04.27.61

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ANCHOR An Anoko?' of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAm.

Dioe'esan Teachers Convene ~~~.· .,~w~ W)i' ~~ S,t\~~~tri ~~~"'."'~ ~~\£J~U . ~~I~ \8~Ul ~~ U~~IiJ" 1ifU~·, ~ F

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To Compete for Sci,ence Fair Awards The sixth annual convention of the Catholic Teachers' Association of the Fan River Diocese will be held Thursday and' Friday, May 4 and 5, at Bishop Stang High School. North Dartmouth. Educators from many parts of the United States will be among those addressing the more than 800 Priests, Bro thers and Sisters staffing the 11 high schoolB and 60 elementary schools of the Diocese. Nearly, 22,000 elementary and high school students are served by them.

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1961' The Anchor

PRICE lOc $4.00 per Year

Socond Class Mail PrIvileges Authorized at Fall Rivor, Mass.

'~re~ Mourns Death

Of Father Slavin, O.P. Most Rev. Russell J. McVinney, Bishop of Providence, eelebrated a Pontifical Requiem Mass in SS. Peter & Paul Cathedral, Providence, this morning for the Very Rev. Robert J. Slavin, O.P., pr-esident of Providence College since ~47. Most Rev. James L. diocese, who today are among C~nnolly, Bishop of Fall the leaders in business, govern-

FATHER SLAVIN,

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R1ver, was among the RUInerous prelates and distinguished members of the Church attended the requiem. Father Slavin, seized by a fatal lIOronary thrombosis on Monday Ofternoon, was particularly well known in, the Fall River Diocese. 4. great number of men from this

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mental activities, medicine and law, were graduated from the Dominican institution during the 14-year reign of the eminent educator. Enrollment at the Providence institution more than doubled during his presidency and the faculty increased proportionately. The late college president was also well known to other hundreds of diocesan faithful who heard him speak at numerous activities in recent years. Father' Slavin received the highest academic award of the Dominican order and one rarely conferred in December 1951 when he was presented the Master of Sacred Theology degree. There are members of the diocesan clergy who came under the' influence of Father Slavin during their undergraduate days at Providence College. Boston Native Bor-n in Dorchester, Mass., a son of Ambrose A. and the late Mary (McLaughiin)' Slavi'1, 'Father Slavin' showed early indications that he would enter the priesthood. He' never returned home 'from school without making a visit to the church first. He became head altar boy. Tuft1 to Page Twel~

MONSIGNOR RILEY

The appointment of Mr. John C. O'Brien to the faculty of Bishop Stang High School in No. Dartmouth was a:anounced today by the Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, acting superintendent of schools for the Diocese of Fall River. Mr. . O'Brien will serve in the du:al capacIty of Faculty Manag-er of Athletics and head coach of basketball. His classroom assignment has not been determined. _ For the'past two years O'Brien has been ·varsity 'coach of basketball at Monsignor Coyle High 'where his· teams earned an excellent reputation for smart,' aggressive play. ,His previous coaching experience included a seven year stint as Freshman mentor at Somerset\High during Tum to Pag~ Eighteen

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.lOHN C. O'BRIEN

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"My heartiest congratulations on the occasion of your Tenth Anniversary as the Ordinary 'of tlle Diocese of Fall River. Please accept the enclosed check for One Thousand Dollars as an endorsement of the Catholic Charities Appeal. Your zealous Ond tireless work to expand the educational •.. the health and welfare agencies of the Diocese {has been an inspiration to aU !!If us." -Norman F. Hochtl ' Turn to lP'ag4l lEighteeEl

Spe«:B@U

~@jition

A special elUtion' of The ~nchor is being distributed 00 OUl!' subscrubers through tho lInaii this wee~{. ITt commemorates the tenth anniversary of Bishop Connclny as Ordunary Of the Dicoese. Special edition copies will be distributed in at! churches Clll Sunday..

Rev. Mr. Rog-er Brisson" M.S. of La Salette Seminary, Attleboro, will be ordained to the priesthood at 7 :30 Monday night, May 1 in StMary's' Cathedral, Fall River, together with two candidates for the Diocesan priesthood, Rev. Mr. Gilbert Justin Simoes and Rev. Mr. Bernard Richard Kelly. Bishop Connolly will be ordain.ing prelate.

REV. MR. BRISSON, M.S. Rev. Mr. Brisson, son of Mill. and Mrs. Alfred J. Brisson, Manchester, N. H., graduated from St. Anthony's grammar school in that city and entered the La Salette minor seminary, Enfielc:t. N. H., in 1947. The ordinand made his first religious profession in 1954 al Center Harbor, N. H. and continued major seminary studie. at La Salette seminary in Attle'J.luft1 to Pa~ Eighteen

Hope Will Rise. When Reds :Ask About God, Life, Sin

some of the large contributions 1W-Cre these comments: <-

AfrC@frhedkfGI On Monday

John C. O'Brien'of Somerset -To Coach Stang Hoop Team

Pre-Appeal Gifts Indicate Charities Drive Enthusiasm Prior to yesterday's opening of the Special Gift phase ef the Catholic Charities Appeal a number of unusual gifts to the Anniversary Appeal ardved at Headq~arters. Each of these pre-Appeal, spontaneous contributions reflected the esteem and affection in which Bishop Connolly's ten veal's of service to the Diocese are held. Accompanying

Some 75 exhibitors of educational materials will be represented at the two day meeting. Following a dialogue Mass at 9:30 Thursday morning, Most Reverend James L. Connolly, DD., D.Sc.Hist. will preside at the opening session at 10:30. Chairman will be Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, M.Ed., acting superintendent of Diocesan schools, and the speaker will be Rt. Rev. Lawrence J. Riley, S.T.D., LL.D., vice rector of St. John's Seminary, Brighton. Keynote address will have as its topic "The Priesthood of Truth." Music for the session will be by Mt. St. Mary's Academy, Fall River. Department Meetings Department meeting on elementary and high school level, scheduled for Thursday afternoon at 2, will include "Your Classroom: A Laboratory of Life," discussed by Sister M. Josephina, C.S.J., D.Ed., professor of education at Boston ColTurn to Page Eighteen

_ HIGH SCOUT HONOR: Given the St. George Award Sunday night ata banquet in Kennedy Community Center, New Bedford, for their contribution to the Diocesan Boy Scout program were, left to right, Amedo J. Dittami of Swansea, Joseph F. Murphy of Mansfie~d, and EdwMd G.. Cloutier of New Bedford. ; \.

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- LONDON (NC) - Britain's prime minister has predicted that the froo world's struggle with communism will end oot when hydrogen bombs destroy both camps but when communists ask themselves the meaning of life. Prime Minister Harold. Macmillan told If we can hold on long enough a nationally televised. press then we have won our freedom conference that Western and theirs." This statement from the Prime strategy should be to "hold

on" until the Reds start asking themselves the right questions about the purpose of life, the meaning of sin, and God. In reply to a question on the relative power of the communist world and the free world, Mr. McMillan said tha t both sides could destroy the other but that "enough is enough, in my view." ,He continued:, "The contest will be in another field, partly technical, partly material but partly for the souls of men. For what in the end is the purpose of life? "Surely our job is to hold on long enough so that some questions that men always ask each other in the end will be asked: Why are we ,here? Is there' a right and wrong? Is there sin? Does God exist? ''These questions will be asked - and I think are being asked-in the communist society.

Minister came at the end of a half-hour questioning by political reporters on his talks in the U. S. with President John F. Kennedy. The Anglican Prime Minister's talks with America'3 first Catholic president centered on Wester!" poiicy in the face of communism. Mr. MacMillon was asked whether the Soviet Union's lead in space could be attributed to Russia's emphasis on productive goods at the expense of consumer goods. He replied by asking what is the purpose of life. "If the sole object of life is production I suppose really it has been best solved by the insect world-the bee," he said. "They do nothing else. The only weakness is that somebody comes and takes your honey away." He said that what is wanted is a balanced system of production, giving people the widest !-ire possible.


TH':f-..!",CI-'O"-R:oces~c:>~ F.QJI."River~ Thur.s.Apr1'

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:~,~ 'S~ci~ty Q~~Sf~~ns

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. Need of Sec:Li~Gr $chooi $)f~~®rdn

Diocese of Fail River

, MONTREAL '(NC) - ~ Catholic organization hafJ " declared that the movement to set up a secular schoall system in Quebec' province represents only a very small min=ority of the population.. The general council of the ~ Jean Baptiste Society also sai~ in a statement that the goverJbooo ment "would fail 'in its duty HI it were to ignore the convictions and requirements of the Catholm .population in the organization a!3 our system of education." The idea of a system of secn=. Iar schools, paralleling the exist... ing state-supported Catholic and Protestant school systems in Quebec, has been advanced by the French-Language Lay Move-mEmt. I \ Wants Same lPow~i's ' .. At its recent founding ~onve_ ti~n the movement urged'forma-, tion of a secular committee af . public education in ,Quebeo which would have the same powers as the existing CatholieJ and Protestant committees. The' movement said secul8'l' schools ,are needed to accommodate those persons who do n~ wish to attend either the Cat}),. oli~ or Protestant schools.

OFFICIAL APPOHNTM~NTS

Rev~ Thomas F.yvalsh, pastl:>r of$t. John the Evang~Hst Church, Attleboro, and Director of the Diocesan. Council of Catholic Women, is appointed to serve ;11so al! Attlebor<l Area Director of the organization.

Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy,' Diocesan Director of the Family Life Bureau, is app'ointed t~ succeed Father Walsh as Fall River Area Director of t~e Diocesan Council of Catholic __ Women.

~~.I'~~ Bishop of

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WAYNE (NC) - Parishioners of ' Immaculate Heart of Mary Church here in, this New J..ersey community have a do-it-yourself program for upkeep, repair and improvement of their parish plant. As is the case with the suburban homeowner. it's more a case of necessity than a love for hammer and saw. Like ~e parishioners, themselves, Irilmaculate Heart of Mary simply is cutting corners to meet the stiff monthly mortgage payment. Program Hub Hub of the progra.m. is ~. prope~ty and ad~Inlstr~tion commlt~ee of the p.ansh unIt ~f the National Council of ~a~ohc Men. Headed ~y Ed English, a , marine eng~neer, the. committee a~so serves In an adviSOry capaCIty to the pastor, Msgr. Edward sc::r.. t h ' k to b d b e~h ere:uw~r't . t o~ a ove e usu Jam ona as

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Sc hedu Ie 'of Con f.· r'm t.·on's' . .

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Apr. 30-2:00 P.M., Sf. John of :-God, £omerset;. Immaculate Conception, North Easton." , 4:00" P.M., Immaculate Con. . "'i ception,Taunton. 7:30 .·~.M.;, .St. Anthony of Padua, Fall 'River; Holy Rosary,, 'Taun t on. ' . May 1-7:30 P.M., St. Mich~el,. ", fall.River.;; St. Lawrence, New' 'Bedford. . May 2-7:30 P.M. St. Joseph, Fall River; O~l'Lady of Purgatory, New Bedford. ., May 7"":":2:00 P.M., St. James, Taunton; Our Lady of Lourdes, Wellfleet. ..... 4:00 P.M., St. Mary, Taunton; ;. . Holy Redeemer, Chatham. :", 7:30 P.M., St. Joseph, Taunt<ln. Qur Lady of the Assumption, '·Oster:ville;. Our Lady ..of Vic~. tory, Centerville~,

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FORTY HOURS DEVOTION,.

Apr.3O-St. Michael, Ocean Grove. . Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, Fall River. . May 7':"7"Our Lady" of the 1m.., . maculate Conception, North Easton. St. 'Vincent's Home, Fall River. . St. Mary; Hebronville... . May ll-'Convent of the Holy Union of 'the Sacred Hearts, Fall River. Convent of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven. . Mount St. Mary's Convent, Fall River. l\!a1' 1~t.· Patrick" Falmouth. .St. Joseph's Orphanage; Fall River. THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River. Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue, Fall River. Mass., by the Catholic Preas of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscripiton price IllY JDBlI, postpaid $4.00 J)et' year. .J' - .

,it becomes the committee's re.sponsibility. For example, there . was a 'lighting problem in ,the . stairwells. The committee called MA Y IS THE' ~ONTH OF MARY: Over the doorway in an electrician resident of- the of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in . parish, decided. what had to be . Washington, Catholics are reminded that the glory of Mary Mass Ordo done , a~d how man'y men with . th a t s h e was c h osen to be the Mother of God. Panels on .FRIDAY-.St. Paul of the 'Cro-., , IS ..... what talents were needed. EightConfessor. III Class. White. .een' committeemen were 're-' sides show women of the Old and New Tes'taments and Mass Proper; Gloria; no Cre~ cruitect" ,worked 'under, the indicate that Mary was the'central woman of all history. Preface of Easter. supervision o~ th.e .elecP'ician, . NC Photo. ' SATURDAY-St. Peter of Val'completed the work in several .. ona, Martyr. III Class'. Red. hours at a saving of a couple of ,Mass Proper; Gloria; noCre~ hundred d<lllars. Preface of Easter. : Technicians "SUNDAY-IV Sunday', 'A', fteThe" committee "was formed . .• " '.' ". four years' ago when the parish .. TORONTO (NC) - Cathoiics' Protestant churches there is'a ,'. ~aster. II Class. Wpite, Ma. plant was under construction. may -well "profit from the in- new appreciation of the euchar- . Proper; Gloria; Creed;, 'PreiRealizing his own technical sight of Protestants into divine istic liturgy as a vehicle of . ace of Easter. shortcomings, M s gr.·. Scully revelation," a priest on a secre- Christ's presence in the com- MONDAY-St. Joseph the Worll<formed the coinmittee from tariat for the coming ecum~nical munity. er, Spouse of the Blessed among the parish's professionals. council said here. "In Catholic theology over the Virgin, Confessor. I Clasa. Its task was to see that contrac"We can never_ learn from last 30 years," he said, "our sacWhite. Mass Proper; Gloriac tors met specifications IlDd to specifically' Protestant princi- ramental notions of 'real presCreed; Preface of St. Joseph, recommend necessary modifica- pIes," said Fa.ther G. Baum, ence' and 'sacrifice' have been TUESDAY - St. AnthanasiWi\, tions in the bUil~ng plans. O.S.A., but "we may be re,mind- integrated into a more complete, Bishop, Confessor and DoctOl' With the end of construction, ed" by ProtestantS "of elements more Biblical and liturgical of the Church. III Class. White. the committee continued to func- of. our Cathol~c past, elements vision of the E~charist. We are Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; tion, checking performance of. w:e have forgotten' :or negl~ted." not as far apart as we 'were iii' Preface of Easter. " A" , ' th . t'" , W .. ~pNESDAY-Mass of.previo·equipment covered by warranties The 'ugustinian priest, who is e pas. .. . . Sunday. IV Class. White. Man and arranging for repairs of a consultant to the Father BaUlii .'al~o said: '''While P roper; GI' ' Secretariat orla; S econ d Colleet faulty, construction work. The for .Promoting Christian Unity, ~he' Protestant. communities as . SS. Alexander, Eventius and committee became a ready':made ,one of the bodies set· up by His bodies' have cut themselves off . > Theoaulus, Martyrs; and Joorganization to .' when. .John' dXXIII one '" Church' .. . . , ' to turn . , '. HoliriessPope ; f th"S V t' to'" from th f the' If·llrii.·· Ii b" to" whom y:e~alis, Bishop and .Contessoq the" necessity for contiI;l.Uing re-. prepare' or . e . econ a lcan ~ ~ 1 .. en •. ~s. een. ~lvenno Creed; Preface of Easter. pair an'dimprovements became' Council,addressed some 300 per,;. , thIS IS '~e Catliohc' ~lew-the"·THURSDAY-St.Monica, Widow. obvious~, . . . soris here on the eve of his de~ Holy 'Splnt keeps on stirring in-..... ' III Class' Wh·t· '. M .., ~p'" M atch'mg Men to Job' p a r t u r e fo rome. R " ' . . Creed; I e. ass rope!; ".. d"d IVI ua I P .,rotestan~s to,.hoh-, .... , Gloria; . no ·pttiface of M~. English 'kid it's Justa 'FiltherBaum explained that ness and to prophetic utterance"" "'Easter .~., ... caSe of matching the man to the "the ecumeniCal movement of Often these prophetic messages ~ ",' ., job, that "at least 75 to '100 men Protestant origin .had changed ,are destined to·recall 'us Cath-. , .. have lent a hand on one project the theological .a t m 0 s ph ere olics to a greater fidelity to the . or another." The parish's 'pro- among Protestant churches, and Word of GiJd." fessional and amateur carpenters between Protestant communities MOIBIL for instance, were called in whe~ and the Catholic Church. Are ¥;);fWearing A SERVICE STATION two classrooms were finished This new approach is based on Pretty Hat? off with paneling. the acknowledgement that all NOll'ffh Street It's There is work too for those <;:hristians, all baptized men beHYANNIS who have no tale~t f~r tools. On lieving in Christ, are brothers, he ONE STOP SERVICE three occasions last Winter the stated. . SP 5-9846 Southern Hew England'a co~ittee called. for-and gotHe pointed out that in various: , , .' Largest Millinery Fashion Store , 20 to 25 volunteers for snow re134 SOUTH'MAIN STREET moval work:'This job was·'ma<le. UNITED FUNDS .INC. R. A. WILCOX" FAll RIVER easier because the parish on th~.'. , ...._---~......---...,;;.~.~' --.;j'.~ '. ;, \. advice of the committee; bad,' , . .OFFICE FURN'l'rURE purchased a tractor. . Waddell & Reed, inc.

P.ries.t Says Catho.lics Can .Prof.-t From Ins;ght of Protestants

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MUTUAL FUND SHARE . Princlp~1 Underwriters Appointment at your . Call or Write

Necrology THE ANCHOR lists ihe deaih aimiversary dates of priests who served ihe Fall River Diocese since its formation in 1904 wiih ihe intention that the faithful wiU give' ihem a prayerful remembranee.

ANTONE G. QUINTAL 95 Maryland' St., New Bedford WYmaa 5-2938. Pros s on Re uest

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APR. !8

Rev. Stanislaus J. Goyette; 1959, Pastor, st Louis de France, Swansea. . ,

"DIE FAMILY SHOE STORE"

John's Shoe Store

APR. SO

Rev. David F. Sheedy, 1930, Pastor, St. John the Evangelist. AtUeboro. ' .. '

95 PLEASANT STREET OS 8-5811

Fall River

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Rev. Lucien Bouchard, O.M.I.. recently returned from a mis· sionary assignment in Laos, wil1 " · address the second annual Communion' breilkfast of Bradford · DUrfee College of Techriology Newman Club, 'Fall River~ to be held :following' 9:30 Mass this Sunday morning at . Sacred Hearts Academy, Prospect Street. New club officers will be 'nom. inated ,at this affai!'. .

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Missioner Training Center":' p-:" Offers Complete Course' ',

THE ANCHORThurs., April 27, 1961

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Asserrts Doctrine Of Mystoc@~ Body Coeld$tence Key

NEW YORK (NC)-A Spanish~language and cultural OPientation training center for ·U.S~ priests, Religious and laymen preparing for Latin Ame"rican service will begin operations in Cuernavaca, Mexico, June 19. The center will offer a 16-week course for Other courses will include: a prospective missionaries, in- socio-economic analysis of -culcluding layman members of tural change and development; the Papal Volunteers for introduction to the history and

BELLAIRE (NC) - A Negro priest said here tha:t ,the doctrine of the Mysfical Body of Christ is a plan of

"peaceful coexistence in the best Latin America, who are to serve civilization of Latin America; sense of the word." adjustment to life in rapidly in Spanish-speakin'g areas. Father Clarence Rivers o£ A similar center for missioners developing countries; and the Cincinnati declared that the docrole of the Church in technoto Portuguese-speaking areas got trine of the Mystical Body could logical and sociocultural change. under way last December in Anbe a powerful influence in interapolis, Brazil, und'er the direc- Study teams will examine probnational affairs, labor relatioJl3 and the race question. tlon of U. S. Franciscan Fathers' lems in specific geographical areas and professional fields. of the Holy Name Province. Its "How much easier it would be Students will be given field asfirst training course ran from for us to settle our disputes, our signments in Mexican' communDecember to February. social conflicts ... if we were ities on tQ:ee weekends of each impregnated wit" the overpowFormel' Hotel month. ering idea that we are all intiA former hotel in Cuernavaca Small Cost mately united in sharing one -SO miles from Mexico Citylife," he said. The cost of $550 for the fourhas been leased as headquarters Father Rivers spoke on "Racial month program includes room, for the training center which Discrimination and the Grace of board, tuition and instructional be called the Center for God" to more than 400 men from materials. Information is availIntercultural Formation. 19 Belmont County parish Holy : The center is sponsored by able from Msgr. Illich at Ford-. Name Societies here in Ohio. ham University here, or by Fordham University here and is . He said the Catholic solution directed by Msgr. Ivan D. Illich, writing David O'Shea, national to the world's quest for unity is former vice rector of the Catho- secretary of the Papal Volun"the union of all men in the lic University in Ponce, Puerto teers for Latin America program Mystical Body of Christ." at 720 North Rush Street, ChiRico. The priest noted that "lifeMsgr. Illich noted in a state- cago 11, Ill. and the sharing of life-is the ment that the course of studies Following the completion of basis of this Mystical Body." at the Center for Intercultural the first 16-week course at the "What a beal,ltiful foundation Formation will include' more center, a second course will befor peaceful co-existence for than just language training. gin on October 16. It, too, will social order, for international ''Current Catholic thinking in run four months. peace, for brotherly love!" he t1te matter of preparing ,people The Portuguese-language cenadded. for overseas' service accepts the ter in Brazil will offer its second Father Rivers said that for :met that fluency in language is course starting December 11th. most people the doctrine' 'of the I!lOt enough," he said. The Anapolis center is about Mystical Body is "a new idea' "They must possess deep retwo hours' ride from Brasilia, that will take a lot of thInking spect for the people' they are the new Brazilian capital city. over and a lot of praying·'over." going to serve. They must feel a Father John Vogel, O,F.M., is But, he said, "the diiy the SUPERIOR GENERAL: Rev. Mother Marie, Elisabeth, strong attachment for the Latin director of the center in Anapolis. Superior General of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Puy Catholic world becomes conAmerican wa~' of life' ,and for scious of this great truth the aU those institutions which the (center), is visiting houses of the community in the Fall ~orld will become Cath~lic­ Latin American holds dear" he River Diocese. Left;, Mother Jeanne Therese, superior of led to that position as the ultiadded. " ' the Fall River provincial house; right, Mother Helen Marie, mate and perfect answer to the The certter's program will inproblem of unity that is at presCEDAR RAPIDS (NC)-A 5 assistant general, traveling with the superior. etude 25 hours' weekly study of ent giving us so much trouble." per cent "tithing" system will oonversational Spanish by small gtooups of students. Those attendbe inaugurated to Ipay off the ing will also spend an additional debt of a new parish plant and dUlCe to 10 hours each week in ' a school for boys to be built here. private language study, language The new parish is dedicated'to ' In Fall River for six weeks to ~ial House, 2501 South Main laboratory' work, or with a tutor. 'St. Jude. On a site near the ,par- ( The four-month course is ex- ish, the Christian Brothers of St. make canonical visitations to the Street, Fall River. The program, pected to give an average student Louis will conduct their first eight convents under her juris- entirelr in French, included a school in the Dubuque archdio:' diction in this Diocese is Rever- Spring cantata, a two act play by tbe ability to speak Spanish fluently in most social and 'profes- cese. The $800,000 school will and Mother Marie 'Elisabeth, nov~ces of the community, and a NEW BEDFORD accommodate 500 boys. 'superior general of the Sisters of sketch by pr,eparatory' school Sional situations. students: Father J. Robert McDonald, St. Joseph of Puy. : INDUSTRIAL OilS , Sisters from other houses of pastor of St. Patrick's' parish, With her companion, Mother who is in charge Of the fundHelen Marie, assistant general, the province were ,also guests HEATING OILS raising campaign, said the tith- the superior arrived, in, New and had the' opportunity of CONCORD .(NC)-A '.priest ing system is designed to bring York last week from the congre- meeting the superior general. TIMKEN ueged New Hampshire legisla-' in a minimum of $4,000 a weeie' gation's mother house fn Le Puy, in Sunday collections at the neW. France. " toI'6 to support a bill providing OIL BURNERS for mandato.rY schooling,of men- p~rish. He estimated the parish . The Sisters were welcomed and 'school debt will be .paid off with a' reception at the, Provintally retarded children. in seven or eight years. & "You'll get 290 per cent back ~ :Plumbing - Heating Oft every. dolla'r you spend for tbis," Father' Richard O. Bonner Over 35 'Ye~rs' 501 COUNTY ST. Of Concord said at a Legislative of Satisfied Service hearing on the bill. Father .BonNEW BEDFORD WILMINGTON (NC)-A parner, long experienced in the 806 NO. MAIN STREET WASHINGTON (NC) -Gov. ents' organization has been set field of educating mentally: re- David L. Lawrence of PennsylWY 3-1751 Fall River OS 5-7497 up here to keep objectionable tarded, told' the lawmakers 'that ,v~nia will' deliver the keynote an estimated $1,900 per child is address at the biennial conven- literature, television and movies away from children. being spent on care and traintion of the National Council of ing of the handicapped. Passage Catholic Men in Pittsburgh, May Called the Youth Activities of the bill, he said, would reCouncil, the, group was given 4 to 7. duce greatly the load on state Gov. Lawrence will speak at impetus by a recent police raid institutions. a general session May 5 on the of a pornographic literature cenconvention theme: "The 'Apos- ter in nearby Newark, Del. More tolic Layman': New Responsibil- than' 10,000 photographs were at seized in a rai.d .on the' center, ities in Christian Unity." Bishop John J. ,Wright of which police said served a fivePittsburgh will be toe principal state area: speaker at the convention ban-, quet on May 6. NCCM headquarters here also & disclosed that three editors and 115 WILLIAM SlI'. NEW BEDFORD, MA~~.:J ONE STOP a theologian will give major ad- "dresses during the day on May 6: 'SHOPPING Ct1NTER . Unity Theme • Television •. FurnitllN They are: Father Thurstori • Appliances • Groeery Davis, S.J., editor in chief of the Catholic magazine, America; ,... SHARON, MASSACHUSETTS 104 Allen St•• New Bedford James O'Gara,' managing editor WYman '1~9354 of Commonweal, also a national ... Spacious Fireproof Sleeping, Quarters ~ ,Ca.tholic weekly; Gerard Sherry, ".. For Boys 7 to 14 years old ~ managing editor of the Central Six week-season: July 2 to August 13 Califorl1ia Regi~ter" newspaper ,... Regisll'er for 2, or 4, or 6 weeks ~ of the Monterey-Fresno, Calif., Free Tutoring if. desired ,,4 diocese; and Father John A. Truck Body Builders Hardon, S.J., professor of theol,.THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART ~ Aluminum or Steel ogy at West Baden Seminary, 4 944 County St. KEYNOTER: Gov. David West Baden Springs,· Ind. NEW BEDFORD. MASS. Father Davis will speak on. J". Lawrence of Pennsylvania "Spritual WY 2-6618 ' Unity and the Chang~ SHARON, MASSACHUSrnS ~ will deliver the keynote ad- ing Community;" Mr. O'Gara on dress a:t the biennial con- "Christian Unity;>"" ,.. A RESIDENT FOR BOYS vention of the National PrejUdice;" Mr. Sherry 0J1 Grammar grades 4-5-6-7-8 "Christian Unity allu ••• __ , Council of Catholic Men in Image of the Church;" and 'me 0,', TI-:IE SACR,IlED ,H,EART, Pittsburgh next week. NC Father Hardon on "The Spiritual Phot~ Basis f{)r Christian Unitv" AA.L~~~

