Secretary Goldberg Praises Encyclical
The ANCHOR
WASHINGTON (NC)~Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg has sent a congratulatory letter to Pope John on his recent "Ma ter et Magistra" encyclical. Goldberg said he believes profoundly "its wisdom and vision will help to cp.ange the course of history." Goldberg told the Pope he considers the encyclical "a worthy successor to 'Rerum NovarumP and 'Quadragesimo Anno'" which were written by Pope Leo XIII and Pope Pius XI. "Your discussion of private
An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and fi'irm-ST. PAUL
Fall Rivell', Mass.,
VO.I 5, .,.· .~o. 31
T~ursdaYI
July 27, 1961
© 1961 Th e Anch or
PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year Socond Closs Moil Privileges, Authorized at Foil River, Moss,
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property, the dignity and rights of 'working people. the freedom and responsibility of labor and management associations, the function of the State in safeguarding the common good, and the needs for personal initiative in social activity elucidates principles that we in the United States have sought to incorporate into our own social and economic ideal," the Secretary wrote to the Pontiff. Following is the full text of Secretary Goldberg's letter to Pope John: "Your Holiness: "I have read with deep interest arid appreciatIOn your magnificent encyclical 'Mater et Turn to Pag~ Twelve
American Jewish CommitteeLauds Pope John XXIII NEW YOR;K (NC)-The American Jewish Committee has applauded the "Mater et Magistra" encyclical of
MEMENTOES Oli' ARIZONA: Rev. Ange Begin, O.P. with mementoes of stay in Arizona: cotton, ironwood, petrified wood and Madera Christi, which he is holding. This latter is believed to be wood used for cross of Christ.
Rev. Ange Begin, O.,P. Returns, to St. Anne's He's a native of Maine, noted for mountain greenery, but he's an ardent booster of Arizona, where it rains as seldom as four times in six months:'-and people regard ,that as too muc~. He's Rev. Ange ~~gin, O.P., assistant at St. Anne's Church, Fall River, the parishioners were Mexica~, since 1955. He's just re-' he said,' and the other CaVlOlic' turned from six months'in church counts three:"quarters of Arizona, where the dry cli- its <!ongregation tt' be ~~xica~.
t . f b £'t to a sinus ene 1 • ~Ol\dltlOn, and he can't ,say t.oo much about the delights of hfe in the desert state. Thc Dominican was stationed at .onc of two Catholic parishes in thc city of Yuma, which has a population of some 24,000. Half Ina e. ~at> 0
In other words, Cllthohclsm IS far from the predominant faith among "Anglos" of the area. T t P E' ht ' urn 0 age Ig een
Pope John as "a resounding moral injunction to which every man, whatever his creed or tradition, can unhesitatingly respond." John Slawson, executive vicepresident, issued. a statement on behalf of the committee which expressed "our sincere hope that the high moral principles and practical recommendations embodied in this historical declaration will find their way into the hearts and practices of all members of the human family." The full text of the statement follows: "The American Jewish Committee, together with people everywhere who are deeply concerned with the future of Western, and indeed, all human civilization in. this nuclcar-missile age, 'joins in applauding the great encyclical just proclaimed by His Holiness Pope John XXIII. "At a time of rapid and global , social, political, and technological change which increasIngly Turn to Page Eighteen
IN THIS ISSUE Schedule of S~mmer Services Page Fifteen Legion of Decency Film Ratings Page Thirteen
Fr. Mitchell, :to Study Canon Law: in Ro'me
Rev. Edward 'J.' Mitchell, temporarily assigned as assistant at Sacred Heart Church, Fall River, will return to Rome in the Fall to pursue graduate studies in Canon Law at North American College, the Chancery Office announced ,today. Father Mit- Green Street, Fairhaven. chell completed his studies First Philosophy-Richard L. for the priesthood at North Chretien, 132 Raymond Street, American' College and was Fall River; Roland Deschenes,
ordained in Rome in December,' 878 Mount Hope Street, N'orth 1956: He served as assistant at Attleboro; Roland Nolin, 184. Sacred Heart, .Taunton and Coffin Avenue, New Bedford. 'taught Religion at Coyle High St. Mary's, Baltimore School prior to his transfer to First Theology - William P. Fall River. His residence at Rome Blottman, 220 Slater Street, Atwill be Casa Santa Maria del Ueboro; Thomas C. Lopes, Tash'Umilta, Via del'Umilta 30. moo Avenue, Vineyard Hiaven; Also assigned to Rome is Michael McPartland, 7C Maple George, W. 'Coleman, 150 High Gardens, Fall River. Street, Somerset who will begin ~econd Philosophy Joseph his, theological studies at North R. P. Nadeau, 44 Green Street, American College. ' Lewiston, Me. , Other assignments of seminar-' St.' John's, Brighton .ians announced by the Chancery .' First Philosop~y- Joseph A. Office are as follows: Duch, 177 Broadway, Norwich, First Theology-Joseph Fer- Conn.; Brian Harrington, 144 reira, 55 Morton Street,. Fall Presidential Heights, New BedRiver; William Foley, 506 Cen-' ford; James Morse, 70 Kentoll tral Avenue, Seekonk; Terence Street, Rumford, R. 1.; William F. Keenan, 46 Larch Street, New F.' O'Neill, 15 Elizabeth. Lane., Bedford; 'Ralph Tetreault, 31 Riverside, Conn.
Sqys St.- John Baptist Model
For, Dir'e~'tors of Vocat~ons NEW YORK (NC)-St. john the Baptist was held up here as a model for vocation promoters by Bishop James A. McNulty of Paterson; N. J. in the keynote address at the 11th annual Institute of Religious and Sacerdotal Vocations at Fordham University. Tak- 'interest," the Bishop said. "Tho ing incidents from the Gos- progress of the Lord's workwaa pei of St. John to illustrate his only ambition," he said. his points Bishop McNulty Mentioning the case of OUi' said: "It is interesting to exam.ine the equipment which St. John the Baptist possessed for this important work: personal san'etity, posItIve action, unwav,:, ering loyalty to' Our Lord, spirit of joy in, his work." Our Lord
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Superiors of Congregations 'To Convene at Notre Dame " NOTRE DAME (NC) -'- Fifteen hundred pries1;Sp Brothers and Sisters, all majer s'uperiors of religious con'gregations, i:n ,the' u'..s., willm'eef for four days beginning Wednesday, . Aug. 16" at Notre Dame Uni·versity. Representatives,of -the ,Holy See; ; th theologian's and philosophers mg, . ~ c{)ngress, h~ld ~t thQ . b ... ' 'h' dd "suggestIon of the VatIcan s SacwIll e among t ose a ress- ,red Congregation of Religious.
CC~VeHl'\l~ Sup\'eO'acr ReqM~${f~ ~[fCVacy fcU" I A~D~ $~~~v" COLUMBUS (NC) - The superior of a convent here announced formally t hat Mildl'ed GiIIars, Nazi radio propagandist of American World War II days, has been employed as a tcacher, then requested the press and public to let her serve "without further fanJ)are or publicity." Sister Mary Assumpta of Our Lady of Bethlehem convent of the Sisters of the Poor Child Jesus, a comparatively new' foundation in the Columbus dio«lese, said the convent acted on Ute recQmr.lendation of Federal authorities In hiring Miss Gilliars as a teacher. Aftcr serving 12 years of a lO-to-30 year sentence on' con, Turn: &0 l'age Eia'bkea
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NORTH ATTLEBORO COLUMBAN MISSIONARY IN LUZON; Father Victor Gaboury, S.S.C., "takes five" on a hike with some of his young p'arishioners of Tanay,Rizal, on the island of Luzon in the Philippines. Father Gaboury is th.e .son of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Y. Gaboury, 12
:a:qr~e" St~
No. Attleboro.
Lord refusing the rich young man who would not will what he 'had and give to the poor, Bishop McNulty emphasized the need! for· vocation promotCl's to make hard decisions, ".With the great need of more , pr,iests and more Religious, the~<i Turn to Page Eighteen
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The congreSs will examine the 'role of Religious in the Church today and review the fundamcntal principles of religious life. A similar event was held at Notre Dame in 1952. .. Valerio Cardinal Valeri, Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of Religious, will preach at 1lI Solemn Pontifical Mass opening the congress. Archbishop Egidio> Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to> the U.S" will speak Saturda~ Aug. 19. Joiat SponsorshluJ The pressing needs of the Church in South America wi!! be the subject of Archbishop Antonio Samore, secretary of the Pontifical Commission fOO' Latin America, in' his address. Bishop Leo A. Pursley of Fort Wayne-South Bend will be host to the congress and will delivelr the keynote address. The National Congress of Religious is sponsored jointly blr the Conference .of Major Superiors of Men's Religious InsUtutes and the Conference of Major Superiors of Women's Religious Institutes in the United States.
2
R.osary Crusade Draws 500,000 In Venezuela
THE ANCHOR-Diocese C!f Fall River-Thurs.; July 27, 1961
Diocese of Fa ii, River
CARACAS (NC) - More .than half a miUion people turned out on this capitan city's' military parade ground
OFFICIAL
for 'the climax of a four-montla Family Rosary Crusade COR\.' d\ictedby' Father Patrick Pe3"ton, e.s.c. The sea of people represented almost half the- population of Caracas. 'An American executive who has extensive experience iD Latin America described the , gathering as "the most impressive demoristration I have eve:r seen in 'Latin America."
ASSIGNMENTS North American College, Rome, Italy Rev. Edward J. Mitchell, gr~duate studies in Canon Law. 'Mr. George W. Coleman, first year theology. St. Mary's Seminall'Y, Baltimoll'e 'lFlrst Theology: Mr. Joseph Ferreira,' Mr'. William Foley, Mr. Terence F. Keenan, Mr. Ralph Tetrault. lFirst Philosophy: Mr. Richard L. Chretien, Mr. Ro4nd Deschenes, Mr. Roland NoNn. '
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- st. John's Seminary, Bright&n . lFirst Theology: Mr. William P. Blottman, Mr. Thomas C. Lopes, Mr. Michael"McPartland. ' Se'cond Philosophy: Mr. Joseph R. Nadeau. First Philosophy: Mr. Joseph A. Duch, Mr. Brian HarI:ington, Mr. James MOIlse"Mr. William F~ O'Neill.
CLUB AIDS MISSIONS: Benjamin McBride; president .of the Huehuetenango Mission Club of Fall River, with Rev. John Breen, Maryknoll Missioner from this Diocese, .who is stationed at the Guatemala inission. Father Breen, on a home visjt, showed slides and spoke on mission acti~ities to club members.
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Hedwig Has New Assistant
Mass ,()rdo."
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Jose Humberto Cardinal Quintero, Archbishop of Caracas, told the rally: "With a manifestation' such as this and with repeated proofs given by the people o~' Venezuela, I am optimistic;: about the future of the country."
AustrDa's Catlholic Schools Fighting Heavy Odd s For Survive I
He: ;;aid 'that if the immenSQ, rally had 'not actually'met, people would have' considered it :uQ... possible. " ' 'J
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Applause rose from the crowd when Cardinal Quintero said the rally had gathered "side . . side, men and women, professionals and workers, rich aRCI poor." I
FRIDAY-':'SS Nazarius aQd' CelA 'With Cardinal Quintero a~' sus, Martyrs, Victor ,I, Pope -.' ~~gainst Father Peyton on the platform and'Martyr. ami Innocent I,' VIENNA (NC) Austria's wiped out· the fortunes" of the wail Msgr'. Luigi Dadaglio, Papal A former musician with Fred, Pope imd Confessor. III Class~ Catholic schools, some of them few and the savings of the many. Nuncio to Venezuela. The VeneWaring's Pennsylvanians is the Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no teetering on the brink of bankExcl~de School Matters , zuelari' Minister of Justice, ~ new assistant curate at St. Hed-. Creed; Common Preface. ruptcy, are struggling along For centuries education in the Andre,s'. Aguilar, and the Mi~ wig's Church, New Bedford. H~ SATURDAY-St Martha, Vir- without any government aid deold empire had been in the ister of Public Works, Dr. Rafael is Rev. Adolph" Szelagowskl, gin. III, Class.' White. Mass spite the fact that such' help is hands of' the ' Chul'Ch. ' Schools de'Leon, took part In the publie O.F:M.Conv., transferred from a Proper; Gloria; second Collect, 'called for by Austria's trooty were' supporledas a rule by recitation the Rosary. .: So.; BostoI:'. pat'ish Rev. Raphael SS. Felix, and Companions, with the Holy See. monasteries and, dioceses which .Father Peyton emphasized the Lopacienski, O.F.M.Conv., forMartyrs; no Creed; Common If state assistance is withheld -had revenues kom 1ands and.. importance 01. family recitatioo· merly at st. Hedwig's, has exPreface. much longer, Cathoiic,educatiOll other holdi-n~. of -the, Rosary. changed posts w~th Father Szel- SUNDAY-X,Sunday After Pen.,. authorities fear, many schools In 1960,' Austria and the Holv tecost. II Class. Green. Mass .T The Irish-born Holy 'CrOfJliI agowski. , may have to close -down. Such a See agreed on settlements of A 'native of Buffalo, Father Proper; Gloria; Creed; Pref-ac:e clQsi-ng would come at a time certain issues growing out of priest said: "This assemblY'is • Szelagowski traveled with the of Trinity. when the nation's 380 Cntholic the concordat, Ineludinga settle- manifestation of faith and low Pennsylvanians after completing MONDAY-St. Ignatius Loyola, school'S have long waitinl~ li!lts ment of claims for restoration of for the QueeR of Heaven." Confessor. III Class. White. high st.:hool and his musical and popular interest in C'h\lll'ch 'Church properties confiscated Mass Proper; Gloria;ftO education. He played piano and Creed; Common Preface. education is rising. by the Nazis during their ocJEFFREY E. organ, and directed singers and TUESDAY-Mass of previous Austxian Catholic schools' are CUpatiOll of the country. musicians. . Sunday._ IV Clasf>. Green. Mass . educating some 55,009 PU1?~ls. in Because large sections of the He enter~ thf" Franciscan Proper; NoGloria; Second Col- all grade~ and sc~l OffICIalS People's party join the socialJi'tueep.a Re.w· OrQer in 1935 and was ordained leet Holy Machabees, Martyrs; are. p~~mg ~e pomt that the ists in their opposition to the 550 Lee... 81. in 1943. -Since then he has No Creed; Common Preface. ' natIon s educat~on budget would marriage provisions, which stip- , F.-I, River. MuI. ser'ited in parishes and also WEDNESDAy ...... St. AlphonstHl h~v~ to belBcrf:lQsed by}4 ulate that pa,th~li~cannotget" ',', ,OS 2-2191 taught in a high school of. the Mary.Liguori, Bishop, Confes- mllhon yea~ly were, the g~)vern-, a divorce there' seems to be, order. In South Boston he .organsol' and Doctor. of the Church. ment to, try to take over Church liittle chadce that the concordat . RoseE. Sullivan ized 'a QOYs' choir and he plans' ,Jeffrey E. Sullivan III Class. White Mass Proper; schools or repl~cethem. or the school issueoon be 'to do' the same at St. Hedwig's. Gloria; Second Collect St; Meet Opposlti~. ' tled. ~nthe' near ~e. . Stephen I, POpe and Martyr;: Adamant opposition by-the Sono Creed; Common Preface. cialist 'party and even some eleStonehill Workshop THURSDAY P. J.,DUFFY, - Mass of ,previous·, ments of the Catholic-oriented A Food Service Workshop for Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass 'People's party - which have. Funeral Home Religious Brothers will be' held Proper; No Gloria or Creed; governed the country in coaliat 'Stonehill College from SunComfortably_Air~nditioned Common Preface. tion since the end of World War day, Aug. 20 through Thursday, II - bas prevented the impleAnlEBORO Aug. 31. Brother Herman E. Zac1,23 Broadway mentation of the 1933 con,:ordat carelli, ,food editor of Catholic 20 Peck St.' CA 2:-0193 . . between Austria and the Holy Building and Maintenance MagSee, which calls for' statE! sub-: PATRICK J. DUFFY azil)e, will direct the course, sidization of Catholic schools. VA ·4-5000 which has received an Apostolic Funeral Dir. - Embalmer METHUEN (NC)-A cardinal This COU!1try'sCatholic schools Blessing from Pope John XXIII. was adopted into the 'Basilian Salvatorian order of monks for have been fighting for surviv'al the' first time in its 300-yearv , against heavy odds since the end Worthwhile, Beoks of World War I, ~hiC'~ f~g- " history. . Continuing .a service perme!1ted the AustrIan .cJJ~:lre, The honor was conferred by Funetal Hoine formed for the past three years, the Eastern Rite community on spawned runaway inflation and FUNER~L HOME 571. Second St. the' New Bedford Legion of Mary Richard Cardinal Cushing, Arch-· 1: 986 Plymouth Avenue has issued the Summer' edition bishop 6f Boston, at its seminary FaU 'River, Mass:',' Fall River, Mae. of . its· .bro·chure,· Worthwhile and mission house here. , ,"\ Tel. OS 3-2271 OS 9.;607,:2., ," Books. Listing ~.Q ,s1!gg~stions for , OANIEl' (;: HARRINGTON M'CHAE~, J. McMAHON I Summertime reading, 'the bro- _ A,. decreeread'at the ceremony , saluted~catdinal Cushing' "for ' .. ,'t.i~.~ FUneral, Olrector , . , , . Licensed Funeral D'irector chure is available at all pUblic extraordinary favors- and' gener-" '~d' Re91~t~redEmbal':"';' '(' , 469 LOCUST STRUr· : Registered: Embalmer ", lib~ariesi~ the Di~ese;' '.', :,.- osities" to, the order during the FALL RIVER, MASS.., ~ I.:' " last 10 years. It 1TIentione4 that, O~ ~ 2:3381 " the Cardinal had granted permission in 1952 for the communWilfr8d C. James E. FORTY: HOURS ity to loc!lte in the Boston archDriscoll Sullivan,' Jr. ,DEVOTION FUNERAL HOME, INC. diocese, cited the financial aid \ and personal ,encouragemen'\; a. Marcel IloF - 0. LOrrallle ..... July SG-St, Francis of Assisl, Rotrer LnFranee ......enAubertine Braugh during the years and paid speNew Bedford. Owner and Director : cial tribute to him for assisting FUNERAL DIRECTORS : Holy Redeemer, Chatham. in reconstruction of the comSpac~us Parking Area 15 mVINGTON CT. August 6-St. George, Westmunity motherhouse in Lebanon ,'WY 2-2957 , port when it was damaged in an WY 7-7830 ,Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven earthquake in 195~, NEW BEDFORD 129 Allen St. New Bedford, St. Theresa, South Attle. The Basilian Salvatoriari order boro. was established in 1687 in Leb-: ","ug. IS-St. Theresa, New anon. ,.:,'. . Bedford. Our Lad}, of Victory, Nec"'G!o~y . - Centerville. . ·R~SID~Nl·IAL THE ANCHOR lists the death , st. Joseph. Woods Hole. anniversary dates of priests ·COMMERI:IAL ....• . ... . . . Aug; 2G-O ur " Lady of who served the Fall .River Lourdes, Vi ellfleet. ,-INDUSTRIAL Diocese since its formation in Our ,Lady of Grace, 1904 ,with' ,the intention that EIe~ric .Equ.ipment North 'Westport~ ': -the faithful will give them a, cmd SUPF,lies, Sacred Heart, New Bedpraye,rful remembranee. ford. . JULY %9 Rev. Mathias McCabe, 1913, Pastor, Sacred Heart, Fall River. THE ANCHOR , AUGUST a ' ELECTRICAIL . CO., IINC. l'leeond 01""" Poota/le Paid at Fall River; Mass. Puillished every Thl1l"llday at 410 . Successors to DAVID DUFF &- SON j. Highland Rev. Michael J. O'Connell, Avenue, Fall River. Mass.. by 151 RODMAN ST. FALL RIVER I the Catholle Press of the Dioeese of 1938, assistant, St. Mary's. Fall OSborne 7-9834 Tel. WY U271' 640 , .......'" Street Fall River. SubserlpltoD prlee br maiIo River, 1906-08. \ J}09lpaid $4.00 per lW"
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Catholic Educator Says Preemptive Act Jl.u;tifialbYe WASHINGTON (NC) A Catholic priest said helle 'that in ~rtain circumstan~~s the United States would
Veteran Maryknoll Sister, Faa River Native, Relates St'01'1£$ 0 f E arly Days tn Ch lila e
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By Patricia McGowa-, "My story's really very dun," said Sister Mary Lawrence modestly. Then the Maryknoll Missioner, the former Teresa Foley of S"t~ Patrick's parish, Fan River, proceeded to relate her experiences in China, replete with bandit warfare, Communist aggression and anti-Western feeling. The soft-voiced Sister was a member of Maryknoll's fivst mission group in China. She w-as one of the second group. of postulants professed in the community. "My friends
THE
ANCHO~-
3
Thurs., July 27, 1961
Re~ GOW®[]'rru~tfM~n~
Ord®r P!fovok~$ Riot in Po~cnd
BERLIN (NC) - Government interference with church puilding has again led' to rioting in communist-
