friars Minor Hono r Bishop • With Affiliation In Order
The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL ~
Fall River, Moss. Vol. 3., No. 32
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Thurs4ay, August 6, 1959 ~eC"ond
t:la81 Mait ItrlYileRel
Authorfzed at .. Fall Ri..,~r. Ma~.
PRICE 10. $4.00 pe' Yea'
~oted
Priest Spea.ke·r At Labor Day Mass'
Most.Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, will become' affiliated to the Franciscan Order of Friars Minor at solemn ceremonies at Our Lady's Chapel, New Bedford, at 8 P.M. next Wednesday. Bishop Connolly will be the third member of the American Hierarchy to enjoy affiliatiqn with the Franciscan Order, the honor having already been conferred on Francis '. . . C d' I S II . A h churchman and for hIS accom- Franciscan by religious profes~r ma pe man, rc - plishments without number for sion, a Franciscan by adoption, bIShop of New York and God in word and practice." thereby giving him the right to Richard Cardinal Cushing, Father Wheeler stated that use after his name the initials
Archbishop of Boston. Very Rev. Celsus Wheeler, O.F.M., Provincial of the New York Province will read and confer the official d~cument in the name of Most Rev. Augustine Sepinski, O.F.M., Minister General of the Order. who granted 'the, affiliation in Rome on June 8. Upon the reading of the citation, Bishop Connolly will be presented with the Franciscan habit, sandals and the Seraphic breviary. . . . . Father Pro~~nc.lal, m ann~uncIng the aff~hat,l,on. of Blsho? Connolly, saId . ThIS honor IS bestowed onl~ on those 'wh~se l?ve, benef~Fhons and .apprecIahon ?,f thmgs FranCIscan are w~ll known to us. We honor BIShop Connolly as a great .
affiliation is the act of making one who is not a First Order
. Very Rev. George C.Higgins, director of the Social Action l)epartment of the National C~ltholic Welfare Conference, and contributor of a weekly columll to The An'chor, will preach at the Second Annual Labor Day Mass' 8p~msored 'by ,the' United , Cardinal W yzszynski . Labor Council of Greater Poland helped Vice-PresiFall River. The appeat'ance dent Nixon solve a delicate of the noted labor priest at diplomatic problem Tuesday. St. 'Mary's Cathedral, Fall River,
Prelate Eases Nixon Visit
Lists Quality Of Superiors
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Breakfast at the Catholic Community Center, Franklin Street, Fall River, will follow the Mass. Msgr. Higgins will apeak briefly at this time also, Representatives of the Protestant and Jewish observances' of the day will be heard, as will Rev. Arthur W. Tansey, Diocesan Director of' Social Action and Rector of St:'Mary's Cathedral. Hundreds of delegates from Turn to Page Eighteen
Youth Festiva I Fails in Aim CLEMENT J. DOWLING
Two Priests to Celebrate (r Masses of Thanksgiving ( '1
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NOTRE DAME (NC) Richard Cardinal Cushing, ,Archbishop of Boston, told more than one thow:;and
It would have been unthinkable for Mr. Nixon to visit Poland without giving some sort of public recognition to the Catholic character of the vast majority of the Polish people. At the same time, it would hav'e been diplomatically dangerous for' a 'meeting between the Cardinal and the Vice-President' while Mr.' Nixon could not be placed in the position of snubbing the Cardinal. The prelate solved the prob.lem by leaving Warsaw for a vacation on Tuesday, and Mr. Turn to Pag'e Thirteen
for the 9 o'clock Solemn High Mass, Monday, Sept. 7, was announced today by Clement J. Dowling ~f th~ National Asso- . eiation of Letter Carrier::;, servtng' for the second year as general chairman of the observance. Breakfast to Follow
Two priests of the Diocese, ordained in Europe, will celebrate their first Solemn M.asses in their home parishe~ Rev. Anthony Rocha, son' of Mrs. Anna Costa of 27 Elm Street, Fairhaven will celebrate a Solemn Mass of Thanksgiv.ing Sunday at 11 o'clock Sunday, Aug', 16, at 11 o'clock. in his home parish of Im- Father FoIster spen~ three years maculate Conception, New at the North Amencan College Bedford. Turn to Page Eighteen
VIENNA (NC)-A West German delegate to the communist - sponsored seventh. World Youth Festival here predicted that "heads will roll when this is oJer." This view pretty well summed up feelings of many observers at this Soviet propaganda drive to .capture the minds of young . leaders in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The lO-day festival opened last week with a parade of 15,000 participants into Vienna's stadium. The festival has Turn to Page Eleven
O.F.M., if he so chooses. By virtue of his affiliation with the First Order of St. Francis, Bishop Connolly will participate in all the merits and glories of the whole Franciscan Order and he shall have the right to wear, when he wishes, _ the habit of the Friars; the right to enter and live in the Franciscan Friaries anywhere on earth; an.d the right to celeb~ate the specIal Masses and offIces approved .bY the Holy See fqr the FranCIscans. He will share in the spiritual wealth of the Franciscan family, in the prayers and good works of many thousands of Franciscans, in the Apostolic ~orks of all. the members of the Friars Minor and of the nuns and tertiaries subject to the jurisdiction . . T urn t 0 Page EIghteen
BISHOP CONNOLLY
nuns last night that a good religious superior must be 111': telligent, emotionally stable and capable of adjusting to changing situations. Speaking in the University of Notre Dame's Sacred Heart Church at the formal opening of the seventh annual Institute of Spirituality, the New England prelate cited "definite similarities" in the relationship of a religious superior with her subjects and a business executive with his employees. . "While it is important for a superior to understand the points in which her functions differ from those of secular administrators, it is no less desirable, and even necessary," Cardinal Cushing declared, "that Turn to Page Eighteen
Religious Tension Comes From Ignorance and Fear NEW YORK (NC)-:-Ignorance and fear of other religious groups were identified here as the principal sources of religious tensions .and conflicts in public school matters. These conclusions were part of a religion and education conference for Connecticut, Mass, The report has now been Massachusetts and Rhode made public by the National CitIsland schoolmen, held la-st izens Council for Better Schools November is South Lee, here.
Fear plays a part in religious conflicts, the conferees found, when the "authoritariarr' and "nonauthoritarian" nature of the different bodies come into conflict. .BOSTON.. (NC) .:- ?,~e Pilot.' Boston archdiocesan newspaper, has proposed 10 Fear (\1 Domination questIOns relatm~ to hIS relIgIOUS belIefs t~ be put to a Methodist candidate for high public They cited the "fear of relioffice. The newspaper listed its questions for'a Methodist in reply to a Methodist bishop gious domination" by one group in schools, stemming from mis) Michael's who had proposed a set of similar questions for a Catholic candidate for the presidency. understanding of rulings by the J. Lally, editor I h' dd B' h L d Msgr. Francis Catholic Church which restrict P ' l ' n IS a ress, IS op or Catholic candidates for the J;>eacon at Father Rocha's of. the lot, explamed that said that Protestants have a presidency about their religious participation by Catholics in ac'~ Mass will be Rev. Bento Fraga the newspaper's list was in- "right and duty" to question beliefs. He then proposed the tivities such as baccalaureate .... of St. John of God Church, Somservices. tended "to show how ridifollowing set of questions: " . }erset, and Subdeacon will be The conferees agreed, howulous such questions are. "We 1) Do you believe that the r':;:,....... Rev. Mr. Manuel Ferreira, a could ask similar questions of American free public school in- ever, that ignorance is the major '1'-"".. seminarian of the Diocese from Unitarians or stitution/and system is a bul- block to the elimination of reli:.""",provincetown, studying at st. Presbyterians, Episcopalians," he added. wark of American democracy, or. gious prejudice as it affects ,';' Mary's Seminary in Baltimore. The questions were posed in do you stand for a religiously schools. They found a tendency ,. The sermon will be preached by for different religious groups to segregated school system? ,-, <kev. Luiz G. Mendonca of Mount an' editorial which closed with 2) Do you stand for the prin- misunderstand each other, even . • mel Church, New Bedford. the statement, "Moral: Anyone can play this game if he doesn't ciple of separation of Church when the issues in a dispute are .. " . . . Father Foister mind getting his hanDs dirty." and State as a principle to be not religious in character. As an example, the report / ,,' ."Rev. John R. FoIster, son of The Pilot's editorial was writapplied for the benefit of all cited a controversy in several c',~c;.'. 'Mt. and Mrs."Joseph J. FoIster, ten in response to an address churches and all creeds? . . ,; J51 Sunset Hill, Fall River, will . given' in Edgartown by Bishop 3) As President you will be New England towns over school bus transportation for parochial ielebrate a Solemn Mass. of John Wesley Lord, resident in called upon to attend many reli'~~1)~?ksgiving in Blessed·S~cra,:". the New England area for the...... gious' 'services 'in Protestant: 'school students. Turu to· Pa:e Twelve Turu to Page'Sixteeu i'if'....--.·lD' Church,. Fall RiveR. Oil' ,Method.t church.
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: Father Rocha spent his last •.. .•. '.";_ year of thological studies at the . Patriarchal Seminary. of Christ ~.'" " the King in Lisbon, and was or· J dained there on Feb. 21 of this year by Cardinal Cerejeira of Lisbon. He recently returned . from a tour of Portugal and· the • Azores and Madeira Islands, and
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Replies to ',Questions' for Catholic Candidates With Similar Queries ~or Methodists
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Mission
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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 6, 1959
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.
Inclrease
Jesuit Province 'Has New Head
ROME (NC) - Native priests in Africau_ and Asian mission territories have increased' more than sevenfold during the past 40 years,it has been reported by Fides. . The mission news agency published here also noted that in the past 10 years the 90 to 1,811, with the largest innumber of native bishops in crease taking place. in the cenAsian and African areas tral African region that includes under the jurisdiction of ". French Equatorial Africa. and
WASHLNGTON (NC)-Father John M. Daley, S. J., former deaD. of the ' graduate· school oi Georgetown Univebity, 'hM been named new head OIl the Jesui~ Fathers Maryland Provthe Belgian Congo. ince. the Sacred Congregation for Since 1950' the nUD1ber of the Propagation of the Faith The Maryland Province, one .native bishops in mission terrihas more than doubled. of 10 Jesuit North American , Statistics rele'ased by Fides do tories has ris,~n 'from 35. to .89. provinces, embraces the states not inClude areas now' und~r" In 1950 there were 33 native of Pennsylvania, Maryland, De'communist domination - China, bishops in Asia .and two in aware, West Virginia, Virginia, , North Korea a~d North Vietnam. Africa. As of J'une 30, 1959, there North Carolina, the southern In 1918, Fides reported, there were 66 in Asia ano'23 in ~frica·. part of New Jersey and the Dig.,; were 1,009, native priests in' the trict of Columbia. As provincial, African . and Asian missions. Father Daley will have more Today there are 7,364.· than 800 Jesuits under his juristo-Year Period diction. During the 40-year period the, A' Pre-Cana Conference for PLAN CLASSES: Making arrangements for Sum~er. Father Daley was born ill number of .priests in, India, engaged couples will be held classes at Otis Air Field on, Cape Cod are, left to right, Rev. Philadelphia on June 6, 1916. Ceylon and Pakistan increased_ at 7:30 the . John F. Denehy, chaplain'; Sister Mary Do~ithea, Martha E. He entered the Jesuits in 1935, from 529 to 3,182; in southeast' Sunday evening He ~eceived the B.A. degree Sacred Heart- School,' Pine and Hurley, Sister Mary Zita and Mrs. .M. B. McClanahan. f Asia from 327 to 1,596 and in, Linden StreetB, Fall'River. The, rom L oyola University, ' Chi-. South Korea, Japan, Formosa Conference will be under the cago, and the M.A. degree ia and Hong Kong from 63 to 775. supervision' of the, Diocesan Ir history from Georgetown. Native African priests,rose from Family Life Bureau. Ordained to the priesthood JD All 'COUplE'S contemplating 1948, Father Daley received a marriage in ,the near future are ' " By Russell Collinge ' Ph.D. in histOry from George-' invited to atterid the talks which town , Back. in May, you, may re- M ary D osithea, R. S .M " 'f"r o m : in 1953. He' . "was named .will be held on Sunday, Tues-" member, we wrote about Father Mount St.Mary Convent, Faii .' dean of the graduate school in' c:ASTELGANDOLFO", (NC)~ day,· and Thursday . evenin~S'John Denehy, Catholic Chaplain River. 1954 and 'held that post until hi. Pope John XXIII has sent his August 9, 11, ;lnd' 13. at .Otis Air Force Base, and his The Sisters will live on the . appointtne!1t as provincial. blessings and praise .for the· Boy·· The talks are conducted on all problem of handling a good sized base and their inultiple hostesses ...... ' Sco~t movement to the Philip- .. phases of married life and parish of 700 Qtisfamilies in adwill be meinbers of the 'Catholic ' I~ot"'e . pines, where the 10th interna- speakers include priests, physi- dition to the regular duties and Wo~en's .Guild, Who ~ill 'See ',"'0. tional scouting convention is. cians, and married couples. work of all Air Force chapfain. that they have everything they . I • being held. A question ;,nd answer pe.riod· need 'The pro]'ec t was 1aunc hed NOTRE DAME (NC)':-TwO " . In an English-language mes- . wiil follow every talk, of ,the. Well, Father Denehy is a glut- . w'th .' t" d t I .t I 'a recep Ion an ea' , as Russian medical research sciensage' to 'Bishop Alej~1I1dro Oliol1ia .series. " . . ton. ,for troubles and problems. Sunday' .. . He got to thinking that the c h i l - ' tists'visited Notre' Dame to in.;. of'Llpa, the Pope said: "Well '.. dren might get rusty in their This is an example ~of 'true" . spect germfree animal reseai'cll aware as We are, of the admir-' To He ad Fa'lI· River . Catholic Action . . . and. credit facilities at the school's Lobund' able: fruits which the Boy Scout ~ catec h ebcal work during the Summer and he. had an. idea. must go to Father Deriehy for laboratories. movement can' produce in ac- ' Colum ialn., UlreS" '" The VI'sl'tors were Dr'. Vla'dl·mM. · Ie,.C0 1um-. F Bishop Feehan C Irc Igurmg t h at one or two extra the tiine and effort, 'the' endlesS .. cordance with the ideals of 'll gray. h airs ' ' 0 f F a 11 R'Iver,' WI. wou ld n 't ma'tter, h e patience and just plain prodding TI'm'ako'v, dl'rec'tor' of thOe In'st_L Christian charity and universal bian SqUires '. which are needed to ge't the re- t t f E ' brotherhood, We' pray that the .hold installation ceremonies in ..put·the idea into practical work-suIts thatseem to be ac'cepted as ,u e 0 xperimentalMedicine, forthcoming jamboree may be . September, ~eating Paul., B. . ing.form and, with the approval and .Dr. Victor Triotsky of the' a consoling· milestone of prog- Dutra: as chief squire and Paul and cooperation of the base com- apart of everyday Catholic life Instiute of Epidemiology, Micro· f ' C 01onel E rnest... T at Otis.' bl'olog'y a-nd Infect'l'o'US Dl'sea~"" squIre. man d er" __ ress·in the effort to achieve the Charland as d eputy c h Ie Others to tali:e office will in- White, he went to work. We all know how little seems The, Soviet scientists; on a na-movement's meritoriolls objec. V e 1oz, 0 to be' ilccomplished eVEln with a' tionwid'e tour arran'ged 'by ti...; Denms I d cue' no tar· y, Daily Sessions .... ,stable parish and dependable set' U. S. State Department, were New Spanish Priests '. Michael Powers, bursar; Paul Sweeney, marshall; Patrick DilAs a result, there will be daily of key' workers. But Father luncheon guests of Father'TheoTo Work in America lon, sentry; Jei'ome D. Foley III, ,. review sessions / of catechetical Denehy is faced ~ith changing" ' dore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., preaMADRID (NC):""""Thirty'Span- Charles Sulliv~m·and John Fox, :'work done during the school floating congregation . . . and dent'of Notre Dame. ish priests have been ordained auditors. year. They started Monday and the knowledge that his key here for work~ in Latin America Members will attend the Fall will ruh through Friday, Aug. people may be transferred toand the U. S. , River C o:u ~ 'c i 1 Knights of 14. There are hourly periods morrow. Or tonight. ' They are members of the third Columbus cl,ainbake: to ~ 'held f3r405~'T8:h30fito.,ntoonka~df1:30 until oliAlcsla'tCrOedtl~st, wtohoo' ator' e thwI~lliCn'gathtograduating CIassof the, ,.Theo- Sunday, Aug. ;.30, in' Swansea, .: .' e' rswee IS or grades . logical Seminary' .forCoopera- . and play softbalI·~·. against the' .... 1 through 4 an~ 9 and 10. The make ,the effort to carry out ,ELECTRICAL tion, with Spanish Ameri.ca,: •. .second week w111 take care of plans and ideas ... knowing, that CONTRAcToRS' wlii~h since 1954 has sent 350 senior group. . . grades 5 through 8 and 11 arid 12. they may. not be around to see. priests to' the Americas. ,' I . 'M'. . "O'd Residential -,- Commercial as!1 r 0 The schooi is restricted· to how thfngs come out. rhe new priests, orQained by, Industria' ' ,.. .' It:l~act, from the way things Archbishop Casimiro Morcillo: ~i~IDAY-8t.,. CaJ'etail, Conf.es- children living'on the base.' Be- get do.ne·,. Father Dene.hy might 633 Broadway,F,al! Riv. , tween 245' an!! '260 are expected Gonzalez of Zaragoza, will serve sor. Double. White. Mass-, to attend. . well refer to his parishioners as· OS 3-'1691 in :the St. Augustine diocese j~ Proper;.Gloria; Second Collect his Guided Mjssals. the U. S. and in Sees in Brazil, St. Donatus,' Bishop apd MarHandling review work and AI'gentina and Venezuela. tyr; Common Preface. Votive new instruction ,will' tie Sister 'Mass iii. honor of the Sacred Ma~ Zita, ,·R.S:M., 'and Sister Legion of pecency Heart of Jeslis permitted. . The following films are to be , SATURDAY -- Mass of the Card,inal- on Stamps added to the lists in Uieir respecBlessed Virgin for' Saturday. NEW YORK (NC)- Francis tive classifications: Simple. White. Mass' Proper; Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop Unpbjectionable for all: Third Gloria; I Second Collect ss. of New York, will· ~ pictured Map on the Mountain. Cyriacus, LaI'gus and Smarag- on postage stamps to be issued Unobjectionable for adults and dus, Martyrs; Preface of the 'by Nicaragua. They will 'bear' adolescents: Floods of Fear; Ten Blessed VirgE'n. likenesSes of the Cardinal wearSe.conds to Hell. I ' SUNDAY"":" XII Sunday After ing the decoration of the Order Unobjectionable for adults: 2666 NORTH MAIN ST. ,'''' FALl: RIVER Pentecost. Do ubi e. Green. of Ruben Dario, which the preBlue Denim; Look Back in Mass Proper,.; Gloria; Second late received 'from President Anger. TELEPHONE OS 5-7992 Collect St. -John Mary Vian-- Luis A. Somoza last year on hiS Objectionable in part for' all: ney, Confessor; Creed; Preface visit to Central America. . R09m 43 (the subject matter it . of Trinity. morally unacceptable for enter- MONDAY-St. Lawrence, Mar. '. ~ taiftment motio~ pictures). . .tyr. Double' of U'Class. Red.· ; . Mass Proper; Gloria; ,ComrJ:Ipn '~''. ' ,',' , Pr~face. Truck Body Builders , FORTY HOURS TUESDAY-Mass of the previAluminum. or. Steel ous' Sunday: Simple. Green. DEVOTION 944 County St. . Mass Proper; No ,GI~ria; Sec-.• Aug. 9-81,.. Th~resa, South NEW8EDFORD' MASS. ond Collect SS. Tiburtius and Attleboro WY 2·6618 St. Theresa, New Bed- ,,' '. Susanna, ' 'M~lrtyrS;" Common'" 1 Preface. ' ford. ~ ~ WEDNESDAY--St. .Clare, VirOur Lady of Victory, ., Centerville. gin. Double White. Mass 'Proper; Gloriil; Common Pret~ Aug.l6-St. Joseph, Woods ace. '.. Hoh. ' THURSDAY-Mass of the pre., Our Lady.' of Lourdes, Wellfleet, . . vious Sunday. ,Simple. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria; SecOur Lady of Grace, North ~ ood Collect SS:' Hippoly~us' Westport. '" and' Cassian, 'Martyrs; ,;ComAug.23-Sacred Hear,t, .. New Bedford. . . lIlon Preface. ' St. Joseph's Orphanage, ,Oll~, Fall River. . Aug. 3()-..,-St. Anthony. of the ''For Your ProteCtion Desert, Fall Rivet: .. ,Buv From St. John the B apt i s t , Central Village: . Plumbing' ~ Heating
Pre-Carla Talks. Start Sll.lnday. at
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Pope Lauds Boy Scout Movement
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Priest's Role Theme Of New Encyclical
Pope Tells Blind To be Apostles By Example
VATICAN CITY (NC)-The role of the priest and the virtues he needs were the themes of the second encyclical issued by Pope John XXIII. Entitled "Sacerdotii Nostri Primordia" (From the Beginning of Our Priesthood), the 9,OOO-wor,d encyclical comf I' , ' a con essor. memorated the centenary of The Pope said that " h n the death of St. John Vianfrom the height of the su;e~~ 'ney, the' Cure d'Ars. pontificate to which Providence The letter was, divided into has called Us, We view the imthree parts. mense expanse of souls, 'the The first part dealt with grave problems of evangelizing priestly 'aspirations, particularly s~ many nations and the relipoverty, chastity and obedience. glOUS, needs of the Christian The second stressed the prist's' people, there is always and need of prayer and devotion to everywhere present before Our the Eucharist,' and the third disgaze the.figureof the priest." cussed the pastoral. zeal required Urging bishops, to close to ~f all priests. their priests, the Pope also asked In each section the Pope Catholics to pe generous in givpointed out the example set by ing their sons to,theChurch. St. John Vianney, patron saint of "The C'lristian family must' all priests, and urged the world's f!llly !lnderstand its 'responsipriests t~ imitate him with ardor bility and give its sons' with joy and persistence. and gratitUde to the Mystical Self Renunciation Body," he said. ''To speak of St. John, Vian'" ney," the Pope said, "is to recall the figure of a priest whose motivation wa~ so strong that, for the love of God and the conversion of sinners, he deprived him- ANnGONISH (NC)-St. Fran~ self of nourishment and sleep. ,cis Xavier University here has He imposed hard discipline on become the third university in himself, ,and he practi~ed, above Canada to sign a union contract all; self renunciation in a heroic for 'its ,mainten'ance, staff. degree." The contract prOVIdes for Citing the saint's spirit of pov- ' seven per cent wage increases' erty, the Pope said he was "rich for male employees over a' twoin giving to others, but poor in: 'year period, and 20 per cent' himself. He lived totally r;increases to femiile employes moved from the goods of this over the same length of time. world and his truly 'fJ;'ee 'heart' O,t her' highlights include opened itself generously to all checkof~of union, dues, grievthe material and spiritual mis- ,'anceprocedure, rest, period eries' which occurred around during every shift,' 48-hour him." week, time and a half for' In praising the sairit's observovertime, nine holidays with ance of chastity the Pope warned pay, leave of absence, a two-, bishops to try to combat the week vacation after one year's effects of isolation in which employment, three weeks' vacamany villag~ priests 'live. , tion after five years" sick leave amounting to 12, days a y'ear Obedience to Bishop Citing St.' John Vianney's with unused ,portion accumuobedience to his bishop, ~ho Iating to 90' days, ,uniforms asked him to remain at Ars supplied. as pastor, the Pope said that his "whole adherence to the will' of his superiors was, to put it precisely, entirely, supernatural in HARTFORD (l'l'C)-Postmast-' motive. It was an act of.faith in er John F. Heneghan made an ' the words of Christ, who said to.. urgent appeal here to city of- ' his Apostles: 'Who hears you, ficials and parents to help i~ght hears me.''' a serious influx of pornographic Turning to prayer in' the life literature. Meeting, \Yith Ac~~ng of the priest; the'Pope said that Mayor Dominick DeLucco 'and' "faithfulness to prayer is', on the City Manager Carleton Sharpe part of the . priest, a duty of perth e postmaster warned: ' sonal piety." "Something has got' ~ , be ' Of all priestly prayers the done in a hurry. The situation Pontiff singled out the Mass as is terrible, the filth is indescribthe greatest. able: The people responsible for "We are not able to forget, sending this rottenness should, moreover, that Eucharistic be put behind bars." prayer in the full sense ,of the I word is the Holy Sa~rifice of Following the meeting, an apthe Mass. There is need, vener- peal was made to pare'llts and able brothers, to insist especially young, people to help strangle on this point because it touches a racket believed to have a sales on one of the essential aspects level of half a: billion dollars a of the priestly life." year throughout ,the country. In the section dealing with pastoral zeal the Pope in'sisted that priests be encouraged to eonsider themselves as pastors of SOUTH ORANGE (NC)':"-The their sheep and particularly to first Serra Club in Italy has, devote themselves to hearing ,been organized in Genoa. confessions, keeping in mind St. News of the establishment 'of John Vianney's long periods in the Club was brought here by the confessional and his 'fame as Father Luigi Noli, chief chaplain,~ho was a guest, at Seton Hall University for a week He , conferred with thr~e Serra chap" MIAMI (NC)-An All-Faiths lains stationed here. Father Noli ,in an address beCommittee for Traffic Safety has been organized here to pro- .. fore the Serra Club of Paterson, said Giuseppe Cardinal mote highway safety by appealSiri, ,Archbishop of (Xenoa, is ing to the "moral and spiritual very interested in the movement.' responsibility. of automobile 'Serra International, which prodrivers." . motes vocations to the' priestFather David J. Heffernan, hood and has headquarters in representing the Greater Miami Chicago, has some 7,600 memCouncil of Churches (Protesbers in 160 clubs in ,this country tant), who proposed the camand also has clubs in Mexico. ' paign, and Rabbi Joseph R. Narot, representirlg the Greater Miami Rabbinical Association, BERLIN (NC)-Mount Washwere named to an adlT)inistrative ington Chapter, Disabled Amercommittee during a meeting attended by church' and civic' ican Veterans, has honored one of its members wJ10 was recentl,. groups. ordained to the: priesthood in The local effort to reduce the number of traffic accidents will Manchester. Fat her' Philip be patterned after a successful Bruni serv.ed in the Korean con;,. program conducted in Detroit by £lict. He is believed to be' the only 'Catholic priest in New the Archdiocese of Detroit, the Detroit Council of Churches 'and Hampshire who is a DAV the Jewish Community Council. member.
