07.14.60

Page 1

The :ANCHOR ·

,

An Anchor of the Soul.

Sur~

and Pirm-ST.

PAUL

Fajl 'River, Mass~ Thursday, July 14, 1960 • 28 PRICE IOc . © ,1960 The Anchor $4.00 per Year V ~.I 4, o. Second Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River, Mass.

Th~e .Catholic

in America

TWENTY-FIVE YEARS LATER: Served by his four brothers who performed the same task twenty-five years ago, Rev. (Col.) Henri A. Hamel of the Air Force Inspector General's staff celebrates his Silyer Jubilee Mass in St. Mathieu Church, Fall River. Left to right, Normand of Taunton, Dr. Albert of New Bedford, Father Hamel, Roland of Newport News, Va., and Dr. Fernand of Taunton.

Anti-Catholic Enmity Persistent in Colonies

ng II·C· an Church Requests' Res PO nse t 0 P0 pe J 0 h n A

· 'l'his is the second of a series of articles reviewing the position /lnd eXI)erience of the practicing Catholic in the life of the' American community from Colonial times. 'l'he author holds a dl~ct~rate in American Church History. has taught in various OIluivl"rsities. and is presently Archivist and Historian of the £,.ll"c~~ioce9C of St. Louis.

Hy Rev. Peter '1. Rahill, Ph.n. · A universal Christendom under the suzerainty of the' JPope was shattered by the Protestant Revolt. Not that this idet\l of the Middle Ages ever had been fully realized. But the. goal of the future was wrecked completely on the shoals of private ambitions and e x . them,do ' not claim English an:aggeratecl nationalism. Carl- cestry. Notwithstanding partonJ. H. Hayes, the convert ticular attention must be given historian, has expressed well to Ellgland because the colonies

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LONDON (NC)-The official Church of England yearbook urges Anglicans to be . "quick to respond to\the geniality of the new Pope." In its long preface summarizing Church of England affairs, the new Crock fords Clerical directory has a special section on the papacy. After criticizing the' Catholic teaching on the primacy of the successors of St. Peter, it says: "Pope John has at least given indications of a new. spirit in' his attitude to I)on-Roman

the contmry spirit. In one of ~lol~g the Atlantic seaboard many essays he pointed out that wel'~ l!nder her rule and laws. antf-Catholicism has chiefly. Elizabeth I · .._ been based In the mother country that upon the inhad. mel\nt outright persecution berent .dl'ead of Catholics almost iinmediately jprotestantism from the accession of Elizabeth bas for the I in 1558. Reneging on her super-nationprol~liseto Mary Tudor to re- . at influence main a Catholic, the new queen whi~h' radimilitantly espoused the Angliates .fl'Om can Church established by her Rome. father, Henry VIII. T9 no one . N~t especially attractiv'e percountry or sonally but .certainly efficient, religion was Elizabeth quickly brought both the lantagopchurCh and state under the sway ism .limitcd. of her scepter. The Act of SuAnd most Americans today, premacy of 1559 completely outmuch less the Catholics among Turn to Page Thirteen

Father Considine's Book Faces Mission Problems

Christians. It is also clear that his ideas are meeting obstruction and English churchmen would be very unwise to rest their hopes too much upon the liberal currents flowing from Germany and France. Eag'er to Welcome "Anglicans should be eager to welcome every move that is made from Rome, but they must realize that issues have to be settled with the Roman Catholic's' in England. Relations have been' ~ery difficult in the past and they are still not too Turn to Page Eighteen

STAMFORD (NC) - Stamford's Board of Educatioll has rejected a ministerial league's protest against' th. appointment of Joseph J. Franchina, a Catholic, as superin. tendent of this city's public sch09ls. The Stamford-DarieR Minjsters' Lea g u e, com- ethnic and religious character of posed of 63 Protestant our city." ministers and Jewish rabbis, The league alSo had opposed urged that' "ethnic and the appointment of Mr. Fran. religious" considerations be taken intQ. account in the appointment and advan~ement of teachers. in .Stamford's public school system. Th~ league proposed that "evidence be given in the selec'tion of new teachers and their advancement in line. with a fair and equal regard of the true

"The greatest service that can be rende.red the majority proximately 100 members of the. Diocese have already had hllm~m need of an their reservations confirmed by economic nature is guidance to solve their problems by their the Fall River Catholic Travel own efforts." This is the theme carried out by Father John BUl·eau. . J. Considine, New Bedford . With the exception of a few born Maryknoll Missioner, in olics interested in the social. .Archdioceses in this country, rio apostolate, the book begins with Diocese has responded to a 1ltis~ new book, "The Missionan ovel'view of the Catholic European Pilgrimage invitation ary's Role in Socio-Economic approach to world socio-eco~ 'as has Fall River, according to 'the C:atholic Travel League Directors. Uoder. the spiritual direction of Bishop Connolly, the Leonardo da Vinci, which arrived in New York last week on its maiden voyage, will sail from New York on Oct. 4, on. the first step. of a 36-day pilgrimage to' ·.Turn to Page Eighteen

.' A famous fellow-member of the Fall' River Diocese ill at least partially responsible for the Marykn911 vocation of Sister Christiana Maria, the former Honor~ Felix of St. John the Evangelist parish, Attleboro. He is Rev. John J. Considine, M.M.,· aut h 0 1', "Before I knew it I was having world-traveler and recently an interview at the Mother. appointed head of the Latin house," she said.. She entered America Bureau of the Maryknoll in 1956 and was pro. National Catholic Welfare Conference. The vocation assist occurred when -Sister Christiana Maria, then a college stUdent, visited Maryknoll to interview Father Considine for a student publication.- She· casually mentioned she might be interested 'in entering the sisterhood.

~oda.l,ity Choose~ Vladimir Mother of God

....... ···_--~·_..-1

I II

To Show [.Jove .of East and West for Mary Hy

Edw~lrd

s.· Stanton,

S.J.

Director of the New England Sodality Secretariate

When 'speaking to a' group of' Armenians on Febr~ary 1, 1959, Pope John XXIII made the observation that "the best hope of reconciliation between the Orthodox and the Catholic Church is our' common love of the Mother of God." The simple, but regrett~ble, fact is. however, that at the present time, as the Christians of the East know little about devotion to Mary in the Pope's Suggestion Rhodesia, Viet-Nam, Formosa, . West,' so do the Catholics of At the Boston' Convention of Australia, Chile,' Iraq, England, the West know little about the Lay Apostolate prominence Ireland and Canada. A copy of _ devotion to Mary in the was given to the icon of the the icon appeared in the center

.,ATHi:& CONSIDINE. M.DI.

East. Witness the fact that last .year fOl' the first time a group of Russian Orthodox pilgrims made their way to Mary's shrine at Lourdes; witness, too, the general unawareness among Christians of the West of the place of icons in the religious lives of devout 'Eastern Christian&.

china, who is of Italian ancestry. on the ground, that. lie does not have a doctor's degree. A doctorate is not listed as a reql,liremen~ for . the superintendent's post. Mr. Franchina holds two masters degrees and is working toward a doctorate. The Board of Education stated Turn to Page Eighteen .

100 Register ·A·s· Pilgrims Attleboro Maryknoll' Sister Officials of the first Diocesan Pilgrimage to Europe annoi.mced today that ap- Runs Puppet Show for God

fJf men over the earth who experience

Betterment" published .t ·h.i s nomic problems. month. Father Considine then examA well-known mission author- . ines modern techniques necestty and dil'ector 9f the newly- sary for a realistic approabJi: to formed Latin America Bureau .problems at the community level. Gi. .NCWC, Father Considine Emphasis is placed on a knowlbased his volume on the papers e ·.,:e of less-developed areas presented by 40 interna~ionally through th~ study' of social anprominent socio-economic speTurn to Page Twelve cialists .at .conferences held at Maryknoll headquarters in April, 1951" An invaluable tool for Cath-

Reject Ministers' Protest Against New School Head

Vladimir Mother of God. In answer to the Holy Father's indirect suggestion that more attention should be paid to "our common love of the Mother of God" this XIIth Century Byzantine icon was honored in a special way qy over 3000 delegates, mimy of whom came frolll u far away aa Southera

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fessed in 1959. Now on a home visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Felix, 319 South Main Street, Attleboro, Sister Christiana Maria is preparing for an 'assignment in Mexico, where Maryknolll Sisters teach and conduct a no. vitiate for a Diocesan commun· ity of Mexican reli~ious. Already she .can look' back upon an excitingly val'ied assort. ment of experiences in the reliTurn to Page Twelve

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of the first page of the BCLA program. After the Byzantine Liturgy had been celebrated on Wednesday, September 2, by Rev. Paul Mailleux of the 'Russian Center in New York, Cardinal Cushing, through his official delegate, Rt. Rev. Franc.is ~. Rossiter, blessed a large , 8ISTE&.. CHRISTIANA Twa to Page Filieea

MABJA

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Relief 'Officials Attend Meetings

2 Expert' Gives Congressional Group New Picture of Soviet Objective

In Europe

NEW YORK (NC)-Two WASHINGTON (NC)-A new have." Dr. Allen. told the lawpicture of communism as an makers. "They want a commutop officials of the aggressor forc~ in the world nist world, and they pJ;,opose to Bishops' worldwide relief emerges from a document made have it." and rehabilitation agency public in recent days by a ConAcquire Power left here for Europe, where they gressio'nal committee. "What 'the Kremlin leaders will attend meetings dealing It is not that all the compoare in process of doing now with with assistance to other counnents of the picture are new, but the use of communism as a basic tries. they are presented in a lighting tool is acquiring power, pow~r Msgr. Edward E. Swanstrom, and 'a persl!ective that gives the in this world at this' time by any executive director, and James J. end result a new interest. . means, fair or foul, at their Norris, European director, cd It is a picture of communists disposal," the consultant ·added. Catholic Relief Services - Naforming an elite group living "Specific,ally, the Soviet Union, tional Catholic Welfare Conferin luxury of£' the rest of the I believe, wants to dominate ence, left aboard the liner Queelll world, careless of whether they other countries, but, not necesMary. have created a Red Utopia for sarily even by the preeminence the peoph. of the countries theY o£-' a local Communist "party in They will attend a meeting all feed upon. every case. ~ .. the U. S. Bishops' overseas relief The picture can be drawn "It is not world communism in mission directors in Geneva, from statements made by Dr. ,the sense of a grandiose Utopian Switzerland, from July 20 to 23" Robert Loring Allen, an expert . ,communal type of organization and' the lnternatiomil Confer,;.' of international trade, who and system that the Kremlin enee of 'Catholic Charities im talked with' the House of 'Rep- leaders hope to achieve. They Rome, from July' 24 to 28. resentatives Committee on Unwant t~ achieve power ".' . to Msgr. Swanstrom said that II American Activities as a co'n- 'the pl;lint where' they are not, continuous flow of relief matesultant. Dr.,Allen, a graduate of a~d cannqt be, challenged by rials is going to Chile, which has Harvard and presently' an assO- any' other power .in the world..• been battered by earthquakea ciateprofessor of econ'omics at ,Communist Elite . and tidal waves. He lauded the the University of Oregon, was' "It is not necessary that countremendous effortS carried on it! . for five years a U. S. Govern- tries go com'munist or are taken behalf of Chile by voluntary ment intelligence officer who over by a Communist party so agencies. More than half of the did economic research on the long as the' fundamental elerelief materials and fiT1ancilll1 Soviet Union and 'Eastern ments of sovereignty are 'transassistance for the Chilean vicEurope. ferred from that country to' the tims was donated through CRSe International Trade Soviet Union, which is simulNCWC, he said. FIRST POPE ANn PRESENT POPE: Pope John , The .consultant said he saw taneousl~ the fountainhead of kisses the toe of the be-robed bronZe statue of St. Peter Flow of Materia" ,th m ' t bloc turning, commumsm and a great power e com UI1lS . in the world." in St. Peter's Basilica, during ceremonies on the Feast of "The assistance to the peoplo more and more toward mterna"The ultimate obJ'ective is . of Chile will go on through tho SS: Peter and Paul. NC Pho·to.· tional trade as a weapon with th . t h' h t 0 f'Ig ht f or R e d d ' cooperation of CRS-NCWC, too W IC omma.. n' et mam el'te enance . g' ,of h a t commuAmerican Red Cross and otheli' tion of the world.. . ,:, IS 1 , l;'s,m . w a ev~r reHe said the communists have 'so~~ces-polItl(:al, economI~ and Inl In ,,' voluntary agencies," Msgr. Sw'an- , a whole arsenal of weapons, but milItary - that are' avallable strom said. "We now have a flow' , that,there are foreseeable limi-' thr?:ug hout the rest ~f the wqrld, . ' ounclangu~ge of Inaterials going into Chile, " . . ' h' b ' . "th' WhICh they hope Will be under ,VATICAN CITY (NC) _The trine and the norms of disd~, .' an. d h"a.ve, i n.orma f t·Ion a 00·.... " tatIons to w at can e done WI th .. " t 1f th' b"" £'t ,,',' . . th "d 1 . 1 ' . 'd th' " '. elr con ro or elr ene I , off,ic·i.all,uiguage of the Ecumeni-' pline." . " need!!. "Which .will.enable Utl ~, ' e 1 eo oglCa weapon, an . e . Dr AIl d P "At 'th'~ military 'weapon has' become . . en ~umme . u '. . ,c'al Council, in discussions as Roman' Pronunciation, be of more specific assistance. risky.' 'In :any 'everit, he said, moment \QI,S benefit reSIdes I~a',well as in doc~mentatioJ1, will Being' even, '~ore spe~ific, Msgr. Swanstrom ~id that certain aspects of the R~d bloC's smal~ ~ortIon of. the RUSSIan, 'probably be Latm. , Cardinal Bacci added that' the' CRS-NCWC and other vOluntary.,,, trade with other .nations "can- .'peop e. This is. the opi.nion, exp~essed 'Latin used will be the. 'nol'i- agencies, ",will. ta~e ,the~ full~, not be justified strictly as an by Antol1lo Cardmal BaCCI, forclassical form'which is normally pos~ibl~, advantage" of the refueconomic proposition." .' n,v~rslty ,.5 merly Vatican Secretary of used in the documents of the' gee , iml1).igra tion bill passed by "Certainly there is iittle ques~riefs to Princes, in ari' article Vatican congregations and that Congress before' it recessed for tion about the kind, of world _ m :.Osser~,ator~, ,Romano, the recommended'pronunciation "for the political nominating convenUlat' the Soviet Union wants to RIO DE JANEIRO, (NC) "Vabca~ CIty dal~ newspaper. reasons of' uniformity 'and, prac- tion!!., ) ", Presidents. of Catholic, universi-·'· Ca~dma~ BaccI. a~sw~re<i. two ,ticaHty" would 'be the so-called' ties from· all parts of the ,world ,', ,questIOns m the .arbcl~:;... " Roman pronunciation. Mass Oi-do In answer to the second ques,;. FRIDAy-st. Henry, Emperor .will meet here Aug. 20 to 28 .at, " 1., What ,language ~Ill, .be, tion'as to what Latin style would I and Confessor. Simple. White. the congress of the International "used for the sole~n meetll~gs? THE ANCHOR lists ibe a82.. In what Latm style Will the be used'''in documents, Cardinal Mass Proper; Gloria; Common Federation of Catholic Univer..' sities. . . documents and acts of tile. coun-, Bacci·.said that it should' be a lIliverslU-Y .dates of 'priests' wlM I;'refa~e. , ", The .presidents may attend ,·in' .'cil be compiled? ' , ' "'semi::'classical style orecclesiail~ , served tbe Fall River Dloeese"" SATURDAY - Commemoration' since ,Its, fo~ation. in, 19041 . person . 01' be represented by . He prefa.ced hIS ans.wer to th.e tical Latin. 6fthe '-Blessed Virgin' 01. Cilrdin'a! :Bacci said that'j¢' wltb the In~ntlon that the JYIount Car~el. Greater Dou- .delegates. ,Only presidents . of, fIrst questu)J1 by notll~g, that _It faithful, .' will them e· ble.· White~ .. Mass Proper;' :pontifically established univer- '. has . ~een suggested m. ma~y . would :be necessary to organize praYerfulreme~branoe. sities will be able to ,vote. ' '., ,parts .of the world, espeCially 111 a groUI) of competent Latinists' Gloria; . Creed;' Preface . of Pontifical establishment is' an '. Amenca; .t~at 'each member ~ at the service of the press who Blessed Virgin. JULY'16 .' SUNDAY-":'VI Su,iday After honor conferred by the Sacred' ~he ~ouncI1 be allowed t~ speak would compile exact summa'ries R~'(Bernard Percot, 198' Congregation of Seminaries and 111 ~IS own language, durmg the 'of the discuSsions in Latin and Pentecost. Double. ·Gre'en. Universities. It recognizes the' ,seSSIOns. and that Sll~lUltaneous in translations, of the modern JULY 19 Mass Proper; Gloria; Second translations be provlde~ by n languages "so th'at they might' Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan" Collect St, Alexius, Confes- universities as "jurjdical· pe.ravoid using other sources of inD.D. Second Bishop of FalJl sor; Creed; Preface of Trinity. sonalities" under the direction, ~ystem ~f earph.ones as IS d~ne River, 1934. ' MONDAY-St. Camillus De Lel- of the congregation, which has . mother mternabonal assemblies. formation which could be inThe Cardinal observed that. correct and inaccurate." Rev. Jeremiah W. Baggott, 1&31 lis, Confessor. Double. White. the right to approve the unisuch a -system is not considered Mass Proper, Gloria;' Second versities' statutes and the apfeasible "because in matters of Collect Ss. 5ymphoroS8 and pointment of their rectors. There are 41 pontifically esFaith, a word rendered poorly her Seven Sons, Martyrs; I, tablished universities, of which or least inexactly could give' Common Preface. ' seven are in Rome. There' are rise to confusion." , TUESDAY-St. Vincent De Paul, AnsWering the first question, Confessor. Double. White. four in the U. S.: Georgetown University and the Catholic he quoted a previous state'ment Mass Proper; Gloria; Common . University of America, both in made by Domenico Cardinal Preface. Tardhii, Vatican Secretary of WEPNESDAY - . St. Jerome 'Washington, D. C., Niagara UniState; which said that "the lanAemilian, Confessor. Double. versity, Niagara Falls" N. Y., and De Paul University, Chi-· guage of' the council will be' White... Mass Proper;, Gloria; Latin'; particularly suitable to Second Collect St. Margar~t, cago. outline' precisely, clearly and Virgin. and Martyr; Common concisely the cOncepts of doc. P~face. . Knock Shrine SoCiety THURSDAY---"St. Lawrence of Celebrates Jubilee Brundusium, . Confessor and Seminarian Visits' ' KNOCK (NC)-This village D octor of the Church. Double. Brother .On Rome' White. Mass Proper; Gloria; has celebrated the silver· jubilee ,Second Collect St. Praxedis,' 'of the Knock Shrine Society, de,,' Edmund Delaney, seminarian Virgin' Creed' Common Pret.: voted to the ~pk~ep of Knock all son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. ace" . a center of pIlgrImage. Delaney, 424' Linden Street,. Fall . Archbishop Joseph Walsh of River, is spending the summer in . Tuam, who presided at cere- Europe, visiting his' brother monies attended by several Joseph, also a seminarian, who FORTY HOURS other bishops and thousands of is studying at the Nortn Amer'pilgrims, read a telegram from iean College, Rome. DEVOTION Domenico Cardinal Taidini, Joseph, who had the' honor' .Secretary of State to. the Holy last October of being photoJuly 17-8t. Hyacinth, New, See, conveying a special bleS&- graphed with the Holy Father Bedford. ing from Pope John. . and Bishop Connolly 'on the oe- . WhatOSjOUi wish .... a ..;'lOfa in the 'living-room, am easf St. Mary, South' DartPilgr~ages to the Irish shrine casion ,. of the latter's ad . Urn ina ' ,chair for father? Wishing woo't get it,.but regular deposits ia: . mouth. began in 1880, one year after visit to Rome, will be ordained YOut savings account will. Open .your account in this friendIr' - JU!,)' 24-St.Pius x, South .:'villagers reported seeing an this December in Rome. . .! :; :' Yarmouth, . . mutual Savings Bank DOW. It takes only , '. '8PJlarition of the Blessed Virgin, His parents and his youngest " : St. ~tephen, Dodgeyille.· . ,St. Joseph and St. John the brother, . Thomas, a student at I. minutes"';' and lIfewd9Ualll JulY' 31-St. Francis of Assisi, ~ Evangelist in .the gable' ,01. iibi: Coyle,High School, ',plan to· ailevety paYday will ciWdU~"MIcl:up ie the !li1 n: .~ . , ,; , New Bedford.. , , parish church, " " '~tend' the ceremony. . ". ;;: Holy I(edeemer,·Chatham. . '~'_'-' ',," . ,.,'..', '.r... . '·'1, Aug~ 7-8t: ,~rge,:.•WestBegi... Constructi~ftl· .. ,',Legion of Decency , port. .FfII' ~·-:'lJM. ~'·lJMI. The following films are to be ST. LOUIS. (NC)-Archbishop , );acred Hearts, :Vairhaven. Joseph E. Ritter of St.· Louis 'added to the lists In their NSt. Theresa, So. Attleboro. , officiated at ·ground-breaking spective classifications: ceremonies for the new $14mil-' 'Unobjectionable for aduUIl THB ANCHOR lion St. John's Hospital. Accord- and adolescents: I .Aim at .the S~ncl..,laSa mali privilcg~ ~uthorlaecl to Sister Mary' Rene, admin- Stars; S.O.S: 'Pacific.: .. as FaD River, Mass,' Published eve.., ini istrator of the new 420-bed hos- .. ~ Unobjectionable for adults: ThuradQ at 410 HighlAnd Avenue. FaD River. Mass., ll)' the CathoUe Press ot the pital, a nurses' home ,will also Inherit tlJ,e .Wind; It Started. Cha,h~.mH~h;Yichport - Orleans Diocese of Fall.' River Sul!s~riptiOil price , be built on the hospital groollld8. 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~lHE ANCHOR-

Society Members To Attend Mass At He(;llth Camp

lhu'rs., July 14, 1960

ST. LOUIS (NC) - The sixth priest from the St. Louis archdiocese to join the missionary service -in Bo-

sary of the saint's death by attending a Mass to be celebrated by Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Bishop of the diocese, at • P.M. next TuesdaY in the G:hapel at the society's Health Camp in Westport. The general meeting of the council will be held at the camp at 7 P.M. Wives and families of members have been invited to assist at the Mass and receive HolT Communion. Mem bers have also been reminded that this year the annual meeting of the society will be held for four days beginning Friday, Sept. 23 in New York City.. Because this is a special year for the society it is eJ(pected that a number of Fall River llllembers will attend. Anniversary Requiem Masses were celebrated yesterday in the camp chapel and at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River for the repose of the soul of William Warren, a camp .counselor for 30me years and head counselor lla 1950.

livia has received his missionary cross.. Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter presented the cross, symbol of the missionary apostolate, to Father Edward F. Feuerbacher. Father Feuerbacher, ordained three years ago, will join five priests from the St. Louis archdiocese who have founded two parishes on the outskirts of La Paz, Bolivia, 12,000 feet up in the Andes Mountains, Volunteers Grow The young priest, who volunteered for the mission assignment, will work among Amayrs Indians living near La Paz. The St. Louis archdiocese is one 01 several U. S. Sees which have established or plan to establish missions in Latin America. Under the sponsorship 01 , Richara Cardinal Cushing, Arch_ bishop of Boston, the Missionary Society of St. James the Apostle has sent more than 15 diocesail priests from Boston, Wisconsin and Oregon into the area. Two other dioceses, - . La Crosse, Wis., and Spokane, Wash., - have sent or plan to . send priests directly to Latia America. The mIssIOnary movement among U. S. dioceses is an attempt to overcome a severe shortage of priests, especiall,. native-born clcrgy, in Latill American areas., .

