08.18.60

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versities: 299,937 in regular sellsions, an increase of 14,283. These estimates were released 'here by the Department of Edu-' cation of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. The dei>artment will 'issue an actual count of October cnrollmept next Spring. The estimated total of 5,239,813 students to enroll in Catholic eleme,ntary and sec 0 n dar y schools indicates these youngsters will account for about 13 per cent of all students in the United States between the ages of five and 17 years. Public schools this Fall, from

River, Mass., Thursday, August 18, 1960 33 lOe V 01.II 4 , Il..I I~O. © 1960 The Anchor , $4.00PRICE per YeGr.· ASSIGNED: Rev. Evaristo Tavares of Candalaria, St.' ,Michael, Az~res,' has been assigned by,' the Bishop to Our Lady of Lourdes Parish, , 'l'aunton.

RO$emariy Moore.

To Join Faculty At Stc~9 High

Miss Rosemary Moore, head counselor at Our Lady of the Lake Day Camp for Girls, will be physical edu-

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,Sister Ann Denise, S.N.D., principal of Bishop Stang High School, No. Dartmouth,'announced today that the seeond freshman class to enter has slightly surpassed the enrollment capacity for the school. The enrollment lists 162 boys and 96 girls for a t-otal of 258. The, first class 'ford with 72 boys and 76 girls leads all towns and cities of the to enter last year had' an Diocese in the freshmen enrollenrollment 'of 175. As a ment. Fall River ranks second sophomore c1ass now th ere h as been an increase of 20 to make the total 195. In her report, the sister prin-

eip~ anr~o~nced tha~ New Bed-

'wl'th 59 boys and tWQ gl'rls l'n the

class of 1964. The town of Dartmouth is third with'10 freshmen boys and five first year gir,ls. Turn to Page Eighte.en

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A Laoor Day eve dinner meeting will honor Rev. Benjamin'L. Masse, S.J., preacher ,for the third annual Labor Day Mass ~ be held at 9 ~ll the holiday morning in St. Mary's Cathedral, according to announcement made by , Dan,iel 'J~ McCarthy, seere-. tar.y, of the United Labor ':Couooii of' Greater FaR , Riv.er,' sP,Onsoring organiza-

from Holy Family grammar and high Schools in New Bedford... Tarn to Page Eighteen

Bishop Donaghy InvestsTh ree In, "'I Order I~ ew MIAOLI (NC)-Three Chinese' women, have been invested in a newly estabiished, native congregation here, the Sisters of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Bishop Frederick A.Donaghy, M,M., Maryknoll regional superioI', ,and New Bedford' native officiated at the ceremony. The three al'e Sister Theresa Hua of

Education of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The Federal education office estimated that 6,800,000 childrel\ 'will be in nonpublic elem~ntary and secondary schools. Its report does not break this down into the number attending Catholic schools and the number in other independent educational institutions. In April of this year, the NCWC department reported that for the first time, the combined total enrollment in Catholic grad~ and high schools had passE,ld the five million mark, a Turn to Page Twelve

Fall ,River Labor Council To Honor Jesuit Editor

cation director and' will teach two history, ~lass~s at Bishop Stang High School this academic

i2y'EARS A PRIEST: Parishioners of. Our Lady of ,: ,Miss Moore, daughter of Mr~ Lourdes Parish, Tau"itron, feted their pastor::on the occs- & Mrs PatrickJ. 'Moore of St. iioft of his completing 52 eats in the gei·.v.i~¢,<>f God., Left ,L'awren'ce',s'Parisb, New' Bed, ' 'fotd~' a'nd 'sister' of Rev: John' tlo right;. Chairman Edward S. Franco, Rev.. :E., Sousa de "':tr. Moo[e, curate at Holy Name Mel~, Mrs. Louis C~rdeiro, Father de Mello's'~sisteJ;. ": C;:hurch, Fa~ll Ri.v~r, ,gra,duated

Stang Enrolls Total Of 453 Students

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WASHINGTON (NC)-About 5,539/750 students wilt enroll in'U.S. Catholic colleges, high schools and elementary schools this Fall, setting another record high total. The totals estimated in a report made here are: Grade schools: 4,389,963, an increase of ' kindergarten t h r 0 ugh grade 127,863 over last year. High 12, will enroll an estimated schools: 849,850, an increase 37,600,000 ~tudents, according to of 24,753. Colleges and uni- a report from the U. S. Office of

An Anchor of the Soul, Sun and fi'irm-ST. PAUL

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Expect to Enroll Over 5,000,000

The :ANCBOR Second Class Moil ,Privilege. Authorized at Fall River, Mass.

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FATHER B. L.

MA~SE,S.J.

,«oil 'for the event. ' , Attending' the dinner, to " held':K White's restaurant, will be representatives of eaeh union holding membership in the United Labor Council. Rev. Arthur W. Tansey, rector of st. Mary's Cathedral and Social Action Director 'for the Fall River Diocese, is among invited guests. ' Father Masse, teacher, writer, lecturer, and associate editor of ,America magazine, is personally acquainted with a cross-section of leaders of labor and management as well as with government officials concerned' with industrial relations. Victor Riesel, noted labor col. umnist, said o{ Father MIIS86 ,Turn to Page' Twelve'

Mission, Priest V'.·'s.-ts· Fall R.·ver Relat.·ves

~E~~:i:~'o~~::~rdM~~~e;U~~n~: 'M~ryknoll

Cath'olic 'Nurses Volunt,eer·;, . amp' Serv·.ees at Hea It h C

Si;;ter Hua studied' .for five years at Salve RegiI}a College, Newport, R.I., Sister Yuan is a graduate of' Taipei's Normal University, and Sister Pang has been a catechist with the Mary-

, ' , '. . By Patricia McGowan . A wiry veteran of the Maryknoll Missions, who has "Homesick headache" tops the list of ailments'treated at the shi~y first aid headquarters of St. Vincent de Paul" taught philosophy to hundreds of, seminarians in nearly Health Camp, Westport, according to Terence Keenan, ~;:~~ssii~e::efo~::::s:e~~:i~~s~ " three decades as a priest, is visiting his Fan River brothers counselor-seminarian in charge. "When a boy complains of , Japanese and English. and sisters on home leave from his assignment in Merida, ~~~~~~F~~~;'''':::~''~''7'''';':'T;~ Yucatan, Mexi~o. He is Rev. headache, I give hi~ what I call nly' T~C pill," explained ~,' Leo - J.- Melancon, M.M., a Terence. "That means 'tennative of St: Anne's parish, der, loving care' and it's a who' is staying with a sister babY aspirin." If the youngster's headache i S I >_ from homesickness, he disap,x pears, happy that something has been done' for him, soon gets absorbed in camp activities, and isn't heard from again. If it's the real McCoy, he's back again very soon, says Terence, and can thcn bc seriously examined. "You'vc got to be wiser than they al'c," hc chuckled. , But real illnesses are not handled' casually. To assist Terence and head counselor John Andrews, also a seminarian, mcmbers 0 f the Fall River Council of Catholle Nurses have for the past ~ seasons supervised nursing __ at the camp. Operating on a rotation sya'';:.., _ ..A'.)·• ,'''.' tern directed b y M rs. Ell a M c.. Nally of the city of Fall River ',.". , Catholic Nurses' Guild, mem'1, • ;.. bers take turns in visiting the ':.~ '~,,-,. camp and examining a i l i n g ' - " ....-.. _. . -.----""-, youngsters. OSTERVILLE TEA AUGUST 24: Planning next Wednesday afternoon's Tea and They take care of minor mat- Reception to the Bishop which will be held on the grounds of Our Lady of the Assumption t'ers and see that a doctor is Church, Osterville, to benefit Nazareth on the Cape,' the recently-established school in summoned when necessary... Wdtten instructions they leave Hyannis for exceptional children, are, left to right, Mrs. Joseph Cronin, Rev. John T. '1!'1!!l1'1l to Page 'J;wenty Higgins, Mrs. 'Ralph J. Shea, Mrs. James J. O:LearyJr., and Mrs. Thomas J. Lyons.

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at 649 Whipple Street. He will be in the Diocese until September;when he returns to Mexico. Father Melancon was ordained in Rome after studying there as a seminarian. Following ordination, he taught philosophy to Maryknoll seminarians for 10 years, then was assigned to Perllo Bolivia andfinally Mexico. In all his foreign posts, Father Melancon has continued the teaching of philosophy at diocesan semimiries. He has been almost 10 years in Mexico and "does everything" at Maryknoll's central house in Merida, in addition, of course, to teaching. I'ather Melancon, one of 13 ehildre'n, is catching up on new nepnews and nieces during his home visit. All his living brothers and sisters are in Fall River. He doesn't quite know how many children he's uricle to, but puts the fi~ure at around 22. Catholic Country Mexico is about 95 per cent Catholic, reports the missioner. He says that Maryknoll's wor~ is going well as regards gover&> ment supervision. Turn to I'age Eirrh~C!]


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'.Red 'News Me.dia" HeapVilifi~,~t,i~ .'OIR \u.'s. Prelate:

!T:HE ANCHOR~l?ipa!$eof .Fall River-Thurs. Aug: lB, 1960.

Diocese of Fall River

'MUNICH (NC) ~1'CQm. "l1lniBt~tiewspaperS and' radio' 'stations have heaped' :v:iJifi.

cation upon. Francis Cardinal .Spellman from behind the Irba,. Curtain for his latest ,warnin« a~ communism's thPeat W I the world.' . . Communist newilcasts JDOft6tored by Radio Free Europe called the Ar:chbishop of ,New York "the archangel of atomic war;" ~y said the M'llDicb International Eucharistic COR.gress, at which he delivered his warning, w"as ~'no ,different thaa the meetings of the NATO well ministers at Paris."

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Reverend EvaristO t~vares, ~~inoo 'Penteoosf' Sunday in An.gra,· Terceira, .Azores, for the DiOcese of FaU River, to Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Taunton, as assistant. ~...

The

This appomtment wae effective' AUgust 14,.1960,

~~. ,lJ6L;:5---Bishop. of JaN River .'

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'ANN{jJ'AL MISSIONS MEETING: 'Over. 800 delegates An c=;u~~r:a~~~ 'from 167 U.S..:~i~si~na:rycongl'egation~ana layapostolate . branded Cardinal Spellman all . organizations wiiI attend tlfle 11th annual three~day'meeting, "()fficiai.of the link between .the . 8 of themiss'iori'<sendings<lC'ietj~sinWasliingtclD, Sept.·l~. immense ,riches ,of the Holy See O,U Discussing "p1a,nsj:or the are. :t.o right) ,Sister, and G O G l I M a r i a del,Rey:of Maryknoll; BrotherPaschal.Bl'eau, S.A.;, RENSSELAER (NC)'-:'-"Polit- ',membership ,is about' 1,5OQ;~·Father Fi'e(iei:l~k<1\. McGu'ir.e/C.M.;:executive secretarY;'-same~, One said th~.. ~est lcal attion' is designed not 'only . .. PriJ.paries Important "'" Abbot db'aries 'Vj 'CO,r:!ston; O~S.B.;Dolo,resBrien,ofth~ .. p'roof (Of an "alliance , between to win'tiMdions, but aI;sO.t6, solv~':In ~olitics, the mo~t im!'orlant Grailrnstitute for 'Overseas Service, Broo~yn. NC Photo. 'ci~icalisin and capitiilism'is the the problems orsocie~y,':·Steph.e~· ti~e IS bef~re ~he prl~anes,Mr. "siow but sure advance of Mitchell former national chalr- MItchell SlUt!.. Here IS tile place 1f5l...!ltl!'. D~A& llrDllR\n:~fL. 1ft A...L Catholicism in the' Uniil.ed ' . CSIft manof'the'Democratic party, you can improve 'politics," hell\,,\iiii(lJl;:, IIBJIG"o!:dl. l.JVUDi:!llnltl U\5,.,ll. lily ~~ .... UlTlI States." told YO'UlJ,g Christian Workers emphasiZed: n!l. o~ . The East German communblt at their national convention here Only one or two of every ten f,c~ If\.ettYlSBIi''Dg) frc~emOye.· ;rO~$' party o~gan Neues Deutschland in Indiana.' .' . '. e1i.giblevote~s .cast ~llotll' in, "B~I;tLIN,(N.q~ -. ,A P,o lis h T!le Fr~CJ,scan 'priest, reJ'u~( ,~~ Cardin~l Spe~bp1'1Il'lie?'~, "We I;Iaye Pjlgnpde,d im~l1gt:lJ_" ... ~~unary.eleCtions, ..The,mdepeEl~-', prieSt. who y;as 1?e.?~lm ,by ,com~?d was,.'beat~. ~:~, th~ p~- . ,~r.lJ~g that'commUIll$t:s aurp~ tion laws.$e h~ve~op'en4ef.ia~;ICe ,. e-r t v~~~ ~po, ,d,?e;m t ~ast ,hiS " nillri.ists when~ he" refused to re']j~e left, Father'VItalis Illy .?~~r '\.,r~~on.,.I..:' ,.''''.' , !~ 'J '" X (If the ,b!gp.~,st .~urtJ of "V,le". land... ,b,~llot.< Ip .,p;rIIl}apes; b~~H~,~he 'i J:moVe' a, cross !froml'cb~r~h.pr?p- \ death.;<:,.' ,', ':. ,."', ".", . :'. ,~, "::'(:~'''~ M{[)i'e"Nonse'otMi'- 1 "":": .' We have, in community 'i1tt,~r, :. d,9,esn t ~s~ t~ de~l,a~e hiI'. party : er,tYr, has d!ed·, from his Jnaumes, , \..,Meanwhile;' dem,oristra,t~1'l! 'li'" -It c\6iri"'ared 'thl' :tafdiri~i "t... ,. commu¢t>, the ·scandi!l. p( o~ '.,i·preference is makmg- i ,tmstake', acc0r.ding,. to rep9 rts received.m,ade up ,of communIst OffiCIalS. .." ,J?, d " . '.. t ,. j ' od' '.' treatnl,',,,,';',i ,,~{.rrii;"rarit' ,~'or~er.l1.,' ,h~ said.l· ... ' r,,' , ':( ," I '~ft-om Gleiwit~, Poland'" ,. >, and pOlice 'm 'c1vilian clothing' ·,'ilazl proPf.g~.~ JD.ll}ls.,~ ,Of;r .. ,.rn' ';;' IC ,'" "p li~:' ti B t . F ..... '.... .,. ...I>rid"· 't" t<" "'d',J" . "th',:,.,Qoebbels and sald·the·sermO,nlft "The, ,ned for .you~ '.partiai- .,:'".,' . 0 '~cs IS p~r san. y no He was Father Vitalis, O. .m.;· aL.emy~ ..., ...? e:'l,r. '., ,o~n., ,e, .:which'~ 'he 'Warned o'f.;C'o'mmu!.:." .. tl pastor of Sacred, Heart, chu.rch l?rge wooden.. cross that" had: . . . , n ... J·t ,'. '. "N'c"'.TO 2' ..: ...... P 'on' l'n, POII'tl'CS l'S', areat,'" he' ! voting m Jhe pnmary you have a " '.. ,., , . 'h d'd t . . . , 0 .....1 teli"·· the' (j' 'fed '.' ,rusm s Ioluea was a .n: 'IU told '1CW. mer;nbers" most. •.. of, JJQ say,!? l)a:-,I~g 't .•" ,~an !" a~ell ... ,lin',Gleiw~ti""! t 'I~'I . .. •• : . " " 'c'· ~en .t' an.ill' ISP.U, . . ,pentagon::'i'nspired ilctibriof PsY- ' whom ,.are ,betw,eenthe ages of '. ,to. appear on the ballot, lie Police entered the parish ground. , h i ' . l' . . f' .. irtst· so;. ,. •• .1 ,; maintained' ' , \ . . . to, f ' I , 'ed . Parishioners'and"parish' priests " ~ 0 oglca' . war are Ill" 18 and,~O. '." .' c'. ..,',:., . .. :. <', \ .- J .. ' / ' "~', ~. ,. ' <ilouse 'on lhe'eF~ast of; 'he ~acr <: ).esisted.·.·.the ..comm'unistS,· .;30d'.. 'cialisf"~atiOris;" . " . ~~. ' I,.,. ' .. The 'organIZation is ·devoted to ". I;;. 11., . ' · ' 1,H,ea~t.tp.; .4emand that,' Fqtber, , t f'"±b' , " "be"te' 'to ;.,sFrom 'Czechoslova:kial'th~ I'&training{ ~ouIw~orkel':! to,'re~':'" ,," at~o ,~C " ··a.~II,G!r:S~S, ' ,V:italis .• r.eli~qlli..l!!J.p r.,o per t r'~no:on~ci~u=:el~~; ~'~~t's .'dio .of":·~i1edbminaritlY'"'C~th()l~~( ChristianIze. theIr own. 'hves~ .. ItIf"!"'" r~ghts,:t9 ~an4 ~~xt tc>Jh" c;:hur~h.. . State. Many" we~e' 'arrest~;" and .' Brabslavla. accused' the' cardtt~eir workIng and' SOC18~ 'en-' ~ feu, . .. . , one priest was. reported to be nals and blSho~,s pre~e?t at the Vlronments and fell,ow', workThe Fall River Catholic Nurses'U rge.. Ad.vancement in' a prison hospital in a critical co~ess of. explOlt.m,g and ers. U,S. membel'sh.lp In .the Guild will sponsor a'retreat for· Of Brother's condition. :usmg the Faith of ~e Slovak movemen~, founded In BelgIUm . all.' members of the Fall' .River . MONTiREAL (NC)-More thaft Father Vitalis died a few dlllye peop~e, ·on ,·the occaSIOn of the in 1925, IS about 3,200. World Council of Catholic Nurses the . 10 million people have signed later . iMuruch congress, to attack tbe weekend of Nov. 11 at Our .Lady . petitions requesting the Holy . Th~ cross had been erected for socialistcountries." 0 "of Good Council DioceSan Re- See to_advance.the beatification the Feast of Corpus Christi with FRIDAY'-:"St. John Eudes, Con- treat House, it is announced. by cause of Brother Andre, founder official authorization. . o. iver an fessor. Double. White. Mass Mrs. William Maloney, chairman of the world famous shrine of St. . InA,pril violent demonBtraHoly Cross Vows Prope r,' Gloria,' Common Pre(- of the spiritual development Jose..Ji.'.·s"O·rato·ry here'. tionsbrokeout in the Polish F'rst f' f ' p" . .. • ,., I pro eSSlOn 0 vows 'as a ace. " • I . ' , ' , . ' " ' ' c?mmittee 01. the Fall River ":", the, ~lln?~c~~en~ .wiU; tna~e·., iriduS~i8Ito~n o.f 1':lowa ,l;Iuta" ,re)igiousin the .Congregation 01. ' SATURDAY-St. Bernard, Ab- ··gI:oup. . ' "'. ,. .atthe shrme at the close of a when C(a~ol1(:s tn~d to, preveJlt <HolyCross was made on ,Tuesday , bot, Confessor and Doctor 01., - !lev; Thomas ~d)";'O.M.I.· ,npven~ that}park~d th~ ~i:th~~~, , the r~?valof•.a: cr,oss ..from ,8 . by Donald.DeMarco, son of MI'. ' the Church., Doub~~.o, Wpite.. wIll ,be retreat master. Reserva- ,'of Brother _AndJ:e, ,. €apucpm clIurchSlte. T:he communlS~ go".: and Mrs: AmerlcoDeMarco;':>14I Mass Proper;· Glona; C~eed;' .tions ,should be made. ?y . ~~~: . Father Gilber~ '~~~eJla pre~ch'rr, . ,ernm~n~ .had revokec;ia permit. :Plymouth Avenue,FaU River. Common frefa~. . • -: t' <. 21 WIth Mrs.. ~l~ney ~r m~:, said that"~esl .fi'om a~~ost.· 'to bUIld a church there. : The ceremony tQok place',". !SUNDAY-X!'Sunday alter Pea-· bers of her committee, Includm,g ,everycountrY'!n' the world are .me community's novitiate ia. tecost... Dou~le. GI:e.en., .Mass Mrs. J~es Hannon ail? ~iss . ,on the"petitions. . ' , Bennmitton, v.t. Mr.neMa~cd. Proper; GlorIa; Second Collect. ,Mary Qumn. Mrs. Maloney can.. '. Holy 'Cross . Brother, .AndJ:e ' . . . . fromSS" Peter and Paul parish" St, Jane -Frances' de "C.han.ta.l;, ' 'be reached at OSborne 3-0032 or.. built a primitive chapel in honor 'THE ANCHOR list'! the F.all River,. and graduateo' from d P 9 6875 . niversarydates '. of priests' who W~~~w; C ree;' ref ace : 01. OSb orne.~. "" ,pf St. Joseph in 1904. The d~~o- 'served tbeFaURivell' Di~Stonehi1l €ollege. He will, conTrIluty. .. , . TheS~ptember dlilte is also the ,lion ,grew ,and a great b~sllica Since. Us' formation'.. in Ji9041 ·ti'nue his studies for the pr.iest.. MONDA~·.- ,The ,Im~l;l~~la~ r,egular meeting' n~ht ,for~. stands on the, Mount Royal site with n._ mtentioD £ . .: . . . ' the hood at Holy Cross' 8emin8r.JIo '... Heart of the Blessed Vtrgm 'Fail River Catolic Nur~s' Guild. overlooking this city..today. The ...., .,..... North'Easton : I " " Mary,' I?~.u?l~, .If. CI~~~, . :Mt'lmbers will gatberat' st. . shrine contains the ,tomb 01. faithfUl will . give ~ White.. Mass 'Proper; Glona; , Anne's Hospital. Brother Andre. prayerful remembrance. Second Collect S8. Timothy, AUGUST 24 Hippoly~us, Bishop and SymRev. W,illiam S. Flynn, .191&.,· C. phrianu8, Martyrs;· Creed; Preface of the Blessed Virgin, lll...J TUESDAY-St. Philip Benizi, '. 1""l1lI Inc. Legi~of Decency' Confessor, Double. White, Mass JERUSALEM (NC) ~ Two ,The priest took them to fil The following films at~ to be Proper; Gloria; Common Pref- Italian priests are visiting Israel hiding place and arranged for FUNERAl SERVICE· ace. , ,..,. ',' "- , ' <: , . as guests of J eW8 . they saved them tor~ceive ra,ti(:ln .cards un,. .• added to the lists in theirl'e:;pectiv~ iclassi#cations:., ,1 WEDNESDAY - St. Bartholo- ~rom Nazi,ini.pr~e~td}lriIlB,; 'der as~um~ n~es.,', ;. . , Unobjectionable for. adults aRd , ."-' '549 COUNTY S1'~ ' . The, .PI'1~~ ~cti~n .,became, . mew,t, Apostle,' tD.ouble'Jof II ,World War ·n. ,.". Class~ Red, MasS Proper; ~ ' k n o w n and his 'biShop, fearing adolescen~S: M~ie ,Octobre. NEw:.BEoFq~. ~SS. " \ "Un()bj~onable . fo:radu~ ' Gloria \ Creed;" Preface oi. ',. They are. Father Angelo della that.it would' come .to'the 8t. : :l Apostles, {Torre and Fath~ SimoQe Gio-. tention' Of' the 'cermari authori:: The Capta~!II".t'able.', ,..., THURSDAY-St. Louis, King ;ianni; both ~ of the. Ai'chdib<ieSe' . ties ordef'ea'· JiUn" to" have.' the and Confessor,., SIIl1~e, White. ~l!lf Florence. Jev.:s t~,a 'place o€ I ( t {" . (.'i':, ( , Mass Proper; Gloria;'Common':: In 1943,''';h~'~'~r~\cifsafetyP.~t~de'F1ox:e~ce. " . " ~ ,." .' Prefac~: t Nazi Germ,any w~re.supplapt~ng ,. In theJrn~w,r~f~ethe Jews Italian authorities to eDforce' . ,were under_ 'thec~eof Fa~er Mainte~~Su~plies . racism andotber Nazi princi-" ·della Torre. They 1le~~unOO SWEEPERS- :SOAPS' OIL COM·PAHY· fORTY HOURS · es 0 n Italy there ,p1 , Father Giovanni . " Italy untm.the llberatu)ft ,01 DISINFECT.NTS encountered at Florence ratlway . the· til J . DEVOTION station a group of Jewish men, er war· e ews ·eml:FlREEXTINGUISHERS Aug: 21-:'O'u r La d y 0 f women andehildren who were ~atedto Isra~. then PalesLourdes, Wellfleet trying to leave Florence to tine. They contin~ed to COTreSOur' . Lady of Grace, void arrest by the Germans. pond with the pn~ who had North· Westport. '. . . a Sheltered them. Fmany they 1886 .PURCHASE $I. Sout-h Sacred Heart, New Bed• were established well enough to • ·Sea SR. NEW 8EDFORD ford. Montreal Archbishop invite their protectors to visit ·Tel. :HY ,81 . Aug.28-8t. Josepb's Orpnsn-; i W Y .341'. . : :Hyan·ms. ..' their homes in:, the Holy Lana. Scoles' ',----~."'!"'~---..,.--~ .a~e, raI! )ti~~t:. _" "._, . '.' , I.:" ,. St. Anthony:· Of ' the', ''Desert; ,', '''CMONT.REAL.'(NC)''':'~'; new • Fall River. . • bOuleVard named' for: His Emi(lOME IN ~ ;SEE :;"citKf'DRIVE' " ., / . .' MJhe' family1\hatr.'. : St. ":JohntheBapti~,; Cennertce; Paul Em.i~e,,,(::ardinal~.' tral Village.' ., . Leger, has been opened here. :fog~ i I , ,. " . Sept~' 4Lst. Louill of Fr~, , ,I .The Archbisb()p of 'Montreal, ·f ..' . . S~ap~ea .. " . i, W~·. ~uH, ~~,~ 'Stay~ T~~~· . 'speaking at the· opening ~­ 'Our Lady of Mount <:ar. r at " ". " , moniell. reminded, his listeners·, ' ,'mel, Seekonk. ,Ij they are 'on earth tor so~1b1D.g,·· Sept'.11-st. Anne~ Fan River~ THE more than "just to. bold'the St. Dominic, Swansea. . wheel-of a ear." He. warned that 1',0 A;Nc;SoB materialisDi is "the road to Marx~ ~ ·pri,,'iltiB.. authorised iSm and the concentration camps" . 1 FORODII.lttIR&' ,1OI'Ov-n 38 'YeA. ce Fall &il'Q, Masa, 'Published eVe!7 that a flight from' ,-religion' . ,i :Mtle1Jolto.-:.Solltb &«IetMtM Tburodas1 <>1 ~l(l, HlBbJD.lld Avenue, .FAD _:. .. 8eek~ River, -aa"""., Ill' the Catholic Press' or the means death for democracy and,." "34ie6.~~ha~·St. .N.~Beeifo.ci;".· i Diocese of F!-II River. ,~abserl.!'~!~ .~ .• eiislavement ror the individual. by m1nU. ~'1LOO,_~. _.' • ' J ~ . _ . .." .. . ,. ,

