05.05.60

Page 1

The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure a,nd li'irm-ST. PAUL

Normal Child Development Is Important in Education, Maxwell Tells Teachers

Speaking on Creative Teaching, Dr. Clement Maxwell, President of Massachusetts State Teachers College at Bridgewater, gave the keynote address at this mo~ning's opening session of the Fifth Annual Convention of the Catholic Teachers Association of the Dioce~e, held at Bishop Stang High' School, North Dartmouth. "Th~r.e is d,tnger," warned the educator, "of thinking of ' . , education as a series of electric buttons with automatic results. All things must be

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, May 5, 1960 ~i I ' The Anchor PRICE We y·o . 4, N o. 18 ' © 1960 '$4.00 per Year

measured and evaluated with relation to the child in his normal development: physical, in-

Second Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River, Mass.

tellectual and moral. "Beware the philosophy of immediacy, the theory of instantaneous utility," said Dr. Maxwell. "We have the duty of preparing something better than a mere social being. We must help Turn to Page Eighteen

Ordinary, Says Cha.rities :'Response Governs Plans Beloved in Christ: ~ Pope Leo XIII was wise in matters of justice and social b~tterment. He did a great deal for the working classes. He urged, as far back as 1891, in a great Labor Encyclical most of the reforms that 'only lately have been made. But in his day, he was dealing with a smug, self-satisfied, selfstyled liberal attitude, more corcerned with wealth and political power than with the right to have a living wage. , It is interesting, however, to note that he, like everyone teaching in the name of Christ, laid down a rule we should aU' obgerve. He wrote' as follows': ,"To have the' means to m'ake a neighbor rise above wimt and ,sickn~ss, and to re!use to help, is to make one accouptable, before God for, the mfsery existing about him." . Laws of charity are binding on all, the poor as well as the rich. The measure of giving may differ. But each one should, in good conscience, want to do his fair share. We tnay not, - we must not rely on governm'entswhich grow Inore and more demanding, to satisfy every human need. That is too expensive a luxury in the long run. And what's worse it brings us to -the threshold of communism. : In the Diocese of Fall River we have inherited a tradition of good stewardship. We' have twenty-four agencies of social and charitable service that touch every level of need from the cradle, to the grave. No need tO I tmumel'<ite them here, since there is hardly a family in th~ Diocese that has not. eXI>e~ien.ceQ in. sQ'me, measure the immense good that is done, due to the functioning of our Charities Appeal, now in its nineteenth year. To maintain these precious services involves considerable expense. Yet it all constitutes a big saving for the cQmmtmity. We all know what a great, almost impossible ~sk it would be to replace our nurseries,hom~s, welfare services, youth centers, and homes for the aged and infirm. Thank God we do not have such a problem. But we do have pressing need to expand. So effective has been our school for retarded children, that we are preparing to open a' new Nazareth Hall, this time at Hyamiis On the Cape. This .means· a considerable outlay, but' it will ~ring blessings to many that' might otherwise be overlo.oked. And in .September of this year, Cape Cod will have proof of our interest 1n this ·new ,field for helping children. , So, too,' with the aged. Our three large homes are cl'owded, and each has a long waiting list. There is need for expansion into new areas. Taunton 'and the Attleboros would be' much enriched, if they had anything like the. Catholic ~ospitality that is enjoyed by aged people in the Fall River, New Bedford and Fairhav~n .communities. We are making plans to meet this, need., But It will prove expensive. A building to give accommodation' to seventy guests would 4X)st well over a milliori dollaI:s'. We may 'not be able to

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Turn to Pag,e ,Two

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_altimo~e ~~th~;an. Now' Spreading ,Erroneous Canon Law Conclusions Merely for Political Purposes A pamphlet. "Cathoiic or President" is being widelY distributed by Harry F. Borleis of Baltimore, apparently designed to shOW that canon law prevents Catholics from taking the oath of office as President of the 'United States. The Baltimore Lutheran is distributing the booklet to Masonic Lodges, news media and to people States where presidential primaries are Bebeduled. . . Father John J. McGrath, assistant professor of canon law at Catholic University of America in Washington, and also a civil iawyer, makes the following comment concerning the pamphlet. By, 'Father john J. McGrath.

in

Th,e pamphlet's author obviously' knows very little about canon law, for. his work is not only filled with errors, mistakes ,and .misrepresentations; ,but ·it, is 'elumsy and bad law. For instance, canons 1572 to 1593 legislate the 'structure of Church" courts" on .. the" .. '" .. ''' ,.. ,,'.., . . . ' on: "Canon 1574 decrees thaf a ~lOcesa~ ,l~v,~~. One of ~hI~, .. J~y'J:I)an .. cam1,Qt..oe a ' judge in group, canOn 1574, reqUIres court. In the United States, all that judges of these ecc1esi- judges must be laymen." astical courts be priests who are learned in canon law. 1l4r. BOrleis writes of this can-

Now why did Mr, Borleis put these two sentences together? Turn to Page Twelve

1960 (harities Appeal Opens In Diocese' The 1960 Catholic Chari. ties Appeal starts today. Officially this is the first day of the Special Gift 'section of the Appeal. Mr. 'George Vigeant, Sr" Lay-chairman, urged his fellowworkers.in this section of the annual charIty effort to: "Make this the greatest year in the history of the Charity Appeal. You must appeal to your Special Gift contacts as the representative' of the 24 agenCies of charity that are sustained by the Appeal. Your enthusiastic approach will aid in conveying this sam'e attitude to all those you contact. Explain the possibiiity of larger contributions by using 'the pledge system; the necessity for increased giving to meet ever growing' costs;, the· community benefits that come from every advance in Catholic Charities.'" ills Excellf'~~y,- Bishop Conno~ly, win.bring the story of the , Appeal to the public in a television appearance next Sunday. Th_e program will be carried by . Turn' to Page Eighteen

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SI'slers BUI·ldl·ng New NoYlllale In Taunton '

Ground breaking ceremonies for a new novitiate house of the Sisters of St. Dorothy were held Sunday at Villa Fatima, Taunton. Rev. Joseph Oliveira of St. Anthony's PariSh, chaplain of Villa Fatima, officiated at the rites which were attended by Sisters of St, Dorothy of the New 'Ellgland and New York houses, friends and relatives. Turn to Page Ten

DR. CLEMENT MAXWELL

Fran'cisco,n Nuns,·'to Observe 50 Yearsl Work in Fall River Fifty years of service to the city of Fall -River will be celebrated Tuesday morning,' May 10 by the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary of St. Anthony's Convent, 621 Second , Street, Fall River. The community, will attend P<mtifjcal Mass at St. Mary's Cathed- M E l ' b th f P t 1 'I k ' 'th H'IS, perior. ary Iza e 0 or uga , su'raI a t 10' . 0 c oc WI It was originally a priE 11 th M t R : xce ency;' e os ev-, vate home then was occupied .. erend' James L. ,Connolly, bY', the Sisters of Mercy for 3S

Bishop of Fall' River as cele..; years b_efore passing to the . brant. ', Franciscan Missionaries. Followirig Mass, iuncheon will The community has performed ,pe: served 'ill, the dinir _ha~l of many services for the Diocese in St; Frands "Guild, ·.a women's its time here. Originally coming 'residence operated by the Sisters : to teach at Espirito Santo school, on: Whi~ple Street, directly be- a commitment still fulfilled, it . hind the SecQnd Street convent. now teaches catechism at six . Bisnop,Connolly and area clergy otqer Portuguese churches, 'opy';ll be among honored guests. erates S1. Francis Guild for Tuesday will be a'day of extra-' business-womer and supplies special meaning for two mem- . Holy Communion hosts to many ,be~s of the communi~y, Sister ar~a churches. M~ry Edward and 'SIster dos The Cathedral, incidentally, is Anjos. Both have been at' the one of the churches supplied by Second Street convent since its the Sisters so the Hosts used at opening in 1910. their jubilee Mass will be of Sister dos ,\njos was foqnerly' their own hluking. a teacher but is now retired Some 300 invitations to the 'from that activit) She still observance have been issued and sews altar linens, a pursuit,she it is expected that school chilha~ 'Uowed throughout her dren taught by the Sisters will religious life. Sister Mary' Ed- ,also be' present. ward was' for many years in In addition to Sister Mary 'Ed'CHICAGO (NC~-A Chi- charge of the kitchen at St. war~ and Sister'dos Anjos. the cago real estate man has left Francis Guild. Both Sisters have community includes four other the bulk of, his $1,125,000 - - be,en. me~bers of the Franciscan golden jubilarians, and a 62 year 'nst'tu MlsslOnarle.s for es t a t e to Ca th 0 I1·c 1 . 1 ' . , 56 years. . . ' veteran , Mother .Francis ' who is tions and charities here, accord. St: Al'3nsthOny s Cldonv~ndtMbU1hldconventTPo~trtoessp; T ing to his will filed in probate mg IS years 0 ,sal ot er . urn age en

C. hie..ago Rea Itor Wills Fortune To Cha rities

cO~~'lter

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To Give St~ George ~oy Scou·. Awa rd ~a:~a~h~~t\~~~~~oag~o OfeZ~h b~f For First Time in ,Di:ocese 'May 29 P. Powers, who died

eight Ca~holic institutions. Aside from $175;000 in 'personal bequests to friends and relatives, the remainder of ,the estate was left to the Catholic Charities of Chicago. Each of the following received $100,000: St. Vincent's 0 i' p hooa nag e, Little Sisters of the Poor, st. Mary's Training 'School, Des Plaines; Sisters of Charity of the Blessed' Virgin,' for use of St. Wry's High School; Sisters of Mercy, fOr use of St. Xavier building fund; Angel 'Guardian German - Catholic orphanage, L_Jola University for the Stritch Scho!>l of Medicine, and De Paul University.

Bishop Connolly Sunday, May 8 12, Noon Ch~' 10,' WJAR-TV,

'St: George Awards for leaders in Boy Scouting under I' 'II b'e presen t ed f or t h e f'Irs t t'Ime III . th e Cath 0 ic auspIces WI Fall River Dio~e-se at a banquet:Sunday night, May 29 at the CYO' Hall, Anawan ~treet. Bishop James' L. Connolly : ," will make the presentation to men·.outstanding in Scout activities. Names of those to be honored will not be I I

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announced date.

until

the

banquet

The event is open to all inter, ested. in Scouting. Tickets are available' from: area chairmen, including Francis Sheehan and Anthony Lima, New Bedford; Owen McGowan, Walter Wilcox and John Shay, Fall River; John . Flanagan, Taunton; Joseph Murphy; Mansfield-Attleboro. ' . ..' . The S1. George Award was .• ' '" inaugurated in 1954 at a national f, [~~ I conference of Diocesan Scout '" 5 Chaplains. It is intended to rec'ELECTED.: Sister Made- ognize outstanding contributions leine Clemence, director of to the spiritual development of Catholic youth in the Boy Scout the School of Nursing at St. program: Ahne's Hospital, Fall River~ Rev. Walter A. Sullivan is has been elected to, the post , Diocesan Scout chaplain, assisted of Religious member of the" by area chaplains, including Rev. , . h ". I C' . William O'Connell, Fall River; B~a~d, at t e Nab~ma on- Rev. Leo Sullivan, New Bedford: v~nbon ~f, Cat~ohc Nurses Rev, James Lyons, Taunton-Atheld at Louisville. . Ueboro.


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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFall River-Thurs., May

5,1960'

Father Considine ,To Give Course In Puerto Rico

Plans Depend Upon Charity Continued from Page One

provide the two homes immediately, beginning this year. But our planning is affected by the measure of public generosity. In other words, we. can do only as much as we have means to build and service. . A third project, nearing realization is' our Day Camp for Girls. This, as you may know, will provide unlimited accommodations with bus transportation" for as ma~y as can use it, girls between the ages of eight to fourteen. The Camp is located at Freetown, on Long Lake, near our Cathedral Camp. These are all proofs of our wish to be helpful, as long as. we can, for as many as we have means to, provide. What has been done in the past is due to your awareness that some one should help meet our growing needs, and that someone really means everyone. Where each of us carries honestly and fairly his share of the burden, great deeds can be accomplished, and it ceases to be a burden, but a blessing upon all. May I ask you then to receive well our representatives wJ:1o come to you in the name of Charity and social-service. Please do your part to assure the maintenance of cherished institutions,' and the opening of new doors to bring benefits into every corner of the Diocese of Fall River. We must not fa:il to help our neighbor improve his condition. We should ali unite and contribute personally to make tomorrow better than today. With cordial thanks, and a hearty blessing on those who serye, and all' who support our 1960 Charities Appeal, I remain' ' Faithfully yours in Christ,

~....../6!.;;g_ ~ishop' of Fall River'

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"Bishop Connolly to Offer Mass Sunday for. Fall ,Rivei'I< of C , Rev. John E. Boyd, director of the Catholic Welfare Bur.eau and St. Vincent's Home, will be the speaker at the Knights of Columbus Communion breakfast, Sunday at Catholic Community Center. . Fahter Boyd, who is also pastor of St. Bernard's Church, Assonet, will take for his topic, "Mary and the Modern World." . Most ~e,,:.. Bishop James L. COI?nolly, lIke Father ~Oy~. a Kmght of Colu :bus, WIll Jom his br.others. at tI;te 9 o'clock. Ma~s m. St. Mary s Cat.hedral, WhICh HIS Excellency WIll celebrate:. ChaIrman Leomdas L. Moreau said that knights will serve as lay readers to lead the congregation in Latin responses, and that Armand Brodeur, member of Fall River Council, will be soloist.

Legion of Decency The. following films are to be added to the lists in their respective classifications:' 'Unobjectionable for adults: Ikiru (Japanese). { ,jectionable 'in part for all: Hercules Unchained (suggestive costuming and situations),; Electronic Monster; Platinum High School (both films have sadistic sequences). Condemned: Expresso Bongo (satirical intent is purported justification for indecent and suggestive costuming and situations. Also pervaded by' low moral tone).

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION May 8-51. Pat ric k, Falmouth. May 15----'St. Casimir, New Bedford. Viua Fatima, Taunton. May 22-5t. Matthew, Fall . River. St. Kilian, New Bedford., May 26-Convent of the Holy Union of the Sacred' Hearts, Fall River. Convent of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven. Mount 51. Mary's Convent, Fall River. .

THE ANCHOR

Second-class mail privileges QUthorised ' ., Fall River. Mass. Published ever7, Tbunda7 ,at 410 Highland Avenue, Fall River. Mass.. b7 the Catholic Preas of. the Diocese of-Fall RiVer. Subscription price II? mail, postpaid $4.00 per ,ear,'

Breakfast guests will include Rev. Msgr. Humberto S. Me,deiros,. Diocesan, chancel~or and K.night; Rev. Felix S. Childs, council chaplain; District Deputy George M. Thomas .of., New Bedford, Mayor ArrUda', and Grand Knight Joseph Travers, Jr., and Deputy Grand Knight Gilbert L. Lowney of Bishop Cassidy Council. ,Knights will form at KC Home, 209 Franklin Street, and move out at 8:30 sharp along Franklin North and South Main, Rodman: Second and Spring Streets to the Cathedral. Mayor Arruda will be iI) the procession which will 'be led by a police escort it Fourth Degree honor guard, ~nd a band provided by the Musician's Union.

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'Atty. John H. O'Neil, council advocate, will be parade marshal.

Mass Ordo rRIDAY-St. John, Apostle and Evangelist, Before the Latin Gate. Greater' Double. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Prefac~ of the Apostles. Votive Mass in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Permitted. Tomorrow is the First Saturday of the Month. ' SATURDAY - St. Stanislaus, Bisliop arid Martyr., Double. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Preface of Easter. SU~DAY

- III Sunday: Alter Easter. Double., White; Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect Apparition ofSt. Michael the Archangel; Creed; Preface of Easter.

MONDAY-5t. Gregory of Nail'" zianzen, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor' of the Church. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Easter. TUESDAY ' - St. Ant~ninus, Bishop and Confessor. Double. White. Ma Proper; Gloria; Second Collect SS. Gorman' and Epimachu·s, Martyrs; Pre1ace of Easter. WEDNE'SDAY-SS. Philip and J~es, Apostles. Double of II Class. Red. Mass Proper; Mass as qn M~y 1 in Hissal; Gloria;' Creed; Preface of Apostles. THURSDAY ..:.. 55. Nereus, Achilles, DomitilIa, and' Pan~ ·eratius,Martyrs. Simple. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Preface of Easter. ' .. .

PONCE (NC)-Rev. JOM M. Considine M.M., direct~ of the newly formed Lathl American Bureau, Nation8«

ADMIRE. ST. GEORGE AWARD: Arthur Gauthier, left, scoutmaster of Troop 50, St. Anne's Parish, Fall River, and Rev. Walter A.Sullivan, Diocesan Scout chaplain, examine the award that is going to be given to Scout leaders, under Catholic auspices.

,Curate to Offer Requiem for Father A Solemn High Mass of Requiem will be offered tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock in St. Anne's Church, Fall River, for the repose of the soul of Honore Boule, father of Rev. Roland B., :-oule, assistant pastor at the Blessed Sacrament Church, Fall River.. Interment will pe in Notre Dame ~emetery. The funeral be conducted fr,m. the Boule, Funeral Home, 615 Broadway, Fall Riyer. Surviving ,besides Father Boule are two daughters, Mrs. Normand Sequin of New Bedford and Mrs. Gaston Plante of

will

Holy Union Sister Wins Scholarship Sister Helen Lucy Sampson, S.U:S.C., faculty meI!lber of St: Mary's High School, Taunton, received word th~ ~ she has been awarded a research ,'as~ist­ antship in the graduate English department of Villanova University for the 1960-1961 academic year. A graduate of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, Sister Helen Lucy has studied at Manhattan College and l!'ordham, rniversity as well 'as ,Villanova.

Tiverton. Two other sonsresiding in FrlI River are Normand H .. arid Raymond W. Boule.

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Catholic Welfare Conference, will conduct a course OJ;! regional religious-social characteristics oi contemporary ~ South America Aug. 12 to 16 at a month-long .workshol; designed for priests, Religious and members of the laity who expect to work in the missions of the Church in Latin America at the Catholic Unive'" sity of Puerto Rico here. The sessions will run from Aug. 8 to Sept. 4. The workshop' it was explained, is part of a sixr:onth orientation course for North Americans destined' 16 serve the Church in Latin America. "This is not a 'how-to-do-it' course for pastoral practice, nor an attempt to supply the student with a 'Who's Who in LatiD. America,' nor a last minute briefing on political developments in a 'given area," the workshop announcement detailed. Basic Orientation ,"It is rather an attempt "offer North American colleg. 'graduates, mostlY priests ~~ S'isters going for many yearS '0. service to Latin AmeJ;'ica, . . intensive, basic, intellectual or~ entation to that new world, 0; 'which out of love, they want '.. become part." .~.' ," .' , , ; "an intelligent . . ~,

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Peplore Efforts To Oust Center From Campus

1l1l: ANCHORThurs., May 5, 1960

3

Navy Physicist Gets Vi 110 nova Mendel Medal

CHICAGO (NC)-The National Association' of Newman Club Chaplains, has' expressed "deep concern over