Po rents Receive Fordham Honors

NEW YORK (NC)-The parents of 13 children, five of whom are nuns, were honored at FordFALL RIVER MARYKNOLLERS: Sisters from Fall River Diocese chat with Archham University's ninth annual bishop' Vagnozzi, APostolie Delegate to the United States, and show him their mission Institute on Religious Sacerdotal Vocations on the Rose Hill cam- crucifixes after departure ceremony at Maryknoll· Motherhouse, Maryknoll" N. Y., Sunday, July 10. Left to right ·are: Sister Christiana Maria Felix, assigned to Central pus here today. : Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. JohnAmerica; Sister Maureen Thomas Higgins, assigned' to' Bolivi~-PerU: area; an4;' Sister of BI'ooklyn received a voca- . 1'homas More Higgins, assigned to Hawaii: ". ' .". • ! ,' . . • tions citation in a ceremony climaxing a two-day program _ religious vocations which. attracted over 1,200 priests,' Three Sisters from the Fa~l . Central America' to 'join the .' Sister 'M. 'Thoillas'" :M~re, ,the: Brothers and nu·ns. River Diocese, including a Sister Maryknoll Sisters staffing a former Helen Higgins, immac-' Two of the Johnson daughters doctor, are missioned to Bolivia- school' and a diocesan novitiate. ulate Conception parish, North are Mal'yknoll nuns serving' ill Peru, Central America, and She is the. daughter' of Mr. and Easton, is the daughter of Mr. the foreign missions. Two ot!ter . lIawaii. Mrs. Henry A. Felix, 319 South and Mrs. Fred Higgins, 'Edgardaughters who are nuns teach in , Sister Maureen Thomas, the Main St., Attleboro,' Mass. She town, Mass. She graduated from Catholic high schools, while the foriner Anne, Marie Higgins, graduated from Attleboro High Edgartown' Public 'School and fifth is a registered nurse in a Holy' l'{ame parish, Fall River;' School and Trinity College, Regis Coll~ge,' Weston, MllSS. hospital.' . is the daughter of Mrs. Nora E:· Washington, D. C.' ' She was prtfv'iouslY: assigned 10 Higgins, 967 Robeson' St., Fall teach at the Maryknoll Sisters White Fa~hers School ~iver. She graduated from. the Cemetery Lift :chools in Chinatown, New York, of the Sacred Hearts, A t'f' . I FI B and St. Louis, Mo. She is misGets Pontifical Rank Academy r I ICla ower an sioned to Hawaii; to join the VATICAN CITY (NC) -The Fall River, and the Coliege of' Mt. St. Vincent, New York City. ,DETROIT (NC).- The Allied staff of Maryknoll Sisters conSacred Congregation of SemiAfterpl'ofession she was assigned Flo r i s t s Association here ducting seven parochial schools, naries has elevated the Whit~ to Georgetown University School has appealed to Mount Olivet a children's home and the diocFathcI's' House of studies at of Mcdicine, Washington, D. C., Catholic, Cemetery to lift its ban esan Social Service Bureau. Manuba, Tunisia, to the rank of graduated in 1957 and interned on artificial flowers. The assoTh' t M a pontifical institute. '· h' H . 1 B ciation said the restriction denies ere are seven een aryEI Izabet t S a t. S osplta, osk liS' t f th F Il'R' The school is thereby emton. She is missioned 'to the pel'sons free choice in selecting D~o IS ers rom e a Iver powel'cd 'to grant degrees after Bolivia-Peru area to join the. decorations for graves. locese. a thrce-year course of study. staff of Maryknoll Sisters doing A cemetery spokesman replied _ The housc of studies at Mamedical work both in the high that the ban has always been in nuba was founded in 1926 and Andes and in jungle towns. effect and is explained to puris open to students who are not Sister Christiana Maria, the chasel's of flowers. But, he membel's of the White Fathers. former Honora Lucille Felix, added, it was not rigidly enIt offcl's courses in Arabic lanSt. John the Evangelist parish, fOI'ced until visitors began to guages and literature, and in Attleboro, Mass., is missioned to . complain of "hideous color comIslamic culture and thought. binations." Two Tent-Churches In addition to Mount Olivet, Commercial • Industriaf one other cemetery in Detroit Serve Archdiocese Institutional 'limits floral decoration to fresh METAIRIE (NC)-An 80-byPainting and Decorating flowers for two full days a year. 40 foot tent which can withstand strong windstorms serves as the 135 Franklin Street church of newly created St. Fall River OSborne 2-1911 Philip Ned parish in the Busonet Warehouse Salesroom Plaza section here. New and Used Father A. Charles Kenny, the OFFICE EQU,IPMENT founding pastor, has his rectory MAILING and office in a house across the street from the tent-church. IN NEW BEDFORD DIAL 3-1431

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Three Diocesan .Maryknoll·Nuns Receive ,Assignments

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THE ANCHOR-IDiocese of FdIlRLver.....::nhur,s..July 14, ,f960

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P.!AMPJJONA (N.C)----Fomr .SpaniSh prelates'haeve 'statecll :that .8 'letter from a <grolllP of :B,asque ·pr.iests containt}

(G. Hfgg'ins

,Directoll'•.NCWC ,Social ,~ctjon ;D~pl!>rtment

'.I\v.o ,y,earsa,go, in ·his thoqgh~pro:voking b()(j~, The Affluent Society, economist Jooo 'K. iGa1bra:ith ;of lIar.vard University 'said that "we :must iflinda 'way ·to remeqy .,the po:v.er:ty which . afflicts ,us.in 'public ·servicesand ,which is;in s u c h increasingly bizarre many .people -includiQg ~bitel­ contrast with our 'affluence lectulils----,are 'quite 'Prepar:ed.te in piiv.ate,goods." The mean- Choose ·collectivism." ing of "private goods" .This :is .a ·:fr.ivolous .answerto

:falsehoods" and kJ ;any ,guaJ:antee '01 a.... ,thenticity." . Because of. \the letter!s lpaJlti~ nature, :they sa'id, they ,00.... not [accept rit. The prelates .commented ,em .lij 'May ,30 letter allegedly signecll 't!y !more than .300 .prJests ~om Spain's Basque provinces which ,was 'sent lothem. llhe' letter protested :against .wha t it caBed governmental violations dfcivill rights in the Basque auea, ;p0lice bnitality against political prisoners ,and press censorship. ·Joint Letter The ;prelates spoke in a joina letter. The signers were !ArChtiishop Enrique Delgado y Gomezof Pamplona, Bishop Pablo Gurpide Beope of 'Bit bao, Bishop Jaime Font y Andrea of San Sebastian -and :Bishop Fnancisco .Peralta y Ballabriga of Vitoria. 'We cannot understand, 'tho BishQps said, "how,politiclil,pasSion can :blind some pl;iests , .• to the point of allowing themselves to cooperate in a great propaganda scandal ,of obscure origin . . . \with serious consequences for ,the c:::hl,lrdh itself.'" 'The .biShops complained of.·the ,way 'in .'which 'the Basque priests' 11etter !has ,been Teportei! in 'the )American 'and EUl'Ope~D press. . "'W'eask 'Catholic publications abroad 'to Ilook 'to' responsible sources of. iriformation -when 1M is'a ma'tter'of-judgingor simply reporting 'on ·theme 'of <the Church :i:ri Spain," ·they said. 'They :asked 'priests ';ne~er,1e engag~ in 'allY 'activ ity 'foreign Ito your "PrieStly ministry." 'Many priests have ItJeclared, the 'bishGp& 'saia, ·that ,theY 'were ,t8Jcell ·inby 'an 'lobscure political .rnaDeuver;" ",obvious ~thout

in

this conteXit is .obvious. '~Public the Ul'gent ,question .as ,to ,how ser.vices" would .include 'school!!, much of .our national income, hospitals, slum roughly speaking, 'should be spent :in the .public sector (of ,our clearance a'n d . economy ,and how much in the u.r b,a n 'redeprivate sector. In answering :this v:elopment, ·sanquestion, ·the Journal .would itation, parks, p I a ygrounds, haye 'beenentitled ,to say, if 'it museums ,and wanted to, that those 'Who '\favor an increase in public spending • '.a thousand CD the r things" at .the' present time ·are mist'h,a t do .not guided 'or mistaken.. "1 e n.d themStatement1lJntme selves to being It was ,not 'free Ito 'say, 'howsold to indiev.er, that theY .are "'prisoners iof viOuals." l their statist ideology." The'lat.P r .0 f e ss 0 I' ter statement simply isn't ,true. Galbnaith wasn't the 1irst economist to Sl\Y that we ,are spendThe <vast·ml\jority ,o'f·those ;who ing too :much, .propor.tionatelY favor ,an .increase lin lPublic iRECEJWiES 'moo H6NoR.: JRrancis :Ca:r:8imil$pellman speaking, .in .the pdvate sector spending (w.alterLjppman is;a receives the 'Grand 'Oross ·of .the (Ordero! Isabella ·the iif our ,eoonomy ,and too little good lexample) .are ;sincer.elyin Catholic:from -Spanish Ani'bassaClor ,JoserMarie ,de Areilza in the public .sector. fa;v.or (of ;pr.iv.ate ,entel'prise ,and 'On ibehalf ;0'£ ;Gener.aHssimo (Francisco !F1r.anco. NC iP.h<Jto~ Many of his professional col- sincerely iO);lposed \to ;socialism leagues 'have saidsubstantia!ly or .any :other ''form ,of. ·collecti. the 'same thing, but Galbr.al~ v.ism. To 'wr.ite 'them ,off 'as 'danl~tteSi:den't "!I~~Us said it :in 'such a way as to atgerous '~libel:a1s" is ·,to' ,ma'ke tract ·the attention ndt only of. rhetoric 'do 'the 'work -Of. reason. Sp'i:ri:t~(d ¥a~lu'es economists and other 'socia1 LONG.BEACH qNC')---'A·Cath- .said.:The :patient must (ev-lnce a .In deploring .the .substituti~ sCientists 'but 'of ·thoughtfuloitidesire to ~tay sober .and must of.thetoric for reason in ·the olic ,university .president said zens in all 'Walks ,of 'life. 'seek 'to 'preserve and marntain current debate on 'our 'flatlonal 'c1eI:gylnen 'can' assist in rehabi'National 'Discussion pUl1pose, I .do mot mean ·to tSug- , :litating;lilcohcilics ,by helping 'sObi-ie:ty 'on'll 'day.Jto../day 'basis, T.he publication ·,of Galbl:'aith~s gest ,that those ,who ~aVlor :an lin- :them to understand ,the 'spirit- cahe ,said. book in 1958 started .a.national crease .in .public .as'opposed ·to 'ual life. ""rhe ,entire :-stay .is ,similar ,to discussion or debate on this is'Msgr.John J. Dougherty~ a retreat ~from the <world," she pI'ivatespending necessarily sue of puolic versus private have the better of the argument. president of Seton >Ha'll 'l:J,niver- 'saiB. No'IW, 'radio or ,news!!pending. MOl'e 'recentty <the papers are permitted-only d\A I ,am merely saying that they sity, South 0range, N.J., told l!ICope lof ~this .discussion has ibeen ane 'entitled ;to .an ,objecti-v:e 'the .25th international <2\:lcoholicsliterature ;anB -:v:isits !fnom fA1A expanded to cover the broader hearing ,and, more 'specifically, Anonymous .convention: '~e sponsors. question as ito ·what ·our ."na- that theY should not ,be carica- must ·hel.p the li-Ic6hcilic to ,grow 'Cites :sta:tistics tional .purpose" really is and in terms. 'of 'Spiritual life 'and 'Bill 'W., surviving c010under tured .as ,enemies .of ,f~eedom. what it ought ,to .be. achievement 'and :point ,out. the of ~,tOldthe convention ·that '~Fl'eedom,'" <as :Charles F. This continuing discussion common '-spiiitual ·,prob1emsbe ~he number o'f men .and women Darlington, ,8 }prominent !busi. about our "national purpose" shares 'wUh others:" who axe now sober in !A.!A. is cannot help but serve a useful ness fexecuti-ve ,pointed -out-in ;an . 'The 'sessions were attended . about '300;000." anticle ,in 'the July:3 issue .of. ,the purpose-if it ,is carried on obby 'some!O;OOO .A2\ ,members. 'Be :s8.id ,statistics show there jecti\lelY .and wi.thout ,partisan New York mimes ,Magazine, 'lis 'Concept ,of 'God are 'at least :5;000;000 active .-a.lnot:a narr.o.w ,thing, ·lot -is.a ,comJ:ancor ,or ~bitterness. Msgr. Dougherty said ·his work c6holics in '.the :U. ·S. mon ·el'ror .to ·concei.v.e <of. ·it ,onlY But there's the 'rub. -Even at with IAAhas led him to .believe !A.'formerwaroenat'San Quenin ,the setting ,with IWhichwe ;are this preliminary stage of ,the that certain 'l!piritual values tin Piison; 'Cli'f.ton 'T. DuffY, familiar. ,F111eedom, ~above :all Slor oebate ,thene ,is 'some reason to should 'be 'emphasized. Among' WId 'the convention that AAiD fear that before very long it will ,a ,great people, ,is found ,in these is ·the {concept,of.. God. prison _:does succeed, ;.Ele ,.said doi~ ,what ·is :morallY TJ;ight:" oegenenate into .a ·name-calling Often, he said, ,a "theoIQgica:Ihis 'studies inBicated that ;00 :NEW ,BEDFORD ;If. this ,is .an ;accurate ,defiinlcontest. 'This would be 'a 'very adjustment ~or (cor.rection" lis per (C8nt.ofmen .~ppearing 'be. tion (of !freedom-and '1 ,think ·it necessary 'in .alcoholics. unfor.tunate turn of events, fore 'tile 'state 'par.o}e 'boand 'were is-it ,would seem :to foHowlog.Msgr.::Dougherty 'said .the alcoholics 'Or ,persons with al,Confuses (Issue tINDUSTRI~L 'OIl:S ical~y .that .some degr.ee ef. .pubpw;pose.of.AA is .to ~help people cohol -as ,par·t '0'£ ,their -criminal lEhe ,lead editorials in ,the <June liclipending is not ,only .morally stoP dninking.,IUs ,noLa:;religion, history.. 20 and 21 issues of the 'Wall IHEA"TING justifiable but may indeed . • but its members ,use ,the 'reStreet J ourmil area .gooo indisources of ,their faith, ;he :added. cation 'of. ,what .we ,may -be ,·in morally necessary. 1I'IMKEN 'E,..qOlA'ND- ,1 I >How .these ,resources ,are 'coupfor once the ,debate' ,begins. Ito led with lphysical itheJ:apy in (OIL BURNERS pick up steam. SU;pe:lIl0rs iL ,A M rehabilitation -was rElPorted 'by 'One o'f 'these leditorials ibadly fS.A·K,f j Sister !~gnatia .of ,the Sisters'of ClOnfuses the issue o'f .public Char.ity of .St. ·Augustine. COL1IJEGEVLLLE' ~(;NC) versus 'Pri.v.ate ·spending.by -makfEvery :SundQ:Y - $2;95;, ing 'it :appear '·that ,those 'Who . Father John iE. IBYIlHe,C.PP.S., . .First ,AA Hospital 1P.I'Ogl'aID ..inC','uu1'ng .~. - A ['IV. L-'" \ In 1939, with AA's cofounder, ~5terL' fav.or greater lspending for pubof Dayton, '<Dhio, ,was elected 1501 CCGUNTV cST. Dr. Bob ,S., :Sisterfgnatia :set licgoods 'and services ,are dan- president ,of the .Conference of. ',THE [NEW rBEDFORD ~p ,an ,:AA hospital ;pl'Qgr:am .in genous "liberals"bent 'on doing Major Superiors of 1nstitutes of aw.ay with private enterprise Men of. the 'United 'States at ita RosarY tHall, ;3 .l,7~bed wand -iii. \YR :3-~1·7.'5\1 St. Vincent!s Ohar.ity ,HOllpital, {Q~ggshaIiIBrid9., 'Fair'have,,; and 'substituting .'some ~or.m ,Of ,annulil'llleeting hel'e. Cleveland. C<lllectivism .in 'its ,place. Father a,yrne,:American Pr~ Patients ,are' .adm-itted1io rRos:rhe 'other 'editorial 'goes 'so 'far vincial 'o'f the Society ·of. tbePreas ,to suggest 'that :allthrs 'bilk cious lBlood, ',succeeds "'.a·tiler' ,ary Ha11'only 'under -sponsorship ,COME fiN 'SEE ,- (and [DRNE of.anAAJmember,Sisier ,Ignatia about our ~'nationa1 purpose":1is Celsus W.heeler, O,F1M., :Pl'o:vJniriherently dangerous. cial of. the Holy Name Province '~HE '~'O Nationall'ullpotie of .the .0nder ,of :Eniars lM-ioor, "'~Indeed," . the .Journal wal'DS New Yor.k,.N.;Y. 1F.ather iWheeler ........ 'World's ,Most .Bea,,~if.dI~ l~ionedCar.S· , J1s neaders, 'lone of ,the diffiheaded the Conference.of ,men's ,at culties .with ,the ,whole ~discus- religious order 'since 'its If.ound, sion ,is tthat ,it :so ,easi{y ,turons ·,to . ing in 19517. ILU;M~B£R collectivism. '0nce you ,abandon ·.'11he 'meeting ,held ;at ~St.:;Jobn!s the idea that .our 'national ,pur- University here ,in 'Minnesota COMPANY pose .is, .as .alway-s, lbeSt -'ex- was :highlighted, .by:a ·,three...dl\Y I pressed 'in \the maximum 'Jfr.ee-' workshop 'on 'mental.hea'lth. 'Tonia ,line F0RD DEItXLERS FOR(OYER ;38 YEARS oomaf ,our :individual-lives,.You included lectures and 'seminars ~Building Materials - almost, necessarily start .advooat- to acquaint ,the ·65 ;major 'supe1344·86 Purchase St. !NewBedfor.d, Moss. ing compulsion. ITlheFe .isn't any riors 'presentw.ith \theservices 8 SPRING .ST., ·fAIRHAVEN other choice. of ·pSychology ,and IPsytohiatl'Y "What is so strange in the WYman 3-2611 . ~ and its effective use in ,the .aposlight of our .past, and '50 frighttolic endeavors of the ,Church. ,ening for our 'future, is that 'so

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Boar-d 'o'f ;E&!Lllc~tiion I:nc lude,s ~Lc:i)y,men 'BURLINGTON (NC)-Bishop Robert F. Joyce ,of Burlington has announced formation of ,a seven-member .diocesan .boar-d of education. The board is composed ,of four priests, a teaching 'Sister and two laymen. Ohairman is 'Msgr. Harold :1'. Field, ,pastor .of 'Hoiy Rosal;y church in Richmond .and editor of the Vermont Catholic T.ribune, ,diocesan rnew~pape.r.