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Ponti'ff Sees \ Christ Victor

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 18, 1960

Ov~'.~.' E~emies' of ChMrcn

Regard for Right More Wmportant Than Survival' ' "

GAS'l'ELGANDOLFO (NC)-Pope John has said that although· the Church is persecuted", Chri'st "will be the victor:': Speaking at a general, audienc.e he said thl:!ot some men I~'may .lose their heads" bQt in the"end God will deal with them in justice. A num- I 'ways' bearing. His Cros~ high her of' persons present ~ur- ' throughout the worla, and He ing toe Uudience interpreted will be the victor with Mary, the Pope's words as an ex- His and our Mother, at His side." pression of his concern over the fate of the Church in Cuba, although he made no reference to any person or place 1n particular. He spoke only of the sufferings of the Church in general. Pope John said there are sorrows and anxieties in the life of every man, and that the Church similarly encounters trials and persecutions. He cont'illued: ' , "But' the Lord with His grace always heips us in times of sorrow. Othcrs may lose their heads. They may believe that they can reject .Our Lord and refuse to recognize Ins gentle but necessary power. At the end' of their road they will find what they have deserved, if they have been consciously guilty. "Christ will go forward, ai-

3

ATLANTA (NC) - A bishop has charged here that ' the' moral flaw in , America's ;nuclear age ,phi-

Ca,rdinal Tours Army PO'sts

MUNICH (NC)-Francis Cardinal Spellman toured U. S. Army installations along the Czechoslovak border before returning to New York from Munich's International Eucharistic Congress, The Archbishop of New York 'remarked after a' Mass he' celebrated for American soldiers at Grafenwoehr that Pope Pius XII had once told him he was too old to continue visiting soldiers. "I told His Holiness I would be willing to give up my position as Archbishop in order to' continue serving the soldiers," he said. Peace for All In a radio address that wu broadcast behind the Iron Curwin by Radio Free Europe, CarNEW SCHOOL: Sister Mary' Dermott, S.U.S.C., seated, dinal Spellman said: "As one principal and .fourth grade teacher at the Holy Name School, humble citizen of the U. S. A., I can firmly assert that America , Fall ,River, accepts registrations of Mary Ellen Powers and A 17 year-old Quechua'Indian wants peace not just for herself: bo,. from Peru, who lost his leg but for all the' countries, in the' Bryan ,Dunn, who will be members of the pioneer first grade ~hile on an errand to buy Mass world." ' class. They're shephe,rded by Sister Maria Gregory, S;U.S.C., hosts. will walk again, than~1 -The 71-year-old Cardinal made who:ll'betheir teaCher. The 'new school will open with four to Richard Cardinal Cushi~. his address a few feet, from nogrades. ' , Juan Ludenya Vargas WU man's land between Czechoslo-' struck,by an automobile in.Lima, vakia 'and West Germany at Peru, las~ month while running ,Schirnding. an errand for Father Joseph B. Cardinal Sl?ellman insisted OIl Arsenault, M,M., of Newton, who shaking the hand of every person .' . wrote to Cardinal Cushing seek- 'who wanted to greet him per-' GASTONIA (NC)-Forty Bapcandidate Terry Sanford "being help following the amputa-, 8Onally. He had cards passed out tist ministers,m'eeting here have cause he is a supporter of Senalion of the boy's limb. to the troops and asked that all disclosed they ,will work from tor Kennedy." , The Ca'rdillal, in, turn, sent who wanted him' to write' to their ,pulpits for the d~feat <Yf To assist the'11, a Baptist'layword to the Maryknoll Fathers parents, wives and relatives" ,presidential candidate, Senator man is, financing an hour-long In Lima, where Ludenya was a upon his return fill in the cards. John F. Kennedy, a Catholic. radio program each Sunday from Jay employe, to send the boy to The ministers, representing nearby Kings Mountain. Boston for further medical most Baptist churches in Gaston The first radio 'program featreatment and an artificial limb 5 and Mecklenburg counties, made, tured, Grady Wilson, associate at the Cardinal's, expense. tile decision because, as one said: evangelist of Billy Graham. ,Mr. The boy is presently being' "I fear Catholicism more than I Wilson stated that Billy Graham treated by a Boston orthopedic ' MIAMI BEACH (NC) - The fear communism." 'haa rejected a request of Senaspecialist. He 'has been fitted national commander of the In ,addition, the 40 ministers tor Kennedy that he sign a with a temporary leg and hopes U. S. A. Jewish War Veterans pledged to work for the defeat pledge not to make religion an to have a permanent one' in time ,praised 'the Catholic Church in of North Carolina gubernatorial issue in the campaign, to return to Lima with Cardinal ' Cuba as Ii bastion of h':lman dig. ' , ' , A spokesman for the group Cushing' on his trip to South nity o'n an island now held by said that anti-Catholic literature America' at the end of this month., ' international communism. ' obtained from Protestants and Berniltd' ,Abrams, of :Te~sey; Other Americans United for SepRussian Tourists Get City, N,J., told the 65th annual ' , a r a t i o n of Church and State convention of the organization COTONOU (NC)-The Blsho~s ' (POA) will be used to start a Map Vatican City ·that the Chtircn i'e'presented "a of Dahomey have expressed their library in a Gastonia Baptist ROME (NC)-Russian visitors ,major 'bastion of human dignity' pleasure at' the country's newly Church. to Rome, ar,e I given a Russian~ and freeaoin' on the island,'" gained independence. • • • • • • • • • • • • •• , languat:e 'panwhlet on Vatican , , "The Cuban' people," he said,'.: • But the nati~e Ordinary ~f City complete with map of t9!! "have' 'been raped by interna- . Cotonou, ArchbIshop Bernardm small pai:l~l pomain. _ ,tional 'communiimi whic'h now 'Cantin, and Dahomey's two SCRAP' METALS The pamphlet, according to holds Cuba in chains. The Castro 'Ellropean Bishops'said in a joint WASTE PAPER - RAGS the Jesuit magazine Civilta goverrlment 'has violated' every , pa'stol'al letter that indep~ndence TRUCKS AND TRAILERS FOR Cattolica, is one of several Rus- concept of international morality does not solve everythmg and PAPER DRIVES sian-language pamphlets pre- and instead of fulfilling the cautioned against "the tempta, CHURCHES, S~OUTS and pared by tourist authorities of promise of the revolution has tion t~, ~n ul1?r,id.led,,, naive and CIVIC ORGANIZ'ATIONS Rome to help Russian visitm·s. enslaved the people by a regime superfiCial reJoIcIng. . 1080 Shawmut Avenue Civilta Cattolica mentioned more dictatorial and inhuman Dahomey became fully mdeNew Bedford WY 2-7828 the pamphlets in discussing dif- than that of any former dictator." pendent from France on Aug. 1 ferences between rules governHe called all Cubans to rally The Bishops reminded the :--"""""""""'; fng tOUl'ists in Italy and in Rusflo the support of Coadjutor country's Catholics, who num,:>er sia. It noted that there are 12 Archbishop Evelio Diaz y Cia of. 300,000 out of a total population zones forbidden to tourists in Havana, ranking active prelate of 1,700,000, of. the grea~ effort Russia and that the Russians on the island who reportedly ill of the Church m educatIon and themselves' :n'eed passports to leading' the' Church' protest c;lther fields in Dahomey. travel within their own CQun- against the regime's' pressure 00. They said of independence: try's borde,rs. . the Church. "This assumption of responsibility for' the country and its destiny will by itself be real, effective and beneficial for everybody alyS if all citizens unite'in truth, jus: 365 NORTH FRONT STREET: WASHINGTON' (NC) - The to step up mailings to the U,S. t~ce and mutual respect aro~nd II : NEW BEDFOR~ : Post Office Department has reby recent Supreme Court rul- smgle p~'ogr~m ~nd a smgle, : WYman 2-5534 : ported an unprecedented flow ings which they, interpreted as constructive Idea. of obscene material into the letting down the bars to their ,"",.,""'------~ United States from abroad. activities. Post Office General Counsel The Post Office official as-' Many a livo wire would be a dead Herbert B. Warburton said the serted the foreign distributors one if it weren't for tho connection•• department is considering new are combining their stepped-up procedures by which such ma- operations with greater efforts terial can be sent back to the ,to avoid interception. . Employ Subterfuge CQuntry from which it came. REYNOLDS-DEWALT Under international postal More and m'ore dealers emWilliam & Second Sts. conventions a nation may refuse ploy fh'st class mail to send both N~EDS to accept obscene material sent advertisements and the actual New Bedford WY 6-8234 • its citizens. obscene material" he revealed. Consult Mr. WarbUl'ton reported in', the Postell officials may not open pQstmonth customs officials in first class mail for inspection. New· York have intercepted 35 ",," In addition, he cited the pracmailbags full of allegedly lewd tice of one dealer in S""eden material from Scandinavia, the who posts his mailings with a by Netherlands, Great Britain and return address in Toronto, CanWest Germany. He estimated ada. that the I'e were some 20,000 Purpose of this subterfuge is Exch~nge, separate items in the intereepted to escape the effects of a foreign EXeter material. ' '!unlawful" order which: permits Johnny" Lemos Florist Dennisport· Mr'. Warburton asserted' that' , the Post Office to intercept re, 8-2291 ., '. foreign distributors of 'such mit.tances sent,' ,.the dealer' by Sp.5.2336 Hybnnis 8-2292 MAIN ST. lIUltec-ial have been etWOW'ageci ,.U.s. customers.

Cardinal Cushing, Helps Peruvian

"Baptist Min.ister Asserts He Fears 'Ca'tholl·cs More Than Communl·sts

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losophy is the idea' that survival in an atomic struggle is paramount to the question of right and wrong. The real commitment for the free world in this atomic age should be its dedication to the right even when there is no hope of survival, said Bishop Vincent S. Waters of' Raleigh, N.C. Bishop Waters preached at the Solemn Pontifical Mass opening the 78th annual international convention of the Knights of Columbus. Bishop Francis E. Hyland of Atlanta offered, the' Mass in Christ the King Cathedral. "In a world, girding for an atomic struggle," said Bishop Waters, "we find a group of nations dedicated to a purely materhilistic philosqphy .. believing that might is right, that truth and falsehood are equaL" Many communists, in spite of their error, ,have a "real commitment," said the Bishop, insofar as they,are dedicated to an end,even when there is no hope of survival. . "If the communists have taketl. a leaf ~lUt of our book, it is out of. the book of martyrs," he said. "The American weakness of the present' time," sa'id Bishop Waters, lies in the philosophy which states: 'In an atomic war it does no~ matter who is right ~r wHo is wl'Ong, but it merel,. matters who survives.''' Supreme Knight Luke E. Hart, in his address at the States dinner, said that "we hear much today about living with communism. Ther~ is no such possibility. The issue is clearly drawn." , "There is no acceptable, dreamy, twilight zone between freedom, as we know it, and communism, as we have bitterly learned to know it," Mr. Hart sl,lid. '

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THE A~CHOR-Diocese of fall River~Thyrs. Aug',lS, l?~O .

Mid-West Bi!$hop ·'Cites Han'd~-Off 'oliticGlIP@~icy.

Conte'm~@rary Signmfic~~c,e InLife of 'St. Ph~lip ~le~i '

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FORT WAYNE (NC) ',Bishop Leo, A. J;lursJey ~ Fort Wayne-South :6end has . stressed the Church's hand&-

. By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Some. biographical stuQies recite the details of a subject's life first, then launch into interpretative comment. Others., interweave facts, and . observations. But Marcel Jouhandeau, in his St. P,hilip Neri,which George Lamb has ' translated . from ,the ',lives of, extraordinary holiness French (Harper. $2.75), be- in that condition. gins with an analysis of Teacher of Joy Philip's character and holiPhilip had no patience with

off attitude toward 'partisan pc». ilics. In a statement on the issue of religion· and politics Bisbcp Pursley declared: . . "Our priests understand that they are not to engage in poli~ ical campaigns or give public support to a particular candidate. ness, and only in part two gets pietistic show. Those who prayed They will act accordingly. around to telling the reader sentimentally or ostentatiously "The statutes of every diocese he'snatched up from their knees when the saint 'known'to me contain this reguand sent packing to, say, a home was born, what lation. We regret that it is not for incurables, where they could education he more generally observed by . turn over mattresses and clear received, where those who preach the Gospel" the bedclothes of lice. he lived, etc. A novel arrangeNeither would he tolerate Two Approaches LAYMEN'S RETREAT CONFERENCE:, Opening the sanctimonious gloom. He was ment. The Bishop said he was making He uses it, he always making jokes, playing 18th biennial National Catholic Laymen's Retreat Confer-' his remarks because "the recent ence, in Philadelphia are (left to right) : Francis A. Crotty nomination of a Catholic for the explains, "betricks, even acting the ·buffoon. eause I seem to He was a practitioner and of Boston, presiden~; William M. Lennox, president of Men presidency * • 0;0 will set off II h a v e noticed teacher of Christian joy. campaign of .anti-Catholic prop_ of Malvern; Bishop JohnJ. Wright of Pittsbqrgh, Episcopal that in biogSpeaking of the year 1591, the Advisor and James H., J. Tate, Philadelphia City Coun.cil aganda designed to prevent his raphies of st. author says there is then occurelection on the sole ground that . Philip in which ring "the worst famine in Italy' president. NC Photo. bis religion disqualifies him for chronology reigns supreme there . for over 200 years. The French· high office." is in fact a deep confusion. The kingdom is in a dreadful state, He continued: "Though clearly Tel~yision reason for this is probably to be heresy has taken hold of Germcontrary to the letter and spirit found in the fact that Philip had any and England, .the Turkish of our Constitution, this will be absolutely nothing in common tyranny extends over the whole the only issue for those organwith the age he lived in." The WASHINGTON (NC) -Pro- and powers." of the Mediterranean, arid banthesis appears rather dubious, When religious rites are in- izations which are dominated dits are looting Rome, where hibitions a g a ins t obscenity, and it is not, strengthened when, social .life has become utterly against attacks on religion and eluded in other than religious' by real or pretended fear of the on a later page, M. Jouhandeau immoral . . . What 'a strange against casual treatment of di- programs, it says, the rites are Catholic Church and the influwrites that what Philip "had moment, on~ might exclaim, to vorce ar~, repeated in the sixth, to· be accurately presented and ence of its hierarchy. The ap'always wanted; to do above a~l sing a hymn to Christian joy!" edition of the U: S. television the ministers, priests and rabbis proach in some cases will be ·'industry's voluntary, self-regu- portrayed in their ca lIings, are dignified and documented; iI& other things, was ,to keep, hI' " ,Lesson f~ V~.' ' ,,': ' -to be vest~d with the dignity of ()ther'cases, just noisy 'a~d n~. disciples in touch with. the age Yet that is what 'Philip aoo' 'latory' code. , The new edition was released their office and under no circumVoting Obligation they lived in.'! . , , his followers were' d9ing: ·A Despite the oddness of its ~r­ lesson, suri:!ly, for us, in' our de- here by the National Association stances are to be~ held up, to '''One charge in particular wm rangement, this is a stimulatmg pressing and threatenirig times. of Broadcasters, under· whose ridicule. be made repeatedly: that Cathbook. The' author' gives us an SaneUty of Marriage , olic bishops tell their priests and Although dead over 350 years, auspices the eight-year-old beengaging portrait and t~ought­ Philip has contemporary signifi- havior guide for U. S. television Respect .for. the sanctity ,of people how to vote." , ful explanation, of the samt~. cance and appeal. It is. al~ays a 'is operated. About 80 per cent marriage and the value of the , Bishop Pursley said it "shoutcl , The reader who knows little pleasure to read about hint, and of U. 1? stations are code sub- home' is demanded. "Divor~ is be obvious" that he endorses no or nothing of St. Philip shoul~ one never does so without grasp- scribers. , not treated casually nor justicandidate for public office. He probably be advised to read the The code covers both program fied as a solution for marital, ing something of the lesson be said he has confidence' in "the second part first. But those who ·has for us in our age. M. Jouhan- standards and advertising stand- problems," the code adds. are fairly well acquainted with deau has caught and fleshed the' ards, dealing with matters rang"S~icide as an acceptable intelligence and integrity" ol his story can go straight through essence of this strikingly mimaJ.l ing from use of animals to sub- solution for human problems is Catholics to decide such queeliminal perception. The previous "prohibited," it says. It also stip- tions for themselves. from page one. man of God. The Bishop'declared, however, edition was published in March, ulates that illicit sex relatiollfJ Personal Apostolat.e You may remember· my say1959. are not to be treated as com- that be does urge Catholics -. Born of impoverished parents ing some nice things about a The code not-es that "the inti- men_dable and that sex crimes "vote as an ,obligation of their In Florence· in 1515, Philip had mystery story called The Saint but scraps of formal education. Maker by Leonard Holton. From macy and confidence placed in and a1?normalities are generally citizenship and to vote for the candidate who is, in their honest At 18 he moved to Rome, where the same pen there now comes television demand of the broad- unacceptable as program mate- opinion, best fitted to fill the he was to spend the rest of his A Pact With Satan (Dodd, Mead. caster, the network and other rial. program sources that they be In its section, of responsibility position of honor and trust which life. He picked up the elements $2,95), featuring the sam e of philosophy and theology by sleuth, a priest named 'Father vigilant in protecting the 8udi- of TY toward children, the code he seeks." Stimulate CatholicS ence from deceptive program states that children's education 'c:asually dropping in at lectures. Joseph Bredder. - ~, " . , "To do otherwise is to violate involves "giving, them a sense He began a personal aposto- , The scene is, Onc:e again';· Uie practices." £Onscience and to do' that is • It specifically prohibits "proof the w!>rl~ at large." .late, ·chatting with people in th~ Angeles. Father 'Bredder,' a sin," he said. ' ' 'streets and getting them onto member of an·· um;pecified reli- fanity, obscenity; smut and vul- _ Decency, Decorum , Bishop Pursley' .assert~d ,~Hltl-. the subject of themselves and gious order, is still chaplain of garity, even when likely to be . "However,': it continues, "such ,their relationship ,to God. He Cath,olic bias duri~g ,tile ~.resj­ the Convent of the "Holy Inno:_ understood only by part of ~ SUbjects as vio!ence and sex also undertook to wait on the cents, and the" school it Serves. audience.'.' ", ' s,h!lll bll presented without undue ~entJal race may hav~ the good 'sick in public hospitals, A ~roup , The cod~"say.s that "attacks ~ emphasis andOllly as required result of stimulating Catholics He '.is : also said: to have"some 'of disc~ples, gathered about parishioners; how this has 'bee~ religion, and religious:faiths are by plot development or character do more solid reading and lbim. " '. . , " thinking, to widen their knowl_ not allowed." It calls for "rever-' delineation., arranged;, iS'not- explained.' , He was 36 when he was or,"Crime should not be' ·pre- edge and deepen tHeir under;. A Mrs. W~ntworhl' c'o~e.s "to e-nce to- mark any mentiorl' of 'dained a priest, and his c0n:'-i standing of their Faith:, to: bethe name of God, His attributes senti:!d as ·attractive or as a solu:' Ipany of assoc\a~es,: became, I.n visit him. Palpably, she is 'in the tion to human problems and, the come more alert and' articulate .time ·a new religious commUnI'" grip of terror. She explaim; that inevitable retribution should be in professing it and more' conPontiff Mass made ty known as the Oratory. His , her husband was burned to death clear," . sistently exemplary in living it." in an automobile crash, and For 87 Missionaries greatness was soon recognized In regard to' decency and VATICAN' CITY (N C) by eminent churchmen, includ- now is threatening to kill herdecorum in TV production, the ing St. Charles' Borromeo, and by fire: The priest at first sus- Eighty-seven missionaries descode calls for costuming to be pects that she is demented de. tined to work in' Africa left "within the bo':!nds of propriety" he was the intimate of several luded. Then ·he has reaso~ to· Rome with the· promise of a popes. and avoiding "such exposure or believe that there is some sub- . Mass to be celebrated for their Sought Solitude such emphasis on anatomical Try Our "LAZY lOBSTEr stance to her credible story. 5Uccess by Pope John. He was a contemplative, detail as would embarraSs or also The story moves along smoothThe missionaries, representing offend bome viewers." spending many hours daily rapt "'Spaghetti and M,0ttMdh", ly, with ingenious twists, rolor18 difterent nations and 15 difin God. Ecstasies were, to his Ii <:aIls· for movemenb of annoyance and embarrassment, ful characters, a neat denoue- ferent religious orders and con- dancers, actors and other perWEST YARMOUTH a common experience with him, ment. There are wit and humor gregations, were 'given a .special formers !llso to be within the Berry Ave. off Route 28 'and his Mass was·likely to bike tO'sauce the grim business 01. audience by the Pope, who exbounds of decency. two hours., He wanted nothing' the plot. Diverting reading fOl: pressed his admiration for their more than solitude. Yet his work a summer afternoon or nighl work and then promised· to celebrate: his next morning:llllass for· 'I ·"'as intensely social. . I He was immensely attractive Archbishop Planning their success. IN NEW BEDfORD - lTiS Present were miSSionaries to all sorts of'people, and each Nuns Study Pr·ogr'am"" from the Nethertands, Germany, 'day a number of them came to his room to discuss the things DETROIT (NC) - An· Indian Great Britain, Ireland, Belgium, GEO., of the spirit. The' atmosphere Archbishop arrived here to France, Swit1erIand, Italy, CanCHEVROLET was informal, the talk never in make final, plans for a program ada, the United States, Poland the least stuffy. Philip the mysunder which nuns from hhl See and Spain.' They will serve in tic was exceptionally practical will receive advanced training missions in Kenya, Tanganyika, 1=01 THE FINEST TRADE EVER in his dealings. in the ,United States. Rh~esia, Ruanda-Urundi, NiArchbishop Matthew Kavukatt geria and Upper Volta. SUCCESSOR TO lOUGHLIN CKfYROlET He had genius as a confessor of Changanacherry, India i. and 'director of souls. Although comp ' letmg ' ' plans for theeduea565 MILL ST. Open Every Evening WY 7-9486 many of the men under his· tional program with officials of The KEYSTONE sway enteJ:ed religion, and,some ' ;rose very high • in the 'Chu.rc'h, ,the 'Sisters of Mercy of t~ Warehouse Salesr06m I h Union, who have headquart~s ·ot ers.·rem.ained. in ,the lay state; h " ";'. ' , ·1 . New and Used " d h . ere. ,:~n were s ow~ how to lead Under ,the ro ram ,'( OF~ICE 'EQUIPMENT ' " ,., , ' . " '" '\' ." _'", .,..,..' .. ,P, g, , nuns .S t" L d' ..... . 'hom the' Changa.nacherry arcH:' 'I ena or ,~u, s, .:"IlU~ ,di.ocese will stucjy at U.S. col:" WASHINGTON (NC) - Sen.' leges conduc'ted by· the Sisters' ~~r1 E." Mun~t of South. D<:lkota .of Mercy of, the Union. - Plans paid tnbute m the U. S. Senate call for the colleges. to pay all ,t? Mother Mary' Raphael, supe- transportation and living costs Wo show a largo assortment of rl,or general o~ the Presentation of the Indian nuns. desks, chairs, filing cabinots,' tablos. SIsters fr,om 1932 to 1946, ?n. her The Indian Sisters are to reetc., in wood and stoel. AI... m..tal 50th anl11versa:y as a RehgJOus. ceive advanced training in nurs,torage cabinet., safo., snelving, ,sen. MU~dt h~lled the nun, who ing, education or ot.her special!ocken, etc. now reSIdes m Aberdeen, S,D.. ized fields in which they are 108 Jamol Street, _ Union as "one of South Dakota's out- needed in the Changanacherry 'lew aedford WY 3·2783 standing and renowned citizens." archdiocese. '

Mndustry, Code' Bans Obscenity, Attacks on Religion'

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Foreign Students Need Aid .to Bolster· Faith

l'ttE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 18, 1960

Asserts Spiritual Illness· Causing Modern ·Crisis

ST. BENEDICT (NC)-A·. priest-editor has eaned for an apostolate 'to bolster. the Faith. of Catholic foreign students in the U.S. "An alarming number of Catholic foreign students attending secular or Protestant schOOls either lose their Faith or answer the needs of the 'forhave it seriously weakened," to eig~ visitors," Father Nevins said Father Albert J. N&- said, "but the structure must .vins, M.M., editor of Mary- exist for them to reach the-forknoll Magazine and president of. the Catholic Press Association. Writing in the July issue ol St. Joseph's Magazine, published here in Oregon, the MaryknoU priest said that "a surprisingly, llarge number of foreign students have completely false ideas about the United States. the American home and the poClition of the Catholic Church tD. the United· States." He slated that only 5,224 of the 20,000 Catholic foreign students enrolled in U. S. collegea ond Universities are attending Catholic s~hools. Pointing· out that few Catholi~ foreign students in secular and Protestant schools encounter Catholic influences, he said that the ma tter has become one of. IlIerrlous concern to the Holy See. H<a recalled that His Holiness Pope John XXIII has urged priests !lnd laity to assist foreiga. atudents spiritually and "help lltudents should appoint Q coordinator for them. . "It would be the function of the coordinator," he stated, "to

CHICAGO (NC) - The eurrent ch~llenge to Western society is "not to build a greater industrial civili-

eign visitor and fM the foreiga. visitor to reach them. The diocesan coordinator ill the ket' to the entire operation. PO

Workers Seeking World Justice RENSSELAER (NC) - More than 500 delegates and chaplaina at the Young Christian Workers convention here in Indiana have been urged to "increase the international spirit .. $ .. among all young workeP6 . in the United States." Romeo Maione, international president of the YCW, emphasized "Our generation has two alternati ves. Either the world. must learn to live together as one family, or we must be ready to die together." He said the YCW is aware of. ita fundamental task to develop. an international spirit. "In the

ENTHRONEMENT CEREMONY: Ceremonies enthroning the Sacred Heart in Damien Council Home, Mattapoisett, precede. first Summer Mass said there. Masses are said at 9 :30 and 10 :30 every Sunday morning during Summer for vacationers. Left to right, District Deputy Arthur Shaw, Financial Secretary Anthony Lawrence, Rev. Clement Killgoal', SS.CC., Rev. Jeremiah Casey SS.CC.• Grand Knight Paul Despres..

