08.08.57

Page 1

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The

ANCHOR·

Vol'. 1, No. 18

St. Joseph's Parish at Woods Hole, which has the distinction of being the fourth oldest parish on Cape Cod, is observing its 75th anniversary this year. Originally a mis­ sion of Corpus Christi at Sandwich, it was established as a separate parish in June, 1882, with Rev. Cornelius McSweeney as its first pastor. At that time, according to ~ai'ly baptismal records, the parish included all the south part of the Cape as far as

The Anchor .Sales Climb Thursday, Augu,st 8, 1957 In Diocese

An Anchor 0/ the Soul, Sure and Fi;m -

Fall River, Mass"

Cape Parish Marks

• 75th nnlversary

ST. PAUL

PRICE,lO, $4.00 pet Yr.

Second Cia" Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall Riyer, Mass.

Feast Of Our Lady

Next Thursday ,

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On a sweep of hill in downtown Fall River stands an answer. It is an answer in granite and stained-glass to a problem as mysterious as life itself: what becomes of us after death? Fall River first opened its doors The beautiful Cathedral to worshipers. of Our Lady of the AssumpIn 1950 the Holy Father merely tion has been teaching us defined as an article of faith by its very titie for over 100 what Christians had believed Co

years what Catholics have been believing for nearly 2,000 yearsthat the Blessed Virgin Mary's glorious Assumption, body and sOl~). into heaven is a thrilling preview of our own destiny. The Assumption answers despair with hope. To a world gloomily obsessed with the problem of pain and the grave, Mary's, Assumption cries to the ends of tM earth, "My Son has said that He is the resurrection and the life. Believe In Him!" Arllc\e of lFaith Catholic belief in the Blessed Virgin's Assumption into heaven did not begin on that Fall day in 1950 when< in St. Peter's Square, Pope Pius XII solemly defined it to be an article of faith, It goes back much further than that. The doctrine of Mary's Assumptlon was believed and loved long before Our Lady of the AssumptiOll in Osterville was completed In 1928 0 0 0 many years before the Assumption Church in New Bedford received its dedication in 1905 0 0 • and many, many centuries before the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption in

from the very beginning. But why was a definition necessary if ,there was no doubt about Our Lady's Assumption? Why? Be­ cause our age needed to be strik­ ingly reminded about the destiny of the human body. Vision of Death For our nuclear age has pam­ pered itself into a cult of the body.. Result of this cult: the new Age of Carnality dreads any thought of death. For death puts a sudden end to the body. And so, to 'a civilization that cannot see beyond the ratios of pleasure, pain, and pulse, the finality of death is a hard reality to stare !n the face, But the Blessed Virgin's As­ sumption gives a new vision of death. It lavishes a 20-20 spirit­ ual power on those who wish to see. Our Lady's Assumption tells us for certain. if we have ever doubted it, that the body is beautifullY precious, and that death cannot change this beauty but only unite it, at the last, with the God of All Beauty. The Assumption of Our Lady Turn io Par:eEig-ht

Four more parishes scat­ tered thi'oug'hout the Dio­ cese have attained, or ex­ ~eeded, the quotas estab­ lished for them by the Circula­ tion Department of The ,Anchor. With the addition of these four, a total of 15 parishes are now distributing by mail the al­ lotment originally set for them when this newspaper commenced publication approximately four months ag'o. In addition, the circulation of ,The Anchor continues to increase in other parishes in the Diocese. The four parishes to reach their quotas are: Attleboro - St. Joseph's. Rev. Ubalde J. Deneault. pastor. Fall River - Espirito Santo. Rev. Joao V. Rezendes, pastor; Sacred Heart, Very Rev, J. Jos­ eph Sullivan, P.R., pastor. Mattapoisett - St. Anthony's, Rev. Damien Veary, SS.CC., ad­ ministrator. Eleven other parishes. listed alphabetically, distributing their weekly quotas are: Corpus Christi Church, Sand­ wlch. Rev. James A. Dury, pastor. Mt. Carmel, New Bedford. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Antonio P. -vieira, pastor. Mt. Carmel, Seekohk. Rev. James E. O'Reilly, pastor. Our Lady of, Grace Church, Westport, Rev. Maurice H. La­ montagne, pastor. Our Lady of the Isle, Nantuck­ et. Very Rev. Edward F. Dowling, pastor. St. Boniface" New Bedford, Rev. Columba Moran, S8.CC., pastor. St. DOminic's Church. Swan­ sea. Rev. George E. Sullivan, pastor. St. Francis, Acushnet, Rev. Alexis Wygers, SS.CC., pastor. St. Joseph's Church. New Bed­ ford, Rev. Louis E. Provost, pas­ tor. St. Patrick's Church, Fal­ mouth, Rev. James E. Gleason, pastor. ·St. Patrick's Church, Somer­ set, Rev. Edward J-. Gorman, pastor. The Anchor belongs in every Catholic home in the Diocese. Are you a regular subscriber? Tell your Catholic neighbor how ml,\ch you enjoy your copy of The Anchor.

Harwich and the Island of Nan­ tucket as well. Father MacSwee­ ney made reg'ular trips to Nan­ tucket to attend to the spirit'ual needs 'of his large flock. ~tories arc told of his ventures to and from the island even under the most severe weather conditions. On more than one occasion; it is said, his Nantucket parishioners stood weeping on the dock as their beloved priest braved the raging elements to bring his priestly services to some other section of' his large parish. Father MacSweeney served as pastor for 20 years, and saw the ­ parish grow in numbers while shrinking in size, as other par­ i,'..hes were established on the Cape. In 1899 he built St. Pat­ rick's in Falmouth, which served as a mission' of St. Joseph's for many years. 111 1902 he was su~­ ceeded by Fathet· James Coffey. who remained at st. Joseph's only three years, but is remem­ bered stl11 with affection and high regard by the older parish­ ioners. Tower Dedication In May, 1905 the Rev. Thomas F .Kennedy came to st. Joseph's and over the next 27 years be­ came one of the best known figures 'in the Falmouth area as he labored zealously in the care of the parish. It Is said that he never took a vacation, and was to be seen frequently in every sec­ tion of the parish from Waquoit to Cataumet in his horse-drawn carriage. In 1915 he opened the Immaculate Conception Chapel at Megansett as a summer cha­ pei, and was able to purchase the property five years later. In 1918 he opened st. Thomas Church in Falmouth Heights, to care for the needs of summer visitors. The crown of his activities came . with the dedication by the late Bishop JamesE. Cassidy, of the granite st. Joseph's Bell Tower, located opposite the church. and given by Mrs. Frank R. l.illie of Chicago and Woods Hole. In 1928 st. Patrick's in Falmouth became a separate parish and St. Jo­ seph's was left with the chapel at Megansett, as it is today. After 27 years of sterling serv­ ice Father Kennedy retired to a well earned rest in February, 1932. and was succeeded by Rev. Hugh A. Gal1agh~, who is at ' present the pastor of st. James in New Bedford. Father Galla­

High Military Position for Fr(l Fenton

Appointment of Rev. (Lt. Col.) Bernard J. Fenton of Taunton, a Fall River Dio­ cesan priest who has been serving as-an Army chaplain for the past 15 years, to the office of Chief of Military Personnel Divi­ sion which handles recruitment. assignment of chaplains and! other personnel matters. has been announced by Msgr. (Maj. Gen,)

Patrick J. Ryan, Chief of Armii Chaplains, Father Fenton was educated at St. Mary's High School, Taun­ ton; Holy, Cross College and st. Bernard's Seminary, Rochester, N. Y. Ordained May 26, 1934 in .St. Mary's Cathedral, he served! as assistant at Corpus Christi Church, Sandwich, until 1941, when he was assigned to St. Paul's Church, Taunton. Enlisting in the Army' Chap­ lain Corps in March, 1942, Fath­ er Fenton served with the 141st Infantry, 36th Division in World! War II. He was awarded the Sil­ ver Stat·. Bronze Star, Legion of Merit. Purple Heart with cluster and the Presidential Citation. His African-Asiatic service medal carries the bronze arrowhead for a beach operation and seven ma­ jor campaign stars. Following World War II Fath­ er Fenton served for a time in United States before returning to Europe in 1947 for occupation Turn to Pall'e Nine


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Simple. Red. ,Mass Pl;oper;

Aug: l1-St. Theresa, So. At­ Gloria; Second Collect for Rain; tleboro Common Preface. St. Theresa, New Bedford FRIDAY-St. John 'Mary Vi­

anney, the Patron of Parish

Aug. IS-St. Joseph's. Woods Priests, Confessor. Double. White. By lUost Rev. Robert J. Dwyer; D.D.

Hole Mass Proper; Gloria; Second 'Our Lady of Lourdes, Bishop of Reno

Coll~ct Vigil of St. Lawrence; 'Wellfleet Third Collect St.'Roinan, Martyr; There are fashions in Saints, almost, one is tempted

Common Preface. Our Lady of Grace, No, SATURDAY - St. Lawrence, to say, as there are fashions in hats. Let us admit it: we

Westport, Martyr. Double of II Class. Red. Rre fickle in our s,ubsidiary devotions, as though' to bal­

Aug. 25-Sacred Heart, New Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Bedford ance our fidelity 'in major matters. St. Rita of Cassia is

Collect for Rain; Common Pre- ' St. Joseph's Orphanage, face. R modern instance. Her cul­ , Fall River .' SUNDAY-Ninth Sunday after

tus was flourishing in the actually did live in Edessa in the

Pentecost. Green. Mass' Proper;

,early years' of the century, 5th ceJ.?tury, and seems to have

QIQl'ia; ::;lecond ColIect Ss. Tibur­ , • tius. ,Marty_r, and St. Susanna. 700 Sisters Attend but along came St. Therese been of noble birth., Before '\[irgin and Martyr; Third Collect of the Child Jesus, and poor st. died he confided to the sacristan

Cana Conference for Rain; Creed; Preface of Trin­ Rita was promptly forgotten. We of the church where he did his

Ity. SAINT - MARY - OF - !THE­ cnn only hope that, being Saints, begging the story of his life, and

MONDAY-l:it. Clare, Virgin. WOODS CNC) - Marriage was they have stayed on speaking how he had fled from his bride'­

Dot\ble. White., Mass Proper. deSCribed as a, way to sanctity terms, in heaven. And now, in- on their ,vedding night. This, ad-,

Gloria: Second Collect for Rain; In talks to an unusual Cana Con­ Common Preface. , deed, there are certain indica- mittedly, does not'get us very far

TUESDAY-Mass of Previous "ference audience - 700 teaching tions that the Little Flower her- with st. Alexis.

Sunday. -Simple. Green. Mass nuns of the Sisters of Providence. Nevertheless, once the Greek

self is ~'ielding, place to other ACCEPTS COLLEGE PO­ ,: The' sisters, attending summer . Proper; No ~loria or Creed: Sec­ favorites of the canonized com- legend had b~en transferred to

pariy. Rome and given a Western SITION: Louise C. Vaillan.. ond Collect Ss. Hippolytus and sessions at Saint-Mary-of-the­ Cassian. Martyrs: Third Collect ~Woods College here, were Invited! and for Which brings up the case of setting, it spread, like wildfire, cou'i't, daughter of Rain,; Common Preface. :tothe, novel study day on mar­ St. Alexis, There was a time, and St. Alexis became one of the Mrs. Emile J. Vaillancourt riage so they could see the work Vigil of the WEDNESDAY roughly from the 13th .to the most popular ,'Of all popular of 9 Kurt's Place, Taunton, Assumption of the Blessed Vir­ ,of Cana. early 18th century, when he was Saints. He is still in the Roman gin Mary. Simple. Violet. Mass Two priests, a doctor and three Everybody's Saint, His name was Calendar, reduced, alas Cas are' an honor graduate of the Proper; No Gloria noi' Creed; married couples made up a team executive secretarial· curri­

on the lips of all, his legend' ce- so many) , to the rank of Sim­ Second Collect St. Eusebius ,Con­ from the Chicago Cana Confer­ lebrated in sculpture, painting, plex. Likely enough, when the culum at Bryant. Cpllege, fessor; Third Collect for Rain; ence who discussed marriage as " epic. Churches bore his Calendar is. reformed' he will be has accepted a position at Common Preface. a vocation and as a sacrament. name, and the prayers of the dropped as insufficiently guar­ Wheaton College, Norton. Though it" was a demonstration. .Navy Hon,orsPrelate faithful, unnumbered and, In- anteed by history.

the conference was handled In She is a graduate of St.

