07.13.61

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The ANCHOR An Anokor

of tke Soul, Sure (lind li'irm--ST. PAUL

FaU River, Mass., Thursday, July 13, 1961 ...1 29 © 1961 T he Anch or PRICE lOe V. ·01.• 5, 1"1110. $4.00 por Yoar Second Class Mail Privilege. Authorized at Fall River, Mass.

NewParish Buildings Under Construction With Summer weather favoring construction, parish plants throughout the Dioces0 are adding new buildings or making additions and alterations to already existing structures. In New Bedford, St. Casimir and St. He:lwig's parishes are building new churches. At St. Casimir's, construction is planned for ~ompletion by the end of this year. Founda,., tions and floors are already in place and workmen are now laying walls. At St. Hedwig's, it is expected that

Fr. Boyd Directs· Office

the new church ,will be completed next month, The roof is on the 'building and the steeple remains to be erected. When interior furnishings are in place, the building will be ready for .

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Also in New Bedford, work Ihas started on a new rectory for St. Ann's parish. It will probably be completed by the end of the year, say priests of the pari.sh, and will be a two-story buildmg with 15 or 16 rooms. St. Ann's Church, Raynham, Is in the process of receiving finishing touches in preparation for dedication ceremonies this Sunday. It will accommodate some 400 families in the Raynham area. Scheduled for Fall completi()ll ·Is the new St. William's Church, Fall River. It will incorporate many new features in ecclesi-' astical architecture and will be of contemporary Georgian architecture. It is the first new Catholic church to be erected in the cioty of Fall River in 20 years. Parish centers are under COIlstruction in, St. Mary's parish, Norton and Immaculate Conception, North Easton.

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For Decent Literature

Bishop Connolly has appointed Rev. John E. Boyd as Diocesan Director of the National Office for Decent Literature. Father Boyd i1'l Supervisor of Diocesan Charities and will also serve as Director of the Diocesan Bureau off Information. Established by the Catholic Bishops of the United States in December, 1938, the National Office fur Decent Literature has for its purpose "to set in motion the mor~l forces of the entire country . • • ag,ainst the lascivious type of Htera'ture which threatens moral, soci'al and nattonal ·life." NODL is a service organization which coordinates activities and supplies information to all' interested groups regardle3S of lJ8ce, color or creed. Originally concerned 0 n I y with. magazines, . NQDL published a Hilt of those it found objectionaJ»e for youth. Since the appear,ance on the market of the' modern comic book and pocket-size book, it has been FATHER BOYD

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As k s· S0 d a I·IStS' Set ' J u Iy 1£ 'f D'ay 0 f Prayer f or C u ba . C) 1 0000 b f th N

include four rooms; a kitchen, and auditorium-gymnasium, is ~" ST. ANN'S CHURCH, RAYNHAM: Bishop Connolly expected to be finished in six to eight months. It wiH be used ST. LOUIS (N -The ,50, mem ers 0 e l\o wl'll bless the new Raynham ChUl'ch on Sunday afternoon for t'lOnaI F ederat'IOn 0 f ov C'~d al't' social purposes and ca;telies 0 fOr u Lady I'n thI'S countM? •¥ at 4' o'clock and a Low Mass will be celebrated following the chetical instruction. have been urged to observe Sunday, July 16 as a speciai ~·remony. Other pictures of this Church on Page 20. At Norton the parish center day of pr~yer f<;>r 'Cuba by Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Arch-. . will comprise a basketball court bishop of St. .Louis, their now the pretext for' their im", with a stage at one end, two E' Th prisonment. classrooms capable of being conpls~opaI Mdt . o era or. e "Though it is not flor' us lll» verted into a single all-purpose Cardmal saId July 16 waS resort to violence we cannOl!l room' and two other smaller chosen beca.u-se it is the remain silent iri race of thitl Classrooms. There' will also be· of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. injustice and oppression, ..,. , LISIEUX (NC) - Devotion to the Blessed Virgin "is .: hali for' caiechetical .use, a He pledged spiritual' support for Ameri9QJt Sodalists, united wit1l the mark of a truly Catholic heart," Pope John' said- in a fully' equipped, kitchen,' showecll ."thoSe leaders" whose" valia nit them by the common bond oi. radio broadcast . .to., a national congress studying Mary's,' aria pul;>Hc rooms. . ..;...:: . 'Catholic action,'6";ce- a role of . Sooality life, \ve pledge our full . . of At West Harwich, Holy. Trin-:-, honor, is now the']>I-etext ",for _ 'spiritual su'pport by our. praY"" spiritual motherhood. The Pope _told the closing,sessIOn . ily pa'rish's new building,' to be· their imprisonment. . , . , . ers, our ~as..'les, our sacrifices.. the French national Marian expre~ng itse~ al.wa~s with the... uSed' for' catechetlca'l instruction "In this difficult time of trial . "To them 'alljO we pledge that customary manifestations·of the '.' J':.~...it to p,;.-......·~;F.iiteea' . ' .... - fOr the Catholics of Cuba," 'the "sPeCial' loya,uy of those WM,' CI ongress :."Wh a tevermaybe centuries-old veneration willed f l 'f t t d Cardinal stated, "Catholics of share by choice, as well as bf our s a:e o l e an our by the Church of' Jesus Christ . the. U'nited States of America' gift,'a common Mother. responsibilities, we are all of for the Mother, of the Saviour," pledge their support to' their "What we. have long felt .. Us enveloped by the. sweet the Pope said. C b M 't he t h rts k . of the Vi . M "Also avo'd everything extra .'. ., 00 $. brethren In u a. ay 1 ar en our ea we no.w spea open ~aternity rgm ary, I ,them to know that their defense lest' they be tempted to think who does for us' the same ·things ,ordinary, beloved sons, and seek S~a.te·. S'~"p"'P' of the Church and of human jus- th.atno one knows or cares that done by a1'1 mothers for .their' on the. contrary that Marian tice is not forgotten by the free they bear these chains' fOff Children: she loves, she watche3t devotioll which is most assured ~PARIS (NC) -:- The ·gov- world. To all who suffer for Chrisi. $he protects, she intercedes. by tradition, Nch as .has been er.Jlmtmt of'President Charles their faith a:nd for justice's sake, "Therefore, all of us, the ~.Ci> I "All Catholics are conseQuenthanded down to us from the be- , deGauile~ ,be~t -o~ .husband- we offer our sympathy and we • 500,000 Sodalists of the United . Iy the children of Our Lady and ginning through the formulas of ..' pledge o·ur. prayers." States, . offer foF them on Jul,. . ~eir:pietY for Mary must reflect prayers of ~e' S\,lccessivegener- irl'g every reso·urce,to.restore· . "We' IJ8lute ,espooial,ly' ,16, Fe.ast C1f.' Our Lady of Mount this-.common membership.lQ, the ations of Chri~tians who' came· French' grandeur,'hasprovided: leaders 'whose valiallt.'Catholic .Carmel, our· Masses: and. OYl' ~mily of the children' of God. from the East and. the West!'" 'financial- pro'ps fotFJ.'Qnce's de~ Action;' once"a' ro'le- 'of h<>nor,ie '. Tura to Pafre Fifteea \ norriinational schools.

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·Moscow Chaplain Former' bo~ri:~tr;Zv:;~~:~lt~oi~~}~ Fath'er; Lordi' O.P. to Mar~ J"U b-,I e.eln '.' Rome BaSI.,.Ica '~ f"IIIIIIIew· Be dford . ReSI·d ent 0 f. -.... the beginning of the ceiJ.tu'Ty, when all Religious were banned from teaching and their 16,904 A former student at St. Joseph~s paroChial school, New schools were ordered closed. The Bedford, has been named as· the new chaplain to American bitter I~S90ns of half .a century· Catholics in Moscow. Father Joseph F. Richard, A.A., known have· broug~t Catholic ~hools Lo' back to their key role -m the in religion a8 Father Frederick, will replace Father. UIS drama of national n!stomtion.. A, Dion, A.A., who has been ' The law offering fin~!lciaLsupserving the American C9'onY p O r t to private schools was proin Mosco~.since January, posed. by' P~esident de Ga\lll~:s Premier, Michel Debre, and IS 1959. "I am <;>O'oing to M.osoalled the "Debre Law" on that cow to say Mass, preach and account. It was plll>sed at the end <!administer the sacraments to of 1959, despite outl'age.d OPPOSInembers of the American 001ition from secularists. OOY," the 47-year':old Assump-o . ., .'., As one' resuLt of the law, par&ionist said. 'Born in Bouctouche, New ents 'have almost 'per,fect free8runswick, F'ather F -_.> , . k .~erlc domof . '.:choosing schools fur oame to the United States the llheir children. Financial bar• of three. After elementar,y riel'S have been v.irtually abolage education at St. Joseph's he atished, ,Even. ,in public schools, tended Assumptl()ll High School parents may. send their children ,",d Assumption College, Warto ·tWQ hours of religious' incester. He left college in 1933 structiQn·weekly. '. after two years and went into The application of tlMi La,! difsecretarial work before enter. fers .according to the level of mg the Assumptionists in 1940. the school, the qualifications of Father Frederick will leave its teaching staff, .and especiaUy New York for Moscow'on Wedaccording to' theamoum of mesday, AUff. 9. He must be b state supervision it is willing tQ Mo..<;cow by Sept. 1 at the latest. accept. '!'url!', to !"agc Fifteeo MATHE_It FREDERIC~ A.A. Turn to Page Fifteen I

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The unusual privilege of celebrating his silver jubiIH Mass at St. Peter's Basilica, Rome, will be enjoyed Wednes. ,day Aug 2 by' Rev. Laurent Lord O.P. of St. Anne's ' • .• ' . Monastery, Fall River. .A:ttached for the past 10 years t@ . the. ,Dominican Fathers~ Mission Band with hea<k quarters at St. Anne's, Fill" Lord is at present leading a . . " ., pilgrImage ~he holy places of ~,:,rope: He wIll return to FaK RIVer 1ft early Septembeli'.

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Th'e Doml'nl'can priest ......... ...""'" born in the'.P~vince of Quebee l'n 1909 a'nd m'ade h'I's relig,iona _ profession in 1932. He was 01'dal'n~' Aug. '" ", 1936 and h"'" "'" since been assigned to varioWl mission bands' as a preachCl"~ w-ifJh the exception of an assignmem to duty 'at the closed retreat bouse the Dominicanll staff at St. HY'<Ioint-he, Quebec. Among the pilgrims on Fathe? LOrd's trip 'are residents of Fall River and New Bedford. They will visit 11 countries during ~fueiJ: six-week sftl.r abroad.


TtiE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thur·s. July

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Says Cuba fears Child Take:over

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NEWARK (NC) ---= A letter from Cuba, which somehow goa through the censors, arrIved iJA North Jersey and expressed' a "new fear" Fidel Castro's regime soon will adopt a law giving the state "all rightrl .... toward children." The writer who prefers to lemain anonymous said it is fearecll the children take-over law will be adopted on July 26 the anniversary of the Castro revolution. "I wonder if I am doing the r·ight thing in :writmg you to telll so many things that can only .bring more suffering to you,"" the writer said. He added thalt "none of these things seem to 00 ' known outside of Cuba." The writer behind Castro's' Sugar Cane Curtain said in pal't1

D'iocese 'of. FcillRiver OFFICIALAPPOINTMENT

_ Rev. John E. -Boyd; Superviso~'of Diocesan 'Charities, has been appointed Diocesan Director-of the National Office .'

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for Decent Id·terature and -Director' of 'the. Bureau of In. formation.

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part: "A part of the Cubans live UDder terror. Another part hoo been forced to collaborate because they have to make a living [P@[P)@ somehow and they make believe that they stand for it. And stil! ~[h)lUJ[j'(:lh1 [P)@~nfro@[[\) @rJ'il tr@lf~~nli'@O'g@trng$om '. another has been hypnoti~ VATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope' sible f~r the latest· tragedi~s. of: brainwashed." Pius Xl's encyclical against fas- . history. The writer said "this situation" cism, "Non Abbiamo Bisogno;" "Even today the Polish press is getting to be too serious" arnll still expresses the Church's a't-' is charged with' convincing" that that· Cuba is being rapidly CODtitude toward totalitarianism, a country's pubHc opinion that the· verted into the third power o! Vatican. Radio broadcast has·· Church was the ally of nazithis hemisphere. He likened tbfl stated. .fascism to the detriment of Pol-: situation to "an arsenal con.The broadcast was comment-' and. stantly growing, and they SBI9 ing on the 30th anniversary of "In those difficult and terrible that ·today there are one millloEl the encyclical. It was issued in years alIrioS!: all fled or repersons in arms being trainec!l' 1931 in reaction to fascist at- mained silent. The only' voice . starting next Tuesday, the the parishioners' novena will be. and'moved around." tack~ on Catholic groups in which made itself heard to u~- : The writer said recently 30tl 91st annual Solemn Novena in preached in French by Rev. Italy, particularly Catholic Ac~ift t~e spirit; to recall the .lin1honor of St. Anne be in Pier.re Lemay, O.P., of .the :00-, Russians, expert pilots and metion organizations. Its of state power ~nd the rIghts chanics, arrived in Cuba aoo p'rogress at St. Anne's' Church, minican Monastery, Quebec. The encyclIcal, the Vatican of ~n~ividuals, families an~. asLt will be held a1 7:30 nightly· that many planes are to be seIll1 Radio commentator ,said, today soclat~ons was that of f!h.e pl'lests, . Fall Rive~.~t will culminate on on the saInt s feast, Wednesday, from July 18 through July 26, here. Meanwhile, 2,000 Cubaoo has the value "of affirming .the the ~~shops and abo~e all, '. th~ July 26, when thousan~s a~e ex::, with a par-allel pilgrims' novena are' being trained as pilots Oiil . irreconcilability between Ca'th- pope, the message saId, add mg. pected to ~ake ~he pllgrlma~e at the basement 'Shrine, preached. th~: other side of the curtain, too olic doctrine and theoretical and "That voice offers the measure in English by Rev. Raymond Ua- .. letter. said. pr'actical principles not only of of the force and moral 'courage to St. Anne s Shnne, located In framboise, O.P., with brief adfas~ism but of every totalitarian of the Church in our times. That the baseme~t of ·the ~hurch. 1L~@o@~ @~ [Q)te«:erro«:w . The speCIal Fall RIVer devodresses in Portuguese by Rev. system." voice continues p.ven today·, to The following films are to 00 The encyclical particularly at- denounce injustice and to con..: '. tIon to the mother of the Blessed John Dominic Fernandes O.P. Virgin began in·1870 when Rev. of Fa·Hma Portugal. ' added to the lists in their J'E>o tacked fascism's contention tha,t demn ,th~ abuse of power wherde Montaubricq was S~ t s . . spective classifications: the Church must confine itself ,ever It IS present, evel,1 ll!t. the Adrien building a church. for' French or ervlces . . lJnobjectionable for General! solely to the Mass and the Sac- sacrifice of liberty and life.~' .. Canadians of the city. The pilgrims' novena will be- . Patronage - A Dentist in th(l. Jl """ raments and on the totalitarian . H I " ' d to 'd d' . t gin Monday, 17 and. end Chair. '" llJI..., e p anne e Ica e t'h e T d J I Jul'y. . .. concept of the absolute state. FRIDA~. _ St. Bonaventure,' t t t St 'Cl t'ld' . t" ues 'ay, u y .25. Due to the. Unobjectionable for Adults and ,s ru.c u.re 0 . 0 Ie,. pa ron l-arge nurn'bel' of pI'lgrl'ms exDeny Propaganda Adolescents-Dr. Blood's Coffin. . Bishop, Confessor and Doctor f th F h h h h h oi the.Church.·III Class. White; . . 0had been e renc ',c urc w ere e pe.cted Qn the feast of St. Anne Unobjectionable for . Adults·"These solemn affirmations of baptIzed. Ho.wever, at itself there will be no re cb~ Come September. Pius XI,'; Vatican Radio said, Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; the cornerstone ble,ssIng. cereing that da • p a, ..... "deny .. , a 'propaganda diabol:" . Common Preface. mony, the platform on whIch the . y . . ically aimed at presenting the' SATURDAY - St. Henry, Em- priest stood suddenly collapsed, ,Featurmg devo1lion~ Ins!ead peror and Confessor. III Class: injuring him and several others. WIt! be short prayer serVICes, Church as a~ accomplice responAU'B~RTINE White. Mass Proper; Gloria; ',S' t· ' sl F th d M processions with the statue of St. no ~reed; Common Preface. . p~n aneou.y a· er e on,.. Anne around .the 'shrine, arid SUNDAY -.VIII Sunday: After laubncq promIsed St. ~nne the v.eri~ration of~ the relic of the THE ANCHOR Iisrs the death Pentecost. II Class. Green., ·chur.ch would be ~edICated to saint.. Priests will be available '~"en Aubertine Brough '. .. anniversary dates of priests .Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; her If ~he. g.ra~ted fum recovery al} .day for .confesSions.. . .'. Owner and Director' who served the Fall River Preface of Trinity. from hIS mJurles. . ,',' ::Sbrine ,officials note that pily Diocese since its formation in SPQlCiOUlS ~aV'kDf11Ig Area'. MONDAY-Mass previous . He :at~ a ~oot z;.cover ~nd 'grims' 'be ~ble to inspect 1904 with the intention that . '.' ; WV 2-2957 ., Sunday.. IV Class. Green. MilSS Imme la e y ep I~ promIse.. recent ri!DovatioIis'of church and the faithful will give' them a Propel:; :&0 Gloria; Secon9'. From that day devotIon to St. 'shrine; includipji.hewly installed 129-.Allen St. New IBedfOll'd' . prayerful remembrance. Collect St. Alexius, Confes:": An?e has grown at the church 'stained glasS windows. July 14 shrme. " SOl'; no' Creed; Common Pre-'" A feature of the Solemn No- rR,=.======",,''';'=======, Rev. Nicholas Fett, SS.CC., 1938, Pastor, St. Boniface, New face.' .' vena has always been addresses[~ ~D.IRl£!R(~ij~~~@~' ~.~ $~lU~~~ ~ $®~$ Bedford. . - . . . ~ , - T~~~D'~~n~~:~o~~mii~isah~~~~ b~ a guest preacher. This ·year _ Rev. Edmund J. Neenan, 1949, . ~M~~~~l ~®~[ 'White': Mass Proper;.. Gloria; @frO$ ~bJ$~·. . fUNERAL HOME Ai'siS'tant, ~a.cred· Heart, . Oak .' :Second Collect SS,. Sympho986 Plymouth Aven' u'"... .. _ Bluffs. . %9 l\.OCUST SY~1E1E1T Members of the Holy. Name ~rosa,- and her. Seven. Sons; . Fall RiYer, M' ass. . Jnly, 16' Martyrs; no Creed; Common Society and Catholic. Women's . frAU RIVIl:R, MASS. Rev. Bernard Pereot, O.P., Preface. Guild at Otis Air' Force Base.' Tel. OS 3~2271 OS - 2-3381 1937, Founder, St. Dominic, .' WEDNESDAY-St. Vincent de will co-sponsor pfcnic'to' 'be"', .PANIEl c.:. HARRINGTON, Swansea. Wilfred Co JClIInfl5 Eo . Paul, Confessor. III Class. held Sunday, July 23·.for Cath- ·licenllC<. funeral ,Director July 17 ~DI/'iscoll Sullivan, Jr. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; olic personnel o~ the' base" and, Regilrorild Emlialmor: Rev. William J, Smith, 196(), no Creed; Common Preface. Pastor, St. James, Taunton. THURSDAY-St. Jerome AemiJuly 19 Jian, ConfeSSOr. III Class. Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan,' White. MaSs Proper; Gloria; D.D., Second Bishop of Fall fUJ~ERAl HOME; INC.' .. ," ....., Second Collect St. Margaret, River, 1907-1934. a. MareeI R';'--·O. ·L;,rraine ~ Virgin and Martyr; no Creed; ROller Lall'J-llnee' " Common Preface.

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'July 16-St. Hyacinth, New Bedford. . St. Mary,· South Dartmouth. July 23-St. Pius X, South Yarmouth. St. Stephen Dodgeville. July 3O-St. Francis of Assisi, New Bedford. Holy Redeemer, Chatham.

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THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass. Published every Thursday at 610 Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass.. ..,. the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscripiton price b¥ mail. postpaid '4.00 per year.

IN FAU RIVER DIIAl 2-1322 or 5-7620

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Christians- Jews Conference Gets $325,000 Grant

'THe ANCHORThurs.,' July 13, 1961

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Cardanal Cushing Suggests Need

NEW YORK (NC) - The Nat ion a I Conference of Christians ,and Jews has been 'given $325,000 to pro-

Of BeU-Ringelr BOSTON (NC)-Richard Cardinal Cushing described. himself as a "man of a few million words," but said

mote ,discussion among religious groups which differ on public issues, such as tax aid to paliochial schools. I,.ewis Webster Jones, president af the NCCJ, said it will undertake a four-year program "to raise the general level of publi<! discussion and understanding" among differing church groups. The new project, he said, will be known as Religious Freedom and Public Affairs. It is made possible by a grant fmm the lFord Foundation. Jones listed three ma,in objec§Wes: To study practical and theoRtical problems involving poUtieal action and religious free~m'

maybe a bell-ringer at .his speeches will solve his problem. The Archbishop of Boston, in his column in the Pilot, Boston Catholic newspaper, said, "I am so anxious to get some basic convictions I have across to you, I guess when I get up before you I just go on ::ll1d on." "Someone has told· me that you are. fine for about 15 minutes but when I t:.et to the hal£nour mark, you are more interested in physical survival than spiritual sustenance. From then on, you. just live in hope. .. '''Well, I guess I will have. to bring someone along with me at future engagements with a bell or a 'buzzer. "When I hit· the 15-minute limit, I will get t·he gong. "And this ought to be the. best news a lot of you have heard in a long time," he wrote. This section of the Cardinal's column' was entltled: "Words Without End, Amen." .