I·shop As 5 ert C ongoIese Peop Ie I . S Still· Friendly to Missionaries

past five years," he noted, "about 150 YCW leaders have left everything behind in order to·· BRUSSELS .(NC)-People of plant and nurture the' seeds of the troubled Congo. remain . YCW in other lands." friendly to missioners despite a He added that the "YCW must violent propaganda campaign ......e. as. a clearing hoUBe' for be, first and foremost, a move- against Belgians ·In that "former foreign student information to drra·w. up local programs and' get ment that hungers and thirstIJ Belgian· colony, according to parish and organizational groups for justice-not only for a few reports reaching here. &0 carry out the programs." men or a few natioll!3, but fQ!;r Bishop Andre Lefebvre, $.J., the whole world." . of Kikwit said in a letter that Our Catholic people are ready his people have shown "mor~ friendship' than usual" to the missioners. . '. The 58-year-old Belgian JesPm~ct uit, whose mission territory is SEOUL (NC)-A North Korean. Liberation in 1945 the Russiane in the southern part of LeopoldAir Force fighter pilot who flew . occupied North Korea. In the ville province, stated: llliB jet plane to freedom in early days of the Korean war, "The lie campaign of LeopoldSouth Korea said he never Russian advisors were in North ville Radio (the government stabeard religion mentioned nor Korea to help the North Korean tion) has greatly aroused the saw any sigJ:ls of-religion in the army. However, he said he wall people against the Belgians. But communist-dominated north. trained as a jet fighter pilot by so far we as missioners have not North Koreans. He was grad- felt any ill effects from it. The Lt. Chong Nak-hyon, 24 . fact that we stayed has disposed escl\ped from his Red-ruled uated from the Air Academy at the people well.'.' eountry by flying his MIG15 Yenehi, Manchuria, illr 1958. . ·Bishop Lefebvre paid tribute .. U. Chong·' said he was ver; jet fighter from Wonsan to • to the native ,Con~olese clergy. Impressed with the freedom en~ amall airstrip on the east coast sta,.· at Posts joyed by people in the South. of Korea. He said he was IU<;ky Unlike those in the Nortli, he \ Other reports reaching· here flo be ;aOle to avoid being shot said, people in the south cam fudicate that· a great majority of down by a MIG17 jet which folmove freely around the country. priests and Religious in the lowed' him to the demarcatioll lioe dividing north arid souo. He expected Seoul to be a warCongo ha~ stayed' in their Korea. . > devastated city as Red propa- posts. Of the total of 6,883 misganda maintains it iI. Other sionaries, fewer· than 100 left Receives Award '. things. that. impressed him were the Congo when it became indeIA.Chong. is the second north amount and the vlllrietT· of gOO<Y pendent. K:Mean Air Force pilot who baa on sale in the stores. While some of these had to flown his .MIG plane to freedom. flee because of riots and bloodReds Fool People in 'the south. He has received a shed, many were forced by civil $20,000 award from the South There are schools, he said; but authorities to evacuate against Korean government and was all the children are subjected to Red indoctrination all during ~Iven a commission as a first theill." school term. Lt. Chong Dance Drama Depicts nieutenant in the South KorelUl Air Force. himself was nine years old when Holy Eucharist Story MUNICH (NC)-Indian danc. Lt. Chong said the German the Russians took over control of North Korea. Indoctrination ers depicted the history of the ~edictine monastery at Tokwea, I~ea~ Wonsan, is being ,used failed to convince him fully of Eucharist in a· dance drama the ~dvantages of living illl. a during the 37th 'International !by the' Reds as an agricultural: communist paradise. Eucharistic Congress here. eallege. :Ct: ·Chong lives in TokThe dance, performed· befor0 .lFinallY at Ease He is ~ot a Christian. ' a crowd of 3,500' including leadLt. Chong said· hiS' father, . RusSian Influence mother. two.brothers and a·sis- ing churchmen, was written by Communist propaganda,' he ter are living in Tokwon. Hu Father George Proksch, S.V.D. laid, tried to tell the people of father is a farmer, his older He .also composed the spoken the north the April revQlvtion brother a mailman and his text in Hindi, the chief lan-· ID. the south which overthrew younger brother is in the North guage of northern India. the regime of President SyngKorean Army. He himself is man Rhee was an attempt to unmarried. tum. South Korea into a comLt. Chong gave the impressioa munist state. But radio broadhe is vastly relieved because he cut. from the south were ab'·had escaped and the ordeal WlUl .. COlTect that, he observed. Plumbing - Heating over. He had been thinking of Ru8Si~n influence - is more it ful" some time, he stated, Md Over 35 Yean 6MAinant in north Korea th..... finally made up hUI mind after of Satisfied Service Ustening to • broadcast by • Appoint Maryknoller former communist agent who de106 NO. MAIN STREET fected flo the south and br0adFall Riwr OS 5-7497 " . t·, To Military Post cast . " to North Korea. SEOUL' O(-NC)_Msgr.· . . Carr~lIJ" M.M., of New ydrk, .. ' . "BUCK OSSICK'S . exiled apostolic administrator of ' the North, l{orean See of :Pyong- .,....." 'fias'>been named chaplain ~egate' for all Catholicli servinc with U. S. Armed Forces in ,·Cbarcoal Steaks Korea. He" has been serving as aoofstant' chaplain delegate in Roast Beef ~ Se'afood --Poultry Dishes

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No Sign of Religion mn North Korea Freed©m Seeking Reports

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their will. This was also the case with many' missionaries who Rient from their mission stations to the bi~ger ·cities. Among' them were· priests and Sisters of a half-dozen different orders led to the capital at Leopoldville by Msgr. Jean Van del' .Heyde n , S:V.D., Prefect Apostolic' of Kenge. Ordered Out On arriving in Leopoldville Msgr. Van del' .Heyden said that he and the other missionaries had been told to leave the Banningville area by Moroccan soldiers who formed the United Nations force there. Banningville, lying about 150 miles northeast of Leopoldville is Msgr. Van del' Hayden's h~ad~ quarters. When the missioners refused ~ .go, the Divine Word priest .said, the Moroccan officers announce~ they had orders to conduct ~hem out of the area for the missionaries' safety. . Msgr. Van del' Heyden said that he and his fellow missionaries planned to return to their posts as soon as possibie. The people demanded their presence, ne saia. ..

zation * * * but to rebuild an ethical. and religious one," aecording to Dr. Robert F. Fries, - dean at De Paul University. Modern soci~ty is "now in the throes of a spasmodic. crisis that may well prove to be its death struggle." Dr. Fries told graduates of the Vincentian Fathers' Summer school. Eternal Destiny Among the "surface characteristics of this crisis he listed "growth of the all-embracing state, economic instability, and the threat of international war with weapons so horrible that the imaginatioli. staggers at the impact of the idea." However, he continued, the essence of the crisis is a spiritual illness. He said: "This is the true nature of the modern crisisthat the basic ideals and beliefs and truths which from the very spirit of our civilization are being smothered by vast canceroWi growths of statism, secularism. and materialism." Dr. Fries said the "real sb'ength of our civilizationI' resides in' the values "that God Himself has given to man 811 part of his 'nature and as an omen of his eternal destiny." .:ffective Ideals But ·he warned that "survival of the nation will be of littlo help if the principles have disappeared among the very peopla who are supposed to be defending them." "Ideals to be effective' must be felt spontaneously, they must be lived," he said. "It is your mission to co'nduet yourselves as indiv-iduals and as community leaders in such a way that others may learn the way of wisdom through you."

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That's My Boyf

THE ANCHOR...:..Diocese, of Fall Aug. 18,1960 . River-Thurs. .

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Meekness - -:Humility - ~Wonder

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While many persons entertain the hope that the forthcoming Ecumenical Council will make some definite strides in the direction of unity, just as many persons' are realistic enough to see that it will also cause a certain stiffening of, the lines aga~nst unity of the churches. The degree of new tension that will be created depends 'in large measure on. the attitude of Catholics as a whole and as individuals in their respective communities. There will be an increase in tension because in any discussion of Church unity the Catholic Position must be stated. And: the Catholic claim cannot sound anything but arrogant to' those outside'beeauseof its very certainty. And 80 the gulf can be widened. ., What might save that unfortunate development--or, at least, reduce its dimensions-will be a Catholic attitude of "meekness and humility," as the English Jesuit Father David Hoy called it in discussing the matter over BBC television. Catholics, he said,must keep a wonder that God has given them the gift of faith when they see the goodness and generosity in their non-Catholic fellows. This is the only approach to the matter that is going to achieve sO"mething definite-giving the Catholics the correct attitude toward the gift that God has bestowed on them and avoiding an impression .of arrogance that could sorely wound the sensitivities of those not of the faith.

"On Falling Off Bikes'"

TODAY-St. Agapltus, Mari3lC, ,Patron Saint of Palestrina,. be was of noble birth and: lived ht the third century. At .the age oi 15 he was arrested as a ChrisUaa and was thrown to wild beasts • the amphitheatre, but the aMmals did not harm him. This mi.... aculous event was followed br many conversions. He was b&headed by order of EmperCJir . Aurelian. . TOMORROW-St. John Eude8. Confessor. A Frenchman, he wa. the founder of the Eudist FatherS arid the nuns of Our LadY.or Charity. He continued his 'mi~ sionary labors beyond his 76th year, and was the author of several ascetica-l works. He died in 1860. .

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It is a wholesome sign of .a good Catholic environment

to see little boys falling off bikes to tip their baseball caps to Sister or to Father, to notice the: sometimes grave, sometimes lighthearted deference wIth which their elders speak to priests of God and religio.us in passing them on the

street.

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Says Science vs Theology Controvers'y Is Stupid . .

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'" This 'custom of Catholics greeting those of their Most Rev. Robed J • Dwyer; D.D: number' .who have been. dedicated'in a si>eciaLway to the Bishop of Reno service. of God ,;8 a :.happy custom. And; sad to say, it is 'a, On S~turda'y; Jllne .1860" specialmeeti~g' of the. custom that Seeml{'to be falling by the wayside with the British Association was' called in,.the, Museum Lecture .... .. . .l' " l passmg years. , . . Room at Oxford. Only six months earlier Charles Darwin' Time was when Father or Brother Of' Sister kept up had publisheg his. Ori.gin o~Specie8, and the resulting e]l-' pr~ct~callY ru~ningJine ..of chatter, answering the "Good mor;ning's" that they encountered on all sides. All too often eiteme~t~n . scienti~ic a1);d' startled neig~bc·.·, 'on the· knee theologIcal CIrcles. made It and .exclaimed, "The Lord hath· DOW they are greeted with a curious stare arid nothing mote. seem imperative that the delivered him into mine hands'" How' does such a lovely.custom of greeting one's priests implications of the theory He had indeed: Rising in ~ebl;'t-. and religious fall into disuse? Is it th~t those saluted failed be examined. Champion of the tal, HUxl~y WIth gra.ve dIg~lty . ., h A scored pomt after pomt agamst som~ 'how to return the greeting and froze the well-wishers anb-evolutIOOIsts was t ~ n- th e B'IS h . . B' h f op' s maOI'fest Ignorance into silence? ghcan IS op 0 • of what Darwin had written 01' Is it that youngsters have not been reminded of this'b¥ O~lborrfd, Samuel what his theory actually proI e orce, a d the teaching and example of/their parents and teachers? pose .. b luff, jovial Is it that the age of casual manners haS extended to gentleman 0 f The air was electric when the mediocre scholscientist calmly remarked, anent wipe this sign of court~sy off the books too? but of the question of his paren.tage, .. And yet how much that custom meant and still means. arship. eon sid e r _ tha~ he would not be afraid ~ . It 'is an acknowledgement that the Church is 'one family of a b I e .platform acknowledge a monkey' as hiS God, that every Catholic has a special claim to the attention dexterity.,. iI e ~ncestor, but that he would .be ashamed to be connected With and services of those whom the Church selects as her men was wid ely a man who used great gifts to' k n.o w n a s and women dedicated to Christ. It' is the salute of one "Soapy. Sa:m;', . oQscure the. truth.~." member. of a family to another. in tribute tp liis . ' Needless, Trag-Ie Wh~t a sad thing' to· witn~ss the passing, of such a talents in spreading .sweetness When Huxley siit down he liaa I truly Catholic custom. Perhaps it is not too late to save it and light where~er ,he roamed. not only won" a debate, a matt~r from .extinction. . Pitted against him on that conceded by all but the Bishop's memorable day was ·a young·, most' tabid:' supporters,' but he biologist named Thomas Hux- had given a twist to the whole The most challenging type of ~ook review is an un- ley. Tall, thin, choked by an subsequent history of th'e rela- ' excessively high collar, his tions between science and theol- ' favorable one-especially one whose attack is based Oft pallor accentuated by his black ogy. valid grounds of content and style and dramatic treatment,' hair, his merits as an antagonist" In that sense the Oxford meetbut one whose disfavor could be attributed to prejudice. .of the popular Bishop of Oxford ing was one of the saddest events That is why it is a great treat to read Richard Sulli- were little esteemed. He had not of. the 19th century, one of the van's review in Sunday's The New York Times of a new sought. the debate an,d h~d ac- most needless, one of the most ce?te~ only beca~se of h~s adtragic. For by pitting a theolobook featuring a rather unsavory theme. . mIrabon for Darwm and hiS zeal gian who was as uncertain of The Notre Dame professor of English criticized the for his good name. his theology as he was of his book not as a Catholic objecting to a distorted treatment The meeting was swamped, scientific data against a scientist of what he holds in reverence-such would immediately be and a larger auditorium had to who, was eminently sure of his' put down prej.udice. But he points out the essen~ial be'. procured for an audience ground" the' impression was which was largely ·.clerical; created that theology dealt only weaknesses of the .book that make it a poor one or, ashe "shouting lustily for the with· myth while science' dealt ; says .in his .concluding sentence; "Perhaps what this one Bishop", though interspersed with facts. • lacks most is control; then it l~cks insight and objectivity. with ladies we~ring sum~e~y The repercussions of that deWithout these, it stands, poor thing, undignified, il).dignant dresses an~ waymg enthusIas.bc bate were enormous,. spreading handkerchIefs, as well as w.I~h far beyond Victorian England and 'dreaTJl"'" . undergraduates of a more cnti- to the Continent and the New That is a worthy review: to take a book for what it cal turn of mind. ·World. Even today, a hundred pretends to be-a dramatic treatment of an imaginative ltelies on Ridtbule years .after, i.ts influence. hi • . J powerful. and gripping theme expressed with verve and stylistic Characteristic of Victorian excellence-and shows how it falls short of its goal by its stamina, the meeting droned on Foole on Both Sides' own standards. ' . for hours before the Bishop was Darwin has had to be correctcalled upon to speak.. He had ed in most' of his major hypobeen well coached for the oc~ theseS, Huxley is no' longer. casion, but he chose to pla,ce his cited as an authority of weight reliance upon ridicule. With vast in his chosen field. Individual good 'humor and obvious delight scientists have re-examined the: in his task he slashed Darwin- , whole' controversy in 'the light ' ism to pieces as. the merest nov- ,. Qf·.a clearer knowledge of the ' elty and·, the most absurd of. limitations of scienc~ and the ' . real provirice of theoolgy, while OFFICI~~ NEWSPAPER O~ THE DIOCESE Of FAll' RUVER inventions.· ~. It becam~ _perfectly plain as theologians on their side have Published ~~"ekiy by The Catholic Press ·of the Diocese of Fall River: he went· aiorig., that he simply restated 'the issue; not in terms, did not know what he was'talk- of' oppositio;}....bu't of the unit)' '. ",no Highland Avenu~ ing about. As he reached his of all truth. . Fall River, Moss. .. OSborne 5-7151 climax he turned to Huxley with Still, the impression remaiNS mock courtesy and "begged to widespread that there is a funPUBLISHER know, was it thr.ough his grand- damental antagonism between Most Rev. James L:. Connolly, D.O., PhD. father or his grandmother that the two disciplines. It has been GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER he claimed his descent from' a sharpened by the myriad fools monkey?" " Rev. Daniel F. Shallao. M.A. Rav. John P. Dris<:oH on both sides who have rushed MANAGING EDITOR At that moment Huxley, sIt- In to mouth their', inanities, by Ung . beside him. 8IJlote b.ia KientistIJ who have pontifi~atecl Hugh J. Goldean .

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"Pof)r Thing"

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@rheANCHOR

Weekly' Cal~ndar .' Of Feast Days

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. SATURDAY-St. ,Bernard of Clairvaux, Abbot-Doctor. He was born in 1091 near Dijon', France. At the age of 22, after persuading 30 young noblemen -to follow him, he joined the' struggling abbey at Citeaux, where he became regarded as the real founder of the Cistercians. During his lifetime he founded 68 Cistel!'eian houses, was adviser to popes, kings and councils, 8!I!d was the preacher of the second crusade. He died in 1153 and was declared a Doctor of the,'ChlUdl iii 1830. .. SUNDAY - Elevel)th: .. Sundq atter Pentecost. Generally thitl dilte is the feast of St., Jan.. Frances de Chantal, Widow,. N. the age of 16, a motherless chiJci. she was placed unqe'r ,the eaN ot' a woI'ldly minded 'governesa. . She offered herself to the.Moiber of God. She was m·~rr.iedto, the B~.rQn 'de 'Charital '~i1~:;heJ;'bome was a 'model of domestic hapIN:ness. After the 'death of her hU8band, she entered the religiou life and founded the VisitatiOa .Order. I In this work she. Wall assisted by St. Francis de 'SaIeS. MONDAY-Feast of the ~ maculate Heart of Mary. Honoring the Immaculate Heart of Mary as a symbol of love, this feast was instituted- .. by Pope Pi~s. VII, assigned a pnn)er office and Mass by Pope Pius.,XI, and extended to the' Universal Church with a permanent ~ br Pope Pius XII. ' ." _, ,T.UESDAY-St. p.hiii~'·.BonbJll, Confessor. He was boen. in ·Florence on the Feast of the. 4ssump.. tion' 'in. 1223. He .ell~ered the Servite Order, w.h.i c.h. . W811 founded on the day of hi~jbirth. His virtue won liim' re;pect and admiration. He died in 1285.. WEDNESDAY-St. Barthol&mew, Apostle. He carried .the Gospel through the most barblJrous countries of the East, pe~ etrating into the remoter Indlea. He was martyred in Arl')'lenia. .r,IJ\_'

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in matters theological and by the theologians who 'have coriodemned scientists'as ath~i~ts ~ of hand. ' ' ' .. Time Stands Stili' It was interesting,' the other day, to read the statement of Professor Julian Huxley, grand':' son of the Thomas to whom th<! Lord delivered the Bishop at. Oxford. In a remarkable exposition of social statics, inasmuch as the position adopted by ttle Huxley of today is hardly 4i&tinguishable from that of his 8Ao:cestor, he claimed that evolutioll . . . had rendered God superfluOW!l:o.It is' as though nothing heel· happened in a fult century; _ though the issue were' to be sta~d in exactly the same ,termi 88 the debate betweenWilbelho force and his grandfather. It is actually a complete JIOoi versal' of roles, with 'the ~ tist. in this instance relying '. • rhetoric and ridicule while .... theologiatIs, certainly those wbO know the elements of' tbetr business, stick patiently aDd sedulously to the facts. BUIt • it was unnecessary in 1860 • • stupid in 1960. For the HwdepI and Wilberforces of this·' WGdlI time stands still,


ANCHORSays Tanganyika Our Lady (Jil L9urdeS, Tounlon, To' Construet , 'me Thurs., Aug. 18,

Won't Dupl'icate: C~ngo.

NeW, '. SCM6l

Chaos: .

for Portuguese Pq,~.ishioners

By Marion Unsworth: .. . TOday priests and pa:rishion~ of Our Lady of LOUlrdes parish, national' church for ~ortuguege Catholics' living in the southern part. of Taunton . and in Berkley, are looking to the. ~alization of a .lOIig-hoped .for dream:"-the erectio~ :of a parish school

NEW YORK~·The chaos that' has erupted in ' the Congo 'this summer, in th4i! wake of independence, win

fo*ardi

aot"be 'duplicated by its eastern neigb,t;>Or, Tangany~, which' ~ due for. limited.self-government la.ter this year..' . This. is the opinion of' Father Richard J. Quinn, M.M., of, Clif;. tOn, N. J., who returned' to the 0. S.· recentry on furlough, aiter six years in the missions of Tanganyika. Father Quinn bases his prediction of "an intelligent, dignified march toward independence by Tanganyma" OD the diUerent methods the British and Belgians have used to prepare their co~ onies for self-goveJl'nment. "The British," elai.lD$ Father Quinn, "systematieal!1)' t r a r n African leaders while the Belgians emphasize general education without grooming potential leaders. This will make the difference in Tanganyika. where there are many well-trained. English-educated Africans al:" ready assuming social and politiCal leadership." Twelve Tribes The young New Jersey priest !bas' been stationed in the Diocese of MUSoma, located along tho' eastern shore of Lake Victoria~ The diocese has come to be known as the "Land of Twel'Ve . Tribes" beCaUse of the dozeir different' tribes which frthabit"

th~

At present it. is estimated. that will beavail'abIe' to serve on the :liaculty. Meallwhife;' Our Lady of LOUFdes Parish eon~ tinues. itS 55 years. history ,

school wiltbecome an actuality in 1964, when Religious

of

1960

7

,Monsignor Stills Fear ()f Studying ,At State Colleges .DETRmT (NC)-A former Newman Club director says the religiously oriented student attending a state university need have little fear that ·professors or textbooks will weaken his faith. Msgr. Francis. J. McPhillip. believes the strong Catholic or any other devout student, 'encounters his greatest danger among irreligious fellow students. The Detroit pastor told Detroit's First Friday Club: oc:Proressors are not tricky pe0ple who plot deliberately to destroy a studerit's Faith." He added:: "Unlortunately, some of them are unaware of the true end of their existence.~ War of AUrfUon Magr. McPhillips; who for 111 years was director of the Newman Foundation at the University of Michigan, and at one time. chaplain of the National Newman Club Federation said "most students listen to profes.sors the same way that many people listen to Sunday pulpit announcements." "It.. is. the same with textbooks.," he C0nunued. "Students .do n~~ devour them. If they did. some of th'em' could have seriOWl eHectB. ·It is through the process of '~sion ,that their Faith ill washed away-a war of attlitfoft." " . MakeS, Comp~ ; 'The' Monsignor said it Is re. grettBble that professors of deep .reIigious commitment ue not permitted to teach religion, but any faculty member may teaell religion Or' be anti-religiau. hi .hiS lectures. ·Some of the finest Catbolie8 I have known attended state universities, whereas 0 the r. . who have gone to Catholic colleges have lost their Faith.". he stated..

and g'Ji'Owt.h which started' with the establishment. Of. the parish of' 800 souls.' on July 20, 1905.

