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The ANCHOR

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, An Anchor of the Soul. Sure and rirm-ST. PAUL

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River, Mass.,' Thursday, June 16, 1960

V'Oi. 4, No. 24 ..

,'© 1960 The Anchor

$4,oo"~';Ey':

. Second Clas~ Mail Privileges Authorized at fall River, Mass:

l41ms~ GRADUATES: First 'graduates of St..Joan:of. Are . ,School, . . . Orleans' .., .first parochial school on Cape Cod, wHl'receive diploma!!! from Bishop Connolly today; Left '.to right, top row: Albert Bohlin,' Michael King, Br\1ce .Carron, Thomas .Hammatt. Middle tow:: Theodore Ellis, Kevin Maher, Rev. James E."Lynch, pastor; Elizabeth Chipman. Mary McDerinott. Bottom row: Gail Walker, Frances Swift" Karen Derger, Patricia ' The 'program for the amiual New England CYO' con- Collins. vention to be held, Saturday and Sunday at Kennedy Center, New Bedford, will be dedicated to Rev. Leo T. Sullivan, former Diocesan youth chairman, just named administrator of"the new St. Ann's parish, Raynham. Fr. Leo Sullivan began preparations for the convention. 'l'hey have been taken over by Rev. Walter A, A total of 1,596 boys and girls will grad uate from the grammar schools of the Diocese Sullivan, who has succeeded him this month, an increase of 370 over last year. First graduations will be held by three as Diocesan youth chairman and schools: St. Joan of Arc, Orleans; and St. Anthony's and St. Joseph's, ~both Taunton. St who 'made the announcement of the dedication. Joan of Arc is staffed by the Sisters of Divine Providence and the Taunton schools by Pather Sullivan further anthe Religious of the Holy nounced that both Bishop Coneighth grade, will hold no vious time in the Fall River Union of the Sacred Hearts. an nolly and Auxiliary Bishop exercises. Diocese, it was noted. Largest class will be that &errard would be present at Throughout the Diocese girls E;leven high schools are in graduated by St. Mary's outnumbe.r boys in graduating operation in the· area, with ooltvention sessions. Bishop Ger-

Convention to Host.

New' England Youth

Diocesan Parochial Schools To Graduate Total of 1596

rard will preside at a dialogue Mass Sunday morning, and Bishop Connolly will preside at Benediction and speak at' the banquet which will close the meeting at 1 Sunday afternoon. Rt. Rev, John P. Carroll 'of Boston, New England CYO moderator, will give a resume of the Convention proceedings at the Sunday banquet before the Bishop's address. Carlin Lynch, director of athletics at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth, will Turn to Page Two

School, North Attleboro, with 79 eighth graders. St. Mary's held last year's record as well. The smallest graduating class will be that of St, Mary's Home, New Bedford. Five boys and one girl will receive eighth grade diplomas. Many schools, not in operation long enough to have

Bishop Conl1loUy

To Lead Rome MONSIGNOR CARROLL

'Misplaced Conservatism Bain of U. S. Catholics RIVER FOREST (NC) - A non-Catholic philosopher has urged Catholics to "be in the forefront of every·progres- , sive movement in human affairs." Speaking 'at a symposium'· on "The Present Position of Catholics in America," Dr. , __, _._.__ ~_ ........ _.. __ Mortimer J. Adler deplored the "misplaced' conserva.., tism" of U. S. Catholics. The two-day symposium at Ros-

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ary, .College was sponsored by the. school's library science departme.nt and by the Thomas . Turn to Page Twelve

Pilgrim(lge Led by Bishop Connolly, a Diocesan Pilgrimage to 'points of religious interest . in Europe will embark from United States Oct. 4. The, pilgrimage, first of its kind organiz~d in the Dioces'e, will" include a' general papal audience and visits to Lourdes, Florence, Lucerne, Paris and Rome. . . Countries to be visited are Italy, France, Switzerland, Ireland and England. Two of the newest and most modern transatlantic liners have been chosen for the transatlantic portion of the First Official Fall . Turn to Page Nineteen

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classes. There will be 683 boys and 913 girls among the total' leaving the eighth grade. Facilities for the students to continue their Catholic education are better than at any pre-

Bishop 'Feehan regional high school scheduled for completion in the near future in Attleboro. L is expected that it will receive its 'first freshman class in the Fall of 1961.

Diocesan School Children Awaiting Annual Picnic

. The second annual Diocesan school picnic for 'elemen-

tal~y school students will be held at Lincoln Park, North

Dartmouth, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. The picnic is under the sponsorship of the Diocesan school off"ice and will be under the and use of the park's golf course, iminediate supervision of bowling alleys, and roller skatRev. ~Edward J. Gorman, ing rink. . superintendent of schools. Highlight of each day's picnic Schools have been divided into three groups' of approximately 6000 students ~ach, and groups have been' arranged so that each' is drawn from the whole Diocese, thus relievmg transportation in anyone area. At Lincoln Park each school will have a headquarters area, at which a' member of its faculty wili be on duty throughout the day. Children will be supplied ,,,:th strip tickets entitling holder ~o rides on park amusements

will be the awarding of three boy-'s and three girl's bicycles to holders of lucky tickets. Awards will be made in the park pavilioA . Turn to Page Two,

Boston·' College ·Graduates Fall River Man . With Honors Despi,te Blindness. Handicap , "I'm very proud of him." Those are the heartfelt words of Mrs. Imelda Labounty, 54 Barnes Street,. Fall River,. a 'member of Immaculate Conception. parish. She speaks of her son, Robert, who graduated with honors this week from Boston College. RQbert Labounty is, blind. He maintained his above-a verage scholastic record for four years mainly ~hro~~h .the , en~?~rl;lg~me~t electipg social work as avoca":" .Morton Junior HighSc~ool, Fall of hIS mother, the help of tion: As a youngster 'heatten~ed River;· but'. increasing loss of classmates who:' read ,:texts 'sight l!ld. him to continue' his, 'for fiim'and th~ ~ssistanceof . high ~chool work at .Perkins

NEW PH.D.: Sister Madeleine Clemence, Director of St. Anne Hospital School of NurHing, Fall River, received her Doctorate in Philosophy from Buston College on Mon-

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faculty members who gave 'him . , . . oral rather than wl'ltten examm.. ations.· "I read to him' a great deal" says Mrs. Labounty. "Sometim~s I'd tape record material for him so he could listen to it at his leisure." Robert only needed one reading of most texts, she said. Some of his books were transcribed into braille by volunteers from the National Braille Press, and those he could study more exhaustively. A major in sociology, Robert plans to enter Simmons School of Social Work in the Fall for two years of graduate work leading to a master's degree. "I want to help people as peopIe have helped me," said Robert, giving that as his reason for

Institute.W~tertow?. . Gardenmg and hlkmg are hiS . . 1 h bb' b' t th t k pl'lQclpa 0 les,: u . ey a.e sec(md place to hiS mam ambltion, that of helping others. He entered Boston College in 1956, completing college work in the. usual four year period. He is grateful to many teachers and fellow students for scholastic assistance, . and found much en-joyment, too, in extra-curricular activities. ' These included singing with the glee club and participation in intramural wrestling matches. "With his sensitive sense of tOUCh," says John Larner of the college staff, "he amazes his friends with the abilirt.Y W describe trees and' flowers by feeling the leaves."

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NEW PRIEST: Rev. Evar· isto Tavares of Canadalria, St. Michael, Azores, was ordained Pentecost Sunday in Angra, Terceira, Azores, for service in the Diocese of Fall River.


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THE ANCHOR-Dioceseol Fall River,-Thurs. Ju~.e 16~ 1.960...,

Ask Investigation ''''Of Red Influence' In Film Industry

Profession Must Realize'· Sickness o·f Whole Man

LOS ANGLES (NC)-The Southern California chaptel' .of, the Knights of ColumblW has called for an investiga.-

ST. ,PAUL (NC),-A psychiatrist characterized the dedication of ,an addition with a psychiatric wing to St. Joseph's Hospital here as a step toward community acceptance and public understanding of the mental illness problem. Dr. Francis Brace- tion of the $6,500,000 structure. land, principal speaker at "By widening the scope. of the dedication dinner, em- your influence in this new psyphasized the importance of.a chiatric unit,' you are aiding in psychiatric department in a hospita!. He said it will help answer the ,"need for reintegration" of psychiatry with' general medicine. . The psychiatrist-in-chief of the Institute of the Living and clinical professor of psychiatry at Yale University declared: "The cost of the segregation of psychiatry from our generlll hospitals has been high-emotionally,' financiallY, in b~d space and in 'time." Precious time has been lost because of such segregation in the "va:in' search" for physical processes to cure psychological . disorders, said·. Dr. Braceland,. who is a .Knight of St. Gregory. The hospital addition was named in memory of the late . Archbishop John Gregory Murray of St. Paul. His .successor, . Archbishop William O. Brady, presided at the formal dedica-

tiorl. by the U. S. Senate Internal subcommittee into the present state of· communist infiltratioa of the motion picture industry. A resolution urging the inve&tigation was adopted at a meeting, of the .chapter, which represents more than" 18,000 K. of, Co members in Los Angeles and surrounding areas. The actio. was triggered by a similar resolution adopted by the K. of C. Joseph Scott Council of Los Angeles. , . The chapter resolution recalled that in 1947 major Holly.wood film producers subscribed to the "Waldorf Declaration", br which they agreed not to emplov knowingly persons identified 88 communjsts and those who refused to cooperate with the investigations of the U. S. qovera- ' ment. \' . ' .systematic Brainw;1shing ... "Subtle anti-American propeganda ,inserted in movies Call have.' far-reaching effects aDd result in the systematic brain-. washing of the entire .population of ,our country, particularly 0\11' impr~ssionable youth/' the reso:lutiOn declare.d. .' , :,'. The resolut~o~ deplored ~ pa~ of the wages paid to m9~~, industry wOJ;"kers who, are 800!' tively conne~ted with communifit· . aJ:ld' communist front organiZ8P.':; tionsgOes "to' further the, intee-.. ests of powers whose·' interestll are . opposed to those ol.. the United States." ., , . . ·~tely,· some. producers ·baYle. stated that they feel they ha~, · the' right to hire' anyone, . ~ ,~;-. , a . loyal 'American or not, have :actually hired some COlDnunist 'writers in open. defiance of the ,1947 agreement," the re.olution declared. .The,K...of .C. asked the Senate, subcommittee to conduct the investigation "with open hearings into the present state of · affairs in the movie industry iB · regard to; influences exerted . therein by the Communist party. , so .that the best interests of the . United' States and its loyal cUi· zens' be prote'Cted ana' served." '.

the effective approach," he declared. Dr. Braceland said that in the past the medical profession over-emphasized the scientific aspect of medicine and :lost sight of treating the whole man. In integrating psychiatric and general hospital facilities, he said, the profession is recognizing ~'the' influence of emotional and environment factors on illness and the absolute necessity for regard for the· feelings of the people."

School .Picnic

Continued from Page One at thr~e ea~h aft"!rnoon. . '. Schools to attend the picnic Monday, June 20 are Blessed Sacrament, Espirito Santo, Sacred Heart, St.. Anne, St. Louis, . St: Vincent, all Fall River; St. • r .•: ,) • ',' .. Francis' Xavier, Acushnet; St. , • John,; A,ttleboro; Holy Name, Mt. ~Con~,entlon Ca,rrriel, Sacred Heart, St. }{yacirith, St: Joseph, New Bedford; Continued from Page One St. JoariOf Are, Orleans; St~ !,: the "convention's keYIl;Oie Louis of' France; Swansea;.' Sacs~ake:r, taking as his theme "A red Heart, St. Anthony, Taunton~ Better Youth for a Better To,:" Schoois assigned to Tuesday, morrow.". . .. Enteriahiment will 'be offered June ,21 '. are St. 'Jo.seph, Attl~­ bOro;' St. Joseph, Sacred Heads. 'bY.t~eFali River are.: CYO Glee. Club tinder direction of Rev., Academy and Sacred HeartS, Paul Connolly; and Senator' School, fair'haven; St. Mary's,. Mai'y' Fonseca' and Atty:. Maurice Cathedral, Holy Cross; Preyost". St. John Baptist, St. Matthew, Downey have offered their servSt. Patrick, St. Stanislaus, Sacices as parliamentarians during . red Hearts Academy, Dominican. convention business ses~ions. Academy, Fall ::liver; St. Anne, Approximately 500 CYO mem- St. Anthony, St. Mary's Home, bers from throughout New Eng- St. Mary's School, St. Theresa, limd will' attend the convention New Beaford; Sacred Heart, and' concurrent meeting of the' North. Attleboro; Immaculate New' England 'Catholic Young Conception, St. James, Taunton. Adults Organfzation. Eleven 'DiSchools for Wednesday, June oceses and Archdioceses will be 22' are Notre Dame School, St. rep!esented. \' JQseph Orphanage,. St. Joseph School, St. ·Michael School, SS; Peter and Paul, St. Roch, JestiS-:; FRIDAY":'-Mass of previous Sun- Mary Academy, Fall River; Holy day. Simple. Green.. Mass Family, Holy Rosary, Imma~u-. Proner; No Gloria; Commoq ,late" 'Conception, Our Lady of Preface. .. Perpetual Help, St. John Baptist, SATURDAY-St. Ephrem, Dea"; ·St.. Kilian,. New Bedford;' St. ' . MADONNA TOWER,: The Creed Rosary Co.' of No.', con; Confessor and: Doctor; of . Mary, • North Attleboro; Sl , the' Church. Double. WhIte. Michael, Swansea; St. Joseph, St.. Attleboro has erected a 38 feet Madonna Tower as an Mass Proper; Gloria; Second \ Mary, Taunton; St. George, . expression ot' gratitude for the many blessings bestowed Collect SS. Mark and Mar~el- Westport. . . upon the firm and' its employees; It is believed this is.the', }janus, .Martyrs; Creed; Common Preface. . first time a· manufacturer' done this.' . . . , . "'. SUNDAY-II Sunday after Pentecost. Double. Green. Mass :r:>roper; Gloria; Second Collect St. Juliana Falconieri, Virgin; .of the International Catholic Creed;' Preface of Trinity. . Order of. Foresters will hold its LOS ANGELES (NC)-The move this apostolate and much MONDAY":'- Mass of previous quadrennial state convention toSunday. Simple. Green. Mass morrow, Saturday and Sunday number . of . lay . volunteers of the progress of the Church' Proper; No .Gloria; Second in Amesbury. . teachi~g re~igion to Los.Angeles here would collapse," he said as Collect St. Silverius, Pope and Delegates from the greater .C:athohc chIldren a~endmg pub- he 'cited the need for more volFall River area and their alter- hc schools has increased to 4,..... '. Martyr; Common Preface. TUESDAY - St. Aloysius Gon- nates include' four' from St. 616 as 616 persons received lay' unteers.. "~en take charge ~~ mo,st exclusively 9f the high" Zaga, Confessor. Simple. White. Anne's Court,. two' from Notre catechist diplomas. Th~ 'new graduation class is. school •. program,". he added; 'M..... roper; Gloria; Common Dame Court, two from Sauval Court and two from St. Victor'... ',the largest in the history of the "Th~h' progress and humility·· P, .. . local Confraternity of Christian' have been. exemplary." ·:WE.D.,.r.:SDAY -- St. Paulinus, Court. Doctrine, . according to Msgr. " Bishop and Confessor. Double. George L. Ledo.ux, Fall River, John K. Clarke, CCD director. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; State Vice Chief Ranger, will The catechists will join the' efCommon Preface. accompany the delegation. '. fort to instruct 123,000 children. THURSDAY-Vigil of St. John In addition, Msgr. Clarke said, the Baptist. Simple. Violet. there are 2;030 .persons . n ow in Mass Proper; No Gloriaj'ComThe following films are to be training a~ 56 catechetical cenmon Preface. added to the lists in their re- ters throughout the arch~iocese. BOYS WANTED for the Auxiliary Bishop. Timothy. J. speCtive classifications: Priesthood and Brotherhood. FORTY HOURS Unobjectionable for general Manning told the new graduates Lack of funds NO Impedithat they. are ''touching .the patronage: Story of Ruth. ment. . DEVOTION . ~eart of the lay apostolate. ReUnobjectionable' for adults: Write to: June 19-5t. Elizabeth, Fall Music Box Kid;, Virgin Island. River. . Objectionable in part for all: P. O. Box 5742 , St. Mary, Norton .-Lee'ch Woman .(low moral tone; THE ,ANCHOR lists the anBaltimo~ 8, Md.· June 26-0ur Lady of Purgae~cessive brutality); Psycho niversary dates of priests· who tory, New Bedford. (sensational of sex and ex~served the Fall River Diocese 'Sacred Heart, North Attlecessive violence). ' since its formation in 1904 boro. . ' . .Condemned: Savage 'Eye (viowith the intention that 'the July 3-8t. Francis Xavier, lates Judaeo-Christian standards faithful will gin . them 1II Hyannis. of decency;. treatment features pnyerful remembrance. Holy Trini~y, West Harsensatiopal. exploita,tion). 'JUNE 18 . wich. . Rev. James M. Coffey, 1935 JUly IO-St. Joan of Arc, Or-· ,COUI1lCii JUNE 19 leans.' -. " David Roderick will serve as Rev. Horm'idas Deslauriers, 1916 Our Lady of the Assump.Grand Knight of ·.BishopStang "JUNE 20 tion,Osterville. Council' 4532", New . Bedford Rt. Rev. James J. Coyle, 1931 , JUNEJ21 raE ANcaOR Knights of Columbus, for the Second-e1aS1l :nail privileges authorised coming year. He will be aided Rev. Owen F. Clarke, 1918 '" ~'all River; Mass, PUblished' 'eVel7' -by Jose-ph Souza Jr. as' deputy Rev. Desiree V.' Delemarre,I926 Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue. Fall River. Mass., lIy the Catholic Press of the grand, ~night. Rey.. William E. Rev.· Francis D. Callahan, 1941 Dioeese of Fall River.' SubsenptiOD prleo Collard will be chaplain. ., Rev.' George A. Meade, 1949" b,. mail, postpaid $4;00 per ,.~. . •.._.. .. . .... , '. ,__ ."""",,," ..-.J,. .:_.s. ' .;,;". ..