T; bring greater intellectual ooherence and depth into interooligious relationships and public COLLEGE HONORS PRELATE: Rt.Rev. Msgr. Daniel A. Dwyer, second right, a policy; To lessen "destructive conflict" Fall River native, received the Franciscan Loyalty Award at .Commencement exercises ereated by different religious ap- (){ St. Francis College, Brooklyn. From the left are Dr. Domin~ck F. Maurillo, Commence9f.'Oaches to social problems. ment speaker; Very Rev. Brother Urban, O.S;F., college president·; Most Rev. Bryan J. First Step McEntegart, D.D., :Bishop of Brooklyn ;Monsigllor Dwyer, and Samuel S. Lockett; M~ The first step will be creation D.. recipient of the St. Francis College Medalof Honor. !If Ii Council on Public Affairs and Religious Freedom, Jones said. Members will include theaC 00 ~a lo~ians, educators, civic leaders eLEVELAND (NC) ~ More that in some instances students times the normal rate. 61fld political philosophers. than 170 boys and girls are enof exceptional ability can raise Double Speed The council, he said, will point roiled in a reading improvement their reading speed up to four I1Jo key issues of concern and ad- correspondence course sponsored "Witq the practice given in The supporters and friends of vise the NCCJ in doing the theo- as a special summer project by Civic Awa.rd 1'0 the oourse, the average high Rev. John M. Breen, M.M., and «iletical or fact-finding work Chanel High SChool here. sohool reading speed of 250 his Ma'ryknoll Mission in GuateIlleeded to throw light on them. Jersey Priest words a minute can be doubled," mala have the opportunity Another step wil be yearly The rourse is believed to be JERSEY CITY (NC) _ A he added. Thursday evening, July :W, to five-day institutes a·t which 1Jhe first of its kind in this area'Oatholic pastor was selected as Books and other reading ma- meet the Fall River Maryknoller (JIergy and laymen can "study It was started last Summer for terial are mailed to students, and'. discuss the work that theY . "outstanding cItizen of the yeM"" ' <fJhe techniques for quiet settle- ~ Ohane1 ·5 t u d ents 'on Iy, b W t thO . IS whQ t h en send work sheets from have so well supported. IIllent of intergroup problems." year was offered to all high by the Jersey City Independence each assign.ment to the school Members of tl1e Huehetenango A third step will be preparaschQol lItudents of the Cieveland Day Committee. Msgr. Leroy E. for oorrection and oomment. ·Mission Club have arranged a fiOR and distribution of materials di-ocese. :(VIcWilliams, pastor of St. '1\nohMechanical devices, such as social for 7:30 in the Hotel Melbearing on controvel'sial probFather "RaYJrlol~ E.. Heal~, aers ch'wI'ch and head of the flash meters and reading accel- len;' Fall R'iver, in order that the >'ern·s. Jones said these will in": .. S.M., diirector of the cOlu'se, said , Downtown' Priests'Committee; . .era'to.ts., also are available at the .public might view p,iotures .taken ~ . .de "theologic&l' exchanges :he hopes· to mak~ it a: perman": sehool. . On the acceler;lto!:", a . by ·the missioner and discuss the p. t"~ived . . .'r the award for ·his ·ac. .is· exPosed . with a b.itr . .practical. \'lork . in ,_comba~ing , published, abroad, .commissioned ant part·· of the sChool's year.:. Page al'ti<!les and books,. reprints' of.. ' round curriculum. .. . tlvity on behalf of.'city rehabili.. . moving'" down" eaCh page' at a. commuhism in this v~ry exposed ba(!~ground ma~rials,. projeCt . ~ .M~~isi priest p?i,r;J.ted out· ~auon prog.rams. " ···regulated' 'sPeed,' . . .. cou!ltry ·south·O~ the border..

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8epOrts and (and) pro.:. .. :II Il'am aids. andstudies d·isclission guideS." Differences Tt'oublesome' ., .. ': ..~s government becomes.more'- : .emplex; and as it touches tplf . U.vell 9f cit.izeps ~or~ f~·eQ..uentlY' . . tlndmore intimately, religious 4lifferences become ~ore appar-· Mlt~ and: more 'troublesome," iones·· said. .. .. -'Public SUPPOl't· for parochial· -oois, birth' cOl)h'ol . policies, . 'Sunday closing laws are' orily' a Jew· of the issues' which divide. American citizens' of different·faiths. "Unless some cleal'er consensus . n be reached, the stI"()ngth-and unity which America has drawn from the common acceptance of the Judaeo-Christian tradition. will be weakened and dissi":' pated."

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A Deal PRISONER: A prisoner of the Czechoslovak com~u.­ aist regime. for 11. years, Archbishop Jose{ Beran of PJrague has been honored in IS letter .of praiae and sympathy written by Pope John '(!)R the 50th anniversary of the Czechoslovak. prelate's ordination to the priesthood. ]);l{; Photo.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River, Thurs. July 13, 1961

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,Social T eoehingAIP-'~~@wes 'Politica~ A<ttjo!ii (d)~, Uni(Dn~ By ,Msgr. George G. Higgins Director, NCWC Social Action Department

The -Supreme Court of the United States, as noted in the previous release of this column, ruled on June 19 in the so-called Looper case'that an individuatworker who is required under a union shop agreement to. belong to a . in political railway union is, entitled to unions to engage a proportionate refund if he action, it would have done irrenotifies his union in writing parable harm not only to t·he that he does not waJit his labor movement but to the gen-

dues used for political purposes. eral cause of social and economic While' the 'labor movement, as progress in the United States. I suggested last Blow to Movement week, may not The fact that the Court re:' be altogether frained from doing this is of hap p y abou,t great significance, It means, t his deci~ion, amOllg other things, that' the some of labor's right-to-work movement is fincritics are even ished. 1 e s s hap p y Would that organizations like about' it. The the National Right To Work reason for this Committee might see the handis that the Suwriting on the wall, but that's preme Co u l' t, ,probably hoping for too much while restrictin an imperfect world. ing the use of No ·doubt the more zealous union dues for political purposes, proponents of right-to-work ruled thart unions may legiti- legislation will go right on trymately engage in political action ing to conVInce the American and also ruled that the union people that the ur.ion shop and shop, at least in the case of those union political action are danunions which come under the gerous, if not unethical. Railway Labor, Act, is a legal Well and good, but I think the arrangement., " time has CQme for them to stop 'Places R.oadblocks' trying to hide behind the Con-" These two rulings came as a stitution of the United States and bitter disappointment to the to stop trying to h,de behind the National Right To Work Com- social teaching of the Church. mittee and similar organizations Catholic sOcial teaching, like devoted to outlawing the union the dec~sion of the Supreme The National Right To Work Court in the Looper case, clearly Shop. The' National Right to recognizes that the union shop, Work Committee called the Su- un der the conditions which prepreme Court's decision' harmful vail in the United States, is to the' interests of workers and legitimate and that unions have said that it "added to the politica.J. a right to engage in polit~cal acpower of union officials." , tion, subject to the requiremen-t4! The Committee also declared of the common good. that the decision "places impos-, This is not to give b,lanket apsible roadblocks in the way ·of proval to the union shop as we rank-and-file workers who dis- know it in the United States, nor agree with, union politicaJ, is it to say that unions always actions." exercise their political influence I have little sympathy with wisely and prudently. )abor's criticism of the Court's The only point I am tl'ying to decision, but even less with the make is that the union shop criticism coming from organiza- and U'1iOn, 'political action, ,subtions like the' National Right To jed to' the restrictions noted Work Committee. above, are legitimate not only If the Supreme Court had folfrom Uie point of view. of the low'ed the advice of these organConstitution, of the United \ izations and had ruled against States but also from the point the union shop and prohibited o.f view of sound social teaching. 7

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OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) Negroes are now able to eat at three dining places here that were prime targets' in yearlong, sit-in activities. Brown's department s tor. e lunchroom, the Forum cafeterIa and the H.L. Green Store were desegregated after negotiations with Mrs. CLara Luper, a member of the Governor's Committee on Human ReLations who led demonstrations against them. . . Ot?er repres:ntatwes of coI?mu.mty edu~ab?nal and sO~lal actlO~ orgam~ahons were actlVe a~so 111 wor~1I1g for desegregabon: A leadmg role was played by Father Robert G. l;\'IcDole, who. .was. a~rested tWIce f01" parbcIpatIng 111 t~e regular Saturday demonstrabons. '!Encouraging Advances' First announcement of 1he major strides in opening of all pUblic eating facilities to Negroes came in a midyear report released by Harvey P. Everest, chairman of the Governor's Committee on Human Relations. A section of the report states that all public 'eating facilities in department and variety stores in Oklahoma City and Tulsa are now desegregated. The report also says_ that all but two dining places 'in· downtown Oklahoma City that were' sit-in targets have been opened to Negroes. Everest called the new desegr-egation moves "most encour-

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Cleveland Next Yeai!' Elected as trustees for two terms were '11homas P. Cou~hlan, Mankato, Min.; Timothy J. Collins, Holyoke, Mass.; and Karl: J. Weber, San Francisco. It was' 'announced that the org'aniza-

SerlJi~

tion's next convention will be. held in Cleveland from June 25 ·to '28, .1962. Domenico Cardinal Tard.j~ Vatican Secretary of State, geM a telegram on behalf of Popo John expressing his "warm interest in the Serra movement'l:l. meritorious work" and praising, the' organization's "enviable r.ecord of achievement in promo&-' iog priestly vocations."

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LANSING (NC) - The Diocese of Lansing Development Fund announced that collections from its 1961 drive totaled $456,044, an increase of $23,906 ova' the 1960 total. •

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Wassau, Wis., was elected trea&-i urer, and Francisco Williams Y, of Mexico City was re-elected secretary.

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MINNEAUOLIS (NC) - George H. 'Smith of BloomJ'ield, N.J,., was elected president of Serra International, an organization of b'usiness and prl>fessional men which promotes religious vocations. He succeeds Ralph W. Hauenstein of Grand Rapids, Mich. ©~d@Iro©HITfll@ CDU'Y~ . Elected as vice presidents weIl'e aging advances," and added that 'Fred J. Wagner, Tiffin, Ohio, the operators of the newly deand Richard M. Ong of Kansas segregated, dining facilities "deserve great credit" for 1!heir ,8 Ifs~e' leadership. Bishop Backs Priest @~ ~@ml7i1llMrroD$lnn1 . . Many Cathohcs, both white ST. PAUL (NC) - Two Catha~d Negro, and m,,:mb:rs of va,,: olic Bishops publicly have dis,rlOu.s ?ther den?m1l1ahons have puted a "charge that Protestant ' been 1I1volved 111 the move to minister,S -form "the largest single open downtown Oklahoma City body" of communists in this restaurants to Negroes. , country. When F'ather McDole, who had served as assistant pastor at The charge was made by HobCorpus Christi parish, was transe.rt Welch, h'ead of the J'ohn fer red at his request to a parish Birch Society. in Ponca City, Okla., ather Archbishop William O.-'Brady , priesjs joined ,with clergymen of various denominations to of St. Paul termed Mr. Welch's at ten d demonstrations against charge "absurd." Auxiliary Bishop Leonard P. Cowley, of St. segregation. Bishop Vietor J. Reed of Ok- Paul declared: "It seems like a preposterous statement to me." lahoma City and Tulsa backed Mr. Welch made his charg'2 in Father McDole's role in the dema speech in' Bismarck, N.D., onstmtions.in J a~uary with. a where he said that 7,000 Protes~tatement In whwh he. said: tant mfnisters are either comThos~ wh()seek e~uahty. of mce.m use of. pU~hc . se~~llces munists or communist sympathizers. are 'SImply see~mg Justice.

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PINT-SIZED RELIGIOUS (IN TENNIS SHOES): Shown preparing for the Senra International convention in Minneapolis are these children from Incarnation parish, pani! of a group of 20 appearing in a "Parade of Habits". during the convention sessions to publicize Serra's work in promoting religious and priestly vocations. The three little "Sisters" represent, from left, Dominican, Franciscan and Benedictine. The boys repre,sent a Christian Brother, Dominican, Redemptorist, diocesan priest, Servite, Carmelite, and Blessed Sacrament priest. NC Photo.

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:_. THE ANCHORThurs., July 13, 1961

Pope Names Bishop Shehan Coadjutor of Baltim'ore WASHINGTON (NC) - Bishop Lawrence J. Shehan of Bridgeport, Conn., has been named Titular Archbishop f1f. Nicopolis ad Nestum and Coadjutor with the right to suceession to Archbishop Francis P. Keough of Baltimore. The appointment, made by and two new dioceses were esPope John, was announced tablished in Connecticut as sufhere yesterday by Arch- fragan sees. ~he new dioceses b ish 0 p Egidio Vagnozzi, were Bridgeport and Norwich. Apostolic Delegate in the UnHed Auxiliary Bishop Lawrence J. Shehan of Baltimore was named . 'StMes. Archbishop Shehan returns to the first Bishop of Bridgeport. Nan1ed Bishop of Providence h See and oity in which he was bol'l1. He becomes Coad- in February, 1934, and conseJutor to an Archbishop whQ was crated 'on May 22 of that year, born in Connecticut and whom Bishop Keough was the fourth Ordinary of the diocese that the once served as an Auxiliary comprises the state of Rhode Isin Baltimore. Born in Bal<timore, Dec. 18, land. He was named Archbishop of BaltimGre Gn November 29, 1898, Archbishop Shehan studied at St. Charles College, Cartons- 1947. ville, Md., from 1911 to 1917; at St. Mat·y's Seminary, Balti- CCl:Hrd9n~1 SpeUman more, from 1917 to 1920, and at GlTteeG"s irish Team ~e North American College in .Francis Cardinal Spellman, ltOOme from 1920 to 1923. Archbishop of New York, reHe served in St. Patrick's pa'i'- turned to St. Patrick's Cathedral iM1 in this city until he was eleto preside, 'as has long, been his ~ted to the episcopate in 1945. custom, at the Solemn High Mass ill September, 1953, the Dioat 10 o'clock. (OOSe of Hartford, Conn., was eleIt was the first time His Em'J:llted to the rank of 8rehdiocese, inence was back a~ the Cathedral since the early part of May, when when he was hospitalized for an operation Gn his right U~like~y eye. Following Mass, rthe prelate MAYNOOTH (NC) - Ameri- welcomed'members of the Irish ean Bishop John J. Wright said Pl'Ofessional Soccer Team on the Ihere it is unlikely that sizeable, South terrace of the Cathedral. . Protestant· g r 0 ups can be brought into corpol'8te unity Itt with the Catholic Church. 'l1he Bishop of Pittsburgh opened a series of lectures on Christian unity here. He said obstacles to the return of ProtQ1itant groups to· communio~ with the Holy See are not only fi>eHgious but also sociological <rod historical. Thus by and llarg.e, he said, bhe way to be ~veled is that of the individOltl, rather than the gzooup. 'lUte possibility of corporate I!'eUtbion by some Anglican bodies was held out, however, by _ English Jesuit. F'ather Frnn, eta Clark, S.J., of Heythrop College, Chipping Norton, Ertgland• • idbnat corpoIlate return might "iog from Anglican churches .. ~e newer natiGIlS wtten anti!!loman prej udices operative in the Church Oil England in ·ils .om~hmd begin, to Joe'e their

.Sees Corporate Reu!rnoorn

Vincentaons Pian To Mark Feast

- W~NSTON HINDLE HOME

Supper, Bazaar to Record Debt' Clearance at South Dartmouth Payment of the mortgage of St. Mary's Church, South Dartmouth, will be marked with a parish supper and qazaar starting at 5 :30' P.M., Saturday, July 22, on the spacious grounds of the church in Padanaram. Between $150,000 and $175,000 has been raised Considine has annouriced the by the parishioners during construction of an elementary . school on part of the 10 acres the pastorshlP. 0.£ the Rev. owned by the parish. Arthur G. Consldme, who as"It will be some few years sumed his post in 1954. Four before the school groundbreakyears ago the new church was ing," he said, adding that the built and laJter a new rectory proposed school "most likely was acquired diagonally across will be of Colonial design" the street at Middle and Pr06- confGrming with the exterior pect Streets. decor of the church. Purchases Home The newest property acquisd~his Spring the parish also tion is the home of the Winston purchased a home north of the Hindle family and lies north of church which will be the even- the rear of the church at 783 tual nucleus of a convent. F·a:tl\er Dartmouth Street. , a e e, yw at . ., .

Members of Fall River Particular Council, Society of St. Vincent de Paul, have been requested to observe the Feast of St. Vincerut de Paul by attending Holy Mass and receiving Holy Communion in their own parish churches on the Sunday before the Feast; on the day itselfWednesday, July 19-01' within eight days after the Feast. The general meeting in connection with the Feast will be held at St. Vincent de Paul Camp at 2:30 P.M. on Sunday. July 23. A plenary indulgence may be gained by those who comply with the rule of the society regarding the celebration of the Feast. Members are urged to attend this meeting and are invited to bring their families to enjoy the, facilities of the camp . Plans for the annual retreat and for Ozanam Sunday, and other matters of interest to the Conferences will be discussed at this meeting. A large attendance is expected.

Defense' Confrel11ce WASHINGTON (NC)-A COIl.ference for religious newspaper editors and writers and for church officil:'ls will be held here next Feb. 13 to 15 under auspices of the Office of Civil and Defenss Mobilization .

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itN'oe. It could happen, be said, in «be face of pagan or Marxist or Moslem oPl'osition to ChristianiIr, that members of a predomllaantly Anglo-Catholic Anglican diocese would feel increasingly . ' " desire to j9in in catholic · ....tty with the Catholic Church . . . the same region, either by .omplete integrntion or by formlItIon of a new "uniate rite." hther Clark said that such a development "might in time lbaYe fa I" - reaching e f fee t s 4lb:roughout the Anglican com· munion and eventually even in ate Church of England."

Reinvestogate Cause Of King Henry VI LONDON' (NC) - A Henry · Vi Society has been formed here in an effort to get the beatifica, tioo cause of the former king· dropped at the time of the Reformation - resumed in Rome. The new society is collecting oothentic data. about the king, searching for a reliable portr~it, compiling a bibliography and listing known shrines and other evidences of the popular · wit which existed in England · from his death until the time of Henry vnI.' A deeply religious man, Henry trave much time to prayer and pious worKs. The report of mirades at his tomb in the Bene· <ilictine monlistery at Cpertsey , In Surrey made it a pla«e of pilarimage and though Richard III Ill9d the body removed to St. 'George's Chapel, Windsor, the popular devotion continued.

Gifts Top $2 Million CHICAGO (NC) Loyola University received $2,486,966.25 lin restricted atbd UIU"estricted ai~ alld grants during the fi&d year ending Jurw ~, 196i, ~heT Jal'l1es F. Maguire. 8.3.. jJJ'JCSident, h~ ~

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·~ioc~se ofF,all River, Thurs .. July 13. 1961

.Use Electronics,-

.Exodus

To Teach Latin At SemBnary

Another Viewpoin.t

The last sevei'al months have seen the press - both secular and religious _ discuss just about every aspect of the controversial' federal aid to education question.

CINCINNATI- (NC) Electronic systems t h ~ serve as the brains of space-The most vehement argument has developed over the ranging missiles also can 00 question of federal assistance to public schools alone, or useful in the Latin classroom. the inclusion of private and parochial schools as' benefiFranciscan Fathers at St. FraiP ciaries of some or much of federal ~unds. cis' Seminary, Mount Healt~ Catholics have taken differing stands on this matter. (near here) 'have tried apply·ing 'S no "official" Catholic opinion. the new technique to the oh!'l There I ianguage and the result is ~ Recently, an opinion has been voiced - from England efficiency in teaching Latin.; _ that has not been heard too often and it is worth Father Denis Moran, O.F.' presenting and thinking about. t~ rector, launched the sem.The head of the prestidigious Agricultural Economics inary's scholastie program itmi> the space age when he gave the Research Institute of Oxford University, Colin Clark, in a order for the electronic train,i'llg letter to the editor of The Tablet, an English Catholic center. weekly newspaper' and :review, answers the statement, Installed at. the seminary'leSli U American educators are, unanimous that federal aid to month, the center, w.ith its 56 .booths for language studeJlll;s, the States is now vital," with the comment: "That is not proved so successful that iJt wlf! for them to say. Groups' specialists, with their .personal be used in the Fall for classesm interests strongly involved, are not entitled to write their Greek and Gel'man as weN • OW. n cheques on the public' treasury, whether they· be ' Latin. ' Father Lucia,n Ricke, O.F., educators, doctors, farmers, engineers, soldiers ·or anyone instructor in Greek and La~ else.' .. American schools are suffering frpm having 'had took t~ new inethod in stridQ" too much spent on them, not, too little'. '. . American schools "No language 'which is used iii' ,. dead,'~· he bel,ieves. And' sinCcl _'sh'ould sp'end less money' on buildings, a,nd try., ~to red.iscover .l,anguage labs' have been trieCJ , the lost art of learning,'as Senator 'Goldwater said.... ' . ' ' :successfully .with modern' lea" .. , This' is 'a'view that ha~ riot been heard especiaiIy- loudly ,Buages, why' shouldn't the-y be in the, various 'dehates on aid 'tp' education. It might be' weli ' .' useful with ancient lan~ ,tooT; fn consider it,however. ' '. ; , ~, FOOl'-Traek Recorder As, Dr. ,Clark says, "Essentially;, it is no part of the ." I Each O{. the' 50 booths III duty of. the State to 'teach." That is,thedtitYQf,the parents, ~ th£' equipped with high fidelity and the Constitution of the, United. States. recognizes, this .. . .' , , , " equipment, including a 19-- 'b"y', making,e'du~~:tion:' :im,''atter~for :pare'uts:' a, lid; 'to as~i8t," ' By, "REV. lROBJriRT HO~DA,· Catli 'Univ~8iity -' . 'track recorder, sensitive micro.. .. , ,':, . I ,phone' and'a, professional..... parents, ]ocalgovernrneD:ts"and by 'making' ,~o J}rO:vi8i~D8 .., ., '. ' " . 'earphone.,' for a federal system ofeducati9n. '" TODAY Mass as 00' Sunday.' who dwells withiinus,wenow ·There·is a central ccmtrdl . Before taking, it for, granted that federal .fu~ds are. Back, to 'sincerity in' the' matter cry; "Abba; Father;" Fear g,ives' panel through' which each oootal needed, people 'should be certain that such is the ,case. And, of our Liturg'y. Sincerity requires' way. to love and' we know that ,can be monitored singly.,. furthermor,e, they should' 'be sure that federal'·funds; i.f' that the .congregation answer the' . we are the chilcIiEm of 'GOd, tmrt" teacher can speak directly. to celebrant where thelitUrg~1 indoi,- we are" his heJ:rs;ShaHng the . individua~, student or to the 'eo. made ava.ilable to" tfu~' states, will not go.merely .toward cates that the congregation iJlheritance or' Christ. That HI tire class, and he can mart ". buildings '~nci. salaries,but win assist in raising the level should answer the celebraillt and the way we should think. 'stop the motors in all the booa. of teaching and facilities· for rediscovering the lost art of requires that the congregation MONDAY.....; Mass asOD Sua- with a footswitch. learning'. , . , s i n g and pray where the liturgy day. In the Gospel 'of this same Instruction is given accor~ . ,indicates that the congregation Mass, Christ proc~' to point : to the Structural Approaeh .. This view of Dr. Clark brings Out aspects of the should sing and pray. This is out what we must do- once Latin developed by Waldo Sweet problem, that it ~'ould be well not to lose sight of. The not a minor matter, as :recent we are' thinking rightly. Who at the University of Michigaa.