TOday there ue approximately 834 families or 2900 parishioners Rev. ManueL A. Silva was appointed! fiJrst pastor for the ex.~ding Portuguese population' of' Taunton and. celebrated MaD in the old Temperance· and ForesteIrS' Han, until plans could, be made for a per1l11lDent church. E.and was acq,ulr.ed on First Street and o~ Ju1:y" i, 1906, the cornerstone of the churcli waslaid! by Bishop Will:iam' Stang. Bl' the end of that year; the church was completed and dediCated,. as: was the rectory next to It on First Stl'eet. lTntiI: 1910 Father Silva. served! as. pasto~ there untiJi 19-10, when he was. succeeded by Rev. Manuel S. Travossos, who remained for three years;. and Rev. Agostinho P. Santos; pastor from 1913 to 1923. T1;te tom-ttl, pastOr, Rev. Daldo • OUR L~Y'.OF LOURDE~",C,~lJl~CH",TAUNTON. A. Raposa. who had pr~",iously been at. Our' Lady of the AngelS Int, 1947, Father Oliveira was of OW" Lady"'of Lourdes' was deChu:reh>. Fall River;. directed! 'tibe' assigned to Our Lady of Lourdes signed.. by' . Father 'Oliveira and the area. ' . parish for'10 years, and reorgan,- , Parfsh.: Since' then, .several fm-. ~t1;ilt .. 911 ~,chuzocb ,gro,.ll;l(I.5: established sodailiJpOD the golden jubilee of the Th'iS muiti-tribe factor is one" ized' lties 'aitd societies ain'ong, the' provements have been made to of the' major problenisfaciDf' eYeJ:''''groWinw' numbel" of paris1'&:1:: b'.\lll: c: b. property, ~~Iuding, padsh·, a new o,"~an was insta1led missioners' however, becaUse'. kneeler CUShions, new. altar rail" and. the 'inlerlOli of Uie· cilurch' ~eJ!S;. .: " new tabernacle 'arid a chain_link repamtecL.' each' tribe. .speaks a' compl~ Upon, Father Raposa'a: death fence around' the property. dafferi'int torgue, only a haDdfll1.' The· latest addition to chunil' m June.,' 1933, Rev.' Jose' P~ 1953 an outdoor' shrine in honor pr:operty of which have b~en committed was ..made last year d~,Ama.ral served. as. adminima,.· with the purchase of properpes to grammar boOks. To master tor for six'months, until the apacross the street. from the chun.:h tribal languages; a missioner must spend long, grueling- hOUR pointment in 'November of'tl'tair and rectory.. They will be used. year of the priest who was to for' the proposed school. olleaming- by rote, with It tribes.. lead the· parish for more- than' man as'Q tutor. Several societies ax;e active in half its .bistory, Rev. E•. Sousa Lawrence Penha,. son of :JilBl Covering an area sligbtlT de Mello, who is still pastor. counterspy Armand Penha and the parish, including the S1. VInsmaller than the State of New Father de Mello,. who observed Mrs. Penha, St. Joseph's Parish, cent de Paul Society, Legion of JerreY,the Musoma Diocese has the 53rd anniveusary of' his, or'" Fairhaven... will enter the Society Mary, Children of Mary Sodality, a POPUlation of 350,000. Father dinatiolL last Monds\y and his of St. Paul Sunday, Sept. 4 to Holy Name and' Holy Ghost SOcieties, Rosary society and Quinn's Iramba mission has 82nd' birthday Tuesday, remains begin his first year of high C.Y.O~ Cites Conversfons groWl} from 1,100 Catholics in adLve· in. par.fm afilairs' although school at the Society'S Queen of 1954 to 3,250 today. Three tribes The parish Legion of Mary "'The .difference fu that amuch of the .direction of parish Apostle Seminary, Derby, N. Y. llve within ·the mission bound- societies, house calls and other AS a candidate for the priest- has been the parent unit of sev- former student has bad to fight arieS---:the Bangoreme, Bakuria, duties have been assumed by to keep his Faith; the latter has hood, he will attend the minor eral other units in Taunton and and' Luo.. During the past six his· assistant, Rev. Edward A.. seminary for four years of higll Father Oliveira serves as parish': lost his in 'spite of everything :vears, Father' Quinn IJecamefa- Oliveira. Diocesan Director of the do to hel h' k 't .. school and two years of college and Legion:'· There alsO' are active ne p 1m eep 1 • miliar with the languages spoken B'or' 14 years, however, Father before entering the Society's: Boy and Girt Scout troops; as ~ Msgr; McPhillips said that l1I-o by the Bangoreme and Bakuria" de rvrefJ.o administered to his Novitiate at St. Paul Monastery, well 'as Cub an(l Brownie Scoufa though, Newman Foundlll'(cm but depends upon an interpreter flock .without an assistant, first Canfield, O. in tbe parish. priestl.l refrain from proselttizto speak with the Luo people. cOn~ritrating on needed repairs 'mg among students,. an avet • .Lawrence was attracted to the "'The Africans are receptiw and' IInprovements;, including Although Our Lad)' of Lourdes of 50 students a year joined the Society of St.· Paul because of itsto Christianity and many thou- ne~ roofs on. church and ,rectory. modc~n remains a national' parish for Catholic Chureb during his y4>1U11 apostolate of the press, .nds are converted each year,CaUlolics, at the at the University of Mic:higDIL radio l motion· pictures and TV. Portuguese present time the Portuguese Ian. aays Father Quinn. Even as' a young seminarian he guage is spoken only at the T The 33 year-old priest is opt!... will be trained in the field of o'clock Mass on Sundays. With mistic about the future of the _ JOlI! TOO . . the comm\1llication arts· as part . the parish growing' larger each €:hureb in A.frica. In justifYIng CAPE TOWN (NC)-The reof his course of study. year and the new school nearing IUs optimism, he points to, the lief agency of the American ~ TOG SMAU.. The Society's minor seminary reality, the veteran pastor and rising number of native clergy, Bishops" is moving to aid Belhas an extensive printing plant bis assistant have many more tile mission education program . gian refugees from the Congo and a political climate favorable who have been heading .for where bookS; leaflets and' pam- accomplishments. ahead of them. phlets are prepared and printed, in most of Africa toward mission South Africa. Cilth6lie Relief Service_Na- not only by professed Brothers of work. " PRINTERS tional Catholl(: Welfare Confa- the Society but aI:so by students for the priesthood. ence is undertaking to offer reft400 . . . 6ffIoe. and. PlaIt Boys are trained kJ. editing.. ugees interest-free loans, food, LOWElL. MASS. clothing and transportation. It writing, linotyping composition, LIVERPOOL (NC) More will also help with job place- layout, bookbinding, printing, JOSEPH M •. F_DONAGHY ~LoweJI thaD 400 architects aU over ·the ment and recreation. Spiritual and other technical phases of owner/mgr. world entered designs for a new assistance for Catholic refugees publishing. . . 1-i38a aM ex. 142 Campbell St. Liverpool cathedral in a contest will also be arranged. The Society of St. Paul was. New Bedford,. Mass. sponsored by Archbishop John In South Africa, the AmericaA founded in 1914 by the Very Amr:f.ttaq· PIa* Heenan of Liverpool. ' . Bishops' I!e.lTef agency wOJr\ts: in. Rev. James', Albe1l'ione,. S.T .D. WYman 9-6792 BOSTON' The Archbishop and two fel- conjunction with the South There are Pauline foundations HEADQUARTERS FOR lows of the Royal Institute of A&fcan, :Bishops' Conference. fu. 22 countries inclWing five OCEANPORT, N. l. COLONIAL AND British Architects are expected South Africa is badly in need of houses in the United: States-.. 'AWTUCKEr., It. L TRADtTrONAL FURNITURE to spend the rest of August Lawrence's father is weD: immigrants, and is making great judging the entries. darts to- maKe the refugees feel known for his work in CombatThe winning architec't will re- at home. The national govern- ting Communism. He provided eelve a prize of $14,000, plus the ment. .and local agencies are the FBI with valuable assistance standard architect's commission.. offering them accommodation, in the field and is active in proThe sign 01 Qualify. Second and third place winneal elothing. money and helP in duction of an anti-Communist will receive $8,400 and' $5,600'. radio program. . finding jobs. Archbishop Heenan specified: that the winning cathedral would have to be capable of construc- . tton within '10 years and would bave to, cost no more thaD. ,. Famous. Reading HARD. COAl. , ~. ~~n r~ $2,800,000. NEW ENGLAND COKE £S!§~~ '4f..I4....~

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MANCHESTER (NC) -,-Msgr. 'Ihoma,a S .• Hansbeny, Chancel-lOr of !the· Manchester dioceae.· ,. bas been elevated ,to the rank of domestic prelate with. the title. of Right Reverend Monsignor: Be was formerly assigned to the aational·center of the Confl'ateroily of 'Christian Doctrine in Washington before he was named, 1llancellor in 1953. ..

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaH River-Thurs.

Aug.

Furthers C· a.'u s e For Beatification Of Missionary

18. 1960

Must Know Bad, Good ·Points Of House Before R,emod~ling

MADRAS (NC) --:- TIM, cause for the beatificatiOll of Venerable Fatheli}08eph Vaz, Indian missi.ol1i'ry, to. Ceylon, has been furthered Dr the archbishop here. "," .

By Alice Bough Cahill "': ' . , ' Recently aJ:Labandoned garage in iovely ~id neigh bOl'hood' has ',had a .remarkable fac~ lifting, into"R charming, eomfortab.1e small home with great. eye~appeal.'Envious neighbors,say,",'Why couldn't we have s~n the possibilities,

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Archbishop Louis .MaihiaiJ, 'S.D.B., of Madras-:MyJapore hae called for a series of symposiurnf! and study group discussions C'!:the missionary priest's life' achievements. The discusl';ioM will coincide :with the 25(lth ari-niversary of Father Vaz's deaUa 'which faUs, on ,Jan. 16, 1001. '

why didn't we buy that 'each ~alve So the' confusion '~, place and remodel it 1" To an' emergency 'doeSn't·' invol.,., be truthful, unless one is more dollars: ':,' very knowledgeable' about Every day new.produota building materials, cost, and' stream into tile home:-huiiding' general r'~pair requirements, it industry. Before investing ,in is, wise to leave 'any 'of them, it is well to com.;. this to' the ex~ pare: them with' <*ier, time~ perts. ' tested'materials. It's folly to, :Also, in considering' these ma-' ~ovet the "land. terials' for' your remodeling ed gentry s t a t - j o b , you should explore' the efus" if you. do. fect they' will have on the cost not know such . .of remp.deling,' and, 'Of, . course,. fun. d a· ,m don't' forget - to 'investigate s· ea nr 'e' ,cost t a IS a of maintenance. . necessary to remodel an ,old You hear peoploe, say "paint , . t"0 Ii covers" a,m,ultitude of sins':' 'and ·property m , functioilal home there's no denying paint 'c;an do for (oday's living. wonders fOl' 'a-, remodeling job, , I've heard women exclaim how but paint was never meant to fill 'well a,prized; picture would holes 01' bridge cracks 'in walls look, in such ,spot and what a '(or .furniture).' B'efore painting nice size room they could ,have fill cracks in waiis ,with p.re- ' if they knocked down !l wall. 'pared, crack, fillers or spackling . ' RemOdeling a'nd, , deconiting. material' and r~pair with ,new home is'nof. 'just' a matter plas~ic ",;,o()d or .putty, " , ;'of putHri'g' up 'pidures or knock.,. . Bcimemi'ft 'FlUeI' ,

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Archbishop Mathias said that the cause of Father Vaz'ii! beine fostered' by Catholic' publica':. tions arid the 'peopl~ being . instruc~ed in the story OIl bi8' ,heroic 'deeds. P-IWa Father\ Vaz was' born i .n.~ ',India, in 1651. Followil\g his ~ dination to- the priesthood,be ' 'came to Ceylon disguised, as' a, laborer. In one' generation he 'brought over 70,000 soult! inM the Church. ' During the' 1956, Bombat Marian CC)ngress, Archbishop' Thomas' B. Cooray, O.M.I:,· of Colombo, Ceylo~; presented to the bishops forms for'ti'ie' beaU:' iidatioll 'cause (of Father Vaz. ;These' were forward'ed" to , the

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: There are s;ome .good gUt etI to follow when buymg a new Ol' an old 'housetO ,remodel. ~any . new homeS contain both' familiar 'materials, 'like' ceramic .tile on floors,an~. walls of bathrooms, and such' innovations .. wallboard instea~ o~ plaster.' You must remember that you eannot arbitrarily drive picture

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UNIQUE' EVENT: Oyer 100 Holy .' "" 1here's 'atso"one'horiiernade fill;. . ,present their first' public' co~cert,Jit'."Sa~re~,He~rt 'Au:dt~:Open ,Ne~ Buil'di.ngs ' been,assurcu A..J·n t ., ,. ' L ' d . -. d P' St' t 3,. S unay~·,A.t d er, th a t ·weve' ,WI ,',' 'OflUm,m en an . me' ree t s,'F a'II R'lver, a· <;:01lege ,in ~nd~a ' " '. ,handle most problems A ',mix:' ',': ...... :', ",.. '" .- " ' ',' .'" '. "" ture"ofi;a'wduBt arl«glue'iS ~fte~o~m,Sept. 11. £eatu~l,ng, a 7~-member gl,e~. ~!~b. an~ = MADRAS (NC) - Vice.:.Pre'" cheap; readily a~ailable and will ' : ,3()-Plec~ orchestra; the prpgr~m o~fer ~lasslcf?" ,semi- , dent S: .R.adhakrishman ·of, In~ia .take 'stain or, paint."Use· SUCD' a e1assics; religious and contemporary selections. Tickets are 'ha~ ~fflclally' opened :the new mixture to fmoan'and 'screw . available at all Holy Union convents and will'als'o be sold. .bulldmgs of Stella Ma~ls Colleee. hole~'and smaH"crad~:!5'-'liWlld -at-the door. Left to right, standing, Sister Adrienrie Eli~e-" ,here. ." .";;,,,:' ,'.'. r-ebwld broken. edges. ...• , ..' '. ' . . ' ,.' ; . . . ' , ',Speakmg at the ceremony he " .',.. ".. ' . SIster AlbmaMarle, Sister John ElIzabeth ; seated" Sister'paid tribute to' the Frarici~aR . 'For the kitchen, natural-tln:J ' h'N 'ta S· t 'J 'A . " '. .' . .' fehed' w~ eabin~~ are 'top osep arl , ~' .IS er ame@ ~nes.· S~sters of Mary. and. ot~er reh:favorites. Birch is the most-used .. , ' " . . . ' , . , . , '. '.. . J,~10US congregahons WhICh co~ 'wood; 'followedl;)y.mahog~nY, . "C~mmu"'ty Receives American Postulants duct women's co~legse in IndHI. knotty pine, ash, maple, oak am.i ' :: WEST NEW.TON, (NC) - A -The community is the 'Donlin;', " Th4! .Vice-Prefiident a~ -. 'walnut, . , :.. . " ..: '. "eommunity of nuns,who combine ican Sisters" of Bethany, who , Maybe. you, ~', aff()l'd , ~,' t~e; co~teinplative ,life ' wit~ :ai!-were'in'!'ited to.the Bosto'n arch:' , "If, you dO not have .. mora; 'hire 'a builder an 'architect :;lnci-. ~chve apostolate has receIved, diocese by Richard Cardinal , values to guide you, it will lead a plann~ng. engineer to help YOll,' . j~ first Amedcan pQstulants. , 'C\lshin~! Archbishop of Bosion~ this country to chaQs •. ."

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hanging nails into 'wallboard choose your homesite· 01' remodel ~..._ _'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...- -'!' -...- - - - - - -. . you would plaster. Of course, as it a' bou~ . to f.it' y~ur : ~eed,s,but ,:., .'""" ; . ( , I ',v can, be ,done,: b!lt "y,Ou can pre- don't play" blindman'., bluff ,vent da!nage .t~. the wallboard around an older house." '. ", '. ) .', ,. if you will ask your' bui~der to That's a game f~ c:hUcitren<;, explain how tc) locate studs 'you must know bad as well (vel'ticlil timbers supporting tbe , 'as the good points of, construe", wallboard). tion about 'a hOWle before ~. ::.-. " .. I 1'-'1' . IIlve8~hl'a~CoM m~deling: . , ' ! ... l Many a homeowner,. h a ~ , ' . Ie learned a bitter 'lesson through Prelate Praises Ro an emergency: one should get' Of Catholic' Soldi~rs acquainted immediately with . SANTIAGO DE·CUBA.(NC).."..:· the location of the main water Archbishop Enrique Perez ser~ , ' shut-off valve. lintes of,Santiago.has paid, trib~~. Not knowin'g :.vhere this is.caD to the role of Catholic: soldiers result in co'sUy flooding be- in the,ove~·throw'of' FuIgencio :mt~:~:psd~s~dv.·~~~' p~~r:;~~~b~~~. Ba.tista's government near}y two .. 'years ~g(). , ' ' rival. ,Take this good hint:.....label· The' Archbishop spoke, at 'iii ,; New Mother Seton Film :,eeremony honoring Luis Mor'ales, . " , .,,' ,' former·' president-of the Oriente . Available to Clubs ' CatholicY,ouUi who was, lI;~lleCl ',. ~. ~. ~ , PITTSBURGH (~C) -'-:- A 45-: i~ April, 195tJ. He h6dbeeR', \' minute documentary', film hat! buried ~ Havanfi,imcJ, .b~::~y" been produ~d .on, the' life Of. ,waa ·now beil\f!: returnecL _ lU .. (, ..... Venerable Mother' Elizabeth nathre c).t,-. " ", ... . ' , . . ' , , " . ,':""Seton, foundress of .the Sister.s Speaking:Of. the ~g~ : '; 'of Ch~rity. in ~h~. un\~e~' States.~ eer, ,the At;chbispop .said: ',The film; may, be oetalned for. . ales d~ed fOl" the'Cuban Revolu,,' '. .: " ' .. ":': , , ;1 ',,' 'ClEAN PANS ¢L-=AN._W~LLS,.~, .. .:.: ", . .howing, to, ,cll)bs and orgal)iza"~ ·tlon;"whose' best eoilabQi.etonr.·,f . " ,tiom;, .lEom ,th~ }:la'dio~~eleyisio~ .', and>. ooldiel's, ,weft' ours.:-.,,· .. "",~' " .Walls, . stay- deoner, ~nd "brighter COpper,',~stai~len' ~~, aIUriJiri~~ Department,~Diocese,' C!f .Pit~.; .' '::, ... " '. .'.',':,.' ." .\.:: ", • ~kit:'g': "ten'sifs will no loriget ,~;,ger. '~, bu~gh, .111: ~oule,~atd .' o:'the·',:Unpr.$c~~fkf ll:trong :':. .need labori~~ ~~uring to AltU~th~r seton.~as ..b~rnin:io.ie~·:,At 'C.uban :·Pr·oc~ss,idn':·~;' .' .~':' ti?~re~v fit":,, ~PoS!t~ ~v~,your York in 1774: arid· 'married Wi11' , ; H~VAN.A:"{NCr~ An' ~ftpre';' ...., ~it~heft colOrL .,.. :" ",' , ..,..'."' A-~ . s~~ , Ham Seton' in ·119,t::He'died "la.;-.. ~dep.t~ throng'.ii~.'ther~te' '.. , 1803· after she :had' borne hfm:'" 'Of thi.' year'.',' procesSion"".'" ClEAN'.PO.TS ~', 'five .children.. 'In 'fa05 '}\fother'" ~Cri~ 'lie,' r.i~p_·.iti 'thMl'fta';'~" : 'ClEAN' CURTAINS', i , Seton 'entered' :'the' ',Cath6lic' tjon's cJlpitat" " .' . ' '. ': . . .Curt~i*, stOy bright:~., spark~. UN .the ~white gloVet test" to~, Church. She fou~ed the. U,S. ",Present'at:tbe ,eereM~ ;·fo, "Iettric ,cOoking-'is '.ho.~' :'~ge,:fr" you..; pots ~i~": , ~isteril : ()f C!lii~ity :i"n ;1809' - at, 'the' ~po8t()lie" NUrldo{' A~ch: ':' 'r' ' 'Eri'imitsbui'g,~ .Md.- 'SM, die!oi ia • bishop L.uigi Ceiiroz. ,o.rieof the eleCtric light,:'; ,.-.' ,~ " J 'remain" .' ,', " : ' . ' ..'(. "." , ~

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Members of St. Pius X Women's Guild, South Yarmoutli, willspon~or a public :ltal~lIl! spagqetti supper from 5 toT· tonight ill the church hall,. Station' .A,venue. , Mrs. William F.' MacDonald is general 'chairman ::with .Mr: and Mrs. Joseph Petrillo and Mr. and·, Mrs. ·JosepK petrilloJl'.,.a~inc 86 chef&.

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TtfE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 18, 1960

Superiors Must Foster Love

-G~J':' aged 14, Is her liu~. columnist. rot- this Week. . "'. ' " By Virginia Daly " " , ~ah morning 1 decided to do something "special." But . w~t! ~ a.te breakfast, did my cho~ then tried. to think I.

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way. J hate to, Iron., I went Upstairs and decided to clean l"OGm. I walked to the. ' , ekmet:mnd found it neari, ''Snow. snOW', snow, snow.

18,

love fur the DlUlS' under tbeiP care-. AuxililW]P Bishop 1. Carron DOt!' - , McCormick l) £ Philadelphia, , In tbe basement I made 1I Bishop-Designate of Altoonal'eS01ution-not to iron my own' Johnstown, Pa>., said that when elothe~ first. After. an hoWl' r such loving concern is lacking. e wirole' community suffer.~ III whole batcli of ironed elotl'les. and put them in the and the Sister\l"will come to reo-:Jgl\tfulclosets. " " gard: themselves, as ro man,. On'C~ more r trudged d'own'the' parts oil' 1m impersonal bureau... slowly,' the thought· of '! cracy. ' irop~p.ff. 'f~ tl~at stuffY basement ' Bishop> McCormick spoke at was: repelling. r stalled, then. ~he formal opening of the eightll Ironed enough Of my things to I'..ast 100 '; ~ , a~nua1- Institute of Spirituality '~'by, .then decided' to clean I in Sacr:ed Heart Church here. 'my wallet. Upon, opening it r' A couple of graduation i n : v t . . ' ,,'I - The. tlreme of the institute, held 'fuund 11 letter- from my. friend tations,. Pat's from, CU and· " ~"J at tne University of N{)tre Dame M:Il:'I'li', 'Who lives: in Arizona'. Johnny's from GeorgetOwn1. Ah! ' v'l was"TlleSuperior and the ComMarni wanted 11 picture, of me. Something' that should' ,be ' J?onGQb'dl of the Religious ComWhere would I get a picture of fram~: 3' spelling paper'of mine m.unlt~." ' myself? Sure ..• Mom's drawem'. when r was in the second grade. Monumeow ...... He told' the superiors that Dad and Mom wer e. It was probably the: ....... ,~-"': 100 I WU~11l married she got a: vanity' dres-ever received.. B,E,A.'DY,F.OR RID.E.: Sally Sm.itb of Ne'w Bedford' Wl·th ~you may leave behind a dozea ~~ • WJi o~'e' dra=A" DO:' M t r' d k __ wi...., S'" -, set' Next was- 81 pictur.e of' Eileen/s' pon ' magnificent. buildings as, mon·~ d"8'Wer aside foC little daughter Mary at ~ bidhday Y' c __ IS~'V'l anB Wlcer ca,·rt Chlld1l'tm win ride'in at. S"-..., , ..... ~ 'r' ' J ' f th WU' ~nts: to your executive abilit"', "'hat dra~er'. ·t-, ......w pvt,. 'i"hell"' she was one., last 0 ~~, lla' az"""" at S.out1., ,...,..tm"""'~l... " J , ::::;;:. . .. 0'~w·.. l.ng 'E'v IO~ ...;;;_, year. '1'fre~e were 10,tlt of' pi'c, - .'" ,. c U! ..IJ4« ..vulll~.. , b.ut they. will not be Ilearly 10 ,,;ou .lit . ,. ~, ...."" ., _..... , i m p O r t a n t ' as. leaving behm' d a ind tion _~~ .~me,thOmg, speci a 1 happens. tureS' ,of me. Youo'should' see " 1'1 VO ,J-'~1Ji C :00 'US SOn. rep,u4l ,' f~ be motherl, . .__ CD~ ..~- lIOnIe' of them---.but 1 ......- ess Mom ' , ," t .-...u> _,,: be ~~.. _....- 'o'nenfn.. .. ... U<:Oo superiof','o'~ dFa.weI1 It, crack and slippinlf;,l~~ tl'l!lUgltt I, was cute.., ' , ' ~y's, The,. Bishop' declared,: that 'l:i::::;. tr r~ The drawer' wa.' s neari':" ty' I' ........ • ;~"''''''';'I'. "I' some" little.~u. . Jo '"""'t:oTFIEI"'" 'OoTr< I ' . ' , • -1 • •, superIor must not allow tile Treasure' Drawer' . now, CarCIS. from Daddy. 'And on:=>, ~~' (n~~~Feel tiedi .. , Compared-OO-.other modes of· detail '<Jf lld' . t t' and. , ,'Now the drawer is filled with Bnothel' "treasure,n 'a letter w.'. do.WIl! with\ the' ,There's'flo, wavel, ,-It,.was. cheap. Plane'",.;....· ,othe,rsp:re;'ing' her c .... th t' M! ..:. need to" ~cordi'!'1g" to Mr. ~,.l.".' V" ~'" ..., areh' 'treasure.. ~,IQcklr o£. hail'; 'j"GraOOrua'" .' ,~,,~,'" ,s ,> 0Ill-,-uom· M ~ > "'" tqii:ll' fare' In Visit Nrt. 'CaffreY"&; s.n~ritual children. of .the "atpictur,esj report cards, ,diplom~ . ,her gran;dchlld:J;.u. Anne,thank-, rs. Johrn' -Caffrey ,of' All.)U- " 11-,_ ir ' , " .,,' • • or ~ t' (' th spiritual com"... . Ing th.e present. on her querqlie,' N.M. And, fueyLve. "''!iro:wie ·,Jersey.n lpn,. and at Mary -vent"" b t"'d T' p,,{Woo. it to' - lot of ""epti'cs '~"l"" ,h"~"". ........., n ... Ii'b'ti"" .~ayt: Jler ltttle. famtlyat Naza.. positions'" and' scllool papers( '~. .. 11' "ay. ~U' Ariite' ' ~ .' ' '. ,,., .' ..' ' ' ' ,-~ '" ", "' •. ~ .",~n. .. ~q, I 1 'Ire. 'reth'O' ", poems; invitatiollS'. , pJ:'Mrams" ,wnies-..,better than I' did' when'I du.rnng" a . tflp", t~at". wilen COll1- '. N;OI. carr wonlg; ~Qmmodate' the " '. ',' .' Stuff like tpat. TIHs> " " ' , ..' pleted', have covered ·fllmi;ly.,.AI!d! It trailer was ResponsibUttte. Is Wh.ete I caine to.finci a pictIJ piCKed up' off the floor the .,500 . . , ' , ". GUt tl'te bel;ausemQst wggested that some o1.tbe re ,Of. myself. i pulled the drawem' thmgs I had dropped~Wavel The- Caffreys; have made the state la-w;t don't permit occ::u.... . 8Uperioo'~ responsibilities caD pari. way out. It. creaked', and! folders. anda. couple of'menUs,..:..:. tFip with> their nine children "pancy while the trailer ja, mov- be delegated to oth~I'Bj "but she iuooned~ gave way a little to and went back to my pile to. who range in: age from ni~ ing. . can never delegate her 'duty to ftWeal complete' chaosl e~~ a picture 1:10 send" to . months to 13 years. So,' Mr. Caffreysai'd the' bile act as: mather of her oom., lIe e. was. my something; . Marn:r. The rigors of cross, eountry was t.?e "lo~cal ans~~r." '. munity/' ~~ said. r -special" to do. Clean up ttiis . N~ ,one was appropriate. bravEd dhi'n't even keep the He fixed It up With ~ camP The rehg)ous superior, Bishop MeSS. Both Mom and 'I would BeSIdes; r couldn't' sendi one of Caffrey clan from continuing stov: and ice chest, ~~t~r stor- McCormick saict:, must. be an ex'bene£it. So 1 pulled. ',the' whole Mam.'iJ "treasui'es" to, an out- ,thel£' custom', of reciting ~he' age Jop" lavatory facihtles, foot ample to the Sisters In' the obdrawer out and' set it: on' tile bed. ~t'. ti family Rosary daily. The CafflockerS! ~ counter top, sleeping servance of the Holy Rule. "Si'" Theft r picked up: the ovElllflow. flus r put, the things .back ift rey key to long; distance trav;el spaee; fO'I(j:tnlt tables and other' must treat each member Gf the I d8eic;led to give everyone his ~. d1l'a:weu I thougllt of tile ia:' at 194'6 snh'ool bus which Mr. device.. . . ' , . . community as: a cherished memOWI1 pHIe', It section for report ~~ng. le1llt to: do. W~. back Caffrey bought f()r $100 espec.-' . "chHtlrenoiU'e- n<it tIre hand"';' beF; she must! have an underand! honor cardS, and It pile for to lfj,.W'lllhl not much, to sl\ow for ially for this trip. Another $300J' ~ 'some people make' them' out· ~ndirig heart; she' must exerthings addressed to Dad' and me time spent but a clean d~aw'- in repairs; and reno~ationll to be','" Mil. ClHfrey·· de'clared. cise paiienee; • must be Mom. .. 01'. 1I few memo~i~ .aDd' II 'Couplet,urned the. ~us into. a "mobiie ,,~c'We"~ fdU'tldf that if we do wiiat' , "·}Jumble,..... On top' were' pictures: of' grand- ott ~' . hotel" fOt't.:' requil1edl 'of' tSj0 QUI' Lord,'" .