VILLANOVA (NC)-Wil-

the serious implications" of a Ham J. Thaler, Navy phycoritroversy a't the University of sicist, who perfected a device Arizona. for detecting missile launch, The controversy centers on ings and nuclear explosions anyefforts by the Tucson institution's where in the world, has been bOard of regents to condemn and selected for the 1960 Mendel take over the Newman FoundaMedal awarded by Villanova tion Center which lies in the University. path of the expansion planned Father John A. Klekotka, by the school. O.S.A., university president, said Bishop Daniet' J. Gercke of the presentation will be made at Tucson has urged that the Newa dinner in Philadelphia on man center be left on the exMay 4. The medal, inaugurated panded campus rather than in '929, last was presented in being condemned and forced to r-5 to Father James B. Macelestablish new headquarters on wane, S.J., geologist and auits ou tskil'ts. thority on earthquakes. Bishop's Letter Mr. Thaler resides with his Father Frederic Curry, Newwife and four children in Silver man Foundation director at the Spring, Md., a "uburb of the univ~rsity, released here a letnation's capital. An expert tennis , tel' by 'Bishop Gercke sent on player, he has won several state April 18 to all members of the championships. His scientific board of regen~s. work on the famed "Tepee In it the Bishop wrote, "to Project" is a recogni--d major our mind, the question is a sim_ contribution to the national ple, but essential one-Is relidefense. gion imprdant? Or, in other The medal is named for words, does the state have the Gregor Mendel, an Augustinian right to regulate religious libermonk who developed the Menti,,·· If this is true, then Amerdelian laws of heridity. It is reicans enjoy no more liberty than served for outstanding Catholic l\IIoscovites." scientists who by their Faith The national association of and their work demonstrate Newman chaplains discussed the there is no conI"' 't between true REDEMPTORISTINE NUN-ARTIST: Eight sisters of the Order of the Most Holy &cience Arizona controversy at a .session and true religion. Mr. of its mer' 'ng held during the 'Redeemer, (O.SS.R.) four American and four Canadian, have arrived at Liguori, Mo., Tha~~r " 'I.e 19th winner of the 57th annual convention of the' from Canada to open a new monastery, St. Alphonsus. Wearing a red, white and h1ne medal. I National Catholic Educational habit, they will lead cloi~tered life at the Redemptorist Publications Center there. Association. ' In a statement, the chaplains is shown here painting "Our Mother of Perpe.tuaIHelp." NC Photo. In Hyannis said: "The removal of the Catholic student center serving 2,000 , IS ur~, University of Arizona students PITTSBURGH (NC) ~ The 13th is only the herald and the have built the kingdom of God On Cape Cod appears t6 threaten the long Catholic Church is still "eve.r hope." ' in thehear'ts and souls· of men. history of friendly concern of so young~' by comparison with , Bishop Wright suggested the Then will we have heaven hereFor All Real Estate American educators for the reli'- , the growth and development it time may come when the great after and here below some gious welfare of the college stu- has yet to undergo, says Bishop and powerful dioceses, of the occas:o:tnal realization of. Chris~~~ . Requirements Consult: 13th century' may be titular tendom, for brief spaces of time John J. Wright. .' Conference Support The Pittsburgh Ordinary, Sees, "ecclesiastical g h 0 s t and in at least limited areas of Father Curry said the Bishop's speaking at the annual Spring towns," corresponding to the Society." position ·has the support of the symposium of the Catholic Ren- sees' of the very early Church Religious Conference at the uni- ascence Society, an organization , which are now titular. versity, an organization repre- of Catholic scholars, said he "In that time," he, added, senting 17 different religious found "fantastic", the idea that "there may even' be something groups, eight of whom maintain mankind could have been, so 0,£ the vision of Msgr. Hug.h Benby 473 MAIN STREET f. undations near the school. _ iong building "to this level, only son-the vision of the successor Gov. Paul J. Fannin of Arizona to have a brief hour ~of the of Peter walking among his' has also opposed condemning kingdom of God on earth." p.eople, yellow skinned al,ld Hyannis and moving religious establish"The Church is young, very slant-eyed. SP 5-0357, SP 5-0253 ments if they happen to be in ' young, ever' so young, even in Johnny Lemos Florist Kingdom of God the path of university expan-. her own understanding of her "There may; in tha,t· 'time, be Hyannis Sp. 5-2336 sion," he said. ~wn ~ind," he commented. "The decimination of ' the world's The Arizona Newman Foun- slow, gradual definitions of that popula:'on by famine, floods, __ dation was built in 1952 and ex-' mind' concerning the 'nature of disease or wars, such as Arnold panded in 1955, with the encour- the Church, the teaching author- Toynbee and the planners have A Delicious agement of university officials. ity in the Church, Mariology, co- not included in the calculations," It is now valued at $250,000, Redemption and like subjects, he declared. "But one thing is Treat Father Cuny said, and plans call all appear to indicate that the certaIn. The Church will be for spending $843,000 in further mu~l:lrd seed is in its early Commercial. Industrial here and Rome will be the cenexpansion by 1969. growth and by no means as yet Institutional ter of it." the predestined tree that fills Painting and Decorating "The ancient task will still the earth." be the same," Bishop Wl"ight Herald and Hope 1'35 Franklin Street The Bishop advised .that Chris- said, "not to rest till * • • we Fall River OSborne 2-1911 ST. LOUIS (NC)-A decision thins face the future with optimism. "Look in the other direcis expected in about two weeks tion every now and' then," he BONNER FLOWERS in a case challenging S1. Louis MAILING University's purchase of 21 acres said. "Look back, of course, to Spe<nahsts m of the Mill Creek Redevelop- the 13th, 'the greatest of cenSpecial Floral Arrangements IN NEW BEDFORD turies,' but look forward also ment area for campus expansion. DIAL 3-1431 to the centuries of which the Three taxpayers, backed by • Funerals • Corsages Protestants and Other Americans • Weddings • Hospital United for Separation of Church :ommunion Breakfast 2082 Robeson St. and State, instituted the suit. For Stonehill Alumni Fall _River OS 5·7804 They contend a public subsidy Stonehill Colleg~ Alumni Asto l' e Jesuit Fathers' university sociation will hold its first anI IN FALL RIVER exists in the redevelopment nual Communion Breakfast Sun_ DIAL 2-1322 or 5-7620 project and also that the sale of day morning, May 8, on the colMade Rite Chips land to the university took place lege campus, following 9 o'clock Ask for Them Today without competitive bids. . Mass. The subsidy, they charge, Rei. Richard H. Sullivan, comes about this way: a public C.S.C., president of Stonehill, ~~ authority buys blighted land, will be principal speaker.. ROUTE 6, HUTTLESON AVE. clears it and then sells it at less Rev. 1\/[arc Hebert, C.S.C., asNear Fairhaven Drive-In '.llI1lI than the purchase price to pri- sistant professor of theology and Italian Dinners Our Specialty vate developments. Selling it at classical languages at Stonehill, SHARON, MASSACHUSETTS "IIIIIIII Service On Patio less is the subsidy, they say. is Chaplain for the alumni assoSpacious Firepro~f .Sleeping . Quarters Last yea I', Fordham University ciation. in New York city encountered a . For Boys 7 to 14 Years old similar suit, but the challenge Six week season: July 3 to August 14 was denied by courts. COME IN ~ SEE - and DRIVE Register for 2, ~ 4, or 6 weeks ... Free Tutoring. if desired Use Tear Gas BERLIN (NC)-Police in com_ ~ THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART '"The World's Most Beautifully Proportioned Canmunist-ruled Poland used tear at gas to bl'eak up a demonstration protesting against the removal of • cross from a church site, acSHARON, MASSACHUSETTS . cOrding to reports reaching here. l' "out 2,000 people took part in A RESIDENT SCHOOL FOR BOYS the demonstration in the Red's Grammar grades 4-5-6-7-8 FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38, YEARS "model city" of Nowa Huta near THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART Cracow, reports stated. About 50

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4

Priest Addresses Jewish In$titute

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 5,.1960

Jackson Finds' Archbishop 'Honest Advocate of Church By Most

Rev~

ALTOONA (NC) - Fa th er Robert J. McCoy, curate at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament here, addressed the Agudith Achim Congregation of Altoona at the invitation Oil Rabbi Herbert Panitch. The priest spoke at one of a series of ad u I t institutes, composed of some 60 persons, predominantly Jewish who are seeking to increase their knowledge and understanding of different rp"gions and of current religious problems in the world. Under the leadership of Rabbi Panitch, the institute will study Catholic, Prote' nt, Eastern Orthodox, Islamic and Judaic religious beliefs. Father McCoy's address dealt with the basic truths of the Catholic Faith with special emphasis on the Mass and sacraments.

Robert J. Dwyer, D.O.

Bishop of Reno

It was midsummer, 1847, in the beautiful Valley of Mexico. The shabby, tatterdemalion army of General Winfield Scott was preparing its final assault upon the "Halls of Montezuma," concentrating 'on the outlying villages of Contraras and Churubusco, related at length £01' the first on the edge of the volcanic time in a new biography, and Pedregal. Within the city it- a most satisfying one, by Lenoir self, the proud city of the Chambers. It is doubtful whether Conquistadores, dismay and confusion were rife. It was simply incredible that . all this should have happened, that a rabble of North American brigands sh 0 u I d have landed at Vera Cruz and broken through the pass of Cerro Gordo to invest the most impregnable citadel in all the world. There obviously was treason afoot, and the finger was' pointed at that twisted adventurer with a lamp, Don Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna. In th"e pal~ce of the Arcllbishop, Don 'Manuel Irisarri Y Peralta, Titular of Caesarea, Vicar Capitular of Mexico City, was writing his. pastoral letter. It was a magnificent, flamboyant dl cument in the great tradition of Spanish pronunciamentos. It appealed') the patriotism of the Mexicans, to their Christian faith, to their loyalty to the Virgin of Guadalupe. In her name they were to resist to the very death this brutal invasion, beyond doubt, as he expressed it, "the most unjust, th~ least defensible, the cruelest on record, without a shadow of j,,~tification or a shred of· respectable motive." Fears Worst The Archbishop's ink ran hot with indignation. Let the barbarians from the North conquer and altars would be overthrown, sect ians and dissidents would unite to destroy the faith of Mexico, and unremitting warfare would be waged against Mother Church. "The Virgin of Guadalupe", he assured his people, "will be exposed to ridicule or worse, as the symbol of our credulity and f aticism." The. excited prelate could r "cely restrain himself; tliis, he proclaimed, ... ~~ the fateful hour for the Mexican people "to be or not to be, to be slaves or r ~sters, to triumph or to go down forever b ignominy and unutterable shame." No doubt about the Archbir.hop's patriotism. It must have been a bitter pill, a month later in September, when Chapultepec capitulated and' General Scott, all "fuss and feathers", reviewed his victorious troops in the square before the Palace. But things, as time went on, failed to justify the worst of Don Manuel's apprehensions. The ( thedral wa!? not violated, the churches and convents were unharmed, and Scott himself showed sensitive concern to promote amiable relation with the ecclesiastical authorities, and ",,'aited upon the Archbishop with every mark of respect and reverence. . Stonewall Seeks Counsel Even so, Don Manuel was not to be beguiled by th"se Northern f -etfcs. What must have been his bafflement, therefore, early the following Spring, when he received a request for an audIence from one of them, a certain Brevet Major Thoinas J. Jackson, for purposes of spiritual counsel. Who. was this Jackson, and what-·on earth did he want? It is a fascinating incident in the life of Stonewall Jackson,

a

Jackson, with his upcountry Virginia background, fresh out of West Point, had had any conta~ts w~th the Catholic Church prior to his Mexican experience'. Possibly several of th~ Louisiana cadets of his time may have been Catholics, but they . NEWSPAPER WEEK WINNER: The Fall River Lodge would not have stressed their of Elks selected Prevost High as winner in the recent school faith. In common with most of his contemporaries he had ab- Newspaper contest. Left to right: Brother Thomas, F.I.C., sorbed the usual prejudices moderator of Prevost Bulletin; Raymond Proulx student 'against the Church as the Scarlet editor; and Exalted Ruler George E. Pelletier. ' Woman and Mother of Abominations. . Strangely, here in Mexico where everybody was Catholic and the Church was everywhere, VIENNA (NC)-Although 90 settlements of individual conshe did not seem quite so scarlet or abominable as he had expect- per cent of Austria's people cordat provisions. are Catholics, the country coned to find her. tinues to TE'fuse to carry out the Goes to the Top Sea Sts• South Anticipating a lengthy stay, provision of its 1934 concordat J ckson from the first had ap- with the Holy See. Tel. HY 81 Hyannis Major reason for the continued plied' himself to the study of the refusal is the opposition of the language, and though he never became fluent could at least . Socialist party which has govmake himself understood. On _erned the country in coalition duty in the city he had ·the good with the Catholic-oriented Peofortune to meet 'ome of the ple's party since Austria remore friendly laity, in~luding . gained independence following the historian Don Lucas Alaman World War II. Although the socialists admit and a prominent physician, Dr. the concordat is binding-thus Martinez. Moreover, there is a suspicion reversing their earlier stand ~ that the stern and upright Jack- that it was illegal-there is no chance that they will agree to DOAN,·8E.AL-AMt:s son was for a time bewitched carry out its present provisions. INCORPORATED by a pair of spar~ling Spanish This is especially true since eyes. Altogether he found himself in a quandary. There was large sections of the People's 469 LOCUST STREET party join the socialists in theirsomething about the Church opposition, particularly in reFALL RIVER, MASS. which seemed to draw him. gard to thc concordat's provi• HYANNIS He might as well get' to the OS - 2-3381 sions concerning marriage laws. • HARW/CHPORT bottom of the mystery. And The concordat provides that Wilfred c.' James E. • SOUTH YARMOUTH characteristically, having ar- Catholics' cannot get a divorce Driscoll Sullivan, Jr. rived at that decision, he wasted nor, as frequently happens at • CHATHAM no time with underlings. He present, ~ontract another marwent.to 'the top. riage recognized by the state. Throws Off Prejudice It is not impossible, however, Priests of the ci.ty with whom that 'negotIations between socialho shared lodgings evidently ist leaders and the Austrian arranged the interviews between bishops, which have been going. 60 PARK STREET TAUNTON, MASS. the Archbishop and Jackson. on for some time, will lead to O,e wo~ld give a great deal to know what went on'during those ,. conferences, and how the prelate, dealt with the young_American's Contracts .for .summer service, problems. . . rebuilding, enlarging, and restoring Inevitably, the gulf was too >:0-,-, '\0 pipe organs now being taken. great to be bridged, but at least JOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY Inql!iries invited. Jackson threw off his inherited owner/mgr. prejudices. Some years later he 142 Campbell St. recalled that he had found the Archbishop "able ... affable, and New Bedford, Mass. learned" and judged him a "sinWYman 9-6792 cere and honest advocate" of the HEADQUARTERS FOR Catholic Church. For a man of Jackson's backCOLONIAL AND ground this was a long jump TRADITIONAIl. FURNITURE' ahead. Certainly it was observed that throughout' his subsequent career he was singularly free from the bitterness of so many of his contemporaries on the subject of Catholicism. 571 'Second St. What the Archbishop thought of the awkward, earnest young Fall River, Mass. officer is not recorded. But OS 9-6072 surely, in after time, when he MICHAEL J. McMAHON prayed for "all heretics and. Licensed Funeral D'irector schismatics", he made a special Registered Embalmer· F'mento for Thomas Jonathan Jackson.

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,Salesian Head Really Gets Around TURIN (NC)-Father Renato Ziggiotti, Superior General of the Salesians (Society of St. Francis de Sales), currently touring his congregation's institutions in South America, is among the world's most traveled Religious superiors. .

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Despite India's pouring of "enormous" sums into birth control clinics, there are no noticeable results to date, nor are any likely to appear inside 20 years. And by that time birth control "won't be necessary because we'll have "Hunger, yes, but not starvafood enough for every- tion," : Archbishop Fernandes body." These views came declared~ "In the bad crop years from Archbishop Joseph A. it is usually possible to supple-

F··' , "lndes of Delhi, a visitor here en route to Rome. The Oxford-accented prelate, a native of Bangalore, reported also that: -A "Catholic" India is POllsible in two to three generations. -His uneducated countrymen, while glad to get American surplus food (much of it via Catholic Relief Services - National Catholic Welfare Conference). d- a lot of listening to propagandists who claim U. S. aid is , more "colonial" than brotherly. "Several large dams now under construction will be irrigatlr ~ the desert in north central India within five years," Archbishop Fernandes said. "When these acres corne into production, we'll not only have ,more food, but we'll need more workers in the fields. "The people-and remember that India is 85 per cent agricultural-know what is happening, And the ordinary villager will want plenty of sons around when it comes time to do the plowing and planting. "He loves his children, and the more the better. His mentality , j.3t isn't tuned to the birth control idea. The clinics will appeal to many city-dwellers, but not to farmers. That's why I think they will fail in their purpose." (Meanwhile, In Washington, D. C., an Indian government official said India may spend as much as $210 million for birth control during its next five-year plan. That sum is 20 times the , amount in the current five-year rlan, which ends this year. (T:le prediction of a rise in Indian birth control expenditures was made by Ambassadorat-Large Braj Kumar Nehru in , a talk to combined meetings of , the 'D. C. Planned Parenthood · Association and the Montgom- ery County, Md., Planned Par, enthood League. (Mr. Nehru, a first cousin of Indian Prime Minister Jawahar181 Nehru, said India's objective · Is to cut its birtJJ, rate of 40 per thousand by half in the next %5 Tears. He also said India rna,. · soon be able to "give foreign aid" in the birth control field to .ther nations.) Birth cC'ntrollers are even~­ fog "c'ustOine~" Archbishop , Fernandes commented. A man who submits to sterilization geta IS rupees, a woman, 15, he reported. India has not legalized 'abortions, he said, adding:' "Parliament considered it; but took II look at Japan and voted the bill , down." Is there real starvation 8111'where in India now?

ment the food supply with rice and other imports. ,And the American food coming through CRS' is marvelous. "The Indian really lives on very little. His diet could and should be improved. But his idea of what constitutes a 'normal' amount of food would be quite different from yours." In conversions, the Church "is doin..; very well, but going about it the quiet way because we don't want to antagonize anybody," Archbishop Fernandes reported. "Two or three of the Hindu parties have raised some trouble. They object to mass conversions." "Actually, most converts are corning from the educated classes. And we're not seeking them out. They hear about Catholicism from friends and corne seeking for instructions. "A couple of generations from now I believe you'll be seeing great numbers of the Indians being ,.aptized. It could well be a Catholic country some day."

EmphasizesNeed For Vital CCD

SAVING VALUES GALORE

AT A&P! COLLEGE HONOR: Assumption C 011 e g e will award an honorary degree on June 2, to Rev. Anatole Desmarais, pastor of St. Mathieu's C h u r e h, Fall River, the College's oldest living, alumnus.

CHUCK ROAST

Joliet Diocese Stops Bingo 'JOLIET (NC)-Bishop Martin D. McNamara of Joliet, following similar action in the' Chicago archdiocese, has issued a statement recommel"":~"" that the game of bingo be discontinued in all parishes in the

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WILMINGTON (NC) -Archbishop Edmohd J. FitzMaurice, retired 'Bishop of Wilmington, was feted at a testimonial dinner in Salesianum School auditorium here with 1,000 ,persons, including a number of state and civic , leaders, attending. Principal speaker was Arch, bishop Edwin F. Byrne of Santa Fe, N. M., who on Nov. 30, 1925, was consecrated a bishop with Archbishop FitzMaurice in Phil, adelphia. In a tribute to Archbishop FitzMaurice, the Santa Fe prelate declared he is "a highly honored and loved member of BUFFALO (NC)-Urging na- the American Hierarchy-a man tions of the western world to worthy of the highest honor." help solve the overpopulation Other !1peakers included Msgrs. , problems of Italy by opening Philip E. Donahue and Vincent ,their doors to Italian immiL. Burns of Philadelphia, who lI"ants, Bishop Joseph A. Burke were'students when Archbishop oi ,Buffalo told 800 persons atFitzMaurice taught at St. Charles , tending a banquet in hb honor Borromeo Seminary, Overbrook, that "all of western civilization Pa.; Bishop Michael W. liyle of owes a tremendous debt to per- Wilmington, and Gov. J. Caleb ~ns of Italian origin." B ....:;gs of Delaware. He pointed out the m8ll1' achievements of Italians in the world of art, literature, music WASHINGTON (NC) , - A and the sciences. He cited such Catholic priest is one of two names as Michaelangelo and da Air Force chaplains selected to Vinci in art, Dante in literature, repr-3ent the U. S. Air ~orce at , Puccini and Verdi in music and the annual conference of the Marconi in science. Allied Air Forces Europe ChapBishop Burke received the laincy Consultative Committee Italian government's medal of to be held 'in Rome, May 10 to Commander in the Order of 12. Father (Col.) John J. Wood, Merit for his work in settling COT"''TIand Chaplain of the Air Italian immigrants in western Defense Command. Ent" AFB, New York state. The medal. Colo., will accompany Chaplain bighest award given an ecelesi(Brig. Gen.) Robert P. Taylor, · utic by the Italian 'government" Deputy Chief of Air Force Chapwas presented by Dr. Paolo lains, to the conference sponSavina, representing the Italiall sored this year bT the, Italian Ambasaador :MaNio '~ ,Air Farce.

Since 1953 Father Ziggiotti has made 218 journeys by air to five continents, not including his present North and Latin American schedule. This figure does not include the mileage he's covered by car, train, ocean liner and river boat.

Save! MONEY-

WASHINGTON (NC) -:The Confraternity of Christian Doc- dioc~se. trine is of vital importance for Albe'rt Cardinal """yer of til - growth, strength and uniChicago recently issued his versality of the Church, diocesan order against parishes sponsordirectors from all parts of the ing the game be"~'lse "n'ere is country have been told. some doubt of Its le:ality." Bishop Charles P. Greco' of The Joliet chancery's stateAlexandria, La., chairman of the 12-member Episcopal Committee ment said: for the CCD, speaking to the "Some opinions state that it directors said: (bingo) is illegal, wl'>He others "You are the 'sparkplugs' of affirm its legality for educa, the confraternity. The success tion and religious purnoses. In of the CCD depends upon you, , view of the doubtful interpretahow successfully you get the tions, the Bishop requests th3t cooperation of pastors and faiththe game be discontinued." ful." . The confraternity, -said the Bishop, is vital to the Church's future because the number of priests is not keeping up with for aft 'the increase in population .and only through the CCD, with its prGgram for usmg' the laity in catecheticalefforts, can the Church spread and remain strong.