will

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SU,perior of St. Joseph Sisters To Visit Houses in Diocese'

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4

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 27, 1961

bE~[?~~~~~ ChMlTtth's lfiterest lin Olfganizing Unorganized , By Msgr. George G. Higgins .

Director, NCWC SoCial Action Department

,

. . Last week,.in the first of a series of columns on the 'f!orthcoming anniversary of the two great social encyclicals, Rerum Novarum and Quadragesimo Anno, it was suggested .that in the field of social legislation considerable progress has been made since, and t<> . t' t t b of 1947 pastoral laId great stress on a cer am ex en ecause , the social nature of man and' the :the encyclicals. This week social nature of work; and from ·.we turn our attention to the these central facts of life they

'.

teaching of the encyclicals on drew the conclusion, among 'unions and employers' organ- others, that the organization of izations. men according to their function Both Leo XIII in economic life is both desirable and Pius xi and necessary. vigorously deGod created man' ~nd m~de fended the right him brother to "his fellow man" ~f w?rke~s to the Bishops' statement says. "He orgamze 1 n t 0 gave man the earth and all its' unions of their resources to be used and develown choosing oped for the good of all. and wholeheartedly gave . "'~'hu~, work ?f whatever sort their approval IS a ~o~lal'functlon, and personal ClfiAIIUTIES APPEAL: Discussing pIa ns for the special gifts phase of the to unionism as a profIt IS not the sole purpose of .Catholic Charities Appeal which will take place May 7 to 17 are these New 'Bedfor4 necessary measeconomic activity ... the Chris-, ure of reform in modern eco- tian view of,economic life sup-' committee members. Left to right, John Har'rison, Wright Walker, Rev. John F.· Hogan, 1960 Drive. Chairman George Vigeant, Daniel F. Dwyer, Clinton Rimmer and nomic life. ' ports the demand for organiza; Leo's endorsement of unionism, tion of management, labor, agriHemingway, Sr. was widely disregarded in the culture and professions under United States, so much so that government encouragement but .-lBifiJi¥i>::.li]t!I·"i:;'MU!ilikJ!ii#i!Wij' ii"li 5l il'!'~!;ili1i jilIi il:'Ii':I'I rl: iO.:!i!a' • • •II·ee• • • • • • • • • • •a • • • •am . by the time of Pius Xl's encynot control, in joint effort to elical" 40 years later, only two avoid social conflict and to proor three million American work- mote cooperation for the com'ere "'~re' mem1;>l?rs of bona fide mon good." , unions. , If this 'be unwarranted' inte~ , ,~las I,.egal protecti~n f~rence in politics, politics will .. A~am, ho\Vev,er,. conslder~ble have to make the most of it, for , progress has ,been mad~ sm,ce it is the duty of the Church to 1931... La1:>or's ;natural right to teach the moral 'law-even (in ". organ~ze .was gIven mor~ or less our day': one might almost say effec~lve .legal. protectl~n-for-'. :"especially") . that part, of the the, f1l:,st b~e-m 1~35 w~~h the . moral' law which ,has-to dO'witB passage. of the NatiOnal Labor ' ec . I'f' ' , .' " , ", Relations ACt. " onomlc 1 e. . . , Today approximately 18 mvl-., , Inter~en~ionAlternatlve, 'Ion workers are organized. Prog-: ' In~identally, it ,mightb.e weB gress, yes. But the organiz~tion' ·for. .tJ:1ose who object' ~, the' ~, Of agricultural and so-called Church's advocacy of more exwhite collar workers must be tensive organization in. economie urried forward as rapidly as life to weigh 'an alternative to . \' . possible. organization. The alternative to Here fire lu~ a few 01 'h. many meot It is sometimes said that the cooperation between free organChurch, in encouraging labor to izations of employers and emorganize the unorganized, :is ployees is excessive governmenprIces sla.h. . at A&P • 'i • check and "taking sides," and is guilty c:4. tal intervention in economic 1iJe. violating the traditional neutral"ID. default of this free coopCOIfIfJf!Irel _ of organized religion in the eration," the Bishops conclude, ..... field of economic life.. "public authority is finally inIn view of this misunderstand-. voked.to maintain a measure, 01. " ". , IIlg, it is ne.cessaryfrom time to,: economic order;,but it frequently" .., time to explain the reasons for' exceeds the just limits of :its: t:' lIIe Church'scontinue'd' interest· , power to direct economic activCDOWH .',,' L · ,Fresh; U.S. Gov~t map.. · ill the organization of the un- ity to the common good." WHOLE, 2Vldo 3:,lba'- LB ' , "'?~ OI'ganized. ': co,,'. :. We f~i confid~nt that th~se!"" " N""" c Individual Effort Ineffective who criticize the Church for ,'. ".,' " :., ' " " '".', .',• '. t ._., ~'t.t ", ~~~ is by. n~ture a soc~a~. ~~ing , ~voring the ~rga~iz;~tion of the '", ." . . . "'~' ", tnap.. U5 101 "" ~ l;t tI;. soCll~1 .~~s?onslblhtles,," unorganized will agree with the ,., ' . ·D.. Super-Right~U?C:-P~~.·,·~,·· ~OWN': which responslbl.htle~, to speak Bishops that' excessive goveinDU , : J ' Fancy Silcea . . , .. LB' '. 101 only' of econom~,? l~fe ,for. tll~ ," mentali~tervention is a dang." , mo~ent, cannot· be ,e~ectiv~lY 'ous alternative and that, there- . : . .hcauSft 28% c~r~let{ out b?" unorgamzed ~n- fore, they will be the more : ,; 'Of YOUR' 'OOD' di':ld~als a~tmg as competmg willing to recognize the right umts 1!1 S?Cl~t~. , a n d the duty of the church to DOLLAR Is sUPER··l DOWN Every mdlvldual - wo~ker, advocate the necessary means to RIGHt' 'L-B 0 14c employer, farmer or profeSSIOnal forestall it. Spent for ,meat, c man-is obliged by the virtue of It' • L-B social justice to join his associ- Schedule Missioner's • 'mportant ates to carry out all of those rethat you C DOWN SUPER·RIGHT AU. sponsibilities which of himself Consecration May 17 I M6AT SKINLIrSS 18 6c alone he is incapable of fulfilling. NOTRE DAME (NC)-Father COMPARI these C In addition, economic associa- Vincent McC~uley, C.S.C., vetprices with what 7-RIB DOWN tions-of, workers, farmers, em- eran foreign .missionary, will be PORTION lB 6c ployers, or professional people-' consecrated the first Bishop of' ' you would pay C PUll RIB HAL., DOWN are obliged by the virtue of Fof1; Portal in Uganda, Africa, elsewhere '~Ins No Chapa Removed tB 6c ' social justice to cooperate among in Sacred :Heart church on the • 1hemselves-and with the gov- University of Notre Dame camiliAD THIM A1U ernment-to· accomplish' those pus May 17. See for yourself 18 . . llOcial objectives which are comRichard Cardinal Cushing, c mon to all of them and which Archbishop of. Boston, will be wh'ere you SA VI hB Done them, acting 'On ,its own the consecrator. " CASH and receive in isqlation from the others, can Bishop-designate McCaul~y,'III C possibly accomplish. native of Council, Bluffs, Iowa, th. best'q' uallfy 18 ~ Social Function was ordained a Holy Cross priest and "he 0.... 'Nle American Bishops ift their in 1934 and served as a missioner w m.. m eat c in Africa· from 1936 to 1944. He for your foOiJ.. . . . . Youngstown Diocese headed the Holy Cross. Foreign . dollar; Talce thl. e Missions Seminary in WashingPlans First'Synod Ltl price list with y~ YOUNGSTOWN (NC) - The tn, D. C., from 1945 to 1958, wheD w,lIen you shop. Diocese of Youngstown will hold he returned to Africa and foundliB its first synod sometime this ed the Fort Portal mission. NOTE THE AMOUNT year, Bishop Emmet M. Walsh, Se first Bishop of. the diOCese estabppose yen-Day ~fR.'Cf lished in 1943, disclosed in a Operation of Mills; REDUCTOON ON pastoral letter asking prayers 'for· OTT'A'W'A t". ' , • Its success. , . . (l"1C)-Sunday miti liB rV/Effty .rlM. A diocesan synod is a meeting operabo~ , m .some' 22 pulp and of a bishop with his priests to paper .m~lls m. Quebec and the' eonsider matters for the welfare' A~lanbc .provmces of Canada of the clergy and faithfuL:, w~ll be !lrmly oppo~d by paPer· Bishop Walsh disclosed that a mlll umons. ., central committee of priests has The decision to fight attemp~' been meeting twice weekly since to institute a seven-day mill oplast October to draw up the eration was taken' by '100 deleagenda for the synod. The com- gates represe~ting. /lome 22;000 mittee is headed by Msgr. Walter workers who 'are memberSl of' ; .... .' . ..... B. Martin, pastor of Sacred Heart· three uI!ions a#iUa~ed·with :the' . . church. 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Thurs., April 27, 1961

Catholic Agency Sets Up Peace Corps Desk

. By Father Jolm L. Thomas, S.J. Aas"t Sociolog)' Prof.-8t. Louis Unlversit)'

17-year-old daughter is a freshman in a nearby college. The boy she kept company with while in high school ~ attending an out-state college and has invited her to spend a weekend there. My husband and I are both opposed to it, so we're called old-fashioned. society, .parents, or the unmarand even toid to go see a ried feel any obligation to avoid psychiatrist because we're the occasion for such displays. Hence you are properly surevil-minded. Many of our "QUI"

daughter's friends have received parcntal permission for such a ff air s. Are thcy lax, or am r really that old-fashioned?" . you already know the an~er as well as I do, Lucy. One doesn't have to be a moral -theologian or an obstetrici-.m t 0 figure out that such weekend affairs, ,a way ~rom home and parental supel'vision, are not exactly calcu-' lated to bolster Christi~n stand': Qrds of sexual morality. If parents assume any responsibility for the behavior of their ohildren, 17heir response to suCh • request should be clear. But your letter merits further eomment because of the pre¥ailing attitudes it reveals. Your refusal to give consent brands you as old-fashioned and evil- . minded. This reaction indicated two things; first, many Catholic' Parents either try to. fool ilhemselves about the normal facts of Ufe or reject Christian moral oorms ift practice. 'Out 01 Step' These conclusions follow :frOm ,our letter. People are called old-fashioned when the standards they try to uphold and the decision.s they make in the practical order are based on a set of ~lues DO longer accepted by the majority. The old-fashioned are Out of step with their, contemporaries because they have re-. mained ia step wllth'the past. . Considered in itself, the mere letentloa. of past standards and eustolll6 may be neither ':good DOl' b8d. Since OUl' environment 80d the .tOCial situation we face Undergo frequent change;· new .applications of old principles. must be formulated, While past eustoms may cease to have .-aeaning. To cling stubbornI)' tl) put ...ays Olf doing and thinklog, Oft 4be principle that ''what.waa pod enough for grandpappy; 'is

flOOd enough for me," is not the ~rk of an intelligent Christian. Preservation of PrincipleS But yotar refusal to go along with the prevailing faShion in this instance involves something more than blind retention of past patterns. What is at stake is the preservation of a set of moral principles based on the Christian philosophy of life, for the custom you mention stems kom a different philosophy. This new philosophy separates &eX from its necessary relationship to procreation, and sexual activity from the moral law. Hence "Sex as play," or the use 01. mutual sexual stimulation as a normal manifestation of affection, becomes an accepted practice, with the result that neither

Indians Talk Back When Storms Come

. PENAS (NC)-Aymara Indi:' aDs living in the sky-high Andes of Bolivia do more than just ~lk about the weather: They blow horns at it. According to Father John J. O'Brien, M.M., of Flushing, N.·Y.. the violent hail storms which shower chunks of ice the size of golf balls so terrify Indian farmers that just before an impending storm they climb the highest peak aad blast away on their pututus-giant trumpets which supposed to blow the storm In the opposite direction. ''From what I've seen," says the Rew York Maryknoller, "the buglers 8I'e blowing .500-half the time they chaae away the lItorms, aocl tbe other baIf . .

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prised that other Catholic parents allow their daughters' to make such trips. What's the matter with them? Refuse to Face .Facts Well, in the first place, Lucy, many of them are anxious to promote the popularity of their daughters, and since they have not been trained to see the false principles from which such customs stem, they thoughtlessly fall in step. But there is another reason for their amazing shortsightedness. They simply refuse to face the normal facts of life. You mentioned that you were accused of being evil-lninded because you thought a couple would be subjected to unnecessary tempta.tfon under such circumstances. Are people who' make such. a statement really serious?

s

THe ANCHOR-

Justifies Parents' Opposing Daughter's Weekend Date

WASHINGTON (NO) A unit to assist Catholic

participation in the Peaee Corps has been established within the National Catholic Welfare Conference here and will begin activities around May 1.

WEEKEND RETREAT: Talking with retreat master Rev. John P. Driscoll at close of Serra-sponsored retreat last weekend at Cathedral Camp are three of the 74 young . men who attended. Left to right, Kevin Martin of St. John's Parish, Attleboro, John V. Anselmo of St. Michael's, Fall River, and John Kelleher of St. Lawrence's, New Bedford.

Ju::e:~miD~hi:~~ll«many

Cathol.ic Hospital Association Geared to . . .Ieeds of Deca'.de -

Known as "Peace Corps Desk, National Catholic Welfare CO!lference," the new unit will be headed by Auxiliary Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom of New York, executive director of Catholic Relief Services - National Catholic W~lfare Conference, thc U. S. Catholic overseas relief agency. Executive Secretary The executive secretary of thc Peace Corps Desk will be Robert Melina, a member of the Catholic Relief Services staff who has served in Latin Americr. and elsewhere. Announcement of plans 1.0:' the Peace Corps Desk was made by Msgr. Paul F. Tanner, genel'a! secretary of the NCWC. The new unit will provide information and services to Catholic dioceses, organizations and institutions which wish to engag(' in Peace Corps recruiting ao<: projects. A policy statement issued ill early April by the Peace Corps said it plans to cooperate with U. S. private voluntary agencies in overseas assistance. Private Agencies Private agencies, including religious ones, are eligible to seel: financial and personnel aid frOTI' the Peace Corps for qualifiec overseas projects of a nonreli .. gious nature, it was stated ia. a guidebook prepared by Gordon Boyce, director of private ageftey relations for the corps. Mr. Boyce said the Peace Corps "wants to help, not 'Jleplace, private agencies which arc doing an excellent job" in OWI'seas assistance.

Catholic parents. act, I would conclude that they probably are. 1""'11III There exists a curious paradoK, ST. LOUIS (NC)-The forthor pel'lhaps better, an implicit coming convention of the Cath- note address. Other speakers include Father hypocrisy' 1n theii' thinlring olic Hospital Association of the about sex. U. S. and Canada "is planned to Lucius F. Cervantes, S.J., assoThey must know what sex harmonize with the needs and ciate profeSSOl' of St. Louis Unimeans, since they have pro- tempo of ·the 1960s," the asso- versity's department of sociolcreated. They regard their chil.. ciation's 'execuUve director said ogy; Dr: James E. McCormack; dean Of Seton Hall College of dren as normal and consequently here. understand/that they normally Father John J. Flanagan said .Medicine and pentistl'y; and reach puberty between the ages that the convention, to be. held Sister Annette, executive secreof 12 and 14, so that henceforth J,une 12 to 15 in Detroit, will tary of. the Sister Formation they are capable of heterosexual seek "to help hospitals evaluate' Conference, Washington, D. C. Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, affection, lov~, sexual desire and their attitudes and their philO&stimulation; ophies against the backgroupd president of the American Red Ct:Oss, will speak at the closing yet they stubbornly refuse to of cur~t needs." face the' natural implioations 01. "Catholic hospitals, as servwe session. His top~c will be "AmerMlese facts in training, instruct- organizations, realize they have ican Responsibilities in an Uniog and guiding their children. ever-increasing responsibilities easy' World." . View 01 Chastity to help make available to the . One is some~es' tempted 110 .. A.meric;m. peopl.e the ..gl'eat 1'8eonclude that their desire to sources of medical SCIence at1d avoid effort imd'to promote their ~hnological advances .. :devel(:lhildren socially ~utweighs OP~ through res.earch .m ~"~ llIteir sense of. responsibility to medical and SOCIal SCiences, provide for the balanced moral Father Flanagan stated. "Patl'~ of difficult e88e8" development OIf those whom God So~e 5,000 Religious and Jay baa entrusted to their care. personnel are expected to attend . They are not concerned about the convention. Ita theme ill modern proadiees; they do 'not "Attitudes, Actions, Achievebotbet' to analyse the premises ment." tlrom which they stem, because List Speaken . Starts Thursda,.,· May 4~h they are not really "sold" on 'the . Father' james H. Fitzpatrick, Ohristianview of chastity. . associate director of the BrookUnfortwfately, instructions on lyn diocese's division of health this virtue aim so persistently at lind hospitals, will give the keythe emotions rather than the intellect that many never do un....ancisoan FMhet'8 ~ New Bedford. Mass. derstand the moral principles involved.

SAINT JUDE

Solemn' Novena' of 9 Thursday•

Our Lady's Chapel

LARIVIERE1S Pharmacy Prescriptions called for and delivered

ROB.ERTS HARDWARE

BEGINS

Sam. J. LaGasse, Manager

THURSDAY

1872 ACUSHNET AVE. near Brooklawn Park

May 4th for Nine Thursdays

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

HEADQUARTERS FOR DIETETIC SUPPLIES

Chapel Novena devotions: 10:00 A.M.; 12:10 Noon 5:10 P.M.; 7:00 P.M. aDd 8:00.P.M.

600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439

New Bedford

) DEBROSSE OIL co. ) Heatinq Oils ) and Burners

GRACIA· BROS. Excavating Contractors

)365

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NORTH FRONT ITREn NEW BEDFORD

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FOUR WAYS TO SERVE CHRIST , AS A HOLY CROSS FATHER

Priest-Teacher Foreign, Missionary

Home Millioner

Parish Priest For Information about the

HolyCross Fathers or Brothers, write to:

HOLY CROSS FATHERS NortIa ......., Ma•• ach.....

Radio Novena 'WSAR-FALL RIVER-14. on DIAL-Ever)' T h ~ evening at 6:45 P.M.

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!;;;TH~.AN~HO~-D:cces.e.ofFall River-Thurs. April 27,.1961

~mments _ Only

by Mr. Ford

reli~f anq admiration can greet the call

.