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bellG\and heal'ts. Next: were 'two ~" . net' degree. she' is the only Yell1:S, Al'rel!dy> on Uie' agenda< is· Bedforol', "by Msgr. Noon Circle fat bV of r~ Ilair'.tbat, had ,',' ~.;.p~aYll~g nun litera'lly> woman of'tl'le six trombonists 8>1.,7,OQ~ll\ile-rQul1dtripjauntto" o! St.Jamea. ChulSch. A large aids beel1l,'Markie's', pigtails. ;l'hen' ;;~roU'gnt Ute house down" with in! tl'te',Notre'Dame',band~ , '~.Ang~les' J1~t"stlUU)1er. ,":,,,, committee is· assisting hel". abo~t.10' pictures of Mally.. all tt~ impr~mptu music recit~ at '90I:)C=<x~o~:=.cX>::~<:':=P'=<~~loC:lC~::::loJ::X:X:liCOC'<::XXK:~O=-C:XKK:IIO~::XX:lCloC« to. the same' pose-when she., ~~ Joseph's High School here. 11 WaG: the Blessed Mother in a . play. ,Sister M. Josetta, who received N~ old report cards--Pat's' II master's degree in music from and Johnny's. An honor ~ard' for ' ate U'lliv~sity of Notre Dame, Eileel1l ~he~ she was' iIi ,grade , wqn the complete admiration of three: Markle seemed to bfl~e, ,the boys and girls at the Summer thought the h.~nor.,llystem_!\,~ll,.~sehbOfJ musk class at St. Jos!rigged'. S~e, SlUii so qn the, back eph's' ' 01. Eileen's cherished. card. " ., ., . A: tbanksglvittg :&i1d~~. of, '. ,~xplammg her oorprise VlSit JOhnny's when he was in 'fifth'" to the Summer school classj Fade. Sister Josetta sai~ that "I've al\ .. ,'..:. , Why does Mom keep 9UclJi ways' liked, p]aymg for youngthings? stern be<;ause it gives ~e .an: A couple of spiritual bOl1qu~t&. . ...op,p~rt'!nlty ~o perhaps mS~)1re afso a poem, from Mary' when just, one .pupll ~o. work a little' I..... ."'lil\e 'Wall 'in' the third grillfe~"" ~ 1.' bar~~tr)wlth an,:ms.~ent."~, ," • .Priotr to the' high school reci-, .'" llS .' Mir,nesotd Nuns' 'Meet .' tal.' Sister J osetta gave' Ii' trom- ~ Prime Mihister bonee:chibition in 'Q'Shaughn... NEW DELHI (N~.)-A gro~ ,," e~sy" l!all on the Notre Dame' ~ cd' Benedictine nuns from MinnecampUll, :before a packed house. .,' " sota . had' a 30-minute meetinII Th~ reclta~ was one of t~e re-. with . I~dia's. Prim~ Mini~ter ~:~ments fo1' her master s deNehru: lIl1. UtiS, Inliian . : CapItaL ..'" ,,' ." while on a tour' of 'indian educaSIster Josetta, one of the few • tional :and scientific ,institutions\ "trom:bol'le'-playjnlf n~ ,the uni.,.. The nuns members of. the faeversHy has ever seen, spent her ,-"~to ;':,',:1 .'.:;l." )';;) ;.:~~),.., :I'.J. " ,j!' ,< •• '" ~ oJ.', "'f' " aIty of the'College of St. Bene- ." bIlit"!"Sb; Summerfl working "Otl''. ," ~., ·.~n\t,:. 'c( J~.~,~c;Jci~ ~f~~, ,$i$~et' J'~Yst ,(~te cIrot, St. Joseph, Minn~. w~ ~petl and say, :"I/m~ :~.;.,J:M:'~,nd~~'~":'" ~ . ~.,' -,' , 1 . ' ,. ' " ~J.' Mary Grell. Chairman of . R. A., WILCOX CO. : ~ .: '!. <,'. ", ; _' . . . . r,."I-t,., .: ;.~'; i~;· .. ~:· :., '.'~., cae Biology Department; Siste#· ':' OfPfCf, ,FUltN.tTURE., ,'.' ;', " CIse 2GG' yard ball' of:WHlT!'CrOChet oOttoA;;.;..,.X.mwican"{Star})'PUt'1!JlIfti,8ed~~ ..J'eremy Hall, 'P'rofessor'of SoC!6Iloof 1 • fourr'. ply. I 0 'ti"~\'.·'-:'~.~'~ ',;;: .1f"' .•~. , : ' . l',~r .';:,i'."j·1 :~, '~'~,.':"';.'\ ~f I,; .. tModr. hr l_echMe DenT" OIlY; and Sister Joanna Becker. Aieademic Dean and lecturer ill • DESKS • CHAIRS " ,r:<:,,; kntt;-lJ5e ~~. 1 (if ~r1itJ~)',.~, S (if kn~.ti9.ht, ~ needt\Hfl CCHt ~"io ~..itch.s Ai'tat ~h~. :Benedictine' IDStitu,...·: "GIftd. knit eoCfl' row ~ipping,. fif'fl at itch- ,CIIf ~~~ r~~.Use.-l!In1'il"e.' baN. ' . " ,nl"'~ ~A~:" . OlIl"Sa'cred' Theology:" .' , , , ., ... • FIRE FILES' . .' SAlIS To crochet- Use No... erochet· ~; malt. cham' of,. n It~ ~ ~ single 1m ROme, th:e Benedictine nWlS POlDING TABUS wochet next row. Repeat, and. " " entire' baa were received in audience by AND CHAIRS Pope John. The nun8l stayed all, ....... MftCIi to·-· ft("loW! missionarY order houses' A~ W1LCOX',CO~ while.' on their trlp~ They visited Propag~tio~ of ~~itft.. 368' Maift St., ~anRiver. Cairo, 'Egypt, Poona, Patna and , . 22.8EDFORD $T. , Oalcutta\ India. Bangkok. nat- " "'AU" RIVER' 5-7838'·: land, asd HongkOfi&,

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NEW. YORI{-:. !(NP) .. The /'1itary Ordin~riate, whlcli.)'ias :ttie United Service Organizations,spiritual care .of Catholics· with' made an appeal 'l1ete'''for in"-', tli~U. S, Arm~d'F:of<:el!, and·Rev.. .er~ased· support of its 6versea~, .. :Qr. Marion "Creeg&;executlve' programs'by churches and syna':: secretary, General Commission " 'gogues throug·hout· the United . of.' Chaplains; . National .. Council States. i{, .'. . .of Churches-had recently. com_ · The USO. is a' federation of' pleted a visit to overseas instalsix vol h t a ryorganizations lations with Msgc. (Maj. Gen) through which the American Terence P.. Finnegan, chief of people allsist in serving the reli- Air Force chaplains. gious, s'piritual, social, welfare, Chaplain David Eichhorn rep_ ·recreational and educational '. re3ented Rabbi Morris Lieberneeds of the men and women in man of Baltimore, Md., former the U.·S. Armed Forces. chairman of' the Jewish Chap_ At a presscpnference held laincy, Jewish. WeifareBoard, under the auspices of the New who also accompanied Chaplain Yorj!: USO' Committee, the reliFinnegan overseas but was ungious and spiritual aspects of able to attend the' press conferPSO's wqr k were' emphasized,. ' ence here. and its teamwork ,with chaplains".. .

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ADDRESSO 1200 SISTER ~UPERIO.RS: -Most Rev. J. Car.r61~ McCormic~, (aee.~n4 . YOUngest hi His~ry' . ]~ft), ,Auxiliary 'Bishop of Philadelphia and ·Bishop-designate .of :-A:ltQOna-Johnst9.Wn, . It was pointed'ol1t'that'tt\e .. ~ ". .... Pa., was the opening speaker at the eighth a.rmual Institute of. ~pirituality at. the Uni2,500;000 'ttieil' and wom~ii·serv.,;,·' :"'SPRINGFIELD .(N<::) - The veraity of Notre Dame. Other participants were (left, to right) .. :Sis·ter,·,Jeanne Mari6\ .ng in tti(:u', S:. Aflri~"F.~r~~:l·,p.r.esi~ent of a Catholic temp~r:-:' '. S; • M' . M E h' S ' S ' M' 0.,' today . constitute the lai'ge~ .ance ~society .has 'lab~I~..~alcQ-: If·S.q.P", eat~~e, other " uc arl~~, C,. .J., St. LqUJS; /; ister' .. < 'Gerald, 9:S: . ~acet~r.n~, mili.tary· orga.nization:'·. holism "the greatest health prOO'- . 'Notre Da~e; an~ Fa.the,,: Rober~ ,Pelton,. p, S.P:, ~}lefld ,of ~o.~re,J;>'am~'.s'.t}(~logy.dep~i.t­ in U. S. ·histOry';. that. th.e Cold: 'blem in. Western civilization:' . ;'merit. Twelve '.hundred sister au~ri~rs of. r.eligious. h~use~ atten<;le<t NC Photo; ;

Alcoholism H' a'I'th Pr'oblem

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. Msgr.John W:- Keough; ·presi-.· .. .. . .' .. . ' . dent 'of 'the.Catholic Total Ab..... 0.' s.' membels under. 25 and many lrJ, stinence. Umonof America, says,. . ,,,' . the 18. a~d .20 year-o~d grol!-p; . "there are not·e.nough physicians· p' !rat, til spite Qf: the.I~. you~h, in the United States to care.for. . .~. . . · they are ..tp.e most "!a.r[.,e;~ .m.II-.i , ."the ,present', a;5QO:Qag.· alcoholi~8' .F. ·LI.MA. (NC) ' - . A ~ucc~ssf)JI A "I~ replr, FaP1er .VerJh~v:ea i.tary force til o~r 111StOlY '.":'"th, and" roblem drinkers." . '. . . . . . . ";.. catech~hcal progrl\m hlgh.l,n the . explainedJbe,brQ~<l,.pt!l.n '1~f ,the. ~ total of"'3,250;000' depi:m'd.ents:;:·., · .. 'W ASHINGTO~.(NC).----,All. Peruvla~Andes may soon be 'Peruvian catechetical system. It It was algb'pointed outthat the. ' . Almost 1,2oo,~.n~~,alcoijohcs, l . ,ua 1 IT d'" t d t hTI be put to worK iii the", Philippines, consists in' a centra'lly located .11. S ..Depar'tr'rient. of Defert~~ 'flas' . arl!"'iidded daily: ·t9 the 'number,.' 91 Ie .. 8. U en s. a., ou < " than]{s..to ~he worldwiQe Catho-, catechetical sch66( 'which~traln; asked USO'to increaire 'a;lo 'ex';;' . ail"average l of"50 per"hour,!;'!~be 1". able" to.: .fmance a colleg~ . Indians afe"now b-e'ing"'reaChed pand its"'seivices' 'especia'Uy.J 'added: .,'",. .' . i:, -'i' '\ : education today .beeauae'.of FathetJdseph't Stoffel, S:J.;:· 'in 'this faS'hion':and 'ilieidea'b8i · 'overseas, .Jwllere so~e "-11,125,000: ," ,I;1~ti'ng tI:\~$ alcohplism i.~. bl;l~. < aVailable"~*tensive.aidrthe 'sec:' , a .. : missioner ; \( in ) !~ Malaybalay,- . 'sprea'd intO B6livh{ \' .,.: ... personnel 'are .now assigned:' ."'- . ,.~aUY".a . :rn.()ral .,p'ro~lerry,-,M~,g~".: ,!?''1P ,;}nru~l; ~'Official .. Guide:t~ .;auki~~()n.}~hilippi~s,·not~ced \v~ki~ th~ pastor~ 'of)~ · R.eprestiilt"j,'hree Faiths ... '.,,;. K.e:qu,g.·b s.aid'. 'that the ;·alc6h.olic . CatholIc,., Educationat' Institu- references In Catholic ,·puj:>hca,.. . .. . . '. h' h) .' ,-,,' . , , 'hear, , d"'" is' I '" "oblge I' d ."QT.l!:VOI,1·:·p~rso!).s,.,·".lti.on!,' t 'd' " th')eca..ec , .': h ehca .' 1" wor k 0 f'" varIOus pans ~s w 0 .... -The conference' here claims , ' . ", :. -tlOns.to l' C'h"ts t th ay.~0 of · c~ergymeri"~~.prese~tillg· .~, ~.~ ~~, p'l~~~fa.n(Lth"ihgli t?a:t·:;~o~.t!,~~",:> ..'fT O,d,' a y',. ',·hi.'g.her. ·ed~catio.'Ji Fath~r Thoma's W.. Vei'hoev'~~,' ,na we ca ~".IS a e r~, . . . dlff.erent tll'It~s praise t.he ..w'?,rk . t.:e?.. ).~~~ to the .-moral' ~.,:gr~d.~-., costs more·-tha'ri ever before'~out " M.M.,.. among. the Peruviab' In-:· '}fi"~~i~~~.e;r:~:a~~c:~~~"a:= done byt1,SOforU,~~miIita'ry:' Jion,j:i>farcoti,olism.'" ;' I• . > , '·s(;~rc~~·of"financial.aidcfo'stu..'···,dians;. ,),).,: ". " ....; "'I I , .. pe'rsonnel 'o'Vei·seas. ., ": .. "~",,, '.-:' Hf,!,~ empnaS'i-zed "the" Catholic' '. d~nis' 'are"more' numerous and ;;~There seemed to be ~ ~il~jng .~,a~~: !.... : . · Two of fnem'.,-,..Msgr,·;J'oseph·F.: ehiirch:p6iJsesses in her moral "'Vliried' -than·'evet·before·'!.'siiys similarity between conditions·in After two years experienee iit Marbach, .chancellor of·the Mil-:. 'code' and sa'er'aments' the most'" the ·'·guiae· in 'an' iiltroductoi'y ,.the Philippin,es and those in the field they return 'for a 're-" , . . . · · e f f e c t i v e program for the··rescUe·· artiCle',' "Financing '8 'College "Peru.' Father Stoffel wrote to fresher course, A small, seleet German StudentWins. of :the 'alcoholic:" " t . ' . E'ducation~" . . . . :F:ather Verhoeven .~ a fellow group of' head. catechists are Sc:hola~shi'p ot·C.U. .,... ::·"so extensive is ·this'aid that ~merican.- for more·informa,.. paid. a 'salary and super'vise the WASHINGTON (NC)-A GerCordlno t~ _ ~t. ~~ne. .~very year an estimateQ, "12 per I.on. . .. ' , work 'of the volunteers. man dramatic student who Bishop McCormick, " .,cent of it goes begging," rep~rts " In :c~~pa.rmg c~md~tlO~s m. ".,_...._ _,.... ..... learned English from' the U. S~ '. ". . '. . . the article irI its discussion of t,he . P~lllippme~ .and In ·Peru,' t ' ~ ·,Armed Forces'itadio nas'rec'eivel .' ALTOON~ (~C) - .BI.shop J~ the 1958'. National Def~nse Edu': Father. ~toff~l ~Id: ',"The' ":l~d-.. :ty'S 'ALL "IGHT "10 . , d h I ···h· 'f'" th' Carroll MeG:ormlCk Will be en-. cation Act schola'rships felern ·mlSSloner-s'. )Il' the" Phtlip-' ," , • rama sc 0 all, Ip 10m e 'th "d '" ''''fth Bishop' oJ , . ' • " "._ . d •., d' d . . SHOP· ARoUND FOIl' .pi·, .... Catholic~Universi't.y 'of' America" . r.ontl. aB, d1 .'. ' .. "~""lowstiips; .foundation' aid' and""pllles. -lI: uvJ;.f.1,m.sr.!i.",e .I~ v~~:.'.,< 'Old . , 'iiere: ~ :",j.;;. "'.: ~., ':;' ~.: '..::' ...;:~~:;~.A-lto~na-JQhnsto"'!.ri., ~n, a .:~p~\ ; :'othe~ :~orms of' financial' assist(; . tage. of n~· .~e}ng able ~Oi .pr~!lt,.f, ,,·SoMl' '~f - H 'st" ,,::ell' \:"" . ~ 41l.·ceremony .at".Blessed,:Sacra-. "ari'ce····· " ."1 '" "",." .. "'" r ' . '.by'what tPe "qld,,spaf)lsh ..mIS";., tJ-'" y' 1, ~ 0g~_ :~ti::-m.ef~'~t'~I.o~~~ rn~'·g'.re t'U~" ·.ment,esthe·dral bY.John Cardinal-:. 'T"h':;'" 'd' 'h" h'" '11 be'· ' "t' ."sioneFS'had,do·ne :becau~'" Of~'thel' ,. "'.~.:,:. . ,;.. ,:. '_.:.' Co-I,o..ne,lBJue,Jr." ... -!1,,'s _~.. ' ',~ . ·-:~SC 'ArChb'sho _ .01.,' ."egul e"w Ie. WI, sen~ t• • ~.,.o ~'" " ,:-0. ." ~., "~~.' dent selected for the' ~niVerslt.y's 0 H;aQI, ..G:! ~\:,,~,,;.:, ..,. ·'fr'ee.:of-charge to 40000' past0r's I ~bfl,l»t, .cu.ttmg",l?,ft. of",th~:$p~n~I"'o1 -' I • r, :. ~ew·. project··,: k.ri~n:·"~·a:~'....'the·" ,,,thh~·,H.hB,.. ah<;l~·I~MtPcaC' o"ramrf"hcdk',JOCs,e'v::red":-' "aiid 'schOQl!: .q~fi~ial~,l '}jlltS~' all: ,.; ~~le~l~el' Qa'9);a ~ ·..Amer1(;~n .JI\~ . " .' 1 ":"262~206 Rock' Stre4lt. 1 • <. PI ' PI 'H '., U 1!'iltl-u were IS Qp. ... ", . , . '·U··S C· h l ' 11 '. .' ,v8"lon In ..' ,',-- .. , o..~ ' ., ~y~~s' ... am: .~.. l~. 'c. ,I' .~... ,,' A''}' 'ry Bishop for i3·yei>'i~:,\· . ~ " at Q... ~C co; ~g~s· ,and,U1V",->· '" "1',,; s'" tiL', ··.X· ':· :". ~ "" ... ,... . .'Filii . RiVeI'·.·· '. '1."·''enrolle4' "..m, ., Ithe , : univerSity'i· i . ~; .U~l}S. "<' .•..... ,; ....:<.. '''.: vel.'sitJes and) tbe, financial·.help" 0 ' " n.". o,H, .. OJ' ,',. ·Ql~rtcfh"·.) .:j:' ,"."~' ·";,,,.1, " ~U1l'iin'~r program,." ""~'" , .....,'. "'Blshop ,~<;C~rnllc~"., ~~, :"'~~·,-;·itieY'~oifer;•. ,;....,.,.,. . ".'" :: '.; ,~~rim:~~ . ~~1l~~!1'1 ..,!~~.1 .., .sl~w,I"y "".o:,r.···"··!!:!! PLACE t'D , A.ccol'diri~:to--' Father-- Gjlbert·:'·, ,n.amed, to su~cl*!,d ;Bl!t~O,P, :fi°l~;"<':'" : 'It al~o lists'schoOls ~f"hursing'" ,g .~~~ to;,~_...,!lah1t'r~n~t'Y)~·~bYJP: ..·'·.'.l .•.. IGET·'A·PR.·ESCRIPTIOH. J' l" H tk' OP d' t [th"" "~""ard"'J"'Ca~roll who died. a~ . . . ' miSSioners ave aomlra ~ •. ' . Fll~~D ..!. ~.I · !II' :t~; S· ". Ihrec °drDo. e'.u· Ill"' " . March', 2l:-afte~ ·.Ii ~r'i~f )I)~e~s::' "Se,~~fra'ries,,:,".tr.aini,~~"progr~mg"~pick~c!I:·· ~p!;"tl1e' '''riti'read''M versl Y s. ,peec an. rama De .~. ,.. ". .... . ' ' ' . ' ' sponsored by religIOUS orders t" "'t""" . ...·1 . "'" 1 ; . ' - ' ,> ... i~l .' . 'l lIlUI"Y." ·"II"'II.,........~ · artment ,,,r·th e pI' ogr a.m"lnc'1 u de' P . s .' ,.Bishop : /. . ' ..CarJ:oll "'. '.." . former., , ,. ...1g~l1ela~, C'. t'h" .. secondary e"v.·'e l--' c boardlng' "': .,,,.. . ....:.. , ..... " ,,",. . g'raduate .I s'tudy""l'n "~a'nla all'd" seer-etary .. a .- -.... ., . dIocesan .-' . . col';;'·~·;.l, .. " . , . ,~,.;r·;:;"',,,;':" ' . . ~ " ... ' , --"'. J'¥. . 'f'."""of·tOe·NatIona "......' .. " ....'.... ..' '.,,'.' sdiools teacher ". "'e."" ""'" ;-"""..-;.,,,~, .:.,. , '. professi'onal: em:p'loymel{t .' b v ' ; ' 0 Ie Welfare .., CQn.(er~nce,. ha(i.. .. .'... ";' ,.. ,' . . . ."". &.~ U.· .,-4........ . . Play.ers . iricoi;porated . the uni: been b'rdil1~ry''of'the AIt~.o;la.,·· ledgCS .' afnd. h'dlOclesan superIn~en"" ""'.~ i '\";~~::/:::;'= . ,. .' J to 'd' .' J 'J en t s 0 sc 00 s, , . I • . II .versity's touring "company.. ohns wn.." weese lllllce aft.... ONE STOP .• ' .:·Mr. Vollmer, who attended the 1958.. .' . . Dioc~sanPri.,st. $ Plan.' SHOPPlNG'CC:NTR Universities of Freiburg, Munich . As Bishop of . Alt.()()na-Jo~~s-. . -==-:-... and-.Cologne caine to the United town, the prelate· Will be SPlflt-. Centenary in. 196~ , states 'unde; a Fulbright Schol- ualhead of alm'ost 150,000 Cath:,ROME '(NC) - The Apostolic' . • TelevlsioD .• • Appliances .~'. Gr~~~J' arship atte'nd Brandeis Uni- olics in. a total populatiC?n 01.' Union of Secular. Priests will .' verSity. 'Ipstead'-he 'entered the "-more· than,6oo,00Q. The ~locese..celebrate the' ceiltenarr of 'its . ·let. Allen. St•• New B8dfel'tl ':players' If!an com~titioo.;,.-; .:" occupit;s 6?~47.. ~uare.mll~; , . foundation:' 'witha' worJd.... coi\..:',,,· .,.' .J WYmaa'1-9354', Wa~ .milital:y, force is. the young-