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Holy See have pointed (l.ut..It us, who can open for us the gates goes, to the heart of the ;9acra- of eternal life? Jesus g'lves 116 solve it. mental system given us by our the same answer here He gave Lord. Signs' or magic? Ac1ls of when He said: "Whilteve-r Y'Qu.. GREAT ST. BERNARD P'ASI! the mystical Body.or ineaillta- do' for. my leaSt brethren, yw ,(NC)-There are more' ttiMJ Mis.s Dorothy Parker ~hoed the feeling of many wheJi trons of some elite? The right . do for me." ,." '. . dogs to see at the Augustin_ she asked; in a recent bo.ok, review, "Whatever happen~danswer'demands the participaThe fri~nds, theil, tbatt Oll'1' monastery here in SwitzerJaOd tion of all.. , ' , Lord advises us to make to a8-' ,8,000 feet above sea level,' bull to the old:..fashioned asterisk?" sure our, salva.tion are. the, poor f ~w visitors have taken . . "'0 ' 0 OW St B This was" the device used by generations of, writer-s ,~M RIIt - . Onl'yeB- and the dispossessed. Use what time to look. iure, U'ishop. Doctor. N~~ither ' , . ,to indicate the vulgar, the scatological, wealth The famousre'8cue dogs' VI. -~ ~ . . the in<H!eent, the Christ nor, His great apostle Paul th Ch you h' have tod' wi~ly, ,. E h says '>';" ...obscene. Its W'te iJ1 a novel gave quite a clear idea to the., were romanticists. 'Jesus in the e urc In ay s uc an",. ,monastery have eclipsed' . . . , . . , Th¢ poor are GOd's ,~avQrite-s, splendor, of the ancient. reader of what was meant without offending sensibilities Gospel :faces squarely thE fact said the p'oet,' Peguy;and ,thatt' . d' . d I· . h 'k t' t' that His discip'les ma.y lose their . " , be~utiful cqHectipn of, sac an m u gmg In S' oc, ac ICS. would be almost unfair if iIt were ,art treasur,es, which have beem '. Yes, 'w,ha-1ever hap'pened, to the asterisk? , .' ,mize salty character and may mininot lawful for eve:ryooe" mon~"'t~ ,Gospel comjnand" ' , ' . . ' to" be gathered' a.t "he V a ... __. . For now all too mahy nov~lists positively delight, iii. ments. And in ~ Epistle Paul POQr.; ,, .,..' ' church for the past 700 yel!l'&' TUESDAY - st. Camilhas eI ,Among the most v'aluable'~ dredging up.the·,language,of the,gutter, t h e, b'ack alIey,.-the ' rather expects that man-yof U6 - .LeliiS., :Co,nfessor.-.i,t"i6' n.m odd ..... J' b h' ff' h ' t·t . It·t .' th . will turn aside from ,the, truth ' ' . · 1 1 13th:-~ntuI'Y, in' tile w h arJ.! ,:- ut w y 0 er "sue graulous msu 0' e' that on these next'fe-w days we' form of a bust reliquary 'of St. Bern_ 19n9shoremen:?'" ,... . . . " . ' ' , ,'.: .' . ,to prefer fables; ' s h o u l d 'find ~xamples of those Another is a silver arm eonta. The modern formula 'for. success· in writing -'-'- th&t is, "·So again the Ghf'istia,n ,is' SUilday lessons. Most an'y .of the , ing, a relic Of. bhe .arm 01. . . for making money --,... to tape-record life, at least the btrruOthghe\pUreP,s' ~.f'~yto ..!a~~b~:: saints <;ould be, .c9i1!iidered bya . Nicholas. . =u..., realist of tQda)' a "hut" 'on chaR:" .. Silver ,Rellqu~ry part of 'life that. can be ext>ressed in four-letter words.' "The only 'gospel truth' ill the 'ity. A pectoral 13th-century ~ And the tip-off that the chief purpose is to shook is truth of the Gospels.'" Thai, this For Camillus, the ineaning of . was presented to the mona~ the ,self-consciousness with which this is dQrie. The writer truth is clarified and developed Christian' commuiJion was more by a patriarch of Jerusalem Jm , ill the Spirit:"guided definitions extenSl've than o'ur" sh~rl·n·g....l! .' is for all the 'world the little boy entering upon his first of the Church no Catholic de'.. Ul 1404. It is a fine example Qf the Body of the Lord; more Middle Eastern enamel WOAs. adventure with BAD WORDS - see how it sounds, look at nies. But that it is infallibiy extensive than our common life The same prelate presented '~ me, listen to what I am saying. There is not even the present in all of ou,r inherited of grace. It meant for him the silver reliquary in the form Of' e saving grace of a smooth technique to pardon the adolescent prejudices, customs and ways, willingness to serve prisOners;' tower which contains whavth ' k , an did' ~ no C'atholic -u"'are affirm. mouthings of which so many .novelists are guilty'. . e SIC so leI'S a't war. believed to be a thorn from '" tiIle . t The "Ite~' of Ma,ss was for him Crown of Thorns. . Of course, their use of such language is a confession SA1.'UlIU)AY - S. 1II1lmry, a command to serve. And, though Emperor, Confessor. We don't In 1507 the monastery 'woo of poverty of expression, of weakness in painting an have emperors any more, in there many ~ ; are t f vocations a'nd given a silver chall'ce I',n .... ,",IV atmosphere or a personality. Joseph Conrad could put case you haven't hearn, but we many ypes 0 service, it must Gothic' style together witJll' n across all the rawness and savagery. of the sailor and the do have confessors. In fact, you regain that meaning for us if paten of ,silver which has be. 't d b Th our public worship is to be' a come to be known as "the p~ sea and do it without resorting to offensive language. But are mVI e to e one. e way living experience. . d'lOa ted'III th e Iest 0 d0 I't' he was a master of English: ,IS m WEDNESDAY _ St. Vincent of St. Bernard." sons of this Mass. What can we For the really talented writer can accept the challenge add, except that money is not def Paul, Another hero High CCMIl'Q- Reverses Ch . Confessor. t· 0 . I'IS Ian love. The Epistle and convey atmosp'here and characterl'zatl'on wI'th skl'llful the only red herring even if it calls him a "foo,l for Christ." · Missol!lra ~ulings . language. And 'if he really must tape-record some especially is perhaps the chief one. There A:nd perhaps if one's worship is WASHINGTON (NC) - 'Jlke . I II h I th t '. k is always the desire· to be un"f l' h" . U,S. Supreme Court reversed 0boff enSlve anguage, we, e. can a ways use e as ens. disturbed. The Freedom Riders' 00 IS In the eyes of some,' , then one's vocational and fam- scenity rulings against 100 pubcan tell you all about this temp- . ily life should not be :jmmunti lications sold by six Kansas 'Cita tation, if you haven't experi- to the same charge. If they are, · Mo., newsdealers because poliee enced a sneaking suspicion' of it then we can suspect that we :we confiscation procedures used in yourselve~.J. ' isolating our temporal and sec- against them lacked safe-gual'dU EIGHTH SUNDAY AF~rER ,ular activities' from the influ- for non-obscene .materiaL ~ .PENTECOST ...... Kinks' in the ence of Jesus and the sting of The' court, in a unanimmind are even more dange:r!>us, .the Spirit. Sunday Mass, after opinion, held that "a state is''. . OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER ,Of THE DIOCESE Of FALL RIVER than kinks in the muscles," In all, is not celebratep. as an apol- · free to adopt whatever procedoo the first lesson, the Church' at- ogy for the rest of our ,week but ures it pleases for dealing wia Publishe,d weeKly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese ~f Fall River tempts to straighten out some 'asa, p'resenta~ion ol.' it 'to ~. obscenity ... without regal'd .. 410, I:lighland Avenue of these kinks before we ap-" thr.o~gh Chrim; , ' the possible consequences'" proach 'the Lord's Table. God is Fall River, Mass.OS!?orne 5-7151 non-obscene matter. 'our .Father and we are a family . ,Oblate ProvinciaB : The .court's opinion was w6PUBLISHER . -'siniplytha1t. That, is ,the way RICHFIELD (NC) -' Father ten by Associate 'Justice WilWMost Rev. JC;;mes L. Connolly,. D.O., ~hp'. " " we should think. , William·P. Coovert, O,M.L, pa~ ,T. Brennan, Jr. -He reversed • . GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER'" , , No ",longer is, God simply a tor of thE! 'Church of the AsSump- · declsion of' the Missouri s-.. Judge, a Creator, a Being to be tion here hi Minnesota, has b~1l Supreme Court 'and ordered . . Rev. Daniel F. Sholloo,·M.A. 'Rev. John P. Driscoll feared.. In Christ. and because appointed Provincial Superior case returned for further .... MANAGING EDITOR of the Spirit, Chrim has sent of ,the Central U.s. province of ceedings consistent wUh his ,~ Hugh J. Golden upon, us, be'cause of the Spirit the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. ing.

Re' qUI-e'm: for the Asterisk·'

=

is

or

®rheANCHOR


.... '

Catholic Schools Seek Fair Share Of Yax Revenue , LONDON (NC) - The Ontario provincial gove,rnment has been asked to give , a bigger share of tax reveDues to separate schoow here. , most of them Catholic. A 15-page brief was submitted to a government official, asking • !rearrangement of school tax legIlslation so Catholic children "will !be provided with facilities' for , an education equal to that of 4Jheir neighbors in pub lie ISChools," The 'brief said that separa,te schools, which are part of the publicly supported system,' re· eeived $81 per child from iocal · taxes, while public schools got $234 per child in 1959-60. Say, Grants Un b alanced

Holy Rosary P,:"rish, FaU River, ,Serves' Italian C~th'olics of Entire City

THE ANCHORThurs., July 13, 1961

7

Moves to Block

. , By

Marion Unsworth Parochma~ Sch~ol With the immigration of many Italians to Southeastern New England at the turn of g LOOnlS the century, an estimated 1200 to 2000 settled in the Fall River ar,~a. By' 1902 the NEW YORK (NC) - The group was large enough to warrant a priest of its own and Rev. Roberto Parrillo came . National Council ofChurches from Italy to minister to these Italian Catholies. For a while, parishioners attended St. has taken a step designed 'Roch's Church, but in 1903 to block proposed Federal 'the cornerstone 'of a church loans to parochial schools, charging in a letter sent to '500 Protof their own was laid, and estant bishops and church offion July 10, 1904, the Church

Grants

cials that "Roman Catholic inof Our Lady of the Holy Rosary terests 21l'e jeopardizing the on Beattie Street was formally ,Federal aid bill to publie established and dedicated. schools." It is perhaps rather unique is The Council of Churches is a that this basement church wan federation composed of 33 aubuilt by the parishioners themtonomous Protestant and Eastselves. Father Parrillo lived with ern Orthodox coIIll'ilunions. a family near the church during his pastorate. The letter said that "while we In 1909, Rev. Francis J. Bradrecognize" the right of CatholiC5 ley, D.D.; tpen rector of the "to work as citizens for their Cathedral, became second pasinterests, it is important for nontor at Holy' Rosary, He hired a Catholics to woi-k with equal tenement building for use' as a diligence for what they conGrants from the provincial rectory. Foilowing his pastorate, sider 'best for the country and government, the other tax fund the parish was temporarily ad.,; for all the churches." tWurce, have helped separate ministered by' members of, the It stated that a House bill to \SChools, but these too were tin- Pius Society of Missions. They aid pUblic schools is being held balanced, it said. In Ontario included Rev. Hugh F. O'Connor, up in the House Rules Commitdties, ,if said, public schools"re- P .S .M' ., 1 9-13; R ev.. R 0 ber to S org!, . tee partly b~use of demand'll eeived $28,664,251 in provincial ,P.S.M., 1915-1920; Rev. George that grants M loans for paro,grants in 1959-60, while separa,te O'Callaghan, P.S.M., 1920-1926 'chial schools be approved at tho /SChools got $11,078,979. and Rev. ,Enrico Mezzatesta.' same time.' "'In other words, publIc schools, P.S.M., 1926-27. Only "a massive surge of c0nwith 67.2 per cent of the enroll-, Upper ChureUl cern at the grassroots, directed , merit received 72.1 per' 'cent' 'of It' was durir..g the pastorate of at the congressmen by their con";' the grants, and the separate Father Sorgi" tlJ,at the upper ,stituents," can save the House /SChools, with 32,8 per ceht of the structure of Holy Rosary Church bill for public school aid, tho dlildren; received 27.9 per cent was built and dedicated. He also letter stated. <00: th,e grants," it said. ' made the first census of Italian The House public school bill -HOLY ROSARY CHURCiHI, JF AJLL ~J[VlE~ proposes that $2.4 billion be · "The brief was presented.. to "Catholics living in New Bedford " . . spen·t in three years in outright , John P. Robarts, minister of eq-' , and made arrangements for the tication in the Ontario cabinet," ,celebration of Mass for them at major projects have been com- th.e aid andcooperahon of' Federal grants to states for usc pieted. He inaugurated a parish , Bl~OP Con.nolly ~Il~the gener- . either in public school construe-by Francis G. Carter, president' St. Lawrence Ch{lpel there. of the Ontario Separa'te School ., His successor, Father O'Cal- five-year plan in which parish- ,OSlty of hiS paru;hlOners, who., tion', or for teachers' salaries. The House is also considering a Trustee Associativn; H. J. Mc-' laghan erected the rectory, which ioners donated a dollar a week to number l~s than 1200 people. A major setback was to occur, measure to lend $125 million a Manus and Msgr. J. F. Feeney, is located next ,to the chUrch on the improvement ,of Ule parish. By 1950, the plan was success- ',however, for in 19f>9, a fire dam- year for three years to private ,chairman and secretary of the 'Beattie Street above, C.olumbus ful enough to install impressive aged a large part of the newly and church-related schools to London separate school boarji. Park. When Father Mezzatesta be- stone steps up to the rather high renovated church, and the parish finance construction of clas:9again had to set about redeco- rooms and other facilities used 'came pastor in 1926, he com- entrance to the upper church. By 1953, F'lther Pannoni com- "rating and repairing. At the in science, foreign language ~d pIeted the work begun by Father d sorgi's census, and established pleted placing a brick limestone ' same'time, the 'other three V\(.alls physical fitness programs. Both a church, St. Francis of :Assisi in facade on the front of the church, of, the church were veneered. measures are in the House R~ PHILADELPHIA (NC)"':'" Fr. 'New Bedford, as a mission of and the following year, the jubi- Since 1959, a -parking lGt has Committee. Leo C. BrOwn, s,J" has been Holy Rosary, for Italians in that lee of the dedication of the been purchased, and the parish basement ,church, the interiOr debt paid off. , elected chairman of the Uphol- area. A little over' a year later, To assist him, Fatbertpannonl i3terer's International Union Ap- St. Francis 'became a parish in of the church was 'renovated, and stained glass windows, rubber ,has Rev. Vincent F. Diaferio, peal Board, it was announced its own right. here by Sal B. Hoffman, ,union ' Rev. B. Benedetti carne to tile aisles and new lighting who came to Holy Rosary on his ~ first assignment in February of, president. Holy Rosary to succeed Father were installed. Father Pannoni imputes the 1958. Father Brown, of the Insti-' Mezzatesta in 1928, but lftayed 'Sisters of the Holy Union of tute of Social Order of St. Louis only a short ,time, and Rev. John SUi:Cess of his, five-year plan to the Sacred Hearts teach ca,teUniversity, replaces the board's . J. Sullivan was appointed pastor c;hism to school-age children O'f first. chairman, Archibald Cox, in 1929. He was to remairi there !~atiy" the parish. In addition, the par, DOW U. S. solicitor gener,al. until 1937. , ish has several' active organiza':' Purpose of the appeal board, The', following administrator WADDEll & REED, INC. tions, including a Women's Guild, . ., the first of its kind, is to inves- was Rev: John A. Chippendale,' HARTFORD '(NC) The Princil>cl Und.rwrite,. tig,ate, revise, or reverse union' stationed at Holy Rosary from first U.S. native to ~ecome a Ladies of the Blessed Sacrament., ANTONE G. QUINTAl verdicts against its own mem- 1927 to 1948. He concentrated on priest of the Order Of the Pious Men's Confraternity of the Ros9i5 Maryland St.. New Bcdfood " bers. . paying off the large parish debt ' Schools, 'Pia,rist' Fathers, has , ary, St. Vincent, de ~aul, and , WYman 5-2938 , C.Y.O. Prospectus on Roquoot , Another priest, Father Dennis ,accumu 1a t e d ..f rom b Ul'!d'mg th e . been ordained in ' Rome. 'I. Corney; S.J., director of 'the church and rectory. Father "Itobert 'T. R4SSQ, S.p.. Institute of Industrial Relations Present Pastor of Hartford was ordained by The KEYSTONE • at St. Joseph's College in Phil- . Rev. -JOsePh .R. Pa~om, the 'Luigi' Cardinal. Traglia, , Pro Warehouse Salesroom Qdelphia, is also a member of pre~,ent pastor, is a native of the Vicar-General of Rome, at the , New and Used ~ five-man board. par~sh, and served for a short 'order's mother 'house. ""--"--'-while as curate under Father' Father Russo ser~ed, with the OFFICE EQUIPMENT We show a large assortment of used Sullivan. Since his advent, many U.S. Army in, the Korean conBOYS WANTED for the and new desks, chnirs, filinG cnbflict before beginning his studies Priesthood and Brotherhood. inets. tables, et~., in wood and steel for the priesthood. The Piarist Lack of funds NO impediAlso metal storage cabinets, s:lfs3, Fathers conduct mission schools ment. a.heIVing lockers, etc. 103 Illm1llI in Asia and Africa and now have BAY CITY (NC) In the , four houses of study in the U.S. Write to: • near Union month, prior to the deadline , ,: WY3-27Ba P. O. Box 5742 for registration for Michigan's July 25 Constitutional ConvenBaltimore 8, Mel NewBedfon tion primary, 50 young people applied to the County Clerk's office for liquor cards. In the same mor,th three young IIYOUR BANKIIl Pcy~nt people registered, to vote in the city. HyalITHro5$ SLADE~S In Michigan, a minimum age of 21 is required for both drink'SOMf:tm, MASSi. - Next to s~ 8. S~ojpJ 335 Win~er St. Sip. ~·OO19 ing intoxicating beverages and invites yow participation in ~o voting.

· t Ch· P rles Gnoman Of A ppeaa Board ..

0 d F ..... rain irst Piarist Missionary'

Trinitarian Fathers

Drinkers Outnumber Voters, 16-'to-l

~

Real Estate Rene

FERRY TRUST COo

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Mac" saysThrifty - &1 Wiso ~k your Meatman fer DAVIDSON'S (MacGregor Brand)

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growth of 113 new Banking Institutiot:l C,OMMERCIAl IlInd SAVINGS SEIlVlCc MORTGA~ES - AUTO and APPLIANCE LOANS) Accounts Insured tip To $ 'Il 0,000 MembW' foderal Deposit Insurance Co. Harold J. Regan, Presidem

• SWEETNIC •

Bake in the Bag-No Basting Real Scotch Ham flavorU ,,"WINNING FAV<>a WITH ITS FLAVOR'"

KEYNOTER: Father John F~, Cronin, S.S.. a8sis~t , director of the Social Action Department, NCWC, will d&o . liver the keynote address ,Thursday, Aug. 24 at the' Mac Gregor" , convention. of the National BPt, '""0 ' Catholic, Conference for I.. ' t&rracial Justice in Detroit. JUST at'AIl leadinG ~nventio)lh theme' b ""l1'he -.~.," ASK FOR food Stores New Negro." NC P1m~Wb'~,_"'iM'l~M".IJ.wu... uwiM'l\;1~........~...SW.w~E~ETN~I~CS .....il1ln.M,,"a... sstola~c~h~u~s,e~ttS~'...

DAVIDSON'S"·

«

ON CAPE COD

JOHN ,HINCKLEY & SON COm BUILDING MATERIALS SPring' '5-0700

49 YARMOUTH RD. ,HYANNJS AMPLE PARKING


8

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" River, Thurs. Juiy~13, 1961 . . . .

Make Refugees Feel at Home

~

Shoestring . Deco,rating .Test Needs Wil~fP>(Q)wer~ ~m~ga;n~t~(On

COMPTON (NC) -A Dut& refugee family from Indonesia has been resettled here in California by the' efforts of seVlm families in St. Philip Neri parish. . Frederik and Ellen Intveld;, with their two preschool chilP dren, arrived here to find a tWOe bedroom house rented for them; furniture provided, including 2l . TV and a picnie table for the patio; a stocked pantry; a halfdozen job interviews at factories within cyding distance of the Intveld home, .and a bicycle fx:> transport Frederik Intveld to b.itJ job interviews. The children weren't forgottoo either. Children of the parisln gave some of their toys to Jame£J and Jayne Intveld.· . The seven couples who engina eered the resettlement al'e members of the Christian Family Movement.

By Alice. Bough Cahill Every woman is 8.! decorator at' heart, but mimy of. us wish our homes might look like those of professionals. W~ try to rationalize and say, "Oh, she had more money to spend, and I can't be that extravagant." But we are so wrong to think good dec- 'through is made unbelievably orating must be coslly:Some attractive with a simple bookdecorators who have merit- case arJ"angement. Here's where ed raves will be honest and furnitureQflexibility is a special

·

tell you they did it on a budget, too. One professional tells us w e sh 0 u 1d

joy.