. Commend·s.Loyai

Still Earthbotmd

New Orleans . loyni~ '.

by Henry

Jord II to American busine~s executives to "keep their own

. CHARLESTON (NC) :lCMlses in order." . Catholic men of the Charlee, Mr. Ford's impressive a~dress given last" Thursday toll dioceSe have praised ~ " , Cftriing in Minneapolis called the business corporation a' . , ·~solid.loYalty to th.e Churc~ .. ', :im,irror of ·society.". AnQ .he· ass:ailed the ",seri~s of falls ". e« New OrleansCatholies whe · ; ,from··grace 'involving s6m:eof our oldest and most. respected . ". elltablished a Cathol~ Counci-l .lliujiness firms," notably pi-ice..: fixing convictions in ·the .,'. Human' Relationi: : ~. ': ... ' . cIectrical'goods:manufacturing' business and .c~mflict,.of..: .'. They. said, the action .by..... '.' '. ... . . New Orleans laymen refuted . . . interest ·.charg·es in:. the.' automobile industry. And,a~ Mr. . "ugi). an'd c:iistorte<qmage' of tb!: .... .., 1Qrd.:i.ind~rliiles;"Asa ~irector qf 9he of'the electrkalgoods .. '. Church" created by. a "sm. rnafiufacturers, .. and.as.thechlef executive officer of an ~:~" .-' min9iity'!·o~Ne~qrl~aqsCai~ .. ';':ilifomotive maniifac.tl,lringbusine.ss; my concern 'lsinore ~ . . . .6Iie~ who promo~e raci~~ segre.:: :'" ·tL.~" acaae'mic.'! . ' lil,,'~' ·ption. '. . . ". . IHHI , ",' '.' ' . . ; These comments were. made ill· . -:':.. And Mr. Ford·re:min.de.d~hisfellow· executives that, ·"Orie .. . , . . . .. .. ' a resolution ad~p.te~f ~t ~h.e. l~: of the many fascinating thijig's abou~; a.. imsivess 'c,orporatfon . ,. ." annual conventIon of the Chaw;"8 that-=- in its dai:ly life arid··not merelY-iIi the,l~gal sense...:. . " .. leston Diocesar' Council Gl i:.' ·:t.does take' on many:ortlie:·~ttribu:tesofa person ..< One ... Catholic Men. More·than. 181' l.hin·g. that mos.i.corp·'.or.afi.·o.·ri.s. - ..1.I.'ke:nio,st 'p·e.Qple, '-.. c a n n o t : " .~e~ represeI:\ting: 'parish' gro.u'-: ... : 'attended the meeting.·' . {lo . is' succeed in creatin·g·the·. impression tha£ they are· .. . ~ ... " . '. . . .,.. , . . . . .... . . ..: ..Center of. .Co.ntrove~,.' ", ';;omething' oth'er than .what .they' really ~re: No amount of .. . .'... They extended ~c~.~gra.tula~~~~ .! , ' falSe ·fr.ont ~il1. k~p -the real character of your. company tAl the 300· New Orleans. laymea '.. mJlie".fromshowingthrough.'~·,~ . . .: .. '.\ .' .... . . who, with the approva!'.of Arch-·. ·fl.:;':-. It.is good that'a person' iii Mr. F.ord's po1!lition and of· bishop Jos~ph F. Ru~el,. ell-: . .. , . . tablished a Catholic Council Gl ',' h~ prestige ~noiild bring out into the o~ri and before his ,.,.... ~ ... ... " - . . Huml:in . Re18tions to' ·proino.e· .. ~ell~w execqtivesin 'big business the t:ecentscalj,dats ~ few ~ ~,;~~.~'~:"': . '" '~go.<idrelationships 'amQrtg 'paCt-: :.>u·~ damaging. - in .American .corporation~. And.it is ~good . '. . . ' .. pIes. of all rac~s." . . ' '::., . .. 'that"'he: 'should point out- that. "the:confidence :artd'; faith' . ' ..",,:. - " ; .. :.Ne.w"·0~leans has been .a,' .cel.l"": r'

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..-:-:: 'papticuI~~h~.i.Ji·t.p~:.. 1>~g c?rpOra~IO,9.s that play SOv.Ita~ ~. ~Ql.e ~~r whole hfe '.;. ,,~11l. no!,;~ 'strengtheneq ~yalIbIs, .excu8~ ?I' .counter~ ." :., recrImmatIOns." Nor does Mr. Ford belIeve, should the "old :, , .' 'Dad'apple'alibi" be draggea 'out to :'expiairi away things;

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. . . . : :-'.' '~'. >' >~ .:'.; '. .' I ;' . l~'id:' ·segregatibni&ts . . . the,re: ~~: By REV. R~~ERT. W. HOADA, 'Catholic :l!nlverslty' 'I ~tilqig~ting to block m~g~at~, . .,,". . . 'of publIc schools.····, ..' . . , . . . .'; .....,.... '. .. . : "', .' ~~rchbi~hop,R~mme~anp.~Ui1~.; ." . TOI)AY- S~. Pe~er CaDlSIUIl,' perfect ~hem, produce WIth. them. '.' several 'years .ag() that t~e ·de-. ;. ,.... '.. ::.In. too Ifiany ,I!l~tance!'ll:lurroundmgthe r~ent 8C~!ldal~. '. Confessor, l)oe~Ol'.~urcelebra- :..·the.' thinlgs oi.tr:~' human' family' 'segregation of :Catholic. ·.s~hoo•. ..., ,. ·.,.nmoke :screens ,were set up, ·with thti..idea ..that.jf. enough tion in honor of Peter, a; great· .. ne·eds;,for.: iife~ ;,""'"' ';.: . ",.~ ... : :".• iliere·;was under· study; bi.ltsome: · ·confusion: was ';created~ 'and . eriough.· bftistei1r '<statements . ~acne, in ,the Ch~r~",,' ,,: is a:a. . ~', It'" :itih~ ,work we': Ch~istiani' ~atholicS. violently opposed·ia..: . '\ :'cootainiiigJ'half~excuses a~nd;doiibie~talk'anci"'Who'ha:'s 'been : a.ffir~ation th!'t.ev.err,·.ge.nera- 'do'around :the"altar:thatgiv~';'. ~eh 's.~p., ~t, ~.~ now~the .~. -', c, , . .11' .. " 2 .COO"}'" 'd"'" .'.' t' "t'" ·t~· ... d" thO . 't't ....;.~. -. ,; .... 'ld' ">"1: : .. :.: .*ion. 1ft. the . C~!Jr~~~s. l~e. must· meaning <and. substance to '~~'aJl n,ounced ,poliCyc' ()~'rthe~ ar;chdH?-.": ,nJure ' .pro IOns eut.lon. woo no onger 'hav- I'ts teacher'';!'!. .·For·· th'e" ouro .. ', th" erwor. . " k' ·I·t··..IS th'" a.- "th-at':'Ca't' hOi' I' .• ' sch'oo'Is ' w' •••. ' .•.," ,,' es a' . ' , rna. . ~, . -en ....•a . '. e l'Ig'h't'"we.. '.' ",,,,,' . ,,'" ,:oc.us·on the' baSIC· facts. .. .... . > .' .Church'stask ill ·not.. only.. to· absorb. there from GOd-'s'Word be integrated no later. than inte',', . , ' ,.' Mr; Ford.prov.ides; the .. only c()urseof'~acti'on in ·such. preach the. Wo!d of' (}od; Itis·to,that prompts us to useoUr:!hea<ifl·!,gration·.iseffectiv~ly.carr-ied ~. :n8t~mces: "There is really only one thing' for top exeCutives'· . preach it ·to men,. ~ep., w~ are: and talents to"become.goOdh\ls,,:· , in the public.:schqo}s.·. : . ,; ." • d'· t··· h t'" . 'th' :Th t~' :to"f ···t·t·h·· I'-b' nd' .··creatures of.·thelr·tun.es,. who bands and wives ·good·farmers. ·.rhe.Ch~rle8ton_Cathobc:Jn~ ,'0.. 9 a suc.a, Ime as· IS.. .~ .~s ..o~gt: .... e .a l I~. a , ·have.a certain 'vocabulary, sp'e- doctors;':·mercnarits, ·medlari.lFs;·· said" Catholics' y.-ho· advocate, ,he explanatIOns and have the fortItud~·.---::the .plaln guts.~ cif~c interests, and concerns, carpenter~good' workers.' It·.is· "'racist ·.policies. hi NewOrleanc' ~~~!~Jld upan~ S~y: ·'Thists o.~r:f~ih.lry..:,,~~~re :cb,ag:ilJ"ed, .. pecul~.ar ways.?f thinking. The.: tpe.l,ove w~ .f~n~".t~ere:~l.tat p'u~~, 'hav~: <l.a_~aged.\~h~ 9~ur.c~'s~ r~p-:. :mdsorry, -It wIll"not happen agam.' .". .... " .... ; .... ~octrme. re~al?s t~e ,.sam~,. ?ut heart· and.' happlp.ess . mto, our .. ~tatIon. t~rough, .r:n.Il!mf?~mahOll . . ·":"T.h· .... .. 'd . I" ..: . 'Of • b '., 't' k ..• ~: It~ comm';lmc~tlOn, Its expressIOn work...It is "the. reverence 'Ye, or malI.ce.. , .ere~~!;l'pne. an ~~ 'yJme.way .o.r ,u~m~~8.? .~.~p l~ .. will ~dlffer~n~. .' . . . ' learn there·.for aU G,od's.gifts . . ~e8tOrell. T!'ue ~e. '." . They added:' :"We :e~te!1d _. ...~ll':tscl.e.ar ,.th~~ IS tQ .Il\SIst. th~t top management. m~mtalD ;;. ,So the LIturgy, our· gr~at that hiHpirus to respect'our toolll the highest-standards of integr.ity in all aspects of· busineStl. I teacher, must, adapt. itself;. must .. and raw ~materials'" and" -tech- ." congratulatory ,word to th~ .zea~": operatIons.'" , .. ' ...•.' . ,'c·.· . .-....... ~hange with... c~an,ging .times. 'niques as more than' sight alone . ~us<gr(:n~p of lay,fPen.in:that.ciJY. . . . W'th' . fM F d' ta d d nd't t '. 00' Catechispls which were useful in . 'acCountsror... ~"'.. '. :which ,has founde!i t~e .Catholic' : ..... 1 . men .0.. 1 r.· o~ s.s n ~r s a In en .-:- ·.a . one generation maybe 'less than ..... " CoUncil on Human Relations ... "here are.happIly many. mbig busInel'!,S -:-- the. Am~rIcaA:: adequate in.' another; As' in . 'TUESDAY- ....., S~. A~biLJiasius," . r.estore to' the' people of: our corporation is in good, hands. Peter's time, the Gospel, like its . Bishop;' Confessor,· Doctor.-The· country the true image of a gre~ '. And lesser executives should take example' from these' hearers; 'is always contemporary,. Epistle tell~ us ·that.· we carry;·,· 'l,\rchdiocel1e . ip the South .that. ~nd from no others. .; . ,. TOMORROW-St.' Paul of the the treasure of. Christian truth in ~ccepts an~ ca~ries.out the~a~.. r-. . .. Cross, C.Onfeslior.'- Again' Wis- ~ess~ls .of cl~y.and the G?spel <l.ateof theIr bIshop as. the dlr~~~-,keleton dom is equated with the pr~ach-- remInds us. aga~n of our. ~epend-'hon of one ~ho exerc~~, leglt1' . ing of the crucified and risen ence on Jesl;ls 10 the mlm~tr.y of. ~.ateapostolIc authorIty... . Many.warnings have come:from responsible and knowl-. Saviour, with the coming of the the ~ame.truth~ '\Ye:'do mlms~~r., T.he Charleston !?atholIc men edgeable men cautioning 'against scientific crash programs ~ingdom; in the Epistle and the truth, ~md. so :we· ar~ .~ols;: praIsed theorgam~ers o~,.t¥ :1.S part of a frantic effort to match Soviet technological Go·spelof. this Mass of a confes'- but we ar.~ mere .mmlster~, ~e~ Orl~ans councIl. for. th~~ '. ' , , ':' , sor. Our liturgy. celebrates i ?ever proprIetors. ahyays H~s ~h.d ~oy.alty to th.~ .Chur~h: and.': • t .".ch ievements. , ...- .. . . " .. ' _ . confessor of the Faith' not· be- Instruments. The message, the· ~helr strong cooperatIon Wltl) her. .Dr. Paul DeH. - Hurd ·of Stanford University' has calise he has adjusted:' not be~ good ne~s, ri~ver becomes ~urs;' ~eac.hings.1J .' " ::.ounded· StIch a ~'arning: ~'Th~ kind of science taught in cause'he is sunk deep in'the ruts It remams· HIS. The odoctors ()~.. _.~ISJ:10P ~aul, .J. Hallman . ~( maily or' our: schools 'and colleges today consists of massive Of the here and now, with no the Church are t~e ~es.t te?ch.ers Sharl~ston s~oke at t!te. men~•. ;., ~ I': . lloses.. o.f faCts, without ~. im.· owledg-e of th~ir development.· .. future and vision of a future: because they. 'have 'been .most c.ouncll. m~ehng on. the cha~-:, . We celebrate hiril:because he' is aware of, these facts and' most: lenges facmg Cath~~lc. ~en .~nd':with(;mtfeelingforthe intellectual methods that pulled different, because' 'he reveals in hU~blebeforeth~t'truth of. Hi. the' h/?me;. the ,community aM_ i'hese facts from nature,.'The mere skeleton :of. sCi.e~c~· it!. every word and act it purpose so . whIch th~y proclaIm. . . .. Yw! ·Church. ·)resented,... fact,S are divorced from anything. th~t'.might . :de~r as to stir ~ur.'imaginations.. . WEDNESDAY.~MaSs OIl • Congo' Unrest :Forcea' :)e.called the processes of science,steriIiz~d·of their beauty. .' SATURDAY-st. P~~er, Martyr. SlInclay.- The Church's public C' '1" • . f' S . . .";D<l'lett"d.angIing..withoutaplace.in the Scheme of things':", '~The language .of the martyr, worship, .heVliturgy;;i~; one"o{., . o~lng.o~: emln.ary.;: ;\. .'·Xt ',is easy ~9' mistake inform~tion for, education; to· the language of witne~sing with the ordinary.ways in which the' .: .~ABWll; (NC)-The }nter~: . . . . .. , .. . 'l'f . h . 1 . Spirit 01. Tr,uth,teaclies. The I ocesan .i:najor semina~:y staff~. . . ! . :·,ubs.titu.te. .oneprodtices . .one s ,ImtellIglble, e, ~ey~r c~nges~ ~s a -. C'. hrl'stl'an c"o'm~'m'. u·'n'('I't'y""I's "a't···M·· a;;~' rby 'thoe· .Immaculate . Heart. 01... ' '• . '.fact-giving . ' . for"fact,-getling; ".. ' '.: ' .T:he" , . '. "ways communicates .. stude~ts :wIth .r~tentIv.e me.mor:Ies .g~ar~(L:to.re,~POP9: ,~l~h '. e'ven' tonien ih.capable·of hearing' as: a learning as ·\~ell·as' a . wOl'- ~ary: ..~athers: here..ha~· ~~. '" · ";)st; answers. to - set q uestionso;' The. other:·trains :men" and· '.' :ttie spoken word: These are the shipping community: Nat·· only:" £Jo~d.becau~ of. pO~ltac~l unrMit ... womeJ).: to ~hink, tQgath~r data,' .to aJi~ly~ a~d. synthesize;·.boidem spokesmen of.~aster. . do ~he scripture readings tea~h,. _.~ ~a~i proy~nce.. '. -.- .' . ....... :to th'eir min:(urto arrive at trutli/"'.<'··"·;· .." ';;". ;''':{'':·<~F(jUB.TH 'SUNDAYi AFTEIl . but 'th~ ~salm.s ~re .pra~~~~;..t~. ' _Inntrroellce·.ed~~bplyopnr·tohcSom;Km~uni;I'sPta~.:t! . : . '. ..... '. '. . '. . c • .' '. '. '. ~ . " "'; ; ": .. ' . . " , '.. '..' ; . gestures, colors, and other mate- ..~.,' "" '_. In ,any'"scholastIc program. -- In· thehumamtIea .a~d~')Jl :..~·M'T.EB..~W.e,<::;hlJstlan.tl.s1M to rial ·thing,'emploY-ed· aBwell. . mumbists. and.. partlT:bY. 'the ge-' . ..the;sCiences.:.:-:- t~e student ~ust .J?e taught 00 think, ·must.the r,.4?rd thenewso~g,~~q~ar!s '.' If '(~h~i~iari 'perc~ \ion~ol' the .' ~e.flsioilist·Minin~,Stli~, ~as>~ . '.~~ ·~~:!,l9.t#eA~ .ti.l,e.,.field,. must", ~now. meth~d~. .w.el)' .'.a.j" -: 6~~:::c:i~~a~;l'enhO:ri~~;~~:: '.::.' e811~~t.ials: ··.of Fait~,~s'~n~t"uni~ ' l::cr~r~~~a:a~~~n:~~::; . .. .aIWlWer!'l,~the."·hqw".ofthe.subject·a8' well as' the "W:hat.'~:~· .: 'far-off' God,.. s9~"fli-.tcause, for,R!!-y ~~en!Ah.~: a_IJ!i""e.f, n:m~,.~, tieate~" : and' . Sisterl:'mole~ ',.:.- . " ", And.,there must .be ·an over-all structure of'philosop.hy; .' 'some~Cr.eator.. b\it:b¢cau~ ..~~:~.Ug~t )r,t<tb~l~:·J,J.o~~r;h?:Lo{1.~c~!:V;-: ; !DUring':MaFch~·,sev~n. missiOlail i ... . ' , " . "'1 .. ' . . 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HOUST0N (NC}'·~..;.:>lfive" ,.;; ", ,'. '".' .... :"' •..•. '·By'Mar~QI,l:·.;Unsworth..., , · · .' .. ,",; . War Centennial thoU'Stmd·ltons·of-'U.S~;,whea;t·i'1i:J) The.Qpep!Dg.:9f,~~~~:~ewHoly~~a,rtie. schoo~;',E;~ll;~iver,l~st Septe~ber, tnar~ed the At G t' . ..:'.:' bound'for'fa:rnine-threatenW 'ii;:~atest m!lest<me!l.l~~,:?8.y'~~r~ld .b~~t?ry :of H!o!y."Narn~ parIsh; The:school, WhICh now .- " eorge own. '",..:. . ·l"f··t h' - "'''''ard ·th· (,.;.mcludes ,fow:' grades, ~:r$ 'expected .t<t .ad<!--;".a'new ·grad.e; each year,. :and 'is 'situated on' . WASHINGTON (NC) "-';," M orV\;co e ere auv e 'D d Stre~~,,J,Jle 4-'.,.,];; .•.• 'I' . 1 . . : ' ....< .•• 1<" t: . . . 'G to U' 't h 5S Alct>a·:Plailter '.. : -;,->', ,,,,..ea o,ngma 1¥J.r1S.lL191lerlf~I~t1f~'h~w'Holy' Name Church;' which·.waseatab--·, .. eorge wn mverSl y ere' Th~lshipment w~s the·first of,·,~lished as"a·.pa.;nsh,in.·~Un:(~'~::'I"";;'-'~':~'" .r ' - < · · , ',," ... ., : '·will hold' a Civil War 'cen-a . 80,000 tons of Wheat' which' wiU',,:,t1923, were"""from Saefed," " ; ,'. " ......~ " tennial ob~ervance' on Sat- " .,e.