~ justified in striking the f·il'st blow in war. ' . . Father Robert P. Mohan, S.S., ruled Poland, according to. resaid the U. S would be justified ports reaching here. !in "preemptive" military action, aimed at countering im "immePolish Catholics in Przysucha diate threat" of aggressioR by an ·thought I was foolhardy to join fought workmen with sticks and "lemy. .a congregation that hadn't yet stones when the latter tried to But he' stressed that he was received' official approbation," de mol is h a half-completed tlistinguish'ing this sort of action she recalled with a ehuckle. church on government orders, it trom a "preventive war," which . Now, of course, some 1,500 has been reported here. be defined as "unjustified agMaryknoll Sisters are working Police were called from as far gressive action designed to 1'6- ,throughout .the world for souls . as 40 miles away to quell the move a remote threat." and the infant congregamon· has disturbance, it was reported. Father Mohan stated: "I have become a lusty member of the Przys!ichl\ is about' 150 miles IIOt the slightest hesitation in ooHgioUB family of the Church. south of Warsaw: saying that 1 think such preempMaRY Relatives Tear Down Church «~ action might. in a concrete Sister Mary Lawrence has The government ordered work. IIltuation be justified, and con- many. nephews and nieces in men to tear down the church aider it utter folly for our gov- Fall River, among them Miss after it refused to grant a conernment to keep insisting that Louise Foley of Holy Name parstruction permit because the· under no circumstances' will we ish, with whom Sister's own . building "does not sa tisfy the strike the first blow." sister, Miss Alice F'oley; lived elementary requirements of esBanS SIa.ughter until her death two months ago.. thetics or safety;" according to An associate professor of phil. Another sister, Mors: Mary Costhe . reports. The government osophy at the Cat.holie Univertello, now' of Andover, was until claimed that materials for the »l.ty of Amel'ica, the Sulpician I'ecently a lifelong resident ol part of the church that had alpriest said he was "not even F·all ,Riv~r; ready been erected were oboonsidering . . . the possibility Holy Name was host a few tained illegally. ftlat any: Christian moralist weeks 'ago to Sister and her Last year some 2,000 people' would seriously attempt ·to jusoompanion, Sister Mary Cornelia rioted. in Nowz Huta when the ttfy an all-out, no-hold-barred of the Boston A'rchdiocese,. when government revoked its permit fihermonuclear war." they came to the' parish under for the construction of a church · "The indiscriminate slaughtet" t >h e Missfol1i8ry Cooperative there. Later, Stefan Cardinal ~ thousands of civilians, be Plan .to solicit funds for MaryWyszynski, Primate of Poland,' these Americans or Russians, knoll. accused the government of.. would not be unthinkable, but it I'll youth the missioner atbreaking its promises regarding the building of n(-,w churches. , would be immoral," he said. ,tended Fall River. pal'ochial and However, he rejected the arIn June, 1960, some 5,000 per- , public schools,and followed this C ld f H 1 N guments of those who would by a year of business training. TELL US ABOUT CHINA: hi. ren 0 0 y arne sons demonstrated in Zielona' :fuvor "capitulation" to commun- She entered Ma,ryknoll in 1919' parochial school, Fall Rivel;, are enthralled by Sister Mary Gora in western Poland to protest against government attemptlJ. ism in preference to war, based and the 40th annivel'\sary of her . S' 'M L b th t . M the hope of converting the professiOI1 in 1921 was noted' Cornelia. (left) and Ister ary awrence, 0 ve erans to take over a building used for, oommunists to Christianity at· this month at the Maryknoll of MafykrlOIl missions in China. parish purposes. Police and demonstrators. engaged in stre~t GOme later date. motherhouse, Ossining, N.Y. . · 'Forget Roma-ntie Notions' Walsh,'; she e~plained, "was t·ne sion; fighting, "As· one who considers capitSister Mary Lawrence has first Maryknoll superior to . "Even that long ago we were Violent Incidents utation to communism equiva- gone a long way since leaving open a junior seminary for called out of the interior by the In 1959, more than a score or ~~ t t t' t· I ld f Fall River, with assignments Chinese boys and a novitiate for American "'Consul more than _0 0 ex mc Ion, wou pre er ta.king her. to China and Hawaii. . amashed buildings and smashim girls. Most of the girls were once. Although it was not real-· persons werE~ injured when .ulls as pr~ferable to a Soviet' Service abroad was followed by young and had little education,· ized then, the Communists were Catholics and: communist police 'th God ~-;" 100 years in the Chinese section so it.took. some 'time to train at the bottom of the. troubles dashed in the village .ot Kraznik . 1rorld" WI o.ut and ....~-: ~ B'os'-n. ·"1 follow:.t·he C·hl·nese. . . Fabryczny near Lublin. The' h d V1 L<J them to become postulants. . ,. that many years ago." . • clash occurred after Red aut'hor-' ~w e m;~ U do 11 to ~ .... . around," she laughed. . "-Their community. is name(l Cargo ·of. Silk' " w~. oF;.For the past few year~ .the. for.. the Immaculate Heart. 'of . On one occa,sion when the Sise w0l.! a.. ities decid,ed to iazE: a chapel' and . ~ the romantic notions of a pioneer missioiter:lias' been s t a - · · . I h' t t' shrine on' the grounds that they' Church of Silence. heroically ad... · t' ed t bh'" Oth h ... ~ . . Mary.· and ·thelr work. was· the tel'S had to. eave tell'S a IOn; had been put up without author- . ministering the ~craments be- _~~?" sha ... e h' m, ef("~us~,. ,teac.hing o.f reH.gion ..k> children said the missioner, "in ·the first taind the Iron and Bamboo lmw,,~~~ t~ ~s:.m,-~, a~~e .. °rlt o1! r and.· adults of. a boat colony part of the journey, coming· out ization. Catholics in ·another tow.~, .. tIlins It is closer to. the trl,lth . 0 sTh' rsl~mt g. ves~~ :. ~SI- which was. just. outside e of the interior, we were hidden ~ re~ognize the brutai facts that ~ss. e IS e:s' recelllv.~ o~ er~ Maryknoll mission compound. in a boat and were .supposed to Nowe TychY,had already par-' rom tially built the walls of a church' Ute Church, its priests and j,t;s ~ vestmtren~ d a , par ~ ~ -.They also made. altar breads and be a 'cargo of silk." Arriving at · h' . "lie coun y an pass th em 0 0 vestments the port where we would ordin:' when municipal authorities aneate<: Ists have been systematlcHongkong and Japan where t h e ' adly board a steamer, there was nounced they would not allow' ~HY and efficiently exterr:ninated garments are·maq.e.'· ,~?ffering Under Co~munism a waH of several days and when the constructiqn work to go on in lands ';,hel.'e commufilsm has ."This provides work for ou,r When the Co~mumsts came, a boat .did come, its crew was and had the walls razed. tltJumphed .people," explained Sister, noting howev:er, the pICture change? composed of doctors, engineers . During 1958 there were vio-' 1hat in Hongkong alone 60 girls Th~ ~Isters h~d to take off t~elr and professors, with little knowl- lent incidents between Catholics are employed in vestment mak- reh.glOus habits and return to edge. of the river currents. We and militiamen over the burial ~tart ing for Maryknoll their homes. Very few succeeded had to navigate only by day, beof non-Catholics in Catholic Sister was in ~uth China for in getting out of Red China and cause the men didn't dare a1:cemeteries. They took place in. 16 years, working under the ·the.y hav.e sU~fered and are suftempt the river at night, so we CLEVELAND (NC)-Educathe village of Poryte near Bialymade slow progress to safety." oors, religious and civic leaders legendary Bishop James E. fenng Impnson~ent, hunger, stok and in Zuromin near WarWalsh. "'At f·irst we did' instituand other ha·rdshlps. Although the bandit raids of there have incorporated a "Clevesaw. 'tional work," she said, "operat"Seven Sisters are in' Hongher da'y were harassing, said land Center :£or Information ,ing old people's homes and 01'- kong and they have a novitiate Sister, no one equalled .the Com-. &mmunism." munists for creating a reign of Among the organizers and' phanages, but ·then the emphasi1; and school there, but there are terror. '.. board of ,trustees are Msgr. Law:' of. our activ£ty changed and we 23 Sisters behind the Bamboo Sne a'nd 'her com'panion exrence P. CahiU, president of St. switched to the direct'ap9Sto- Curtain, many of whom are conlohn College; Rev. B. Bruce late, concentl>ating on C9teCheti- fessors of the Ji',aith.'~pressed·gratitude .to the parishLife in Sister's time in ·China ioners of' Holy Name .for' their Whittemore, executive direCtOl- oal work." The missioner's :most ,~or>twas very exc,Hing,·she said, with aid' to· Maryknoll,' explaining' of the Cleveland Church Federa:'" ant wOO'k during·. her:. time ·in- much inter-~ity battling between' . tiJ,at sucll contributions represent ~on; James B. Naylor, attorney; NEW IEOfIORD and Dr. Michael S. Pap, associate' €bina was with Ohine~!1ovi,*s '. warlords, rioting and 'looting.· a main source of support for.the· worldwide mission endeavors o<f. professor of h'istory and' political iR a netive community. '~Bishop ,'.. It was very different fr-om the . China of today. The people were the· community. . lJCienoe at John Carroll UniveP:" INDUSTRIAL OilS friendly, but not particularly aity. . . .~nterestec;l in. b~com~ng Catholics. · The center plans ·to establish HEATING OilS and. conversions oame slowly. • ,ll.brary of source material '011 QUEBEC (NC).;....Father Ar-. . "The country 'was disorgInc. eommunism and to serve as a' man Croteau has been slugging anized, with' constant civil wars TtMKEN Eiepository for documents or ori- away at "telephone sins." MOVERS . which hampered our work but ginal manuscl"ipts pertinent to SeRVING He said Canadians .are seryiced at the same time brought us into OIL BURNERS oommunist activities which now b&' 5,439,000 phones. Many sin ~ntact with important personFall River, New Bedford at'e held by refugees here' or' by using slugs ins"tead of coins ages who took refuge a,t our mis& Cape Cod Area othet" Americans. to make calls, others by pocketAgen&: It will provide in:£ormation for ing extra change which occasionaBe of newspapers, radio and TV AERO MAYFLOWER ally dumps in the coin box. ,01 COUNTY ST. NO JOB TOO B16_ litiations and also will furnish in'- . He also cited making use of. TRANSIT CO. INC. tiet"pretations for laymen and . information learned on party NEW BEDFORD NONE TOO SMAll Nation-wide Movers newsmen on ·U. S. foreign poliey lines; refusing to give up a WYman 3-0904 M itt relates to communism. party-line phone in case of emerWY 3-1751 314 Kempton St. New Bedford ., geney, and anonymous use of the phone to annoy others. He listed -: Honor' . "telephone sins" in an artiCle for . PRINTERS WASHINGTON (NC) _ Dr. La Semaine Religieuse de Quebec Ioseph Hajda, professor of hie:- magazine. 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-:-D:ccese of Fall River-Thurs., July 27, 1'961
Start Peace Corps Tra'ining At Notre Dame
IMa~:~ing of
President, 1960' Is Serious, Probing Work
NOTRE DAME (NC) _ Fifty young men and womell 'have reported to the University of Notre Dame to
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Several books on' the 1960 presidential election have already appeared, and more are to come. Theodore H. White's 'The Making of the President 1960' (Atheneum. $6.95) should not be classified in this quickie category. It. is a gargantuan and elabo- . better understanding of what rately detailed study of the happened ane! what it meant. long and varied process,' Moving on to the conventions, which led up to polling day he points out that a convention
across the land and the decision is "not just one cotlvention but then registered by the American a constellation of little conventions," shows.how this is so, and. people. One can interprets' both ()of last year's only assume major conventions in such terms. that Mr. White Platforms 'Meaningless' began preparing Platforms, he maintains, are this-book about essentially meaningless. "The a year before program of either party ~s what the election, lies in the vision and_conscience devised" a plan of the candidate the party for the gatherchooses to lead it." ing of material, Nevertheless, the 1960 Repuband took great lican platform emerged from a pains to assemvery significant difference of ble all tha,j; he basic opinion, in the precipitawould need to tion of which Nelson Rockefeller present a ~ull picture. . had a maj()or part. How this He was on hand for the deCIsive primaries. He got to know developed is one of Mr. White's . the leading aspirants for the best summaries. As do other. observers, Mr. respective nomina,tions. He trav. elled with the two candiOates. White sees the television debates as the turning point of He interviewed political figures all over the country. He did, or the 1960 struggle. On them he at least drew on, a vast amount has m£terial which I, for one, have never read elsewhere. of reading. Admires Organization He gave himse'lf to reflection Whereas he considers that the as well as to research. He delved' form of· these debates prevented' into the past and peered into the the participants from offering future. What he has produced is incisive comment on' crucial iscalled "a narrative history," and sues and from hammering out Ii the designation is apt. For, . clear account of their respective although the book deals with positions, the device yielded in events still recent. it has somethe case of each an i!TIage whiClh thing of the texture of history, impressed millions of voters. and it reads easily. The ups and downs of the l lit is not a partisan work, as is campaign are plottlid, together James Michener's 'Report of the with each candidate's assessCounty Chairman.' Obviously ment of his chances at succesMr. White' admires President sive stages. After a return to the Kennedy, but he has respect and election day beginnings of the sympathy for Mr. Nixon. ' book, the climax .comes at the He is objective 'in dealing with moment when a' Secret Service the Mssrs. Rockefeller, Humph- detail moves. in to guard Mr. r e y , Stev'!nson Symington, Kennedy. Johnson, et al Occasionally Mr. White admiringly analyzes ther.e occurs what seems to be the Kennedy organization, coura flick of irony. But this merely age and skill in decision-making, flavors the text, as, in another and style. way, do the descriptions of the 'Solita.,y Man' American landscape. M-r. Nixon, .by contrast, is seen Alive, Vivid as a solitary man, extremely Mr. White begins by telling us sensitive, wanting to be liked, what Mr. Kennedy did on elec- unskillful witt. the press. In the tion day and fat into that night campaign, as Mr. White sees it, . which brought neither conces- the then Vice President went it 'sion of defeat nor claim. of vic- alone. He had an organizatiOfl which made meticulous plans, tOry. From its first paragraph the but it was largely ignored, and book is alive and vivid. One this led to discontent and e~ realizes immediately' that here disaffection. The fundamental difference is no rehash of newspaper stories and gossip, but a candid close-up between the contestants, Mr. oombined· with astute observa- White contends, was that from tion, appreciation of. context, Mr. Nixon's speech, private o-r and awareness of ramifications. public, there was missing "any The election d·ay horary of shape of history, any sense of the stream. of time o-r flow of the Democratic candidate is followed by a flashback to what forces by which America had Mr. White thinks the first stir- come to this point in history rings of aspiration ,and action and might move on," but these on both sides as the 1960 con- were to the forefront in Mr. test began to loom. This gives Kennedy's thinking aAd utterhim an opportunity to sketch ance. This ser·ious, probing, dispasthe background and quality of sionat~ work is packed with eath contender. stories, vignettes, .fresh facts. It .views Primaries is a rare combination of expert Ire nex-t reviews the prima- lively reporting -and scholarly ries. The primary, he says, is in.terpretation. ' America's' "most original contribution to the art of democracy." But be also says that the professional politician hates it Catholic Missiolts bitterly, .because the fi~t within OMAHA. (NC) ...-. A record the party provides the othel" crowd of 7,120 turned out for a party with invaluable ammuni- Houston "WI. Omaha basebell tion for the imminent campaign. game in Municipal Stadium here. He gives special attention tIO The magnet was a chance to aid .the Democratic primaries iR CathoJ.ie missions. Wisconsin and West Virginia, The managemeRt of the and as he weaves together a Omaha Dodgers split the g.ate minute account of each battle the receipts 50-50 with the Papal reader has a feeling of direct Volunteers for the Missions, orparticipation ·or at least a f8l' ganized recently by Archbishop Gerald T. Bergan of. Omaha to recruit, train and finance lay Refugees T ST. LOUIS (NC)~.t\ntonio Ai- workers for home:: and foreign vare'Z' Pedroso, former assistant . missions. Previous record·for an Omaha proftlssor of Latin American and . modern history at Havana Uni- home game was 4,068;' Guests at the game included Archbishop versity, has been' appointed to St. Louis University's visiting Bergan, Mayor James J. Dworak Cuban scholar program. He is of Omaha, Msgr. Nicholas H. the second Cuban refugee named Wegner, director of nearby Boys to the program. The other is Town, . and F'ather James H. Armando Castellanos,. former Stewart, director of the Papal Cuban tax judge and economics' Volunteers . for .. the Missions. 'Omaba won, 3-2. professor.
RecOf'd Crowd Aids
ead1ers
begin eight weeks' intensive training for a U.S.' Peace CoopII project in 'Chile. Abo~ half of them Wel'~ ... .cruited .from Indiana campusee by the Indiana Conferenee od Higher Education, whichiw sponsoring the project. Tbe others come from the PeaCll Corps' national volunteer Pool.
BIG DAY: Princ:ipals in celebration held oy St. Mary's Church, South Dartmouth, to mark payment of mortgage. Left to' right, R~v. John Magnani; Mrs. Frank Mello, supper chairman; Francis J. Mahoney and Francis Collins, bazaar co-chairmen; Hev. Arthur G. Considine, pastor.
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th@ [j'~~ W>lfOm@fte @~ PCO~«UTl<dl Seek§ iro Di~trupt NatgO~'Ol~Urrnity BERLIN' (NC)-Stefan Card- perform our work of uniting our inal Wyszynski, Primate of Po-' compatriots in· brotherly love land, has been accuse.d by Po- amidst an atmosphere of constant lish communists of disrupting . distrust and hatred, thrust on national. unity because OlE a let- us bF the arrogant and unretel' he wrO't~ in May to the U.S. strained a,theists, freethinkers, Catholic League for Poland. sectarians and officials of the The charge was made in an so-called national church, which issue of Argumenty, org'an of the disrupts the unity of the nation. atheist organization in' P'Oland, . "This is a. close-knit godoJ.ess received he~e. front that we must oppose in The. Oardmaol. w~ot-e .to the U. patience and with calm, being S. PolIsh organ1zatIon m May to watchful not to stop loving those thank it for the money Jror P'O- who are determined to hate us." land it had raised in its annual Argume t l'ed b · Th P' t"'d . n y rep 1 y accusco11ect Ion. e nma e sal : ing the C . d' al f . k' to . Grateful for. G i f t s . ar 1~ 0 see mg. "And t d d . t f' d f d1srupt the' umty of the Polish o .ay, eales nen·s 0 people. '<The dramatic aspect of the Catho.lIc ~ague,. when our the situation' consists in the fact collaboration IS bemg estabh h . li h d h . sl I d tat t e Church ... IS stubborns e SO armOnlOU y! sen , ly seeking to disrupt the unity 01. you wo~ds of de~p gratitude ~or the nation on th~ basis of reevery gift, even 1f mod7~1t,. WIth ligious quarrels" the Red or It greater hope, because It 16 for said ' ~ us a sign of your love, unity and . comfor,t in the diHicul:t fight for the freedom and ril~hts of the holy, Church. . "Our life (in Poland) is exceptionally difficult. We! must
The Peace Corps volunteet:ll will spend two years in Chile. working with its Institute of Rural Education in furthering education and in ·raising living standards of the rural popuJ,a,.. ·tion. The Chilean proJect ~ sulted from the first agreemem of its kind between a U.S. goyernment agency. a fo-reip country and a group of' Amel"ioo can colleges and universitiea.· Language Ability Nine recent Notre Dame ~ uates and three alumnae of nearby St. Mary's College aro among those in the training program. Other Indiana institlltions represented include the universities of Indiana, PurdutlD Valparaiso and Depauw. Walter M. Langford, profe&. sOl' of modern languages at Notre Dame is coordinator of the Chilean Peace Corps project. George E. Smith, associate professor of modern languages at Purdue ,University, is an ~ sistant coordinator. They sa14 the Summer training program will seek to develop in the volunteers a basic conversationSl ability in Spanish as well 3S _. basic knowledge of Chile's history and culture.
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Seminary SlWperaor Is Pith~u<end NQJth~~ BURLINGTON (NC) -·Father Lawrence F. Lyons of Pi.ttsfield has been named to :>Ucceed Father Robert J. Sheehey- as su. perior of St. Edmund's Seminary at Fairholt. Father Sheehey, who headed the seminary for six years, has been transferred to St. Michael's College in Winooski Park, where he' will be director of Edrnundite seminarian Brothers completing their studies at liberal aI"ts colleges before entering the semina';'Y. . .
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T-HE ANCHOR,Thurs., July 27,
196~1
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Ri~®$ '~~ocrolMlO~lm° In C@~d CQ'\7a~ W (iJ'rJ PITTSBURGH (NC) - A Negro priest from Mississippi said here that the Freedom Rides in the South
The editor of the QueStioR ood Answer column dou not guaraBtee .. answer anonymous queries oor letlers from unidentifiable sources. In every instance the desire lor anonymity will be respected. To that end, name" are never appended to the questions, bl" unles" the letter i& signed lhere i& 110 assurance that any eonsideration will be given it..
One of my friends, who is not a Catholic, says that DO man has the right to take God's place and forgive sins. What proof can we give to show that priel;ts have this power? Certainly the forgiveness of sins against God is not the RIGHT of any man as a part of !his human nature, However, the POWER to forgive sins has been given to a specific, particular ·group of men by Jesus Christ, true God and true man, whose RIGHT and POWER it is to give. There are several places in the New Testament where this bestowal of power to forgive sill5 '.. spelled out, but perhaps nowhere is it more clearly set 6>rth than in the twentieth ehapter of the Gospel according 60 St. John. It was aftel' His l'esurrection from the dead that Out" Savior appeared 1lo the ·Apostles, His first priests, and «he following account is recorded: "Jesus came and stood in the 'midst of them and said 'Peace be to you! As the Father has .eAt Me, I also send you.' When & had said this He brea,thed upon them and said to them, 'Receive the Holy Spirit; whose you shall forgive, they al'e forgiven them; whose sins you 'lII1all retain, they are retained'." This double power to forgive 01' retain bestowed upon the Apostles and their successorseu ol'dained priests-presumes Utat the sins be told to the ,priest, in order that he may make a judgment. If your friend is a Protestant, tlUrely this should be accepted M incontestible proof, since they accept the Bible as the sole ~urce of divine revelation.
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I have been told from the time I was a child that women are supposed to wear hats in church. Lately it seems that more and more women enter ehurch without hats. Does it really matter? '1'0 answer the question, let's look at the Code of Canon Law, the ChUl'ch's official book of legislation. Canon 1262 states: "Men should assist at divine services, either in church or outside of it, with uncovered heads, unless the custom of the people 01' peculiar circumstances demand the contrary; the women should assist in modest dress and with heads covered, especially when they approach the Table Qf the Lord." While the law admits of ex'o;reptions where exceptional reaoons exist, it cle&rly indicates ~hat a woman should attend Mass with head covered. This 1!>recept is based upon a wellknown passage from St. Paul's ! Cor\nthians, chctpter 11: "But 0Very woman praying or prophesying with-her head uncovered disgraces her head." A CATHOLIC COMMENTARY ON HOLY SCRIPTURE in commenting on ,Cihia passage in the epistle stated ~4h&t it was apparently the rule 4n Paul's day that women should OOVet' their heads in the presence
House Passes New 'D.C. Smut Measure WASHINGTON (NC) - The ,Bouse of Representatives passed and sent to the Senate a bil'l. mtended to crack down on 00lICenity in the District 01. Columbia.
of men and it waF his principle that established custom, if not sinful, should be observed. Modern custom is less strict and Paul might hold a different opinion today, since there is no indication in his writings that he was a woman-hater.
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Whlllt is the meanincr 01 the "quarter tenses"? The QUARTER TENSES is a now obsolete name formerly applied to the EMBER DAYS. It was derived from the Latin "quattuor tempores", meaning the four times or the four seasons. The ember days are the days of fast and partial absti- , nence which occur four times a year for the special sanctification of each season and for obtaining God's blessings on the clergy, for who!!e ordination ember Saturdays are especially set apart. ' The EMBER DAYS are the Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays which follow December 13, the first Sunday of Lent, Pentecost and SeptembE.>r 14.
Family Movement To Meet Aug. 25 CHICAGO (NC)-The Christian Family Movement will hold its .12th national meeting at South Bend, Ind., Aug. 25 to 27, its headquarters' announced. The organization of married couples said about 1,000 couples, many accompanied by their children, will gather' at the University of Notre Dame and neighboring St. Mary's College. The movement, whose participants are grouped in small "cells" which meet for informal discussions to inlprove family life and to better their communities, devoted its attention last year to international life. _ Cites AccompHshmenta CFM groups brought more than 300 Dutch refugee families from Indonesia into the United states, extended hospitality to more than 5,000 foreign students. made contact by mail with about 4,000 families overseas and provided visits to their homes for thousands of exchange visitors, the headquarters said. This year the emphasis will 'shift to national family life, CFM said. "Family life will be presented as the family thrust into the world; affectE::d by the culture and environment which it helps to create, obliged to build a social order within which Christian families can flourish."