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THE ANCHORThurs., June 16, 1960

Finishing Schools Build On What Homes Prepare

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Catechism Film In Color, Sound By St. John's

PAOLA (NC)-A priest-expert in the Catholic family life challenged parents to turn out better material in the home for the nation's Catholic "finishing" schools. Father Ed~ar Schmiedeler, O.S.B., chaplain of the Ursuline Convent and Academy in this Kansas home," Father Schmiedeler said, City, gave the sermon at the "our fine ac,demies often work Mass for the 53rd annual wonders, but could unquestionhomecoming of the Ursuline ably bring about so much more Altilllnae Association. "If raised, once and for all, to an equal footing in practice, llS they are already so "xtensively in theory and principle, the two highly ,important academies, the home and the schc~' could work much more effectively and fruitfully with our growing genet'ation to the glory of God llnd the benefit of His truly vital Church here in the United States," Father Schmiedeler counseled. The former director of the Family Life Bureau, National Catholic Welfare Conference, said that "traditionally, girls' academies have been referred to lIS finishirig schools." But, the Benedictine stressed, "the family is the primary academy or school;" which lays the foundations. is the seed plot, one might say, of future vocatio!"" to both Christian marriage and religious life," Father. Schmiedeler continued. "When it lays its foundations well, the secondary' academy or finishing school is enabled to mold the young people who come to it into veritable masterpieces of God's high_ creation." , Father Schmiedeler. deplored., the widespread indifference of parents towards vocations to the. priesthood and religious life am'ong their children. He declared there actually are some pare'nts who stand in the way of c<the fulfilment of God-given voeations on the part of their children." Even in the "truly absymal plight of the child who comes from a neglected or broken

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NEW YORK (NC)-Completion of a project present-, ing the Baltimore Catechism in a sound-and-color film-

fruitful results if the primary academies had fulfilled their God-given tasks."

strip series was marked at a dinner attended by bishops from three countries and 100 catechists, Religious and lay.

Set Family Picnic For Somerset The Somerset Catholic Women's Club and the Holy Name Society of St. Thomas More parish, also Somerset, will cosponsor a Family Picnic from 1 to 5 Sunday afternoon, June 19 at Cathedral Camp., Games and prizes for children and adults will be featured with supervised swimming also on the program. Soda will be available but families will have to bring their own lunches. The afternoon will begin with, prayer and end with Benediction, according to Mrs. William Kirkman and John Murphy, cochairmen. Those unfamiliar with the route to the camp may neet infront of St. Thomas More Church following 11 o'clock Mass on Sunday, where guides to the picnic site will be available.

Sev'en Religious In' One' Family ,

SCIENCE AWARDS: Winners of the fifth grade science class project exhibited at St. John's School, New Bedford were, left to right, Raymond Boyce, artesian well, third prize; Raymond Oliveira, reptiles, second prize, and Barbara Cat;alana, "How Machines Help Man to Work", first prize.

Speaker Hits DimestoreAesthetics In U. S. Catholic 'Environment RIVER FOREST (NC)' - A speaker at the Rosary College symposium on "The Present Position' of Catholics in America." complained that U. S. Catholicism has' failed to provide a friendly 'environment for artistic' creativeness. 'Mr. Scharper asserted that' U. S. Catholic "theological understanding" in m;ltters relating to art has been "so vague that. our Catholic writers have failed. to pr'oduce-one m'aj.>r novel, play or film that' fused profound Catholic insights into the mystery and meaning of man with . the persistent Amenican . vision of what inan aspired ... to be."

ENDICOTT (NC)-Two bro-. thers who are priests will join their third brother, also a priest .. in .a ceremony next Sunda~ marking the silver jubilee of his ordination. Father Method Billy, O.F.M. Conv., the jUbilarian, is pastor of St. Joseph Church here. He also has four sisters who are.' nuns. He and his brothers and sisters have spent 185 years in religious life among them. They' are the children of the late Jos- ' Father (Colonel) Henri A. eph Billy and Mrs. Elizabeth Billy of Midvale, Pa. ' Hamel, a priest of the Fall River Preseilt for the celebration Diocese on duty with the armed forces since 1942 has been trans- , will be his two priest-brothers, ferred to Scott Air Force Base, also members of the ConvenIll. He is a member of the Air tual Franciscans: Father Florian' C. Billy, O.F.M., Conv., pastor Force inspector general's staff. of SS. Cyril and Method In a letter received at The Church, Montreal,. and Father Anchor, he notes that he "had Anthony M. Billy, O.F.M. Conv., the distinct honor and privilege pastor of St.' James Church, of meeting His Eminence Cardi~ Speculator, N.Y. nal Santos during a recent trip Father Billy's four nun-sisthrough the Far East." ters are all members of the SisThe Air Force chaplain also ters of SS. Cyril and Methodius, said that he had visited a leper a community with headquarters colony where the missionary in in Danville, Pa. charge "has been doing an outstanding job especially in the Red Poles Sentence religious and educational areas. Priest to Prison There are over 2500 lepers under BERLIN (NC) -A Warsaw bis pastoral care. court has sentenced a Catholic "His work is supported enpriest to'18 months in prison on tirely and exclusively by charthe grounds that he violated the ity. For the first time in history lepet·s are receiving education Red government's decree guarthat qualify them for a college anteeing ft;cedom of conscience and religion. degree." The Polish news agency P.A.P. said the priest, Father MaksyPope to Promulgate milian Waskiewicz of Kurdevanowo was convicted of "harRoman Synod Laws VATICAN CITY (NC) -The assing unbelievers and forcing legislation of the Roman Synod children into religious practices." He was accused of slandering will be promulgated on June 29, the feast of SS. Peter and a non-bclieving woman school teacher from the pulpit. He was Paul, His Holiness Pope John also accused of humiliating chilXXIII has revealed. dren who did not attend Mass The Pope announced the fact and of intimidating them by in the comse of his Whitsunday citing the dangers of hell. evening discourse in St. Peter's Father Waskiewicz denied he basilica. The synod of the Diohad publicly attacked the teachcese of Rome was held last Jan. er, Zofia Macjejczak. He testified 24 to 31. Its work at that timeH was his duty to point out the was a revicw by the pastors of dangers' of hell to children who Romc of a prospectus of diocattended the voluntary religion esan laws. classes he taught. Since then, the prospectus has been rcvicwcd and possible revised. Thc final draft, called the constitutions, will became law when the Pope, as Bishop of Rome, promulgates them June Sales Rentals 29. West Harwich It is expected that in the decree pt'omulgating the synodal ROUTE 28 legislation, the date on whicb Harwich 4-14 the new code will go into effect Harwich 3-67 will be announced.

Service Chaplain In, New Post

PILGRIM

REAL ESTATE &

Writers Fail "As writers," he said, "we have not done in our.' 'own right what· Willa Cather did' with an ArneI'';' ican Catholic theme, or what Graham Greene or Evelyn Waugh: have done with English Catholic themes, or Bernanos, Mauriac and Bloy with French Catholic themes." . \ Mr. Scharper continued: "As critics and readers we have censured the philosophies of Dreiser, Hemingway, F!lrrell, Barry, O'Neill or Fitzgerald, but we have not· asked often enough what caused them to leave the household of the Faith. What attrition had we permitted in our theology that made the artist turn ... to a philosophy of nihilism or to economic deteJ:minism or to mechanism as the answer to the mystery and meaning of . " ' man.? Di~estore

"The true artist lives on his intUitions and we have given him conceptual formulations of immense mysteries in catechisms

Receives Grant NIAGARA (NC) - A $1,000' grant has been awarded Niagara University by the United States Steel Foundation Inc. for faculty recruitment and development. Niagara was among 710 institutions receiving grants under the foundation's program of aid to education.

Hou$ekeeperCook Wanted FOR TWO·PRIEST RECTORY

Other Help Employed Apply by Mail

Rev. Edward L. O'Brien 23 CHURCH STREET MANSFIELD, MASS.

and question boxes. The artist speaks in symbols and moves in ritual; ours has been a religious cl'lture of attenuated liturgy and dimestore aesthetics. 'The artist, no matter how wild his conclu:' sions, is a congenital momlist, and ours has been a religious culture of. intricate legalism. '~The artist is fascinated with the ,singular and concrete ... Ours has been·a religious culture which ·str.essed the abstract, the general, the typical, and viewed the unfamiliar' as unorthodox. The artist' has asked for bread', and, has received" not astone, but worse~a magnetic machine-made, plastic Madonn~ for his car."

Mark$ 65Year·s In Priesthood RENSSELAER (NC)~Msgr. John .F. Galvin, 91, who nurtured a parish publication into the Albany diocesan weekly newspaper, has commemorated his 65th anniversary in the priesthood.

Called', the St. John's Catechism, the project took 10 years to complete and cost about $300,000 to produce, according to spokesmen for its sponsor, St. John's University here. Highlight of the dinner was presentation of the first complete set to Bishop Charles P. Greco of Alexandria, La., ·chairman of the U. S. Bishop's Committee for the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD). ,Completion of the catechism comes during the year-long observance by· the CCD of the 75th anniversary of the publleatioll of the Baltimore Catechism, the question-and-answer text used as the backbone of most U. S. religious textbooks and course of st~dy. . Many·U. S. dioceses have made use of completed portions of the St. John's Catechism· in recent year.s. Several" of ,the 30 film' strips, each running -ten minutes' and accompanied by narration from a record, have Iieen d'/ail- ' able. ' . Editions in French and Spanish are now in the making under, the direction of two prelates who attended the dinner. Archbishop Fl'ancis Beckman C.M., of Panama is dir~cting the Spanish ver- . sion, and Archbishop Maurice Baudoux of St. Boniface. Ma'niLJba, is 'supervising work on the French edition.

The Monsignor, who is pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church here, started the paper as a parish ptiblication. He named it the Evangelist for the parish with which he has been connected s~nce. his 'ordination Dn June 8, 1895. Eventually the paper grcw in the newspaper for the diocese'. \