CASTELGANDOLFO(NC) -The blind have a "silent and useful apostolate, an apostolate of example," His Holiness Pope John XXIII told representatives of the blind from 47 nations. ' The Pope spoke to hundreds of blind people gathered in the main audience room of the papal, summer vill,a here. The visitors,' who cheered the Pope repeat'edly, have been taking part in the world congress in Rome of Organizations for the Sociai Protection of the Blind.
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University S,igns Un, ion, Contract
"How many have sight and do not see," the Pope exclaimed. "How many lose themselves in the meannesses and miseries of life, forgetting God, the soul and virtue; and their hearts are immersed in the darkness of death." Work in Love "Your Faith tells you,"' the Pope continued, "that the most precious light-that which never dims-is your jealously guarded heritage, which sustains you in your battles and difficulties. Be generous in your mission, which is part of you. Work in love and in peace, remembering that nothing is lost on o' earth when one adapts oneself to the will of God."
Ii'EAST DAY SATURDAY: The feast day of St. John Vianney, the Cure D'Ars, will be observed Saturday. The 19th century French priest.is regarded as the patron of the secular clergy. NC P_hoto. "
,,19-Me'm'b'er 'Q''u,ebec Fam.ely' ,At't"'ends' Service at Shr.ene of 0'ur, Lady' , "
'I d . n escr.· bable F."lth ' " Sent Through Mail
Form First Italian Serra Club in Genoa
Organize All-Faiths Safety Committee
Honor
CAP: DE 'LA MADELEINE
the Family Day ceremonies ineluded that of Mr. and Mrs. member' Tremblayfam,ily, of, ~ernard Trepannier of HerouxAlma, Que., to take a 400-mile ville, .who have '17 children; that' ,trip. , , of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Boily But Family Day at the Shrine who have two sons' priests; tw~' of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary daughters nuns and three sons here was an occasion when Mr. religious Broth~rs, 'and that of and. Mrs. Paul Emile Tremblay Mrs. Larent' Belemare 'of Cap deCided they should be present de la Modeleine, who was preswith their ,If children. 'ent with her 12 children and Mr. and Mrs. Tremblay have who has seven sisters in relimade news, before. Their 17 gious life. ' children include seven sets, of Auxiliary Bishop Marius Pare twins. The oldest child in the of Chicoutimi offered ,a special family is 12. Mrs. Tremblay is Family Day ,Mass for those in only 36. attendance, and later conseoOtherdistinctive 'groups at crated .the families to Our Lady. (NC)~It's no Cfnch for the 19-
The' Pope declared that Christian hope -is based on the following words of Christ: "He who follows Me does not walk in the darkness, but will have tl::Ie light of life" (John 8, 12). He told the blind people: "If iii the designs of providence you are forced to l,ive with the help of human solidarity, the divine plan is clear and certain by which your life, here below transforms itself in the preparation and the promise of reaching one day the great light which is not of earthly things . . • but the light emanating from the Glorious Christ."
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. -THEANCHORj''World's. Largest Floa.ting Parish' ,Is Pastorate of Lowell Chaplai.
Thurs., Aug. 6, 1959
OIOC'Es~
OF FALL RIVER. MASS
ByRt. 'Rev. Msgr. John S. KE!nn~y Cromwell's brutal subjugation of Ireland in the seven.. .teenth century is somet-hing of which but few of our contemporaries lrnow anything at all. The reason is that official history written <in English during the last 300 years, sinned they were punished. They were purged by pagans..• 'We will' emelrge a better people, not today but tomorrow. We will learn te, live ,with sorrow and to laugh at it, but we never will if we abandon hope. We must be'lieve in God,' hope in His mercy and love our ene-
mies."
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Settles Down At last in the west, Dominick finds that Murdoc has become a tribal chief, has entered' into an understanding with Sir Charles Coote, the tyrannical deputy of Cromwell, and is enjoying his possessions and authority. In Murdoc!ldittle kingdom, Dominick settles down, clearing a patch 'of land~ building a rude house. ' But Murdoc's understanding with Coote is by no m~ans 'hard and fast. Out of necessity the ED~lishman has entered' into it. When he has the troops to invade the mountain-ringed rE;treat, he confronts Murdoc with the alternatives; public adjuration of .his religion or' being • stri~ped of his positio~.. The choice is put to Mui'iloc on. a religious feast day, when all his peonle are gathered. Murdoc' t~kes the oath which commits him .to apostacy. Shortly thereafter Father Sebastian, long hunted by Coote,' is 'seized, dr.agged over:;tony ground behind galloping horses, burned at the stake. Murdoc is suspected of having betrayed him, and ·his people m~t away from him. Real Fair Land Dominick realizes, at the last, that "the fair land" is not a piece of earth. Evil force can penetrate even the remotest corner ·of the ,country and wreak·its havoc. It is in the soul, he concludes, that "all the real things take place. And if it is a 6ght deep place, and has been tended by your head, then he supposed: that God 'would be deep down in ~here whispering to you always but the realiti.eS. So that would be the real 'fair land, deep down in yourself." . There is considerable melodrama in this book, most notably.at its furious climax. ~ut there is plenty of authentic and profoundly moving drama as well. No one, for exa;nple, can be indifferent to suc.b scenes as Dominick':s daughter's first Communion in the lonely woods or the assembling of people -for the proscri,bed Mass being celebrated high on. a. mountain, or to the description of the island where bishops andl priests have been confined to starve to death.
8EFORE: YOU
CLEVELAND (NC) - I f the Great Lakes seemed like a series During the Solomon Island. of duck ponds to Father (Capt.) campaign, Father McQuaid w.aa Arthur F. McQuaid, U.S,N., chief aboard the cruiser Minneapolis . chaplain of the 2S':ship task force .when it was hit by Japanese torpedoes.· Aviation gas exploded engaged in "Operation Inland 'and the priest was so badly Seas," you could hardly blame. b d th t h . t ted him. _ urn~ a e was no expec 'That's because in his regular . to li~e when put ashore .at job' as force chaplain of the Tulagl, the Navy base OPPOSite Atlantic. Fleet Destroyer Force, Guadalcanal. Father McQuaid is pastor of "the But the tough Boston Irisbmaa largest floating parish in the survived,.a;nd after eight· inontM world." It· extends from the ill hospitals returned to duty. Arctic to Antarctic, and includes During t~e K;orean 'War, be w~ the Mediterranean Sea and aboard the battleship Missouri, Persian Gulf. which .took part in some 14 gUll Father McQuaid was part of actions off the ,Korean coast. . a force Of 6,000 sailors and maIt is still an active life even ill rines who took-part in an "inva- _ peacetime,. he ·has found. Two sion" here as part of ceremonies weeks ago, in Milwaukee, for marking the St. Lawrence Seaexample, Father McQuaid saved way opening. a four-year-old girl from drownIn .his destroyer force group, ing when a temporary dock Father McQuaid has 32 chapcollapsed, plunging many sightlain~, including seven priests. seers into the water. Three Masses on Sunday He' said a priest may offer as many as three Masses on Sunday ROME (NC)-Athletes of an ~sometimes on three different nations taking part in the 1960 ships. Olympics to be held here will be Since it is impossible to have taken to the place -of worship of a chaplain _aboard each of the their own choosing~ ·Olympic· more than 200 ships of the deVillage, on the outskirts of stroyer force,' the Navy uses Rome, is setting up a central trained lay' leaders. Thus, Cathinformation office for the atholic leaders conduct . Rosary letes. Among its duties will be. services when no priest is avail- to take the athletes by auto .t. able. the church of their choice. Father McQuaid, an "old salt" of 19 years service, became a' chaplain after 10 years as an assistant pastor in Lowell. World War II started a year after he joined.•
·Olympic Athletes
GOLDEN JUBILARIAN: Religious of Jesus and Mary feted Sister St. Melanie at the convent 'in Fall River in observance of the 50th anniversary of her Profession. Solemn High Mass'was ceJe,; brated by her cousin, Rev•. Adelard pionne,.O.P.
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West Fails to Convey Spi.,it of Christianity HONOLULU (NC) - A well 'known 'Chinese scholar and writer said here that the western world has failed to convey to the peoples of the Easl the true spirit of 'Christianity. In observing the West, declared Dr. John C. H. Wu, "the East does not see the beauty and bounty of Christian living in action.". . ' A convert to Catholicism, Dr. Wu said that if the West hopes to lead the East, it must first listen to wh.1t the East has to say. The objective of both East and West, he declared, must be "one world," united in and by Christ. '
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Catholic Church Makes Progress On Formosa TAICHUNG (NC)-Openiog of a new Catholic radio station, printing 'press and the Catholic Center's summer program in one day marked the continued progress of the Church on' Formosa. Msgr. William F." Kupfer, M.M., Prefect Apostolic of. Taichung, olTiciated at the opening ceremonies for the three proF' eets. In the morning a branch of the Hua Ming Catholic Press and Bookstore' was blessed and opened and the Catholic Chung Sheng radio broadcasting Station's new studios and office. were inaugurated. In 'the evening a special Mass in the Catholic Center chapel initiated the Center's Summer program. The Hua Ming Press, under the directi01~ of the Fathers of the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, has for eight years been supplying misaionaries in Formosa ·with Catholic publications, religious objects and doctrinal film strips and' charts. The radio station is operated ander the direction of the Jesuit Fa thers. After its blessing, Msgr. Kupfer made the first talk over the station, speaking in Forinosan dialect. Broadcasta from the new station can be received in all parts of Formosa. The Catholic Center's Summer program includes doctrinal' discussjon sessions, sportll activities alid classes in music, typing, 8eWing, English and mathematics. Weekly record concerti will be held. In less than ten years the Apostolic Prefecture of Taichung has acquired a radio station, a hospital and four dIspensaries, three. novitiates, two atudent hostels, a cemetery, an: orphanage, the Catholic Center," • printing press, schools, and the newly erected Pro-Cathedral
Father Marchildon, St. Anne:s Shrin.e Direlltor, Wi" Celebrate Diamond Jubilee Sunday At the age 01 83 he begins his day at 4 :30 in the morning. He's as much a fixture at the Shrine of St. Anne, Fall River, as the miraculous statue itself. He's beloved by thousands who count pilgrimages to the shrine incomplete without his blftssing. Celebrating the diamond jubilee of his profession in the religious life this Sunday will.be Rev. Vincent Marchilden, O.P., who has been and hears thousands of confesidentified with sf. Anne's sions yearly. shrine for 54 years. He came In common with all the priests ',connected with the shrine, be to the parish in 1905, follow-
ing missionary work among lumberjacks and Indians in Canada, and has been assigned there ever since, with the exception of two more years in Canada.. _ In early years his activities with the shrine were an avocation, brought about his great personal devotion to St. ~ne. Became Director In 1912 he was placed in charge of shrine devotions and from then' until 1928 also served as assistant pastor. and vicar. By 1928, shrine activities' had increased to such an extent that their direction became his full time assignment. "The shrine is his life," said Father Raymond M. Bedard, who succeeded Father Marchildon aa director four years ago. During the jubilarian's years of active duty he initiated Tuesday novena devotions at St. Anne's, and expanded pilgrimages to the s"rine. ' His 80th birthday was the occasion of special festivities conducted by his fellow Dominican Fathers. They included his' mstallation in a shrine office and presentation of a large armchair. "But he does't use the office,H smiled Father Bedard. "He prefers to walk around the shrine greeting pilgrims. The greeting activity reaches a height on the feast 9f St. Anne, high point in the shrines year. This year, 15~000 pilgrims. were on hand for the celebration and Father Marchildon was on his feet for 11 hours as he met and spoke to the' unending line awaiting his blessing. Daily Routine, Although his day usually begins with Mass at 4:30, ,he marked the feast by a 3 o'clock MANCHESTER (NC) - The rising. "I had to prepare for the Manchester Union-Leader, New day," he explained. Preparation Hampshire's largest newspaper, included a long peiiod of prayer will continue its policy of cenprior'to Mass. . lOring its movie advertisements.. Although nominally retired This was stated in an editorial in the newspaper, which also took movie makers to task for their "multi-million dollar traffic in muck." The editorial criticized a IPOk!ilsman for United Artists, a movie company, who, the newspaper said, "declares ·that the, calibre of movie ads is going to get worse instead of better, and that his company doesn't intend to be hampered or intimidated by what he chooses to call backstair censorship by newspapers. H The Union-Leader charged that "the movie industry constantly and continually exploits the vulgar and obscene with no other purpose in mind than to .timulate box office action. "We firmly, believe the industry, time and again, takes ~he most offensive, most Suggestive scene from the film and then surrounds it with tricky words' and phrases of double' meaning and outright ambiguity and offers it as an inducement, nay I Charge Plan • sensual stimulation, to lure the customer inside." BMC Durfee Trust Co.
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FATHER MARCHILDON from administrative activity at the shrine, Father Marchildon maintains a busy schedule of conferences and confessions. He is always available to pilgrim.
Pastor Seeks Nuns To Complete Steiff BENTON (NC) - Father N. Charles McGinnis, pastor of Our Lady of Fatima Parish here, is making oile las~ effort to find at least two Sisters to staff his new $60,000 parochial school before t~e fall semester starts. He has already traveled from Arkansas as far as Ireland in quest of nun teachers. His school. situated in a city of 10,000 with a Catholic population of 300 persons, has 150 children ready to enroll the day school opens.
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MACKINAC ISLAND (NC)William H. Bocklage, editor of the Xavier University Alumnus mag a z i n e, Cincinnati, was elected chairman of the Conference of Jesuit Alumni Administrators at the group's fifth, annual meeting. Mr. Bocklage succeeds Father Robert C. Graham, S.J., of Loyola University, Los Angeles, as..... head of the organization of alumni officiah- of the 28 U.S. .resuit colleges and universities and the high schools conducted ' by members of the society. St. Louis University Magazine was judged the best publication· for alumni prepared by a Jesuit institution o.f higher education.
5.
DIOCESE OF FALL, RIVER, MASS
PETRA (NC)-A museum and study center commemorating a native of this Spanish village who carried the Faith to California has been opened here. The museum and center honor attempts to inculcate devotion to Father Junipero Serra, famed St. Anne, Our Lady and Our pioneer Franciscan missionary Lord in those who come to petiwho founded nine missions in tion for favors. "First comes. California between 1769 and devotion, then a favor may .be 1782, the year of his- death. asked for," said Father Bedard. Bishop Jesus Enciso Viana of The Dominicans have made no Majorca presided at the opening. special effort to spread word of Diplomat the shrine; pilgrims have done that job. Many have felt themJacob Carter, cnJ:tural attache selves blessed through visiting of the U. & embassy to Spain, it, and have told others of their gave a speech praising Father experience. In that way, devoSerra and the 'Franciscans "who tion has spread. There are some wandered across foreign lands pilgrims, said Father Bedard, with the sole ambition of carrywho have not missed a Tuesday ing civilization and Christ's docnovena service since their betrine to Upper California." ginning in 1928. Mr. Carter referred to the Although public celebration of statue of Father Serra in the Father Marchildon's jubilee will U. S. Capitol and said: take place this Sunday, 'the --"In reality it is more than the actual date of his anniversary is statue of a monk. It is the symAug. 13. At 7:30 that morning bol of what SpaIn represents for he will celebtate a solemn high the Americas - determination, Mass of thanksgiving in' the strength, a great heart, a thoupresence of his brethren and sand-year-oJd civilization and many members 'of his family. The latter will include a cou- spirituality." , sin, the last of 23 children to be brought up by Father Marchildon's mother, who reared nine WASHINGTON (NC) - Edchildren of her own and 14 oth- mund R. LaFond, athletic diers orphaned by various family rector at the Catholic Universrty tragedies. of America here and member Next week will hold memoof the Olympic and Pan Amerirable days for the jubilarian, but can Boxing Commission, is on no personal celebration will dea three-month tour of Africa to ter him from his life work-the conduct boxing clinics under spiritual care of the\ thousands sponsorship of the Cultural Exwho come to St. Anne's Shrine. change Program of the United '''He's always on deck," said States Department of State; Father Bedard, "and he always goes' where he's wanted." ~----~~-"---~·_------1 A proud epitome of a life of service.