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JERUSALEM (NC)":"- One of the three deputies of the Orthodox religious pa'rty in the Israeli parliament has introduced a motion to restrict Christian missionary activity. Rabbi Menahem Parush complained to the 120-member Knesset tha,t 1,485 children in Israel are attending Christian schools and that 230 ChrL~tian missionaries, including 60 Christian Jews, are engaged in a "hunt for SIOuls." On the proposal of Education Minister Abba Eban, Rabbi Parush's motion was sent to the Knesset's Education Committee for considet'ation.
The measwe, unaniznowd)r ap-
pI'Oved by' the House, woulcf permit confiscation of Pl'OperW Involved in smut operations and the closing of theatres. It . sets penalties for violatollS at a year in jail or a $500 fine. Besides obscene matter, the mea...re would ban mater~1l1 devoted! ~ "ceandalD" or to "intrigues be~wn men and womeB ·aM 1m.~ coo.~
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VINCENTIANS VIEW CAMP:, Fall River Particular Council members of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul visit St. Vincent's Camp, Westport. Left to right, Jerome D. Foley, Council president; H. Earl Heron, president of St. Thomas More Conference, Somerset; Manuel C. Medeiros, Our Lady of Angels parish, Fall River; Everett G. Crowley, president of Holy Name Conference, Fall River.
Blind~
Paralyzed Students Clear Hurdle in Quest of Law Degrees
SAN DIEGO (NC) - A blind 'student and a paralyzed veteran have cleared a big hurdle in quest of law degrees from the University of San Diego law school. Samuel Hecsh, the blind student, and Karl Sudekum, who is paralyzed in all four limbs and his diaphragm, have done outstanding work in their first year at the law school. Mr. Hecsh, 37, a day student, finished second in his class of 22 students. Mr. Sudekum, 33, who attends night school, finished fourth in his Class of 45 () students. Mr. H'ecsh had been an aeronautical engineer for eight ye<lrs when he became totally blind in 1959. Mr. Sudekum, a Navy flier, was stricken with polio in 1953. Unable to read the mountains of written text material in law school, Mr. Hecsh studied by hiring two rel!ders to dictate all of the written matter onto tapes and records that he played back in his home. Mr. Sudekum, able to read but not write, did his studying by using a' special reading rack on
Hist@~g@1'il Microfilms ,lRlec@li'ds- o~ Pal1'cshl<es LOUISVILLE (NC)~Amateur historian Francis P. Clark is doing a big job' with some small film: He's microfilming the parish records of the 112 churches of tne Loui~ville archdiocese. The entire job will take him about 14 weeks to complete, and he has about a third of it done, The work involves filming the baptismal, confirmation, marriage, ordination, religious profession and death records of each parish. ,
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his adjustable bed, turning the pages of his 'texts with a stick in his 1I10uth. He dictated his answers in examil;ations to secretaries who transcribed their notes. 'Braille Too Slow' Mr. Hecsh said he had to use records and tapes because reading Braille is too slow to be prac-. tical in intensive studying. Mr. Sudekum estimated that it takes him about three times as long as it does the average nonhandicapped student to absorb the same amount of work. Mr. Hecsh is married and has two children: Janet, 6 and Suseen Susan. Mi. Sudekum, who is also married, has a daughter, Sylvia, 9. Both students were enthusiastic about the help given them by the University of San Diego law school. "Everyone has gone out of his way to help me, to a man," said Mr: Hecsh. Mr. Sudekum said "the school has really cooperated in every way -the professors, the office personnel, the students."
are a "skirmish" in a "cold civi1. war" being wa'ged over the. race question. Father John LaBauve, S.V.D., said that "if the rides result in something positive being done by Americans for race relations, then the riders will have done a good thing." Father LaBauve, pastor of Holy Rosary church, Hattiesburg, Miss., spokE' at the Summer School of Catholic Action for young people, The Divine Word priest declared that racial injustice is a sickness in American society and' unless Christians work to cure it, it will get worse. "In America when we discriminate against, our own' people, we are failing to make friends with a group of people who should be our first allies," he said. Feliow Americau "We are trying to get friends aU over the world, in Africa, in Asia, in Latin America, and paying a pretty penny for it. But we are making it almost impossible for oUi' own fellow Americans to be our allies." He said there are three major issues involved in the race question: as a human being, the Negro "wants the fl'ee use of aU human rights;" as a t:itizen, "he wants whatever other citizens want;" if he is a Catholic, "he wan t s everything that the Church provides for everyone else." Desegregation and integration are two different things, Father LaBauve explained. "Desegregation will insure that the Negro gets his just rights," he said. "As to integration, that's up tG you. U you want to love me, that's up to you. But we have no right to take what belongs to another:'
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" ~-Diocese of F~"River~Thurs.,July 27~ 1,961
'One'Wey to Vott
'Paradox in the book, "Catholics in· Conversation," Bishop John Wright of Pittsburgh states the parad'ox:. "I've often' reflected" that' while Catholics are; in theological and religious matters, the most cosmopolitan and world-minded people' on earth, somehow in poHtical, social and economic matters they turn out to be ultra-nationalists. On the other hand, those who are so ultra-nationalistic theologically that ,their very church names reflect 'the names ,of 'their nations ••. are usually among the most ip.ternational-mi~ded.'! " It could be, of course, that many American Catholics, second and third generation Americans, are still putting ',down roots in this country and" rejoicing,in the many advantages that it has given them.. La,cking much formal education themselves, they are working to' give to their , ,children 'this boon that they th.emselves had to forego. .These two factors would account for their conservatism, .their desire to attain personal goals ,without having the time and interest to look ~t wider horizon~. " ' Iti!,!, a ,paradox, however, that 'anyone bearing the name ()f' 9atholic should not be catholic - , univ~rsal -: with a,wide ,int~rest in things s~ial and political and economic. Surely, the Popes , from 'Ure tim~' of Leo' XUI have "given: the leadership 'in these, matters, showingtbat 'the Church on earth and making' her' way'to heaven is not .unmindful of conditions in the worId', around ,het" :conditions- of government and economics. LeO's monumt'mtaJ.' encyclicle on labor and' the workingman waS'decades in advance of his times. 'Pius'XI contributed meaningful principles along the same lines and years before such idea:S gained the familiar sound, of repetition. Now, Pope John XXIII has commemorated the 70th anniversary of 'Rerum -Novarum' with an inspirin15 and timely reminaef:·to "men in autnority and in favorable, circumstances that theY are 'indeed their brothers' keepers. So the ultra-conservatism of Catholics,,- at least h ere in America ,-\ must be attributed not to lack of leadership in the ~opesnor to forgetfulness of the Church in' all matters human, but to the sociological makeup Of American Catholics. Perhaps with more maturity thl'm~ will be an , , awakening to the full mission of the ,Catholic in the world.
Political, 'DivisiOll Church's Major Problem ift Chile CINCINNATI (NC)...:....~ sharp division between Cava.. olics ,of the political rigbt and left is a major problem.
of the Church in Chile, accordJ,. ing to a Catholic newspaper 011 that country: Dario Rojas, an editor c>f lln Voz, leading Catholic week>lf' published at Concepcion, saiWl th3lt "if you spel!k out aga<i1Mlt the :right in, Chile, you are suN to be called'a communist.", In fact, when Bishop Manual Larrain Errazuriz of Talca spoRe in favor of better wages fGf ,workers, he was labeled "tRe ,Red Bishop,"· Rojas said. ' Rojas visited here under sue-pices of the U. S. government aDcJ. ,the Cincinnati Council on W 0F.kl Mfa,irs.' 'Like, Cancer' Rojas,a member of the eh. . . tian DemOcrat party, said he se4ie ,ne'· danger of 'the' Communi" ' 'party's becomIng a major in Chilean poUtics. "But com;.. ,munism itself," hc S;lid, "is like 'a cancer that eats at our v'RSi 'organs." , lIe ex,plained that communiatlf) have exercised strong influence by qualifying for posts as teach.- .\ ers and by becoming leaders ill other professions. An example ()f how seriouldy Catholics are divided on politiBy R~V. ROBER'r W. HOADA, Catholic University I , I' ical issues, said Rojas, is the c~ rent "big problem of workeJllf' salaries," , TODAY-Mass as on Sunday. Han, layman as well as priest or' "The communists have ee.It we are to have this redempReligious, is not merely to com- dorsed the workers' request f-Ql' tive effect on the city, on the municate a certain set of truths higher salaries," he stated. "The secular community, then our but to persuade men to accept Christian Democrats have en,..' worship must animate, us, must the Mystery. Yesterday's Phar- dorsed it, too, because we believe charge us with a religious expe- ' isee could not have understood an increase in wages is necessar3L rience, must touch heart as well Ignatius nor any other self-8a()- But the rightists come o~ as mind, emotion as well as rea- 'rificing disciple of Jesus. against it because they say it iIJ Business-wise, it doesn't make impossible to vote with ,the COlRP sense to eJ!:tend so much time munists on an issue." Following upon the charges of Federal Communications cheap, the shoddy and the mass- and talent on a venture which Wrong Slant on U. S. Commission Chairman Newton M. Minnow that television produced in art. It must be in- promises no immediate profit. Rojas offered an illustrati01l I d telligible, so that its sign and Yet it is this "profitless" venture " presente d d uring the course of a day a vast waste an .•• symbol language again reaches to which the Christian has com- to make clear his own positioJl& a man is drowning and I} a procession of game shows, violence, audience partici-' the mind of man. It must engage mitted himself - because life "If communist leaps in to help him. pat'ion shows, formula comedies about totally unbelievable'" us as participants, as aotors ill without ,the Mystery (God's sav- should I stand with arms folded families, blood and thunder, mayhem, violence, sadism, this sacred play, so that "audi- ing acts in history) is a life too for fear of 'cooperating' with 11 murder, Western badmen, private eyes, gangsters, more ence"---'indifference is forever bare and poor. communist?" , " banished. TUESDAY-MalIS as on SunHe described t.~ ChriSt. . violence and cartoons;" a Senate subcommittee :has linked TOMORROW - SS. Nazarius day. The Mystery is witnessed tG Democrat party as being "se~ television violence to the rise of juvenile delinquency. and Celsus Martyrs;Vitltor and by different kinds of gifts 'and center, semileft." Senator Thomas J. Dodd, head of the subcommittee, Innocent, Popes. If a native tal- services and vocations. So, in the Rojas said all Latin Amerie&J. said he found it difficult to believe that "the -heavy dosage entfor foolishness d.:>es' not light of the Epistle, it is inade- are very much interested in' tiWl quate 'to think of the Church' as U. S., but often get the wron. of extreme violence, brutality and sadism" that reached win us Jesus' 'blessing, neither an !'army".' or, a "monarchy." slant on this Country,. many children did not' affe~t them adversely. does a native talent for making " enemies win us the 'g:race of These terms are pitiable ever as U. S. movies, for exa~ .> Sociologists 'testified in support of: this view. martyrdom. Martyrdom, as the analogies. One member of,: the have given Latin Americans the It will not take long ,before television executives line ,GospelteHs us, is one1s ultimate Churc~ ,can prophesy, by the in- , notion that "Americans don't 'beup their own statistics and sociologists ,to' counteract the gift of self 'because ,he is 'hated. , spiration of the Holy Spirit: .i\n- lieve' in anything, have nore)ij" other, hierarchical aut-hQr,ity,can g>ion, a~ accept divorce an" . M'mnow.o:.....a It h ough ,e,' h ','for my, name's sake.", . charges 'rna d'e' by b oth Ch 'aIrman test the spirit of the prophets, money-making, as a, way of life,lIO 'has frightened them by his combinationor"iricisive inqictWe cannot mi~ the' stroag can sift and judg~.·' be stated. mimt and power to ac~-and, Senator Dodd. 'And, the' sad implication that the burden of The relationship between Ute , making Jesus known as Saviour members of Christ is never as part will be that the men who rim the television industry ill on us, and that if WE' do not simple as that between one AlIIIs,tin , will be' reacting almost automatically-using the Madison do this :focthe city and the whose job is to command and for Retired Avenue technique of not . listening to what has been world, those who revile orat'tack another whose job is to obey. Home WACO (NC)-A 250-room charged nor 'investigating it for possible' truth but put- or even kill us (because we are For, in' the Church, the com:" hotel in downtown Waco will ting on a c,ampaign to proJ'ect the right image" to cou'ntel'- rich or powerful or are political manders listen to the commanded be converted Into a residence opponents) do not thereby add' for promptings of the Spirit. for retired Catholics, Bishop balance the charges, to offset the bad publicity. us to the compa'~ of t]ne marLouis J., Reicher of Austin has WEDNESD?AY-St. Alphonsus This is where a lack of maturity, in the communicationS tyrs. announced. Mary de Ligouri, Bishop, COBindustry reveals itself. SATURDAY-St. Martha, Vil'- fessor, Doctor. The lessons, Q;f The Roosevelt Hotel was S000 Leaders of maturity and responsibility de not im- gin. One of the most popular the Mass point to the mission of lected for the experimental pr_ mediately turn to whitewash when charges are laid at stories of the New Testament, the Christian-the mission of jectand is expected to be ready today's Gospel emphasizes the known the Mystery to for occupancy by retired Catn.. their door. They listen with open minds instead of react- primacy of worship. The're is no making men. ,This is one of the values' of olic~ in September. ing 'with loud cries of outraged innocence. They weigh condemnation of action. Quite a highly social worship, in" which A chapel is being built in 1JIm what is being said to them instead of rejecting it summar- ,the contrary, action is both in- everyone takes his part. A mere hotel, and a full-time priest WFn Hy.. They cO,nsider th~ benefit of the people they are pledged evitable and importantly good. individua,l and private piety can be assigned to serve its resio> But if it is to be fully human dents and to direct their apo.to serve, instead of harkening only to the voices of those action it must find its ,source in never be the wellspring o:f a stolic Costs of residsocial apostolate. One who withwho pay them. They are, in fine, acutely conscious that' human thought and feeling, it draws :f)rom his fellowmen. in ing in activities. the hotel will range from, the communication waves belong to all the people, that must be rela,ted to the deepe9t worship can hard'ly be expe¢ted $125 to $150 monthly for roOllQ theirs is the privileged position of using-not abusing- wellsprings of the human heart. to open up to them'in his daHy and board for single perso~ what has been placed in their hands. , And this is the part of ma,n which life. and $200 to $225 f-or retired 0080> opens up, grows, and .flowers in pIes, A new era of responsibility will open in the country I ' worship. ' Blesses, Byel,oruman if any executive of stature respoJ;lds in that manner to TEN T H ~UN1l)AY A.~ER Giyes these recent charg~s. PENTECOST. There is DO pacable in the GOspels more 'filled OHICAGQ (NC) -Christ ttM BETHEL (NC) -ANew YoIiIa with a sense of the mysl;ery, the 'Redeemer Church, bhe first Byeawesomeness, the WOndE!l' of the 10russilUl Catholic ChurCh in tbe psychiatrist and his wife, woo .. , love of GOd for men than today's Westetln bemisphePe, was!JOi- , 11 weH known television pereo.. Gospel. ,The difference between 'emnly, 'bIessed'here by Bish()p ality, heve given a part of~ . ' , the worship acts of the two men 'Cesl~n.. Sipo...k, M;U}.. £i'OIIl estate 'hePe to St, Mary's pa~ , ~ \lBe as the si*e 01. a ~ , who pray in the temple is tlu!' ROJ1}e;' , " .. ' '.'; . .. ' difference between a man whO The J!lf'~-'" R i'toe schoOll. , ':rile lend WM ~ted. ,br_ : OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF ,THEDIOCE$EOFFAlL, RIVER' has'been shaken to his roots by a •church,' ~ for the estimated , , ',,' , " ' ,' " ' 'glimpse of the unkiiowlIblenesS, 100,000 ByeloruBsUmS in the and Mils. Eugene J. ClWkor, .... , Published weeKly by Th'e Cath~lic Press of theDi~eseof Fall River " the 'utter purity and spi1'it-being 'CnicagoUtinRite 'arehdiooeee. mainiam a Suriuner residewMe" ,410 Highland. Avenue-: : . ; ",:,.. ' Of. GO~; and a man whose GOd'i. Chdstthe Redeemer is th.e'~ , Bere in €onnecticu:t. Ma;. Czua.c. ill the actress and television ~ Fall'River, Mass. 'OSborne 5-71-5'1 no greater than himself. It is bhe such parish m the world. PUBLISHER ' difference between a nlan woo Tber~ are a nuntbel' of By. . . B~mal~, BarbaM Britton. ~ Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Phe.', ' 'will not exclude JDystery from l'U6siiul Or:t:hooOK, Churches ia CZUKOI'S lll'e Jl()C; C1MJholks. .Father , Wal~ , J.. '~Mee:atiIIa. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER his life and a man who whittles the United' States, but this one , , ' , down reality to ms o\\ln s~ is the firSt for ,Catholi,(lS. Thet'e . psator, Of St. :Metlvls, stud' • Rev. Da.nieIF. Shallo,o, M.A. ,Rev. John P. ,Driscoll dimensions. 'He other Byelorussion CathoDe pariSh 'witi btWd an eight-eleflBoo MANAGING EDITOR MONDAY--8t. lIgnathlS, Coa-' churches 1ft other parts GIl: 'tiM room school which will be ~ ' hi' lHM) ill ~ W8L :: Hug!1J. Gold~ ;;~fessoIIJl'-ne.'JRissiOO"o£'tiIeCbri6a',W ONdl'butfto'~ ,,~.,
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SSe Peter. and Paul. Parish, FaU ·Ri·ver, Has First Women's ,Club Orgarriizedin Diocese
Alaska Family' To Appea.l. Bus Rg~®~ Ca'se· JUNEAU
By Marion Unswortb.
(NC)-,A1aska~"fJ
SS.Peter and Paul .parish was founde d by. Bishop HendrTh:en in 1882 for EngIishspooking Catholics in its area of Fall River. With Rev. Patrick Francis Doyle as first pastor, the congregation used a nearby building for Mass and other religious services. but soon a :temporary wooden church was bu:ilt-ona site where garages are now located.
. controversial case !inv:plvi:rm·the constitutionality' 11) f
school bUB trnnspo$t~~n at .public expense for .nonpub1i1: .school students may ,be .he~ded for the U.S. Supreme ·~0U!t.. · Mterthe Supreme ·Courlof .Alaska turned down a petition for a rehear~gof the case, a motion was filled with the courit !indicating an·intention to appeal to the nation's highest .tribunal. The Alaska high· court last April ruled that such transpol'ltation was illegal. The case, known as' Quinton vs. Matthews originated in'1959 when Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Quinton 'sought to foree·· the , Fai"rbanks public· sohoo'l district It<> provide bus transportation for their daughter. .Judy .Kay Quinton, th~ ,an. p-;ye\\.r-old fourth-grader, from t/leir, Aotne fri...the suburban ·town ;o,f,(::pllege to Immaculate Conce.pt~on sellool ':In Fairbanks. In its A,pril decision, ,the· Sup.reme Court of·A1aska held such transportation is .a benefit. to. a ..nonpublic .school and. as such .cannot be accorded ~galiUr ,by the state. ~uoteB iD~l~ateg···
In the motion lor a rehearing, Edward A. Merdes, .attorney lor .If.lie Quinton familY,contended the Alaska :Con~tutional .Convention of 1955 intended that public :school ,buses be used 'to transport nonpnblic school stu. dents 10 !their schools. . lIt his brJef,Merdes enid be 'bad ~ontacted the 25 'living delegates to that convention 'and. that 21 answered 'tbe :conven'1iion ,did not intend 10 'stop thei/tate from lurnishing bus transporta1tion to nonpublic school children. He said the other four delegates took 'the opposite view. The brief .also contended that the SUpl'ame ,Court of Alaska was bound iblY the 'U.'5. Supreme oCourt decision igi;v:en. in the Everson 'ca.se in .:1:94'7. ·'1".his .de~ision ;up.he'ld :n New Jersey .law providing 1lranspciIltation for · Donpublic tsohoollihildren as an aux:ililllW .assiStanCle to the :student, not the school . ..
Three Par,is'h Sc'hools To DfIOJ) f,irs:t;GllClde . CINCINNATI ,:(iNC) .~ 'll'hree wge parochial .schools. ~ 'the Cincinnati ar.chdioceSe will·droj) , the -first ,gr.ade this !F.all. .' . . ''IJ.Ihe .pariShes are S~ Helen's, Dayton; ~St. \Vivian's, Finneytown; and 'Our Lady of. the Rosary, Greenhill.s. The latter two are inCineinnati sUburbs. A Shortage of 'teaehers, couplet9. with rising 'costs -and 'enrollment, was ·givenas tbe 'Pl'lnciplil TeBson for ·the move Recently "the Altohdiocesan School Board issued 'a regulation placing at 50 the maximum number of. children in a parochial school ·classroom. At the same time the board announced as a general policy that where any curtnilmentof parochial :sohool operations is deemed necessar:y, lower grades are to be dropped rathe'. 'than upper ;grades.