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4

Celebrate Jubilee At Wareham

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River,-ThuJs.June 16,1960

SIPEC~Al GDfTS lN~!l'O(c)Irn(w~ . $1,000 First National Stores, Inc. $300 Congregation of the Sacred Hearts, J .. L. Marshall & Sons, Inc. $150 Holy 'Cross Fathers-Mission House.

~~~m:Al.G~f'iS SCli1l'll~Il'$~it'

ST. PATRllCK - .

$10 1\111' & Mrs Thomas Daley, MJ & Mrs Frank Ferry.

'

fall River SACRED HEART

$10 Marilyn Gibney. ST. MICHAE~ $25 $25 Gilbert C. Oliveira. Benziger Brothers Inc., Mrs ST. PATRICK Russel Vern'ooy. - $10 . $20 Mr & Mrs Raymond Hardy, Sisters of the Sacred Heart. Mr & Mrs James Holleran, Mrs James Gallagher. ' S8. PETER & PAUL $20 $250 Mr & Mrs Carl Mithers. Duro Finishing Co. ST. LOUIS $100 $20 Swan Finishin.~ Co.. Inc. 'Ann Marie Padden. Dr Henry C. Lincoln. , HOLY NAME $50 $25 Manuel Rogers & Sons-FunIn Memory of· Michael J. eral Directors. . Breen. John F. Stafford, Atty & Mrs ST. ANNEJames A. Heaney, F~ll ·River $10 --Liouor Dealers Assn., Dr' Frank Joseph ,~oulombe. J. Lepreau. ·ST. JOSEPH $10 !t~5 Leo Ollis. Dr. Peter F. Piccinini.

Fall Rover.

~?5 ~. Cloutip,r /lJ: ~(ms. Dr Fnbert H. Moe; Dr Alan G. 8impson.

'li1.'7

JAr & Mrs Warren C. Herrick. ~15

It E. ~mith Comnany. Dr Wi1~M' F., ~,,"hes, Atty & Mrs Joseph E. Hanify.

no Edwarn's Motors, Gray TyPewriter Cnmn::tny. .!.. tty & Mr.s ThomM F. "M"cGuire. Atty r,p,c:ter I. R'lkst, James K'me. Dr Frank L. Collins, St.vle R~auty Academy, Fall River Po~tel' MverH~;,,~ Co.. Hutc)1inson Oil Co., M. Richard Brown.

New

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$100 Dr ]I.f'lrio Bueno. Mr Patrick ~nYeeney· $75 Sullivan & Foster.

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SaundersOn Co. $35 Ernest, J. Flood Ins. Agency;

520 Little Bay Super Market. . $10 Dr John C. Bullard. Paul Smith Insurance Agency, TWUA Local No. 1129, TWUA Local No. 30, Hartman Transportation Co., _\1:orse Transp,ortation Co. Bishop & Hackett Archi tects.

South Dartmouth ST.· MARY

$25, Dr & Mrs Archibald Senesae. $15 .Antone S. Amaral. $10 Rosemary Quinn.'

New Bedford: HOLY NAME.

$10 Octave Ferreira..

Provincetowl? ST. PETER

$10 Mr & Mrs John F. RobinSOIl.

, Taunton, ST. MARY

$35 John Ruddick. $20 Mrs John Hall. $20 Norman Sherry. . $10 , Manuel Foster,·Joseph Masterson, Harry Alexan'der, ~. William Lemmis Stephen CollIns. M.. &'Mrs Fred R{)kocy.

N'orton

ST. MARY

$10 Raymond .Marchand,. Albert Robbins, Mr;;' Albert Robbins, Valmore Leroux, Ernest Fillion, Frank Zwilkowski, Francis Gallagher, Frederick Rego.

_Attleboro· ' ST. THERESA

$10 . / Mr & Mrs Gerald Brogan.

.

1

SCOUT AWARD: Six boys of Den 1, Pack 26, Sacred Heart Parish, North Attleboro, were awarded the Parvuli Dei Cub Scout Award Sunday by Scout Chaplain Rev. Edmond 'L. Dickinson assisted by Cubmaster L~uncelot Masse and Den Mother Mrs. Ralph Patunoff. Left to right, front row, Michael Chabot and Laurent Jette; rear row, Richard'LeCompte, Piml Patunoff, David Weldon. James Lambert also r~ceived the award. .~

Lensman's Five-Minute Audience With Pope Runs 105 Minutes DETROIT (NC)-According to ,- ~ appointment book" Tony Spina's picture-taking audience with the Pope was to take at : ast five minutes, but not more than 10. '

North Attleboro ST. MARY

$10 , Lillian Devlin, lVir& Mrs Edgar McGowan, Roland Poirier, Gibney's Wheel Aligning Serviee.

Osterville ,QUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION·

$100 Mr & Mrs James Lebel. $20 <' Mr & Mrs EdwlU'd Barry, Richard Cross. $1! , Mr & Mrs Alvin R. Souza. $10. Mr & Mrs John Perry, Mr & M-,:"s John Gallagher Sr., Mr& Mrs Joseph Barry, Mr & Mrs Joseph Mello, Mr & Mrs Peter Fermino. \ Mr & Mrs Harold Pina, Mrs Amos de~arros, Mary Mendes, Guilhemina Barrows, Christian Mendes. .... Thomas J. Roderick, Joseph Bprry, Mr & Mrs Amos Buck.

Wareham' ST. PATRlICK

$10 t Mrs Dorothea Hatch, Antone Andrews. '

Mansfield ST. MARY

$10 Mr & Mrs James Kinder.

Fa'ill'haven ST. JOSEPH

$10 Harold & Irene Kerwin.

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It lasted 105 minutes.

Aided by a letter of introl;luction from Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit, Mr. Spina was granted· the special audience with Pope John at the Vatican. Mr. Spina is the chief photographer for the Detroit Free Press. --:'he privilege of taking photographs inside the Vatic~m Palace is ordinarily restricted to the Pope's personal photographer. Mr. Spina said Pope John showed an interest in everything he did di.tring the session. The Pope even asked about the· photographer's family and about Detroit, he said. As he was leaving the Pope halted the photographer with a gesture and said:. "Would you send me the picture? No one ever sends me any pictures." Mr.. Spina promised he would and the Pope gave him a personal gift, a silver medal emboSsed with the Pope's likeneS&

A combined celebration honoring four Fathers of the Sacred. Hearts took place at the Seminary in Wareham Tuesday. The' priests honored were the Rev. Egbert Steenbeek,. SS.CC., the Rev. Daniel Cotter, SS.CC., the Rev. Albert Rowley, SS.CC., and the Rev. Charles Kellagher, SS.CC. All are observing anniversaries this year. Father Steenbeek has been 0rdained 40 years. The other priests made their religious professions 25 years ago. About 40 of the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts gathered in Wareham for the celebration. A Solemn High Mass of Thanksgiving was offered. . Officers of the Mass follow: Father Cotter, celebrant; Father Kellagher, deacon; Father Rowley, subdeacon; the Rev. John G<>delaer, preacher; the Rev. ·Ambrose Forgit, master; the Rev. John Sullivan and the Rev. Boniface Jones, acolytes; the Rev. Regis Kwiatkowski, thurifer; the Rev. Eugene Robitaille, music; the Rev. Edmund Francis, the Rev. Harold Whelan and Father Godelaer, choir for the Proper; the Rev. Alexis Wygers, organist.

Pontiff Holds Great Hopes for Africa VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has told students of the 'Pontifical Ethiopian College that he has great hopes 10r Africa. Pope John received the seminarians and their vice-rector in .the Vatican gardens, before the replica of the grotto of Lourdes, which is a favorite retreat of. his. ' He recalled a visit he made in 1950 to the northern part of. Africa, where he saw "traces and memories of the great SL Augustine, the shining star in the firmament of the Church." '

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CUB SCOUT AWARDS: Parvuli Dei awards presented by Rev. Roland Bousquet at St. Joseph Church, New Bedford; to members of Cub Scout Pack No. 24. Receiving 'the award, left to right, Eugene Plaud,Joseph Lemenag~, Francis Mettke, Paul Fredette and George Rondeau.

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Adoration Program Has New Director TUSCON (NC)-Father James Weber will replace Father ArT. Weber, pastor of Blessed Sacthur B. Kimball, the first direcrament parish, Miami, Ariz., has tor of the movement, who died been named national spiritual May 16. director of the Knights of The program's national center. Columbus nocturnal adoration founded in Tuscon in 1950, now Program. directs 18 Knights of Columbus In making the appointment, councils throughout the country Bishop Daniel J. Gercke of . that are affiliated with the movefuscon announced that Father ment.

NEW YORK (NC)-The cardinal named to direct the new secretariat for Christian unity expressed col)iidence here that progress in that direction is not far off. Ris Eminence Augustin Cardinal Rea, S.J., a 79-year-old Germman-born prelate, told a waning. We believe this to be press conference that hopes the case." On how negotiations would go are highest for talks with .the Eastern 0 r tho d «) x on, he said that "the Church of Church. But he added that among Protestants in France, Germ:>lly, England and SwitzeTl.,.,-t there ore signs of a "spirit" receptive to discussing union. In the ,United States, on the other hand, there is little such inclination among Protestants, chiefly because of the fragmentation of Protestantism into hundreds of sects, he said. The Cardinal was here to . receive an honorary degree from Fordham University when His Holiness Pope John XXIII announced in Vatican City that he would head a new r-"l''ly connected with' the ecumenical - council. The Cardinal is a member of the Church's headquarters staff at the Vatican. Follow CouneD's Work The Pope gave no name '. to the agency but said it would help separated Christians follow the work of the council and enable them "to find more easily the path by which they may arrive at that unity for which J'esus Christ prayed so ardently to His heavenly Father .• :. Cardinal Bea, speaking through his interpreter and secretary, Father Stephen Schmidt, S.J., told newsmen the secretariat will provide "liaison or contact between non-Catholics and the council, and give non-Catholics an opportunity to makp inquiries or suggestions expressing their desires." Full participation by Ortho. dox or Protestant leaders in the council will not be por":ble since the meeting is to be of the Catholic Bishops, he said. Pra.ctical Questiollll "There remains only a practical question how the participation of non-Catholic observers can be arranged," he said. In regard to liaison with those outside the Church, he said dif-' ferent procedures are needed to digest different points of view. "For instance," he added, "contact is needed with the World Council of Churches. The World Council has 170 membel' s , denominations, and churches whicl:t accept Jesus Christ as their Saviour and God, yet complete unity is lacking. "They have only a formal external organization adequate for action on such things as human rights, peace, atomic energy, but on all other points they do not even like disCussion, for It could imperil what union they have achieved." Two Points About the Orthodox Church, th~ Cardinal said "only two major points of disagreement remain: the primacy of the Pope ood his infallibility." "It is probably much easier for them'to enter into union," he mid, "because the liturgy is acceptable and possibly some of the old psychological reasoning of the masses and prejudic~s built up over the centuries are

Rome can accept no compromise on doctrine," but he added: "Discipline and practice are questions on which compromise cannot be excluded, each case ' must be studied separately. Liturgy offers no insurmountable problems, because we have so many forms, such flexibility, in· the Catholic Church. Changes in canon law are anticipated to ease union." Receptivity to Talk About Protestants in countries where there appears to be a receptivity to talk about union, the Cardinal said that in Germany the Lutherans have found in EDITOR: Raimondo Mantheir Biblical studies "that they are very much closer to our zini, 60, new editor of L'Osposition than they once be- servatore Romano has served lieved." In England, he added, the for 32 years as editor of the Anglo-Catholics stress points in , diocesan daily newspaper of their Book of Common Prayer Bologna, "Avvenire d'!talia.'· showing many points in com- NC Photo. mon with Catholicism.' "These should be stressed to narrow the gap," he said.

Appoint Pastor At Mattapoisett The Rev. Clemment Killgoar, SS.CC., formerly of St. Joseph Church, Fairhave~, has become the new pastor of Sl Anthony Church, Mattapoisett. The 'Rev. Damien Veary, SS.CC., has been assigned to work at the Provincial House of the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven. He is former admin~ istrator of St. Anthony. Father Veary was ordained in Washington, D. C., where he. made his major seminary studies. He has held the position of director of vocations of the Congregation and had done extensive preaching work prior to becoming a chaplain in the Marine Corps in 1951. His mother resides at 81 Palmer Avenue, Falmouth, and a brother, William Veary, lives in New Bedford. A native of Boston, Father Killgoar made his major seminary studies in Washington at Catholic University where he received a degree in canon law. ;He has taught in seminaries of the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts in Wareham, Jaffrey, N. H., and County Monaghan, Ireland. His brother, the Rev. Charles Killgoar, O.M.I., is vice-provincial of the Eastern Province of he Oblate Fathers. Another brother, Timothy J. Killgoar, is an assistant to the State Treasurer.

Milan Cardinal Praises Society

BOSTON (NC) - His Eminence Giovanni Cardinal Montini, . Archbishop of Mil a n, has praised Boston's Society of St., James the Apostle for its missionary activities in Sou t h America. Speaking at a press conference at the Don Orione Shrine here (June 8), the Italian Cardinal told of the mission society's help in combating communism and revitalizing the Church in South America. The society was founded by His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston. After taking part in the dedication of a huge statue of "Madonna, Queen of the Universe" at the shrine, Cardinal Montini said he was "very pleased to see Catholics here taking such fnterest in the condition of the Church in South America." "The spiritual energies of the Church are so strong," he said, "they cannot help but be a good influence on South America."

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River,-Thurs. June 16,1960

Cardinal Bea Optimistic On Church U,nity Talks

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River,-T~~rs~ June 16,_ 1960

The CYOImage

.: ' .'

The Diocese is,proud to be host to the New England Convention of the Catholic Youth Organization. This is an age when a great deal is made-by Mlldison Avenue and those who are wise enough to use some of the techniques evolved by the ad men-or the image. .A tremendous amount of planning and brains and energy ~nd money' is spent to project the desired image. Thus books and ads are spread around to picture the great corporations as really not impersonal machines but ~kind benevolent mutuals, in business as much for patriotic and philanthropic reasons as to, make a dollar. The election year has seen a flood of articles aimed at fixing in the minds of the voter the "right" image of the candidate. The CYO has, without benefit of ad men and camp,aigns, projected an image of itself. And it is an image of which the CYOer can be proud. , It is an image that began, years ago, as one of the athlete. That was a good beginning-it is' the part of wisdom to begin with something that can be done easily and weJI. But the image has been adding new dimensions through the years and especially in the last several, years that have seen new vitality in ,all aspects of CYO programs. , The image of the CYOer now is one 'of the complete young Catholic adult-perhaps not the finished product in ~ll cases, but the realizable ideal. Mention the CYO and the image springs to mind of the juvenile whQ is not delinquent, the young. man and woman interested in what the Church is, doing and anxious to take a' part 'and to contribute a share. The image is-one of the poised i'ndividual, at, home with the social graces. The' image is one of the young adult growing up physically arid mentally and socially and spiritualiy and developing to the,full the talents of nature and grace. . , This is the image that' theCYO has projected of its members. It is a pleasure then to welcome so many CYOers to. the Diocese from allover, New. England. ,And it is a 80urce of happiness, to see how so many present iri actuality the image 'that their ',CYQ':program 'projectS~ , .

.'

.""

Six Days '. • and,the Seventh "The doctrine of, the sepl;lration of' Church and State II a valid juridical conc~ption, ,but it does not entail a separation of our political and civic life from our spiritual life. Unless we Catholics can 'feel the same as Gandhi did ,and say that our professional and daily life >is part of our training for spiritual perfection and a stage in our progress toward heaven, we shall co.ntinue to live on the periphery of life rather than its center." These are 'the words o{D,r: Joltn ,C. R., Wu, professor of law at Seton Hall University, spoken at a recentsymposium on the position of. the American Catholic at Rosary ' , College, Illinois. , Dr. Wu-as Gandhi before him-has brought, out the frightening, contradiction existing in the 'lives of so many-a compartinen~lizingof'religiol), ,8 forcing it into a .limited segment only of life. Religion, which by itS nature Bhould be a horizontal force pervading every aspect of life, is made a vertical force, living,within narroW-bound.,. aries, not daring to encroach on the social,and-.civic areas of living. ', : . This does not mean;' of colirse~ that' the' C~tholic shouid 10 to the foolish Point of ,trying, to brand eve~ything with a cross.. There is no such· thing, for,instance,as a "Catholic algebra" or 8 "Catholic physics" or 8 "Catholic geography," But it does mean thiitthe Catholic holds on to the broad blueprint of life' alwa'ys-.-theknowiedge 'of from whence he came and why he is .here' and where he is going. It does mean that the Catholic should know what to do with the knowledge he has' and iiiat ,means ultimately, that he should use it always with an eye on eternity. It means, in fine, that the Catholic's professional and daily life must not laugh at 'his' Sunday life, that his way of living six days a week should not make of him 8 liar or hypocrite on the seventh.

Enough, .Sa:id The Connecticut Supreme Court; in upholding the right of communities to provide bus transpor.tation to children attending private non-profit-making schools, has summed , up its position'in a ,phrase. that is a mod~IOf good law and common ,sense; "The' State, .is· und~r a duty, to ignore ~ child's creed but not his need," "

@rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIQCESE <;)F :FALL RMR Published week.ly by The Cath'olic Press of ·the

Di'oce~e,of Fall Riv...

" , "JpJ:fi9hland.Ave!,,~, ',' Fall, RiverI ' MaSi. .' ; , . 'OSborne 5-7'151 -

PUBLISHER " Most Rev. James, L Con;'oIlYi·D;D.~ PhD~, GENERAL 'M.AN,AG~R "':, , ' ~SST."GE~ERAL 'MANAGER Rev. Daniel F. ,Shalloo, M.A. ~,Rev~ JOhn' p~ Driscoll' ",,'MANAGING :EDlrOR" .... ' ' ,. Hugh JoGokieR' I " ' , ' " . " " ' , :'.';:',

',,<'";'

,

Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days '~,

Not ,Even a LoaD

TODAY-Corpus Christi, eelebrated on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday in honor of t;he Body and Blood of Christ real17 present in the sacrament' of the Holy Eucharist. This feast ~. · extended to the univerSal Church in 1254 by Pope Urbaa IV as a means of making reparation for sins committed agaiJist Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament. Generally -this d'ate is the feast of SS. Aureus, Justina and Companions, Martyrs. It is believed they lived before the seventh century. During an invasion by the Huns, 5t. Aureu~ who was Bishop of Mainz, and St. Justina, his sisters, and otherw were driven from the See. On lih! , return, his zeal for Christianity aroused certain evildoers and! while he was offering Mass, he and his sister and a number of ,others were murdered in church. TOMORROW - St. Antidius. , Bishop-Martyr. He lived in the filth century, and was a disciple · and the successor of St. Froninua in the Diocese of Besancon, eas*ern France. He was put to death , by marauding Arian vandals at Ruffey, where his relics aN enshrined.

The editor of th~ Questum and Aruwer column does not guarantee ,. answer anonyfnOus queries nor letters from unidentifiable sources. In ef)(1ry imtonce' tAe desire for anonymity tIIi,U be respected. To that end, namft are never appended to the questio1U, but unless the letter .. siBned '. there'" JW assurance that any coMideratum will be given it., Is it a sin to read someoae

else's mail! Under ordinary circumstances, It is a sin to r'ead another's mail The seriousness of the informa'tion gained in this manner and , the intention of the 'person opening the letter· determine the gravity of the sin. We mentioned circumstances in the opening sentence of this , answer. Some' circumstances do 'justify the opening of mail, addressed to another. If parents sincerely feel that the good of the child iii involved, they ma'y, in good conscience open such mail. If the permission of the addresSee is given' or reason, ably presumed, it is permissib'e 'to read the letter. When there '18 practically certain evidenCe that grave harm to some group or individual' can ,be averted by 'reading the correspondence of a Certain person,it is morally iicceptable to investigate and read it. ; Permit us to repeat the general rule: reading the mail of another is an invasion of privacy and is sinful, unless there is a well-founded suspicion -that definite threat to the common good or private morals exists. Morbid curiosity is not sufficient cause in such instances, no matter how one attempts to paint the motives with pious pastels.

Can't we say lor eertain that Judas went to Hell whe. be died!

SATURDAY-St. Ephraem «If Syria, Deacon-Confessor-Doctor.. He was born in Mesopotamia 8fld became a monk while a young man. He attended the Council of Nicea in 325 as a deacon. The ehief place of his work was Ede;.. sa, 'where he taught school aDcI became famous for his oratOD; al'ld poetry. He died in 378. ' SUNDAY-Second Sunday .....

er Pentecost. Generally this date is the feast of St. Juliana Falcon:. ieri, Virgin. She was born .. ,;"lorence in 1270 and a t the aRe of 16 renounced her wealth aNt entered a convent. She received 'the 'religious habit from SL Philip Benizk and aided him iii building ue the Third Order Of the Servites. She was noted ,.. her life of prayer and penance, and her service to the sick and 'poor. She died in 1340 and ~_ 'canonized nearly 400 years by Pope Cle~ent XII.