1.000Attend Banquet for Retired Prelate

5

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 5, 1960

Archbishop of Delhi Claims Birth Co'ntrol ~olicy a Dud

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THE Ai KHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs., May 5, 1960

On The Rise

. . It is gratifying to learn that gifts to Catholic colleges

Unit~d

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and untivlerstities in the States percen as y~ar over prevIous·. ye;:trs. , IS t;1 " ' J . . amount of money given last year to the one hundred and eighty-two institutions reported to forty nine million, one '11 hundred and thirty-two thousand d 0 ars.. '. This report,.made by John Price Jones Company, a~d prepared in cooperation with the American Alumni Council, stated: "The picture painted by the facts 'recorded iIi this study' indicates, we believe, a bright future for the financing . . "ofCatholi~ higher education's needs. Alumni support is. bound to gr~w as more and more of. the esti~ated' eight · bundred thousand alumni of Catholic colleges and universitiesincrease their own' resources.". ;', . '. 'Another hearten.ing:' .'noteis. the fa.ct.· that fo. ~.r~fifths.· . 'of the total was· contributed by: non-alumni.· .' . '. ' , '.' . '. All this is' indica'tive~.of the.· role :thatthe Catholic in~titutions of ,higher 'le~rni~g'h.~~e:.attained-,-a role that 18 ac.·.knowledged.' as being .deservirigof.ul'.eafe.·.r .firian,Cial sup,... P , . pOrt iul'd·e:ric·outagem~nLThe.amourit O~" ¢oneygiven to ~ .coll¢ge IS c~rt~~nly;~p ,guar~n:te~.of· its 'place":1 on , t~e 'e.Iucational' scale or its.contripution to ,the, culture':of an :area. But .it' also;a,{~ct't~at; people -I,ike:.tObe with "a winning team" arrd .the' appreciable r~seincontributi'pns,to . ,Catholic .institutions' indicates::thatalumni .and~ more. e8pecialiy~non~ahinini feel:·that·the· coilegeor university is doing a worth.-whiie job, is' livingu'p :-tQ:a creditable .. degree - to its. stated'. objectives. . .c . " Perhaps the' only sh~mefur part'·ofthe.report is this that the alumni who benefitted directly:'from:' the Catholic college have :not yet e~pressed, gratitQQein .great enough . 'bl t th' 1'" . t' Th'" I numbers in a tangl e way 0 elr a mamaer•.... eva ue ., .' placed. on their college by nori-alumni. contributions may waken the attention of the :iJumni to 'what value the comrnunity places on 'the Catholic' colleg~. . . . . .' .

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a joined the Dominicans at the '. age of 14 and achieved a wide reputation as a preacher, lie became a Bishop, then a Car. dinal and succeede'd Pope :rius IV in 1566. The great naval vietory over the Turks at Lepanto in 1571. is attributed to·.his eodeavors and prayers, He died ,ill 1572 and his' shrine is in st. Mary Major in Rome. . TOMORROW- St. John the Apostle before the Latin Gate." The feast commemorates 'the in":ciSient .in .the. iife of the' saj~ '~alled t~e Evangelist,' when . ~ . was brought in bonds to HOJne ... from Ephesus. by order oIEm-' . Perot: Domitian and. was tenced' by the ·.Roman Sen'ate to . 'be. boiled' in ~ cald,ron, of ~il :~ . the. ~ity~s Latin Gate.:'" He .' emerged from the tOrture mir8e:. . ulouslyunharmed and was' ban..

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. returned to Ephesus and li'ved . to an old age, ·sllrviving~. ~. . felhw Apostles; " .,'., '. .' SATURDAY -.:.. St. ~~anisla.,u., . Bishop-Martyr. 'One of Polarid·. :fclinous saints, he was born' neM . Cracow in 1030: He becaineCn..:. . cow's' ArchbishOp in '1071. "and . excommunicated' the poweriUi y-' 'g Boleslaus II, who was lead.. ing an evil life. The 'Kfngkiiled . the Archbishop with his OWD . hr"1ds in 1079' in a church' near Cracow. whe'n he was unable to persuade his guards to do 'tlMi

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The edito'r of the and column does not guarantee Ie . During the.. re,cent-White House·Conference.on Children. Gnswer anonymous' queries nor letters from unidentifiable sources. In· every .~country and died in misery. St.. instance' the·desire jor anonymity will be respected. To that end, names ' . and Youth, a· great deal of attention was paid at one of the GTe never appended' to the questions, but unless the letter i&' signed ~~~~.islaus was c~nonized: iD , . t d '0 t·O e a rly' marrl'ages~the fact of" them there i& .no assurance that any consideration will be given it. rna~y S u y sessl ns SUNDAY-Third Sunday aftel' th~ problems arising from th.em, the'preparation needed l-im trying to find out if I at various times in the seven Easter. Apparition'of St. Mich~el to make them successful.. . . have a vocation. Is there someyear period betwee'il 1642· amI :U' J Archangel. This feast comThe y'oung p'eople taking part in the session suggested .one or someplace that has 1649, and were' the victims·of. . memorates the apparition of St. . . charge of vO,cations .where i brutality· and. torture at' the . Michael on Monte Gargano ill that more family-life courses are needed to give those precan go to help me make my . hands of, the Iroquois and Huron southern Italy in the fifth CeDparing for marriage a full picture of what they are getting . decision? . Indians. . tury. Another apparition la into and to give them this· picture long before they are The story of these dedicated . th e elg . hth cen t ury leet Most dioceses 'have a priest in men and their work is a'n exem- F rance In swept up in an emotional turmoi.l. The family is' the best charge of' vocations; in the Dio- plification' of the truism that the . Michel'in to the Foundation Brittany. of Mont' St. . place to get the proper attitudes on' family life, ·of course, cese of .Fall River our Diocesan . seed of faith. flowers with labor · b tedb . f or many . Director of Vocations is Rev, J. . and the blood of martyrs. Due . .Nazianzeri, MONDAY -Bishop St. _Confessor;' Gregory ol b ut t h Is,must e suppI emen . yo th eragencles. reasons the family cirde is not doing its job Of teaching . Joseph Hayes, pastor of the Holy to the efforts and death of these . Doctor; was the son of St. Greif· . Name Parish, New Bedfor'i.· He devoted missioners, the Hu.ron. . th Eld H h' ,. young "men an d. women h ow.to be' h usb an d s an d Wives, 'w"ou'Id surely be 'glad to consider. ory e er. e ac leved, all' . . . . nation was converted to Cathol- outstanding record as a student . , . ' ' . ". .' y'our deCl'Sl'on w·l'th you , but his . IClSm. .. Th.e North A ' f'athers and mo.·thers. merlCan' and was a schoolmate ot" St.. Another point brought out at this particular workshop advice, we are sure, would be Martyrs were canonized in 1930,. Basil the Great. Later St. BaSil was the de's.ire e}\:pressedby the young people themselves the. same as' this 'column's:- arid their feast day is celebrated consecrated him Bishop'. He be· f or more oppor t um't'les t 0 work .d'Irec tl y WI'th smaII ch'ld I ren speak with . .some . priest you on September 26. Ash.rine com- cam'e Patrl'arch of Constantl"Q-' . . know, preferably one who is at memorating their work has been' ople', .in 379, expelled the Ar.iaain order to obtain a sound idea of family responsibilities. least fairly well acquainted .with t d' t~A . '11 t' f .This is indeed' a good sign,as the yoling people themselves you and knows your capabilities, ~:~/A:osto~~lel~v~or;. cen ero '~~~1:~' f~~d p:::ent a:Js seem to realiz~; more' ~o .than many.o{·their elders, that temperament and other back•• • . doctrine until his death in _ marriage' cannot be taken apart from 'responsibility and gr;~:~ein:~~ma.~~:ya~~~~/o~ In a recent fa~i1y discussioB With SS. Athanasius.· Basil aDd family cares, that m.arriage.:'is.· to be tpought of ~lways . about the current ·topic of a . John Chrysostum, he is ranked .. .among' the leaders of the 'Eastern which priests, brothers and SlSwithin the family frame-work. ,.". ters work. Would you like to Catholic in the presidency, the . • Through.ou . .t . . this· group. meeting,th. e 'older 'memberfj pursue y.our vocation at 'hQme' . question came up as to ho~ 'Church: . , , . L hi the mission fields? Which many Catholics had served. as ' . "TUESDAY ....:. St. Antonin~ were somewhatsurprised .at another not~dhat kept creeping type of service to God particu.:. me'mllers of presid.ential eabB ish op - Confessor. Born '".ba in continually. This had to. do with the opposite problem":- lady appeals' to . you: '. parish Inets. Our combined list totaled ' . FIQrence in 138~. he joined' the the problem of young ne.ople whQ had no. ii1t~:rest in "I;lteady work,teaching; hospital work, eight. Su~ely there are .others;. . :Qominicans and becall).e At~" -d t' " . , . . .. I' l'f ...... . 'h" • t . . . • kl so'me o·thoer s'pe'cialized field? If Could 70U expand our IUlt for bishop of Florence in .1446. .A. a Illg; III socIa. I e; In rus Illg III 0 'marrIage as 'qUlC Y ? .. '. cOnfidant of the. Pope,' he .~ as possible, in ent~ring the race for :an engage'nient ring.' you have decided the type ousf . '. 'ministered the iast s'acramenill ..Young partelmembers ..pointed· our-how ·distur.bed .they were work, . have you decided. upon '. Accc:'rding to.infO~rn.a~i<?fl~~\lll~d ,to'Pope 'Eugene IV. ,'He' died }D' .. . ' . . ." . ,. . . . .. . iOme definite 'group of brothers. from. the. National CatholIc Al- 1449' . d' P ' p ' 1'1 'tt" "ded" the 'pressures,to .date early•. togo ,to.danceS, even' . Sisters or priests? , . mariac 1959'edition your family ".....~n. ope IUS. . ~ .en, , formals while stilI. in grade .school,. when theIr .natural inThe above 'questions wili be .gets' a.'mark of bett~r tha~50%.· . b.l;:tri~~I~f>AY-::'SS.Phil'i ) .' by, the priest .that you .The total number accordmg. to ..... ,.. .. ' ... ' p... . clinatiQns were:' to . enjoy th.e.· relax~d· company of. their put ~)you 1 f h k" II' .tho. b'i" t· '.' 15 Th'f' .·.James the Less, Apost-les. s.. 'friends ofithe sariu:! sex•. ,: . 'consu t; I e . , nowsyou w~ IS pu lca IOn IS , IS Igure' Philip 'was a native of' BethsalCia. ":So '.tn,e' vo. un.g' ·peo.·p}tf.hav.e much eto ie.oritrib, ut,e to the he ~can.be. ~f~.lnyal.~a.bl~ ~~l.~- ~ ref~r.s ~'~e n~~~er. of .~e~, ~~t . He" 'alwa s' takes··ilfih 'p'UI(~e'iIl ' .', 0/ ~nce ID .guldmg you, Pel'haps . tQ the. number of p~sts he~d. '.. " t fih A" if '. . . ... · thinking 'of theit'elders ·in this matter. Ana parents. should health, demperall1ent 0,," some' since.. some of them ,held more· 1he B .. ~~ a o,gt~e °d' "th e.. t.P?'!-!!-" :... ".. le·a.rn:·fr..:om.". t~·e·'·.hoh. estv.. o·f .:th·el·r ch·,·I·.ld·r.. ·.e·n·',·an··d·. n.ot ,t'ry'. to'.. oth.er f.act'or." mhl. T ta t·es· d·a~~~. 'st '"th' . b'IDfe tAPttOS. l't'lOn. G' . e 1" men lone .. oT aT"n ollef·f,ca , '.' Ii 'confidant" of Our"ree 'r.:,ordIme& in 'ok I;i' . h h . 'force SOn!! and··d~ughter8·irlto an,earlysoeiaiHfe·that·is .the~ Olpe.y~u...ave m,a e;.:,~lS '.'., e:~ . Ice '~' ," ~rner. "~~':'·John'sGosel.After'th~ AScea...: against the inclinations"and: hiterests 'of -the childien~a-,he., ~anbrmg to YO~lI: .~tte.ntIOn ' . ~.ral. h~sJhe dlstlll~~~OI'). ?~.1;l~~n~, Ilion ·he·· i~ believed . to . naft :, .. , . Il'f' th 't . .. f"t' :th' 't' th··· . '..., ' . ,. and per~aps suggest ~. more m,I~ber~ne, numencally" amoJ;lg I " re~choo in :Asia Minor ancf tIr; .-.. . ·80<;1~. 1 e als,.more.o. en . ali· no , '. e ,parent just living . ~itable :alter.nativ~ .. ' . '. .c~~i,ne~, .po!litions :beld .by· C~t;h~, : tavebeeninartyred aboui' the . ' . :the',k,ipd o~ YQ~th.lie;wished ,he, had,:aJ},<f liv~*~ifil()w.in the; ... YOU.D.eednot.a.pp..roach your ollcs;, WIth a:.grand .total of ~x.., .' 80'· '·H..··· .. ' r' . h' .;.:£..... .., ... . t th . 'd' . d h . d t th '. . t' .. ' .,: '. ' '. . . ' ..... ;., J' '. P M Ga' . d'J year ID lerapo IS In ry.._ h 'ldre~, ~";."'.; '~.t 0-. el.J\ISm~y;~~ ,::-.arDJ.·an . ~ ·e.paren :sown·: pastor;n~ceSSlirllYj;toseekithls',' am.es c;r -,Wry· aN,·c/ .JlisrelicsareverieratedinR6iM:· ,';c'."" . '.... ". ..-iil.el.f.ish enJ·oyment. ..... ~:-- .'. .-. " ' , ......,. " . :. .... 'ad"ice" but· once you. have de-,. ., Howar~ M.cGJ;'athserv.~ II! ,~I •.' .. ' a'm ". ' es' "surnam~d 'also' '''the ... , . . ..... :,",that' YOI,l . ' have._ ...,.voc;a·..·t····· p"resident Tru- .: 'Just," "'-~' '. '. . Our "~ .'" ,y "" clded Ion. capacit~·.under . ... was, a cousmof' ... .... i .' .', .. .....," ',.,:', . ,,:':' .. ' . , ", iUs no more·than common cour- man. Charles J. Bonaparte. held .. Aite . th 'Resurrec'tf6il" he be:i.

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.' D'R ran se',urpe.y, un er.;ran I n " . fro .. ,',a pUlf)ac. : "1' .' . It::~. 'd'R 1,("'Bro' ke ·.. ·mg rownom. ,:_ 00 ;ve ~n., 0 er Q...: the:temple·and.Uleii stoiu~d: ' .' Taney,. (also~nt~pm Sefretary ,.... . . ,,, . ' .. ' .' .. ..,,, " ',.'; .Ot=FICIA~ ~EWSPAPER,.Of.·IHE QIOCESE OF, FALl ...IV!R ;'.. . r' , .. , ..., th ":N th'~ 0'; ::'~f the:<Tre~~ry)under.:.:ra~!<son·: ::ert':')i;'· WYnne'··'nider., TedCIi',,' . ,.' . • .' " ,•• ' I " " : , ••• ' : " , ' . ' .': . . : , . , : , : , . __ ' .. ,.'".wh~.we!~._~ _""er:went·onto.be~namedmembers·'·'ROO It ' •... :.'~. :~'.'~'~';'.' ··,iJbUlhed w,ekly'by The' €otholic·Presscof-the,.Diocese of 'fall River ".' . lean 'Martyrs"," ...,' 1.-' ,"<." ';", {'ttl '5 i>' Me' C :"';r;·"c··~' l"':"': .', ,.~v.~ ,!,.. '~~."'; :'.. , .... ,.... ~""'.-..:.' • , ~, ~:('1~;~'~19~1~~:~;;~ue:: '~'.,',::'>:,.:. :".',.':'.' c.',; ····r~--~·.Tb~.N~~(;~~tit~~:~a·r!y~ ~.::e~~~*~U~!.~.4!~~.OfJ~~)h~~~~.:,~~~n~t~p;~~~~i:4~~b.~~::'::;o::-;.': .. .' .C'·.' :-.". ..' .'" "" .' FciIl'Rive"; Masi. ",..' " :"()sb'Oine' 5~t151 ... ; . .... ; wereSS. c, John' de. Brebo~w, ~l~; Ca~olI~, ,}lave ser.v,ed. ;all.. ~ met'.as S~e~ o{Labor:'~1lIJ!" ..• ,. ;.,,'. !.~ ".;.: .; ...., :;. "r·.'· .,' • ':.-...... '.'" .. ,.... ..' ' . " '". . ' . f.. Isaac Jogues' Rene Goufil, John . J~sb~s of the Supreme.Cour.t. '.. tin ·P•. ~ Durkin: ·and..· Ja~ea ",; '~' :.",.' ':":.'. '\' "( ..•....• : :..•... PU811SHE~,'::(~,;; '. ''''.' " ",.', ,.'., .• '?;,t.alande':'·.i\~ihoiiY . 'Oiiniel, ·.G8- ,'. ··Five.·Cai!iollcs· ,have,.·peeii,:Mite~lJ.. ';we~~.r·appointecC~··· . , ;'.' ,;';" ':':M~t: Rev;"'Jome~':' L.C.~n.nolly., D.D~;"PhD.:. ,. ';"'c ,', "~: :bi'ieI:.Lalle·maiit, Cha,r.les Gar.nier..'Postmasters· ,G.eH~ral.-:~ :.Ja~iI: -EisenhC?~e.r:,;:.. ,an~ -; ~a~r.i~!: :~' .',. '...,'.,,}<:: '.G·tNE~~r MANAGE,r'" '..::'. ASST:;'.r.~NERAfM~NAGE.· .,. ~' ~n.4-~~~!qha~~:'~?~Y;~J;'e.~,~~·i}~~~~I?~!~, ..1I~~~.J:"":~r~~:~f!~!1~i~! ;::T~~j!1 ":.~s.~-'E~~:~y.; :.!'r~~a.~.: :',:' '.' .. . .' ., :';'~l ;· ..'ti" ;. V"f' ·'s· :. .... ·M·A;. """'-'R' . . .'7. ,,.,,~ .' c •• ' . , . , . , . " .. '. ~ ·known·as ,~the: JesUl~; ~ar~yr" ::Pl~J;'ce; ,James. Ngy~ll~.S· ~ai)~y. ' ... .P1e .fif~~tb' ~~n ~'vfa:s-,~~ ,.' ,

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THE ANCHOR'Thurs., May, 5, 1960

7

R.eport Shorter ,B'revia ry Soon ROME (NC) -Reliable and well-informed sources report that a new sho"~ened breviary will be published in the near future. These sources said that the new breviary will be entirely contained within two volumes. At· present the. breviary, which is t' ~ book from which priests an(i c~erics recite the Divi,ne " Office daily, is in four volume~ each for a season of the year. , it is also reported that recitaticin of the new breviary will take a substantially shorter time, and that the proportion of feasts " of simple rank will be greatly increased. It had already been reliably reported that leglsla':' tion would soon appear to in.. . " NEW CHAPEL WING: The mi'riib6lI: . in ·Sisters of Mercy has 'crease the number ,of simple necessitated a.new Chapel" Wing at Mt~ :;3t.:Rl~a~s.C9n·~en't,Cu.~berranq,''W,~idiW:illcomprise· a' chapel, seating 500, feasts in the celebration of the This seems to confirm the auditorium and four s'ei4inar room~~',Mothe~·Ma:r;f'Oa~hei-ine;'J;t.S,¥~,.p'-!~~in~41;,h as announ~d that it. is expected' MaSs. report that the proportion of that the project will be·coIJ1.pleted· in'a'year.-" '.' . o" , . ,. •• ,," ". • ;: ..... ~, • . • , simple feasts in the breviary will pe increased, since the breviary. and the Mass follow the saIIlEl liturgical ~lendar. .