be sent to: Morocco in the. next Heart and St. Joseph's .par~ . ~ . , ~.••: '< ·urday; May 6 to honor its 1,161 , 90 da~s in an effort to .stave· off .... h Th" :. '. to-p·l' ~." '" .alumni and students who went starvation in that drought-ridden .IS es. . e; s.aJll~~e~.:,:··. ~:.8: ".' , into"the Union and Confederate ClOuntry ~ . . , ' '. for the fl1'~,,!;~~~b weJ;e :f~~~' ' f o r c e s during the cOnflict. . CooperaUng in the project are Jated and"~ ~$t M;tss, ,.ce.le- . 'f' . Also honored· will be the old the Moroccan government,. the ,. prated by ~e.,~irst.p~r.!.:ReV':':'" 69th Regiment of New York City 11. S. Operations Missionia ,.peorge B.':l\IIa.cN~.~\ By. 1925. '. 'i. which was billeted at George... . Rabat, Morocco,. the U.S. De... the. ~hurch w~' compl~OO,d.,and. . town from May 4 to 24, 1861. The' partment of Agriculture, the In... offiCially dedic~te~ .~J::- '~t.!lh~P,;'< " "Fighting 69th" is now the 165tb ternational Cooperation AdmiD- . ~eehan. :"',:. '. , : ' '. ~.. ':',' ".. ~ . h.., Infantry. Its officers will attend istraUon . and Catholic . Relief ' .. Father McNamee then' ~!1";'the observance. Servic;es ."'7' 'Nationai: ¢.ath()~ic:. '~rned himse.Jt;~~tb.the: gr.ow-.~" .G~c;ll:geto.w~,.tbe nation's old"!',. Welfllr~ CoDierence, .. tb,~.. ,".S. "... ,.,9~ the paf~h,,:anc;l~~ortlY'~'o,te:;::.: .- est Catholic college, foun~e~ ia. Cathohc overseas relief .age.Dc).'"..,".. Jps death :~f!,"~~!J-,.lle p,urch~sed,.. .. 1789, had 1,500 graduates and The wh~at will be dist:ribut~,d a plot of la~ct~;n:~anovE!~~ttet;.t, . students' of military age when in Morocco by Entr'Aide Na- two block.s~a.~Y· from.:J~e:or:17.· . the confiict·,between the states, tiona]e; Rabat,· Moroccan cotin-,;l ginal church,:. wh!ch included, a.,. . ,'" . began, Of those who s.erved, 210 terpart"agency of Catholfc Relief" large private. :·.residertce.::. t9, . ,be. '-' " . . ' wore the Blue imd 951 the Gray~ . Servi~e·s.· • "" used as a· reciory•. Fat,h¢-r: 'l\ifc-,; . " T h e university's ~olor;, Blue and . Two-Month Drought .'" Namee was,as,siSted, in.¥S .wor~ ,'. ' Gray; were 'adopted in 1866 to It will go 'to some one ~illion' . by Rev. W.i!li~:H. Do!a.n, 1~23- .':": honor their service. persons inMoroccan areas baked' . 1934; Rev.. George E. Slil1iva~' . The· First Virginia .Regiment by a two-month drought which' "1928-1933; Rev. Edward B. Booth, .,,1. of 100 years ago, now the 176th it is feared may destroy up ·to'80 1930-1941; Rev. George A. Le~i~ ·Y. Infantry, and the Fifth Virginia" per c~nt of. the crops. .:' 1934-1941; and Rev. Willia~ D. now the !l6th Infantry, which The current drought is'con'sid,,, ·Thomson, 1,938-:1939. . had many: Georgetownvolunered the worst in Morocco' since ' " Sec~nd Pastor teers, also will be represe~ted at 1944-'45, when the .country '·was"··'·',,· the observa.nce.. ' .. stricK~n'bY'fiinine imd('aAriihus "'. R~y. oJames·"A.. ,Coyle bet:ame ~ Sen.'Philipilart Mj'~higari epidemic. .. ..., :" ".. ' 'I! ~e seco!1d p'al!~r aJ .Ho.l)' ;t"iame. \v h'o' ;'wa's' gradliatecl' froni·· Th'e"'firs("S;OOO-ton"'shiprrtent' ,.'.Church,. followmg the death' of , . Georgetqwn .in- '-1934, will' .give ,. of wHe'at . conSiSted .'of .'j 40' car~;" ~athtlr:, MQ~.aU1e~;:,. He.. cQJ1lplet,ed." . : . the: . centennial observance ad..,' loads:-lwifu"an: 'approxiriiatc{v~lue" work" on. th~' ..l"e<;tor)\;.. a!l~ .by cf • .-'dre~.. 'He'jvijl .speak '~"'om the, . of $:f.:I8·038~' ! , ' " '-, .. tl, . . , . ; , ~940, plans had been ~9mpleted, porch'ot Old North, built in 1791' , A 'Ahipsfde '··ceremOnY·: (Iu'ring' ,.and;h~ cor~e.~s~ne::;la~9 f.% t~e., ~ ,<. 'Where 'George'Washirigton and: ' <.:o--'dIng · -.. 0'f' th' l!. VA'''' Hanover, Street.. t' G eorgee wneat was"...... Qew .,church c·· . .'.' '......on " .<,.... ,. ..... .", .' .' '" . • ". . . Ge n. Laf. aye'tt·e spo k eo" th e l va held t'ie' daY.. bel.'ore th~s~lpme.i1't'·r'/,l'he !~fm.:9q~1.~mr.?-~. a~t ,W ~l!>:,.. hi': '~own:s~l1dents..F".the.r Edwa.. rd. B~ .' .ailett: 'On hand were represen,-" c.ons~~cte~,the,:be!1)JtIf~ . c.,h1,l!!l..~ . hJ,::.' "Bunn, .s.J. t univers~ty [?t:esiqent?" n tatives"Of.'th'e us government'. , 4 d, ~~,\he pr~.l!~ntpa~toJ::.:Pfl?Ufil, '" also WIll speak' . d Ci'th Ii "R' I: f···S··.::I:'-·, . . , ,·.If relates, ":r,hey,consid~r i~.the ., '. ',' ," an . a 0 c e Ie ervlc.~~; 1I~-.'.· b t"" "loni' l' ciit~rChtheY'lia~e'. .. ," .·Ba· c· 'ks A' ppe'a I eludlDg Msgr. John F; Mc;Carthy';" e~ .~9, ",a,.·c"r.,.,:. . ..... '''''[1 ',' . Qssistallt ei'tecutive "'ditedor' of" bUIlt..,It w~s ~pw,.pl~~d,m 1941. .I • WASHINGTOl'/' (NC)- Rep~ CRS-NCW-C, New York, and' 'Father Coyle· continue~ .~s William M. McCulloch of Ohio Msgr. John Roach, director of pastor. at Holy, ~ame. until ~IS placed before the House of Rep.. Catholic Charities in 'the Gal-' death In 1955. HIS assistants 10resentatives a parish group's ap": veston-Houston, Tex.; diocese. .' cluded. Rev.. Thomas F. DaleYr peal for creation of a Federal 1939-1944; Rev. Arthur W. Tancommission oD. the obscenity '5'.·5' sey,. 1941-1944; .Rev... John J. HOLY NAME CHURCH, FALL RIVER problem. Tl).e peti~ion in favor of Murphy, 1943",1948; -Rev. Thomas. . '.' the commission came from the F. Walsh, 1944-1951;. Rev. James approximately 2800 people, there Rosary' and Womeri's~auilds and' Rosary Altar Society of St.. A. McCarthy, 1~48-1960; Rev. are an active H~ly Nam~ Society; , St. Vincent·de Paul Society. Patrick's church, Anna, Ohio. . MIDDLEBURG (NC) - Pres- Humberto S. Medeiros, 1950-51; fdent. Kennedy learned at Mass and Rev. Donald A. Couza, who I• •' here ·that his presence as a week... '" "anived· in 1951"'and is still curate· end 1'0sident'had brought"about·',o at the parish'; :.'...;. .-. ,. the quiet i~~egrati~n' of: t~r~ .... Although "S8 'y'e'ars old,'Holy 'Planning 0 .... Buildirig restaurants ". In this .. Virginia . Name has had"orliy' three pastors 'town.. , . " t h e third, Rev; Williain H.' Har~ Fa.ther Albert F. Perell'a, the" rington, being "named' in 1955. Plan . 'the' Ask " PreSIdent's pastor here;" broke:.. 'Each' pastot;'also,: seems to have' the ne~s at a· Ma~s attended by, , completed one large. project, in the ChIef Executn~e and Mrs:'" "addition to hisre'gular parisb K~n.nedY. He ~~bhclythanked;'·'duties. For Fat~erHarrington,it mlnll~ters, offICials; drugstore'·· was Uie new' school 'which was owners, and resta~ran.t propr!e-:' .. started in 1959, '~'gain witb tors f~ cooperatIOn In ·the- 10-, " Maginnis, ·WalSh'. a,nd Kennedy'" :." .: . tegratlon.· .: as contJ.:actdr~, and opened' in He· ask~d .th~ prayers of the·, 'September of 1960. ' .. ClOngregation "m a .program of· .' .... more, communication of more., Holy Union Sisters sharing, of more g~anting of . Staffed by.. the' Sisters of the . rights to the Negroes of our Holy Union of the ~acred Hearts, community and country so they the school is located at the site may .. become, b,'uly first-class of .the Ol:iginal church, From eitizens." 1941, when the second churcb Three W,eeks .was built, the bU~~ding had been Faflier Per(!ira d'isClosed ·'that···! used ,as a· kindergarten and pr.e-. ;.. :,"" he had worked quietly fOr three '" 'primary, and:~or.socialactivities '. week6 in bringing abOut·the in:. of the parisb. 1n,..1959,. it "was: ....".: . ':' . " . "",' tegrati'On of" restaurants 'and"';' torn down. to ;~ake wal'>for_the lunch',' counters:' Asked' if . the' . )school... , ,..: ..,-: ,". ,: :,t··· 5,'. :..• , ...• '':'1.'',. ~':,~.I:·.·· "'... .....: ....,; .. , .. President had. been ·told·:abOu·t'l ., Father' Harrington's"assistants '.: " ..:> ... : .. ,.>. the negot,iations;: the'p'riest: said:· W • include Father..:Couza..,/and·Rev. -.'" ".. ";", "I wOlJldn't,have -dared ·tel1"him'~:' ·'.'l'ohn ~".Moore;who came to'·the"·: .. ,.;. anytMng·'abolit·it:"·.. :, ,~, ... ··,·:· ..."parish in '1960.. In the::-par.ish·of' " '. . .. ';"',' 1., ',. '-", It"was disclosed that"h:id:·the:I·" . , . . . . . . . . . ..... ' .., Of." ;.,': I!lervice been"refused,to N~gpoes"PI~n. . -, . , '. .\ plans had been· made'fo.:. plcket-··, ;. .'. . . . .. ' ""C' U'" ,. .:; I . :'" ~ , '" J. tng, ,e.ven at the church attended,COhferenceat . • • ,. . . '., .; ,I,' ;",'; "'" by the·President. . " : WASHmaTON' (NC,)·'.:....:

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Make Smaifl R~oins' Loo[(':B'i'gger By Wise Use of Space, -Ligh~'

Three girls from the Diocese will'be guests at a C;ollege weellend to be sponsored .this Frida~ Saturday and Sunday by fres.n:. men at Salve Regina Colle~ Newport. . . Diane Bienia, filil'haven and Barbara. .Arruda and Louise Boulay; 'Fall River, will atten4 activities beginnning with ~ motion picture Friday night, a sports progranl Saturday n1or~ ing and a lawn party and jazz concert in the afternoon. Highlighting the weekend win be a formal dance Saturday night, followed ori Sunday by Mass and a Communion break,.. fast at which' Rev. John F.. Hogan, Catholic Charities director for New Bedford, will speak. Closing the agenda will be an: afternoon concert.

By Alice' Bough' Cahill, . , . . When guests arrive do you' feel cramped, 'do you wish you could put out the walls, or have JU9ior 'hang :from the 'ceiling in order to make space for just one more? You want ·to make your rooms :loo~ larg~r and aetually "live larger" and the' first thing that wm meaningless knickknacks; . 8'l'e help you do this is - our old your walls covered with many friend color. This is what' We small pictures hung haphazard. mean----"a space-making color ly? .The answer to these queries scheme uses closely related col- ·ors. Don't linger in admiration . of eye-catching materials with iarge designs. Such patterns can m a k a room look bUsY and crowded. · Strong' color crontrasts a Iso chop up wall and floor area. · Probably you ace' .not in the market for new , drapes or slip covers or rugs, but want to make space with

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Convict Record Dealer '. On Obscenity Charge

By using a hanging lamp, for instance; yo~ .can leave your M SeN GH D" Gl Cl table top clear. :By replacing U I· I T: lscusslng the ..ee ub program many small pic:tures ~ith one the Sac!ed Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, held at New large picture, hung' in. relation Bedford High School, are, left'to right, Glee Club Director to the furniture, you'l[ ha¥e Michel Labens, Chair.man Mrs. Joseph Cataldo, Jr.. and more open wall · a r e a s . · · One famil¥ WIbo did a remarl;.. H~ad US,her Mrs. Frank Rogers. .

. NEWARK (NC) -A Newark record dealer has been convicted of offering for sale pornographic recordings. . The dealer was fined $100 bF Chief Magistrate Nicholas Ca~

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what you have, or with .few able job in creating more space purchases. Sometimes. you ca·n in a sman room resorted to dye slip covers and d1'8pes to grouping their furniture at rig.ht " match or .exchange' rugs;, re· angles; that is'to say, they-.took placing a. design; 'rug 'w~th a advantage of space out in the WASHINGTON' (NC)-An ap- -tivities near major military in. ,plain rug from another room. room, even to Hie. placement 01. peal for young women 'qualified stallations in this country and Turn on Lights their spivetpiano.' . . " for USO work overseas was maintains a' staff in USO units Go into your room and tum: Tohey placed two easy. cham made here by ThomasD. Hinton, around' the world, including· ,:, . eft . all. tl).e lights. 'Y<lu'li ~ sur~ .at right angles to, the· fireplace. executive director of' the Na. Tokyo; 'Rome, Manila, Guam; pr,i~ci ,~t what;!oli m_ay fin1: if.' The ,spinet. piano fits .back-to. tional Catholic Community Serv.. Okinawa, IStanl?ul, Casablan~ai Naples,Paris and Athens. .,' )'(lu' appraise' your.. lightmg. back with. one' Of.' the chairs.. ice, a USO member agency. Have, you. dark corners .th~t a:re, '. They added· another' attractive,' Mr, Hinton' 'Said the' need is : "A USo assignment 6v~Seai young woman' a speCiai .aot u~d, are there. som.e , ~i~ touch--:they cov~red the pack 01. for young women aged'. 25 to 30·' gives '. the' family. nev;er, u¥s. !?~au~ . the piano ,with pi~ sh\l'tters. ·.r with college· degrees and some.' oportunity· for a rich and· reChey'are'riot comfortable r,eading . Gf cour~e, if you 'are g~ing.out 'exp-erieI;l<;e ingro.up work aetiv. rwarding ,personal service to ,ipots, d<i some l~mps ac:cep~~~ to buy new furniture, we repeat ities and .. volun~i' 'recruiting . chuic~ and country ,n. he added. '.,. tiM! ta}l draperies ~n~ cellin~!. -you can' give a small' room a '. and organization. . . Mr. Hiriton said' young women . , : . Proper lighttng.. ~s.~.. sp·~,. -larger 10okif."You·buy.furniture:,· They are 'needed·..for· profes...· interested·,ia employment -withI'. '. .:", I ~ak~r .. ,'1'Ihe ~ew~.r: .1~m~ . ta~e, in scale with tberoom. }rhe·.ad" . , &ional staff· assignments .in US0 the NCCS should eontact·-the,· '.. ' 1ittlePOOpl.._espe<;!.al~y t~o~ ~~. vantage is -that Smaller;;'scaled ,.' ~lubs ovel'seas;.the.NCCS official ',agency's national headquarters . t1ttach. to a w~n. Y~u~!l. ~~ furniture will let. you uSe mOl'e . '. s a i d . . at 1312 Massachusetts Avenue, · inexpensive lights on. pulleys pieces Hi ar~x)J~;,Y~UCll'R get ., The agenelr ,~uets uS<> . . ' N.. W:, Washington 5, D. C. . iliat adjust to the person u~ng . more seatil'lg ~paee',. floor space, ~~ Mtl · Mtl w ~ Mtl""'~""~Mtl ~~ .them, - or' there.··~· lamPs and, lin~ fre~' t~~ffic·~a.,~:,ij'~;,~~~Y.r;,.. tables' in one unit.' . :: a fact, a roomy' love seat. does '. There are' novel ways ,01. :in-'. the job 'of a' sofa. Al~a:Yfl lW~ Btalling ceiling.' lights~:iB ~kier.:· :bulky; oVersiZe. pieCe&:" . .

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the room; Use of bUi1lt-in'valll~' "Attlebor-o ~~hting wili also bri~t~ ~ . Spo'ns~' ConteSt,.' ) eorners. . ' : Perhaps the'ne~ h~lpin in~- " The Cath~~~ Wo~n's Club 0« '. _g space' in a' small room is 110' :Attleboro has announced the: Consider furniture arrangemeftt. : annual 300 word es~YConte.9t:. Of cb~se 'fu,rniture' should be . for stude~ts of ~ges}2 ~o 1~.~1~,.;·. ~aled 'to the size of the .r~om, have ~s 1ts tOPIC,. ~liat IS t~e .... but' families 'often find them- Mass? A $25 ·Savmgs .Bond wili eelves with furniture from other be awarded to the wrIte,:,of ,the bouses and other times and'these best ·essay. All essays must be pieces'must be used..' submitted to Mrs., Mil?rooKelly? . -' . ,. . .,. ~ .. , .' ." Hope Street, Attleboro, by'May 6. : All,.. thIS 16 not hope1ea, ~. , .. ..tho .' . t the'''''' ~nsider the ari1angement. Do. In addIbon to. IS proJec , . You have to weave and dOdge '€l~b also offers a -$,100 scholaIil- . around pieces of furniture to ShIP to a· worthy ~dent wbe get from the room to answer the .pla~s .~ attend a Cath.o~ic schooL doorbell, or get· to tIM· dining A~sIstmg Mrs. Kelly OR the .com~m? The best plan' is to keep mittee. are: ~r~.. ·Mary, RICkel:,' Gil much "furnitUre a's' poilsibi'eflat· Mrs..Marie Fouca~lt, ~rs: Lena r . to the wall, adherinl:( to the.pl'in- Mushll~, ,Mis~ Kath~n Stokes., Clple "don't bloCk traffic: lanes.It - and :MlSS Elsie Mcl)oRalcL . . .' Suppose YO\1 feel you bavell't·

tellano. Police said he sold re. cordings· of obscene Florida nightclub performances. . In'i:'renton, N. i" Assembl1'woman Mildred Barry Hugh~ announced that a joint legislative committee investigating obsceni.tyand 'state laws dealing wi~ the problem 'would be ready to make' its, recommendations late!' th~s year. . ' ~ . . ' , , . . Dames Patronesses' ': Dames' Patronesses of. Sac~. Heart 'Home, , New Bedford, wn. ·hOld tbeir annual meeting' at i:30, Sunday afternoon,' April 3Q, ,The program will include Bene-. dlCtion,"a-business' me~ting and a social hour.. ,Next·· executive ' board meeting is set for Mon~' May 15.

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ReligioUs Articles

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Bishop Confirms G~~.., .... in Hospital. R~m' , ' . . PITTSBURGH (NC) -Nine., ear-old Erma' Horgan'. saw: a.very .depressing day turn into. one of great joy. ' .:.., '.: ...:.- : · Hospitalized' since' .la8t:'Sepo' .tember ':with polio, the ,g~l 'wa~ : "facing the disappointment,.~not _ :being .aBle' to-re-ciifve ~ th~ ·Sacra.l . PIent of Confirmatiop ~it~ .h~ Class at Most Holy Name Church; , · But sadness became ,excite.. ment, when, after confirming the class at the church, 'Bishop' John J. Wright of Pittsburgh traveled to Children's Hospital and con· firmed Erma there, together with her brother John, 10, not a pa'tient but happy to ·shar-e his siSter's triumph,

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"i~sid~h •. therichest~ most luscioUsiCe,cleam th~ ev.erme1ted iJ:\your mQuth,~ me texture 'is' 'so'.$mootb; . the~ft~vor"So'''h6hest:;tO~gOOdrie'ss, youk~~ thi~ is the In.ost tempting. Hood. lee Cream~you'ever tasted· And now ·HOOd .I~~ Cream comes to you in. the 'new .Temptation .Package. 'SuccUmb, to ·temptation· today .-+.'it's YOU1!S in pints and half-gallou of Hood' Ice 'Cream! ' . ' ,. .

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But· Priesthood' Comes First ,By' MJlry Tinley Daly . It was at one; of. Washington's swank parties. A be-orchided dowager raised her glass toward the husky priest, with his straight, unparted, brushed-back hair: "Here's to Father Hartke, :who could have been the great impresario of the American . . is yours. You have a child with theater!" One of the thea- a speech difficulty? There is 1ler's VIP's added, "Father, help, A national newscaster seeks with your knack for finding aid in improving his delivery. and developing talent, you could Father knows what to do. have made a fortune." Perhaps this is the secret of Father Gilbert this amazing priest, an interest in people-all kinds of people, V . Hartke, 0 .P., the eternal dr.ama of life. tops in the theatrical w 0 rid, His phenomenal memory for :has no such amnames and faces is a constant bitions, thol,lgh puzzlement and he is approached their realization by friends wherever he goes. As might well have a wager, when traveling far from been his. Long home with a priest friend, his ago, as a child companion bet a dinner that here Q c tor in his was one place Father Hartke native Chicago, would be unknown. he decided to . Father Robert Mohan bought become a priest. the dinner ... This is his r e a l . Full Schedule llfe. ShorUy, in the National ·Teaching, directing, adminisShrine of the Immaculate Con- tering the multitude of detail caption, Washington, Father concerned with his famous school Hartke, wearing the cowled and touring cOlIlPanies, serving white robe of the Dominican, as adviser on matters artistic and will say a Mass celebating the. theatrical, Father has a schedule 25th anniversary of his ordina- that would stymie anyone less sturdy and dedicated. The spirit t1~;emarkable,u,he "commented '. of the priest is everuppermollt. . The combination of a theat~ to this reporter, "that I was or- . ricaland a' commimlty ~ife, se~m~ dainedat the age of five." .. ' . ,lngly . at odds; Father II!ariages Religion,' 'education, the the- w'I'th ·ease. A late . ·"ehearsal, a n ' .,. 1 k'" h" ' at all: MatFOR HARTFORD GATHEDRAL: ·The·· argest ce.ramic w.or. m. th.e .'. IS. t.Ol"V mer, sport8-'-'-i n' th a·' t ord er-h ave early'Mass-nri trick ." of a.rt been the dominant factors' in . t~r of' :i:lict, h!'l: J,'ath~i' ~rijOYS, the' has been completed iriRome arid will be pI~ed inthe.··Cathedral of St. Jos.eph in HartFather Hartke's life. .,;; extremelY.' fun',scheC:hl1~, 'pne that ford, Comi;r.rh~,ceratnic, right~' th~ work of:mn#> As'senza, portrays' Christ in majesty As founder and director of make's his staff' at,' tl\e university .. with. the 'aMc~lypse 1.n .the .1»l.ckground. It- covers. more .than 3;00.0 square. feet and eatholic University's renowned \ . hove~." ov'e'r'th"e; p'a'n"'I'C" .b·,·'tto·n.·. ' ,: ", . 8ch00 I·0fSpeec h andD ~ .. ·weighs 40,000 pounds.: At ,left,,, sculptor Assenza works on one ofthe.th,ree.brQnze.. doors. '" . ram a a,nd " '. Abruptly, d,uting.a co'riferEin,ce, . ,. of its famous: Players, :Incorpor,\, . Fathe'i.' will snuff o~t hisfat.cigarto be in~t~ned..·' in" the H!1rtford cathedra1.- NCPhoto; '" ' ated, . Father... Hartk.e works ~ cigarette with "the ~solu- .> .", . . ~~!ti~her df~r 'ft~me .. nO~t' fog..rtU"ed; ·tton:~lNomoiesmokiI1g' until' . -- ng, ll'ec mg,. wn 11) ,. an. '. St. Thomas Da';" j'u'litil my '" full understanding of dramatic " birthday" or "for Lent." Father ~HICAGO(N¢ )....:.T-e~ch~r are teaching in their native lan- school, which has an enrollment arts, Father believes, come to ith· is forever giving up smoking. aides are' doing a fine job ia guage. In primary grades, aides' of 700 boys and girls, ,is served. Cbeir ·fullest development w In One thing he never., gives up, Chicago's _Catholic; schools, ac- meet witn groups of four or 'five by 15 teachers and 61 teacher Cbe framework of the liberal though, is the daily recitation of cording to a survey by the arch- youngsters for reading 01' arith-. aides. Better Job metic pl'actic~. . ~hiS Ct1 office, surrounded the ros8l'Y. At three o'clock each diocesan school board. . afternoon he' is on campus,. The survey disclosed that 164 Christ uW King grade school Sister Mary Suzanne, the prinwith autographed pictures of Father Hartke can be found on schools have aides and the typi.. WlUI one of the first schools 111 cipal, said ~acher aides' free 6.e 'theater's great, Father JIlartke leans back in his. s.wivel his knees saying the .rosary be- cal aide is a. mother. who con- Illlnpis to develop' an extensive full-time teachers of man,. teacher aide program. The chores, enabling them to do • t1hair, drinks coffee from a pint- fore a statue of the Blessed tril,>utes a .. half-day's work to • lized cup and talks 'in his ~sy Mother in the covered courtyard school. better job of preparing for theif." Her work ranges aU··.the way School From.popes. De!axed manner: . of the drama department. Stu«la~s;., ' .. , .' .. First thi~you kJ;low.. y~ N'e dents" facuI~, staff, any'bo~Y from' :typing letters to ,actual Dedicatecl A side benefit of the aide pro-· _tung him your problem8t :';' .who cares to IS welcome to. JOIB, teachlng,.-usually· i~ sOme "engram, spe stated, is. that parents, . 'in the responses. . richnient" course. that 'could 'not , NIMES (NC)-~ school built "show more interest 'in the school. '.' MaD¥-Sided Priest It is the same thing during the . be offered without hei" ·help. The With ,the aid Qffu~dsgiv,en·by,. and ~Yiderice' a oo'tter under-' In the course of a day,' Father Summer when Players, Inc. put most common duti~s performed two pop~s was ded~cated in n.~ar- .standing .of· what the school is llartke may be in serious con- on their excellent performances 'by aides, .the survey revealed, by R9cord-du-Gard. .' doing'.. Teacher .aides also seeDi.. ...lta~ion with, thlil State 'Depart.. .in· Olney, Md. Every'night b'efore are secretarial and'clericai .work IoitiaUvefor the school for th~ to understand their own childrea ment,: with one of the many com- curtain time, Father Hartke' .or lunchroom' and . playgr6und village of 700 people came from bettel; llfter working with other .ittees on the arts of .which~· leads. the rosary.' . , ~upervision. . a little .girl who wro~ Pope . chfldren, she"added. . ill a !)lember, with an upcoming Now Father Gilbert Hartke is Pius XU asking him to erect a . "I don't think we'll ever wa• . College, Grads' , . "amlttic production.. ~everthe- about to mark his 25th year At least a' fourth .of .tii~ aides SchoOl there.. Pope Pius and later, to give uP. the. ;lides," she. con,.., .. less,: to the individual he is the road as "a priest forever." .'.' are college; gra9ua~.. Fifteen l!0pe"J'oba :~I!I. ~.fW1~ e1uded."~ 'never drea~' II ~aY's available, his attenti()ll Curtain time for Act U.· ' . .' . ~ould work 'o.ut S() ~ell." are former teliche1'8 and several a¥'ail.ab~. ' . i '. '~ .". are registered nur~s. -Aides who conduct 'foreign language classea

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NCCW Head"Urges Women to More Time to Parish Works

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The Frie~dly' Store That Saves' You More!

SCRANTON (NCC)-eathoiic' welfare of others. women were urged to devote Stressing responsibilities ol 1Il0re time to parish activities bTCatholic women in the communMrs. Arthur L. Zepf, president ity, Mrs. Zepf said they must of the National Council of Cath- ,provide services' to'God'-and ," . REYNOlD,S;.OiWALT, olic Women. .' ' . 'o.,; ·.. :neighbi>rpecau~····~en·y,ou 'i,-. I , ., _ '. ,: '.":, ' "More time and energy ~ust, 'nore the; problemS of the., com- ; ".' Wittiam&: secOnd Sts•. en to pari$ work because , 'D\llDity it depri~es',the commun_· . u..:...... ~'./. W"f ;.~ -34' t.e Gtis IS the root of the NCCW.,"'· it>' of a great deal." __ - - - . : I _ ... M~. Zepf told the Scrant~n The NCCW:..pre~li<lent'declared. Diocesan Coun~l of Cathohe hard' knocka ~,life 16se s6ni~'~" t. ':',..'~'. . .' .~~~"",,""",!,,---"-'oO!":'-.. Wome.n convention here. th ir pun Ii'""-"",,,.' .. ".' , ". :""t ; . ~..: ,r . . ' ,.' SI 'd Am . e C~W,'I""P.,peoP!"'.' ry,;"l" . ' , . .... ~:: .' .