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PHILA~EtPHIA(N6)-',\

"Bars ;"Marriage

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World i. War II military . . leader dte~. a comparison W'ASHrNGTON (NQ) _ between ~ dedicated, d i s c i - T h e State Depattment hopes pJined Soviet society and Amerithe' Italian government will cans who 'remain pa~sive' participants in international life, take speedy action to clear. Gen, Alfred M, Gl'Uenther, up a snarl which currently bars now president of the American' U. S, 'citizens from marrying in Red Cross, speaking before 650 Italy, delegates at the three-day ] 8th AllynC. Donaldson, director biennial convention of the Naof the Office' of ~pecial Consular tional Catholic Laymen's ReServices, says the department treat Conference warned if this' would like "to see the Italian country does not come to the aid Foreign Office' move quickly" of the underdeveloped nations of to overcome legal restrictions the world in their growing pains, blocking such marriages. He de"we've had ,it." clared the U, S. embassy in Rome CliRlax of Efforts has been .instructed to try to work out a mutually satisfactory "No matter ,how many mlsunderstandillgon'the 'issue with siles we i~!"l, l?ut intQ the sky, with the 'Italian -Foreign Office. the problems· we face in the . ." , world wili ~hever be solved by . . Policy Change . . military aCi1k>'n rHone,'" . Since eariy Jhbe U,S. ~itizene His des~ipti6n' of Soviet· so-. • "in" Italy have. been .unable· to . eiety was' .based 'on a 'recent . , . m:l'rry' either non~itizens or other h d of t"he· '. NAYAHO RUG' FOR'PAPAL'DEtEGATE: ·Tw. 0 N.avaho .Indians 'P.'resent'anativeAinedcans:'·' .. . ff ' ' I ·t· . ~~~~can~~~cf~~ro::~ the Gen- Na~"ah'o' ruk'tt> Archbi~hop' Egidio VagnQ~~i,APOstolic. belekat~ to the" UnltE~d:States, "Immediate cause 'o.f the sn~,a ral said, . , . , ..' .. is State Depart~ent 'order for';' e during' his visit to their r~8~rvatlon.' Left to tight: Alyce Kellywood, the Papal Delegate, bidding its consular officials iii. He expressed for a Bishop· Bernard T., Espelage, .0..F,M;, of G.allup, N.M., ,in whose dioCese the entire tribe Ita I ., th II: . eivilization basec;l concern on fashioning . y f rom 'Issumg . e ,.·IJU.". a youth "from the' ground' up," of 85,000 '~ndian8live and Rosalie Kelly-wool. NC Photo. ' osla" as proof in marriages 'i~ , volving Americans, He told how a youth progresses ' ~I' U. S, consular officials in Italy, , have been told to' cease .. where he ltiigHt'be selected' for'· . , ,.. , " ' , ' , -" ' issuing the. "IlUlla osta'.' because·' the Comn\imi'St"party; ",. . •.. , .. " I. "there·had.'t>een iOo'm<\ny com.; I', ",.: ,,', '.... ." .:f·:··,". , ' \ ' , " ",', . :.' ." plaint!! or !ra~d~~e!lt 1l)arriag~, .Mo~,,;r,.N,o~ EnoU«h. " . LONDON (NC)~There are 'no';,v about 71 000.' Catholic students. in "the universitiesI' of:, . .under this "pro~e~ure. We don't ' Gen, q,r,,-;,er.tp,er. said tbe~e Engl~nd and Wales. It. iA, expeetedthat:'lO :years, hence the 'number· will ·be at least 'w,ant!o be.unwlttmgly aq acces- .. are 8,500,,<mP,"w~m~ers ,of. th~ . ' l , . ' . '.' ,r,. "'. .,.. ., ... ,... sory to a Jraud he .c9mm~nted. Communist par.ty in tl:i~ Sovie~" d,Q~,bJed, yet.a·decade.ago there "were only·4,500.\These:flgures IllustrMe a rapid 'expaJi:'" Mr, Dori'aIdso~ said the State Union, The party is hel~ up to ~,~?!1, ,in the' number of university ~tudellts"~eIier~H~<,'l'~ere'has peenan'~~QrJilo~sinc.reas~:pep~'~;tment ~qp,,:s th,~. Italian' the peopleolas tHe'Climax of their: ~in~e.,World War 'II, out the· . , ' , . "" " , . 01.' , . . . . . . , .. ..,.. ". '. governme'3t,,~l~l npw slrrply.r~ efforts, he" obse.rv'ed; aarling, . ' . · f . t' . '.' ." " : also because .the Cathohc popu- . MeanwhIle, several !mpottflnt turn to the procediJre it £pllowed "This way' 16li 'create a' verY' : nu.m?ero., ,Ca~.l:IO]~C stu~~n,t~",. la.tion: a~ a,., wQ.Qle ,js increasing" announce~~~ts':'~bou( Cilt,~,oli~ .' ,be'forf, 195( f~", U'. 'citi~en~ formidable" lrocieW" . -', ~h.ou.~h stIll, a,small mmorl,,:,~',E,r!h!;' In, England i a,Qd, W,ales· chai)la'incies to' the un~y.ers~tie~: '.lJee~drig to, Marr3!:: in,.Italy, Pr.ior Discussi'i1g ei\tholic participa:':" ty, 11:1. growmg faster than registered. ,.as Cathoh(;, .axe· '·at,( h.' , .. b' .' d ' t. to that year Amencans. made , , 10 , t el'na t'lona I J't ' ,"', . esent 13 ave e~ ,.tna e. )n ,recen th'elr ,. represen4~19ns ;' .' hon ln I e, G en. the generalt6faL' ,,, ',..,."." ...... ". .pr, . ,.,per. '. cellt of the of,freedom GI'uenther said "not once in .my . ,, ., .., natIOnal total. Only a :few years months, From, the. UmversltJes to marry directly to the Italin~ . . Tl'lIS'sltuatlOn has been exam. . .. t ' , , . " '"":' six years at SHAPE .(Supreme. i ·ed·· t ' t " ears . b' th t 1" ago Jhey were 10 per cen .and of London, Liverpool, ManauthontIes Without OilY inter.;, Headquarters, Allied Powers in t'?' III ec ethn YN . y Ae,s a .l~- the statisticians say that py 1967, chester . and Bristol there has cession by U Scol1sulates : IClans Demographic 0f e ewman ssocla'h '11 b 17 b. eennews 0 f ' ch i" il. D onaldson ,. 1 Survey an • ey ·WI.. e, per .cen t . new' ap amcles. 'VIr, sia ted ' _ thiN E urope ) d I'd we. ever h ave a . tion's Catholic group come," He re:-. . " t' . h' h .. h' , It is likely that by· the end of, From the recently - founded pefore .1952 the Italian author':' fel'red to free' tours of the orgamza Ion W IC now as a, ....:_. t . , f'fth of '11 Unive't C 11 g of N th 't' d" '1 ' I • fulltime qualified staff, and has Wft: .. c~nur?, a,. 1 · , a. St ff r:~, - 0 t eKe I " ~r f ~ I~~?r m,arl y s.lmp y took the a eee NATO (North Atlantic Treaty put BI'itain w.ell to·the fOl'e.iri t~e umyerSlty students,·/I1 E~g~ .. adoh~ s IEre, a.· d , 10 h -to m IVlduals word that he was Organization)' facilities at RQC;" the new sCienee known inEu'; mnd .anc:t.Wales will:be. Cat~oh~ ~o~ s, Ire, ng l an j comes ~, a free t.o marry. ~e said. he ~ 'q_uet!,courft'fFran~, Gtrou.PB con-. rope &8 religious' soc'iology: . The pre~ntp:oI?OrtJ~n.vahr,lehs. In' ~s'm SOfmellwaYfsthet m ostst~trhl.kmgl· no rea.ston "WlhdY t,he ItalIan gov,:, SIS lOgo, rom SIX.. 0 . 1 OO ~ep-.... S u r v e y ' . , ' .. ~ver-y umv~rsltJ:'" but It'l~ 19 est· news.,o a -0· as u d e,? , cape· ern/TIen cou. not return to th~ sons made tqese \ours. . ... , ""TIl" 'sa,·, th t '01. 'the·,·)I\,theUn~y'erslty"of,,:Hl~e,HlC)ol; A!H~t, . IS to be shared Jomtly by.. system. ,,' "",.'. "" . , , . He ~i<.l, S:ath?Uc~. ~.". ()un~ 8U::~re"'i:,sEng~and"'and" ·w~e~;iti.s ~.«(pi! C~IJt,,~P!Pp~r~~, .. ~~~r0l.fcs, F:Arig~icahs a~d :F'~ee.· "~ Tn.e:im.pa~ has created ~ that by glv~ng to· the J.31~ho~. Y ' bP t.~ . 'th·.' g"''''f "'1'8' ',,,;wlth·the 'mitIonaL average of 8 .Ch!J.r~~men~wlth "allCOfttnb~.· "umental PToQlems, for .Fathell'. W a· Iet 'ef. F· d th ' .. ~ t ' . " t · e ...een e a es ... ," . "..... ".,- '..... '. '"'.1 I",., .· .. ... C unmngh~m, ' Re l I . un elr, ~r m ,m ~r-: :I "d l ' ''''19'''1-52';··'' ... ·t·h"· ,.,./ per.cent: .,' " .... ~',. ,.. ..: ,,,11 t'.I~~al'k I e'...,'r...'co".t .' "aines "C.S.P., ,r~~. ' Il'f h b""~ f l·flll d "an In iJ ,more j\n , . '...,,,,,.,, ",' '\"'" ,.'.>". , ...." .. > , '",,,,,,,>0 "'.. ... t . 'f"S t <::! , ' t ~a lOna . I e as ~n.. u ~ ... ': three: per cent' were' stuaerltsi'.:" ~': ".': • •~.P'OblelRll "., ";0,.,," .... :I':\:.ti;le Un~v~~sitr,:o~'Lo'l~:?n"a. '.cnt: '.0 ..an, a """'::"',Y'~ S.· t~ M9~~Y IS n.t enough, We.must. "but 6:1; youn'Catho!ics 111. that" ;~,. ,'" . , . ;., '."." "" ,».al·lsh·phurc'h ~lth Its aQdltlor~~.·. ,iAmer'ica~ ;,'. ~urch ,In,., ·,R~m~ partIclpatel:\ctively , as, part: of , :',. g'h ket g t tt. a t l' . .,},;.. t·,' ~,"'l\~ ,growt~. O!: the ,(!atliohc ..buildillgs 'has'be~n 'taken "over" ' ... ;Hller CUQl\lllgllillJl ",~ ... "li tJlCI'e o.ur citizellsbip responsil>il.i.iyl' athe rrac ... ' ~_ .. W "", !rnted"~ts.s . . · ~lt\ldent .populatIon "'lll!SCS' t'¥o :'for the·dth'o·uc·' ella'p.Iki'hcy' ..1,. , .• ~ .., : are; at',lea$t. ,50, couples ,seekind , . an~wop",r' ....,...1'1i ",.·e"u .ens. m~UOl:pro . blems,',th' ', '. ··1'11' ,-to,.. m'arl·Y ' at . , ~ he. declared r'. . I . epa","t"'1 or.. one .. '," . I n .. L' """"1 .i;'h' ~ 't'h'" ~T" '... ".. ".'. . ...... . , " ·Iverpoo w er", ere WI .. '.. . .hiS . . church w·h·o ..~·e ~ ',1 .. he gap 'IS narrowmg and tile O!-., deyelopmg the Ulllverslty ,... " ·1 . ,.". ,·'C·· .. ,· l'~" .. ,'" prevented ;(J:om doing·, so ae Find Famil...., Retreats' I.statistIcians 'say' t~~} i!1 10" years':;', ~haplaJncies"and:the 'in!-'ellectua! ·'l>e tilt, ea~~. ~,O?O, " ?~~OblC stu "; ',' things,sta~d ~ov:.,· '. ".'. o ,.. . " ' . • . ll , ... CathQlics will ,1l8ve l\chi~v.ed .. ~I:ta~le'lge they meet atlthe,uni-:" d..en,~,.n tue .l;l.I)l~e,~~lty Y197, l Are Best\..Vacahon ' . Pa,rjty. . .'.". ".' h , ' . • ' ""r "~~iiY.·' '. >.: ,. , . .. '. ) a ne~chaplam~y IS to ~e b~.dt,.. ~""""...._ _.............,;---....;,--.. EAST PAl'),j;~~O,N (NC) "'::":;' The Cat~lie proportion Of" :I(ls:the;~nd,:problem ttJat,· ~rl91~, ¥aIl~hestE!r.,,~tI~ ~~Ist~l Two familiesIW~~.Qm'the ,familYt' 'u'niversity,'students .is increasing is of· c;oncern to•. the G-a,!Jholie. . ~m;~bte do~aU.on~'~~:Vle,Jl1~de ,J~. , " " " •. : ... :. ..' ,'-' , . ,.'I~ life apostolat~\~~'St:. Leo'll parish.. >, '., . • '. , . " , : ' unjversity .teacher-s.:· wh~ will, pOSS,1 J~' to ??Il~ cha~" amcles. ~f\ here .combined a retl'~at w\th a. Report Castro Listing'; ~nvene from .Sept. 5 to 8 at st;: the uOlverslt~es t~e~~, , ~R vacatIon and had their best va• • . • . -Ioseph's· College, ,UpholhiQd, In the Umverslty College of I~,. cation ever. . MIlitant Catholics Lancashire, where the Arch-. ~rth Staffordshire's permanent The families are Mr, and Mrs. MERIDA' (N C) - Reliable );)ishop of Liverpool will receive chapel, which will take the place CITIES SERVICE James F. Colaianni and their sources in Merida - across the them and deliver an· address, Of II temporary hut, th~' Catholics, DISTRIBUTORS five children and Mr. and ·Mrs. Yucatan Channel from Cuba-'. Cb· l ' . who alsosharE!d the, hut with Frank Brady and their foUl' have reported that' the govenl. a~ 31DC1e8 other denominations, "will have children, Their weeklong V8ca-· ment of Cuba's pri,me .Minister "rile only ,prle~t among the list their own" alt~r, 'It will,.pe :GasOline' . tion retreat iwas speilt a(,the (Ficiel Castro started:: in 'June. to·...:' .of sp~akers is .the hea'drnaster of. 'screened off when'members' of' Carmel Retreftt' Center,. Hamil." draw' up liSts. of mUltant Catho- .I,latehff~ Col1eg~, 8,,,Jarge 1 boys' 'other faiths are using the build,Fuel-~nd Range . ton, Mass. , " jI , / ' " . ~'l" ~. '~ lic,~r/.' :/.. ' .,'./ '.~ ~ ~ ~ ."-.r. _,":': .s~p~o~,In the; M.ld!~nd~ of ~ng-~· .in~; Cal'mel .'Retreat Center was The lists are compHed from. l";lnd, "Who, WJl1,dISCUSS. unJ\!.erThi'j;"arrangement for a shared selected . ~¢cause it specializes .information obtained. where the S.lty en,iran~e ~equiJ.:emenis. from '. student chapel has no precedent in family i~etreats and also »as :'CMlwlic8, 'work', ~,such' as, public the p~l,nt ot,Vlew of· the ~~ls., in' the United ':Kingdom;' in' a .'~ : .Oil 'BURNERS':" vacation f!lcilities. The families" offices; p r i v a fe' businesses, A lay profes~or Q{,th~UnlversltY' .. university Gr"elsewhere, "". '.. , .._._-, were able \)0 begin each day aot store~, professional. offices and, of Lo,?CJ,on W,lll,examu~e the s~me, " ., G::E. BOILER BURNER',UNIT5 8~ A,M,. M*ss, A series' of th'ree, ·,smllU.. companies, i They,. include queSh(l,h. ~~om. t~e' pQmt:of view r··-·.·- -A-·-·~T.-· " {~"""'---.'7C'-j~.", ' daily conf~rences for the adults . information on education and of the'Ull1V~r~ltIes,.AU the other For prompt delivery followed with sp'ecial devotions activities. Such lists are not speakers. WIll be' lay men and . & Day' & Night Service and spiritual reading intersperbeing made for other groups. women.lrom university staffs. MOB IL

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U~ S.·S-nate ApproYes

An ta rtic. T rea t y '

WASHINGTON (NC) "._ The Senate has ratified a 12-nation treaty intended to preserve the

The same reports say that the' "Sp·urns .G~·n· de•• r, Cuban gover~ment has ordered the manufacture of 200 cassocks. MUNICH (NC) - For weeks~. It is feared that the cassocks may' earpenters, plastere.rs·and paint- . be distributed to active Castro . era refur-bished- a 'huge bedroom supporters l' n . v a 1:1'0us· are'as .,- in Munich's' former roy·al pale ' the ace for the Papal-Legate to the dlI' sc redl't ,a Q d . omproml~e· . c er~y prlOl' to 8 campal~n 0(' internationa~ Eucharistic ConrepClsal gress, . but· when "he:, arrived, . ',. Gustavo Cardinal Testa shook . 'I;pe ,lists' of Ca,thblics; the re- 'his head, "It's' too 'comfortable ports say, would be useful for . he said". . ,imlist~ng . , that for me," trumping up ch arges and disa simple bed be set up in an· missi':!/!{, milit,apt, Cathol~cs adjoining .r0011\., '. i i , ' A.. th ..t.!'le, .... .nom· elr .30""".' ,

Antarctic fur peaceful' purposes, '. Dr, Char~es M, Herzfeld, pre1)-.~ Ideot of the Catholic Association for International Peace , said the pact "Qffers an opportunity· • . to to exten(l the rule of interna-. tional law:to new areas 01. the Reelect '1ead world." ~ .. The treaty's main purpose 'is-kl t. NEW"l'BERtA \Nch - Dr. .. . ".' . , , Q. Eugene B, Perry of Houston, provide fot international scien.MOTOR SALES . Tex., was re-elected Supreme .titic cooperation in exploring and developing the Antarctic, It Knight of the Knights of· st. RENAULT. PEUGEOt· Peter Claver at the ·4lJth na-· also prohibits all military activ. tional cOnvention of .the prePa..... Sales ~ serv~ Ities, including nuclear explosions, in the al'~a, and gt'an-ts un,. dominantly Negro/Catholic' fra..' ' 1 E~ . limited inspection. right to treaty OOt;l}al society ,held ,pere .iIl '. '., HV.· ... 'N·....:.'IS.·· '.',. nations to see that tbe,atJreement LouisialWl, Some'800 persona '. A I""'Il jebeJng~\I~· . ,.. , , < _'~IMklG, UM, ·fi'¥e~~~ "~,., . L.;~.,;.-',,;,,''i,;j.:.;,..;,;;.':;.;-;..';,-';..'';;'-;';:''.;.;;.".;;.;....;...0:;.'. ;,.............

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall.~iv~~;:-Thurs.. Aug. i 8, 1960 oj• • • . • • •

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Lim'it~l~~evitabl~' in" M(I~ital Shari.·ng and.' ToSetherness·.

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'01 the greatest-<poe~.s writ~n ;a. tMusand 'hars before Christ...Homel' deseri~s: how ; Uly~ .. af~r, hi's .long, joume,.• ,;retorned ~ I~Whto~.s]ho~~., &. ~~e DOt. ~. 'his;~lencls sa.w him. nOl' as he reaD,. was•. He. WOft. Ute appearanCe. of age. and was d:l5guisecll ... ~.: beg~>Unli'noWu b,.·fr~nd.'or foe.... sat ~ the I~west p&ee and WIIS' Degl~ eVeD &this own table. Onl,. two recognizect him m spi~ 01 eyer,.' ehange--hls dOl' b,. an instinet. of affeetion. wJrlch·. never was lost; and the ~ther. tile none who recognized him when. she ·washed. his teet, and saw the sears whl'eh the wild bou pve UI,.SlJIIS Ie the eba8e. 011, Mount PlU'IIaSlAIS. . .. . ' .

Ass't Sociology Itrof.-St:... Louis.Unlversi~ HMy wife.thillks I'~l.' shirking my ·dom~tie. duties.