No we can't say with certitude that Judas' soul is in Hell. We ,can say that every indication · points to the' fact tha t this was ~i!! fa,te, for the account as it is recorded in Scripture doesn't allow much room for hope. There , is a, chance that he repented , the moment of death, 'In view of the fact that the unfortunate 'man took his own life in a spirit ) of dejection and despair, by chances of salvation would seem , MONDAY-St. Silveri us, Pope· to besIini indeed, but that slim ,Martyr. He became Pope in' 531 and ,ruled two years. During hill 'chan~e does remain. Judgments are made on tbe ,reign Emperor Justinian .rec~ basis of facts as we know them; ered Rome and the greater part we may surmise, but only God of ItalY"The Pope firmly witll.· can know the inner workings of stood iderference by Empr_ · a man's mind; hence, God alone · Theodora' in religious matters, , can judge in the case of a man's lind died in exile on an islaDd ' eternal salvation, whether it be oil Italy. 'Jud.as or anyone else. · ,TUESDAY-St. AIQysiu~,d~ ,zag~, Confessor. The Patron GIl ,Youth was, born to the nQble Italian family of Gonzaga,' tlWt Dukes of Mantua, in 1568. WASHINGTON (NC) ~ The served as a page in·the courts at Philippine ambassador' 'to the ':"~scany, Mantua, and Spain, and 'United States has called for ,entered the Society of Jesus at greater zeal for democracy to the age of 18 after overcoming counter communist zeal for objections of his family. He retheir ideology. c~ived minor orders but died at Gen. Carlos P. Romulo told the age of 23 of an illness co&the graduates of Georgetown tracted while he was ministering ,University that "we have failed to the sick during a plague. He to, achieve peace because we are, was beatified in 1605, canonized I) • • dealing with the most' powerful, ' in 1726; declared special pro'predatory and unanswerable tector of young students by Pope I\D aequaintanee told me state in history, propelled by Benedict XIII, and proclaimed something that I wish he messianic and deceptive doc:" by Pope Pius XI as patron Of. hadn't.. Beeause of the eonvertrine . . • .. Christian youth. ' ,'. satlon. rd like to ask a ques-, He c aut ion e d Americans tion. Is a person who wins a against allowing themselves "to WEDNESDAY - St. Pauli~_ eontest by eheating bound to be blindedby selfish nationalof Nola, Bishop. He was Pontiw, make restitution? ism and by racial and religious Meropius Anicus Paulinus and The definition of stealing is bigotry. ' was born in 354 at BordeauX, "taking or keeping' unjustly "If you can lift your sights the son of a Roman who wa. something that' does not belong ,beyond natiol)al jealousies and prefect. of Rome. In 390, after to us'. By this definition, accept- ambitions to think of all peoples the death of his only child be ing phzes acquired by cheatipg as members of one human fam- retired from the world and ~eDt in a contest is stealing. One who ,ny," he stated, "you will be to ~arcelona, Spain, where the has stolen is, bound to make smashing the shackles of hatred, people urged him to join the restitution~ Therefore, restitution suspicion and fear ,that have ,priesthood. He became a hermit of some kind must be made. paralyzed the world all these near Nola in Campania and Ja U it is certainly known who cold war years ...." ,no the people chose him .. the ,winner would have been, Receives Doetorate their Bishop. He became one 01. the outstanding prelates of hilt of t h e prize ,should possession General Romulo delivered the ' ' h time. He suffered greatly durin,' be turned over to is ownership. principal address at the school's If there is doubt as to whom 161st commencement and re-" the invasion of Campania by the the real winner' is, or serious ceived an honory doctorate. Goths under Alaric. Many of bU 'dilf'ICUIhes ' ' f rom poems and writings still are eswou I d arise Honorary, degrees were pre, ~ 'tan,t. He died in 431. reve1ation 0 f the dishonesty, a ' 'sented also to John L. Lewis, oonfeS60r should be consulted. retired president of the United Such a person must reconcile' Mine Workers, and Howard B. NEWARK (NC)~¥sgr. Vllthimself to the fact that this con- ,Mitchell, Conductor of the Nasultation with the ,priest, is only ,tional ' Symphony Orchestra, .cent P; Coburn of the NewBl'k for the purpose findi~g soule ,Washington, D.C., . ' ,'arch"diocese has' been eleew ehanneis' for di~sitiOn ~'the .A total of 1,179 degrees were rresicierit of the eastern contei'Prize; The'cheater'hlli rio 'right ':, preSeiited at, the Jesuit ':uriiver- ' ence of the National Canon &cie*>,. "'keep the a1'uc:J.e. ' ...Qt'; 'l1'aduatiQU. exercises.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of

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Fan River,-Thurs. June lcS, 1960

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MAKING CAPE HISTORY: Graduates of St. Joan of Are School, Orleans, first parqchial school on the Cape, are writing a newchapter in the history the ,piocese. Left, Bruce Carron' chatS with classmates Patricia Collins (lef~) and Frances Swift. Center, rehearsal

for an all-important moment of graduation. Left to right, standing, Thomas Hammatt, Theodore Ellis; seated,Michael King, Kevin Maher, Albert B'ohlin.Right,girls exchange autographs. Left to right, Karen Berger, 'Elizabeth Chipman, Gail Walker.

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:"First Graduates of St~loan of Arc School ;_. On CtJpe COd Receive Diplomm Today

,Natural Law Seen :As, First Buhvcirk Against Smut ,1. ,

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CINCINNAT! (NC)...J... An judge cited' the ·tift'ehan~ing character of' tf{e

natural law in upholding t'he conviction on obscenity charges of a Cincinnati magazine disttib'utor. ' ;l ,Jutlge James O'Connell 'of the 'First 1 District Court of AppealS 'declared In a written 'opiniCll'i:' "Though it may be true t~at certain laws have been enacted, and repealed, the basic (nat!Jrai) law with reference too' matters C!~ sex' <;an no more chang~ tp~~ 'any other part of,this law, l!-~d the 'mores' in regard to such la~ have remained constant.", " Judge O'Connell made the com-men t in a ruling which' Upheld ,the conviction in' Municipal COUl:t, of magazine distributor Joseph L. Marshall. Marshall was found guiUy by a· jUry' ill December, 1958, of having ,vib'" lated Cineinnati's ..antiobscenity oltdinance. " i He was fined $400 and given • suspended sentence of thl'ee months in jail. His convicti,oll wBii upheld i'n September, 195~, by Common Pleas, Court' J~~~ Louis J. Schneider. " Good Morals :" : In a 10-page written decision, concurred in by Judges Bert Long and Stanley Matthews, Judge O'Connell conceded that the exact meaning of the wordS ~obscene, lewd, and indecent'! in .the city antiobscenity ordin· ance is difficult to define. " ' ' He held, however, that "ari ordinarily intelligent person would know that the ordinance pr.ohibits the possession of liter7' .ture that violates good morals with reference to matters Of sex." He added that "the ordinary person" would have no doub~ .:' 'to the "immorality, perv~i ilion, and unreasonableness" ~ the" literature for' whose sa~e 1 :arshall was convicted, or itS ability to "corrupt certain per':' ,ons into whose hands such ature fell." ' '. " " "The literature involved was obscene and ... its perusal .would have an adverse and immor~ effect on all persons," he said." I

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fairfield Biologist ,.;.': To Study Radiation' ,

FAIRFIELD (NC)~A Fairfiel'd University biologist has: re~ ceived a grant from th~ Atorille Energy Commission to' initiate a course for the study of radiation f>iology. John E. Klimas Jrr., assistant professor of.. biology at' ~e CO,nnecticut Jesuit universi~y" ~', been granted $1,l,l36 by: ~~ cOmmission to p'urchase sp~<;illl radiation equipment for tmder. lP'aduate laboratories. . '. ,

Bottle of Pisco Does the Ti'ick'

POMATA, (NC) - Wh~n, ,~ j,eep brakes gav~ Qut on a, ,dap_ ,.By, Russell Collinge " ''''The date is today, the' time is this afternoon, the place is Q,rIeans • and)f the air gerous mountain trip! Fa~~ atQu.)jd St. ,Joan of''Ar~ C~#cAjeems. tinged" witlL'ro,~'~ and gold -,- well, that's ,tQ be Richard M. Quinn, M.M., of San expected and as it should be.· For this, is the time and ·place of the very first graduation of Jose, Calif., pulled into a Pen... the;very first parochial school Qn,Cape Cod! (Xes,.Iknow about Father Clinton and Sand- vian service station for brake fluid. ,wich)i Bishop Connolly, ,by .' ' the 'full use of available sPaCe. "They, are the ·real ,and big . The Indian proprietor told the the nature of his office, has _ without ,clutter .of, friUs, ' and news on Cape Cod. And nuiy all harried M:;lryknoller he ,hac,l no flfequently heard, a congre- Pal:tly t~ the. way, thatol,ltside their future' achieveinents' be brake fluid but would sell"hiin gation told to behold a great l~ght . iSlllade .an unimpedfild built in' keeping with ,the foun:.. a bottle of all-purpose "pisco" priest-but when he enters 'St. P,art of the design': Desi~n that dation that is now theirs. Some Indian brandy.' With no other Joan',of Arc he will probably realizes its purpose as a sch,ool-;-:- day they will fully realize their choice Father Quinn skeptically eat ' good fortune' in that they bought a bott~e of "pisco," listen wi th uncommon pleasure education. ' ' were a part of St. Joan of Arc' poured it into the master brake T ranspor tat IOn and' understanding as the choir, 0 f th e s t u d en t 'cylinder and continued on w. ' , grades three through -seven; re.,. "00' .". Y .IS han dl e d by two b usses School. peats, the ceremonialexhol'ta- Which the school owns ,and with The class will go in proces- mission trip. tion.' . the, roost welcom~, acceptable sion from the' school to the St. 'Joan of, Ar-c 'school was 8.J:Ic:I~ppreciated, help of ,the church. There, after a,: talk by started in 1953 by the pastor. town of Orleans" : Father Lynch, they will rece~ve their diplomas and hear an 'adFather James E. Lynch. It COy- ;",." Full Cooperation' , I ,erekl : pre-school "work . and . Fa'the'r Lynch" 'I'S, na'turally, dress from Bishop Connollr· The ' h d 54, ha'p'p'y 'with the school "and its ceremonies will' cOnclude, with gr.a d es one an d t wo, ,and ,a 469 LOCUST S~REET , pUpl'1s. T 0 d ay, all gra d es, are SuccesS, 'and with the full ahd ~olemn J3enediction, of the Most FAll RIVER, MASS. , cover.ed through the ,eightband hearty cooperatiOn be'receIved Blessed Sacrament. ,,) OS.2-33$1 the.-e are 185 ,student&--·a,num.,. hom' every side when he started In addition to the Bishop, and bel' that would, be much,larger thf! 'project. That cooperation his staff, ,Fathel," Lynch and FaWilfred C. James Eo, but"for .the str;ict rule, el\foree4 . has' never flagged or wavered iher' Francis' M. Coady, his I;)riscoll . ,.., . $uUi~ar".II:. ~r~~gb. nec~ssity;, tha~ .. QJ:\ly in' the pansh;' ',,:" '" , ',' 8$sistant, the. Sisters, 'pa~~nts, r .~ish re idents ' m,ay ,be ell.,. "Of'coursethis'day ceriters Oft relatives and :friends, ,there' will' rol1~. ., • ' ' .' be other special guests, inthe' graduates. And theileare eluding Mother Mary 'Flor- , Divine Providence Sisters,·,· ~eir ~ames: :'" . eru:e', C.D.P., SUPerintendent of Funeral' Home ,The school is staffed by the Alber B hI' G'l W Ik Schools Sydney G. p'eirc'e and Sisters of Divine Providence; t 0 In, al a er, 571 Second St. ' "'lll's Frances Sw~'" Principal Armand Guarl·no. Mother Tharsilla, Superior; Sis- Theodore' "" , ..... Fall River, Mass. : ter Mary Loyola; Sister Kath- J{ev'in Maher; ·:Bruce : Carron, A great day for St. Joan of d S· Tho a Ii Hammatt, Michael · t er DOmI't'll Ieen; S IS OS 9-6072 I a; an, ISKing,inKaren Berger, Ma,ry E. Arc Parish, for the' Cape, and MlCHAR J. McMAHON ter Hilda Marie. They are aided Mc·Dermott. Elizabe,th Chipman for all of us who· ~now how by, two lay instructors, Mrs. ... necessary, importarIt and ,vital . Licensed Funeral Director Crowell for Home 'Economics Patricia Collin!l.' 'this)IChool has been. A, day and Registered !Embalmer and Mrs. Carmen for music and a work surely pleasing to God. the school orchestra.. Parlia'men'f Visito'r ; The work: done by the .SisLONDON (NC)-A U.S.-born ~~rs has been outstanding, anll prelate was the first representacertainly the obvious results are tive of the Holy See to visit pleasure to behold. The con- Britain's Houses of Parliament duct and deportment of ~he in more than 400 years. ArchSOMERSET, MASS. - Next to Stop & Shop children, their orderly manners, bishop Gerald P. O'Hara, Apostheir innate politeness which tolic Delegate to Great Britain, .,. • invites your participation in the haS 'been developed 'and en~ was guest of honor at a dinner growth of a new Banking Institution com-aged. All of which are in the House of Commons. • COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS SERVICE helped by the school uniform. • MORTGAGES - AUTO and APPUANCE LOANS .ai'ne shirts with dark biue Accounts Insured Up To' $10,000 ties and gray trousers for the ~ys, and dark blu~ jumpers and Member Federa'l Deposit Insurance, Co. white blouses for the girls, give ., Harold J~ Regan, Preside"., an overall impression, of neat':' H61~n Aub~..tineBraug",·, n'esa; discipline, and pride in ~eing a member of the school. Owner, and, Director (Whoever designed or' selected Sp' P k' A The sign of Qualify • •• the uniform for th~girls, had it CltIGUS· ar In9 rea ~uch of happy genrus~) , 'WY2-2957 .." The school buildin~ seems '129 Allen St.· New Bedford. ~rger than it is-due, partly, to 0

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese of:FaU River,-Thurs. -June 16, 1960

Nurses~

S'olve, Your Storage Problems With Attractive Built-,Ins

Sets Retreat Fall River Catholic Nurs~ Guild will hold a retreat at Cathedral Camp the weekend of Nov. 11. Mrs. Esther Maloney and Mrs. Mae Fitzgerald will be in charge' of reservations. Other activities include II cake sale at McWhirr's Department Store Saturday, June 25, a garden party Monday, June 27 at the home of Mrs Margaret Quinn, Lakeville, and the staffing of a first aid st.ation at St. Anne's Church Tuesday, July 26, the feast of St. Anne, whem many pilgrims visit her shrine. Nurses will also provide first aid service at St. Vincent'. Camp during the Summer season.

By Alice Bough Cahill When people talk about do-it-yourself projects, have you ever thought that the idea may be all right, but how eould one make a built~in? Did you know that there are patterns' on the market which you can buy for a dollar that outline step-by-step the o~ form the back of the passerations necessary to turn through. the most inexperienced novShelves above were open, letice into a 'super do-it-your- ting light filter through from the self artist. Be it a tool shed, a storage eloset, Christmas angels, or outdoor decorations, there's a pat tel' n for each. Built-ins 'are ,truly a solution 10 many prob,le~ spots, like a ,kitchen privacy problem, or a storage ';pace ,problem for guest-room 'bedding. Or maybe you need a music nook in the living 'room, or low-cost storage space' ,for flat clothing. The built-in campaign that interested me 'in the telling Was the stOry of a man who went to an auction, - and sudd'enly. found himself'the owner of ~our chests for $1. The auctioneer bellowed : at p,im to ,remove themfl'om the property and when he got them home, there was further bellowing 'from ... you know who . '. . what was l)e going ,to do with them? w.hat he did with them and the finished product was remark~ble. The first thing he did was to 'remove a great variety of drawer handles and pulls. Then Mr;- X sawed 'off the bottoms of all chests and the top of one to make them all the same height. The chests were then set on 3x4s to provide toe room, topped with a pine slab, then built into a wall in an upper hall. When they were given, uniform pulls and 'painted with red Chinese lacquer, the owner had 12 feet of storage for flat pieces and a piece of furniture that made an attractive decoration along one wall. , Screen Off Kitchen In one' household where the dining area was separated from the kitchen by open shelves and a pass-through, the problem was how to shut off the view of the working part of the kitchen. A piece of plywood was us~d to

kitchen. Then, when the counter was in use, eiU.er as passthrough or snack bar, the plywood back was swung up on hinges attached to thE:' bottom shelf, where it serve<.: as a 'solid backing for the normally open shelving. 'Chanc~s are this may not be what you need in your house, but maybe it gives -you an idea of something like it tha~ will work for you. Maybe your kitchen could stand ,a built-in breakfast table, placed in front of windows that overlook your garden. Such a shelf table is easy to build and when . topped ' with' easy-tomaintain linoleum saves steps ~nd, wear and ,tear on the dining roo~., . ' Built-ins are a' great help il\ childIen's rooms,' such as the , roll-away storage bins for toys. Build boxes -to fit between the springs and fl06r: W'uh casters , at' each corner~ these boxes cart , roll out from the frame of 2x2s around the springs. ' Rope 'handles, . that lend a nautical air and are placed at height a child can reach, make these drawers or bins easy, for him to handle, and he'll be happy to store his toyS in them. More Towel Racks We needed more towel racks in the bathroom, so devised- a ,built':'in family-sized, rac\r by attaching sideboards to the frame of the door. The top edge of these boards was 7 inches wide and tapered down to 2 inches at the bottom. We drilled staggered ,holes il\ the side bars, using I-inch dowels for rings. Each one now has a rung long enough to hang bath and face towels without their overlapping. The towel on each, rung hangs out and ayvay from the towel on the lower rung for quicker drying and as easier grab. , Here's, another linen' storage' problem that one family used in an upstairs hall. The old stair railing and banisters at the top of the' stairs were replaced by a framework of 2x4-inch studs, from' ;rhich were hung three linen-storage 'cabin~ts, 30 inches high and 14 inches deep. You could build them of ply~ wood and decorate them with half-round moldings and blocked out handles. When painted the ,color of your hall woodwork, you'd have a striking storage cabinet. '

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BROOKLAW'N FUNERAL HOME, INC. a.

Mareel Ro, - C. Lorraine'Rot Boaer LaFranee '

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Name Honor Graduates At Fairhaven Academy SCOUT AWARDS: Boy Scout awards presented in St. James Lower Church, New Bedfor'd were, left to right, Michael McCormack, eagle scout; his brother Patrick McCormack, of Cub Scout Pack No. 1,0 with Parvuli Dei award, Jon Telesmanick and Robert 'Souza, eagle scout awards. Scouts are members of Troop No. 19. . . Boy .'

Sisters Jof -Mercy' Conduct Ba,zaar, For Building Fund on Saturday",

Sisters of Mercy in the ,Fall Attleboro regions' will 'be lendRiver Diocese will hold a Sum- ing their support to the. bazaar. mer festival Saturday, June 18.at ,The Sisters will be serving on Mt. St; Mary's Aacademy, 755 the v~rious booths, assisted by Second Street, Fall River,for ,relatives and friends. ' the benefit of their building Among' the attractions offered fund. , , w i l l ' be cash' awards -whiCh will Work on the new Mt. St. l,\1ary be drawn at the close of the ~cadeII?-Y is about completed: It day's festivities.. Many' booths IS expected that, the new buIldwill have other useful articles: ing ~ill be f~ni~hed in J~ly. Th.is The Country Store, Household spaciOUS buIldmg has ItS mam article's Feminine' Attractions entrance' on Whipple Street and Fancy Work Nuns' table Gam~ runs the full block. It is joined . Land fo~ bo~s and girls.' , to the present academy by an "L" shaped wing. ' Administration offices will be on' Middle Street,' along with classrooms, laboratories and shower rooms. The new auditorium with a seating capacity, of 700, a large cafeteria wnich will accommodate a full student body of 500, and a fully equipped gymnasium, comprise the Whipple Street section of the million dollar building. The Sisters of Mercy under the guidance of Mother Mary Catherine, ,R.S.M., provincial, undertook the expansion, program because of the continued increase in enrollment at the academy which serves girls" of ~igh school age in the Fall River area. In addition to functioning as a . private girls' academy, Mt. St. Mary conducts a full Winter evening school, 'Saturday classes for elementary students, and this Summer will conduct a Summer school for the sixth season. To Lend Support All the Sisters of Mercy in New Bedford, Fall River"and the

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Outstanding among graduates of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, are Margarida Carreiro and Barbara Baker. ' Miss Carreiro has won a scholatshipto Rivi~r Coilege and. MiS. Baker' has" been awarded '. Junior Achievement Scholarship. and' an achievement certificate , of superior merit in a nationwide 'La~in examination.' , Three ,sophomores received honorable' merit, certificates iD. the . same Latin examination. They are ,Elaine Furtado, Mary 'Elaine Moniz and Barbara Pi'res. . Sixteen members of the seri'ior , class merited diplomas from t):le , Catholic' Unjversity of America.

Cape 0 oll Mother Cabrini Circle, Saga,more, Wareham and Sandwich Daughters of Isabella, will meet at 8 Tuesday night, June, 21. Sandwich members will be hostesses. -

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-(. P. HARRINGTON FUNERAL HOME 986 Plymouth Avenue , Fall River. Mas~

~ MUSICAL YEAR:

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Miss Constance Bury, daughter of ,Mr. and Mrs. Matthew H. Bury, 94 Dean Street, Taun'ton, gave an organ recital ,preceding" commencement exercises at the College of Ne~ RocHelle. The junior will be president of the Col-. iege Choir and vice preside~t ' of, the Glee Club next year. Already to her' credit is the score for a musical, "Rain-> ',bow!g End," produced' last