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The mere reduction of the 'rank. of a nnmber of feasts to NEW YORK (NC)-The head1 that of simpfes would in itself of the U. S. Bishops~' oyersea!si relief agency says- the distrihu... . :'W,ASmNGTON (NC)'-The' National Gath-oUe MotIi~ of 1960 is Mrs. Frances E. ,reduce the total content of the breviary, since only one nocturn tio:rt of U. S. agriculfural. si.ur..; LeehaD.,·62~ of'Portland~ Ore., a·..convert.whQ; boie'-13 clill,oren and g,a.ye four of her sons with; three lessons is said in the pluses abroad has' created.' more.' alJ.d tllI:ee of her daughters. the reliijouSi Her selection for the honor was an.. office of a simple feast instead good will' for this nation. at. less' , . expense than anY', similar pro.. nouncem j,ointlyl bYi Bishop; ChristOpher J'.I Weldon of SpFingfield:, Episcopal Moderator of of' three nocturns with nine leSsons on feasts' of greater rank. gram in, U. S. histor)!'. .' the . FamilY", E,ife' Burea~, ' caW., and: the Oatholic Daugb.. " hal .•,~stationed' at: Cour--d!Alene, While the report of the shorter Msgr..Edward Swanst:l!OlD', ex-.,' Na4-:"'n~l" wu ~r Ca,thol'!'c W'eff';>04 .....'" _.......... ten of America. I;lreviary comes from' unofficial eeutive· director of Ca1!Ii.olic: Re.- Conference; and'Dr.Francis. . Her other sons, are- J!lranciS,. Gifted' at recognizing- and: enlief Services-National Catholic'. C JlQth~; ,of Little:·:(tock., Leehall;> a', citx>- ~ter" meter rp.,.. c:oqrag,intt individual differences sources, it merits attention beWelfare Conference; made the" .A-k., president of tr. ... National. spector' itr Porl:land.;, Paul; .AI,. in.c. hell' OWD.! children, Mrs.. ,Lee.. cause of the reliability of these comment in a statement repudi- Catholie: Conference 00' Elamil}7 phonsus. Leeflatll" whO' teaches h~- also applied this talent as sources, the credibility of the .ting recent preslf, reports whi~ L'-le.' '. " . hi .,i;o~and.mathemati'csatJ:Iow;.. house· mother of the Good Shep- details and the persistence of . the report. conveyed the impression tliat.the , ard\ Hugliesl.T.uni:OJ:' Hi:gp. School, hetld home fot" girls. in Portland. Suipl~s program creates ill' will'. -7'ii~ selection was. made by a, L 'l.rn:g.. ~b;., Calif:, and Michael. There is nil' question that a .. ' WiR Complete Studies 6>r the U. S, in some countries.. committee of the' National Cath- Leehan, a: iUni011 at. J.esuit HigJ:!: reform of tho breviary is actu.. Fro~, .1952. to 1957 when the . from malting; Uncle; 'S am., , ollc C,onference' on Family Life,. School,. ?ortland. ally' in preparation. This has "Far Leehan family resided in DufUr . th ~.. which: considered, scores of nom.. been confirmed by ranking fig,_ out to be an ugly American, Three. Daughters NUDS' One,,, M~ Leehan assisted with . . all wi ted. inees. for., the' honor which is an.. ures: of the Church. The only programs, prmclp Yi co LlC," no.uDeedJ annually cin May 4, the Two· ~ .. "er :fiive daughters. are the hausehold. chores of the by, reNgious sponsore&. a~ncies" . 515'te~s. of' the U01,,~ Names 0'\ Third Order Regula1" Franciscan question is the nature of the reth st. fe~st of St. Monica, a' patron. of: ~ .Q "'3 ... f bave day in an d ,out ,01! epa I mothers: Jesus and, Mary-Sister M. Fran- Fathers" w9rking in that area. form and wheo it will be seven years been bringjIlg' to ces. Irene" who: teaches: at, Chris-; She taug,ht:a. number of the decreed. needy men, women and childJ:eIliConvertto CatholicisDi tie School in Portland, and Sis- ),':oung Franciscan priests 'to throughout the free' wadeL co~ drive an automobiie 'nd her fD1 Soutb Yarmouth· on Route 28 crete and visible evidence of Frances. Edwina Van Patten~ terCornelius Marie, art instruc- }:-- ":te, became a: "headquarters'" the. concern of every; American,. embraced ::he'Catholic Fait,h- in tor. at HolY' Names. Academy;, for the 2ranciscan Sisters who 7~ ', ior,. their individ.ual.',welfare;' he .. ch;lc"'lood , . . . . She attended. HoI... ,,,} Seattle, ,w.lSh. Ano.tb.er daugh-' Rede~mer parochial school and: . ter is. a Sister of. St. Mary-Sister. were in c!larg~ of 'the- Conb:ater_ said. St, Mary's, Acad.emy,inPortland. M. Frances Therese; wovking- for' nity of Christiai, ""'octrine work in, the lJuf'.ll' area. Distinctive Motel Unab~~ to continue q.er fOJ;mal a degree in music at Alverno Now> that her family is nearly , . ~ . ' , . . ,. ed¥-C~~lOn by day, s~e enrolled College" Milwaukee. Her othe,: ON CAPE COD reared, the ,vigorous grandTo Receive "i-,t;he. Un.iversity of, Oregon ex- daughters are Mrs. Dolores Wemother of nine said sh~ intends 5 Miles. East. of Hyannis St': LOUIS' (NC) ~ Father '- tension nigl1t school and for six, lin, mother of three children, and to complete, her stUdies for her HEATED SWIMMING POOL Georges' Pire', O,P., the Belgian" years, even after her marriage, Mrs: 'Rita" Linehard, mother, of college degree next year. A diliDominican, who won the 1959';" studied Spanish, English, crea- six. -hi~dren. TV in Every Roo~ g"nt. diary-keeper since 1939, Nobel peace Prize, will receiVe": tivEfvvtiting, poetry. and journal:-·Mr.Leehan died in February, Mz:s. :Leehan said' she is' con-' ' South Yarmouth 3 aB"h6nonal!Y doctor of' laws; ~ ism:. She also attended Hasting~ 19-). so' -'ering wri ring a book based Exeter . 8-2311 pee 'from St. Louis: ~niversity,:: : l3lJ.$.ness.', College' where she Despite her busy home' life,,' on he~ own family life. d.uring an honors; cqnvo.catioii . leattied typing and comptom- Mrs: TJeehim enga::: . in a numSunday; MaY." 15~' etr;;. .' ber of varied activities ....... the' The pviest,' who does:, riot On May 28,1919, she wasmar.- HolYi Redeemer Altar Society" iPel\~. Ehg,Lish, receiv:e4'. world-... rie<fj.to Cornelius Patrick Leehan, the Horeca' Guild which raises; wide acdaimfor his1Workamong. w~ eventually became deputy ~ _.ds for the Redemptoris~ . fait Rivell- New Bedford tti9h~ay~No:. Westport displacedJ persons, in E't1J:ope-~ He, citl' treasurer of Portland. Sh~ Minor Seminary' ·at -Oakland;" JUICY!" TENDER SIZZLINGI ,.~~~~~ h34 he'lped: establish' e.n~ mI.'bore 1- children, on'1 of. whom. Setmething New'! . IIfl1 loges to: house EUropean PP's,.· died' in infancy. ~"... (hoose Your OWn Steaks ~ .i~ the first priest; ever- .s~.· of her seven sons; four are 41(' steaks on display for your lected for?, No?el Peace; pl!lZe. Re@mp~orists-FathersCorne, ,, choosing ,F:.~thel!· PIne' wi:I;l be ~e secoruf litiSiand Gerard Leehan, who' are Special ' Arrangem'ents ' N~!>~l ~ace PrIze .WInnelt ..to'. sta,t~oried. i~ .... reat' FallS, ivIont.;. r.: Weddings.. and Parties recelve a~ h0fo\0t:arydegree fro~~: Fr~~~r'Tliqma8.,L~~n,.:",hpiw,il). 'Bowling & Skating the UDlI('el'Slty. DJ:!.. Ralpu,., b: ,ordained to. 'Ie priesthood in .Eor Reservations . , '.,' .,.\' B,,!~ch.e, w~o won the' ~?be~., Ju.ne; imet &other Jose h. Lee,. 'Phone OSborne- 2..9186 prlze .m 19.>0, also subsequentI:JI:. ' l.... , , ' . ' ,P . ;Millioi'l'DoUarBaJiroom Was given .an honorary .dO.cOOr or iaws·degree. .... . .', ,", A V A,I L ABL E . '.' ;., . . .. .,' -, ·fot:V~W~:.

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Offers Valuable'Suggestions' In Choosing Floor Coverings By Alice Bough Cahill . Your floor· is part of the backg~ound of your room. Along with walls and ceiling, your floor must be treated as a. background. Your floor covering may' serve, as a foundation for all the' decorative elements. Much of the furniture is seen against the color -tching needn't be ~ floor. If' your floor covering precise, for there's a changeblends in color, texture, and ability a1: the tweedy mixpattern with aU these ele- tures. U your taste runs to

:R,raises' Catholic' ,Nurses' Counci I

LOUISVILLE (NC) - Delegates to the 10th biennial convention of the National Council of Catholic Nurses heard speakers urg' them to make membersl'.:p in Catholic nursing councill .a source of spiritual enrichment. Typical was the stat~ment of Father Aloysius J. Schmid, spiritual director of the Philadelphia Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Nurses. He declared: . "The influence of the nurse ill everywhere felt throughout the ( ~ire structure of modern s0ciety. Perhaps no other lay group can, as a whole, make a more valuable contribution tG the solution of our social problems than can our own, Catholic· nurses, organized and functiQning as a national professional body." Organization Important· Father Schmid deClared th~ no 'other secular religious 01':' 'canizatioft existS for Catholic ,J ',:rses "itbl,lt i~ a's benefiCial,' all interested . on' a widespread scale in the Catholic -registered 'r' 'se as' is the National. Cou"': eil·of ~a~holic Nurses." . Recalling that professional organizations are found among many U. S. professional groups; he '. that "formal;' 'd organjzation among Catholic nurses ill as important to the' '::::hurch and, th, Catholic ,. _se as it is in an1 other strata of society." "It has been a'nd ,will continue to be the fnstrument for educa-' tion, promotion, implementation; development 'and sanctificatio~ of 'the Catholic nurse," he addecL

ments, it has " harmonizing large pattern:;, you "should use effect. Your floor covering can plain, nori-patterned walls, drap-" , C' '3te "'.n effect eries .and simple line furniture. of' .pace. That's ('I.,,,,, upon 1Il time linoleum why lots of peo:"'belonge". 'rictly tokitchens and pIe select plain, bathrooms but now,. because of one, c () lor'" its jmprove"and beauti' 11 deroom,.size' r:ugS signs, it: is used in many rooms. or'over-all carAsphalt tile. : "bber· tile, and peting to create . r ,,:stone: ar~ used for floors 'iii ' '. . eUeet, of, ·.manY con~emp.07i ·llOu~es. ' "r:' "'~r' sp ace, Pleasing'esigniand ,color. 'andrest!'·'''lesB. are'. ',able; in 'both asphalt . . SPRING DANCE: AtSecoJXd'An#ual Spring Dance co:.·· .. In,'·ro'om.,," and rubber ,tile:"·Some ·people .ponsQred North. A,ttleborQ K~ighis,: of ·Columbus·and :,' where T·'rugs.: . prefer the·rubberi.tiie.forgrl'~'r IsaQella are, left t() tight at table, Mrs. James Bhowafoot or" comfort hi walking and' standing Daughters · ·ito of.floor arounddts riges the on.' .the floor. Flagstone', i s . P. Cullen, Mrs. D. Eugene Leco, Mrs. Frederick A,'Thorpe, effect of space .. is lessened. Thii naturalrock.and therefore· is a ·Mrs. Fritz Gengtmbach. Standirig is Eu~ene M. Mullin. ' · .hap;,... t ~cauSe the eye)s in- hard and: durable sul- ·~ance. te,...··pt.ed in .its,move.ment be-' Many 'entrance halls, recrea-, ·.,.)t .. ,~hes. e wall. When lion. rooms, and dining rooms the rug 'alsO has a definite pat., are finished with. fla1.'-.ne Special awards have been New. B~dford;Miss Rae Sousa, tern"there seems' to be less space. floors. The new baseboard heat- · made to two Holy Family High Junior, 'If H1'Bay Village, New When you are' choosing a floor, 'ing is a: boom to those stone· School girls by ,the National B'ldford; Miss Barbara Connor, covering,. decide' .whether you floor~ w].' ' 'used to be so cold High School Poetry' .Association. J'·,ior, of 39 Campbell Street" wish to cre' a feeling of cor f ,'-" stand' on them. Recipients at the New Bed- New Bedford; Miss Susanne greater space, or to have, the. Whatever 'y' r. chOice, remem-, ,ford '~hool:are Miss Sheila HenStager, "Tunior,' of,' Chestnut effect r ' smaller and cozier. ber to consider the long-term drickson, a Senior, of 254 Street,. New Bedford, and Miss • '. This is 'ama:ter of per- 'durability~" -decorative qual- County Street, New' Bedford, Elizabeth Mills" Junior, of 570 ional preference. ity, not ~ just the cents-per- and Miss Kathleen Brabin, .. ....Sou t~ Second Street, New· BedfQrd. . J~nior, r ' 159' Hudson Street, Note Background square-foot.' A pl!li~ g depends on, color One needs to employ ,the prin- New Bedford.' , Certificates 'of·Acceptance went: and texture for it,s interest.' e ' d', ,?, ,of c' '3ign for help ,in se'choice of color should always be lecting good rugop'terns. ,There to Miss Diarie Champagne, Senguided by suitability fot a back-, are, many' beautiful patterns ill: ior, ,of 123. Bedford :Street, New' ;round.' A ~ brilliant blue which Oriental rugs, but some p~tterrill Bedford; Miss Ann Bermingham, INC. . ' · ~~ ~ml to "jump up',' '~t you M are not pleasing. True Orientall' · Senior" of :I Carrollton Avenue; yoU enter ·the 'room' does ',Jt are very' expensive, but ,thi. North Dartmouth; Robe~ Page, . ·make it .good , background ~- "doel: nOt alway.', guarantee. Junior, GIl 14 Spencer Street, Cause' it is 'too intense. On .th~: l?ea, . ~ d,csign: Ac:ademy" Alumnae 61' ~r hand, the color :should Since early Colonial time. Dominican Academy' ~lumnae Dot beSet dull 'and:. neutraliud . hoo' have been .used 'ill Ulat:t has no life. " American homes. You may have · .As8<?Ciation,trail River, will hold " ,... also hesitates' to talk a home that calls forwill-to- ita 24th' annual' communion' about flo"" coverings today, for wall carpeting. There are many' breakfa, "unday, May 15, fol-' 8:30 Mass ill the c:onvent· with the develor-- ~nt- of our types of carpeting from which: !owing diapeL' '. ~ew synthetics,' what is new to make a choice and of 'cOurse' . Rev. StePheil 'McMahon,. today is old tomorrvw. Today, it" your privilege to plan ' the FRANCISJ. DEVINE ARTHUR J. DOUCET one hears of cut and uncut pile, background which you think OJ .M., Ol! OW', Lady's Chapel, N~w Bedford, ~Jll speak. Reser1;Iigh -'- -l low loop, twist or 'will be ideal for your own.home.' vations . may 'be made until .f.pieze, "raved" wool, reversible Thu,rSday, May 12. .". wool, saran, latex-backed cotton. , (When buying an] of these be S" to""ad the labels to find out abOut crc'e and wear.) The Elaine Theresa Pivirotto ,and colors you can get are infinite. Mary EllE!!) McDermott, ,students You can get anything from fragile off-white or subtle ~ljar­ at St. Mary's J-"sh School, Tauncr" to strong hues like fire-red. ton, are recipients of Scholar-, You can choose from tweeds ships to Katharine Gibbs School ' or patterns. PerhapS' the newest of Business. Miss Pivirotto earned lIlIIl ' 'l1- _ 'oe tweedy all-over blended patterns. People find' these easy Alumnae Scholarship, Miss Mc-' to . - - -~ate :th, because they Dermott a full scholarship. Both e use patterns in other fur- girls are active in the school glee nishings. Also with these tweed. club, rosary club cand yearbook staff. Miss Pivirotto is, also a o ° . S M student cOWlcil mef.lber. MISSloners ay ass. Miss Jean O'Keefe, a junior, In p'eru -Marketplace. h .. ~ been named to represent , PUNO (NC)-Sunday coHee.. Taunto'n at a Future' Leaders' oi tion basketS bulge here :.,- but Aniericaconvention to'; be, held ° Dot with money. .' . at Bridgewater Teachers' College At the MaSll celebrated in the ill J·me.· ., '1 • ' ~ "M)iMtimes '~eceiving' ~ ,,,but the.re',', no 'market 'piacl.' in this City, more Other 'sct,lool ,events ineludM " Ulan two miles high in the' first. annual . receptioll 'eli: ' ~,.Farms Qu'ali~' ~ilk.' "., · Andes mountains,ovendors'habi- members:' ol. ',the' Debraban¢' t'~lly dbnate: fr:uits,vegetableil;' Chapter ,'of the National' Honor t , chickens, :eggs a,.,~L other sOciety. Newlyinl!talled offlc~: foods .. Alneficlinmissioners here'·, include Louise Illahllri, ,pi-esi-'_ is recogriizecffor its consistent 'later distribute them to the poOi- dent; -o ..rolyn Lima,' p~ , ·of the;area; .' ' " . dent; Jacqueline Mazzoleni,see-, "f~' •. ~• • ~ :~i :~:'dayj "gIaSlQfter "glass. Try "Ever y,9.8Y !s market .day iii .' i'e~ty; ~hyllii' KosinBkl.···Vea.. t", tow,oof .no refrigeration," ver. '.... , .' . store•. and taste' 'the Father Gilbert ·Dc:. 'Ritis, M.M" ,.".~... . ' '. ' Baid; ','and si" ~e 'the vendors cannot lea'/e their stands to attend '.' , ' . Mass in the', church, we' briha Mass" at the ·marketplace. '

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Sagamore 0 of I Representatives of Mother Cabrini Circle, ,Sagamore Daugh-. ters of Isabella, will attend a Neighbors' Night program i~. N:.::w Bedford Tuesday, June, 28, the invitation' of HyaCinth ~ircle, that city. " }O' '. Theresa Bosnengo :and 'Mrs. ,Martha Williams areiJi ~harge of the annual cOmInunioa breakfast. . 'Mrs. ,Elsie Fraher and MrS; Louise Cremonini will attend the ·national convel ion of the organizat' in Kansas City ill 'A'l~ust, as delegates of the Sagamore Circle.

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Grandma~s 'Tabte,cto'th: \I'nspires'

THE' ANCHOR.... Thurs., May 5, 1960

Purchase of New Washer '

Holy Family Girl

By Mary Tinley Daly , Song of the washing machine, for years background music at our house, has been silenced. "Like the sound of a grand amen," The Old Washer-Singin' Sam-gave its final clunk several weeks' ago. So for a while we've played the role of the sophisticates, one of the cockpit of a jet plane. -sending it out" (the laun- I wondered if, without a degree dry, that is) and fancying in electrical engineering, I'd be ourselves free from the ty- able to operate such a seemingly ranny of being what the ads call

.~ wash-day queen." It didn't

ultrasonic contraption. The salesman, noting my al!e and probable experience in the field of laundry, took for granted that I would want variety. He spun levers showing hot wash, hot rinse; hot wash, warm rinse; warm wash, cool 'rinse; all the various shadings thereof. He then launched into the 'nuances of water conditioning products, synthetic deterg~nts, blending' of ,fibers ,and Eabrics, followed by 'a disertation' on' acetate, acrilan, acrylic ,fibers" arnel, etc. . ' , , Home' again, with an armload of iiterliture, the Head" of the House and' I did our studying. Then we picked .the. least complicated model we could find, ordered it over the telephone.' And that was that. Meantime, came a letter from Aunt Aurelia:_ "Your grandmother never' had . a washing machine; Mar y Louise," she wrote. "A bar of yellow' soap, a washboard, plenty of clear water and elbow grease -plus a bit of blueing and good Iowa sunshine have kept that tablecloth the way it is." Here's hoping I can give it as good care!

Wins Scholarship Mi' Susan J. Koch of 42 Park Street, New Bedford, top ranking Senior at Holy Family High School, has been awarded a National Mer it Scholarship amounting to $750 annually for four years, it was announced at f ~ school this '""leek. Miss Koch was sponsored for the award by Acushnet Process Company of New Bedford. A communicant of St. Law~ rence Church, New Bedford, Miss Koch will enter Mt. Holyoke College in September to major in political science. Students from more than 14,000 schools in the nation took the National Merit Scholarship qualifying tests a yeap ago.' The topscorers in each State, Susan among them, were announced 'in 09tober, and ,were, named semi:. finalists in' the scholarship testing. They t(0)( 'another thteehour 'test in 'December. 'Susan was' among 'the '1,000 winners throughout the 1 country. / The young recipient is a member of the Monsignor McKeon Debating Club and has participated in national debating tournaments. She is editor-in-chief of the school year book, member of the National Honor Society and is a Junior Achievement staff r-')orter.

r k. Rather than simplifying daily living, it merely com p 1 i cated our problem. EXAMINE PIECE OF SCUJLPTURE: Prior to the . Grandma TinNew Bedford Catholic Women's Club Communion Breakfast, Jey's tablecloth Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, V.G., P.R., Auxiliary Bishop of really brought Fall River, and Mrs. Lilly L. Dumont, club president, center, the whole business' to a study an art piece held by the guest speaker, Miss Margaret head.' , C. Cassidy of Bridgewater. State Teachers College; • "Grandma's To b 1 e cloth," 'I:.. '.: well deserving &.:., , . SEATTLE (NC)-:-Laurie Hed- paper route and baby-sitting of capital" letters, 'is real Irish rick, 13, eighth grader at Holy jobs,' she's paid for some afteriitie'n, three-and-one':'half yards 'Names Academy here, is an ex- school tutoring in 'French be:' long by two yards wide, hem:' pert skier and swimmer, and likes sides. stitched by hand with an artistto play the violin. But, in her Her extra-curricular interests I'y one seldom sees in the 'mawords, she's "most interested in have paid off. Young Miss Hedchine or any other age. More the elements and in studying the r1nk is the only girl among eight than half a century' old .this atom '-ucture." , winners of scholarships for a masterpiece retains its pristine She has taken to reading mathematics and science instiWhiteness, having been kp.pt mathematics, 'chemistry and tute ·to be held this summer' at beautifully all these years by physics books after school hours. Lakeside School, a private boys' Aunt Aurelia and only recently With earnings from a weekly school in Seattle. ' presented to this household. , Inspires Mostest ' 'rhree times we have used it, each a gala occasion. Hanging in graceful folds .llmost to the Fall River - New B'edford floor, it inspires a hostess to her mostest. 'It must be accompanied in the 'way of elegance by exquisite silver, glass, china and Falmouth ;of I ~orgeous food. ' ' Falmouth Circle, Da'ughters of After the first two usings, we , :Isabella, will send Mrs. Matthew washed the treasure in 'our then- Souza and Mrs. Stephen McInnis ailing machine.,.-old Sam-hov- , as representatives to the annual ering over it, regulating tilli~ng, . convention "of" the Diocesan detergent, bleach. .' Council of Catholic Women, . And then the washing machine': Saturday, May 14, at Bishop ~ve out. Samuel' gave: up the" Stang High School. ghost. We wrote to 'Aunt Aure-, The unit will contribute cakes heavenly white dresses for ~, asked her ~hat kind: she to the USO Monday, May 9, and ued, for this would· certainly members attend a NeighConfirmation .and Holy , CommuniOll be a cri,terion. Meanwhile,' not bors Night program Tuesday, only Grandma Tinley's Table- June ,28, under sPonsorship of ••• two all-importalltt formal Goth, but everything e~ waa HyacInth Circle, New, Bedford. events ia. the life of • MiB8I pil~ up. For the third tilne in our lives, the Head of the ~ouse end I went washing machine mopping. Left: - Girls' sheerest white 100% silk organza Things haye changed! ~rice­ dress with tiny tucks at wise and every oUter way • • • the top. Small applique 'I'imes have cJt8nged. ' of Swiss embroidery for Nostalgically, we recalled the accent, Complete with arst electric machine we hadslip. Sizes 7 to 12 • • • wringer type-for which we paid $50. 'Twas used every 12.98 day for years until it literally gave out. That machine didn't owe us a thing. Came the era when there Girls' White Dresses were, to our surprise, a few "dry beds" of a morning, the diaper sizes 7 to 12 ••• 7.98 to 16.98 load appreciably lessened. We were introduced to soft Girls' Size 6 to 6lt living, with an automatic washing machine-I thought I bad it White Dresses ••• 7.98 to 12.98 'Glade. All ther~ was to lal,1ndry • Sheer Wh ite Veils .as-s(lckit 11\, return in:'half . . hour, take _t out, himg.it up. .:.:' :"."', ,,3.98, 5.98, We never, heard' of 'driers in " ,aaose day~, !f.,the day was rainy, purest of aD white nylOil .:,' We'd hang the clothes i~, the· basement; if we needed 'em in a dresses for little totS· burry, we had our own improvifirst Holy-Comm'unioR eation of a drier-a complicated, , ~at - hanger; broom '- betw~n- ' ~irs arrangement in front of. Lett: elegance iD a _e open oven door: : pure white dotted nylon Final Clunk dress enriched with deep ,lace on sleeves, collar' Bit by 'bit, automation and front panel. Also out until the aforementioned eIunk.' I ribbon and ,bow trim. Complete with full nylon : Hence the shopping ~r P. underskirt. Sizes 5, 6, Salesmen showed us this type and that: washer-drier,' plain 6x • • • 8.98 keep these'impoftcint" washer-the "plain'" is merely: • comparative adjective ~ until days forever in we were utterly confused. . fine professional Panels in the bade with their Intricate shadings iof temperaphotographs taken it:'~. Cure, speed, halt-and-go,' remind. W 0

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ColDmonion ••• Confirmation

St. Aulalia court" -ew Beei-' lord and Father Lenaghan Junior Court, MassachusettS Catholie Order of I'oresters, will join in., • memorial Mass at 5:30, Frida,. evening, June 3, at 8t: Mary's' Church, South Dartmouth. Following Mass the junior grollp will hold a Communion supper .. the churcll balL

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Memorial Mass

SPRf::IAL OPFE.B,

'6 An. '9.95'' . photograph. " 8xIO .•• two 5x7's plus ~ three pOcket-size pictures Dressing Rooms foi" Your ConYenience, No appointment needed. Proofs Shown. ' . , ' Fall River New Bedford ODe

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THE ANCHOR:....Diocese·of Fall River-Thurs., May 5, 1960

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FIFTY YEARS .OF 'SERVICE: Franciscan Missionarie~ of Mary. will mark 50 years of service at St. Anthony's Convent th,is Tuesday. Left, ;twin, sisters. Sister' Mary Clare' (left) and Sister Francis Borgia, share adoration in ·the·convent chapel where the Blessed Sacrament is exposed daily. Center, Mother Vincent of Aquila ~orks at. hostmakin~ machine.