Now the moral of st. Alexis is numerl;1ble, ascended to God's Ol'll 20 Y,ears Service the usual manner, 'with talks. throne'through his blessed inter- clear enough. It is a commentary Jacques Parochial School

Msgr. p~nel discussions and questionNORFOLK CNC) cession. It was only when schol- on the man In the parable who and St. Mary's High School,

, and-answer sessions. CRear Adm.) Maurice S. Sh'eehy, lars like Baronius and Malllllon pad married a wife and therefore Taunton. Marriage' is a '.'method of spi­ career in the who is ending his got busy and decided that it was could not come to the marriage

Navy. was honored here at a rituality that should character­ extremely doubtful whether such feast. It is a gloss on Our Lord's

farewell review of Naval Reserve ize the couple's love of' God," Plans Expansion a 'person as ,st. Alexis ever lived - plain statement that "He who said the Cana Conference chair­ units. WASHINGTON CNC) The that the cultus encountered diffi- , loveth father or mother more

man: Father Thomas McDonough He will be installed as pastor first unit of Serra International than me is not worthy of me."

cuIties. of the Immaculate Conception of the University of Chicago Rut it is doubtful whether many In Great Britain, set up only four Church in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Calvert Club. Exasperating Problem months ago, is, already thinking It is, truth,fully, an exasperat- moral theologians today would !The Sisters were" told they today by Archbishop ·Leo Binz of ing problem.' His' story runneth strictly approve the course fol­ . about possible future units of the Dubuque. ' could do much to teach their organization in Ireland and on thus: In the happy days of the lowed by st, Alexis. What about At the farewell review Rear children - pupils to appreciate Emperors Arcadius and Honorius, his long-suffering wife, who the continent of Europe. that method and get the benefit ,Adm. Howard A. Yeager. Com­ This was, stressed by Father who flourished in the 5th cen- spent 34 years of practical mander of the Amp h i b i 0 u s of it when they become adult. George Waring, chaplain of the tUry, there was born to a noble widowhood without taking ad­ Sena unit in Liverpool, England. Training Command, At 1 ant i c Roman family, long childless, a vantage of any Enoch Arden leg­ Fleet, commended Msgr. Sheehy Serra International is an or­ R. A. WILCOX CO. BOn, named Alexis. Reared in islation?,' for "20 years of illustrious serv­ ganization of Catholic laymen OFFICE FURNITURE Wife of Same lVlind luxury. clothed in silk and, fine the Navy. ice" in , linen. he yet presei'ved his heart In the 17th century her deso­ . devoted to fostering vocations to In Stock For Immediate Delivery free from the world's taint. And lation attracted a good, deai of the priesthood and 1 a ~ tin g • DESKS • CHAIRS when, at his majority, he was sympathy. and it was agreed friendships among Catholic lay­ men,

FILING CABINETS espotised to an imperial princess, upon that she would have been The first official unit of Serra he had no stomach for the ad- perfectly willing to have let him • FIRE FILES ' .' SAFES International in England was venture. Yet he was caught be- fulfill his vow of ,chastity, in­ chartered in April of this year. FOLDING' TABLES tween two obediences, to his par- asmuch as she was of exactly the FAIRHAVEN, MASS.

So far the group has 29 me'mbers. AN[) CHAIRS

ents, whose' will it was that he same mind. How this conviction

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told him he Was reserved for bet- it forms ,the burden of one of,

Academic and Commercial ter things. Richard Crashaw's poems:

Courses. Also Kindergarten­ 22 BEDFORD ST. Day School-Boys and Girls. If Heates of holyer love and He solved it somewhat ingeniFALL ·RIVER 5-7838 APPRAISER olisly: He married the princess high desire ' ­ WYman 2-3467 REAL ESTA1E

nIl right, but that very night of Make bigger thy fair brest with

his nuptials he fled from Rome immortall fire,

nnd took refuge in the Far' East. Whiff needes my virgin lord INSURANCE Bome say in the city of Edessa. ,fly thus from me, 136 CORNELL ST. Who only wish his virgin wife Here, lacking any other employNEW BEDFORD ment, he lived by begging' at the to be? " WY 3-5762 church porch. After 17 years of Wittnesse, chast ,heavns!' no happyer vowes I 'know this, his incognito was broken Than to a virgin Grave un-' by a statue of the Blessed Moth'lr. crying out ,';Seek the Man of touch't to goe. It is perhaps ungenerous to say God!" Knowing the game was up, he fled again, and returned It, but the legend of st. Alexis to Rome. ' mainly goes to prove that It is a Back to his ancestral palace he man's world, after all. Even came, where his parents and his among Saints.

wife, st.Hl disconsolate. moul'ned ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

bim with rare fidelity. Did he re­ veal himself? Not he. For 17 more Michael and ,Edward Nasser years he lived as a beggar under Proprietors the great marble steps of the palace, in utter squalor, eating . the crusts which fell from his lOIEAII./ERS own table, Finally, evidently It's a wise homemaker who sets aside part of 'N GfENfERJU judging that enough was enough. It celestial voice again cried out, the family bUdget for saving. And it's the MERCHANDISE "Seek the Man of God, so that wisest homemaker who puts these savings in he might pray for Rome; you. will an OLD RED BANK SAVINGS ACCOUNT. find him at the house of Euphe­ 1732 So. Main Strell:t mien." But alas, when Pope and 944 CcuntySt. Irall River For 129 years, THE OLD RED BANK has been Emperor came to find him, he a favorite savings headquarters for millions OSborne 4-2047-3-9381 New Bedford. lay dead, the story of his life \ of thrifty New Englanders. ' wTitten in parchment In his l,and. The Pope gave him a mag­ nificent Requiem, and he was YOIUl CAN BANK BY MAUlL bnmediately canonized. Mixed Up Story , Now the fact is that none of The ; thIs can be substantiated. Some­ where along the line the story lot mixed up with that of St. John CalYbitus or with that of Mar R15a (the Holy Prince), who Fall River Savings Bank

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~ !1HI1! ANOHOR­ ~!illlri., Aug. 8, 1957

A Term Defined

'World Needs Intellectuals Despite Waughl.s Denial By Donald McDonald

Evelyn Waug'h, the. English Catholic noveli~t, is quot· ed in an interview in the current issue of The SIgn maga­ zine as declaring "I am not an intellectual ... 1 do~'t like the word. Tbat's a Marxist term that sprang up III the Middle European coun­ tries to distinguish a class, sion now, that an intellectual is which doesn't exist here Q person who is systematically consistently concerned not (England), bet wee n the and only with knowledge a.nd under­

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is

PARIS (NC) - Letters from two Cardinals to the International Congress of Sacred Music here· are ex'­

pectM to be the basis of discus­ sion and study for a long time to come. o One of them was .a letter on the .musical education of stu­ dents for the priesthood. The standing, but, ultimately, with other concerned sacred music in wisdom, which is to say he is mission countries. abidingly concerned with man, The first letter was addressed his origin and his destiny. to Bishop Emile Blanchet, rector The intellectual, then, is the of the Catholic Institute of Paris, philosopher par excellence and by His Eminence Giuseppe Card­ to the extent that each of us inal Pizzardo. prefect of the Sa­ .shares in tho. t conc~rn of the cred Congregation of Seminaries philosopher, to the extent that and Universities. In his letter the we, too, seek to broaden the area Cardimi.1 stressed the importance of wisdom and illuminate the hu­ of the priest's personal partici­ man situation, reveal its God­ pation in sacred rites, not only center.ed nature, then to that ex­ as the celebrant in ceremonies, tent we are also intellectuals. but also as the director and reg- The his tori a n, theologian, ulator of all things liturgical in scientist and novelist mayor may his parish. not be intellectuals. If a particu­ The letter on sacred music in lar novelist is not intellectual, he missions countries was sent to need not, I think, feel ashamed, the congress by His Eminence nor need he pretend that intel­ Celso Cardinal Costantini, chan- lectuals spring from a dishonor­ cellor of the Holy Roman Church able ancestry. and member of the Sacred Con'As one who has never thought E'velyn Waugh an intellectual, I gregation of Rites,; Recalling the wo.rds of P9pe am willing to let him express his distaste for the word, As one Pius XII in his encyclical Summl Pontificatus, Cardinal Costantini who is convinced that what the . said that the character of sacred world needs is more intellectuals, music in mission countries as well as more poets (and sa­ should be based on the native tirists like Mr. Waugh), I can­ culture of those countries. not let him escape, without com­ "Indigenous melodies must be ment, when he dogmatizes on the accepted and christianized by the non-existence and irrelevance of Church," he said. intellectual life iteself. The Cardinal called particular attention to the music of the Swiss Cistercians Orient, which is much older than Plan U. S. Convent that of the West. This music cana FRAUENTHAL (NC)-Six Cis­ be used very effectively to demtercian nuns from the Frauenthal onstrate the essential universality convent in the Canton of Zug of the Church, he said. will leave their community to es­ In his letter Cardinal c;ostantlni spoke of his own experience tablish a new convent in Wiscon­ sin. when he was Apostolic Delegate . The six were chosen from to China. He said that he had among the 134 who volunteered commissioned a Mass based on Chinese music which was highly to leave Switzerland for the Unit­ praised and became popular ed States. The Wisconsin con­ vente tq be located at Bar~boo, among the faithful. He also about 30 miles north of Madison, spoke of several other Masses based on African chants. will be known as New Frauen­ The Cardinal stressed the thaI. Frauenthal is one of the oldest danger of insisting upOl~ the use convents in Switzerland, havin5 of Western liturgical music in been established in 1231. Cister- . countries that have a culture of cian nuns dedicate their lives to their own. prayer and meditation. They earn part of their substance by' mak­ ing liturgal vestments.

After all, a man like the French Dominican, Fathel' Sertillanges, had written a book on· "The Intellectual Life," a most !mportant book, and toe thing ~ithe~ existed 01' It didn't. Concerned Witb Wisdom I concluded then, and I see no ~IlSPPn tQ, &llft,ll,gljlo

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wor!{ers and the bourgeoisie , . , Only mathematicians are erititled to be called in­ te llectuals," MI'. Waugh's apparently in­ dignant denial of in t ellectual status was IPrompted by the somewhat naive question put to him by his American inter­ viewer, Thomas C. Ryan. Mr. Ryan, had asked him w~ether he found any "peculiar slgnifi;. cance" in "the increasing number of ii1teIlectuais In your country Who have embraced Catholicism, such as yourself, Edith Sitwell land Graham Greene." . Nothing so pleases .an English­ man I think, as to be plied with questions by an American jour­ nalist who is working from a faulty premise, Only the very charitable Gilbert K. Chesterton was able to restrain himself In such situations. MI'. Waugh is not so restrained. If an American is under the impression that Gl'aha~ Gl:eene, of a\l people, is a workll1g mtel­ lectual and that Dame Edith is in the' same category and that MI'. Waugh himself, who very well knows he is not an intellec­ tual, is· nevertheless given that designation, why, w~ shall tweak the man's nose. Defense Unnecessary It is interesting that in deny­ Ing he an intellectual, Mr. Waugh thought it necessary to uefend and justify his denial. A mun who has played the part of Dandy and dilettante, who has affected certairi attitudes in the past, but who has won inter~a­ tlonal acclaim for his extraordm­ ary satires on his own class, stands-like so many others, both Americans and English - awk­ wardly and self-consciously when the discussion turns to intellec­ tuals and intellectual life. TiW vehemence with which people proclaim their non-In,tel­ lectualism would almost conVlllce one that they are needlessly ashamed. Unfortunately, MI'. Wa ugh went too far in' his own procla­ mation. Though the Marxists did make "intelligentsia" a vogue­ word in the 19th century, "intel­ lectual" \Or, what some people prefer, "scholar") had been quite respectable for many years before Karl Marx appeared .. And while we cannot deny the possibility of mathematicians be­ ing intellectuals, to make the two terms co-extensive is to confuse a highly cerebral activity with the infinitely more profound and ultimate activity of reasoning and judging, the proper function of intellectual life, Two years ago, in a series of articles here, I attempted to de­ fine "intellectu-al" and "intellec­ tuai life." I did so, not to rescue these concepts from abuse by either the.pseudo intellectuals or the anti-intellectuals, but siml?ly in the interest of clarifying the language a lot of us were using somewhat loosely in our writing and conversing on this matter.

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was repatriated with othel' Amer· icans living in Korea. Since then. with brief absences, she has been in California. Both Sisters have been at th~ Motherhouse at Maryknoll, N. Y,. taking part in are-dedication program designed for missionerm who have been serving on the: field fOl' a number of years,

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NORTH EASTON, MASSACHUSETTS

PHONE CEdar 8·2221

Jl...

-_....

Rev. THOMAS C. DUFFY, C.S.C·

.& ••


!heology for Laymen

Newman Club Center At Methodist School

CI

Trinity Doctrine Profits Those Who Live With It

RICHARDSON (NC) - A new ton is chaplain for the Newman Newman Club Center has been Club at' the university. He said opened for Catholic Students at the new center will be equipped Southern ~ethodist University . with a chapel, recreation and lecture rooms. One of the first h ere .' Paulist' ~ather Walter J. pal- functions in the new center was

a leadership conference of the south-central provirice of th~ Newman Club Federation at wlUch student .leaders from siII , • ·ti t umvelSI es were presen .

By F. J. Sheed

We of the laity have not givef\ mu,ch attention to the

doctrine of the Blessed Trinity. We have not, for the most

part, met God's desire to~e known with a desire to know

Him. One strong reason is that we dq not quite see what

there is in the doctrine, spir-. ..L'- - - - - - - ­ itually, for us. . , makes to us: it would be shame-

The difficulty here is 'in ful not to know. But ignorance

rinciple the same a,s with about the supreme Being is worse

P poverty, than ignorance about'

elery organic, experience. You any of the lesser, being He has

cannot know what food will created of -nothing. Of' these

mean 'to you greater truths, as of all truths,

till you eat it, the rule remains that it is suffi­ or 'the JOY of cient reason for acceptance that marriage t iol 1 they are true.' If there were no ,you marry. So' other profit, that is- sufficient with our docprofit.