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Anthony's, Taunton, Has Long Record Of Service to Portugue se of City

BY' lUa:rion Unsworth Arigin~, out of the need' of immigrants' wi th a deep religiouS' background, St. AnthonYP I Pall'ish, Taunton, stands today as: a monument to industriousness "and faith. Just after the mid-nineteenth century, immig,rant3' from Portugal began to settle in Taunton and Ute surrounding area,. lured by the- prospects of' work and living near other friends and ll'ela;tiveg, who had arrived f'-' I previously. At firs~ these DeW Americans worshipped at. the existing Englishlspeaking parishes in the vicinity but when, by 1900, over' 3000 POrtuguese had established. their lltomes here, the. need: for a Portuguese' parish wow recog.. 1i1f~',

. In 1902', with this in mind. J'ohn de' Rose of Dighton pur'-lliased' the Perkins, Estate on Weiit' Street, and the following yeal' transferred the property to the Most Rev. Matthew Harkins, Bishop of the Providence Dio4leSe, which at that time included ~ Fan River area. Rev. Alexander F. Louro was l1IJamed pastor of all Portuguese , Catholics in the Taunton area, mcludin~ Dighton, Seekonk and Rehoboth. Mansion Becomes Church On the Perkins Estate was an "ltd colonial mansion, and Father lLouro: set about establishing thiB as his church, using the Uppe!l' ~~~ ~ •• , . . . . oS. _, • J-. , l!loors as living quarters and OOItverting the large front room lP'RIESfJ.'S OF THE PARISH: left to right: Rev. OIl the first floor into: a tern... JLaurenco M. A vila; Rt. Rev. Manuel J. Teixeira" pastor; porIU'Y' chapel. But. thisi- too; Joseph, Oliveira. ~, had to be changed, because eI. the overflowing crowds at- ionePlf tht'ough the financial Connolly. The church had beell tending. Masses there' each week. cdses. that caused. disaster. erected on the north· side of the throughout- the. country, but. the rectory, rather than over the To accommodate the ever-in.. parish. il!!elt was seriously basement, so the second proiect ereasing number of'parishioners, of Monsignor 'Ileixeira' was the stricken- financially. the first pastor rented- the Temperance Hall on Trescott Street, Aft e l' bringing- his flock construction. of an elementar1 and Father .fohn Goulart· Car-'through the crises, of' the. depres.- school for the childxen of the dcn:o was appointed by Bishop sion and the beginnings of parish. Record Attendance. Harkins- to assist Father Lauro. World Wan n), Father. Couto alSo Until' tlie school' was, ready fOr resigned from his duties- ill ][n 190~ Rev. Augusto J. Ta.. occupancy, classes were held ill ftira replaced' Fath~ €ardozo Taunton in. 1944. the old parish hall, with an enIt. WlI8l to llt pat'ish consisting .. assistant, and in the same rollment of 5& pupils. By Sepof !I' rectorY' and basement ')'e<lr the Fall River Diocese- was tember 20, 1955, a' IDndergarte'll established with the Most Rev. chu£'ch, both: ill' need of repair, ancl' three grades- were.' ready for that the present. pastor, Rev. WHiiam Stang as i13 Bishop-. the' children, Since then;, a. grade Manuel J. Teixeira, was ap>Again this signified great pointedl 33. administrator. in 1944. has been' addedJ each year until a' record 30C> pupils attended Jl)l'ogress for the Portuguese The pa:stOI1, who: celebrated the people in the area, for Bishop fiftieth, anniversary of his ordi,. this year. Anothel' record was noted this Stang immediately realized that nation'in February of this year, Tllunton needed more than one hag; accomplished much' in: the . June' with the first, graduation exercises. held' for the finst Portuguese parish, and purchpast 1& yea'rS\ eighth; gllade. Fourteen pupu. ased property on: the comer of By- 1950 ground W8$ broke'll were' graduated. Sci\ool and Washburn Streetll t>,. Bishop. Cassidy for a new St. Anthony's; School is staffed. for facilities for the north end church" which was solemnly b1 SisterS' of the Holy Union of .eUiement. dedicated' b,. Bishop James L. the Sacred Hearts, with Mother Official Beginnings Mary Beunard. serving as suConstruction of a rectol'T and perior and principal. The sevell ebUl'ch basement was· begun in sisters. reside' in a temporar1 that. location in 1905'- and the conv;ent aeross, Washburn Street fOllowing. year the basement froln' the school. Parishioners dturchJ was dedicated by Bishop AUSTIN' (NC)-8ix Catholie Stang, an- event which mllrked ~lle~g\ and universities. in believe that Monsignor Teixeira's next project will be the "the official beginnings of Sl Texas: received $76,600' in: grants building, of a convent to house Anthony's Church. from the' Texas. Foundation of the nuns. Voluntarily SUPPOll'ted Colleges 17M 24' years Father Louro'led Presently, Monsignor Teixeira and Universities. the pal"is!\· organization and· ae" is assisted in his pastoral dutfes UvitiCSl retiring in 1927 to his The foundation said' iIll • b.y Rev. Joseph Oliveira and Dative isrand of Terceira in- the statement received here by ReV'. Lourenco· M. Avila. AlIDireS and resigning hilt pasBrother Raymond Fleck, presi" torat.e- due to age and ill health. dent-of St. Edward's University, Cafhol'ic. that it. has distributed $346,400 The' new pastor was- no stran'MEXICO CITY (NC)-"Cath_ to its 22 church-related membei' gel' to' his Taunton parishioners, olic Action and the_ Problems of institutions. ' for Rev. Manuel M. Couto had the Apostolate in America" will served as assistant at St. AnOther Catholic institutions thony's since August of' 1919. sha'ring; in: the grants are: Incar- be' the discussion' topic at.' the· fifth In:ter-Amel1iean Catholi.3 Almost immediately he was nate World College, OUr Lad1 faced with the economic crash of the Lake College and St. .Action· week here next Fall. oC 1929'. Mary's. University, all of San Father Couto organized the Antonio; a'nd Sacred Heart What A'bout You? St. Vincent, de Paul Society illl Dominican College and the Unithe parish, to assist the parish- versity of' St. Thomas, Houston.

nt!' ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. July 14, 1960

5 Missioner Sees Impro¥ement~Only

50 Wifch Doctors to Every· Priest of Sacred Scripture, a post he' held for six years prior to his 1957 mission assignment Father Grassi was pastor of a mission parish illl the town of Colotenango among some 7,000 Mam, Indians; "Guatemala, like- the rest of Latin' Ameriea-, can be' called a Catholic country," says Father Grassi, "but this Catholicism is only a mere skeleton today." When· Maryknollers first arrived in the country in 1943', theY' found their mission area swarming with "chemanes" or witch doctors. Superstitious People The' "chemanes" had assumed religious authority in the ab.. sence of priests. Consequently much of the Indian population of 200,000 had deep-rooted superstitions. "But once the Indians recognized the American missionero as members of the true clergy of the Catholic Church, they began to throw off the cloak of superstition," he says. One method of offsetting tho acute shortage of priests there, the missioner said, is the use of well-trained catechists.

NEW YORK (NC)-"Things looking- up' in mY' Indian mis_ ston-there are' only. 50' witch doctor.· to evert' priest there

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A.. Grassi, M.M., of New Rachelle-, N. Y:, describes what' faces: missioners in the remote Cuchumatane Mountain area of: Guatemala where he labored before returning to the U. S. The lean, soft-spoken priest has been· reassigned to the faculty of Maryknoll Major SeminaI')l', Ossining, N. Y., as profes_

Fordham Conducts Vocations, Insti_tute NEW YORK (NC)-Auxiliary Bishop James H. Griffiths of New York yesterday gave the keynote address at Fordham University's. tenth annual institute on religious vocations for Catholic youth workers. Archbishop Thomas A. Bo:and of Newark will give the principal address on the second day of the institute today. About 1,20a priests, Brothers, Sisters and lay people are attending, officials said.

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Catholic Colleges She re' i'n Gra nts

SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY

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Missionary S'ishop Visits Home For. First Time in 4 U Years MONTREAL (NC)-An Oblate miasiollary bishop came back to Montreal, his native city, for- the first time in 41 years. Bishop Gerard Mongeau. O.M.L, left here in 1919 and went lo' San Antonio, Tex., where be studied for the priesthood. lIa was- ordained in 1924 and la'i7e years later went to a mission station in the Philippine3. Do has been there ever since. The 60-year-old prelate said ~ when he arrived in the JPWlippine province of Cotabato there were 60,000 Catholics and ~,OOO Mohammedans. Today there al'e 700,000 Catholics, 300,laO Mohammedans and 100,000 pagans. Bishop Mongeau heads ~ PFeiature Nulliqs of Cota-

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MElt/NO THIAIU liP, The American Association for the Advancement of TODAY St. Bonaventun. Bishop - Confessor - Doctor. Be Science represents, as well as any other group, all American was born in Bagnorea in 122L icientists. 'A report-four years in the making-was Just His baptismal name was .J9bm presented to the Association's two million members. but he was called Bonaventul'fl The underlying theme of the report is that the advances (good fortune) by St. FranciIJ of Assisi, who cured· him mn.. of the scientists have created many problems.' Examples aculously as a child. He became cited in the report are the effects of radiation; the effects 1\ .Franciscan at the age of • of new insecticides, food additive and food colors on the' and at 36 was Minister Genemll health of man and animals; the prospects of artjficially of the Order. Once when askeGl by St. Thomas Aquinas where controlling the weather, and the like. be received his great learnin& Since these developments of science affect the lives and he replied by pointing to a erQwell-being of the general public, ~he scientists dare hot keep dfix. He was the adviser 01. 9t. in their own hands the decisions arising from such progress. JUOuis and of St. Isabella, the ,King's sister. He wasnominateCI The burden is upon the scientists,tJieh, to abandon their Archbishop of York: but declin'eCB eustomary reluctance to becoming involved in public issues the honor. In 1273 he was ere'with political a.spects and to translate the 'findings of the .ted Cardinal-Bishop of Albano. , lab in easily-understood language to the ,people~ As the .' Known 'as the "seraphic Doctor,. he died in 1274 during the Counreport says, "In the Jast few yeaJ,"s the disparity oetween dl of Lyon. He was canonized scientific, progress and the resolution' of the ,social issues im 1 4 8 2 . ' . which it has evoked has become even greater. What was once merely a gap now threatens to become a discOJitinuity TOMORROW7-St. Henry ii. Emperor. A descendant of ChlllPwhich may disrupt the history of man ... Scientists bear . lemagne; .he was born, in D&• .serious and immediate responsibility to help mediate the 'varia in 972 and was known ail , effects of scientific progress on human welfare' ..' ." ,'Henry the Good. He was ed" It.is a wonderful thing to read such a realistic appraisal 'c..ted 'by St. Wolfgang of R8't:isbon. He became emperor iii of the responsibility of,the scientists. The one world of ,1002 and. with his empress, st.. geography-a world made compact by the jet---:-isgiving "Cunegimdis, 'did much for reway to the one world of knowledge-the realization that the ligion during troublous times. discoveries in one field Of ,learning have consequences in He bad a special love for the ,Benedictines and tried t. b&other fields as well. And this, in tum, is giving way to the ' rome a member of that Ordez. one world of' humanity-in which the progress of the For this reason he was named by American scientists must be viewed just as much with its Pope Pius X as the patron ol effects on every living person in the world as from the ',the Benedictine Oblates. He died in 1024 and was canonized .. narrower viewpoii\t of progress for its own sake or for 1146. ' ' industrial gain. . Forthe scientist' to measure up to what this reportca.1Js " ", SATURDAY-Our Lady Gf The editor of the Question Gnd Answer column does not glll/ranlee Ie ' Mount' Carmel. This feast comfor, he must be a good scientis~, a dedicated man, true to _swer anOIJymous queries nor letters from unidentifiable sourc.es. In eVfl,y 'memorates the' Carmelite trahis calling and superio.r in his work of research and dev.elopinstance the 'desire for anonymity wiU be respected. To that end, mimea dition' that the Bl~ssed Mother are neve; appended Ie the questioTM, but unless, the letter i& aillned ' , ment. And the scientist must'be a man of learning in a llIere is, no assurance that any consideration ffliU be given ,ie. 'appeared to St. Simon Stock, a wider sense than his own profession; for only against the Carmelite friar, and gave bin.. , When dining in the home 01 in the minds of tbese people, 1ft the Brown Scapular to which background of great knowledge will, he be able to see aU non-Catholics, is, a Catholic our era, subtle and long-lived aH ,privileges were' 'attached. ,the implications of his scientific progress. And he must be ,permitted to participate in brain...,washing has ,been going' 'St. Simon Stock became the a man of moral values, for his is the task to understand the Protestant "graee before on 'in the United States creating' 'Prior General of the Order. Be that there is a hierarchy of values' and, to ,see that his meals"! 'a widespread semi-socialistic at: <!lied in Bordeaux' in 1256. titude 'among our countrymen. eontribution to man doesnotl distort' the right relation of The custom of reciting the 'Socialism is not a completely 'SUNDAY' _ Sixth .Sund,. man within himself and to his'neighborand to his Creator." ' form of government, but it .after Pentecost. Generally th. P'rayers before and aftermealJl bad The report cans upon scientists to take on greater: is a laudable practice. There is .has its imperfections in practice. date is the feast of St. Alexiwi, burdens than ever before-to, see all, the, ramifications' of no reason why a Catholic could-Not least among the faults of thifl, .. Confessor. ·He.lived in the filUt. not join in such prayers in the what takes place in. the lab, to explain these to the public; . home of a Protestant, p'rovided system is that it deadens initia- century and was the 'son of a , tive; creates slothfulness, and Roman senator. He fled frOll& to try to direct scientific progress" for the benefit of hu- the prayer does not coritain false 'implants the notio~ that ihere is .the luxury of his father's home 'manity. Such a role is .complicat~d arid', difficult and: hall ' doctririe.Theaccepted ,Protest- nothing wrong with' '. stealing' on the day he .w'as to be inairi~ many pitfalls-,but it should beunde~taken and aided ,and ,imt','graee, before and after from the government. . These and, in order to serve GOO .. meals" ceriainly " , " , does "not pro., things, naturally, are notteneta ' ·humility, disguised 'himself .. a applalJ ded• , . ' '

'beggar. Later. 'he ,retumed, an4I ,lived- in his own bome, unre~ ' Bi~d, as a beggar. Only after hill ,The irtgen'uity of :,America;n businessman 'is a ~a~.. blessing ,~ndqffer Him thanks. ,,' Stealing,trom :the,'government ' 4eatb' was his identity reveaw' " ' ' . ' , , "'We repeat that it is a commend:' is still Stealing. Stealing is moJ'lOus thing to behold. , '.' " :' able custom and thank God that 'iilUi wrong ,',,'.' , . MONDAY~t. CamiJ)us .. , ",Coinbin~ this with,the, h~tte~t~k;~roll'singe~:fY.f so ;prevalent among bo~. : •• ,.,' ,.. ,.,", LeJJis, COQfesso~. Atthe·age .. ·· 'd '. bo ,Protestants, 'and Catholics. , " " I':.., . ': ,II he entered 'Ute milI"tary' un", '.. th ' '18 <lay a.~ tbe oombinabon'i" ,und' to come ..,ith " It is forb'idden for',CilthoHcstO What Is., ",his'fath'er, ariltalian noblem.... 'IOmethirtgto delightan(I &rnaze. :peiightand amaZe whom 1 'ac~ivelyparticipat~)n non~Cath:-;, A BUGIAls a candlestick with ,"~fter,fouryear8ofJ:~a~paigni.... Well, th~t"s,heside the.Poi'~( .', .'''.' ' '" ,.~, ol~c services:notb~cause ~here.short\handle·it ,is held:byJhe '~f~und himself, thrqugh . . '.'A.nyway,' 'the. lat~st er~ on ,the,West 'coast ~'thfl arepray~rl!.butforseveralothei'.'ehief·assistant·'atth~:Mass'~ iI":"iolimt temper, reckll~~s' bahi" . reasons. These reasons are, prill.:' bishop when the bishop is before and passion for gambling, a d.... 'lI:"hairloo,ril.", Xe~,a genuil)~ loeJr o.fhairf:rom: Frankje 'cipally"th.~t ,heretical .doctrinesthe Miilsai.' for 'the' reading.' '01.' 'dlarged' soldier in ,straite.... ,'. Paul or Fabian .tOgetl1.et:' .with a pie,ture, l,>Oth beautiflilji . may be, proClaim.ed; ~ad example tbe' Epistle Or. Gospel. The. use.circumstances. A few. wQl"~ lealed; in plastic to ,wear as a necklace. or charm bracelet: 01' ,ma.y be given to both Cat}:1olic. of the 'bugia' i is' conceded .to ab- ., ,frOIl,l aCapuc~in friar led '.to . . . ,and ProtestantS; becauSe the bots and to certain other prelateS. 'eoriversion. He 'entered' religw.. pIn. '. Catholic knows" that Christ It ,is :8190 called the 'palmatoria'" ,life, 'was ordained and fQu~ , Now, isn't that something to delight and amaze? founded only one true Church Or: 'scotula' and more receritly ill ,th~ c;ommunity of the ServaDtlt Imagine what that does to the grateful devotee 'who and his attendance indicates referred to simply as the' 'hand ,of the Sick, which was confirMhas expended the required fifty-nine cents, (not to mention that he,is willing to accept man- J candle'. ' ed in 1586 by the Pope. He c.-. made substitutes' for GQd's OWR • • • ill 1614. the added revenue to the barbers of ,these genuine "stars"). form of worship. What 'tsthe ~rigin Of' the TUESDAY~t. Vincent . . What a possession to' tlaunt before the rest the erowd. The prayers mentioned are not BaQle,"Dominicans" li:nd 'wilelll 'Paul; ,Confessor. He was bora What a prize for a latter~ay Deiilah4nd without the work acts of public worship;--but a was this order 19.unded! ill 1576 and' devoted his life .. of, getting' it pe,rsonally.. " " ' . , " ' private devotion, and 'surely no Protestant would interpret par- . The officllal title of DOMIN- 'the care of the poor and laOf course, someone is bound to come along and' try~ ticipation in, these prayers as an' ICANS, is the "Order of PreaCh:' '8tructio~ of the rich in ways Of ers". The order arose in the year charity. Soon after his ordina1'9,', the' whole Qusiness' one better. There are always'such ·act ,of' defection on the part of a , '~th~' , 1216. Since 'the 'niemb'ers' of iiiis' :tlofl, he was' captured by piraiell -,ag~r':beavers trying to top the untoppable. But really, the religious group 'follow' the iuie -and taken to Barbary, where he mar,!ret, nQt- to' mention ·t,heflUpply"i~ 'going~to be q\Jite' Is it slldal to Inerease. ' the· established by" St. 'Dominic, til4t eonverted his renegade masW limited when the ads come,-out not only for a genuine .lock .tze 01 relief cheeks' by lalse . more common J'name' seems self:; and with him escaped to Franee. Be founded ~e. congregatioR'" claims!: " , explanatory. ' ,of hair but forthe heacl.yes, then, it will be time ,to call,. Vincentian Fathers and Sis"" balt. . . ."" , . wording of your, ci~estiOll 't ' , o f Charity. He'died in Paris'_ IDdic;ltesthat' yo~ already know, '" serve . en e,n~ry, J~epteinber 27, 1660, and ' . . , , , . ,,' , _ at least, IlUspect,what the ,N~WTON ~BtBOtTSNC - ~ :~n~niz.ed.in 1737.; " " " " A n S W e r , i s . , Y e s ! l t i S s i n f U l ' t o I l U n s e o m m u D l y a· t . A ugu~", .. ", ' • t--f~ , '1., " bOld th l'ef heck"~ tine's ',Priory' here, near ;1;'ly-, '." WEDNESDAY - St. Jer-'a. " , 'UI up, e. 're 1 c .", mouth has'maintained perpetual .'means . ' , ' Sacra, :,Aemilian, ,Confessor. A·Vei», ,,' , . First'ofoffalse.'cJaims. all-'false claimS' b adoration of the Blessed 'tian, he was - miraculously ...

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PUBLlSt:tER .' Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER . ASST; GENERAL MANAGER Rev. Daniel f. Shalloo. M.A. Rev: John P. DriscoU MANAGING EDITOR J:iugh J. Gold~A

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only another way, of saying 'lie',' irieInilthfoOn'·rolrOOof'Ythe~rsS-:·'. 'b' ·t~. . '!ee after pray.ing to the Bl~ 'and lies are always' morally, ~s ervlce r,,''''' 'Mother upon being taken pri'" 'Wrong. Secondly, the reason for CllnonsRegular of the, Lateran, 'eI' while serving in the a..... the claims is to ,steal-and steal-' Pontifical High Mass was offered. 'Later ,he took Holy Orders '.m. ing is a ·sin. at ,their priory by Bishop Cyril 'devoted ,himself to charitable ; ~urthermore, Jwe may .te~sieaus of Plymouth.... ·, ".. .works. He founded a congree-,that in almost every instance it . The' community, formed 111I" .tion .of clerics regular-caW ill seriously sinful since, the 1609, included relatives of some the, Somaschi for the little tOWII amount ,of money, wrongfully of the English martyrs among its ,of Somasca in Lombardy wb'.e taken, is substantial.. Those who first members. One was' Mar- . :It was started-dedicated to ... assist others in perpetrating pret Clement; daughter of., St. eare of ,orphans. He died in ~ ,8Uch frauds are equally , guilty Thomas More's adopted daugh- ',:aged 75, of an illness contiaeW. and; ,in some instances, more" ter, Margaret Giggs. The nuns while tending the sick. He _ guilty than the recipients of such have many relics of the martyr's, canonized in 1767' and in _ fraudulent funds, since they are including St. Thomas' . More'il . was declared the patron': Gf ~onsible for planting the idea 'hair shirt. ' orphans and abandoned chil. . . .


Archbishop' 'AslCs . Gua.rdian Angels Work Uverti~e.Uith"'Trip:l:et:-v r.~.~~~~~~R;-4, 1960 7 Special Prayen:' Four Year Old Sisters to Watch' Over .Charities Group Before Election . By Patricia McGOwan Has Eisenhower , COLOMBO (NC) - ' The Guardian angels work overtime at 1682 North Main Street, FaD River, where the four, bead of Ceylon's Catholic year old Pascoal triplets live. The three lively little girls keep' their parents and their As Speaker Hierarchy directed all parr ish e g and communities to hold a special period of prayer and penance a week prior to the oati!)nal election. Archbishop Thomas B. Coorsy, O.M,J., . of Colombo asked for . prayers "in reparation for our sins and for the welfare of o~ country." The general election is .scheduled for next Wednesday.. . The prayer appeal for CeylOn was Archbishop Cooray's second one in recent months. In the earlier request, made in midspring, he said that "the .enemies of God are trying hard to destroy ~ freedom of this land of .ours lIlnd. to lead her citizens, into slavery worse than that of all~ent Rome." !issueS Warning in an address at Holy Family Convent school in Dehiweia, 'tlie prelate said that Ceylon's Catholic schools are among the best tn' the. country. It is largely. 'b~ ause of them, he said, that literacy has spread, and an edueated elite capable of winning Independence for Ceylon has been formed. .The July 20 election called because the conservative government ·that was formed after .the March 19 election was d~ tented jn Parliamen.t when .It presented its program. . The March election brought back to the premiership Dudley Senanaykke, leader of the conservative United National party, after tour years of rule by the Great Ceylon (Sri Lanka) Freedom party. But the United NationalIsts had only a meager plurality .m Parliament, and were unable to win approval for. their progr:am. Therefore, Parliament was dissolved and new e!ectiona were called for;

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elder brothers and sisters on the jump., One, Mary.Ann, managed to-fan out of a second , NEW YORK (NC}-Pres-story window when she was a year old. She spent 11 days in tbeh08pital, but is now. ident Eisenhower will speak . here September 26 at the as good as ever-or as mis50th annual convention of chievous. The family are the National Conference of' members of St. 'Michael's Catholic Charities. parish and the Holy Union The charities convention wiD. Sisters who staff the parochial school are due for some,mix-ups in a couple of year!J when Mary Christine, Mary Madeline and Mary An~ start classes. . "They. were lots of work afI babies," admits' their. mother, Mrs. Maria Pascoa!. She worked out '£i" system. whereby she'd wash each baby.. put her to bed. then start all o,.rer" feeding. each one, "then putting' her .back to bed. They were good at night, however, probably because those guardian angels felt that Mama just bad to have some sleep.