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Chicago Catholics Build Projects

projects.

Style Show

Otl BURNERS·

CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago Archdiocese completed or developed 78 new building projects In the past year, according to a report by Albert Cardinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chicago. Among the structures erected last year by Chicago's Catholics were 28 grade schools and two bigh schools. Other projects eonsist of 14 churches, 9 rectories, 11 COllvents, 7 hospital additions and" 7 misceilaIie(hllil'

Alumnae .of· Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, will sponsor a style show at 7:30 tonight at Venus de Milo restaurant. Proceeds will benefit the academy building fund. Mrs. Mary Burke Nadeau and Mrs. Gertrude Ready O'Brien are co-chaif'men.

Also 'complete BOUer~Buroer

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Stanley·Oil,Co.".I.. c.. oIlMt: Mt. 'Pleasaat Street New Bedft>rd • ',; WY 3-288'7

COME IN '- SEE - and DRIVE

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"T:HE '61 FORDS"

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Cap New Bedfordite;· . Anne E. Curry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Curry.. New Bedford, was among student nurses capped at St. Vincent's Hospital, Worcester, this anonth. She is the only student in her class ir~mthe Fall R!v« Diocese.

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Tel. OS 7-9663 .99 Rodman St., Near Second St. Fall River at Cathedral Square

formerty Motor Sales Company FORD DEALERS FOR OVE.R 38 YEA,RS

New BedfOrd, Mass.

1'344-86 Purchase'St. • '0.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese 1961 . . ,of F0t4 River-Jhul"$.,Ap~",27, .-.. . -., .... ",

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GIRLS' CAMP OPEN HOUSE: Shown at the Open House Sunday of . Our Lady of the Lake Day Camp for Girls in East Freetown are: left photo, Mr. and Mrs. Thaddeus Stasiowski of Fall River talking with Director Rev. William J. McMahon; center photo,'Miss Mary Halloran,. R.N., of New Bedford enjoying refreshments with her~niece, Barbara Halloran of Nor-

Cardina;'s Lawye,rr'Suggests Leave Issue to Courts WASHINGTON (NC) - Congress 'can aid, church schools if it wishes and leave constitutional questions up to the Supreme Court, a' lawyer' said on behalf of Francis Cardinal Spellman. New York attorney Lawrence X. Cusack declared that the constitu, social injustice, unequal treattionality of Federal aid to ment and discrimination." church schools is a "wide "All our children are Amergray area." "The Congress is icans," he said. "The parents of

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wood'; right photo, discussin'g movies of last 'year's' activities are, left to right, Karen Sullivan of Fall River, Suzanne Glenn of New Bedford, Christine Barros of Taunton, and Head Counsellor Miss Rosemary Moore of New Bedford. Parents and prospective campers had the opportunity w.' examining camp facilities~ '

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Students R_~~uest c.f forrmecr Teac~e[l"~

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MIAMI (NC)-American nuns who formerly. taught in Havana's Catholic 'schools are receiving urgent pleas for prayers from their former students. Typical of the hundreds of

peace of mind and heart whiclu we all need and that you SisteL's have al;ways given to us." Another student wrote:

CINCINNATI (NC)-A successful industrialist told a group of high school pupils. he uses "For the first time in my lif~' .gamblers' mathematics to avoid I now come to realize that II letters is the following excerpt: school needs not only books and risks in production. "I hope you are praying for my desks, it needs something else Jack Gantt, quality control country which nee~s, each day, and that something else is yOIll, studies supervisor at General more and more, our prayers." _ The nuns had returned to the Sister! My only consolqtion then Electric's .Evendale plant, exis the thought that God is witb free to enact legislation that will all would, directly or indirectly, ,United States after diplomatic us imd that when we ChristiaDfJ give equal educational benefits pay taxes to finance any Federal plained to, members, of the relations were broken with the fight there is no battle lost." 10 all American children ...leav- aid program.. AlI,not just part, Regina. High School Science pro-communist Cupan regime of jng it to the SupremeCour't' to should benefit ... ."y" ' " . , club how the bhi.omial expansion Fidel Castro'."" , '.' ~nder decisions on what are now He .said' there is DO "clear curve is used in' catching proLiving Cuba, writes one,' ,eonstitutionalimponderablesthe constitutional requiremen't'" to gu~tion errors befOre -they occur "has taught us to realize how mid. " .. exclude" children inreligibuiJ .and also in ,planning ,industrial' unbearable life would be without House SiatemeDt 'cschool~ .from· program of~id tests.' He said ,it's') the same the Sacram:ents, the 'priests .and ' m secular subj e'cts.' ' ,. method used .by gamblers·· itt ' the privilege .of ' practicing ;the' Mr. Cusack's remarks were calculati~g odqs.: " ,.' made 'on b~half of Cardinal . Parents' Right ' "To 'exclude them· would be 'to ' " The industrialist said because Faith openly. Years ago we took ,,~pellman, Archbishop, of N.ew, penalize them because"their par'-' ,of. the kinship of the ,occupation, all these things for' granted and. Yo'rk, in a statement submitted ents,happened.to have'exercised he has become .expert in manip- didn't appreciate them enough." 'to. the House Committee on Ed'u-, . . The letters' 'are, obvio~sly: CHARLES F. YARGAS eation and Labor. " t h e i r constitutionally guaranteed ulating loaded dice,. marked written with cautiori to prevent' 254 ROCKDALE A VENUE , :"Theattorney suggested fol.l!' right to send' them .'to" church';; canis and sleight-;of-hand. One, repri,s~ls " t~rough . <;ensors?ip. .~ BEDF.ORD, MASS. of the' girl students .asked Mr. One young gIrl wrote: '. pOssible ways in which Congrees related schools," he added. ' ' ,could aid religiou'Seducation: '. ,',Mr. Cusack said Cardinal sp~n~ Gant h~ gambled. He replied: "It seems like a bad ,dream! " man does 'not suggest -that Co~ "N() it's too risky.", , It, ~s: ,impossible to believe that I)' Non-religious textbooks and gress "should enact a law that our dear Sisters are not with us , .lupplies and non-religious edu- . would conflict with any clear Chap,loins.Day ,Bill . to cheer us and bring -us the cational services. prohibition of the Constitution." 2) Aid to the parents of chil"He is, as I u,nd~rstand it,askBefore Committee dren in church schools in the ing the Congress t., gi"eproper WASIDNGTON . (NC.) - Sen. form of reimbursement for tu- recognition to the facts that there Building 'Contractor Philip A. Hart of Michigan has ition, or tax deductions, exemp- is a large gray. area of constituintroduced a bill in the Senate ~ions or 'credits. tio~ality, that ':'VitJi~n such area Masonry' 3) Long-term, low-interest Congress is at ,liberty to enact ~f to designate the :first Sunday,,-O'f ,loans to the schools. . prQgram of Federal aid which February each year "Chap, 4) Federal aid for the nonwould· provide equal treatment lains Day." ,The commemoration, would religious facilities, of. church . for , c~ildrei1 attEmp,ing churchschools and perhaps for the sal- J:elatedsch<;>ols; and that any honor the 2~4' chaplains who aries of the teachers' of secular constitutional, imponderables in- have lost their lives while'servBubjec'ts. volved should be left for decision ing with the' U. S: armed. forces Mr. Cusack noted that Federal .by~the ~upfeme'Court," l,le said. in times of ·war, and especially 7 JEANmE STREET ~e four chaplahls',of the USS aid for religious .teaching or the '. FAIRHAVEN . 'lty 4~7321 Dorchester. .. . 'construction of religious faciliPriest Cites Danger SSSSSSS\S%:SgS$i%$S'i~· ties "would be beyond a doubt In Science Stress unconstitutional." CINCINNATI (NC) -,. space DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUl , Gray Area feats should not lead to an 'over;;' Invite youne eirla (14-23) to ~r III But otherwise, he said, there emphasis OIl science in educaSHEET METAL Chri,t', volt vii!ey'ard a, an A ~ of is a "large gray area of' consti- tion, the president, of' Notre 'J. TESER, Prop' Editions: 'Pr_. Radio. Movie, and fel... tutionality" into which a num- Dame University said -here. RESIDENTIAL , vi.lon: With th_ modem meau, th.1O "We have to !;J.ave.proportion'ber of means of aiding private JlIlinionary Si,.... bring' Chrl..•• Doctrine , INDUSTRIAL education fall. ate education, we do not want to 10, aU. regard.... of race. color 01' creed. COMMERCIAL The attorney said the recent get out of balance,'! Father The.. For informatien write to, 253' Cedar St. New Bedford memorandum on the issue pre- odore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., said REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR pared by' the Department of in an address to the local Notre WV'3·3222, SO ST. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON ~. MASS, Health, Education, and Welfare Dame alumni association; is "a catalogue of the uncertainFather Hesburgh also said that ties -involved." "our own space program' has "On page after page the mem- turned out more h~rd scieritific re~edfj'ocaJ! orandum is sprinkled with ref--, facts th~n ,~ man In space can !rail River· New Bedford MighwltlIy-No. Westport lb@Il1l~ll'aJc~@i"1i erences to the difficulties of at- accomphsh. JJUICVI Y1ENDIERI SIZZII.INGI tempting to interpret' and apply the available constitutional prin- ~D~®~$(f lf@M!i'!hJ W~®1!t STlEA~S CHOPS a IltOASYS VIENNA (NC) -An expected ciples," he saId. Visit Our New 25,000 participants make Burden of Proof this year's, Youth Week the BANQUIET ROOM Mr. Cusack declared that any- largest gathering ,of Catholic lloi Wedding 'Receptions-luncheon one who spends Federal funds to young p~ople ever 'organized in... Dinner Meetings-Banquets! aid public school pupils, but not Austria. The' series of discussion 944 CountY St'private school ones,' '-'has the, sessions" cultural events and en.' ,F~r Reservations i ' , I;".z;c.((~~'::;: burden of proving that such in- tertainments wiillast,.;Ioom 'New BedfOrcll, Phone' O'S~ne ;~.~lj~ , J ' :Mstme~ ,woul4 pot ;OOSUi.i"~. ~-::e;~".-J~,:~<~,~,;, ,-~ ,.,' ~,>l:i.;,c .. " ~,,-""-~-!!,."" ,!!,.,,!!,<"'!~!!"'!!i" """'~"",;-',~~~~II!i'!.~~""_"!"'I!lI!I!!l!!II!lI!'~~~ '. ~. u r~ '7 ~~

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. . A+«:~-biooeeeof Fan R.fver-,",,,rs. April 27, 1961

ANNUAL SODALITY MEETING: Attending the Annual Second Semester meeting of the sodalists of the Diocese at Stang High School Wednesday are: left photo, Mary Badwey, Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River; Muriel St. Amand, Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River; Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Diocesan Chancellor who addressed the meeting;. ; . \

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Church 'Must Stress Role Of Laity in Modern Life

The Bishop made his comment in a statement issued in connection with the forthcoming COIlvention of the National Council of Catholic Men, to be held here May 4 to 7. Large Group Bis~op WI'ight said one of his main objectives' in inviting' ,the NCCM to meet here was to set the stage for the establishment of a Pittsburg Diocesan Council of Catholic Men. Some 3,000 men aJ;e expected at the' convent.ion. He said he envi~i~'~s the di()Cesan council as a '\senate" body with which he will meet regular17 to discuss' programs and

St. Jude Novena' Bishop Asks Catholics Cooperate Begins Thursday When 'Movil'll9 Into New Parish

In New Bedford

SPRINGFIELD (NC) - Cath"Nothing is more insidiou~ olics moving into a new parish he added. The Franciscan Fathers of should consider it "their first "When we trace efforts of this Our Lady's Chapel, New duty" to make themselves known type to their source, we know to their new parish priests, ac- the reason. Satan still underBedford, announce the be- cording to a Bishop. in Missouri. stands the scriptural passage ginning of a Noven&.- of Bishop Charles H. Helmsing quoted by the Good Shepherd Thursdays in honor of St. Jude of Springfield-Cape Girardeau Himself: 'Strike the shepherd, ":"'Saint of the Impossible-next made this point in a statement and the sheep of the flock shall ,Thursday, May 4. issued April 14 to mark "Good be dispersed.''' Father Cosmos F. Timli~ Shepherd Sunday," April'16, so teach us durine the course of its O.F.M. will be the novena named because in the Gospel of convention here," he commented. preacher for each of the nine that day's Mass Christ refers to EAST HARTFORD (NC) _ successive Thursdays. Himself as the "Good Shepherd." Robert' J. O'Connel, 17, a senior Age of Laity Devotions will be held every Good Sheep at St. Helena's High School, New Bishop Helmsing urged Cath- York City, won the AmericaQ The Bish()p added that the Thursday after the 10 A.M., 12:10 P.M. and 5:10 P.M. Masses, and olics to be "good sheep",' He put Legion's $4,000 college scholarworld is today experie,ncing "an special emphasis on the duties ship in a national high schooi age of the laity in the life of the at 7 P.M. and 8 P.M. of Catholics who move to new Church, an age in which the. OI"atorica-l contest conducted areas. Among his suggestions here. The scholarship ilJ·good for' ;laity is called upon to be special fOl' those making moves: witness in many areas of the any school of the youth~s choice. ~Join in Catholic Action P-r-o- . He has not yet designated h" . Church's teachings." " UDINE (NC)-A priest who .. . choice. said' laymen will be im- once advised a future pope' to' gcams ill., the new parish. . -Cooperate in whatever protportant to th,e, suc.cess' of the take a one-way ticket to ROIne forthcoming' ecumenical council. has celebrated his 101st hitthday. ects the ·new past()r has. . '-Be sure to receive the ~' "We can be certain" that the He is Father Pietro Benvenllto, E. A. WARING ,CO. long.,ralige succesS of this coun- . pastor of the village of SMile ~na. raments at the new church. The Bishop cautioned against 419 SECOND ST., FA~t,RIVER cil' and its ,conclusions will .de- the oldest parish priest in 1411y~ people. who would divide the . pend more than' ever on the Distributors for '-Don Pietro was born 6rt March faithful from their legitim'ate interest and cooperation of lay- Ie, 1860, and has been' pastor shepherds, the bishop~. ' KENT FLOOR' and men, individually and in. their the village church sin~e Palm Smear VACUUM MACHI~ES organizations," he said, Sunday, 1902. In the parlor .9£ ,He· said communists "have RRE EXTINGUISHERS his small home is a sofaoh which undertaken a worldwide smear' Pope St. Pius X sat wWeh he vis- campaign, to divide the people Phone OSborne 7-9100 ited the village while still Pa- from their bishops through a triarch of Venice and just before pretended distinction between the conclave which elected him what the hierarchy wants and Pope. what the people want." Don Pietro's comment' to the Patriarch at the time was to buy a one-way ticket to Rome "because many say Your Eminence will be elected pope."

PITTSBURGH (NC) - The Church must put more stress on laymen and lay a9tivit~es if i.t is to make con~ct with many sectors of modern SOCIety, BIShop John J. WrIght of Pittsburgh said here. "We live in a generation which will listen to the devout laity problems ()f the Church in this more quickly tha~ it will lis- area. ten to the ordained spokes"The NCCM is a lay organizamen of the Church" Bishop tion which will have a lot to Wright explained.'

Bernard Petit, Prevost High, Fall River; right photo, Michele Paquet. ,Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River; John O'Rourke, Holy Family High, New Bedford; Judith Kiley, Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River; Rev. Gerard Boisvert, Notre Dame Church, Fall River, Diocesan Sodality Moderato1'\,

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Ae SODAUSTS MEET: Discussing Sodality plans at Second Semester meeting of diocesan sodalists are, left to right, Michael Methot, Prevost High, Fall River; May E. Sullivan, Sacred Hearts Aeademy, Fa! River; James A. Donnelly, Stang H~g.h, N1? Dartmoo4ih,; ~ Dia-ne it. Denis. Dominiean~~i;~~ . ,_ ... •

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'THE A:-:C:: :-'Oiocese of FoB River-Thurs. April2?1'!?~\r:<

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Laity in the missions! It seems to have a modem ring'. But IIlCtually it is apostolic.. Did not pious women follow Our Lord '. and' the Apostles during His public life'? Did not a lay woman intercede for Him at Pilate's court and a ,layman help carry His cross? Was not a layman fro~ Colossa 'the bearer of a message to Paul while' he was in prison? Did not a married couple teach catechism to the learned Apollos? Didn.ot the laity goad Peter and John into action at the Resurrection? Was it not from the house of the business woman Lydia that the 'conversion of Europe began?

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~'Is,reHgion in Amedcaa matter of public·interest? The

question;' we believe, cuts to the heart of the contemp()l'ary confusion ., in regard to the constitutional separation of ehurcli and state. Separation need not imply secularism or" secularization, but in _th~ vive as a n~tion if this· foundaprevailing mood of Ameri- tion were to be notably impaired can thought on the subject is a very large question, but ill; is manifestly e 0 min g certainly it would not be the