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The Sisters supply host~ to St. Mary's Cathedral and many other area . churches. Right; Sister Mary Edward and Sis~r dos 'Anjos (seated left .to right), who have be~n at· the Fall River cOJ1ventsince its 1910 opening, share memories with the newest arrival, Sister. Xavier ot the Holy Name· (standing), who has only been at the Fall River house two months. . , ,

Italian. ,Bish~ps Hit Any Ties With Reds

Anniversary

Continued from Page One to offer themselves as victims<.., A unique activity of the Sis- for t~e Church and s?uls.,. ANCONA (NC)-:-Th.e bishops ters now discontinued' since OffIcers of Tuesday s Mass, In of the Marche regIOn m central 'en lawbreakers ~re' no addition to Bishop Connolly, will Italy. have reminded their peoi:~;er imprisoned in Fall River, be R~. Rev. Msgr. Humberto s. hIe thatl~t~thloliCds l~hOUld ~tOht was the visitation of women MedeIros, . assistant priest; .Rev. ave. po 1 ~ca. ea,Ings WI . For a perI'od , such Laureano C. dos Reis , pastor of MarxIst soclahsm. prIsoners. ', St. An.thony of Padua church, Socialism is not strong in the • prisoners were paroled to the Sisters' care and were housed ~all RIver,. deacon; Rev. AgosMarche region, which is prion the third floor of the convent. tmh? Pacheco, Immacl,1late Con- marily agricultural. But the It t ceptIOn church, New Bedford, Bishops' reminder came' during M ost mpor an subdeacon. 1 ' hId' b' ortant of the Sisters' ' . . . Ita y s two-mont -0 ca met M. o.s.t im p . Rev. WIlham H. Harrmgton crisis as pressure was being put actI~I~Ies a~~ forn:m~ the he~rt and Rev. John E. Boyd will be on the Catholic-oriented Chriso~~, r religIOus hfe IS the dally. deacons of hon,or and Rev. John tian Democratic. party.-the naVIgIl they·· keep before t~e H. Hackett and Rev. Paul F. tion's largest _ to seek an·.alBlessed Sacrament ex.posed. In M ;arrick.. will , be masters of liance with socialism. their small 'chapel. Adoration ceremonies . continues from 6:30 each 'morn" Christian Democratic Premierinl;t un~il 5:30 in the evening.. d~signate Amintore Fan~a~i, inThe .Fall River. community is . dlcated that ?~ was trymg to part of a worldwide order-dedi-, _.fo~m .a . c.?al.lb()o.,gOvernment eated to all ty;,es of missionary • " ._ " . 'c.:. WIth at ~east Uie . tacIt sUI?P~rt k ' t h th t 0:"£ ld aiin of- _ . ·VATICAN C~TY, (-N9)~~ope of Italy s leftwmg SOCIalist wor. t~I f e. w 'dO r'tI'c'I"P'a'· John has told. 30;000.aalian party headed by pretro Nenni. ,expla Ion or sm an pa - 'f' th ' h .. 'd"t' to' . , . " , , . ,'. armers at tell' .u y pre-' . , . . the apostolate" ,t IOn m, , . . . . , . . . . serve spiritual values does not ,Gift to Univetsity In ad<;lition to poverty, chastIty· . 'mean they must abandon efforts ST. LOUIS (NC)-The Gran,and obedience, the Sisters vow . for material progress. ite City (Ill.)Steei Company has ~I • The Pope, the son of a farm presented a gift of' $100,000 to 'Warns l"IIleWmanltes famiiy, declared "if the Lord St. Louis University for its 150th '.Of Modern -Atheism. had not called me to be,a priest, Anniversary Development ProI would have been one of you. gram.. ! PROVIDENCE (NC)--:-Modern I would be here with you asking atheism crops up in academic t" Holy Father for his bless.:. MEN 17·25 classrooms where religion and ing." even truth become but a'function . The Pontiff said members of JOIN THE NEW of culture, a University of Rhode the audience, which included his Society of. Brothers of Island professor told deJega.tes farmer brother, Guseppe Ronto the New England Province calli, and other members of the Ou.r Ladyof Providence Newman Club convention' here.' Roncalli family, were "repreFor information write to: Dr. William Oliver Martin~ sentative of all the farmers of FATHER MASTER hf' of the university's 'philos- the earth." St. Joseph the Worker ~phy department, deli' red the He called them "men .and ,keynote address at the two-day women marked with hard work, Novitiate £onvention which attracted ,n~ore yet serene in their simpHcity, War";;ick Neck; R. I. :ihan 200 stulents;an4. chaplains' patient in labor * * * but rich . I ~rom nearly 60 Newman Clubs at in so many human and Cl;Iristian :New England colleges and :uni- values, in the love of family and versities. nation ·and. faithful to the 'The philosopher ~id 'A~glo~ ,"Chtirch.": . .:, ., Saxon atheism' maintains' that it: ~.,-",;,,'.- - - - --. is' all right 'to bel,ieve irtGod i· . and go to churches "because you:' 1I""l11111 BOYS WANTED for the create your own god religion 0.0 ; ·man-made."'Modern 'atheism "', . , ' " " " " . ':, Priesthood 'and Brotherhood. ,lack,;of fundi N.O Impedi. ·merely cloaks ltself:in.:the guise : JOseph A.· Charpentier ....:: .' Of~· religion· designed ,by, man to ".'.:,' Ileg..,P.barin. " _ i ,,'.• me!:'t. ~~"~' ,.. " ,:' . . 88ti~ human :ne'ecis'- h~ I added. ::~ "wy' ';O77~ ~ " " Write &oc' .PRESCRIPTIONS " P. O. 'lox '5742 . itoZ ACUSHNET AVE. . Baltimore I, Md. NEW BEDFOR~.· Continued from Page. ODe , The two-story brick' building, : .~ ~~~ 'Which is expected to .be com,R. A. WILCOX CO;' pleted in, the FaU, will 'accomOFFICE FURNITURE ... . .'~ 1""lIIIII imodate thearow~ng n,umper .of . 'novices 'in the religious, order. III· Stock' for I.. medlat~. Dellv"7' FA~MS fE. James. Kurtz bJ: EastPro~i':: • DESKS... •. CHAIRS. 14.5 Washirlgton~t.,. Fairhaven 'dence is architect'of the building· . FILiNG CABINETS ,<,' .• BAR-B-Q .ChiCkens :and the construction.contra<;t.ha!l.· .~ CUT. 7Uf»'.Chickens peen awarded til DonateUi'Buifd:-, " • FIRfFlLES . , ' eSA-FEs ing Co., North Providence. • .DAY OlD Eggs' FOLDING TABLES.,~ .tHICKE·N· Pie~ . , It will provide. living :quar~rs; '.. ..../AND.CHAIRS .' .. ., . . : .totU~~EY$ '.'- , inclllding' dormitOry, ~rec~pt1on; '~ ROAST.GHICKENS· land ,work room'· facilities, and :wi~l ~\.cllnnected:'~' ~e;ma'i~ 22' 'BEDfORD . ST~' . i ••;BAKED ~A·NS·. ~bUlldmg .~nd chapel.. oWor.k;·_is, . "All RIVER '5·-7831' " ,. ,.. ' (Week-ends}:'" "'_': .-..,.....le~pec~~.l:l.~o.s~ar:t.i.m~~~.!\tel1.'.

Po'pe Commends Farmers' Virtues.

Trinitarian 'Fathers

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Vatican Daily Sa'ys Soviet Leaders Preparing New Persecution . VATICAN. CITY (NC)-The chev's) colleague of those days, Vatican City daily has specu- Malenkov. '. . Khrushchev has lated that Russia's communist consolidated his position and berulers' are preparing a new 00.- lieves that the moment to act slaught of relfgious persecution. has come." External Appearance ,L'Osservatore Romano poi~ted. out iQ a front-page editorial en... L'Osservatore notes that many Htled "Atheism in the YJ.S.S;R." newspapers and magazines of the that antireligious propaganda, w,estern world have published which has never ceased in the articles on religious "freedom" Soviet Union, has recently in Soviet Ru·ssia. All this, says grown more intense, more ·fre- the Vatican daily, is merely exquent and more widespread. ternal appearance since Marxism It said: cannot tolerate true freedom. ."The Soviet communist lead.,. .:Qut the newspaper S~YS it", ~ ers have decided and ordered true that religious sentiment is t::at the antir~li~ious campaign still· very. 'l1uc,h alive i'1 J,luS!>ia be .. sharpen,ed,while they have today, an4 for thi~· very re1,lso\1 renounced .the caution. which the Soviet authorities find it hard,ly 'six years ago the secre- necessary to renew their perse- . t~rY~f the communist party cution. the Soviet Union, Khrushchev, L'Osservatore concludes that had prescribed. . the:survival·.of religion is a con';' "The 'purpose, 'it would seem, tradietion of the Marxist ide';' is' to' deal a blow to .(KhrIJshology and a witness of its 'failure. .

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THE ANCHORThurs.; May 5, 1960

Press Publishes First Annual

11

Cites Guild's Aid To Oil Workers

'l'E"r YORK (NC)-The first edition of a new yearly historical publication, the Catholic Press Annual, has just been pub-' , NEWARK, N. J. (NC) - A lished '-:, tho Catholic Press Jesuit priest told a group of . Cat' .. ~ oil emptoyees here that Association here to mark the association's golden jubilee con;. . they have "made a real contrivention next Week in Washingbution to promoting unity among the oil workers in the Middle ton, D. C. The first comprehensive colE,ast" lection of !t'istorlcal material on ,Father Joseph J. LaBran, S.J., the Catholic':Pre~ in' America, a former teacher at Bagdad Colth~ new AnQu'al :c9ptains e)Ct~n- ' , lege in Iraqu who is now as-: sive historical' articles, pro~ile!l ,!, signed' to Holy Cross College, of several outstanding ,Catholic ' Worcester, spoke to 500 petro- . press men and publishing 01'-, leum industry. employees at the ganizations and other, specia~ " ; 14th annual Petro'leum Sunday convention material. Communion Breakfast here. TI ~ association plans. to illsue Father LaB ran commended the Catholic Press AnilUal each Petroleum Guilds 'of New York year at its convention time, illuand New Jersey for their efforts minating other aspects and dein bringing the Petroleum Suntails of the history of the Cathday movement to Bagdad, Iraq olic press in America. and Kuwait, Arabia. He said:, Featured historical article is "If we could go on a magic carpet to Bagdad, Basra, Kirkuk, "Beginnings of the Catholic and Kuwait this' evening, we Press in America," by Floyd Anwould find ' 500 to 2,000 petroderson, K.S.G., who served as leum . 'orkers, inclUding 11 dif_ editor of the Annual. Mr. Anferent Christian rites and Mosderson is managing editor of the lems, assembled to participate in Advocate, Newark, N. J., archthe observance of Petroleum '-iocese newspaper, and director Sunday." of the Catholic Press AssociaPetroleum Sunday, the name tion. given to the religious movement Another feature article is on SISTERS TRY THEIR SKILL: Two Sisters of Charity of Nazareth from Archbishop in tt- l industry, was started in the history of the' Catholic Press Association by James A. Doyle, Williams High School, Braintree, test their skill on part of the math exhibit erected, by , N w York City 19 years ago 'by an ,oil truck driver and has CPA executive ,secretary, Who, Sister Mary Aloysia, O.S.F., of Lancaster, N.Y., at the National Mathematics' Educators spread to various parts of tb,e supervised pubtication o~, th~ , ' world. Conference at B u f f a l o . ' volume. ' .,

Puerto Rico Debates Released Time Bill

Britain's Catholics Answer Need For Lay Helpers" in . ~issions .

LONDON (NC)-British Catholic laymen, preoccupied for the past 150 years b;' the increasin'g needs of the Church in their own country, are only now tU'rning r eir eyes toward the missions. In the days when the British Empire was growing and this n::.tion was a mission area itse'l,f, its Catholic laymen were cori':' tent to leave overseas territories, to missionary priests and colonial civil servants.' But now that the Empire is changing into a multiracial com... monwealth of independent and sometimes immature riations, they are becoming aware' of the need for Engli!lh-'speaking: lay Catholics to help both the over'" worked native' 'and missionary clergy and the understaffed civil services of the new nations.: "The British' 'Commonwealth has within its more than 12 m~l.l l~on square miles' nearly 700, m~l':' lIon people, of whom ~n~y a lIttie '11~re than 30 mIllIon a,re CatholIcs. It covers much of the

School Pupils Pray For Pagan Children'

ml~lon worl.d, partIcularly m ~sla and AfrIca. On these con-

t~nents ne~ ~omm.onwea~th nabons are rIsmg wI~h their. ~wn '~ult';lres, but. ~Ith BrItI~h­

mSPI;ed constItutIons and With En~lIsh as a common language amId a welter of tongues. There is a tendency in some of these countries to regard mission personnel unfavorably, alt: '1h the Church is allowed to' exist, is respected, and even h"l.. I officially in some places. The presence of Catholic lay elites' is all important in such ' countries~ To help' build them' UP' ,there is a' 'constantly in-;creasirig demarid for Englishsj:)')aking' professional lay men and women Wl10 can' doctor, nurse, teach, plan, organize, design and build. Train and Support "T~ s'upply this demand by p~blicizing the need for a lay elite and to help train and support one is the main task of the lay missionary apostolate in Britain at the present time. According to an expert on the subject here, the apostolate is humming. Main recruiting center for the lay mission workers i.:; London's 1 ° 'ica Bureau of the Sword' of the Spirit, a Catholic society aimed at keeping laymen aware of their international responsibilities. , The Newman Associa'tion fo~ . \1niverllity graduates also l:Ielps '''and the Young Christian Worf~ ers' organization sends· out spi:!,.. cially trained lay,' missioners. to spread the movement in under,developed territories. '

PITTSBURGH (NC - More than 200,000 pagan children will be baptized this year through the aid of U. S. Catholic school children, the national director of tbe Pontifical Association of the Holy Childhood anticipates. .. ,Father Au~ustus .0. Reitan, 'c.s.sIi.; made 'Hie prediction 'as the annual May campaign of tl)~ ~oly Childhood Association' to ,"adopt" abandoned pagan babies ~ot ~nderway in. Catholic parochial schools throughout the country. ,.: Father Reitan S<lid the daily prayers and monetary sacrifices ' Of. the millions of children in U. S. Catholic ,chools will help to bring baptiSm, shelter, fooa· ~\nd medical care to .millions of , abandoned children in Europe, South' Anierfca a'nd' 'Asia. The: Y,oungsters takin~ part 'in tli'e ~ t1(O,rt are from' kindergarten age up to 13. '

,President of ColI~ge IGets Army Award " JERSEY CITY (NC)-Father James J. Shanah:an, S.J., presi':' ' dent of St. Peter's College, has 'been given the Outstanding Civilian Service Medal by Maj. Gen. Raymond W. Curtis, com- . manding general of the Second :Army Corps.' TJtse award was mode to' Father Shanahan for "dynamic ,leadership in organizing', guiding' ll'1nd supporting" the ROTC unJt . :'at St. Peter's. It marked the first . time the award ~as presented ~ , Ule, First ~my ,~r~.

SAN JUAN (NC):- Bishop 'James Peter Davis of San Juan has called upon the 1- lders of Puerto Rico's three major political parties to make known their position on the Catholic' supported "released time" bill now pending in the House of Representatives education committee. In reply to the Bishop's call, Gov. Luiz Munoz Marin, head of the Popular Democratic party, sqid that he favors the legislation and 'is considering including a section on religious instruction in his next message on education to' be'sent to the present legisllitive session.

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The stamp is one of a series Oft landmarks in Israel. It consists ' of a view of Nazareth with 81. Gurion for ordering withdrawal Joseph's Roman Catholic cathe_ of a stamp depicting a tiny cross dral in the foreground, next to on Nazareth's Roman Catholic Mary's Well. On the stamp, the cathedral. cross on the steeple is tiny, The 'newspaper, Haaretz, said measuring less than one-sixM;r.' Ben-Gurion's action may· te.enth of an inch in height and damage Israel's international half that in width. standing. 'The decision to print the Haare~z said Mr. Ben-Gul'ion would ~'shout to the heavens" jf stamp was taken a year ago, be- ' Ben-Gurion became a' stamp bearing the Star of f.,re .. David were withdrawn intenMinister of Posts. T

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,,~12

Gold of Merit

"Msgr. Kelly's Boo'k HelpflJl

,God LoveYou'

Especially to Youngsters

By Most Rev. Fulton .J.,Sheen, D.O.