Eight Children There are eight children in the family.' The triplets. came as a surprise to the parents, who had expected only one child. Joseph' Pascoal, the father, is • native of Fall River, his wife of Portugal. Married in Portugal. they ~ived there until 1951, when -Mr. Pascoal returned to" Fall River, to be joined by his wue three years later. . The triplets have lots of fun together, .says their sister Ed-uarda, 13. But they have fights too, like most children. An unwelcome present Mary Ann receivedfrom Mary. Madeline for the triplets! fourth' birthday in March was a black eye. At birth the triplets weighed a total of 17 pounds, eight ounces. They were born in a 20 minute period. In pretty print dresses, they looked like three flowers when they were intervIewed al-

R,eligious . Serying~egro . Catholic.s '£~ect New Superio~ General. ,.

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father George F. O'Dea, S.S.J., was eiected superior general of'the ·.Josephite missionarie~,a~' AmerICjln community of priests, and Brothers. who mini~ter' to one·1lQ~II;th. of ~th~ Ne~r,o Cat~olicsin tlle, U. S. . . . . '. ,.. , .: T\1e. 49-ye~r-old }lative.. ,.. ,of Brooklyn, N. Y., was vicar generai. of .the community· for. six ,·years. He wasordair'led in ~~. •. .E·lected. to se.rve w.ith E'!ltl\er ,O'Dea his cOnsultors ·gener.:al •were: Fathers Vincen~ .1. War·nn, ~.S.J., a Pl)iladelp.h~a ~atiYe .and, veteran of .4~ years. l.Il the community, vicar general; A-rthur J. O'Leary, ~.S.J., a,W~ter'town, Mass., native. and form~r 'reotor of Epiphany Apostohc College, Newburgh, N. . ·Matthew J. O'~Qurke,. S:S.J." a. New, York native, prlOclpal of St. Augustine High School" New Orleans, and RobertJ. 0 Connell, S.S.J., a Buffalo, N. Y., native, master of novices at the .losephite· novitiate, Walden.

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THREE LITTLE FLOWERS: Meet Mary Christine, Mary Madeline and Mary Ann, the Pascoal triplets of Fan River. No, they're not usually this demure, and Mary Madeline, in the center, lqoks as if she's got mischief brewing from the moment the photographer lets her get, away. , though interviewed is hardly the word, since none of the three uttered • sound.

'Ostermann Is Editor Of Baltimore Review BALTIMORE .(NC) - Robert Ostermann, former managing .editor of the Voice of St. Jude ,magazine, has been named man.. aging, editor o.f the' Catholic Review, Baltimo~ archdiocesa.n -.newspaper. He will take over the post Aug. 1, .succee9.ing Gerard. E. Sherry, who resigned and will- become managing editor of the Central California ·Register, -ne~spaper of the ·Monterey:'Fresno, Calif., diocese.. ". . . . Mr.· Ostermann, .38, ~as, ~ managing editor of the ,VoiC4.l ~ St. Jude since April, 1956.. IJe .studied at ,the ,--Uni~e~ities ,()f ) Wisconsin, and .. of .Chi«;SlgO. aJ:ld at the Cork,bran$pf t.he .UQi"versity of Ireland.

priests and Brothers work exdusively am,ong the N~roes ill this ~untry. , :.. The community had. its beg1&. Ding in 1866 at Mill Hill;. England. It was founded by Father Herbert,..Vaughan, who later became . the Cardinal-Archbishop "of .W~tpl.il:lste".. In 1893 .Ca~~li~al Vaughan' made. an 'agree.rp.ent 'with JameS Cardinal: 'Gibbons, Archbishop of Baltimore, and founded a new society for the United States with'headquarters dn .Baltilllo~.., . ,~. .' ; The :Josephites do missional'7 . . wark in' la states -and .the District of Columbia.' They· staff' ,137. parishes and misSions, which have Ii total of 165,343 parishion- .. ers- .about one-fourth of the Negro·Catholic pOpulation in the U. S. The community conducts 91 elementary and high schools ,w.ith a total enrollment of 24,950 pupils.

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OKINAWA (NC) Daily of Satisfied Sel"Vice broadcasts on the Catholic Faith 806 NO. MAIN STREET have prompted more than 1,000' inha!>itants of the Ryukyu", Fall River OS 5-7497, islanM to take correspondence .... -' cOurses· in the Faith. .

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coincide with the annual' national meeting of the St. Vin-·ce~t De Paul Society. . President Eisenhower win speak at tlie conference's golden jUbiiee 'banquet in the Statler Hilton Hotel. The conference .will be held from SeptembCl!' 2a to 27. First Since 1938 More than 200 members of the U;S. Hierarchy have been invited to the convention by His Eminence Francis Cardinal SPellman, Archbishop of New York. The 1960 convention will be the first in New York City since 1933, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt addresBed the conference. . Cardinal Spellman will of1e:r • 'Pontifical Mass in St. Patrick's cathedral on September 25. Archbishop Patrick' A. 0'Boy I 0 of Washington will preach. The conference, founded m 1910 at the Catholic University . of America in Washington, D.C.. convenes annually to explore new ideas in the field of social services.

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Riv~r-Thurs; 'July .. " . "of'f~lI: .

. THE ANCHOR-D'iocese .

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Actress' Relates Return to Faith,

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Fireplaces Can ·Be Attract·ive. Spot~ Even ~nSummertime .

. .By Alice Bough Cahill .:. ',Comes Summer and the' mode of our daily.' Jiving' eh~nges. You are probably so glad to be relieved of the responsibiliti.esof heating problems that you shudder at· the remembrance of nights when the whole family gathered· around the warm .fireplace. 'Green is thecoole~ color on the spot that was' so warm hot days, so bring a bit of garand inviting all Winter does- den green to your hearth. If D't .give the same solace in you don't have a garden, potted July. Certainly you didn't wailt to stare at ashes in the fireplace' all summer. You doubtless .

plants are nice used in'a fire- . 'place shadow box. Since flowering plants need sun, you'll find you can only use' them for special occasions, but ferns' arid have .removed vines give a more permanent logs and stored ·display.' . the fireplace' . , Green Is Coolest accessories unFriends living at the seashore. til frost a g a l i l . a l w a y s complain about their inIl i p. t;h e air.' ability 'to use bra~s accessorieil But have you because of the salt.air. There are left your firelovely wrought-iron pieces that plaCe grouping serve equally 'as effectively, but as it was, starat the shore a fireplace i. use'd In 'g vacantly, more in summer, come • cool into an empty' evening,. than in the city.. hearth? You can, of. course, fill But if you want sOme interthe f.ireplace with leaves and esting camouflages to use at the branches, or, if you prefer,You seashore you might fill the space ean place your sofa against jt, with a trellis arrangement, wit)l facing the ce?ter of the room. . a shelf as the pedestal. Potted OLDEST BENEDIC'l'INE BROTHER :~rother Maurus Sammer Feature ivy can be placed on the shelf . LObenhofer O.S.R, 91, who came to Belmont.Abbey, N.C., Even in silmmer, you can.featand ivy vines' can be trained from-his' native Bavaria ,in' 1889, 'is the oldest professed . 'lire . your fireplace, however. to grow or' spread around the Crisp paper. fans give a summery . trellis ,to give a summery, cool,. Brother in th~ Benedictin~ Order in the United StateS'~\NC Photo. \. look to a fireplace, but if the fresh look. night turns cool, you can use Le~ conventional,' but bY wa,! the fan 'as kindling. There are . of giving the kiddies a !>reak ltOme rather' glamorous .fans sold and entertaining .them indoors in gift shops today, which are'· when the sun is' too hot, 01' when more or' less permanent,. or you the rains fall, use this idea. PITTSBURGH (NC)-i\. rec. . '. ean have a fan that is easy to Place a backboard in the ~ire. . t place opening (it's well to get ord total of' two .million dollars .National Shnn.e of the I~mae­ make. Simply fold paper In 0 one that fits in snugly). Now'let was expended by. the Ca tholic. ulate Conception, ashmgton, fan shape as you did when yOIol were in gnide school. your little artists draw to their daughters of America for char- .D .C., the rep~rt ~aId. . . hearts' content. Their drawings itable,' :religious and educational,. Other .contnbutions inc.luded One of the - most interesting will lend interest to the rooml programs in the past two' years;' ,scholarships for ~he education ~f . summer arrangements' I ever. \ it was reported here.' ' . nuns for. teachll~~ the. h~n~hsaw was the use of a/gold corruNew·· Jersey Abandon.s The report was made by Mrs.' .capped, scholarsh.IPs by l!?'dIVld-· gated paper fan, teamed with John V.Ballard, executive secual courts for high school and brass andirons and potted plants. 'ReconCiliation Service retary of th!! CDA, at the open- . :colleg.e education ~f youth!~nQ Vines were hooked over the top TRENTqN (NC)-New Jer- ing business' session of the 01'- dO~a~i?nS to vanous mISSIon of the fan to softe!l the stiff sey's marriage. reconciliation ganization's28th biennial con- actiVItIes. lines. program w'as aba~d0':le'd by the vention. . Maybe you'd like to m~ke a State Supreme Cour:t he~e be. A major part of the contribu-' ~ormer '·Movie House permanent fan'. Go to a dIsplay cause -, it was successful only tions went to the bishops of the Serves as Church . supply store and buy some gold three per cent of the time. . . dioceses in which the CDA is corrugated. paper.. Cut the fan Edward B. McDonnell, admin- organized and was used for the BATON ROUGE (NC) - The about 20 inches' deep from a roll, istrativedirector of the court, first Negro to be ordained a :education of pri~sts; priest for the A~chdiocese of of corrugated paper two yards 'said' that the frlbunal. will apMore than $500,000 was con- 'New Orleans 'has a onetime long. Fold fan into accordionpoint a. special committee of tributed from the organization's :'movie theater for his' church like folds. Use a pointed instru- judges, lawyers and laymen to ment (I had an old ice pick) to plan a reconciliation service that general fund and from individ-. here, m a k e evenly - spaced holes is available at the first sign of ual C. D. of A. courts for the.. Father AUbryOsbo.rn,. ~ho erection of five side .altars·in the .served. for seven years on the through all fl?lds. Knot end ~f a marriage break-up. rubber band; fit other end According to Mr. McDonnell, ..staff ',at St. Joseph's church, through head' of bobby pin,pull persons. could seek advice. Orosse .Tete, was commissioned through holes and then .turn to through such a program withrecently to fourid Ill' mission anchor. Push a stick through the out first filing suit for divorce withir;. .the . Negro section of . ottom folds. 'Now you have a 01' separation.. Un<ier the for. _~,acred ,Heart. parish her:e. The Women's Guild of St. pi~s permanent, professional-looking mer plan, lle said, the breach i~ ,~e acquired ',the onetime summer fireplace' screen. When marital relationship. was, usuall;r X Church,South Yarmouth; will. . movie theater, whj~h has been . you wish to· have a fire,. ·you - too gr:eat by the· time' the Su- sponsor a·' Summer bazaar' from' .remodeled into a church. His simply lift the fan off. They're preme Cc;mrt'. program. swung S . to . 9' MondaY afternoon and' .livingqu'arter~ are. on the· secOnd evening,' July 18, in tpe church fUn to make and. certainly' dieSB into action. The' program had . ~loor of the building. . up your fireplace. . been' operating for three yean hall on Station Avenue. This; too, is a delightful way if). 10. oJf. }liew JerseY'1I21coUn 'l' J • ". Mrs. John 0 Martin and of featuring ,your fireplace this tie-.·. Dennis O~Connor are 'co-chairsummer. First, blacken inside men 'of' .the event,' which will : with stove polish: (Better. pro- ,,' Spanish ~Wo'rkers" feature a parcel· post' table, tect your hands .witl). old gloves .MADR~D (NC)-The Spanish home--cooked· foodS; religious ar. Everythiilg·. • .. . I. forgot and oh, wl).at a nationai cC:lJlgress of· Young ti~les, .ha~dwork and. a white :mess!) Now use 'your fireplace Christian . Work·ers. wiUmeet . elephant bootn; Ring' tOfll .'Yill in · as a shadow box. to, 'dramatize her.• ,~iqm ~JuIYi2S :to July· 2:1 be plaYed' by children w.ith ,P~6to Suppl,ie~ · cut flowers., You'll. p'robably .to· cQn!lide~'problem,s.of .y:oung 'prizes to' be awarded ·and· there ,: 245 MAIN ST.. · need to use something as a' ba~ . famili~. The. YCW. plana ~ will ~e a' ~~ack .~!l.T; .... , '. for your container to. give' your create .a.permanent organization. 'Falmouth "';;Kfi '1-1911 · arrangement ·height.. ·I simply for premarriage insti'uction' and · put my· vase on a couple Of for investigation of ttielOCial brtcks. . and econoini'c problems' of YQung , Inc.·" .' woi-ki~g ~en and.' their familiE!i.

Cathal ic D'aughters .Give:' .$2 Mi Ilion to Charity, Education"P~ograms " .w

UNION CITY (NC)-"I, went down the aisle to the altar anCl knelt there for the' longest while" ·not praying, at least not in wordl5, just looking at the altar, thanking God ... I had come home." These words of Helen Hayes,' often called "the first lady ell the American theater," describe her return to 'the Catholic Faith three years ago. Miss Hayes wall reared in the Catholic Faith illl her childhood in Washington, D. C., but left the Church when she was married in 1928 to the late Charles MacArthu'r, a playwright who was a divorced man. In an interview if). the S,ign magazine, published here, MiSi Hayes' said the' death of hell' daughter, Mary; was "my first step back to the Faith." She said that after Mr. MacArthur died she stood outside a Catholie church in New York three.yeau . ago "trying to get up' enough courage to go inside to Confession." She related that she walked around the block 20 times recit.ing the Rosary before she summoned courage and entered. "It was as if the years had fallem away and I was a little. child again, safe in a world I'd almoSt lost, returned, to i~ at last,". &be said. '

'Reward Nun-Teacher. For Aiding Blind . PORTLAND (NC) - A nunteacher's work with blind childrenhas earned for her a Di&-. abled American Veterans 1960 Community Service Award. Sister Mary Miguel, a teacher ~t Cathedral elementary school here, was cited for her work i. conducting a class for blind children' and those with Severe eye troubles. Sister Miguel has been working with., blind children since 1954. At Cathedral High SchoOl she h;ls a classroom equipped with special teaching 'materialll for the blind.

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Summer Bazaq'r: At So.Ya rmc>uth ~

M:rs.

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Sisters of Charity. E.leet : New· Mofher General

NEW YORK (NC) ....:, Sister Loretto Bernard, administrator of St. Vincent's Hospital here, was 'elected mother general of', · the Sisters of Charity of New·. York. Francis Cardinal Spellman, · Archbishop of New Y!>rk; presided at the election at the : Mount St. Vincent mother' holise. The new MotlierGeneral has been in hospital administration lwork sirfc~ i933..

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.. . BUENOS AiRES (NC)"':"'Five .':.. :h.unai-ed' priests will ·come ·to SO. DartmOuth \ Argentina from Spain to preach .' ' .. . during a mission to .be held and Hy~nnis here from September to Novem. bel'; They will be led by Arch-.$O~,Pcirt~ oi bishop Casimiro Morcillo .Gon••, ' WY 7-9384 ,zales~ ~f Zaragoza, president..of . ~ IpS" . ~ 1. the ~ocietY...fo~.r"atin Arrierican..' AiiI(:fornTheMTechiy·· '.' ~J'wn . ·Priestiy . Cooperation. . '.. _.' '.'" ~."~.-i'~'J,~.:~;.~"~~:_r;.'.:......:. 'poi"'P;'~";'",".~ .. ~.i!o"~ . --;,;.~"",,,.•.1;j •:~;:H:tQiQC:;X;~~I:!Mi8:t'Qq.I,* ~i 1 -1 l'1 1. :J "I .,,~ ..J.:1 "_J ,-,:j .1 t J _:.t.J.. J j" .J ':1 ~ ,.. .:, ;...,.,~(;4 ..... '!...u• .;,:.~.., 'T'.! . :"'!' ..Lt•• I.r.• ~ ._...... ,. .~

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Much-Abused Television Is Useful Servant at Conventions

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., July 14, 1960

New Provincial In Fall River

By Mary Tinley Daly Once upon a time, there was a family: father, moth~r, big-sized children, middle-sized children. Now and then, teeny children would join them. They were the grandchildren of this family. These people' all liked to be together. But IOme~dy .always tu.rned on long. long time. THE' MAN a Thmg In the middle of couldn't understand how this where all were gathered. family could get along. For And then nobody talked to $$:Ol! it would be restored·to its

anybody else. All the family~hlnlng place of honor, he ~ro!p­ ttl b'lgS th iddle-sized and ISed . . . A month later, $ siess would do the trick. Finally, for t he t , . e m , e eemes $ 49 thOIS f ami'1 y cou . ld'" s t ar t wou ld Sl't st arI'" . ." in at THE 1Vlng agam. TJING, all of Convention Time t b e m just a The' family felt that it was bundle of eyeliving quite satisfactorily withb a II 9. Someout THE THING. times, the big Came a recent day .•• The people would Father of the Family made the "shush-sh" the pronunciamento: "We rea 11 y Jl itt 1 e people, should see the conventions-our sending th e m government in .action. Better to the kitchen call THE MAN." to "get a glass THE MAN was very, very of mil k - or busy, 'very, very popular at this something." Other times the littime of year. His modest $..49 tie people would plead, "Please had risen to its· former figure. don't talk so loud. We want to Goodness knows, the Father of see Bo-Bo. Don't you want to the Family said, candidates have IlO to the kitchen and get somegot themselves 'nominated, even thing?" presidents elected, without the This went on for a long, long entire populace seeing the blood, time. When the teeny children sweat, tears, and deals in smokehad gone home, the father, filled rooms. However, he conmother, big-sized children, midceded, THE THING need not die-sized children would 9t~re remain silent and dark when the at THE THING for hours. They family could take a look-see at grew less and less fussy about the goings.-on. what they saw. They watched So, THE MAN took the family people brushing their teeth, men for his fat fee. THE THING is shaving, glamorous girls (ob0 nee mOl'e ensconced but "iously fresh from a beauty parnever, no, never as master. lor) putting up hair that needed The teeny people think that DO setting. it's silly to have ~HE THING This Is It! going when, all they see w Finally the Father of the grown-up people doing snakeI'amily 'Who has more sense dances, shouting .. - - __ for than ail the others, would anPresident!"-not. tl single dog DOunce: "This is it! No more!" act. The family would go to bed. The middle-sized, big-sized 'roo late, 'but they finally would children and thei..,. parents watch. flO· . and listen eagerly-glad to be a A d then something happart, even a shadowy part of pen:d. Not t~ the people but to USA 1960. They listen to the THE THING.. (Well, yes someroll-call of the 50 states, exultthing happened to the people, ~nt that every. man and women too.) Hitherto, THE THING had 10 each of the.5? has a c~ance to provided sight and sound. Sud- . expl'ess an opllllOn-a v~)lce perdenly, there was neither. ?ap8 muted. somew~~t, In ch~sThe Mother of the Family was mg who Will admInister affaIrlJ aU for "Calling somebody, doing of state. ~mething!"

"No l' said the Father of the

I'amil~. "'fhe end of the school

VANCOUVER (NC)-A couple hobbying its way to heaven wall here visiting churches and chapels. Eleven years ago, :Mr. and Mrs. Alcide Breault of St. Paul, Minn., decided to visit as many churcheo all they could. To date they have visited 25,895 chu'rches and. chapels in Canada, the United States and Mexico. Mr. Breault is retil'ed from business. Counting only first visits, the couple travel some 35,000 milea each year, returning for an annual visi* to St. Paul, where their only child, a St. Joseph nun, teachell school. There are nearly 17,000 parish churches illl the United States, but the Breaults included .iIl their program visits to chapels

in Catholic institutions. At each visit they recite one decade of the Rosary. Since Mr. Breault'lli retirement they have recited at least 5,000 Rosaries.'

famous Portrait Artist Marks 100th Birthday BALTIMORE CNC) - ' MiS3 Marie de Ford Keller, famOUIl for her paintings of the late Jamell Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore, eelebratedher 100th birthday at Jenkins Memorial Hospital. Miss' Keller'a paintings of the Cardinal now hang in a hotel here, at the Catholic Un{versity of America in Washington, D. C., and at St. Charlell College, Catonsville, Md.

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Somerset lawn Party Parishioneto of. St. Thom8ll More Church, Somerset, wilt sponsor a lawn party Thursday through Saturday, July 14 to 16. An aerial performer, a clOWIl and a singing group will be among attractions. Rides, refreshments and varied bootM will also be featured. .

JULY 18-26 Solemn Novena to GOOD SAIN.T ANNE H'igh M'assl1 :00 A.M.

dai~y

!Novena Devotions: 3:00 and 7:30 'P·.M. dai~r /

. ~reached~y

the Very ~everend Francois DlrlUlin, OJ~O(l

lNationa~ DiredO('

@f the Holy No'me Society in CanOl~<bit'

. Tu~sday, Ju.ly 26' .

Feast of:G~od' Sa:int An~e

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'Novena .Praye~·' 2, .. 3, ,4 and]:30 P.M. Veneration 'Of the relic aN day, !IIr. Mcwchildon, 0.'.

I'fo.ll.aChanc.,

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Fr. Corriveau,

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Fr. Fernandes,

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Saint Anne's Shrine '881 MIOOlE Sf.

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FALL RIVER, MASS.

aannot 'Come - cvt out and mall '.