There are various ways in which the laity can serve the missions. I I nation we have known and loved 1. By awakening in others an interest in the missions and by closer to it with every decade. as an interpretation of an ideal. .collecting alms in offices, factories, neighborhoods for the Holy Religion is viewed by many Misc;mception of Principle Americans toFather. We say the Holy Father because you day, perhaps a The secularist tendency, al-.must be Oatholic in your aid, tha·t. is, you majority, as toready so powerful in shaping must aid all missions, all areas, all societies tally devoid of nationai decisions; is to ignore equally by contributing to the Holy Father public interest, the importance of religion in through his Society for the Propagation of a mat t e r so' America.' It assumes that separthe Faith. exclusively priation of Church and state means 2 .. By praying for the missions, by vate and peralso a separation of religion from .offering your trial!! and crosses in reparation sonal in "it s the state. for the sins of the world. nat u rea ri."d It is not far from the further S. By offering yourself to a missionary function as to assumption, that the state should ESSAYIST: Richard Ham-. bishop through The Society for the Propaga- «1. have no possible logically be atheistic, if not in . 'el, 14, son of Dr. and Mrs. tion of the Faith. b% 4. By entering one of the lay missionary §\j title to national creed at any rate in attitude and Fernand B. Hamel, St. Jacspirit. This is a misconception institutions which' prepare the laity for the [I interest. . . 1e f separa t'IOn ques'. Parish, Taunton, and a f t h e prmClp If this analysis be carried to missions. The.number of these institutions in ·'t its logical conclusion, then it which is at the farthest possible. student at Coyle High School different countries is as follows: Belgium, 10; . - must be a matter of indifference remove from the intention of the is winner ot'an essay contest. France; 11; ireland, '2; Italy, 12; Luxembourg; 2; United States, 15; to the state whether the nation' founders and "the 'mind of the on the Flag, sponsored. by Spain, 3; South America, 3; Australia, 3; Engiand, 2; Holland, 7; continues to. "be dominantly . builders of the nation. the Catholic Order of For~' Switzerland, 5; Germany, 5; It:ldia, 1; A1,lstria, 4; CanadQ, 8;, Christian or c~ase to be Chris-. '. Yet it has been written .as '. . . . . :'. I • Portugal,!." tian altogethet, or whether re- commentary into' certa'in phases . esters'. 'RIchard,' also an oraUgion survives'or disappears. of the law as expounded tor will participate in:a Here are some points to' conside~ before' applying; It may require an unwonted touch,ing the relations of religion. tou'rney of the National 1. Do not go to the missions because you cannot fin.d a husband G'Xercise of im'aginationtocon- and the national life, particularly'/ C th r F' " L ; '. . ;' . . ~ . .'. /' ". ceive the poss}billity. of Chris- in the area of; education. .' . a .OIC qrensIC, eague ;I!y or a wife. 2 .. Don~t offer:y~.urself to the missions ~ecause.y~uthi.nkthey. tianity fading .from the nati~nal Need for Public Concern BaltImore next month. are ·r'iunantic. "One' couple 'journeyed ··to a··foreign ;mission, took Public l'nterest I'S prl'marily 'a ',."" . c:o'nscI'ousness or·.. o·f rell'gl'On itself one ,look' at·the poverty' and returned home·the,next day.'.:~. ;'. , .,' becoming a memory;' b\.Jt·~,the··recognItioii:onhe,needf or public :·Father',S~a'Vrl'l·:·· 3.. :;()ff~r :four!!~lf o~ly ·,because:you ,~~nt;to.b~a.wit~.eS$. to; the. point is not whether"such'ca1iim:':' concern. It is riot necessarily an ,.. Co~tinued fr;;m Page One ';l'ru~;~f·qlI.ris~~.,".; :'.:, ;'..--.. "'1.'.: :.' :.' i"<:'.,-"" , ~ Co, ' . . ,;: . lties might occur but whether . open invitation to' federal inter:-,' f\ quiet, studious youth, he at~.C.onsiderwhat you have to off'7'~~ r,9,u h~v~ . a sk,nl 01' ~ they should be the, concern of vention. Confusion\.. on this car':: tended Boston College High , profll~.On, . ~~ch '".~.Ih a :~"cher, lJ.P,edlcal··'dodor, 'dentist, . nurse. ." . America. dinal disti'nction 'has already School, but went on to the Doarchitect•.electriCian?:If you·.are just mediocre;, forget .aliout being Has ~roader Significance gone far to create a,kind of v'ac- minican Providence College. a Ia:Y .~i~s~onary;". seei.iinei.·~ra~rs ~s4y at:.h9.me;I·Q~ly f!J'st-r.a~rs . There is no doubt that the uum in American' thinking in After studying here from 1924 . and those who want'to ..be Saints a~ good enough· for th~ ·missions. " eoncept of public interest bas regard to the inevitable relations to 1926, he was transferred. to St. acquired a significance in mod- of religion and government in Thomas Aquinas College in 'In 'the days of the Crusad~ thousands left their to fi~ht. ern America far beyond any- the United States. River Forest, Ill., where he rething . the Founding Fathers One result 'of this, plainly ~ani_ ceived his bachelor of arts de-. for the Land where OUi' Saviour died; this new crusade is one in ." which the laity leave ·their· horries to make Africa and Asia Holy ckeamed. 'A3 it has grown and fest in the: current' discussion' of Lands. If you are unable to g.O, at least send,~ sac!,ificeto the Holy' broadened and gained in depth,. the place of. the private or g,ree.. Taught in Chieago more and more areas once held: church-related-school in the total He' began /his teaching career Father; Help him flirSt. Be Catl1olic. Be mindful of The Society for the Propagation: of the Filith, 366· Fifth Avenue, New York 1, to be. purely private in .scope educational scheme, is a refusal. in the philosophy department of New York.· . . bave been invaded and claimed: to 'explore the possibilities of any' De Paul University in ChIcago as part of the domain of publ~c: solution which does'not conform: and later' ~as named professor , '. .... . to the;secularist pattern., .. .. '. C li lntere.st. OOD,LOVE·)fOU to Mrs. J.V;D. fOl'.. $6 '~I.am. denying myseif . ':! . . -... (of,'philosophy at the atho c ' Necessity, for the most: P!l!~i:: ;Thenationalmio<rbi)gs down, i'University of,Ame.r.!=Q, a post he sever~ triPs, to.t1ie:t.be!luty~parlor': to .hclp· the; misSions." .:., to", bas forced this upon·.us, thOUglJ.' cfmfesSes;·.its inability to ~pe held:for.13years.'" .,. M:r.L.E.C. f0t: $5·,:'Since .you.are ,one of,the !~~.men·on.T.V..who we like to think·""that in som~ with theiproblem and invents He .took his master of arts does ·Pl>t carr.y. a ~n, her,e is· a .don·ation topur~ase a side; arm measure at least this expansion all manner of plausible 'excuSes . :' kom' Catholic, University in (for~e poor ,of.the .,yorld)'."..• :.·: to T.K.M~. fO,r' $5 "I ~ma .1J.igh bas been due to it' heightened for avoiding' a candid' appraisal.; 1934. In·.:Juneof. the'same year school senior 'offering thanks .to. God fora ',wonderful home,. land .and, a, more of the ways. in which other: in-'; . bu manitarianism and F:aith.:· May.. 'this, dQnaiion. 'help !liinB. the' benefits ,to he was ordained to the priest. . .. . . enlightened view 'of public' re- teiligent .;peop~e.s, equally con- ~ hood. He. received his licentiate miss1o.n.1a~ds·.'~' .. ",::'.. '.' ...,.' " ' . ". ~onsibility. . .c~rlled .,to mainta~n the distinc- in·sa.cre4· theblogy from ImmacThus, welfare in all its .ramI- 'tion· between the churches and,: u~te Conception Coleg~, Washi~' ~j.;j .~"in~d .~ '~i~on'ar1':~tlvities throUgho'ut· fications, labor-managemenl.-re,. the' state, h~ve.:apP~<:he~ it in';ingtonin.l935 and his Doctor of. the ~oj.ld.will .want ~': read' M1ssiON,a' bl-monthlY. publication. lations, and more recently racial search of a Just settlement. '. PhilOS~pliy.,)degree from the featu~Ing'lItorles;"plctures. and. details 01 ,oUr "Holy Father's Integration, to name only a· few, Must Faee Reality _ Catholic University in 1936. missions. Send.' r'eque~to be put On oUr maliing list aloDg with" of the areas, have been Clothed This is a foremost I\eed ill . He was given honorary de:vour;:sacr~fiCe~.:' . " : \ " , ,~ ~:,:."". '. . .... ' 'with public interest and declared America today: an honest con- grees by Brown University, Bry". ,', ~~ .~ . ",' ...bjects of national concern. frontation of the points of the ant College, Rhode Island CoICut' out ·this column, plD your sacrifice to it and mall it to the. N0 longer are these reckoned dilemma, of religion as a matter lege, Rhode.· Island College of Most"aev.· Fulton J. Sheen, 'l;'fatlonal Director of theSoc:lety for as su,bjects of private action' GIlly, iilvested with public interest and Pharmacy and Alied Sciences, the Propag::tion of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., DOr even of local or state discre- . the principle of separation be-the. University of Rhode rshind, or your 'DioCeaaJl Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T; GONSIDINE•. tion,' but as belonging to the area 'tweeri the iwospheres l?f religioa aod St. John's University in 368 North: Main Street, Fall RIver, Mus. . '. of federal interVention and de- and.g()vern~ent.. ., Broqklyn, N.;Y... oision. Current thinking would .. 'bl th 1 elso ad'Vance education from the It IS unpOSSl e at we ~bou d Noted EdaeMon domain of private and state con- con~inue to deal with it on the He was a Jhenib~i of the ex".!' . : IN NEW BEDFoRD....: IT'S .. baSISwhich of a conceptual vacuum, of the coltrol to that of fede~.al a~tion,~nd. into b:y: sheer default the eral executive board . e while the d~bate l;S still.actnr "l::se'cularisf :~hi{oSOphY iiiSh~s" to. ,,"lege 'and' ~niversit'(:dt;partment and acrid, It is likely enough. , : .. , ..,." o( the:NatI()t:1ar.q.~~h?licEducainevI.·table that the argiuneIit'"ol~. claI·lt~~O~fssliOtl}': ,,' ,; . ;'" ..•. \. tional'Association;' and was for'R' " t . th· b' 18 a re ec lon on·.our lngen. l' 'd t' f th t . .~"...: pub 1~c mteres , meamng·... er~"Y; '. uity, "eerUiih1Y;:for<"We"; 'have." mer y·presl en ,0 ::.' a ,orgam;.,' ., .," ' . ' .. ., ". the en~argeme~t ~f federal con-. . prided ourselves on our abili~, ,..,z8~ion~, ' ' .. " ': c. tl'ol, wlll preval1 m the long run. to c'onquer difficulties, but it. ,.. ,' \He 'was a;·m.embei'ii- of the ex,:;." .. ". F01t.!HE, ::~'N~$T~::TRAPE ,~VE~ Issue Is Clouded . reflects even more grimly on our" ecutive committee of the Ameri..; ;:SOCCESSOR' 'TO" LOUGHLIN' CHEVRO(ET . '.,.• :1.::." Religion remains apart fro m. willingness to face up to reality. can Council on Education, a .... ..,. " . ' .,' ;. this .trend, and so far as ,public ': . And when a nation hesitates member of the advisory cominterest is identified.wfth federaf ". to 'encounter reality she has rnittee'-on new educational me565 MILL ST. Open Every Evelling: . WY 7-948'6. eonttol, we are grateful.that Uiis' ,. aireadi', 'encountered defeat. dia of the United States Office t • • • • ". ~ • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • e' • • • • • • • • • is so. But it is precisely at' this . "".. of Education, and of the advis'h t h ' h b" W k P·· . ory committee' to the surgeon point t at.. e.lssue. as: ecome,-: or . C· ,", Il'Ojec't Iv·es. general on medical education. .' .. clouded and' obscured. .. . . Religion.is.a ..matter..of. jlul.nic : Two" o. h!ge .StGll't. . Father. Slavin was a member interest. It is important to' the .:. CARROLL (NC) -~Abo~t 170: of the Rho'd~ Island C0In:mission natie tha·t..she·remain·a par't:of' !5-uemper ~igh 15qhool sel1iors in; ,t9 Study, ~llgh~F Ed?~abon and the Jud'aeo-Christian' tradition.. . this' Iowa community put' 'io:'a' , of· the ,cpmmuDlty' ,colJ;e,gc study Few 'things actually, are of .hard' day;s work over the' Easter' . ,~roup o~ th(!' Board 'ofTtustees greater )Inpo;tance 'to' Amei-ic!1. ',~olicla~s :4>: :r:aiSe .~J,QOQ. '~o:r." F':Q1-5tate· ~()lle'~e~::'J".::::: . than this for the whole 'bas,s 'c'ollegelstart for.··.two.of.them... '. : Fa.therSlavm leav.~~i ·.besldes ., of her pblltical'philosophy,her' ,'Sp~rred; 'J>Y: ,'a .sug'geS~iqn:"oif ..::hi:;;:. fa~~er, ~ ~ bf:<?th~t:, Nnbrose . COMPLETE concept: of/freedom.:and justice . theU;CIass' president John :Mai.~;' '. ~.·,Slavm of qumcy,~ass., and RENTAt 'WORK UNIFORMS under 1l~~ ·restsui>on.thi~ as a:..···tln "the shideiits'tooko'ii:;,ilitious~'fu.i;~~ister§,,~ister-~()s~ph Amfounda tion~. '.' .. " " :". jobs to' rai~e' toe' mohey} .The ~ ,., Q;~.se, of ~tQharl.es .C,onve!;1t, TOWE'LS " " Whether'An;,~rica could,sur':': 'Jjoy(:~orked:dn ~aI.:. washirigr·:t.~!l~_rs:t;N9v~.S,!:oba;)\4rs. Mll-. . .....: .. ," •'. ~.. ,', firms ser.vice stationS.'- ware,.' ,dred Lynch, ~f D<?rch,e~t~r, and . Ako' 'Reclaim lndustria4. Gloves ' Vin«:entians fo'·~Meet: ~o~~~s·.and stores"The girlS, be-t. -~r~:" ~hO~s '~ollin~ of,Milton, The monthly meeting ot·the' came "Sjllesclerks, typists and:. .a~s., ::.' ..'. :. . . _ r ,.: I'all River Particular Council, house:clea'ners.for·a day." : 'teo'c.hers Society of St. Vin'cent de Paul, Themon~y.earned will pro-. will be held at 8 Tuesday eve- vide $500' eaclr for a .bo~ and. girt. ·.TORONTO (NC)~I{igh school Ding, May 2. Benediction will in the senior ~lass:to.start colleg.e students_ were urged to consider . , <..: Successor to be given in .St. Elizabetp.'s next year. Students who.. ~ork.ed: 'Catholic educatIon as a career New England Overall & Supply Co. ehutch~ . Tucker Street,·· Fall on the project will choose tpe' . by a full-page color advertise: ZO Boward Ave•• New Bedford River, at 7:45 and the meeting boy and girl from among 10 ment' in the Canadian Register. !1lone VVV.1~~787 ~ VVY'7-0J88 TarontO archdiocesan weekly. will. follow in the s,,;iool, hall. . nominees

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'''~-«\PaMIRlwr-lhu .... AprM 27, lMit

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Catholic Youth Adoration Day on May' 21 W1\SHINGTON (-NO) Five million Catholic young people throughout the nation are expected to pray for the "regeneration of personal and public standards of moral responsibility" on Ma.y 2:1., Peatecost Sunday. They will be participating in the fifth annual national Youth Adoration Day sp,onsored by the Youth Department of the National Catholie Welfare Confellence. Other inltentions of the da'~

besides personal and public morality, are the success of the forthcoming ecumenical councH, the reunion of aU Christian 'churches, and the, dedication of all youth to Christ ia the Ho~ Eucharist. Msgr. Joseph E. Schieder, director of the NCWC Youth Department, urges Catholic young people from grade school through 'college age to receive Communion on the morning of Youth ,Adoration Day and to spend 30 minutes in prayer before the Blessed Sacrament later in the

d&y. Ceremomes M'Sgr. Schieder said parisb, diocesan and school youth grou~ throughout the nation will sponsor ceremonies in oonnectioft with the observance. The Monsignor said hundreds of thousands of special prayer cards and thousands of posteq 'have been prepared specially foil' the 1961 Youth Adoration DQ,~ These materials are available from the NCWC Youth Department at 1312 MassachusettS Ave. , nue, N. W.. Washington 5., D. ~

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GOLD MED:A,L Perlect-Whippecl·B RE A D

HONOR ARCHDUKE: Feted at a benefit dinner fal' needy Hungarians was Archduke Otto of Hapsbur.g, ehatting with Francis Cardinal Spellman Archbishop of New York, at a luncheoJl. giyet\ b¥ the Cardin'at NC PhotQ.

Catholic Offlc,ials L'aud :New Food Plan

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WASHINGTON (NC) ...,.... The director Of tbe worldwide relief, agency maintained by U.S. Catholics ha:s lauded all announcement promising that the Government will boost its aid to voluntary agencies- distributing U.S. s~rplWl foods ' abroad. Au*:iliary' Bishop the age~ies "w~" very . much Edward E. Swanstrom ol. encouraged by the eourageouti New York, 'executive dirac- and far.:.sighted progl'am planned tor of Catholic Relief'Se"," for; the better '~ .rtf .Americaa ices-National Catholic Welfa~e Surplus fOods:,"- ' -, , ' ,: -'j' Conference, made the stateme~ Prc*ia Foods after attending a White House : He added that the 'age~cy

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cials' w~re par'tici!larly pleased by the hope expressed by MJ:, McGovern and' Mr. Freemaa Agricultul'e that "eventually, through amend_ '!'be meeting was called br ments to present legisl~tion,'they George, S. McGovern, d~rect:or may even beable'to Diakfi'availof the adnl'iniirtration's Food-for- able other' prote~ 'foOds ' . Peace'; program. Secretary "Of 'badly needed ill the "diets of Agriculture Orville Freeman was, peopli!' iJi p'oor cOlintries." ~ present at the-~ meeting. ' , 'Referring -to 'the' CRs-NCW'C The two men told the .volul\oo program' itself, Bi~hop Swantary age n c y representatives strom said: "For a long time we that the Department of Agricul- realize that we should be feeding ture will give their organizations a great many' more' people an additional 66 million pounds through surplusf<lOd donatione of food oils by the end of 1961. 'than We a",e' at present, and They also said that government through new assistance we donations of nonfat dry milk iii. Should 'be able to do this." ," the year starting July 1 will be He also said that, the ,new' ~id .' ; about 560 million pounds, a rise would enabli! ",CRS-,NCWC ,"te, of 110 million' pounds :£IloDl double its programs in, many earliel' commitments. countries and to quadrupli! th~. Inereues in some." The lncreases are part of a / wideilcale program of assistance for underdeveloped countries that was suggested to President Kennedy by Mr. McGovern. LISBON (NC)':"" Relief supBishop Swanstrom, who' ~ plies given by the Uriited Stateai ehairman of the American Coundl at. Voluntary Agencies, said distribut~d bY C.athcilic Reli¢f ServiceS-National Catholic: Wel~ ".; f a'r e Conference;" .wo'rldwide ' agency of' Am-erican' Catholicllt are on the way, to refugees int;pe Portuguese territory ot. . Luan<l8 -, LOUISVILLE (NCr - '!'here ill southweSt- Mi-icai' -. are more people in need th!Ul iil The 40 tons Of foOdstuffs and -, ,'~ the depression years of the 50 bales of clothing'will' be diS- 'r 1930's, according to the number tributed among refugees 'from " of cases being handled by the , nationalist riots iii' norlhern An..St. Vincent de Paul Society here'. . gola, where about 200 white per"The case load is the heaviest sons died in March not of in the society's history," said -African nationalists. The refugee.' Tom Byrne, treasurer of the have flocked to· tlie capital' cit,. Particular CounciLof Louisville. of Luanda. . "The average per month is 270 Portugal's Red Cross has al~ which is even heavier than dur- asked funds,for settlers who lost ing the depression." , home and.livelihood in the ~P­ The council, which recently risings. observed its 100th anniversary, disclosed in its annual report Fall Rivet' President that over $94,000 was distributed James Mooney, Fall ~iver. is to needy persons. The money went for food, clothing, rent, new president of the· Bristol County Alumni AssOciation of fuel, utilities, medicines. A total of 1,267 cases number- Holy Cross College. He waS ing 5:696 persons w~re ~andled. elected at the group's annual - meeting,- at which' Rev; John McFadden, S.J. reported on new SOcia;1 Encyclicals BOSTON (NC)-Boston Col- developments. at the college. lege will commemorate the 70th High Percentage and 30th anniversaries, respectively, of the encyclicals Rerum HARTFORD ('NO) M~re Novarum and Quadragesimo than 62 per cent of babies born Anno by holding an institute on to Connecticut residents last year the Christian social ecoaom)!l, were baptized ~ the Catholic June 1{l to l4. Chul'.ch. meeting in which officials of 20 charitable and religious' agencies took part.

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Prelates Oppose Birth Control

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By Rt•. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy

heads of Connecticut's three Catholic Sees have registered their opposition to two bills in the legislature aimed at repealing the state's so-called birth control laws. The position of Archbishop Henry J. O'Brien of Hartford• Bridgeport and Bishop Vincent Bishop Lawrence J. Shehaft of J. Hines of NorWich was made known: in a ·statement read at a public 'hearing on the two billa. . The hearing was held by the I egislature's . Public Health and

One of the most important biographies ,and historical studies of recent years. is Pio Nono, a study of the pontifieate of Pius I:({ by the English historian E. E. Y. Hales. Pius IX ruled from 1846 to 1878, an eventful span which ,saw Europe racked by revothatbeen thereached. end of the the seizure of the thought papacy had I ution and .Papal States by a finally But a conclave to elect a sue.united Italy. Now Mr. Hales cessor ·to Pius VI took place. ,It has undertaken to show in some was held Qn ..the island .of San 'detail the background "oC:ihe :Giorgio in Venice, ·.under the pro.,. reign of "Pfo:·.': . ~ ;, ~. ;,... . :tection of the .lioly Roman EmNono;espedaliY. :peror. The 'new:.pope was a 58.,. in the times' eif y~ar-old Benedictine, Cardinal Pius VI· -'Chiaramonti•. chose' as :his

~ho Napoleoo'.~COncorclat

and:'·

Committee~

Pius VII. 1 : . In'; .title Pius Vii;;:'"': .. Safety Revolution':and:: :.,,,'; ; . ". The 81-year-old Connecticut Papacy , .... ,en . be pope for laws prohibit the use and preover H 0 e.;," ./ 24 years. He would witness tlie scription of contraceptive devices. $4.50), he. i s . . i into The U. S. Supreme Court is conexamining' 'tlie':· a 'De1-\' absolu,tlOn With Napoleon's sidering whether they are happenings riSe from--general,to first consul tutional.· ' the 77 years' tC>\e·il:t~erQr." . , . Positioa Unchanged previous.. to the ; A.s 'first .consul. iNapoleon n~ Taking note of the pending electio~.:of t::at:,,": . .... . \~A'~iilted a. CQ!1 cord,at with the .'., ...c:,~ur,t,!lFtio~~, th,~ ,<;?atholic\prel- , diil<l,i:iM:astai::Feretti to thEf'papal:p;ew:pope;once'more established .ates said that untIl the court's throti~:- '.' . .. . ' .. ·~nRom~:)ts.terI'n.s, not the best decision is announced '.'it should \ Hi'begil'1S wfU:i: 1769;becauge( that the at least beriecessary it' may' il6t '. it wks then ·:iliat Cardinal. Gan,l;, appeared to be' a igreat improvebe advisable in effect to reargue ganelli \'V'aschosen..pope', taking' . ment over.the 'l:oItditi9ns from the 'case' before the legislative' ,'\ . the bame of' XIV. ?r~...::·w,hich theC:i).urch suffered ill branch of the state government," t sure; !;W:1l. ', Ffapce whe : the, revolutionary ',Tiny Lavon They' said ·they-would offer no i· ll s to bear on':Clement to 'suppresS worst. Klem bunch of Texas Bluebo,nnets, of the evidence at the hearing because .the Jesuits.' It,h!ime text. of 'the Lone Star State, to West man Chancellor Corir'.·ad Ade- "we feel that this matter has the ..a been so thoJ::oughly publicized Jesuits had a speciaL loyalty:' W ,lIsf.ofregu!a.hons'whlch made.lt nauer as· .the German 'leader. leaves!.'St~; ;f:rancis:, Xavier that the memb~rs of the committhe Holy see··andwer.~i'j:;sp~~H1IIKi!cl-M,r;'that\\ij'il'\~~ant to contcol Church in ,Stonewall. With the CllanceIior 'is"Vice President ~ee are familiar with the argueffe.ctive for own Lyndon B. Johnson and AdEinau"er·s .. Mrs.' .Lisbeth ment.s which would be made by itual claims. . J,' '. <':.'.' even :;as the legitimate B h h NC Ph t < ' tthhe ,QIl, . But the· various mC:fnarclrs'· monarchs had done. . . era n. 0 o. ' :. ~ ..,.; ;:~: e ques Ion. • ..' . found. the. society troubleSome So be'gan the struggle between .. "It is .sufficient to say," they because these kings sought, and the evidently unevenly matched SUpPO·:.;·'.rt.'.·.. .. successfully, to interfere with adversaries _ the ruthless NaAI position 'of ·the Roman Catholic the' spiritual freedom of the poleon and the gentle, defense~ Church o~ tJie fu~damental Church in their realms, to con- less Pius. Its course is sharply • 5 erSj·~ moral question': of·,the.1pr:aetice':.. 'J trol bishops, ansi to direct eccle- ana dramatically sho~n .by Mr. WASHINGTON (NC)-Cath. ';' of contraception ·is unchanged siastical affairs,thus circum- Hales in the most fascinating olic organizations threw theit' ment. of . a National" 'CiUzeM and unchangeable." scribing ' :' a ge.nt;rally fascinating suppOrt behind three bills' be- Council ,on Migrator>: Labor . i .. ,.' .... ' . : ' . , Monarch . .. _. \; fore Congress 'to aid therlatiori'.· (S. 1132).' Diocese to It may be wondered why the i ~as Po~e ~rretMed .... migrant farm Workers; . Elimina&es Spectacle N d f Eld Pope would consider 'doing' , .' Napoleo n ..- requited .Pitis' to Father',. JamesL, Vizzard; . Father ,'Vizzard the ee 5 o· erly away with his most reliable sup- come to Paris'to crown hini em- testified before a Senate· sub- aims of aU'three measures. TOLEDO (NC)-The Toledo porters. The answer lies in his peror. The pope, trusting that committee in behalf of the Na. He lauded the child 'labor pro- diocese will make a parish-bysovereignty. this would ameliorate the 10to£ tional Catholic Rural Life Con- tection measure as an attempt parish survey··on the needs of the He was himSelf a .tempOral _ the' Chur:ch, complied. He was ,fer~nce. the Bishops' Committee to "eliminate that incredible and aging, .especially in housing. It monarch, heading a considerable rudely treated, even mistreated. OIl Migrant Worker-s and the shameful spectacle of Sinan chil- will be directed by Msgr. M. J. territory in Italy. He thus had a Napoleon wanted to make it Bishops' Commitllee for the dren working iB fields in and Doyle, who 'heads the·'·diOeesan" out of school haurs hazardous committee on the aging. 4:ertain kinship with. other mon- .plain that the pope was now no Spanish-speaking. a The conference archs, and was attentive to their more than his chaplain. He then The three bills have been 10- occupations." I:' surv.ey.,here was fot thedioe• ""'" Th ideas and wishes. . ' . . . . .to0 k.. 9v~r Rome"'!l~~~lPpting·,to'r".trp d ~cec;l . by·-:~n':Harr-~90n:,A.. ' e measure to IIUlke crew eaan.. Committee. 'and ....·ests·· ~;" Clement XIV yielded to. their .:reduce ·.the pope to 'the level of' . Williams, Jr., of New'Jer~Y. l~aders ·register 'and obtain .."'7 importunings and decreed the< ,..... ,. ,c.hairman ()f. the licensing, he said. wili protect George J. Rehring' of dissolu tion of the Society.in 1773. , .Ne.xl.th!lre openel}' a~stillm6re ,on: migratory. labQr"· of the' Sen.:", workers from "unscrupuious ex- :.... '~ ,.. " , ,. ~·I '. , This, according to Mr:.· HaleS;·· . ama2;ing cqapter. Napoleon an- ate Labor and Public Welfare ploitation on the part! 01. some '. " I' was the most serious defeat ..the /.. i jl.~x~:. '.the 'Papal States and Committee.' labor contractors." '