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Father's Day shou'id 'Remi,lid Us Of Eternal Fatherh90d of God"

THEANCHO'R-

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Thurs., June 16, 1960

Book on Mary Wins Award

. By Mary Tnniey Daly Once more, ads in newspapers, magazines, posters in stores call attention to another "bl!y-buy" day. Father's Day is on the way, coming up. Alld well it might, to ttly way of thinking. Mother's Day has been done to death with saccharine pleas to m a k e They pay baby-sitters at the mother happy by buying her prevailing (rather high) rate so everything from flowers- with other couples they 1d and-candy to a new car. their wives may enjoy social'

DAYTON (NC) John J. Delaney of New York was presented' with the eighth annual Marian Library Medal fot his book "A Woman Clothed With the Sun." The award is made by the .University of Dayton's Marian Library for the year's best book on the Blessed Mother. Mr. Delaney's work was judged the best in 1959. Mr. Delaney has been supervisor and editor since 1954 of Image Books, published by Doubleday and Company. A native of New York, he was graduated from the College of the City of New York and has made the book field his career•.

eoming in May, Mother's Day life. Many of these young fellows can be skillfully manipulated to are still studying under the GI encompass the bill. Through night courses in Mother of us colleges and universities they all, the Blessed take advantage of advanced Mother. The education. No one need prod result, in-~' them to do their homework. creased devoTheir academic records are extion t o t h e cellent. Mother of God. A similar inTo' the casual observer, the terpretation middle-aged father's role is not Infant of Prague Guiid might very so obvious. H,e just -lugs along, well be put on trying to keep up with inflated Mrs. Albert Tomke will serve Father's Day. A prices on a salary whose ceiling as president of the Infant of family, honorhe has reached. Period. His kids Prague Guild, St. Mary's Home, ing an earthly . in high school, ready for college, New Bedford, for the coming presence, the head of the house, this father wears a suit until it year. She will be assisted by can turn again to God the is nearly threadbare. He nurses Mrs. Arthur Bennett, vice presFather. along an old car. Just 'Jefore the ident; Mrs. Edward Cloutier, · For a long time, Father's Day final "clonk" it's turned in on secretary; and Mrs. William has been a sort of joke. Come- another used one. He skimp~ on Chapman, treasurer. dians have had open season. lunches, walks instead of riding They portray father as hen- a bus or street car. But he is pecked, downtrodden, a sappy always there when a Y01Jngster ALUMNI BREAKFAST: Among former" students sort 0' guy who, once a year, needs him, wants to "shoot the attending the Holy Family Alumni Communion Breakjast has his slippers slipped to him, breeze" with him, revealing an held at Kennedy Center were, left to right, George E. wife and daughters waiting on inner need.. him, saying, sotto voce, "Today He was in World War n. Butler, incoming president; Arnold J. Manghan, outgoing Father doesn't have to wash a Doesn't like to talk about it. He. president, and Miss Isabelle Sullivan, only member of the . lingle dish!" hopes his sons will not have to Class of 1910 present. Little beer cans march and go through the same experience. sing their way to dear old dad, And yet he knows the world is CHARLES F. VARGAS on "This, your day, Father!" . still in turmoil-more so than 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE Let's have a look at Father, ever. He is confused, somewhat. NEW BEDfORD, MASS. Dad, Pop, Papa, the Old Man, or Just doing the best he can. Degre~in whatever you call him. By all the rules, the older WASHINGTON (NC)-An air- taste of working with them Let's begin with the young fathers - grandfathers now lines stewardess came down out when I helped in the library at fathers: should be taking it easy. of the clouds just in time to pilot Ohio State during my underYou see them in the superPhysically, perhaps they are- a mental "Cloud Nine" of her grad days. I had a yen to learn markets on Saturday. They are barring mishaps occasioned by own. more about books and libraries. dressed in Bermuda shorts, advancing age-but they see a Edna Schweinfurth flew in So I chose the CU course besport shirts. Usually they do the world upset. The ideals for aboard an American Airlines cause its rated topflight." marketing with one or more of which they worked and fought plane. from New York, and She made 'Washington her the small fry while the wife and are in danger. Even the Father- swapped her powder blue stew- home base during the school mother Is .tending to the auto- hood of God is beIng questioned, ardess uniform and cap for the years, and used the city's many matic laundry across the street. utterly disregarded in many somber academic gown and library facilities during the mortarboard. Then she marched "good bit of time off" provided These young fatherl1 you see parts of the world. With this in mind, knowing to the platform at the Catholic by the airline for reference 1ft hardware stores 'consulting with experienced clerks, learn- just how the average father University of America' com- work and writing. Her thesis Ing the beSt "do-it-yourseltt' feels, on Father's Day, 1960, let's mencement and received her . was a study of all publishing ways of tending to home main- not give Daddy just a box of master of science degree in lib- done in Cleveland during the cigars, a carton of cigarettes, a rary science' from Archbishop Civi~ War. Father James J. Kortenance. . Interested and articulate, they pipe, a case of beer, or what Patrick A. O'Boyle of. Washing- tendlCk,' head of the Library science" department, pronounced are to be found at citizenship' .have you. Let's give him our ton. Miss Schweinfurth easily was . it "a masterful job.'" meetings--especially when a " hearts. After all, he's been safety traffic light is being con- tQrough the mill. So tell him, · the most tra"eled among the lIidered-or a new '~hool bond "A long life, a merry ~me, Dad, 200 -students of the university's and God bless you!" '; depart11lent of library science, issue. Here's to him, who's like. him? though many came from di~~ant Quite often, they "moonlight" places. She maintained a s~ho­ -take on auxiliary jbbs, drive Nob0l!y! 'lastic record of A's and B's'dureabs, work as night watchmen to Publ"ish ing her two-year course: Oilly . . , and the like. Thus they tide the Franciscans occasionally "was she 'stranded family over financial emergen- Marian Book AnnuQ"lIy · by foul weather. or .erigirie tlies. This is the way they meet CHICAGO (NC)-The first Insurance premiums, s h a v e edition of "The Marian Era," a : trouble in some far-off city mortgage notes, p~t something' new annual publication on the when she should have been in away to protect the family in Blessed Virgin, has been re- class. - 'Double Life' Cl8se of necessity, and make cer- leased by the Franciscan Herald tain mother can remain at home Press here. The 124-page book Explaining what she calls her with young children... containing two-color illustra- "double life," Mis Schweinfurth In these days of large famitions, "The Marian Era" has' said: "I love flying. I've had Des, young fathers can and do articies written for. the general some wonderful vacations in help "with the care of children, public by experts 'on theology Europe, Hawaii, Mexico, ~a­ give a hand at homework, serve and on devotions relating to the maica and Canada. Also, 1 like as baby-sitters so their wives " Blessed Virgin. to meet people. now and then may have "an · "On the other hand, I've al. Features in the first issue In_ening with the girls.... .elude two picture stories on the ways loved books. I got my first National Shrine of the ImmacParochial School Pupil ulate Concepti~n in Washington, FAMilY TREAT and the Mexican shrine of Our third in Spelling Bee WASHINGTON' (NC) -Marie Lady of Guadalupe. "The MaBAR-B-Q CHICKENS. Inserra, a 13-year-old Brooklyn rian Era" was prepared under WY 7-9336 parochial school pupil whose the direction of the Franciscan favorite subject is mathematics, National Marian Commission. took third place in ·the 33rd National Spelling Bee here. Fairhaven Alumnae FARMS Marie reached the 17th round The board of directors of. 145 Washington St., Fairhaven of the gruelling contest before Sacred Hearts Academy AlumJust off Route 6 going down on the word "intus- nae Association, Fairhaven, will Watch for Signs Busception"-a medical term hold its annual dinner Thursday, · meaning the reception of one June 23 in Warren, R. I. Miss While out f<.r a Drive part within another: She spelled Pauline Davignon is president of .Stop at this Delightful spot I It 'intususception." the group for the coming year. ~ , Marie's slip left Henry FeldI DIan, 13, of Oak Ridge, Tenn., , and Betty Jean AltschulJ, ,1.2, of "MANNYU·SOUZA . . • FOR SEE · Norfulk, Va., to battle it out for tile championship. Henry came • PlYMOUTH ! out on top when he first correctly spelled "velleity" after Betty • CHRYSLER .Jean spelled it "veleite," and • VAlIANT~ then spelled "eudaemonic," l',(EW. 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10

THE ANCHOR-'-'Diocese:of Fall .River,-Thurs. Jl.!ni! l~, ·1960

Asks Statement of Catholic Position on Aid to Schools By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.O. Bishop' of Reno

The election of a Catholic to the presidency of the . United States of America, whether in 1960 or in any campaign year in the foreseeable'future, would carry an almost exclusively symbolic value for his co-religionists. Not that such a value is unimportant; : To be fair, however, these we live by symbols and o~r men are not altogether deserv.seale of values is largely ing of criticism. It has not yet determined by their vitality. been spelled out, in precise, unIt' would symbolize the grad.ua"-

mistakable terms, just what the tion of the Catholic minority American Catholic position in from what has . regard to this question is or bee n . called, - ought to be. Like many minoriwit h appro·ties throughout history, and the priate bitterIrish during the era of their libness, seconderation are an eloqu'ent example, cia's s citizenwe, are bedevilled by confusion and dissension in our own ranks, ship, to the enThere' are·, divided /'counsels joyment of the among Catholic leaders and honors, rights, spokesmen, some of them opting and privileges for a position of austere inde':' annexed to' . pendence, some fr'ankly advofirst-class citi. If cating a proportionate 'Share of NEW OFFIC.ERS: CYO 0 f ficers for 0 a k BI uff s-Ed gartown are, back row, e.t 1;0 zenship. What it would public funds for the construc- right, Gerald Surprenant, treasurer; Natalie Martone, vice president; Virginia Coutinho, not do, of itself, and what it is g~~hO~i~dsc~~il~~enance of our secretary; Robert H~aley, president; front row, Ronald.Ferreira, Elizabeth Healey, Sheila clearly not intended 'that it Few would disagree with the Beru be, T'lmo th y D' owns, a II c0 mml·ttee ch· alrme n . I should do, is to conduce to. any first principle, that an injustice I easing of the Catholic position is being done in excluding in these United' States.' To the Catholic school children from a d ' contrary, it might'well increase share in the benefits which the I ra'ther than decrease the. un- . Federal government proposes. tc:l: ~ I easiness of that position; It extend to the youth of 'the naVILLANOVA (NC)-Absolute tic," he said.' would be' folly, of course,' to tion; but there are -those who reliance on technology can kille'Modern man of the techno~ discount the traumatic shock would settle for the. injustice th.e spiritual potential of man" logical age rejects the notion ~J that such. a choice would imply ra'ther'Ulan ru'ri the rIsk' of Fed-' the U.S; Secretary of Labor evil because to accept evil :.s to for a fairly large number of eraI ,interference, :whatever that warned here. accept a system of value~ based I .,: ." " " " r fellow-citizens, who would mi'ght . . ,.. the ' . conduct· and ' " ou mean, in . Secretary James P ..Mitchell, u pon the su pernatural ,w hI' ch .h eL . fr'ankly regard it, in William operation"of the Catholic school who spoke at ,the Villanova Uni- . rejects as unprovable and un:: --.... .;..~~--Ujoyd' Garrison's famous phrase, system. versity commencement':- exer-. proven," Mr. Mitchell' l;aid.:-.-7T~--';"'r-..;.~rfj a, ~ "a ;covenan~" with .death. and .' . 'd f a t a I resu - It 0 f an· "ThUS, he may, and does, com~ . Need. Positive Program . J Clses, salone, a:1lea'gue with hell,'7 .' , . re h ' t h' I g' 1 mit evil under the guise of goO..~ •.. '. :I . . • '.' '. .,' . For the ultjmate benefit of the: ,ove mp aSls on ec no 0 ICa .' ~We\)llight"happilY'disre~;lrd /yc>uth of America, including our'J progress is "the rejecti~:lo.f evil,.. "-When man looks only to ·his.-.-::.~~-...:-;;;..-r-JII this i~lusiori, _but...·even . ,a~ide .. C thor th't' f . ' 'j and .·the subsequent reJection of. own technological works for his,· l fi!om that' ::factor; it. is almost : 'ir:iportlaCncYeOUtha't aIScIC?ea'rP,rIemxaarcYt' ). grace," .. happiness and fulfillment, the inevitable that a Catholic 'in the . statement of Cat-h'oll'c al'ms Mr. Mitchell, who received. an result can only be frustration, ....'hlte House would' be forced should be forthcoming, and that honorary doctorate at the com- fear, regimentation, and . loss of ¥Y. to' lean over:' backwards; so to a definite policy.be fixed upon; mencement, declared that scit'n- responsl . 'b'l't'" I I y. \ . you' lin' , speak, in his effort to assure the " general public 9f his ent~re' dis- The present confusion i'g getting tific progress promises man no·interestedness.· . . us nowhere; is,'indeed, exposing told ma,terial benefits. Political Realism. us to a great deal of subtle ridiBut he warned that "complete cule. '.' reliance upon technology can' .This is not, emphatically, cited It is hardly to be 'wondered at, give man a false sehse of selfas an argument against such a under the circumstances, if su ff'IClency" . KIT C HEN S and ~'can lead to a choice. It is no more .than an ther~ are -Ciitholfc legislators" false idea of reality." ·Amerlca's··most envied, kitchens' attempt at a realistic'appraisal who honestly do not know what of what, in the nature of politi- position'they should take, not as , Communist Example cal realism, is bound to happen. a matter .ofconscience so llluch "We see all of those effect:4 It is difficult to imagine, for as a matter of 'concrete action. c1e.arly.pronounced in'thoseso)·· example, how ~ Catholic Presi- If it is agreed, .and to this writer cieties, the communist socieHes, dent could take much part, not it seems obvious that it shouid which are candidly materiali!.:-. to speak of a .lead, in procuring. be, that· an ·injus'tice must be for his fellow-Catholics some- ended, then a positive program Middleboro Road, Route If thing like minimal justice ,in the of political action should be out.EAST FREETOWN matter of government fund's for lined and persevered in ~ith the La~t private and religious scho~jls. candid aim of securing fina~ suc& This 1s already an issue of eX-,·cess.· . I The June Holy Hour sponsor,ed ONE STQP Please l!end literature ·trem~ delicacy, not because of This might well take a great by ·the New Bedford Serra Club' any inherent flaw in the pro,:, .many year-s,' for ·the obstacles in will be held at 4 this Sunday SHOPPING C:::NTER 'Have salesman call at no posai;'but because of the historic' the way are many and the oppo- affernoon at Our Lady of Purga':' , obligatiO" circumstance which ,has made sition is firmly entrenched'. But t~ryChurch .. Rev. John Hogan, • Television • Furniiure most Americans think, exclu.. if the objective .is clear, there chaplain, will conduct. the Holy' Name _ .. • Appliance. • \ Grocery sively in terms of a secular, is reasonable hope of victory. Hour, which. will conclude with Address ....••__••••.•... ~ .........•_ . UK Allen St•• New Bedford state-supported educational sysDemocratic Processes Benediction' in .. the Maronite WYman 7-935. tern. This will hardly be accomp- Rite given by Rev. George Saad, City..........•_ _ It is more readily conceivable Jished, however, by the mere administrator. that a Catholic chief executive, vindication of a symbol, even . The group will not spon'sor whatever his personal views one so potent as the election of Holy might be, would be constrained a Catholic to· the presidency. August.Hours during July and to adopt a nelJ,tra( non~commit-..' Less dazzling, it is an objective tal attitude toward a question considerably harder to llchieve. which he would immediately' 'The point bears -repetitio':l berecognize as loaded with politi-· cause' one gains the impression cal dynamite. from certain Catholics ~that the Explosive Issue .. symbolic victory ik 'the one thing . In common with most matters . needful, and that all else will . of justice, it is loaded with dynfollow merrily in its train.. amite. It is an intensely explo-Not so; and as has already So. Dartmouth sive issue, as was plainly indi- been suggested, the actuality aod Hyannis cated by the attitude of our na- might work in quite the contional legislators· when it· w'as trary fashion. Our business is to So. Dartmouth even tentatively broached in marshal our forces and avail Was h i n g ton during recent. ourselves of these democratic WY 7';'384 weeks. It was side-stepped with' processes secured to us as Am~yantiis2921 admirable dexterity.. ericans. But first we have to . A fair .number of Catholic sen- 'know exactly 'what our job is.. ' ators and congressm'en represent· _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ; . . - - - - - - - - - - -.... various sections of the country 'SHARON, MASSACHUSETtS in Washington,· but it was obSpacious '. Fireproof: Sleeping Quaiters servable, . indeed it was rather ' . For Boys 7 to 14' Yean .. old . painful!y evident,' that' only a 6 at The NCllrrows i~~orth Westport ha,ndfulof them were willing to ~ix week ~aSon: July '3 to August 14 assume a position in the matter. Register for 2, or 4,. or 6 w~ : ':, . Th~ majority pretended they WhereTh~ had not even heard of it. :", . '1 Free Tutoring if. desired Entire Family rHE BROTHERS OF. THE· SACRED HEART Can Dine Economically MILWAUKEE (NC) -A man' who served for 29 years' as president. of Mount Mary College SHARON, MASSACHusms here will be honored at the college's commencement. exer- . A RESIDENT SCHOOL FOR' BOYS cises Sunday. Edward A. FitzGrammar grades 4-5-6-7-8 patrick, p.ead of the 'college from B~OTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART . 1925 until 1954, will receive an

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Analyzes Reform Pr~ble,ms' Of Socially Mobile Family.

THE ANCHOR~Dioceseof Foil River,-Thurs. June 16, 1960

By Father John L. Thomas, S. J. Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University

"We were a happy family until we moved out to this new suburb. Now my wife is not satisfied with anything. The local school isn't good enough for the kids. She's started spending a lot of money on furnit!lre. and clothes, has taken to smoking and ently well off. drinking some, and has This process also explains joined .every club, society, or why your movement" to. a 'new organization in the neigh- suburb has sparked a family re-