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KincMr .-..d ..... «I

Saturd ay, J uI, 16

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HENNEF (NC)-Joseph Car~ dinal Fringe, Archbishop of Cologne, has blessed Germany'. first Catholic sanatarium for thQ treatment of women alcoholics. In a speech- prior to the dedication, the Cardinal said that even St. Monica was for a time am alcoholic, but that through both natural and supernatural mean. she was cured of the disease. The new St. Mechtold Cente1i.' will have the services of physicians, clergymen and Welfare workers in b'eating alcoholics. There are au estimated 40,000 women alcoholics in Germany. The center is similar to ~he St. Camille House for men alcoholiCtl at Essen-Heithausen.

35,000 MHes Annually To Visit Churches, Chapels

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Prelate Blesses Center for Women Alcoholics

'Trave~

LEMIEUX

0 PE.N .. HOUSE

Returning to Fall River £or the first time since her appointment as United States Provincial Superior of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, Reverend Mother Jarlath, F.M.M. last week made an official visitation to the cominunity's convent at 621 Second Street. Reverend Mot her Jarlatll taught at Espirito Santo parisll school, Fall River, in the 1930's. Subsequently she was missioned to the Philippine Islands. Immediately prior to her election aa Provincial, she was novice mistress at the Franciscan Missionaries' Novitiate in North Providence.

GREETS IRISH STUDENTS: Msgr. h J. Toomey of Buffalo greets the -first two irish students from University College. Dublin, who will· study in the Catholic colleges of D'Youville and Canisius in Buffalo. Left to right: Msgr. Toomey; Seamus L. O'Connor;· Pauline W. Clarke and Father Basil A. Ormsby. NC Photo.

] 1-Pound Baby Borll1l 10 Mother of Dozen

:rear is at hand. Examinations ST. HYACINTHE (NC)-The are in order. Who could study baby mst a pound in weight bewith a distractionlike this? THE fore 'going home but no one in THING stays silent!" . St. Charles hospital here was That was that. A silent and worried .. The infant weighed in dark THING sulkingly stood in at 17 pounds two ounces at birth. a corner, forgotten. '. .The' boy was the 13th child of The middle-sized children Mr:i. Benoit Beauchemin, 38, of eame through .their examinaBeloeil 12 of whom are living. tions creditably; the big-sized The bi;th was "normal and fairly children did the same. The Fa- easy" Dr. Remi Dansereau 'rether and Mother did some read- ported, and mother and child are fng they had wanted to do. They thriving. took: evening walks, even in the The baby is not the heaviest rain, "just like the old .days." on record. A 23%, pound babq wall They invited friends in for conborn to Mrs. Anna Bates of Nova Yersation. Scotia in 1879. Mrs. Bates, acBedtime was earlier, nerVefil cording to reGords, was seven were quieter. feet five and 11 half inches tall. Nobody missed THE THING Mrs: Bealichemin, who weigh(j Hcept the teeny chilaren, and ZOO poun'ds is five i!eet, 10 inches i;n height.. they soon found other fun things "do at .Grandpa's· house. Oh, yes, another who missed THE THING was THE MAN who had PlUMBING & HEATING, INC. been its paid guardian for • . ~ jooo Domestic Library Trustees Keep &: IndustrW __ . Sales a. . Open Shelf Policy Oil BUl'l1ers 8erviee CLIFTON (NC) -The trusWY 5-1631 tees of the Clifton Public Lib1283 ACUSHNET Aft IQry have declined to rescind an order .. for an "open-shelves" HEW BEDFORD policy that makes adult-type books available to children 11 and oldel" CATHOLIC NURSES The City Councll had asked AND FRIENDS the trustees to stick to a policy 3rd Annua4 '«aat had 'been in effect for, ." 13 yeQrs. It recognized certaiil books as unfit for children. Un- '. . tier the old po~icy some book. . were reserved for. adult reading. MeCAef'S _ Illalll STRES' The trustees b;tsed their a~tiOil _ the Amedcan Library Assolte.haMe IeacII aation's so-called bill of right.. .'. Marshfield, Mens. By • vote of 5'-to-4, the trU/lteeol gamM, ........... 'YOted in favor of the "open. . . :1. P.M. .-.elves" policy, making. all of Prooeeda- . Gte library's books available • Nursing S e ~ ,.... ~ resident· who ho~ds • lib-. Resei:vatio"""':. card. Anyone 'who is Contact • member of the . . ... oider,.:~y .obtain & . .u~ loeal Guild Of Catholic: NUl'8M

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BOOK RESTORER: "Fr. Mario Pinzuti, O.~jt, left, director of Rome's. new Institute for the Scientific Restoration of Books, checks a microscope used in his work as a restorer of ancient documents and manuscripts. . . He heads a team of ten monks working in one of the world's most modern labora· tories. Below" an almost · ruined mamiscript, far left, ·is taken and with the use of vitamin irijections and ultraviolet· rays along with other scientific techniqoes, is brought slowly and painstakingly to a clean and restored condition as is pictu~~d at'far right. NC,Photo.

THE ANCHOR-

, Thurs.; July 14, 1960

Atheists .Indicate Religion· Exists En.. Red Russia WASHINGTON (NC) The communists have not yet succeeded in stamp,ing out religion in Soviet Ru'ssia,

J-e sui t Director Moves Catholic Studio to Taipei TAPEI (NC)-,-An Ameri.can-nun radio studio for the production of Cat h 01 i'c broadcast~ has moved to

Taipei from Taichung . in the. interior. according to fragments of inforFather Philip L, Bourret, S.3.,. mation which have come through of San Francisco, director of_ the Iron Curtain, Unfortunately, Kuang Chi studio, said he moved, these same pieces of evidence seem to i.1dicate that the Red operations bec;ause "the gre~test atheists intend to step up their amount of talent both for writefforts to exterminate religion ing and acting is available here.-; in the Soviet Union. Kuang Chi studio has ~een ~. has long been understood operation for two years. It h~~ that some people are still adherenlisted actors of the Broadcast-; ing to religious bc:liefsand prac-; jng Corporation of China for its, tices in communist Russia. But programs, and has c~opel·ate~. these were reported. to be the. closely with the, Cathohc. Chung;. Gicier people, and:' there were ,ShenJ;lrQadcasting Stati,on ..i~ ligr s ' that the Reds had., "~iven Taichung; 'l;lpostolic . p'refectu.r~: . up" 011 them, and were\yillin~rto . staffed 'by Maryknoll,mi~sione~s."' w'ait and let religion: in "Ru~sia , Th~ Jesuit ''rv'!issioner, who h~l!t die with them. . ; ) ~ master's degree in electri,:~", . Rece~tly reports COJ11ing. froni engineering .and c,?mmu!,1ication8 "al'iou's parts of Soviet Russia· froni. Stanford: University, plaolJ , have given the impression that to ' «?pen .·a Summer school foi .ome . young people may be radio' :writing .and acting. Showing signs of interest in reProtestants Active . ligious faith. But these, impres... lions are. gathered . from the .iThere· has'· always 'been • eompla'ints of militant commun.. shortage of. trained writers and is'· at,heists, who called for more actors for radio," he said. "If vigorous suppression of religion. wetraiil. Catholic writers and 'acto'rs,' then with good programs Red atheists. in Russia Were we have an excellent opporfluoted as saying: .' tu'nity to. influence the large The anti-religion campaign is not making the. progress it radio audience of Taiwan" (F:'orshould among young people; mosa). there has been a growth in reFather Bourret said that, For.ligious tendencies; ,even "admosa has 70 broadcasting trans,:,. vanced" communist youths have mittel'S . with an audience of become affected· when brought about two million people. into contact with persons still "For' more than eight years believing in religion. , Protestant 'religious programs Also that "even our own comhave dominated the programmunist party . members are ming of these stations," he said. . ROME (NC)-The patient' was a 700-year-old illuminated manuscript suffering from "Today; there are about 1,00(li falling' under the influence of confessOl's and sectarians;" the burns and old age. The .prescribed treatment included ultr~v,iolet rays and vitamin shots. programs monthly from .Jariou. elergy "are exc.eeding in their The patient. recovered completely, thanks to the unusual and' ingenious care of .Father Protestant Sources. Compared duties;" ,"hostile elements" ~re with these, Catholic program. exploiting "religious prejudice in Mario',Pinzuti,. a 34-year-old Olivetan Benedictine monk who has raised the restoration , are almost non-existent." .. of 'ancient documents to the well as about 3,000 engravings with the documents of the Holy their fight :on our ideology." . .. .: level of science and high art. and 900 designs done· by 'artists See. Instead, we want to be 'of r~·--:----·-;----l. Excuse for Crack-down . Father Pinzuti is founder such as Duerer, Raphael, Tie- service to all· parts . of the S . ii.' These assertions, while ostenpolo and Veronese. Church throughout the world.'.'. I . ..' . , . U~ libly admitting that· people are, and' director' of the newly still practicing religion as far. as opened Institute for Scientific Hospital Atmosphere . Use Rays' .... . they are able, also' h~ve the Restoration of Books. The insti. Wo~Ji: ~t 'the institute's Rome ,~,The monks also,use yltrasaunlo of excuses for a more tute has: the. support and special lal.;ioratories is just beginning: violet a'ndinfrared fays to treat I vigorous crack-down on reli-' intereSt of· His,. Eminence Do-· But .the atmosphereof'a,hos- . ~~?uscripts. ~n~, to loc,ate;i~0 . lion. But, over and' above this, menico' Cardinal Tardini, Vatipi t~1 is unmistakable. ..... . . . t~r~or. det,erIOratlOn o~ Jllold. not· " ., •. the Red atheists also made such can Secretary,of, State~' . "We.' consider documerits":'" VISible to the naked eye,: .' • tatements as the following: ' . . , . Th~laboratbries' of the:'inSfi-. damaged parchments, papers' .or, " Because of limited funds 'the ,There should be "re~ewed tute "would delight a Scholar's ~pyri-asthough they were . institute has yet to 'acqliire an -:--:--r':"-~-~...,;..;-~r1j . aggressive, .sclentific' - atheis.tic: heart. Ten moilks work in' one, sick people," Father Pinzuti ·ex-. x~ray machine arid 'other equippropaganda but also a-renewal' of 'the best equipped restoration plained, "We treat them like inent. However, its photographic of punitive measures; al\ti-relisection, complete withdark-, laboratories '-to:' be found any- living. things and we.. approach lious .propaganda. "mus('unmask i,vher.~.,. well-equipped, . and .~ .. ' " ' 'their cases in: terms of biology,. room,: the harm done by religion" and' cheluistry and technOlogy:".· photography and ph6tostati1'lg . The laboratories. l",cated at ,13 .. Each 'd~cument" ;;erit ~. th~' ' .i's 'done 'in· the labora.tory. put a stop. ~·to. the violation of the So.viet 'law;", .we' must 'de- Via '. Rusticucci, .occu·py two institute is examined bY·ttie . Though, its equipme'nt is the; ' . . ' . . .' floors of the rear· section of ,one; eisively. suppress' all' --attemptll monks. They report on'itscon~ most modern, the iristitute'"you'll-find' of the papal office buildings by ministers 'of 'religion to" exdition and suggest treatment in WOl'k is. c;losely aligned to .the. .. .' , . flanking St. peter'sSquare. . ploit the church and the se~ts for ·a printed' form that resembles a .. scholarly and devotional tradi-l/J4 ~1t purposes hostile" to the. Soviet medical chart. tions of the ,Benedictines. Like Scientific Center 'people," and "churchmen' have "Most restoration laboratories the monks of a thousand years Ut;;~ Seven months ago the instibecc"le so bold as to begin vio-' ago, the staff members of the . , tute did not exist, except in the today are in the ,hands of artiinstitute with their microKIT CHI! N • lating Soviet laws." . minds of Father Pinzuti and sans,'" Father Pinzuti said, "We scopes ~nd scalpels, labor to ·Amerlca'., most envied kitchen... ·, L.egislator to Renew Cardinal TardinL That it' could are scientists using the bes~ and pI'eserve. the immense heritage be s~ quickly created is due also. ·most, modern means of science of Western cjvilization centered Crime Books Fight to the interest of His Holiness to revivify the restoration of books." hi the Ch~rch. i BALTIMORE (NC)~A delePope.. J.qhn XXIII", ,who recoggate to the Maryland Assembly nized the need for. a modern,' Use of VitamilHl ._-~------has said he will attempt to draw scientific center for preserving' up another bill aimed at preand restoring anCient' documents Among 'his most" unusual' M.iddleboro Road. R,ou.t. M venting the sale of crime comie that tell the history:' of ' the. treatm.ents, is the, use· of, vita- .. " " books to minors. Church in·all parts of the world., mins.in his restorations, TheSe. , Home, mci~e EAST' F!tEETOWN are either injected into the in, Francis X. Gallagher of BaltiEight Y,ears ago','. F'ather Pin- erior' structure of the document ~ ,CAN[)!ES more said that ."we· are going zutl', the son of. a miner from, . . CHOCOLATES' 'on it. . ' ' 0 ""p. ease. sen d I er~ t UN . try to provide some protection . Siena began a sCientific restoni- .~r.sptayed . ' , 'f t 11 'bl" "", . , ...... "Asked to elaborate· on: their '.' for.mmors pOSSle.. center at '.his h.om,e mona!l.. ' effect, Father Pinz,.uti, . 15.,0 Varieti.. O. H'av'e' . salesman , call at, _. . , Maryland .,I a a C ourt f' A p-' tion 0 t.ery i.n Siena. Tl)..e husky, 1?lack;';, use, and , . . " bl .. ' The 'peals 'has'affirmed that Mary-, haired"monk 'looks "curiously sa~,d tha~"he,p'lan_s tQ ~eh.v~r,.~ ';ROUTE' o·near,'''. ;;, 0 il}atlo~.:.,' .. , . ,,' ,land's present criqte comic book ., dy'namic 'for:' sucli a~"time-eon,<; paper' ..9~ . t~e~hmque'1tt " '",,''' ' ' . ., ':'h' ,',. '-. ,.,Hame.~.,.;~;.::~;:;i':"""::':'''::';:'':;'''~;:' ·Iaw. is ·unconstitutional.· Mr. ' .".' . . .", "f"':' Stockholm .. thls year and p-I'e. . fairhaven.Auto;Teotre". . msta k'" 8.u,miJ1g .!'I}d . pa. .}~I.~:o ~'-. '''fers.·,to . 'keep' :it:S cktails·~r..i-."" "'" " " " , ", .' Ad.ir:e":~:' -" . ..: ,: :!." :. l ·.":.·,G;'·ftl!tllhae~hpears'saWgheO'·o;wf.a. ,,~Il·i19s5t9.1'u"a.mmeenntda_ , '8ion~ , ,'., .1 ' " " , ., ..... ' .,'-' ...·u·n'tl'l"'t,,:'e"n'" ' j ' " ' ,...... ' ." ," ,y.,~ ... 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Dominican Radio' Ca rries Threat Of Violence

THE ANCHORThurs., July 14, 1960

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SAN JUAN (NC) -The official Dominican Republic lI"adio station has broadcast a threat of violence against the only two foreign bishops in the country. In a broadcast heard here, La Voz Dominicana read a letter in which it was claimed that Catholics are in rebellion against B ish 0 p Thomas F. Reilly, C.SS.H., American-born Bishop of the Prelature Nullius of San .Juan de la Maguana, and Spanish-born Bishop Francisio Panal ' Ramirez, O.F.M.Cap., of La Vega. ,Meanwhile, copies were rec:eived here of a pastoral letter issued by Bishop Panal in which be denounced the, "open perse- ,I c:ution" of the Church and her.,7: lI'epresentatives in his diocese., , . Chief Target . ~ j,. The Bishop stated that h e ' himself has been the chief target of threats and abuse,. a.nd , accused the 'government' of .!nterfering in Church affairs. SOLEMN' INVESTITURE:. Members - of newly-organized Boy Scout Troop. 19, St. Accordi"ng to the letter read over La Voz Dominicana, Cath- ;Patrick's Church, Fall River, recei~e,iJ.eckerchiefs in a solemn church ceremony, held for olics in San Juan de la Maguana the first time, it is believed, in the Diocese. Left. to right, Rev. Kenneth Delano, ScoutBnd La :Vega are demanding master Harvey W. Donnelly, William' X. Murray, ·Harvey W.· Donnelly, Jr., HerbertF. native-born bisho1,>s. . Tracy, Robert K. Floyd, Martin E. Bernat. ' . The broadcast said the letter i'~fe~Fed to the possibility that Catholics would use physical violence a.,lainst Bishop Reilly lind Bishop Panal if they are not replaced by native-born l)relates. . WASHINGTON (NC) - A motion picture shown here has a brief seql,lence entitled Another Move The broadcast was regarded "Cat and Mouse." In this sequence a cat is seen in the company of a mouse and,at first, here as another move in the. acts toward the mouse as a cat. is expected to. Then, suddenly, the cat is fearful of the anti-Church campaign being mo~se, a situation which is not normal. What has happened is that between the two conducted by the regime of Dominican strongman Rafael phases the cat has been sub- st.ruction of buildings, bridges, awesome power of mutual deTrujillo: The regime' has jected to what' is called a and other man-made structures. struction." 1 au n c h·e d virulent attacks harmless gas. A human High Priority That today "a single nuclearagainst foreign priests and Re" . . h0 t 0 f tipped missile can equal in deb emg receIvmg a s It ha,s been known that gases ligious. structive power all the devastathis gas will not react to inof these general types were posReports reaching here set the t.ion created during World War structions or orders, but will sibre,' and that they wel'e being II." number of foreign priests exwander around aimlessly. developed. Now it has been said pelled from the Dominican RePerpetually at War It is one of the nonlethal, psyhere authoritatively that the public at from 30 to 50. "That "our own State Departchochemical gases which are U,S. Government knows that Relations between the Church being 'investigated a!) possible Soviet Russia is "putting a high ment has estimated that 300,000 and the regime have been depel'sons are being employed by' alternatives to nuclear weapons priority on. development of teriorating rapidly since last communist forces in espionage and toxic chemical agents in lethal and nonlethal weapons, .January, when .the regime anagainst the Free World." warfare. and that their weapons stocknounced it had suppressed an That '''never lnust we forget These nonlethal gases disturb pile consists' now of about one-, alleged plot by priests and semi;" that'the communists consider' the' normal be'havior pattern of 'sixth chemical weapons." narians to overthrow the gov;. themselves' perpetually at war.'" , the individual, causing fear, 'rhe film was shown' at a dinerhment. That through "microminiaturapathy or disorientation of, the riel' given' here to 51 high school' Since' then the Dominican ization of elecfronic compon'students,state winners in a conBishops have issued two joint. mind; It 'is thol,lght that they ents" a cllbic foot of space 'which could be used 'effectively again!)t test sponsored by the U.S. Junior' pastoral letters condemnin.g, onlyyesterd~y held' 7,000, parts, , troops' out in the field Chamber '·of Commerce. It was enemy violations of human rights in now holds 350,000. or intermingled with civilial)s exhibited' by 'Lieut. Gen. Arthur their countl'Y,and Archbishop .That, "with due regard for. in,~ city. " L . Trudeau, U.S: Army Chief of' Lino Zanini" Apostolic Nuncio PhDs, what we need vel'y badly , Research, a l?peaker at the dinto the Dominican RepubHc, has in this country are more Chps". There. is another basic typ~ of, nero 'He was talking to young been assailed in the gQvernment these nonlethal gases. A, person people who have won awards -Doctors of Character." press and over the radio. ,That "if there 'is one attribute ~ho gets a dose' of the second for essays they had written on that needs' more' ·thought and gas becomes physically incanati~nalsecurity., attention today -it is 'the adpacitated through temporary Technical Progress blindness or paralysis. Both .. ,vancement . of those sterling Billion~Doliar Gen. Trudeau made some gases, it is said, could , b e used qualities of character and 'adNEW YORK (NC) The striking assertions. He said: herence to sound moral prinagainst an enemy without causThat in the last 100 years-2% Knights of Columbus has passed ing fatalities or large-scale deof recorded time-mankind has ciples' which were the tradethe billion-dollar mark in the mark of our forefatners," amount of its insurance in achieved 90% of its technical force on the lives of its memprogress.' bers. . That of all the men who have In the past three years, inever been trairied in science ,and PARIS (NC) - Greater spirsumnce held by some 400,000 technology, it is, estimated 'that itual aid for the more than tWQ FUNERAL HOME, INC. members has increased by alnine-tenths of them are alive million Catholic immigl'8nts in It. Marcel Roy - C. Lorraine Roy most 50 per ,cent and has gl'own France was called for at a Cathtoday. Roeer LaFrnnce ' to the point where it now olic Action congress here. That new 'machines; soon to be FUNERAL DIRECTORS is ~V1o-::al~c/-one-hal(,ti,m,,:s the; in pl'oduction, will provide sevThe congress;, held in connecamount in force eight years ago, eral times more mechanical and " 15 IRVINGTON CT. tion with' ceremonies marking Supl'eme Knight Luke E. Hart electrical energy ,than present the . 300th' annivel'sary of the WY 7·7830 Illlid. ,models with great ,reductions inNEW BEDFORD death of St. Vincent de Paul, was . ,The Knights have asset.~ of .size and weight; attended by those eilgaged in . more than $160 million., Since . That "at the tapropt of this' the apostolate to immigrants. its founding by Father Michael marv',elous technological age is Speakers urged parishes, ~ath­ .J. McGivney in New Haven in ihe distUl'bing, fact that nations' olic Action groups and' families 1882, the organi7.ation has 'paid last, achieved the' to come' to the 'assistance of 'im-· have at long , .. more than $140 million to memmigrants,', and w~l'I1e,d that .non.,. . ' . . and their' beneficiaries., :' Catliolic organizations ate seek-' -: ~.~ '-'ub.rti~ ,Braugh .. ing "to'· gaili' , the,' immigrarits':: " . Owner and ,DirectOr Ordl~citiOri'~' . polit!~l , support. ' . ,. .' , ,. Spaeio-.. Parl(ing, A~ . .. MUNICH, Gel'many (NC)-:. There are' abOut three' illi<m ]ilinetydeacons from nine reliimmigran~s' in ·F'ra~ce. '~~.e~ , : .·;:WY , '2~2957 46" LOCUST STREET gious communities will be orinclude 950,000 from Italy, who daine~ priestsdUl~ing Munich'" RI'JER,' ,lU Allell st. New Bedlor. , '. forthcoming' International Eu- , are being cared for by 65 special dS.2-3381 missionaries in 41 parishes and eharistic Cong~'ess, , ' ,Wilfred C. .James,E. Bishops from the .Philippines, . ·chaplaincies.' . There 'are ~Iso Driscoll Sullivan, J,r. Formosa, India, Africa, Argen. . 500,000 Poles,,350,000 Spaniards tina, Brazil and elsewhere will and 200,000 Belgians. officiate at ordinations, which' will take place August 4 in 11 OIROURKE parish churches. Following the ordinations, high officials of the Church will 571 Second St. Ji'tI..er.' Dome wait on tBble at "agapes," or Foil River, Moss. charity-feasts, in the tradition 550 Locust St. of the early Church. OS 9·6072 Fall 'River .(\Iass. Eight thousand priests will MICHAEL J. McMAHON OS 2.,.2391 celebrate Mass daily during the licensed Funeral D'irecto; , Rose E. SUllivan eongress, which meets' .Jul¥ 3oll' Jeffrey E~ Sullivan .' Registered '-Embalmer 10 August a. '.