We cannot goon for ever talktrine. Only· by yourself ' a n d 'ing about the Blessed Trinity. It

living with It, will De one of the joyS of heaven

can you find that we shall be' under' no pres­ what there is in sure to move away 'to <;lther to­ it for you. pies. Next week we must begin

Yet even to to talk of the beings God has

,one who has created. Meanwhile we may sum-' marize. God is Trinity. The Tri­ not had the vital experience some things can nity is' not an extra: It is God. be said. . If men omit the doctrine of the , Thus we learn that God has.an ~rinity because they do not adequate' object for His infinite know it, they can still be talking , loving power. It is wonderful fo~' about God. But; if knowing it. us that He loves us: but, as we ave seen, It would be idle to pre~ they omit it, how are they talking h about God? How are they talk­ tend that we' are adequate for ing to God?

infinite love"":"'we can neither

comprehend it no(respond to it,

·save In the most meagre way. Plan Marian Week It is as though a man on a de­ "AfM,r«:y. Shrine ­ ser' island had only a dog 'to love STOCKBRIDGE (NC) - The -he simply could' not love with first shrine in America thll:,t is the fullness of love possible to a

man. It is only in the interchange dedicated to God's attribute of

of love with an equal that love mercy will be the central point

reaches its height. If God had of a Marian Week of prayer and none to love but HiS\\inferiors, it penance in mid-August. would be' hard to helieve tha t The Shrine of the Mercy of God is love. But God is not thus God was established in 1950 in a , ..

doomed to love without ever finding an adequate object. In small stucco structure which has

Son and Holy Ghost infinite love been replaced with a larger: and

ts infinitely ar.cepted and Infi­ permanent structure now. Mari­ nitely returned. an priests and brothers assisted ' In God's Image in. the construction work. A new , Again, knowledge of the three seven-foot high painting of the 'Persons enriches our awareness Merciful Christ, executed by of what is meant by ourselves Adam Styka, was placed in the being made in God's image. shrine. Man, is not only a .unit com­ The shrine and surrounding

posed of matter and spirit, by his grounds will be the, site of a

spirit and its powers ma'de In Marian Week commemorating

the image of the infinite spirit. the 40th anniversary of Our

Man cannot be understood as a .-Lady's apparition at .Fatima be­

unit at all, he Is a social being, ginning August 18. linked organically with others, neither brought Into being nor maintained in being save bY others, Commimity is of his very 'essence. And now we know that HItCTRiCAlI. there is community within the' very being of God, so that by CONTRACTORS that too we are In His image. Residential - Commercial

Contempl,ating God we learn the Industrial

secret of community, wonderfully 633 Broadway; Fall River

defined by st. Augustine-a com­ munity is a multitude united by as 3-1691

agreement about the things they 'love. We learn the truth ex­ pressed by St. Thomas - where each one seeks his rights~ there , is chaos. For the secret of the divine community is infinite giv­ ing. , Gain for Us As one goes OD letting the mind live with the doctrine,-new thingS are constantly emerging to CHARlES Fo VARGAS answer the question what gain is 254 ROltKIDlAU AVENUE ,there in it for us. But even if no

NIeW I!l£lDlrr\Cl~IDl. ~SS. such things emerged for our ob­

vious and statable profit, it still

remains that our principal rea­

son for accepting it and clinging

to It is that it is true, and it is

t.rue about God. Intellect is one

of the great twin powers of the

soul. In so far as it remains un­

nourished, our personality lacks

.full development. The. food of

the 'Intellect is truth, and this Is

the supreme truth about the su­

preme Being. Merely as truth, it

would be a defect of human dig­

!D! ~f nity to ignore it. Thinking that

there is only one Person, In God

is incomparably worse than

thinking that the earth Is flat.

People would find the latter piece

of ignorance intolerable, quite Ilpait from any practical differ­ ence tllat the earth's sphericality

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THI ANCHOR­ Thurs., Au•• 8, 195'7·

At Our House

Brainstorming Sessi"ons Can Produce Solution The "Madison Avenue Boys" have come up with a technique that is being used, and quite effectively it seems, not only in the advertising and commercial fields but wherever new ideas are needed. Known as "Brainstorm­ room with a complete st1'anger. ing," it is essentially a kind What would you say?" of fun~way of producing cre­ One after another of the group up with conversational tid.. ative thinking. And it has came bits guaro.nteed to break the ice. There was everything from "Do you think it's going to rain to­ day?" to "Did you ever build fI. brick patio?" At the end of the three min­ utes. the group felt an easy cam­ araderie and were ready to take on the real brainstorming. The technique could be used in parish groups, social groups, with those engaged in allY mutual en­ terprise. . Father James Keller of the Christophel'S has a movie on the subject which can be rented if any group wants to see the way the thing works. Or, you may write to the Creative Education Foundation, 1614 Rand Bldg., Buffalo 3, N. Y. or you can just start out on your own. Want to try it at your house? Let us know how you made out and we'll tell you how it worked at ours.

[famous

Seven Sisters of Mercy were awarded degrees and four others' received . certificates at recent college exercises. Sister Mary. Joannes, RS.M .• received her degree of Master of Science in Dietetics from St. Louis University. Her Dietetic . Intel.nship was done at St. Mary's Hospital and the F,irmin Desloge Hospital of St. Louis. Sister holds membership in the American Dietetic Association. The ·degree of B.S. in Business Education was conferred by Bry­ ant College on Sister Mary Ger­ aldyn, RS.M., and Sister Mary Julian, RS.M. . At the exercises held at the University of Notre Dame the degree of Master of Arts was conferred on Sister Mary Enda. RS.M., and Sister Mary Flora. RS.M., and Sister Mary Gratia, RS.M. At Providence College Sister Mary Rosanne; RS.M., received the degreE} of M.A. in Religious Guidance. Sister Mary Benigna. RS,M., Sister Mary Olga, RS.M., Sister Mary Leander, RS.M., and Sister Mary Stella, RS.M., were given Certificates of Theological Studies.

Con,,~riJ'

Os SericusBy

5

m

'Rt. Rev. Msgr. Ronald Arbuth­ nott Knox, famous English writer and convert to Catholicism, io dying of cancer, Newsweek maga­ zine reports. A brilliant student' at Eton and Oxford, Msgr. Knox was the son· of the Anglican bishop of Man­ chester:- Following ordination in the Church of England, he served as chaplain at Trinity College for six years until his conversion In 1917. Following ordination in the Catholic Church he returned . to Oxford as a university chap­ lain. < He left Oxford to devote his time to translating the Bible frol11 Greek, Latin and Hebrew texts, a task which took nine and a half years. Despite an operation last January for cancel' of the liver, he recently delivered the Romanes lecture at Oxford, but he had to speak from a wheel chair.

Record

DEPART FOR MISSION: These five Sisters of Mercy left Monday for Belize, British Honduras. From left to rig.ht are Sister Mary Concetta, RS,M., Sister Mary James, RS.M., Sister Mary Antonetta, RS.M., Sister Mary Rosa­ lind, RS.M., and Sister Mary Magdalena, RS.M. Sister Mary Magdalena and Sister- Mary James have taught in st Kilhin and Holy Family grammar schools, respectively, in New Bedford.

Gif~s

WORCESTER (NC) -.;, Holy Cross College has announced alumni contributed $120,964 to the 1957 alumni fund, setting a new high in dollars raised in the drive. The institution, conducted by the Jesuit Fathers, estimated that 46 pel' cent of its graduate~ participated in the campaign: This was' It total of 4,302 men. .

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been applied to family situations, such as "Where shall we go for v a cat Ion?", ,_ . "How best can we share house- ' hold msks this year?" "H 0 w can we s a v e a I ectrlclty, etc.?" We have not trIed It as yet at our house, but Dr. G. Her­ bert True. fath­ er of five and .. teacher of cre- n. ative thinking courses at Notre Dame UniverISlty, has tried at home and says that he Is able to be a better father because he has more ap­ preciation of his children's ideas and their ability to come up with practical solutions for hQusehold problems. . ' The writer of this column Qld participate in a brainstorming session with a group of parents interested in a particular school. The subject was: What Does This School Need? We used the traditional rules: 1. A leader to keep the discus­ olon on the subject. 2. A record,er to note each

suggestion.

3. A strict time-watcher to call a halt at the end of ten min­ utes. . 4. No explanation of sugges­ tions nor editorial comment. 5. No ridicule of anyone's sug­ gestion. 6. "Hitch-hiking" allowed, I.e. taking another's suggestion .and adding to it. Fantastic Notions It was a game, certainly, and everyone enjoyed it, giving forth with. the most fantastic notions as well as some that could be ap­ plied practically. And, from the several hundred, it was found that some of the seemingly wild Ideas held the germ of actual im­ provement for the school. For example:

"Highel' pay for the teachers."

And, hitch-hiking: "A vacation

every day for the teachers." "Let the pupils do the teach­ ing while the teachers rest." Had these been propounded in the serious solemnity of a fa­ culty meeting, somebody would have sent for the man in the white coat, but In the brain­ storming session they werE: just among the "off the top of your head" talking that went along with all the other rapid-fire sug­ gestions. . It was only at the next session, when the same group met-and this time did use some judgment in evaluating-that these wel:e not among the ·dlscarded. Result In this particular school is that llOW and then a pupil does con­ duct the class, at least a portion of It. and though the teacher doesn't get her "vacation every day" she sees a renewed Inter­ est among the students. Warm-up Session Difficulty in the famlly brain­ storming, as we see it, might arise out of a certain timidity at fh·st. that' awful fear of being laughed at by other familY mem­ bers when discussing something of real importance. Tltis might be overcome by a "warm-up" session of perhaps three minutes when an utterly impel'sonal topic is the subject. Even with the grown-up group mentioned above, we had such a warm-up. "Let's pretend," said illUl' leader. "that you are in a

..

PIl.'\fMOOJHJ'1H AVIE. Ai RODMAN SlJ'.q fAn.!I.

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IPlUJICIH~"S1E

S'1I'IRIE1E'li'

NIEW' f5!EDIFOIlD STOlle • 195


6,

®The ANCHOR o

THIANCHOR­ "hur•., AUIr. 8. 1957

Week~y

Calendar Of Feast Days

OFfiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

TODAY-SS. Cyriacus, Largus. Smaragdus and Companions. Martyrs. They were 23 martyrs who were put to death in Rome In 304 under the persecution 01 Diocletian. St. Cyriacus, a dea­ con, was their leader.

Published Weekly' by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Ph.D. \ CENERAL MANACER ASST. CENERAL MANACER Rev. John P. Driscoll Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. MANACINC EDITOR .. Attorney Hugh J. Colden

Color in South Africa

TOMORROW-St. John Mary Vianney, Confessor. Popularly known as the Cure cif Ars, he was born at DardiIly, near Lyons. France, in 1789 and was· a 19­ year-old fjJ.rmhand when he be­ gan studies for the priesthood. He completed his studies with much difficulty and was assigned to Ars as parish priest. There he worked the rest of his life. His confessional was thronged with all classes of persons, who came frQ!)1 far and wide. During the last 10 years of his life he spent 16 to 18 hours a day hearing confessions. He died in 1859, was canonized in 1925 and was de­ clared patron of parish priests in 1929.

The Catholic BishOps of South Africa, aiter a plenary session, have issued a historic statement condemning the nation's racist policy of apartheid as "intrinsically evil" ­ and the white supremacy theory on which it is based as "blasphemy.' . lAth,,1/:.u/ ScJ,ebeste;., S.V.D, plillllllllllZllill_pfI;llIIIIIIl! Five years ago the Bishops stated that "justice de­ IS PROBABLY lWr G~rA1TST LIVING mands that non-Europeans be permitted to evolve gradu­ £)cl'ERT' 01'1 'mE P)t;MY 'l'R18($ Inrm:::

Ol' MALAYA. RllLlPPfN£S Atoll)

ally toward full participation in the political, economic CEtoITRlIl. "'FRleA. fli +lAS .

. and cultural life of the country." WRITTEN 18 6OOKS, ov£~ i>oo

The Bishops said that the theoi'y of separate deve.lop­ ~CLlS, DURJI'IG 33 YEAItS'

SltlOY AMO ecPEDITlONS

ment, advocated the world over by proponents of segrega­ ALOtolE AMOHCi 'Jl.irt-1.

tum, sounds plausible only as long as the fact that "sepa­ rate development is subordinate to white supremacy" is GOOD SHEPHERD ~UN'S ,." ?' hAve tf lOIrrUGAJ.'s NEWWOM£NS JAIl.. 71RES, 'letV'lISBON, overlooked. They commented: "The white man makes himself SATURDAY - St. Laurence of Rome, MaTtyr. He was born at the agent of God'S will and interpreter of His providence The Family Clinic Huesca Aragon, Spain, and with in assigning the range and determining the bounds of his family came to Rome, where non-white development. One trembles at the blasphemy he joined the clergy and became of thus attributing to God· the offenses against charity one of the seven deacons· of the and justice that' are apartheid's necessary accompani­ city under Pope St. Sixtus II. In 258, three days after the martyr­ ment." • dom of Pope St. Sixtus, he was Such a: statement, based as it is' on fundamental· By Rev. John 1L. Thomas, S. J.

put to death by being roasted Catholic doctrine. on man and his origin and relation to aliv,e on a gridiron. St. Louis University