DenOM rru:~ Conviction Of 12 H'unga",iafts . UNITE)} NATIONS (NC) Sir LeslieMunrO,United Nations 'Special Representative ,01'1 the Question of Hungary,: has ,denounced Ithe .oonvictions ·of H Hunganian Catholics ,on .~ charges 11\ thatRed-~~. B;Q-
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REGGIO CALABRIA (NC) -The Bishops of Southern !taly's Reggio Calabria region havt! urged itsCatholit:
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SS. Peter and Paul Church was built on the' plar) of a . Mexican church , that 'Father McCahill"had seen andaclmii.-ed. Meanwhile, the rectory 'had been purchased next door to the church. Coimected 110 the church. as part of the same building,.are.. .a hall and gym"'; nasiuin, used for CYO 'and other parish ·activItieil." . In 1:908 iRev. William H. Curley became" ·pastor of S5.. ' Peter arid P.aUl. He .remained Cms ~Cll'~ ther.e for eight years. ". Father Kellw This year their statement saW. His successor, Rev. 'Thomas A. 'that "according to the clear.'and Kelly, was 'namedpastor in explicit teachmg of the Chureh, 1915. His .major project was Catholic. administrators. of pubbuilding SS. Peter and Paul lic matters 'aN! not permitted to School, completed .and opened collaborate with elements .00in 1923. Sisters of' Mercy. who pendent upon the above menreside at Mount St.Mary's Contioned parties, condemned 'Q3 v:ent, staff -the. school, which atheistic and materialistic." now has an enrollment . .ofapThe statement cited the 1M£) proximately 450 in eight grades. decree of the Sacred CongregaSister Mary· 'Grace, iR.S.M.,· . tion of the Holy Office, which principal, .has lbeen :at .SS. Peter forbade Catholics to collaboralte and Peulall mer teachinglif-e, with communism, and added: almost since the .beglnning ,of ALTAR, SS. PETER & PAUL CHURCH, FALL RIVER "This (collaboration) is a ithe schooL grave error and anyone assume3 'nhe 'scbool 'now ineludes '14 .pairs -to ,church, school and .rec- .Maxwell in 1953.. Assisted by a heavy responsibility who lightiRev.. William F. O'Connell ;and rooms, since two have been· tory property. Rev. John P.. Driscoll, he cares ly and presumptuously contribadded in the· 'basemen¢. lItis ~esentPastor utes to the weakening of the staffed by 14 Sisters. The present pastor, Msgr. for the ;approlltimately 3500 necessary dam 'of defense agairu:;t souls in the parish. In 1934 Msgr. George C. Jobn J. Kelly., succeeded Msgr. the declared enemies of God and The facing of the school !has Maxwell, who had served at ss. been renovated ,and water- the Christian religion." Peter and Paul as a curate, re:proofed lmder liis jurisdiction 'turned to become its fifth pastor. A'pprove Siste'frhood and many minor repairs 'com'He remained 'Until '1953, during :P,~anS pIeted on ihe church property. STA"TEN [SLAND (NC)-The which 'time 'he made many· reMILWAUKEE :(NC) - Jere- In 1957 the pariSh celebrated the .Sisters of the Divine Master bas .miah L. O'Sullivan, ·dean 'ofthe 75th :anni",ersary 'of its founding. .received linal approbation from Marquette U.nill/'ersi~y ,college of Another milestone was noted the Holy See and now is a CODIiourJUllism since 1928, ,has de- ·'in 1959 when 'the 'SS. Peter and .~gation of pontifical rite, it 'cided Ito retire (on Aug. .31, 1962. was announced .at the commu~ 'Paul Women's ,Club, the first ·(j)Sulliv.an, <61" has 'been ,Ill ''Such ,organization in the Dio1ty's U. S. headquarters here. The NQTREDfAMJE (iNC) - A. .$20,000 .research ;gr.ant. tbas !been · meIn:ber of the unill/'ersity facUlty cese,observed its 2Mh anniver- sisterhood was founded in Ita2y .made to Illhellrniv;et'sl!tiy of Notre since 1\924. .!He \Will 'continue ,to ~. Other pariSh 'or.ganizations :in 1"924 and established its first .to :promote .:an ov:er-all · teach on il part-time 'basis after ;include the Meri''SClub, C.Y.O., U. S. community in 1948. Itihas study 'to dev.elopmeansof <0011- 1he '1'emeS ;asdean. Boy, 'GiI'landCub '5couts,A:1tar establishments in five ·U. S. arch-In .noti'fyiing -the uni"Wlrsity ·af . and_Rosary .Society. 'dioceses and dioceses. _~er.ting the .sun ~ ~t -to electriCal enex;gyfor ,~ do,missiles . !his 'retirement plans ()~Sulllvan ,said·that Ibe 'wanted "to make . 'Mission' i· ·.and spaceships 'Il!! tbe .future.· ESSEN (NC) _ "The young The"grant was qnade~y th~ "dille uam;ition to 'the new :dean Air Force electronics systems , gosinoothly" and to. do all _'he ;peopleof '5t; Paul's ,parish In ·division:. 'Spec'i:fically the Notre · could "to .achiev.e the best . 1n- >this 'German city bave .collected Arthur .Janson, ·Reg. Pharm. Dam~ 'study wi~deal wJ1lh proterests of the' university and the o<:lose to '$4;000 .bypersonal'sacri· ductiQIj. .a.J;ld .Physics.;of s.ingIe . college 'of journalisni.." . fice,serenading and the collecDIABETIC AND SICK ROOM · crys~l surface ·em.itters. ,JILUj' B.C. ·.Degree tion of old paper to purchase a SUPPLIES The' reseandhWill be con·ManqlJette's .academic v.icetractor ior 11 mission in New 204 ASHlEY 'BOUlEVAttD duoted by Edward A. Coomes president, iFatherEdw.ard J. . Guinea. The collection .cmn'paign New f8edfor.d and .Ftdber.t L. .AnthoD'Y..boflh Driunmonc;l" S.J.,said !halt the ran for tlulee ,¥eaI:S. wy ,3-8045 phy.sics ,profesnorsat :~ 'uni- univexsity will use the time to ,.... versity. find a "suitable successor." 'WEAR Dean .(J)';Sullivar.. was-cited by Lay ·Mission Society !theuniv:er.si.ty earJier this year Shoes That ·FIt for ".teaching .excellence" and Complete To Expand Pz.ogram .was '''THE f~1LYSMOE 'STORE" knighted hy Pope John. He PATERSON (NC)-The Asso:was .graduatoo from Marquette ciation !£oJ:' International Devel,in Ul14 holds ,an .bonorary deopment (AID) has announced ;gree fr~miBoston .college and in .plans for an expanded pro~ram 1'957 was awarded a medal by of international education and '95 PlEASANT STREET Jlhe ·Catholic P.ress Association leadership training to ke~ UP Fall River 058·5811 with recent developments in the !for his 'contributionsto Catholic gournalism. lay apostolate field. AID is ·alaymission..,sending society· whiCh trains volunteers . CHRYSLER for a minimum of two years of service in mission l a n d s . P L YMOUTH Its future training programs, l'il'fcRIAL the announcement said, will .coni Iv\ .I;; sist offull""tune training ,here for VAL1ANT approximately three months. Sales • 'Service • Paris • fAUNTON, MASSo This will be :followed 'by .attendance for four months at the TMI! 8ANIC ON CroB9-'Cultural and Language IDstitute tit Cuernavaca, Mexico, MOTORS" INC. TAUNTON GREEN "MADE lFOR 'Drotbel' ,sPPclallzed Justitutes. .:. .13 ,MAIN ;smEET .i iJ:his .trainiQg would ,~pendOB - I 'PIdmCUUUl 'PEOftr IIeIDblBr of 1'edera1 Depoalt Ithe specifle field assignments 'to c; 'Hyan~'ii SP 5.4970 .lDsuraJIIce .(lor:PoraUon "be .giveR 'to \the. volun~
.....,The; Catholics, IQciu:aing',nine , jttiests, were sentenced·to prison "
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politicians ndt to cooperate witil communists or socialists or ~ eept help from th~m. The joint statement of tho Bishops was issued following renewed efforts by some factions .of· the regional branch of the Catholic-oriented C h r i s t i a a Democratie party to set u~ local coalitions with the social.ists·,and perhaps even with th8 communists in some places. The Bishops of the region ~ sued a similar statement in June, 1960, saying that cooperation with .socialists and communists carinot be supported by Catholica under any circumstances..
uniql.>earchit~,
.. ,said that. the convictions ,a:re . an "iDdiclitioJ that harsh .St,al,inist I
UtE ANCHORThurs:, July 27# 1961
BEAutt oNA 'BUDGET is what yow offer your neighbors. when you 'become an AVON ·representative. 'Take orders . in' your free time. fOT AVON'S many fine products. Twn those e.x.trca· ,hours Ulto $$$$ by colling- . PAU 'RIVR AIlSA OS a.s265 AmEBORO .AIlt!A CA '2-3651 aIOCIAON-STOUGHfOII .'$3434
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.Knowled'ge ofWa IIp'aper.Tr·lcks· ·Can Aid in Home Decoration
Staff Schools'. RALEIGH
staHed 23 religious vacatioe schools in NOrth Carolina. The college volunteers came .. the invitation of Bishop Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh. They took n three-day' orientation course u~der the direction of Father Robert McMat¥>n, vice';'chance~ lor of the diocese. and four Mission Helpers of the Sacred Heall't who' staff the diocesan office c4 1he Confraternity' of Christiam Doctrine. . Activities 01. the two-week 'vacation schools included" Bibli:' cal and doctrinal classes, Church music and Mass participatioa. and supervised recreaUon. N i n e other schools were staffed by members of the laiq of the Raleigh diocese. . Bishop Waters said the project was highly successful and added that he looked forward to a "more extensive and fruitful!" program next yeal'.
.ByAlice Bough Cahill . We are conscious that wallpaper gives a warm, cozy glow to almost any room· and each year. Daner" l~ - ~ ~ ._'" more' attractive. We generally think Of using wallpaper in the traditional way - on walls and ceiling. VIle w",vV'~le' i-t because. i t generally' . In a young girl's room in this covers a multitude. of sins,. same home, patterned _ paper such as uneven walls, or un- was used around the headboard' sightly cracks. But a home of her bed, while other walls were covered with the patterned paper used' around the headboard.. Cut-.outs of the pa~terne.d paper were also put around the mirror over her dressing table. Another place where' you might "splurge" on 'a little more expensive Pilper would be in a 'small powder room, where yOtl paneled room wouldn't need ·much. '. with gay wallpaper you add The WaY you treat your walls ·warmth and incan enhance your entire room. 'terest. If you How you .treat the background depends upon the effect you select a pattern wish to create. The choice of th a t has a . llIlatching, fab. color in wallpaper is no differlI'ic, by using 'this fabric for ent from the choice of colQr iDa drapes, you add unity to your' wall paint. Your color scheme determines lI'O~:'a bedroom that had pan- what color to use on your walls. eled walls, .we papered the ceil- In fact, if you come upon a ing with a bold pattern and wallpaper that has great appeal used matchir.g fabric for drapes to you, you might adopt your and even the bed headboard. ,color scheme from this paper, Some people, though, do not . just as you would from a fablike to use matching fabric and ric. wallpaper, and if you feel that How to Choose way, we'd suggest drapes of a You can get plain wallpaper~ solid. color.. or' paper with patterns, either You'll find aU kinds 01. pat- as back-ground or as decoration. terned wall coverings on the Strong contrast' in color market today, offering unlimited should, of course,be limited to decoratih'g possibilities. Some relatively small ·areas. A large are not inexpensive, but a liottle room can stand a greater- degree goes a' long way. You'll be able of contrast thaR' oaR a small 'to get suClh interesting effeetil .room. . """ In' selecting paper, considei' ·that we're sure you'll!eeI JU"""- ttle amount of, pattern in the re.St ·:tied in the expenditure. ,of the ,room.' If rugs, upholstery . For instance, a scenic paper or draperies' '.stress ,pattern, a en . one wall in your hall will plain. wallpaper is usually ad'practically furnish it, and you'll visable'; Also,' it i1!·wise· to rebe so pleased with the effect .member that therE' is Ii differthat' you will not mind the cost. ence between the sample and Too, using it 'on only one wall, its appearanee on the wall. The uneims you won't need too. ~arge pattern On the wall' WIll look quantity.. (\Ve'd pai.nt ..th,e . smaiIer, while' the color will ether walls and trim: to. matcp. .looK .darker tha~' in samples. .' ·.the background Of the wa;ll.,. Consider the kind .01. Iurm-' · .~per.) . ture you use - with .fine,. , Hallw~ Treatment .. grained woods, such as. mahogLet us describe how one ha1'l- ,any or 'walnut, a 1!mooth paoper 'way ~as treated. A ~arbelized and wall are desirable. An open· paper was used on one wall, and grained wood. such as· oak, may a hand-painted Chinese . scenic take.a coarse-grained paper· or insert in light tints was placed . waH finish,' can large rooms against it. With a panel mirror. and large pieces. of furniture. A on bhe opp~site wall the effect masculine roOm may use rougher was striking. ·teXJtu~ than a .relpinine room.
that is wood-paneled, one often dismisses the use of wallpaper. · N eve r the _ ~ . ' less, it adds individuality to a . i'OOm. By. Papering the ceiling. of a wood-
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Oblate Secukw InshtuM Expands Activities PITTSBURGH (NC) - Two members of a secular institute for women, the Oblate Missionaries of Mary Immaculate, have come here to carryon Confraternity of Christian Doctrine and social work in Immaculate Co~ ception parish. The two belong to an institute founded in 1952, which now hae communities in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Mi_ nesota and Texas. Since the members do not belong to a formal religious community, their title is Miss rather than Sister. They dress in a conservative fashion of the day.
STUDY iN ASTRO-GEOPHYSICS: Among the 33 college' professors of physics and astronomy attending the Georgetown University Summer Conference on "Recent Advances in Astro-Geophysics" who visited the U.S. Bureau of Standards were, left to right, Sister Mary Constance Loeffler, Mt. St. Mary College, Pittsburgh, and Sister Rose Francia of D'Youville College, Buffalo, N.Y. NC PhotQ.
Mount C-armel. Procession H'onors Woman Unable to Participate - CHICAGO (NC) - Picture a 'usual route,- turned into a side 95-year-old woman, sittfnl~ sadly street and passed slowly in front .·in a chaIr in the sun, unahle f~ of Mrs. Priga'no as she sat before the first time to join in a pro",: her home, her lips· moving ill cession' She had participsLted in prayerful gratitude. for 67 years. Said Father Salvatore DeVita, That was ailiftg Mrs. Anna P.S.S.C." pastor of Our Lady of Prigano on the day when Mount Carmel church: "Mirs. thousands took part in the' an-· Prigano took part in every Mt. nual pilgrimage'and out?oor ·.Carmel procession since the deMa,ss -honoring'. Our Lady oi .votion originated 67 years ago, Mount Carmel ~ suburban. and we felt that the best way to Melrose Park. bring her spiritual solace was bu But Mrs. Prigano's grief soon .bringing the procession to her." turned to joy as she 'heard the Mrs. Prigano is the.only surmarchers, their voices raised in. vivoi' of those who helped erect Italian hymns, coming closer. the chapel where t'he annual The procession, abandoning its observance was bol'fl.
Parish to Honor Late Cardinali
Whet About You?
, , '. A Franci5c~n Siste.r:! GIVING YOURSE'LF to a completely dedicated to, 'tlhe salvation of souls • • ; through prayer, work, sacrifice and joy •.• by using~ your talen.ts· as a Nurse, Labor-atory andX-R~y Tech':'. niciaR. Secretar.y, Accountant, Dietiti.an, &eemstress,' Cook, as well IWl ill other hospital departments and in a new extension Of. our work ia the Catechetical ami' Socia! Service Fields •. '.: .There .. No..Greoie;; C~ritYl. ~ife
Trinitarian Fa.thers
LACKAWANNA (NC» - A parish hall named for the late Alojzije Cardinal Stepimlc has BOYS WANTED for t+.e been buHt in a parish whose adPriesthood and Brotherhood. CHICAGO (NC) - A 15,000- . to establish' a tube-rculosis. sani- ministrator is Uae Cal'difl6l~s Lack offvM! NO impedimile trip should be enough to . tarium. 'However, because of 'the iormer secretary; M ..... tire anym.an, but it didIl't .~lo"", ,~~.ighting'betw~n nationalist and The formal dedic~tioft ,C1f. t\IM 'down Sister Maaw Aquinas 01. . communist .forces there at the Cardinal Stepinac Me'morilll AuWrMe toe · Hong K<>ng. .. '. . : time, the' nuns 4ecided: instead ditorium will be held O~t.· 29. P. G. (Wri_giviR/l' "your age-.-.-to, Sister ·AQuiIllWl Cbermed news- ~ go..·~ .HoftC 1(00g,' .,Bri~ The' auditorium is part (If. Our VocaUon Director. 767-30th Street. Roell: Island,. IIIi'!ois•... for ,further . Lady of the Sacred Heart ~ ·BaItiMeN •.1 AU. 'men here w1th' her -captivating;·.. colonr.:.._.·. ' .. . , . ... , detaHs of thia happy life:) , · lllIl.ile and equally captivating· The' ·iaftitarl_is 'suppOrteti ·J'esus Croatian parish, adllnini~ "tered . by. FatherSteph4!ft'" "lrish brogue. Medica~' superin·,. - by a 'local civic organigation . . · te~dent ·of the Ruttongee Tube~- . government subsidies. Ill, all' 01. Lackovic.·· . ': «miosis; ..sanitarium )n ~Ong'Hong·K6ng, .,...-:wherethree Diil~' ,,'Father Lackovtc, ~ ·Cs..e ~ , ... , \. -, . . . . ; ]{oQg,she, is to~rin~. ",ed~cal. lion, persons live ill'l.:.ail 8~ 01., ·.fheUnited Statei. ill 1941ii, iIa~e . ~ . b«o. . n8JMd· :fOl' · ieenters. in the .united State~, ~180 ·"sC:i.\,lare :.~ il e's :.2:sistelr lhehall teYings~"'·lffe · \' consultmg w~~ c.~st· spec*- ... Aquinas' said ··tbe.e·are 'ooly'l,- :,Cardi~al Stepin~;;'io:'k~~ h;' . ' hal Estate LoaM, ., . ,t Ws.- ....' . 'i';'~ " 200' b~il"for~tubercula'r'patients' ·.-memory and hls, ~etl68ge alive." Stepinac,' Archbishop : '~..' • ." . ' J .' '• . , :'., ~ ,Sister Aq'ulilas, +I; ·tOW ,N- including 360 .•. the 'IWttoii~ of Cardinal ' •• <' ".,' t .• ".. .,. ", ...,f '. . • a..i"~ ~ V.aa..... QU'" Zagreb; Yugoslavia, diied' ill . .. :'portersthat tuberculosi'!:.is ~e~;~n:i~ri~ .'::"', ' , ' " , ' February, 1960, iltteralinG8t ~ ~~r:st health. pro~lem, iii. l;IopC., _.. Sister A~iriafJ'wa6 grad-ooted years '01.. persecution,' inC1ud'i~g . ( - ~V• • &.OC•• ~ i X;ongl .especl~l~ aIfW~..,~~"·; National .. University' ift: imprisOnment, by t~ cOmf:nunHJt ..• I CORV."ieRt Locl;ltiOft& : clren.;· "~'". ' : " , . ' " "', .i: '.. Dubli~,~art(i"(.aiter 'iookgraduate regimeo~ ~ Coun~r,:.. .' ~ "OhiCago bes about' the same 'work in. cil~s( disea~s in Ire":' .~ population ·as Hong Kong," she llmd; Wales;' and ·.J!ingland. She HEW iEDFORD 1 said. "Yet in. Chicago only eight is one 01. two'". nun.,Qoct<>rs who ·TwinNUM tic Observe ! out of .100,000 have tuberculosis. .are members 'of' the' .American ·Golden· Annivers'ar~f 'f~ ; Gur figures in' Hong Kong' run College Of .Ohest PhYsi.cians. She Mc'GUAN (NC)..:... Twin nuns · more than 10 times that num- ·re.ceived a world health organi- will'observe their 50th an:niverber. It' is hard to isolate the. 'zatioo'fellowShip in 19&2.' Sflry in. the Sisters.of Notre Dame · reason, 1;)Ut overcrowding and : .... . ' .'. " '. : on Aug. 28 here in Wisconi~ii1. · . the constant surge of refugees '-fitehbvrei GMsfDiocese', Sisters Mary' Petra and MallY " contribute to· the: problem.'" ; .:: ... ~ . ' " .: Paula, 75, will spend their !(olden JMIe. .. Many peopkl ar~ afI'a:~d, to.rep'ort· .flr~t~P!Jpql·Volunteer anniversaries at Ii new m<)th~r ~tihe' disease be~ause tbey·feM'':· _.' . W.OR~ES~E~ (NC)...,... Bi~ house here, about ~ mMes noritll : Mle loss of their jobs." ,. '. " . :Bernard J, Flanagan of Worces- of Milwauk~. . · Choose Hong Kemir:: ." ,. (ie~.has ..accepted· th~}irst Papal j Sister Aquinas and i9' ottier"~ Vohult~ ,from, the ':I>iocese .01. DRY.. ClEANING : Columban ,Sisters were .sent· to···· w:~rc~ter 1:0' ~k:·. ill Latin' Gad : ~ Ohinese mainland 1ft '19~ '. ,~~i~ . .> .FUR STORAGE " . . .. : . . DiaRe Gui1met of Fitchbur.g, Locate Ancient Altot:'.. 'w,ho was graduated in: 1961 from MURCIA (NC)-A fifth-cen";' ': t}1e~olle~e'of Our :padyof the CO,N.D;.T!O~UNG tury tomb located at Jumilla .has . '. Elms, C~icopee, Mas.s., will leave ~tL~A~~IP{~, been judged by the head of the late this month to begin worklil~tMNlen$' JI. Ili)~uwm AWiJIXIQ,nlil .D. [Q)OUJlC~ archeology department of the .ing ". in Tulancingo, Mexico - a 34-44 COAoRRet Stre,~ University of Bonn to be the first mining town some 100 miles ~~~ ~~<e©~[Q) ~Uo [p~[L[L l~OV~(%~ M~~~o. Tounton VA 2-6161 Christian 'altar'ereeted 'inSpaiB;, northeast oiMexico' €i~
Irish Sister Recounts_ Constant Battle With 'TS' in Hong kong .
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. :Take~HomeJ~resents Important f a'rtof Ev~ry' Tou ristTrip
T'hurs., July 27, 1961
Nun to Address NCCW Institute
· B y Mary Tinley Daly
"Ma'am, pardon me, but would YO\1 mind telling ~ What size dress you wear?" The question came as a surprise from one of the delegates at a national convention in , . Denver. "No offense meant, .Ma'am, H the rangy Texa» hurried to explain, shifting kom Maine $0 Mexico. frornone foot to the other Encamping Girl Scouts are tik~ a small boy caught raidsaving their allowances to puring the cookie jar, "but chase a box of salt water taffy
)"ou're just about the same size as a "take-home"; Boy Scouts are doing likewise. Honeymy wife. Well, maybe mooners, entranced with the deE'laine's a mite lights of the boardwalk on the taller and not Atlantic and the Paciifc at lakequite so •• •n shore resort;; throughout the "Thick around country, think nostalgically of the middle,?" I the' wonderful wedding their' finished for parents have provided... him. "Let's shop for something that "Well, I will always remind them of us!" wouldn't put it The "take - home," "send'filat way," he home" habit is one deeply rooted grinned. "Here's in American consciousness, a her picture, soft spot, if you will. Goodness ma'am." , knows, this instinct is exploited Tex showed me a colored picture of Elaine ,to the nth at every tourist center. - so slim, red-haired, beautiful "The stuff one buys when and young that it made me blush to think of even being away from borne'" one of the above-mentioned conventioneers considered in the same class. sighed. "We know we're paying "I'd like to takfo her a dress, one of those Western ones with twice as much as it's worth and if we lived in· Denver we'd 'tihe silver braid and the £lounoes. Like that red one over never go fc>r it. Somehow, though . . . " He gave the clerk there." He pointed to a bright a $10 bill and got but a few 1'ed. "Think she'd like it?" cents change and a bag of souvI knew that Elaine would enirs. "My own sori - Boy treasure anything such a devoted !husband would bring but Scout, going to be an Eagle red, with that copper colored Scout next year - brought me, a paperweight, 'Souvenir of Athair? lantic City' and it's going to be "Size 12 would be about right," I suggested, "and here is a fixture of my office as long the same ';h.ing in. blue. Bet it as I have an office." would make these blue eyes of That's the way it goes: a trip !hers shine like sapphires." away is incomplete without a Blue dreSl; was purchased. present for those at home. Take-HOme PreSents So the house fills up with Those conventioneering spec- mementoes from Quebec, from ialists were. thoroughly enjoyOcean City, from Kansas City, ing the one afternoon free from Miami, St. Louis, San Francisco, eonferences, trooping from one Mexico City- and now DenDenver store to another, conver. They take up space? ferring with 'one another for the O,K.Each Qne means, "I was take-home presents: lariats, thinking of you!" bolo ties, nuggets of "fool's told.... Indian-made belts, moccasins, Indian dolls for small daughters and granddaughters, t'Wo;'gun holster sets, western NEW DELHI (NC) - The ha~ levis, westen,' sport shirts -aU' the Wild West parapher- Ceylonese government, which nationalized 720 Catholic llCh{)()ls Dalia. There were teacups and silver last December,has now ruled that catechism cannot be taught epoons, head scarves and handkerchiefs with "Souvenir of 'witho'ut a permit, even outside llChool 'hours. Denver" imprinted on them, At the same time, according boxes 'of Colorado stOne canto reports from Colombo, the dies. .. . government of Premier SirimA sophisticated buneh, this. avo Bandaranaike has also ruled Nevertheless, they went wild that foreign teachers of religion over displays in "gift shoppes" must leave the island when they never would dream of visittheir pl'esent residential permits ing in their own home towns. expire. "I1'hey were frankly aild unThe' Ceylonese government ashamedly "tourists" shopping has also asked religious personI.or the take-homes that would nel living in predominantly answer the expressed or unBuddhist areas to migrate to express·ed, "Wb:at'd you bring Catholic districts, it was underIDe?" stood. Done EverYwhere The same thing is beifig ,done, Catholic Gypsies Hold IIlOre to the delight of the' givers Aan the recipients, at vacation International Meeting IIe8OrtsfrOm .~attle to Miam!, TRENT (NC)-The first internati6hal religiou~" issembly of CathoHe gYPSie& opened at the shrine of)lon~na dt:PifM! near here. ,., ,. ,"~: '., ',.'''': .".