You can save in fur~ishing bedrooms b y buying g 00 d spend the l a r g _ s p r i n g s and mattreSses and est slice of our mounting tihem on.' adjustable budget on such frames until such time as you · basic comfort buy the kind of bed you want!;. I . pieces as a sofa, Look ih the \Ulpainted. furni· easy ch'air, and ture department for chests. We sleeping equipalways suggest the purchase of a llI1ent. Another high, rather than a low chest of drawers, beeause oi the add:iBritish' Womel"l Rai~ · thought to bear tional storage space. . . din mind is to oolect flex'i!ble 'Fora bed'side table, hunt for $700,000 For Refugees ,'I: urn ish ings one with· drawer and shelf LONDON (NC)-The Cathoilhat can b e space. Simple shel-lee and wax lic Women's League raised $700 r used ifl different rooms and w-ill .make these chests· usable. . 000 during World Refugee Y~ groupings, if you later nwve Ol' Here's what one decor-at<ll1' to help distressed people in :w Iltave a larger house. did for a dining room in an in- ' countries, it has announced. . : Then we should give consid- formal house. She suggested a The le?gue raised over $46,000 C2rable thought' to a coordinated sturdy pine ball'becue set-table among Its members and coleolor seheme that will run and benches. lected most of the rest' ~ 'ibrough the w:hole house'to Tavern chairs usually. used iR churches throughout the coun-' make small ·rooms flow togeth- the living room served as host try. Biggest single sum-$140,000 ~ and our furnishings. in~- and hostess oha·irs. -was spent in' helping refugees ehangeable. When I had dinner in this and coneentration camp victiJl1Gl' . Spending Big Slice ·room" the meal was served fr@m . now in Britain. Over $70,000 When you are· spending. that a large cart, the gay striped cotwas spent for social centers, ~ig slice" of money you will ton cu·rtains were drawn and the clinics and gefle!'al welfare in be wise to choose, for inst'<lnce, bronze in the curtains was re.Hong Kong. ' . a sofia with simple ltines, one peated, ill -'homemade fringed, About $27,000 went to Chrm.. · that wil'l st8\Y Hi style. When place 1llaJtcs, which harmonized refu'gees' in Egypt, refulL~OK INTO PRmSTHO.OD: Y~ung boys of the San tian you are shopping. for a l!ofa, - beautifully with the bright pot~ees ,from Algeria and. for help. you'll probably purd1age an eesy tery. dishes. It w~ an informal AntOnIO area leave their pets at the door for a special series . lng refugees to emigra·te te ehair at the: same. time;. room,bllt a charming one. of week-Iortg Vocation Workshops at St. John's Seminary• . Latin America. Others receiv. The adv.antage ai ~ting bof!I.. Fut'nishing a house attractive-. ing aid were refugees in Ailstria, ~ore than 500 boy~ att~nd Mass in the Mission and pray pieces ..together if; th~ Selection ly and comfortably on a budget Germany, Greece, Italy, Viea.. . JiI!. a schedule whIch mcludes' conferences, classes and of . covering. Its color can set . callos fOl: lIIl overall plan and, nam, ~urma and ~ndonesja. the scheme f<if:' the entire 'Qoulie~ - of course" once you've. made ~ecreation' designed to ,give them a glimpse of priestly life.' our NC P h o t o . · · ' . , You can repeat' ttie basic' color' plan you should stIck to . R. A. WILCOX CO. . . of" these 1Jw() pieces in da'QPei'i~,' . it, and not. be swayed by some ~~5preads an<;t ~ugB, ., . .... of those ~hl~lgS that ar~ beY0n;d. p ' D 'OFFICE FURNITURE On the other hand,you·.JnJlgbt bl,ldget 1~~lts.,_ Aceeptmg • ill StoeI< ' . . I......... DellveJr prefer 'to buy thes~pieees ill challenee IS ~ • DESKS. • CHAIRS musliriandhaveslipooversmade. ' . .' There'.ioSadvimt4lge to this too, : M.ouf.'t.Mercy CorJege· 'MEMPHIS . '.' (NC)'"'7"" Co median.· W'3dl made by Fred Gat1taB, see'FILING CA"'Sbecause ifyo1,l "wi~to.c~ange "Has :N.w 'President ' Danny'Dhomas'. St. Jude's. HOB- retaI:Y of. the hospital's ex~'- • FIRE FILES • SAFES' )"Our. color scheme .it may not ' (NC)-Sie:' .pital. ,is expected te aeCeJ~ it6 tive board and national Chair~~ .. FOLDING TAMil ~ . '~ 90 expensiye t9 ~w slip- ~'. 'CEDA~._ RAPIDS . ,... . tel" Mary :A:~nes Hen~y ~ first patients Oft SUrl..M.r r...;;i 1"" .man· 'of' the £i.nan<;e committee AND CHAIRS . eovers as to 'h8,ve' pteeeoll.·~ .been' appomted president 04. '. '.,~, of ALSAC, an· organi~tion ~ holStered. . .~ ~ ....... i st' . UlL R~·A. 'WILCOX CO~· If you 'have II glees-topped Mount Mercy ColJege,oonductoo, . ..me n ~tution for undel'pi-iV'- Americans of Lebanese descent - by Sisters ~C1f Mercy here im ~ Deged chHdren, which will spe- pledged to maintain the hospital 22 BEDFORD ST., . . eotfee table, match up small, end· ' . . , cla l'lze 1ft . research into . lukemia after'its completion. '.l'hoffias is *" ~bles by chairs, 90 tJh,at you can . Iowa, and' will be installed iI:L FALL RIVER 5-7838' push them all together for a long . office in the Fall. .and some other .diseases, win be . Lebanese. . ta ble-a big helP when ~_ She succeeds Sisrel" Mary Ilde-. staffe~ b~. tale Sisters of SIt. ¢.aining. ' ". phonse Holland,' who resigned ~ncJ6. . T'll e·. use of 'old shUtteN .has til after serving as president for 24 T·pe impetus for the !hol,pital way of disguising an ugly TV yea~s. Under tl'!e administration w-as providea by Thomas who - ret and' old. radio ca.bin~ cll-n. be' of Sister Mary Ildephonse, Mount promised 20 ,years ago to ereet eonverted .into att1'l~ctive cup-' Mercy grew from a junior 001- the institution as a ~hrine to St. . boards by replacing doorS with lege to a fully accredited four- Jude, patron of hopeless caseS. brasS. ~ill work' possiblw year college for women.. Announcement of its ~ming Qutting 'off legs. . The college is a member of the . Use for BoOkshelvee North CentnW Association of Nun Former Buddhist Sectional book-shel:ves can be Colleges and Sec.QnarY Schools CLEVELAND (NC)"':"Aformer ._.ed in a .liv1rig room, OJ' "'udy or and is affiliated with ,the Cath- B uddhist took solemn vows as a " bedroom and 'are '8 ....... "IV>. d. budget ol1e . W h' Unive1'f/ity of.: America ' . Poor Clare nun in the monastery idea' for a-n empty' ball.. Some- I1d . as ~gton, D. C. Sister. Mary chapel here. 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THE ANCHOR-

S-un, Fun Clothes Are Fine But Not at Sunday Mass

Thurs., July 13, 1961

Aid Furor Scars Church Image

By Mary Tinley Daly Each Summer, seems to me, people come to Sunday Mass more and more unclothed. We live year-round in a delightful spot. Visitors come during the Summer-many many visitors. We are very happy to have them. Not onI; do they help our town econ- !.ion' thi6 loriouI li.tt omicaIly, but we like them that ~~ ma:e. . Ie spot .. people and formed some But, for one hour on Sunday, laating friendships. I wish, cannot they recognbe that the 4bougb, that 1hey would be more areful of dress and just plain ~ers in church. Suncla,. HeM . During the Fall, Winter and &pring, our congregation has til a t " w e 11dressed" look quite in keep~ lag with the di/fllity of the Mass. People in our town put on-"corny" if J'OU will-their Sunday be st. Men a 1 way s _ar reguLar suits or slacks jacket, s h i r and tie. Women give the Lord His due by appearing in modish and modest dresses plus hats real hats. Boys and girls like~ wise wear suitable attire Comes Summer, with the influx of visitors, our church ()ft Sundays looks like an off-shoot of the ne3.rby beach. "Why do I have to dress up when nobody else does?" our nine-year-old asks. It is hard flo answer this without seeming flo be unduly critical of our lUests. People arrive late for Mass. )eave early. They whisper and even talk aloud. Oftentimes, 4IJ.ey have shuffled on a pair of _ndals over bare (and none too clean) feet. Women step in~ a sundress over a bathing suit, bobby-pin a paper handkerchief atop their heads in lieu of a hat. Men wear slacks, even shorts, end sport shirt4l. sometimes only baH-buttoned. It' is hard for us to explain flo our children that these, too, ace "real Catoolics," members of 1be Universal Church. Goodness knows, we weleome 1hese visitors, hope they can have a relaxing, restful vaca-

t

New Bedford Girl 'Wins Awards Diane Alice M·ay Franeis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Har!lisan Francis, 254 Tinkham St., New Bedford, has been named recipient of scholarship awards kom the Portuguese-American Oivic League of Massachusetts and from the New Bedford High School Alumni' Association. . A graduate of St. Kilian's PaI'OOhial School, she att'<lined National Honor Society membership in her junior and senior years at New Bedford High, graduating in June with highest honors. She has held office in theiunfor Daughters of Isabella and is en active member of St. Kilian' CYO. Diane wiH begin her studies' ill September a,t Salve Regina. College, Newport as a candidate tor' a bachelor of arts degree.' She plans to enter the teaching field after college graduation.

9

Blessed. Sacrament is .. really present In our little frame church as in the mal"bled catbed.r'llis or the big city churches which they regularly attend? Do I sound cantankeroU8? I hope not. However, many of your readers will be going to Sum~r resort churches this year. Will you call thei·r attention, in the Catholic press, to their respon9ibility as to dress and behavior in keeping with the.dignity of the Mass? Also the effeet of their "informality" on the "natives?" If you print this, please withhold my name--also address. Distin~uished Visitors Dear Mrs. Anonymous: We agree with you completely. As a family which has gone to many a Summer resort, we have noticed exactly what you bring out: year-round members of the congregation are ~ily recognizable. For one thing, they bave a smooth, even and quite accustomed tan-not the burning, splotchy look of those who are determined to "go back home and, by golly, look 90 that everybody will know I've been away!" Regular parishioners are distinguished, too, by their "dressup" look, as though attendance at Sunday Mass were an occasion which it is, worthy of real care in dress and grooming. I'm afraid you are right, too, as to vacationers' "churoh manners." Sun and fun, relaxation and "unwinding" are fine-but we don't have 1lo collapsef

iiJIloii.; ..

WHO'S HAVING THE MOST FUN?: Day Camp programs of supervised games, handcrafts, and dramatics have been established by the Catholic Youth Organization for inner-city parishes in cities throughout the country. These sessions are usually held in the parish school playgrounds and auditoriums, Donna Kelly, CYO counselor for the Cleve~and diocese, supervises a game at St. Edward schoolyard. NC Photo.

Sister Formation Conference Plans New Nursing Program for Nuns

Holy Father Receives Ex-Queen of Albania

VATICAN CITY (NC) -Pope John has received in pl'ivate audience former Queen ~raldine of Albania. The wife of the late King Zog of Albania, now a communist nation, she married him outside the Church. A Hungarian CatholIc, she had requested the usual dispensa t.i on for marrying a Moslem. But the King refused to give the required promise to rear the children of the marriage as Catholics, 90 the requested dispensation was refused. The couple were married anyway. and Queen ~raldine fell under the canonical penalties. About 10 years later she was reconciled to the Church.

Sisters of St. Mary Observe Anniversary BEAVERTON (NC) The Congregation of the Sisters of St. Mary of Oregon commemorated its 75th anniversary here Monday. It is the only religious congregation founded in Oregon. Archbishop Edward D. Howard of Portland, Ore., celebrated a Pontifical High Mass of Thanksgiving at the convent chapel here. The congregation, a Pontifical institute since 1934, now staffs 18 elementary schools with a ·totlil enrollment of 5;500 pupils and four high schools. Sister Mary Johanna,·at 92, 'is the sole survivor of the original' group of nine Sisters. The' congregation was fouru:led_by Archbishop William Gross at Sublimity, Ore., in 1880.

WASHINGTON (NC) - The organization which is recasting many facets of the training given U.S. nuns will launch its fint specially tailored training program for Sister-nurses this Fall. The Si,,-ter Formation Conference has announced here that the new program will be made possible by grants of up to $44,000 from the Hill Family Foundation of st. Paul. Minn. The conference, a division of the National Catholic Educa-' tional Association, is a cooperative movement of 377 U.S. communities of Sisters. Two-Year C&urse Organized in 1954, it is seeking stronger spiritual, intelIectual and professional development for the 180,000 Sisters who staff U.S. Catholic' schools, hospitals and social agencies. The new nursing program, ~_

Pope Receives 30,000 Franciscan Tertiaries VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John granted a special audience in St. Peter's basilica to more than 30.000 tertiaries of the f~ur Franciscan Orders The Pope cited the simplicity of the Franciscan life andrecalled the day when as a yo'ung student he joined what he called the "seraphic militia" founded by St. Francis of Assisi to help penetrate the world with the spirit of Christian simplicity and poverty. -

BOSTON (NC)-The image of the Catholic Church in the U. S. has been scarred by the conflict over Federal aid to education, Richard Cardinal Cushing said here. The Archbishop 01. Boston told a dinner meeting of the directors' board of. the Catholic Daughters of America that prior to ~he election of President Kennedy the Church's public standing had improved. But it has deteriorated since then, partly because of the "controversy aroused by Federal aid to education legislation," he stated. And this has happened, the .. Cardinal continued, despite the fact that the U. S. Catholic Bishops' attitude toward such aid has been the same for the pa9t 25 years. "Personally, I am against aU Federal aid to education," Cardinal Cushing asserted. "It is the problem of the states, not the Federal governlllP P +" Pray for President ~ Bishop Vincent 0. .. ~.dS, of Raleigh, N. C., CDA chaplain, urged the director. to encourage members to pray daily for President Kennedy. "He needs m~ny prayers," thQ Bishop stated, "because of the seriousness of the times. No man in history, unless it be the first president, has had to face up to such tremendous problems ..." The CDA supreme regent, Margaret J. Buckley of Chevy Chase, Md., also urged that members pray for the President, and for all governmeJ1lt officials as well.

Chinese Auction

cording to Sister Annette Walters, executive secretaQ' of the conference, is a two-year course to be taken by Sisters destined for leadership in their communities. A novel feature, she said, is that the course. can be taken only after four years of college preparation. With the addition of a canonical year. it means Sisters enrolled will have a minimum of seven years of preparation before entering the nursing field. Previous efforts of the conference have focused on Sisters due to become teachers, but these efforts have a common note with the nursing program - a lengthening of the period of preparation.

st. John the Baptist Ladies' Guild, Central Village, will meet at 8 tonight in the parish hall. A Chinese auctior, will be featured and each member is requested to bring an ar-ticle for it.

Fall River Whist . The CYO ')f St. Joseph's parIsh, Fall River, is sponsoring a series of whists. The next will be held Thursday, July 27 at the parish hall.

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The conference, for example, has backed recommendations that Sisters who will become Catholic school teachers not enter the classroom until theY have finished their college edu'cation and spent another year in special religious studies.

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10

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs. July 13, 1961

1tIe AN~-Dfoceseof Fan River, Thurs. July 13, 1961

11

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NEW CAR: Mother Mary Elizabeth of Portugal tries hand at driving new station wagon presented to Franciscan Missionaries of Mary as Sister Maria Anjo goes along for the ride and Edmund R. Pavao, chairman of fundraising committee that donated car, looks on. Center, Rev. Edward

Japanese Club Helps Church KYOTO (NC) - A Catholic club here is creating much good will for the Church among the overwhelmingly non - Catholic population of this industrial city. Eight months ago a group of crippled and maimed Catholics, many of them war veterans, banded together to share mutual interests under the title Lambs Club. Today, for every physically handicapped Catholic who joins the club, there are six nonCatholics. "The members are a spirited, joyous group," said Father Francis A. Diffley, M.M., of Brooklyn, N.Y., "and they have time fur everything except complaints or selfpity." Most members admit that before becoming Lambs, their lives were full of frustration. Some had even attempted suicide. But since joining the club they report a-, new, optimistic outlook on life, and many trace their conversion to Catholicism to their first Lambs Club meeting.

A. Oliveira blesses car as community watches in background. Right, mea of EspiritoSanto parish build garage to house car. Left to right, Mr. Pavao, Simon Cabral, Jack Sylvia, Manuel Mello, Manuel Gonsalves. Not pictured, but also a helper on the project is C~arles Pacheco.

Give Missionaries Car, Garage,· Driving Lessons When friend~ of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, Fall River, decide to make a gift to the convent, they don't do it by halves. Proof of this came Sunday, when parishioners of Espirito Santo Church, Fall River, members ot St. Cecilia's Mission Club, and other friends joined together to give the Sisters a station wagon. Along with the wagon went its home. Men of Espirito Santo parish, headed by Edmund

Priest to Present Paper in Moscow WINDSOR (NC) Father George W. Kosicki, C.S.B., chemistry instructor at Assumption University here in Ontario, will present a paper at the International Congress of Biochemistry to be held in Moscow Aug. 10-16. The Basilian priest, ordained in 1956, recently received his doctorate in biological chemistry from the University of Michigan. He will resume his teaching post at the university on his return from Moscow, and will also do resea rch work.

Street. That isn't all. Free driving lessons for Sisters desiring them will also be furnished. Chief use for the wagon, said Mother Mary Elizabeth of Portugal, superior of the Franciscan Missionaries, will be transportation of Sisters who teach at Espirito Santo School. She said that the Sisters are most grateful for this means of facilitating their apostolate in the city of Fall River.

Pavao, who also organized the fund drive for the station wagon, are building a garage on the Sisters' grounds at 621 Second

Psychiatrists Realize Vital Role of Religion CLEVELAND (NC) - More doctors are beginning to appreciate the role of religion in treatment of mental disorders, said Father Ernest Zizka, O.S.B., chaplain at Central Louisiana State Hospital, Pinesville, La. Father Zizka, a native of Cleveland, was here on a visit to family and friends. The Benedictine cautioned that religion is never a substitute for psychiatric treatment, but "religion by prescription" is a good spiritualmedical team. approach to personality recovery. Religion, said Father Zizka, gives vital proof of God's mercy and consolation and helps bring peace to those who must draw on God's love. He said the fast pace of the modern world makes it easier for a person to wear out his vitality-and that's a big reason for the increase of mental illness.

Path Leads Priest To Fourth Country EASTVIEW (NC) Father Karl Staerk's pa,th to the priesthood has wound through three countries and will lead him to a fourth. The newly ordained White Father studied first in his native Germany, then went to the United States for his novitiate and from there came to Canada. He was ordained here in Ontario. After several more months here, he will return to Germany and his next stop will be a White Fathers' mission on RuandaUrundi in central Africa.

•...

SUNSHINE SPREADERS: Fairhaven area teen-agers aren't spending all their time on the beach this Summer.' At least 17 are .devoting hours weekly t~ helping the aged at Our Lady's Haven, Fairhaven. Left, Miss Alicia McConville, age 94, gets tender loving care from Janine Savoie (left) and Nina Amaral, as Sister Mary Rosarie checks techniques. Center,

..

Anglican Primate To Visit Pope

Susan Baker takes Chauncey Hackett for wheelchair aIrIng. Sister ii Mother Mary Daniel, superior of Our Lady's Haven. Right, proud moment as girls receive Carmelette pins. Sister Mary Elizabeth invests, left te right, Janine Savoie, Susan Baker and Nina Amaral. Rev. John A. Cantwell, St. Mary's, Waltham, who spoke at ceremony, looks on.

Maryknoll Adds Girl Fridays Make Life Sunnier Two New Films

LONDON (NG) - The new Anglican Primate said in a national television interview that like his predecessor, Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, he hopes to visit Pope John at the Vatican. "I have little doubt that one day I shall be going to see the Pope, " Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury, spiritual head of the Church of England, said. His first objective as Primate is Christian unity, he added. He said he feels the best thing now is to consolidate the work already defne to promote Christian unity. Archbishop Ramsey wa·s en"; throned in a national ceremony in Canterbury cathedral as the 100th successor (according to Anglican belief) of S'1; Augustine. Archbishop at Dinner Archbishop John Heenan of Liverpool attended the enthronement dinner. given by the new Primate that evening in Lambeth Palace, his London headquarters. The Archbishop did not attend the enthronement itself.

NEW YORK (NC)-The Orient provides the background for two new films, "Dateline Orient," and "Man With A Mission," produced by World Horizon Films for the Maryknoll Fathers. The two quarter-hour movies are combined into a single halfhour film, part of a series Oif eight motion pictures on the people of the Far East filmed on location by Father Albert J. Nevins, M.M., editor of Maryknoll magazine. "Dateline Orient" is narrated by NBC News CommentatQr Frank Blair, and "Man With A Mission" is narrated by NBC Announcer Jack Costello. Both are produced in 16mm color black and white. "Dateline Orient" takes viewers on a tour of five countries of the Orient-Formosa, Japan, Hong Kong, Korea and the Philippines. "Man With A Mlssion" follows a missioner through a typical day in the jungles of Davao in the southern Philippines.

.and

for Guests Cathol ic Colleges Win Recognition At Our Lad)"'s Hoven, Fairhaven

By Avis C. Roberts Seventeen Girl Fridays are making lif e easier and sunnier for elderly guests at Ottr Lady's Haven, Fairhaven, and assisting the Carmelite nuns who staff the home. The girls are high school students, members of the Carmelettes Club, an organization devoted to aid of Carmelite nuns throughout the country. Four girls were capped at ceremonies at Our Lady's Haven, fol- New Bedford and Bishop Stang dining room, work in the lowing completion of re- High Schools and Sacred Hearts the beauty shop, dust and clean, or quirements for the honor- Academy, Fairhaven. Sis t e r set up vestments in the Haven's serving a minimum of two Elizabeth organized the Carme- chapel. hours a week at the home fur a period of three months. Mother Daniel, superior at the Haven, capped the girls and Sister Elizabeth awarded their pins, patterned on the Carmelite seal. They were congratulated by Rev. John Cantwell of St. Mary's Church, Waltham, who spoke at the ceremonies. The girls, who received brown and white checked Carmelette uniforms, nurses' caps and pins, were Nina Amaral, Janine Savoie, Susan Baker and Donna Monty. Currently the 17 girls serving are students at Fairhaven,

lettes last October and is looking for as many new club recruits as she can find. Volunteen; are especially needed this Summer. Coming after school 01' OIl Saturdays, the girls :find a list posted telling them their day's duties. They might feed patients, help .them to dress, make their beds, give a back rub, help in

Send Prayerbooks VIENNA (NC) Viennese Catholics have raised $1,000 to send prayerbooks and Church literature to fellow Catholics Oif communist-ruled Poland.

Each club member makes a pledge to Our Lady of Mt. Carmel before becoming a fullfledged Carmelette. The pledge says, "I, as a Carmelette, promise to be faithful to my duties, kind and helpful to the guests and mindful of the need of religioU\S vocations in my d'lily prayers. May Our Lady of Mt. Carmel help me to keep this resolution." Sister Elizabeth said there have been several vocations from the Carmelettes Club into the Carmelite community but this, she explained, is not the primary purpose of the clubs.

For Alumni Aid

HOLLYWOOD (NC)Five Catholic colleges and univerRities won recognition here in Florida at a conference of the American Alumni C 0 u n c i 1 for "distinguished achievement in the developmeni of alumni support." The Catholic institutions which received honorable mentions iil the council's annual competition, are: Xavier University, Cincinnati; Seattle (Wash.) University; College of Mounot Saint Vincent, (New York); Mount Saint Mary's College, (Los Angeles); ano Regis College, Weston, Mass. The council also judged Redman, the alumni magazine of St. John's University (New York). as one of the 10 top alumni magazines in the country. Of the 300 entr,ies in the "Alumni G i v i n g Incentive Awards" program, 67 were recognized. Lehigh University won first prize, $5,000, for improvement and Yale University won the same award for sustained. performance. Administered by the American Alumni Council, the Inccntive Awards program is sponsored by the United States Steel Foundation to broaden the base of gift support for American edu.cation.

Congregations Name CCD Coordinator

•...

WASHINGTON (NC) - Msg, Rudolph G, Ban:ias of St. Paul, Minn., has been appointed by two Sacred CO~lgregations as their coordinator with the U.s. Bishops' Committee of the Confraternity of Chrl!'tian Doctrine. The assignments by the Sacred Congregations of the Council and of Seminaries and Universities were announced by Fr:. Joseph B. Collins, S.S., director of the National CCD Center here. Msgr. Bandas, pastor of st. Agnes Church, St. Paul, is a former rector of St. Paul Seminary and served for many years as St. Paul archdiocesan director of the confraternity. He is also the author of several education and catectletical wo'rks, including one of the first series of graded religion texts for use in CCD classes, grades 9 through 12.

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Aid Blind Children

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LOS ANGELES (NC) -l'he Catholic Guild for the Blind here has donated $100 for the care of blind children in Africa. The money was sent to Bishop Frederick Hall of Kisu:n:'-u, Kenya. who has 65,~ bUrid children . .

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12

THE

ANCHO~-D;ocese

of Fa If River, Thurs. July 13, 1961

I

In Giving to Him You Give to AU

Planned Training of Youth Forestalls Many Problems

God Love You

By Father John L. Thomas, 8.J.

WHAT WOULD YOU DO POlt THE BOLY PATBElt!

Ass't SeeieIec~ Prot.-8t.L. .is Ulli'renit7 17-year old son has gon~ crazy over a girl

"Our of 15..abe looks older, as they all do these days. The other night Jae was to take her to a dance and return early. He got back at Z A.M., admitted he'd beeR drinking, and had

wrecked the car cllasiD«'

~

boy who had dated his Kin. What punishment should we Aive him? My husband says be can't go out until he .-aduMes. Won't that make him bit-

ter." You're worded about the wron g problems, Mary. Like many modern parents, ,.ou seem to &how concern only when the damage is external. Why Ilot stop and ask yourselves what kind of a boy you are raising? This incident offers a good occasion to take a serious look at what you 8l'e doing. Raising teenagers these days appears to be left pretty much up to chance. Sensible parents try to develop a plan. ~nd by looking ahead they ean forestall some of 1he most lle£ious problem.s. Rules for Dating What are some of the areas 1hey should think. a~t? Well, Mary. your letter mentH)TIed severnl. Let's take this problem of elating. Have you developed any genemJ norms or rules that .your children are well acquamted with and which they take £or ,anted that they must follow? It seems very strange that you should have tolerated yom:- 36n's association wi'th this is-year-old p r l . . your letter indicates that tIns «irl has been dating for some time, yet at her age she shouI~ be home and in bed. Doesn t the fact that her parents shuuld el10w her as much freedom give ,.ou some indicatIolll M her trainin~'!