. God, is, nevertheless, a most courageous one. The Bishops SUNDAY - 55. Tiburtius and '- have seized upon the matter without attempting to com­ We're having some diffiCUlty making up our minds Martyrs. St. Tiburtius promise principles or without shutting their eyes to the about the use of. television in our horne. They 'say that . Susanna, was the son of a high official of consequences that may well follow upon their aetipn. They the Rome Imperial Court and have not been afraid to stand up and be counted· in this some of the programs children watch are not really good was beheaded for the Faith -very important matter. It would be easy for them to keep 'for them: This may be true, but I feel it's 'better than In 288, St. Susanna, said to have . been a niece of Pope St. Caius. a discreet quiet - it would not be measuring up to their sending children to' a mo­ was martyred during the reign . vie where YJe have ·little needed opportunity to teach re­ of office as leaders in the Christian community. Emperor Diocletian in 295 for sponsibllity, proper management The government's policy of apartheid for South Africa, control over what they, s~e. refusing to marry the emperor's son, a pagan. . it's insistence that integration is untJ:linkable, is a powder Besides, children can learn of time, and self-control. I . Type of Progra'!1 keg to which the torch has already been applied. The , a great deal from watChing, tele­ MONDAY - St. Clare, Virgin. Second, you can regulate the . She was born at Assisi in 1193. Bishops are trying to hold up the true Christian principles vision. and it does keep them out type of program your children At the age of 18, drawn by the which alone can save the country from a "harvest of disas­ of the way watch. This means that YOU must preachings of St. Francis Assisi. ter." And it is no exaggeration to say that the future when I'm work­ pay some attention to what is she ran away" from home and of the world and the future of the Church look to Africa Ing'. How should parents d e a 1 being offered. With a llttle effort , took the veil of Sisterhood from and are affected by its development. with this prob­ you can come to know the pro;. St, Francis. She founded the The Bishops, of course, realize -that perfect equality lem? grams which you feel are suitable Poor CIares, governed the com­ cannot be established by the stroke of a pen. ~ocial change Most modern for them. In this matter, as in so munity for 40 years', and was many others, you are personally consulted by Popes, Cardinals will be gradual, special protection must be given to those Inventions responsible as parents. The fact and Bishops. She died in 1253 who need it, there must be a greater sharing in things w he th e r the automobile, the that some programs are supposed and was canonized two years cul.tural before there can be Ii full sharing in the same poli­ movies, radio, to be designed especially for later, tical and economic institutions.· It is a matter of evolu­ or .f; e 1e vision children does not free you from TUESDAY - 55. Hippolytus tion, not revolution. this obligation. h a v e created and Gompanions, Martyrs. ·St. n e 'w problems Third, "you 'can teach your Hippolytus was· put to death for Noting that the Church understands tha't the spiritual tor parents. I

children to appreciate good pro­ welfare of her children cannot be fostered in a whOlly alien 5uppose the Faith by being torn to pieces our great grandparents grams. There are many ways of Bocial atmosphere, and that sh.e therefore "does not en­ h~d their parental prQblems, too, doing this. You can call their at­ by wild horses In the third 'cen­ tury. After his ·death, his. nurse. force human associations that because of these differences but they were clearly quite differ­ tention to such programs and Concordia, and 19 other 'Chrls­ can produce no gQod," the Bishops said: "But the Chris­ ent. Radio and television are im­ Etimulate interest In them by tians were beheaded, discussing, explaining, 'and show­ tian duty remains of seeking to unite rather than separate, portant because they enter di­ WEDNESDAY - St, Eusebius. ing the children where they can Confessor. He was a Roman to dissolve differences rather than perpetuate them. A' rectly into the family circle in the read about them when necessary. different color can be no reason for separation' when cul­ home. Since most of the, pro­ Above all, you can show your own . priest sometimes honored as III they carry are designed martyr. During the Arian trou­ ture, custom, sociaJ conditions and above all a common . grams for entertainment rather than , appreciation for these programs bles, about 257, at the order of by enjoying and· sharing them faith and common love of.Christ, impel toward unity." Emperor Constantius, he was education, they command a large . This document, historic in the Church's life in Africa, . audience among both young and , with the ~hildren. ' shut up in a .room of his own Sense of Values hou.se. He died after spending .can be stupied with profit by ma,ny in this country and old. Watching television, in par­ ticular, has quickly become one Fourth, as your childten ma­ . seven months In constant prayer its principles and conclusions examined in the light of our of in the room-prison. our major national forms· of ture, you can use various' pro­ Christianity. We often'think that this country has all to diversio1'l and information. It fol­ grams to help them develop give to Africa; might it not be that Africa can teach us ·lows we can't simply ignore It or critical insight and a sense of Providence College

rule it out as harmful.' . . values: Why do they like what Borne lessons? ' Deans Appointed

*'9"

TV in Home 'Can Be Used

To Teach Christian ,Values

,~ummer ~Jriyjng There are many ways in which· we know that our Diocese is a vacationland. We can tell by· the many out of state license plates that may be seen passing-through our cities and towns and making themselves at horne all over the Cape. One of the saddest ways is to see the num­ ber of automobile accidents written up in oUr daily papers. It seems strange, doesn't it, that what'"begins as a vaca­ " . . tion e,nds as a tragedy for so I,Ilany. ~an is a moral being. His actions have consequences which he cannot ig~ore or laugh at. If a man drives. a few tons of machinery that can easily turn into an instrument . of death for himself and others, then"he must drive' with full awareness of all that is involved. The man or woman at the wheel of a car must be an adult in judgement and control. He must exercise due regard for the welfare of himself and other$. He must practice Christian courtesy. We want peop!e to vacation in our Diocese-not to die here.

. '. ' ,'Regulate Time they like? If the program offers .' What can parents do? In the something objectionable, do they . first. piace, you can regulate the detect it? Can they tell you. why amount of time that your chil­ It is objectionable? In this way dren spend iIi watching, tele­ you can learn a great deal about vision. Some parents appear your childrens' needs and out­ childishly helpless here, protest­ looks on life, You can help them ing that their children won't acquire the habit. of judging obey them in this matter, Such a things In terms of Christian . state of affairs is .absurd, sug­ prin9iples. As you well know, gesting' that parents have no young children can ask a thou­ control over their children in any sand questions a day. While they important affairs. Of course, if are growing toward maturity, children have been allowed to do. . you must make use of ali that as they please from the cradle they see, hear, and do to show on, it is not surprising tliat they them 'how they can reason wl1l want to have their way in through. to the' correct .answers. watching· television. Mature par,. 'IJle most important lesson you ents will see to it that television can . teach your children· Is t1:1is do~s not interfere with .their constant need to interpret life children getting the pro per and the world of their experience . amount of exercise,· finishing in ter.ms of Christian values. The their homework, and helping use of television in your home with the assigned tasks around' offers a wide scope for teaching the house. This offers a much this lesson.

Two administrative appoint­ ments at Providence College have been announced by the Yery Rev. Robert J. Slavin, O.P., President•. The Rev. Anthony A, Jurge­ laitis, O.P., has been named Dean of Discipline, and the Rev. Martin' 1. Jordan, O,P., Dean of Men, Father Jui'gelaitis has been professor of Spanish at the col­ o lege since 1949 and has served as moderator of the Camera Club and the National Federation of Catholic College Students. For the past year he has conducted a weekly Spanish course on WJAR-TV's Operation School­ house. Father Jorqan, has been as­ signed to the college since 1955. serving as moderator of the Stu­ dent Congress and assistant to· the Dean of Discipline.

.1


5t11cred ,HeOlJ't Brother Observes Act~yities at Boy Scout Camp Brother Francis Xavier Naka­ ever, they are slowly beginning zawa. SS.CC., a fOI'mel' Buddhist to approve the movement on the who Is now a Sacred Heart lay recommendation of the priests. brothel', visited Camp Cachalot he said, and both the Catholic at Miles Standish Reservation to and the Shinto religions are observe American Boy Scout acti­ fostering the development of the vities, particularly camping and Scout program. sports. A further difficulty Is the Active In Boy Scout work in ,economic status of the people his native Japan, Brother Francis which limits the funds available explained the difficulties the for uniforms 'and equipment. Scout movement Is having in his Brother explained that the edu­ native country. One problem is cational system of Japan is very that since the war people object competitive and therefore most to anything that even resembles of the boys 'spend most of. their ~iH~a~'~ training for youth, How­ . time at school work. They have very little time for outside activiChristian "Workers ties such as scouting. Born of devout Buddhist par·

To Meet in Rome ents, Brother Francis attended a

CHICAGO (NC) _ A' delega- Protestant school In his youth.

·Later, his aunt, a Franciscan

tion of 215 members of the Young nun, urged him' to attend the Christian Workers in the United Jesuit University of Sophia in States wJll"attend the YCW In- Tokyo, and there he became' a ternational Youth' Rally and convert. The priests, noticing his meeting in Rome from August 22 interest in youth. work. urged him through 26. to attend a course in Boy SCout The Americans will Join some Organization. Returning to hl3 30,000 young workers from 75 home parish. he found that the countries In the rally, signifyh;lg priests were not fluent In speak. the devotion and loyalty of ing Japanese, and therefore ho young' working people to the became' theil' chief assistant. Chmch. On August 25 the dele- While there he formed his first gates are to be received In St. troop. Gradually attracted to the Peter's Square by His Holiness· .,.:rellgious life, Brother Francis Pope Plus XII, who will make a joined the Sacred Heart Order trip from Castelgandolfo, to greet and has just completed his novi­ them. . tiate in this country. The rally wili mark the occaBrothel' Francis spoke of the sion of the Hply See's official difficulties Christians had in recognition of YCW as an inter- Japan during the war when to be . national organization of the a Christian was to be associated Church. Another highlight will with the Western world. He re­ be the announcement of the re- lated that joining a religious Bults from a survey of religious order Is looked down upon in practices of you n g workers Japan because of a feeling that throughout the world. it removes a person from practi­ cal work In the world. Shintoism Is interwoven in the educational Mass Is Solemnized! system of Japan and therefore For Priest's Sister poses a great drawback to con­ A Solemn High Funeral Mass vert-making. It is through the was offered yesterday morning in Boy Scout Organization that St. Patrick's Church, Fall. River. Brother Francis and other reli­ 1'01' the repose of the soul of Mrs. gious leaders hope to attract Ida (Broderick) Conlon, wife of japanese youth to the Church. the late Thomas D. Conlon and eister of Rev. Christopher L. Broderick, pastor of St. Plus X Church, So. Yarmouth. and of the late Rev. John Brodel'lck, pastor of St. Mary's Church, So. Dartmouth.

BOY SCOUT METHOD: Scout Paul Lopes (left) of Fairhaven explains construc­ tion of altar fire at Camp Cachalot to-'Brother Francis while DistrIct Scout Executiv~ Edmund M. Tavares and Scout Raymond Bourne of Wareham regard the project with interest. .

Award to Finance Delinquency S'tudy

OUR ADS REACH ~ MILLION CATHOLICS

The ANCHOR

WASHINGTON (NC)-A $13,.. 210 grant to stUdy juvenile de­

CAU NEW BEDFORD WYman 2-6103

linquency has been Qwarded to the Catholic University by the National Institute of Mental Health. University officials said the money will be used to study the manner in which delinquency de­ velops in boys through their as­ sociation with other delinquents. The study will be directed by Father John W. Stafford, head of the university's department of psychology and psychiatry. and by Dr. Seymour Rubenfeld. chief of psychologIcal services here at the National TralnllllJ) School for Boys. Observations of delinquents will be made at the school for four months.

PREnv

Taught 59 Years NE ORLEANS (NC) - Sister Ernestine Kennedy, a Daughter of Charity of St. VIncent de Paul who had been sewing instructor at St. Elizabeth's Orphanage here for 59 years, died at ths orphanage at the age of 90. A J1ative of St. Louis, Mo., she came to New Orleans In 1898.

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Special Ceremonies on feast Day At Cap de 101 Madele~ne Shrine

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., Aug. 8. 1957

8 (OGJlr

lady

Continued from Page One ~ells

us our w,orth by rehearsing our destiny. But there is a dif­ . ference. If our bodies, yours and mine, have a preciousness that Is "out of this world," this certaInly does not spring from their biolo­ gy. For, through the chemistry of natural ·generation, we are very much the children of Adam. In .pain were we born; in SUffering, matured; and in death, so sUd­ . denly· hurried away. Feast Next Thursday No, if we are presently pinned with an "infinite" pricetag, it is not because we are of Adam's brood-but rathei' from our Bap­ tIsm into the sonship of God. For in that moment we ·started to live and breathe as the consecrated temples of God. With Mary It was different. Her consecration came in the first Instant of her conception, when, by a special grace of God, her soul and body were preserved from original .sin and its sorry human aftermath. This is the meaning of the Immaculate Con­ ception. She differs from' us In other ways, too: in her spotless . ,llfe, In her virgin birth, in her dIvine motherhood, in her sor­ row~filled soul and last.of all, in the effect and crowning glory' of all these, her glorious Assump­ tIon into heaven. Next Thursday, Aug. 15, Catho­ lics in the Fall River Diocese will join with Catholics throughout' the whole world in celebrating the Blessed Virgin's Assumption' into heaven. Through the rich­ ness of the liturgy they will be­ hold the empty tomb. But more than that, they will see an empty tomb that was not strong enougn to a hold a mother's love from union with her son. For that son was the' Son of God, and that mother was His Blessed Mother. "Not even death itself Is as strong. a.s , love .. :' , Understand Doctrine The Assumption is really not so hard to understand if we look at it in this way: no man or woman' would like to see the home in which they grew up sud­ denly destroyed by a hurricane or bomb. Neither would Omni­ potence. Who tabernacled Him­ self within Mary, consent to' see His 'fleshly home destroyed by the dissolution of the tomb. And just as, men love to go back to their boyhood homes and remem­ ber the debt they owe their mothers, just so did the Son' of God go back to Mary, His first cradle, and bring her home wIth Him. ' . Father John Tabb expresses the doctrine of the Assumption so well In these fe.w words: .

Nor Bethlehem, nor Nazareth Apart from Mary's care; . ~or heaven itself a home for Him Were not, His Mother there.

lFIRST TIME IN 60 YEARS: ,Rev. Francis' J. Bailey, pastor 9fSt. Robert Bellermine .Chui.'ch, E. McKeesport, Pa., gives Holy Communion to John Callaghan, 83, bed­ ridden for the past seven years and an invalid all his life. This was the' first timeMr. Callaghan has been inside a church in 60 years. st. Vincent de p,aul members arranged ambulance transportation. .