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By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy There are no statistics available, as with steel manufacture and movie-making, but I suspect that advising teenagers is at present one of America's principal and most lucrative industries. The, product, unfortunately, is by no means uniformly good. In- clergy, and Jthers who have to deed, some of it is both ab- d:rect young people. But, best surd and obnoxious. In con- of all, :, can and, we predicttrast to such shoddy wares will be read by the youngsters

America is a very prosperous nation. The Catholle Church in America shares that abundance. Our needs are great, but '·tbey are needs on a very high stanftard of living. Any nation that can' average $56 a year per person on alcohol, while one~fourth 01 the world earns only $51 a year, is far being in a state 01 grave need. ' , , . Returning to the Church; one wonders if the words that Our Lord applied' in the Apocalypse, to ,the Church of Laodicea, which was a symb~l of the whole Church at ' o n e ' . period of history, does not apply to us who are busy about many things: "I know of their doings . . . Thou sayest, I am rich·; I have come into my own; nothing, nowcis wanting to me." 'Then Our Lord tells the truth about the false prosperity of the Church of Laodicea: "All the while, if thou. didst 'know it, : it is thou who art wretched; it is thou who'art to be pitied '... My counsel to thee is l to come and buy from Me what thou need~st: gold proved in fire to make thee rich," He goes on to say: "See where I stand." He is standing outside the door knocking-not inside.

themselves. It is carefully aimed rig'1t at them, and is so composed as to reach and benefit ,them. lIlle "'iever Grew Up Poor ,jack Keefe! If eve anyone was a perpetual adole::::enf and desperately required advice, it was he. He is, of course, the hero ( that is the correct word) ][NSTALLED : Mbst Rev. of Ring Lardner's You Know Laurence A. Glenn has been Me Al (Scribners. ~3.75). installed as the new Ordinary The ' look first aplJeared over t years ago, and has since beof the Diocese of Crookston, come something 'of a legend. It Minn. . is good to have 't back in print. ~ T'e thousands '10 have mereThis must give us pause! Maybe we are poor. Maybe we need ly heard of·it, can no'. ,'ead and Continued from Pa'geOne I .. the 'gold' that was' purified' by fire, which is sacrifice and selfo:. relish it. ' Did he' really believe th'e canon denial. Can we really say that we have let Christ into our Uves Ring Lardner began,' writing was giving the requirements for when all we give each year to the Vicar of Christ for the missions it as a series of,macuine pieces, judges in the courts of o'ur of the entire world is 27c apiece? Let us not leave the Divine with each installment produced country? Master at our door knocking. He must be brought inside by recog~ under the necessity of procuring' If Mr. Borleis, who said he 'nitionof our Spiritual poveriy:that we need His Cross, His sellhard cash to support the' author's. studied canon law for a long denial, His Sacrifice in our lives. And lor what, purpose? The b~~pful. family. But it was by no means time before writing his pamonly purpose for which we live on earth-to extend the Kingdom His manner of address would hack work. Many years have phlet, was knowledgable in of God. Our, counsel is: "Come and buy what thou needest"~the seem; at least to this old codger, passed,. and almost everything Church 'law, why didn't he cite gold' of merit purchased by a sacrifice for the Society for the '->be appealing and authorita- , ha~ changed, since Lardner pro- canon"139 which forbids priests Propagation' the Faith. i . " tiVf' The youthful reader 'wil!' duc€.l this minor classic, but it to" judges in civil courts? feel, ."He knows· us. He knows l . 1till as incisive and· entertain,;, An 0 the r i l l u s t rat ion. what he's talking about. And ing as it ever was, and in form, Canon Law, . "'9 the laws of GOD LOVE YOU to F,R,V. for $2 "Enclosed are two dollars be's 'very anxious to assist us in making the best of ourselves and it is all\but_jerfec~. France, Germany, Switzerland , which were saved in my sister's bubble gum machine. It took a lot of chewing on: the part of m'y little brothers and sisters to get it." . 'Series of Le.'-"'!I arid many other countries, is our situation. Let's listen." based up'on'Roman law. Roman' ,.• :.. to Mrs..K. for $5 "I am" past eighty-two .now, and don't see ·E I' Ad I enc It comprises a series ot'letters . xP. alDS 0 esc e law provides for trials by judges. very well, but well enough to. see that someone needs help. I~ has H e,'be g'n been a few months since I have sent you any monl7Y so I thought tt I s by expoundl'ng the written by ,a blazing· but bone Mr. Borl"s writes: '''Canon importance of adolescence, as head pitcher, Jack Keefe to his law ordains that all cases in was about time, knowing it will do some good some place." .: ..to well as the peculiar nature' of its pal Al. back in Bedford. Keefe court must be tried by a judge M.H. and Friends for ,$12 "Each time we watch your prograJ!l ,we bl m s. The adolescent I' S no had J'ust been bro.ught up to the or several judges. In crimiDlll put aside a quarter to sen~ to you. Each time we don't watch :youi' proe .:.. program we' donate fifty cents. We are enclosing twelve dollars &Un g er a hc h'ld I " not yet an . adult·, ,:"i·' , leagues, with., the White cases, the ,Constitution of 'the · . t ro ess of maturl'ng' Sox. He is the very reverse of ' be IS 10 which we know you Will be able to use." pc, United States guarantees to the of moving toward freedom and diffident. accused the right of trial' by 6111 ; ,sponsibility. He is sure'that, for good looks, jury." . Wo~ld you like to keep' up to date with the. activitie. o.f th8 Much of the difficulty, attend-' pitching brilliance" and' prowess This is' another scrambling of missionary Church":"'to l~iirr" what th~ Holy father's elIlissarie~ ar~ ant .on f is age'springs from at fisticuffs; he has' nO equal l' difference between Church tile tendency to veer wildly be- When things go wrong~as they and State. Again we wonder why , doing: allover the globe? Why not subilcribe to WOR!-D~ISSIOI'f. tween what has left behind generally do for him-thef8ult ' it quarterly, scholarly review.edited by Most R~v. Fulton J. Sheen• • ftd wllat aw",i.- b'ut has' not yet Mr. Borleis put two such .senA year's subscription price is.$5.oo. The address is WORLDMISSION, ........... is never his. He has more' alibis te'nces together. . arrived. than the Yankees have haters. C h' 366 Fifth Ave:, New York, N. Y. , "S a perl'od o'f change--phya _ anon law says 'fIot 109 about It I He is scornful of Walter Jo n-' the trial of in· American bl, intellectual, emotional. The son and Christy Matthewson; l. oN. And the 'lI:. S. Constitution, ehange can be bewildering. A they nave nothing but luck. He in its First Amendment,does not <;;ut out this column, pin your sacrifice tq it and mail it ~ the considerab'eaid in handling it j convinced that TY .Cobb ia dictate how any church shall Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Dir~ctor of 1;he Society f~ the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, .New York 1, N. Y., is to 'understand just what it is, afraid to bat against him. Every handle violations of its own laws. what'it b r i n g s . . manager in both leagues covets All Mixed Up or your Dioce,san Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. There is, for example, the him, he's sure. The First Amendment, guarphysi.cal change. This is exRaw Boastfulness dian of religious freedom, leaves plained by Dr. James T. Geddis He is a fool with women, both ev~ry church free to judge itS DAUGHTERS ()fl ST. PAUl' ill a, 'chapter, noted for candor t' -:-ht-fisted and an 'easy mark own law by any system of juris"vitti ,oung gir" (1"·211 to labor. .. a.. d . completeness, entitled "A w h er J money 18 . concerIie d , un- ... prudence l't may choose. Chrilt'l valt vineyord GI an Apaltl. of .... Doctor Talks to Young People." able to handle drink, unwilling One should not mix up Edition.: Prell. Radio, Moviel Clftd ·T ... Dr. Geddis treats of bodily to keep in condition. But for raw Church and State; it violates risiOll, With mod.m mean,. tIi_ change '.. boys and in girls, and boastfulness he has no peer. canon law and the Constitution llI\illionary SI.te,. brine Chrllt" Doctrln. proffers sensible advice as to of our country'. ro all. reeardlell Of rac., color or creH. An odious figure, you would b ow t' 0 d ea 1 WI·th it. An even more surprising thing For information write te, '. . K I1y think. No. He is comical', he is · Wh en M onsignor e I'&happens to canon 16. ' REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR . to suc h ma ttera also p'athetic,'. . He has redeeming, SO ST. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 10. ·MAn. awnes, h e goes 10 This canon discusses in two ' • l.. h 1 gue qualities, s.uch as, his love for as ,le secre t fears w hi cpa paragraphs the effects of ignort' the crucla . 1 ques- his tiny son. And the reader ance of law upon a person who .. &...""'" a d 01escen, -... f k' d k . d senses "'at Keefe is doomed to .Ion an Chr' eepm~ breaks church law. Mr. Borleis &0' d,0 thrna mg ' d 't' quick extinction as a big leaguer, .... Ien s, e sane an IS laD writes: "Canon 16 states that the d th ose 0 f the even though he is still going. force of the canon law is abso.att1'tu.d, e t owar r ,.tit er, sex. g e tt'm g on WI·th par- stroI:_' 'vhen the bo '. ends. lute as to .the;· legal effect." · The secret of the book's hold~ 'eo t s,. ma k 109 use 0 f th e e d uca, No Such Thing tional opportunities,' drinking ing power, despite its repetitions, ,end driving. etc. i that Lardner has created an. Canon 16 says no such thing. :He sets out principle~ for guid- .~}~~thentie···eharacter"'"whom'.-·be "': ~even,.adm.i~Jhat .. ignorall(;.e.o~ ."ce,'l·n the chol'ce' of a career.':' .. ~ :oy:'!-and enables us to know' the law is" poSsible, defense: _. .Now why did Mr. Borieis':wriie 'The notion of a vocation is dweit -through:andthroligh~:~hat sentencef'bi(Che even 'read On, as a're the intangible factOrs Also, many - of Keefe's -attri,-' the c~non? ','" \ .', . ' :. > which have so much to'do wIth butes,':are,iatl', to 9, typical of 'a ',A final example. of the pam,.. fos, uri,ng happiness in life. ';,' grea t,!:.:many "Azrl'ericans;:: ·in, .. or,', ·phlet:s ,ilPIJrollCh is this: Here, of course',religious ;vo- outot baseball. Finally, there is " . ation comes up for considera- th') perf::ction of the langu,age: In 1928,. the Saci.:~d.G:origr.~ga-.: . - , tion of the Holy Office~ hi'R<rine tion,:but the book is not pri~ci- KeefEj's vocabulary, pron~nci~- •"s~a:ted tha~ cases of marriag~ pally for hose who will go into tion, spelling, for all theirhil- . 'may not.be brought into Church the priesthood or religious ·iJi,fe. arious· peculiarities, are repre'..' courts by non-Catholics. i' it more than adequately meets senta!ive of th~ use ~nd misu~ _ Who's. He Kidding !.~. the : ods of the majority;who and abuse WhICh our' tongue,,~ . Since such -'persons are not...·. will pa:s their adult years it}'·the subjected to. L,ardner heard'wI,th . members 'of: :the Church, Ahet':~ world., almdO~ preter.n~tura~ t~ute?ess,ly Catholic Church courts are('n,'ot,' , Backs With Reasons . an got down In 0 prln preCIse c!)mpetent forums for'their cases, ' There is excellent material' on What; :;he heM.'d~ 'rhis seems to ~akeserise to. alk marriage. on dating, g~ing But Mr. Borleis writes: ' :.:-'~;t<COMPLETE ateady, the choice of a .life part' ~', ."The Holy Office Gf the o/llt~:i:.;·,: " RENTAL WORK UNIFORMS aer, .engagement, weddmg prep- Top, Iumn I I ,o~~c Ch?rch de~lared~on .,J~I}- ': :' aratJons. The' treatment' is NIAGARA UNIV-ERSITY(NC)': ,u~ry37, 1921,1"that.non:-Catho._.'· simple but comprehensive and -Per capita CaSh giving of Niag- lies; whether baptized or unbaplNIIin~ntly Christian throughouL ara University's alumni 'to the tized, are barred from attackiDg. Also ReClaim Industria' Gloves . It- makes use not only of un:school's' development fund cirive, their marriages ~nd acting as "'anging theological truth and was e highest' in the nation plaintiffs ~lll 'their own m;itritil", superna:ural, context, but last year among ,private univ;ermonial cases; they cannot sue also of the latest findings of Scl-' sHies: The' 822 .Niagara alumni for separation or annulment." ence.. What it SUgbests, it always contacted personally gave $87,There is" no conflict between puts:back with reasons which 693 or an average cash gift of canon law and American law. Succenor to are as comprehensible as they ~ $138.10. Second place honors Every Catholic can take, without New England Overall & Supply: Co. are cogent. went to Harvard College in reservation, a solemn aath w H How!U'd .-'ve., Ne~ Bedford This book will be of great a... . Cambridge with an 'averaie cash "God'to uphoic:i.·tIie· Constitli-U.OIi Phone WY 01' WY '-0'788 ot. the United State.. lIistance to parents, teachers, the lift ef $128.69. are the contents of Monsignor Geor[ A. Kelly's nr ' bool~, The Catholic Youth's Guide to 'L i f e and Love (Random House. $3.95). M o'n s i g nor iEeel,.: is widely and' favorably known as the author of The C' 'holic Mar'Il'iage Manual and ,The. Cathelir·'Family Handbook. He is, an.. ·alert observer, a judicious student, and, Cl 'counsellor rich in sympathy \,. and practical wisdom. His book 'indulges in no railing against ,young people. Rather, he seeks always to be constructively

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R'ecipe$ to. Matc~ Spring,fidt·.· In Freshness and, E.ye-App~al; . By Joan Meadows The road leading westward into Cheyenne,.is a wonderful example of perspective. For as far as the 'eye'can see it ,is an ever-narrowing ribbon., On,' all sides there" are' small dome-like hills which huddle' like t9mbstones. alternately·. 8co~hed by the.: sun apd ,'·'cakes.)E;ach pancake containS whIpped by the wmd. Above . 33 cal6ries; 3.4 grams protein; all is the biggest, bluest sky .i.o gram fat; 2;3 grams carbohy:., I've, ever seen. ·No· moun- drate. ,

THE ANCHOR. Thurs." May; 5~, 1960'; .

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S'erra P'resident Urges Laymen Study Religion BUFFALO (NC) - Cana;. diim and American Serra Cfub, members heard here from the organization's 'preSi.

ident. that it. is, not enough' to be ,a\ complete Catholic, one should lblow;· why he, is; Frank H .. Hanrahan, head ,of Serna' International, urged Serrans. from Toronto; Buffalo and 'Niagara' Falls to heed ·papal pleas to becom~ Uenlight~ned". laymen. .

"'ees " nothl'ng Or '-:-eSauce: ta Ins; no .,," to' ',.' 1'l" .' .0'c • t t' it· it is like .a giant ?'! .cul's o;.,nge JUICe. pune::, ua e , - . ' .-, .lh, teaspoon orange' nnd invez:ted .umbrella that heIghtens, '. 2 tablespoons cornstarch. ,-, . the' feeling. o( , lteaspdon s:>veetening.. solu~ion ..Oll": utter spacious"'8 swe~tening tabletS' ness~ ~ Its maj,es. Few g·rarh.~ ~~It·'. '" tic scope testi1 large. orange, ~ectiohe.d· fies .to the in: Comb~~.)· aU m:gredle?-ts (ex,.. " "Serra Clubs are to be uni"er'finite, creative' .cept o~allg~ se~tIons) m ~~all sities 'of Catholic thinking. Pray ness·of'iod. . , . hsauctepat~; .,0!J " ovtert1me 1Ut~l firs(but cio n~t stop there;" Th~'. " re ea, s lrr.mg: cOns an y, . un 1 If . you a t ' . , gz:eatest. national', forCe. iq. t~~, . : .Adc{' g t· laJining a . c. '.; ... :.,oran e sec IOns; wortd..' is .'knowledge.. Let us a;s . PI ", , t'r l' p' '. cool. Serve .:with· Feather..Pan, Serrans use it," . he." :told, .. $e II easure k 'b ..;. Milk Ilh"'" this' summer, don't forget the .ca es, a ove es '54 cUIPS Spring dist,,''';t. convention. " ad to Che enne.. o.f sauce, or . serlvlI~~s.ca 0Serra intermitional, MJ;...·Him-: ro I: ~ . r i ' pez: servmg.: ." .', "." rahan expla' ed, is a soCiety 011 . , day' is' . "ThiTsty''~day" . The young an:d .those ,of' us . E .; v.ery . ., h t ill 1'1 business. and professfonal men: .. whi1~ ;yo'u're' travelillg.Thilt's ',w 0 are nO ~?BY?kung w S Ice. devoted' to·' bstering'" religious~ . ' i 'f! ·th t y-at-'homes and· these tasty.. "., uc aroQ and:tr ue: or e sa" . h " H"; h' t /1~' vocat' -~s.· It was' 'founded' 2Si for the young "uns' out.of school WIC e.s. ,er~ s w a ;yo~, ..., years' ago and h~s :·grown .froml· ' need: as weI'll. four '.mel} in Seattle, Wash., Wi ,.., - "I !want a drink" mama!" is he ..' BUCKAROO.'8ANDWICHES 10;000 men in 203 .clubs in: silt. plaintive cry. Many mothers r~c,. Broiler pan countries. 'FEATHER PANCAKES ognite this cry as a golden op6 slices ·raisin .bread portunity and ke~p" 3: supply ,ill.! % cup (% stick: hutter ' , rqk'di"inks on h.!lnd''PJu.st to cheese .. Plo,ns,. fill such requests. meapp eFcan deviled ham (4'h ounces')' Clol1."ses' Chocoiilte' Float" is a d~licious Lightly. toast six slices of'raisin. ' I .ilJl Ii \lie I' I nourishing drink ·to help ke~p . ;bread. Then place -toast 'oni '-Eighteen colleg.e~~r~diti. courses' , ,P.reIiminal'Y.Lwork &be construction of, a new dam· at PEEio yO'r, child in robust hea~th. I~-l! Moiler rack and spread with 1(4;' wilt be offeredi_this summer.' at , - (:~ INDIA" has, bl'oua:llt many, farmers into this area. ,The88J ,," our gUess you'll J:lot confme tl'\lS, :cup of creamy butter.. In a me-, Stonehill College. beginning Frit' ~ . men ,.have. begun. the task of c0tlveri1float to the young·crowd. Adults, d,il.lm size bowl, In.ix together one, day, June 1T.,. and running Li.1> ." W/!/ lng, a great section of farest into fer~; too, go for this delightful' drink.,· . 4%. ounce can of' deviled, liam, through Mond~" Aug~. 1. Rev. 01" . tile' som suitable· for cultivation.. See i,f ;you don't agree. '.' "'1- 'egg;'slightly beaten and l! cup, Jahn P~ Lucey" C.S'..C., will coo.~J ~. p.resentl7,i there .are more than 90G). PINEAPPLE-CHOCOLATE shJ;edded. cheddar 'cheese (If", duct the'session, . ., , ~ '0 . CidJiollilsJ livmg at the site of the dam., ~. This 'figure includes; in . addition to'. :. '," FLOAT . pound' of cheese yields 1 cup, Registration is set for June 1'7. .' "'~ ,~, the farmers; government officers"ancl! 3 cups cold 'milk " 'w ,en shredded).' Blend ingr~, ..Classes will begin. June 20"and' of , construction ·workers. As' work on thei··' 1 pInt vanilla ice cream or ~cC' milk: diimts together and spread' on' , j:>e held daily, Monday through, , dam 'progresses,. more and more. farm,. , '" ~u.p· (I can, thawed) pmeapple . toast.' Place' these open-face Friday, with examinations JUICe concentrate. 'h ' d th b '1 f ers will be moving In to establish· 'A cup chocolate' syrup , ' sabndwlches. un e.r 't e r~tl'ler"th0r scheduled for July 29 through. , ,them~elves permanently; Even'thougbl Co:b.bine milk chocolate syrup '8 O\lt ,t ree mmu es, I e Aug. -I. ' The '01: the bulk of' the people- working OR' and pineapple j~ice :mcentrate ch-ese melts ~o a luscious golden The session is coeducational ·R fJ!Pathtr's Missiun AiJ the project will. leave upon Us 'coJrno, . and beat. together' thoroughly. . brown. Serve hot. :and .courses may be taken fOr' .' ,ftr tht OrimtaiChurrIJ . pletion, the, Influx of. farmers is so, Pour' iQto tall glasses and top TV FRUIT ,SALAD WITB: credit or audited., great ~hat there will: BOOn,. be more than one: thousand: of'. themo, . with· a scoop of vanilla ice HONEY DRESSING, :Stonehill is 'a four-year coLh:ing at the. site, permanently.. will also be the, maintenance: .cream. 4 servings. I.c!lP orange sections edm:at50nal college and is fully People, for the dam. Farseeing" the growth of this, s~ction, the, , Wh,en guests come for dinner, 2"bananas accl-edited. It's course credits . 'aiShop of. 1:irichur~ wiUliil whose.. Diocese Peecbi is situated~ 70U want. to serve an extra spe.1 cup pink grapefruit sectiODlt may be' transferred to other iDhas'. secured al plot 01\' land for the erection, of. 11' Church. The· eia! dessert. Something new and "'cup chopped walnuts ' ~. :~U!tiOns. '. . cosi'o of materials: will be: $3,000. The farmers: anelL the construc' exciting, something that tastes 1 cup diced pineapple, Courses will be offered in. tion\ wOl1keils, will. supply. the labor. utterly'scrumptious, and someMix above ingredients together Accounting, Education, Englisbv" thing light and easy on the calo- .and· chill. . Goverriment, History, Latin:, WORED: REFUGEE; YE:AR. ries. Here'S the. answer ... tiny, Dressing: Mathematics, Philosophy, Soci'" THE; HOPES OF' THOlJSANDS OE1, REFUGEES have been., featherweight. . rolled pancakes 1 tablespoon honey ology and Theology. They will:,' very high during 'this World Refugee . Year '(June 1959-June, , '. Id 1 tablespoon orange juice topped with a lUSCIOUS, go en be conducted by' cO,llege faculty 1960) that. sufficient financial help woul.d be forthcomlri'g frolll! 1 3·ounce pacl..-age cream cheeso the world's more fortunate, pe'ople-those who never. had to flee: . '.' orange sauce. The combination 1 tablespoon lemon juice , 'memb'ers utilizing full facilities is puri ambrosia, one that no% cup whipped' cream or whipped of the coliege, ' . ' , home and homeland-to enable them' to live more. normally;... even 'in' exile: Any donation that you' can send us will be gratebody :is! likely to resist. 'nonfat dry milk (reliquified). Ti:Ie college will wlthdraw any' " fully received for it will. enable' us to do more for those exne'~ FEATHER PANCAKES Wllm Let cream cheese soften to cOur.se in which' there is not 8: .'. people who are our spedal concern-the REFUGEES FROM' ORANGE SAUCE,.. rOQ~tem·perature. Gradually registration of. 10 students. ' cream in lemon and orange juice. , .PALESTINE. $10 will 'feed'a fa,mily for' a week. : · ) (L ow ca 1one '.Further information may be .. t'"' P k'" ',d'Lastly add lh cup' whipped .. ea ner' anca es. - , o b t a i n e d by writing the" Office , . 'THE' CROSS OF ILLNESS, Is made, it Dot" Ugbter, at lead.' m .lJG. cup 'cottage cheese, .sieved (from",·.;crea or whipped cream sub-;" of the Dean. and Registrar," e'asier' to: bearwhenl care. is belng'glven by nursing sisters; skim m i l k ) , .stitute. Serve over' chilled fruit 1 Throughout the, world, many ate the hos-: '. " ¥oJ cup nonfat dry milk solids which has been mounded on a StonehiU College, North ,Eastou. ' pitais staffed' by, Ca.tholio nuns, wbo gjve % te~spoon S!lIt ..,:' iettuce leaf". ' ~ r-' Mass. ' unstfullilgq' of.. Uieinselves 'IDI, ministerinc, % cup, £lour to the. sick.. SISTER MONICA: and SIS~ ~~~~,w~~~rated ' 'In~tltute TER MERCY 'are two novices of the I tea~poon butter (for griddle) WASHINGTON (NC) -Army MEDICAL MISSION SISTERS; 'KOTQu~lity 'HousehoidProducts Combine cottage ,che~~e, sal~. and Air Forc.e chaplains from.2l) :.TAYAM;· INDIA," who, have offered' God The Shopping: Servi.ce _ That Comes· flour, dry milk so~ids.and water. base, throughout the .ccluritry the gift' of spending their whole"lives in to Your Homo Add llgg yolks and beat until 'are attending the second annual caring for the sick. Before beginning their SPICES e COSMETICS smooth, Beat egg' w!).ites, until, Adult Education Institute. for kainllig as nurses . the;; must spend two _":=:-..JU,IIlII.l,. . MEDICINAL-e HOUSEHOLD .: ... peaks begintoforrn:. fold Milital'y·Chaplains at the Cath~ "years: inithe novitiate, to be trained in'the religious lifti; The. '"., :·ARNOLDT. CEJKA ·lnto cheese mixture. Drop 'by Qlic Vniversity;. of America here minmlli.m '"osf for" the' training ,of it 'Dovice:is '$150 ieai. ·Th., spoonfuls onto hot,'. lig~tly.-;:!·this .'Week under ,the' direction 32 Hedge St.· WY 4-~221 novitiate' ·trainlng takes two y~ars.. To "adopt" either of-the,. ~h:-; .,. . ~ .. greased griddle; "'c.ook· un.til.:... ,of . Father Sebastian" ,M.iklas; , IIOdooswouid':'ClOllt, $S.O~thiS amount ean' be- paid all at .once,: . , ellr CI,ve~" golden., (Makes 20 3-inch pan-.O:F;M; , or iD'installinents; If paid: bi, iJ)stalig.ent,s U is:,a/iked that· $15~1 , ' . bepalel withinone.year.: ,I,. o

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ST. MARY, NO. ATTLEBORO Rev. Edwin Loew, former assistant at St. Mary's, was honored at a testimonial Monday night in the School Hall. Robert V. McGowan, K.S.G., introduced the visiting members of the clerc' who attended to pay their respects to Father Loew. Leonard J. Quinn, chairman of arrangements, presented ~ gift on behalf of the parishioners to the honored guest. Entertainment was furnished by the junior choir of St. Mary's School.