"SHOP THE TOWN" and "CHARGE IT"
Jesuit Alumni Elect Bocklage Chairman
THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 6, 1959
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. ~iscu~sing,Ju.v.e~ile delinql:lency,~ while a~o,a:cornedian . DIOCESE OF FALL. RIVER. ""A88, ~~~~ blamed muclron the ability"'-9f children to push their parents around and get their own way. "Why," he asked, "should we do as the children wjsh ?After all, we're bigger than · they a r e . " ' . . . That isa rather primitive motive for making a person obey. 'But there is sorri'ething, in: the idea: ': ...• :,- ".; '. ' TODAY-The Transfiguratioa . • of Our . Lord. This feast' com'Just recently'a'group of delegates.' of:,che New .. ' ,England ' . , ., , ., memorates the occasion whell · Congress of CatholicYouth Councils, meetirigin Manches:ter, Our Lord took St. Peter and the ealled upon th'eir parents. to exercise their prerogatives as two sons of Zebedee; 'SS. 'Jamel parents when it is a question ,of driving and drinking. The the Greater and John the Evan- . delegates said,'''Inasmuch: as teen':agers .'have been the' '. gelist, to Mount Thabor,. where target for' criticism r:egarding driving .anddrinking, it, is fie appeared to t~e~. in, aJIHUi felt" that'. par~nts. should e~ercise their 'prerogativ,es ,as Glory.. , . .... , · .parents in' these' matters; 'that theyshould'~oilstantiyalert . TOMORROW - St.' Cajetan, , ,Confe~sor. He ,was, born ip 1480 youth to: responsibilities. to the public;' tha.t parents should at Vicenza, Lombardy, Qf pioul take a fiim staJi~.whei the occas~on de.imihds; that in e?i:e r ,.. . anlinoble' parents, 'who .d,edieising firm guidanc.e·nmch of the trouole ~usedbyteeri-;age . eated him to'the Blessed Mother•. driving ,and drinking could ~ averted." . " . He renounced riches ,to devote ,Parents'should:·not-fear ,~hefitm·haJl.lt 'It is what the, his life to the' 'sick, and ,poor. . , . , , With Peter Caraffa, 'who ,.la~er , 'ehildren; look for,' andexpec~. And When parents neglect to ' became Pope 'Paul W, he found.' give,' iirmg,uidan¢~, important'matters, ,then the young ed 'the ,community ,of ·Cle,r.~. 'adults 'reason-';logically~thateither the niatter. is not so . Regular ,know.n· as~, the Th~a.. ver.y important or the parents just dono!; care. After all, . tines, .~hicliplayeda promiwhat could gi\re more evidence of really 'caring t.hanpareiltal ·... n~nt part in. the co.unter:-,refor'.' was omeless.·" ·mation. He died at ,Nap-Ies ill "laying .dowD, the'law~" . .', . , '.' ' . . 1547 and was can?ni~ed in 1671.. Yomig adulthood is a p.eriod .of maturing. There are , you SATURDAy SS.- Cyriacus, ...:..irianychanges going ,on transforming the child' iJito the'. . 'e' 'In" Largus Smaragdus and 'Com-' young 'adi.Ilt.:The.individual aLthis tiInenel~ds security and pa~ion~; Martyrs. Th~y, were:23, understanding and' guidance:. Left to, his own devices, he martyrs who were put to, death .:' will becapti'vated by 'anyonewith a good liIie and twisted. ' . '" in Rome in' 304 under the perby misunderstood feelings and instincts~ While i.n his 'Ol,it":, Ent--.e· nn'_ secution oiDiocletian. st. Cyri. a~us a deacon, wa's their leader. ward demeanor he may appear to be very much the "man " , ' .' , " _ of the world with all the answers:' inside he is the youngster '0"5.COW'. ,'. ··,SUNDAY ,:-"Or.dinarily the trying hard,to grow up and 'not knowing quite'ho.1 to g o . n " , ", ,'feast of S1. John Mar-y, Vianney, , " ". " 'I d'··· ~ By William ,H. Mooring ,'" Confessor is observedton this day. "_ . ' ab,o~.t it. DireCtion ,given 'Yith firmness anc tin eil~tandmg , . " _ . ' ';.. ;. ',However this year,' the centenand reasons lets him know that'here is ,someone who is $ure, ,A ~ew weeks a~o,. offICials of the .Mo.sco~ FI~r.n Fes,bva~" ary of his death, his feast w.al , here is ,someone who knows the way,. here i.s the answer to sent tIle U, S.movle mdustry.. ,a late lfIvitatIqn to COmpe~e•. moved ,to ..Aug. 8 by special dihis'questioning and fears. . Holl!wood was .given .two days ,to seleft. andregist~r.its,. rection ,of. His Holiness Pope , .:'" The youngsters are demanding that theirparents8ct .. :e~trI.es; ,an~obvlOuS trick to defeat '~merICan competItlO~." John "XXIII. Popularly knowll . . ' F I t t ddt as ,the Cure of Ars, St. ,JOhll ':r' ,'in this way not, because they are bigger but·be.causethey .1 ms ,no . I~ en e, 0 com-' in .the,play: a couple ,of"poli~ 'V,ianiley::was.born at Dardilly, ,:,~re' .parents~ Youngsters have,sense\:enoughtO.knowhow. pete could be ~nter~d.mu~.tf pullies and a coroner. :near'Lyons, France, in 1879 and , -their parents should act. Do parents? ' later. rhe U. ,S. movie l!1 d USF~lk~Opera. 'was a, 19-year-oldfarmhand , try, in, consultation with the As long as Goldwyn or any, '"when he began studies, for the
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.Shelton, ~ l.a.-t'e' Department's Turner. other producer, was. going ,to, -,priesthood. He completed hil a meinber' of the lnter- .. filni. "Porgy.' and Bess" at all, "studies with much' ~ifficulty,
.. ;' Seven weeks of anti-co~mtinistagitatio:nin Kerala h~s G 0 ve r n _ ' the, play"by ,DuBose and Dorothy and w'a~assigned, to 'ArS,aI -brought, about a decree by the central Indi,angovernment mental C o m _ H e y w a r d and the. songs by ~/parish priest. 'There he worked , ending_ two years 'of rule in that Indian state. This could mittee on Film Gershwin offered no alterna- i the 'rest ·of· his· life. His confes, h'av~ far-reaching effects throughout all Of India. Festivals, ; has . tives. Neither writer N. Richar!l sional was thronged with all . . , now offered to Nash nor movie direc~or Otto classes of persons, who came The official Indian policy has been neutrality between' . send ' to the Preminger. could do muchl. to . ,from far and wide. During the , the:, Upited 'States 'and Russia, w:ith much criticism of Moscow Festi, "emancipate" the inhabitants of, last 10 years of his, life he spent America and the feeling that it was possible'to do business val, "The, Di"Catfish Row". . 16 to 18, hours a day hearing · with the Com'mun·is'ts. .. , llry' of Anne, ' Nor.might Rouben Mamoulian confeSsions. He died in 1859,' . " Frank", as the' have done more had, he not quit was canonized in 1925; a.nd wu Two years ago the Communist 'party in. Kerala, with non-competitive, Am e ric a n direction of the· film complain- declared patron of parish priests thirty-five per cent of the.popular" vote, managed to control . entry. . i n g ·of Goldwyn's "dictatorial in 1929. " . a majority of the state 'assembly of Kerala. Here was an '. Unless' the Russians whip up . interference". A colorful piece,of . . :' '. · opportunity to shQw all of India the commruiist 'way of life.' some temible, technical objec-' negro folk-opera is all they-had''-' MONDAY -:-St.Lawrence 01 . " . tl'O'n-which the,y 'may well do to begin with.' ~. .' Rome, Martyr. He waS· bomat . . ' Steals'Honors . , ' S .. 'th . ' A.ndall of India watched. . . . -this:,."film' should give those Bailey '.lIuescaAragon, pam, ,an d WI, · '. '. The disillusionment came out intQ the open among the attending the' Moscow Festival Viewed in this frame of refer- . his' family' came to Rome, where · people. of- 'India"when Nehru was criticized ,bitterly' by the something to think about. ence,- it is hard to im'agine any~ ',We,'oined the 'Clergy a?d be~a~: ",' Communists for his, words of sympathy for the brutal Red . Interesting Comparisons ,one' making a better. 'job ,of ,. o~e of. the seve~ ~eaco~s 0 t B ut even bef ore' th" IS th e peopIeon f I 'd'la, an d ,"."The .Dl·ary of Ann Frank",' ·"Porgy: and Bess" city 258 .under Pop~" ~.t. SIXtus IL rape .'0f ', T'b .. Ie. ' ,..than' . , Sam· , ., ,. I' three days after the , . ' . . ' whl'le .not Hollywood's finest, Goldwyn ha.s don.e. The cast, , n,·., "'. t especially' those living under communist domination t d f P ope St . SIX •us, ' , . a r in t i s t i c achievement of the year headed by Sidney, Portier' as the ~ar yr om 0 Kerala resisted the brazen attempt to take 'over' control of. ("The Nun's Story" might rea- kindly cripple Por.,gy and Dor- he was put to. 'death .b~ bemg sc..hools' !t~~,family life. It was seen"a.t ~irst dimly.aJl,d then sonably deserve that distinc- othy Dandridge" as the loose.,. roasted alive on a gndlron. more clearly" that the communist goal was ,control of the tion!) , exposes Nazi despotism, living Bess, is great even though TUESDAY-SS. Tiburtius and school system' and its use ,as a medium of ·communist through the tragic 'experiences Pearl ~ailey in a relatively Susanna Martyrs, St. Tiburtius indoctrination. of some German-Jewish refu':' small. role, .steals prime acting was the '~on of a high official of
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gees who hid out from Hitler's
honors from both. ' the Rome Imperial Court and The songs are 'so' skillfully was beheaded for the Faith ill dubbed one feels the principals '288. St. Susanna, said, to have actually are singing them. The been a niece of Pope St. Caius, choral numbers are a Hi-Fi was martyred during the reign As a movie of some artistic delight. Still all· the signs of of Emperor Diocletian in 295 for and dramatic merit, it ought, to negro joy .and passiOn, of an- refusing to marry the emperor'. provide Moscow. with a' few: guish and anger, like the cus- son, a pagan. interesting comparisons. Nothing toms and superstitions so explicit Adolph Hitler's Nazis did during in this' tribal tome, are primitive; • WEDNESDAY St. Clare, World War II' was any more l' n the tr a d't' 1 lOn 0 f "U nc I eT om' s Vl·rgl·n.. She was bo~n at Assisi ruthlessly inhuman than the Cabin." in 1193. At the age of 18, drawn Red Army's blood path in Hun-. ....1· by the preachings of St. Francis gary or its fake trials in' many l"IIlUnS to a rador. of Assist, she ran away from another subjugated country. At For Vacatl'on School home and took'the veil of sisterhood from St. Francis. She least the Commissars know ALLEGANY (NC)"':"Perso'n. \ founded the Poor Clares, govthat Nazism and Marxist Com- n'el 'at the U. S. Al'r Force's· erned the community -, for 40 munism are twin tyrannies. McGuire Field in Wrightstown, years, and was consulted by Cotton-Pickin' Relic _ N. J., were startled rec'ently popes, car d'ma Is an d b'IS h ops. As a story for movie audiences when f<;Jur. Franciscan 'nuns·' She died in 1253 and was canof today, Sam Goldwyn's lush lined up for processing for a onized two years later. production, "Porgy and Bess~'; . flight to Labrador. may prove to be veh much a . The Sisters were on their way . Name First Full-Time cotton-pickin' relic. It works 'to Labrador, at the invitation of ,stereophonic magic upon the late. Air Force chaplains to conduct a Chaplain at College RICHMOND (NC) ~ Father George Gershwin's songs and four-week .religious vocation score. It 'ideafizes the squalor' of school for the children, of Air W. A. Stickle, a,p" has been named the first full time chap"Catfish Row", Charleston, S.C., Force personnel. there. the b'ri1li~111tly .conceived sets, in Since their arrival in Labra-- lain at\the Newman Club of the subdued Tecl!,nicolor,' growing dor, the nuns have reported' University of Virginia in Charlott~sville, Bishop Johi'! J. Ruswith. artistic virtue, according to regularly on their adventures Hollywood's most opulent standin letters to the U. S. mother- sell of 'Richmond announced. ards. . house here' of the Sisters of the ·Dominican Father Stickle will It is peopled, however, by., Third Order Regular of' St:" reside - at Newman Hall on the campus. The state University negro characters of the solid Francis. segregation era. They speak the The Sisters' said they were' has some 400 Catholics in a stutongue of the "Darkies". They given an unusually'warm recep- dent , body of approximately toss dice, sing lullabies to .their tion - complete with popping 4,600. Msgr. J. Bernard Moore, pickaniimies and resentfully enflashbulbs and a ',military-style pastor of Holy Comforter dure the',arrogance' and "supE!- recepti'o~' at an' Air Force non- ' Church, Charlottesville, hal riority" of the only white men commissioned officers' club. been part time ~haplain.
The Indians. have been given ::t. prev~ew of what life . troops dl,lring the occupation of under c<?mmunist control might be. They have cried out Holland. it is based on an actual that it is not to their liking. It is a cry that could call a halt diary kept by a young; Je'Vish to Communism in Asia. refugee girl.
Second Encyclical
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Pope John has taken the occasion,of the centenary of the death of the Cure of Ars-celebrated Saturday-to issue his second encyclical, this one on the r~le of the priest It is typical that the' Pope-the parish priest of an Christendom-should· point out to his priests the virtues they must cultivate, and should hold up to the faithful the joy and gratitude that will be theirs if God sends a religious vocation to a family. : ' The priests of the world especially rejoice in this added sign' of the Holy Father's love for the priestly SOns of his flock. o
@rhe ANCHOR
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OFFICIAL ,NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF: FALL RIVER_ ·
Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioce:ie of Fall River 41'0 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass.' OSborne 5-71 Sl -PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, .D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER ASST., GENERAL MANAGER Rev. Daniel F. Stiall~o. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden
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Our' Ne",Pope :;"-Moslem,~,'Orthodox, C~tholU;s and' .lf~r .. ~'
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From POPE JOHN XXID: AD:AaU.ori~iiv~ BfopoaphJ"B,. zSoit And!. Mscr. James I. Tucek, and James; 'C. O'NeillfCoPJ'ri&"b&. 1959. bJ' Farrar S,traus and 9udahJ', 1I1C. PUblishers ' , .
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THE ANCHOR,Thurs., Aug. 6, 1959
7
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS,
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Archbishop Angelo Ronealli arrived in Instanbul. capital of 'the "new" Turkey, on Jan; 4, 1935, and his first act was a wise and diplomatic one-he registered with the police. Officially the ApostOlic Delegate in Turkey had
made another appeal to RoncallL The former ambassador 'was to be tried before the International War Crimes Tribunal in Nuremburg and he asked the future ~. consider himself .a for-· . yean .the cails ,were more frePope to be a witness in his elgner and needed a' vl~a and! .qu·ent and of great import. defense. ' ,permit to stay. ,From his '.,!,he Tl;'rkish: governmellt.out:, In his Memoirs; Von Papen recalls his .meeting with' Archfir s t day, Roncalli was·',Q.f co~rtesy, gave him, suc.b facili;' bishop Roncalli. Of it, he 'writes: . meticulous in observing, this ~ :..t1es· as. are granted to ~lplom~ts "The papal delegate Mon"rule, even when his personal 'a~dth' he, developed frIenff~s~IPl· signor Roncalli, who had arrived friendships reached the highest. WI g~vernn:tent .'. 0 lCla s. in Istanbul for a confirmation cirCles of the Turkish govern-' Among'.. hiS close. friends was t " Numan MenemenglOglu, .secre- " • service, tried .to assuage our · men . taiy generalof.the Turkish: Minfears.. He could' see no alterna..' Three Jobs ill One. ; istry' of Foreigit Affair~. .. ,tive. to. a German defeat..but he When he arriv,edffom ·Sofia, . At 'the time of his election to '. hac:i confiden,ce in the judgment Bulgaria, only a secretary' from: the papacy, Turkish papers' re, of the Western Allied statesmen the delegation was on hand to caned how often Archbishop. and their intention ,of taking all meet him. Together the'y': went Roncalli had ~xpressed admira. the measures necessary for'EuroLat~in 1934 Archbishop Roncalll ~a5 appointed ~postollc Del~ to the office of the city governor tion of Kemal Pasha Ataturk' gat., to Greece and Turkey.' Her. he visits 'a' community of ' .. pean security. · and the chief of police. The fact and how that admiration ',had "At my request he forwarded Capuchins· in Istanbul~ " that he complied with the law, been reciprocated by Ataturk to the Vatican my pleas that the I . · without· claiming any right to himself, '. , Allies should realize the differdelay the process,., impressed The Turkish diplomat Reckid In, his years in Istanbul he' with other representatives of ence between the Hitler regime the Holy See in the Near East. and the German people... ' both local and 'national officials. Staffet Atabinen recalled in an never had hts own car. He used The "new" Turkey to which public transportation. His staff Communicati~ns from Africa Work Is Effective article how highly A,taturk ap- was sma . 11 ,consls .. , t'mg 0 f' one seeArchbl'shop Roncalll', h'ad' bee~n and South America went via preciated Roncalli's orders that ta' d ' . ta t I h' " X'I In 1934, the-then Archbishop Cape Town, Suez,' Turkey arid' assigned by Pope P , lUS. was c~rtain prayers and, sermons be re ryan an aSSlS n. n IS Spellman of New York visited under the leadersh~p of .the· pow... delivered in Turkish in the na- spare time he toured the city's' by courier to Rome. erful and progressive, Kemal tion's Catholic churches. many antique and book shops. Needless to say Turkey, being, Istanbul' and remarks in his Pasha Ataturk. In its dedj.cated 'When Ataturk died' in 1938 He bought a considerable numneutral during the war, swarmed book, Action This Day, that: "The Apostolic Delegate Mon~ drive tq. achievenational,-unity Catholics of' Istanbul took part ber ,of manuscripts as well as ,wit~ agents of both sides. , And after the overthrow of the Sul- in the national mourning. Cath- objects of Byzantine art of' m~ny: kept thefr' eyes pn ,Dele~, signor Roncalli was at the station to meet me... I had known · tans the "new" Turkey wa$ hos- .olics gave the' same honors to which he had become a con- gate RoncallL Every move he tile to Christian' groups. .. . Ism~t Inonu, who'succeded Atanoisseur even before arriving in . made watched night and Monsignor Roncalli·and it was During the future Pope, John turk, when he too died. Turkey. day by' German, British: and gO,od to see him ,again." , Car(];.njil Spellman was to be the guest of 'XXIII's stay in Turkey the situSaves Old' Church The second World War ended other agents. the future Pope when he waa ation of' Christians began to im, t h e more or less,tranquiIassign-. The.Archbishop got, so that he . Archbishop Roncalli's good rePatriarch' of Venice. prove. The ArchbI'shop was al:' ' 'th h . ment of being a non-diplomatic, could identify his .followers and lat ~ons WI t e Turkish govern_ . , ' lowed ,to W'ear hl'S ecclesl'astl'cal . , '-'. pastor. of souls for Archl;>ishop Because Turkey was neutral once 're~arked: "I never 'could habit because he was the head m.ent also played a parL.i.n the Roncalli. With its horrors the '. find out: wheher they followed and because. he functioned as a · of a Ch'rl'stl'an communI'ty and modern history of one of the . war transformed " his activities me and watched me or one anrepresentative of the Holy See, . therefore eX,empt from the law m.ost important monuments in Archbishop Roncalli's work in the world, the chu~ch ot" "Hagia into the diplomacy of human other." which forbade wearing religious Sophia," in Istanbul. solidarity, into the Church's ,reTurkey W;lS effective and autoToward the end of the' war 'dress' to priests and nuns. He "This was built in the 9th cen- sponse to the needs of charity. Archbishop Roncalli was asked. matically took-on a diplomatie 'Yore the Roman collar but not tury by.the Emperor Justinian'. The Agpstolic Delegate;s of- to become the intermediary be- natur·e. · the cassock and his secretary Originally a Catholic Church it fice 'in Istanbul was one of the' tween the warring nations. . During' the same years he was and other priests dress~d in , '. . t' h . f h Apostolic Delegate in Greece. . became in ,turn an Orthodox most ac Ive in t e serVIce 0 t e . Von Papen Asks for Help civilian clothes, thed 1 d f' . Vatican's Information Bureau. And in those war years he was The German Ambassador to In his new assignment, Arch- . ca ra an mally a mosque. one of the most ted" Pope Pius XII set this bureau up Turkey, Franz -Von Papen,-asked a principal figure in Greece in ." ' venera, m b ishop Roncalli had three' J' oba. Islam. . - . . in 1939 to establish contact be- Angelo Roncalli to request the one of the great and, for the · He was Apostolic Delegate in With the: overthrow. of the ·tween prisoners of war of all na- Vatican to convince the Allies most part, known stories of. Turkey and in Greece, that is. .. Ottoman, Empire, the Ataturk . tions and their relatives. It also . that they should make a distinc'charity among Christians. He he was the Pope's representa- regime planned,' to, turn the . wofket:i. to find missing persons tion between the German people helped avert mass starvation. tive to the Catholi!=s of those bui~ding into a museum. Thanks' and refugees who'were scattered ,'and the Hitler Regime. (Next week: Catholics and two countries. to Roncalli's endeavors this plan' all over the' world. ' . ,After, the war. Von Papen Orthodox Work Toge~her) He was also head of the ,Apos- wa t . d After WO,rld War II it handled 'C VI'cariate of" Constantinople, ,s no carrIe out and it was toll preserved as a. historical monu- more than 10 million requests .. .. ' , the older name of Instanbul. In ..ment. and Turkey, through the Dele"this office he. was bishop ofa But he won even greater con- gation; was among, the most imflock: who looked to him not as cess' Th T' k' p,ortant p'oS.'ts· in "this work. The ...' IOns.,' e . ur l!!h governa dl'plomat but as a father.' 'ment consenteq. to r'emove som'e Apostolic Delegate was able to The las"t responsibility, which . of the modern decoratioiis and get information ab'out POWs .and' could not be written into his ,·thus uncovered. tlie, ancient 'people in concentration camps ' c'redentials, was that he was Ch' tl.stian .paintings of ,the Cross, w h om even the International' expected to have some contact the Image of Christ the Blessecf' Red Cross was unable to trace. _" ' with the Or'thodox Patriarch of, Virgin and the'sair:ts. . in Turkey, Archbishop Ron'Constantinople, \vhoheld t h e . . · ' c a l l i was also very active in aid~' "p'rI'macy of honor" among all. Family Spirit Remains I h" f' t ' ing Jewish refugees fleeing Hit:' · Orthodox patriarchs. . n IS Irs year in Istanbul Angelo Roncalli's father died i~ ler and in helptng them to reach Work in Greece .. Sotto il Monte. The 81-year-old Palestine. The Chief Rabbi of . Archbishop Roncalli too~ up peasant Giovanni Battista, Ron- Israel, Dr. Isaac Herzog, traveled his residence in Istanbur and calli, whom the future Pope was to Istanbul mote than once' durfrom there visited Athens from to remember when it became to ing these years to visit Archtime to time. The story of his choosing: his name of John bishop Roncalli and publicly tremendously effective work in XXIII, left a testament and ex- paid tribute to him for his efforts Greece requires a separate 'chap- ample to 'N'hich his more famoUII on behalf of the Jews. , ter in itself. sqn was always faithfUl: His office during the war years The Catholic population of It was. the example·of.a simple alsO serVed as a. contact point Turkey was very small. The lif total population of the country e, of accepting God's will and in '1940 during his time there continuing the .tradition of his ancestors, peasants like himself was 17.9 million. Of these about of loving the land. Angelo, Ron~ 20,000 were Catholics of both ill the Latin and Oriental rites. ca was unable to attend the Maintenance Supplies funeral and his vacations at the Of these about 10,000 were' f h SWEEPERS - SOAPS located in the Vicariate of Con- . arm ouse of his family became " DISINFECTANTS . impossible during the war. stan"tinople with 67 priests and' But he had with him his two FIRE EXTINGUISHERS 49 churches, Also under his jurisdiction was the Vicariate of' sisters, Ancilla and Theresa who ,were never to' know hi:n as Smyrna with about 1,000 Cath-· Pope. They looked after his olics spotted throughout its 110,- ,household and thus the spirit of 1.886' PURCHASE ST. 000 square miles. A mission terhis home and family never faded NEW BEDFORD ritory, Trebizond, counted 214 Catholics in its area of 120,000 even in the distant capitals of WY 3-3786 the world. aqu'are miles. Makes Friends Archbishop RoncaUi spent the major po~tion of his pre-war years exercising his ministry as Famous'Reading HARD COAL ~~11 C~ head of the Latin Rite Vicadate. NEW ENGLAND COKE ~~~') 04~ He showed particular zeal in ·DADSON OIL BURNERS ~g:: ~~ supporting Catholic schools, providing funds to keep them in SHEll 0 24-Hour Oil Burner Service existence when there was dan~~'e ~1I.4 ~ ger of their going under for Charcoal Briquets ~~v~ lack of money. .~ : ':'.,~, Charcoal Bag CoaJ Although he functioned on. a non-diplomatic level, Arch,. ,bishop Roncalli traveled two or three times a year t<;l Ap.kar'a, the capital, to pay formal calls '. on the diplomats .~nd o~icials of , . 640 Pleasant Street, ,·New Bedford Tel. WY 6-8271 the government. In' the war
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,,: 8' . Thurs., ',~. -.THE A,NCHQI Aug: 6, 1959
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DIOCESE. OF f' ALL ""VEA, MASS,
Give's Illusion of Space By Alice Bough Cahill-
,'Women's Council , . Plans Institute'
What is your f~vorite colorf Have yoU! ever considered that many personality traits are determining factors . " in your choice? Color is enwloyed in every facet of life today - be it the house you own, the car you drive, or the pack~ged m e r c h andise' in it for draperies. Then add you buy - edible or not. It 'YOlJ r secondary color-yellow, is color that sells us many clear and strong. For your of the things we buy. Your dining room you. might use the
WASHINGTON, (NC) ~ "The Catholic Woman . . . Her, Cornmunities" will be 'the theme of the leadership training institute to be held at Marquette Umver- ' sity, Milwaukee, from Aug. 10
to 14..