1. Suppose that you had about ZOO mis8i.OllV1' societies under your jurisdiction. Z. Suppose that aome of these Orders bad 1 or Z mem.ben oa tile Missions, others 4.0, others 1,000 and still others 3.000. 3. Suppose that 3 per cent of the total of the 200,000 missiOll.nes eame from the! ricltst eountry in Ute world; ~ ....t .., per cent of the missiomuies· came from poor countries. 4. Suppolle that ... few. of the societies received many alms, and o4iber soCieties received very little. 5. Suppose that DO one miBsionary lIOCiety aided any of the others financiallySociety A helping only Society A, Society B helping only Society B and not Society C.

number of ni&hts out, and so on, lbat you and your Ilusbeml must discuss and work out some con.lIistent plans for handling. ElEaIBiBe V ..... &t a society offering sueIt • variety of norms and standards, Catholic puents must not simply drift wiih the crowd, irresponsibiy hoping that 3Omehow their children will tul'll out aU right. But perhaps more important than the tasks we hav~ been discussing, parents must examine what kinds of values, aspirations or life-goals their children are developing. What does it mean to be a Christian in the modern world? What are they going to do f()lJ' Christ? Wharf; vooation are they planning to follow? What qualities and training does it r~­ quire? Are they dev,eloping a sense of loyalty and responsibility? Have you taught them to take "no" for an answer, to be helpful and cooperative around the home and with their sistel'S and brothers? Requires United Effort Needless to say, such training requires the united and persistent effort of both parents. You can't do it alone, Mary, and particularly in dealing with teenage boys, your husband must be willing to offer guidance and oounsel, rather than just stepping into the picture when th~ situation is critical. .What punishment shouM your son receive? A great deal depends on his present attitude. If he is arrogant and surly, yo<u will have to be gevere, !letting down a strict and absolute regime regulating his ltOcial life and studies un&i.l he lear.n.B to acknowledge your authority. If he admits that he has acted irresponsibly, he has learned a ~d deal, and you, or particularly his father, should use this opportunity to discuss his present conduct and future h()pes witb him on a mature level, for he appears quite ad{)lescent at this point. If he w{)rks during the Summer, he should of course help pay for the car, but he will' want to d·o that if he has learned anything from this experienre. Discipline Skews Love One final question, won't he become bitter if you are too strict'! There is l!i.ttle real danger of such a reaction if you explain the reason for your rules and let him know that his freedom will increase to the extent that he developo; a sense of responsibility. The really embittered youth are the del1nquents who have been neglected by their parents. Discipline shows love, though it is not always recognized.

EXTENSION POST: Fr. John J. Sullivan of the Oklahoma City-Tulsa diocese has been named to the staff of the new Extension V01unteers program, conducted by the Catholic Church Extension Society, which seeks to enlist laymen to gerve in U.S. mission areas. NC Photo.

Anglo-Catholics Wary of Merger NEW YORK (NC) - The Anglo-Catholic faction 01. the Protestant Episcopal Church has told Episcopalian:s that mNging with other Protestant denomina_ tions would. jeopardize the church's chances of reuniting with the Roman Catholic M' Eastern Orthodox communions. Canon Albert J. duBois. executive director of the American Church Union, and :!2 other clergymen and laymen in the group made the statement in an open letter to Rev. Dr. Henry P . Van Dusen, president of Union Theological Seminary here. Dr. Van Dusen 'had criticized Episcopal churchmen who opposed a merger of the four major Protestant denominations: Episcopal, United Presbyteri.an and Methodist, and the Unite« Church of Christ. P_ibilities OJ)ell, The author of the merger pNposal is Rev. Dr. Eugene Canem Blake, chief executive officer tn the United Presbyterian Church. Citing the example ()f an existing merger in South lndia, the letter further stated that adoption of the Blake proposal would "unfit ourselves to enter into the WiStly enlarged ~i­ bilities which DOW seem open ~ us."

Besides there is something unbealthy about an older ooy beeomiD?; infatuated with sum a child. Is he afl"1aid to date girls itt his own class at school? Lacks Self-Esteem Moreover, the facts leading up to the wrecked car incident point to a trait of character that needs oo-rrectipn. Obviously the girl stood hi m up on this date, yet be does not seem to have sufficent self-esteem or insight to .-asp what has happened, and rather than admit that he has been made a bit of a fool of, he tried to take it out on the CHICAGO (NC) A large other boy. neon sign bearing the name at. Why not point out to him that the New World, Chicago archhe has been "taken", and that diocesan riewspaper, was blessed unless he develop" a little sinby Albert Cardinal Meyer. ~ self-esteem, he'll probably The Archbishop of Cilieago have it happen again and again. a1ll0 threw the switcll that ilSome voung men neve!' do seen luminated the sign, whiclt exto cat~h on that they are being tends from the fiftil tQ the ninth used as seconds or stand-ins. floors of the New World buildIt's a p()(}r way to start dating. ing,' located in Chkago'. Loop. Then there is the matter of Assisting Cardinal Meyet' were drinking .. Have you discussed MsgI'. George J. Casey, vical." .is with him, so that he knows general of the Chicago archdioDay your firm convktions? I ~ubt cese and president of the New whether he would have glVeIj. NEW YORK (NC) - The naWorld Publishing Company, and the shallow excuse that aU juntional headquarters of the ScapMsgr. John lII. Kelly, editor 01. iors in school drink if yoo had ular Apostolate here, which pro:the paper. let him know your position motes wearing of the scapular clearly. of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Why wait imtil the matter announced that the principal comes tW'! Y~ur Children lIIiould celebration of the Mt. Carmel tote made well aware of your . feast day in the U.S. will take attitudes on such problems beplace in New York City. . Me they meet tbem is. liheir A solemn novena is being ~kl IOUTE 6, HUTTtEsON AVe. tivM. . (July 7-15) at the National Near' faiti\avet. f»ri.,.-Ift There are oitaec Jnlftter., such Shrine of Our Lady of the Sc~p­ • use of Iibe cae, 8jIeIlfi!n« ular of Mt.' Carmel. in prepai;a................ 0... , Money, type Of ~paai.cHl4, pee, tion for th~ Feut Of Our Lad,y ....... 0. ..... Mitred plaoea fIl ~ , of Mount carmel, luly l-6. . The special Pl'9tecti~ ol C)w ,. to Lady is extendetl to Catho.l;ios ~-----------....., W'ASHINGTON (Re) '" who have matte a conscienti.,. I " ectHege housinC 10en ." $t,HO,- effort to lead • Christian ~ ·N...... & MIA:nNe. INC. 810 to St. Louis UniYersiQ' was an« have faithfun,. wern Ute ','. ' ... De.sRl. tlIlDOunced bJ' ~i8sioner Scapular al. 0 - 14dy of JIlt. ~ j' • 1Ft. "'. . Sidney H. WoolDer oil tile CoRl- Carmel, the lteadquarter,s aanouncement saicI. The promiee t, . ... Mlolftity Pacililies Admini8U'a00 ...........,.. tioo. A Jesu.it coeducatiemal in- of this protecUoa w attribu\ecl . ,atution with _ enroihaeat at. to Our La(jJ' ia aD apparition to WY 5-1631 ~l, the univerait,. wilt ue St. Simon Stock. priOl' gellera-l 21.a ACUSHNET A'W. the loan for coastruetioa • • of the Carmelites, ia lfil. ill. NEW 'IEDIOa8 Aylesford, EnglaRd.. , , DeW men's dol"mitol7-

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SOLUTION You would probably do exactly what 1he Holy Father did. 1. While blessing every community for the aid it recei~ he, nevertheless, felt the necessity of aiding all of them equally> . 2. He established a Society to be his own, therefore, Pontifical. The purpose of this Society would be to gather alI?s. whic:h t~e Holy Father himself would distribute to all of the miSSionarIeS In all of the areas of the world. The Holy Father said that this Society, the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, "is to be first and principally aided." Because he is the spiritual father of all m~~n­ aries he has an equal interest in all; because he knows the MlS910n probiem better than anyone else, he is able to distribute alms more wisely than any individual.

It is _t ~ible for y_ t. answer tile th_ _nds., ~ that come to Yl}. for aid. All of them are worthy. JlISt as cities instituted the Community Chest in erder t. avttill exc:essive soliei&a.tions, 1M) the Church 'has clevelopecl the Societ,. for the Propagation of the }'aith where, without exclading help" oUten. aid is first and principally given te the Vicar ef Christ. iii giviB.c to Ilim y•• cive te all. Always r.emember tIlat TIle Soeiei,. for the Propagation of the Faith is the Churcll'. 0 _ Seciety f_ eathering and distributing alms to the MissieBS. If y_ remember this yo. will rememBer us in your Will, in taking out aIUtuitiell . . . ia yCMlr 4ail,. prayers and sacrifices. GOD LOVE YOu' to A.A. for $5 "In thanksgiving." ... to Miss L.J.B. for $55 "I prom'ised this donation to the Missions if I were to find suitable employment after my graduation from bigh school. My wish was granted, and I send this in gratitude." . . . ~ W.J.C. for $5 "The Lord has blessed our family many times. May you use this to help bless the poor oi. tihe world." . . . to Mrs. H.V.W. ~or $100 "All my -life I have wanted. to be able 110 give this t1) the Missions. Now God has made it po95i'ble." Televisiell viewers spend tile Sulftmer meftUts watehing "repeats." Lei us, then. repeat our leve of Mary by placillC OUIt LADY OF TELEVISION .tep 0 _ sets. This ll-mcli fipre '" JladODDa aacI Child is made .f unbreakable white pla~ wiill gold-colorecl _ aad. llal8ll. Send _ etfering ., $S 'willt· ,.our llequ~

Cut out this c~lumn, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it fA) the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, NY .. or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, F:all River, Mass.

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Bishop Dwyer Urges Purge Of Indecent Floor Shows

THE ANCHORThurs.. July 13. 1961

Ma~a2Z:ine Lists ] ~~ U. S. Negr@ PlfO~$tl'~

RENO (NC) - Bishop Robert J. Dwyer of Reno has caned for a cleanup of indecent floor shows presented in eertain resort hotels and casinos in Nevada, warning at the same time'that Catholics are forbidden under pain of grave sin from viewing such enterfurced to call y~nir attention to tainment or taking any part its prevalence. in its production or· adver"I refer, of course, to the type tising. Bishop Dwyer, a 00: floor shows and plays precolumnist fOJ: 'The Anchor, issued the warning in a pastoral letter read Sunday at all Masses in the Reno diocese. The prelate did not mention the word "seminude" in his letter, but il1 was clear tha,t he was referring to shows featuring seminude girls. There are now three such shOW8 .in Rerro. Repeats Warning The Bishop's letter repe8lted ira part what he had said three years ago in a letter warning about indecent entertainment in Nevada, particularly in Las Vegas. That letter was used to frame a bill in the state legislature against immoral entertainment. The bill passed the Senate, but it was held up in a committee of the Assembly by a representative from Las Vegas. Bishop Dwyer said in this week's pastoral: "Three years ago I found it necessary to write to you in regard to a most unpleasant and unsavory subject, the problem °of indecent and immoral entertainment in Nevada. Once aga·in I find that I am

sented by a certain number of resort hotels and casinos, located principally in the two major cities of the state." Taint 01/ Immoralit.y The Bishop said his first concern is for the spiritual/welfare of Catholics, and especilally their children who are exposed to the "taint" od' immoral enter·tainment. "But I am also concerned," he 2>dded, "for the honor of the state of which I am, like yourselves, Q citizen. I object when certain elemen·ts try to rub our noses in filth. And I do not think I_stand alone in my objection .•• "I urge that we clean our house before rising national sentiment forces this upon us," he asserted. "There is no question here of imposing a puritanical censorship; the public decency of our commonwealth is at stake. Here, certainly, is an issue upon which all right-thinking people-Pro-testants, Jews and Catholicsshould join in instant and effeo/live protest."

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL: On next Suooay, Feast of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, the N~tional Federation. of Sodalities will hold a day of prayer for the persecuted people of Cuba. This giant mural of Our Lady of the Scapular, Mediatrix of All Graces, is housed in the Marian Library illl Dublin, Ireland. NC Photo.

Prelqte Says Advance of Science, Communism Cause World Crisis MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - The assert now lIB always that man'IJ two most obvious factors 00'll- reill goal Ie heilveft," the Cardtributing to today's world crisis ina! said. ll!re the advance of the material eerdinal Meyer, episcopal adsciences and atheistic commun- viser to serra Intel'l1atioJUi.~ ism, Albert·· Cardinal Meyer lauded the organization of busitold more than 2,000 member6 ness and professional men for· of Serra International at a ban- helping to meet today's crisis quet which closed the organiza"through i~ chosen purpo6e of tion's annual convention here. Ilhe apostolate for' vocaUON! ~ The Cardinal said that writen the priesthood." today are questioning whetl)er' Need Underdlmdhll' technical progI'e68 begets Iriho ~Thiflis caMed the'age of the oism. "May t simply say in a par- lay apostolate," Cardinal Meyer tial answer to that question, in said, "and indeed who can doubt the words of Pope JOhn that· · the- truth Of this phrnge .in: the . 'The Christian faith bas nothing · ligbt of the many statemente to fear either from science:> or · which recent popes have from its offshoot, technology,''' . 031 the subject.' . ··Pius· XII did not hesitate tc Cardinal Meyer said. . "Perhaps the crishs resulting tell the International Congress from scientific and technological of the Lay Apostolate in 1957 progress is best expressed in that 'the oonsecration oi the . terms of what Pius XII called world' is essentililly the work 'the terrible temptation to ma- of laymen themselves." eardinal Meyer said that in terialism.' This temptation undoubtedly showlS itself mQSt facing toda!y's crisis it is of "the forcefully and menacingly in utmost importance" tha,t \xll!ib atheistic oommlWlism," he con- priest and layman achieve a deeper understanding of their tinued. respective roles and also achieve COIle of Communism a deeper understanding of the "For it has been well mid that 'the bard' oore of commun- true role of the ChurCh;- . ism is materialism.' With the rejection of heaven and the supernatural as the goal of ma'n, 'communism has insisted that man's Of Family Movies· .. NEW YORK (NC) - There real goal is 1ilis earth. "Therefore, it is determtned are a number of ,Iwholesome" k» be rid of the Church and the family-type movies being shoWil\ ministry of the priesthood ift this Summer, an official of the National Legion of Decener- Sllie! the Church, wbicll continUal flO here" ; . ..< . ..

BAY ST. LOurS (NC) - Fi~ teen American Negro priests, four of them converts, were 00'dained this year, raising the number of America's Negro priests t() 120, it was reportoo h~re. . Three of tIN! new priests are member.:; of the clergy in the Archdiocese of Chicago and the Dioceses of Camden and ~_ kane. The remaining 12 8Il'C members of six religious orders, according to the St.· Augustine Catholic Messenger, magazine o:f the Divine Word missioners. Five are Divine Word ml&slonaries and two are Benedictines. One each belongs to the Capuchins, Fr,anciscans, Conventuals, Redemptorists, and C1'{P mea- F9Jthers.

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Msgao. ThomeeF. Little, exeeutive secretary of the legion, .' ·said that among them are "Misty," story of two· children on a pony ranch, and "Question 7," a drama 01. the conflict· between the Church and commun- , ism in Germany today, Both have been cited by the Legion of Decency as superior rnotiOlll pictures. Msgr. Little also recommended the "Guns of Navarone," "The. Parent ·Trap" and "Francis of Assisi." And "parents with more mature children," he stated, "will find worthwhile entertain-. ment in "Fanny," "The Naked Edge" and "The Bridge."

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NOTRE DAME . (NC) - Fr.. '1'heodore M. Hesbur,gh, C.S.C.. president of Notre Dame, an-' nounced thll't the university hae received the ·lan-gest researcli grant in history, $579,653. The funds were made available by the Atomic' Energy Commission and represent e one-year reXlewal ofl the AEC's sponsorship·' (If Notr0 !klme'e ~diation lebi

MODERATOR: Henry B. King, a prominen·t Catholie layman, has been named moderator of the NBC radio program, "Family Livi~.5::> 61". NG Pho:to.. ... ~~i:}.:.-:t

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THE ANCHOR-Oiocese of Fall River, Thurs. July 13, 1961

Eva~u@l{e~"~atholic Schools On' QWJ@~ofry of Instruction Dwyer~

By M.ost Rev. Robert J.

,

Bishop of Reno

D.D. '

'

This is written on the edge' of exasperation.' Doubtless for that reas"on it ought not to be written at all, as failing in that olympian objectivity,which should characterize these mitred musings. But some'thingmust be conceded'from time to time to the .state o~ the But the downgrading we speak weather, the mternatIonal, of it not only destruotive. Worse, , ,situation, or the things one' -it is mendadous. For 1t is simply has been reading. And we untrue to say that the Catholie have been aroused by the last- ~ch~l i';1 ~e~iCa today_is an

lllamed, recently, to a degree of inferior Ipst~tution. .' ,Superior InstitutlCMl ' , .'" . '. th a t 'saeva mm ,t' h' h n is m fact a superior insti, gna w It .'fution. It is superior not only e 'no 0 n gG d' , in its steadfast exaltation of the l,e a ste t~ ' , primacy of t~e spiritual bu.t in ormen Sf D e its adherence to an ideal, of SSha~~ 0 ean Christian, hum~nism which has . .,wFIor" we h av e wellnigh, died out in its secular 1 'b ,. d' counterpart. th~: ~he a The, valid crit~cism ~~ ,the th l' h 1 Cathohc sC,hool, actually, IS that a 0 IC,,;c 00 : 'it has not :maintained' this"su:" 'n~ed e. d th ~ d:~a , periori~y with 'quite enough zeal,' 41.1 I'S ,a . ~r and, determination; tha't it has " are In f enor . , " ' ' Is which 'ought allowed itself to-.be ' beguiled" tQ secon d ra t e sc h 00 . ' , , , to b -b ght 'to standard.. an extent at least, by the fool's . e.. r0';l up I .,' gold of faddism and by 'tha't ,,' ~". ThiS IS a he and a slander. : t 18 .,mania for, uenrichment"-- which GQ transparently falge that it . th' d' .' f th te ,,_ should require no refutation. ~s a I~ Isgulse or e s ~~ l ' that it is given 1J!lpoverlshment of our teachmg. Y et th ~ puzz ~ IS " . By arid large, however, it has space' and Circulation even lR h Id th l' ··t st'll bell th"'t Catholic journa,Is as rthougl!'",)t: ';"i ci I f e<i\ie~r, ' ~ , ., .t' hI 'nion if not an e en ..pr u , o c a Ion 151 were, ~" ena e Opl " not' only 'the' preswnptiv.~ 'citi- , ~tabhshed fact. 'zen of heaven but the ;chfilized ' is so fantasti~llY :wide of, , human being who is the he,ir of, ," ,th~ ~mark. th~t one IS tempted to the ages, the man who is at home wonder If It be not a: clever in the difficult present and 'Who· , piece. of propaganda. ~evlsed by ,is unafraid of thedoub~ti"I to- ' BOYS MEET R1EAL ANGELS' Th' t .' ,. , ts "f th Pith A 'tl CYC certam non-CatholIC ; paren,ts ..morrow.," , ' ,',", .' ,.' ..' .. ~, .' • e wo masco ,0 ,e au,,, e pos e .. t wh~ have been disappomted In , . . Dedicated Thchers" ' "baseball team lIsten WIth awe 88 members of the, U.S. Navy "Blue Ange~s" preCISIOn. the~r efforts to enroll their chi~It is superior, let us say it, in flying team come to Pine Lawn, Mo., to teIl them ab/jut the wild bli,Ie yonder. The flyers, d~~n in thege same Chathobhc the quali~y ~nd 9-edi~ation,Q.f~e Lt, Lew 'Chatham, left, an~ ·,Lt. Dan McInt'yre, were ·in Pine Lawn after participating lllChools, and who hope .t er: y vast majOrIty of Its teachers,· . h S tt A~ F B TIL L 1'ttle Kevm . Rens h ' ed 1f .h """" 'd I'ay~ T rue , enoug ", h., m. an aIr .... scare a few Cathollcs . mto 're1"IglOUS an ' s " ow at Co C Ir orce (ase, , aw IS seat at e t, Wit • 4lreating the de~ired vacancIes. the. habit 'of religwn d<>el; not hIS brother .Steven. N Photo. , , Sinister Influences automatically confer the habit of ' ,. , P - But it is nothiJDg so simple or the, teacher, ,but it ~';flattering: It reflects, rather, blindness to ignore the fact, that' , two somewhat sinister influ- :~t 'furnishes an, incentive to, ex- ' ROSLYN,' (NC) - Jack and stations of the islands. ' . lands; for whioh they sailed ences the'arroganceofthe'secu-, ',cellence which is unique,,'and' Dorothy Binns left New York" Mr. and Mrs. Binns are both from·here. l8iist' educational thi~ing in ,which has produced inc~inpar- for the Marshall isIands, where £rom Ohio -he.from Salem an~ -:' They were given financial asAmerica and the readiness of able results. . . they will serve ,as' lay :mission-sh~from Barnesville - but they sistance in preparing for their certain Catholic elements to Religion inculcates, moc:!.esty" aries - but that's only half the met in New York. They were long, voyage by the specially d~wngrade the greatest achieve.. and reticence, and it has, often story. ' married in 1936 arid entered the formed Capella Committee of me~t of the ChUrch in modern, occurred ,to'us' that some/part ' Mr: and Mrs', 'i3inns'al~egoing Catholic Churchin 1946. . St. Mary's church -here, where tirbes. of the blurring of our ·public" 'to the far'-Off Plicifec isles the Mr. Binns has since 1947 been they were parishioners. .,The first is to be expected; ~t , image. is simply due to tpe, fact hard way' - via a six-month, In charge of nUcleK reactor in' W6uld be strange' if gecularism" 'that iW~ 'are reluctant, to ,~pro- 12,000 mile voya:ge aboard their strumentatioD." at the, Brookwere not to strain every, effor~ : clai~' our virtues in.the ~~rket- '43-foo1 ketch "Oapella." ' haven National Laboratory.¥rs. to'·: blacken the' image of its', place over th~ ,P.A system.', So be -, The' R6s1yh'~arried couple Binns has taught domestic sci.. mo~ vigorous and' effective op- it; time will mark the,diife~~nce. serve in the'Mars:tlall Is- ence'in New York City schools. P,lumbing - Heating p¢ent., ,C(atbolics llIave Rigb~:: ':'iands under'Bishop Viricent L When the ambitwtl. of becom, ~,~o long as the.Catholi,C .~~uf~!-t: ,~~~- l~t' be cl~ar. abJ lJ•t all , Kennally-, '~,S,-.r:,: .:vicar: Apos~olic Ing lay mfssionai'ies' firrst ocOver .35' Years is m the educatIon~ bus~n~~ 10 t~IS In .ou~ own t.h~nk~ng, ~et~us of, t,he Carohne .lind Marsh.:all" ,curred to them, they got in touch .of Satisfi~d Service ¢his country the secularism wQr~ for .Its ,clanflcatlon In: the" Islands. " " ", with' the Jesuit Seminary and which is entrenched in the Na- public thmkmg. _ , ' '" They plan to tum over the 'Mission Bureau in New York 806 NO~ MAIN STREET tional Education Associ~tion, as "It is ~t De.caus~ th~ p~th~lie ""Capella" to' JheJesuit n1iss.ion.,. The bureau helped arrange then: '~Ii River 0$ 5-7497 a:.f~·presentative press~e .group, :'Chool 1fJ. an, ~nfer!Or Ins~~t~tlOn 'aries there. for use in transport- : ~gnment to' the' Marshall Iswill do its utmost to villify the m America tha1 the rlgli;t to lng priests, medicine and food ' , Catholic school. ,Ft:deral or .sta~ aid is ass¢ried, am6ngthe"-iar~flung mission . , ~ it' will assert or assume the but 'because its, Students happen '" '",. , manifest superiority of the sec- to be American citizens wb6 are" New'Presiderat alar school andpatro~ize the ,re:- entitled to .an equ~l s~~r~ in.: SYRACUSE (:NC) -'- Father -<. l!~ious ,school when It ,does not th0ge, m~tenal b~nefI,ts .bet':Veen Nicholas J. Sullivan, S.J.,' a naopenly sneer atit The leopard, su,penonty and mferlorIty. It is otive or' Pittsfield Mass. is the wi~l change, his. spoti!, w~ thin.k, still t.rue that a log wi~,Joh~s - new president' of' :LeMo;ne Colsooner than thIS mentahty Will Hopktns on o~e end. and .a ,Pupil lege. He succeeds Father Robert acknowledge the competenc~ ,l?f on the oth:r IS a um~ersl:ty" and E.' Grewen, S.J., who sell'Ved as file Catholic educational syStem., the Cat~ohc school IS prepared president since 1954. Brands Criticism FalSe to re~t I~ value. on the quality , Th 'd ht t f be'" of i'ts teaching, aid or riO aid. ----/J)-R~Y-C-.L-EA-N-I-N-G-·-, e secon oug DO .. 0 The question,., once more, is , expected, It would ~. pleasant not whether the Catholic school and, to. record that American Cath- needs to be brought up to stand- ' FUR STORAGE lDlics, to a man~ .were enthused .ard, but whether the rights 01. ove,r th.e, magmflcent structu~e all Americans are' to, be 'recogWhich IS the. ~roduct 'of s~ch nized by equal justice under 1 ' generous sacnflce, and which ' , aw.. represents the most telling clial8De~Dl6dh1*lliJ9 !r<e,~~@t\MO ,~ lenge to the growing secularism ~ w 34-44 Cohannet Strc~ of the age. CLEVELAND (NC) - A man, Taunton VA 2-()161 But no; in a body so large has been indicted in nearby. and diverse there are bound to Lake County for accepting $7,be the dissentients, ,the -malcon- 725 iJD payment for the sale and tents and the gelf:"appointed.' installation of, -two organs for NO JJOIa 100 BOG critics, It would be endurable, Borromeo SernIruirY; The maD lit would' even be va],uable, if dumped severa~ parts of one 0'1:NONIE TOO SMALL they were to dwell on :the ad- gao at the seminary but failed . " ,mitted weaknesses of the Cath- to assemble them. The 'second olic school structure SIS a con- organ still hasn't been heard tribution toward rectification. from. In explaiI~.ing what haP-' While preserving a balanced and pened and:"Why" a seminary PRINTERS constructive y.iew. ,~pokesman saw' he "was really " ,a ','.delightful fellow." .