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in .';' Arrogates Autbor~tT:~: , ,.:' .!'n,fV~H'.!Ie ''fas rush:d~frolll2his(,.~of;·,children and, only. outside w~uld have the adva.ritage of ·il .Pius VI was elected· •.f.,.·· provide non-governmentai a nid' S,' ;': .... :'.' HIS chief problem init,ially. '!V~~'• . t~ ~ke, ~v~n, a change of· hneh.· for reglstratIoii:' and' licensing of ImpartiaL ... A .; ,'J exemplified by the Holy ~om:a~ \ i ~1-apped·!n~:a coach,.~l1d·.;hurl'ied. '!,.e~~~i:l~c;1~r,s.:-~r·,)!lbor" contrac( Emperor, Joseph II, Italy and. t? the U.S. Labor D e p a r l - " ':,;, I " known as His ~atholic'1VI~j~sty...,... ~.b~e: .' ,': .. " " . ment (S. 1126); andestablisbJoseph arrogated to himself .au.,. .. strong Resisistance . thomas F;'Monaghan ·Jr.. thority .over the Church. Thus HIS permanent place of incarpriests were to' be trained ceration was in Italy-at Savona: . Tre~J1urer seminaries controlled by him, He ~as strictly cut off fro~ his not by the bishops. adVisers and I sometimes not . . allowed to have wrI'tl'ng m te MAKES. YOUR . 1;4~ SE~ND. STR~E!: Members of religIOUS orders.. . .' a '. ' were not to be subject to fOreigIi~·~alsFThe.card:I.n.a~s ,)\',ete:br~9gqL,' ... ·'CAR:'iiUf.j';8En. H~ ATI~G OSborne 5-7856 superiors or to purchase books .rance,seals, as eta were IaR '··;", archives,. .", the .. 'papal . '.'.... ,. At·' '.,'.. . ... a b roa d ; h e.s~ppres.~ed orders and··!'.. ··: N~··oleon"';'th·· . ":~~L":b" ..:: ,"';;;',; I~·F.: Y~l,~;-Q~Wt:* Sea $tlo .... ,..... confraternItIes at will. He rear- Nat' PIC led a cInd Service. StatioM South • Tel. HY 81 \ '10.. ,'j". :l~~,~,:~lIYE~~. ~i,: . . J ~~~tg~~m~~~eses and.parishes to po~n~ ha~~n~~h'7sh:i~1 ~:g~~~= ./ '!::,;;·;~~,.,1c.:~"}:!:~;' HyClftftis . .' ing the Chur.ch. overriding the . But If PIUS VI. was plagued authority of the pope. ' ., the old order ItS worst, he was " But the intransigence of the . , .. : '.. ":1 iO::. also to experIence the hammer pontiff, despite the durance and blows of the new order,. as rep- . 'duress visited upon him; was iJn.' . CAPE COD r~sented by th~ ~rench Revolu- breakable, and-resistance among Maintenance Supplies N·J· tlon. .' " . the French clergy. was sUl:pris. . Expels Pius VI ingly strong. Napoleon did' not SWEEPERS - SOAPS. The new order in France pm.: 'get everything he desired but i DISINFECTANTS •. posed to divorce Church from in time"presumably he "';ould. FIRE throne and to. effect needed reHis time, howeve'r had rua . _., ", i ,forms. Typically,' it went too out. When Napoleon ill 1814 far, establishing a civil consUtu- . Pius VB returned to Rome and A tlon of the clergy and requiring very soon brought the Soci~ty of. ·i..6 PUR.atASE ·ST~ ,:.' :' an oath whick trespassed OR' Jesus back into being. EventuNEW IEDFORD "" ap.iritual ~reedom and tampered au,- the Papal States were IeAMPLE PARKING With the, eoostitutiori,:,of. monarchs .- :'"WY 1-1716" .. ":, the ,,_,,' .....:' :.... t;he .. ,.".---........_--.,-".-...-. .J. N . '. .' ....'.: nc.:..: lu"-": . ' >,' " :1 All would':ft'ft be" 'Del" ..,... ~ "'. .c:' ., ..."... .: . . 01;., "!'!8fI ...,. ,.-.-..0 .~. eon;:,;," ,,} ...,:'" . lIB:, ~r~.~.DI.I"'<: . I " . • ,. ,

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Tltis Message is Sponsored hy tlte Following Individuo& and Business' Conce;ns·"· . . . Greater' Fqll R.iver: "

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THE:~. ,,-,,vR-Oiocese

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THE AHCI'tOR-oioces8 of FaA Riwr-Thurs. April 27, f:96lI1

MotheA Day Plans

I The Parish Parade S~. MARrs. NORTH A'ITLEBORo Mrs. Fred Thorpe Sr. wHI be president of the Women's Guild for the coming ye8l', aided by Mrs. Edward Messier, vice presldeRt; Mrs. Albert Rose, seeretary; Mrs. Edward La'l1erY, treasorer. ST. MARY'S, FAIRHAVEN The Couples' €lub wlH hold a bowling party Saturday, May 5 at the Bowl Mor in Mattapoisett. Next regular meeting, Sunday mght, May 21, will feature a mock trial. Mr,. and Mrs. Gerald Fournier are chairman' couple. ST. JAMES, NEW BEDFORD Msgr. Noon Circle will hold a cake sale at the Star Store this Saturday. Cakes may be brought . to the church hall from 6 to 8 tomorrow night or to the store Saturday morning. Mrs. Leonard

ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER A planning meeting in preparation for a Country Fair in June will be held Wednesday, May 3 by the PTA and Alumni Association. MIlS. Alice Gromada is chairman. ST. THOMAS MOIt8. SOMERSET Atty. James W. Killoran will address the Holy Name Society at 8:15 Tuesday night, May 2 in the Old Town Hall. His topic will be the current status of movies, television and literature. The meeting will be the last regular one for the year. A corporate Communion and breakfast are planned for June. OUR LADY OF GRACE;==-=NOIlt'lrH WIES'lrIl'OR'll' , The Women's Guild will hold

I

its monthly meeting at 8 Tuesday night, May 2 in the church hall. Following a business session, L. O'Bri~n is chairman, with the entire membership will preMrs. Frank T. Francis as cochairman. pare for a public Maybasket whist to be held the following ST. MARY'S. night. Mrs. Elsie Laurendeau MANSFIELD The Catholic Women's Club will be in charge of the social has elected as new officers Mrs. hour and members are reminded to bring canned goods and Rufus F. Gallipeau,. president; special gif,ts for the Maybaskets. Miss Rose Vassanelli, vice presThe whist is set for Wednesday ident; Mr.s. Vera McCauley, night, May 3. Tickets will be FIRS~ BOWqNGTOURNEY: Trophy winners in the first Fall River CYO'Bowling correspondmg secretary; Mrs. available at,the door, and refresh- , Mary Jane Greene, recording ments will be served. Mrs. Edna Tournament are, left to right, Agne~Desnoyer representing Immacul~~e ,Conception P-. secretary; Mrs. Helen Fales, Clements. is chairman'. ' ,ish; Barbara McCann, St. Patrick's PaJjsh; Arthur Goreia, St; Patrick's' Parish; EdwMd treasurer. ' , '" The annual Communion break- Gagnon, Prevo~t High School; Joseph Con-eir a, Immaculate Conception Parish; and MJ& A.cUvities for the ~ason will fast Win'be held at White's res- Charlotte Wicz of the Bowling Alleys. end with the annual banquet, t f I slated for Thursday, May 11. aurant 01. owing 8:15 Mass SunST 'ROCH ' - day morn~~gl,:¥ay 7. ReservaGro~m ~re FALL RIVER -:', ' , , tions .~oul~ b~. ~~tJe with Mrs. . . PhylliS Brown' 'or Mrs. Martha !he Councll ~f Catholic Wo~en Ratcliffe. Dr. Fred Sullivan of !R~BE:K (Nt) -!The 1il1O wIll meet "Fa 11 R'lVer:WI,'11 spea k and' mem- , ,LOUISVICLE ,NC) - Practi- .their nup,tial Mass at Our Lady, ' 'cbiefQf the large Azartde tribal Ma l ' at 7.30 MOndaytfzlght, " y In ~ school ha~.,: ,J:lter- ,bers may bririg guests. ' ,cally everybody gets married in of';Lourdes Chureh (June 17).; ,group' to' become a:: Catholila tainment WIll be furmshed byJune but not every bride and ~hey both have been intereste!l ,·;while· still' hi office :has beat the Franco-American Ch~le of SANTO CHRISTO. groom compose, their' own. wed- in music since grade school and~'baptizedherein The Sudan. Fall River. Members may bring FALL RJVE.R·, ,.'1 'I, ,.-' met while studying music in He' is Chief Matthew Di~ guests. it is announced by Mrs. The Council of Catholic Women ding m u s i c . ' Carol Ann Weiss and John college. Both were OR scholar- who heads the Azande tribesm_ Romeo Charest, President. Mrs. wm hol~ a public: whist pa~ty of the Ezo region in south~ Claire Charbonneau wiD be tonight m the parish hall WIth Thomas Dennes, IV, are' doing ships. just that-writing the music: for John, a COlllvert, received his Sudail. :ijaptized along with till hostess for the social hoUt' Mrs. Mary Souza as chairman. bechelor of music in composition 70-year-old chief were seve_ ST. MARY'S, The parish's patronal feast win last year. He hopes to go OR io other tribesmen, SOUTHDARTMOUTB be observed ,Friday through D~minican graduate school and eventually The Women's Guild wiH bold Sunday, M~ 5' to ,T•. teach on the college level. Carol, its annual Spring dani:e SaturRapoza, ~l;l'ffian, announces WItIM S\CMN£SS STRttt8 day night, May 13 at stevenSon's events will mclude a bazaar, CHICAGO (NC)-Midwestem who graduates this June, will an IMPORTANT nJ SU restaurant. Mrs. Frank Mello 3d danees,. games, an auction, two members of the Third Order 01. ,teach at Gardencourt, the school YOUR. OO(TO,,". ~O I ~HeN is chairman and Mrs. ~rDftt A. J)l'OeesSlONI: ~ ~'~~mll High" St. pominic will meet May 6 in of, music .of the University of Arruda is ticket ehainna'n. ' Mass.' " , ,"... I , MadiSoD, Wis., tornark the 500th LOuisville. ,.' ME'S GIVEN ~" I ST. MICHAEL. .' OUR LADY OF AHGBL~l ' ,8nniversaiy of the canonizatioD PR£$(IUPTION. earol is C()ffipos~"th~ Kyrie, . .". ". FALL RI'VER . FALL RIVER "'.' , , .. , of St. Catherine of Siena. ~nctus and Agnus Dei in three 'M,POATANT ~ ..,; Manuel Rapoza h . ..iiill' se~ Our Lady of Fatima will bE! ' ,. More than 500 persona fiom women's voices for the nuptial 11' FlLl£D AT' '.' as general chairman Iot'the ob:' honored Saturday, May 13 with, 'lllinois, Wisconsin; IOWa, Mis- Mass. The music will be in tRe servance of the . Holy Ghost a procession and evening Mass. souri. Minnesota .and othe~ mid- 16th century stY.le of Palestrina. Feast to be' observed on June 4.. An auction and concert are, ~esiern stateS included 'm the ,John is composing the procesOther committee chairmen are: planned for Saturday and Sun- ".l>om~canProvince of St.-Albert sional, recesssional, and oHertory ,PHA~MACY Joseph Rapoza, kitdle11;· Mio& day" June 3 and 4. th.e GJ:eat are expected. u$ing 16th century style.in a OliVe Rego. sweetbread; Manuel ss. PETER AND PAIlI, P~s for the meeting weI'e eqntemporary way. Rap~ Jr., entertainment; Mrs. FALL RIVER .~)" i·~·. ..)~ . . . ~ '." ailliounced""'her~e 'by' Father J'OhD ,: It,·:, :., Ma~orie R~epdes. decOl'Btiol1St The, ,W'o~en~s Club will. hold· 'll..;' Schneider, O.P., provincial an~ . Miss Evelyn~ Almeidil,' pu~ its', monthly" meeting "Moriday dit-ector of the 'D'ominican Third liClty. , n i g h t , May 1 in the church hall Order. to which St. Catherine In addition· to the religious with Mrs. John Markland as belonged. The Province of St. aspect of the feast, the remain- chairman and Mrs. James Quinn Albert the Great has more the ing part of the program will con- assisting her at the social hour., 5,500 layman members of the IOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY slst,in a procession, a band con~ unit will sponsor a public Third Order. owner/mg,. cert, an auction and Portuguese dessert whist at 1 Wednesday 142 Campbell St. folklore entertainment. afternoon, May 3, also in the ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA. hall. Mrs. Edward F. Johnson is New Bedford. Maa. FALL RIVER chairman and Mrs. Arthur Duffy, WYman 9-6792 ,,_,Ph~r p~y The Council of Catholic Women co-chairman. " HEADQUARTERS FOR will mark Mother's Day, Sunday., ST. HYACINTH, .Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm. 202 ,ROCK STREET May 14 with corporate Commun- NEW BEDFORD COLONIAL AND D~ABETIC AND SICK ROOM ion and a breakfast. Miss AngelNew officers· 'ol Our Lady's 'ntADITIONAL FURNITURlE SUPPLIES FAU RIVER, MASS. ina Vasconcellos and Mrs. Bella Sodality include Miss Flore ,204 ASHLEY, BOUlEVARD Nogueira are co-chairmen. Berthiaume, president; Pauline· New Bedford The executive board and plan- Regnere, vice president· Lynette Ding committee for the breakfast Landry. secretary; Elallli! FurWY 3-8045 will,m~et at 7:30 Tuesday night,. tado, treasurer. A living rosary. May 2 m the parish hall and the and crowning of Our Lady will Real Estate Loans next regular meeting will be be held next month. BEFORE YOU Scivings Banlc Life Jnsurance held Tuesday night, May 1~, at ST. JOHN BAPTIST. BUY - MY which time films of a European NEW BEDFORD Christmas and VacatioR Qubs trip will be shown, and membel'll 'The Ladies Guild will hold a will bring gifts :for • bazaar eommunion supper Sunday, June Savings AalOUnts to be held m June. 25. Mrs. Fred Cunha is chairman. 5 Convenient LocotIoM ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT. The Holy Name SOciety plans FALL RIVER a ham and bean supper at 6 this OLDSMOBILE The Blessed Mother Guild will Saturday night. is the church NEW BEDFORD Olthmobikt· Peugat • Renalt hold a cake sale following Masses' basement. Tickets will be avail., 6'1 lIIliddle Street, FairhaVeD Sunday, May, 7. N~ regular a1;lle at the door. ' i meeting of the unit 'Is set.for sACRED HEARTTuesday, May 16. ,. ~ALL RIVER . ,-' '. ", IMMACULA.TE' CONCEPTION, The Women's Guild will preFar~ Daiij FALL RlV~ , '. sent a Spring musical show at uSPECIAL 'MILK The Women's Guild will meet 8 Monday night, May 1 in the ' at 8 Mond~y ni~ht, May 1 in the school hall. ,Mrs. Joseph' Canniff ',F~mQur Own ! ch~rch haJJ. Mrs. Andrew Cook is chairman. Also- among May" Tested Herd" is. lD charge, o~ the social hour. ,plans is a public card party ,to be . 46, T ton Greett MISS Florence Lynch and Mrs. held Thursday. May 18.· - .. Acushnet, Mass. WY 34457 khn Roach are program co- ST. MARY'S CATIIIEDR.AL chairmen. They announce that FALL RIVER • Special Milk VA 2-2282 students from Imbriglio Acc<wThe Women's Guild will meet • Homogenized Vito 0 Milk dion School will entertain. at 8 Monday night, May 1 in the • Buttermilk ' _.. The unit will hold a day of Catholic Community Center. A "Our Bemdng Oils Mob • Tropicana Orange Juice Jlecollection Sunday afternoon, calendar party will be featured. • Coffee and Chaco Milk 1t'...... Friemls~ May 21. changed from Sunda)t. Mrs. Timothy Kelly and Mrs. • Eggs - Butter \!lay 't Linniil Lee are co-chail'men.

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Composing", "African Tribal ,Chief ,'Becomes Catholic M Own ,u.s,ic for Niaptial Mass

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'Catholic' Teachers' Meet 'Next ,Week Continued from Page One 'K;S,G" Hartford; former presilege. Chairman will be Sister dent of Serra International, will St. Maurice, S.S,J., A.B., St. speak and panelists from DiocMathieu's School, Fall River. esan Serra Clubs will also parHigh school teachers will ,con- ,ticipate. They include Gilbert J. sider a homeroom guidance pro- Costa, New Bedford; Joseph H, gram, presented by Brother Feitelberg, Fall River; Edmund' Joseph G. McKenna, F.S.C., F, Henry, Attleboro, Robert Ph.D., principal of Catholic McGowan, K.S.G., deputy district Memorial High School, West governor for Serra Clubs, will Roxbury. Chairman will ,be be chairman. ' Sister Mary Ve'ronica, C.S.C., St. Discussion groups will be feaAnthony's High School, New tured at 2 Friday afternoon for Bedford. 'elementary teachers 'and at 3:30 At 3:30 elementary teachers for high school teachers. Elemenwill hear Dale Cook, Ph.D., of tary topics will include phonics, Science Research Associates, reading comprehe,nsion, skills Ci:hicago, discuss new advances and habits, arithmetic, elemen'in the teaching of reading. Sister tary scienc~ and creative :writing. Elizabeth of Mary,. S.N.J.M., B.S.Ed., will be chairman.: High school teachers will disThe meaning of 'intelligence cuss English, history, sCience, will be the topic for high school mathematics, foreign languag'.!s reachers at the same time. Rich- and commercial subjects. lard J. Villamil, A.M., also of" Other topics for Friday afterScience Research Associates, will noon will include' a session, for sPeak, with Sister Anne 'Denise, ,elementary teachers on modern 'S.N,D., A.M."principal of Bishop approaches to teaching arith-: Stang, as chairman. ' me tic by Miss Frances Barry, Most' Reverend James J. Ger- A.M., educational consultant for G WI'11 presl'd e a t a textbook company; and a disrard, .D.D., V .., Friday morning's general session, cussion on the Mass for high scheduled to start at 10. Topic will school teachers by Rev. William be the relationship between J. Leonard, S.J., A.M., \S.T.L., Serra Clubs and vocations. secretary of the' Liturgical ConJ 0 seph W. Cunningham, ference and professor of theology at Boston College.

C.,!Ui~ntMct '1Hal Pag-e. ODe which ti~ his sqiiads compiled. a fantastic' 140-19 record. ' A member of the Class of 1941 at Coyle, O'Brien was graduated from Holy Cross in 1948 after a.' service-interrupted college career. He is married to . the form'er Jean Monarch of ,Fall River and has been a mem,bel' of the Somerset School System for the past twelve years. His resignation is effective at the close of the current ,school year. "It's with genuine regret that ,I leave Coyle," said Coach . O'Brien. "My assocjations there ,.were the best from the adminis,tration on down. We didn't set any records, yet the experience, was most rewarding. I look forward with great anticipation to :my new duties at Stang and the opportunity to' work once again with my fellow Coyle, and Holy ,Cross colleague, Carlin Lynch. "

LIBRARY IS BUII,T 'ON BIBLE': A large stone Bible stand located near the entrance of the newly completed library of St. Catherine's Coll~ge, St. Paul, is symbolic of , the idea that the library was built on the principle that the Bible is the'foundation of all l~arning. Inspecting'the Bible stand is Father William J. Dunne, associate secretary of the National Catholic Educational Association. He delivered the keynote address at the national biennial conference of the Sisters of St. Joseph of' Carondolet, held at St.. Catherine's. Sister Mary William, the college's principal, conducted the library tour. NC Photo.

Segregation _ CAPE TOWN, (NC)"':""'A .gov.,. ernment spokesman stated here that South Africa's law to provide for residential segregation of the races will not be invoked .in the case of tnixed church ;attendance.

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·.Cha rnfroes Appea I Continued from Page One , "Your' Tenth Anniversary oombined with this year's Cath'olic Charitie~ ,Appeal affords us 'the - opportunity to double our gift 'in your honor. "Please accept our check' for One Thousand Dollars as a token of ,our respect and gratitude." , -The Lecomte Family ~'. Gold Medal Baking Co.

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"My wife joins with me to QKtend heartiest felicitations on vour Tenth Anniversary as the Ordinary of the Diocese of Fall ~ver.

, "Because of our great admira:cion 'for' you and Catholic Charities, I hope the enclosed pledge for Five Thousand Dollars will help set the standard of gi"i~g throughout the Diocese." -George a'nd Dora Montle

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;"Heartiest congratulations on ,our Tenth Anniversary. I have CltwayS maintained that our's: is not the la:rgest nor the. wealthiest Diocese-just the c1assie'st.· !'I hop~ the enci~sed' pledge !ol' One Thousand Dollars will ,help keepit'that way." Arthur C.,Guimond

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Other notable gifts were: '1 $2,000 Atty. & Mrs. John T. Farrell: F. L. Collins & SonS, ',trie'.

'$1,000 Mr. & Mrs. Aloysius J. Kearns Mr. & Mrs. Monsour Ferris, Anonymous Caritas Guild For the' nex~ ten days the IIp'ecial Giftsoli'Citors -will 'be employed in contacting business 'and professional· 'contacts. in the acea. SpeCial emphasis to this parot cif the Appeal will be added by the TV appearance of the Diocesan Lay. Chairman, Mr. .Joseph E. FerJ;landes, on WJARTV, Channel'10, Sunday, A-pril 30, 1961 at 12 noon.

Ordination Continued f;om Page One bol'O and the Angelicum, Rome. He also took courses at the Cathotic Institute in Paris. First Solemn Mass . .' ,Rev. Mr. Brisson will celebrate his First Solemn Mass at 11 :30 Sunday morning, May 7. in St. Anthony's Church, Manchest~r, after which time he will receive' an assignment to duty, from .the La Salette superiors.

Pope John Aftte~ds Symphony Concert ,'VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope lohn .attende'd the annual coneert given for him by the Italian radio network's symphony orchestra in the Vatican's Hall of . Benedictions. The Pope and many cardinals and bishops heard a program of works by Bach, Beethoven. Cherubini and Mozar.t.

Science Faii" . Concurrently with the convention, a Science' Fair will be held for students of Diocesan high', schools. Presentation of ·awards to prize-winning exhil:iits, will be a feature of the closing of the convention. Judges, will be Gilbert M. Bandarra, M.Ed., Dartmouth High School; ArmandA. Dallaire, M.S., B. M. C. Durfee High School, Fall River; and Patrick F. Delaney, Jr., A'·M., Dighton-Rehoboth Regional High S<:hool. ,., Science exhibits,will be op.en· to the public from 9 to i2 and 1:30 ,to 4 on Friday. ' Arrangements for the conven.:. tion have been made' by Father O'Neill, general chairman, assisted .by Rev. John P. Driscoll, Rev. J:oseph L. Powers~ Re.v. Edrop,nd L. Dickinson, Rev. JohnF. ::Q:ogan,.Rev. Edward J: Burns, , Sister Miriam, ' RS,M., Sister Mary. Felicita, RS.M., Miss Grace A. Taylor and'Mrs, James /~cMahori. .' 0

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.Fea~ :LeprosYS'pread i In .Congo

Provin~e

. LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-'-:-Ne.w: outbreaks of Hansen;s disease (leprosy) are'feared in the north of Kasai. pJ;'ovince with the forced departure of missioners and others who have cared for its victims for decades. . :. A 'European businessman who made a' rapid tour of the area to ,visit his stores reported' that ,rampag!.ng,baridsof youngcie~ linquents ha"e .driven missioners from .their stations. " . The, flight of the missioners ~nd European 'medical techni-. cians .who cared. for the ·lepers has left tens of thousands, of them without.medical treatment. 'Famine is expected 'to take Ii heavier toll, than the lack' of medicines since the disease' runs rapidly through undernourished bodies.

,Castro Strrc61lg!:ing StMdent Liberty WASHINGTON (NC) -Academi~, freedom is dying-if not dead-in Castro's Red-tinged Cuba, two University of Havana . ,refugee students said here. The 'students, 'Raul Gonzales, 24, and Eduardo Muniz, 22, also said the Castro regime is trying to harness youth ,organizatio~s to its own purposes. Organiza.·tions that wiil not be yoked to 'Castro's side are throttled, they said!· , .r • .• The students said' 80 per cent of the University of Havana's 'professors have quit the universi'ty rather ,than submit to the directives of, a military junta which 'Prime l Minister Fidel .Castro has placed over· the uni-' versity., . ' . , F:lee to U. S..