Th~ Milwaukee institute i. one of seven planned by the first question in arriving at a same blue f or carpe t an d h ave board and staf:" of the National color scheme for' your horne is grey wa II s· an d ,an accen t co 1or · coverln,gs. . (G rey IS . th e Council of Catholic Women here f or ch air the deCision as, to which colors neutral you introdiIce.) for Wisconsin,' Louisiana, Ohio, Vermont, Virginia, Kansas and F.or th e b e'droom, wa II s a ga'n 'you will use. I Cl:difornia this Summer. This will rest are bl ue, b u t a d I'fferen t s h a d e upon your indito give a different effect. CharThe meeting will focus, attenvidual color coal-blue walls, dull-blue carpet tion ,upon the needs and probI' r e f e r _ ma'ke a rich, restful background lems of the registrants' com,ences, and will ' for deep-wine be,dspreads and a, ,munities. Specific probl~ms to also depend on comfortable upholstered chair. be treated are those of' youth the use to For color accents use bright blue and chil~ welfare, of the aging, w h i ch e a c h a n d pales,t pink. of inter-group relations, and 06" room will' be Blue-green and .blue-violet the' effect of international rela-are widely used :in horne decor~ , tions on the local community. pUIt~ consider-, ation'. Avoid cold blues. Tinted i~ Auxiliary Bishop Leonard P . . ,'lng color in the horne, it's more' blues, such all Wedgw,9.oda n d 'JAPANESE PREMIER>AT VATICAN: Domenico Cowley of,St.,Paul will deliver to confi,ne our choice robin',s-egg" are 'good . P IS ' f' S'tat'e; escorts J ' 'the keynote address on' "The' P'racti"al ,.. . ,back1ft, ,C'ard'ma1 T ar d'InI,. ,apa ' ecretar,Y 0 apanto the basic pi-imary, colors ground colQrs. TurqUOise, de " P ' M ' . t' N b k . K' h' d ' h' t" Mystical Body 9f Christ and the , rather than tints' or shades. One delphinium~ sleite··blue, navy and , ,ese rIme m~s er 0 usu.e IS I urmg IS. sta e, VISIt ", Idea of Community'.'" ' eolorconsultant has made a" iris'are,pop~lar. ' to the Vatican. rope John XXI,IImade ,a special trip fro!Jl "" "., , " .,." eolor, chart and if you, were ,to "Qbviously yo~, CaD, buil!! . a ,,-hi~ ~umll1err~sidence a~ Ca.stelgandolfo to' meet tl)e Pri~~ ; I jay, "1 want my ,home to l>e one-colorschem'e . m~t easily, MInIster and members of hIS party.. NC Photo ' , . dignified and impressive; we 'when" you're~stal'tm~ to, do. 01' , " ' ' "',' , , ' , ' ':' 'like a quiet evening with,a few red~. everythmg. FIrst, decide, , WASHI~(}TON '(NC):"-Trlb~ . close friends; I am fond' of an- " whH;h color you. want and th~ft ' _ . " , . ' . ute was paid in the U, ~. Senate , tiques and traditipl1al furniture; wdodr.k toward a dlnousefUI of It, ,t9,a nun who 43 years ago pi~ I. am ·more or less. conservative a l':'~ ,more an. ~ore .. you .': . neered in bringing about ,enact... in nature," he would recomreplace and repalltlt. ,. EMMITSBURG (NC).:..-An elo- here was aPontificaf ,Mass" at ment of, the nation's first mini';' .,. mend for yO'.l blue. Why blue, ,Besides gi.ving )'OU the illusion' quent plea was made: here that whic.h Archbi~hop Eg~di~ Bag-' _ mum wage law covering V\iomea you ask. ' of more space, Ont! color through, Pope John XXIII "may see no~zl, Apostohc D~legate, to the, and 'minors. your horne' permits you to inter- through to fulfillment" a peti- Umted States, preSided. ' Th' . ' ' k . f S· t Coolest Color ,'Blue the coolest of the colors, 'change. fui-nitu. re from room tb tion for the canonization of 'In his serinim Msgr. Ellis said: M'" e PTIPhneer wtor 0 h dlseofr d and restful':' ' M th 'El' b' th B 1 S t "T' 1 f h ' . h IrIameresa 's serenI'ty' IUggest room. ,You can pull a bedroom 0 er Iza e ayey eon. ru y can we say 0 er, m t e h ' . 1 . ' , 0 ay d - ea t t 'ness. It induces a feeling of un- chair'up to the dining ,table Msgr. John, Tracy Ellis, pro- words with whfch S1.Paul ex- t e SOCia sCiences epar me':! ruffled, dignity and tranquility~ without apology. You'll be able fessor of Church history at the horted Timothy, that sheleiid ~t ~a6lhurst coll~feci :a~YI" So you can understand why the to retire a liv.ing room rug 'to the - Catholic' University of .America, hold upon the life eternal '00' WU~s, rMe., was r ec3 e, y en. ' , , 't bl f'" 'ayne orse 0 f 0 regon and ' color expert sugges s ue or, bedroom when you buy the made the appeal at the cere.:. which she was called and that . P 1D 1 f III' .' a 'person such as de,scribed .. wall.:.to-wall' carpeting you've . monies marking tli~ sesquicen- she 'made' the good' confession Sen. ,au, oug as 0 mOls. above, ' planned., _ I I tennial of S1. Joseph's Convent before "many witnesses' who Sell·, ',Morse tOl.d. the, Sen~te, " Does everyone think eyf the ' , a n d College. have carried' its inspiring mes- that· Oregon's minim urn wage, lame blue? You may select a Catholic School Pupil sage, t~ every section, of the ,land. law was enacted chiefly as ~, tint, -another person a shade. . ' ' Mother . Seton founded the He added: "We have gathered 'result of a survey conducted by A tint is a color value lighter Wms U.N. Ce,ntest, u. S. Sisters of Charity at Em- in Emmitsburg today not only . Sister Miriam Theresa - th~n, than 'the normal value of the NEW YORK, (NC) _ A jun- ,mitsburg, with eight followers. to 'honor an historic occasion of, Caroline J. Gleason-of condl, pure color, while a shade is a ior in a I California Catholic ' The community founded by her the American, Church;' but _to . tioris in -Oregon sweatshops. ,darker value. Tints, and shades high school has ,been named was the first native American join in expressing ,the 'prayerful Sen'. Douglas added that lie ' are pro~uced in paints tJ;1rough first' place winner in the 1959 sisterhood.' It became affiliated hope' that, if it be Goc;l's' holy, knew, from his own experience the addition of white or black' examination and essay contest 'in 1850 with the French Sisters will, Pope John XXIII, the'10th' of working with' the Oregon respectiv'ely to the color. on the United Nati-ons, sponsor.ed of Charity. 'If she is canonized, Succe~sor of Pius VII, the .pon- Minimum Wage Commissio~ Objects also appear> to be by the Americali," Association she will be the first native ,tiff,'of Mother Seton's day, may years ago that the. 'nun's woflt different, in size as ,a result of for the United Nations here. '_ American to be w'honored. see through to fulfillment' on behalf of sochll justice waa the value ,of their coloring. Light She is Miss Jo.... ~~nn 'Fargot 'of Highlight of the ceremonies ,Mother' Seton's canonizatio'n. ' , deeply appreciated. , : __
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Historian Appeals for' Canonizatio'n, ... " Of Mother Elizabeth 'Seton "i
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impression of greater size. Dark values and black, on the other hand, appear to decrease size. This applies to both room and furniture. To 'increase th~ ap-' parent size of a room or piece of furniture, you would paint it'a light tint or even white. You would paint the room or furniture a dark shade if you wanted to reduce its apparent size. You Want Blue Let's assume that you are the person who wants blue. Consider the suggestion so often made-carry one color from room to room. For variety within each room, team it with various -llecondary colors. In y'our living, . room, build y~i.lr. one-coloi" scheme in. blue or a deep-blue - - - - - carpet. ' , . ," ' , , ' Paint 'your walls a lighter ~alue of the same hue. Phoose a patterned, fabric with . some blue
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vent of the Sacred Heart in Menlo Park. The. contest's first pri,ze is a choice (l~ a European trip, or $500. Three students from Catholic high schools 'were among the 16 winners 'of honorable mention.
,IS THA T' ALL
Obscure Nun Sister Of Famed Filnn Idol
BALTIMORE (NC) -,- A nun who lived in humble obscurity while her brother was the movie idol of millions died here follOWing' a prolonged illness. 'She was Sister Mary Hilda, a sister of Francis X. Bushman, silent' movie', star and now'. televisioIi actor~ ,The nun served as r,ecordhistorian, at Mercy Hosp!tal here for more than' 30 years...She died in the 'hospital; , A 'Baltimore native, Sisier Maty';Hilda, was the daughter of the late John H. ,and Mary Nor, beck Bushman. 'She entered'the Westport Parish' Fiesta novitiate of the Sisters of Mercy To Be Four-Day Affair 'in 1895 and took her' 'VOWI ill Parishioners of Our Lady of 1898." , Grace Church, Westport, will hold their annual lawn, party Papal Reliet 'St:>ciety , Wedn~sday through Saturday, Aug. 19' to 22, on the church ,Provides' Vacaitio~s grounds at Briggs and Sanford ROME (NC) -Two thousand Roads. children from eight nations have Booths; will include foods, been brought to Italy, by the games, fancy work and "trash" Ponfifical 'Relief Organization and tre<tsure." Other attractions 'for a month's 'vacation at 'the will be pony rides, midget autOl: "beach.' , ", ' and amusement rides. " The r~lief agenc~r" .which receives 'much ,of it~: food stuffs Music for Mass .:and other supplies from 'Catholic OTTAWA (NC) - New music Relief Service_National Cath., for the Mass - beiieved ,by itsolic Welfare Conference,"',oper.:. eomposer to be easily, within the ates a: string of Summer camps range of any parish, congrega- alon'g the'coasts of Italy. ' tion, - has been pliblished by The children; mostly" of Itallifn'" the Catholic Center of the Uni- nationality or origin, corne from versity 9f Ottawa. The music France';" SwitieHand, " 'Austria, was com'posed by F1l.ther Jules ...,Germ;my,. Lu?'e.mbourg, T\Jl1isia, Martel, .O.M.L, 54, former di~ ,Lebanon, 'Greebe arid' Hollanct , rector of th~~~iversity~s Pales- Among the young~:ters ar,e 50 trina Choir, to 'enccllirage"'1ai-'" soris' of~ itiilhiiCmineri"'wlUl'are participation in the Mass. working in Belgium.
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THE ANCHO~-Thurs., Aug. ,6,· 1959
la'ity' 6ra,tefol for. ,J=or~hri9ht: leadership of Mofher Chur~h
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS.
African Actress Refuses RoIe
By Mary Tinley 08ly .' ' , Once more, the confining reins of. the Catholic' Church eome under fire. This time, it is the refusal of certain bishops to allow girls within their spiritual jurisdiction to participate ir.I bathing suit contests. Th~ "mean old men" who "don't understand today's' world'" with picayune details-but when are screamed at fr:om within spiritual direction is indicated, and without their 0 w n he directs, with all the aut,hority dioceses. Fortunately for of the Church behind him. their flocks, these "mean old men" understand all too well today's world, know the dangers inherent in such exhibitions. "It's a talent hunt!" sanctimoniously declare promoters, seeing big profits endangered. "This . is not
~~~:s~~~boe~~,1))\ must have talent. Y'understand? Talent!" , FOl" Mess 01 Pottage' . '" Granted. MisS,36-24-36 should'" be able to sing and/or ·dance-but she has to prove her talent· (and her measurements) in a bathing suIt via a publicly judged contest. On.e, w:onders if the voice of a Lily Pons or the dan,cing ,ability of a Pavlowa, , would win if its owner wer~, e10thed in a conventional dress. Realizing that this competition eould be the occasion of serious ain, ,the' Bishop (that "mean old man") forbids the Catholic girl, to display herself publicly in the manner,required. Depending on the nature of the contest, the Bishop is forced by his conscience and the responsibility of his holy office to announce a terr~ble threat-denial of the Sacraments-to anyone who deties the jUdgm.ent. . Sometimes, one of the "foolish maidens" sells out:· gambles 'her most precious heritage agairst the chance of a s~ll,. crown .on her head, applause from a leering crowd, and the "opportunity" to enter 'more fully into an environment where there will be even greater temptations. When this happens, her Church can only pray for a return to ,sanity of this feminine Esau who has sold her birthright for a mess of pottage - or a chance at that mess. In this sorry state, the term "Holy Mother Church" seems to this observer' a misnomer. I'd rather think that it is "Holy Father Church" speaking. At our house and at yours, minor but similar situations have arisen. Things go along: time-wasting, meaningless ac'tivities are indulged in by youngsters-not especially good, not really bad. Mother talks and reprimands against ever-deafening ears. Comes THE TIME. That's when Father proves himself the Head of the House with • firm, authoritative pronouncement, not of What's What, but of. That's That-and no foolin'. As in a well-run family, the Bishop is the spiritual Father to his flock. He doesn't throw' hie weight around, interfering,
Citizens for Decency Step Up Smut Fight PUEBLO (NC)-Pueblo Citizens for Decent Literature have appointed two committees to further their drive· against smut on newsstands. The decent literature orgal\ization represents 33 civic and religious groups which' have banded together to fight printed filth. The chairman is head of the Protestant Council of Churches here. The ,group meets 'm a Catholic parish hall. Members' voted to send one eommittee to contact magazin~ distributors and expI8in the 'federal, and state law8, asking for co-'operation. Thi8, cOmmittee ' w~s autl)or4ed to an,ure dealer., that legal action to' enforce eom" pliance will be mkea wheft ne.usar".
Quite often, in the past few years, the Church has protested the mores of the day in America -always accompanied by howls of protest from those who have big $$$ stake. Witness the sale of pornographic' literature, records, salacious entertainment..• "Suppression of freedom!" they shout,. Cynically, it is pointed out, the very condemnation of various books and movies boosts them into best-sellerdom. That's beside the point. National' Concern Reading, listening to,,' viewing such offenses are all up to the' consumers. God gace man free wilL He may choose what he ,.likes, though it doom his sou1. ,By the same token, the U. S. Pure Food and Drug Law labels certain' products harmful. By circumvention, underthe-counter methods, nar'cotie8 and, the like may be purchased, dooming,'man's body. This does not release the Pure Food and, Drug people from the responsibility 'of making tr,ue pronouncements. Interest in the weUare of" youth is by no means confined to those of our Faith. It has become 'one of the major concerns of all mature, thinking Americans. . Only Unified Force A recent incident pointed this up. At a" meeting of college and university administrators, 'pre~ dominantly Protestant, informal discussion went something like this: "Our 'young people seem to be assailed on all sides by appeals to their basest natures-jungle music during every waking moment, scant clothing accepted u a matter of course." "Serious stu,dy is ,counterbalanced by recreation that debilitates rather than re-creates." "Did it ever occur to you," one of the Protestant members of the group asked, "that the Catholic Church is the only unified force actually doing something about all this?" Opinion was unanimous. Mother, (or Father) Church, we of the laity are grateful for such forthright leadership.
9
UMTALI (UC) - A noted Southern Rhodesian actress at the last moment turned down the leading role in a local produc-, tion of Tennessee Williams' "The Rose Tattoo," after seeking the advice of her bishop. 'Ruth Dawson, described by producer Adrian Stanley as "one of the most powerful actresses in Southern Rhodesia," consulted Bishop Donal Lamont, O. Carm., of Umtali on the eve of rehearsals. The Bishop advised Miss Dawson not to take the part because the play is "suggestive and objectfonable."
BI_ESSES PARENTS - Rev. Eugene V. LaPlante, A.A., sang his first So'lemn High Mass at' St. Anthony church, New Bedford, Sunday. ~ather LaPlante completed his studi.es for the priesthood at Assumptionist House of The6logy in Layrac, France, and was ordained th,ere last Oct. 19. His parents" Mr. and Mrs. Engene A. LaPlante, receive his blessing.
Children Hcive Morbi a'nd Legal Right to Religious Heritag~,·.
COLUMBUS (NC)':'-"Children ' is more jmportan~ in today'. have both a moral and a legal world 'than: the expansion of proright to ,their religious heri- gra,ms o~ child care!' It pointed tage," a committee representing out that society has an important the six Catholic Dioceses of stake in family stability, perOhio has told the Ohio Commit- sonal responsibility and religiou•. tee 'for the 1960 White House instruction. ' Conference on Yo~th. "Comtnunity morality," the The statement wail made in a committee, said, "cannot long report'issued for the committee exist in the abs~nce of religious by its chairman, Msgr. William principles. The growth of adult E. Kappes; Columbus diocesan and juvenile delinquency among director of charities. unbelievers offers Ii challenge to The' report ,~,ated that the community leaders who see the "Deed fOr influencing attitudea Reed for religion."
Junior Daughters pian Leadership Institutes NEWARK (NC)-The Junior Catholic Daughters of Ainerica will. h~ld their 'eastern leadership institutes and workshops at the Robert, Treat Hotel' here, Aug. 27 to 30. Leaders of the ' movement' from 14 states will ,. attend. Theme of the' meeting .will be, "All For and Through His Sacred , Heart." ,Auxiliary Bishop Martin W. Stanton of Newark will preside at the opening banquet and the following Holy HOUr-OD Aug. 27. 0
A Requiem Mass for Frances' Maher, past Supreme Regent of the national CDA, will be offered on the 28th. A demonstr~ tlon of trooP. meetings and handicrafts will be a feature at Saturday's program. The institute will conclude with a noaa dinner on Sunday.
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,First Woman Teaches At Theology School WOODSTOCK (NC)-Woodstock College, the nation's oldest Jesuit school of theology, hu' its first woman' teacher. ' , Dr. Magd'a B. ~rnold, a member of the psychology department at Loyola University, ChiCago, is teaching a summer course on the scientific investi-'" ,gation of personality to Jesuit, scholastics at the college. She is former head of psychology at Bryn Mawr College and lecturer at Harvard University.
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-10'Thurs., -THE ~NCHOR Aug. 6, 1959
Twelve'Years of Pro'yers ' Answered by Marykl10ller
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS.
Outlines Pu rpose " Of Religious, Life
TAQUILE ISLAND (NC) -,Tears of welcome from usually stolid Indian men greeted' the arrival of the first priest in 12 years to visit this primitive island in the middle of Lake ,Titicacahigh in the Peruvian Andes, When Father Robert W. Golish, M.M. of ' ' , turies' ago, has been the center of Sunland, Calif., journeyed spiritual life for the ,people de,seven hours by motorboat spite the lack of' a 'priest," to some 400 Quechua Indians, Father Golish reported, "The
living here, he was gr~eted like people gathered in the church a returning hero. every week to r,ecite the Rosary, Word of the priest's arival asking the Blessed' Mother to Ipread 'quickly and the entire send them ,a priest." island population appeared to Father Golish spent two days greet him. Women and men on the island baptizing, coriiirinwept with joy. ,Children were ing (priests have special faculties' dancing and' laughing. Leatherto confirm 'un(lI~r certain cirskinned Indian men liried up to cumstances), m:irrying,hearing give a welcoming ,embrace. A confessions, and giving Comsmall, band of musicians, plaYirig. muniori. ' flute-like reed.s, drums, and, 1n"We just can't spare the men dian mandolins, kept, up a' to have a Prie:;t visit :Taquile steady', rhythmic tune' during' eyery,' week" I)r even ,eVery the ,walk to the 'village at the, month," the pritlst 'said. "It ,will top}ifa st~ep hill. probably be'a year before ,a ,Top o~; Villa~e ' priest will'again' be able to 'get The rarefied air of Lake Titi- 'timeto visit the island. ' ' "A 'trip to TaqlUile is lik~' going , 'caca, with its 13,ooO-foot altitude, made the Maryknoll priest' back five centuries into time. It Itop for frequent rests along the, is'so near and 'yet 'So fiirrimioved 'way. But the altitude did not' from modern civilization' that, it bother 'the" barrel-chested Inmust be a lot like 'America 'was diaris. The flute players' kept around the time of Columbus," playing without interruption all The Maryknoill mission area ~e way to the, top 'of the village.' in Peru is the most heavily pop:. To his surprise, the 35-year- ulated' ,district in the: entire old Caiifornia priest found the. country and it suffers from one' village church and rectory in of the most severe shortag'es of perfect condition. The Indians ,priests -, one for every 15,000, had been keeping it clean and souls. . maintaining it just for, this day, -the arrival of a priest. , "The small cnurch, built cert..:
Tower .Gives No Fea'i · t
Pri'son B'lrings Priest DE~ath
Leani~g
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CHICAGO (NC) - P nes s an ' '_engineers have discovered, that the tower of Holy Name Cathedrai is the only leaning ,tower , in Chic~go, but they aren't worried.
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HONG ,KONG (NC).,-A 39~ year-old Chinese priest serving a life, sentence at hard labor near the Tibet border has died, ' it was learned here.
, TORONTO (NC) -,- Religious life is not primarily 'a way "of giving oneself to man but of giving oneself to God" -,a' Canadian cardinal said her~. Even if there were enough secular institutions serving hu-' 'manity t h I' 0 ugh ch~ritable works, "the religious life would,' , nonetheless, be ,justifiable,'" stated "James Cardinal McGui-' gan" Archbishop of Toronto. Writing in his weekly column' in the Toronto Telegram, Cardinal McGuigan pointed out thilt the imj>ression is sometimes' ,given that religious life is justifiable "on, ~he grounds that itll' members do a great service to: .society.'i .'However, he said, religious life~ "is essentially and primarily 'a'
POPE GR, E,ETS PRESS CiIAIRMAN: Pope j~Ii.nxXIII~- ,'man, way of ,not. giving oneself' to' but of giving oneself to', is shown with Bishop Alber~ Zuroweste· Bell~viIle; '" lit,' ,God.", ' Episcopal Chairman of the·N.C.W.C. Pl'ess' pepartment,' Because of the 'spirit of dediduring an audience at'Castelgandolfo. The Bi.shop' presented cation among· Religious, the members' of his party, priests and , sen:iiilar'ians, ' to, the' Cardinal added, "this love of,' ' ' ' " ' \' God will issue forth and overH oly Father." NC Photo' ' , flow,into a love of all that God .
of
, Remains To Be Seen if Maine Towns' :a:~Vr:a:tth~~: ;~e~:~: ;:e~: WiUContinue'Bus'Rides for All ~~::es:~; His own image and 'AUGUSTA (NC)--,Communi-' ties which transport childreri ,attending private and' parochial. schools in the' new sch'ool year ' technically will be 'acting illegally. So it, remains to be seen if they will continue the prac:" tice. This is the situation observers see 'created by me statement of Gov. Clinton, Clauson and party leaders of the state legislature 'who said it would be "unw'ise'" to call a special session of the legislature.