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,GEORGE M'. MONTLE

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DIE1M0 D,r ClEAIN ERS

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. A Stonehill College facult)' u:;.ember is the author of a. feature article in a recent edition' of The American School Board . .TournaI. Dr. John P; Sullivan, p,rofessor of education, has\vrit.:.: ' ten an article entiUed "Curricu~" 10m. Guide for School' Board" Members"; which appeared in the June issue of the publica~

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Urges Philosop'he:rs Seek 'Humanization' of Science

THE ANCHORThurs., July 13, 1961

Cathol8(;S Warn Of ~~d TtJ1lrreat

DETROIT (NC)-A Catholic philosopher urged here that his fellow philosophers make it their mission to humanize science. Dr. Anton C. Pegis warned that science, without the guiding ,hand of philosophy, "could even destroy us." "Philosophy today has, a "The philosopher and the scimore serious duty than ever entist are both seeking fundabefore. In this age of science, mental truth," he said. "Though philosophers .must have as the terminology and the methods· their mission at least the dehumanization of science," he said. Dr. Peg is is president of the Institute of Medieval' Studies at the University of Toronto.' He took part in a symposium on the relationship of philosophy and science sponsored by the University of Detroit in connection with an honors convocation. Seek Same Truth Dr. William j, Thaler, former Navy physicist and now a faculty member at Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., said philosophy and science are ultimately seeking the same ,tru~.

of investigation are different, both must arrive at the same conclusions, for truth is one." Father Robert J. Henle, S.J., dean of graduate studies at St. Louis (Mo.) University, said philosophy must make "the best use of scientific methods and remain free as an interpreter."T. A. Boyd, an automotive engineer, described science and philosophy as "sister forces" in the search for truth. But he added .that science "must remain humble to philosophy," which aims to interpret the ultimate causes Qf ti:lings.

Father Frederick Goes ,'to Moscow

1'5

BUENOS AIRES (NC) - ~ gentina's Catholic Action organ.ization has condemned the religious persecution' in Cuba b.y the government of Premier Fi=del Castro.

"1

The organization's statem~ assert::d that "the regime hl power in Cubci denies, destroys and cruelly violates all attemp.'W to live in freedom." Argentine Catholic Action S3>Ul it wants "to alert the natiC'ml of Latin America and our own C<luntry to communist penetJ::a,. tion."

Semin<!:8ries to Share Millien DoUar Estate

.»-

CINCINNATI (NC)-Two ocesan seminaries will receW:ll the bulk of a ,widow's es~ vah,led' at more than a miHiMI P~OCLA][M CUBA lPRAYER DA)': Studying a proc- oollars. lamation by Joseph Cardinal Jl.l.itter, Archbishop of St. Louis ,The' wiU of Mrs. Gr~ and Episcopal Chairman of the National Federation of , Schwenck, former Cincinnati school teacher,. after bequests til Sodalities, calling for a day of prayer for Cuba on July 16, relatives and friends, left - tbtl Feast of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel" ai'~ ArthurJ. Conley, ,bulk of her $1,i52,263 ~s\ate,. , left, qf St. Louis, president of .the federation, and Charles Mount St. Mary's Major Semi&-> S ld'd ",ary and St. Gregory's MinoF .. enn~wa ,pres! ent of the St. Louis Adult Sodality Union. Seminary for tile education'" NC Photo. young men for the priesthood.

Continued from Page One sion was in retaliation f<lr the "That deadline was set'down by refusal 'of the U.S: government the, Russians," he,said. to prolong the vi~ of a visiting "It g,ives me plenty of time Soviet clergyman,. ' to get there by ship and train. :' Two-Year St-ay. '.l1he Russi'ans -have been prett;v Fa·ther Frederick asked in his generous." visa application to, be able to Father Frederick said his reI-igious superiors asked him this stay in Soviet Russia between Pr~yfor tw~ and,three yeafs., He,said.,.he Spring to prepare for the MosContinued from Page One expects to,:stay a1>9ut .two y~~fS. COw assignment and he applied Communions, .our prayers, arid The, Soviet Union. permits. an for his visa the first week. 'in our heartfelt deepest sympathy. ' April. It WQS issued within two American priest to live inMos"With them we beseech our cow .under the terms of the 1933 months. ' . Mo-ther .Mary,. Queen of Peace, ,Roosevelt Litvinov agreement Replaces Father Dlolll The present American Catlw- , in which the U.S-. granted diplO- to bring pace and freedom tG matic reC<lgnit!on to the' Soviet their beloved land and' we shall lie chaplain in MosC<lw, Father 'Union. ,.. ,. continue to pray until this prayer Dion, waited more than three , Father Frederick will be the is answered." years for his Soviet visa. He replaced Father Georges Bisson- sixth American priest - . all nette, A.A., who was summarily have been Assumptionists - to expelled by the Russians in take the MosC<lw pOst. Continued from .!Page One' March, 1955, after serving as at first, is planned, for use in a chaplain f<lr more than two Suppor~ few years as a regular grade years. Continued from Page One school. '.l1he Russians later admitted Private schools inust 10weT It will be C<lmpleted in three tlhat Father Bissonnette's expul- their tuiHon fees in propOrtion , stages, the first including eight to the amount of government aid classroomtl, an' administration they receive. In some cases, office 'and a library; the second ,therefore, tuItion charges a·re an aUditorium; and the, third six Continued from Page One ' more classrooms to permit tl-JIevaluating publications in these , eliminated completely. pansion of grades as needed. , Private Schoo is' ' two fields. PrieSts of the parish said it is Safeguards Ideals Most of France's Private' The National Office for Decschools are Catholic. The private' expected that ,future growth ent Literature has been estab- - schools include 10,200 .elemen- will demand ,that several grades lished to safeguard the moral tary schools, with' 1,100;000 pu- will have to be divided inte and spidtual ideals of youlil pils; nearly 1,400 secondary separate sections; At St. Miohael's Ohurdl, through a program 'designed: schools,' with 400,000' students; 1. To remove' objectionable and 2,300 technioal schools, wHil Ocean Grove, work is in 1he planning, s~ge for enlargements comic book,s, magazines and 240,000 students. pocket-size books from places of Only one pl'ivate secondary of the chuvch building. The sacdistribution accessible to youth; s c h 001 and eight technical risty will be increased' in size and 2. To encourage the publicaschools' hilVe asked, to be ab- addtions . to t~ kont of the tion of good Hterature; ," sorbed into the public sC'hO<lI ~hurch w-illmake it capable of accommoda't1ng mol'e worship-. 3. To promote, plans to de- :system. .. velop wovthwhile reading habits Last August, the six ca:tdinals , PePS. ' during youth's formative yeall\S. of the French Hiera,rchy sugNODL fulfms ,its' purpose, in gested to ,Catholic secon'dary and , -',: WQlcome .Home paM, by offering to' responsible NEW YORK- (NC) - Aiter 11 technical schools that contracts individuals and organizations of association .should be nego- - two - mO.l1th absence. Francis evaluations of current comic tiated. Four hundred and twenty ,C~rdinal Spellman, Archbishop books, magazines a~d pocket-' such contracts have. been re- of New York, returned to St. size book,s based on clearly dequested - around 300 of fuem , Pa·trick's cathedral and presided fined objective standards. at ,Solemn Mass. The Cardinal for seC<lnd'ary schools. . had been absent since May when he un,derwent an eye operation. •

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ESTIMATES ON MEET ATSEMINAR:'The only two' Father' Claytorts , . iH the United States met at the recent 1961 Communica.DRIVEWAYS· ~ARDS tions Seminal' at St. Joseph's College;. Rens~elaer, Ind. • SIDEWALKS Father Charles M~'Clayton, left, editor of the North Central • lPAlItKnNG AREAS Louisiana Regist~r, 'looks, ~ver a pubiic'relations manual '.GAS STATIONS held by Father Thomas Clayton, C.PP.S., of Cathagena, Route 130 Sandwich Ohio" publicity direct~:r for the Society of, the Precious T¢1. GArde~ .3-2433 Blood. NC ~hoto.

JANE PARKER, LARGE' a'lNCH

PIES 1 1::8 a OZ LUSCIOUS PIES ... EACI>'I PrlCfl stM,wn I,. this ad eu.arantHd tbru Saturday, Jill, ~ .. ell""tlve at AlL A&P Supe, Markel... thl. community" vicio",


16

THE ANCHORThurs., July 13, 1961

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·CYO News Social Summer Dance Sched,ule The Franklin Street CYO offers to teenagers of high school age the only air-conQ.itioned teenage dan~ in ·this part of the State. Dances will be held for high school CYOers on Tuesday a'nd Saturday evenings during the Summer. The usual . 'Illights for the Junior high school " ~nage dances -will be evet"y other Friday. The Summer schedule for da"nces at the Anawan Street eyO for Juniors and Seniors of High school age and college students is on Tuesdays and Saturdays Jrom8-11. On Thursday ~ evening at the Anawan Street eyO beginning July 6 something new'for Collegians only. A dance will be sponsored presenting entertainment at its best with Bill Weston and his Orchestra, "from Newport". The time-8:30 to - 1-1:30. No hig.h schoolers will be , allowed to attend this collegiate dan.ce. Cultural The Fall River Area CYO is planning its cultural program for the Fall with a style show sched'uled for September 19 at White's, with Mrs.' Gertrude O'Bden serving as Chairman of the Committee. Also on the committee for this event will be: Mrs. James H. Sullivan Jr., Miss Mary Cronin, Mrs. Rose Kidd, Mrs. Robert Banville,. Mrs. John J. Sullivan, Mrs. George Boitano, Mrs. Roger -Lachapelle, .Mrs. Michael McConnon, Miss- Catherine O'Neil,' Miss Catherine Coughlin . and Mrs. Raymond Suart. The annual eyO penny sale will be held in October this year.. It will be held on two conlJeCutive evenings. Parish CYO' units from the area will be 8Illvi,ted to participate. Proceeds from this sale· will go to the parish units that participate. Athleth 'l'he Fa U River Area CYO qualifying round for golfing repl'eSet1tatives of' this area in the Diocesan CYOGolf Tourney was held July 3, 1961. Ten parishes floom the area sent representaUvea' 00 pariicipate in this tourney, which was held at the Pine Valley Golf Course in Rehoboth. The golfers who will represent the Fall River Area In bhe Diocesan GQlf Tournament Qt'e:

Plans are being formulated for' a CYO Bowling League Banquet and outing. to honor the "Corporals", who won the Championship. This was a team of expert bowlers from St. Mary's Parish in Norton that swept aside· al'\ competition, Trophies. wHI be awarded to each member of the Championship "Corporals" REV. BERNARD F. SULLIVAN Team Bowlers: Don Allard, Jim Now, there is nothing wrong Pontolilo, Gene McCaffrey, Bill The book-filled battlefield is . with the Summer if it lets you: Adair, Carol Ann Lajoie and silent now. For some of you, it .. relax physJ.c~lly. The trOI,lble is Margaret McCaffrey. Trophies is a temporary truce. For others will alsO be awarded to the boys . that we. are liable' to be lax the war is over. The classrooms and girls who posted the high morally. In the Summer formalare silent. The rows and rows ities and .conventions are laid single total and the high triple of desks stand as t{)mbstones total. . This is' an annual event aside like the topcoat. I'll the marking the spot where learnSummer things that people that has been a big success in ing died a swift death following would not think of doing under the past and we are looking the final exams. Yes, it is vathe fol1bidding and frosty Janu-' forward to an enjoyable time. cation time for our y.oung men ary 'stars, they dare do, and they and women. A couple of months The Attleboro Area Girls' do, under the mellow moon of Softball League will be in full rest before those tombstones July and August. There are. too once again become the prover-· swing very soon. Several parbial grindstone and many of you many liberties and too :much ishes have already signified freedom. will once again be answering their intentions to enter teams the bell for another round in T,he wrong kind of freedom to try to dethrone last year's your battle with· the boQks. can be deadly and dangerous. undefeated team from St. Mary's These are the days you dreamFreedom, for example in dress. in Norton. St Mary's lost only a ed about. Freedom from the Fredeom at resorts. Fredom few of last year's team and seem drudgery of school discipline, in cars. Freedom on the beaches. to be the pre-season favorites. and the shackles and .slavery of Freedom with casual Summer With Captain Janet Rich, Janet homework. acquaintances. This freedom Roberge, Donna Dunn, Pam For your parents, 'Summer leads to mora} slavery. It is freeScherer, the Norton team wiH dom from anything but sin. signals those sometimes endless be hard to beat. H there is any time we need days when you eat like steamReports were that there wiU the grace of God t{) be goOd, it be some Summer dances schedshovels, sleep like mummies, is in the good old Summertime. . and grow like unpaid bills while uled in the near fuutre for the you systematically forget all you And so we flash this warning Attleboro Area CYO. Look for ever learned. to our youth. When the youth of an announcement .soon. life, which is adolescence' and Next September you will rePlans are now underway fO'l' a teen-age, meets the youth of the turn to the limbo of your closets Fall retreat at the Diocesan Reyear, which is Summertime, and harvest the books. you treat House at Cathedral Camp REV. BERNARD IF. SULLIVAN there is danger of spontaneous for the young men and women planted ther.e a few weeks ago. cOmbustion. And with a deep sigh and trem- from personal' experience, that of the Area. The Committee .ble your teachers will heroically You recall how Scri.pturetells plans to meet with Father Mcthe careless days of the Sumprepare to instruct your minds, of three young men who went mer might become days free Mahon, the Director of the Diocwhich, like shallow ponds, seem ·from not only the three· "Rs" of into the firey furnace and came esan Retreat House,' to complete 00 dry up under the heat of the Reading', Ritin', and Rithmatic, out uilsinged,' but it took a mir- plans in the near future. We Summer sun. acle of God to do it. And when win be announcing the dates .of but also days free from the most Now your CYO Directors are young men and women go into important "R" which is Religthe retreat soon so that everyinterested in the education of ion. the firey furnace. of hot July one will hilVe time to make arour young men and women, but· and August, there is grave danrangements to attend. So, since yoUr CYO units are ger they· will be charred by' .pasmost of all we are interested·'in not usually as active during the With the completion of the your relig.ious· educati{)n. And sion \,Inless surrounded by the Summer, we want to ask you we area b-it fearful, perhaps to stay close to the sacraments sheltering wings of God's grace new Bishop Feehan Memoria,l High School in sight, the Area which we get from His Sacraof Penance and Holy CommunCYO looks forward to being DATES TO REMEMBER . ments. ion even th{)ugh you migbt not able to utilize some of its excelIt i1l OW" pray« that you may Aug. 12-13 Taunton -, New ~ . the constant prodding of travel .tbrougih ·the Summer lent facilities for athletic and Bedmrd Semi-Finals Diocesan . your priest-director. social events. That should be a months healthy both ill body BasebaU Play-o,££s.· . Even !If yOu are not away big help fO(' Area Activities. Aug. 26-27 Dio<JeSQft CYO frwn bome, tile weekends of the and soul. And bhus your souls will DOt be burned by the flames Baseball Finals. Summer are perhaps. the most Hospital Grant Aug. 28 New England CYO dangeroU6 of ·the year ~r young 01. p8S9ion, but healthfully sunGolf Tournament in Bridgeport. . _ and women. And you have .burned by frequent exposu:re to BURBANK (HC) - Federal the 'l'GTS Ot 10~ from the 80ft IIrarN8 totaling $184,500 have Conn. ~be strongest, paNodoxioaUy.. . 01. Mart.. the Son of God--.Je-l been awarded to St. Joseph'. Sept. l'J Fall Nv« CYO C»V6l" the ~eekend. Ohriet. I Hospital for medical research. Area Elections. Sept. 19 FaU RiV'et" At'8& CYO ~tyle Show.

Throughout T'ie, Diocese

YOUR eyO .DIRECTOR SPEAKS

Taunton Area

Students' Movement Plans Study Week

. eyO

Newls

In the 12-13 age bracket Athletie . .wm Lenaghan, from St. JosCHICAGO (NC) "':-The High The Tau~ CYO oPel1ilt their !&ph's Pal'lsh was medalist, and Mlartin Connearney, from St. School Young Christian Students tennis tOUl'nament on JulF 14." loseph's runner-up. In the 14-15 will hold its annual National . T~is tourney is open to boys Study 'Week from ·Aug. 21 to 25 girls from Taunton and. is the eg~ bracket James Roarke unique feature 01. this year'lI from 5t. Pa·trick's Parish wa~ at St. Benedict College, Atchison, tourney. It will be dividEid intG medalist and the runner-up was Kan. More than 100 YCS leaders are three divisions for botln girle Richard Brodeur, from Notre . expected to attend the sessions. and boys in singles and doubles. Dame Parish. In the 16-17 age group John The 'YCS has an international The three divisions include Wle Ellis, of 55. Peter and Pa~l was secretaria,t in Paris and U. S. Pee- Wee Division 7-11; J'uniors 12-15; and Seniors 16-21. Entry medalist and Fred Say~rd, headquarters here. blanks are ·availab~ from Mr. from Holy' Rosary Parish, was James Goldrick at the Spor1B ron-ner-up. In the 18-19 age Department in Pierce Hardware group, 'George Pacheco was medStot'e, at the CYO Headqt\arters alist. on High Street and throll~:b MI'. In the over I1J age group, Bruce 'Andrews, ()f the Taunton Allen O'Neil, of Holy Name Tennis Association. and frem the Parish, was medalist with a low Playground Tennis Instructor, score of the day of 76, and Rich~ Mr. Kevin' Ryan. It is untie&ard O'Connor, of SS. Peter and pated that the Division Oham.Paul Parish, was runner-up. pions will participate in an illThese medalists and runnertra-city tournament with the ups will represent Fall River in Fall River CYO in the near futthe Diocesan CYO Golf Tow'nure. . ament which will be held in approximately four weeks at one of the area golf courses. Arrangements are incomplete at this writing. .

and .

,

MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE (ORP.

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German Catholics Aid Soviet Zone Priests

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STUTTGART (NC)-StuUgart eatholics have contributed over' $~2,000, 32 tons of supplies and food, and 32 motorcycles for the priests of Red-ruled East- Ger- .. many. Father Werenfried van Straaten, O,Praem., raised this sum in his campaign for East German priests by preaching in all of Stuttgart's 35 parishes. The- Premonstratensian priest is known as the "Bacon Priest" because of ·his successful drives to get food IHld supplies for Catholics behind ,the Iron Curtain:

Area

eyo. News

~YO ·A4~TIVITIES

Fa U Rio/®Ii' Area

it

Attlebor~

RECRUITER: Pre sen t director of the Women V01unteers' Association, a Catholic lay apostolate group, Betty L. Behrend, has been selected as a recruitment officer and full-time.' staff member or' the Peace COrp8 in Washington. NO Ph9tO.

Thomas f. Monaghcm

FAU RIVER

SAINT ANNE

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FEA$I' Of GOOD SAfNt' ANHIi~WecI., July 26

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THE ANCHOR-Di'ocese of Fall RivEW. Thurs. July 13, 1961

17

Pope COmJrPores Victory @~ Church T@ Dayi«1l6~ Defect @f Go~g@th

The editor 01 the Question and Answer c~lum~ ~oes not guarantee to ..nswer anonymous queries nor letters Irom umdent~/Ulble sources. In every installce the desire lor anonymity will be respected. To that ell~. n.ames are never appended to the questi~ns. ~ut un.tess the. lett~r ~ slgned there is no assurance that any conslderatlon wlll be gwen It.