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S~STERS

NEED ROOM,

People are people the world over ; .. and here's proof of U f..om India. Six years ago the people of MUKKULAM, a village . S t rh in the ARCHDIOCESE of CHANGA· ~7;. ,"J,'. NACHERRY, begged th e ' POOR . ,.c.. .I'd' CLARE, SISTERS to come take care ttrJ ...... ,of their, girls ando-pen a school. Four ~, ,~ Sisters. went.. • • today there are 20 ~ fA , ••• and the.20 Sisters today are living + .L in, the tiny house which was intended T original~y for four. Understandably, there is, no room, even in the chapel where the Sisters recite their prayers. The Sisters' work in MUKKULUM is .The Holy Father's Mission her~ic and' successful • • • but the,., . flo,- flit Orimtal cburrh ,m'" enlarge. their house If they are "'' golnc to stay. The people they 'serve ' are grateful and generouS • • .: bUl they are too poor to provide &~ 'fa(lilities the Sisters need. $3,000, 'carefuiiy spent win do &b~ .job in M:UKKULAM. "If Catholics in America could 'see our p'i~ht and the good we could do," says, Sister. Teresa, ibe Superior, ,"th~y would alt'do somethilll( to nelp." We agree. More tha~ t~at, Catholit:s in A~erica will do' something' for the' Sisters wlthout seeing t~eir pli~h~. If you ca~ send us $1.00 for' MUK~ULAM we'll ,be more tb3ll grateful and" the Sisters will , never 'stoP tliankingGocf. : •.for 'you. We have 80 ,much, the,. . have, so little.!, Please' send whatever' you can afford..,...$I, $&,' HO 'o~ more.: Even, pennies wi':l help; God 'bless tout '

Ai"

. Premier Castro viola'ted Cuba's Constitution in appointing the army officers to oversee the university, the ,students said. According, to' the Cuban Constit·u.';' tion, the University of Havanli " is' an autonomous' institution. I The 'Constitution specifies that the govel'nment's only respolls='". SISTERS ARE UNSELFISH ~ility:towar4. the university, is .~hen they ask something, for tIiemselves, you knowUtey are fjnanclil1' support. ' in need. Here are six Sisters,:who, need sponsors ...; men and ' , More than,3,OOO studentS of the :, 'w.omen who' cait, provide. food and cloth- .. '. ,university have fled to the U. S., " iug .for 'c~em whil~ t~ey are preparing to . '" ,becQme Sjster~. .' The preparation" ~kes' ·Mr. Gonzalez Said, He 'left 'the t-.;vo • years. and the tw07year program university '1ast Summer' "beco~ts for each Sister $300. <That's, rough-. , cauSe it was no longer a center Iy ,$?o.9 a week). The SisterS are: S.ISQ'ER of study:but a center of politiCli't CECIL MARIA and' ,SISTER PROVIindoctrination." He had been DENTIA at the, CLARIST SiSTERS 'in studying,law. PALAI, INDIA; SISTER HERMINE and He quit Cuba in September '$IST,ER- JASMIN of, the ARMEN~AN SISTERS OF THE 1M"because I had nothing to do' . MAC.ULATE ,~ONCEPTION, now studymg, in Rome; SISthere ~xcept to collaborate with l'ER CHRISTEA and SISTER NARCISSA, w~o want- to become something I did not. ,believe in." CARMELITE SISTERS i~ .Ol.LUR, INDIA. Perhaps, if $3.00 a week is too muct' for. you, you ~tild get some of your friends to help. What greater .charity is there Ulan helping Sisten; in need'? New Bedford SerninsvVill hold their monthly public holy· hoUl" for increased vocations 3 this ; 'ON ,MOTHER'S DAY Sunday affernoon in St.' James' Many ,a mother; we 'know' from our mail, mueh prefers to' have Church.. !lODlething given to themissiolit! in ~er name' on Mother's Da,.· than to receive a pre,sent for herself.. As time goes on; we realiZie ,more l\nd. more it's in 'the nature of a Christian mother' to giv:e rather than receive. You might, in your mother's mime, give a \ Sac~ed Article to a needy ·Mission church. Or you might. give Paint and Wallpaper her a Perpetual Membership <$20) in the CATHOLIC 'NEAR Dupont Paint· EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION:'in this way 'She'll participate forever.. in all the prayers and good works of our Priests and cor. Middle St. Sisters.:Or you might'send us a donation, marked "No Strings . ,i, 422 Acush. Ave. tUtached," which we'll use where it's needed most. Write 118 (l"t:.ta.; New Bedford iDunediately, and we'll send your 'mother lin attractive Gift • .. PARKING Card indieating whl!.t, you have' done for her on Mother's Dat.· , Rear of Store Finally, If your mother is deceased, you might enroll her for a set of Gregorian Masses-30 Masses offered for'30 days without interruption, to which innumerable 'indulgences ,are' attached. I WHAT YOU PAY FOR A PACK OF FILTER CIGARETTES WILL $UPPORT A FAMILY OF PALESTINIAN REFUGEES ,FOR ONE DAY. MARK, Y-qUR, DONATION "REFUGEES."

',Serra Holy Hour

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Report Comm'unists In'crease in Britain LONDON (NC) - The Communist party in' Britain which suffered a severe drop in support after the 1956 Hungarian uprising, is again r,apidly gaining in strength. ' ' ' , The Times, national daily, said Britain~s three most important universities _ Ox,ford, Cam.. b'd ", ' all , have I fl ge "and London' growing communist g l' 0 up s among undergraduates. Communist clubs 'have ,also been revived at the universiti~s of CM-diff, H:qll, Newcastle -lIpon'Type, Liverpool, Leeds" 'Edin..; , burgh a·ild Aberdeen. " "The' Communist party is currently making greater progress in Britain than it has done for years," Douglas Hyde:a Catholic convert from communism, said in the weekly Cathol-ie T4mes. "

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Ranks o,f, UnbeaTt~n' ,Th'inn~d'-"" After "First Week of Play ",', By Jack KiBu~avy Local schqolboy baseball was launched last week despite rain, snow and 30 ,degree temperature. Coaches are prone to moan ~~out the u~reasonablewe~theJ.' each S~ring brings, but conditIons do seem to be getting progressIvely worse. The Diman - Dighton game well represented on the Colby halted by rain on Tuesday ,College nine this Spring. Leadwas played amid heavy snow ing pitcher for the Mules is forsqualls the following day. mer Somerset captain Jim·

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WINOOSKI PARK (NC) Bowling by mail, latest' i~nova­ tion of the collegiate sports world, will be adopted 'by St. Michael's College here' nex!l November as a varsity sport. . The striking situation was dotailed by Robert Beran, WisCORsin State College director o:f intramural sports, who is recruiting for the newly formed National Intercollegiate Bowlinfl Association. VarsUy Squad Athletic Director George (Doc;) Jacobs said some 40 students at St. Michael's had been bowlinf.'i as an intramural sport here for seven years. The top woodgetters of the school's" eight teams will form the varsity squad, he added. i I The arrangement calls f01' members of the intercollegiate bowling league teams to roll on weekends, when the students can spare the time from 'classes. "Doc'" Jacobs said: "When tho league is formed, all area conference competition will be on a postal basis and the top four teams in every conference wil:1~ compete in face-to-face roUoffs for the title."

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Thurs., April 27, 1961'

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Here was the ideal setting for a Bridgeman who last week tumedt'S< blinding fastballer; instead the in a fine 2-0 job against Wi!tilt turned into liams. Hitting well and playing a 16-11 slugfest, first base is Durfee's Charley the Regionals Carey. Charley had four hits winning. against Springfield on Saturday. The unbeaten Rounding out the local array is ran k s w ere Dick Bonalewicz, power hitting thinned quickly outfielder who is also an exi n bot h the Durfee three sports star. Co u n t y and College baseball suffered a Narry circuits. loss early this week when Jack o n 1 y Durfee Barry, veteran Holy Cross coach and Fairhaven and former major league shortsur v i v e d stop and manager, passed awa.v unscathed in B. C. competition, after a long illness. A member of while Case and Dight~n-Reho- Connie Mack's legendary $100,000 both posted successive wins in iniileld, Barry played in six Narry. The latter race promises world championship teams with to be a real scramble with no the A's and the Boston Red Sox one team outstanding. Durfee which he managed in 1917. This, and Fairhaven, scheduled to would have been his 41st year meet last Monday. appear to be at the Cross during which time the class of the senior circuit. his teams won 627' games, lost The Hilltoppers,'led by sopho-, 151 and tied 5 for an amazing more outfielder Bob Bonalewicz, .800 percentage. were extended by TauntoIl-and The death knell may have Block Setolll HaU'$ had to come from behind to sal- been sounded for the annual vage a late game 4-3 decision. New England basketball and Expansion Plellns Bonalewicz drove in three runs hockey tournaments as a result SADDLE RIVER (NC)-Setoo and scored the fourth himself on of the decision of the ConnectiHall University's attempt to set the strength of a double and cut Interscholastic Conference up a branch campus here in New triple in four trips. Right hander to withdraw from regional play. ' Jersey has been delayed because Woody Berube pitched 7 1/3 in- The move was not unexpected. of a. zoning amendment introSC HOLAR .p L AYERS: Tops in sports and study are duced at a special meeting'of tho nings of no-hit, no-run ball in Only last month Hartford Public relief of Ed Mello to gain his upset Wilbur Cross for the title, Michael Clarke (left) St. Louis School; ,and William Sylvia, ,Saddle,River council. " first victory of the 'year. the eleventh to be won by a Con'" St. Mary's Cathedral School, both of Fall River. They, hold, Msgr., John J. Doughe1't3\ Berube's scintillating perfor- necticut school in the past 12 trophies presented' by Santo Christo Junior Basketball president ,of Seton Hall, had anmance capped a'banner week for years. Only Duffee has interLeague in re~ognition of their standing as honor students nounced March 21 that the uni'Coach Don Montle's' pitching rupted the skein. ' ' ';:~~~t:rew;:ct:F~~~~ ~ staff. On Monday Terry Lomax The' Nutmeg entries have not' and outstanding basketball players. threw a three-hitter at Attle- made a 'comparable impression River on which to set up the branch. boro, striking out 18 en route. on the ice, however, and it is When Durfee's hitting comes conceivable that post season play But on March 23 the mayOl' around, and it's early yet, the in hockey may survive. There and council of Saddle River Red and Black is going to be a is some talk that the three introduced a zoning amendment tough club to handle. Northern States may stage their PARIS (NC)-Sports which pIe from' different social classes that would permit only primary own tourney, While ~n some and secondary schools to be conCoyle Young quarters the possibility of now aim at the complete development "healthy and instructive distrac- structed in the borough. A pubof a man can help make him a tions by offering them a vast and Coach Jim Burns' Coyle nine, determining a Mass. State chamlic hearing on the issue is sched. young at heart but with lots of pion has been, greeted with better Christian, a Vatican let- varied choice, of sports." uled April 10. ter told Catholic physical eduHe pointed out that it also hustle showed Somerset how the ~nthusiasm",' ,ca~ors here. infield 'is' played in 'an exhibition seeks "to give' youth a' sound tilt in Taunton on' Friday. The The letter, was written in the , moral and Christian foundation Warrior inner cordoIl, "'sparked name of Pope John by Domenico and make' use 'of the indisputable by pivotinan :Gerry 'Cunniff and Cardinal, Tardini"Vatican Secre- virtues of sport to foster an au-, tl,1ird baseniari'A, 'Cwikla, entary of State" to the convention thentic spiritual life." Such a gineered a 5-2 victory over' the , ,NEW YORK (NC) ........ CBS-TV here marking the 50th anniver- program, he said, deserves the;, will broadcast "an 'hour-long Narry Leaguers. Cunniff has tre-' program of movie censorship on' sary of the founding of the highest praise. 123 Broadway'I mendous range afield and he is Catholic International FederaPromote Friendship May 11 featuring a censor, in:" . '",j I,,' , , a steadying influence on first dusiry r~presentative and Cath- '" ti,on for Physical Education. , The, CanUnal said that, C1:lristy.ear ,shortst~p Menard, who ~ame olic a'nd Protestant spokesmen. ' Federation members from nine ,ian spol'ts,pr,ograms develop good up with a c01lple of gems, him~ VA 4·5000 "Censorship and the Movies" countries discussed the doping of health',and joy ,of life during the Ilfllf. , will be seEm on: "CBS Reports" 'athletes' and other' challenges .to difficult, y~ars, of adolescence. , Cwikla had a perfect" day at, 'from 10 to 11 'P,M., EPT, accord.. the Catholic conscience in modThey help, qe said, "to create a ' the plate with fOUl: hits in as 'ing to the network. ,ern sport. Archbishop Paolo Ber- developed sense of community many triP!!' and fresp,man Paul Msgr. Thomas F,Little, exec- toli, Apostolic Nuncio to France, through t'eam spirit and to proO'Neil ,turned in a strong five utive secretary of the' National presided. mote open and generous friendinning stint on the mound before Mind Over Body ship," and' serve as a "school of giving way to Collard who fin- Legion of DecencY;- will be a After conveying the Pope's loyalty, courage and unselfishished up. Both Cwikla and participant. Others were listed good wishes to federation pres- n~ss." O'Neil hail from 'Fall River. The as: Mrs. Christine Gilliam, film ident A. Van Good, the letter said Warriors dropped an opening CITIES SERVICE censor for Atlanta, Ga.; Geoffrey that sports "can serve and favor day verdict to Fairhaven, 9-3. DISTRIBUTORS I ' " The plague of high school Shurlock, ,administrator of the, the control of' the' mind over the' NO JOI: 100 BIG U. S. mov~e industry'!! voluntary body, and can train disciplined , pitchers-or any pitcher for that' NONI TOe SMAU. ' " matter-cost Somerset dearly in "production code"; and S. Frank- and energetic men and women' Gasoline I I , : 'the Case game on Thursday. The lin Mach" executive director of who in their own envi,ronment "'Fuel and Range", first two Cardinals, Jim Murphy the broadcast and film, commis- can promote Christian rege-neraand Len O'Neil, received a total sion of the National Council of' tion." ,'I~~ of seven bases on, balls between Churches, the leading, ~. 5,,'" , Cardinal, Tardini prais~d ttie them. Five runs resulted even Protestant-Orthodox federatiOn. federation's efforts to offer peoNBC-TV also announced it will . OIL BURNERS;'" though the 'Redbiras could MaID Offtee aDd PJaIIt fashion only three- singles. It ,,'as broadcast on' April ,29 from 9:30 , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - . 'to 10:30 P.M., EST, a program G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS IOWRl, MASS. !l real give away program. Case Michael' Austin capitalized and registered a 5-4 featuring director Otto Prem........lIiIIe Lowe:II Inger and former movie producer For prompt delivery victory. . ,Inc. . Roger Duarte, Dighton's elon- Dore Schary in discussion of . . I-IUS ... GI. 11-_ & Day & Night Service "Should the Movie Industry gated righthander, had a terrifie Classify Its Films?" Rural 80ttted Gas Service break-in against Diman hitting FUNERAL SERVICE . .1IIwr ....... two homeruns and fanning 15 61 COHANNET ST. ' hitters en route. It was, as ex- Anti-S~ut Bill Moves BOSlON 549 COUNTY pected, pretty much a pitchers' TAUNTON Forward 'in Florida OCEANPORr, week. Gerry Suprenant set down TALLAHASSEE (NC)-A bill Attleboro - No. Attleboro NEW BEDFORD, MASS. PAWTUCKEI', 15 Prevost batsmen via the K designed to achieve faster and Taunton route and Paul Summers had 14 m 0 r e effective enforcement strikeouts in the Somerset game. against obscene literature cleared Give the hitters another week a Senate' Judiciary Committee and some weather. Then duck, and is expected to come before AVAILABlE IN FAIRHAVEN AT: lads! the Florida Senate soon. Area Represented Under the bill, distributors BRAZ BROS. F-ali River and Somerset aM convicted of forcing dealers to GRAND CENYRAl MARKETS accept obscene matter through BOYS WANTED for the tie-in',sales could be convicted of Polish Ch~plain , 'GREAT SCOTT SUPER MKTS: Priesthood and Brotherhood. Rev. Seraphin' Stachowicz; 'a felony punishable by five Lack of fundi NO Impedl. O.F.M.Conv.; pastor of Our Lady years in' jail or $10,000 fine. PlEASANT STREET MARKET" ment. Possession of obscene literaof Perpetual Help Church, New STOP & SHOP SUPER MKTS. Bedford, will serve as chap1ai. ture withoUt the intention to Write tIM of Polish Roman Catholic Union transmit it would be a misdeof America, Council ,74, repre-, meanor under the bill and punP, O. Box 5742 senting units in New Bedford ishable by a $500 fine or six, Baltimore 8, Mel. months in pr-ison. and Fall River.

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Vatican Letter Says Sports Valuable In Making Men Good Christians

TV To."Debate "Censorship .

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W'fE M~CHOR-o;oc-ese of Fan River-T'hurs. April ;27,1961

REPORT FROM GUATEMALA: Rev. John M. Breen, Maryknoll 'Missioner from Fall River, pastor of Soloma parish in Guatemala mountains, reports pictorially on activities in his domain. Left, it's jump rope time in Central America too. Girls learn the fine art from Sister Marta :Rodriguez. Center, Father Breen stands on site of partially finished

Domestic Arts-School for Indian girls. He hopes to have it ready by early 1962. Right, Sister Carmen Torres, fc:>urth grade teacher, inspects, notebook of Lucia Mateo, "smartest girl in the 'parochial school," according to Father Breen. She gets 100's it;l everything but arithmetic.

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:Repcrt Asks Mutual Respect "For C~<er9Y,' Psychiatrists'

NEW YORK (NC) - A psychiatrists' report urges clergymen and psychiatrists to respect each others' functions and cooperate in aiding those who need help. The report reminds the psychiatrist that if he "presumes to lecture on aspects of religiori says, the clergy should "have an other than its ,psychic func.:. ' understanding of the nature of iion and clinical' signifi- mental disorder." , And to help the sick person, eance, he is out of his

province." , Beyond Capacity' . And for clergymen it had this advice: "A well 'conceived and executed therapeutic program is beyond the capacity of the tlergymen, unless, of course, he, is one of those who has' under~llken specialized training." The report, entitled "Psychiatry and Religion: Some' :steps toward Mutual Understanding tlnd Usefulness," was prepared by the Committee on Psy.chiatry and Religion of tJ1e Group 'for ~he Advancement of Psychiatry, Iii psychiatrists' organization. ' Own Attitudes . The report reminds psychiatrists that they should be aware of their own attitudes toward ,religion and should be prepared to "scrutinize" the psychological significance ,of 'their beliefs "whenever this seems relevant In work with particular' patients." "If psychiatrist is going to' deal temperately and objectively with the beliefs of his patient, he should know at least when or where he is himself unsettled, just as he should in regard to other areas of life," it adds. .. Understand' Nature The report urges clergymen to refer persons with psychological problems tq psychiatrists., for treatment. For this reason, it

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Bishop UD'ges Action Against Sll.lllTlday Sales BUFFALO (NC) - Increased violation of the Sunday closing law calls for "immediate atteri-: tion while there is still time to give Sunday back to God," Bishop Joseph A. Burke of Buffalo said here. The Bishop in a pastoral letter cited violation "by giant shopping centers, furniture and hardware stores." He urged all Catholics to cooperate with the Citizens Committee for the Observance of the Lord's Day. The Bishop said individual Catholics can do this in three ways: (1) "Let yourself be heard as a Christian, (2) Refrain from doing unnecessary shopping on Sunday, (3) Patronize those. stores that work along with the committee."

Urges Perrsonal Co~tQct

in Effort

To Aid

N~edy

NEW YORK (NC) - A social action 'expert urged Catholics to g~ve "the unique touch of personal compas-

sion, love and charity" to their efforts to aid the needy and suffering. Father John F. Cronin, S.S.; it states, the clergyman should assistant director of the Social recognize "that illness is just Action' Department, National that, and must avoid the error of Catholic Welfare Conference, viewing it as an unaccountable said donations to charity, while mishap; a retributive calamity, good, are not enough. or simply the reflection of a "Our annual check contributed /moral issue." to organized welfare work is Clergyman Ally hardly the complete answer" to The report says most, psychi- the need for personal involveatrists would probably welcome ment in aiding others, Father having the Clergyman as "an Cronin said. "Ali affluent 'society need not ally in the effort to deal with the , be corrupt and decadent," Father illness of a patient." But it adds that the clergyman , Cronin' said: "Wealth and leisure "should regard himself as an can bela challenge to the service informed and influential layman of one's fellows in works of . with no more authority or com-' Christian. compassion.'" petence in the field of psychi- . Speaking of the problems' of atry than the psychiatrist has in such minority groups as Negroes the field of theology." and the Spanish'-speaking, he 'declared:.. ' , ' ',. ~ "There are' organizations to fight' for their rights, and there are laws to protect these' rights. 'James vi. Fay, :National Com- All this is good and necessary. "But in the struggle 'for rights, mander of the Catholic War . Veterans, will be guest of honor too often one' essential eiement at a meeting of Father John P. is lackiqg. ~his is - t~e, warm; Washington P9st 1799, Taunton, p~rsonal ~ontac~ . at 7 'tomorrow night at the Shamrock Room, Taunton. Commander Fay will visit the unit' as one of a series of visits he is . , ptaking to posts throughout the country. A graduate of St. John's University and Law School, Commander Fay has been a member of the New York and Federal' bar since '1940. For the past eight years he has served as Assistant Corporation Counsel in charge of Admiralty matters for the City of New York. . He is presently serving as' a member of the State of New York World Memorial Authority, TrM$tCompa~y president of the Guild of Catholic Lawyers of New York, and TAUNTON, MASS. member of the Cardinal's Committee of the Laity, Archdiocese 'U'HIC BANK ON! of New York. He held several offices in the Catholic War 'D"AUNTOIi\l GREIEN Veterans prior to being elected Commander, and has also been Member' of Federal Deposit active'in other parish and civic llnsurance Corporation organizations:

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C@lJi'tilIJi1\1&l1i11l@D'芦iltl'ov~ Ifolm VIENNA (NC) - A motion ,'" picture portraying the contributions of Austrian Catholics to the solution of social problems has been produced here to mark the 70th anniversary of the issuing of Pope Leo XIII's encyclical on labor, "Rerum Novarwn."

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Foster Parents Hope 'Tuesday' Will Never ,Come ,

TACOMA (NC) - Mr. and Mrs. Mons Helmerson now are hoping that "Tu'esday" never will . come. That's when 'they originally were to give up Mike. . . Blind and de~.f, ,Mike was ~O ,months old when the Catholic ~hildren's Service of Tacoma .asked the Helmersons to care fo~ him as .fos,ter pa,rents ~'fro~ FrIday untIl Tuesday." Mike IS now 12 years old. : Mike originally was scheduled to live w1th another foster fam.; Uy. Measles'iilVaded thlllt household and the Catholic agency asked the Helmersons 'to take over ~emporarily. Said Mrs. Hel~erson: "Time moved on. ;Mike won his place in ,our home and that was it."

sored by the Catholic agency for foster parents in the Tacoma area. , Mike is now a student at the Institute of Logopedics, Wich~ ita, Kan" one of the few schools in th~ country best equipped. to help blind and deaf children. The Helmersons read about the school in a magazine article. "In time we hope that Mike

will be able to read braille as a result of training he receives there," Mrs. Helmer90D said. . Use ~ibration Method During the' years Mike has . . been with the~, tJ:1e Hel~ersons communica~ed ~ith the, boy throug.h the vibration melihod~ his finge~s' feeling movements , Win Top Award of their mou,ths and throats. "From the beginning, we just The Helmersons have another foster 'son, John, 16, a sopho- felt our way wi,lih Mike," said more in a Tacoma high school. his foster mother. "He responded The love, patience and care the ' to our affection and our touch Helmersons showered upon these so quickly. Even as a baby he boy,s made lihem top-award winseemed to sense' our presence 'ners for 15 years of service as in the room, thoug.h he' could foster parent!! at a dinner spon- not see or hear us."


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