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ST. PATRICK, FALL RIVER Formation of a watch-dog committee for television and literature as well as a retreat and Summer religious a~d social events are on the future 'calendar for the Holy Name Society. Forty-seven boys have been inducted into the Knights of the 1 'tar, organization for altar boys. Sister M. Benita, R.S.M. is director of the group and Rev. Rob'rt S. Kaszynski 'is spiritual ad\Tiso,r.

T.

ST. JEAN BAPTISTE FALL·.RIVER· ' The Women's Guild will hold an ST. MARGARET, instalhition dinner at 6:30 SunBUZZARDS BAY day evening, May 15' White'. The CYO of St. Margaret's and Restaurant. Mrs. Leonidas Mor~ St. Mary's, Onset, will co~spon­ eau, chairman, announces that IIOr a white elephant and rumtickets may be obtained from mage sale from 10 to noon Sat- . dinner' committee members 01' urd morning, May 7 in Sl guild officers. . .. U'garet's school hall. , ST. BONIFACE, BLESSED'SAORAMENT, NEW BEDFORD FALL RIVER .. The lOth annual'day of adora- . .' ~.: Stella Jeunesse will serve . tion for all members and friends as president of the Women's of the Night, Adoration in . Guild for the comin year. With greater ·New Bedford will'be her. Will be'Mrs. Gladys Barre, held this year at St. Boniface'. . vice president; Mrs. Anita Friday, May 6. ". Joseph" secretary; Mrs. Yvette The Blessed SacI:ament will be .' Desrosiers,treasurer. exposed all 'day and ilt 7:30 a A Communion breakfast is Holy Hour will be conducted by planned for Sunday, May q with Rev. Anthony Pohle, SS.CC. ~ - '~. Irene St. Amand as chairNew members will be enrolled man. in the soc'~ty of, night adorers Next regular meeting will be following the Holy Hour, and V':ldnesday, May 18, with Mrs. all interested in this form of Bertha Belanger in charge of reparation for sins are invited to . b - -,itality. attend. ST. MATHIEU, ST. KILIAN, FALL RIVER NEW 3EDFORD TI-~ Women's Guild ~ill bold Brownie Troop' 116 and mem_' corporate Communion at 7:30 bers' mothers will attend Mass . Mass Sunday morning, May 15, and receive Holy Communion followed by breakfast and a 'at 8 o'clock Sunday morning, crowning ceremony of the Mother's Day. Breakfast will Blessed Virgin. Mrs. Adelard follow", the school auditorium Lamontagne is chairman. and the Brownies will present Installation ceremonies and a their mothers wiih spiritual banquet will be heH in June bouquets and shrines of Our for incoming officers. Mrs. Nor- Lady made by themselves. The mand Charland is in charge of' event is under chairmanship of arrangements. Mr:s. Karl Heuberger, leader, and Mrs. Stephen Pryslopski, SACRED HEART, assistant leader. NORTH ATTLEBORO The CYO will resume weekly Parish children will make their First Communion Sunday, record hops and the bowling May 8. Monday evel)ing,. May 9, team will hold final play-offs. rr.:lmbers of Ste. Anne's Sodality will tour a Central Falls bakery, . Cape Cod's meeting in front of the church at 6:45. This will be a guest ni~ht, with Mrs. Orner Martineau in charge.

HUGE SAVINGS COtJTINUE THROUGH.. SATURDAY

DUNCAN HINES

3

0

BEST TRADES , USED CARS

MT. CARMEL, ,Bernard C. NEW BEDFORD Cubs, Boy Scouts and Explorers will receive Communion 1 YANOUGH RD. RTE. 28 with their mothers on Mother's Hyannis 5P.4285 Day Sunday, May 8, at 8:15 Mass. Coffee and d~ughnuts will b e , " .(' served by fathers after Mass. r~-~------:---Members of the Youth Activi• ties Group of the PTA will plan' projects for e;lchschool grade. Bakery tours have been enjoyed by third grade children thus far. Meeting time has b,een changed I from third Sunday of the month to fourth Monday. Next regular 'i me'''~g wi~ be Monday, May 23. L_,;,... __'--'---

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ST. JOSEPH, " TAUNTON Rev. Joseph L. Powers was honored by over 409 parishioners _--+----"1-111 and friends at a testimonial the occasion of his appointment as chaplain at Bishop S,tang High S.",ool. Entertainment included ', selections'bY' the'Boys' Sanctu- . " ary Choir' thatwas"organized by t,n ,.; Father Powers (h~riilg his as-'lIA. ' ., ~ .. , " . -,' signment at St. Joseph's. ~~' ' .. Laurence L. Lacaillade was' ~. toastrn!ls~er foJ.! the, evenihg·. .. _". c;" ,

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$1

$1

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TISSUES

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APPLE SAUCE

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FIN·AS-t· -

MOTT'S

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 5, 1960

Communion Breakfasts

'T I SS U E

SAVE 17e

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Shee.t Rolls

White or Colored

$1:'

SAVE

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.FlNASI ~ Frozen

CHICKEN PIES STRAWBERRIES GRAPE JUICE DRINK

Also Turkey .

or Beef

"YOR" GARDEN $ave10c 1LB FROZEN - Sliced CTN

. in Sugared Syrup MIRABEL PURE '

.~ 29c' Grape Jelly

Welchade

III 8 0% JARS

, n10c OFFi~ SALE

,IMPORTED ITALIAN

Tomatoes Juice Drink

3

CTN

3 2~~S~ 51. Golden Rose TEA. 00

FINAST - Pineapple~Grapefruit

$1.00 69c

100

BAGS

ASSORTED CREMES

4 cr~~sz 51. Vista-Pak COOKIES 00

1

RICHMOND - Fancy, Medium

Sweet Peas 7 .~g,~sz

5too

REGULAR PRICE

2 LI CELLO

49c

EACH

49c

S9c

Anniversary CAKE

Best Week-end Meat Buys I

Choice Grade - For

29c

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BONELESS

LB 6Sc

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PONE IN

Chuck Roast L845c

Chuck Steak Lean,Ra~~~~:yly~teerBeef SSc Fresh Shoulders ):k:r~:.. 3Sc Beef Liver, Nutrit:~s; .La. 3Sc 'S .'. ' .... 4'Sc . 'ausa~e LB LB

: : : : with

FINAST-' Skiniess

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.BOIi.'D - SLitED

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. Prepara'tions ·for .the ~j~ F9 rce ,... Band ,concert· to 'pe sponsored ' I ; ,' . '. . ...:. b" the parish' M;ondQY, ~lay !t '.' at Lincoln Park 'include selection' . ..,. . ,. " • . ,.., . of-14 high scbool' m:tt,!il;:ian!l b;c>m' Middleboro R9ad,'RQute J":. , sehoolil to' play with the . EAST fREETOWN' -' ." ,band' aFa,·Jiultlnee;'perform'ari(!e ':-' "~", . ' ..:, ',;, :,,>,~.'" :'.'::'.'" . tot stu~en~s: Each ~oungster 'will ." 0 Please ~end: Iitei'ature::>', :" .. ,. ,receive a, lett~r o~ c~mme·f!'da",·· D'· Have s~le~,"-ait c~tt Ut" no' tlon from ~he banji dIrector to,.' "bf"" ...~., '" "". ,be.read at,Ohls·.sc;h~ol,.aild will,' ,". "0,, ....Qat~o~ •.:,. ' .. :".:0 j\i,.""'.';'"

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STORES

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.THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 5, 1960

I

Effective Mot~~rs Develop Balanced Scale of Values By Father John L. Thomas, S. J.

Not This

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Ass't SoclologJ Prof.-St. Louis University

"I have a problem I'm sure most mothers with young children face-I have four under five. If I spend as much time with thellJ. as they demand, I can't get the work done: If I get the work done, I'm constantly after them to stay outside and not get the certain c·ompromises. Since their house so dirty. Also, should time is limited and they do not . I take them for a walk today have the power of bilocation, . and iron tomorrow, or vice- they have to strike a happy me-

..

,. rsa? I'd like to read a little, but Len I have to let something else ':;0." You' re so right, Esther; all mot h er s with small children soon discover that time fr their most scare commodity, as the economists would 'would put it. Of COUI'se, so m e are better managers and organizers than others, while some have better accommodations in the way of household' fixtures, play-space, "'d so on, but aU face the problem of how they should parcel out their limited time. As you suggest, it is not simply a matter of getting the work done. -.-{hile there are growing, restless youngsters on the prowl in the home, the work is never "done" because a mother is so much mOl'e than a housekeeper. Guide, Console, ~urb Most women could handle the routine household tasks fairly well provided they locked the children outside, or gave in to the temptation to put quicksand in the play-pen. . Bu~ mothers have to train, go.:ide, and instruct, arbitrate ·fi -;hts, console the. -injured, curb the aggressive, encourage the meek, and supply endless suggestions about "what to do" when the children run out ot ideas. . How should you divide your ii"'e? In early marriage you prided Yourself on running a neat and orderly home. With a litHe planning you were able to lind plenty of time for shopping, reading and recreation. W·hen the babies started arriving, the pict·, .. · gradually changed; and something had to give. Often it has been your patience, since growing youngsters and a spotless house tend to be incompatible, no- matter how hard TOU work. On-Ioing' Affair I suppose that .most proud y. mg housewives find it difficult to distinguish between Ii 1: )use and a ._ome. Some nevel' accept the dlstinction - they missed their vocation, for they should have been curators of a museum. A home is a kind of process, a . vital, on-going affair in which essent"" jobs are never really finished because they are always rhythmically coming up again. You can't wash a child for good -sooner or later "e'll return to the scene of. his grime. I Clean and sweep the house. as you 'v"', eventually your' brood will re-enter, like the unclean spirits in the parable, and the last state may be worse than the ·first. You may prepare them • banquet or a snack--eating only makes them hungry. . Make 'Compromises . All effective r mothers have .learned that they must mak.e

Legion Recomm~nds Disney's 'Pollyanna' NEW YORK (NC)-The Walt Disney movie "Pollyanna" has been recommended by the National Legion of Decency as "superior entertainment." Evaluating the picture in its Class A, Section 1 class-morally unol-;ectionable for general .patronge-the legion posted the following ·observation: "This . film is recommended to the patronage of, the· entire ~ ­ _~ su: :iO;l' entertaJnment.~

dium in t..eir devotion to their .roles as housekeeper, wife, and ; ·other. In practice this means that they develop a balanced scale of values based on an adequate evaluation of their various roles. For example, it shows lack of balance to place so much emphasis on keeping the house orderly and neat that husband and chilHEADS PHILOSOPHERS: dren are regarded potential threats. Some mothers 'go to the The National Catholic Philopposite extreme, forgetting that osophical Association has their husbands have a right to be elected Dr. William H. WalfeJ and to r~~eive reasonable attention, while the children must ton, professor of philosophy learn to limit their demands and at St. Joseph College, West cooperate as members of a Hartford, ·Conn., as presigroup. dent. NC Photo. Wider Obligations :oerhaps the most serious error some women make is-to become so completely immersed in housework and child-care that they neglect their own growth VATICAN CITY (NC)-Vatiand development. Although the can City's daily newspaper has early years -.f bearing and rear- returned fire against laicist acing children place heavy de- cusations that the Church has mands upo.! mothers, they must interfered in Italy's two-monthavoid the type of "nslavemenCto old .Jolitic" 1 crisis. their , . at prevents them L'Osservatore Romano said from fostering companionship with their husbands and wider that while laicist elements in Italy's 'communist and socialist in ~ )rests in life. Since housework is never done parties are criticizing the Church and children's ne!!ds are elastic, for interference in political mothers must limit their dedi- freedoms, their ultimate aim is cation to both in terms of their to rob the citizens of those very wider obligations to their hus- freedoms which the Church is instructing her members to use bands and themselves. Some modern mothers waste wisely. a good deal of time trying to be Since the governmental crisis reaso:lable with children who began, Italian bishops have sevha"e r. t yet reached the age ot eral times cautioned against atreason. The result is usually a tempting to solve it by seeking wearisome, time-consuming type the support of Marxists and comof arguing and naggin~ munist sympathizers. Mothers should realize that The Osservatore Romano edt-· young children are not adults and cannot be expected to think torial, written by editor Ralmorid.o .Manzine, pointed up the :-' I act as adults. They need clearly defined and con.sistently inconsistency of laicist crltiCli . enforced rules to guide their. of the Church. Itefers to )fe~e conduct. A brief spanking ill often better therapy than a long It noted that at one time the scolding. . laicists criticize the Church for . interference in PQlitical and s0BapPJ Medium Mothers who trj to reason and cial fields, while at another argue endlessly with their young ti"1e they denounce the Church children show that they don't f~ inefficacy or disinterest in undersbnd the psychology of the great tasks of civil evolution, children. A child likes rules social conciliation and political clear -,nough to be tested, and justice. t-kes for, grante(~ that he will It reminded readers that the be punished for their violations Easter message of Pope John -if he gets caught! urge' Catholics to fulfil their Hence your problem, Esther, responsibilities. It said that the is to strike a happy medium in recent pastoral letter of the Italyour distribution - ~ time and ian Hierarchy,' which deplored effort. You play. various roles growing opposition to the influin the family circle. Don't -let ence of the Church in the coun_ one absorb the other. try', had the same t~ne. When evaluating different possibiliti ., ask yourself what Franciscan Trio Cuts difference your decision .will make, say ·'ve or 10 years from Mother's Day Record PATERSON (NC) -Just in n' '. If it's a nice day for a walk, maybe the ironing can . time for Mother's Day, May '8, the "Three Friars" have cut '. "ait until tomorrow. record called "The Second SunRetired Archbishop. day ~n May." The "Three Friars" are FranSPOKANE (NC) - Retired ciscan .Fathers Lawrence A. Archbishop Thomas D. RobertS, B,'-ke, who sings tenor; Hubert S.J., of Bombay, India, has re- Woods, baritone and arranger, turned to Gonzaga University to and Felician A. Foy, who leads be honorary chairman of its and strums a tenor guitar. The three have been singing together 'theology department. since 1955 when they were staArchbishop Roberts headed the Bombay See from 1937 to tioned at St. Boniventure monastery here. 1950. • He came ·to Gonzaga in the' Their popularity grew with Summer of 1959 to lecture and. personal appearances at parish was invited to stay and teach. and other affairs in New Jersey. He divide~ his time between the They feature "barber shop" ar~ Sacred Heart School of Nursing rangements of old favorites and in Spokane, and Gonzaga, where use "The Blessing of St. Franhe teaches theology. cis" as their signature theme. The Archbishop. left Gonzaga They were persuaded to cut the last June to attend Summer Mother's Day song, "The Second school at wyola University in Sunday- in May" with the "GoldLos AngeleS'. He also went to en Years," a song for ~nior citEngland and Canada to give re- izens on the flip side. It is beine treats -and to participate ill :di8- distributed·' through the· St. :A'ft-. ~l!~ions with €hw'ch l~ader.... '~D¥:Guild q~r~.,

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New Sister Formation Conference Significant Movement in Education ST. PAUL (NC)-When Sis- lay persons doing the same ter Annette Walters changes work." jobs \ next September she will In the last few years, she begin directing the work of an points out, e9ucation has inorganization aimed at improving creased both in quantity, and the intellectual, spiritual and . quality in every field. professional development of SisLargest Group ters throughout the United "It is especially important for r .ltes. Sisters to develop to the peak of As executive secretary of the their abilities,'~ she says, "beSister Formation Conference, cause they are by f~r the lar~est Sister Annette chairman of the group of teachers In AmerIcan psychology d~partment at the Catholic sch~ols.". . College of St. Catherine here, O~ the 16:>,000 SIsters In t?e will visit motherhouses from U......, 96,O~0 are tea~hers. SI~­ coast to coast consulting with reter Annet e says thiS tota~ IS ligious superiors and working 50,000 more t.han the combmed out means of conducting training to~l of all p~lests, ~rothers an.d laIty teachmg In Catholic programs. schools. The Sisters' conference has By forming a cooperative conbeen called "the most significant ference the 377 American relimover.lent in Catholic education gious c~mmunities hope, she said, today." "to use all their resources for the Tht> conference was formed enrichment 0: America, increase six years ago in response to a vocations and extend the plea from Pope Pius XII and the Church's. works of mercy Sacred Congregation of Reli- throughout the world." gious. To Meet Today's Needs It is the American contribuCours~, tion to a worldwide movement of "renovation and adaptation in A course in ecclesiastical the ~'ates of Perfection to meet Latin will be offered in the 1960 the needs of our time," as reSummer session of Stonehill quested by Pope Pius in,1950. College. According to Rev. John P. Sister Annette says its purpose is to provide "Sisters who are Lucey, C.S.C., summer session doing active work in the Church director, it will be designed today with long and careful primarily for seminarians and training which will equip them young men planning to enter the for a rich personal life, effec- priesthood. The course will develop Latin t"e social leadership and prereading habits for use in future cise professional preparation to make them equal or superior to studies and will include readings from St. Thomas Aquinas, the Fathers of the Church, and liturgical sources. Father Lucey stressed that it NEWARK (NC) -Five Cath- is not a beginner's course. Proolic universities are among 33 fessors will presume a Latin institutions which have received r- -"")aration of at least two National Defense Foreign Lan- years .of high school or one year guage FeIlo'" -hips under legis- at college. The summer session will begin lation passed in 1958. with registration Friday, June 17. The grants are awarded by the Final examinations will be given U. S. Office of Education to enFriday, July 29. courage Americans to study lessFurther information is availcommon foreign languages that able at the college. are valuable to government, education, business and industry. Seton Hall University of NewWILMINGTON (NC)-Father ark has received five grants- John E. Kelly, director of the three for the study of Chinese Bureau of Information, National and two for Japanese.George- Catholic Welfare Conference, town University in Washington, will be among the speakers at D. C., has four fellowships-two the Middle Atlantic regional for Chinese, one for Arabic and meeting of the Catholic Broadone for Russian. casters Associa'tion here May 14. St. John's University of ' Delegates also will hear an adB:-"'okl~'n has two grants for dress by Msgr. Charles B. Mystudy of Chinese, and Fordham, naugh, chairman of the radio in New York, has received. two and television committee of the for Russian. Duquesne Umver- Archdiocese of Philadelphia. sity in Pittsburgh has a gr~nt for study of Swahili, a native African tongue.