Why is All Saints Day 001ebrated on November I? The date for the celebration of ALL SAINTS' DAY is not of very great importanee, bUlt it does seem quite appropriate to have the commemoration of All Saints and All' Souls on consecutive days. As the Latin Church calendar now stands, these feasts occur on November first and second. In the Byzantine Rite, this feast is kept on the first Sunday after Pentecost, and the day varies in the different rites. The purpose of this feast is to commemorate all the saints in heaven, canonized or not, known or unknown. Perhaps a significant featul'e of this feast is that it serves as a .reminder to us that there are many more in heaven than we know of by name and it is a symbol of hope to all of us that heaven is a possibility for all of us. Principally it is an occasion of giving' honor to all of those whose lives have merited eternal happiness.' In England it is known as the feast of ALL HALLOWS. For this reason, the evening before the feast is stiB known as Halloween, or the evening of All Hallows. o • •

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ceptions. However, the requirements of the Church are more stringent than the civil law; mere lack of contact f<lr a period of_ time is not considered prooof of death. Instructions have been issued by the Holy See as to how to proceed when a death certificate is lacking: the bishop is to weigh all circumstances and evidence in the particular case to ascertain death; if, having done this, the bishop is 'morally certain that the death of the party has been established, he may give permission to the surviviryg partner to enter anotheor marriage. In such instances, the testimony of two witnesses should be obtained regarding the time, place and circumstances of death. In extraordinary cases, the testimony of one witness is acceptable if coupled with other conelusive circumstantial evidence. If no\ even one witness is available, in the words of the authoritative book MARRIAGE LEGISLATION IN THE NEW CODE OF CANON LAW: "every possible conjecture, clue or surmise should be used, with the greatest care and prudence, to constitute a proof, so that, when all available evidence has been collected and duly weighed, a prudent man may consider the death as established with very great probability if no moral certainty." If the bishop does not feel absolutely certain, he may submit all evidence to the Holy See for final decision.

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During the· New England CYAO' Convention held in Hartfurd, Conn., Mr. John Medeiros, Jr., of 20 Eastern Avenue, Swansea was elected Tl'easurer Alf the Ne~ England Regional Feder. ation of Archdiocesan and Diocesan Councils of Catholic Young Adults. Mr. Medeiros is presently teaching at the B.M.C.Durfee High School. He is a graduate of the B.M.C.Durfee High School and the Bradford Durfee College. He is now working towards a Master's Degree in Education. He . holds the office 'of Vice President in the Fall River Catholic Young Adults Organization. Mr. Medeiros has been active in the CYO in the past as a member of Espirito Santo Parish in Fall River. The honor of having one of our own elected at this Convention once agam shows the forward step in the youth and young adult progr"ms being promoted in the Diocese.

and has not been heard of for a number of years. is his wife. a Catholic, free to marry again? Civil law, J believe. Dettro~t Unive~$gty presumes a person dead if not heard of in seven years. P~ans The ordinary procedure for a DETROIT (NC)-The Univerman or woman who wishes to sity of Detroit has announced' a remarry is to produce a death tentative $25 million extension • • I) certificate. Other means are also and development program. if some members of the admissible, but when death is The project, which will cover Catholic Church live bad lives, given as the reason for the prea period of years, has been under doesn't this disprove the alvious marriage ceasing to exist, intensive study for two years, leged holiness of the Church? the first sentence stands. Persons who lead bad lives are acordiJlgto Father Celestin J. We say the "ordinary proceSteiner, S.J., univers1ty, chan. e~il in spite of the good influence celor.· dure" because there can be exof the Church, not because of it. ·The over-all plan was pre-. It is not mere membership, but L«!IMd~ lUJl1llaW~II'$BtV'$ sented to a group of Detroit adherence to the doctrines of Se®li'e~lD.lta@l7Il Sfl'<DIIill<cll the Ohurch that makes men holy. business and civic leaders at a PITTSBURGH (NC) - The The Church was established for luncheon. It is outlined in a 24Catholic Interracial Council of the weak as well as the strong page brochure which calls the the Diocese of Pittsburgh has and Christ foretold that it would university "the only privately adopted a resolution congrat- have sinners as well as saints. He supported independent university in the metropolitan area O>f ulating Francis S. Cheever, dean compared it to .a field containof the Univp.rsity of Pittsburgh ing both wheat and cockle; on Greater Detroit." medIcal school, for the medical another occasion he referred to Details !First Phase faculty's decision to 'avoid hold- it as a net which would ca,tch "Today, two out of three dening meetings in city and country both good fish and bad. tists provided to DetroH by clubs which practice segregation.. Michigan dental schools come The council's statement said (5)~f(!rr m.@(OJMO(!}li'flil M@$$ from the University e>f Detroit," "this action is a great step forthe brochure states. "Fully 91 [F@rr A~d<dl(g()\)t Vo~frOO'il'il$ per ward in breaking the social cent of the student body of DUBLIN (NC)-Requiem Mass U. of D. comes from the Detroit bars that stand in the way of true justice and cooperation be- for those who have been killed area and there are currently tween all faiths and races. It in road accidents during the past 17,416 living alumni in Detroit." year was offered in the progains for the Pitt faculty reThe first phase of the develcathedral here to mark National opment project, for 1961-03, spect and admiration from peoRoad Safety Week ple of good will everywhere." calls for an expenditure of six President Eamon De Valera of million dollars. I: will include Ireland was among those attend- construction of a biology reing the Mass, it was announced search building, engineering labby Father D. P. Kennedy, S.J., oratories, an administrative cenpresident of the Irish Safety ter, a scholarship fund, a student First Association which is spon- loan fund and a five-year faculty soring the week. . fund. Father Kennedy said the week is being held to focus attention on road accidents caused by inIA De~icDClYl$ dividual recklessness. These cannot be substantially reduced, he Trea~ said, without awakening the conscience and moral sense of both drivers and pedestrians. There will be fewer accidents, he concluded. wher. people admit tha·t bad road conduct is sinful conduct.

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VATICAN CITY (NC) - The victory of the Church over today's forces of evil parallels David's victory over Goliath, Pope John said at an audience granted to the Pontifical Missionary Union of the Clergy. Speaking in Italian to the national association of priests devoted to praying for and contributing to missions, the Pope said that tOday's challenges to the Church are the same as to be found in the pages of the Old and the Nev. Testaments, particularly in the victory of David over Goliath and in the miracle of the fishes. "We stand before Goliath and we probably waste too many words that could be put instead to better use in prayer and in giving good advice for the sanctification of our life and that of our '1eighbors," he said. Seems Enormous' "We face something that seems enormous. ·But 'it is not strong nor is it valid since it is a question of the attempts of error, greed and violence. We sometimes fear and we are s 0 met i m e s discouraged at

~~@~k IL,~Hl'Ud ~@ ~<e lY\Q) [lJ [l1) g0/@ [j'~ DfI'~ JEFFERSON CITY (NC) Three appellants have filed a motion for· a rehearing in a case involving sale of redeve]e>ped land to S1. Louis University. The state Supreme Court last month upheld the university's right to purchase 21.5 acres of land in the Mill Creek Redevelopment Project from the Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority. A suit to block the sale had been filed by three St. Louis residents who are members of Protestants and Other Americans United for Separation of Churoh and St·ate. Largest Project Father P,aul C. Reinert, 8.J., president of St. Louis Univers':' ity, said the university was ready to start construction of a $2.5 million student center and a $3.5 million science building early next Spring. "But we can't think of starting construction before the city has given us a guaranteed title," he said. Lawrence A. Woods, chairman of the civic bureau of the St. Louis Chamber of Commerce, said the entire Mill.Oreek project - of which the-university is to occupy only a part - is the largest redevelopment piroj_ eet in the U.S.

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thoughts of the future. "Yet this giant will have 00 give in before the will and grace and mer~y of God. And we must not believe that the victory o{l this Goliath must be universal destruction and ruin . . . The simplicity of littie David rising against the giant represents truly the universal Holy and Blessed Catholic Church." Likewise, the Pope pointed out; "Jesus went in the barque of Peter to direct the movement of the waves, of the wind and of the catch. There can be no disturbance of this ship . . . Discouragement can only come, therefore, fro m scarcity oR faith."

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CYO"News Athletic The first half of the New Bedford Area CYO Baseball Leagu0 is nearing completion. Our Lady of Perpetual Help, with a strong nucleu.s of veterau players, hall been the pace-setter from tho outset. Sooi~n

The weekly rece>rd hops fcyz registered CYO members are continuing at the Kennedy Youth Center on Saturday night. AIttendance has been very good. Cultural Four members of the New Bedford Area CYO attended the New England Youth Congress conducted recently at the Statler-Hilton Hotel in Hartford, Conn. William E. Doyle, assistant director of the Kennedy Youth Center, waR accompanied by Miss Anne Morrissey, ar~ president; Miss Pamela Galligan, area vice-president; and Mis:J Ri.ta Estrella, area secretary.

Pray for Cuba ROME (NC) - Luigi Cardina1 Trl'!glia, Pro-Vicar General oi Rome, presided here at public prayers for Cuba at a ceremony sponsored by the National Civie Committee and the Roman Civie Commit-tee in Gesu church. 'Dhc: committees are groups to pro-. mote pa.rticipation in natiol1l~l civic and political li.fe.

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BI§AiLLO~'S HEADS SOCIETY: Fl!'. Edward J. Duncan, present director of the Newman Foundation ai the Unive/l'sity of Illinois, has been named National Chaplain G.f the John Henry Newman Hono.rary Society. NC Photo

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..Cardinal Cushin'g To Consecrate Bishop-Elect

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LAWRENCE (NC) Thirty-four-year-old Bishopdesignate William J. McNaughton, M.M., the Mary-

. By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John·S. Kennedy . An American novelist famous· througho'Ut':the world, aM a Spanish novelist whose name has hitherto not been heard in this country,. give us two' bo.oks· comparable in theme. In each the leading figur~ is' a poor ni..a~ w.ho 'longs to' better himself. financially'. , . . . . too characteristic of American and. gets an opportunity to. Hfe. do so. But, just as the setBut. the impaCt of ·his indicttings. and characters are meht is destroyed by the flab-

knoll Society's youngest Bishopelect, will be consecrated here by Richard Cardinal Cushing on Aug. 24, the Cardinal's 66th birthday. The Archbishop of 'Boston will quite dissimila,r, so are the biness and indecision which perform the ceremony in St. means by which the respective mark hi,s'marshalHng of his narMary's Church,. a' century-old . protagonists go rative. The downfall of Ethan parish conducted by Augustinian 111 p i n the Hawley is .not tr·agic and is hardfriars. The consecration da,te world. And the ly :credible. falls on the Feast of St. Bartholtwo books dif. One is constantly reminded of omew the Apostle. fer. strongly in the' later, inferior, and inept The Bishop-designate has been novels of Sinclair Lewis as one named by Pope John' as Vicar style, composi. . toils, sometimes embarrassed.ly, Apostolic of Inchon, Korea, ilion, outlook, d' meaning, . :.' through this ill-coordinated,' which has a population of some The American. ov.er.written, and finally' maun650;000. novel is The . dering book. . Korean. Missionary Winter of Our .Espinas' Novel Bishop-designate 'McNaughton, Discontent by. '. Mr. Espinas' novel, <;m fihe a native of Lawrence, has served .John S t e i.n -: . oo.n:trary,;.i§ trim, sk.nl~ully.con-. for the past seven years in the b e·c k (Viking. trolled', and ·thought-provokirig. South Korea missions.' He a't$4.50); the Spanish· is By Nature ·He·is..telling··ofa clerk named . tended Catholic' grammar and ~qUaI, writte!l ,bY .~os~'pMar:ia Jordana ·who is' pressed into ser.. BROADCASTERS' AWARD: Richard Walsh of the ·high'schools in' Lawrence before Espinas' and translated by An- vice' to' chauffeur 'his employer, National Council of Catholic ·Men· accepted on its behalf . enteri.ng .the Maryknoll Soci~ty :-. thony Bcinner{ParitheOn. $3.75). ·Senyor. Civit, on a' business trip. . Steinbeck's'novel.comeswrea,th-· and the consequences ·of· this. one of the two "Gold Bell" awards presented to the Catholic. in ~944. ed' with' praise by Lewis Gan- .unexpeCted assignment. Hour at the annual'congress of the Ca.tholic Broadcasters' stuiHed He ordained in 1953 and' the Korean' language 'at nett Edward Weeks, ~nd Saul . Jordana is about the same age Association by Bishop James A. McNulty of Paterson, N.J. Yale University for a year before Beil~w .. TheSe worthies agree: ail Ethan Hawley.' He, however, NC Photo. . .leaving fOl'the missions im ilurt what we have here is villltage has not come down in the· world, Korea. Steinbeck perhaps his best but stagnates and suffers on the work Th~ present reviewer vig- same wretched level.as did his I Ol'ously dissents from this esti- anceStors. He works in Barce- . mate. Parts of the book have au- 101lli offtce on' week'days, 'drives I • . R' We had never heard of' DMJl:.lNE until' we o.pened the maD a truck on Sunda ys, t 0 earn· UI ....o·rity and drive, but they llIl"e' . .... e 0 alh t k h' If d h' . lIbis week. It's a village in SYRIA, in the Archdiocese of HOMS, n'f u.... d0 theep Imseh'ldan l' IS ALBANY (NC) - JE,mes E. ..eur'round'ed by far-reaching bogs . And, you'lI be pleased to know, the _I'. mush. ·WI e,an elr one c existence. I a Ive. Allen,' New York State Educa-. It is' a miserable village is 100% Catholic. The CathA Long Island Setting . .He longs to improve it before tion Commissioner, turned down olics (some 1,000 all together) belong Most of Steinbeck's output old age hi.. Civit, . on the. a request by Mayor Robert F. to the GREEK-MELKITE Rite. The baS a California scene. The Winother hand, _is' ;verywealthy, Wagner of New York City for an Archbishop wrote us because the tiny· ter of Our Discontent is laid on .takes .for .gran.;.ted· the 1ux.u.ry investigation of complaints of parish church is, in his words, "beir ~ng' Is'land l"n R~d about the anti-Catholicism at Queens Colvond repair." And, anyway, the -. ,...... . whic.h .he and h.is. fa.mi.ly e.nJ'oy, J Small community of New Baylege, operated by New York City. church is mueb too. small-sosmall . '. . bI"" N . and·.does not recognJze alihu, that on Sunday most of the parish., town, which resem es a e'!' .man, a.n. em.ploye' ·like. Jar.dana. 'In a letter to the Mayor, Mr. oo . 1 d' '11" . . '" ioners. io hear Mass, mus~ stand outng:an VI age. . Allen said he did not believe it m.''N-.'.'' p'rl'ncl'p'a'l .i-c.... ~ l·.S· on """'-'aft '. D.~rJng ·the· #r·st -stage 'of the . " . side near the doors and windows ••• ...... ...v h- .. ·ust ,,'i,/.. . ..re..;.· ..... _ .'two' reom"·a··l·n·"..·..·l·n.· thOel'r' would be advisable or necessary . Who Y no.• bUI'I'd a new one." .The Aril h • '1 u '11' ••"" . . . 7l'L U.l., ", ••L-LM;."_ " . .,.':J . . 4tl~:n!iaw4~YH w '~y,l\J a ci:~~ . aecustomij<l"" relation:'Ship':' 'But .to confu.ct an.in~destigatil(l~· Thte rxn"'Jr-• ..,.."fUll bishop wouid like to build, the paris~ '. ~a, mg . . a'! ~ .'~ I . . . . . then'- there is illl' accident. .oivit . commlsswner sa.l. comp ;innli n s. . fur llit Oriental Chtntl,. ' ioners are eager to ·do the' construe. :. ~ ~.. gro~ery' Jt~r-e. 0!,?~9. Ilt ,ll~'·.·.is.b~dlyhurt~.Jordah~·.·,'.less.bad;;.:hlldIJla4~. no· a~empt ·~.a.ppe.aL ~ .~OD work. themselves, buUhere ,isli!t: much·, money iD DMEINE. . '11le new .church' will.: cost $10.000. The parishioners' en raise .ij!t,a!Ian Immlg'!-:llnt,.~ .~~f.l~ . ¥a~,.. '.1,.. hu~t, carries..him "t'o 'ahouse' t?e. {Illdmgs of. an earl1.er..lnve~::-. 1l1l0.. The. !:i~wl~Y:S ~ere ~m~ .in remote"area, :gets'heip £ibm .tlgatIon conducted by: a ,slIbcOIR... OOly $1;'500; The Archbishop ~wonderii if we .'ClHl belp ". '.• CaD ~~a~.l'{lg clbzel1s. of· New... BaY."" the· inhabitaiitS;:summons'a 'doc:'; . ·.m;ittee .of ~ ·B~a:r:d o~ ·.Hi~h~ .we?We'cl Iike~ to help--because, obviously, there should' be • • ~n,. t>rosperousandpowerfuI., tor;' and" iiurses'''hiS emplo'y&: .. Edu~·bon. decenth~mtdor the Blessed Sacrament in DMEINE. Moreover, ,~ut f9rt4n~ ~nd ,statull w~re.·b8Ck·to.heiilth:""· .." .. ;.... :-:, .': "'::'Subcomlllliiiee Report' . ,,,e'd Ukete'help our'fellow Catholics. of the Eastern Bite~M ~byEthansfather,·aiid.·Eth' ~ ' ", b·lo.· . · ·h·_··· ..··II· . . C'· Ii hi' ., 's one .atte·inpt: ho'nestly to' re,.: '. ;.'Ptie~ ..lfj; ,."; ..~t.~ ~ea!l~. ::h.et:~,.; ,~ ..•1'h~ . ~h~rges, of. antl-~,a~o~le: Ii ..w .hem, JD • .. sma way, that a.bo CB· are Cat OIClS, rethese p'roV:~d disaStl-o\)jj. ": .. ~Itb. ~9~~ t~.~~ !t~~~~·.}>~';I~~. :plafl. ~t the ~op~ge.were ~~de ill. "CardleSsOf Rite' ~ ':~The .parisiaionenin 'DMEiNE wiUcontrib'''':77' .. ' •. ' .:. . '. . ' . vulg.~~I.tr. .' lUl~ an ai?u~dan.ceof; . 1958.. They·a.llege· thert~ ".i.s dis-:: '.~' the' labOr. 'we'ti'iiii:e to hell': suppli' some· ~.·tIie -materia" .' < .~lot~lD"" . fal~: . . . '. sha:rp".s!!bire.'rheri,is.:a1s9.. f ll'n':'. ,crimination: in' ,the .hiring of .".... ··BUt how c.n·we· table $8,SOOT.' At $I'eaeli person, we. · ~.~"_~ . h~PhPY": .v'j.l.th'~hhlSh'; Wt·l.£oe ·tasy, ifl the recounting 9f.id~¥i!l·· :Ca~holic.s. alld hi faculty promo'.:eed 8,500: people,'At $5 'eaeh; 1;'100 people. At '10 eaeh; 8St · _Qry ·not so appy,wlv is wo It d 'm g'n' g ' . . . . • . .. t· .' "t til ." 11' Th'b 'peO'ple:'At $20 each;-U5people: A.t $100 each: 85 people ." •.•. · " ;if 'i' t g' Coh' ia,' . .And 'M' n ' , ! ~ 1 1ft ~. ~.' . :"'.; .. '. ",'. ~ons a. e .co ege.: .. e··S\l'Call you send Sometbi~! Whatenr' yoU send, please send 1& . :.: ~l.~. een~ e l. ;t~~'h' _. , .. But tile .mll!·ft)~ea~.. ~~ .bi,'~•.. committee which investigated·,iiow.your gilt· wiil ·..~·tO ·w'oridinmediate"';·i~·'DMEINE.·A n. . ., .'7t,err ajT~'kWI::~: l:her~ood o~ man. (.and. e.v~!qbe " .~e.. charge~ repOrted it found n<L ·roucait· be sure youJ'gift willmealla lot to' God and thoe people ~. OUB ~" e ~ows .. e bond of t~ communion c·of· "pattern.of b i a s . " . . . . ' . ..' . .,' .. ' 'iIl tbe viliate.' .. , . \ ' .' . .~mse1f stlll has some standll)g saints)-is' strongly'. eonveyect.·. in ·tbe town because of his fore-' A d thO d 'th " . . . f th ~':. Mayor WagJ.ler· had" called .:', .. SECOND. THOUGHT . . '.' M-S .but realiZes. that.v;.verty . n · IS'_I~nte. W: l ·.. ~no~~f·~t-l·le .. upon . Comtpissioner AllEm" t<t be Think twice before you order that second· drink! There are· . ' .". t"<.. . sen tlmen"" 1 y' w·h lOu so . a a y" d .. th" . . ." '. :wil~ consign h~s son and, daughter. '. .... . " ..• " .,' ·:c~.n uct ano' ~r .l~vestlgatlon so. hmillio~ Arabs who ca,nnot help the~selves-m'others, fathers, " 'the .. ttom of the 'sOcial Seale. blurs an~ debl!~t~s.:.Stem~c~.~c . as to. se~tle. the "Issue once and and youngsters. who'rn,ust depen.d on people like. us for food, ~.. bo . '." book...· . ..,'. fo "11 t·· " - clothing; housing, medical an,d religious care. Everything they Ime. . ~e is ~eep~y..~roubl~!·,.:1;oo" .. Tr~e p~th08"'isacIii~ved ~y: , r a owned they lost duril}g the· Arab-Israeli War of"1948-homes.· ~au~e hIS wife 1~ se_nsltl'l~e.:,to.· the aubhor, especfally: .where i""'-~-~------'--'" farms, sometimes. faIr\jli~s. For 13 years they have lived this tiM, shghts 'md .. tl1e . pa~rop.lzlrng Jordana's feelings'imd liis wife's :. f~:You~.. ~u~ldi~g Motel-ials. way, perpetual victims of war.·. , We try to help them. More ... '1lITh~ch rest,II.t fr()lll .thelr eoon- plight arecon~er:ned;.but :this' is' . 'N.~ds and Choice Builcling than 1,000 PriestS, B'rothers lmd Sisters wOI:k with them every IImIC. co~dltlon, ... ' '.,. . 'Worlds away from: "sentiment':' ... ·Lots in the Greater Taunton. day~ You can help by: sendi!1g something for the REFUGEE . ~~ Stem.beck .uJlceels ·the plot, a l i t y . · · · . Area : FUNO, by sending' what you:' save, perhaps, by not taking the ft ,lacks cogency,' rings false;' .' . . I " second drink. WE FEED AF;AMILY_FOR A .MONTH FOR $10. ·:Moreover, it is overlaid wi1Jllfat:~.·p Il you'll feed a family for a mQnthoo ($10) we'll. thank God for iniliar Stein be~k'preQccupations your generosity ... and we'~I: show our apprecilition by s'ending · ~d .p'loys. Th.us,·there· is a -.e.at_ROME (NCr::., .T.he Italian' INC 0 R P'O RAT E [t . .... ..government has' .aniiou~ced a' , ~ou an Olive Wood. Rosary from the Holy Land. . deal of l'aW sensuality pseudo- speCial· issue' of·s'tahlPs·tocorriTAUNl~ON. I¥l'i'cally presented, afl~ then; is .memorate the 19th' centenary ofYA4-7847 - VA 2.40.51 FOR .YOUR 'CONVENIENCE" II, great deal of. sentimentaI.itY. . the arrival of St. Paul in Rome. You'l( help ouli' missionaries as well as yourself by sending '!'he brutally hard and the ~ltish-·· ';' . . · as your Mass intentions.' We can arrange. too, to have GREGfly soft alternate incongruously, ORIAN MASSES offered pro·mp·t1y. Drop us a note and we'D WEAR a~ in so much of Steinbeck's · send you the details.