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CHURCH UNITY CANDLES: Sister Carolinda, OSB, of St. Benedict's Convent, St. Joseph, Minn., removes a Church Unity Candle from the mold. The Sisters are presently promoting prayers for Christian Unity through distribution of these Church Unity Candles in Christian homes and institutions. NC Photo.
Nuns Community Makes Candles To Spur Prayers for Unity, ST, JOSEPH (NC) - A nuns' community here in Minnesota is rna kinO' candles to spur prayers for Chu;ch unity. The Sisters of St Benediet are making Church unity candles, which they hope Catholics will burn in their homes each Thursday, thus joining Pope John in prayers for the union of Christendom. The Church unity candle was first used at the Benedictine Abbey of Niederaltich, Germany,
Cathol ic Schools in India Now Need ,Permission to Teach Cotechism Meanwhile, - it was learned that Ceylon's Minister of Education has decided to build new schools to replace schools situated on church grounds. Aii investigating team was ordered to make on-the-spot inspections of all schools located close to pla~ of worship. The team was told to specify which schools are so situated ,that their grounds 'cannot reasonably be separated from those of the adjoining chul'eh. CQlombo authorities said that temporary schbOl buildings would be constructed to 'repLace such schools pending appropriation of the funds necessary for permanent school buildings.
Villa Fatima
Helper;::of Villa 'Fatima, Taunton, will sp(msor their, fifth an','nualla wu festival on the convent grounds Saturday' and Sunday, Aug. 19 and; 20;Proceeds will " benefit the no.v,jtiate building fund. ,Mrs". FlolISie Thadeil'r. Long"HnflBof~ravans,'moved ,.aeneral .. ehairman. along the, Italian" highways OR the dayspdOr: to:~he assembly's opening ·"»earinf· gypsy tribel from Yugoslavia, ·Austria,Germany, Italy and France. , The assembly opEmed with the Way of the Cross. TwO 'French Sam. J. laGasse, Man....' priests and one Ita'ian, chaplains of the gypsies in their countries, 1872 ACUSHN~ AVE. conducted the assembly in the near Brooklawn Park course of which many, were baptized, confirmed and received NEW BEDFORD, MASS. their first Communion. Many weddings were also performed.
ROBERTS HARDWARE
MAILING IN NiW aEOfOH DIAl 3-1411
T PROVINCIAL: , Mother Elizabeth Anne haa , I»een named first provincial . of the newly erected Ameri... Proviftee of the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa (White Sisters). NC Photo.
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Use Sticker Campaign Against Sunday Sales NEW ORLEANS (N C) Churches in the New Orleans area have distributed nearly 100,000 car stickers bearing the words "Stop - Don't Shop on Sunday." The project is sponsored by the Interfaith Committee to Promote Sunday Closing. Fifty thousand of the stickers have been distributed by New Orleans archdiocesan churches, 40,000 by the Greater New Orleans Federation of Churches and 10,000 by the New Orleans Baptist Association. Msgr. Charles :T. Plauche, archdiocesan chancellor and chairman of the interfaith committee, said there has been a great demand for the stickers. He said he has received man,.. messages endorsing the aims of the committee. ",~
Dime-A-Week Plan GREEN BAY (NC)-Through a dime-a-week bank plan, 50,OO(J members of the Green Bay Dioc_ esan Council of C8tholic Women support the Sacred Heart television program which is telecast each Sunday on st,ation WBAY-TV here,
BARDAHL MAKES YOUR CAR RUN BEnER At New Cor D.al.... and Service Stations
,I¥erywhere
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'DONNELLY "'PAJ'NTING
'HOmemade
,. C~NDle~ CHOCOLATES
SERVICE, Indus-tt'iat Institutional Painting 'and Decorating
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Fairhav.n Auto Theatre
135 Franklin Street Fall Riv.r
150
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FAIRHAVEN, MASS.
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the scene of many important discussions between Catholics and non-Catholics concerning unity. Each Thursday a unity candle is lighted at the abbey, It stands as a symbol to all faiths that the goal of their work is "that they all may be one," Thursday was c,hosen as the day. the candle is lIghted becau~ It was on a Thursday that Christ instituted the Holy Eucharis~ and offered His prayers for unity. Abbot ,Immanuel Heufeider of Niederaltich abbey presented a Church unity candle to Pope John. It now stands in the Pope's private chapel. The candle is used widely throughout Europe. It burns in homes, churches and schools. Non-Catholics and Catholics alike use the candle in their prayers for unity. Last year the Sisters of St. Benediet at St. Joseph began this European tradition of the Church unity candle in connection with their prayers. Join in Prayers The Sisters light four candles each Thursday: in the Sacred Heart chapel, the convent refectory, the college department and in the high school. Members of the community and students join in these prayers for· Church unity every Thursday. The Sisters have now made it possible for everyone to bring this practice into the Christian home, They' 'arema'king 'and selling candles designed espe'cially for 'this purpose.,
MIAMI (NC) - A Dominican nun who has received nationwide recognition of her work here among Cuban refugees, will speak-at the leadership training institute of the National Council of Catholic Women at Spring Hill College, Mobile, Ala., beginning Saturday, Aug. 5. Sister Miriam, who recently observed her 20th anniversary as a member of the Sisters of St. Dominic, will outline the plight of Cuban refugees who have poured into south Florida seeking refuge from the communist regime of Fidel Castro. Sister Miriam has served as the superior at Miami's diocesan Spanish center since it was Qpened almost two ,years ago. She was cited early this year by the Miami NEWS as one of Dade County's "outstanding women of 1960." The honor was the first of its kind ever given to a ReligioWi in Florida. Three montns "Her Sister Miriam was one of six women honored by the Greater Miami chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary sorority:.
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5Isten"Of Poor Report on First Braz.H Mission
THE ,ANCHOR-
Thurs., July 27, 196"'
Sees Communist Youth Movement Revival in U.S.
Thurs., July 27, 1961
cheers .greeted five Franciscan Sisters' of the Poor when they arrived -at Pires do Rio, Brazil. This w~s disclosed in a report sent by the Sisters to Cincinnati provincial headquarters at St. Clare Convent in nearby Hartwell. The five nuns - three from Cincinnati and two from the New York Provinces-are their sisterhood's pioneers in Brazil. Their assignment: to operate Our Lady of the Angel's Children's Home and Dispensary and St. Anthony's soup kitchen; to do other' social service work and give religious instructions in the town of Pires do Rio. Initial Problems Learning Portuguese hymns by eandlelight (power failures are eommon); picking up a speaking acquaintance with' Portuguese, taught by non-English-speaking Brazilians; adjusting to unfamiliar food ("What a struggle it has been ... !") climate, and to primitive sanitation-these were some of the initial problems that faced the cheerful missionaries. They left New York in December ,and went first to the Colegio Sao Francisco in Anapolis, Brazil, for a six-weeks course in the language and customs of the country. Irmas Franciscanas dos Pobres, as the Brazilians call them, made a big hit iii Pires do Rio, which is not far from the nation's reeently built new capital, Brazilia. N_lmpressed "lit was simply touching," wrote Sister Cunjgund, "to see the large square in front of the church packed with people ... and our little orphans all dressed in their best." ThE. mayor of the town, Evan Ferrida, gree'ted them formally, and a Mass ill the parish church climaxed the I'eception. And the Brazilians impressed the nuns. The report said: "The simplicity of the people's lives and the whole appearance of the countryside make .you feel as though you are walking and living in the time of Christ ... It is very interesting and educational to llee the different ways in which people live, learn, and conduct their affairs. But one thing is outstanding - the i r warmth and hospitality."
back, according to a hearing report released by the Senate Internal Security ,Subcommittee. The organization spearheading the comeback is named "Advance," according to Herbert Romerstein, a former young communist who testified at the hearing. Sen. Thomas Dodd of Connecticut presided over the hearing. Marvin Markman, executive vice-president of Advance, also gave testimony at the hearing. But it consisted mostly of his refusal to answer questions by invoking the Fifth Amendment.
SUMMER STUDENTS: Pausing between classes at the Summer session of the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., are these Sisters, all from the Fall River Diocese. Left to right, Sister M. Paul Raymond, C.S.C., St. Anthony's High School, New Bedford and Mother St. Laurent, RJ.M., Jesus Mary ,Academy, Fall River. Both teach business subjects and are enrolled in the graduate school of' business education at Catholic University. Next three, all Holy Union Sisters, are Sifgter Mary Richard, first grade teacher at St. Mary's .school, Taunton, enrolled in the school of education; Sister Eugenia Marie, teacher of algebra and French at St. Mary's High School, also Taunton, studying advanced French; and Sister John Mathilda, teacher of science, Spanish and religion at St. Mary's, studying physi~ under a grant from the National Science Foundation. IT'S COOl,ER THERE: Greenland's icy mountains seem to attract Sister Mary Laurita, RS.M., seventh grade teacher at St. Joseph's School, Fall River, as she carries a full schedule of Summer school classes at Catholic University of America, despite Washington's heat and humidity.
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SOMETHING NEW IN CHAPELS: Smi Ie of gratification lights the face of Mother Mary Judith, F.C.S.P., standing in front of the modernistic chapel of Providence Heights College, a college for Sisters, located near Seattle, Wash. Mother Judith, provincial superior of the Sisters of Charity of Providence, and Mother Philothea, dean of the college have worked almost ten years in the Sister Formation movement ef which Providence Heights is a direct result. NC P h o t o . · .
Dedicates College to Advance Sister Formation SEATTLE (NC) - A Catholic college unlike other Catholic colleges has been dedicated near here by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delega,te to the United States. It is called Providence Heights College, and is designed for, operated by and attended by Sisters. Eight archbishops and bishops from the western United States and Alaska joined the Apostolic Delegate and Archbishop Thomas A. Connolly of Seattle for the solemn blessing.
Red Court Sentences Catholic Teacher BERLIN (NC )-Officials 01. Western powers here have protested against the conviction of a Catholic teacher for political activity by a court in the communist-ruled sector of Berlin. Anna Mrugalski, 72, was sentenced to 10 months in jail. She had already been under arrest for eight months. She was accllSed of working for the Christian Democratic party of West Germany.
Archbishop Vagnozzi offered a Solemn Pontifical Mass of thanksgiving in the college chapel after the dedication. The only other college of this type is Marillac College in &to Louis, Mo. For Be~ TraiMntr . The college, a dm~ct result of the Sister Formation Movement for the better training of Sisters in education, social work and nursing, will give a bachelor's degree to the four orders of Sis-tel's partcipatmg-the Sisters of Charity of Providence, the Dominican Sisters 0 fthe Congregation of St. Thomas Aquinas, the Dominican Sisters of the Co~regation of the Holy Cross a'nd the Sisters of St. Joseph CYf Newark ~ Bu'ld' lI.mpus I lD§8 Credits will be required ill philosophy, theology, psychology, sociology, political science, the physical sciences mathematics, history, French, English and education as well as a fifth year of special studies required by canon law.
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Missionary Says African Freedom Good for Church
CINCINNATI (NC) Exploding fir e crackers, pealing church bells, showers of flower petals and loud
WASHINGTON (NC) The communist youth movement in the U.S., dead four years ago, is making a come-
'Died' in 195'1 Eomerstein said the former eommunist youtt> movement, known as the Labor Youth League, "died completely" in 1957 aft e l' Soviet Premier Khrushchev made his secret speech in Moscow denouncing Stalin. He started that Advance was formed in February, 1960, in New York City, together with similar organizations in various parts of the country. There has been "frequent" connection, Romerstein said, between Advance and the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, which now claims to have student chapters on the campuses of at least 37 eolleges and universities. Hysteria CaUfle Asked what makes young peopIe' become active in organizations like Advance, Romerstein replied: "Perhaps the best single word to describe why they beCODle communists is hysteria. They becl)me involved in front youth activities _which build them up to a pitch ... "When young people get in'¥<lIved in the communist-led marches tc, ban -the bomb or in the 'Fair Play for Cuba Committee activities, and so on, where they just run through the streets shouting, they have no idea that the communists are leading them." Romerstein also said that once youths berome active in the Communist party or in front organizations, they believe sincerely that they are helping the U. S" not harming it.
THE ANCHOR-
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Included in the campus buildings are the novitiate and juniorate reSIdence halls, administration building, provincialate unit, classrooms, a gymnasium with a swimming .pool, library and the chapel whIch seats 400. Fourteen windows of chipped stained glass, set in cement, were made in France, They depict the Seven Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin Mary' on or,e side of the chapel and the seven spiritual and corporal works of mercy on the other side. Th l'b h ' 50 000 e I rary as so~e , vo~umes. For t~e phYSIcal wellbemg of. the SIsters, volle~ball and tenms courts are prOVIded. Mother Mary Judith, Provincial Superior of the Sisters of Charity of Providence, and Mother Mary Philothea, dean of the college and second national chairman of the Sister FormaHon Movement, have directed the Sister Formation program at Seattle University which has been a demonstration center for the new curriculum for Sisters. They will continue to guide the program a,t Providence Heights.
General of the White Fathers of Africa, said here. The head of the 3,600-man mission society said he believes the African will not be made over into an American, European or communist image. "In the political field, the Africans will have to make their own way," he said. "Democracy as we know it isn't for them. Nor will Khrushchev's way do. They will have to find a new way. The Church can't do it for the,m, they must do it themselves." Independence, continued the missioner, "is not only beneficial but necessary for the Church in Africa. lot will make the Church more African and enable it to penetrate more deeply into Africa, spiritually." Violence Possible Father Volker said that short of armed intervelltion, he believed communism would IWt take the lead in Africa. He said violence could oeeut again since violence often erupted during times of political stress whether the men involved were white or black. Angola, he said, must ultimately be resolved in favor of the Angolans. "The only solution for these countries is to prepare the people to take over. Why aren't they capable of now taking over? They haven't beeR trained," he said. He said if leaders were not trained by the West they would be trained by Moscow or PeipiD30
Austra Iia Reports Catholic Growth SYDNEY (NC) - Australia'. Catholics numbered 2,111,126 in 1960, an increase of 60,002 over the previous year. The figure was reported in the new Official Yearbook of the Catholic Church 01 Australia. The new figure follows rises' noted in only 10 of the country'. 28 dioceses; the remaining diocesan totals are still based on the 1954 national census. The year book also reports that 424,347 children attended Catholic schools and colleges throughout Australia in 1960. an increase of 20,340 over the previous year.
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THE ANC.
-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 27, 1961 r:'
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By Most Rev. Fult6l'l J. Slteett. D.D.
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.
The coneern we have lor the poor in oSher parU of the worl4 depencbl on onr own anworldline88. Separatioa from the spirU 01 the world is the fint'l'U.le of service. No one can possibb be interested in the missions in the Congo or Korea if he is concented principally with the pleasares Which surround him at home.
.Bishop of Reno
Great art at first sight is nearly always repellent to the untrained observer. It creates, by its very nature, a condition akin to shock. If it does not offend certain moral misconceptions, then it is almost sure to upset the popular aesthetic smugness of our It is more doubtful whether, synthetic world. It might save in rare instances, good art even be said that good prima has ever been received by the facie evidence of the worth public, in this or any other coun-
try, with open arms and intelli01' worthlessness of a given gent understanding. artistic product is furnished by Fact" of Experience the hnmediate . This is not to condemn the reaction it public; it is simply to state a fact arouses. of universal experience, with its If everybody concomitants in the fields of likes it at first literature Ol' science or philosglance, then it ophy. is probably good FIRST AMERICAN: First Perhaps, indeed it is just as and may actuAmerican elected Superior well that this is so, for it creates ally qualify as General of the Basilian the necessity of fighting for what ,reat. Most peois worthwhile, of overcoming Fathers, Father Joseph C. ple dislike being opposition, of winning the ultishocked. And so Wey, C.S.B., was chosen mate recognition that is of final it follows that by delegates from Basilian value. they ~re content Hous~s in the United States, A good artist that would decwith indifferent or positively orate a church and find that his Canada and France. NC bad art, especially if it makes work meets with the unqualified the usual meretricious appeal to approval of the congregation at sentiment. large might well question Root Problem whether he is losing his grip or Continued from Page One Herein, if we mistake not, is simply riding the crest of a fad Magistra.' It is a worthy succesthe root problem of religious art. which is even more dangerous SOl' to 'Rerum Novarum' and The deplorable stuff that is so than disapproval or obscurity. 'Quadragesimo Anr,o.' Like them, eommonly pawned off on u.s as Withstand Criticism its influence upon modern "Catholic art" is guaranteed not But the case is legendary. The thought and economic systems ro shock the innocent, though it may cause the angels to shed few really good churches which will be profound and beneficial. have been built in this country As a major social document adbitter tears. thus far have had to withstand vocating' justice, it. defines a It drips sentiment; it is balm the assaults of ignorant criti- cause in which people of good to pious souls. And woe betide cism, long continued and of great will of every faith and religious those disturbers of the religious persuasion can share. peace who insist upon the un- violence. Only when it is finally borne "Your discussion of private heard-of consistency of offering home to the critics that the work property, the dignity and rights only the best to the Highest! is of extraordinary merit and of working people the freedom Championship of good art dethey are fortunate to possess it and responsibility of labor and mands either callousness or a kind of heroism. It must be pre- does the carping cease. Recog- management associations, the nition might not have been won, function of the State in safepared to meet unreasonable critguarding the common good, and icism, scorn, and all manner of but a kind of grudging respect. Why should this be so? The the need for personal initiative unmannerly ridicule. question is annoying, but it does in social activity elucidates prinCause Worthwhile not differ essentially from the ciples that we ion the United For this excellent reason it is more general query of why truth States have sought to incorpornot recommended that those af- should be so hard to· grasp Ol' ate into our own social and eeoflicted with thin skins 01" ex- goodness so difficulJt to attain. nomic ideals. Having spent much veme sensitivity embark upon Beauty is the third member of of my time before my present anything like a crusade to lift the metaphysical trijl.d whereby appointment as legal counsel to rthe standards of Catholic art Ol' man lives his rational and aes- labor organizations, I know at appreciation thereof. thetic life, but it is equally sub- firsthand the necessity for such Similarly, the lack of a sense ject to the same relentless as- clarity of purpose and firmness of humor is a distinct and prob-' saults of animal nature, the same of vision. In speaking to the ably fatal handicap in the· crumassive indifference of human whole world of these essential sader. inertia. Truth is obdurate, good- matters, you have made an enObviously, this narrows the ness exacting, and beauty alduring, contribution to the welfield of candidates, since most ways elusive. fare of all humanity. ertists themselves ·are underAs most of us are content with "I would especially deem standably sensitive and few are noteworthx the inspired passages gifted with a deveioped spirit of half-truths or even with easy error, and are satisfied with of 'Mater et Magistra' that deal the comic. The woods are full of bruised partial goodness, so we are hap- with the problems of poverty, souls who have battled for the pily reconciled to what appears want, political suppression and to be a superficial prettiness, violence to human dignity faced cause, broken their lances, and without bothering our heads by so many of the world's milretired with bleeding heads to over the missing substance. And lions. Economic systems that brood thereafter over the doubtyet, with the shadow, rather serve man's wants by observing ful doom of humankind. It is the than the ~ubstance, we perish; the principle of just distribution price that has to be paid; the de'Spertd and Be Spent' and charitable use of wealth, and cision must always be taken Thaf is why great art demands social systems that reflect and beforehand that the cause Hi sacrifice - sacrifice both from protect his digl,lity. should be the worth the candle. those who ·create· it and :from' .flowering' of man's communal those who seek to apprec~&te i~.. life. 'l2his ~ tru~r today than If the Church of America is to' ever before since science has rise to her full stature as the new raised our capabilities to SIIICh '. '''eldi!st 1iaughter" 'in the years to'extraordinary hclghts. !:~e,!!J.er~al4~-be }0uu,<fP1~,_:,. ·'~.Y~t:, e~$:l4ljll will be read who in their maturi;ty of under- Jor many generations. I prostandi~g and in their zeal fOl' foundl)" believe iq wisdoM IlRd theG1bry'of'God and 'the per-' '\"isi6h Will heIP'io change the fectlon of His servke, are willcom'se of history toward creMive ·ing, in the sanctified phrase, "to fulfillment of. man's gifts rather ~nd themselves and to be than wantOfl destruetioR IIIi. ~t?' for whatever vision of them." 10vel1.ness Is vouchsafed U8 here below.-
Labor Secretary
CINCINNATI (NC);..,--A' onetime' mayor' of an Italian. town .wil(. j)e·'.ordained a· priest· here ~ext guttd~~;' .' . : ...
. ReY, )fro Albe'1't Marrljl,F.~.C;J.,
Who. isbe~iiIga LIBRARIAN A W All D: William Ii. R~y.: .director of Marquette. UniversitY .Iib:-· raries in MilwauJ~ee, /has. been awarded the Clal'ence Day award of $1,000 for "his enthusiasm for books, expressed in numerous novels, articles and speeches, and fQr being a creative literary artist." NC Ph0,J.
priest :dt the VertmaTlitlier~> had b~illinlut
HnO!1siy elected mayor of· his ' home w,Wn, Filago di 'Maine, in ~fie ;pfovinee of Bergamo. BlIt be resigned in 1956 after .six inonths in off.ice and began studIes for the priesthood. . Rev. Mr.. Marra has llItudied with the Verona Fathers in this country since 1957 and will be ordained in old St. Anthony's Church here by Bishop Angelo Barbisotti, F.S.C.J. Vicar Apostoli<: of Esmeraldas, EcuadQr. 0
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Church's Attainment of Full Stature ~equires Sacrifice
Schedule 'Ordination Of Former MClyor .