Set Ecclesiastical Latin

Universities Receive Language Grants

Broadcasters to Meet

THE ANCHORThurs., May 5, 1960

Intell'fuptCatholic Serv~~~!j; Qn India ERNAKULAM (NC) - AntiCatholic demonstrators en tered a church at nearby Cranganore during Mass and shouted abuse at persons attending the ceremony. They threatened to manhandle the priest at the altar, but were driven off when large numbers of townsfolk heard the fracas and ran to' the rescue of priest and worshipers. The incident followed the nighttime desecration of a Catholic c1:'Jrch at the village of Sorappara, also in Kerala state. Miscreants broke in'') the church, scattered . osts from the tabernacle and disfigured a statue of Christ the King on the main altar. Police speculated that the desecrators were communists smarting "at a recent electoral defeat brought about largely through the efforts of Catholico.

AT GROUNDBREAKING: Groundbreaking ceremonies for a novitiate building were held at Villa Fatima, Taunton. Turning the first shovel is Rev. Joseph Oliveira of St. Anthony's Church, Taunton, convent chaplain, as Mother Marie De Piro, provincial of the community, looks on. BUFFALO (NC) -A bishop advised music educators to "first teach your students to appreciate 'nusic as a great art and they will learn to appreciate liturgical mus' '." Speaking at the 13th National Catholic Music Educators Association convention, Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh,cited music's importance in educa'tion, in the liturgical life of the Church and the nature· of life i~elf. , "In the very definition of education; that it is the complete harmonious development of the faculties distinctive of man, the word harmony shows the relationship of music to education," the Bishop staid. Develops 'Taste' "It points out that r.1Usic, one of the greatest forms of art with a special excellence all i~ own, completes the development of man in which no other thing can possibly develop. That is 'taste'. Neither the well-informed nor 'th~ highly moral man is complete in his education unless he has developed this taste," the

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VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has confirmed the election of Abbot Walter Arthur Coggin.. O.S.B" as Abbot Nullius of ~el­ mont Abbey in North Carohna. Pope John thereby gives Abbot Coggin authority to govern the Benedictine Abbey of Mary Help of Christians in Belmont and to govern the abbacy nullius dependent upon the abbey. This comprises the whole of Gaston County, N. C., and Abbot. Coggin will have most of the fights of a bisho'" in administering it. Abbot Coggin was elected abbot in November after the death of Abbot Vincent G. Taylor, O.S.B., who had governed the abbey and its dependent territory since 1924. He had been serving as vicar to Abbot Taylor and president of Belmont Abbey College since 1956.

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18

Appea I Sta rt$

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of .Fall River-Thurs.; May 5, 1960

Continued from Page One'

~~~~el

Justice, Charity EssE!ntial B'a rga=n.-n·g' m~~ In · Col~At!!tJti-tl·ve By Msgr. George G. Higgins

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10, WJAR-TV at 11 Extraordinary strength has been shown in advance gifts, Mr. II Vigeant reports. Headquarters reports the receipt of $31,760 in Director, NCWC Social Action Department advance Special Gifts to date. This total has been .attained in Cardinal Cushing of Boston, in a recent address on the phase one of this year's Special future of collective bargaining, remarked that, while.new Gift approach. A definite and techniques for improving labor-management relations are substant: - increase in contribu:rgently needed, there is something basic that is' even more uting is evident in these gifts. Some of the more prominent' important. "Techniques .. ," partial excep~ion to this rule. I gifts include: he said, "are of secondary refer to the recently' published $1,500 importance. Of 'far greater Second Edition of an invaluable Lincoln Park, E. Anthony and importance are the disposi- 650-page reference work, Unions, ~ons, Hemingway Brothers :01tions of justice and charity." Management and the' Public, terstil te Trucking, Fall River . The. same thought was ex- edited by three distinguished Herald-News. pressed m 0 r e labor economists-Dr. E. Wright ' $1,250 recently by Car,B ':ke of Yale University, Dr. T. Loranger and Sons. dinal Montini of Clark Kerr of the University of $1,000 Milan in a fea.:. CaL' '')rnia, l\nd Dr. Charles AnJohn F. Smith Estate; Creed ture article in rod of Loyola University in ChiRosary Co.; Fall River Electric L'Osservatore cago (Harcourt, Brace and Com_ Light Co.; Atty. and Mrs. John Romano, the pany, New' YJrk, $6.50). T. Farrell, Sr.; Fall River Trust The' first edition of this an_ Co.. Vatican City thology, published in 1948, didn't F. L. Collins and Sons, Inc.; daily, 'on the M 'M rs. G eorge M. Montle; include any material on the subr. and subject of bor ject of moral and spiritual values B. M. C. Durfee Trust Co.; Merrelations. His 0:. on the work of 'the churches chants National Bank; Old ColE.m i n ethat nee . th f'Ie Id 0 f I ' t ony Transportation Co., 'Inc. warned it me· a b or-managemen ,relatior;S-: My Bread Baking Co., Fall is always disasIn writing to one of the 'editors River National Banl.t, First'Safe trous to divorce h tl £t th b k ' b ' Jabor elations from Christian S or y a er e 00 was pu NEW' FALL RIVER SCHOOL: Rev. ,William H. Deposit National Bank. lished, I suggested that· the sec. Parish' Committees are making ]IN'inciples. "If we wish to pre- ond section include at least a Harrington, pastor of Holy Narne Church, lays cornerstone- final preparation for their secvent work from becoming a s3:"1plin,,; of articles on these . for parish' elementary school. . tron of. the Appeal. While this prison," he said, "the heaven of t b' t I d b does not officially commence .miritual life must open over the wo su Jec s. ' was assure y . , .... . . return mail that my. suggestion until May 15 much preparatory sphr l of human activities m- .was well taken and would be work has already been accom'" volved in earthly conquests. And given serious consideration f ' 0 J J G" d D' D V G Continued rom Page ne. ames. '~'w'e wj'sh to' preven the heaven . . ' ' ... . ' " errar, . . '. . ., . . .•. plish.ed. On Saturday', May ,7,' II: the student translate· noble will preside at, Friday's' session. ' the Parish Committees will mail 's:pl'rj'tual ll'fe from becoming Second Edition . . . . . . Of . . thoughts, into' noble action." , ,Speakers w:h !> will, address· each contact' their individual. ' pty reality' full of decep-' I do not .'wisli.' to i,in,ply, of, . ' "Man is ~app'iest· when h e,' specla .; 1 meres' . t' .' t groups ' d ' an em urmg card. These will be delivered to, dreams, then' it must 'shine course, that this exchange . of leads an orderly life," pointed other . .parts . 0 f t h e '.two- d'ay meet-, the homes throughout the Dio."·ve' .. with the supreme, brilliant correspondence turned the trick,' ( t Dr. Maxwell: He ~said that a' ing iriclude speciaIi~ts in scie~ce,: cese on Monday, May 9. Each 'Reality, the living God." bJ.lt, in any event, lam 'happy to desirable,' life "gives rightful modern languages, literature and contributor will have six days . E,cclesiastical Jargon! SilY tl.'\at the .second edition, does place to all g'ood values." busineSs subjects. " t o ' study the contiibution card, include a number of articles o n ' C 1 h The majority of people, I sup- moral and' spiritual values and ,Quoting. ardina Newman, t e Consideration will be given they will see here the list of pose, wouldn't regard these two on the' contribution: 'of the educator ,continued, "Education the needs of the gifted·child by'- institutions, maintained by the statements as particularly news- churches tv the solution of labor-' is the great ordinary means to a Russell G,. David,IEd.D., director. appeal: They' will also see the wort~y. The average' person management. pr.obleins.. great but ordinary.. end; it aims of the' office of educationalre- various, financial arrangements :might be inclined to go alo~g - 'at raising' the 'intellectual core' search of !Joston College, while' by which they may substantially' *l'th them as general propos 1In my opiniqn, the addition o,~ of society, at·· cultivating the Miss Rita Watriri., M.A., of Cath-' in~rease their contribution. With ... this material makes the- second' tions but -the disillusioned cynic edition a much more' valmible public mind, l!.t', purifying' the olic University; Will present· a each card will go 'a personal national taste:" . , report on the university''s exani- letter from the Pastor 'of the and the doctrinaire pragmatists reference' work 'than the,. first. ~as Cardinal Cushing himself Lest I seem to be grinding ,IllY 'In contrast 'to this ideal, said ination program. " Parish telling of the special suggested in his own address- own professiona) axe too'sharp- . Dr. 'Maxwell; "we are divided, . Educational' .materials and. effort being made in the Parish would probably brush them off . today into two groups: hucksters . school supplies from 60 publish:" . this year to. greatly increase con-' · l'th an j'ndulgent sml'le as typi,ly, this let,me hasten to say on thatmoral even and . huckstered-we . - are victims . ' d .manuf t ' are on 'tr'b t' th roug h use 0 f the if new material ers an ac urers 1 u lOns· W eal examples of ecclesiastical and spiritual values had· not of the soft sell. Our thinking, diSPlay at' the high school. pledge system. jargo.n-the sort of thing t h a t been incorporated into the re-, like our 'living, 'seems at times . Also on' view are 64 science ,Parish Cori'llriittees will meet they have resignedly come to vised edition of Unions, Manag'e-' to be· sp!lt ievel. . prrjects 'prepared by high" next· week with their Pastor. expect from iVQry-to\yer church- ment and the :rublic,' I ,would t>e "If we' don't think primarily school students· qf the Diocese' clergy and chairman to receive men who are out of touch with happy to reco,mmend it. v'ery' of the moral l\nd... intellectual as' entries in the "Third Annual" tlteir -final instructions and the reality. 'enthusiastically .not only to spe-' deveiopment of children, we are Diocesan Science Fair. The stu- 'list of contacts they are to The fact is, however, that cia lists b'ut to the general re'ader conducting a 'charm school,'" dents are competing for awards' complete. churchmen are not the only ones as well. he emphasized.' of $100,' $50,. $25 and six honor-' who are currently saying that . It is by all 'odds the most com'_ . "Wisdom," he said in conclu- able mention prizes of $10 each. Heads Organizations techniques are of secondary im- prehensive and most carefully sion, "must be the desideratum In charge of the' event is Rev. MIAMI BEACH (NC) - C. portance in the field of labor- and intelligehtly' edited' anthol- of all of us." Edward .J. Gorman, Diocesan Clyde Atkins, president of the management relations. Increas- ogy or reference work iri the Presiding at the' opening ses- School superintendent. A com- Miami Diocesan Council of ingly as time Joes on, Cardina~ field of labor-man'agement rela- sion was His Excellency, Most ~jrn.·tt~e of priests is working with' Catholic Men is also president of Cushing reminds us, labor econtions-:--the one volume which, in Reverend James L. Connolly, the Florida Bar Association. omists" union officials and ;~~- the event of a fire, I would be D.D., D.Sc. Hisl. He also adagement representatives, a more anxious to salvage from dressed the assembly of some oHc and non-Catholic alike, are my own fairly extensive library 800 priests, Brothers and Sisters p .... Hcly strec:ing the importance on labor-management relations. from the i1 high schools and 57 of moral and spiritual values. elementary schools of the DioSurely this is a newsworthy de- Catholic Collegians, cese. velopment, and one that even 'Tomorrow's general session the cynics can't ignore. Lead in Vermon t ' will feature Sister Innocence•.' It we' lId be difficult, of course, MONTPELIER (NC) - VerO.S.F., professor of religion at '110 document this encouraging mont Catholic schools are out- 'Alverno College,' Milwaukee. trend for the statements re- distancing by far the State She will speak on the Mass,as ferredto by Cardinal Cushing p---rage in, sending their grad.. co-author of a book on the sub2666 NORTH .I,\AIN ST. FALL RIVER, scattered far and wide in ua~es to institutions of higher jecl. ~arious ,specialized periodicals learning. ' d 'l':" His Excellency, Most Rev.eren TELEPHONE 5-7992 and have yet to be made aval Of 336 Catholic high scho'Ol a:ble for' handy reference in II .grad ...ates in .1959, 140-or 42 ) Choral Festival single volume. per cent-went on to college. BURLINGTON (NC)-Choral . As a matter of fact, even the T fcnty-six per cent of the best of anthologies in the ~::tte's pu'Jlic school graduates gr 'ups from 12 colleges will partiCipate in the 19th annual Interfield of labor-management relawent to college.. Among the tions-and there are several very graduates of all approved pri- , collegi,ate Choral Festival spongood ones on' the market-omit vate academies - a category in' sored by Trinity College here in May 14. any reference to the subject of which the Board of Education Vermont; on Saturday, ( -moral and spiritual values. includes the Catholic high Valuable Anthology schools-28 per cent went to It is a pleasure to be able to cc" ~ge. eet Top QlUllity report, however, that there is one Thirty per cent of the 1959 Cath')1ic high school graduates Foods and Catholic Bishops Hail continued their. education in some institution other than a Togo'l ndependence college. This compares with 18 Top Value LOME (NC)-Togo's Bishops per cent of the public schools NEW BEDFORD have expressed their joy in a , and 24 per cent for all of the., SkJp & Shopl joint pastoral letter that Togo approved pr~vate academies. has become Africa's newest inINDUSTRIAL OILS hJQl1 better li~ 1ritb de~ndent state. '. ,""""""""""'A former United Nations trust . . II Shop superior HEATING OILS territory under French adminqualie, Jooda pl. istration, Togo became indepen~' yoar eboice of ...... TlMKEN dent only yesterday.. . ' able '&'fie gifts, ,:-; Located on the 'west coast, You OIL BURNERS Togo is a' country about the size of West Virginia with a popu:lation of 1,115,000. Catholics' in the nation's two Sees--the Arch'diocese of Lome and .the Diocese' . : Insurance Agency : SUPER MARKETS 501 COU~TY ST. of Sokode-total 204,220. They . : 54 PlEASANTST~EET ,: are served by 76 priests. The NEW BEDFORD : NORTH ATTLEBORO : Church operates 394 schools with a total enrollment of 36,-, :' TEL. MYrtle 9~82n ' : WY 3·1751 " " _ " , , , , . __ f 295.

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Large Throng Pays Tribute To Retiring Durfee Mentor

Go-Go $enior Wins Award

By Jack Kineavy Lincoln Park was the scene of a mammoth testimonial tendered Luke Urban last Sunday night on the occasion of his forthcoming retirement this June as head coach of football, basketball and baseball at Durfee High. An estimated 650 persons paid doing their usual capable job at tribute to the veteran men- S -nerset. tor during whose twenty It has been our experience, year regime the athletic that the officiating in the New

fortunes of the Hilltoppers reached unprecedented heights. Among the 15 speakers who lauded U r ban :,' for his superlative efforts over r the years were :. Rt. Rev. Msgr. George V. Kerr of Boston; Congo Joseph W. Martin, Lt. Gov. Robert F. Murphy, Mayor John M. Arruda and Bob CouSy, Celtics' fabulo'ls backcourtman. Jim Fitzpatrick, athletic director of Portland, Me. High and Frank Morrissey, Philadelphia businessman, both of whom were teammates of Luke at Boston ,.. .. ':!ge were also on hand for the festivities. Under Urban's astute guidance, Durfee teams' won State honors in all major sports. His 1948 gridders took Class C honors, his 1957 ball club the State championship. But it was in basketball that the Hilltop-' pers really came into their own. For 15 consecutive years the Red and Black participated in Tech Tourney play, winning the Eastern Mass. title four times1947, 1948, 1952 and 1956. In '48 a . again in '52, Durfee went all the way to the New England 1°·"'!..

,This is indeed an incomparable coaching record. The final chapter is yet to be written, however. Luke's baseball team is currently undefeat'ed and is tied with defending champion Coyle 'for the lead in Bristol County. The two teams are scheduled to meet today at Fr. Woodley Field, Taunton at 3 P.M. Narry Race Action 'in the red-hot Narry League race moved into the thiru week of play with no less than four teams deadlocked for the ,ircuit leadership. Prevost, Case, Somerset and Westport carried 3-1 records into competition on Tuesday. Defending c" ·,."pion Dighton and Diman Vocational, only a game off the pace, share the fifth spot, while Holy Family and neophyte Apponequit, both 0-4 on the season, seem destined to hold up the league. Finding competent umpires to officiate games in this area has long been one of the most aggravating problems with which school officials have had to contend. However, the' calibre of arbiters in Narry has taken a decided ' !'D for the. better this season as several well-known sports personalities, in Greater Fall River area have embarked upon umpiri~g careers. Working the home games for Westport are Carlin Lyncl} and Sherm Kinney of th': Somerset High athletic department. Tom Karam and Wally Sunderland of the Westport faculty are handling Case games and veteran arbiters Ray Biba and Tom Burns of Barrington' High, and Walt White of Fall River are

Bedford area has been topdrawer through the years and cc:-tainly competent men like Bob Reed and Gino DiNucci rate with the best. However, there )las been a real need to augment the ranks in Greater"Fall River and the emergence of the afore_, mentioned young men has served to fill a great void. Glynn of U. of Me L::tst week we mentioned a number of youths from this area who are currently making their mark in intercollegiate ball. Quite unintentionally, we failed tv include Ger~" Glynn who is a starting pitcher at the Univer_ sity of Massachusetts. Gerry prepared for the U. of M. at Monsignor Coyle High where he received 'All-County recognition as a hurler. Last time out, Glynn tossed a five hit, 6-0, shutout against the University of Vermont. That 2-1 Red Sox victory over Washington Saturday was a pitching duel in the best tradition of the nip and tuck con-" tests that were characteristic of' the old Braves of the Judge F, ~h era. An unusual aspect of the'g ame found Washington outfield going without ,a single putout. The unusually strong J','lst wind was a definite factor but even this didn't deter former Sox! infielder Billy Consolo from hitting one downtown. The impact of the Negro ball_ player in the National League is no better demonstrated' than by the current batting statistics which place McCovey, Mays and Aaron at the top of the list. As a matter of record the top batting honors in the senior circuit have gone to Negro players for the past thr . years with Mays, Aaron and Banks leading the way.

NEW BEDFORD PLAYOfF: Captains of finalists in the Parochial League playoff ready for start of championship game. Left to right, Paul Fernandes, Our Lady of Perpetual Help; Charles Viera, referee; and Paul Cloutier, Holy Family.

Says Great Percentage of Crime Is Now Que to Drug Addiction LOS ANGELES (NC)-Seventy per cent of crime in Los Angeles can be traced to drug addiction, the Western Conference of Catholic Chaplains has been t o l d . ' Sgt. Edwin Hall of the' Los Angeles Police Departq1ent's narcotics division .advised a panel on narcotics that peddlers are pushing addiction among high school students. He' recommended better narcotics control cooperation with Mexico, alteration of search and seizure laws now hampering officers and stronger, more certain punishment for peddlers. Dr. A. Vincent Gerty, a psychjatrist,told the panel that the narcotics problem was related to the moral laxity permeating modern society. Narcotics addict1'on, alcoholism and sex per-

Set Discrimination Deadline at College

HANOVER (NC)-Racial and religious discrimination must be ended sin 'campus fraternitie at Dartmouth College here by' Sept. 1, it has been announced Look for the Dodgers to return by the college trustees. Larry Sherry to the bull pen The' order, climaxing nearly corps in the not too distant future. The powerful right- . 10 years of effort to wipe out hander \lho. performed so mas- discrimination at the college, terfully for. Los Angeles in the, came with an approved report of World Series last Fall insisted the undergraduate council's disthat he be given a ,shot at a start- crimination committee, which ing role this season. Thus far recommended that all Darthe has failed to impress. His mouth fraternities abolish discrimination. record now stands 0-3.

Taunton K of C Msgr. James Coyle Council 82, Taunton Knights of Columbus, will exemplify the second degree at 8 Thursday night, .May 19 in Legion Hall and a major degree at 8 Sunday night, May 22 in C~TO Hall.

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Bishop Sheen Plans Book on Holy Land

LITTLE ROCK (NC)-Jerome L. Straessle, who will have driven 30,000 miles to obtain a secondary education when he is graduated from Catholic High SChool here next month, ha. been awarded a four-year scholarship to the University of' Dallas, Texas. The youth lives at Roland, Ark., 20 miles west of the school where he is vice president Of the senior class. He has drive'n both ways five days a week for the last four years to attend classes. And in addition, he has been a football and basketball letterman, and has held a job on weekends to help finance his schooling and transporta tion expenses. The Dallas U. scholarship was awarded to young Straessle by the Little Rock Diocesan Couneil of Catholic Women. He it! the fourth Arkansan to receive a scholarship to the liberal ;IrtGI university from the local CounciL

Gets' Ford Grant NEW YORK (NC)-The Ford Foundation announced here it has given the University 01 Notre Dame a grant of $15,000 ~r its graduate research and training program on the Soviet Union and East Central Europe.

JERUSALEM (NC) )-Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen Off. New York crossed the barbedwire barrier here from, Jordan to Israel. to' continue resear~h for . .s forthcoming book on the Holy Land. With the Bishop were Yousuf Karsh, celebrated Canadian photographer who will illustrate the book, and H. ,V. Morton, British author of travel books who will collaborate in the writing of the text. Bishop Sheen also brought along his eight-year-old and nine - year -old grandnephews, Fulton and Jerry Cunningham. The book 'ill be written in the' form ,of a narration by the Bishop to his nephews of the story of the Holy Land.

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'Olympics' to Benefit Foreign Missions ST. LOUIS (NC) - Foreign missions will be the beneficiaries of the biggest Catholic high school sports event ever staged in ", ~ St. LOu~s archdiocese. An Olympic track and field festival' will be held May 15, wi:', all of the 41 private and parochial Catholic high schoola in the archdiocese competing. Patterned after the Olympics to be held this Summer In Rome, the event will be the first in which all local Catholic high schools will take part. The event will be sponsored by the Society for the Propagation of the Faith.

19

THE ANCHORThurs., May 5, 1960

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THE ~Nn'r")"-!)iocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 5.1960

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