Such arrangements were ruled' . Abbey 1;00 Years Old' illegal, by the State Supi'eme HEREFORD (NC) - Belmont Court, which said in May that Abbey near here, a 'major permissive legislation from the Benedictine monastery in Engstate's lawmakers must be obland, has celebrated the cen,tained. The court also said it tenary of its founding,. Monks ~f, sees no constitutional barrier to the institution also conduct Belsuch transportation but a law is mont, ABbey School, a leading needed.' British Catholic College.
Fath,er Joseph Taam, parish priest o'f the Maryknoll Fathers' mission in Kongmaari (S.unwi), South China, died after eight years of harsh prison life under Six municipalities which There 'was an inkling that the t'ranspor tpnva ' t e an d .paroc h'la 1 the communists. . cathedral tower ,was inclining New!! of his death was furschool pupils to and from school toward State street when new nished by the' post' offic~ at the a t' pu bl"IC expense had appealed , .bronze doors were being put.in labor camp, which ' ' returned' t 0, th e G ov~rnor ' t0' ca 11 a speCIal, . the' catl;1edral in 1953. The open- some 'o(his mail to the senders. session before the new school '~~:n~~~.~he doorway had to be Father 'faam ,spent: :the" last 'year opEms to, enact' legislation , .' three years· of his, life' at "hard "to make their transpo~tation arBut more evidence of the lean- ' 'iabor 'in Tsin,o',h,. iii "pro'v'I"nc'e 'rangements l~gal., ' ing 'tower was discovered ' re- near the 'Tibetan " b't>rder. '01'-', cently when the Salvation Army building on 'the' sou theast cor- dained' in 1946 ~It the regional ner of State and Superior streets seminary ',of Ab~rdeen in Hong' , Kong, Father Taam's first aswas torn down. With the build- signment was at the cathedral.;' ing gone, a more spectacular parish of Bishop Adolph, ' J. Pas-,", B. F. GOODRICH, Dist. view of the tower became visible. RECAPPING DONE Priests of the cathedral, i~-, chang, M.M., of Martinsburg Mo., expelled Ordinary. 0'£ Kong~ IN OUR OWN PLANT cludingMsgr. Patrick J. Hayes, moon who, is no,w' residing in.' 365 MAIN STREET the rector" walked a short disHong Kong. , FAIRHAVEN tance from the cathedral, looked Father Taam wa~ later as-' WYman 7-4501 . up at the tower and- noticed tha t , it was' actually leaning outward signed to the pa:rish church in ' Sunyi, China, "'here he was toward State Street. Two Feet Off arrested by the Reds ' in 1951, and imprisoned. He' was reJoseph Monaghen, engineer of 'The Family That the cathedral, was skeptical. So leased in 1952" but reimpi'isoned after two month:;' freedom. In', . Prays Together he dropped' a plumb bob line 1956 ~e was given, a, . life sen--:' from the highest window in the tower, and it fell two feet from ,tence at hard laboJr in Tsinghai.,: Stays Together"
From the Tra,p plstM 0 n k. , J
ROLAND'S ,'TI.RE SERVICE
the base of the cathedral. "Gosh, the cathedral tower actually does lean," he exclaimed: / S th 't' l' th t ~.;~_____ orne all on les c aim a,', excavation f6r the nearby subway caused the old tower to lean. But pries~s Rt the, cathedral recalled that the tower was leaning before, the subway diggIng started. Subway architects examined the cathedral. and asserted that the digging caused no ,damage. Although the tower actually: leans, ,priest:' at the cathedral say, there is '!.o cause for alarm because the tower rests on, two caissons set on bedrock 118 feet below the ground. The entire front of the cathedral is set on six such caissons, Holy Name cathedral, de, signed by architect Charles P. Keely, was dedicated on Nov. 21, 1875. 'Its spire rises to a height of 210 feet.
Jesui-t Consultant
WASHINGTON (NC)-Jesuit, ,Father Albert A. Lemieux, presi-' dent ,'of Seattle Univ~rsity, has 'been 'named' to a 12-member" consultant panel 'to evaluate requests for National Defense Ed-ucation Act loans to worthy students. "
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Sister Constantia to Head New School in Maryland
THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 6, 1959
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS.
Holy Nom:e Men To Take C~nsus Of Dioce~e
Sister Mary Constantia, R.S.M., a member of the faculty of Nazareth Hall, Diocesan school for exceptional children in Fall River, has been appointed to take charge of a new school for exceptional children at the General Motherhouse of the Sisters ing at Cardinal Cushing Clinic of Mercy in Bethesda, Md. in Boston and St. Coletta's The appointment was made School,' Hanover, which has a reputation for work in by Mother Mary Catherine, national the field of educating excep-
R.S.M., Mother Provincial of the Province of Providence. In company with Mother Mary Antonine, R.S.M., Mother Assistant Provincial, Sister Constan-' tia spent some time in Bethesda recently, inspectinUg the buildingand making arrangements· for the opening of classes in September. 6bject cif the school will be to help children not intellectually able' to follow regular school programs, but who can benefit by a simplified educational progi'a'm given to small groups.' Sister Mary Constantia has been a' teacher iii' Diocesan' , schools for the past 15 years. . Prior to her appointment to Nazareth Hall' when it was opened two years ago, she had .. taught at St. Joseph's arid St:" Patrick's schools in.. Fall River!, Love and understanding have characterized l;1er work with the exceptional at Nazar!'lth Hall for which she has had special train-
Country Fair to Help Holy Cross Seminary A country fair to benefit the North Easton 'seminary building fund of the Holy Cross Fathers will be held by the Lay Family of the order fr'om 1 to 6 Sunday afternoon, ·Aug. 9 at Holy Cross Mission House, Tucker Road, North Dartmouth. Special children's activities will be provided, in addition to refreshments, gifts and fancy work for adults. In charge of th~ event are Stephen ,A. Markey. and Francis Collins.' , '
BRIDGEPORT (N C) The Bridgeport diocese has announced that a house-tohouse census from Sept. 13
tional children. ,). While teaching at Nazareth' Hall, Sister Constantia has resided at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River.
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through Sept. 20 will be made by members of the Holy Name society in the 173 churches in the . diocese under the supervision of the pastors.
CENTENNIAL YEARBOOK: Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, .former Apostolic Delegate' to the United States, examines' a special centenn~al edition "Roman Echoes", yearbook of the North American College in Rome. Showing . the book to the CardimiI are Rev. Mr. ~nthony T. Padovano, of Newark,' N.J., editor-in-chief, right, and Rev. Mr. Anthony Massimiili, of Philadelphia, literary editor. NC Photo
.Public Relations "Official' Warns' Of Great 'Communica'tion Failure FRENCH LICK, (N-C)-Modern man is building up an immunity to the persuasions of. public relations men, one of, . them admitted here.
Red Festival Continued from Page One run into considerable trouble and never succeeded in getting off the ground. This is the first time the communist-sponsored youth festival has been held outside the Iron Curtain. Reports circulating here indicate the festival will not be held agfiain in a non-communist country. Communist Life The festival's discussion seminars, cloaked with inncentsounding titles, represented the ideological core of the festival, putting forth the hard and serious communist life. The other events, the movies, dances, parties, operas and ballets, were merely devices to hide the· true purpose of the festival. At these seminars, U. S. participants were able to express. their position in defense of freedom. A young U. S. scientist emphasized the American desire for nuclear control withinsp~c tion. In the philosophy seminar a Chicago lawyer called freedom "the life of philosophy." A Boston city-planner said the U. S. prefer ."intellectuals who' are dissatisfied, like Socrates, to a nation of contented pigs." U. S. delegates in the journalism seminar stated that freedom of the press required the free movement of news, newspapers and newsmen at the festival. Aims Fail It quickly became evident that the festival organizers, despite their attempts to control activities, failed in their aim to persuade the youths of Africa and Asia to accept the communist solution to their problems. The image of unanimity was hurried- ' ly shattered. "They cry peace and friendship, they speak violence and hatred,'~ said a young Algerian delegate. Reacting to ·a demand by a Bulgarian professor for Asian',' youth acceptanc'e of the' communist philosophy or atomic death, an Indian student said:' "We are not ready to abandon 4,000 years of Indian heritage' or to forget Ghandi."
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SISTER CONSTANTIA
Planning to visit 200.000 Catholic and non-Catholic families.in Fairfield County, the area or the diocese of Bridgeport, the census takers will· engage in a purely spiritual endeavor according to a chancery statement. They will' encoura,;:e indifferentand lapsed Catholics to return to the' Church and invite non-Catholics to ·inv.estigate the Catholic Faith,. the c\1ancery said. The' Holy Name members will begin their work with a special blessing and prayer. .
school. a blackboard jungle. every large city a mammoth nest A pastoral letter by Bishop of gangsters, every Westerner a Lawrence J. Shehan of Bridgelevi-clad, drawler who shoots port emphasized the "purely from the hip, every teen-agel' a spiritual purpose" of the census• , Edward P. Vonderhaar; public . coke-soaked nit-wit rocking and' Bishop Shehan said that he i. rolUng and squealing," he said. relations director at Xavier Unicalling the diocesan-wide inversity, Cincinnati, drew a dark' , "Such exports communicate quiry' a census for the sake of picture for his' fellow public rebut distortions,' because the convenience. "But in reality it is lations men at the annual conrecipients lack the sophistication much more," he said. "It is' a ve'ntion of the American College to understand that these are excomprehensive program of enuPublic Relations Association. aggerations ,andcarica'tures for meration and information aimed the entertainment of a limited at the spiritual welfare of the , "I am afraid that as a target for our ~oinmunications," the" .segment of our population." whole diocese." v~teran .Xavier official said, '''as a pick-up of our amplified, multiplied, and intensified ideas, man has become deaf as a post and 'blind as a ground mole." INC. Mr. Vonderhaar said the reas'ons for the failure in persuasion are modern <m,m's preconceived notions, or his interests, or his whims of th.~ moment." Cites' Example '. An outstant:iing example of communicatio'n~failure, the pub":: ·lic relations official stated, is the inability of "Uie U. S. to convey ;i genl,line image of itself to other' . ARTHUR J. DOUCET FRANCIS J. DEVINE nat,i,ons. . "Simple minds around" the world. 'think every American ' ~~~
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Pope Grateful ForU. S. Gift. WASHINGTON (NC) - An expression of gratitude' on .behalf of His ,Holiness Pope .John XXIII for the U. S. Bishops', $500,000 gift to the. Holy See's' charities has been received. Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati, chairman of lh'e administrative board. of the National' Catholic .Welfare Con;. ference, was· recipient of the· letter signed by His Eminen.ce Domenico Cardinal Tardirii, Vatican Secretary of State. ' • The Holy Father is. "comfocted, .and encouraged' ·bythe· riiunificence of the"gift, because.' it' is: such a valuable help to him in promoting various' works of beneficence' dear to his' heart' and inseparable from his pastoral office," Cardinal Tardini reportep.. The funds given to the Pope were fro in the proceeds of the Laetare Sunday collection taken up a.rinually in U. S. churches for the U. S. Bishops'" Relief Fund.
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-THE 'ANCHOR
.'. Thurs:.; ~~g. ~, ., ..r l
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS
SJ~:'
Holy' Father Comtts First
". :" ..' ,.';
God L'ove Y QU By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. D.D,:. ,','
Assistant Professor of Sociolog'J Saint Louis UniversUy
'~- :'" No missionary society. in the world ever decides.·.of and by Itself . to open a mission in Africa, Asia, Oceania or any other pari of the world without an authorization from 'the Doly Father through hiIJ . Congregation of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith. They must receive their authority to evangelize from the Vicar of Christ. It is he who sends them OD the. missions; U Is he who begs you to aid him in order that he may aid them. If, therefore, he sends the various societies to their mission fields would you have him ·send them empty handed? It is not enough that we recognize Papal authority in the mission lands; it is equally important. that our Faith be supplemented by sacrifices. These are received by the Vicar of Christ through the Society for the Propagation of the Faith.
What do you think of separate vacations? ·My husband's oarents insist on taking their married sons (they have no daughters)~onvacati(jn "just as we us~d to:;' Wives aren't forbidden, but Ithey pick a remote and primitive . Place where it's impossible Preoccupied with earning a livto take young childreri, so ing and raising a family, they guess wh<? stays home with r grow apart rather than together, whom? My husbandhesj- with the result that when the ta'tes to oppose his father, but·
last child departs, 'they face each other in their emptied home hoi ida y s to almost as strangers: . Genesis Gives Answer build now. i think you With these observations in will a Ii r e e, - mind, Irene, let's consider your 'I~ne, that the specific problem. Your stand Who is Irish who does not know that St. general que sthat '''wehave Ollr own family " Patrick was sent to evangelize the Irish??) Uon of separate holidays to bund now" is ..Quite But let it not be forgotten that St. PatrickM: vacations for correct. You have formed a new went to Ireland by order of the Holy Father, @l[ hlisbands and family unit that must now beCelestine I. Patrick has been rightly called!@: wives cannot be come. the principa! focus of your the Apostle of Ireland, but in the mind of that great soul there could answered with interest and energy. CE-NSORED: Bishop Car-' be no Ireland without the Pope. Patrick went first to the Vicar of a simple "yes" What about your husband's reChrist and from him received the'· name Patrick to signify.that.uhe· or' "no". Indiluctance to offend his father? los Borge of Managua, Nicawould be the father of the citizens of heaven." ragua, was the victim of vidual . family Although we must rellpect the '-.-e ire umstances longstanding emotional bonds, government censors when he There iIJ not a single mission country.iD the world that has vary' so widely' that no single, sense of gratitude, and reverence wrote an a'rtide for the ever been brought to the Church ,that has not had its.. missionaries .. ' absolute rule will apply to. all thaLa son owes 1:0 his father, we sent.by, .the .Vicar of Christ. II the HoI,. Father alone authorizes .,' editorial page of La Prensa, 'cases. . . can find an adequate answer· to any. society to go to such and such a mission territory, does it not For example, there are times this question in. the firstchap.ter independent daily paper crif~lIow that.}le wh.o e:x~rci~s, t~e authority, should be pro:vid~d. when the husband may have .an in the Bible that tells us about tcizing persons who use the with. the means? That is why, as the Holy Father said,. he shouid opportu'nity. to go on a hUllting. marriage, ' be iirSt aDd principally alded.·You nia,. have your favorites. but word "communism" for 01', .fishing trip with the "b~Ys,", There is a striking verse in the everything coiitraryto their they must not be "first." .First 'comes the Holy Father's Society for lJI\ the wife may haye the. chance. second chapter of G!'lnesis, rethe Propagation of the' Faith. You may give generously to a NG Photo to . visit distant relatives or . peated 'by Our Lord when He' interests. particular cause; but . not "principally:~ 'Your greatest sacrifice.. , friends when· her husband is no.t . spoke' about marriage: "Wheremust'be made'to the Holy Father. . . £reeto' take a vacation. It Would . fore a man shall leave fath~r and Te~~ion seem absurd to pass up .all such mother, and shall cleave· to his GOD LOVE YOU TO A.H. for $500.00: "I am endosing a check Continued from Page One occasional. opportunities on .the, wife: and they ,~hall 'be two in . for the Society for the Propagation of the Faith;' You made me The dispute was argued on re- realize how little I have done. This is to make upa ·little." . . • assumption that husbands and, one flesh" (Genesis 2/24). wives ought to do everything . Once a man marries, his pri- ligious grounds, the report noted, toW.X.C~ for $50 "Here is my sacrifice for our Holy Father's ~ether at all times. ... .. mary loyalties ,and obligations . despite the fact that, in many, Missions, to be applied wherever he feels it will do the most good."· As a general principle, how-. must be directed to his wife instances, the disagreement grew •.. to J.B. for $1.65 "I' am sending all the money I have on hand, ever 'and making allowances and family. The clarity and out of economic, rather than re- in gratitude for wonderful parents and a good· horrle." ... ·to Mrs. fOr ~p'ecial occasions or' unique force of the Creator's original ligious considerations.. M.P. for $5 !'I am enclosing a. check for your poor in thanksgiving Ignorance .. family circumstances, I believe' statement in Genesis, as well as for my 95 years." ... 'to M.D. "I was going to buy flowers with this . Similarly;oignorance gives rise . $1, but couldn't after I read about the Society for the Propagation. that husbands and wives should' OUI" Lord's repetition of it, have to mJsinterpretations and ru- of the Faith. Here is my offering."·plan to spend ·their. vacations peculiar significance. mors overdevel~pments in the tog~ther. '. Obviously the Creator' foreWhy not WJe 1IO~' of the time you spend sitting in the bus or There are many reasons for saw that the strength of long schools. Tensions have arisen ill litis stand. Throughout much of eStablished family ties .would some . communities, the report- IlUbway on your way'to work or home saying the' WORLD MlS- . said, as the result of purely ficSiON ROSARY for the 'missionarles throughout' the world? If the year, modern couples. are pose a perennial threat to the .eparated a good deal of the stability of a new family unit, . tiona 1 reports that one group or " y~•.do not have one, send US y'our request with a $2 otJerinA' aDd . tinie by the demands of the hus- and in quite unmistakable an~ther is 'di!lcriminated againllt~ we will be happy to send you one. \ band's job; Vacation offers them terlllll He. warn(ld mankind of ill the hirin'g of teachers. One conferee, from a'predoml. Cut out this colUmn,' pin' your sacrifice to it and mail it to the' ~ opportunity: to relax and en- the danger. Through' marriage, . joy themselves together, free husband and wifE! are joined to-, nantly Jewish community, re- Most Rev.. Fulton J. Sheen, National .Director of The Society for frOm the routine bustle, stress gether more closely (they shall I . ported tlie following situation: . , the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., "Protestants say' the Protest- or your DIOCESAN DIR~CTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, and tension that characterize be two, in' one fleuh) than parent ants can't get jobs in the schools. ,368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. cOntemporary urban living. and child. . Jews say Jews can't .get job1!. , . Share Experiences Accept Faet Cut out ibis column, pin your sacrIfice to it and mail It to the Further, when there are chilHence there can be no doubt Catholics say 'Catholics can't get jobs. In the public's mind there Most Rev. Ftilton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for deen in the family, vacation of- abOut the primacy of their loyttlePropagation .of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avemle, New York ,1. NY., fers the father an excellent op- alties, affection, ;and obligation. is no separation of what is actual portunity to get to know them When their children marry, par.,. fact and- _what is fiction;' and or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND 1'. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River. Mass.. better, and incidentally, to.learn ents must accept this fact as well tension, results in the. community" 'from first \ hand experience as their children. The conferees. advocated an DAUGHTER~OF ST. PAUL something of the job his wife It seems to me, Irene, that Invite young girls (14-231 to labor In faces every day of the year' in your husband can graciously re- improvement of communication Christ·s vast vineyard as an Apostle of the between 'groups as the only way taking care of them and keeping fuse his father's invitation withEditions: Pres., Radio, Movies and feleto alleviate religious probleJiJ.s them occupied. out unduly offending him. vision. With these modern means, these in schools and to reduce tenMany modern children selP~rhaps it would be well for' Missionary Sisters bring Christ·s Doctrine sions. dom see their father when he is you to make your own plans for 10 all, regardless of ,ace, color 0, creed. - wholly relaxed 'and at his best, your vacation together at once. For information write to: 30 there may remain many asIn this way you will both assert REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR pects of his character that they your unity as a family and will 50 ST. PAUL'S AVE. IlOSTON 30. MASS. come to know and appreciate proceed on the basis ofa definite only on vacation. program of action rather lhan a At the s\:ime time, vacations mere negative refusal of an in- .. spe.n:t together as a family' are vitation. COME IN . SEE - .and DRIVE . , rich' with shared experiences Some tensions may result;' It and.: memories that endure always accompanies the wean~ NEW .BEDfORD through. the years,' serving to.. ing process, but mothers go oR ~orld'~ Most ':Beautifully Proportioned Cars" unite .and bind the family ever weani~~ babies just. ~.l1e same. at more clC?sely together. .' 'INDUSTRIAL OilS , . . Promote Companionship J1EA~ING Vacations together havespecial significance for the mo(lern TIf~KEN couple. Owing to increased Fath~lers" FORD 'DEALERS FOR 'OVER 38 YEA'RS'" . longevity and changes in the. :. . OIL .B~RN~RS [amily. system, they must be. 'BOYS WANTEDfo,r, ·the· .. 1344-B6 Purchase -,NewBedfo~d, Mas:' :Jrepared. to face a good number ·Priesthood and IlrotherhoOd.: .i & ·.fyears alone together after lock of funds INO impei:!i:heir children leave horrie. 'Un·m ent. . less. they have learned to play .' 501 COUNTY ST• .IS' well as work· together, .this Write 1~0: i~xtended period of the "empty NEW' BEPFORD ~ You Work in a' Factory, aesi" can be dreary indeed. P O. Box 5742 ",. During the busy, hectic years . Garage, Machine Shop or. Baltimore la, Md. WY3~1751 of raising a .family, vacations to. Gasoline Station? " gether can strengthen and PtaWe piCk up and deliver, cleol'l mote their sense of comp~nion and' repair overalls. Also. we have ship: so that they will be capable o complete line of Coverall I, Pants of.li\ring alone, once the children' . and Shirts' fOr sa!e. . leave. Ubfortunately soine make no W. reclaim and was" any oily, preparation for thes~ later years. ~ir:ty or greasy rogl. '.J Why BUy When W. Supply DOMEsnc & HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS ,'. VATICAN CITY (NC)-Amleto Giovanni Cardinal cicogflam, former Apostc;>lic Delegate to the U. 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LEWISTON (NC) Municipal officials 'of Lewiston have set aside funds for the transportation of parochial school students this Fall, anticipating special legislation to make their action legal. Lewiston is one of six Maine communities which have petitioned Gov. Clinton ,A. Clauson of Maine to call a special session of the le~islature for this purpose. The requests were made following a May ruling by the State Supreme Court. In a 4 to 2 decision, the court held it illegal to use tax funds for bus rides for children attending nonpublic schools, unless permissive legislation to this effect is first passed by the legislature. Twenty Areas Some 20 communities ill Maine have provided bus trans'portation to non-public school students in the past. Lewiston city fathers set aside' $4,100 to pay for the' transportation of all school children from' September· through April, 1960, when the budget year expires. Lewiston transports more than 1,400 children, the majority of whom attend parochial schools.