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LOE ANGELES (NC) Chiang Kai-shek's determination to hold Quemoy and Matsu is based on the belief that their loss to the communists might .trigger the fall of ail southeast Asia. The Nationalist Chinese President's views on the value of the offshore islands was reported here. by an A!11erican Jesuit on th~ faculty of the National University of Taiwan (Formosa). Father Frederic Foley, S.J.. told of an interview he had with President Chiang shortly before leaving Formosa' on a return "i'sit'to the United States. I According to· Father Foley. the Nationalist leader summed up' his views'on the offshore island. by saying: "No Quemoy, no Tai..' wan. No Taiwan, no southeast Asia." Strategic for Defense The Jesuit said Chiang's stand 0'1 the islands is based on th.eir. 'st.rategic importance to the..de-' fense of the'Formosa stl'3it. He' values them as observation 'posta' from which he can learn of any m ..ssing of, ships or troops, Father Foley said. The priest reported that the' Chinese President also foreseee trouble for the Red re,;, 'Ie on mainland China. "Chiang givCII the mainland communists a time limit of two years before a major revolt occurs as a result of reaction against the family commune system;" he said. Admires Prelates Father Foley said Chiang tolcll him he "greatly admires" Bishops James Walsh, M.M., and Ignatius Kung of Shanghai, the two Catholic prelates sentenced! to jail in March by the Chinese Redr. Acording to Father Foley, the Nationalist President has higb regard for the two bishops particularly because of theil' refusal to support a communist-backed schismati~ church group illl Chipa, even though they could pl'obably. exchange their jail cells for 'lives of luxury if they did so.

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.12

THE ANCHOR.."Diocese ofF-ail 'RivehThurs~' July' 14/-l960

Holy father DeCides

Robinson's 'Water of Life' 'Excruciatingl.y Bad' Novel

God ,Love You' By Most Rev. FuitOll J. Sheen,

By JRt. Rev. Msgr.

JohnS. Kennedy Telling a hawk from a handsaw is second natu.re to Mlyone involved with books. At least this is so in the s'ense that he has to be able to discern which new works will ~ spectacularly. successful in the conlmercial order, which will cause hardly a ripple. Thus, it is no feat at all to predict that Henry Mo~ton Ro~ fuson's nov'el Water of Life 9)

(Simon and Schuster. $5. 5 will make a big splash. It Us The 'reasons are patent. by the author, of The Cardinal, . that lu- ' dicrously overrated, but pheIllomenally pOPIlIlar publication of a few, years ago. It is aensational in character. It is IP l' 0 dig' i -' ously; lengthy (621 pages),. a ""long read" for people who are §eeking a book to ge~ them through the summer. It IS pubJished by a house which is ex-

ci~ent which costs the life of 0!1e or-his sons and (at least temporarily) his ,wife's sanity, Anson prospers. He buys a big house in town. He takes a mistress during Zarah's absence. His whiskey becomes the delight . of COi1rlOisseurs. His naine. and . fame' swell. He commands the respect and affection of decidedly worthwhile friends. And all the time, in the critical reader's mind, he remains· a cipher and a bore. . The careers of his children are minutely spelled out but~never . quickened; so, too, with the doings of his scrapegrace brother 'and those of the other peripheral figures. Oliver G. Treadgood begins to loom large in the pages; he is a' puny but malevolent fanatic who makes a racket of the drive for drying up the country. He

D.Do

A charitable foundation wrote to 1lI8 reoen&IT IDqulrlalr .. what. pariicular needs It should assign $50,000 It planned ongivinA' to • cerialll Mission eountrT. Not trus&inlr our own judgment, we wrote to the Holi Father's Congregation for the Propagation 01 the Fal&h in Rome, askinA' them to s&ate wbere such charit,. Wall most lIIeeded and would be most effee&ive. TheT mentioned two partiCUlar !P'eas, one because its ehureh and sehools ,had" been des&roTed b,. a flood, the other beeau!!e there had beell such an increase of conver. th~. new ohurches and schools were imperative. How wise were the decisions of the Sacred Congregation! llIl .contrast, how little we know 01. the truly great needs of the Missions.

NNnoNAL CHAP~AIN: F~ther Alexander O. Sigur,

ti~~l ~u~i~:e'l~~~ kd~~~~~ne:~d'

of Lafayette, La., 'has been appointed chaplain of the National Newman Club Federation, with headquarters at the Y~)Uth Department, National Catholic Welfare Conference, Washington, D.C. NC Photo.

Attleboro ..... un

ThUs brings up the question of why the Father should hav,e said that he must be "first and principally aided," through hiG Socid,. for the Propagation of the Faith. lIt is because (1) the Hoi,. Father knows the urgencies of each territory and country An the'world; (2) he equalizes the distribution of the alms of the faithful; and (3) we make not on1,. a sacrifice of money whellll we send it to him but a sacrifice of 0011' egotism as well: we concede tliat lite knows 'the Missions' needs better than

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. Not a. cent which you glve to the Holy Father's Missions through the Society f.or the Propagation of the Faith in your diocese may be' dist!ibuted by its Diocesan Director, nor. by the ~ishOp, nor, by the tia~~onal Director in New York. Everything goes to the Vicar of Christ., What a beautiful way to 'ma~e an act of charity, either in your daily sacrifices or in your will! You cannot answer every appeal that comes ,to you, nor can you' judge , their relative merits. But' you can. put all your responses in one basket by giving to the Holy Father through the Society for the Propagation' of the Faith.. for he ha,s care of all.

pert in the arts of publicity and, IIeliing. dies, n o b l y . ' I~ The fact remains, however, Continued from Page ODe tbat it is an excruciatingly bad Tiresome Tricks DOvel. Is that all one can'say, by way gious.life~ ,For the past year she In the punishing and noW of summary, of this Brobding- has written Maryknoll'publicity . tlChingly familiar Robinsoll style nagian' production? About alL for newspapers and magazines -an elephant rollicking through For it is not in the least a and has participated in a weekly Gte dictionary-it purports to serious and sustained' work of television show which reached elaborate the. histo,ry o~ an fiction. Mr.'Robinson has mere';., viewers in the New York City GOD LOVE YOU to E.S. for $1 ••. to C.M, for $20 "J pledge American whiskey dynasty. 'li 'hitonll themewhlch will area and taught children catea dollar a week for the Propagation of the Faith. Here are some Chance Woodhull, an Indi;lIla afford him an opportunity'to chism by means of puppet charof my savings." . . . to ;M.J. O'B. for $10 "I'm sending. this ten .....rmer, decides, at the age of pay' I .... and re-p Iay h'18" t'lresome aeters. "The other' Sister participatdollars for our Missions. This is a real sacrifice for me as'l have ao , l'n'1860, to "run off a ba.le.h tricks . . . . iog in' the show and' myself a lot of bills to pay." .•. to M. for $20 ... to C.C.S. "Please, accept of passable spirits." By th~ hme O.h, he goes off, now and then, this offering for the Missions in gratitude, for the gift of faith, a Mr. Robinson finishes hlS run into discourses on whiskeytraveled from the "Maryknoll ." fiction which is not passable making, extended excursions motherhouse at Ossining every good marriage, four healthy children, material abundance,. ,and Prohibition is going into effect which have all the vigor and weekend," recalled Sister. "We countless other gifts not earned or merited." . . . to Mr. and Mrs. and Chance's grandSon and artistry of an article in the enstayed at a Maryknoll convent C.S. 'for $2000 "Please accept this check fo~ the, Propagation . ot namesake is refusing to work. cyclopedia. He periodically conin Chinatown and early Sunday the Faith, part of our winnings from the Irish Hospital Sweepmorning we'd travel uptown to ~~~ 101: bootleggers. descends to' whip up some local Radio City." Principal Chanetel' color-Cambridge in the sevenThe show' drew a lot of fan The two Chances, however, ties; Cincinnati in the eighti~ mail, said Sister. It will 'continue YCltur prayers go a,o"lonc waT when you Ulle the WORLDbut glimpsed. It is the son a huski.ng bee, .a cockfight, etc. with' other Sisters as its "stars." MISSION' ROSARY. The,.oover the whole world in the course ell. ·the one and father of the . But this is perfunctorily done. Asked if. she'd had experience of a few minutes. And the ,sacrifice offering that you send to us otberAnson Woodhull,' who ia He sparks a bit of drama, off with puppets before her telefor &be rosary goes a 10~A' wa,. &oo-for It is used in the far-away f:be p~incipal character. We first and .on, as. at a Congressional V1Slon debut she laughed MIssions, The rosarT is yours a& ,.our .,equest accompanied by . 'al Ex..hearmg or m the clash of coun' ,.' ' , ' . . ,.our $8 saCrifice. ' , meet him at the C ell t enm sel 'at a sessioncalleci' b'a cab-' .. "'!tJ.,a~.s .. ~ot. :nece~sary ,w~en position 'in PniiaClelphia' in 1878 i t if' Y you re 10 rehglOus hfe. You Just where he first meets Zarah 09n; ~~er. . . 1 get the assginment and you get Cut out this c~lumn,pjn yoUr sacrifice to it and !pail itt<» the cood, a' beautiful bluestOcking ~ati~n islSse~.rI~~r: m~~:ocI~:= ~e t~lent. It's a matter 01. Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Dir~c~or of t~e Society for from Boston. k' I' d 11 ... ace. the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y.. ll ia smac mg, eermg, an eye-ro S' t l' 'II t' I t G t · I Th ey are youn g , they fa ing, he has at the subject. He IS e W,I rave o. ua ema 11 or your Diocesan Director, a1'. REV,. RAYMOND T.' C;::ONSIDINE, love, they are immediately mar- scorns the indirection of, Henry before gomg to MeXICO. Mar~­ 368 North Main Str.eet, Fall River, Mass. . rled. He 'takes Zarah to the, . k . ., knoll has a language center in d, encounterJac. But peepJack prunenne 18 Guat 1 C·t h' . h '11 ema Woodhull farmstea any, intention of being a peepb 'h a SI y ~ here s e WI . ' rus up on panIS' log 'on the way a variety of what he is selling OAU.GHTERS Of ST. 'PAUl here, and sell-e Sh ' expec t sore t t' Improbable people who, one is . h , urn t 0 A'ttl eInvito ,oun" gim ,1.14-231 to labOl fit ....re (and one' is not wrong), ..mg ard .. He ,goes to such ,ex"boro'in 10' years Which l' 'h ' Chriat·o vaat vinllvard 00 an Apo,I'" at the ..tremes as to cause the reader's .' .." 8 W en will' crop up later, like jacksdl'SgUSt to 0'; to 'd' 1 her next VISIt home and to the . Editions: Prolo. Radio. Moviol ~nd' ·fel. . , "."..ve way r.I lCU e O ' . th h . in-the-box, at, moments conven-." o'f t'h'" er . ouse 18 sched"ioion, With th~'k,' modern· meano, ft.Mit e men 't a l't 1 y an d me th 0 dB 'I'ssmmg ' d ' mo ' .. ~Iionarv SiotovB bring Ch;ist·,· Doctrine tent to the author. here bet d u e , Her present VISlt WIll conAnson continues his father's raye . tinue. until July 24. She is stay10 all. ,ogardloso' of race, color 01 ~. Fw infarmotion wrilO to: practice of producing a few Big Words ing at, the Sisters of Mercy conREIt. MOTHER SUPERIOR', baJ'rels of whiskey, occasionHe seems to think that big vent in St.. John the Evangelist !lO iV. PAUl'S .AV£. BOSTON, 30.' MASI, ally. He does not· drink or, sell, words ward off offense. If only parish. it, but stores it. Eventually, of clinical details are set out in eourse it proves to be prime technical language, he apparent- &tuff. ' . , ly supposes, the noisome 'lavaC t' , tory atmosphere which he' pro; on tOned .from Page One And when hard times arrive, thropology and cult I h d.uC,es ,wI,'ll. ,be mistaken for the '' ura,'~ anges. when dtudgery' of·the,farm be- ' scientific aura of the la·boratory.·' "" The 'b ' k d ea Is' :.BClen '" "t'f' ,00 I lca 11'!'. "' comes overwhelming and its ~ e - , with community planning' and <:,,, .", turn is next to nothing. Anso~Bu~ thi~ is' :backfence scribbling, ho.!J..~ing;' socio ._ economic iin:,' seriously into the whiskey even though perpetrated Oil tn. pro"ement of the family; public king business. . front lawn. h Ith" d ' . ma He gives us not single in- . ea., .. , ..an nutrItion; agricul:; Household Crisis, .' , tural'betterment; l'IJral and ur" " " , tegrat and interesting human b ., . This is over tDe opposition of being. Each of his characters Us ~n pro~lems,. e~ploy~ent 01. :'" .,", " .-'. '".' . Eara," h, who det~sts the so-called no more th an th e sum 0 f h'IS or' . - leIsure tIme; credlt UnIons and. ','.' '.,' .' water of life and especially the' "er lusts; and the course of life ~oopera.tlv.esi small cOll}munitT reek of it. Anson's c;lecision pre- . for , each'"I/i b Ut th e sa't'ISf ac t'Ion or mdustl'1es, l'lghts· ' . of .the. worker; eipi.tates a crisis in the house- frustation' of those lusts. "He . ,. women "and .'TIIIlOrs In mdustry; IIJNION WHARF , 'IFAIR~~V~N! MASS:',. hol~ and occasions"a grisly in'- speaks of love, but, instanees and. populatlOn problems. "

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E.Og' ht Cardin, al~'· Plan To'Attend Congress ,',

none of it. In!jtead of depicting the lives of human beings, he ill desc'ribing existence in the barnMUNICH (NC)' - Eight, car- yal'd. . dinals from the Holy See's cen- . Empty. Print tral administratioil in the VatiThe author'. seems to have a ean will attend Munich's Inter- marvelous good,' time, like, the I18Wmal Eucharistic Congress., sHcker cQl}n,ing.the rubes.~at. Congress officials listed them •cOuntry fair. He. gets vast en. . .:Gustavo Cardinal·' Testa,· ,joy~ent,. from. his. ponderoWi Papal 'Legate to ·tlu!)'corigreS$;,:: jokes'; his idea," appears "to' be Augustin Cardinal'" Bea; S.J., ,that ,Wit and. hU!horresult from who is returning to his native ,. reeling" off' obscurities~and 'obGerinany for the,4'irsUime since acenities. ' ~ ~ecaine a cardinal in Decem~' ' ,And pathos, as in' a'·death. bee,: Aloisius Cardinal Muench, scene, is secftred by il diagnosis, former Apostolic Nuncio"to' ·in·te~ms that even some doCtor. Germany and former Bishop of . ~ig~t be 'hard put, to·' underFargo, N.D: ' '. sta'nd, ,of what ails the 'patieh( Also, GregQ!,.io XV. Cardin!lr ()ne doupts that' any reader ill Agagianian, BenedeftO Cardinal 'going to"relish 'this"vast iti~· Aloisi Masella; Alfredo Cardinal ,glomeration ol empty print Ottaviani; Marcello Cardinal nearly so much as Mr., RobinsoD Mimmi; 'and Arcadio Cardinal does. In fact, I wouldn't advise

,Dean Visits· Foreign IEngin'eering'Schools NEW YORK (NC)-Brother Amandus Leo', 'dean of Manhattali College's school of engineering, Us' visiting "engineer-ing sc,hools in. Lebanon and Israel .. a~ireprestmtativ~ of ': the: New

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rHf·ANCHOR-'-Diocese of fan River-Thurs:'July 1.4, 1960

13

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HONOR SCOUTS IN ITALY: Alfonso Cardinal Castaldo, Archbishop of 'Naples, Italy, poses with two American Boy Scouts, after he had pinned two awards on them. Resid- , ing in Naples with their parents, Army Lt. Col. and Mrs. Thomas J. Gendron of Cohoes, N.Y., the boys are Joseph L. (left) and Michael P. Gendron. NC Photo.

Colonial Enmity Toward Catholics Continued from Pa"ge One itans. 1awed the Catholic Church, k» The colony of Maryland will which the majority of" English be treated in the next article. men still belonged. It shouid 'be noted here' that Elizabeth's ex-communication the presence of Catholics on by Pope Pius V had it negative Chesapeake Bay aroused the result. Though most ,Catholics anti-Catholicism of their neighnever wavered in their loyalty bors to the south. Virginia imito, the crown, they became t~ted Massachusetts" .Bay in "second-class citizens" in the fIerce enactments agaInst Caeyes of their fellowmen. They tholics. were further, stigmatized' as a ,Antipathy in Virginia group by John, Foxe'~ Boo~ of "A Papist" was even prohibMartyrs. Now fUl~y dls~r~lted" Ited from owning a horse valued for several centurIes thIS SIngle at more than five pounds. Apbook caused ~ousands of E~g- . parently this statute had only a !ish readers to detest Cathohcs. nUisance value indica. , but it is . Puritans, Separatists tive of the calculated antipathy , For opposite reasons two for, members of the Catholic groups in England came to opChurch. , pose Elizabeth. The Puritans A. colon~ was succe~sfully eswanted to purify Anglicanism tabhshed m the Carohna~ under • of "the trappings of Popery." Charles II. Though ~he KIng was The Separatists, on the other a.t least 'sympathe~lc .to Cath~­ band, objected not to the cerehc.s from the begInmng of, hIS, monial but to the church being reIgn, the Church of England ll'uled by the Queen. was establis~ed by law. . 'l' hIded t Hence no mducement eXIsted P The I ~rlms w 0 an ,~ for Catholics to emigrate here ~lymouth In 1620 ~ere 8 dIVInor to Georgia in the next cenSlon of the SeparatIsts, or Inde- tury. Protestant dissenters were lIendents. permitted in both colonies, but Soon they were followed and the liberty thus granted' specigradually absorbed by the lar- ficaHy excluded "Papists." ger group of Puritans, The New " England settlers were not of a Hatred Persists common religious cause with The bitterness of anti-Cathothose in the first successful Eng- licism was not mellowed by. the lish foundation at Jamestown. passage of a century and more. There the Established Church Almost 150 years after the ,setwas accepted without discustlement at Jamestown, the Acasion and no concern expressed dians were deported from Nova for non-existent Catholics. Scotia. Because of war with France the actions could be ' Death Penalty labeled political and military. The Massach~setts B.ay Co; But the dire consequence~'sufony ",,:as equal y" destItute r" fered by the exiles were due, to Cathohcs. But. No Pope Y their known Catholicity.·;No from, the very fust acted as a Sanctuary would be granted' coheSIve influe~ce for the setthem as they drifted southward tiers..The severIty of treatment in their boats. Refuge finally experlen.ced by Hester Prynne, was found in the bayous, cit. as conceIved by Nathaniel HawLouisiana. Evangeline 'had < a thorne, today appa.us. But her Longfellow to lament her heartEC:"rlet letter was mIld compared break. How many' more GabWIth the tortures pro~osed.for riels were there who searched any Catholics venturIng mUJ for their loved ones in vain? the colony. Sa'ved ; b' y W' , ar ProsperIty came ,to replace Catholics did, fight in '" the theology as the prImary con- American Revolution: To" excern of the New.' England~rs. plain how "they existed '8,11 . Yet the i~precatlonB agamst until 1776, separate treatment the Catho.hc Church and her will be given to the colonies 'of members mcreased rather than Marylan~ and Pennsylvania'parlessened. ticularly. " ' " . Far to the north Samuel de Monsignor ~eter Guilday, late Champlain had founded Quebec historian of, the Church in the in 1608. Being both French and United States contended that·, 'Catholics, these people .. were the War of, Indeperide~ce saved considered enemies by the Purthe few colonial Catholics from itans. As early as 1647 death was complete extermination: Though the penalty prescribed for of-, the freedom gained was neither fering Mass 01' ,even fO!' the complete nor immediate, the presence of a priest in the area vise of intolerance never again . controlled by the Massachusetts came so near; to closing on, the Bay Colony. very bone and blood of AmeriSelf-PrettervatiOil can Catholics. Th 1 te . u ~ (Next week: Maryland: Sancr~ years ,a r. a curIo. s " tuary and then prison fo«", relaxatIon occurred In the rl:o C th li ) " gor of this law.; An Indian misa 0 Cll Ilionary, Father Gabriel DruilPOpe' Names," ,Prelates, : lettes, came down the Kennebec' River to propose an alliance' of To Marian Offices the English with the French VATICAN CITY (NG)-Pope against the Iroquois Indians., 'John has named' Archbishop' " Not only was the priest cor- Maurice Roy 'of Qtu;bec to the dially received,but in the home post of president of the'Permaof Governor William Bradford nent Committee for International , he was serv~ fish on Friday. Marian-Mariological ·congresses. Though the missionary re- ' , He also named Alfredo Carturned' a year later, no league dinal Ottaviani protector' of the was effected. Yet it may be Pontifical International Maria. aaid that temporarily aelf-pres- Academy, which fosters theolog. ervation triumphed over hatred teal and historical study.. con~Ua~C1i., ;¥'O~; ~l fY~-, : ~rntna, ~, ~!et'~~; y¥,:,i,!i ),

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· '-~~~:!K:~of C' Appoiii~ "District Deputies "

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. Leonard X.Martin, Maravista Avenue, Falmouth, and Edgar ~ Bowen, 134 Main. Street, Nan;. tucket have been named district deputies for, the term endiRg June' 30, "1961, it has been an:. nounced by Joseph E. Boothroyd, State Deputy ,of the Massachusetts State Councll Knightll of Columbus. In announcing the appoint-· ments, State Deputy Boothroyd stated they were made in recognition of services rendered bl' these men to the organization."