borhood. I don't mind, but now form campaign in· your. hOnle. she's trying to reform me-ac- The "pertinent· others," that is, the families that are now re';' cording to her garded as the pace-setters, have I'm not even changed., This means that your housebroken. family is airJ;ling at new standWhat should I ards and goals. do?" Sensitive to Differences You're in for " Why "is your wife so consome r 0 ugh cerned? Well, Frank, in every sledding, society women are much more Frank. These sensitive to social differences family reform and much, more conscious' of campaigns can prevailing family standardS and' get to be quite goals than their husbands. This a nuisance touches' their domain, their when managed special sphere of influence, both by an energetic woman, though they may have in regard to the home and the their good features. also. Since future of their children. ' Your wife now has new paceyou're going to have to live RECEIVE DEGREES: Among the recipients of, honorary degrees at Georgetown's with the situation for some setters, and she's insecure and time, it may be helpful to ana- frustrated not in terms' of what 161st Commencement exercises were General Carlos P. Romulo, second right, Philippine' lyze the factors involved before she has but in terms of the new ambassador to the United States, Doctor of Laws, and Howard B. Mitchell, second left,· ~deals she has now acquired. suggesting a remedy. I What can you do? I thi'lk conductor of the National Syrriphol1Y Orchestra, Doctor of Humane Letters. At the same ,Whether you realized it or once you understand wnat has Commencement Mr. Mitchell's daughter, Martha, and General Romulo's son, RQbe~' not, your change of residence pappened you will be in a better re~eived .degrees. NC Photo. indicates that you have becolne' P9sitlon to deal with it prudent:. ' socially mobile. Your family is ' ly.' ,. ,. mbving into a higher, or at leas~ 'She is reasonable in working' di~feren~, sQcial bracket. for' some changes and expecting A Special Message f~r Father's Day - '1960 This movement is common in yo'u to make some adjustments.' ;': ' OTTAWA (NC) - The 'setre;. America because we have an Your transfer to a new commuopen-class social system that nity' obviouslY' makes this im-' tariat "of Canada's Catholic does not restrict ul)ward mobil- perative, 'since your family has Bjr'1ops has' called on the gO\Tity, an.d flourish'ing economic now become an active' unit i~ Ii", ernmimt to spearhef\d a drive.' system: that makes possible ,the somewhat different' social sYs..; to 'help the nation's Indians' po..; .' litically, economically and culincreased family income ire- tern. ' turally. Firm But Flexible quired to finance the climb' up In a statement to the Joint the -social ladder. Unfortunately, your wi!e apIndian Affairs Committee of the Although you may' have pears unduly concerned .with Canadian Parliament, the Canathought that you were only making a good' impression. ' dian, Catholic Conference dechanging residence when you Typical of the socililiy insecure clared: moved into this new suburb, you in new situations, she is over-' . "Indians must be helped to ' obviously moved into a different conforming. preserve their cultural heritage One may also qu'estion ,whesocial class. ther she has adequately sized' and to share it with their felPrevailing Patterns up the real pace-setters in the low Canadians. At the same Since !amily outlooks, atti- community. 'It' takes some time time they must be enabled to tudes, and patterns of action to discover the "peo'pie who take part in the economic and vary .considerably among the count" in a new' neighbOrhood. ' political.. li~e of. our common various social strata, in our, Some o~' the elements in your country.;' The Catholic Conferen'ce reccountry, you are now engaged wife's reform. campaign sug• in making the transition irom gest that she has confused su- ommended a "bold, vigorous and one pattern to another. You may' perficial or incidental traits realistic program of economic development" for' Indian comlike the old ways of doing with real qualities. TEACH my child respect for his fellow man. munities. things and seriously question It seems to me that your posiwhether the new are better, but tion should be firm but not inEthnic. Minority TEACH him good sport"manship ~n work and play. this is probably beside the point, flexible, stu d y the stable, The statement deplored that for sooner or .later, families tend happy families in your. neigh- Indians have little say in their, INSTILL in him a deep sense and understanding of to conform to the patterns pre- borhood and take them as your own affairs and "have· not 'yet religion, and an appreciation of the family; vailing in their communities;: "pace-setters" if any changes been recognized as an ethnic' the backbone of socte~y. at:e to be made. Show your' wife minority meriting existence." STRIVE for companionship and mutual understandHow, does: the process work? "It is our considered opinion ing.· . In this regard, families tend to that while you are willing to be be very much like individuals. cooperative, you're not going to that it is essential to acknowlIMPART to him a desire to love and honor his counWhile we are growing up, we model your family life blindly edge the permanency of Indian. try and obey its laws. communities," the statement model and evaluate our outlooks on others. One of the tragedies of the said. ENCOURAGE him to apply himself to difficult and conduct in terms of those ~'As much as possible, all adtasks. persons around us whom we ad- , situation you are in is that some ministrative, economic and edu, socially mobile persons become mire and respect. These "pertiTEACH him the importance of participation in comcational provisions must aim at so concerned with imitating nent others" tend to set the munity affairs and local government. standards and furnish the goals others they don't have' time to enabling these communities to function successfully as' social, enjoy the blessings they already TEACH him self-reliance and help him develop an by ~which we judge our progress economic and political entities." have. independent spirit. and ,development. F:amily standards and goals HELP him develop a sense of responsibility in planare usually acquired in the same ~x. ning for the future. marmer. In a given social strata, the: most successful, that is, acPREPARE him for the duties and responsibilities of I c.itizenship in a free society. cor!=ling to mOdel'll standards of jUd~ing, the most prosperous, tend to set the standards and goals at which the other families in the group usually aim. Source of Frustration This accounts for a great' deal of the insecurity, unrest, and constant striving we find among 8.M.C.· many families, for they are aiming at goals set by the top few and evaluate their situation in the same terms. ,Since the degree of frustrati?n we experience is measured' nc)t in terms of what we have; INC.:I but in terms of ,ou~ aims, that is, ' . COMPANY , what we feel we ought to have, oJe can understahd why there Banking Headquarters for Every ,Family Need can be so much frustration even ~ong families that arc appar-

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12

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River,-Thurs. Ju".e 16,_1960 .• r .. .• '. -,' .". .~,.

An Altar

Wg'lter "lord

Book Reviews' Pre-World War I Years

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy L What is a good year? For the farmer, I suppose, one which has yielded large crops bringing' high prices. For'the' actor, one in which he has had fat parts. For th~ family, one in whic4 all have been reasonably well and no major setback has occurred. For· a team, said _ masculine enough to preone with a high proportion vent them." , of victories. Spiritually, it, 'Other chapters detail the race. would be one in' whjch :we for the North Pole between

to~ Sanctify

Your Gift

I

God Love You By Most Rev.

~ulton

J. Sheen, D.D.

"Blind fools., which is g'reater, the. gift. or the altar that consecrates the gift?" (Matt. 23:19) These words of our Lord are not often quoted. He uttered them as He drew near to: the Hour of His Cross. Having begun His Public Life with the eight Beatitudes or Blessings, He now ends it with the eight denunciations or woes to the .Scribes and Pharisees.

Our Lord was he~e referring to the BOok of Exodus which describes how the altar, dedicated with great ceremonies. became have 'progres~d ,in holiness: Peary and Cook (Peary was Even this brief sampling shows .' said to have brought discredit the center of sacrificial worship. It was the that 'the term on his venture by taking a colholy altar which made the gift sacred, not ~:' f ored man along); the San Fran- b,.L_~"'-'-~ the other way around. The Pharisees con"g 0 0 dye a r" cisco Fire of 1906 (lamps _and that the gift was more worthy than COAST GUARD: William .'tended ean be variousstoves overturned by the short, the altar of God which sanctified the gift. 1y understood. severe earthquake caused it); E. Wheelock, son of Mr. and Walter Lord, aviation pioneering; the finan- Mrs. Everett Wheelock, 49 Bread and wine are not holy in themwhose. account cial panic of 1907, etc. West Street, Attleboro, a selves, being served on countless tables of of the' sinking of the "TitanTango 'Risque' senior at,Coyle High Schoo!; the world. But bread and wine on the altar not .only become sanctified; through tp.e ic," I\. Night to Those were the days when ·the has been appointed' to the Remember, is a proposed ~ ~nco.me tax:wasre- Coast Guard Academy, New. words of the priest, they become the Body Nt\ boo k: to regarded as confiscatory because :nd B~~dd .Of Christ_.__._. '1;'1 member, has the rate' would run as high as.' London.. He also won a parHow would you like to buUd an altar .K tial scholarship to Northnow .produced " two per cent on incomes of from in Korea, VJetnam, or Mrica in orlller that a plump vol- ' . $20,000 to $50,000; when the fun- .. eastern University and is , your gift might be sanctified? You 'can k wne entitled The Good Years eral of a King of En'gland sah.itatorian of his class., build a small 'chapel for'as' Iitile as $2500 and a church for as little (Harp~r. $4.95) .. The 'years so broughttoget4er:ninekings who as $5000. There is only, one condition.. You must allow the Holy styled' are those, f~o.m 1900 to were real rulers; and 44 royal Father to decide in which country the chapel will be .buut. After the First World War. '. princes; wh~n, for the first time, OnSerVQ US ~ all, he and his Congregation for ihe .Propagation ·of ·the Faith Why single these o'ut as good?' an American team beat a British 'Continued from Page One know more about 'needs in mission lands than anY.of ,us. Because the world (or most of team at polo; when, a metropoli- More Association; a nonprofit ' . ".'" it) . was:.':it peace, a shirt cost . tan paper reported "an. attempt Organization which promotes 23 cent~, soc~ety gave sumpt~ous was made this week to .intro- . cultural activity ~mong Catho. Thus it will be the altar ,that will sarictify 'your gift. This is parties:',But particularly because duce' the 'late'stdance, The lics. ' ,. , . the best way to make a convert of one of your family-by making "whatever the trouble, people,' Tango; after a few ex'perim,ents Dr, Adler, director of the 111- pl>ssible the conversion of others. .you cannot give to a nobler were sure they could fix it. The however,it wa.s. !ii,sC;1rded,.as the _ stitute for Philoiophical Recharity anywhere. , ' I solutions differed' of course majority of dancers. found It a' sc:lrch, San Francisco, said 'that Theodore Roosevelt had his ,little·risque;" when a prominent while a ,Christian should be GOD LOVE YOU to V.B. for $5 "I promised Saint Jude a Square Deal, Carry Nation had real estate ··man wa's arrested for conservative in one respect," he donation of five dollars if he would obtain· a special favor for me. her hatchet - but everyone at wearing a sleeveless bathing suit should also be "progressive, or He did and I ask that this be printed so that others may k~ow of his least had a bold plan and could on a public beach; and when a revolutionary', 1n another." powerful intercession." ... to "A C~ubby Teen-ager" for $2 "T~is hardly w.ait to try it." typical American societ'y wori1~ Conservatism is called for two dollars is for all the candy I would have eaten in the next two . Questions 'Good' an, returning from' Europe, "with respect to the deposit. of wee~s. I'amtrying my best to keep on'a diet. For every three pounds . . ly 'Jus- brought· with her 14 trt,mks, faith and the religious instituThe reasons cited scarce I'lose I will send you half of my allowance." •.. to Mrs. D.F. for four suitcases, and three crates, 'tions which relate to the indi- $15 ."A small token.'in grlltitude for the many blessings that God 4<U y characterizin,g these, out 0 f f .... th containing 70 dresses, 10 ur vidual man's aspirations for all the years of our times, e has bestOwed on us this past year." . . "ood 'years., And the, very t ext hcoats, . 38 large 9 .feather f I'pieces, .,. 22 d happiness in. 'the' world to come," . .. lib reCl'tal ,conat pms, 1 paIrs 0 g oves, an he said. ' .JI Mr. Lord's g God first, others next, self last ••• when you sacrifice for the .... In the Vanguard tains plenty of evidence 0 f con- so on-and on. ditions and tendencies less or Colorful, Brisk But at the same time, he con- Holy Father's Missions you bring Christ - the Perfect Joy - to countless others. You can learn how your sacrifice helps others and other than good. ' A colorful book, this, brisk tinued, the Christian "should be aiso what further aid is needed in pagan countries by reading the In fact he himself writes on and d,iverting, with some rudi- in the vanguard of all progres- bi-monthly publication MISSION. This magazine is edited by the the very' last page of his book, mentary allusion to social, poli- sive movements in the life of,' Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen and contains articles and anecdotes, , "There was much tha t was tical, and economic trends and man on earth-all tendencies' pictures and cartoons describing the work of .the Propagation of the wrong with this old way of . tides which we have since seen toward the perfection of that Faith in the five continents of the world. When you send us Y0':1r Hving." drive rapidly and far and change life and the fultillment of the sacrifice for the poor of the world,ask that your name be included He devotes 16 chapte'rs to the life on all levels. . secular destiny of the human' . on the MISSION mailing list. We wi:l1 be happy to send it to you. . h t 14 race in time." period of somew a over There is, however, a ,dearth of years which he covers. Each reference 'to ideological and in"Wherever there are even Cut out this colwnn, pin your sacrifice to tt and man it to the chapter concentrates on a single tellectual movements, and the slight signs of the possibility of subject representative, in his spiritual plane and the religious progress, we should hend every Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Direc.tor of the Society iol1' mind; of the year in which it realm, are completely igno!'ed effort to push for\lard, and not the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., occurred. The whole thing does (unless you are satisfied with hold on to the past with the or your Diocesan Director, RT: REV..RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 'nOt add up to a definitive pic- Theodore 'Roosevelt's 'remark, . blind' obstinacy of· a misplaced 368 North Main Street; Fall River, Mass. ' tore, or proof of the original after he had met St, Pius X, "A conservatism," he said. "Nothing postulate, but there is much en- worthy, narrowly limited parish that men have so far thought or D~UGHTERS OF ST. PAUl tertaining, and some mildly priest"). . done is So good that it need blind Invi'" ,oune girls (14-231 to la!Ior .. thought-provoking, material to . Passionate SightSeer us to the possibility of improveChrilt'i volt viRerard as 011 Apostle 01 tile be f o u n d . ' ment." Editions, Prell. Radio. Movies and r.teThe assassination of President Bernard Berenson, art expert Non-Catholic Approaeh ..mOIl, With the.. mode... mea"I, ltl_ McKinley, for example, gets' a par excellence and convert· to Dr. 0 Adle.r, presenting. "a non~jllioRary Si,t... bring Christ', Ooctrille chapter, a vivid and swift-mov- Catholicism, who died last year Catholic approach" to Catholi10 an, regard.... of race, cotor or aeecI. 'ing one. Theodore Roosevelt's at the age of 94, ':ept a diary cism went on to score misplaced For iIlformatioa ""riM to: term in the White House and his from 1947 to 1956. Excerpts from cons~rvatism. on the part of. REV. MOTHER SUPERIOit . bl it make up the book The PasSO Sf. PAUL'S AVE. 80STON 30. MAlI. so-called retirement are nun 'I sionate Sightseer (Simon and Catholics." ...... summarized. He listed three principal areas Notable is T.R.'s' advice to Schuster-Harry N. Abrams, Inc. in which, he said, this conservaTaft when Taft,was running for $10). This is rich and fascinat- tism manifests itself: fare, partly because of the 1) W'th d to l't' I the Pres1'dency l'n 1908: "Let the ing 'sh quant1'ty of p'hotographs I regar . po I Ica audience see you smile always lavl d He sa'd there is I~" he responsible for the per_. (68 in black and white, three "e~docracY'd k t. 1.." . g ""' in full color), partly because of WI esprea s ep 1C1sm amon tect mania for grinning which Catholic thinkers about the basic CHICKEN KING SIZE' ..rips every aspirant to office?) the privilege it affords one of ·t·' f d "th sharing .Berenson's final look at proposl IOn 0 emocracy- e , ..••. I have received literally . h u n l· t men so much he loved andhis musequa 1 yfo , the least gl'f'~;o """U . dreds of letters from the west of whom has sufficient power protesting about , ~ . your play- ings thereon. to participate in political life ing golf • • • Photographs on An American who spent most d .. of his life in Italy, Berenson'·, ''\s along with the most gifte . horseback, yes', tennis, no. And ' a sagaCious traveller, never a 2) W'th gard to the 1 re expa nd golf is fatal." tourist. He sought out I'atural ing opportunities for all men Votes for Women beauty and relished it, caught to 'tengafgleel'siunre"~,hesolim'beerCaalthPoulr1'CUNION WHARf FAIRHAVEN, MASS. Also in the political field, ,the distinctive quality of placcli, SUI s o . there is Woodrow Wilson's cap- gazed penetratingly at paintings, thinkers, he said, are committed' t!Iring of the Democratic nomi- sculpture, architecture, an d to "the perpetuation of the divination for the Presidency at wrote pithily of these and not sion of mankind into those who Baltimore in .1912 and his suc- a little else: who are destined only for labor cessful campaign. His travels as here reported 'and those who are destined for We read, too, of the tempes- are mostly return journeys, even learning." . . 3) With regard/to world gov, tJuous, tenaciouS, and ,filIally pilgrimages. He, lets us ,go along , successful battle for the vote for 'ils he revisits towns, chure"'''!!, ernment: 'He said. some Catholic '. ..... ...... ..... women. The New York Times galleries in Italy, Sicily, and thinkers retain "outmoded ideas ~",B.u, ': by the way, opposed this exten- ,. North Aft-ica' 'for the lasftime.· ab'out' the preservation of na'. sion of suffrage. "The situation Generally, what he is talking tional sovereignty" 'and fail to COMPLETE : "Is,dangerous," it said. "We often about is set before our eyes in so see that "nothing short'of world RENTAt WORK UNIFORMS .': hear the remark nowadays that far as ~uperb photography can government can be the 'terminus , women will get the vote :f they do t h i s . ' of mari's pol'itical de,Yelopment i tTy hard enough and persisterit' ,. ".. 0;'.' and the perfection of the state . Iy; and it is true that they will 'Library itself." .'''' .i·i, -· ..·AI.9,,,Recl~"', Industrial.Gl9Y.... -

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"get it, and play havoc with it MILAN (NC)-A bust of Pope for themselves and society, if John has been placed. in Milan's the men are not firm and wise Ambrosian Library, where the , enough and - it may as well be/ Pope as a young priest spent

"Basic Christian principles with regard, to, the natur~ of ,man. the nature of human society, and the secular welfare of men, . many hours in historical re- individually and collectively, Superior General' ,sear.ch. From 1906 to 1914Fath~rrShouldlea:Ci'·:.Catholics to. be ac. ",;: The . Franciscan Missionary Giuseppe Roncalli made many tively at work in the pr~rriotion Sisters of Mary have elected,' vi,sits·to ,the Ambrosian ,Library, of 'democracy, of. technological French-born Mother Mary of st. one of Italy's most celebrated advances and of world govern.A .... es.as their sU~ior lteneraL, -".cIl~-li""""._.,.., __ .:._..__ lU~ .Dl'.,Adler 'saieL , . __ .... ,1 • ...,~ ..::, -

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THE ANCH.OR-Dioceseof Fon Rlver,-Thurs. June 16.1960

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All Aboard for Rome, Lourdes, Florence, Paris, Lucerne, Dublin, Killarney, London

First Official Pilgrimage of the Diocese o'f Fall River on the New Luxury Liner Leonardo da Vinci Under the Spiritual Leadership of His Excellency· Bish'op·· Connolly October 4, 1960" .

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~----~---~--,-~~-~ On October 4th, the clergy and laity of the Diocese wll'l sail in the Leonardo da Vinci for the religious and cultural centers of the old world.

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Regarded as Italy's masterpiece of the high seas, this brand. new luxury liner will launch .the first official pilgrimage of the Diocese of Fall River. The itinerary will include Rome, ,NapleS, Florence, P~ris and : other cities 1ft Italy, France, Switzerland, Ireland and, England, with visits to the Vatican and Lourdes listed ' among the highlights.

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Th. Pilgrimage of $1250 covers tourist accommO" c dations in the Leonardo da Vinci, the luxury liner Rotterdam (on the return trip) plus alt accommodations and' travel in Europe, except costs of a personal nature. The Pilgrimage . win be under the penonat leadership of His Excell~ncy, Bishop Connolly. .

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MA-"L ·THIS COUPON

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Fall River Diocesan Travel league

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P. O. Box 1629

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'Please send me complete details on the First Official Pilgrimage of the Diocese of Fall, River.

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THE ANCHOR-'-Oioceseof:'Fa·il·River,-Thurs. June :,'6, 1'960

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MEET ATCATHEDR1\L.CAMP: 'rhe.Diocesan Cqria of the Legion Mary met at Cathedral Camp Sunday. In the group· at left are Bish.op Connolly, center,chattip.g :with.JohnSchondek of St. ;Paul's Parish,' Taunton, who spoke "Mass and the Holy Eucharist," and Rev. Edward A. :Oliveira,diocesan moderator of the legion. 'Curia officers incent.er photo are, left to right, James Lamb, treasurer; Joseph Reilly, vice-president,

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MANY VILLAGES II INDIA,

,These Hefty::,:,':Sandwiches ,. ',,,' ·:Devotion; :. .