Expect

S~Y~n

.Million to Visit

At lourdes Shrine in 1958 LOURDES (NC) - Accommo­ dating· between sevenan!i eight million pilgrims Is p~rhaps the most pressing of the problems facing the committee in charge

SAW ,BLESSED MOTHER: An historic.photograph of St. Bernadette' Soubirous, the French peasant girl to ,whom the Blessed Virgin ¥ary appeared 18 times at Massabielle, near Lourdes, France, iJ) 1858. NC Photo.

of preparations for this shrine's centenary celebration next year. In 1858, Our Lady appeared to Bernadette Soubirous as the Im­ maculate Conception. Since that .time" Lourdes has been bne of the chief pilgrimage places of the Church. Every year, more and more people come from all over the world. ' Next year will be the centennial year of the sanctuary, and local authorities are striving to ac­ commodate the' many millions of pilgrims who are expected to visit the shrine. . The greatest problem of all, however, is living accommoda­ tions for the expected pilgrims.· At best, Lourdes can put up about 35 or '38 thousand people at a time. For the centennial year ' it is planned to set up hostE;I~. and camps ouside'the city', with' transporta tion to the shrin'e pro­ vided every day.

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The National Shrine of the Queen of the Most Holy Rosary at Cap de la Madeleine, P.Q., Canada, will observe the Feast of the Assumption with the laY-­ ing of the cornerstone of the Rosary, Basilica by His Excel­ lency Archbishop Giovanni Pa­ nico, Apostolic Delegate, who will also celebrate the Solemn Pon­ tifical Mass. His Eminence James C: Car­ dinal McGuigan, Archbishop of Toronto, will preach in English and His Excellency, Most Rev. Maurice Roy, Archbishop of Quebec and Primate of Canada, in French. Bishop Georges-Leon Pelletier, Ordinary of Trois Rivieres and OUR LADY OF THE CAPE First Guardian of the Shrine, observance of the 25th anniver­ will .celebrate Midnighf Mass simultaneously wit h Cardinal sary of his ordination. McGuigan and' ArchbishoP' Roy Observance of the ~ Feast Is. to open the obser"vance. Bishop Charles' P. 'Greco of preceded by a Solemn Novella Alexandi'ia, La., will preside over and ~ Triduum. Tenth anniver­ the Blessing of the Sick. Bishop , sary of the' Pilgrimage of Our Joseph M. Pernicone, Auxiliary Lady of the Cape to the Ottawa to Francis Cardinal Spellman of Marian Congress will be observed New York, will preside at the on Sunday, Aug. 16, with His English ceremony. Bishop Louis Excellency, Most Rev. Joseph Levesque of Hearst, Ontario, will , Lemieux, O. P., Archbishop of celebrate - a morning Mass in Ottawa, presiding.

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Woods Hole

Asks Prayer1 Penance '1'0 Stop War~

Continued from Page One

gher is well remembered for his kindness and concern for the Vlclfare of his people. Under his energetic leadership the base­ WASHINGTON (NC) mentof the church was fm-ther His Holiness Pop~ Pil.!s XII excavated and a fine parish hall provided. He was succeeded in has called upon Christians 1935 by the late Rev. Thomas to "oppose the onslaught of McLean, who served here for evil" with the "weapons of prayer three years until his transfer to and penance" and with ~'victories Osterville. The new pastor was of charity." . the Rev. Timothy J. Calnen, who No one understands the world lI:arried on faithfully the work of . situation any better than the the parish. When sickness Pope, and apparently he would bfought an end to his stay in make the forthcoming Lourdes 1945 Father John Casey was ap­ centennial year another "prom­ pointed in his place. During his ising step," as he called the Jubi­ pastorate of some five yeai's lee Year' of 1950, "towards the Father Casey did much in ·the c9mplete restoration of the spirit way of remodelling and renovat­ of the Gospel which ... (is the mg both st. Joseph's and the Im­ only thing which can assure the maculate Conception Churches, peaceful co-existence and fruitful enhancing their beauty and collaboration of peoples." Disarmament Conference servIceability. Steady Progress The world longs for real peace, With the coming of Father but for the present must concen­ trate on the mere' prevention of Thomas Stapleton, who succeed­ war. That has been the aim of ell Father Casey in 1950, the par­ 1sh debt was paid off, the various the 'London disarmament confer­ properties put in fine condition, ence. War has become so frigl,1t­ and steady progress was made In ful that experts believe no nation would deliberately start another the spiritual and temporal wel­ ff\l'e of the parish. Father Staple­ , world cataClysm. What they fear ton, during his six-year stay, was is that" one of the' major powers 'Well beloved by the people, and may blunder into conflict. While the Soviet Rqssian rep­ his transfer in June, 1956 to Sandwich, as well as his sudden resentative met with the dele­ untimely death last December, gates of the west in London, to occasioned much sorrow. He was discuss nuclear arms limitation, .mcceeded at St. Joseph's by Radio Moscow did not hesitate to Father Bemard Unsworth, the attack Western leaders, particu­ larly American officials, call1ng present admlnlstratol·. St. Joseph's throughout its them bloodthirsty Qnd "extreme­ years has been blessed with loyal ly fond" of the atomic bomb. Bulwark of Democracy and devoted parishioners. Of the People who know us know this original famllies In the parish a few stlll are here. They are Mary is not true. President Eisenhow­ and Catherine Broderick, Mrs. er has said repeatedly that "the Mary Condon, Edward and Mary great struggle of our age is to free Ann Walsh, and Miss Frances men from terrible fear," and that Goffin. Their enthusiasm for he wanted to do everything in his thcir Beloved st. Joseph's Is power to relieve their anxiety re­ shared by the newer generations .gardlng nuclear weapons. Premier Suhrawardy of Pakistan said in 'Who now constitute the parish. Looking back over the 75 years the U. S. House of Representa­ tives In July that "were it not for of St. Joseph's history, the pat­ tel'll is easy to discern. It is the your endeavors, were it not for story of the many zealous priests the fact that you are the bulwark 'Who have served here. and of the of democracy and of peace, pos­ gcnerll,tions of faithful lay people sibly by this time, the world 'Whose sterling example shines would have b.een shaken and lOut as a beacon and inspiration shattered." The Pakistan Prime Minister to those who follow. said he recalled "the time when you, and you alone, were the pos­ sessors of that destructive force, namely, the atomic bomb ... and Continued From Page One if you had desired to conquer all duty. Following service as chap­ the nations of the world through lain of Stuttgart Military Post in the means, the powerful means Gelmany he was named Deputy in your hands, you could have Chief of Chaplains at Seventh Army Headquarters in Stuttgart. Father Fenton was assigned to the 2nd Army at Fort Meade, Md., in April, 1951, and served there until he went to Korea in A.ugust, 1953, with the 45th DI­ Joseph A. Charpentier

vision and later with 8th Army Reg. Pharm'.

Headquarters. 1902 ACUSHNET AVE.

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PARTICIPATES IN PARISH ANNIVERSARY: Immaculate Conception Chapel at Megansett serves North Falmouth parishioners of St. Joseph's Parish, Woods Hole, now observing its 75th anniversary. Photo by Bob Ruiter, Falmouth.

done so." He added that "the' moral strength" of the United States stayed our h<tnd and "showed to the world that peace was safe in your hands." Victories of Charity

Not everyone feels that way about us, unfortunately. Not ev­ eryone knows us as we are, and many who' would have formed good opinions of us have been misled by communist propa­ ganda. This is important, because, as the Pope hus said, "peace is above all an attitude of the ,mind, and only secondarily an harmonious

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Communist Ov~rsimplificatiol'D

Difficult to Conv·ince·· Reds With Logical'Reasoning

can

forr lRe.. Emplhasos· On Christian Higher Educatioll1l

1THE ANCIlfOR7" ;rh~rs.• Aug. 8, 1957

Educators'

Academy Graduate Wins Scholarship

WASHINGTON (NC)':'-U the Christ by which. consistent with nation's spiritual heritage in Christian traditions, all our Miss Madeline' DiSanto, a· education is to be perpetuated, teaching must be judged." graduate of the Academy of the Christian higher education must, The Christian college Is a com­ By Joseph A. I8rieg

Sacred H:earts, Fall. River, has be "emphatically re-emphaslzed:' munity of teachers and students six Cat~0.1lc .and· six Protestant' Cleveland Universe Bulletin

seeking to know the nature of tha college educators have stated. . . universe created by God and the The group said that. "all per­ I sympathized deeply with President Eisenhower' the sons concerned with our country'S kind of society In which man can other day when he told reporters that he had once been live according to God's will. Ed­ welfare must give it high pri­ '.'hard· put to it" to find satisfactory answers to arguments ority" because today "the true ucation in'this context enables offered by Soviet Marshal Zhukov in a three-hour discus­ ,meaning of life and a sense of . the student to learn and grow 'responsibility are 'being obscured within the framework of a mean­ sion of democracy versus .ing and purpose· that unifies and or lost in confusion." you find a satisfactOl'y answer for communism. orders his. knowledge, illumines The group was evenly divided a man who believes that It does­ his appreciations and gives. di­ 'One . reporter seemingly a man utterly ignorant of what between representatives of the rection to his existence," said the Cbllege and University Depart­ misunderstood the Presi­ democracy is all about? ., ment of the ',National Catholic statement. dent's remark. He asked whether Zhukov considered it a. virtue Educational Association and the - Comml~sion on Higher Education Tony Chapel Scene Eisenhower meant to leave the of the Soviet system that it impression· that .of the Protestant National Coun­ Of. H@lyday Mass teaches people that their primary cil of Churches. Zh u k 0 v pre­ BAYOU GOULA (NC) ---:. For . duty is to support the state. That The Association of Amei'ican sented the bet­ is idolatry of the state; but how the 67th consecutive year. a Mass Colleges said the statement preter arguments.. do you 'argue w'ith a man who . pared this year "does not pur­ Not at. all, re­ will be offered on the Feast· ot thinks that Idolatry is good'? plied the Presi­ port to be a declaration of the the Assumption In the Madonna ' . If 'a small child says to you complete goals and objectives of chapel here, one of the smallest dent with his that he can't see why every!;lody either group ... (but) is rather churches in America. famous smile: shouldn't go around naked, you a setting forth of some of the' . The chapel has room for a butyoucan will be hard-put to reply. The .minimum goals and pui'poses "congregation" of from five t() find some peo­ ple who will put up a strong . child is· wrong for a 'hundred just been notified by the Ad­ which these educators' believe seven pers'ons, but' many others. argument that the sun is not hot· reasons. but his mind is not pre­ common to both Catholic and will be seated on benches outside missions Office at Albertus Mag'­ pared to know them. You've just nus College that she has been Protestant institutions of hither or will stand In the chapel yard. and the earth is not round. education.' .." Obviously. what Pre sid e n t got to wait for him to grow up. selected from the list of alter­ Father Augustine Wyshoff. I'm afraid we'll have "to wait nates to be awarded a full tuition Eisenhower meant was .that he The 12 men declared that "all . pastor of Our Lady of Prompt had· been hard put to it to fil)d for Zhukov to grow ,up, too; but scholarship valued at $1800. philosophies of education must Succor Church in White Castle. arguments that would reach it will be an endless wait as long The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. i'est upon Certain presuppo'sitions will offer the Mass 'and preach as all he knows is what the Com­ Zhukov's mind. the' sermon in the chapel, which Thomas G. DiSanto, Plymouth of faith which Ultimately deter­ Zhukov, the President rec.<.tlled, munist Party's propaganda sys­ is located about 16 miles south BOUlevard, North Westport. in" mine the nature of education." insisted that the communist sys­ tem tells him.

"It is our' copviction," .they of Baton Rouge. Our Lady of Grac~ Paris.h, Miss __ • • a ••• • • • • __ & tem appeals to man's ideals.

DiSanto was second highest said, "that· knowle'dge of reality whereas· the democratic system Summeli' Sch@ol Has

and of the meaning of life is ad­ graduate in the Class of 1957, 8 -g Is simply materialistic. ~

and one of the two students ·ili equate and complete only'in the tlnusua~ fFea~llJIres 8 In support of that strange

light of the revelation of Jesus B CHARLOTTE (NC) - A small the ciassical course who received 'statement, Zhukov said that

o a diploma with the rank of high~ CBlD B --, democracy tells a man that he parish church here has a reli­ est honors. 8 can make as much money as he gious vacation school that Is o During four years at the Acad~ 8 The Original o wishes. keep as much of it as he 'packed with -the unusual.: emy Miss DiSanto distinguis.he~ wants, and do as he pleases. WB1UAM No There are nearly 500 childr~n herself as a student of high scho.:. In contrast, he argued, the So­

~ lastic achievement and cO:1trib~ n viet system teaches people that attending. uted actively· to various organiza l their primary duty is to support Instructors are priests, Sisters. tions. She was Art Editor of the ·0 I the state: 'seminarians, Brothers, and lay' 1957 yearbook, Janua, for which As I said. I' sympathized with she did original sketches. An ac~ BRAKES RELINED I assistants. President Eisenhower. The hard­ All the youngstWt,s are Negro.' complished .accordion player she ADJUSTED-REPAIRED I est. argument in the. world to Their Instructors are white and has appeared frequently on pro~ answel~ is the one that sweeps WHEELS ALIGNED and, I PRESCRIPrloNS __ ..I" grams at the school and through­ Negro, aside mountains 'of facts and I BALAN~ED More unusual - there aren't out the city. takes the form of an imbecilic over a couple' of hundred mem­ She will enter Albertus ~ag­ . RelIable oversimplification. nus College in September where bers in the parish. . Prescription ServIce

Douglas J; Richardson Throws Out Intellig'ence Most unusual - most of the she will pursue her interest in That kind of s tat e men t 500 children attending the school science and continue her art and g General Manager amounts to an utter irrelevancy. are not Catholic. music. 566 RODMAN ST. It throws out reason and intelli­ ~ I Alfred A. Dumont ReR. Ph. I?rop. This religious vacation school gence. It 'descends to the prepos­ was launched last year by the fALL RIVER terous. No wonder. then, that the first pastor of the new' Our Lady I Your .friendly IDruggi5~ a m· intelligent and reasonable man is of Consolation Church, Bishop OSborne 4-4628 Depot Mass. g suddenly stt:uck dumb. i • • • a _ . GSq._ _ HyannilJ, James' J. Navagh, then Auxiliary Mm • • • _ _ D _ _ Every communist I have ever Bishop of Raleigh and 'now Bish­ known has used this method of op of Ogdensburg, N. Y. debate. It is the only method The first teaching staff was YOUR 'DOLLAR BUYS ' open to communists because made up of four Mission Helpers communism cannot be defended of the Sacred Heart Sisters. The. ~n Win up ~o $209 (ash

reasonably. . / teaching staff this year includes Communists, for example, used Mission -Helpers, Oblate Sisters FIRST NATIONAl

THAN EVER BEFORlE to chant, like a chorus of talking­ of Providence, Maryknoll Semi­ BANIK machines, 'that you cannot make narians. a priest of the Dioceslt See us for the lUST DEAL 611I CH

an omelet without breaking eggs. of Raleigh; and lay assistants. . Attleboro & So. Attleborc> Ford Car or T.ruck

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omelets without breaking eggs, Directors what do yoU reply? You either OS 2-23\)1 punch his addled head. or walk 469 Locust St" Fall River ... Rose E. Sullivan

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Such 'was the dilemma in which Eisenhower lllUst have Sharon, MassClJchusetts found himself in his discussion : , with, Znu~ov during the war. . Do As You Please . Zhukov said - and apparently One.