Each will be recognized as the personal representative of t)le State Deputy to the Councils 10 which they are assigned. ",

.Scouts Honor Vets' WASHINGTON (NC) - Tt;.e Catholic War Veterans of America were honored "here bytl:ie Boy- Scouts of Americafor:~eir ,contribution to· the scouting movement throughout the past 25 years.. ' ,} Robert T. O'Leary, natior'!al" commander of the Catholic War Veterans, accepted a p.1aque from Walter Ryan, Jr., Washington representative of the Bol' Scouts at (June 25) luncheos at the Mayflower Hotel.

ONE' THOUSAND 'CATHOLICS, possessed of the knowtedge to oonsvuct abui'" lDg-ihese are theCaUloUo of CIlEMMANDA In INDIA. A few mon~bs ago, with' sOme building ma&eriaJa dona~ . to ~helil, tile men having the abil- , ~began tile' erection of D Church." For . yean the people of CIlEMMANDA' have .. been tr.aveUing many miles over diri r~· to, atund· Mass in another village. .TIi~ were delighted witil tbe prospeo& of baying a Church 01 their OWIL Their zeal and energy, however, did not ~ke into ~OUDt the fact tbat tile,. did DO~ have sutlicient ma~rial to oempleu a building 50ltable .ror" taking care of 1,000 Catholics. Building operati_bave ceased unUl ~hey aecure" ~be "wherewithal" te. eoatmue tbe $3.000 wiH bUJ" aU the ~hings ~arF to eomple&e the iltructUre~ Can 70a help 'suPPly &be mOue,., required .to ba~ a Churcb "in thia villager . ' . ',"

-some of them

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.,DONATION TO BE USED IN WHATEVEIt" WAY W·E 'WISH ~TWS IS'A ·STRINGLESSGIFT. SUCH DONATIONS SERVE ., " ", TO AN~WER EMERGENCY APPEAI&


.' THE ANCHOR-Diocese of foil River-Thurs. July·H, 1960

15

Argentine Bishops Recall Church's Roi'e in Struggle

Bl!E~OS. AIRES (N~)-Arge!1tm8 s Bishops have Jssued II jOlDtpast~ralletterrecalling the 8Upport given by the Church to the struggle for Argentine independence.

Spe,aking: of the leaders who won mdependence, the Bishops ~ote.d· that the .Church had tramed that cluster of heroes in. its schools and universities. "For this reason," they added,

the Church claims "the place of honor that in justice belongs to it in 'this commemoration for iUi arduous difficult and selfless Ilpirituai work, which remainll as II memorial sacrifice,

Nearly !O(() Diocesan Pilgri~s Already Scheduled to Sail for, Europe Octo 4 on The New Luxurv liner The Leonardo d~ Vinci "

.

01

VLADIMIR MOTHER OF GOD ICON

Sodality Chooses Russian Icon let; wr~te to BCLA, 761 Harrison Continued from Page One kon 01. the Vladimir Madonna. Ave., Boston 18, Mass.; 15 cents After this ceremony all the each). delegates to the convention re2). By honoring the Vladimir eeived a small prayer-book size Mother of God, Catholics of the pictur:e of this famous Russian. West will be making a gesture leon, with a prayer which His. of friendliness to all the Chriseminence composed for the octians 'of the East at a crucial ession: time in the history of the Church "Mary, Queen of Heaven, we when our separated brethren of honor your icon before which the East have to express .their the Russian people pray. We attitude and make a decision beg of you to look with favor about the invitation of the Holy and motherly care on that great Father for reunion. f:Ountry and to lead it to faith . 3). Icons of the Vladimir and friendship with us all. Mother of God i'" Catholic We are blessed to have your Russian image in a: place of homes will introduce, Catholic!, honor. We will pray to you and to a form of Chdstian art' which' work with 'you for Ule libera- is little known in the West. tion of Russia and for the peace 4). Finally, an icon· of Our el the world." Lady' in . Catholic. homes will On September 5 in' general, have a certain apologetic value, assembly the delegates to Ule in the sense that it will serve as Boston Convention of the Lay II "conv.::rsation 'piece;', as well Apostolate approved' unanias a'picture and' a "presence" of mously 'of the first, resolution:' Our Lady. . Visitors. will ask ~ make the Vladimir Mother . about it and an opportunity will ef GOd better known - aild be' provided for ,an .explanation appreciated amon, the CatholiCi' of the involvement of ;lll .Catho,., the West. ' '"; ,lie;: .,people .n, the Ecumenic~l. Reasoas fOf' leoD "Movement; at least they should 'li\e reasons for choosin, tbhllearn all they' can .abo~t it anell : 'particular icon and agreeing, toe pray for i~ s~c,cess.,. : ' _ make every effort: to,:' bave. the '" Already thoulIand~.of eards''Vladimir Madonna ho.\ored in '.nd booklets' and many ico'nll Catholic· hOmes throu.'hout, the·, have ,gone' out' ~"'m'any,'foreign' 'world, are: ,: f:Ountriell. It "is ho'pedihat -many 1.) The Vladimir icOn iIl~' more thousands; .even ' millions, ': .tdered by many to be the most of devout Catholics will interest' cherished religious syinool oltliemselves 'in: this 'East:ern ex... the,Ru88ian people. (A':history Of· pression' of lov'e',"of Mary the icons, and of this one' in par-" Mother of God, and our, Mother, ticular, ill available hi!a' book- ~.

.Dutch Catholic Dailies Read By Just About Every Family AMSTERDAM (NC);- Nearly New Daily every Catholic family: in Ute The new daily wh,ich is printNetherlands subscribes ~ II ecll in both Amsterdam and RotCatholic daily newsp'aper. terdam, has a circulation of Dutch Catholics ";ho' number' &3,000. It is closely. ~nnected only about 4,500,OQO,:: support ~i~h a c~ain of three regional dose to 30 Catholic dailies with dallies With a. tota~ .of 57,000 • combined circulation.: of 880,- , "'bscribers. GOO. AIl a result of m~rger, the Biggest Catholic newspape~ e P~ople I Dumber of Catholic p~i>ers hal • .l?eVolk~krant 4ieclined slightly in rec¢nt yeen. Dally),· With a ,~lrculahonol' Some families subs~ribe ~ 158,000.. Foun~ed. 10. y,I23, it ~ more Ulan one Catholi~ paper, . longs to the CatholIc. Workers uually to one of Ule tw:o papers Movement. A.small paper before with national circuliliibna auld World War II, it h~~ become to a regional daily. " . 1\ large and influential daily , . .nee 1945. . The.. two national ~~lIee'.... 'Circulation of : the , regional De Tljd-DeMaasbode! jancl De' dailies a number of whlch beVolkskrant. The for~er eame lOng ~ several .chains, range. into existence in Apnl ,of last from 12,000 to 75,000. 7e~r when the countrr'. old~ " 'Ten Pages tilly, the 1Ui-year-old:~ Ti)d The national dailies average (The Times), merged' :WIth De about 10 pages in size, wiUl Maasbode (The Maaa,·~*'). larger editions of from' 18 to 24 tounded in 1868., pages being published on Sat1II'days. . Sch~1 ,The joumalistie level of the PITI'SBURGH (NC)' - 'nle f:Ountry', Catholic daily is high Inightll 01. Columbus 01. Pitta- and compares favorably with burgh raised $23,714 101' St. Dutch secular publications. None Anthony', School foI' Excep- of. the Catholic papers' is sensational Children' during the fl&- tional in its news presentation eal year ending June 30. Most 01. and most give competent cover1he money was raised through II .ge of national and internationChristmas seal program. al events.

,(:rtt

Aids

,First ~f(icial Diocesan Pilgrimage ~o Visit R9me, Lourdes~ Florence, Paris', Lucerne, Dublin _.'" Killa~ney . .tQndonu~der the Spiritual Leadership 'of ~

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and

,:,;Bis'Bxce~eJicy"BiShop., ~ame~' 4,C9imolly. ....'. .

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"'Pi1f1rIr7"ige travel:' officiolthave stated 'that 'with .the '~xcepti~' Of a few , Metropolifon :- DioceseethrO,ughcHn' ,~: notion-nev~hav~ 'they ,Men such' I~~est; fervot' ~enthulii;$",'_ hOI been showi:i . ' dOte our' oWn' . , DiOeeiCJI'Pil9ri_~. ~ begins; on ~~'4.. -

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shipselec,eciI f;;' the eosrbOund passoge. il t~e ~ Ju~ury' liner leon'~rdo d~Vinci 'now .in·New York' ofter com'pleting , its' maiden voYoge. It hos been hailed, by mc;»rine. engineers, interior~ 'd~signers and travel ~~pertS os the ultimote in safety, ckK:or and comfort. The return voyage will be made on tbe . ~ar.old 5.5. Rotterdam, acclciimed throughout the free World os one of the "'~tluxuriou! liners ever to soil the high seos. ',' Here is yOur opponunl,ty to visit the religious ondl' cultureD centers of the Old 'World including Vaticon City, including on oudie~ce with His, Holiness, Pope 'John XXIII •• ' Lourdes •• Einsiedeln •• Our Lody of Knoc:k ondother Shrines of Cotholicity. ' 'Alternote itinerarieS ore availoble for thOse who' prefer Europe ond who desire to retu~n: by air.

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'Pleose send me the ItIustratedBrochure on the First Official' Pilgrimage

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16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of' Foil River-Thurs. July 14, 196@

GRAND OPENING TODAY9 A. Mi. England's. Most Be'au't,iifUIII,

SUlb~ulrbalnl Th:e~

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OPEN: TH:U,R5-DAY and F,R'iDAY

. Today at 9 A.M. sharp, the curtain unfQl'ds on' one of New England's most modem ... most beautiful suburban 100 nks., Wsthe Grand Openin9 of the Somerset Branch of the fall: River Tru,st,. ,

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DEPOSITS INSURED UP 11'0 $HP,OOO.OO-, ASSETS OVER. $30,OOOt~~OG'

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·A Glorious, Cruise Aboard: ne' FamouS' S.S. Ric heI'ieu· Up l'he Beautiful Sag'uenay and St. Lawrence Ri,Yers To The I:fiistori'cal and Picturesque' Ports' of E'astem, Canada., Residien,ts of: Somerset, Swansea, and: Dig,&,ton,. except'employes, of. th., F'alll Riyer. Trust· Co:, are eligibte. Nothing, to bUf - simpl, sign 01 .reg:istr.a,tion, bl'ank on' any of our, G'rand' O'pening' Days' thru July' 22-

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Holy See Warns Against Dangers Of Socialization GRENOBLE (NC) - Exeessive sooialization can dehumanize society, delegates to the French Social Week

Priesft From Attleboro M([[l~ks Silver J~bilee€j Is Peoplle's Enthusiastic /League Director A former resident of St. Joseph's parish, AWebmro, has just, marked the 25th anniversary of his ordination as as a Blessed Sacrament Father. He is Rev.' Frederick Roberge, S.S.S. He marked the occasion by returning to his home parish, where he visited Rev. Ubalde J. Deneault, present pastor. He looked back over a quarter century of travel and labor on behalf of his community. His assignments have included the "teaching of seminarians in

Conference were warned in a letter sent by Domenico CardiBal Tardini, Vatican Secretary fit State, in behalf of Pope John. Theme of the conference is the United States, mission wor.k "Socialization and the Human 'Un Venezuela, Germany and· Person." It ill a meeting of Australia; and rodio %pe2.king scholars, oociolcgists and profesand retreat work, againftn the sional people to discuss social United States. problems. His present post fll ~hat ot 'Cardinal Tardini noted that dir.ector of the- People's Euchacircumstances stemming :hom World War II have led to an ,ristic League, an organization ever-widening and more thor- ~nsored by the Blessed Sacrament Fathers for the promoough socialization. tion of Qdoration before the Advantages, Dangers tabernacle. His headquarters "The advantages offered by lhI'e in Chicago. this state of affairs, both in the Quebec Na.tive economic, social ond cultural Born in Quebec in. 1008, fields, ore undeniable," he said. Father Roberge came to the "In addition to developing the !>2Ilse of collaboration and of United States with his parents during World War I. His mother, BolidaritY,socialization cen satMrs. Walter Roberge, is now isfy certain social needs of primary importance in a positive a resident at the Catholic Meway: for example, the need 'of morial Home, Fall River, and he has a sister, Mrs. Leon Laa home, medical treatment, soBonte, in Attleboro. A brother cial services, work and leisure." resides in East Hartford. "On the ~ther hand," he Father Roberge studied in this warned, "socialization increases bureaucratic machinery beyond' country tlIld Canada .and graduated from the Angelicum in all proportion. It i:ncreaseJl 'the details of the juridical crgani- Rome, doing postgraduate ·. .." ork at Fordham U!liversity. mtion of human relations in an He 'has 'been present at a good .ectoro of society's .life and it bit· of history in the making, leads to methods which 'constitute .the serious risk identified including the. early .days o.f tiae today with .the word 'dehumanimtlon.'" The letter .noted that '''modem. man sees in many cases 'that the aphere in which be can think MONTREAL (NC)-Commualone, ~ct -on his -own initiative, nist-subsIdized literature .and o:ercise his cown responsibility textbooks are a threat to Westor assert .and 'enrich his personern influence in Asia, Africa and a1ity is becoming excessively 'I!'eLatin America, a library authoratrioted." ity said here. 'Work of MltD Raynard C. Swank, '4iireotM of With. this in mjnd, 'the Carlibrar.iesat 'Stanford University, dinal asked: P-lili> Alto, Calif., 'Said thattbe "Does it follow that it may become impossible to contl'ol amount of communist 'publieations On sale at 'pqpularp:r!cef) the advance of socialization, and that it maY,with its ever :greater in these areas.ill amazing.. "It is ~portant,"be .said.. ~stness and depth, reduce men ~at Western otlountries .find inevitably to the role ,<01 'aA ways 'of distributing their literaautomaton? ture to ·these countries 'on a "Certainly not. For socialization is not the product of the massive .~cale and at 'popular prices." forces of nature that act llccordMr. Sw.ank, who recently retng toa determinism whicl1 ,ill turned from a tour of Latin impossible to change. American and Asian libraries, "It is ihe work of man, of. a free human being,conscious and spoke to the first joint conferresponsible for his actions. OIl ence of the American and Canathe one hand, one must 'be able dian Library Association. to profit by the adv~nta.ges it He said ·that the peoplem Offers. But on the other, one Asia, Africa and 'Latin America must knowhow to protect .the cannot afford .high priced U.lS. human person 'from the 'serious publications. But, he added, ,althreats that can arise '.from itll most every bookstoreRn these excessive and disordered __ "book-hungry" areas is cr2.~med "elopment." .....ith cheaP editions ·cif commuDist works. These books are usu.a'lly 'printed in the I8nguageof the T~p country and many of them are in OTTAWA(NC)-Tw4CathEnglish, he said. elie members of Canada'.. Liberal party have ,gained ·the ,~ ef premier in Quebeeand New Brunswick provinces ·in upset "ictories over the Conservative OMAHA (NC')~A missionary party. priest has praised the United In Quebec, the 16-year rule 01. Nations forces in Korea for afthe Conservative party wall fording thousands of Koreans a ended when the Liberalpar~ ehance to practice their faith. elected Jean Lesage all premier. Father Francis Woods, 'S.S.C" In New Brunswick, the Lib- 'Stopping ·here enrouie to his -naf!l'al party elected Louis J. Robi- ·tive Ireland, said that the South dlaud as premier. Koreans w()uld not have \the Both Liberal leaders' are grad- opportunity of practicing their faith or saving their 'souls if ,the uates of Laval University law North Korean forces were r.ow college at Quebec. :Mr. Lesage occupying ·their land. -erved as a member of the FedThe Columban missionary deeral cabinet under former Prime clared that South Korea will Minister Louis St. Laurent. Mr. Robichaud, at 34, is the youngest never go communist. "The people have seen the Reds operate (durpremier in Canada and first in.g the war) and want no part native of Acadia to be elected to of them," he said. this office in New Brunswick.

Red Literature Threat to 'West

Catholiclibera'is Gain :Places

'

'u. N. He1ps

Koreans To Prac.tlee fGith

Heads Art Exh;bit LATROBE (NC) - Graham CareY,·chairman of the adyisory board of the Catholic Art Assoeiation, will be in chaJ:geof 'the exhibitions at the association's convention here Au.gust 18 to 21. Mr. Carey has been editor of the association's quarterly publieation, Good Work, 'since 1956. The convention will be held at St. Vincent's College. The . Association has II membership of over 850 priests, nUI1B and lay-

men.

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OFFICE OF EUCHARISTIC LEAGUE: Father Roberge directSaH promotional work for adoration loofon the tabernacle from his Chicago headquarters.

Hitler regime in Germany 2nd II Venezuelan revolution. His radio work in Chicago consisted Of a stint of 1,267 consecutive day-s on each of which he spoke on religious topics. At present, Father Roberge assists in the apostolate to Puerto Ricans and Mexicam; who live in the area sUl'ToUllu:lling Notre Dame 'Churoh, .Cbicago, where the lEuchartstnc J[.eagate headquarters are ilocated. Beloved by !bis .fellow priests, he was 'the subject of an l:l!'tiele in a monthly periodical Gssued by the B l,e's s·ed &cl'ament Fathers. "1& th~ 25 yevs of !!:lis

unselfish priestly life," the article noted, "Father Roberge set foot on four different lands, lived in 10 different hauses. Here indeed was a priest 1.miversa! in his apostolate, tru}y a man without 1Il' country. "Yet-never without his God, whom he adored and hrought others "loadore, to whom he pledged ~is life and his love, saying with Ruth of old: Whither thou goest, Lord, u.ere will i go; , And wheile thou lodgest, I win lodge; -Thy people5baU ~ :my people."

O'ld Parochial School to be ·B.ur,ned In Safety \!Equipment Experiment LOS ANGELES (NC) - Old ~t. Agn~ School here is emling Its days 10 ,ablaze of ;glory. - 'I1he obsolesoent, 46-year-old building will be used ~y Los Angeles City Fire Department for a series of 'small, <controlled fires to test .and improve s&!ety standards and equiprrtent. The Los .Angeles archdEocese agr.eed to permit St. Agnes 'to be used in the cooperative program. of eil{perimentati.on 200 research. It is expected that the study will furnish valuable <lata as a guide 'to :future phlnningand construction ,of 'Schools. City Fire Marshall Raymond M. Hill is 'directing the operation.Fifty fire safety experts from all parts of the U. S. are working with rlocallti:remen on the project. More than $100,000 worth of fire alarm a·nd spi'inkler systems have been nnstdled

for tests. This includes 300 000 feet of wiring and J. 500 fire 'de' teetors. Fire's effeet on variotlls mes, draperies plastics and on enclosed stairways will ~lso be studied. After the tests, what is lett of old St. Agnes win be razed.

THE ANCHORThurs., July 14, 1960

Bish@~ of Fat~ma ~s V~§)~f1'ing Six

U. S. C-ities WASHINGTON (NC) Fatima's bishop is visiting six cities during a sojourn in the United States. Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leirna, Partugal, whose dioceseinclu12eJ the shrine at Fatima, offici~t~ at a service in St. M1rry'll church in Waltham Sunday. He preached the sermon a~€l!' a Solemn Benediction servi~ tD the Blessed Sacrament cathedral in Detroit Monday. The highlight of his U.S. vi:n"t came Tuesday and yesterday ED the national capital where Iilfl participated in ceremoni<es ~ the National Shrine of the 1mmaculate Conception. His U.s. vistt is sponsored by the Btae Army of Our Lady of FatirnD which conducted the servke:!J here. The Bishop will ofQ1cin{:1l today at a service in the Ifr.ffinculate Conception cathedr~l iJ:l Springfield, Ill., and tomorrc"W at a service in St. Mary's e&thedral, San Francisco. The Bisho;p will be in Plainfield, N.J., Saturday and SUD-> day for services at St. Ma:ry'. church, the birthplace of abe Blue Army of Our Lady fII#) Fatima.

-Indians Sign Youth PITTSBURGH (NC) £. YGUth who piiched 40 no-hit games in the past nine years hall been signed to a reported bomse contract of $75,000 by the Cleveland Indians. He is 17-year-olCl Sam MeDo~:11, who graduD~eCl from Central Catholic ~ School here in June.

:MONAGHAN ,A(CEPTAN(E

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18

THE ANCHOR-Diocese'of Fall :.River....,-Thurs. J~ly 14,'1~60

Pilgrimage

Surve~ of World·Co~dition

Shows Devil Hard

at Work

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer,-D.D•. Bishop of Reno

"The devil," quoth the Archbishop, "the devil 'is an ass!" So saying,. William Ullathorne; sole survivor of the Vicars Apostolic of England; breathed his defiant last.. But while we might savor the humor of the doughty old prelate who had befriended New- ing that he has not fully. taken man during the dark days of into account the reality of the disfavor and suspiciQn, and power of evil, an article of faith who had always' spoken his for all'Catholics, . . mind with forthright candor, This belief does not imply that we nevertheless acknowledge the Catholic cannot be' a good that only a n ' democrat, .but simply that his extraordinarily optimism or enthusiasm is tembrave and holy. pered by his recognition of the full .reality of th'e human con: 111\ a n w 0 u 1d didOll, He is aware that democ-' . CHILEAN BISHOP 'TELLS OF QUAKE DAMAGE: have dared to. racy itself can be dragged down .First Chile~n Catholic hierarchy member to arrive in the' speak so of the· to the depths, and n'ot merely by ultimate Enethe pull of human weakness, but . United States since the earthquakes and tidal waves strucK 111\'1, by a'gimcies whose only proper Chile visits the New York headquarters of 'Catholic Relief We today are name is diabolical.' • Servi(:es.. He is Bishop. Raul Silva Henriquez (right) of m u c h m0 r e The Catholic does not thereValparaiso. He told Msgr. Edward E. Swanstrom (left), considerate of fore despair of temporal salva:" the .devil. We tion, but he faces up to facts not· executive dir:ector, CRS there are two million homeless, prefer, actual. reckoned with in the philosophy 5,000 dead or missing, and a half'-biUioil dollars in damage. lly, to accede to NC Photo. ill i s favorite of the secular ·humanist. .