" ,USe.. ~f~:Sllnctuary Credence Table ·:Recall$
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'Custom' of 'Procession With Gifts
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DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASSi
8t. .Joseph's Church, New Bedford
The Sacrifice of the Mass to receive God's graces through spirits. We need to express this symbols of ourselves, in order to . gifts of bread and wine stand on a small, table, credence table, at tq.e beginning of Mass. The Sacrifice of the
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By Rev. Roland Bosquet_
THI ANCHOR-' Thurs.,' Aug. 6, 1959
is a great ex~hange of gifts. We offer ourselves in order the intercession of the Divine Victim. But we are not pure exchange in a concrete fashion. We offer bread and wine, receive the Divine Victim in Holy Communion. Today our
St. James Priests Active in Bolivia SANTA CRUZ (NC) -Tw'o priests of the Missionary Society of St. James the Apostle of Boston have begun their first missionary activity on the outskirts of this' ci ty.
Father Donald Ballou of Lexington and Father james T, ,Mcmass, in the' early days of the ' Donald of Canton, who CQmChurch, was usually celebrated pleted three months of study at at the end of a fraternal meal in the language school of the a private home. The material Maryknoll Fathers in Cocha,needed for the sacrifice, the bamba, are working in Our bread and wine, were already Lady of Fatima parish, located at hand on the table. west of Santa Cruz. By the end ·ofthe second century, the faithful began to offer The Missionary Society of St. 'the necessary matter ·for the James the Apostle was formed Sacrifice of the Mass, This ~all last year under the sponsorship done in the simplest manner pos- . of Richard Cardinal Cushing, sible. By the end of the fourth Archbishop of Boston. It recruits century, however, it was 'a uniand trains missionaries for work versally accepted custom for in mission areas, particularly • Latin America... each person to bring his own gift of .bread and wine with ~him to church, This was his "liturgy," his speCREDENCE TABLE cial function at Mass. The deaCorpus Christi Church - Sandwich, Ma8t'l. cons gathered 'these ' offerings and placed th,em on the altar, WASHINGTON (NC)-"Spirpractice, :;Ilso contributed to the' .. re~inds' u~ th~t the Ma$ll ill the the symbol ofChris.t. gen~ral abandonment of theSe ~ worship. of the entire Christian itualize Youth~Vitalize Nationll'" 'Great Entranee' proc~ssions.. The on'lyinini~ter':' community.' Each must assume . will be the theme of the ninth serving the priest wa'! ,the aco- . his activ~ role in the renewal of annual National Catholic Youth We 'notice, however,. a differBerlin Cardin'al Asks . ence the drama' of Our Lord'll passion Week to be observed Oct. 25 to in the Eastern and West- lyte. The priest .brought' the Nov:, I, Msgr. J 0 s e p h :E. Crusade of Prayer ern Rites in' the manner of pre- chalice and host with,hill). to the and death.. BERLIN (NC)-Berlin's Cardinsenting these offerings. In the altar while the wine and water The faithful present their gifts Scheider, director of the Youth Department, National Catholic al used the radio to urge a East it soon became customary ~ere p~aced .on .a small table or (w~ich today take the fotm of Welfare Conference, has ·anworld-wide crusade of prayer for the faithful to bring their In a nIche III the w:;l~l of the the collection). The deacon and work for international ungifts to the sacristy or to place · church next to the altar before places the bread and wine, sym- .nourlced. derstanding, which he said could' them on a special table in the Mass began. bOIs of the faithful's gifts, The The week is observed iri aD smooth the way to the peace church before Mass-began.. On Epistle Side priest as minister of Christ, the archdioceses and dioceses in the sought by the Geneva foreign At the offertory, the deacons The credence table today is a High Priest, changell them into United States and in U. S. terriministers' conference. tories; and throughout the world fetched the bread and wine from small table placed on the epistle the Body and Blood of Our Lord His Eminence Julius Cardinal in areas where U.S. armed there, This little ceremony · side of the altar to hold .the at consecration. Doepfner, Bishop of Berlin, forces are stationed. quickly developed into one of · requisites f~r Mass. Although. (Next week-Holy Water Fount) made a special broadcast to his the main aspects, of the splendor no special material is required~ people on the morning of the day of the Eastern Rites, known as f6r its construction, wood is genthe Big Four foreign ministers the "Great Entrance." erally used. At tirrtell a niche or resumed their efforts to solve In 'this rite the celebrant, ac- a wall· bracket replaces the crethe Berlin crisis at Geneva. companied by the deacons, dence table. Addressing the Catholics' of brings the elements of bread alid A white linen cloth reaching his diocese - which includes "SHARON, MASSACHUSETTS. wine from a'table, where they to the floor covers the credence. West Beriln, Soviet-occupied have been elaborately prepared, It is large enough' to hold the East Berlin,' and part"of the in a solemn procession to the cruets' of wiile and water, and A RESIDENT SCHOOL ,FOR BOYS Soviet Zone of Germany, Car- altar, the basin used for the washing , dinal Doepfnersaid: The offertory processions took of the' priest's fingers. At a' Grammar grades -4-5:'6-7·8 "The Geneva meeting has re- . ·various forms in the West. In ,Solemn Mass the chalice and Bumed.Let us resume our pray., Northern lands it was customary paten covered with the humeral ers too. All news of the misery for the faithful to form into a stand on the credence table. BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART of suppressed peoples longing for The credence table, bearing procession at the beginning of peace, and of the difficulties in the gifts' of the congregation, the mass of the faithful. Each the negotiations in Geneva 'with man and woman placed his own the Russians, we should undergift of bread and wine on tables stand as a call to 1>rayer." set near the sanctuary. According to the Roman custom of the Seventh Army Lauds early Middle Ages, the clergy went among the congregation to German Archbishop collect the gifts. GRAFENWOEHR (NC)However, the more universal Archbishop Michael Buchberger, practice was for the laity to Bishop of Regensburg, has been make their offerings at the changiven a certificate of outstandcel rail (predel!essor of our altar ing service for promoting Gerrail). They would deposit their man - American friendship' offerings of bread in a linen through his support of Catholic cloth or a silver dish held by a activities at the Seventh U.S. deacon. A second deacon held a Army Training Center here. great two-handled silver cup The scroll,' presented by Col. into which each' person poured' Paul L. Bates, commanding a little wine. The deacons then officer of the training ce~ter, bore these gifts to the altar: was accepted for 'the 85-year-old 'When. you install a convenient, Origin of Antiphon. prelate by Auxiliary Bishop .dependable,' GAS incinerator in the The offertory procession of Josef Hilt!. the faithful cust9m lasted .over basement of your home you end Presentation was made at a . a thousand yearl; in' the West. garbage and trash problems. 'your luncheon in honor' of Bishop At first it was performed in comand smokeless GAS New odorless Hiltl, who' had earlier adD;linplete silence. It soon became the incinerators get rid of trash istered Confirmation to members custom to accompany this long of Catholic families at the center, - and garbage qui c k I y and procession with the singing of a and blessed a num1)er of statues psalm or hymn by the faithful. easily. Silently and safely the for the Catholic chapel here. The This is the, origin of .our present GAS incinerator red u c e 8 statues, all hand-carved from' day offertory antiphon. everything to a fine powdery wood, are gifts from varioua The offertory processions, ash. Get one soon. They're units of the Seventh Army. .however, came to an abrupt end in the tenth century. At this inexpensive to own· and to time the use of unleavened operate. bread won ~cceptance in 'the Continued *froml"age One Church. The clergy, "themselves Nixon was then free to visit, on made this bread and it was no that same day, the Cathedral of' longer practical for. the faithful , St. John. ' to offer this bread at Mass. InThe Cardinal's -taking himself stead, ,the .. sub:-deacon transout of the piCture helped the ferred the chalice; containing the Vice-President pay' public tribhost, from a special table (called ute to the Catholicism of Poland the' credence table) placed' close while not disturbing the uneasy to the altar., , ' BE A SOOTLESS GOOD NEIGHBOR p~ace of th.at erountry which ha~ "Private or· low Masses were been kept the least enslaved of introduced at this' time. This the communist bloc by the combined efforts of two opposites-Third. 'Order the Cardinal and the communist , GRAND ..RAPIDS, (NC)-,-The leader Gomulka. lecond annual convocation, of It is reported that the Cardinal the Third Order of St. Dominic sent Mr. Nixon a note on which will be held at Aquinas College .1 SS NORTH MAIN STREET' the Vice-President haa refused here on Rosary Sunday, Oct." comment. it has been announced.
Theme of Week .On Spi ritua I ity
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iLauds" MafureCath,olicism ..
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,By' Msgr.George' G'. Riggiuls":"
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Fait~o,f, Spa~ish.Americans DENV~R (NC)--:The Catholic, Episod~s w,ill re-enact CornFaith and traditions of' the' nado's 'eiitry 'into the state ia Spanish-Amer1can p'e'opie' 'will'" i540~4~; the founding of the first :' i'i' :: becd~amatized·in' Uie' centennial permanent', .~ .whi~. :" :setUement, , ,,' pag~ant cel~brathlg.- the, .lOOtq ,Sa,1). ',~~~!l iq.. J85l;, ~n!i ,th~"build ,anniversary of the Rush to t~e ing, o.~, the fir:,t churc~, Our Lad,. llOckies. , . of Guadalupe, Conejos, in 1858. The' . production.; "SonS 'of AI~r ' b~Yll' men' and "~omea ',Corol).ado,'~ ,wilJbe, staged in represE!Dting "'priestS a~d" nuns, ,Red, .. Rocks Amph,itheater: near 'and dozens of "Ninas de Maria" ",' ,Denver. tomorrow al).d Saturday. (Daughters', of Mary) 1n Com,~t will star Cesar, Romero as munion dresses' will lead the , nar!:,ator. '' proces,sion 'which ta}{es, place Plan~ed as' c>ne of, the out-, ,during: the Church, fOWlding ,'standing events 'of the 'centennial episode. The Qenver Pllilharyear, 'the pageant' will '-have monic Chorus" will sing the , Catholic prayers -recited 'in some "Wesiiva,~ Te Deum" ,during the , of';'the most dramatic' scenes. p~,ocession. Many' ot' thE! musical' numbers " Other' scenes will show the will be taken frain' Catholic reli- :' stl-OIig, 'Catholic traditionS of the gious se~viCes:' ' '~Spanisl): Colonial families.,..
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Db-ectOr NCWC' Social' Action Depariment " "
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, , There has been a great 'deal of discussion inrec~nt years on 'the lecture piatformand in the-public prints about ' the real or,alleged failure of Catholics t9 tal.<ethei,r rightful' place and to play their proper role' in the Ipa~nstream of "
a few ~eeks ~gO aft~r an mne!!S "," 'American life. App,are.ntly there is n'o end of, artIcles of several mQilths.'Mrs,Mahoney and, speeches on this rather was the immediate,'past prE:si:-: touchy subject, but mbst of .d~nt o~ the National,CC:lUnc}I,of' th ' are of 'only passing CatholIc Women. ,A graCIOUS lady of . rock-liKe faith and 'all-em~, , intern eres t , Now 'and then,' however, one bracing cha,rity, s.he was a~, ,of them rings ,e.xemplary ,C:atholIc ,and 3;D , th bell as for. exemplary CItizen, e 1' , I 'had known Mrs. Mahoney, , ,exame e, a ;.,eever since I came to NCWC in '" ~~:ce~e~~ ad~ 1944, and in 1957 I. ca~e. 'to lqlow "th her very,wl~ll, ,for 10 th~, 'Fa!,l dCretshs ' nde' of that year I .was priv. il.eged to' a 0 l.on lC a , th L'b I S · ,tra¥el,'in' to the ", ". e 1 era ' 0;-. " her . , company' '" a, : . . , iet "b John ,W~rldCon~(r~!is of, th~ ' ' ,.. ~o ie ~e full Apostolate .. m'R6me"-:~t,_whlch HIS HOME BOMBED: '. tex~ whiCh is ' s?e 'deIiveFed?~e ,of tlIepri~,. Archbishop Mariano Rossell ",' ''reprinted'in the ' clpaladdre,sses. . .. ' , ' y"Arellano" of 'GuatemalaoJ I' 4 issue bf ,I kne~, that she. had .. ,~ni' , AU Y, ' Th' , extremely, active form~nYy'ears,City,' whose residence,' w~ men~~, t :s in a variety of' Catholic organ- slightly damaged by ,a bomb, , a Irs -ra e ,'. , , izations, and. I also kne~" in ':il ' ~rformancefrom every pomt of gene~al sort of way, that she, exploded' by terrorists, has' _""".. VIew. , had played a very constructive, been outspoken in his de:': Gh~tto' Complex" " role in corrimunity affairs in fense '9f hiscou~try's'ChrisAccording to Mr. Cogley; "the ,Washington as well as in her ,thln tradition's against the greatest problem Catholics have ,adopted Stat,e of Connecticut. ' . h ow' t 0 use' the .po w er ':'Frankly, ' now IS liowever, it' 'wasn't, ',threat of communism.' N,C ",-, ' .. 'that- is unquestionably' theirs.'" un~il, after her untimely death" 'Photo: It..is his op,inion that, ,"Catholics ~ at. 'the,-ear~y ag~, ~~. '53 that .1 'should stop' acting like' a be'" cll-me to realize how pheriom- : , sieged minority cut off from the "ellally active she had really been , ,., mainstream of modern life,' Our' " , '" ' ' ' S", 'I ' in,.civic a,nd cO\llmunity affairs. , ,',. ancient ghetto comp ex: no' 'Sp~ce' is not' available eVE!D to '"" longer makes'sense."", " INCHON (NC) -Officers and the pri.ncipal offices she f th USS St P I fl A ~umb ~r 0f ,our f e 11,OWl,,' list held-in Catholic and non-Cathmen 0' e . au, ag-, ", t:atholIcs ?bJect. to the ,pubhc~,:"" olic organi:~ations 'concern~," ship of the U,S. Seventll'fleet. "." 'lion of. articles hke Mr. C?gle~.s, 'with human ,welfare and civic entertained 120 Catholic Korean even when' they agree WIth hIS,.. ro r e s s ' , , ',orphans' from the St. Paul Or,",," ' , -0,' "conclusions. They seem ,to fe~l. p g, .. , , ' .. , ' . phanage in Seoul aboard the that it is in bad taste for Cath'" Follows p~pe s AdVice ship in Inchon"harbor. ' , 'olics to ,be washing their 'linE!D in, , ,Mrs. Mahone~, God rest her, Among the orphans was sixpubiic. ' ,followed ,out ~ the. letter the year-old Pascal' Kim, polio vic;' , Idor\'t happen to share this oft-quo~ed adVIce WhICh the late tim' who has been' adopted by 'point of view. I think that Mr., P,?pe, PlUS XII gave to th~~ath:" the Holy Na'me men of 'Rockville ,,,,, Cogley and other serious~rriinded olIc women of the world 10 1!,147:, 'Pdson Bellefonte Pa. Pascal, 'Catholics who' have written or at the Congress of the !nter,-, gradu~ted from his leg braces spoken publicly on this ,subject national lInion - of Catholic to cru'tches the week before. have done a service to the cause' , Women's Leagues, of American Catholicism. ' ~e late Pontiff pointed out Organized by the Seventh , Positi~e Role' that "a slogan la~nched some ~O, Fleet chaplain, Father (Cdr) , " " years ago eontmues to gaIn '~aymond J.' Talty of BUffalo, : I would agree, how~yer,. that, acceptance: rdurn, to the purely,.. the party was held on deck. The ." we, could pr~bably do WIth a""spiritual'."' children were fed, ice cPeam; ",.. few- mor~ articles and speeches , A t - 11 "h .. 't" 'd' "Th cookies and' soft ,drinks and 't' 1 th t c ua y, e con mue , e " , on, th e POSI lve ro e a many, 's! hid' b e th were' shown 30 minutes of' ani"; y.. " C~tholics are playing in the .Otganbes ou t , e ver ~PPf~ .'mated , cart60ns:Earlier" in the . A ", ' lif ,SI e: preSE:n' everyw h ere o~ mamstre.aJ!l of mertcan . e. the Faith,for Christ, in every' ' day" men from Uie'St. Paiil had Granted that we are ,not domg way and to the utmost possibie 'gone"'io SeOliI' arid brought the as much as we are capal:!'~ of ,. . '. "orp,han's to In~hon in four bU,SSeL doing, I am convinced that' we', lImIt, wherever VItal Interests, :.:'ar~ doing more than" is gene'r- are, at stake, wher:ver laws , 'II I' d -', ' , ,bearlOg on .the worshIp of God, a y rea lze . " ' . '' . ' " It is, my impre,ssionthat 'an :rr-arrlag~, the famlly, the schoo,l, ,~ Inc~ea~m ' . g·l y I" b ' f ,the SOCIal order, ,are proposed ' ~~~~=:=~ arge num er 0 and discussed," Cathohc laymen and laywomen M M h t t ' ,'.. ", 'dl' rs. a .oney'W h 0 se ld om Illa k e th e h ea mes to th . 1 0 .ret urn f n th'o w , ",", are turning in 'a very creditable e orlgllla ,p~m 0 ~~ f ' t h 'f' ld f column-was a IIvmg example per orm~nce 10, ,e Ie , 0 , of mature and well-adjusted c:ommumty ' relations at the local. C' th 0 I'lClsm . t LEOR. BERUBE!~~ ,a a' t 1·ts very b es. state" If ,the s t ory 0f 'h ~r se lfl ess 10. Ie 1 regIOnal' and national ' 951 Slade SL '!'el. Of, 5-1836, ~~ 'the course of'my own work terest in so many. worthwhile c at NCWC I kee running into, ' ~auses were m,ore V'{Idely known. , , . ,P", It would serVE' a double purpose. ~em co!,!stantly 10 the IJ;l.ost out-It "·ld. d ht dl . . of-the-way and unexpected wou, u~ ou e y InSpIre l d ' f' Id f t' 't '!Jther,Cathobcs to follow her ~ aces an l~ Ie s ,0 'ac lVI y "example and, would thereby featuring where CatholIcs .' '0f 'th . were h . ,seldom' to 'h'as ten the commg at ''The Gaslight, Room" f d be oun . even 10 t e recent past. blesseay d d h f ur ther , '. ' 1/11 en any Ideal for Communion Break, Exemplary Ca~hohe reference to' the "ghetto comfasts, Organization Banquets Sad to say, ~me of the people, plex" of Arnerican 'Catholics 386 Acushnet Ave. I am r-eferring to, Mrs. Robert would be completely unwarH. Mahoney, died in Washington ranted. New Bedford , '
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The glory 'oi'- 'the 'Transfig,ut/dion (Feas& Augusf 6)' has blinded MAGID and ANTOIN to the things' of &his' 'world. ' They 'wish , to 'live· in 'Ulis , ,~glory" 'on earth' as' well 'as in heaveD. They' a!sO Wish to· share it with. Uleir friends' and neighbors. These, boy. wish to becomepriests."WiIl )'o~ belp' them! Eacb boy DJustbave a sPoUsor ,wbo will pay bis necessary expenses 01 $JOO a )'ear during, the sis year ,lIe minary course. You may pay~e money ,in any, manner convenient. ,', M:A.$S OFFERiNGS 'MA'Y MEANAQDrTIONAL SACRIFICE FOR YOU 'WHICH IS' GOOD, FOR YOUR SOUL . ; ,'MASS OFFERINGS MEAN 'LESS PHYSICAL SACRIFICE FOR YOUR 'MISSIONA~IES WHICH 'IS ALSO GOOD! SISTER THERESE and SISTER MARIE have long desired to share Ule jo)"s of .0Ul' Lady (Fean August 5) , , , and )"ou can make it POSSible! These two young girls will be aocep&ed by the Little Sisters of Jesus ill Jerusalem, , IF. we can find a sponsor for each ",,'\-/ll..."''l1'a../....-=..~ who will be williug to pay her n'ecessary 9 . I penses of $150 a fear lor the two year periLL.!!t.<::::::;:i:::~ ..,ILIl.!LJ od 01 nov.~tiale kalniug. Will you adopt one of &heae Y0W!C. nuns as a pledge of your devoUoD to Our Ladyf BAVEYOU INQUIRED ABOUT OUR SUSPENSE PLAN FOR GREGORIAN MASSES! DO IT TODAY. • . THEY WILL HELP YOU WHEN NO ONE ,ELSE CAN ••• AFTER YOUR DEATH!
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THE TRANSFIGURATION OF OUR 'LORD Is brought ~ each year by the Church (August 61 &0 remind as .. ,&he Eternal Glory which shall be ours it we remain close te Christ. every, day of our lives. The rewlU'd is great. but great '&00 is the' price we must' pa:r! The problems and difficulties of
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'By 'BRIAN,' CRONIN L: Exactly 100 years ago The Blessed Virgin appeared at Lourdes before a l'1:-year 'old girl whose name was:""":' (a) Catherine , Laboure? (-b) St. Bernadine? (c) Mari~'tte Beco? (d) Bernadette Soubirous? 2. Who did th~' other Apostles, choose by lo~ to replace JUdas?:(a) Lot? (b) Matthias? (c) Matthew?;.(d) Philip? 3. The Decalogue is another n~me for:""':"'(a) The Ten Commandm~nts? (b) The Rosary? (c); The Holy'Ghost? (d) The Bible? ,.;4. 'The Cappa Magna 9f a. cardinal is his:--(a) Head-piece? (b) Ring? (c) Seal? (d) Long flowing robe? ' ' 5. St. Joachim was'the' father ()f:- (aj St. Josepitl?,(p) otir Lady? (c) St. Peter?' (d) Judas? " , ' i.What is a Concordat?:-(a)A Church-state treaty?, (b) A ,Hymn? (c) A, pray,er for peace? (d) A ~hoir? . , T. A Novena consists of how many days" prayer?:-(a) l! (b) 3f , (c) n- (d) ;9? ' ,:' , , -.. ,The orati()n ,by the, priest immediately before the Epistle 'is called the:-(a) Introit? (b) ,Collec't? (c), Credo?.', (d) Confiteor'l " , Give yourself..10 marks for each correct answ,er on page 18. ' ,-Rating: 80-Excel1ent;'70-Very Good; 6~ood; 50=-Fair.
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'Rejoices in Renaissance Of 'Newman's InfluenceBy .M.~t.Rev. Robert J. Dwy'er; Bishop of Ilene
D.p.