. believed with utter simplicity ­ FUNERAL MOMIE that the democratic system al­

lows a man to make and keep all

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looks of The Hour

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., AUr\. S. 1957

Children of the Shadows Story~ of Naples· Urchins Thea~D,

By Rev. D. Bernard

Widow of Navy Here Dies at ArRington

O.S.B.

Morris West's Children of the Shadows (Doubleday, $3.00) tells the story of the street urchins of Naples, chil­ dren who exist at a level of poverty and degradation one would have thought impossible in this twentieth century. But the book tells also the this book and her German story of what is being done husband. for them by Father Mario By American standards, life at Borelli, a priest of the c.ity, Santa Isabel is very primitive, who resolved a few years ago' to aiedicate himself to the jpb of rescuing and reclaiming these outcasts for whom, it seemed that no one else Clued. Poverty and its accompani­ ments, hunger and vice and a hind of subhu­ man existence, have been a Eu­ ropean com­ monplace since the late World War. We are al­ ready acquainted with one ver­ sion of the sad story through the books about the Parisian "Rag­ pickers' Priest" and his Emmaus <community. ILIttie Criminals Mr. West's story is even more !pathetic, because of the tender ages of his subjects. It begins In 1950, when a young Neapolitan priest visited the Cardinal-Arch­ lllishop of the Italian city to ask !permission to work among the Ilougnlzzi - the street-urchins without families or homes, who. from the age of five upward, lived by their wits and the quiclt­ lfless of thieving fingers. To these <children no form of crime or vice was unfamiliar nor repugnant, lllecause out ot them all a living <could be made, and survival was their goal. It seemed to Don Borelli that the conventional pastoral ap­ !proach would never work. What :rne sought was permission to be- \ <come one of them, to mingle as actively and closely in their way (J)f life as he could. After a period (J)f reflection on the matter, the Cardinal - Archbishop granted fuls petition on condition that he find at least one other priest to engage in the work with him, as a protection and support. This was Padre Spada, who first dis­ «lovered an abandoned church llluilding that could be used as a /Start for the home Borelli plan­ lfled for his urchins. So came into existence the House of the Urchins, where the two priests are now housing, feeding, and caring for a hundred and ten boys, at an average cost of a dollar a day for each. The money is raised partly by the boys themselves, now engaging for the first time in legitimate scavenging, running errands, and the like; and partly by the beg­ ling of the priests. The purpose of Mr. West's books Is mainly tc1 advance this work. Fathers Borelli and Spada are eonscious of the great risks their work exposes them to. Mindful of the difficulties encountered by France's priest - workers, the readers of this book will do well to pray tor them and their cliarges - but also to do what­ ever may be possible to give financial ald. . Mr. West gives in detail a plan he has suggested to the Austra­ lian and American governments for taking in several hundred of these boys and setting up trad\! schools for them. Not much prog- " ress has been made in this direc-' tion, but at any rate life is looking up for the once-lost small souls of Naples. CbeerfulBook

. A more cheerful picture of life

abroad is offered in Marjorie

Grice-Hutchinson's Malaga Farm

(Newmarl, $3.50). A description

of life on and about a farm in

the Spanish province of Malaga,

li'un by the English author of

but there are many rewards, as the author easily convinces her readers. Besides the day-bY-day account of farm Ilfe and the pictures of the employees and their life, the hook also takes its readers throughout the whole province, one of the most typical­ ly Spanish. Civic and religious celebrations are· described, there are attrac­ tive chapters ,on food and'drlnk and on the music and art of Andalusia, and a good deal of serious writing about the' eco­ nomic picture of present and future in rural Spain. All of these things are written of with skill and charm. This is one more example of a book about Spam that does not consist of one long shrill denunciation of Franco and the Spanish church, but that emphasizes the goodness of a land and its veople.

HONORED BY PANAMA: Receiving Panama's high­ est honor is Rev. (Lt. Col.) Lawrence E. Ryan, Army chap­ lain 'cited for his personal work with Bishop Thomas Clavel while on duty at Fort K6bbe, Canal Zone. He is presented the Order' of Vasco Nunez de Balboa in the rank of Knight in David , Province of Chiriqui, by Governor Don Federico . Sagel.

NATIONAL LEGION .OF DECENC:V UNOBJECTIONAL FOR GENERAL PATRONAGE Black Scorpion UNOBJECTIONABLE FOR ADULTS Journey to Freedom Doctor at Large. OBJECTIONABLE liN PART FOR ALL Dragstrip Girl Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? Lost Lagoon Woman of the River

Record Attendance At

New Proiect Closes Historic Churches

St~

ARLINGTON (NC) - Solemn Requiem Mass for Mrs. Eliza­ beth M. Kelley Shea, 55, widow of Navy Comdr. John J. Shea, World War II hero and author of one of the most famous war letters, was offered in St. James Church here. Archbishop Richard J. Cushing of Boston offered tpe Mass. Mrs. Shea Is survived by one son, John, now a senior at Bos­ ton College. It was to the son then five years old, that Comdr. Shea wrote the letter which be­ oome famous as "Letter To Jackie." The letter was written shortly before Comdr. Shea was killed in action on September 15, 1942, when the aircraft carrier Wasp was sunk off GiJadalcanal. In the leter, Comdr. Shea. counseled his son: "Take good care of mother. Be a good boy and grow up to be a good young man. Be a leader in everything that is good In life. Be a good Catholic. and ~u can't help be­ Ing a good Amer-ioon." Shortly after Comdr. Shea's death, Boston College .announced it had reserved a scholarship for "Jackie." Comdr. Shea gradu­ ated from Boston College In 1918.

Anne Shll'''mne

Masses were said at the shrine on the feast day and more than -An estimated 100,000 persons 50,000 persons received Com­ participated in ceremonies here, munion. marking the Feast of St. Anne On the eve of the feast day, and the 299th anniversary of the about 30,000 persons t~ok part in founding of the shrine to the t he' torchlight procession along the path of the Way of the Cross Mother of Mary here. \ Redemptorist Fathers who on the mountain overlooking the conduct the shrine, gave the shrine. estimate on attendance and said .-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.­••.•:;;" ••••••• it was the largest ever seen here • Child ' for this occasion. More than 200 : First Qr:~i~Y

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ST. ANNE DE BEAUPRE (NC)

DICKINSON'S LANDING­ (NC)-The last Masses have been offered in three parish churches which were closely linked with the early Catholic history of up­ per Canada and now will soon disappear under the st. Law­ rence Seaway. They are the Lady of Grace Church here and the mission churches of St. Francis, at Far­ ran's Point, and St. George's, at Mille Roches. These churches and communi­ ties on the ·St. 'Lawl:"ence River figured prominently in the work of the early missionaries who planted the faith in what is now the province of Ontario. But the three riverside places are now ghost towns. Most resi­ dents have been moved to the new communities' of Ingleside and Long Sault, farther inland, to escape the flood waters that are to course over the area as part of the vast seaway project.

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.

.112

Test of Gratitude'

God Love'You

J!arents to Prepare

To Teach Re"ogiori

By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.~. While rummaging through old books in, a secona hand boo~ store, the other day, we discovered a post card that had been sent out by one of ~he smaller Protestant bodies in the United States. The first line read: "In the year 1913 the contribution of (our churches ... ) to the 'foreign missions amounted to $1.89 per member." Should we mention it? Yes. Last year, that is in the year 1956, the Catholics of the United States, in times of higher salarieSoc and incomes and gr.eater prosperity than 1913, contributed to the Holy Father for all the foreign missions of -the Church, only 30c apiece.' The average donation of the protestant group in 1913 was three and a half cents a week; the average of the Catholic gro~p in 1956 was about half a cent a week. Why are we so 'little conscious of our duty' to the Missions? Probably for no other reason than that we have not yet become con­ scious of them in a spiritual way. Proof of I , this is shown in what our servicemen do for 'the missions once they have entered the

al:med forces and served in· a foreign land.

There. they see missionaries in action, nursing

lepers, caring for the poor, spending them­

selves and being spent to heal mental and phy­

sical 'wounds and they immediately become

sympathetic.

We cannot take you to the foreign missions of Burma, Africa, or India, but we can beg you to imitate in your life the sacrifice of' Christ and make a sacrifice for these missions. Why not send the' missions ari amount equal to what you spend 'on cigaretes. In His most recent encyciical the Holy Father asked the faithful - are you grateful for the gift of your Faith? The test that proves your grati­ tude comes when you are ready to make a sacrifice in order that others throughout the world may share the Faith. Only to the ex­ tent that we make Our Lord and -'HIs Blessed Mother known in foreign lands shall we receive blessings at home. This Protestant notice also stated that in 1914 theY expected an increase in donations of 60c per member. This year the Holy Father received an increase of .04c per Catholic. Please form the good habit of making a sacrifice every day and sending the month's total to the Holy Father through the Pontifical Society for the Propagation of the Faith. GOD LOVE YOU to L,S. "T.hls $7.63 will buy more for,the mis­ sions than it could possibly buy for me." . . . to. M. Mc. "I don't • smoke 01' own a cal', so I didn't spend this $'6 on cigarettes or gas so here it is." ..': to A.B. "I promised to send this $1 to the missions if I found all the information necessary for a term paper-I found it and got im A-I'm happy and I hope that the missions will be a bit happier by reason of my tiny donation.'! , One of our readers seQt ,us a donation which was to have peen her first deposit on a new T.V. set. She realized that soe needed the sacrifice more than she needed the set. For part of the sacrifice money she requested a statue of Our Lady of Television saying tha t her old T.V. sej; will look beautiful with Our Lady's statue adorning it. You too can give Our, Lady a place of honor atop your T.V. if you send us your request and a $3 sacrifice for the poor and suffer­ ing people of the missions. Address: SocIety for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N. Y., 01' your own DIocesan Director. ". Cut out th.is column, pin your sacrifice to it and mall it to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New 'York I, N. Y., or your 'DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAY~OND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North MaIn .Street, Fall RIver, Mass

laws of Church, Were Observed 1111 Pagliai-Oberon .Marriage WASHINGTON mC) - The ,American secular .press gave wide -"-;'7'" . play to the. story of the marriage of Merle Ob~ron, Hollywood ac­ tress, and Bruno'Pagliai, Mexican industrIalist, in the Church of' the Four Crowned Martyrs in Rome. The press described Miss Oberon as twice 'man1ed and twice divorced' and Mr. Pagiiai as having been mal'l'ied three times previously. After prolonged investigation, the NC 'Rome -bureau was able to ascertain that there were no canonical impediments to their mal'l'iage. The bureau learned that the previous marriages of Mr. Pagliai, a Catholic, were on­ ly civll ceremonies and therefore

invalid in the eyes ~f the Church. Miss ·Oberon is a non-qatholic.. It was learned that her first mar~ riage to film director Alexander Korda, now -deceased; was valid in the eyes of the Church. How­ ever, her second marriage to Lu­ cien Ballard, from whom she ob­ tained a MexIcan dIvorce, was in­ valid in the eyes of the Church because it was contracted wIth a ~ validily married man. ,

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WEBSTER GROVES (NC> ,. Numerous parents will go to school here; .beginning ,this fall, to learn how to teach their children religion In the 'home. A district training program, to include . at first a group of parents from fewer than a dozen parishes.. was outlined to 300 Sisters here by Father John P. Cradick. assistant director. of the Confraternity of Christian Doc­ trine for the Archdiocese of St. ,Louis. While the program is aimed at parents of children who are attending public schools, Father Cradick said the classes would be open to all parent~. "The home Is actuallY the' child's first .school." he told the' 300 Sisters attending the insti-. tute. "Parents must recognize 'their responsibility as teachers of the faith if religion is to receive its proper place in 'the hom~." The st. Louis archdiocese re­ cently underwrote a series of' seven pamphlets designed to aid­ parents in teaching religion to their children. These will form the course of study followed .in the training program, Father Cradick said. The course follows a, three-year cycle. , Several families in the St. Louis area are already teaching religion courses in their homes, the priest said. "Some are invit­ ing neighborhood children to participate," he added. In one parish, baby sitters tak­ ing care of children at the Sun­ day' Masses are giviflg instruc­ tions to pre-school children.