.. BY'Joan Meadows '.' 'True Devotion ·to theBle~d: ';;"Perhaps it would not he:so natd for some of us tolend~ ,"Virgin 'Mary as promulgated b~ ," lepd a hand, .lend a little tOletance, lend a little synipathy,:: St: Loti is de Montfort ~s=.)· or an occasional cup .of sugar jf we would stop to. ~eal~ze pl;ai~~d3;t t~e' Sec()~d. ~=(i"at that even our breath IS borrowed.· If the man of the famIly l&glO~ ofM:aryc:.ong~E7~ '''''0'' 8~orts a hefty appetite p~; with remaining bread slices. :In. Cathedral Camp. . . . fore he heads for the ~eat a shallow p~n, beat. togeth~~'Rev. John A. Cantwell,·dU'ec-..: . h .' h t d evaporated mIlk and eggs. Dip tor 'of the Newton Curia of the ou td oors, ere s a o .san - standwiches into this mixture, . . . "m' wich that's grilled in a' jiffy turning to coat both sides. Brown Legion of Mary,. sPoke on" e and has the stick-to-itivenesido on both sides in small>amount of devotion and ilnswe:red qU~~I()~ 'Ia'st . through a long afternooit b.utter-in skillet. , . ~b~ut it. He is a natjpnallyWe'd like' 'to . ,. Yield: 6 servings. known autho'rity.on,thesubj~~ gi~e you th~' ,,,W.hile we are on ·the subject Other highlights of the conrec.ipe.. . of Fren~h. toast,"cheery "good gress included a dialogue .M~ 'It's called il mornings'" will resound if you of~~red. by.. Bishop. Connolly. dipwich -:- 'an begin your family's ·day with"a discussion of the meaning. of .~he e a ,'$ ':I Fre!,\chgood br!!!ikf.ast: One way to bring Mass in the life of Legionaries, toas~~d san d them running to the table is' to and an explanation .of ,the praewich with hear":. serve. French toast topped with tice of the Enthronement ()f. the; tY)nt1 at filling ~licious hot-Fruit Sauce. Here'. Sacred Heart in the' home. " to '''make ir"a ':.;i"., .. , the easy recipes for both: .. The 150 Legionari~.present real m.an'!! ~ar~.. I~'s so goo~ and ':' DELUX 'FRENCII roAST'· were .given pamphlets: covering' ~o simple, that a.ny: man whQ call; .. ' Zeggs :':". . .' ,..... .,,; topics' discussed, Exercises were ?pen a can ..and ~cr~ck an e~;% clip syrup hom ciinnOd fruit"":'. opened and .closed Q1' .Rev, ;Ed,tan make one for himself. .' .Cocktail' .'. " '" ,. ". waI:d A. OliyeiJC~" Pi~~ 1 • ~er~ are th~~e. v~r9~ons.of~: %,ieasPooQ. salt. . ; ; ii Moderator of the Legioll,., . ,dIP-Wlch: '" ,'. ·Day.old br~ (8 to 9 diMt~ .... . ,PAUL ..SBER¥AN

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. WASHINGTON '(NC) _·The: U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear arguments' challengingConnecticut's 81-year-old· laws· against' birth controL

; Raw onion slices. . , " cup evaporated nillk Z eg~ 1 tablespoon prepared ml18tard 6 slices process American cheese 1 teaspoon ·caraway seeds. . . Cut veal loaf into 6 slices.. Spread half the bread slices with, mustard; tOP with sliced veal, 6nion and cheese. Cover with ROUTE 6, HUTTLIESON AV!. ~emaining bread slices.' In 'a" Near Fairhaven Drive-In shallow pan·, beat together evapItalian DinnersOu; Specialty 9rated milk, eggs, and caraway' Service em Patio !reeds. D~p .sandwiches Into ·'.this ~ixture, turning to coat both sides. Brown on both sides in small amount of butter in skillet.,' Yield: 6 servings. L . , mg.) . ~. Eledrical , GENTLEMAN JIM ;, A ''Tuna StuHed Tomato". ; 8 slices bread inakes a wonderful -lunch for' i % teaspoon drai~ed,. pickle. relish !' Spring or Summer llayi. Serve' 'l % cup peanut butter whole juice, r.ipe tomato .for; i 1 egg' ;. . ., . ~ach person, cut in-wedges and:, : 1 can (4% ounces) deviled ham Spread apar~.heaped with ...'. .~.: ! % cup evaporated milk. , ,delicious tuna "'salad made extra'· I Spread 4 breadsllces with·. good with wedges of meaty 'ripe deviled ham; top with. pickle: olives. Serve ~n the crispest sal~lish. Spread remaining. bread' ad greens. aread and butter .944 County St. : (~ . ~ith peanut butter. ·Place to-:. sandwiches, ;your. ~avorite bev-: New Bedford gether ··sandwich fashion. In a:. erage are all you need add for' " ... ~hallow pan, beat together evap-' a satisfyigg meaL . orated milk and egg. Dip sandWiches into this mixture turning to coat both sides. Brown on COME IN SEE, - ltlllndl D~~VE. both sides in small amouQt of butter in ·sklllet.Yieid:· ",' ~ngs ' "'The World's Most:,.' lBeQ~tifuiiy Prol?0rtionedCars'" : 'CASEY JONES'.: . ~;," • •. ' • •r : , 12 51 ices rye bread l at , 1 can (12 ounces) corned beef . 1 tablespoon drained hors'erad'ish " ,

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A SPEClAL"REMEMBRANCE IN THOUS./\NDS .OFMA~S.ES', . ei'ther" in the,,"memento of.the living" or In the "memento of. the dead..:.....this lailven. to all members of.. the ,Catholic Near East Welfa~e ASsociatiOn: Will, not enroll yourseU,"or • relative. 'or Ii friend? .... ,.. . , ," ". . . Annual Membership:: , " Perp~tual M~lAper8hip; Family ".' .. , '100.00 ·FamilY ..'. : • ~ ".: .. .... $5.00 individual 20.00... individual ' .,; ' ,; ;'.. , 1:00 ., ',".' .'

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PALACE OF 'GOLD MISSION CLUB .

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SECURITY IN OLD ·AGE-bow. fol1unate. we. ue tha" our .lovernment: tries to guarantee this for every citizen: how grateful ·we .shoald. be tilat so mlUl7 ·of our yo~g Catholic. girls are wUliDg' to' dedicate· their Uves as nuns pledged to tbe care of t~'Aged,. both at bome and In 'Misslon territorieS. In most In.StanCes,: tIJe 'HOines fl,r .th~ Ag~ !,onducted by our Siste.n in Missionary countries depend completely for their maintenance on the contributions of Catholics from other lands. -If you eoold Join our PALACE OF GOLD MISSION CLUB (dues are $1.00 a . month when.. ' yoo: bave' the' dolIill' . to send) YOIl would: be helping ,the ,Aged 'who have Dothina'. ie finish their Uves in a home' WtiIi.'iaome IlmllJ! comlorts. .. , ,'.. : .,;

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WHILE YOU 'ARE LIVING you can arrange 'for GREGORIAN . MASSES to· be celebrated for yourself after' your death. Make - arrangements now to Insure the fact that Masses will be said .tIW the' repOse. of' your. soUL . Write· for complete Information.

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"DEVOTION 'I'O"'1'JiB SACRED,. BE~T, pF JESUS. "th.• mart of Catbolica who are'j;ealous for .the conversioD ·of ..the whole world.r!r· the, s~ceess o~. t~eir' ••liD- ." . . ,IstQ,.all pries~ brothers, and sisters, place their ,complete Confidence Iii Ch'rist's Sacred ,Bean. SISTEK' MARIE THERESE lind SIS· TEK MARIE BERNARD are novices in • community . of DuuswhO have taten this Saered Symbol .as' the name of tbeir eon· rre,ation. the EGYPTIAN SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEART. NAGUEB SIDAROUS, aD EGYPTIAN ""DOW studying for the priesthood III' hla native land, and JOSEPH MARCUSA, a RUSSIAN bOJ preparing for the priestiJood ID Rome, are filled with the desire to make known 10 their own country· mea the .surpassing love that Christ has for everr single individual. When these two boy. and two girls finisb tbeir training they will be, D ordained priesl8 and professed nuDS, models of Christ's loft among their own people. U you could pay for the education of a seminarian or II novice in the Near or Middle East, yo.u would be making eoncrete expression of your beUef that tbe love of Ute Sacred Hearl of Jesus extends around tbe world. $600 Is the cost ofeducaiIDI'a seminarianl. $~OO Is .Uaeeost of edueatiDa

BARBERO'S.

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where there are Catholic populations of' substanUalsize. lack ehW'chtis. The Bishop of Trichur, realizing the ·financial Im- . . · t- Lh. . possibill,tr o~ having a Chu,rch in eacb · .~1>S ~IJ," . one' of theSe vililiges, is trying, ",her.: ·. ..d'.:r' . ever and. wbene'i'er becan, to .erect ~ ,,*' . :o~e, Church to serv~ t~o .1Iet~lem~D~ QI . ~. PYLINK4,JlA ,and CH~lPPAN~UZHI ~. V) are, . two . adjacent towns' where be . 'would like':to ·bave 'such an . arrange·' menl. In.· these two communities there are' about. 1400 Ca'thollcs. $2000 would U . '.' ereet a sultable' Church 'for eacb one of thesepeopl~ was" sbie to Tht Holy Fathtr's~ AiJ/ give the equivalent of one :dollar and &..Ibt Orimtal ClJinrh . a halt In our m'oney, there' would be JV< . '." more tban 8ufficient funds to build' the Churcb.·They' Dve so priniillvely,bowever';·thaflhey bave no money. Would you help to ereel:a Church in'this particular area. wilh a' donation' of any slzeT .. ,

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""'Dash' nutmeg .Fruit sauce . FRUlT SAUCK. '.% cup orange mannarIade . '. 2 cups drained l.:8nned fruit cocktail Beat. eggs lightly and stir ..in syrup from canned fruit cocktail, salt and nutmeg. Tum into. shallow dish, ·such. as pie pan. Dip slices of bread hi egg .mixture, turning. once and draining well. Brown on' both sides in' hot ,skillet in small ,amount, of, butter. Serve at once, topped with hot Fruit Sauce. Fruit Sauce: Heat marmarlade' gently. Add fruit cocktail, and heat, makes about 4 servings. (2 slices French toast per serv-

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and Miss Clotilde Nason, secretary~ Standing before the ·Blessed Virgin in right photo. are, left to right; Mortimer D. Kennedy, Curia president; Rev. John· A. Cantwell of St~ 'Mary~s', Waltham, principal speaker,' and James Lenaghan, president of Our Lady of Good. Counsel Praesidium. St. Joseph Parish, Fall River. . .

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riv.er,-Thurs. June 16, 19~O

CHAMPS IN ACTION: Members of Boy Scout Troop 50, St. Anne's Church, Fan River, are consistent winners' in Scout contests. Left, boys show their skill in lashing logs to form- a rustic fence. Left to right, Paul Boucher, Richard Anger, Denis Boucher, Andre Provost. Left center, firebuilders exhibit various types of fires and tinder. Left to right, Paul

Prelate Declares America Needs GlobaI Outlook .

Canuel, Gil Desmarais, Joseph Holleran. Right center, Rev. AugustiR Langevin, a.p., chaplain, prepares Robert Floyd for Ad Altare Dei award. Right, first aiders practice on a patient patient, Charles St. George. Left to right around him, Paul Melancon, Thomas Grandmaison, Donald Plourde. Five patrons have received national standard ratings.

St. Anne's'Troop 50 of Fall River Champions Shrine Awaiting Relic of Saint In All Phases of Scouting 'Activities ST. ANNE· DE BEAUPRE . (NC)-This shrine is awaiting

By Patricia McGowan "Beat 50!" That's the watchword among Boy Scout. troops in the Fan River area. America needs a sense. of Troop 50, numbering 64 members, is sponsored by St. Anne's parish and has the good direction that transcends or bad habit (depending on what troop you belong to yourself) of winning praqticany national boundaries, a Ca- every Scout contest going. Boys from the unit won first place at a recent Scouting· exposition with an exhibi- sistant Scoutmasters. tholic editor stated here. a room at St. Anne's school for tion of IO-second firemaking\ .".It's amazing how the. recogAmerica cannot catch the . . nltlOn that boys get In the storage and small meetings and the group has the use of' the minds of men 01' inflame their WIth flmt and steel. T~e Scout program works wonders," large recreation hall for regular troop holdl!l honors galore m said Mr. Tremblay. "For some imaginatloD5 with a purpose' exthe field of first aid' and five of it's a recognition they receive weekly meetings. pressed always in national terms, its patrols have earned National nowhere else." Ad Altare Del declared Msgr. Francis J. Lally, Standard ratings. from the naRev. Augu~tin Langevin, O.P. He's a strict disciplinarian, editor of the BOston.Pilot, news- tiona I Boy Scout headquarters. but he loves the boys. "I have is troop chaplain, attending all paper of the Bqstonarchdiocese. Troop 50 is the only unit in . only one myself," he said, Hand meetings. He prepares boys for In delivering the baccalaureate Masasoit Council (which covers the Ad Altare Dei award, highall these others make up." sermon at Marquette Univer- this area) to hav~ so many paHe told of an .overnight camp- est honor in Catholic Scouting. sity, he said: "'This is the new troIs thus recogmzed. Ing trip the boys took in Jan- Seven from the troop have already earned the cross and revolution that mankind is one; The Nation~l Standard award uary. "They were warm, but I this is the new purpose-to make Involves attamment of ex~el-. was frozen! I kept patrolling all others are working for it. Associated with Troop 50 is possible a United States of the lence by patrol m~Jl.l~ers ia. night to make sure .everyone world." was taken care of." He said that newly-organized Cub Pack '50. many. Boy Scout actlvltl;:S:. The tl,'oop is also the ..llst In during the winter's worst snow- Boys from the pack will autoWhat the founding fathers declared once for America, Hboldly the .a~ea to organize a mothers' storm Troop 50 boys turned out matically enter the troop 'at age and bravely, clearly and un- auxJ11~ry. With mothers,. troop to shovel the' sidewalks around 11. An enthusiastic Scout is likely conumtteemen and other inter- St. Anne's Church.so that pa_ t: .uivC>Cally," America m'ust in to spend about four hours a the 'same manner now declare ested adults, added to the boys rishioners could get to Mass. "The boys worked 'till 10 at week at Scouting, says Mr. for the entire world, be added. themselve~, Troop .50. has ~~:1 Tremblay. The turnover is very over ·100 Involved In Its act.\'!- D 1g ht" ted. HIt was thelr . t' , he no . The priest-editor said that the large, how~ver, and i,t's a rare les. good turn for the church." . world needs America's. declaraboy who goes straight through Lots 01 'Em And the church in Its turn is tion that there is no national the program from Cubbing to And there are lots of i em ! This good to Troop 50. Alban Dube, the peak of Scouting, the Eagle purpose, distinct at least from dream troop has overnight Institutional Representative for the destinies of ()ther nations and award. . ' . camping trips every two weeks the unit, is enthusiastic in pra.ise other peoples. A boy who has is young John and monthly hikes. There are for Rev. Henri Laporte, O.P., "The American dream'. '. . is monthly Courts of Honor where pastor. He has given Troop '50 Horan, son of Dr.·and Mrs;·Jo~m. Horan. An Eagle Scout at age' everyone's dream and the Amer- merit badges and' other clwards 1-3, he entered the program as a ican reality, in all it,s ~reedom are presented. All this ; n addiCub. Only one Boy Scout in and prosperity, is everyone's tion to weekly troop and patrol_ Predicts Wider Use 1,000 attains Eagle rank, noted reality ... we have already ex- meetings, plus extra se,<;;ions Of Educational TV Mr. Tremblay. ported the American reality, but when' there's. a «;9ntest to be PROVIDENCE (NC)-A CathAt the top of Troop 50's curwe have failed to remove the won and first ~id, ·for examrIe, olic college president predicted rent program is preparation for labels," Msgr. Lally stated. must be intensively reviewed. a week's camping at. Camp Center of this hubbub is Rene a major breakthrough in educaCatholics bave a special role techniques will occur Noquochoke this summer. About to play if "the voice of America Tremblay, who took over the 23 tional during the next decade through 40 boys are going on the trip. calling all mankind to freedom year old troop about a year ago. "We'd ·go for longer if I could expanded use of television. under God" is to be heard, he He's assisted by Maurice Proget away,' says Scoutmaster Father Robert J. ShiVin, O.P.. vost and ViCtor Boucher as assaid. Tremblay enthusiastically. Providence College president, tOld the college alumni association that within 10 years most colleges and many high schools will be utilizing closed-circuit television, noting that 52 Cath"olic colleges already have cooPerated in educational television programs. COMPANY . "It is not unreasonable to' surmise," .the Uominicaneducator .Complete. Line. lia.id, Hthat there will be non-. Building Materials commercial educational televi,ion 'statio~ in almost every city 8 Sf»RING sT., FAIRHAVEN in America. The public realizes wyman 3-2611 the value and need for educational TV." MILWAUKEE

(NC)

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

Dorothy Cox Home made

CANDIES CHOCOLATES AT NOTRE DAME: Dr. Thomaa Dooley of Laos fame and President Dwight D. Eisenhower. e~change congratulations upon receiving honorary degrees at Notre Dame University', 116th commencenHmt. Dr. Dooley waa .awarded a doctorate of 8C~~.. ~. President Eisenhower. .

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the arrival of a relic of its patroness, the mother of the Blessed Virgin Mary;. It is a bone of the forearm of St. Anne, which has been preserved for centuries in the Basilica of St. Paul's Outside-the-Walls in Rome. ~e relic will be solemnly enshrined July 3, when Archbishop Maurice Roy of Quebee will celebrate a Pontifical Mass. In 1892 Pope Leo XIII gave a wrist bone to this sanctuary. According to tradition, the presence of the relic in the Basilica of St. Paul's Outside-the-Walie was revealed by St. Anne il!. II vision to St. Bridget of' Sweden, . the 14th-century mystic.

'. Malaria Help GENEVA (NC)-The Holy See bas again contributed $1,000 to the World Health Organization;1I Malaria Eradication Special ~ count:

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THE ANCHOR-Dioce:seof Fait River.-Thurs, June 16, 196~

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YOUNG ADULT PROGRAM _ SATURDAY~ JUNE 18 SUNDAY, JUNE 19 I

Registration of. Delegates' Opening Plenary Session Business Session Dinner Cong~~s5 Dance

Congress Mass· ' Election of Regional Officers Congress Banquet Installation of New England Officen Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament

KENNEDY YOUTH' CENTER '. NEW ~ BEDFORD 1 I

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Stall President's p'roposed Labor-Industry Conference

THE ANCHORThurs., June 16, 1960

Asserts Strugg~e Involves Christ Against World

By Msgr. George G. Higgins DIrector, NCWC Senial Action Department

A few weeks ago President Eisenhower called upon the AFL-CIO and the National Association of Manufacturers to set up a seies of industry-wide labor-management conferences. It was the President's hope that these proposed . . meetings would improve the collective bargaining atmos- the prelimmary labor-management conference do not really phere and prepare the way measure up to the specifi~atioNl for a new era of labor-man- outlined by the President. agement cooperation. Mr. Eisenhower requested AFL-CIO Presiden~ George Mea n y and NAM President Rudolph BannO·-f to work out the necessary arrangements for an initial planning session. It was understood that the 1i'ederation and the NAM would each desigf'~te three top-drawer repreeentatives to take part in thill preliminary meeting.' It was further specified that the management representatives were to be Presidents or Board ChairIT ~n of corporations having colIective bargaining agreements "ith AFI.-CIO unions. Labor Coo 'es . pera Mr. Meany responded to the President's invitation immediately. He named himself, UAW President W~lter Reut~er, and George HarrISOn. PreSIdent of the Brotherhood of Railway <:lerks, as labor's representatives. The NAM, on the other hand, took its time about the matter and unfortunately, when it finally got around to acting on the President's request, designated three management representatives who do not measure up to the above-mentioned specifications. These men. are all from the lower echelons of American in( .sUy, and one of them repreeents a corporation which has been involved in a bitter strike for several months. Strictly llPCaking, therefore, he doesn't re:,~ly have a collective bargaining relationship at the present time with an AFL-CIO affiliate.

They are also. too intelligent and too sophisticated not to have known in Ivance that their f ~ections would be completely unacceptable to the AFL-CIO. In other words, I think the leaders of the NAM knew exactly what they were doing. They wanted to torpedo the President's proposal and at the Same time wanted, if possible, to pin the blame on the AFL-CIO. Criticize Eisenhower In saying this, I am not trying to pick a fight with the NAM. Actually I would much prefer to be aple to report that its o3'icers are cooperating wholeheartedly with President EisenhC'"ver and with the leaders of the AFI.-CIO in organizing a series of labor-management conferences. The need for such conferences is extremely urgent. The fact 1- - t the NAM doesn't recognize this need is a very bad f\""en indeed for the future of labormanagement relations Equally disturbing the fact that the U. S. Chamber of Commerce has rather sarcastically criticized President Eisenhower's attendance at the opening in Vlashington on May 6 of tht! an_ nual AFL-CIO Union-Industries Show. I was privileged to deliver f.!le Invocation at this ceremony. Sitting next to Mr. Eisenhower and Mr. Meany on the platform, I was delighted to 'hear both of. them emphasize the importance of labor - management cooperation as symbolized in this annual exhibition of union label products. Discouraging Attitude Not so the Chamber of Commerce. A Chamber newsletter says, in effect, that President Eisenhower was taken in by the leaders of the AFL-CIO who "usually manage to get topflight politicians to endorse the exhibit"-as though there were A spokesman for the AFL-CIO something reprehensible about ill reported to h~ve to~d th~ press their doing so. that the .NAM s deSIgnation of This sort of residual antlthese three lower-echelon execu- unionism coml'ng' as -t does . · 1 ·m th ' of NAM's regrettable In t Ives. was " asap "e f ace. a t the wake P~esldent Eisenho,,:,er. ~ am mattempt to torpedo the laboreli ned to ag~ee with. thIS state- management conferences recom_ ment .and, if anythmg, would mended by the President, is very make It even stronger. discouraging. I think it would be fair to say Fortunately, however, it isn't that the NAM, for reasons best typical of American industry as known to itself, doesn't want to a whole. Many of the really im_ sit down with organized labor in portant industrialists in the the series of joint conferences U"ited States are willing to coproposed by President Eisenoperate with organized labor in hower but, being reluctant to a spirit of good faith. The sooner decline the President's invitation they succeed in taking the propfor fear of losing favor with the aganda ball awa. ir(,m the NAM public, has decided, as a matter and the Chamber of Commerce of strategy, to stall for time. in the field of labor relations, Blame Uni~n the better it will be for the country as a whole. Surely the leaders of the NAM are too intelligent and too sophisticated not to have known that the three executives they selected to represent industry at KHARTOUM (NC) - More than 500 Sudanese Negroes have become Catholics during the past two years while serving prison terms for taking part in a mutiny MONTREAL (NC) - Paul in the South five years ago. Emile Cardinal Leger praised About 4,000 southern Sudanthe "daily devotion" of firemen ese have been serving terms of when he offered a Requiem Mass from-four to 15 years in prisons for five Montreal firemen killed for participation in the southin the collapse of a burning, ern.rebellion. Among them were building. many Catholics who were able The Archbishop of Montreal to give instructions to pagans offered the Mass and also and Protestants who showed in-preached the sermon before terest in Catholicism. thousands gathered at the BaIn the prison at Suakin, on the silica of Mary, Queen of the shores of. the Red-Sea, more than World, to pay tribute to the dead 200 pagans were baptized in the men. . last two years. Whenever a CathIn his sermon, Cardinal Leger olic priest visited the prison it declared that people "forget too was converted into a vast church. . easily the devotion of the men who 24 hours a day protect our Many converts have written persons and our possessions their wives that they had emfighting fires. Without them and braced thl'; Catholic Faith and their daily devotion, our social urged them to do the same. Hunand economic activities would be dreds of these women have asked impossi ble... for· instructdl and Baotism.