A

Continued from Page One 'Rome and the shrines of Europe. In addition to visits to the pointS of religions interest in Rome, there will also be a general papal audience with Pope John XXIII. ' Florence, the art center of Europe, is listed on the itinerary for Italy, Other countries to be vis'ited are France, Switzerland, Ireland and ·England. While in France, Lourdes will be the object of the pilgrims' travels, The return trip to the United States on Nov, 8 will be made in the Rotterd~m of the'HollandAmerican Line, a ship that will be Just one year old at the time of the Pilgrimage crossing, The Pilgrimage 'price of. $1250 covers tourist accommodationll' in both of these fine ships, plull all travel and· accommodations in Europe (only minor costs of' a personal nature are not included in the fare) for this 38 day trip. The complete itinerary includes Naples, Rome, Florenc.e, 'Fiesole, . Milan, Lucerne, Paris. Lourdes, Dublin, Killarney, Galway and London.

·AngIica n Church

device of denying his very exist_ In Sacred Scriptures· ence, 'so that he might operate Quite true it is that the med- . . Continued from P~"'e One the more effectively under the ieval representation of the deyil, -.. cloak of absolute anonymity. complete with horns, forked Help~ easy, It is necessary for lis to ""hose of us who believe in a . tail, and cloven hooves, has no bear in mind that 'Roman CathlL ' .. MEXICO CITY. (NC) - True the meeting that "sanctity is the OII'CS have memorl'es of persecu"""rsonal spirit of evil are immebusiness in our mental imagery. .._ Christian family life contributes vocation of all Christians." To diately typed as victims of su-. The folklore and art of .that disto the general wellbeing of sO.., achieve sanctity, Cardinal Ga:" tion and exclusion from public .....rstl·tl·on, as medieval ob.scurtant . era had,. their uses, and, ' ty as a woe, h' 1 a.V a t'Ican 1e t . life which leastofasRome_' pow.._ . cle ribi added, it is first necessary erful as' ourare ownat·fears 'sts, or as childr.en who 0 have doubtless many a soul 'was' per, . . . ret told the Latin American co'n- . to carry out the "noble family "While there I'S no predl'ctable Iilntl · tgrown the cautionary 'suaded to mend . . . its ways by congress of th~ Christian FamilT mission, especially. as it refers 'possl'bl'll'ty of unl'on wI'th Rome Illever ou "-les of the nursery. So it is no templating a carved de'vil ·drag... ., k' . d b' h d Movement' here. . . to the education of children," w'e should nevertheless look out lLonger customary to hear se,rglllg II1gs an IS ops an peasTh t h . f ts l'ke' t . th u h bl e letter was sent 0 t e conCardinal Tardini'. letter for an~ weicome all possibiliti~ mons 'on the devil, and the Ire an a I 10 0 e nquenc a • gress in the name ot 'PoPe John .tated: '1~. and brimstone descrip~ions,of fire, . . . b D . C d' 1 T din!, of cooperation, Even in England "'ell and its horrors, to Vi.hich our. . But· reality is deeper and eveD. 'I, omemco ar ma. ar . "Onli families established the Roman ice can be thawed by IlIl .• , f' ht ' ·th - , . . . . Vatican Secretary of State, ' t h ' ht . t" d . f' dl' d . L..refat·hers .liste.ned. "',it". such. more fig enmg an Imagery, Th' 1 t t · . d b J WI uprlg ness, rame rIen mess, an AnglicalUl' I.'U' . 't ' h' h h' d' 1" d e e er was rea y ose. Ch' t' . d sh Id be ~rapt attention.', h.ave long.. van,-. a fac w IC t d'e me . A h' an marked _ '. . 1 '1 . leva' d F mm' 't C'··ard'lOa. 1 G' arI'b'I y R'lver,a, rc b" rIS Ian1 manner ' 1'" , th ou . , l' quick .to respond to Ilshed from the misSion preach- very 'cear y. Iscerne., ,or 1 bishop of Gua'dalajara who told' y ~ora an~ re IglOuS ~ehavIOl' . e .gema It'I of the new Pope." en' repertory, One might con: was' all:: there in the .Sacred ' . . ,- attam that lOner' seremty . that The Crockfords preface is by dude that ,the devil ha~ taken .Scriptures, in' such wise that to changes them into. home of tradition written by a person ot. . h I'd . deny it was to' tamper :with the happiness, a shrine of peace and distinction in' the Church of . . e~tended 0 I ~y. ,. '. '" very' foundations6f.· faith;' . Continued from Page 0_ respect, 'Out of them comes also' ,England who remains .ariony- Presence.of Evn' . ' .. 'The' !"edieval'nian~~w the that the proposal made by the, as from . an inexhaustible. lJlous so that he canexpreN hw Tbean~wer·'.to, that.}'~ti~n, devil' as an obsCene be~st; the ministers'·league ·is "opposed to. spring - the general wellbeing '(iews frankly. I' for one who demes .the. .iate Sir Max, Beerhol1m~~w him. good moral and ethical conduct':" of society as • whole. The,.: ' rtiristi~n revelation, is a survey ;la. 'a .vulgar cad. iriachec~ed . and also is ,iill~gal and '.retr~ bring' to s~Ciety.a , , . contribu:" ~...~-~_......~-~_....... ,{" the world at this prese~~ mo-. waistcoat; There is not much 'to gressive,",' . tion of integrity, 'honor, justi~ tent". The devil is hard ,at"wol'~'. choose between:· the two . iritui: ;I'heministers' stand that se-,.. and·fraternity.~ lIt is" doubtful .if· at any.,tllI\e. In . tions,. ..:' " " .'. , . .. lection of publicschoolp.erson'The ,Cardinal also said, that the' abe history of the race tile pres-, Beware ot :Itlek, nelshould be based on "the same Church "looks U:ustingly.to (the .. f .'. 1.'1 as a preternatural ... '. . . ,.. '1 ,. 'religious prop-ortion" as the "re-· ROUTE.,6; .HUTTLESON AV!. oence 0 ev . . i bi' '. Denis de Rougemont, one 01. . Christiil.n "hoine)' . because -it, Influence' .nas .b~en so pa pa. e. the· keenest observers "of the ligious composition of ·the· comhopes' fo.r an increasing flo'w 01.. ' Near Fairhaven Drive-In · 'fest'ations of . . inunity" was o"pposed by. the . 1 . . There are tn aI:u... . .periOd between the two wars, ~riest y and ~eligious v~~tions.. Italian Din.ners Our SPecialty 'ty of 'spI'rl'tual d e g e n - , . Citizens' School League' :and the as ·well as the· suo pport of 'a lal't.., perversl , ... once, remarked that· the thmg Service On PaUe eracy, of absolute ha~red of God, that most disturbed him. abou't Stamford Ed1.!cation Association., which, . . aids' the Church in which go far beyond' the 'normal Americans was that they had' an organization of tea'chers. . the tasks of the apostolate." tendency of our fallen l)ature ~~ given .uP believing in the'devil, . Quota system '. d ·t s'equences In ·thls The citizens' organization said. ain an I s con .' even,' one might.· add, a respect'ghtenment it opposed "vigorously any sugvaunted age 0 f enll , . . able Protestant devil. 't of appallmg mgestion . that religious beliefs, the' ms ances The effects of this' d.isbelief racial origins or political affiliaelty surdecency an d gro s S cru . are only too patent in our stupid g rep·orted from the tions should have any bearing pass any th lIl' ' . confidence that the only thing . on the selection or advancement ages 0 f b ar b ansm, necessary to convert' the world . 'f' 't l o r e of teachers," The group added , Either man IS' 111 to our brand of good fellowship d 111~ e··tY mth n that setting up a "quota system," despicable in h IS'l epravl 'I a . is to invite it to a cosmic Roh f as proposed. by the ministers, the grimmest p h I, osop' d Y P yestarian picnic. . would be' "an encouragement to simism has eyer -Imagme '. It is not 'needful to be con- racial and reoligious b.ias." , h' . ., or we-. f are reckoning WIt a powet; 0 vinced . that. Mr, Khrushchev is ,.,' The teachers' org311ization aBI 1e 0 f b en" lIlg· p.ossessed 'by the devil to he.ar. . evil which is capab .t ~ serted that appointments 01. ....- man's wil I to I s own purpose", fiendish laughter echo.ing down ·teachers should be made strictly Apparent Contradiction the halls of the Kremlin, on the basis of professional comIt is an interestin'g refleCtion' Baudelaire was no saint, but. petence, and called the suggesthat the democratic principle is he was emphatically nl? fool. He tions of·. the ministers' gcoup based upon a belief, in the esspoke with the '.wisdom' of the "offensive," sential worth 'of man, It may not Christian ages when he said, go So far as to adopt the' naive "The greatest tI:ick of the demon faith of Jean-Jacques Rousseau . is to .persuade us that hepoec in his natural perfectibility, but not exist." . ., INSURANCE AGENCY it doess\lppose that the average He might be an asS, but unless citizen is 'capable of thinking we are made of such stuff as All Kinds Of Insurance and willing for his own and the Archbishop Ullathorne, we had 96 WILLIAM STREET eommon good," best beware of his kick, NEW REDFORD. MASS. This, indeed, is pretty much' basic Christian doctrine, holding DIAL WY 8·5153' to the golden mean between the NORTHAMPTON (NC) Personal Service extremes of Plagianism and Bishop Thomas L, Parker of this Calvinism, English diocese fulfilled a dream But the mystery of iniquity,' of 19 years when he consecrathe revelation· of the aweful . ted his new cathedral of St. - NO JOII TOO . . Mal'y and St. Thoma's here, He depths to which' human nature had been hoping for completion can and does plummet, is an NONE TOO' $MAtI. of the 'church ever since his conapparent contradiction of the secration as Bishop of Northdemocratic theory, It demands a ampton in 1941: furth~r explanation, not foulld in man himself, but ip a_power exercised over him·for his ·own t·····.····~···· 'PRINTERS undoing, A FAMILY TREAT

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Diocesan CYO Golf Tourney" Set for Pocasset Links

THE ANCHORThurs., July 14, 1960

19

DelegQ{[~ to Offer

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]By Jack Kineavy Pontgfite@~ The annual Diocesan CYO Golf Tourney will be held this year at the spacious Pocasset Country Club located just outside Sandwich 011 the Cape. The course facilities have COLORADO S P R IN G S generously been made available to CYO through the cour(NC) - Archbishop E~idio tesy of owner William Carr. the low scorer in the intermediVagnozzI,. A pos t 0 l'IC D e IeThe date is Thursday, July ute or junior divisions. gate to the United States, 28 and tee-off time has been' Individual trophies and prizes will offer a Pontifical Mass here set for 9 :00 A.M. The medal are available and' they will be Sunday, July 24, for the estiplay competition will comprise received at a Special Awards mated 13,000 Catholic boy scouUl three divisions and the top Night, date and site to be deterwho will attend the Fifth Nascorers in e a c h " mined. Queries on the Tourney tional Scout Jamboree. will represent should be addressed to the apBishop Hubert J. Newell ~ the Fall River propriate area directors: Fr. Cheyenne, Wyo., will preach Diocese in the Bernard Sullivan, St. Mary's, during the.field Mass which wilR New England . Norton; Fr. Connors, Sacred be held on the jamboree Tourney at AnSacred Heart, Taunton; Fr. grounds. A completely covered dover, Mass. on Walter Sullivan, St. Mary's, Fall sanctuary is being built by the Aug: '29. The River, and Fr. Edward Duffy, Denver archdiocese. Junior g 1'0 U P St. James, New Bedford. A total of 40 Catholic chap.. includes those A small paragraph in the Bos' lains frotrl all over the United under 16 years ton papers last weekend related . States will, say Mass daily in !l of age. The In'news which should be of signifi-' recreational tent in each of thcl termediates, uncance to scholastic basketball 3D sections of the camp. der 19 and the Seniors under buffs in this area. It concerned Other members of the hieJ\D 26. 'Represented in each of the the transfer of Fr. Timothy Giro.' archy attending the jamboree three divisions of plaY 'will De ard, F.M.S., who coached .Lawwill include: Archbishop Urbaa the four greater urban areas of renee Central Catholic to basketJ. Vehr of Denver; Archbishop the Diocese: Attleboro, Fall ball heights during his ten year Edward J. Hunkeler of Kan88lil River, New Bedford and Tauntenure. Father Girard will asCity, in Kansas, and Bishop ton. sume the principalship of St. Richard O. Gerow of NatchezThe response to the Tourney Agnes' High School, Rockville Jackson, Miss., assistant episcohas been encouraging according Centre, N. Y. pal chairman of the Youth Deto Director Jim Lenaghan. Imperturbable under fire; partment, National' CathoUe Qualifying'rounds have been 011' Father Girard's quiet, incisive Welfare Conference. are in the process of being staged approach to the game was D sigTemporary City and each area is eligible to enter nificant factor in the successes the 'top five players in each achieved by his teams down Also present as representatlvee division in the championship thro.ugh the years. In this respect of Catholic organizations be Msgr. Joseph E. Schieder, will direc' final. Cape Cod youths who are h e was very muc h like ano th er interested will be invited to esteemed, mentor, Fr. Clarence' tor of the Youth Department, fT t NCWC, and James T. Griffin of O 'Sh ea, 0 .FMC partl.cl.·pate. . C th··l· B. .,. onv., Hi h 0 T ren ntoon Cleveland; Ohio, chairman of thtl Wh,... the Ca......? . a 0 IC oys g, re n, . J ..., 'N. J. Trenton Catholic has been Catholic'Laymen's Committee 018', : C.Y.O. ·is most interested' iDo 'a perennial 'threat in the .fast ":BISHOP PITCHES A STRIKE: Grim determination 'Scoutin'g'in the United States. extending tbe scope of.. its or- ESCIT'Tourney at Newpon . '''and plenty of spe~'d result~ a atrike as Bishop Albert R. . More than 55,600 Boy Scout.! " ganization .. to include. the- .Cape Old Pros " ' .including '425 Scouts and leaden" . and tbe ~ourney afford~ a timely··, Thewarm weather has brought· Zuroweste of Belleville, .nt, 'deliv~r'e~. the opening pitch at .from' 38 'nations around tbfJ opportu,Il1ty to acquamt Cape out the 'best in baseball's two.the'·n'ewCatholic Youth' 'Center night softball diamond. world participate in the:·· R'esidents with at least one ~hase, 'old pros' who'once again have Umpire Charles Missrrian .agrees" first pitch is a strike. jamboree.' A temporary city of" of the program. Then, too, mas-. 'proved they are to be reckoned· Bow l'mg 1anes an d a recreation center are also , 3 0 , 8 0 0 tents; making it the IourU:l included in muc h as th e p.ocasset course ,Ill with at the plate. The reference . ' largest city in Colorado, 'is now not ~he .home c~u~ of any of the ' 'is, of course;, to Ted Williams the,local facHities. ~CPhoto. being built., qualifying partiCipants, tourneY'and 'Stan Musial. Ted got off to S" , • . , offici.als felt that the competition slow" start· 'Musial started"fast ., Po~e Minister Convert would be completely equalized. then .' fade'd. The' handwriting. . UTRECHT' (NC)-Henrik vas ~e pro at Pocasset is ~9rmer reemed'to be on' the wall. .~ del' Linde', a former leader of the Holy Cross outfielder Jim RoThen came tbe renaissance SO'UTH ORANG . C) D' 1" Dutch' 'Protestant ecumeni.....Jl nay~e. He enjoys the·.dlstincti~n Williams got. going midway , . E (N - e- sel, ill pit and practiced in his' ..- of having .lettered 111 VarSity through :the Sox' last' Western, termination makes champions. 'own backyard. When school movem'ent who resigned DB II baseball at both Boston College ".~ing and. he 'hasn't, stopped yet.. More't~Hin a year ago tpe track, 'open~, he ,'rounded up some Reformed Church pastor thiIl d th C t i th"coach, atset~n Hall Prep here' . other pole vault candidates, and Spring, 'h~s been received intle .. an e r05;8-no. n . e ~e ,Ted.is now ·hitting Q lusty ..345 .. 'told ::assjstant', track manager.: ·.they set 'about building a pit. at the Catholic Church here and year, of course. Jim started at and is considered, the man' to T .. M 1 'th t 'f h' . 'tn h 1 Th' .. confirmed by Bernard Cardinal B. C., took. timc' out for a hitch beat.for the A. L. batting crown om or, ey' ,a 1 e ever e sc 00... e:y did the. dig.~ in the Marme ~orps, ~hen elected which .he ,has previously won.' 'wanted ioear!! a ~~tter iy sports, ,ging; the school provided the Alfrink, Archbishop of UtJ'eebL .. to complete h.1S studIes at Holy six times~ The'Musial story while his field of. competition .was.~ "uprights and the basIc sand; they C h t f th pole vault. collected the saw dust for pit ro~ upon IS, re urn rom ,e not nearly so impressive, is, service after World War II. He B nevertheless, quite encouraging. Tom .took the advice seriously, sites; they got the bamboo po.1es now in the Newton School syeStan "The Man" carried 11 .295 but .immediately faced a prob-, .,from rug dealers. tem. . B. A. into the All-Star break, lem: where to practice? Seton Came last Winter and the pit A . ~heck ,?f the Fall River thirty points of which came dur- Hall had no pole vault pit. couldn't be used. The boys hitch_ qualifiers reveals th~ presence of ing the last two weeks of play. 4st Summer Tom buil~ him-:, hiked 30 miles every day te D number of top flIght golfers. The shift to the outtield seems Princeton, to use the indoor Dick O'Connor and Alan O'Neil, to have given him a new'lease Former Policeman facilities at the university. members of the Providence C~l- on life and he's swinging a mean Recovers Chalices Tom Morley has just tied for lege golf team and rankmg bat in the No. 4 spot for· the DAVENPORT (NC)-Two gold the state pole vaulting champlayers at .the Montaup C.~.. fourth place Cardinals. He apchalices valued at $600 were re- pionship, competing against the head th.e semor group. ?n ~he mpeared in his 17th All-Star game covered shortly after they were 1959 champion at the end. Tom, te~medlate squad ar~ Richie Roy, last Monday. Counterpart Wil- stolen from St. Mary's church D divinity student, has a gold Willner of the Jumor Chamber liams has seen action in sixteen' here. ' medal. Seton Hall campus has of. Commerce title. at the' Fall classics. Two men, described by poli,ce' D pole vaulting pit. River C. C.; Bob Placido, '59 J. C. champion and versatile Asserts Concessions 2S vagrants, were arrested by a Terry Lomax round out, the top former policeman who is D Electrical three choices. John Ellis, 3 15 Fail to Affect Kechi " p~rishioner of the church. They year old campaigner, is Fall BONN (NC)':""Foreign Min'ister were booked as William E. Bald_ ~~ , Contractors River's main hope ill!. the Junior Heinrich von Brentano has. ,win, 53, of Kansas City, Mo., and division. warned' in a speech before the Joseph McGovern, 53, of seattle, . i Political Workin'g Group of Ger- Wash. R tgg os Trophy ,William Kopp, the former .1 many's Catholic associations that O 11 h an d to d e f end his tit ' Russia cannot be made poll'ceman, set out l'n search of ,e Soviet Monks'«l Bread was orlgi· will. be Dick McGrath of St. suspects shortly after being told by concession and nated by Ihe Monks 81 the J osep h ' S 0 f T aun t on. Di c k was reasonable compromis~. . of the robbery. He said that ·he Abbey the Genesse. awarded the Marty Higgins found the, two mAn, W1'th ....e ..' h 1 He said that the Soviet Union' .,. w. . 1 T These hard·working men M cmona 944 County St. {. rop y Oil' his per- 18 "another world." chalices in their possession in do not eat meat. fish, or tormance last year and should the rear of a warehouse. Be New, Bedford · Id h ome agam, . Among the prerequisites for poultry. They depend h e 1ea d the f Ie he . held the two at' p1'stol-po'-" u" largely upon the bread WI'11 ret ire the Trophy perma- new and· successful parleys .with until poli,ce arrived. ' nently. The award 18 made to the Soviets are the economic aid they bake themselves '01' political strengthening of, the their nUlrilion. and European commun"Mac" saysNow Monks'. Bread Is Boy Swimmer Trains Atlantic ities and the bolstering 01. their available to the general Be Thrifty Be Wise will to resist, he said," " For Olympic Trials public. And has become Ask' your Meatman for • At the same' meeting, ihe SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - It.. II source 0' livelihood to , DAVIDSON'S l'7-year-old prep school swim- Political Working 'Group' en~ the Abbey. The public:'s (MacGregor Brand) ming star is training here in cIorsed the refusal of the German enthusiastic response is .. ' preparation for' the· Olympic .Catholic Youth AsSociaUim.'·te'· . helping the monks to " • SWEETNIC • 8Wimming trials m ,D,etroit from. establish contact with::cci.tnmUD-:· continue Iheir exempla.., Bake in the BQg-Na Basting JBt-front )'outh' organizatio~~ ,~' August 2 to 5. lives in peace Ind secu/':' Real Scotch Ham Flavorll Dick McDonough, gradrlt,. Look for nutritious "WINNING FAVOR· uated from Seton Hall Prep illl Monk.s·· Bread in lhe lall WITH ITS FLAVORN loaf It your Aearest store. June, is ranked as one, of the na': ..' tion's top yo~ng swimming pros- . peets. 'Beholds" a number state indoor and outdoor swimming records and ia the national Mac Gregor' Catholic scholastic champion. His goal is to make the OlymBRAND pics in the 100 and %OO-meter JUST at All Leading free-style events. He also e'xASK FOR Food Stores eels in the breaststroke and, backstroke. He swiJnll from four SWEETNICS in Massachusetts • five miles dail7. ,.~

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THE ANCHOR-Dioceseo{ Fa'lI Riv.er':"'Thurs. Jul)"U, '1960'

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