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IRAQ. Caracosh is a vlIlage of Chaldean Catholics on the banks of ancient TigriS! River, ntlar Abraham's birthpl.ace anell _ ,Babylon of old. Chaldeans in their Mas!! ,TIx Holy j:alhtr~ ·MiMi," Aid and liturgy stlIl use Aramaic, the languago spolien by Our Lord. Intensely devoted to .our Lady, they just built a new Shrine of the Immaculate Concep­ tion. Overwhelmed on all sides by a non-christian majority, tho economic stress is so great they can't finish th,: bell tower and bell and provide the necessar:y furnishings for which we need $2,500 in LEBANON. In Ain-EI-Delb the Greek rIte CatholIcs (all share­ crop farmers) ,have no church. The Maronites (Syrian rite Cath­ olIcs) welcome them, but theIr church is too small for their own parish. Three years ago they started in. Little by little, they gath­ ered what they could. To reward their spIrit the Holy Father wantB to provide the materials needed to complete 1t-$3,OOO., In the hearts of aU, especially In' young lads like HAFFEZ in Egypt and EMMANUEL and " DEVASI in India, as they begin their six years seminary training, They hope to Ibid a friend to send the $100 needed yearly to keep them.

MISSION HOSPITAL IN HOCK? QUEEr-{ OF INDIA HOSPITAL desperately needs help. you send a mite-or buy a bed. ($25), endow bed <$250),

Won't

THRICE-BLESSED MERCY Shakespeare in one play says mercy "is twice blest It blesses him that gives and him that takes.... Your MASS OFFERINGS, often the only SUPPOl:t of our missionaries, .are a mercy to the souls of your deal' ones for whom Masses are said; to these poor. priests; and surely will bring God's mercifUl blessings upon yourself.

SERV6CIE

501 COUNTY Si. HER GLORIOUS ASSUMPTION

NEW BEDFORD

WrJ 3a17!5n

BU11'MOIR.DS !PILAN (OM'OUINIIDlS INTEREST on Q'lI'IHlROfi" iWHeE YIEA~1l.\f ON DAHILY IDlIEIPOSO'11' ISAtAINCIES

J.% ·206 IUNDOINI S1i'. NEW ~1E1Cl1FO~iD)

~~.~

'GOD'S WANT-ADS

Today the HoliY Father seeks help for poor missions in three Near East lands. ETHOPIA, in Haddisc Addi the chapel, buut of thatch 50 years ago, is tumbling, so "the Bishop forbade its use. Mass is now said in a private home, while o the peasants started to build another­ ~~S t even the tots helped, carrying the mate­ .c., .s'",_' ~rials., It is now about two feet above the ;J . foundations. We need $2,000 more for the ~ ~ materials to complete it. ,.

MAKE YOUR WILL GOD'S WILL BY INCLUDING GOD.

~!

~

But NOBODYUI

I II

HOPE SPRINGS ETERNAL

NOBODY~

I

WELCOME HOME: Very Rev. Vincent Egan of Burns, Ore., welcomes Rev. William R. Rush of Simpson, Minn. to Oregon after absence of 18 years. Father RUSh, former Episcopalian minister in Burns, wa.s converted in 1939 by'Father Egan. Taking part in welcome is Bishop Francis P. Leipzig of Baker, at right. .

all.

a•••••••••Emmm~E~~a.~s~~~••~~~~~~~~.~~.~~~~~~~~

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AL & PHYl'S

.

THE ANCHOR--­ "",un., Au•• 8, '1951

. . ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••

Q

11 IlJ

~ §

We know two )'oung Indian girls, both SISTER MARY AS­ SUMPTA (or 'ASUNTHAI. who will "storm" Mary on August 1$' with their prayers for a friend to help them through the two years training by sending, in any payments... the-$150 needed each year to train her. So will Sister Therese In Lebanon and Sr. Theodore in India.

A MiLLION AND ONE WORRiES That's the lot of FATHER KING who is dl-' recting the Holy Father's relief for over 900.~ 000 Arab refugees exiled fmm their homes in Israel; He must find shelter, food, medical care and help educate their tots. For each gift of $10 (food pack) he sends in thanks a HOLY LAND ROSARY.

Fast OlissionsJ1tl

~. '~'Tlear FRANCIS CARDINAli. SPelLMAN,

I: ~

!

'WY 5-746$' ~ ~ ~~.~

Presiden~

Msgr. Peter P. Tuohv. Nat'l Sec'lf

Send all cC)mmunicatlona ~:

CATHOLIC NEAR IEAS1T WIEll.IFARIE ASSOCUAlION

480 Lexington Ave. at 46~h St.

New York n7, N. Y.


Hollywood In Foe'"

THE ANCHOR­

Thurs.,

By William H. Mooring

Au~.

8, 1957

13

Pope Praises French Canadian Families'

Reader Charges Writers Coddle Catholic Stars

VATICAN CITY (NC) - The strength of the typical French Canadian Catholic family can well be the envy of people in other countries. His Holiness Pope Pius XII said to a group of French Canadian pilgrims here, The Pope recalled how the Catholic faith was the source of strength and heroism to the first colonizers <!f New France. now, Canada, and how the strength of their faith has endured through the centuries. "Continue. beloved Sons, to make those gifts which the Lord has given you bear fruit," he said. "We hope that they will be profitable not only to the more or less limited circle of your fami­ lies, but that theY will also spread abroad to the service of your country a~d the Church, and contribute to draw to her an al­ ways greater °number of those who seek the unquestionable signs of Christian truth and charity." The group had &ome to Eu­ rope to commemorate the third centenary of the arrival in Can­ ada of Noel Simard, 17th cen­ tury French missioner to New France.

Does the Catholic press "coddle" certain celebrities because they are Catholics, while criticizin'g, for the same errors, those who are not? . . The question' arises following my recent columns on Bing Crosby in "Man On is. of course. that I do Fire" and Ann Blyth who answer agree and that I have neyer has just starred in "The knowingly excused in the work of Catholic actor" anything for fIelen Morgan Story." Both ,,,., which I might presume to excori­

of these articles were Intended to 'ate a non-Cantholic.. explain, not excuse. In the past Two Lives at 30 just as many. Second childhood used to come

rea del's have l on at 80. Now, with TV, it can

been irked bY; . arrive at 30! .

my criticism of ' Shirley Temple, who in the

certain Catholic 1930's used to perch on my knee

celebrities. at the Fox studio to practice

The question typing. ·becomes lady Emcee of a.

might well trig­ new weekly TV series this Fall.

ger a typicallY provocative and liitL~il.;J.l\.Ui~..J while another network plans to

productive topic for our Movie replay the "moppet" movies she

Clubs, once they get going. made while still under 10. Freddie

Meanwhile, if you've anything to Bartholome~ who used to play

with our children around 1935, is

Bay on the subject'do not hesi­ now a TV director in Emerson

tate. In a characteristically chal­ N. J.; has a son and daughter of lenging note. Miss Mary J. Mc­ Cue, of San- Mateo. Cal.. asks: his own. He can tune in evenings and re-live his boyhood as "David "Why do Catholic movie column­ ists feel obligated to give certain Copperfield" 01' Spencer Tracy's Catholic movie stars a uniformly young sidekick in "Captains "good press' when these stl}1'S Courageous." FIRST FLIGHT: Rt. Rev. Msgr. Antonio P. Vieira, Roddy McDowall. an 0 t'h e l' nppear in films that are obviously pastor of Mt. Carmel Church, New Bedford, boards plane Questionable and would cause young visitor of ours while mak­ considerable criticism if the star ing "How Green Was My Valley," at Logan International AirpOl:t for his first' visit to Azores sometimes returns to visit us as were not Catholic. in 20 years. _ .

"Catholic columnists seem un­ a boy on one TV channel while in some playing a young husband convinced and uneasy as they

First Step· offer excusl:ls for, say Bing Cros­ new teleplay on another.' The Mauch Twins. Bobby and Billy. VATICAN CITY (NC) - First by's appearing In a picture in

Which divorce and remarriage became studio technicians, but stage in the investigation of the remove the basic conflict: never­ are still around as boys in "The cause of Father Vincenzo Aaroz­ theless they seem unwilling to Prince and the· Pauper" filmed in zi has closed. The investigation. antagonize the star b~ calling a the 1930s. Joan Carroll, unhappy schoolgirl in "The Bells of st. which is the first step in a pro­ moral spade a spade. .

"It is well known that a star Mary's," now is a happy wife and cess that may lead to Father For Complete

like Bing Crosby can approve or mother, although still re-appear­ Tarozzi's beatification, involved <dIsapprove just about everything ing on the screen as a child the study of the priest's writings. Laundry Service

involved in his productions, nor actress. Susan Whitney, the little girl l'eputation for sanctity. and mir­ would it cause him financial Lucia in "The Miracle of Fati­ ~ 668 Pleasant St. acles attributed to his interces­ bardship if he refused the role. ma," is struggling during her sion. Hard to Accept Fall River 9-6497 "The picture (gathered, from vacation from college, to gain a. fresh footing as an "adult" my column!) of a shi'ewd, suc­ actress. And the "Fatima" film is cessful star llke Bing, who has a still considered too young to plaY well-paid staff to check on every­ Sure, these are -wonderful thing that affects his career, as TV! an easy-going, naive type who days. ~ Of all these youngsters, by the ~

lbarely realizes the import of the way, all are ~Catholics except lines he speaks is hard to accept. Shirley Temple and Freddie Bar­ He saw the script (of Man On tholomew. Fire) ; he made the picture know­ () Relsel Film ing that the story line tended to Several movie biographies of­ £lhow that God's view of marriage ,can after all be ignored when fering little by way of inspiration @ or example have been, 01' are there are mitigating circum­ 0 being made. The story of Victor ,.tances. ~ Reisel, acid-blinded exemplar of "Cannot Catholic newspaper­ (ID Illlen state this bluntlY while stlll America's free press, was to have .& valuing the fine movies Bing has been a different sort of movie biography: one worth telling. in made? Why does their hard-hit­ 0 fact. Several movie producers ting, unequivocal criticism sud­ ,RANDOLPH "Go into the whole NORTH EASTON denly soften and mellow at the considered it. One announced he world and preach the mention of Bing CrosbY,-Richard would film it. Now the Reisel Story is quietly Egan, or Ann Blyth? One gets gospel to every crea­ E. BRIDGEWATER the impression that Ali.n Blyth and mysteriously dropped. Why? ture." Fear of reprisals on the part can cast an aura of purity over a low-cut gown Impossible for of powerful underworld influ­ Mark 16:15 ences within the American trades ltrass. worldly types to manage. union system? Or the favor of "This reluctance to face Catho­ lic stars whose personal lives are some sinister fellowship between above reproach with the fact that the underworld and the movie TAKE YOUR fAMILY TO 'lfHfr they are knowingly using their world? Suspicion grows with omi­ in Holly­ nous silence. Someone talents as an influence for evil NORTH ATTLEBORO lInstead of good, cuts the ground wood should give us a public from under criticisms of those explanation. outside the Faith for doing simi­ lar things. We all know that AURIESVillE, NEW YO~K val' i 0 u s pressures can f<>rce teachers, doctors. politicians or actors to so separate their per­ !Sonal and professional lives that Uley do things professionally that are incompatible with the Catho­ ON THE NEW YORK THRUWAY AT EXIT 28,

lic principles they know to be oe @ true. BETWEEN FONDA and AMSTERDAM, N. Y.

"But it seems imperative that ll'ationallzing about our compro­ mises tre kept at a minimum. St. Thomas More might have some­ EASY iO REACH IF~OM. 'VE~MON1l'

thing interesting to say on this whole problem. And whether or not .we would have the courage A VDsnr YOU WOlf!. NlIEVIER FORG~li'

to join him in the Tower, we can at least not pretend that we are too busy or tcw careless to know CHURCH GROUPS AND SOCIETiES. ARE INVITED 10

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Recommends Consideration Of Inflation Curb ProJlosal

IOWA CITY,-There's n~thing so graphic as a trip through East Berlin to emphasize the' differ­ ence of living in the communist and the democratic way of life. according to Fllther Roberti. Welch. A professor in the school of religion at the State University of Iowa here, Father Welch made such a trip. His companions were Dr. George Forell, a Lutheran. .and Dr. Fred Bargebuhr,' who is Jewish. They also are professors in the, university's school of religion. The three visited 10 univer­ sity towns in Europe to explain the "Iowa Plan," under which the state ul1lversity gives credits for courses taught by the three professors in the school of reli­ gion, • In an interview here, Father Welch said. "The..... jouhWY was even safer than one through West, Berlin because there was so little traffic. At the, border. the guards did not even bother, to look at our passports. "Nothing one has ever read is

By'Msgr. George G. Higgins

Director NCWC Social Action Dept.