The infl!,.ul.nce. 'of Cardinal Newman on the. religious thinking qf our times' is enjoying a splendid renaissance. For Catholics .and·.non~Catholics alike he is emerging ever more clearly as the true prophet of the 19th eeiltury, the man who read the ,scroll of historical .events.. They cannot history with the deepest in- be studied, much less undersight and compassion, and stood, in terms of theology diwho traced in outline the vorced from their historical answers to many if not most of setting, the circumstances which our problems with the finest un- .produced them, the inisunderderstanding of . standings which led men to the i r inmost adopt one position or another. nature. It may Aside from anything else, well be withi!' Newman's' insistence upon hisour lifetime, torical ·realism offers the only that he' will approach for a genuine solution take his place of the difficulties involved. For with St. Augusdogmatic differences are so intine' and St; extricably intertwIned with· hisThomas· as a torical events that they cannot Ii 0 t unworthy be viewed, or intelligibly dismember . of a . cussed, without constant refer-' peerless tria of ence to the setting which gave C h r i 's t ian rise to them. thought. Demands Study This was hardly· considered The task, admittedlY,is enorpossible at the turn of 'the cen- mous. A comprehension of Newtury. In spite of Newman'. . man's view of the development "Vindication", when he was of dogma, clearly differentiated named to the Sacred College by from the heresy of essential Pope Leo XIII, it was commonly change' in the original deposit understood that the' gesture was of Faith, demands far more more of a recognition of his than an understanding of the personal qualities and his sacri- terms of definition. lices for the' Faith than a just . It calls for a thorough study of estimate. of his ·contribution to psychology which produced· de:' the science of dogma or to velopment,the extremist tend:Christian philosophy,. encies which'produced heresY The Duke of Norfolk, who en- . on the one hand or ultra-congineered the 'matter, convinced servatism on the other.' the Holy See that the appoint- , It calls for a breadth of symment would be eminently 'pathy ·to......which human nature pleasing to the English-speaking is never strongly. prone,. no less world, as indeed it· was, but ·than apassiorl: to safeguard there was little to indicate that what is essential 'and could only the accolade went beyond the be lost by losing-the Faith itsE!lf. bounds of Pontifical courtesy The ways of God are beyond and goodwill. our human c<,mprehension. If, Books Less Admired as Guitton suggests, there is. a Even in Catholic circles, until d i.v i n e pur p 0 s e working fairly recent days, tliere Was a throughout the tangled skein of tendency to "fight shy" of Newtheological debate, religious man's basic thought. .Much at- quarrels, and our envisaged task tention was given' 1'0 his. Qiog- of reconciliation, we can only raphy because of its extraordi- - humbly admit our mability to nary interest, and. tribute was read the re~ord' straight. paid to his accomplishments as . Newman himself, with his an historian, an ess~yist, and a superb grasp of history, made man of letters.. ..' : no pretense at understanding it B'lt his great boo.ks, his Gramall. He was only coilfiderit that mar of Assent and above all· his Divine Providence could not be Essay on the' Development of gain-said' by . mere mortaiity, Doctririe were less 'admired, and and' that God would work out to a certain extent" suspected of the 'seeming puzzle "in His own mildly 'dange",ous tendencies.' good time. They were not scholastic in the . 'I!his does riot absolve us, howusual connotation of that term, ever, of our obligation to offer' conceived and written in the ourselves, as the fit instruments tradition of' the Revival of of His purpose, ready to serve Thomistic studies, and .for those at the appropriate Wries and who canonized the language and seasons. We are not, in his phraseology along with the deathless phrase, to"sln against spirit of St. Thomas, there was the light". no place 'for Newman in their Commends Newman Spirit restricted categories. What does it all come to, in .His broader sweep, his convic- view of the Council announced tion that philosophy and even by the Sovereign Pontiff? This theology are meaningless with- at least, a comprehensive and out a comprehension of history, reasonably detailed knowledge found little favor among those of the history of theology and who tended to regard history as hUD:1an thought as it has been an emabarrassment to pure debated and hammered out by thought. I the conflicts of a thousand years; Revival in France an honest effort to understand To day, in contemporary human motivation, even wher-e France, for example, Newman it must be. branded as sinful and is being studied· with enormous deceitful; and a clear distinction appetite. The list of books, mon-' between what is essential to the ographs, and articles dealing Faith and in line with its own with his life,' his philosophy of internal development, and that history, his theology, ~s fairly which reflects no more than staggering. inherited prejudice or 'regional One of the foremost apologists or peJ1sonal pietism. of the Catholic 'intellectual re~ The spirit. of Newman was the vival,' Jean Guitton, has frankly spirit of generous sympathy based his work on the foundawedded to firmest adherence to tion of Newmanism, almost as . absolute principle. If that same in the old Tractarian days at spirit dwells in the hearts of the \ Oxford, his young" disciples Fathers of the Council, as it voiced their "Credo in Newman- must surely dwell in the Divine ismo". Spirit which presides over it, With many others, Guitton who can set a limit to the good points to the Essay'on Develop- which will be accomplished? It ment as the key treatise for an is something to live for in our intelligent approach to the day, 'to work for, and to' pray for. whole questior of renewal of unity among Christians. Needless to say this is of treBONNER FLOWERS mendous interest in view of the Specw.ltsts \11 summons of the Holy Father Sopccial Florett Arrangcmcttu for the Council which will have this unity as one of its. prime • Funercils • Corsages objectives. . • Weddings • Hospital The tragic break between 2082 Robeson St. Rome and Const'antinople, the Fall River OS 5-7804 Protestant Reformation, the rise of modern secularism, all are
Holy.Name Society Most Richly Indulgenced . Of Any Organiz(l~ion'for Men Thousands of Catholicdmen, representing a majority ofthe parishes in the Diocese, are members of an organization whose his tory in this area goes back prior to the establishment of the Diocese .and whose own foundation is centurie's ·old. Dedicated to' the personal sanctification of men and the ho:nor and glory of God through respect for His Holy Name, the Holy Narne . . .' . a C?py of the Holy ~ame' pledge Society was originally found~ . . reCited at each meetIng. ed by Pope Gregory X, who, The latter expresses devotioa in 1274, commissioned the to the Holy Name, the Pope, the new Dominican Order to c.oncentrate its efforts on preaching 'greater devotion t() the· Holy Name. . . ~ince that time; parish 'groups of Holy Name men have been form~d allover the world. ·Here ·in the United States the Society ill 'particularly active. A niembership of . over .3,000,000 it! joined in a 'national organiz8tion with headquarters in New York. 8inee E'arly Days . Here in southeastern Massachusetts, parish Holy Name Societies existed. when . Fall River· constituted part of the Diocese of Providence. In the · course of years, however,. many I groups became inactive. It is · only within the past 20 years that the potential of the international organization of Cathoiie IlEV. HENRY Il. CANUEL, men has begun to be realized. In 1941; the late Bishop James national regulations, a Holy E. Cassidy called a district meet- . Name . Communion Sunday is ing of the 39 societies, some held in each parish, during active and some inactive, which which. ,members attend Mass were then in existence, ~t . St. and receive Holy Communion Anne's auditorium, Fall River. . in·' a·body. Almost· every Ullit . During the meeting he ap-' -·n9w·. holds annual communion · pointed Rev.. Henry R. Canuel,' breakfasts and many sponsor then moderator. of the St. Boy Scout troops. Mathieu's Society which he had Parish units have their indifounded, as Diocesan Director ·"vidual constitutions; and . gear of the Holy Name Society. In the' their activities to parish needs. 18'years since, Father Canuel _ Larger groups often have Junior · has traveled to most of the par- Holy Name Societies for boys ishes in the· Diocese, speaking at . from 14 to 18. OffiCial recepmeetings and com~union bceaktions for new members are held, fasts, helping to reactivate when members receive 'the Holy groups or to form new ones. ·Name .button, manual, missal, The results of his efforts speak for themselves. There are now ~embership card. emblem, and societies in 83'of the 106 parishes ·Mathematics Via TV in the Fall River Diocese. NOTRE DAME (NC)-Sum"it is primarily a confraternity of the Church," 'Father Canuel, · mer students in mathematics at now stationed at - St. Joseph's,. Notre Dame' University are taking an advanced course via Attleboro, . explained; "and the most highly indulgenced of any TV. Nearly'180 J'Iigh school and college teachers,. most of them · religious society for men." nuns, are studying higher alge. . Many Indulgences bra and analytic geometry on In addition to many partial c:losed:"Circuit television. I ' . indulgences, plenary indulgences · can be gained on the day of enrollment, on the Feast of the . Circumcision,' on Monthly Com,;,' munion Sundays, at special Holy Name rallies and parad'es, and' at the moment of death, under the usual conditions. . Pa~ish . units hold monthly · meetings at. which there is a . program of paiiicular interest to' men. On the second Sunday of each month, in accord with
Church and its' teachings, the flag and the Constitution of the . United States. Hopes for Union Father Canuel, flrst and only Diocesan director. of the society, hopes "some day we will have a Diocesan union." Through a . union, all parish units would be joined under Diocesan office,.. and could participate in Dioeesall-wide projects under the direction of: the Bishop. Steps toward a union have been initiated by Father Canuel . Iii 1944; a second district meeting, also 'attended by Bishop Cassidy, was held in New Bedford. In October of 1957, thousands attended a family pilgrimage at La Salette shrine sponsored by units from .the A.ttleboro area. A second Holy Hour was held last year at the shrine " for members. "We are trying to form a working plan," the director noted. "When the groundwork has been laid, perhaps then we can move toward a union.'" .Meanwhile, Father C~nuel II on call for iIll parishes in ihe Diocese. If other duties permit his attendance, he hopes to receive ideas on how to increase the eHicie.ncy of his large group of Catholic men at the National Holy. Name Convention to be held in October in New Orleana.
Sees Prayer Weapon Against Communism WHITEFIELD (NC)....,- The chief 'Y.eapons the world hall today to combat . communism are prayer and sacrifice, the · exiled Archbishop qf Nanking. 'China, declared here. Archbishop P a u I Yu-Pia · spoke before a capacity crowd at the Shrine of Our Lady of the Mountains in New Hampshire. where services were decl· icated to prayers for the persecuted .Church in China.
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16.
Ask 'Questions of Metiliodists Continued ~from ,Page :One ehurchesand- in the Protestant 'tr.adition. Can :you -attend 'such . .niices .and worsliip in 'freedom (M ,con~cieriQe :and in ·the belief ,that ·such ser.v.ice:.can 'bless ,the 'land that you, ser.v:e? 4,,) ,Can 'you ,enforce any (civH '!aw, ev.en ·.when ~theJla.w (coriflicts Iwith ,eoclesiastrcal Jlaw ,or diogma -.of !the -:Church.? ·5:) cCan ','you ' d e 'your :d.eciaong Jimpar.tiaU,y'? . Pilot RePlies ,In l'eply, 'the JP,ilcit proposed 'thetfollowing :questions llor 'a :Methodist .candidate !for !the presidency: lIt) lCan you w..'lfuout :qualifica,;lion :of .'ar;ty kind 'ackriowledge '.the Ihistoric Ainel1ican lRe:v.oluition setting 'up !this gneat:replibilic, lin :the Iligtit:of the 'condem'nation 'o'f 'ther-evolution Jissued "to ·.the <colonies :by ..y.our lfounder, Jlohn WVesle~? ],V'oula ..y.ou :be ....JUi rig 'pu bliely Ito lrepudia:te tthe .entiments 01. .the ,aforemen'.tioned lbefore .'taking public of',lice? 2) ,qn the ilight :of \the ltradi'.tional xacialsegnega'tion Jlong i)tI'atticed and ,still 'mightily 'sup,poded ,in Methodist .Churches ,in _~ ':the UiriiJted:Stlftes, ,canir0u 'be relied upon to carry ,.thr.ough :the SupI'eme .Cour,t·decisions recently .made on ,this topic? ICan you ,.mv:e with Negroes lin 'Your .Cab'inet, .congFess, ·etc.? I' '31) .Qne .of -the fundamental 'tenets of .Methodism tis the ·'con-demnation ,of the use.,ofl!pi~ts ,(alc;ohol). ,Committed ,tby ,C!onilCience to ,fihis lproposition" \would •70U, .ina IPosition ,of ,public trust, ,'Iel!pect .the right \of .others ·to eonaume .:such be:v.er.ages'r ,Couid ,government diunds .be ',used lfor 'this lpur,pose, ,as .in ,(jfliicia1 (cock'Iail parties? Would liquor in4ustI1ies ibe',shut 'down'? Rigltt to Drink c4) 'Methodists ('and ,tither Rrotestarrt denoTninations) 'have placed on the 'law 'books of 'many :.eparate states sb'ict 'laws de:priving other Citizens ;of :the ,right to drink alcoho1ic 'bever~es 'as their ,conscience 'allows. 'If elected 'to natiomil .office, would 'you ·strive 'to, 'make 'theSe ·Jaws 'Federal, thus -forcing your own -religious 'views onall.your 'fellow citizens? '5') ~The Methodist religioh condemns gambling 'in all . its >forms. IIn:a 'position 'of 'public responsibility· could 'you conscientiously permit horse racing and other forms of gambling;to .continue under y;our 'control and could' 'You use ifunds raised ,in this ('to .you) immoral 'way-?, 6) Methodism is a 'form of Protestantism descended from. the Atlglican chunch abo.tit '200 ,years ago. Many either forms :of Protestantisrri, ,including' :Anglicanism, have long practiced .in England, Scotland, Norway:, ,~ Sweden ,and elsew:her-e 'strict un'ion ,of 'Church and 'Staite. Can, 'we ·be certain that no nostalgia ifor 'earlier .protestant 'WIlYS will ,seek ito .replace 'the 'traditional -separa'tionof the Church and .State guaranteed by our 10und'ing 'fathers? " '11) Protestants iin ',places as !far :apart 'as, South :Africa .and :Swe-
den, where they contr.o1 'political rpoww:, lin'fiict !disabilities ;on~ dllinor.ities lJ?y measons,of'l:ace iand r.eligion. 'Is UlEiresomethillg in 'Methodism thaI would give us Teason 'to lbe sure 'that "such ,eventualities ,w,ill.not .happen,.in, our;coun'bJ:'y'? 'S)Bishqp :Lor.d;an!! .other .1\1ethodist l1eaders'hav:e Imany ',times !pRoposed :politiea1 :actions .at.-¥Qtiance 'wjth ,the (established ,.na:tiol1liHpoliGy, ,such ,as .'1'ecogni,tion .o·f !Red ~Cl:1ina. ,or ,its ~aamit tance to .the ;United 'Nations. ,Wou1d -,you ,disobey ;the lwreci,tiv.esof :-your, il'e1ig.ious lleaders and I;emain J(I;ral to :the:tI:adi(tional Amenican )l>oliC;y'.? 9,) .The !fllmo'us discipline ,which l1'egl.ila~,>.Methodist.teaChing ;protests ,against 'Catho1:ic' 'teaching. W;ouldyou jn iPu1:l1ic office ;be ,regui:redto ;prote!it (or .suppress -Catholic :teac~g ;as directed 'in ,this document? 10,) 'Cim'Y'ou 'make your ,deCi,sions .impantia~lly'? rFhe Pilot 'editorial was '>enitiUed "Sauce for :the 'Goose."
,L0ND0N (NC)-A 'Cam,P,!llgn of pra',}'er and ,wor,k 'has 'been 11aumihedin -Britain lor 'the lreturn ' or. orthodox ;Slavs to Ithe Holy See. Known as the ,APostolate of SS.C,yrjl and MEithodius,iti,le parent 'movement was 'founded un Europe some 50 years ago ,and ,approved by the Holy· See lin 1925. The inauguration 'took ,place at the JesUit Church of the Immacu'late 'Oonception and was preceded by a Mass :sung ~y 600 'Slavk exiles. The preacher at the Mass was Father.J.ohn Lang.~S~J., secretary of. the ·new apostdlate and chaplain to 'Czech ,exiles in Britain. Americans, Britons, Poles, , Czech, Yugoslavs 'and'Bulgat'ians were among ,those <who took part. They .included ..F ather 'George Mahoney, Wisconsin.Jborn J.esuit "",ho -was or'dained'last year :an_d wasenl'olite ·to the lRussian ,Center at,Fordham 'University, New \York, a'fter 'taking special studies at 'the itussian 'College ·in:Rome.
OIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.
~_.,....---.::.....J
,I
FAnIER GRENIER
;P'riestC~eteb,~'nt
-t'nHome ';arish
Newspap~r 'Says Communist -Pa·rty C01JlesOut I~nto Open in Canada
. MONTREAL ,(NC)--C':DheComa declarati()nof loyalty. This II munist party has come out :of how he put it: ihiding un ·(::anada again, 'accord'Fi Cr·, JI . I S 'tar.. mg .t 0 th . e M outrea, .. 'The ngel]l: L b . OS5eu P g . '''T' B k th t·t 1 1 " - ' a or - 1 ' 0 reSSlYe , " 1m ,uc e I..U .ar' ea..- Pal"ty IS an absolutely indepen'of'C~na?~an'commumsts, -has·dedent Canadian party, 'with no cla1ed m Va:n.cou",,~r - th!i.t·the affiliations With any partJ or Labor-P:.ogreSSlVe party WIll reorganization outside of this counvert.. to .Its 01d name, the co~try. The LPP neither gives ll()r m~mstpartyI of Canada. ThIS ,takes orders irom anyone. There WIll not be front-page news is no one whu can bring forth anywhere, for no one has ever a shred of evidence which could ,t~~ught of t~e Labor Progrescontradict this.' Sives as 'anythIng 'but commu,nistl "Mr. Buck had his fingers who 'gave themselves :another crossed when he said this for ,Trame ~eca~se~hey ha~ to;" the only a short time before th~ spy St~; sald edlt?rlally. . trials had' disclosed that the . The ,,:aganesof t~e :Canadlan Communist party was. the re.co~mul11sts undel' TIm Buck cruiting ground for Russian spies durmg the past ,~5 y~ars or more and ·one of the men' convicted woul~ be:amusmg 1J they were' was with Mr, Buck in the hurried ;no~ trag1c. TragIC, b?cause rush for the woods at the beginthrouglIout they have trIed to ning of the war" 'persuade Canadians they were.' .. 'something when they were quite Clambpil Will. Benefit 'somethinge1se. ' . Fall River School Loyal to Stalin The sixth annual clamboil for "In 1939 they were quite 'honthe benefit of Espir.ito Santo est and loyal ~ loyal to Stalin, School building fund,yall River, that is. They were against Canwill be held Sunday, Aug, 30, on ada, as they are now. the church grounds, Alden '''When :Sta1in made his pa~t Street., . with Hitler, Tim Buck and other Servings win be available leaders, considering discretion from 12 noon to 3. Antone Cabthe better part of valor, h,ighral beads a large committee•. tailed it for the woods. "There they holed up until Hiper." atta'cked h'is great and good.fr-iend Stalin andbrou~ht 'RUSSIa mto the war on the allied Side. ,It speaks volumes for the fOl'ebearance of the Canadian ',people 'that they let them come In CarfMmateei , back at aU to fl'eed&m . _.i.-.""';;;;;;C:::" '''With ·the change of name to Distributed by itheLa'bor - 'ProgresSive Party TimBuckthaught fitte issue
The first member ,of .St. George's .parish, :Westport, to ,be ,or.dained .a ,prJest w,ill .celebrate a high Mass of ,thanksgfvingat 10:45 Sunday moming, Aug. ,9, ,in the church. TORONTO (NC) :- Francis He -is Rev..Joseph MarieGre'Cardinal 'Spellman Teceived ,:the nier, A.A." an~ Assumptionist ''Ten -Commandments Award" Father. The ,son 'of Mr. and-Mrs. on 'the Fraterna.l 'Order 'of Eagles .Joseph A. Grenier;, '13 Summit .at 'the O1;ganiZllition~s !61st 'inter- . ·Av,enue, Nor:th Dar.tmouth, ,he national convention here. ,graduated fr,om Sacred Heart' 'The Archoishop of t~:ew Yiork ,parochial .school, New Bedford. was 'honored 'fe'r 'his "'leadership The winner :of .a ;scholarship 'in cstrengfhening- -the moral and ,..from l'Union .St. .JeanBa,ptiste .Spiritual fabric of American'life, d~AmerJque,'he ~Faduated from in ;prov,idil1g ·guidance ,and ,d'irec- AssmuptionP.repar.atory School dion ,to the 'wi.v.es ,of 'Young ,people, ,and College with 'highest honors. and in ,oomba ttingithe ~global . He pursued ,semtina·ry ,studies :conspiTa<;>yof ia~heist.ic !Krem1in- at the Angelioum P.ontifical 8e'(erage Co;~ ,direoted 'World ,communism:" , !New Novitiate 'seminal)'.:; Rome"rearolling .a LiST. MA'Ry'~OF-THE-WOODS ~A <check iIior '~;1l251°°° 'Was ,prei 331 Nash Rd., New Bedford .centiattf in ,Sacned T,heol{)gy. ,sented Ito 1F'ather Elwood iE. ,Cas- iFatherGrenjer WilS ,or.dainedin (NC) ....,. Archbishop Paul C. WYman 7-9937 ,sedy, 'founder aod Idir-ector <Of St. Peter's Basilica ,last Dec. 20. Schulte of' Indianapolis laid the ~Home ,on fthe Range "lorBoyc oornerstone for th'e new noviHe .hasthree sister.s, .of whom at Sen'HnePButte, 'N. 10. ''I1he,do- .tw6, 'sister Mary .of ,St. Laur.a 'of tiate ~uildingfor the Sisters of' nation will be, used for ne'w ,the Rosary and 'Sister Mary of 'Providence on the motherhouse .bui.ldings at :the !home ifor boys. the Holy Ghost, .are Holy Cl'OSS 'grounds here. When completed The -institution w:as fOtJcnded 10 ,sisters. The .thir.d, IMrs. Agnes next Spring, the $2,000'000 struc'years ,ago w,ithanother ;gr.ant Martins, ,resides .in Ma~yland. ' ture will pravide ac~ommoda from the .QFder of Eagles. tionsfor about 200 of the com. Officers . for .Sunday~s Mass will -incl,ude Rev. LOl'enzo, H. munity'snovices and postu1ants. CITIES SERVICE Holy Na:ri1'e Mem:bers Morais, ,pastor of ,St. George's, DISTRIBUTORS.' t'S a' assistant .p.rlest; Rev. Lawrence eque.s "~lJl.na,Y aw . -Richard,' A.A., dea,con; Rev. ELIZABETH (NC.)-The Un- Maurice H. Lalllontgne, adminGasoline ion County .FedeI:ation cof ,Holy istratorof Our Lady 'of Grace Name' Societies: is circulating parish, North Westport,slibFuel and Range petHions thr'lughout the coun'ty, deacon. Rev. Armand Desautels requesting that a Sunday closing A.A., will preach. ' referendum be placed on the' ballot for -the November eleeR. A. 'WlLCOX CO. OIL BURNERS Itions. . 'New Jersey',s recently 'enacted OFFICE IFURNITtJRE G..E. BOILER BURNER ,UNITS Sunday closing legislation is on .. Stod< .fer ,I....edi.te DeIinl7 ---. a courity-option basis, with the • DESKS -CHAIRS For prompt delivery ,signatures of 2,500 registered' RUNG, CABINETS 'voters :being required to place I . & Day &' Night Service the question 'on the ballot. - ,FIRE fILES - SAfES Rural Bottled Gas Service , ·FOLDING IT ABLES ,-In (counties. where approved, the law bans the Sunday sale of AND CHAIRS 61 COHANNETST. clothing, building and lumber FaliRiver OS 8-5677 TAUNTON R. A. WI LCOX CO. supplies, furniture, home or .Attleboro - No. Attleboro office .fur.nishing .and .ap'plianc~s._ 22 BEDFORD ST. 373 :New :Boston ,Road Union County is one:of''the'staie's Taunton 'FAll RIVER 5-7838 big Sunday 'shopping -eenters.