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,shildren, but shecan';t8e.em.to (Uloe:rstand! ~.bat' ciuTying a :responsible: full-time job plusnigl'tt schC!JC!J~.·reaves little .time. and energy . to spare. responsibility of paren~. ' III as Dhe says I abandon' her to 'Well as its foys;. will be shared • world cirded by meals, with their pannus.. This does diapers, formulae,. doCtoring not mean that husbaDdssbould cleaning., Why should I get becOme dish joCkeys or "mothInvolved in all these det.ails er's little herp~S'.~~ Few there are who recognized· ChriSt 'in His joumeys thl'oug!l when I won't Because modem> conditions the centuries in His .Mystical. Body, the Church. The eomplainll be 'on hand:. to leave wives so much. alone, they of ~. Paul against the Corinthians might be repeated .in ,our geneIta n dIe them. are eager to shcure' tlieir domes>ration, namely "we are not discerners: (1i. the Lord's Body." He anyway?" ti¢ and parentali plans" worries, comes to our day battered' and beaten, from . Many YOUIl3, feari',: and experiences with Russia and China. The owytwo ,who .nottClll eo.uplesface. a . their' Sp01lL5e$. From.. your last H·' . . . "," Similar chal-' remark, Fr~, i~ appears. you. im are those who recognized 'Uly'Ssea,' the ' ; leng'e, .and the.' are' lettii:tg 'your 'wife down' o n " hum~~~ and those schOoled bi' pain: arid"sae:'1 '1,_ ... . • they meet " .:tllis .tlQin,~~. . .., . . .. '. rifj~. ,,~T,!te. humble ltf'e. like the dog who ' . will mean a, What can yow do? In the firSt recognized Ulysses, or the' ox ~nd iileaSli 8r~, deal for : "pl~(k, you.' ean' display reaL in>who recognized the Savior at the. Crib';' the ,t h e i l' .future . terestJ in 'helr .d'aUy .roneerns: PR(i)Fji1SSES VOWS: Sister " ., \ ' It a p p i .,.:True,-yau.ca!'L't,.be around. to M...,Imma€u:la,the former' other group are. those who have been close il e s s. Th ey' handle; all .these' details;. but by Felida. Supczak,.. to suffering and recognize :.jii",. ..-arry young, discussing, them, with her yo~ celved in the modem Gofgothas of the wod'd. ~rt their families, a~ once, and will show' that you understand of Mr. and Mrs.. Stanley His Heavenly Body is beyond! the reaj:h of~fl[i ..-e soon caught. up in separate her problems and· appredate Supczak, Om," Lady of Per- nail$,. but His Mystical Body the Church is<iill Munds. of activlty that demand what. she is d o i n g . p e t u a ! , Help :parish, New still u~et"going its bitter passion. Ma'ge"- i:% ID08t of their energy and inShe seeks companionship, a Bedford, professed vows a8.. field put· it: ., ,." ~~est.1n YQur. calle, fhlnk. the sen~ ~f pa.rtnership, a psycho- a: Bernardfue Sister in ttt. '''O'"Hnore '111Dt ·llP_ Riir·beacl. ,pressure isincreased bJ.t~e need, . 10gJcal.~~aJ::n~ tba1t~ serve as> f' /" h ' pot!ier thomlIpoD'lIis bead;., "." " _,,,,, • ,further schooling.. , , ' : a UndY.lng.:::and mutually·· IcStSUC . ceremony held at'" . " ' . Ailother,moek.:b,.:W:ben'R.~,,·.,.,', '.. ".' How can .You, ,J:ec~ncile the stren~hen~, pFoceSSl 'in your the Villa. Mana Retreat'" ': Another ull, another ,OI'OS!l>: ".' . " oJ·, ' ." '.demands' of. y~ur' ,¥o~~.with marriage. You' both need this if House' of community'~ ". . . . . . . ~It,: ~hat! you are,;.is.thM·Chrlst~s 101'*"" . '.,. ,.r 0 ~ r. dome~ , opli~tion~!." ~",l ar.eJ!'. ~.r9W; .to~er',rather I 'North" Stamford .·Conn. .·The ~' lR~~,r~e ~ho~. who"loore sacrifice, tb.ese- a19lle '."" ",.You n ,make J.i.ttlepro~ess In .. tha~, a~Qrg~lde ,~f.ea~,other;" .. ,'; ;'.,1 .:n": . ' ~. ,.' \ ,knoW' .Chrlst: They kriow ~m lO··theitr seff,·.deniai;of"a. pleasure, -roW' career unless ~9u., give >it ",F~r~fter", b~a\I~You.. ~te ~?,'~ ."".-.L. "',lio ·.. in' thete, sacrlfi'ce".of a 'part of' a favO&" receiYedi in. ,thanksgiving: b~ ,,' ,,' ~ be~t, that" you hllv.e.• Compe.- .... '=~e ~'ciu~'" :~:~l~an~Wt~ <. : :~,Q:u,.. ()~'I'C· .. C . 0.0 '5' I' ,=~:g. an> offer~:, 1'0 ~. ~WY:nf;,.theJ1 tl! ,~el'p".Qul'!.}e~Si ()II' f,oo .!,., " ..tlODlsrough.fortl1ose.,'A.'hot,ry,· .... '." '...., ' .. ". cilfe, Y' Continued'.fro'M,page,O_. , " . a.. 'chapell'lfl.'A:frica, ,W.her~I~'LOl"d,,~~~orewe>'i' .to advance, so you,.hav~.. to con- :. plan l~ng.: ,budg~,t,:y,OUC .t~m.e. a~, .total,of 5 08~. ;1;97.. . sdOrecl. in' the BlesSed.sacr~~nt.;",,1 : .....;" 1'7 ." ' ' ./ .. tribute a.little exu:a,u". terms ;.ho.w~....;~t,~S1~¢ ad'~lnite, " ....,.. , t ...!;.,.. . . . ., ,,' ,:,' '.'...-..-!'., '"~ ..•. added L'esponsibility and in..., ,,,.mu.h.!ally agreeable vtime fin( ,.···.l,. '))~encllS 8ir9Dg;· '.- .., ....~.' ,....,. '.... '.. . \" :'. ..' , • . ,'; . ' '.',' .,,:.' h: ,.tlerest if .you.. hope to.. m~ke tho" sn.my-.and, fo,Uow jt;. o,th,erwi3e . ThIS' to~La~' the.. expected 'Ilben> ~ - , h~~IJip.,. ~,~~, w"rld. com~Me: to; tile. reo.'"Fade; . ' ..JrW;,!lH.nev.~~,f~1w.holly ~ee.: ~~rea:re thlg;.Fa!1represents'ccU1!- .. ;. ogoiziog:;.~.,Chdst. with, H~ lICarSlC.outd. w~, ~.,~ all- 0111' At the same time. there's .rio . .M.lnd!ul. tha~ .you .haye serious .. ~n~a non .01i>an .enrollment trend . wro~lrs .afJdo~ to .Ute: ~~t:et olllie; Fea8t" tb 'we' would' dfs>. aort cut to learning-eitber you faml~Y. ~b.hgatiofl$, trlake spedfic m .€a~holic schools. that has' beeD oem. tlMl Body of the I:ord wlileb, is: His; Ch~ch•. Ma~ Wlft heal' .wdy hard or your schooling. ili prOY181~ for fulfilling. them. especl'll'lly .strong ~~e 1945, the. "'o~ you - tile- poor lit lPirtt ,. .' ~oI' the, M.... ' wi"', wasted. But you're also a mar- What WIll it. profit· i1O' succeed y~ ~ar,ked uno:fflclally as: the IIIlaI'lJf eted man obliged. to be: a'com- at your job if you fail' U' a hus>- begmnlOgof: the',current. "enrou.. --'Danion'to'your wife and a father' ~nd a"? fathel'?·... men~ b o o m . " . . GOD LOn: yOU to V.~. 'f~' $4.""E:~ time. I ami late. ... yoW' four children.. ': ..... At. -the· me ~~, .7011Jr wife ThiS past ~adeplle yelW,. gr~ tor·wor,K I fine· myself a nickel', ..w hichl nicltles;aiie' for.: the 'Missions!" Perhaps' she~s expecting too ' ~ulct: ~.elflI~e tllat.. ~ grea.t deaf ~ls> ~ar~ed'. a 100. ~ert c~ ~."'~ Mrs.. !i=·:N. "P,lf!!llS'e u~· this $3',00) where it: 'i&J most. ·.neede£ Much ftom one man: Let's look.' 01 ~ : energy ~:: in.term ~~ llb en.r0llment smce.the ~. ha~ been SIck foe' six month~goingftOlll> one. doctoE': to aDl-' at the situation from her point IIlU8t "~ssari~y be' foeused1• 00 end • ~ . World,.. WallIK. H~g,b otller. ,I was: gQi~ to spend ~is: for another X-RaY,. Penhapst some>Of view. With f~ur small chil- .. ~ j~' that):·, ~ outsidetne 1IC~1$ und?t+.~y~. achieve. one needs: m.edlcali ..e8;re .worge tlumJ II, dO\'" •.. ' to Mrs. ]!t.M>. fair · -".en·to feed, train, and 'watch,fc ~rl,. c~rcle:.P~apstbis:ier the " ~ ~~.dlstll~c~l(;~~~ tins,. sc¥' $5>. ':'Thls. .is: in tballksg~y:ing, to.i,St..·~~d.~. for,~ ~'Y'oit,gp .. ted' ~oufJb, , anch home ,to m.anag~, 'stleprob- ~;-~pamfuI' l~.tnat'Y'Oung year. They need, an ~~ll:OJ.lmeDt. ~ ..,I~tef~~~J~n. It. 'A'aC"truJy .~ lIopossible eaae,but; D1J.' pra)ler• .'.,'.ably feels :caught fu.,.' ~ e~dt~ ,\!'~ must ·le~J:n:.~ '. '~;; ;.: ." lW r,~"t4 to, d~uble ~lQce 1lM5 were ans-wered." . " 'd.' ,. . • ,~"".\' , IN)Und o.f trivial' thouib i'~sterit '... There ave· hmlw' tiDi'mari~W .a~d th~. ~all estlm~te'lS 849-,850.. .,; ,. " ! ",0-' I', '. : . ' , , ' demands that narrow her bori": sharing: and, togethemess;.Ihhey.' ~·NO" est~~at~s.on new ·tea~?t;.rs • l'rOu' will be • cltSCerDH of.',0.... Lord'll; 804... '..1'..:1.-...... p_....lIOns and' isolate·her from the are to suce~. husbands must or' schoof D~.I1ld:111gs' or additiON . • ... ~ag.... .u,J'.,. . . . dult world fu.' whkb yOUl become absorbed; in. their work' wet"e' made' 111 the N€WC depart... WO&LD~~SIONtROSARY; yoa wiU be recogriizbi«: CJirist' :'ork . though: the resultiDg: semle' ment's: sta:te~ent· of: earollmen:t, Ia.:- His: My,stical" ~oe,,~ the ,€h~l!ch, throogbolM ".t\friea" Asia., she also is flnd separation often comes· a& a • -, '" r Io..r Inexperienced routfue.. si'cKn'eils shock. to young•• brid,es.. That~lt: . '. Teaching Staffs· '. > ; •• aDd'" iii" . ,. $ . , 0 mO,re a~d •. ~ou.! r~quest . or in tlie deparu.nenfi;d '''''', "".'.. '. babi~,,~g,E!nera.~e,.~t:FteS' :,and! begin until the' noneymo{)n: 1959. S?,m.mary of Catholic Ed"" " "."" ',' .. : ," .... ,~. '-;-'l-"-. "I'I'" '., ,"·I i".", , feIml' ..sJ:ie,. f4Ids,' dlIfi.euH, . ~ ~r over. . . . uca ~1O?, a. booklet. of school Cut out tins .~lqmn",pm you~ sacnfil:e' W' ~" a~4 n:t511t it' to, the: .alO!l~:,: .. , .. ' l . .. '';:,i;: YOIlE Sltuat:!~,~f~ ~ SIl1-··. l!Itatastlcs; ,It, reports that "illl" .o9ti,.~¥~..,.It~ltQll:.J. l:ilie~n, }'!~~~o~l.Directoll.of. t.\'I.~' SpeietY'fOr : What 'is she' looking for'!' ?ere reappraIsal. Tbec~lict- Oc:~be.r, 195~, there were' 10',278 . ~ ~!-"OP~~a:tlon . C?', ,tp.e ~~~th,.3~?·flftb:.~venu~;N.:~vI' !grk 1, N'. ~." . Chances are she' wants;-an&- mg demands. you face. cannot be CatholIc grade schools staffed' or youc DIOcesan DIrector, RT. ~EVI. RAYMOND,' T:"CONSIDrNE needs-an occasion3lJ. break fIrom.modified, but 'youl can change by 102,622' teachers. The number' J68; Nort.b ~ Street/,. Fall Riv~,'M!as& . . .' bel' small-\vorld J:outine . a re-. your. attitude. 'You aJ:e involved, includes 77,172' religious teach. It·. 6 betweea freshfrig sMft in scenery,'a tiim- in f~milt. cir.cI~, ·lind though ers; an~ 24',450; lay teachers. . . porary change' in phantasms, am ,,' ~our .time IS IllDl1;ed',you can, In the' summary; the depal'llfall River & opportuiLi:ty to,enj'ol" adult con-. len~ mterest, .emotional S.4PPOl'~, . mentreports. 2,300 secondal'7 New Bedford versation. and' companionship.... anc;f' enco.,';lragement. '. , schools staffed by 40,708 teachIt's ,c1ear"'from yoW' letter that For her part, yoUI' wife m~ ers;, of whom 31,280 are religioull me. l!kes 'oe.fng'; a"'lnoth~r, ~ but realiZe that your sepaJ:3ite:," teachers and' 9,428 are. ~ let's .~~ 'face. it ~ pabi~ iiivolve,'~..~~<?dd~' do not coiilcidEl",: though. teaC'her~. 'ro'" , .. m~re)tl'ran on~JHhd ,pf.confine,;" they meet at significant points.. . The department counted 2,3(,. 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.:.' '~ollltin~ed' from Page 0_ ... , :"Tfie. journali9t labor prie6f!Mother1'rlllo@.-adit.tr~'~d':ta.~tltke;>\\:tf~.~,U~l!>.Wlscon~n..pro:Vlnce" has: . knows 'the ' labor-management" , . MQf.e.':';i'Ip:J?Qttafi{·th~y;..:h~vi:j·,:.i·~~eH:· .. ,~.Ppointed to the newly . picture first· hand. He talks 1~" ~n."p~'aJ}l~d;)ii::~xi>eci\' tnat ·~h~:;·. ~er~t~li!,i 'pos~ . ~f ~~~~\.l1;! ve,. !'Ji!!e.c-:. u~ar ly,; to labar· leaden ... HI2 ' . ';~.,: <~> :t9.i".Lo.(,ptl:blic r~ations and de- knoWs, 'm'llmlgement executnoe., DOmiJ:I!l.I~~CI,~' Lq,y",:O:r.:~,r vel?IliJ.l~ht for" '~I!'e~e~n:' Jesuii£' '. an:;t.gov:~rnmentJe8der.u. To M:ee'f.irr.:.Octo·~ . '" , e0l.le!t~._.and. umversltRls',oV!:'l'- ." '.L'her7 ."al.'~· 'many people- b!1' I · . , ' . , ' ,,;. }~~~ ." .:. seas, '. ' : :. . ,. . . ,~. . ,,,' la~~. C;ll"cle~ - newspaper.JneZ1;. · is. former vi'co Uillon eh:lefs;'31Ibitrators andLpl"()o.;,· : ": ' ru '" " ' >~. ~~~'"*" 'foJ:;.prll1ffi:· rela:tioh\i:' at"·", ,fess6:a:s,·. who,,",agree with the ;. : . at~nd t)i rd"ii.a,~u~'~~, Uni-v.el'snY,lhertk Each> ~~,~~~~e~~~ ~~ on the floor"'Ot" • ~ osar P ,'q,t.? t pltov.in""'~""j.tiil~f;!c,-, ,. the ,H~use 'bY:' a: California c6A-': . ThIrd'. Ord'e .. i-l':;'o' .. ".: and ·<;77- ., '• ... r:.. ." ,?\:.,t, "'~..l>I..:ri'........... "" R ..' _;. '50;,.',"". les a procurator ~''C."""r~ I. I~.ne· ev. Benlam_ ,", .rt!,~,g".,,~a ,," -.1•. ~<! .. ~, ,'., :!leall schoo~. Fathel:'. :nt,Iasse' lSi one of the most astute" 'r~. ~ " ... ~W!!~~. ~ 1J ·woi!lt· Wittf~UieRi:' 'arra( .,. 'smcere· and·obj~ti¥'c·studenU7il1t "" lIg~ted! by..tpe .P,f.: ".' of~~0~~ ." _ e pr~4t.~,~~ ,o!,,9ve r tl,.,.: . I~e?r:~anagemetlt relationa -iil"", :""" Thlrc~ ~,rq~r no~. ,.q!1);u.M~r,'>Ji·, . Itiltions ill pl3rin'ilkdevelo~ ,,·;~.,Vmted States!" .~; .•.,.(. Oct. 2;'the f~ast of'tfi~~~;IJit~:;~~~me'nt:~~dJseek!9g fin~¢~J":ai~:,; ',.": b:o,,' ... .;:..·.;;:~:,,,l.._ ' , ~,1.-' Rosary. FaUier; ~ •. F .. SmJ.t!\o" G.P." Am~rlCan J)~~~tts'.P-i0~ h,av,e ~G .',_ .... '0 ."I~~.£"<Apostolic ,,': ail. t.he Doml.mcan House ~f colleges and .l,l~hi.ersi.~s in,. for"'.. :".' GiR~ "(;NC)' .....:: A;, for~' :ri~l::, ~=~ha%g~:crr~C'M=" .ei:b=~tries" T~tly, ~e~I?,~ct. ~ \pr.ov.inci~~ of .~it'..Divine W~l'd< be of. .... esc our or fIve schools In, mISSIOn8171es: woo' spent 20 y , J • rs " . t~ec, D2m~c~~, .. Th!r;d ~~, -~oliia~;Sout!l .&nerica and Africa in New 'Guiilea;'llas' re . earl Order are' la,ym-en woo strl'Ve for within· tne'nexttew'years. 'tRese - N" ~~'G;'L'" ,. ..tIpn~, to:,. :;hristiadn. . Pder£ect~on according. schools. are in addition to the 2lf A;:sto::ne:t ~~e Vl~. a mo 1f Ie v.erSJ,on, of the ·ru~ ,colle!Wtl aOO universitie ,:.. D·,.},~ .. .• . at S('DomiIllc. '. '" ,";':'.' ), .. ' ~clu ~)"';b, J .....' .7.'1' s".con.:'.,. ,lib,. t'~<n","l" Peor~ ·,Bernardilltl.· c __ me eSWiB m the U;.& . '.S;V.D.;.' a "nati~ 'Of"Pittsbu.rjJb;;'· • •

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Kni'ghts of Columbus Fight Pastor With Criminal Libel PITTSBURGH (NC)-The pastor of an "independent" church in nearby Finleyville, Pa., has been ordered to appear before a grand jury here after the Supreme,Office of the Knights of Columbus filed action· for criminal libel against him. Rev. Mr, W, L. the Pittsburgh area pamphlets King, pastor of the Naza- carrying the bogus 'oath. He also rene Bible C h u r ~ h, is printed the oath in his magazine, charged with printing and the Voice of the Nazarene.

Joseph F. Weis, Sr., the atcirculating ,copies of the bogus oath of the Knights Of Colum- torney representing the Knights 'of ColumbUS, 'said that' "there bus. Rev. Mr. King waived a hear- are no political aspects 'to this ing before Magistrate E. L, case. We are in it purely to deHearndon in. nearby Westview, fend the Knights. There is abPa. and was freed on $1,000 IOlutely no such oath." In most cases, the Knights Oil bond. The grand jUlry will sit illl . Columbus asks for a retraction September. A printer-editor who resides from those who distribute or in Elizabeth, Pa., Rev. Mr. King print the bogus oath. Nine times is alleged to have circula~ in out of ten, said Mr. Weis, the retraction is obtainM. Rev. Mr. King has refused to make a retraction. '

Voltaic Lead,e r Lauds Catholics

Italians Support Fanfani Regime

THE ANCHORTh'urs., Aug. 18, 1960

13

Head of Public Schools in Erie To Be Priest

ERIE (NC)-A 47-yea~ old educator who served f(Yf 10 years as superintendent of Erie's public schools will go to Rome next month to study the Catholic priesthood. John M. Hickey, who resilfned in July as head of this city', public schools, has been assigried by' Archbishop JOhD Mark Gannon, Bishop of Erie, to undertake his studies at Beda College in Rome. Mr. Hickey will leave f~ Europe on Friday, Sept. 2 with the Serra International pilgl'image group, ~ed by Bishop JOM J. Wright of Pittsbllrgh. Mr. Hickey,' who attended NEW RELIGIOUS COMMUNITY: At the novitiate of, Edinboro (Pa.) State ~rEiacherll the·· SOl1s of Mary,' Health of the Sick, in Framingham College, began his careet' in pubFather 'Edward F, Garesche, S.J., founder and ~uperior lic education in 1934' at II local general, blesses the' habit, the cincture and the beads for junior high school. With the exception of one year' when lK! Ma\Jrice'Mahli, a Palestinian Arab, who is a candidate for,the was field representative for the .priesthood in the Commuflity, With them are Brother National Education Associatioll Francesco Tanega, F.M.S.I., rignt, a doctor from the Philip- in New Jersey, Mr. Hickey 11M served continuously since 1934 pine~, and' ~rother Paul Tifford F.M.S.I., a convert from with the Erie public school sy...

OUAGDOUGOU (NC) ~ The President of the Republic of 'Volta 011 proclaiming the naROME (NC)-The new Christion's independence paid tribute tian Democratic government of ,to the Catholic clergy for having "provided th,e country with i~ Amintore Fanfani has received first leaders." , - overwhelming support in: both In declaring this land-locked the Italian Senate and Chamber Judaism, NC Photo, tern. West African national independ_ of Deputies. He was appointed superinteoent President Maurice Yameogo " The new government, ,tb~1!d: . dent' of Erie public schools ill also paid tribute to France' and to, be headed by Mr, Fanfani 1950. During his temire Of' offiefl - there has been a steady growtb to "'t'esident Charles de Gaulle since World War II, replaces ~he in particular' for helping' the': old . Christian Democratic govern-, in the city's schools. He had two :, SA~~IAGO D~ CUB,A, (NG)-: " Castro ;!leven years a'go whefl' more years to serve On his apUpper 'Voltacolony achieve its,' 'ment, of }ferna,nd9,Tambr,oni. Joining, Christian, ,Democ,rats :A gre~t,spiritual crus~de in' tl;1e ¢asti'O was a young revolution-,' pointment to office whenhe re.new status... in voting for the Fanfani gOv:-,ArchdlO.cese 01'. Sant~ago, the 'ary iii"the mountains. He per- ' signed.' I I The Voltaic Republic, with iUl ernment were" the Republicans, ·largest In Cu~a, has been sched- 'suadedhim to surrender before Beda College in Rome is II 105,900 'square miles' on ' the he was ·captured by pursuing special seminary' established bIf northern border of Ghana,'; has' Liberals and Social Democrats.;' u,led for November. :' Only the communists 'and NeoThe call for the crusade was gover'hment troops and,' obtained' .the Hierarchy 'of England for a total ·population. of about Fascists voted against the gov- issued by Archbishop Enrique a. ci~ilian trial for the young' deiayed vocations. The college'. 3,326,OOQ. persons.' While ,the Perez 'Serantes of Santi~go. He revolutionary. The Archbishop last graduating class, ·consisting Catholic population of 126,000 ernment. The left-wing Soci~lists of emphasized the$piritual charac- comphiined in a pastoral letter 'of 14 men, averaged 46 years ci constitutes less than five per' age. Nearly all had been eothe' Monarch-, 'tel' of the cr,usade, '~hich. is this year that communism had cent, it provides the backbone. Pietro Nenni' and . ' voting. It - aimed at ,bringing understand- eJ'!,tered. the gO,vernment "as 'gaged inseclliar careers before i ate abstained In the of the intellectual class. . ,though settled ill ite own dodeciding to study for the priestwas the first time 'that the lng and practice of religion to , main." ' ,The Republic of Volta is a hood, ' Nenni Socialists have not voted _all corners of thearchc;liocese'. ' ' . member of the four-nation "Council of Entente," along with with th~ communi,ats on a major . The crusade will coincide with . the .provincial assemblies of the Dahomey, the Ivory Coast, and issue. 'DAUGHTERS Of ST. PAUl the Niger Republic. The four The margin of support for' the 'four branches 'of the· CUbim , Iftvi" - ,oune, girt. (14-231 to Iaber .., contiguous state's formed the" Fanfani gove'rnment was the Catholic Action Nov. 24 to Dec, Chri.t'. "a.~ "inlvaret, a, ci.. Apos'" 01 .... grouping to provide for economic second largest of any postwar 4: DuriQg the crusade the sfaEdition.: P"II, Radio, Mo"ie. _ r.... and political cooperation., ,All Italian government.' Only the, : tue of the Virgin, patropess 9'l vi.iott. With the'l mode,.. m...ns, ..... became independent within the fifth government of the late Al- .Cuba, will be brought here from ~jSlj;nary . Sistere brine' Chri.t·, Doctrisle same week; before negotiating cide De Gasperi,a Christiafl its sanctuary, about 14 miles , 10 all, regardle.", of rae., color' a-I CfMCI. , For iMormation, write' to: ' membership in tt~e Fre'nch' Democrat, received greater sup- away, , , REV, MOTHER SUPERIOlf , . , Community of nations. P ort in 1948'." Archbishop Perez ,Serantes' It ST. PAUL'S' AVl. &aSTON 30. MAlI. ',saved the life of Premier Fidel

Arch,.,d,iocese ofSan,tiago to" Hold ,No'vem, ber Spiritual Crusade "',

Catholic Schools Are .to Rec;:eive' Mo;e State Benefits in France

PARIS (NC) - TheF,rench and with ~mly indirect state, ald. government has pushed the, That aid is paid to the parents starting button of the country's of pupils arid turned over to the new machinery for aid to pri- Ilchool. It is to' be increased thie school year. vate education. A school may also' elect to / ' In a series of decrees the government has fixed the amounts be absorbed gradually into the of aid to be granted to various state education system. Yarying Controls sectors of private education unBut if a school chooses to aeder the new law. Nine out of 10 private schools are Catholi~ eept state ai4,: it may demand schools in France. Most are run "association" with the state sysby parishes. One out of five tem or it may demand what • ealled "free contract.'! French childFen attend 1I Ca~ Under "association," the'sta.' lic school. The new' decrees 'assure 116aumes all costs but obtains the teachers in participating private right to fix the;cul·riculum. AlsO schools of ·an income equal to teachers are to be drawn from a' teachers in public schools. They government ,list a~· named also' stipulateS that private jointly by the, government aDd schools must lower their tuitioll by school authorities. ' " Und~r "free, contract," , the chat'ges in propo~'tion to the amount of aid they receive from state pay8 half of every teach;" 'the state, In. lOme' eases . this er's salary and: underW.riteshalf 'reduction' i~ tuition" Will de ,of all material eX~l\se,;; ~hool authorities 'name' the1eachers ' . . away with tuition altogether. with the mere, approval of: 'the' Priv.ate ,schools are n'ot· to re- government. ., The " gover";ment 'cetve state' aid automatically, 'exercises only; 'limited· control Tliey must' ask for it if they curricl;lum." aftdftriaricia! .w;.nt' it,. ~nd 'it can be obtained over adminiStration. ' " 'oniy at the price of, 'some ,state Flseal YardsUek. ' control. The more aid, t.be, more Since' the government 8Sl1urricS' , st~te control. ,. , aU costs in. "assoCiated" :schoolsi'"' A s~hool may elect kl remaHi .. it· ,ie,' without state eontrol ' these schools' may no longer eharge tl,lition: But' theY may require a small, fee lorel~tive . classes 1ft religion, taught by .. chaplain, ~Ad 1or, tbe upkeep'f.Jl· ' ' , .ROME. ,(NC) - Aloisius I Car- the chapel. During the' tirllt year, of iUJ dinal Muench will return to his opera~ion· th~ ;,n,(;w machine~y .... native United States of Ariterica , ·in., mid-September' to eelebrate for state',aidto ..'private schools , , the '25th anniverS8ry'~ <nit! will pay "associat~"'schoQls ac-' . cording to· the number of stuepiscopal consecration. ,Cardinal Muench was eonse- dents eit'rolled. The amo~mt' paid crated Bishop of Fargo, N. D., per student will 'vary' according Oft • Oct. 15, -1935. He has since to the material expenses of the served as Apostolic Nu~io to schools: technical schools, which Germany, and was created a requi~e a maximum of physical' cardinal in December of la8t equipment, will' receive from year. He is a member of, the $65 to $100 per student, while Church's administrative offices purely academic' schools win' in Rome, known 8fl the Rom8l1 receive :£rom $40 to $70 per stu-' Cwiao ,

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese' of Fall Rive.:-Thurs.. Aug. 18, 1960

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h_. INTERNATIONAL EUCHARisTIC CONGRESS: Twenty new priests (left) from areas scattered throughout the world give the first blessing at the International Eucharistic .Con gress in Munich,. Germany:. A small section (center) of the thoi.H~ands of clergy ~d religious are shown at a spe~ial Mass celebrate~ by Gustavo. Cardinal Testa, Pap~ Legate. Over

30,000 pilgrims, includi!1g Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York. attended the dedication of the Chapel of the Agony of Christ at nearby Dachau. Former inmates of' the inf amons_ nazi concentration camp participated. Millions of pilgrims from all parts of the world came to Municll to attend the Gon~ NC Photo. .. .

.ROQ1e'Tre(ls~".;~fc Re,JicsofPassion But ·Aut,be~ti,:~,jtY;:~9:f.;. S'9.t-n~f',~oubted'·

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. ROME (NC)-Towi8t&.)~'·:Ro9:!e·often·p.rlif.\;~I:~,aFt~.,~any r:lics.of the Passlo~ ~ Christ preserved in the Etern'jll' 9.iij'.;f::J~l9~ 'alL :of}heD.(i~re genume, however,. and It IS difficult to authenticate many otnerst~~Hist6ri¢:aJly:itf.'~logical that these relics should have found their. way to Rome, the See'-:Oi'Cli,rist'~~'~ on.' earth.' First among the treasury of. these relics is uine would seem ·juatiliJ,. per- Pilate ahd up .,.,hicll ChriSt the Church of the Holy Cross ti.cularly because ita history" walked are housed in their OWR 111 Jerusalem, one of Rome's fairly well documented siace special shrine. . hal b'Ii the fourth century. The steps, called the Scala seven patnarc asl cas. The.church's other relics at the Sanela. or Holy Slairs,· are near

Built by St. Helena.. ~Uler of Passion brought back by St. 1be Emperor Constantme,. to Helena include .two thorns from bouse the relics of the Passion. the crown. a nail and a large' that she brought back from portion of the inscription. in .ierusalem, the church ~s fIX' three languages, that Pilate 15 centuries been a sbrme of. ordered placecl .over the Cross. Christ's sufferings. Sceptieal Scholan True Cro!il!ll ....- 0 . . M 0 st Beh 0 lars are scep-..__ Most important of these Is 11 of the authenticity of the more Jarge fragment of the True Cr~ss. than 30 supposedly genuine nailiJ Cynics have estimated that if. all to be found throughout the the claimed pieces of the True world. However, again the speCross were reassembled there cial history of the Church of. the would be enough to build a' . Holy Cross and its very close 'batUeship. '. association with St. Helena argue However, scholarly study of in favor of the genuineness of it. ell the existing bits of .w~od memorial of, Christ's Passion. . believed to be part of the Orlgma~, . P~eserved in the church is, uoss has shown that .only ab~ut . another cross, said to be that of ene-fiftieth of the e~hmated SW! the Good Thief, also reputedly of the True Cross IS accounted brought to Rome by St. Helena. for. One relic recovered by St. So the supposition that the Helena is not in the church she fragment conserved in the built. The 28 white marble steps Church of the Holy Cross is gen-. that led to the praetOrium. eI.

St. John Lateran's cathedraL Today the,- are encased in wood that has been worn smooth ill rounded furrows where countless thousands of pilgrims ha" . ascended them on their knees. MajGr Treasury '" • tre asury .... .... 0 tho er major relics of the Passion is in St. Peter's basilica. There in a small chapel which none enter except the . canons of the basilica-are preserved' part of the lance said . to' have pierced Christ's side a large fragment of the True Cr~ss and a painting known as Vero~ lea's Veil. \ Veneration of the veil has long been popular,: although there is . doubt among experts that anybody named Veronica had anything to do with Christ's Passion. . The Bi~lical account says only • that a pio.us woman compassion.. ately wiped the face of Christ OIl His way to Calvary. ",There is no· record of Christ's impression having been left on A.. the cloth. Some exper~, have ,derived Veronica's name- from VATICAN CITY (NC) - L'under conditions of moral the Latin and Greek words "vera Osservatore Romano has en- equality with the ot~er free naicon," or true image. However, couraged eight new Afriran .t~.9l1S'·of ~he world." even that is disputed. But there nations receiving their inde. L'Osservatore' recalled an edt.;. is no doubt that the image in St. pendence this month to proceed torialit' published on the. eve Peter's is a late Byzantine work . "in an ordered and pacific of the" independence of the· and' not a 'genuine relic Of the manner'~ to do honor to. the~ Congo.. It 'repeated what waa' Passion. people and give proof of .their said'. then, implying that the Lancie Relic sense of responsibility. . statement originated in an lUiThe .eight nations are: Da- .thoritative Vatican so'urce: .Scholarship, on the other hand, U V Ita,' Is inclined to hold that the lance homey,' Niger, pper 0 . :"The Church and the Holy See relic is probably genuine. AnIvory . Coas~. Chad ~public, . follow' with satisfaction ·these . other relic of the lance is to be . Central. African..Republic. Ga- 'promotions' of the Mrl'can Fr h found. in France and comparative , bon' an d the · f ormer enc people, which, if accompanied' Congo.. All had been I!art of, by a real sense of responsibility drawings of the two fragments former French est ~ea and. . appear to be :the right" road =~~sa~:t::~ are both pari French' ;Equatorial Africa, and toward that ascent of man fOr As for the relic of the True .~ 'hav:ehad self-government which Christianity' hQ:i worked Cross, there is genen.i'agreemeDt smce 1958: ., for 20 centuries."· The Vatican City daily·ne_ on its genuineness. .