President Eisenhower, as we previously noted, has made several pleas in recent months that labor and man­ e> ag-ement exercise responsJbility and 'self-restraint with a view to curbing in~lation. rhe consensus of economists and editorial writers seems to be that such well intentioned' .Hoover obtained agreement from business leaders not to cut wage pleas are rather unrealistic. rates during' the 'great depres­

The reasoning' behind this pessi­ sion," mistic conclusion is summarized The hold-the-line agreement by Alfred Kuhn, ' would last for a year, perhaps Associate Pr07 two, The agreements would allow fessor' of Eco­ only "small" wage increases to ,nomics at the take account of increasEOi in pro­ University 0 f ductivity, and increases where a Cfncinnati, In"a major disparity in particular book which was ,NOTABI,.E FIRST: Rev. wage rates required correction. published During the standstill, an inten~ James E. Quill of C;ovington shortly before sive investigation would be made the President of the actual process of price Diocese has been named the made his last increases, with emphasis on a first American to receive the pub 1 i c appeal solution to the question of. who' on the question. should Ilenefit from the nation's Doctor of Sac'red Theology "During infla­ yearly improvements' in produc­ degTee from Dunboyne Es~ tion,'; P~ofessor tivity of labor. A permanent pro­ Kuhn writes,. "it would be wise if gram for curing inflation cannot tablishment, graduate de­ all components of the economy be designed, Mr. Means said, par t men t of Maynooth, "'Could show restraint, and not "until there is fairly general famed national seminary of -agreement on principles to be fol­ raise prices until they had an lowed in sharing productivity," Ireland. ' urgent reason for doing so. The Professor Means' proposal is trouble with this precept is that not a panacea, but it would seen\, Receoves Award anyone who uses more than aver­ to be a step in the right direction. DAVENPORT (NC) - Father 'age restraint inflicts a'loss on Let us hope that government, himself for somebody else's bene­ labor, an4, management will give Edward "M. Catich, prof~ssol', of fit, w"Ith very little assurance that It a favorable hearing. art at st. Ambrose College, is one he will help the economy." of eig~t members of the Am~rl­ The same writer concludes: ... St. Vincent de Paul can Numismatic Association to "we live in an economy whose receive the Heath Lit era ,r y progress and productivity are Officers Elected built on the philosophy and ,Stephen B. O'Brien was elected Award: which is given annually practice of the pursuit of self­ president of the St. Vincent de by The Numismatic, nlag'azine for interest, and we must "reconcile coin collectors, ' ourselves to the fact that the, Paul Society of Our Lady of Vic­ An authority on coins, Father pursuit has its undesirable as tory Church, Centerville, at an Catich wrote a three-part article , well as its desirable results," organizational .meeting in the entitled "AU or BU," which ap­ Master Wage Policy peared In three issues of The church. Nlmlismatic. ' , The professor's point Is well Elected to serve with him were taken, Nevertheless the situation' is not completely hopeless. One Arthur D. Maddalena; Jr" vlce­ THE

proof of that is the fact that a president: John J. Pendergast, number of economists, including Jr" treasurer, and Stanley A: P~lRMACY

Professor Kuhn, are beginning to McLean, secretary. talk seriously about practical Also present at the meetinli PRESCRIPTIONS o ways in which labor and manage­ were the following members: ment can jointly tack1e the prob­ Thos. P. Selleck,' Reg. Ph, ,

Harold Bragel, John S. Lebel' lem of Infla tion and gear; their Henry L. Murphy, Frank Mello'l MEDICAL SUPPLIES

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advantages of national collective bargaining throug'h strong cen­ tral organizations of labor and BILLY BOY CA'NDIES employers. Professor A l' t h u l' NEW BEDIFORD always fre~h

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the subject of wag'e determina­ '" WY 3-1101 tion - made the same recom­ For _Service Call 'WY 3·9951 mendation several years ,ago in WY 8-5917 a book entitled "Trade Union Wage Policy," What is needed, "Try 'em YOU'll like 'em" in the opinion, of Professor Ross, Billy Boy Candies New Bedford is a master wage policy, worked \ out voluntarily at the national level by representatives of labor SI~GUIN. and management with the assist­ ance and, possibly under the supervision of, the feder>tl gov­ Truck I$cdy Builders ernment. Aluminum or Steel

This proposal was seconded in 944 County St.

1952 by another economise, Ger­ I NEW BEDFORD, MASS.,

hard Colm, in a booklet entitled WY 2-6618 .,. ~;n. "The American Economy' "in JUUED 1960," published under the non­ -- I VAN LINES, ~c, partisan auspices of the National Planning Association. "Perhaps ~l"~!!:~, Hia,"",,~IIo, ~ ill ~'No.l io fll:ll Collllllllllity an attempt should be made first. FURN·ITURE DEPT: in an entirely unofficial and ex­ 19 lEAN ST. • NEW BEDFORD perimental way," he says, "to bri,,,g 'nationally known leaders of management and labor to sit down around a table and see what progress could' be made' toward an agreement conce1'l1ing' price' and wage policies for a given 'time which would be com­ patible both with a full employ­ ment :and, a stabilCzation :> POlicy' .-. ," In July of this year another " BANQU~TS () WEDDINGS ~. PARTIES economist, Gardiner C, Means, made a similar proposal in a let­ CD COMMUNION BREAKFASTS ter to Senatol; Alexander Wiley of Wisconsin. The heart' of the Means plan i~ tile calling by the President of the United States of 1343 PLEASANT ST. fAL~ ROVIER a ' conference, of business and labor leaders, at wh,ich he WOUld, PHONE OSborne 3-7780 "get agreement from them "to . . . . -. ::'"RO"-1"1l'oil'to- r.j ltD l_hGld.tbe i1ine ofilUco-as-Ploesldent.. _ •••• ,. .••• - - - - •• , l: -

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CQUege An Starr Gridsterrs P~ay frio! To~orrow N~ght

Ccrrowerrfl' Appointed! 1I'lQ> (cUllege Faculty

By JImck JlUllleavy

Somerset Hlgb Sthool Coach

King Football is scheduled to make its annual Sum­ mer invasion tomorrow night when the College All Stars clash with the champion New York Giants in: Soldiers Field, Chicago. For the third consecutive year "Curly" Lambeau and his staff will direct the Stars. Two years Goldstein is to be commended for ago the Collegians eked out' ~topping the one-sided affair as soon as he was afforded a real III thrilling 30-27 verdict over opportunity to do so. The fate of

Paul Brown's supposedly invinc-' . jble Cleveland Browns. The Browns evened matters last year, )lowever, romping to an easy 26-0

win. Foremost In the galaxy of AIl­ Americans at Lambeau's disposal is Paul Hornung of Notre Dame. Vying with Hornung .foe the starting quarterback job are John Brodie of Stanford, Lou Dawson of Purdue·-and both those boys can thread a needle with the ball-and Jim Harris

of Oklahoma. In view of the Beef

Trust that is the Giants' for­ midable forward wall, the Stars are expected to go to the all'. Lanar Lundy, a strapping 235 pound flankman from Purdue, Ilnd Ron Kramer of Michigan, via Notre Dame, 217, are set ~o

lIltart at the end positions.

To keep the Giant Defense ~onest, Lambeau has a wealth of

running talent to exploit, For

power he can call upon Jimmy Brown, one of the boys from Syracuse or Clarence Peaks, 208 pound than-whomer from Michi­ gan State. For speed and elusive­ J)ess there are Oklahoma's Tom­ my McDohald and Jon Arnett of Southern California. In all, the

Stars will suit up 48 pfayers rep­

resenting 34 colleges and univer­ sities. '0 Stars HandicRl>ped

The star-studded squad will,

have Its work cut out, however. In the 23 games to date ill the colorful series with the profes­

sional 'champions, the Collegians

have been victorious but seven times. Two tie games have been

played, On paper the Stars would

seem to be equipped with the personnel lo give the pros a run

for thei.. money, but actually they

will be operating under two ma­

jor handicaps. One, the Stars

cannot become, in the few weeks

of practice allotted them, as

finely coordinated a team as their professional adversal'ies. Second­ ly, there is the factol.' of speciali­ zation which the pros employ. They use separate units on of­ fense anft defense and the colle­ gians have not been schooled in this practice" , To combat the Giants vaunt­ 'ed line, the Stars have assem­ bled II interior linemen wlio tip Ole scales at 230 01' better. As a !patter of fact, only one All-Star forward, Jack Johnson of Miami, weighs- less than 200, He goes i95, Most of the ,Stars are al­ ready ticketed for the pro ranks. Friday night they'll be officially welcomed. Good JudGment HERE AND THERE! Worces­ ter's Paul Harney continues to s!;intillate on the pro golf circuit. Paul was -medalist in the Tam O'Shanter tourney in Chicago next to last round he ,was third with 136-8 strokes under par but 3 behind the OlIeader, Roberto De­ Vincenzo of Mexico • • • Tele­ viewersof the recent Patterson­ Jaclrson setto universally were jmpressed with the "quick" hands of the champion. His punches p'acked plenty of power to boot, but, oddly enough, Patterson time and again refused to follow up ltD obvious advantage. Perhaps lIe didn't want to Ilunish Jack­ !lon any further. perhaps inex­ pm'.lence made him overly cau­ tlotw. Whll.te'Ver the reason, his re­ luctAnce' onlY'lscrved to postpone llic lncv.ltab e. Rcfcl'ee _Ruby

lS~ C<aJtholic Hour Program

"IJ'&ft ANtIilOR­ T!n1r~;, A&lJ!. II, U957,

Jackson portends ill for the Army's Pete Rademacher, Olym­ pic heavyweight cnamplon, with whom :patterson Is to be matched in Seattle later this month. The whole affair is ludicrous.' Rade­ macher will be making his pro­ feSSional debut against the champion. All efforts to cancel the bout have thus far met with failure. , Managerial Changes It's open season on major league managers again. Out­ spoken Bobby Bragan was fired by the Pirates general manager, Joe Brown, in Chicago last week. The dismissal occurred just one week before Bragan was to have been given a "night" at Forbes Field. The Pirates, mired deep in the second division, only a' game or so out of the cellar, had been in the throes of a losing streak. It's axiomatic in baseball under such circumstances to make changes fu1d th,e manager being most vulnerable is usually the first to "head down the road," No bitter recriminations at­ tended Bragan's replacement. On the contrary, he spoke well of his squad and they of him, which leads us to think that Bobby's clowning on the field was the primary. reason for his dismisa!. Danny Murtagh; erstwhile Braves infielder, has been named inter­ im managel'. Fellow pilots whose jobs at this time appeal' anything but secure for '58 are Jacl~ Tighe of Detroit and Kerby Farrell of Cleveland. Both are serving apprenticeship , terms in the majors following il­ lustrious mlnor 'lea,gue careers. Each has been beset by injuries to key personnel throughout the year but theY are working in ultra critical areas. Pre-season prognostications had both clubs in the thick of the pennant fight but a glimpse at the latest stand­ ings finds them tied for fourth, some 17 games off the pace and only a scant game ahead of on­ rushing Baltimore.

WHEELllllG (NC) Four years ago, Natalie, W. White, actress and dramatics teacher, was converted to the Catholic faith, "Looking back over my years of formal education, I find it IlPpalling to see how much of it was definitely anti - Catholic," Miss White said. "As 1 learn, little by little, the truth in history and literature, I feel resentful that for so many years ,I have been cheated. Once 1 learn the truth, ever 80 much that was formerly a hope­ less puzzle becomes clear. Coming to the Catholic faith as a mature adult has been a dazzling ex­ perience. Whereas previously everything was grey, flat and drab-especially in moral matters -life has' now taken on depth and dimension. All of It sudden. 1 experience life in technicolor and sterephonic sound," A native of Norfolk, Va" and an alumna of George Washington University, Miss White has been an actress and has had wide ex­ perience ,as a dramatics teacher. She is the author of several books, including "Shakespeare On The New York Stage," and a number of plays and TV scripts. Miss White has been named­ assistant English professor at Wheeling College, conducted by the Jesuit Fathers.

To Present' Rome of Popes

WASHINGTON - A series of importance of the Vatican in

four half-hour proglams on world affairs,"

Rome. to be shown on the Catho­

The saga of the past will be lic HoUl' television program next January now are being- filmed illustrated through a pictorial on location in the Eternal City s~a~'ch of the great churches,

with the cooperation of the Va­ monuments and art of Rome.

tican" It was disclosed here.

Mr. Work said, while the storY The venture, jointly announced of the present will. be recounted by the National Council of Cath­ olic Men and the National through a film report of the peo­ ple and of the activity of the Va­ Broadcasting Company, was de­ scribed as the biggest - single tican to day, highlighted by scenes of His Holiness Pope project undertaken by the Cath­ Pius XII. olic Hour in Its six years in tele­ Mr. Work said that for each vision. The Catholic Hour is produced by the NCCM and is program NCCM has received spe­ catried by more than 100 stations cial permission from the Holy See to film the most important of the NBC-TV network. The series will be titled "Rome sites and 'activities. Included in of the Popes." In the first pro· the four films will be scenes of gram, "The City of Peter," NCCM st. Peter's Basilica, the excaVA­ tions underneath St, Peter's intends to dramatize the pres­ the catacombs and early Basilica, ence of St. Peter in Rome to point out the significance of that Christian art, the Vatican mu­ fact in the history of the Chur,ch, seum and library. the' Sistine Chapel and the works of Michel­ Mr. Work said. angelo, the North American Col­ Scripts fol' the series were writ­ ten by Paul Horgan, Catholic lege, the famous basilicas and author who numbers a Pulitzer the ruins of classical Rome. Prize among his literary awards,

Key personnel of both NCCM

and NBC are in Rome in connec­

tion wtih the operation. INSURANCE Signifcance of Papacy

APPRAISER Martin H. Work, NCCM execu­

tive director, said the purpose of REALTOR ,the films is "to show the con­ • 0 tinuing significance of Rome and 1320 No. l\lain St. the papacy in the history of FALL RIVER

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Public AccountilOts. To be eligible, you must be 18· years or

older. You may· enter a'a~ First Na.ional Stores in Maine,

New Hampshire, Vermon', Massachusetts, Rhode Isl~nd.

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