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lhur.s., Aug. 6, 1959
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17
• DIOCESE 01" FALL RIVER. MASS.
Boston Cathediral Site for Opera BOSTON (NC) - . The New England premiere of· a, musical work, . commonly called "the Pope's' Opera" will be 'sponsored by Richard Cardinat Cushing in Boston's Cathedral otthe Ho17 Cross on Sept. 25.
American Catholics SEOUL (NC). -
Some 3,500 victims. or heavy floods in the Maryknoll Vicarrate. in centI:al, Korea have been aided by shipments Qf food and milk from,
Its performance in the Boston Cathedral was described by a spokesman for the archdiocesan news bureau not only as the first time an opera has been presented in the cathedral here, but also the first time a mem bel' of the hierarchy in North America has sponsored one ill his own cathedral.
The food fot' the flood refugees; was ret!lJlested by Bishop'
B·ox Office RecordsT363 PleasonJ Street'- Fall River
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The work was given its world premieJ;e at La Scala' opera house, Milan, on March 1, 1958. It was an overnight sensation in Europe and was immediately booked into nearly a' score of major cities on the continent, its tour capped at Rome in a "command performance" given fem Pope John XXIII, 14 Cardinals, and other members of thepapal household. In the United States, the ..Assassinio" premiere took place at Carnegie Han, Sept. 17, 1958, and was tri~mphantly received. Proceeds from the performance at the Cathedral will be used by Cardinal, Cushing for the benefit of his Charity Fu'lid.
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From the very beginning,
Pontiff Counsels Gypsy Chapla ins
CHISEMPHERE (NC)-Kalu- • luma, aged 99, eldest chief in Nyasaland, Airica, was baptized on his deathbed by a missionary here. A chief for the past 71 years, he was baptized by Father Henry Stumpf, superior of the Nikhamenya mission and • member of the White Father;;' congrecation.
ence;
rice, 35,000 pounds· of' eon meal and :'O,OOU, pounds' of dried milk. Distribution of the relief supplies is being, made through,. the Caatholic priest.
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Historically, the murder took place in a side chapel, though it takes. place in drama and opera versions at the main altar.
Ba,ptizes Chie'f
Jamel'" V. Pardy,. M.M., Vicar Apostolic' of Clmgju. In all, CRS-NCWC, worldwiderelief agency of. the IT. S. C,atholic Bishops,. sent 30 j OOO pounds'
The Motion Picture That's Shattered AU p'revious,
The Eliot play was written originally in 1935 for the Centerbury Festival in England to memorialize the martyrdom nearly eight centuries earlier of St. Thomas a Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1162 until his assassinatioin by four of King Henry II's knights on Dec. 29, 1170.
VATICAN CITY (NC) -Directors. of Italy's apostolate to circus entertainers, itinerant actors and gypsies were received in audience by Pope John XXIII during their first meeting l'ler4f: The Pope recounted stories ot his ministry to' gypsy caravans in Bergamo, his native diocese;. and to circuses in Paris when he was Apostolic Nuncio to FrallCi~e. He en'couraged the directors to persevere in their new enterprise. Recently Created The Organization for Spiritual Assistants to Nomads in Italy was created recently 'by decree of the Sacred Consistorial Congregation. The directors plan to set up centers in several, dioceses~ These will consist of at least two permanent chapfains supported by members of Catholic Actit;>n. Church authorities have -already approved the erection of • center for assistance to gypsies in the Trentino region of northern Italy, and the Ministry of the Interior has promised ita help.
Catholic Relief' Services - N~ tiona!- Catholic Welfare Confer,..
of' KOrea·ft: Flood
Held Oyer-41ba,ndFIRAl WEEK
The unprecedented eve~t. will" be a performance of "Assassinio nella Cattedrale," an opera based upon T. S. Eliot's versedrama, "Murder in the Cathe... drat" The opera was presented at Montreal's Notre Dame Church as part of the Montreal Festival. It was sponsored there by' Paul Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of Montreal: .
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"lS- Thurs., '-THE ANCHO~ Aug. 6, 1959'
AffiliatE~ 'Bishop to Fran~iscans
DtOCESE OF' FALL RIVER, "'ASS:
C(Jrciinal Cushing Continued from Page 9ne those who exercise authority in 'religi<Jus ' communities should know something of the funda'mental· psychology of human re'lationships and develop. certain of, 'the skills of leadership and government which modern: psychology has made availabl~." , Cardinal Cushing stressed -that the .religions superior rnust have an'intelligence that is '''practical, ... well, as speculative." ,The' ,brilliance of the artist or the sCholarly interests of the student do' not guarantee successlulleadership and' administration, h~ observed. ' FATHER WHEELER FATHER S-EPINSKI Prudenc~Important Continued' frOID Page One The disti~etion of affiliation:, "'I do not· mean to imply that people I with highly devel~ped . ·of the Ministe'r (;feneral; and he is being conferred on' Bishop learning and skill cannot be will become a spiritual brother Connolly in the year'that marks , good superiors," the Boston arch- of the Saints, Blesseds and Ven- ,the·750th anniversary of the erable;; of the Seraphic' Order foundation of the Order by Sl ~ishop' asserted, "I knQ~ from . ,of St. Francis. ' . 'Francis in Assisi, Italy. experience, ho .lever, that some people w,ho are outstanding fot' scholarly attainments are unable p~a to deal with' the ,prllctical. probContinued from Page One , o n the Feast of St. Joseph the lems of life and that briliiant . , 'unions' composinl~ the' G:reater - Worker wilL be offered in the people cannot always be de-, ,Fall River Labor Council are' U: s. on Labor Day, it was prepended 'upon for the day-by-day , expected at Mass and breakfast., dicted in a-,report prepared for app'lic,~tion to duty requ,ired ,of, ' ,A cordial invitation ,is extended the Catholic Council on Working, those who must assume the bur,- .to 0 the' r union members Life. dEm's of leadership." Prudence is to be particularly throughout 'the Diocese to atEd Marciniak, council director _ prized in the religious superior,' te~d, said' D0\yli'ng. prepared the report. The organ~ 'Cardinal Cushing said. The Serving.with - 'him' on the ization has been active in proprudent superior, he explained, 'arrangements committee· are moting the Labor Day service has a comprehensive view of the George Quinn, Insurance Work": \ which Pope Pius XII established -relations of her ,community, with ers Union; Clarence Banks, Tex-, in' 1953 as a special Mass to D eceiesiastical authorities and the 'tile' Workers; Americo Ramos, make labor!s holiday a Chi-istiall outs.ide world"too. HShe'is con'; ,Furniture Workers; and Edward feast. lCious of the 'weight which must F .. ~.ool~n" presid~rit of, the' The M~ss originally was apattach to her every word and Umted Labor CounCIl.. pointed, to be said on May I, / action' • . . and must be' conMore than 500 speCial Massea labor's holiday in most other , stantly aware of the imj:)li<:ations countries. In 1956, however, at which may be drawn from what Students to Honor the request of the U. S. Bishops, she ,says by those who may not MI'n' n.esota' Sena,tor ' the Holy See granted an indult 'understand her" own point of permitting tl)e Mass to be said Yie~," he said. WASHINGTON (NC)-U.'S. 'here on Labor Day. .... -._Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of 'In his report, 'Mr.. Marciniak Minnesota ~i1l be honored' as said there were 500 special an 'outstanding Catho~ic' college ,Labor Masses in the ,U. S. last Continued from Page One alumnus by the National Fed- year and a "very defi~ite trend" in -Rome and was, ordained there e~ation of Catholic College Stu.,.. indicates that this year there on December 20 of !list year. He' dents. will be "even, niore.~" finished his theological studies Sen. 'McCarthy has beensethis Spring and Was awarded the leeted to recei~e the 1959,'Arch:' Pe'nalty :'l~ifted degree' of Licentiate 'in Sacred 'bishop Noli Awftrd at a SeptemBUENOS AIRES, (NC) -The Theology 'from '~e Gregorian,' ber 5 banquet to be held during excommunication of former Vice University in Rome. He has,ju~ the national congress of 'the fed';' :President Isaac Rojas of Argenre'turned to this country." , er'ation in St. Louis. tina for fighting a duel has been Archpriest at Father FoIster's Sen. McCarthy graduated in lifted, it has been announced Mass, will, be Rev. Eugene Dion, 1935 from St. Joh'h's Uhive?sity, ' here by Buenos Aires archdiocese pastor of ,. Blessed 'Sacram,ellt __ Collegevltle, Minn., where he authorities: Church. ,Deacon will be Rey. received the B.A. degree in Thomas R. Leigh, S.S., a pro- -English. In 1939 he .recefved an' fessor at St. Mary's Seminary, i\,t',A: degree in sociology and ROSARIES, MEPALS, Baltimore, and Subdeacon win economics from the University be Rev. Donald E. Belanger of of Minnesota. AND 'STATUES St. John the Baptist Church, Fall River. The sermon will be ,given Reopen Chapel In All Price Ranges by Rev. J. Adrien Bernier of WARSAW (NC)-An historic Notie Dame Church, Fall River. chapel in the Warsa'w cathedral Father FoIster will receive his here has been renovated and as~ignmellt in the Diocese from solemnly reopened in the pres-' Emily C. Perry the Most Reverend Bishop. ence of Stefan Cardinal Wysznski, Archbishop of Gniez562 County St. New Bedford Facts of Faith no and Warsaw, thlree'other bishOpp. St. Lawrence Church ANSWERS: 1 (d);2 (b);3 (a); o~s, and many' members of the clergy. , ' ' 4 (d); 5 (b); 6 (a); 7 (d); 8 (b).
La bc)r Day ' M'ass , S
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Two Priests
KEATI NG'S
'WHAI'WOKE ME'N'THE OEEpegr NIGHT ~ WAA-r ~ENT ME L.OO"IN~ OUT OF ~ WINDow?!" WHAT. .8ROU~HT ME: TO "THE RIGH"r ~POT
AT THe RIGHT MCJtvf~NT 'f?
Interracial Council,'Asks -. Citiz,ens To ,Cooperate ,inPup.il . Transfer, ,
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BROOKLYN (NC)- T_he' from the Bedford '- Stuyvesant Catho'lic Int~rracial 'Council section of Brooklyn. ' has urged -citizen's to cooperate ,The council's s tat men' in ,the proposed transfer of, pointed out uiat' since the·transNegro pupils,from overcrowded ,fe~ has already been decided Brooklyn public schools to upon "it can 'now be received by under utilized schools in Queens. ,the Ridge.wood and Glendale The move :which 'has met. residents I;;' an o'rderly, friendly sti,ff ;opposidon from. residents ' and 'cooperativ~' fa,lihioo o~ it of the predominantly white can. be met' With antagonism. Glendalli-Ridgewood sect~on of. ,fear. and suspicion." , Queens, is slated -to go into effect ,"Likewise,,, i,t 'continued, "the next September. Most of . the students and pare.nts of the Bed• Negro transferees come ford-StuyyesantcomI!\unity call, . approach this charge in a friend- ' Cardinal Urges 'Fig, ht" ly and cooperative fashion or ' , w i t h an ,attitude of mistrust and Against Communism. ,belligerence." WETHERSFIELD (NC)- His '''Which, ,course of action 'is Eminence Richard, Cardinal, taken depends upon what is of Cushing,' said here that he will paramount consideration to the' collaborate with Louis Budenz, parties involved - the welfare former editor of the communist and interests. /0£ ,the school Daily' Worker; in writing' a children or the luxury of' re· pamphlet exposing the dange,n1 taining' personal grievances,of oommu.nism. ' the statement said, 'The Car.dinal te,rmde commun:' The council declared that it ism "an international conspiris' "no more than' reasonable to acy," 'and added that "all ·vho expect the siphoning '}f. stubelieve in God-Catholics, Prodents from" the 'city'~ crowded ,testilnts and Jews-must get ro-;., schools to the city's half-empt, gether'to 'fight it;" schools.;'
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Dick Donovan Outstanding Example to Catholic Youth
THf ANCHORThurs., Aug. 6, 1959
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS,
Prep Stu~ent Top ,Swimmer
By JACK BUTLER Spolia Editor, Brooklyn Tablet
If the Chicago White Sox nail down the AmericaJl League flag come September, it will be through no little effort on the part of Dick Donov'an, the husky righthander who learned the game's rudiments in Quincy, Mass. The 31-year-old hurler, who has two seasons. Farmed to Atlanta parlayed a "practice' and of the Southern Association, pray" philosophy into major Dick began to find himself and league stardom, was born he won 11 games for the Crackand reared in Quincy, where he ers in 1953. still makes his home. , Impressed by his work, the There in Sacred, Heart parish Detroit Tigers' brass took Dick Dick's devout spiritual life and to Spring training the following baseball enthusiasm were nuryear. But the trial failed for tured. He received the 8acra- Dick and back to Atlanta he ments of Baptism, Holy Comwent. That trip made him. He munion and Confirmation in the won 18 of 26 decisions, completed parish church while the parish 18 games and posted an earned school team and the Catholic run average of 2.69, second best Youth Organization were his in the loop. first steps' toward the, Chisox The White Sox studied Dick's and the American League. 1954 crede.ntials, liked what they Becomes Pitcher .saw and the New Englander was An infielder at North Quincy signed to a Chicago contract. High School, Dick deCided to 'Before .. this season, Dick's capitalize on 'his strong throw- four-year won-lost record was ing arm and in his senior year - 65-44. His biggest season thus he took to, the. mound. That _ far was in 1957 when he posted switch, along with the encour- .a 16-6 mark: .,' , , ' , . , .. ,,_ .. agement and advice of his dad, 'Practice and Pray' Jeremiah, . and his brother, Like many' another moundsJames, gave his baseball career man, the six-three, 205-pound its initial push. ' Donovan quivers a bit when Ted - While attending· Boston UniWilliaIrls, his boyhood idol, apversity in 1947, Donovan took in proaches thepla~e. Regardl,ess a Brav~s' trYout camp,'w,hen they of "The Thumper's" age, thrOl-!gh' were' in" Boston. Catching the his blue, eyes Donovan sees. the eye,of the~outs, he was signed figure of the, game's greatest to a contract ~nd assigned to hitter. ' Fort Lauderdale in the Florida ' strongly attached to St. Fran":, International League.' , .' cis Xavier, Donovan makes a Be spent the' ,following Sum-' noveria to the Jesuit missionary mer with' Evansville in' the 'each March and what a ball and Three-I League and toed' the glove are to Dick's baseball rubber: for Milwaukee in career, a missal and miraculous American Association and'Hart- medal are to his spiritual life. ford 'in the Eastern League in' An .outstandinr,example to '49. , ..' Catholic you'th, his advice to He 'reached the parent Braves' 'major league hopefuls is "pracin 1950 where he rem.ained for tice zealously and pray hard."
ihe
Colavi~o's
Booming'Boundary Hits' Amaze Engli,s" Jesuit Father CLEVELAND (NC)--,-English' Father Basset wrote later that Catholics l~arned, recently that "baseball, like cri«ket, has its very few members of the crowd "sudden glorious moments" and at a Cleveland Indians baseball reported, that in the first game game get excited until ;Rocky he saw, Colavito "scored a grand Colavito comes up to try to slam." strike a homer. '''There were men on all the This, they disc'overed, .is like bases," the' Jesuit. explained, a boundary hit, and wh~n Cola- , "and he had only one more vito struck four of them against strike; a homer is like a bounBaltimore, the' feat just' about 'dary' hit; and he got it;' the equaled a "double century I:ie- Cleveland Indians scored four fore lunch." runs at one blow." The data came to readerllof 'This aCQ,ievemeqt, Father Basthe Catholic Herald, a national set wrote, dismissed the Big weekly published in London, in Four foreign min,isters' confer• column by Father, Bernard' ence from the front-page headBasset, S.J., the English Sodality, lines and returned Colavito to promoter. . hero status. Father Basset, a kind, enthusi"And, .as ,Catholics are· the astic and sharpwitted observer same all over the world, eveloy01 the American scene, has been one tells me that he signs himspending several months in the' self b.efore striking and tti~lt, on U. S. prior to the World Sodality the television' screen, one' can Congress to,be held Aug. 20 to 23 just catch sight of his scapular at Seton Hall University, South on'a dear day. Orange, N. J. " .•. Scapular or no scapular, He saw his, first baseball he is grand to watch." games w~e~ he was here in But until Colavito arrives, June to give retre~ts and make Father Basset reported, the •.number of other app~aranceL audience is only somewhat less lethargic than a cricket crowd. He exposed. as a major: bluff the notion' that" baseball' is a much faster game th;m cricket. "It is nothing, of the kind.' I ANTIGONISH (NC) - When Father Donald' R. Chisholm watched one game in which.onlY speaks of the need to be phys- one run was scored in three ically fit, people hereabouts pay hours; another when neither side achieved so much as a base hit attention. . ' , The priest, a track and field for an hour-and-a-half. ',There star in the 1920's at St. Francis are few of the hazards which enXavier University here, was on lighten cricket; fielgers wear a' .. band for the opening of the glove, and catches are never Antigonish Highland Games to dropped.',' , He also pointed out that baseapeak on the value of sports. ball lacks cricket's therapeutic He urged the spectators to "lend encouragement to events qualities, being "noisy and restof this kind." He stressed that less, with the crunch of peanuts in the back:ground." . "to be successful as an athlete demands serious, conscientious training" and asserted that the power of self-discipline is essential for success in any line of endeavor.
WIN GOLF AWARDS: Winners of the first anmlual CYO golf tournament, sponsored by Monsignor Coyle . Council, K of C, of Taunton, received, awards at Fall Rive.r Country Club Monday night. Left to right are Richard Roy and Bob Placido of Fall River, Denni's McGrath of Taunton, who' receives the Marty Higgins Memorial Trophy from Donald R. Jones of Barrington, R. I. . '
Pharmacy
Santo Christo Outing The CYO and Children of Mary of Santo Christo parish, Fall River, wi~ co-sponsor • trip to Nantasket Beach this Sunday morning. Buses will leave Canal Street at 9 o'clock.
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SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - A 16-year-old student at Seton Hall Prep here has blossomerl into the top male swimmer in New Jersey. Wi'thin a three-day period, Dick McDonough of' South Orange won three State AAU swimming championships and set a state record in each event. He started by winning the 50yard freestyle and the 100-yard butterfly ina meet at Linden and finished by copping the 200yard butterfly event in a meet in' Englewood two days later, ' McDonough has been swimming ,competitively for only two years. Earlier this year, he won two state interscholastic championships and two senior AAU indoor titles. He also swam on the 200-meter medley relay team which broke the national junior AAU record at High Point, N. C., earlier this month.
Name Five Golf,ers to R,e.present Diocese in New Eng'an.d' Tourney
If McDonough continues te develop as rapidly as he has' this year, he stands a good chance 01 -6: ~ , making" the . 1960 Americ~n The five low scorers in the; Mozzone, Sacred Heart,ITaunton, Olympic team despite his youth, first annual CYO golf tournawon the Blind Bogey. accordit;lg to observers. ment will represent ihe Diocese For 12-13 year olders, Richard in the all-New England tourney Brodeur,. Notre Dame; Fall scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 19 River, was low gross scorer, and in Manchester, N. H. James Connor, St. Joseph's,Fall '-. They 'include Dennis McGrath, River; won the Blind Bogey. A CASTELGANDOLFO (NC),St. Joseph's parish,' Taunton; trophy for highest score in the The Harlem Globetrotters played Bob Placido, St. Patrick's, tournament was awarded to basketball for His Holiness Pope , Fall River; Richard Roy, ~t. James Saunders, St. Joseph's, JohJ;l XXIII .in the usually sOI-' Math,ieu's, Fall River; ',Barry Fall River. emn consistorial audience hall, here. Bird, St. Joseph's, Taunton.; .and ChippiJ1&' Exhibitioll 'Robert, Martin, 'Sacred H,eai-t, Other features of the evening The Globetrotters, who a180 Taunto l1 . '1'.'0'w' were a chipping exhibition by had showed Pope Pius XII some ' Announcement of. the, Bill Cute, Segregansett Country of their sleight of hand with a , sc~res and presentahon of ~o- Club pro, and a golf clinic in basketball, were accompanied ~hles won at tourname~t hlghwhich parts of the golf swing by Msgr., John Carroll-Abbing, hghted the, yearly Kmghts of were explained, also conducted director, of the' Boys Towns of Colum~)Us Golf Night" at the by Cute. Italy. ' Fall RIver Country Club, sponColor movies of the 1958 The team, touring Europe, s~red by.~ of C Couricil86, w~th Ca~adian Gold Cup and Millers ,later 'played an exhibition game mne. asplrmg YOl,mgsters recelV- Open tournaments were shown for the Boys Towns members. ing recognition of their achieve- inside the clubhouse me,nts in thej~nior~'tourney.', Rev. Walter Suilivan, Fan Under the' dlre~tlOn of .Jamell River director of CYO activities, Lena~han, golf, mght chaIrman, spoke briefly, thanking' Councii ~rophles were awarded ~ boys 86 for its sponsorship, of the golf m four age group~. Headmg..all program. He and Leilaghan exwas McGrath,.wm?er. of fIrst .. pressed hope that CYO golf le~ on the Marty Hlggll1S Memactivity would expand from its' or131 Trophy.. present successful" beg'innings The award was gIven by Don- and include many more young-' aId R. Jones, of Rhode Island sters in programs of successive 'Country Clu.b, close friend of years. ' 'late Fall R!ver Count~y Club " Also, featuring the evening golf pr.ofe.sSI?nal. Jone~ father was the awarding of many door was, Hlggms m~ntor 10 early prizes of golf equipment, includ- ' days'at the Fall RIver art d Rhode . ing woods irons and golf baliJl. Island Country C l u b s . ' " . The trophy will be on display 'C"~~~OOl:>C::XX:>CloCIoQOOlC::>C::XX:>C>C:IoQOOl=-C::>CX)oC~IoQOOl=21 at Taunton CYO headquarters for the next year. McGrath wall also named Co-Medalist Trophy, winner in the 18-19 age, group. Other trophies, presented by INCOR'PORATED 1937 Lenaghan, included the' Blind Bogey in the same age group to Thomas Unsworth, 81. Paul's, Taunton. , Winners in the 16-17 group were placido, co-Medalist; and Leo Leary, 8t. Mary's <;:athedral, Fall River, Blind :Bogey. JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E.,. Pres. In the 14-15 class, Jamea. Registered Civil and Structural Engineer Cunniff,St. J,oseph's Taunton" Member National Society Pro~essional Engmeen was low gross :winn~r. Eugene I
Harlem. Globetrotten Perform for Pontiff'
F. L. COLLINS & SONS GENERAL (ONTRACJORS and' ENGINEERS
Father Proves His Point
LARIVI ERE'S
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FRANCIS L COlliNS, JR., Treas.
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THOMA,S K. COLLINS, Sec'y.
ACADEMY BUllDIN9.
FALL RIVER, MASS.
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