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Prelate Confirms 85 In p'rison Chapel
CHICAGO (NC)-Eighty-flve inmates. of the Illinois state Prison at . Stateville were con· firmed by BishC'p Martin D . ',McNamara of .toliet .in the pri90ll chapel. ' Several priS()ner~ who already have been confirmed acted as sponsors for the 'group, about half of. wb,om are eonverts. This · is the tenth. year Bishop McNamar,a has confir!Jled at the ifWti: tution; · Solemn _Ben~dicl«>ft imparied by Bishop McNamara fOllowed the ceremonies. He was auisted · by Father John Whelan, Catholic cbaplain at the Illinois State Reformatory, Pontiac, Ill.. and Father Joseph Sense, ehaplaia at the Illinois Security Hospital in MenaN.. Ill.
When Moses petitioned Pharaoh to let the people of ISI"llel go out of slavery in order to Sll£rifiee to the Lord, the diabolkal tyrant made many counter proposals. One of the four that Pharaoh stipulated was that Israel should sacrifice 1;0 the Lord ''in the land"; they were not to go out of Egypt. Moses knew very well that the people would not sacrifice as long as they were posseslled by the spirit of worldliness of Egypt. Hence, he said: "We will do what the Lord bade us do, go out three days march into the desert and offer Him sacrifice there." The essence of all relicion is separati_. 8t. Paul Did to the Corinthians: "The Lord say. to us, separate yourselves from them." The sPirit of the world iI at enmity with the Spirit 01 Chrisi. What is the distance the Script\ll'eB recommend to us? Nothinc lellS than "three days journey." What a beautiful symbol we have here of the deliverance afforded us b.y the Death, Barial and Resurrection of Our Blessed Lord. We can never induce you to make an offering to the Holy Father in order to bring Christ to Africa, Asia and Oceania unless we have first spiritualized your soul. That is why we never ask you to give; we ask you to sacrifice. We do not want to help the Holy Father and his Society for the Propagation of the Faith without helping you. We do not want to separate you from your money unless we have first separated you from the world and united you to Christ. Your response to this appeal will be a token of whether or nm you have gone "three days journey" from the fleshpots of Egypt. GOD LOVE YOU to CM. for $5 ~'In fulfillment of my 'promises to send $1 a week for the Missions, I have enclosed this donation. I do wish I could do more, but may1)e someday I will." •... to Miss F.R.M. for $3 "In thanksgiving to St. Jude for favors received.~' . . . to E.S. for $1 "A token of thanks from a teenager once filled with selfishness and egotism. You have given me the gift of concern for other people. May this help the suffering souls in the Missions." . . . to Doima ·for 25c "I.am four years old. Please buy a loaf of bread for .the poor Chinese children."
You carry the Blessed Mother's image in your heaort, but Why not show it by wearing her GOD LOVE YOU ·medal? The ten letters of GOD LOVE YOU form a decade of the rosary as they encircle this medal originated by Bishop Sheen to honO!." the Madonna of the World. With 'Your request and a corresponding offering you may order a GOD LOVE YOU medal in anyone, of the following styles: $ 2 small sterling silver $ 3 small 10k gold filled $ 5 large sterling silver $10 large 10k gold filled Cutout this column, pis your sacrifice to it and mail it to the Molt Rev. ·Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, !II Y.. Ol' your Diocesan Director, RT, REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street~ Fall River, Mass.
DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUl Invi'. ,/,OUft9 girl. (1 ....23) to ....... ill Chris". vast vineyard as an Edition.:. Pres.. Radic Movie. and fe'. vi.iOfl. With tltelle modorn _.... ...... "'issionary .Sist.rs bring Ch,is'·. Doctrine 10 all. regard'••s of race. color or _cs. for imormation write to: REV. MOTHeR SUPERIOR !IO Sf. PAUl'S AVE, BOSTON 30, MASS
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/II. Dentist it! tt.e Chair Beyond the Time Barrier Big Gamble, The Big Night Broth of a 90y Bernadette of Lourdei Capture That Capsule David and Goliath Days of Thrills a"d Laughter Desert Attack Fabulous World of Jules Verne Face of FIHJ Fidelio Flaming Star Francis of Assisi Frontier Upriaing Gallant Houre Gorgo Guns of NovarCAll klvasion Quarte4
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Left, Algftt and CeRtN Libel Mighty Grlliodwa Misty Modern 'Rmee Nikki ~!e ReK ~allport
to CltlrlCil Pepe Power Among Me" Queen of the Plratw Question 7 Romanoff and Juliet Secret of Monte Cristo Serengeti Shall Not Die Sf9ry of Mankind Swan lake Tammy Tell Me T_ Ten Who Dared The Loot World The Boy Who Fo¥MI $100,000,
The Last Dawtl The Magic Boy n.e Amazing Tra~ Man The Sand Castle Th'e Snak.. Wom_ The, Sword and th- DrtIf/Nl There Was CI CroollOCl! Man Three Came to ,1EIIt Tamboy and the Ch~ Town like Alice Trouble in the Sky Twelve Hours to Kitl Twelve to the Moon Warrior, Slave Girl Watch Your Stern ' When the Clock Strll<OII Wild Dog of the Norlh Voyage to tho Bottom of the Sea You Have to Ruft Faet
P AVLA PLEADS FOR ENGLISH TEACHERS: The Salesian Fathers who a;r.e ill eharge of this bi-lingual school, "Colegio Cardenal Spellman, is Quito, Ecuador, havt asked the Papal Volunteers for Latin America (P AVLA) for five Catholic College grad. uates, between, 21 and 45 to teach Engli-sh for two y.e&1"8, w,itoout salary. NC Photc. '
Unobjectionable lOl' Adults and Adolescet1tM
Atlantia, tho Lott Continent Battlo of tho SeMc Bridal Path Cago of EvH Crazy for Lovo • Curse of the Uncroo.l Devil'. Disciple Dr. Blood', Coffin Ferry to Hong KOR{J Four-D Man Frantic General DeHa Rovol'() Homicidal Holiday For Love""
A-3 Ado All in A Night'a VoI'ort Angry Hills Anna's Sin Big Deal on Madon_ Street Ilreakfast at TiffClnl'~ Come SeptembflQ' Cover Girl Killor Cranos Are Flying Crimson Kimono Ena of Innoconce Exodus Fact. of Life Fast and Sexy Fever in the' Blood Five Goldon Hours four Fast Guns I'ou, Skulls of ~ Draloe
Homo is the Hero
She Demons Ten Seconds to IW Illegal The Canadiam Journey to the Loot aty' The Cat Burglar Magnificent SevCft The Cow and I Marie Octobro The Fiercest He~ Miracle The Naked Edge Mountain ~ The Secret WaytJ Mummy The Tormented Operation Bottleneck Trapped in Tangiera Prisoner of the Volga Village of the Damnoo School for Scoundrela Walking Target Secret of the Purple Reef Walk Like a Dragon Se"en Ways from Sundown Wild and the Innqc~ Scream of Fear White Warrior
I Aim at the StCH'tl
GOLD MEDAL
Unobjectionable fO!' Adults 400 Blowa
French Mistreu He Who Must Ole House of Intrigue Magician Make Mine Mink Man Who Could CMaie Death Murder, Inc,' Mu.ic Bol\ Kid Odds Against Tomarrew One Foot ifi Hell Once Moro With Feelifttl Ikiru OperatiCHl ~ Possessors Ring of Fwo Rocco and His B?OfiMr Rue de Patio Spartacus
Savage Ii,"ocen~ That Kind of WomCllSl The Big Bank Roll ' The Captain's Tabfo The Unfaithfula The Young One Third Voice "Three on a Spree Tiger Bay , Tunes of Glory Touch of larce..., Two Women ,Up.tairs and Do~ Why Must I Die Virgin 1.lands Virgin Spring (printe ~ in the United Statel\l Wild' Strawberriel Wonderful COUA"""
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"evor Taite Conely from a Stranger (deal. with m ol••tatlon dron and,' ollhough tre ated without aensotionalls m, could effect., UpOft yOUl19 and uninformed lHlleas accompanied by lis,ing carrie. warning. "Notice to parfllltll. No child wiU unleu accompanied by you."
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"like Trying to Slide Through a Hole in
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And Quiet Flowa 1M> 'Doll Happy Anniversary Riot In Juvemfe ~ Boal Genoration Hood of a Tyrant Road Racel'll Beloved Infidel Hercule. Unchained Rookie' Between Time and EterMtv Home Before Dark Room 4S Bimbo the Greet Horron 0: the Black MU&OIIRl Room at !he T..,. Blue Angel House on the Waierfront Sanctuary Blood and R_ Hiroshima, Matt A _ September Storm, Born Reckles.s I. Mobater Sex Kittens Go To Coti9 Bramble Bush Intont to lCifI SilJfl of the Gladiatoa Breath of Scandal Inside tho Mofla Solomon and Shebca ' II Started With Same Corne Runni... Bucket of Blood Buttorfield II It Takes a Thief Same Like ItHct Can C~ Jack the Rippev Sons and lo_ Carryon, Hur... Jan Boat Squad Car ,Circus of Horro,. Last Mile Studs lonigoil C,ack in the Mi"... Let's Make Ilow Subway I,. ' ....... Cry for Happy lIl' Abner Summer ,Place ~ ,Daddy-O Macumba Ilow Surpril!' Pack~ " Desire in the Dwt Mania The Curse of . . Eighth Day of the WMlMiddle _ 1M> Hight 'Werewolf' , Electronic Mona'" Miuile to the MOOlIl The Ente,taif>er Elmer Oanlty Millionairel6 The Marri~ge h~ " Female Naughty Girl The Minotaur Female' and the l'1elh Never Sa' Few -The Right Approadl Esther and The King Of Love and '-t The World by Nig6le Five Branded Wom... Porty Girl ,Three Nlvrd.reuM , Forbidde' Fruit PatinuM High ~, Thunder ift CarollN' ", frci;,li~n'ltei';'s DaughiW Perfect F u r l o u g h ' Two, Fa- "of"~ ~ \' FrOM H.II To ~Ierni" Pharaoh's Wom_ ,Tunnel of Lo~ From the Terrace> Portrait of A Sin_ Two -lov.. Gangster Story p,etty Boy flo;..l' Virgin SacNfk. .GenQ K~ ~ Prime Time Wha,t ~i-ii:e' Mu," GI Blu.. Private Liv.. ., ..... Wh..... the BoY' ..... Girl ift _ _ M and h. 'Where;th"Hot Wind . . . . Girls Town: .. Puch.r Who Was That LacI;f Goddel6of Lov. 'Queen of W!.cke4l Go ~ ~ , Go Iol';'ked' it! Ihe w..II1 Rat Race , ' . . ~jfe for 0, ~ Goodbye Again.' Rally Round. . . , ........... Wild River G;eat St; Louis R.bel Breed Wind Across tt.e ~ Robb';'y' " Revolt of the SIo¥ee W,orld of Su&y Guns, GIn. aMI C;i:o....t_ Itlae CMd Fall ,of Young Captives' ' , , it #"Lege Diamond \IovJoo JellMl " C~Conde~ Adora~ , ct"'ature. MademOiselle Oobette Ila¥eaII And God Cr_ted w-- MagdQI~na .' Ra,,,nnG Baby Doll 'Mating Urge , Sava~ Eye, Bed of 0 Miller's Bea~ WIfe Sav~ge Trit;lngk> ~, The Miss Jvlia Seven Dea:cUy SIRe Come Dance with Me Mtsou ScOrred Desperate Women. 1M Mom and Do@! Sensuallta, ~ ExineaeO 8orIgo Moon Is Blue . SavcigeJ .' , Flolh Is' WOok Naked Night She Shouldci'Said . . , french, The Nona Sins of' the' Borgia.' F,uits of Sum..Never on Sundoy Smile. of' a Svmmer MigIilJ,l Gamo of Love Night Heaven Fell 51e"o Garden of Eden No Orchids fOf' MfA Strol~ii, .... I Am a Camero Blandish Third Sex Illicit Intorlude One SummOf' . . . . . . . . .aTh,ee Forbidd,eA ~ La Rand.. , Oscar Wllclo ThriH That Kills, The 10 Plaisir Paris Night T,ials of Olear WItiIoI lotlore from Nty W1ndmIft Passionate Summer Violated' R.lane, Junglo Godclc~ Ploasol ~, Balzac Wastod Uvoo --o,nd !!liD n.ovo Gamo P-ot BoulllG (LoYero cl rcl~ Birth of Twioo ~ovo I. My P'Cfuod.oR l7J'ivo~o Liven c1 WaYl of ,L~ve Lady ChalterloY!ll Lo= Adem c"d rxo Woman Witho~ ~= Lovar'. Ratul':;> ",rivelo l'ro,:>"r~ 'iI~u;le ane! tiro Dc~ ~-=::l bvoro, r~ cxo:~ cJ t.::~ ':.r
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MALTA {NC)-Thegov·ernment of Protesta,nt' Great By'Msgr.Gleorgle G.Higgins Britain,. iwh~ch ruies' this ,Dlll'eetor, NClWC SoeialAetion iDepar.f;ment Mediterranean island; 'aids . In August, 1959 ,Armour :andComl'>any,seo(l)nd~argest .private 'Catholic schools and ,pro:meat packing 'company in the United '~ta:tes,sigm.ed'~ vides a Catholic public school y.ear ,collective bargaining agreement WIth the tw.0~rnnClpa.l '...!lYstein d:or Malta's .overwhelmunions in" the industry, the United Paoong'house, F<oodand. · ingly .catholic.population. . There :are vir.tually :no ,secular 'Allied WorkeI:S,and the tomation 'Commif.tee 'comes te schools 'on the island, 'e:x:cept fOil' · Amalgamated Meat Cutter.s one :general 'concluSi6nwhiChis . a handful of schools for children and Butcher' Workmen ·of then broken ,down into :Six :speof BritiSh servicemen. Private North America. ·The 'mog,t cllie recomm~nda~ons.'r.htgensChools, .most of ,them r.un QY re. '. . • d .' 'man eral 'conclusIOn :IS that Only ,ligious <orders, educate ,about hIghly pUbliclZ.ed anm Y through a 'coordinate!! :approach :one-:£ifth of all Maltese. attendways.the most lIl1portant ,feature in which public policy and pri'ing ,schools, technical schools or f?f thIS con~r~ctva1ie actionmutua:liy :reinforce ·uni'l1ersities. . ,wasa pr?VlSI?n one another can the employme~'t Education on Malta is <there,fo,ra .tnpa~'l,te problems oftec.lmoIigical change " fore 'both pubiic-'Catholic ,aQd ,~ u t.o m.at Ion . 'be ,met; Collective ,barga'ining by . .private-'Catholic. In ,the ",ordS' of .itSelf cannot'.fulti' 'Solve these e CJ m mIt tee, ,an official report of the .BritiSh · ~ 0 m p 0 s~ dof; ·probl~ms." Colonial Office, Maltese .cl1ilfour represen, . O f..... . ....._...' . , __,,.,. , dl'en ,have .Bir.ight 'to attend "free 'tatives of the . . . . 'liUecom~Il1,''''''''' 'S .s1XSj)~~ 'company, t wo reCommendatlO~s the most un."go'vernment schools Which are Roman Catholic.'" ." . trom . each of p()r~~t; of al1.,ls ~at~d~ua~ ',the two unions, ec.ohOm~c g~owth Is~ss,~ntIal,~ ~ix Higl!-&hoo!s """d'n imparthe"natIon 15 to'prosper and if 'The ,government operates 114 a I achairman. ,unempl?yment .is . ,to , be; avoided such 'Catholic primary schools, ·.This committee '.,'. and ,relIeved. _ with "56,1'89 pupiISand. sIx 'high , was to study the prob1eql, ~f, au- .. " 'This growth, ""'-high, depe!1ds · schopls ~/ith 3;528 ,pupils. Pri·tomation (the tota.t process of o~a combination C?f. priYl;lte ini, , mar'y.eiiucatio~ Jlas :been ,comJoi'iiiodernization., includiiili teCh- . tia#vean<i public' pGl1Cy,muBt ;pulsoJ:Y :S1~ce 1~46. _ ,: 'nological change ) and ! refer its 1be'fast enoug'hto absOrb ,thecitrprivate schools 'have a T'he fhidings to the company and the rent excessive unemployment, 12000 MILES ''Il0 MISSION FIELDS: A New York·tota!enr~llment o~ 17,497 pu?ils. Unions for' their consideration the ral'id additions to the labar '. . .. . . . . . . ,UntIl this year they .recelved iii connection with bargaining force, the workers -displaced by ,couple, , J ~~1c: ,and Dallothy Bmns, mspect thelr~0'Y'll -43-~oo~ . '.' finan'cial help from thegoyernover a new contract in 1961. modernization in an increasing The first progress report of number of industries, and the in- 'ketCh, shortly pefore lSl:dlingwith jt .tp.,tbe .Marshall ;rsland~'ment,to lthetune <of about $3,000 · th'is committee was· made 'i>ubli~ ,;cre~~·productiYj~Y."~workers where they will eng~e in lay missionary work under the yea:~, ·or ,about 17 cents ;per :I.' J esUil'Ot ,l''I;' a th ers. B. 0,'th 'ecame 'b 01'1, ~ June' i9. It- simply jUstifies '·not-'displaced." .." ''!'.. " . direction o.f ;tine' ,oonv~rt s .to ',pupil. . . .Now t " .the t',government th' ,soh'~~1_ . . _'" +:fh' . prODllSes suppor e, vv.m the hopes which were placed in '.Problem llsUrgent. ., theCatho1.1e 'faith in 1,9,16, 10 years cuter .11 ell' marrIage. :at ,a ,rate of $42,000 yearJy:. the committee by many studen~s Labor and m~nagement mem- NC' Photo:' ' . . . .-....., 'llhelgovernment (of Malta:has of industrial relations ·when It be'rs' of the committee do not >been 'of !the old colonial tY.Pe--a was established a year ago this fully agree as to the most effec'governor and an 'appointed 'execAugust.. ..... . .tiV'emethod or" methods ·,ofatu'tive council-since Btitain SUB. . "Mutualb' Advantage~. . ,taining .this ,required r-ate of BONN :(NC)- 'Germany'aPope J()hn• lpendedthe Maltese' ·constitution The report reveals that. w'!:ule economic groWth,They ,do agree. newspapers front-paged the new T~e en~~1ica:'l's 'greM' ~ength ,ill 1959. A new constitution ill the labor and management rep- however on the'1inmensity and social' encyclical of Pope J10ha ~well'over 20;000 'words ·m'tl1e. ,UDder .discussion -in .,London. resentatives on the committee the urg~ney of1lhe problem. and devoted' a generousamoullt English verSion - ClearIyxuled stiil have some far-re~ching,d.lf- which :they illustratebi·pointing Gi space :to it. out the earefulreading and· ~til1 ferences of opinion, nevertheless 'out .that between now and 1970 Almost without exception they more careful ,thou.ght req~ed' - they unanimously agree that ,the 13500000. more jobs will be emphasized 'Pope John's appeall~OreIthe ~ommunistand soclal-, work of the committee has been "ne~ded merely 10 .keepa.breast . "fot a' just' distribtition ,of prop- . ist ,new:~s Icould co~~ent I mutually advantageous and con- of the net growth in 'the' labot" erty. They gave second plac,e to adequately. '11he,~efore editi.o~) itructive. force. his declaration that rich COUll- of ~he <day fo~owmg 'the encyclI:. "":The whole eoneept of a tri"Without taking into ·.account tries have a juty to help under- cals publication hadto content· pa'r~ite committee meeting regthe present unemployed or those countries. themselves. the 'fact most "pa~' ,'SA,!'V, ularly in a non.-crisis a~mosphere who will be displaced :by tech- . developed' . With a 'reportfor 1>1 1:he 'ofpu'b, ']'. the ~elt of Ham~urg sai~. tile lication. together' With selected ~.ian effort. to appr0l;\ch mut,!aI nological change," they observe, quotes ..f:f-om 'the, encyclical 'INVESTED' 'IN p~blems in a more constructIv:e "25',Ooo-newjobs per/week 'will encYdl(,:ars~J11ph!ls18 on. aid te unaerdeveIopoo' 'Countries as a '.' . , ." ' C ATHOliCCHURCH fa$hion is new," ·the report have to be' created just'to' take moral duty "may be regarded.. LONDON (~C)-B~itisb newsp~Jnts out. Care of the growinglabor'f!?ree." :the heart of tile encyclical" papers played ithe I~ial.enc~u- . !AND :HOSNJAl BONDS ,,::~'Whether such an appro~ch. EneouraglDgcAtmosphete . .' cal· Mater ,et .iMagisln stralgbt, I 'lla ,Units IOf ,$500 'Of' 'More ~~ll prove to have endurIng 'The Annour A!UtomatiOD'~pomMADRID (NO). ~. Spanish.,. . on., inside',.'pages, wJ:thol+t .. ~,I . v~}4es is yet: to, ..~~e~rw.ip.~mitti!:e;:·''has':'ilot,andwi1i','not, newspapers left no doubt that torial comment beyond the nor- I ~~,~~n truly be saId that the d.l9:"SUpply rea~y answers",!tO ~ they 'consid~r,~he~ew,social e~- mal background 'material in itbe I ' . ' , ., • ~~~.s.lons have been .frank, un~n,:," pl'oblem of ·:technological· unem( ,MInneapolis, JMinnesota cyclicaiJ. the iwept of t~e w,eek. news stones 'of 'the 'eneyclicaL bi;t>,i.ted, and in an understa~d~fl', p~o~ent. But the fact ti~t the and perhilPs, ,of ::th~Year· " .' .. .COPENHAGEN ,(NC) '~eta~~~te ~orlllAUoD v~in. :.' . '~': members of:the Committee' are In most ·papers. news of. the ,newspiulersmpredominantq' . l ,,:~,~ ~egree of' experi,?le';lta. " ;'C09perati~ly studying the~Prob . pUblication of Ma.te,retMagl.~,~a Protestant Den~l1k .gave sub- : ;" 'CRA'~LES A.- amtPIIY dJ~.usslOn· has ~n possl~le !em in au atmosphere of, frank:- took 'up th., e.e..D,t.'lTe fr.ont paIge.. stan~al covera17e ito the soc:.~·" ·Jl,egl.Stered Representatift .. through -the CommIttee willch ness and good wil'l is moSt en- IDhe mon~.c'hlst.ncwspaper ABC~n~y~li~f!Li.ol Pope Jdhn. ,;:;:" " ' i l 4 5 PondSu-eet'" '. W({Uld. not ~ll>,:be,Pos'slble,Couraging. . :':-'. gave t~e fl!.~. ~ve pages ~ the though almost aU relegated it " ' Winchester, Mass. bi~"Jhe more rIgid .contractur~l. Their fIrst progress report i8 encyclIcal,>'·" " , to inside' ages. I.. pi\. 9-2696 . . p , ~t~ticture. If great solutions' have a,tribute to their sta·tesmanship. PARIS (1'!JC) .. -:i"~" IIIl4 . 'l1le ~~theran daily Kristeligt not' been found, it' may 'be be- I' recommend it very:highlY. many French newspapers w.e~ , Degblad .put news <of the encycli- ,iNtlme __.__,_._. _ ~.~Se the problems permit onl7 Copies may be obtained by . taking a long Bastille holiday cal OIl the front page under the .AddreIs _...._ _ ......_ _ p~rtial answers.". . writing ,to Mr. Robben W. Flem",The very. £act ~at. labor ~ . trig, :Executive Director, ~our when Pope John published' hill headline: '"p~pe 'wants workers' CIb' _ -'long~awaited sQcial encyclieal to wield influence and shaI:e '-J ~ap.agement members of thIS AutomationCommittee,JUmour Editori81 responsewH slow Bind profitII." . committee havel:ieen able to and' Company' Chicago IIlionois. Ilot very enthusiastic. ,jI. • .;-'..;. •• discuss problems of .mutual in'. ' . . ROME ,(N~ ,-Weak dislilpterest which normally could not Opel1l Queen of He'a' ..... be handled .constructively in the • . . r~3 proval .was the immediate lrecrisis atmosphere of collecti,ve Confraternity Ce"ter \ ! action of Rome's communist and ·bargaining is reasoneno"~h tQ . ',BAY SHORE (NC) - The socialist. press : to the social EIOhope that the committee "will be . seventh center in the U,S:of the! '-cyclical Mater et Megisba fII. continued and that it, will be Confraternity of Mary. Queen ef 'WHOLESALEAUTOMOT~.V:E copied in other major ·industries. AU Hearts·" has been set· up a:t ~DismisseCiTime ancli Collective bargaining has aa 51. John's cathedral, Fr~ . MADISON' (NC~ - TheW. Indispensable role to play. in the' Caldf. eonsin Assembly has passed aDllL field of labor-management relaFather' Roger BtL Cha.rest, sent to the Sena·te a bill to POll"rtions, but wherever possible, i1; S.M.M., national director of theso mit public school pupils to bet .• GENERAl 'tiRES • ,DELCO SAnERIES ought W. be supplemented by confraternitk!s, said that Bishop dismissed from school one ho_ new forms of labor-manageme~ Aloysius J. Willinger, C.SS.R.v early one day ~cb. week '. ,PERFECT rellCL'!: 'RINGS cooperation fitted to the partie:-' . of Monterey-Fresno~has appoint- religious instruction. _ 'IWR - 'NEW .HDiORD- NY-ANNIS -NEWftORT ular needs of mdividual CQI&o ed t:he cathedral's ,~, Msp. panies and industries. Francis X. Singleton. as local For your Building MatericillJ The report of the Armour Ali- director of the cent8. '6(Mot!" sciya..:.. , .. iI'urpose of the:contr8traienlity Needs and Choice Build"", ' . . !Be Thrifty - lie WIN . ... 'in the ·GreatGr Ta....... For 18 '<to help the members live aocI . ANa . M·you.- Meatmonfor' 'CI" EDMONTON (Ne) ...!.;Catbolilt ~ the Marian, WQ" 01. lfja parents will ~:.~ week heN u'the 'easier aDdtbe moftl . . DAVIDSON'S beginning MOnd8Y~~ Aug. 14, cure! DlI'~anS to' -'tifJ' tibemlMacGreg~ 'Bran~ I ' " learning how to" teach their chil- selves." CORP'ORA·;ff.: I dren catechism. The catechetical '.~":c':H:l."IICM:lIClJoCH::Hlc=tQ~ .jj I:;.;.::,h~~ ii;"',the' !~a~ti~9" school has organized by VA 4-:7847 - VA 2..... · priests of the west deanery of ", IRedJSc:otch.·, Ham /fIoY,orU 'I.' ,':"v-:"' 'I~ 1 ,the Edmonton archdiocese in an ',::,.:: 1:,.·;" '''WINNINGf.AVOR.-,',.,,,~, effort to,prQvide for, thereHgioWl .... WliTH ITS FlAVOR- II instru~tion' of .Catholic . children . .• ;. 4 ~. ;.:r-. "": ...... iii runii areas in AJberti
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Schedule for Summer Season . Dennis
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OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 10, 11:00 A.M.