is

Sudanese Prisorters Join True Church

Cardinal Commends Devotion of Firemen

17

BUFFALO ,(NC) A Catholic auth3r and pub1i!'lber stated 'here that today's war of minds !involves i1ile mind of Christ, 100 by Catholi:es, against the mind of the wor2t1, led by communists.

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KNIGHTS OF ALTAR: Rev. Rudolph Frick assistant at Espirito Santo Church, Fall River, enrolls Peter Couto ~eft, and Thomas Souza as Knights of the Altar; 13 boy~ In all were enrolled.

Father Hesburgh Cites Importance Of Truth, Bea·uty and Justice KINGSTON (NC)-The educated person must face today's world of explosive change and inhuman inequality with a commitment to truth, beauty and justice, the presIdent of Notre Dame University said here Monday. "I would first commend to you the high and continuing quest for truth," Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., told the graduates of the University of Rhode Island. "Only by a lifelong commitment to truth ... do we rise above the great mass of those who feel instead of think ..... In delivering the commencement address, Father Hesburgh stressed that truth is the basic value that has led the minds of men down the paths of wisdom • . . against the "blind forces of ignorance, prejudice and passion." Man-Made Ugliness In speaking of beauty, Father Hesburgh said: "The world is full of man-made ugliness and only a sense of discrimination can recognize the multiform beauty, God-made and manmade, that like sunlight ·brings .bright flowers to blossom in the swamps and deserts of this world. "The truest instinct of this value is to shun habitually that which cheapens human life human love, and the rich tapes~

try of the world that mirrors God's perfection." Turning to Justice Father Hesburgh remarked that "utter commitment to this value has given ... our world a dimension of order and rule that reflects the eternal law of God by way of natural law, divine and human ordinance." Passion for Justiee The Notre Dame priest told the graduates that a passion for justice will ennoble them, but injustice will degrade them. "Without· a burning commitment to justice' on the part of every American, in every section of America and in every walk of life, the American dream will not come true tomorrow or any day ther-eaf·ter," he said. In conclusion, he said: "1 would at long last commend to you a final value: respect for that which is spiritual, that which transcends the body, its pleasures and comforts. "It is in :the spiritual order of our mind and will that we are made in tbe image and likeness of God, and it is in respectoing and using these higher qualit:ies to their utmost that we best serve God, and man, too."

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ELIZABETH (NC)-St. Eli. zabeth's Hospital here has been granted a $500,000 loan by the Community Facilities Administratio~, a Federal agency, tel help It construct an educational building and 11 residence fur nurses and interns. . A $3.9 million addition is a)so planned for the hospital, conducted by Sisters of Charity.

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DENNISPORT

In deliveringtce main adclrecs at the school's 52nd commencement: Mr. Sheedstated thn1 there are few Catholics sufficiently equipped in the know)edge of their Faith to becom1! effective participants in tod<IY'~ struggle. He told -the graduates: "Giving your life for the Faith is the greater gift, but it is not wha1 the Chul'oh in America wants:' The ChUl'Oh wculd rather have the time and services of the faithful-something that Catholics are often reluctant to give he a d d e d . ' ,

NEW ENGLAND

DETROIT (NC)-No organi'1Eltion in the world attaches more importance to the study of law than the Catholic Church Archbishop John F. Dearden 'of Detroit told a gathering of lawyers " here. The Church "traces all law to its source-God, Himself,' the prelate told 200 lawyers and their -guests at the annual break_ fast meeting of ·the Catholic Lawyers Society here.

REXALL STORE EXETER 8-2322 MAIN STREET

Francis J. Sheed warned t£1! graduates of D'Ycuville Col!~ that the world faces a "lot d weeping" in the ~ext two cl!eeades, and that many of the lnj~ fail to appreciate the "despern~ urgency" of the world situaticn.

Tel. WY 6-8271

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THE ANCHOR-Dioceseof Fall River,-Thurs. June 16, 1960

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Jesuit University Graduates Minister SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The Universi'ty of San Francisco's 513 graduates this year include a Methodist minister. It hasn't happened before in the Jesuit school's 105 years. Rev. Mr. Alzia Bowser, pastor of Ridgepoint Methodist Church here, received a bachelor of, science degree in history, (June 5). He entered the university's evening division in 1951. Why' USF? "Because I could study-at· night for the degree I needed to complete my ministerial training," he said. Next fall, Rev. Mr. Bowser will attend a local Protestant theological seminary. The Negro minister "took .• little kidding" from 'his' friends about going, to a Catholic college. He has never considered becoming a Catholic convert, but admits clalises at USF-especialby . philosophy ...:.... "tended to broaden 'my scope of thinking." sa

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ST. KILIAN, ST. LOUIS, NEW BEDFORD FALL RIVER \ : CYO . officers for the coming The' W omen'~ .Guild will hold .eason. will be Robert England; a mystery ride Tuesday, June 28 preside·nt; Paul Dextraze,. vice with Miss Monica' C. Mur:phy as president; Lorraine Dion·,.· sec.:. 'chai'rm'an: . ' . ' .... .: ..•." . retary; Herbert Lloyd Jr., tr~asMrs.. Oliver Dawson ~ill be u.rer. . ,.' president for the coming' year, Committee heads.include Noraided by Mrs. Ray~ond Morin, · mand Dion, recreation;. Robert. vice :president; Mrs. John Rowe; E~gland, social; Jeannine Girard, . secretary; Mrs. William Lynch, culture; Joyce England, spirituaL treasurer. SACRED HEART, ST. MARGARET'S, NORTH ATTLEBORO BUZZARDS BAY, New adult advisors to t.he New officers of the 58. MarCatholic Youth Counc.il will be garet-Mary Guild who will be introduced to the board and installed in' September include membersliip at a cookout Mrs; Frank Rocchi, president; planned for Tuesday, June 28 at Mrs. John Enos,vice president; Town Park.Mrs. Anne Eldredge, correspond- . They include Mr. and Mrs. ing secretary; Mrs. Arthur- Wills, Normand Jette, assisting the recording secretary; Mrs. Fred spiritual committee; Mr and Mrs. Alden, treasurer.. Alfred LaCasse, recreation; Mr. ST. JOHN BAPTIST. and Mrs. Ralph Patunoff, cul. CENTRAL VILLAGE , ture; Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur WelThe Ladies Guild will sponsor don, .social. ./ a meat loaf supper from 5:30 to SS. PETER AND PAUL. 7 Saturday evening, ;June 18, in ~ALL RIVER the parish hall. Tickets are avail: The Women's Club will hold 'able from Mrs. John Costa or a mystery ride Thursday, June Mrs. E~ithKirby. · ~3 with Mrs. Rocco Postiglione ST. HEDWIG, in charge. Mrs. Stanley M. Jan- . NEW' BEDFORD ick is newly-elected president. The Bernardine Sisters, who ST. ANTHONY 'OF PADUA, staff Our Lady of Perpetual Help FALL RIVER School, were honored Sunday, The Junior Study Club and' the 10th annnual Nun-Teacher · Junior Holy Name Society will Day, by parishioners 'of St. Hedparticipate in a parish procession wig's and Our Lady of Perpetual honoring St. Anthony Saturday, Help parishes. A High Mass was .June 18. followed by a dinner and ,presentation of gifts. Mrs.. Mary BarST. ROCH, giel was chairman, assisted by. FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women Andrew IZdebski, co-chairman, and .Leo Koczwara, secretary. will give a camp scholarship for Members. of the Holy Name one' week to a boy of the parish. Other activities will be resumed' Societaywill hold its annual F 1ther-Son Communion break\n the Fall. fast after the 9 o'clock Mass in the Woodrow Wilson Hall..

TO BE NURSE: Annette Cousineau, senior at JesusMary Academy, has been named· this year's recipient of the Fall River Quota Club's three-year full tuition nursing' scholarship.

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TO SING AT CONVENTION: Howard Taft, left, and David Borkman, right, confer with Rev. Paul G. Connolly, Fall River CYO Glee Club Director, cOl!cerning the choice musical selections to be sung at the Convention in New· Bedford this weekend. i

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Cu~tain

Falls on Schoolboy Interscholastic Competition

T-HE ANCHOR-

·Thurs., June 16, 1960

19

Editors Cha rge Press Freedom D~ad in Cuba

By Jack Kineavy Interscholastie athletic 'competition for the year 1959-1960 'ended abruptly for area schools when three Southeastern Mass. teams were eliminated in the semifinals of the state bas~ball tournament. Durfee High, champion of the B r i s t 0 I County greeted enthusiastically by the League, bowed to Boston press with' whom he always en· English, 4-1, in a Class A joyed the best of relations. The encounter at Holbrook; Pre. reaction of the general public

NEW YORK (NC) Three Cuban newspaper em.. tors and publishers ousted from their homeland agreed.

Yost was blitzed by Milford, 18-0 seemed more or less apathetic. and Falmouth, Cape Cod titlist, The rumor persists that Higgins' term will, be an interim one, his lost to Wayland, successor to be Ted Williams 15-4. when the big fellow calls it quits. Durfee de. The Stephens' trade simply served a better bears witness that the young fate. The Hill· outfielder didn't fit into Higgins' toppers outhit plans. This is no't a revelation in the Boston that Gene was used primarily as champions, '1-5, Williams' caddy in his formative but defensive years with, the Sox.. We noted, lapses proved however, that Stephens was their undoing. quickly inserted in centerfield This was a com· by manager Paul Richards whose plete turnabout Baltimore Orioles are only lead· from the solid support the Dur· fee inner cordon had exhibited ing the American League. in its first two tournament games. Terry Lomax hurled a strong game, striking out eight Continned from Page One while walking only four, one River Diocesan Pilgrimage, unintentionally. der the spiritual leadership of Coach Luke Urban's charges His Excellency, MoSt Rev. James hit the ball viciously all after- L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall CLAMBAKE SEASON STARTS: Damien Council, noon, quite in contrast to their River. puerile efforts in the Coyle con· Pilgrimage members will sail Kn~ghts of Columbus, Mattapoisett, held· their first clamtest. Unfortunately, the more from New York Oct. 4 on Leori- bake :of the year Sunday. Left ,to right are Albert Fortin, serious Durfee threats' came with ardo da Vinci, flagship of the two out. Woody Berube came Italian Line, which will make chairman; Joseph R. Nunes, bakemaster; Paul E. Despres, within. a whisker of evening up i' maiden voyage at the end of Grand Knight, and Thomas Clark, treasurer. the tilt' with two out in .the ninth, , June.- They .will return to the when he drove a Bill Donahue United States on Nov. 8 in the serve to deepest center before Rotterdam of Holland-America English's Bob Bouyer hauled it Line, a ship that will be just one LOS A.NG~LES (NC) - The down. ", , . year -old· at the time of the Pil. prayers, problems and hopes of social. workers and trainees. The Bostoil nine' had a brace . grimage croSsing:'" He is in' the United States Termed "Italy'S masterpiece of energetic young Father Fernando under' the State Department's of outstanding players in third Gomes de Melo are conditioned baseman Charley McVea and the high seas," the Leonardo da exchange of leaders program to first sacker Bob Guindon. Coach Vinci is a three-Class vessel conclutively by two factS--67,ooQ confer. with social welfare 'liu· Bill Stewart" who is also head which marks a significant new souls, one priest. He's the one priest. His parish th;>rities including those at the coach of football and hockey at advance in the art o~ ship-buildis St. Joseph's in Recife, Brazil. National Catholic Welfare Con-' English thinks so highly of Guin- ing. All of creative Italy dedi. ference headquarters in Washdon that he refuses to let the cated its skills and ingenuity to And his archdiocese of Olinda' ington and at Boys Town, Neb. and Recife anticipates the ordin· boy play football for fear of in- the building of this flagliner, o Parish ~oblems jury. Bill mentioned the boy to which contains the works of ation of only four new priests in the next seven years. Parish problems in Recife are me last Fall and I must say the such renowned names in the Curiously, the awesome respon- complicated by' migration of lad lived up to expectation. world of art and design as Zonsibility for 6':',000 souls came to landless persons from the counAn interested spectator at the cada, PulitZer, Longoni, Lavar- Father Gomes by way of North tryside, Father Gomes said. ello, Monaco, Marchi, Luccichengame was Bill Stewart, Sr., forCarolina. He went to Raleigh in mer National League umpire ti, Minolitti, Tevarotto and Te- 1945 from his native Brazil to Many homeless boys are gradually coming under the care O<f and one time coach of the Chi- dischi. StarUing innovations in study engineering at North Car- parish guilds. cago Blackhawks of the National passenger comfort and conven- olina State College. 'This," he said, "is the seeding' Hockey League. And so the ience have been achieved. There The particular uphill circum- of a boys' town." twenty year coaching regime of 'is closed TV circuit in all public stances of Catholicism. in the The sheer weight of responsiLuke Urban at Durfee came to rooms, an infra-red heated pool Carolina' area, he said, caused. bilities seems not to dismay the (one.of five outdoor pools on the an untimely end. Luke, however, him"tochange his mind about youqg priest's spirit, but rather had the satisfaction of capping ship), private facilities for all engineering. to shllrpen his resourcefulness--a First and Cabin rooms, and 80 a fabulous career .with still anInstead he went to St. John's trait evidently not lost on his other Bristol County champion- per cent of Tourist rooms, a tre~ ship. The retirement of the ven- mendous auditorium for both Se~inary•. B,righton (Mass.) to superiors. Anlong other tasks, he is alsO erable skipper will leave a great plays and movies, two garages study for the priesthood. He was' for' transporting accompanied ordained in 1957. Now, just three archdiocesan director of vocavoid on the local sports beat. years later, he is administrator tions and of charities. Another fine coaching job was cars. of a liuge parish in his hometown. The Rotterdam has won a host turned in by Coyle's genial Jim On a visit to Los Angeles, Burns who, despite the loss of of admirers during her first year A Delicious Father Gomes told of a plan to in service. Her revolutionary demost of the key personnel that had carried the Warriors to the Bign, eliminating' the customary d~vise a means for drawing as' Treat moke stack, allows for abso- many of his parishioners as posBCL title in 1959, fashioned an· sible into the life of the Church. lutely uninterrupted deck space other strong contender this "I plan to start a welfare cenSpring. Dave Meehan, a con- for all sorts of re.creational facilverted first baseman, proved a ities. She is the only liner afloat ter," he said.' "It'll include l!l real find on the mound leading to have two complete decks of -vocational school for boys and the Warriors to the runnerup public rooms, upper promenade girls, a grammar school, a conspot in County play and a berth and promenade, containing 1'1 vent, clinic, recreation hall, rooms devoted to passenger night hospice and refectory or in the State tourna~ent. comfort. The Rotterdam offers soup kitchen;' The city will Prevost High, Narry's third a radical departure in design by donate the land. Counting on place team w.hich won a tourna- ' allowing her two separate classes gifts of materials, the cost of ment spot in a playoff with Case, complete freedom of movement buildings and equipment should turned in a' commendable per. between their private and public come to. $100,000." formance in post season com- rooms in the most desirable' parts For this program, Father petition. The Leafs disposed of of the vessel, so that neither is Gomes admits he'll need considAbington, Old Colony champion, confined to one section. erable help. He is looking to the and followed this up with a 15-10 Both the Leonarda da Vinci Catholic University of Recife to victory over Silver Lake before and Rotterdam. are equipped running into the Milford jugger- with stabilizer fins, which turn 'furnish a basic crew of graduate naut, Coach Charley Espanet's an. ocean crossing into a lake-like Midland titlists just had too trip. many guns for Prevost. The Pilgr~age price of $1250. The front office of the Boston covers tourist accommodations in MILWAUKEE (NC) - A Ask for Them Today Red Sox has put in an unusually both of these fine ships, plus all $300,000, gift will enable Maractive week. First came Bill travel and accommodations in quette University to establish a Jurges' short-lived recuperative Europe (only minor costs of a chair of journalism in memory period; then his outright release. personal nature are not included of Lucius W. Nieman, founder Sandwiched between Jurges' in the fare) for this 36-day trip. of the Milwaukee Journal. firing and Higgins' hiring was The complete itinerary includes The gift· was made to the col.' the trading of outfielder Gene Naples, Rome, Florence, Fiesole, lege of journalism by Faye Mc· Stephens to Baltimore for Milan, Lucerne, Paris, Lourdes, Beath, niece of the paper's lighter-hitting Will '1'asby. And ,Dublin, Galway, Killarney and founder. Father Edward J. early this week Marty Keougb . London. O'Donnell, S.J., university pres. and Ted Bowsfield' were sent to All travel arrangements are ident, said the' occupant of the. Cleveland in exchange for catch- being made by the Fall River chair will be known as the "Nie. er Russ Nixon and outfielder Diocesan Travel League, P. O. man Professor of Journalism...· Carroll Hardy. Miss McBeath said the profes-Box 1629, Fall, River, .Mass. The stage was thus set for the Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy sorship was endowed to preserve return of manager Higgins who is director of the project, and, her uncle's ideals of public re-. found the club in the same spot announces that the pilgrimage sponsibility in the community that he left them last July 3- will last about 30 days. Passage and to assist the university in the American League cellar. to Europe will be via the steam- maintaining an outstanding proGenial Mike's reStoration was llhip Leonardo da Vinci. gram in journalism.

European Tour :

Former Tarheel :Science Student Now Plans For Brazilian Souls

Endows University's Chair of Journalism

unanimously here that the gov-' ernment of Fidel Castro is dominated by communists. They told a harrowing tale .. how press freedom died in thew country. Th,ey said their plants were invaded by armed groups who threatened to inflict physical violence on them and their families. The newsmen are Jose 1., Rivero, editor and publisher of Diario de la Marina; Guillermo" Martinez Marquez, editor of FA' Pais, and Sergio Carbo, publisher of Prensa Libre. Thse first twO. papers have been closed down.' The third was taken over by em-; ployees described by Mr. Carbo; as "part of the communist fifth column." Dope for Next Year Their statements were made at' a luncheon given by the executive committee of the Inter-: American .Press Association at the Overseas Press Club here. The occasion was "Freedom of th~ Press Day." Mr. Martinez Marquez is a former presid_ of'the association. "I would like to take advaDoo, tage of this occasion to express : my, well-founded hope that next year we will be able to meet ill, Cuba to celebrate Freedom Off the, Press, Day with all dignity,,- . he, said. "Because by that time I aJIll sure 'that the totalitarian Castro regime· will have fallen and, Cuban newspapers will have re. covered their complete inde. pendence." He spoke of the "thieves and criminals who are mismanaging Cuba" and included among them "Il(ilven communist leaders" wiw are now operating his plant aB a government printing shop.

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