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.' .Shelter Program ST. AUGUSTINE (NC) - A pt'ogram to utilize diocesan 'buildings as shelters in the event Of a national disaster is being Mtaugurated by the Diocese of at. Augustine, Fla. .'

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Mocking Account Religiosity or a travesty on <i':hl'isti:an belief is another nl>t insistently sounded.' The story begins on Good Friday, and there are many illusions to the lPission, death and resurrection of Christ. The ac'cent is.·a mockling one, but occaSiomilly there · is a hint that hi~ Episcopalian upbringing still means some1lhing to Etha·n. The author p}a-i'!'lliy intends· to tndict materiali'sm,.· crookect:·: MsS, selfishness, and cruelty, and · has some devastatingly true things to say of·· the lust for money, the worship of money, and respectable people's utter unscrupulousness in the ·pursuit .. money-all of which are far

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yes, we would like you to join', Our Priests, Brothers, Sisters, .a~d lay. helpers on the missions :need backing. You; too, have a _lIlission o~ligation. W~ need your prayers, your sacrifices, your ·financial help, .. In<:identally, you'lI be well rewarded. You'll ·share in the benefits,'now and'after death, in the 15000 Masses offered for our'·members. YOu.·l1 be remembered in 'the MasseS . '. offered by Pope John; in the Masses of Cardinal Spellman, our president; and in the Masses of all the bishops and priests engaged in the work. You'll be eligibie, too, for a Plenary IndulgEmce at the moment of death.. Why not enroll the family? Clip this form, fill it in, .and mail it to us.

John's . Shoe Store 95 PLEASANT STREET !Fall River OS 8-511:11

DON BOSCO'S SALESIANS

NAME

. Young Me,nWanted! • For Full-time Boy Work. :.• 'For lifelo~g action and happiness. .• For the Salesian' Priesthood. . ," ...~ For the Salesian Coadiutor .' . Brot"erh~od; . Full information -free. Write: FATHER DIRECTOR;SAC~ED. HEART JUNIORATE, IPSWICH, MASS. ' . 11.

== 2500 Boy's Clubs-Camps-S~hools-Mission$. _

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CITY : .. ::~.:~ :., ~ . ·ANNUAI.. MEMBERSHI·P 0 INDIVIDUAL. ($1) 0 FAMILY ($59 PERPETUAL .... N. EI INDlVI[)UAL ($20) 0 .. ($100)

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FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pr•• ld.... .

M",.. Jo••"

T. R;-' 'Nat' Sec'y _m...lcatf_ ..:

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an CATHOLIC N~AR EAST WELfARE ASSoCIATION' , 480 Lexhtgton.Ave. at 46th St. New York 17;N. Y..J ....._"",.• _~_

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Yanks Picked to Repeat

Cleveland Pupils To Begin · Stu d y Of Communism

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By Jaek KiIneavy Time is back in today in major league baseball after a three day hiatus for the All-Star game in San Francisco. As the clubs resume championship competition the Yankees and Tigers are virtually deadlocked for the AL lead, while 8n ?pstart rtsCinci~f~ti aggJre- lans to see, the Ameri~ gation sPO, a Ive game League's best. The game was the lead in the senior circuit. first to be telecast from CandleTradition has it that these stick Park which became the are the teams that wiU be in the van at the end of the seaSl>ll. Dusting

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CLEVELAND (NC) - A study of communism will IiKl a part of the religion COUI'8Cl ill elementary and higb scllools of the Cleveland dioo

cese in the Fall, Msgr. Clarenee E. Elwell, superintendent «l diocesan schools, has announced. The course will be based en n

official home of the Giants in the 1960 season. Situated on the Bay, Candlegtjck's varied winds

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Baltimore and fading Detroit. From a sentimental point of

Women. The subject will be taught in grades 8 and 12.

On July 31 the All-Star scene shifts to Fenway Park, Boston. There won't be much local color inasmuch as reliever Mike For-

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The Grade 8 course will iJl.o

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magnetism of Willie Mays and Co. is certain to attract a full house and then some. The lone member of the N.L, array familiar to Boston fandom is Eddie Matthews who was a rookie third baseman when the Braves up and took off for Milwaukee. '

munism, and communism and way but their }i.' ~'t youth. Children in grade 8 will inexperience is not use the book but will g~ apt to prove too great Ii hurdle the information direct from tho in the tough second half going. teacher. Manager Bob Scheffing has done The' study will be given wi~ a tremendous job with the club material on the Seventh Comwhich hasn't had anything worse mandment which considers tho th~n a three game losing streak on~ ~raves right of an individual to proJllo> to date. . The sight of fuaves Field~I', ··CATHOLIC·.·FILM AWARD:. Cindi Wood (right) l!!i'ty. Three-quarters of the TIger can't get used to the' fact that it t D M h' , I n grade 12 thl!! book will Too' infield is composed of first ye,ar is now Boston University Field . grees . on urr~y. upon 1S return from Europe where the u~d· as the text and the materiel men. Jake Woods and. St~ve -always brings with it nostalgic movie in which they starred, The Hoodlum Pnest, received will ~ supplemented by a stucy Bo,os have come thr?ugh In fu~e memories. As a youngster and a the Catholic Film Award at the Cannes International Film' of communist tactics in tl1k.t.-ng style; Dick McAuliffe, rookIe member of the Knot-hole gang, festival. " over ,a nation. The Grade 12 shortstop up from Denver, ~p- I spent many a Summer aftercourse will be part of the Eeo· pears to ~ave the poten~al.. noon in the old let, field pavilion ~i1IR\r1laJL . A ...... Itil Q L '1igion unit on justice. Catchers DIck Brown an~ Mike watching the stars of yesteryear. U~IOoVLl ullll AlUla lQi .., l:.Far~s Roarke, also freshmen,m the Wally Berger was the Braves' MIlo PE:' III ~ «'! i\,.....JI StuD~&~ majors, have done a commend- homerun king at that time. Lefty VV OI1U$ ~a~l«e l.,g)@y ~(:O~tl AWarrtW CHICAGO (NC)-The voieo able job behind the plate. Roarke Ed Brandt, Ben -Cantwell and Boy Scout Troop 47, sponsored tained the rank of Star and Life. in Voice of St. Jude hall beeJli' ia the former Boston College Danny McFayden tossed 'em up by St. Ma'ry's Church of North, Special cltisses are being constilled. But in its last breath ba~ball captain who spent eight 'to Shanty Hogan' Attleboro, now boasts its first ducted by Rev. James Porter, the Voice of St. Jude ann'lUncoo years in the Braves' minor Bill M K h" th 'I S at Eagle Scout. At the recent troop chaplain, for the Ad Altare that. henceforth it will be knowra league system. ~ ec me, e Wi.y c , Annawon Councl'l Presen"'-"'on . D' th 0 th Ii S simply as St. Jude. It's G1 natilo . kllU1 Kaline' and Colavito the mastermmded tlle club. and a el, e a 0 c couting I C th li , In . gent by the name of 'Charles Banquet, Scout Joseph Doran reAward. ona a 0 c monthly mag~ Tigers have a potent outfIeld D'li Ste 1 It h dIed th eeived the coveted Eagle award. AI1;houghadvane.ement I' n zine published here by the ClaDpunch and Billy Bruton, aeI. on nge ,a er an e etian Fathers. ~uired from the Braves in ex- reIDS, though WIth ~ot n~arly the Eagle SCout Doran, son of Mr. Scouting skills is stressed, the change 'for Frank Bolling, has . success that he ~ttamed lD a suband Mrs. Joseph' Doran Of. troop program is designed to filled the centerfield .void ade- sequent tour WIth the New York Broadway, North Attleboro was aler.t . and remind the boys of " 00..... · R orne, Ital y 14 years ago their obliga.tion to God and quately. A veteran pitchmg staff tYankees. " t Boston d . '1was thenf a btwo th .u In is Detroit's long suit and rookie' ' earn CI y an payers 0 . ~ and was ba9tized at Saini Peter's Countlry. ally famIliar. ,in Rome. An active altar' boy, Phil Regan has provided addi- leagues .were tional strength. A caildid 'ap- ~OW,. ,With, ce~tam .few ~cep,. and an enthusiastic 'scouter, Jos~flltIJU'cne IU$hcp praisal, however, stamps the tion.s,. the leadmg play.ers 10 the epb still finds time to maintain FORT PORT4L (NC)-Bishop Tigers as the team of the future National league are little ~?[e a daily pa!>er route, and to p'ur., Vi~nt McCauley, C.S.C." of ., ' than newspaper personalities. sue 'his interest in soie'nce and l1lear but. not ImmedIate. Th 31st· d t "" Orioles' I!Jhallenge . e . a e .Wi'11 C h ange tbi s, electronics. A recent g,raduate Fort Portal, a na,hve of Council CHARLES F. VARGAS Bluffs,' Iowa, has' been enThe . Baltimore odoies. an if only for a day. . of. Saint Mary's School, he will 254 ROCKD~LE AVENUE ... ·i. throned here as the first Ord'-" enigma for m~t of the first The largest crowd of the sea- further his edlJ.cation. art; Msgr. . NEW· BEDFORD, MASS. imiry of this new African Se~. half, caught ,fiI:~ fin~llylVl(i' son in . ~he ,Americali!'eague, Coyle lIigh School in· Septem- .Msgr. Guido Del. 'Mestri; Apo~ .. .. :' movedwi:thin,se\(eIl games. of . ,.some 71'0~? s~~:mg,' Witnessed ber., tolic Delegate to ,EaSt· Africa the top' at .the break. Pac¢ by ,the. ~oliday doliblehead~r 00... JI:>2sror's Youth IProgi'am' presided at the inStallation cere~" the big bat of. Jim ~ntile-fQur. t~~ th~ Yank~s and ~e Troop 47 was organized in monies. grand-.slams this year-and the.: ,!Ig~rs. ThIS ~uggests ,thatnothmg 1958 as the first step in the proreturlL . to form of Richards'.. IS wrong, Wltb baseball ~at, a gram .instituted by Rev. Edward' young' ,pitching staff" the Birds" first !:"llte a~tractiQ~ w:on':t cure. B. 'Booth, the' pastor, for the «:olTllh~d@Ii'S figure to provide New York with Even the sI:l~th-place ,Sox drew youth of his p~risli.. The troop ., its stiffest challenge. Should the well over the weekend. In fact has' flourished under' the able lE~etZ:frrrk<tlJ~ Tigerll thwart the Orioles' bid it -the' Sunday crowd of 48,000 was leadership of Francis Reynolds,' would indeed be ironic for it the largest throng the Sox have scoutmaster, and Francis Fitz...: was Paul Richards who recom-' 'played beforeal1 year. pat1"ick, committee chairman. mended Scheffing to the Detroit A number of boys 'have at[NJ~ll'i'ro®$ ~~O'~O(j'j}@~$' organiza tion. VATICAN CITY (NC) San Francisco went wild over the All-Star game. The tilt was Pope John has named as memwId out weeks in advance so bers of the Sacred Congregation anxious were the West Coast for the Ol"iental' Church, Antonio Cardinal Caggiano, Arch... .... bis~op of Buenos. Aires; Pietro " Cardinal Ciriaci, Prefect of the "Sacred Congregation o~ thl!! ~. Darimout~ Council, and William Cardinal l§Jl1td Hyannis Godrey, Archbishop of. Westt6le S~ver minster; England:'

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WY 7·'1384

Building Contractor Masonry

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VICTOR

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Bristo';·.:C'o.unty Tru~t~·.¢Ompany

Furniture Store . IOSEPH M. P. DONAGHY owner/mSlr. 142 ea It. New 1ecffoId . . . .

TAuNTON; 'MASS. _lA_ON

WYMCIII U792

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Serying ond Home Owner

The Specialized Job of a Cooperative Bank

TAUNION CO-OPERATIVE BANK WINTHROP STREET - TAUNTON ACROSS ,THE STREET FROM THE ~ST OFFICE

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POP E' S SACRISTAN: Bishop, Peter Canisius van lLierde, 54, a member of the Order of the Hermits of St. AU~8tine, is responsible fOr the spiritual welfaN of the Vatican's 1,000 eitizens as the Vatican's Vicar General and takes care of. all the chapels of the Apostolic P . ace, especially the Pope'o privateehapel. NC Photo..

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THE ANC;:HOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs. July 13, 1961

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READY FOR DEDICATION: Interior views of the new St. Ann's Church at Raynham, which win be dedicated next Sunday by Bishop

Connqlly, show ,the Seventh Station oCthe Cross, body of the church as seen from the san~tilary,'and one, of the lovely stained glass windows.

:SecretarIat Head Cites Importance Mission COl.lntries Catholics, Join Forces, to Raise, ~ :Of Broadcasting in Lati~ America ¥!~~T~rM~~~_~~?dk~em_ ~iv,ing Sta"d~'r~s 'of Islanders .' ' BOGOTA (NC)-Rad'io, Latin : America's major source of news ~ and, opinion, is of specjal im-, ,'portance to the Church here. ~ But it is also 'a communist wea: pon of major importance, , 'T'his was stressed in, an interview with Marina, Bandeira of Brazil, tlie head of the LatinAmerican secretariat of the In'ternational Catholic Radio and !. Television AssociaItion, 'known :as'UNDA. ' , Miss Bandeka was careful to :.emphasize that in Latin America" Il'adio should IWt be considered ~IlS ehtertainment. ':She ointed out:

the paymelllt due on their radio bel'S of' the Catholic Daughters" receiver." of America were urged at a meeting' here to increase, supThis, noted MisS Bandeit;,a, is an indication of a ','new culture port of their program for send-, that is a fascinating problem." ing books to mission countries. She pointed out ,that a new,culThe program, called the Batture is being formed among tle of Books, is a ser'~Jce of the Latin American people who World Mission committee of the have never heard of Simon , cpA. AnnaK. Buckley of Dover, Bolivar, The people are like N.H., committee chairman, reNorth. Americans' who never 'ported that in the past year heard of GeOrge Washington. of books hav{~ been serit "But," she added, -"they tune packages to missionaries in Arabia, the in on the radio and they hear Canal Zone, South India, Korea, news of Eisenhowe,r, Kennedy, Africa, Central 'America,' the Khrushchev, sputmk' and the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaya, marriage of Princess' Margaret. Pakistan, Peru and Hong Kong. When you ta~k to: the~ they " P • have a new mentahty.~' But she stated that increased In Europe or the Umted F' ld f Id requests for books are coming 'States, if you don't listel} to the B ,t th Ie ,~r d eas h in from missionaries in Africa radio, you can get the news in u ere IS a ,anger, ere, to help them offset the flood of ~he newspapers. But in Latin too-, sh~ wen-t o~,' ThIS ne~ mencommunist literature being pour'America where the distances are tahtr: IS also a p~rfect fIeld for ,ed into that continent. ;So 'enor~ous, there is no other new Ideas," she sa;d. The people 'means' of communication, A let- know /ha,t. somethu~g must hap,tel' can take a month to go over pen, or mstance m regard to GREEN BAY (NC) -- Six out ehe' mountains. In Brazil it Can the favellas, the ,s~um areas of every 10 babies born in 'the ", take 10 mOl1lths for a newspaper around, the large cI,tles. ,' to get to the interior of 'the And she said very, bluntly: ,Green Ba,y diocese last year were baptized Catholics. Six out , 'Amazon valley. "If the communists give bhe right . 'Radio Only CORtaet ,answer, t~e people will ta~e it,/" 'of every 10 marriages were pet"Th : ' . , , .The' sqlutJon, she stalted, ,IS for 'formed in the churches of, the , ' . ,~re IS ~~ ''pos~lblhty.of the, Church to give" the ,right diocese, according to figures , , ,; ;o,th,eI, c~m~~mcabon, .she said, : answers to' the problems that published in' the' , Green' Bay ": ''''~~ radlQ, .IS,' t!le, only:, mellns of' face the' people; 'and tcHio'it in Regist~r, newspaper "of "the ,'·;.~n~act"wI~!t,the.o~t~ld.~:~orld,,the very near:future. ,northeastern Wisco~sin diocese., ~ven WIth the capital 'of your ,'" " 'own- c·oulifry."·· ....:. , Miss. Balldeira nOted :,ttietin ' ~s" r¢at~r:, ·1

'Note Church Glrowth

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C' ongressman·'A's k' G" , EJffort ~t~~Zrl%n':::a~~i~he'~;::~:as~ ..To, Satisfy,Heal,th' Needs of Na,tion,

HALLIM (NC) .:.... A project . spinning of a very good tweecll started three. years ago; by an ',cloth convinc~ the Bi~hops' ',Irish missioner to rai~ his par- ,Committee that with more help ' ishioners' 'living 'standards is a thriving wool industry' Could now an international' effort. be, built up on O~eju isl'and~ When Father Patrick J. MacThe Uni,tea States aid missiOJ1l Gliricl,t~y, S.S.C.,' 'of Doneg~l, - in Korea ,offered expert advice Ireland, started organizing 4-H on farming and helped design 'clubs in his' parish here ,on ,some weaving machines. The ,Cheju island 80 miles"off Kor- ,original spinning wheel was ea's south 'coast, he got the en- made in Donegal Ireland and .couragement of Minneapolisshipped to Che.J·u. 'A local m'ech", . born Bi!;hop Harold . Henry, anic was able to copy the model Vi~ar Apostolic. of K~a~gju, in ,using a bicycle wheel in place whose See the Island IS located. of the usual wooden 'wheel. 'All'l'n' all the eff t to " · At the time Bishop Henry had littl ' I to ' h' or raIse very .e e se give.. 1m., ' the living standards on the isThe BIshop has ,now re.celve~ -land is shared by the Koreans word that the German BIshops ,themselves WI'th Arne' 'ttee,."M'lsereor, "h as d 0 b. rlcans, , C omml, Germans and Irish helping the ated over $100,000 to projects in people to help themselves his vicariate with all but '$24,000 ' . going' to self.,help projects in Hallim parish. ' '-.-. ". . Three years ago Father MacGlinchey WlWl convinced', that I·tl\ ON Mit W,AV TO THt with a litle capital he could DRUG STOR.E TO Plc.K. UP · improve the living standards of A PR.ESCRIPTION",' 'his people by 'starting a woolen industry on the island. I kNOW THAT ·MUNS . , ,T)~ e 'C~lumban missionary, and, Bishop Henry: decided to appeal the Gerll.lan Bishops' ·for help. In response the B'ishops ,sent '3 representative to see the propOsed .project and report .on., I~M' A FAN Of: 'fH!.IRS· ", " ',its ~ssibilities. Tn,e', bis!J.ops ,o~ - ~.,!.ci~LL"', , : ,proved 1l!J.e, project' and gave a', ' THEIR. PRESCR.lp''fl~ , '$9;000" grant 'lirid 'a '$10,000 loaD DEPARTMENT /'1ME't'U 'at nonlinai irtterest: ' ' '. . , A ~ tw'o-stor'yweavilng school THOROUGML't It£LIAal£ I' .' ~' · was ,built early in 1960.· Tiw ~. succeSs of this school in'training girls... in the weaving.and .. carding, ,.-'. ~

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during' the dictatorship ~f. the ' NEW,XORK' (NC) Rep. 'coincided wi1lhthemel~~ing Of. late President Getulio Vargas. John E. Fogarty of Rhode Island 'the' American Medical A9socia". 'The program, she went on, car- called here for increased efforts tiOh.' , ' ", .. ried ,only news of the diCtaItor- by, government and 'private ' " Rep. FogarJy commen~ied that. 'ship'. WheritlheVargas regime' groups to' meet the health needs the existenCe of a Catholic Phy" ,was ousted in 1954, she. B;lid', 'of 'the nation. sicians' Guild is "a testimonial '.Glhe new go~rnment wanted to He told' memberilof the Noa- to the' close kinship between .' ONE STOP 'end the "Hour of Brazil." tional Federation' of Catholic Christian religion and :medi, " SHOpphltG CENTER ,"'But," Miss ~ndeir~ recalled "Ph~si~ians' .Gpilds~h~,t'~ffOr~ ,cine.",' , ~ .. ..' , . '. ,~.,. ' a r e needed 'In four. 'maJor areas: 'He urged 'CatholiC 'dO(~tol'S to' ~" el:e_~a_s ,~·.n~~~tlOn,: :flom.. t~~., , Clini¢al'research'ta - "bridge be >iri 'the ,for~froDt 'of those ' . ~~ievisi~ ,'. Farn,itun ,~Q..te!;!?r,,~~,t!i~,.~.unYry,. TlJe ~:-::. the gap between '.. .'labOratorY working to natiOOal health' ". ·-Applianoes' • Grocer,. " ,pie said: Tha·t IS the, only chance f' d" l\d 1'" at l' ., ,needs.' " ' we have Of knowing what is 't~n 1,?gS a ,c Ime app loa-:-, 1M,' Ai~a 'S*.. ,New Bec1fwcl :goiilg on, what laws have' been Ion. , ;Wy~ 7~93" ' li-assed.' And so the progl'am is Medical education. Iiontinuing." "More speedy application" ol ' ; Illiteracy Plague medical knowledge. ' " ',' , Ther~ is another,problem that "The deve\opmentand a,ppli::" 'plagues Latin America: iUiter- cation of controls against health .racy, "Radio is the only cha'nce hazards on the environment.'; " ," ' Rep, Fogarty, a congressional OIL BURNERS the people have for contact with specialist in medical and' health BUSINESS AN~ . AIIIO oomploN Boller-Burn. I!!Omething' new," Miss Bandeira matters, ~oke at the "Century DUPLICATING MACHtNl!S or Furnace Utii*-. Efficient, ',:filll id . , "We ~now of, people woo Dinner" of the federation. ' low cost beatlnl. Burner and secc;~ ,and' Morg~, ,: :~o-:hl,in'gg so' they wVI, not r:t1iss : ' The celebration marked the rueloU,sales and aervlee. , forma,tion of the 100th' Catholic " fALL RIVER , Physicians' Guild' in Roohester, , ¥fy. 2~0682 ' 'OS 9-671'2 ' , Minn. ' ' 6S0 Mt. Pleuant Ske." 'E. J.McGINN. Prop,. Bedll'rd , WY I·ZH7 Earliel" .in 'the day delegates, , LONDON: (NC) Catholics In Great' Britain are ,being attended a memor-ial Mass fOr lIi.rged to taJtE' , p~rt in, and. CO!1~ the Catholic, doctorsinSt. Pat, ;tribute. ,~o 'the' Freedom' .. from, rick's cathedral: T,he Ceremonies Hunger, Campaign star-ted here to help underdeveloped countries,. ,,', , A Catholic org~nization, which publicizes international, ,affairs, the Sword' of the Spirit, is ap-' pealing to teachers,.. doctors; ~SCHOOL tarn:ters and· OTher qualified people, to volunteer ,for "work in SUMMER SESSIONS' ~ese ,cQuntrie~. ' , ' , . '. :' SHORTHAND TYPING , In addition to being asked to VTolunteer and, contribute to the, ENGLISH - NOU' HAND (Campaign, Catholics are being, .': \' asked to urge politicians and HYANNIS SIP. $-1372 trade union offici:tls to press for 640 Pleasant Street New Bedford Tel. WY 6-8271 greater government aid..

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