,POPlPonesset -
West Barnstable
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST Masses: .Sunday-7:30 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. First FridaY-7:30 AM., 5:30 P.M. ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST HALl. Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30 A.M
East Falmouth ST. ANTHONY Masses: Sunday- 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 Noon Daily-8:00 A.M. Benediction: Sunday 7:00 P.M.
East Freetown
p.'"
ST. MARY'S Ma8lltlfl: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11:00 A.:M. and 10:05 in lower Church Daily-7:00 A.M.,' Saturda~e--:&:Oe .A.•••
.
Sandwich eORPUS CHRISTI CHUIWIIl M&lIses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10:00 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M.
Sagamore
SACRED HEART
:M&8sefl: Sund86'-9, 10:00 A.M.
Mattapoisett ST. ANTHONY Masses: Sunday-6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 1'1:00 A.I'£. Daily-7:30 A.M. . Tuesday: Novena-7:30 P.M. ROUTE I) DAMlIEN COUNClIL, ll{ OF © lHlAn 1l6lasses: Sunday-9:30, 10:30 A.l\'I.
N@UilG'M«:[k®fr 01lJJR lLAIDY OJF TIHIIE llSlLTIl: Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M. and 5:S!'l ~ Daily.....,7:00 A.M. Benediction: Sunday-!7·:30 P.M..
Oelli<.
South Yarm<t»IUJft'1hJ ST. Pros TIENTDII Masses: Stmd'8y-7, 8, 9, 10, 11:00 A.M. Daily-7:00 A.M.
EdgartoWt1l ST. ELIZABETIll
Masses: Sunday-6:45, Dally-7:30: A.M..
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BenedietiOAC ~ PA
OrleaM
In... JO~N OF ABC . Sundar-T, 8, I, lCl, »-'OCD A-J& DalJy-T:30 A..M.
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.. 'VISIT OF THANKS:. Tn Taipei, Ling-Yuan, 15-y~ · old Fonnosan lad who lost both atms in a factbryaccidemlast year, shows his friend, Maryknoll Father Michael ()l., Connor, how capably he can use his artificial limbs. T~ boy waf! sentenced to a life without hope until Father QJ2.., · Connor stepped into the picture and initiated a mission. · of mercy: which resulted in. tlw youth being outfitted wi-til'new limbs. NC Photo. •
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ST. lPATiUCK Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, H), 11, 1,2 Noon Daily-7, 8:00 A.M. Devotions: Sunday-7:30 P.M: MiI'8culous Medal NoveNl-Molldee7:-V:SO . . .
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ST.. ANTHONY ~-8:36, 9:30, 10:30 A ....
OUt .LADY 'OF LOURDIHl ~ hndaY-::-7, 8,9:oq A.M. upstaiw . . . IG, il:OO A.M. Downetakc Da'l1y-':30 A.M. ~ Saturdeu 4 to !>:ge 7,:00 to 8:30 P.M.
~da.y-8,
10;00 A.M. FridaY-8:00 A.M. @enf.es6ieoo: Saturday-Ii to 8:08 F.&!l. Sl.tIlda~ before Mass
~®[]'frh 1Jli'M[1'@ 01l:Hlt lLADY OW PIERlPETUAlL IHI!l!}W
Messes: Sunday-7:00, 9:00, Saturday-8:00 @0nf~ Saturday from Sunday before
B~UJfHF~
OUR LADY STAR OF TIm smlA Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9, 10:30 A.M. Daily-T:30 A.M. Benedicticm: Sunda~-V"l3O P . )l[.
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ST.. JOHN'S CHURCDII Masses: Sunday-6:30, 7:3(), 8:30, 9l30,' 1J01lJO 11:30 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M.
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ST. THERESA'S CIIIUReIll Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:10, 11:00 A,I\(.
Wareham
Hyannis
-
I
falmouth
ST. FRANCIS XAVIER MaBBe8: Sunday-6, 7, 8, 9, }O, 11, W·Nooa· . Daily-7, 8:00 A.M. Benediction after Last Ma88 om ~
.'
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South Dartmouth
OUR LAIDY OF THE IHIllGIHIWAY :Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:3(), 9:30, 10:30, n:~ ~
ST. THOMAS Masses: Sunday-6:15, 8, 9, 10, 1'!1:00 AJtI.. Daily-7:30 A.M.
-..~·11
Provincetown ST. PETER THE APOSTLE Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11:00 A.M., ~ Daily-7 and 8:00 A.M. Devotions': Sunday-7:00 ·P.M. First Friday Masses-6:30 and 7:30 A.M.
Falmouth Heights
I
I
CATHEDRAL CAMP OUR LADY OF .THE ASSllJMPTIlON> OOAPEila Masses: Sunday-7:30, 9:10, 11:00 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. Benediction: Sunday-5:OO P.M.
ST. PATRICK Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11, }12 Noon Daily-7:00 A.M. Benediction: Sunday-7:30 P.M. Novena: Monday-Miraculous M~, 'Il:8'OP,a
'1I
j
ST. JUDE MaSses: Sunday-8:00 A.M.
Chatham HOLY REDEEMER Masses: Sunday---':6:30, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00. 1<1.:00, 12 Noon Dally-~:30 A.M. Devotions: Sunday-7:30 P.M.
i
'~
Santuit
OUR LADY OF ~OPE Masses: Sunday-9:30, 10:30 A.M
Central Viliage
I~
COMMUNITY CENTEIt Masses: Sunday-9:15 A.M. ConfessioIHl heard before Mass
Centerville. 9UR LADY OF VICTORY Masses: Sunday-7, 8, ·9; 10, 11 A.M. Daily-7:00, 8:00 A.M.
.~~:.'~ . .•. . I ;r>
Osterville
Onset ST. MARY-STAR OF THE SEA Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, l1:30A.M. Daily-8:00 A.M.
j
CARLETON IIIAlLL Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30 A.M.
Buzzards. Bay ST. MARGARET'S M-asses: Sunday-'-6:30, 8, 9, 10, 11, :D.2 Noon Daily-7:30 A.M.
15
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Assonet ST. BERNARD'S Masses: Sunday-7, 8:30, 10:30 A.M. First Fridays-Evening Mass 5:30 P.M. Holydays-8:30 A.M., 7:30 P.M. Confessions before every Mass aoo Saturday3:00 P.M., 7:30 P.M.
'JIH'E ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 27,1961
11:00 A.M. A.M. 4:00 to 5DOO
lPl~
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W~$t HC1lrWDd~i) HOLY TRINITY masses: S1llooatr-6:30, 8,. 9, W, I-I, :11\ N!ooa' DaU,.-T·:OO A.Moo
Dennisport UPPE~
COUNTY ROAD OtJB LADY OF ANNUNClIATIOJ( Sunday-T,.8, it, Wl, U:OO A.M.. Dai-Jw-a.:oo A.M..
maeses:
WoOds' Hole
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Cha rges· Jetport P~an Threatens 31 I !m~ft'gtilltB@ns
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TRENTON (NC+-A nURcollege president charged that 37 Catholic iJ18titutions, exclusive of pa'rish churches,
By Father John L. Thomas, .S.J. Ass't Sociology Prot.-St. Louis University
"Although my husband was ·a top salesman all. his life, the small company for which he worked recently replaced him with a younger man and just'lethim go. Now he doesn't know what to do with himself and is becoming hard to live with. I never tiQJl, to make humanly developrealized before how little we . mental use of their leisure, now seem to have in common. that they have aC~I~ved it? M.ore 'd TV, beer, tranquIlhzers, or alm~ ft er a II th~se ~ears. I . less touring surely offer no so-
llke to help hIm adjust to re- lution to the dilemma though at tirement, but he's very inde- present we have co~e up with' pendent and ap.no other. par. e n t 1 Y Almost Strangers bas little need The second problem, loss of • for my comcompanionship in marriage, may pany. What can have many causes but usually ! do?" results from mere neglect. Hus... You r' letter bands become totally preoccubrings up two 'Pied with making a living, wives closely related become wholly involved in bear.problems t'hat i11g and raising children. · changes in our After 15 or 20 years of grow· way of life are ing separately, many partners · bringing sharpfind they share few interests in ly to· the fore. common and can no longer en,First, aUhough w~ all like some joy themselves as a couple. With leisure, many men be<:ome so their childr~n raised and retire. .,: geared to their jobs that they. ment upon them they face each seem incapable of find~ng new other almost as ;trangers. interests when they ret,.re. SecWhat can be done? Well, in ond, husbands and WIves can your case, Martha, it is a little grow' apart as well as together late to start planning for the in marriage, so that the Ugolden "golden years," yet it may not years" of life may find them be too late. Try to convince your cohabiting ·strangers rather than husband that he has retired from helpful compa~ions.. his job, not from life. Perhaps Caught 10 vacuu~ you can help. him· discover some Because modern society has useful leisure-time activities in introduced some new elements - the parish or community. "in the situation, it may prove Serious Choice helpful to examine these probStart going places together, If lems. in greater detail before possible, take a trip together: seeking a solution. Don't nag or put too much pres.In an industrial society, with sure on him, but if he remains its co.mpetitive spirit -.~n? .accom- .independent and uncoopera·tive, panymg marked dlV'lSlon of refusing to show interest in any- . labor, success in one's job or thing new you should point out HAPPY F AMILY REUNION: A group of Cuban l'r:ofession tends to place, such to him that a man can die a good ..children whose families fled the Castro regime months ago heavy demands on a man s tal- many years before he is buried. ents, time, a!ld energy that his We are never too old to learn ~ were accompanied from the island to Miami by 26 Sisters occupaHon becomes the central something new; to 'acquire new of the Apostolate ()f the Sacred Heart who arrived by airor focal point of life, around interests to make. new friends liner. Sister Miriam, O.P., Dominican superior at Miami's which aU other intel'este and or to pa~ticipate in new activi~ Centro Hispano CatQlico eElCorts two young girls to a reconcel'llS are oriented. ties. Every stage of life offers its When retirement co~es,. as it. own type of fulfillment, provided union with their mother at Miani International Airport. NC·Ph()to. .must for the great maJorlty of we remain spiritually mentally people in our society, many feel and physically flexible in ad~ that they are caught in a kind· justing to reality, of meaningless social·vacuum. Your husband faces a serioWll Society is organized for work, choice. He can make his life a S~choolin and when they can n.~ longer burden to himself and others beMIAMI (NC) Marist Broed throughout the U.S., Canada, work, they are apt to £eel left cause he no longer has his job, out, of no account, useless. or he can reorganize his life tbers whose 12 schools in Cuba Europe, the LaUn American were seized by Oastll'O forces _ countries and the Philippines.' . This situation points up one of around other interests and conwill staff a new boy~' high ..' . the major dilemmas in model'll tinue to grow:school to be erected i1ll NOI~th OhrJshan Brothers of La Sal~e society. In order to maintain our . Marriage 'Twosome" who also opemted. ~h~1s 111 :high stan?~rd of l'~ving, .we must Your situation, and you share Dade County. After conferring wi1lh ':&rot/het' C~ba accepted the l'llwtatlon of have effICIent productIOn. But it witn many others should reefficient production demands mlnd younger coupl~s that they Pablo' <Ie 18 Cruz, Havane pr'o- BUH1?p ~rroll to staff, anoth~ careful organization and. the must plan for retirement and the _ vincial, w.ho came to Miami I'&- boYS. high . school . W'hl~ .wIll cently with 82 Marist Brothers., open 10 September m. Mlarrn. c?mplete orienting or g~aring of. later .years of life together. hfe to meet the demands (}f This involves deliberate effort Miami's Bishop Coleman F. Cll!'maintaining efficient production. to maintain a warm sense of roU said the new school win NEW ENGLANO Yet we h~ve .now reache~ a un~ty and companionship during accept students in the freshman and sophomore classes this yenr. sta~~ of orgamzed produc~1ve the busy years of. bearing and CLAM 'I'he fourth Catholic secon-d1:.. effiCiency that no lo.nger requl~eS rearing a' family, as well as the all of our productIve potentIal, ability to develop new interests al'y sohool f()l' boY'S m' the with the result that. hours of and new leisure-time activities Greater Miami area is the 16·th .!Every S~dCllY - $2.95 work are shorte~e~ an? retire- ·as the family circle gradually. high school in the Miami diocese. American Marists staf£.one hi!~h iooludll"g - A Liva ,Lobllt0f ment at 60 or 65 IS mevltable. evolves into the "empty nest." school in Miami, the ChristoTHIE How can we direct men', who Marriage begins with a two' through past training and ex- some and ends with a twosome pher Columbw. CASA IBH..,ANCA The'Marist Brother-s, wOo opperience have been narrowly -that's why companionship ill erated more schools in Cuba tha,n Coggshafl Bridge, Fairhaven geared only to work and producso important. any other society, are represen!t-
are threatened by the plans of. the Port of New York Authority to build a jetpol't in suburban Morris County. Sister Hildegarde Marie, pres'ident of the College of St. Elizabeth, Convent Station, N. J .. made the charge at a public hearing called here by Gov. Robert B. Meyner to help him decide whether or not to sign a bill which. would prohibit the construction of a jetport in heavily populated North Jersey. Sister Hildegarde said she had been authorized to speak for most of the institutions. She said they included her' own college, the motherhouse of the Sisters of. Charity of Convent Station, two junior colleges for nuns, two diocesan high schools, 11 private schools and 20 parochial schools. Near Glide Paths She pointed out thwt the motherhouse (}f the sisters of Charity "is the place of formation for Sisters who staff 104 parochial schools, seven hoSpitals, five schools of nursing and other institutions." She asked the Governor flo sign the bill because the mothet'house, as well as juniorates for the Sisters of Ohl"istian Charity and the Religious Teachers Filippini, are in or near the "glide paths" proposea by the Port Authority if. the bi-state agency is allowed to ereC't a jetport. Also testifying in favor of the bill at the hearing was Father James L. Fallon, pastor of ChIist the King Church, New Vernon. Indications are that his brandnew parish plant would have to be demolished if a jetport i• bunt on th~ [<ite selected by the Pori Authority.
eIIN'T ICleP A GOOO MAN oovm .... W14EN Hi 6l!1'6 CQUTGKes F1l0,",
Marist Brothers; From Cuba Plan Florida' To Open High
TOUHEY'S PHARMACY
TH BY FIT RIGHT I I.OOK
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BUFFALO (NC)-The assistdirection to these people, pointNew and' Used ant director of the Society for ing out their individual origin, . OFFICE EQUiPMEN:r the Propagation of the Faith their responsibility, their ultiWe show a large assortment 01. U8ed in the U. S. declared here tha·t mate .goal and their' dignity as and new desks, chairs, filing cab"due to world conditions, the human beings. inets, tables, etc., in wood and steel. Also metal storage cabiDelll, sales, ~issionary is ~ming.the,~(}st . "The missionary," N!sgr. Toulshelving locken, etc. Important man m our hyes. man said, "caD tell these people Msgr.. Robert S. Toulman, forthe price that Christ paid for' mer pastor of St. Frances Sales their eternal souls and for their _ neel' . J-U' DIOIl parish h 7re, who was recently liberty on the Cross at Calvary. · •~ : . .Ne1!Bedfc?amed ,Bishop ~ulton J ..Sheen's "He cali do this as he moves wY3·2783 lmmed'late aSSIstant WIth the.g th Th k thO g P ropaga t'Ion 0 f the F a ith SOCle . t Yo amon f . l'em.ti ey Th now 1nok m was interviewed during a v,isit 0 SOCIa !US ceo ey on y now . degradation, because, heretofore, h ele. t h ' tat" f R. A. WilCOX CO. "The l'ea80n that the missione represen IVes 0 ~overn• bee' • the t · · ment have dealt only wIUl the· ary IS ommg mQS l l ' l l p o r - · rust· f ' 'et ' OFFICE FURNITURE tant man in our society is be- upper c . 0 SOCI y. .,Stock .. c~use of the recent fl'eed_ "Until recently, maDf' .govern• DEsKs • CIWM movement of the people," he ments have missed the real, FlLtNG said. vital movement that has been "Unt·il this era any revo-llll- going on," he ·added. "However, • FIRE FILES. SAflIS tion came from the upper five our. own .government. is beginFOl.D1NG -TA" per cent of soCiety, or less. T9- ning to realize thE' iHtuation and AND CHAIRS day, this movement' is from the I hope its cooperatiQD with the .R. WILCOX CO. lowest strata of society," the missionaries will bring about a Monsigl1Ol' continued. better futul'e for the rank and 22 -BEDFORD Sf. "This is where tbe missioDarv 'file of men living In.the·milllJi9D FAUltViR 5.H. ~'oomes in.-He cali'g".,~ Uie.proper ....·oountdes of-·tbe-worldo'·· .. ·
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'HiE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoH River'-Inurs., JUlY z:1, r9$1
lhe gt'im spectre works overtime
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days. week-ends and dUf"ing the vacation seasom That's wheA more cors swarm the highways, driving _st...a'" increases, impatience
mounts ••• and Ule wagic
count of serious accidents -accelerates.
That's. when yCMI mUM drive with EXTRA CAUTtOH. Don~ r~sk lives 110 scwe
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THE A:
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Summer IBcozaau:
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Fall
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July 2',
1,~
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The Parish Parade
OUR LADY OF VIC'lI.'OIltY, ESlPIlItlI'll.'O SAN'lI.'O. lUl!:NTERVILLE FALL RllVEIR . The Women's Guild will bold Alfred Benevides fs chairman elections at its meeting ned of a parish clamboil scheduled month. A Summer bazaar, ,is from 12 to 3 Sunday afternoon, planned from 3 to 9 Saturday, Aug. 20. luly 29 in the church hall. Mrs. Stanley T-amash' is chairman. OUR LADY OF ANGjgLS, Slated for Thursday, Aug. 17 is FALL inVER Ii fashion show and luncheon at The patronal feast of ri;he parTrade Winds. Mrs Jean Quigley . ish will be observed the weekend and Mrs: Marion McCaffel"ty are 'of Aug. 11. Highlights will inin charge, of arrangements.' elude a Mass and procession, OUR LADY 'OF GRACIE, . :block danc~ and bazaar. . NORTH WESTPORT ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, The parish will hold its third. FALL RIVER annual CIamboil and auction on Parishioners wilt attend the the Sanford Road ch"urch annual picnic Sunday, Aug. 13, 'grounds from 1 to 3 this Sunday., a<t. Holy Ghost Grounds,'. Sodom with the clamboil starting at 1 Road, Westport. Bus tt-ahsporta':' and .the auction with. Jerr~ tion will be available from the Grondin as auctioneer, at 3. 1ft' <;burch, according 'to Manucl oase of rain the event will be Domingos, general chaiMlan. moved to Sterling Beverage Grounds, Old' Bedford Road. HOlLY REDEEMER, Bakemaster will be Raymond' CHATHAM' The annual Summer sale of Trial: Reservations may be made by calling OSborne 4-8136' and the Association of ,the Sacred Hearts isbei~ held from 10 to' the public is invited to attend. 3 today at the church hall, HighST. MICHAEL'S; land Avenue. Mrs.' John ' M~ OCEAN GROVE ....,T·he parish's. fourth annual M:ohyde is chairman. ,,,' bazaar and penny sale will be OUR LADY OF LOI1BD&S; beld on the school grounds to- . TAUNTON . morrow and Saturday and also .A "chamariia';and. modern Friday and Saturday, .(\ug. 4 and dance to benefit the parish 5school fund will be held SaturAdmission is free and the pub- day, July 29 in Mt. Hope Hall, lic is invited. Attractions' will North Dighton. Tickets are availinclude beverage and food able from committee members booths, ,a penny sale and other or at the rectory. special features. Henry Dion and Leo Grenier' are co-chairmen ST. CASIMlI:IR, and announce that proceeds' wiU -NEW BEDFORD 'benefit the' church renovation A kickoff banquet for the benefit,of the church building fund fund. ST. DOMiNf€, will be held this Sunday. at SWANSEA PQlish-American Veterans Hali, . The Women's Guild will hold 1680 Acushnet Avenue. ·Mrs. a· cake and fooct sale at aM Evelyn Ponichflera" is ticket chair·man. Masses' this Sunday.
Req.uests /Privacy foil' 'Axis Sally'
·BUILDING AFRICA'S FUTURE: Brother Luke; W.F., long time principal of. St. Joseph's Technical School in Kislibi,Uganda, East Africa, supervises two future coR,tractors in the readin~!, of architectural dra wings. A fotmer student of Brother Luke'. •Waf! architect for the' White F'athers' mioor seminar-y at Kisubi. NG Photo.
'Dominican HOlme <Continued from Page O,ne Residents' of this Diocese may have' thought the past few weeks quite hot, but Yuma is the hottest place in the country during the Summer, says' Father Begin. Temperatures up to 124 degrees have been recorded, wi1h the average ·Summer day running f.rom 90 to 120 degrees. "You don't pray for 'water iii Arizona, you telephone for it/' said Father, in 'explaining the' in'igation system that is the lifeblood Of the farming·'industr.y of the' area. Water is siipplied .in irrigation :ditches to. order, and farmers never count on:raii:lfall ,~ produce their crops,' ,,: ..
Contl!lued from pag'e One . its members by per-mitting the ". 'f - , . 'h' M" shadows ()f. the past ,to fade and V'lchon 0 ' a t:reason c a('ge,'(&1 '. d er ro,' . . . '1 ., .. ,' . . , . a11ow th ,e 'mQ utIe of"h ' . e or ""'IHar-s was re eased on parole t '1' th' h' fut' ' . .....:_ . h F d' 1 "', . (). C 0 e . er' ~ ,serVIce DVm • . ' t.e e,."era Women ' . s Re. WI·tho U t .'fanf are,' , or pu bl'-lCI''t y,',; .tIoomatory W.I Voa. S S'ster Au ' " ·s·a,e. t't d "C' on-. , at Alderson, " , S mp... The Dominican served a t . . " ,Languag~ Teaoller tinued· attention and inquiring . mi,ssion' station 'some' 40' iniles ,':The convent· here ,conduobs would· tend to disrupt the nor- from'his Yuma parish' during :his .' kindergarten and, also has mal pattern·of the convent and slay' in' the West, and 'he said a courses fo~ high school·girls in- might possibly: interfere with smattering of Spanish' acquired terested in joining the sisterthe ·serv-ice it is meant'to perin student days came in more hood, It has no formal' school. form." . than handy on, many occasions. Sister Assumpta said that Miss . . He t60k the 'oppor,tuni1y to Gillars will serve as a language see many of the scenic marvels teacher and added it is anmcipated "her backg'round in lanContinue!l from Page One of the state and was particularly appears to reduce the signifiguages, music and cultural al't cance of the individual-human impressed with the absence ·of trees an'd shrubs except wh(!re W;ill be put to good use at the ~nvent.'" being in the scheme of life, the carefully nurtured. "It's a land repeatedly vigorous reaffirma- with no trees,"· he said. tt also was disclosed that Miss tions by Pope John of -the 'sacred Comfortable weather and, a C3:illars, an alumna of Ohio Wes- dignity of the individual' and of leyan University, a methodist 'human solidarity and brother- perennially dry climate dr~lw institution at Delaware, Ohio, hood' constitute a resounding thousands of Winter vacationE,rs became·a conver,t to the Catho- moral injunction to which' every and health seekers to A~izoi:ia, ].c Faith three yeaTS ·ago while man, whatever his creed or tra- noted Father Begin. He said that " s~ .was in prison. dition, can unhesitatingly re- one particularly striking contia9t between Arizona and the East ~ : Sister Assumpwl said that in . spond. ~ame during President'. Kim:'. aPplying for the j<>b at the con"To members of the Jewish nedy's irial,lgura.tion. v,erit Miss Gillars requested "she' community and' religion, ·there Yumans ,were enjoying a :warm· b.e .afforded the oppOrtunity to 'are many teachings.in this couradevote the remaining ·yeaes· of geous and far"-visioned encycli..; day. and indulgil}g in ,outdoor her life ih the Lord's service." cal regarding the social and eco- sports while iriauguratioll spe.(~~ The Sistei'sa.id that iditer a' brief nomic order which evoke a par- ;,ators and "participants, were 'y'isit with a sister at Ashtabula, ticular'sympathy because. their shivering, in chill blasts and ehio,Miss GiHars will come" spirit and expression are so·pro.:. post-snowfall' siush. here to prepare for her teaching foundly imbued with the ancient duties'. She will be a lay em- Biblical and. prophetic zeal for ployee and will reside at the social justice. convent; ' ' ' A s Americans, as Jews, and . (Eontinued fl'Om page 0_ as an organization dedicated to Opporiunlt.y to Serve helping improve human relations it! a temptation for vocation dibetween people throughout the rectors to ,take short cuts," he .Th~ nun's statement said that while "the Sisters of the Poor world, it is our sincere hope that said. Ohild Jesus. ·is not a cloistered the high moral principles and But, he added, "if webecomt~ order, the dkect' contaot of its practical i'ecommendationsem- inierested in numbers of priests members. with the general puob- bodied in. this historic declaraand Religious, no matter· ,whal; .He is ,extremely lim~ted." tion will find their way into the their disqualiffcations, then WE' oontradict the,Providence of ~d.' Miss GiHars' decision ·to· assist hearts and practices of all th'e and scu1tle the vocation program. the Sisters in their work, "af- members of the'human family." . , The mediocre provides no incenfords her an opportunity to serve Dedicate :New '.f~iary ·tive for others to follow; Future <Ilhe religious community and t~ demonstrate in the priV'acy of At St. Bonaventure development will be stunted." the .convent her devotion to ST. BONAVENTURE (~'C) _ Stresses Hoi,. Life furtherance of the Ohristian The ,new two-million-dollar fri,lit! . told bhepromoiel's, too, hUh," the 'silatement added. ary at .'St. Bonaventure Univ-:rthat "holiness of life is more per"It is anti<;ipated th~t the'press sity' here was dedicated with' a' ,: suasive than wizardry of words.. and general public will re!tPeot Solemn ~ass offered in 'the . 'A-holy life is a convincing an<tihe tradi ti~ns of the" convent and chapel by Father Celsus Wheeler; liwer toa parent who objects to O.F.M., Provincial of the Fran- hHlc~ild entering the priesthood' Hospita I Grant ciscan's Holy Name Proyince.· or .religious life ... Could. (such ANN ARBOR (NC)-St. Jos, Father Valentin Long, O.F.M., . parents) have been wounded in eph's Mercy, Hospital here has in the sermon, traced the history' .1iheir thinking by: unworthy received a $40,567- Federal grant of the university's growth from priests and religious whoSe gruff for the 19fh-62 fiscal year Iio , the arrival of the Franciscans in manner and thoughtless speech support a new vocational rehaCattaraugus County is. ia8a t9 warped their appraisal of Hie bilitation project. .. ...... nresent. OOdWat-edoo God's sel'viee~"
Lauds' Enc'ycHcal
.THE TINY TOTS OF PURAKAD Visit PURAKAD, in INDIA, and you'll probab.ly never come lome. You won't li!te. PURAKAD-it's not a pleasant place' to live. But YOU'll stay in PURAKAD 'because you'll see how much you're needed . . .' This is what happened not long ago to two FRANCISCAN SIS~ERS Or PAUDA when the, walked llirough. the dirty streets. Pagan children followed them, timid· Iy asking questions. The Sisters were friendly, they gained the children's oonfi~ence, and then-in two SlDaU rooms-they began to teach. The out· '. comeT The Government agrees to let 7Zt Holy Padxr'sMisJ~ Aii the Sisiers, oIMin a little school . . . fir Ikt OrimlaiCIJNrrh . The Sisters arecheerfal, about tbe prospects•. SIll: 'Sisters wm staff the school, all but a few of tbe pupils are pagans. If you were In PURAH:AD, you could help • • '. The ,Sisters' need lots of help.. To begin with, .&be, oeM a ".place to .live. 'They have lu mind i plain, simple structure ade- . ; .qua&e for their daily needS-:-with, ODe larl'8 room to serve 81 a' ehaIMiI for, the, Sistel'll and·, the chlldreD. The eost? HesltaDtly, tIIe'Slstel'll tell us the cODvent· wiD 00llt $5,000 '.' • Jl'wecould, we'd· send the Sisters $6,000 this week-sothat they could .. . to work ,immediately;' Frankly, we·haveD't·aDything to send .•. That's why we mention PURAKAD. &0 you-because we know you want to help. Perhaps, as memorial to a loved one, you'. like to donate the chaIMiI ($1,000), the kitchen ($500), the com· munity room ($400) or a Sister's cell ($300). PerhapS Y9U can furnish a. room .($150) or help stock the Sisters' pantry ($50) .' •• ][f you. could see for yourself the Sisters in PURAKAD, you wouldn't say good-by without leaving something for the work. Whatever your gift, large or small, mark it PURAKAD and send it to us today. The Sisters will know. it's YOu~ way of saying: "Wish' n could be in PURAKAD to help. But here's something enclosed-a~d, with it, my ~raye~ for all of you."
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B B =, BEDOUIN BLANKETS Chan~
are, you've never seen' a Bedouin. They're Arabs who Dve iD tents, and wh"o 'move from place io' place in the desert looking for grass for their sheep and camels. Men, women and cbildren, they are pitiable. Last.winter in enst Jordan thousanda of them nearly fl'oie to death because they didn't have blankets. 'We can't stand by and see them freeze this winter - so we~";e· promisel;ito provide 15,000 blankets..Will you help? The $2 in 'your pocket,can mean a 'blanket for a Bedouin. It can make' the .difference , between comfort ~ and agony..OIH' Lord said: ~Wh:atsoever y~do to the least • ~ ~,you do to Me." , , ~~----~~~-~ ,.~.: GOD'S GO~BETWEENS . Who are ",_the people who write this column week after week·?, n suppose you'd say we're God's go-betweens. Day iii, day out we 'open mail-the letters that come from you, with your gifts and promises.. of prayer; and the' letters that come Irrom our missionaries, telling us what they need. III a sense. iall of us are' ·misslonaries-ihe Priests, Brothers and Sisters who are actually overseas; you at home who keep them there; IUld we who keep you all la touch with one another. We feel close to one another becau,e we share in the noblest work 811 earth-to bring all.men to Christ. ' Dear Cardlnai Speitman: Please enroll me sa 8f1 0 annual iJ perpetual mem~. Name
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ltlATHOllG NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
480 I14ldftgton A".. at 46th . . St.
New York 17i-N.
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FR Intermediate eyO Stars In Wednesday Night Game
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., July 27, 1961
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Urge ·Peil'manent Laws to Admit Refugee Groups
By Jack Kineavy South Park, Fall Rivet', will be the site of the annuM Intermediate CYO All-Star game next Wednesday. For a number of the players it'll be their second arc light appearance in a week. Charley Carey, Terry Lomax, John CipPQlini and the BonaleWicz brothers, assistant Gerald DeCosta. Rick and Bob were on the The recent Red Sox-Yankee City Squad that saw action series had 'everything, everylast night in the third an- thing, that is, but effective pitch-
WASHINGTON (NC) Church -sponsored' reI i e f agenCies appealed to Congress to drop the practice of passing special laws for admig.. sion of certain refugees and W substitute permanent legislation. Catholic Protestant and Jewish agency spokesmen said in separate statements to a Senate judiciary subcommittee that special legislation is only a stopgap, slows down assistance and permits .a refugee problem to build. up to explosive proportions. '. One spokesman noted that it had ,taken as long as 15 years to work ·out.. final resettlement plans "for· "one small group of refugees; The religious agency representatives·were Msgr. John F. McCarthy, ,assistant executive dl-· rector" of Ca,tholic Relief Ser-' vices-National CafJholic Welfare Conference; James MacCracken of Church World Service of the National Council of Churche9; Vernon E. Bergstrom of ,the Lutheran Immigration Service; . and James P, Rice of United Hiss Service. Jewish immig!'G-' tion agency. The subcommittee b EI for 61 which they appeared held hearings to ,gather data on the e:litent and nature of refugee problems and to evaluate the effeotiveness of ,aid programs. The religious spokesmen commended the cooperation of tOO U. S. government with the pr.jc" vate agencies, including those church-supported, in prograJJKl to help ,refugees. MacCracken·of Church World Service noted that the American voluntary agencies are the "operating hands" of governmentsupported efforts such as the U. S. escapee program, the Intergovernmental Committee fw European Migration. Msgr. McCarthy reported thm since its founding in 1943, Catholic Relief Services-NCWC b8tl helped find new homes and jobs in the"United States for nearly 225,000' displaced persons ant! refu~ees: '." .. The' agency has also assisteti some' 75;000 persons to find homes, in other countries, he said. .
nual CYO Suburban League. All-Star game. A banner crowd is expectE:d to view the 'con-
ing. Even the fabulous Whitey Ford was trea,ted harshly. Ford had a sp.Jrting chance of becoming the first 30 game. winner in the post World War II era. test. Thp. New Ironically: Whitey who holds the' York Yankee Rookie tea m best 'winning percentage among active hurlers has never been a split in its two 20 game winner.' He's currently game weekend 17-2 and if Luis Arroyo can series against Somerset and continue to provide effective New Bedford of late game assistance, Ford may CYO Suburban. just make his first 20 game year The Roo k i e s a memorable 30 'game record. dropped a 3-1 Scoll'e Sliding decision to the The man whom the experts Raiders in a well-played nine tabbed to Qe the greatest pitcher inning contest that consumed of our era and' who was well on only one hour and fifty-five his way to living up to this preminutes. Skipper Art Dede's diction before his career was neophytes had their hiUing blighted by a line drive off. the shoes on the following day, how- bat of Gil McDougald is finding ever wresting a 15-7 tussle from the going rough in the minors. fron; Perfection on of New Bed- He is, of courSe, Herb Score, ford. sent down to San Diego by the Colorful pre-game ceremonies White Sox in late Spring in and skill contests highlighted hopes that he might regain the the Somerset visit Former Coyle form tha', made him the majors 'BLACKROBE' HONOR GUARD: Descendants of the star Pete Bartek who handles most respected hurler. Score is the c8'tching duties with aplomb now 3-5 with the Padres and his Sioux chiefs who,' 75. years ago invited, the. Blackrobes to eircled the bases in 14.8 to win control has shown little signs of open a mission on the Rosebud .Reservation, served as an the baserunning competition improving. ,.. honor guard for' Bishop William T. McCarthy, CSSR,of after he .tJad previously annexed Meanwhile, Danny Murphy Rapid City, S.D., when h~U~elebrated the- Pontifical Mass the throwing for accuracy award. who was signed for a f<lbulous marking the 75th anniversary of the founding of St. Francis Rookie 'centerfielder Carmine bonus by the Cubs upon' graduIndian Mission. NC Photo~ " Conrad took throwing honors for ation from St. John's Prep a outfielders. Nobody negotiated year ago has. been having his the fence in the h9menm hitting troubles with Texas League 'Instru~'.~ons'· competition. pitching. After a very slow start, Bridcem_ MYP Murphy has upped his average Winnel' . of the MVP award, a to the .252 mark, still a long way BOGOTA (NC)- Colombia's The document published by beautiful trophy, wes Somerset. from Wrigley Field. Danny has moundsman Jim Bridgeman been belting the ball at a .320 leading newspaper has published fJhe newspaper .states that "the whose slams proved too complex clip this past month, however, a detailed story on wha,t it says Union of Soviet Socialist Refor the Rookies to solve. The and the Cubs' brass trust the bot' is the Soviet G:ommunist party's publics will not haggle over fiool instructions for the con- means of support, including big righthander who is real has finally hits his stride. . millions of dollars, for the conquick employed a snapping Massachusetts' colors in' the quest of Latin America. EI Tiempo, . Bogota liberal quest of Latin America." eurve and an effective change of P.G.A. which is scheduled to get El Tiempoin its front-page pace whiC;~ had the Rookies oft underway today at the North daily which has the largest cil'stride throllghout, The only safe- Course of Olympia Fields Coun- culation in the countrY, said the story gave no inc!ic8ltion as to ty the, young . visitors col,lld try Club; Chicago, will be car- instructions were ~~ssed ~,.~., . how it acquiXed the document muster was a ground ball single , . the May meeting 6f .the Cenf:1:~: in .question. ,It. said the instruc".t in the eighth' by Bob' ''ried by'1l trio of Bay State pros Committee .of the Commun~st... tion promised that a veritable to rig4· foremost of whom' is Paul '8ar. ,,' ,'",. army of communist workers, exBonelli. ' ' . . . , ney, former HolyCro~ gbif cap- 'party of. the U.. ~.S.R. . A mam g?al Of fJhe. mstru~-:, perts a.nd specialists would come Paul.. 9ha~, Somerset shori- ·ttiiD. Harney' is teluned. with the stop, 'Vas the leading sticker. His ve~ran nenny Shute. in th~ 36 bons, accordmg to El Tiempo! ,18: to Latin America from this:July line shot to right in the eighth hole qualifying round.' . Art to· discredit the ~atholi~ Church 'to September at the Invitation brought in Len Farrell with the Palmer is the favorite' with . and .the clergy m. partlcuiar. It of local trade union and other . big third run and insurance South Aftica's Gary Player oon- quotes the party directive as· groups. Sets S-,wim Records . addition to their ·work. as marker. In the sixth Paul was ceded the best of the auslander call4ng on a~it!lJtors tbroughout, literally robbed of an extra base TOLEDO (NC) - Chet J8<> Latin AmerIca to follow the communist agents the document hit by Rookie centerfielder Car- group. Cu~anstn e1i~~Ple Oit~ l"a:tacthkS, said, 'the visiting ~orkers would stremski, former St. Francis de par ICU ar y e, b h g d ·th lecting native Sales high school student has se* mine Conrad who raced far to Planning Vacations' Caga!th 1· re ' glOn. 1" the" e c ar e WI se his left to stab Chace's l~"lg a 0 IC re IgI~;;, as .0plUm candidates for visits to Russia two new world swim records in the breaststroke-2:35.3 minutes hoist. This was the fielding pJiy For Italian Child-ren of the people. and Czechoslovakia.. . in the 200 meter and 1:09.8 in the of the game, though coacil lhel ROME (NC)-More than a D Ei Tiempo's article quoted the 100 meter. Douthwright played a lot of million Italian working class Red document as saying that "in centerfield for the Raiders. children will enjoy vacations at .. various places in Mexico, HonThe game was viewed by a the beach or in the mountains , . duras, Nicaragua, Colombia, capacity' crowd, highly partisan this year as guests of the PonCANTON (NC) -A total of' Venezuela and the Antilles there but equally demonstrative. A' tifical Relief Organization. 220 seventh and eighth grade" exist clandestine organizations post game banquet was tendered Speciai camps will care for boys are sampling life for two 'of agents to be in contact with the players of both clubs at the children who are pollovictims weeks at Brunnerdale Seminary . commanders ofa flotilla of subSomerset. Lodge. Gen.,erat Chair- ,or who are suffering ·from other here. marines transporting agents;' man John A. Carreiro presided 'physical or mental ailments From 5:40 A.M.:to·9 P.M. daily,' " propaganda, explosives, a'n'd and introduced Father Stephen ,that. would normally 'exclude they follow a .schedule of spir-. t ' which in time could transport .. D. Dow'ney of St. Thomas More, them from ·takingpart in; the itual exercises, cla!1ses, work and" arms and munitions' to feed any selectman Sidney Hathaway, summer program. recreation similar to that of the "-. subversive movemEmt." , .' . Superintp.ndent of School FranThe .Pontifical Relief' Organ- seminarians. ",;', , Thcmds' F. Monaghan. Jr. cis Kilgrew, Bob Danis, general They assist at daily Mass, have ~-,-.-----~----,-.l"'\ manager of the. A .. C.'s and his' ~~ation works in .. cooperation ,Treasurer wit h piocesap organizations periods of medttation and spir-' reading, go to Conferences' I Italian Jesuit Plans .. throughout Italy and is aided in .itual great part .by. Catholic. Relief on seminary Hfe and attend ab142 SECO,ND STREET Plumbing - Heatin~ Anti-Red Crusade Services National Catholic breviated classes' in Latin, EngROME (NC)_Father Riccardo Welfare Conference and its di- lish, arithmetic and' Gregorian Over 35 Years OSborne 5·7856 Lombardi, S.J., announced here rector for Italy,. Msgr. Andrew chant. They also do work in the kitchen and garden. of Satisfied Service that he will preach against com- P. Landi. The Precious Blood Fathers, munism throughout Italy this 806 NO. MAIN STREET ; FALL RIVE~ who conduct the seminary, beFall. PoUsh. Communists OS 5-7491 lieve the program is more effec- .... Fall River The Jesuit founder of the tive than any pamphlet. Last·· ' , Ban Four T~Qlchers Better World Institute is known year 58 per cent of the eighth . '. BERLIN (NC) Communist for his 1948 preaching crusade against communism' in Italy. Poland's ReligioU:s Affairs Of- ,graders who attended returned, After a trip to other parts of fice has banned four professors, in the Fall as full-time seminar-· . Europe and South America, he including a bishop, from teach- ians. said. he plans to renew his anti- ing (It Catholic Univ'er-sity of LUblin, according to re~rts communist crusade in Italy. ~ "For the past 10 years," he reaching here. '!'he ban was imposed, reports said, "I have worked mainly abroad. Now I c9nsider it my .. stat,ed, because the,uni:v~r,e;ityreC'0 . duty as a Christian and .citizen, . fused to hold lectures on ,CQrn, ~' tounist' 1JheorY~ '. , ," '."', to take up again preaching here c, in my own country. I consider The profeSSOl'S were identifIed the present situation of the as Bishop PiotT Kalwa of Lubworld extremely serious because Bn, who is also university chanof the spirit of aggresSion shown cellor and a professor of canon everywhere by atheistie com- law; Jen Nowicki, dean of the ~365 NORTH FRom STREET munism, which ie determined canon law facuLty; Jozef Majka, ~ NEW BEDFORD to snatch away from the heartD professor 01. the phi1~hy'of WYman 2-5534 of men ever)' fonn at religious religion; and Boleslcw Kul1lOO'. \ . feeling." ~f~ of Ch~lI'cla hi~!Wo
Reveals for Red Subversion in Latin America
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'.' 220 lI;Joys Sampue·
Semina rry Life '
MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE
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GEORGE'M MONTL'E'
~ DEB'ROSSE Ol,t;~:
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).' Heatinq Oils': ) and Burners
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.20 . THE ANCHOR-D~ocese '"" "c
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of Fall River-Thurs., July 27,.1961
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"""" fall" River Area Boys Enjoy "Day Camp at [
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