L'Osservatore Romano Encourages Newly Independent frican States

VI

Names Auxiliary VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has named Salesian Father Arturo Rivera Damas, 36, Auxiliary Bishop tQ Archbishop Luis Chavez y Gonzalez of San: Salvador, EI Salvador. The Bishop-designate was ·rector of the Salesian International Theologate in Guatemala at the time ~ ,his nominatiop as· bishop.

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of making CODback "str~ sheep." OfroUSW-g the whole world to reLura ChrlSt's'.love-these· are some of the. thoughts iii the minds of seminariaDII and novices. Along with their dreama goes knowledge of the part tbat finances must pia)' in their DOble sa.piraUons. EYery priest, brother. anct sister, isconscloUII of the debt the7 owe those who make possible them training and their ministry. The ex'-'" U.L ,,:..J....J.. AI~'''~ tension of God'a kingdom on eartll "w"»OJ ........,., IOU»II1K ~ requires both the prayers and the fJr. ftr Iht 0rimJaI CJmrrII nancial help of all Catholics. In the ArchdIocese of CHANGANACHERRY ill INDIA another Mt. sion Station has been opened at .TEKUPARA. To erect a churdl and school in TEKUPARA will cost $4,000. Can you help! ,

v~i .. Qf; ~ri.nging

BENEIlACTORS of the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELll'ARB . ASSOCIATION receive a share In the .merits of all the prayel'll and works of Missionaries in the Neat' and Middle East. A REMEMBRANCE IN YOUR WILL is one WllJ' to Insure' prllJ'el'll for the repose of your souL Why Dot· take care Immediately of 'a BEQUEST to the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION? CAN YOU SEND A DONATION TO HELP 'US OPERATE OUR TWO SCHOOLS FOR PALESTINIAN REFUGEE .CHILDREN AT DRAYEH AND JISR EL BASHA? -JESUS weDt out Into a'mountala to pray, aDd He passed tile whole night iD pl'llJ'U: and when dlQ' was come. He called. E'o::--.,.;~1tJI!JIi'lin1i."" unto Him His disciples; and He eHOSB TWELVE Oil THEM. WHOM ALSO HK NAMED APOSTLES." Slnoe tbe selection. of' His first Apostles. Oar Lord has, for ceDtUries. beeo c1loo&ing others from among His disciples to iiiil!!!\II!;_.II· take their places. AmonA' those chose. io our day are AUGUSTINE VATFAo : : - -. . . THARA and JOSEPH VAZHAPPILLI wbo are DOW preparing for tbe priesthood at SAINT JOSEPH'S SEMINARY in INDIA. It will cost J600 to support eseh of them In the seminary forsD: years. WoaI4 yOU care to fiDance the education of one of them? :rHROUGH TYRE AND SIDON, Our Divine Lord came one day to the Sea .of Galilee where He cured a person who wu deaf and dunib. ADd Hia disciples wondered, saying. "He hath done aU things well; He hath made both the deaf to heat and the dumb to speak." SISTER' CHRISTINE and SISTER CONSTANCE, novices of the B.\SILIAN . SOARITE SISTERS in LEBANON ",viii spend their lives nearTYRE and SI" JU; here by their teaching, little ehil- ..-:~;...w_ dren win hear the troths of our holy faith and will be taught to use the wonderful gift of speech in prayer to Him wboonee passed physicalJy through their country. If you could pay fOl" \be education of one of these Sisters. the cost would be $300.

NEW SEMINARIANS 'AND NEW' NOVICES' M~

American boys and girls are preparing. dariDg these weeks, to enter a semlnlU'J' or a "ovUlate. PerbHPlI you bave a : ,"DOg relative. 01' a friend, 01' • neighbor, wbii Will lIOOD be . leaving home. to beglll the traiolD6 that will lead to tile PrIes$tion. On Good Friday; after the ~ hood, or the Brotherhood. 01' the Sisterhood. These young peo';.. 'NEW,YORK (NC).:- New Copletedmmuni~:.<SerVi~e. is cOrn~_ ,..' pie need" the ,prayerli' Or ·Of·' 1iiL' ,~' SuggestiODll for a' "golD,.. y' 'k',..... ', ssfu'1 S h:"":' f' Th' , a can~n, clunbs to' the or s succe . c U<II. 0 eh h' 'b' l' . '. h' h b h awaJ'" .. gift are th~ltIASS CELEBRATED 1l01l THEIIl IN010 for La mert'wil{be' ita' c. ~ .. s a cony;. _lg a ov~ ,t ,*!: TENTlONS'~ EHROLUIENTbi ttle'CATHOLIC,NEAR' EAS'l' . gy y . '. ". gm. 7 _ ,statue.of St. :fI:e.rena,. an~ bles~ .' thIrd year starting sept. ,26. En- . the' faithful. below :with eachcof WELFAftE AS.SOCIATION (tbe'fee for the aDDWtleDroIJlnent rollment last year was 400' '_"', .,"!" .. '; .. ; " " , ' ': .' . . " " , _ ' of aD Individual Is ~l.~)." We, ~n send a Gift C~ to. ~~ D~~ . . - .. ~, re~.· ,'" . :'" . The school, conducted by the .' '., . Auth~Dticit,.·. .. seminarians or new DOYtcelI !WOw that yOUI' Pl'll¥e&'II &U wi&ll tllem. . Third Order of St. Dominic, ~ The diUich¥i' 'al~aY~' COftstaffed by Dominican .Fathers. cerned with the "authenticity at Te~-we~k courses. cover Sacred relics, and she also respects the SCripture, dogmatic and moral g e n,u i n e devotion centering theology. around objects of age:"old venerfRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN. President. A certificate is awarded those ation. MIgr. 'eter P. Tuohy. Nat" Sec'~: who complete the 'school's fourThus the relics of Christ's PasSend oIl_lIIIlcat!oes-. year cycle of courses. No college sion to be found in Rome remi~d CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOOAnON training is required for enroll- its people and visitorsGin a very 480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St. New York 17, N. Y. ment and non-Catholics are graphic way of what Christ welcome to attend. suffered for them.

:::~~p~~~;dc:~~h~S:'f~:n:; "New York'Theology Africa.:: It said that the appear- .$ihool· Expanding

ance of the new nations "does' honor to France which like .' other former colonial -powers has understood and nobly in. ti f th t er~ret e d the aspua ?ns 0 e African people to live freely

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1< of C Begins Libel Action

THE ANCHOR-Diocese, ofFa1l River-Thurs. Aug.1B, 1960

Sociaiisf$ Force Ch'ristians To Form Own Labor Unions By Msgr. George G. Higgins Director. NCWC Social Action, Department Gaston Tessier, one of France's most prominent labor leaders, died in' Paris on' August S at the age of 73. The New York Times,... in reporting' his death, stated that M. · Tessier had served for almost 30 years as Secretary General ef the "Roman Catholic is partisan Catholic propaganda, . Labor. Confederation," which I would recommend that they is one of the three most im- consult a recent two-volume portant in France along study entitled European Socialwith the communist-led and .ism by a distinguished non.., socialist federations. This state- Catholic historian from the Unimen tis n o.t versity of California, Carl A. Landauer. completely acProfessor Landauer, who is· eur ate. The himself a moderate socialist, Confedflatly asserts thaLon the Euroeration .0 v e r pean Continent, at the turn of which M. Testhe century, "most' socialists s i e r presided considered religion 'opium for from 1919 unthe people" and proudly protil his retirefessed their materialistic ,creed." ment in 1948 Under these conditions, he con-. (The F r e nch tinues, "people who were loyal rop .SPEAKER: William Confedeto their church could not be 1l'Iltion of ChrisC. Suilivan,· F.B.I. chief inexpected to remain in the Social tian Workers) spector of .research and . Democratic party or in the labor lis not, strictly . unions which the socialists domanalysis relating to commuapeaking, a Rom~n Cathol~c organization. That 18 to say, it inated." nistsubversion and espion- . III not controlled by the Church, . . Another non-Catholie hi.. age activities, will be a featDor is its membership confined torian, ProfesSor Alfred Diamant ured speaker at the 19th exclusively to C;ltholics. of the University of Florida, N ationai C: ,tholie Students throws additional light on· this No NeuVal Unlonlil Misg'ion Crusade conventiOll' problem in a new book entitled 'Be that as it maY, the .more, bnportant question. and the one: "AustJ;ian Catholics· and the opening Aug. 25 at the Unithat probably occurred to many, First Republic." The· pre-1933 versity, of Notre Dame. NC· of our fellow Americans as th~y socialist unions - of Austria . he ,.Pheto. were reading M .. Te.ssier'~ ob~t~, says, were ~m integral part, of. the general socialist moverri~nt, gary noticc in the Tunes IS thiS. . Why is it ,that ,in France: as, which was openlY, and systemeontrasted with, the Umted atically anti-religious. States Catholic (and . other In Ausfria, then, as ~ell as in' Christian) workers have had, France and other Western EuroHONG. KONG (NC)-Bishop tllteir own federation· of labor,: pean .nations there was ampie James. E. Walsh, M,M., lQoks justification for the establish- "well and cheerful;" his brother ainte 1919? Why has the labor movement ment of separate Christian reports after visiting him in hill . m France been divided along unions. As a matter of fact Shanghai jail. these organizations were ~ William C. Walsh of Cumberreligious Ii nes? Why don't all of the non- necessity at the time they were 'land, .a_ retired Maryland judge., eomlllunist workers of Fran~e­ started and" in some cases,· are telephoned his wife here and like the workers of the Umted a necessity even at the present told her he had been allowed to States-belong to one and the time. visit Bishop Walsh twice during Ill8me "neutral" organ~z~tion, ~e­ his first week in Shanghai. Mrs. American Example 'gardless of their rehglous dIfWalsh stayed at a hotet in thill - It is too early to say whether British colony during· Judge ferences? Or' not there will be a need for Walsh's visit to his impriiloned Doctrinaire Socialists them and place for them in the The answer is· that in France ' future. That will depend iargely brother. Judge Walsh said his first lII1d on' the European Continent on whether or not the socialist III general, as contrasted with unions discard their anti-reli- visit lasted: 30 minutes and ·the the United States, there were no gious bias and l?ecome genuine- second an hour. Both times, be, "'neutral" unions when men like .. ly, neutral after the example of reported, he and the former : Tessier were coming alo?g. The the American unions. There has superior generlil of Maryknoll_ dominant unions in almost every, beeR some little progress in this were' seated at a small table, lSOuntry in Western 'Europe were; direction in recent years--not' whHe two Chinese _communist controlled by doctrinaire social-, very much, to be sure, but· officia'ls,· on both .OCClisions, sat Ists who prided themselv~s, in', enough to warrant our being at' at the, table :with them. ~rying degrees, on being' not·' least tentatively. and guardedl,.', The judge told Mrs. Walsh that' only 'non-religious but anti-re- optimistic about the future. .the Bishop appeared to be "more' ligious . and, more specifically,' or less as usual." He said Bishop Walsh· was happy to get the anti-Catholic. Consequently, Catholic and winter clothing he brought alonl·ether Christian workers in In addition to clothing, Mr. fiance and several other· WestNAZARETH (NC) - Mother also 'took with him to ern European nations· felt that Lucille Russell was elected Walsh Shanghai a gold rosary given to they had no choice but to estab- mother general of the Sisters of Bishop Walsh· ·this year by lish separate Christian unions. Charity of Nazareth during a Mount St. Mary's College ill Their purpose in doing so was general chapter meeting of the Emmitsburg, Md., on the occanot to "split" the ranks of labor, 1,550-member community here sion of, the 50th anniversary 01. but simply to make' it possible! in Kentucky. his graduation. Judge Wal~h., fOI' workers' to be good trade,' A nativ,e of Louisville, Ky." wh'o is also one of the four sur-, i unionists and gO()(:l Christians at , Mother. Lucille was formerly one and the same time. Inciden- mistress of novices' at the head- v.ivingmembers of that graduatally, I like to think that Ameri-. quarters here of the Sisters 01. tion class, sa.id he 'hopes to pre-, the, rosary to the Bishop Can Catholic' workers' would Charity of Nazareth. She suc-' sent d4ri,ng one of' his visits. .have done .the same thing under ceedsMother' Bernard' crimmins: Judge Walsh, given accommo-, aimilar circumstapees. 88 mother, general. . dations in a Shanghai waterfront, Landaoer Comments Members of the community., . hotel, is being eseorted about If there are any Americans ill· which. was founded in Kentucky the citi by assigned guides. . . . out of the labor movement in 1812, work in the Archdiocesewho think that the foregoing of Boston, Louisville and Washjustification of Christian unions ington, D. C., and the Diocesell A Delicious of AI~lt8ndria, La.; Columbua, Ohio;Covington,Ky.;Little Rock. • Treat Ark.; Mobile-Birmingham, Ala.; 'LONDON (NC)-The Observ- Nashville, Tenn.; Natchez-Jack_ er, Sunday newspaper' and influ- SOR, 'Miss.; Owensboro, Ky.; ential British ;ournal, has abol- .Raleigh, N. C.; Richmond, Va.; · iahed the .requirement that ita and Steubenville, Ohio. The,. . a.~ s~f( a hospital, and school top personnel be Protestants. ia India. . .. The late Viscount Astor pro'rided in 1945 in the paper's trust deeds that the directors, editor. and manager of the Observer " profess the Protestant faith. The Observer, announcing the -lifting , Gi the restriction said: "The effect. of the change is to remove the clause in the deed which required that all ·trustees Distributed by should be of the Protestant faith, that term being interpreted in ~@~m@mJ Ch.!l~ the widest and most liberal sense lBeverage COo .~. In future the directors, ed331 Nash Rd.: New 8edforcll M~<dl<e,. !ltote .Ctaip~ · itor and manager will no longer be required to be of .. the : Asic' for Them Toclay , WYmal'i 7-9937 0Protestant faith.

WESTVIEW (NC)-The Su- . alleged to have printed and ciTpreme Office of the Knights 01. culated in the Pittsburgh area Columbus has filed action for . pamphlets carrying the bogus criminal libel in Magistrate'. ' oath and also to have printed Court here in Pennsylvania the oath in his magazine, the against the Rev. Mr. W. L. King Voice of the Nazarene. of Elizabeth, Pa., charging him Joseph F. Weis Sr .attorney with printing arid circulating for the Knights, re;ealed the tile oogus oath of the Knights. Rev. Mr. King refused ~ make a retracUoa for printing the Rev. Mr. King, a printer-editor bogus oatil which say. Knights who is pastol' of the Church of pledge physical harm toward the Nazarene in Elizabl'lth, is non-Catholics.

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The Catholic in America

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THE ANCHOR-

I

.Thurs., Aug. 18, 1960

Revolution Brought Positive Hope of Religious EquG~~ty .

By Rev.

~eter

J. Rahill, Ph.D.

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Four u@M~toniarJ1)s ~n H@~}7

C_ross CereM@!fDie$

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This Is the seventh of a Sell'ieSJ of articl~s reviewing the ))6Sition and . experience of the practicing Catholieln the nire on the

Four Taunton men win participate in reception ancll profession ceremonies to be held in Valatie, N. Y. Monday;

American' community from Ct,lonial times. The autholl'iDoD.ds a doctorate In American Churcl. History, has taught Diln vadon universities; and b presently' Archivist and Historilllln off the Arehdioeese of St. Louis.. . -. .

Dnd Tuesday by the Brothers of Holy Cross of the Eastern Province. Receiving the religious hab~ and beginning their canonical year of probation for the religious life will be Brother Wilfrecll Precourt, son of Mr. and Mm. Walter Precourt and Brother Leon St. Pierre, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon St. Pierre. Making first vows will b@ Brother Richard Demers, while perpetual profession will be made by Brother Joseph Hogan of the faculty of Coyle High School. Following the ceremonies 00 both days relatives will be guestn of the Holy Cross community at luncheons held on the novitiate grounds.

That God can and does draw.good out of evil is proved over and over again. A striking instance of this Divine Providence is found in the Quebec Act of 1774. Initially it seemed that thiS legislation, in permitting Catholicity. to be freely professed and prac- be added "of Carrollton." It is ticed by Canadians, would £aid that his purpose in so doing cause laws against the was that there would be D"O misChurch in the 13 colonies to take as to his identity should

become even more coercive. Inthe revolt fail and the signen stead it afforded the Catholics " be punished. in the colForeign Ahl! onies an opThe valor of the patriots and portunity to the leadership of Washington d e m 0 n _ would not have been successful strate their had foreign aid not been seloyalty as a cured. It was to Catholic France group for the that the first appeal was made. first time. To In the beginning a few leaders this day the protested dealing with "Foreign C h u r chin Papists," but the danger from the United the British forces was too immiStates benenent for them to be heeded. Drum fits from the Supplies absolutely essential valor of the had been sent by France long Un VFW Catholics of '76. On two occabefore the Treaty of Alliance NEWARK (NC)-The Gol~ sions Catholic efforts to assist was signed in May of 1778. ConGROUNDBREAKING: Very Rev. Richard H. Sullivan, the American Revolution were gress was elated. To the credit C.S.C., president. of St~nehill College, breaks ground for a Knights of Blessed Sacrament parish here are favorcd to wm hampered by the prior colonial of that body it showed its grati- - dormitory on the camp.us.. Father James Doyle, C.S.C., left, the national VFW junior drum anti-Catholicism. The Indians of tude consistently throughout the . and: Father James V." ~wry, C.S.C., center, are interested and. bugle corps championspip ' . .'. MaI·ne,. lo.. a since converted to war. Occasionally indivi.dual epectators. in Detroit Aug. 24. the Faith,....volunteered on con- members demurred, but a$ a Blessed Sacrament won h dition that George Washingtoll group the Congress divested. VFW crown in 1954 and 1956. provide them with a chaplain. itself entirely of anti-Catholic The Newark corps has won mlThecommander-in-chief reexpressions of any kind. tional American· Legion hono", fer red the request to Massachu'French Papists' i:' five times having ta ken that letts, of which Maine was then It is not surprising that ·the MOUNTAIN LAKES (NC)- for the father of the farmer we title three years ·in. a row. It wiH a part. Laws more than a cen- Tories-one-thi"rd of the Ameri- Puerto Rjcan migrant laborers work for. He is not a Catholic, tury old prohibiting the prescans who supported England in working on some 30 farms in but he was a. nice man and we defend. the Legion crown .. Miami Beach on Oct. 15. ence of a priest in the colony, : the struggle-:-took horrified um- this New Jersey area have found like him." Blessed Sacrament is tryiDII .howed their effect. Not only brage at the alliance of the 001- a friend in Father Vincent E. Pray Kosary for its second drum corps gnlllllll was the colonial government" not onies with "Papist France." In Puma, entrusted with their spirSome workers, Father Pum!l slam. It is one of two corps ever able to call upon a priest in their eyes the 'specter of the itual . care by Bishop James said, pray the Rosary at night in to win state and national LegiOZl that vast territory, but no idea Pope was seen hovering above McNulty of Paterson.' their quarters. And "to see them mnd VFW honors, a feat it 00was had where one might be every French soldier. In his far-flung mISSIon" walk two or three miles to eomplished in 1958. found. All previous canard.s seeming- Father Puma sought out the church after a hard day in the Finally the request of the In- ly were refuted in the exemp- migrant workers, counted them fields is a lesson in itself," he dians was fulfilled through an lar;- conduct of the French and found that their seven-day added. exchange of prisoners for a troops who' passed through work week of 65 to 80 hours left Most 01. the migrant larmen priest who had been a chaplain Philadelphia in 1781. Nonethethem little opportunity to attend aFe single men in their 20s, but aboard a French ship taken as less, one loyalist writer eon- Mass. He arranged lor iii monthly sOme are married. One is the a prize of war, .trued the good· behavior as abevening Mass at 'a new church father of,12 children. They come' .. " Char~ Carroll I19lute, proof that ·the "French nearby. to North Jersey from the soutbFarther t~· the north was "Papists" were awaiting a more Evening Masses ern part of the state in March another disappointment. which suitable time to disclose·the He also scheduled eves;ng and wo~k until November before was of lI;luch greater consecloven hoof. Masses for Puerto Ricans in returning to Puerto Rico. CHARLES F. VARGAS quence. After. berating King The patriot. DCWBpapet'S. ,of other North Jersey farm. arc;lls Work A'verage' . 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE ' George In for the freedom the colonies were as consi~nt and gradually won the friendship ,They work ..an average .of 11 NEW BED~, MAS$. granted to the Catholics of in supporting the alliance ",~<ith of the laborers. He prepared for hours a day, seven days a. week. Canada, the First Continental France as was Congress.. FOr- the assignment by doing n brief Their pay ranges between 70 and CongfElss had besought', these merly" loud in their denunt!~­ stint in·Puerto Rico a year ago. 80 cents an hour, and from their same .'Catholics . to . join ! their tion of anything which had even Father Puma has worked· out earnings they must deduct $90a Catholic flavor, th'e De~s­ his. sp.iri~ual .and social. program for plane fare· home. ' ;' ea~~~~ war actually broke out papers then became positively wi.th the help of th~ Peill"!syl_, _ - - - -......:."1-----....;.:..:.1 .. a commission" was chosen to enthusiastic in their reports vania Department of Labor:. He plead in person. Anti-Catholipertaining to our ally, Equally induced farmers to help by. let~ Electrical cism had kept Maryland's "First noteworthy was the complete ting tHe workers off in time to Citizen," Charles Carroll of acceptance of the military union attend the Masses scheduled. In ~&; Contractors Carrollton, from participating by the Calvinist clergy.• some cases, he even got the farmin the assembly. But he was There is surprisingly little to ers to drive the Puerto Ricans to readily named as one of the quote from Catholics in praise church, to wait for them and three members of the delega.tion or in endorsement of the league to drive them back. to appeal for aid from the with France. In 1777 the French Refreshments .~4t French Catholics to the north. Consul at Baltimore observed One non-Catholic larmer JH>W The same Continental Con- that the Maryland Catholics- picks up the tab for post-Mass Il'ess asked Father John Carroll, "lea red an alliance with France, refreshments. Up to then the 944 County St. cousin of Charles, to accompany lest they be persecuted, and Jest snack was prepared by nllr: rlJ _ New Bedford the mission. From letters to his their priests be expelled." - ioners of the church the Puerto mother it is evident that Father To the outcome of thestnJgg)e Ricans were attending. Carroll had little hope of suc- Longfellow's words may be apFather Puma has been imcess. Yet he willingly did his plied: "You know the rest. In pressed with the devotion and simplicity of the workers. One, best to convince the Canadians the books you have read . • ." SEE "MANNY'" SOUZA FOR that the previous diatribes God indeed had drawn gOod out he said, asked him: "Please pray against the Church did not rep- .. of evil for the long-suffering .PlYMOurH resent the true AmericQJl. spirit. Catholics 01. 18th Century AmerBEFORE YOU Canada Remains Loyal. lea. While the tradition of anti• CHR·YSD..ER BUY - TRY Bishop Jean. Olivier Briand, Catholicism had not been shat• VALDANIl' however, W88 110 grateful for tered, undoubtedly its previous-. the freedom already bestowed ly unbroken front had been pen. NEW CARS and a Fine Hne of Reconditioned Used Cars hy the British government that etr;:;ed. American Revolution COMPLETE MODERN SERVtCE ON ALL MAKES OF CARS he kept Canada loyal to the e Crown. brought liberty to the c:oloAies.; OLDSMOBILE to moreover it brought to the Charles Carroll was due American Catholics a real hope Oldsmobile - Peugot - lenah exert still more influence for FAIRHAVEN 32 Iokh Street-cor. Washingtolll 67 Middle Street, Fairhaven the patriot cause, and this time of freedom of conscience. For ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:aI most effectively. The colonial most of them" :the . "Shackles t. , , . 'I would, not vanish. immediately ~.' ~ leaders wert: ,ready to make ~. ~l'cOmpletely.JBut'never. again . . complete break with the mother country. One of the signers 01.. would the outlook be as.'bleak, d nor the very survival' of Catholithe Declara t ;011 of Indepen ence cism in. Ameri~a . be threatened. was Chatles- Carroll, who andbrought honor to the Church in Next week: Feder~I'Religious ." . being the sole Catholic. ' Equality Not Realized'ill All . Moreover, he had another 'dis-' States. . ." 'Oil BURNERS tinction which was convincing Also eomplete BoiDel1'-Bumer proof of his patriotism. The or Furnace Units. EO'iclent MANCHESTER (N~)-'-Cath­ richest man in the colonies, low cost heating. BIll!!'n. _d olics in New Hampshire have fuel oil saies and 8ell'vlce. Carroll risked that fortune as well as his life 'in proclaiming contributed more than $19,500 openly his flill adherence to the to the fund to aid the victims of 312 H;nman New Bedf",d dO Mt. Pleasant StI'ed Revolution. In the Declaration, recent Chilean earthquakes and 'few Bedford WY 5-2887 to his clearly legible signature floods. ~

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Puerto Rican MigrcintWorkers Find Devoted Friend in Priest-Chaplain'

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\', Rosemary Moore

, THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Ri~er-Thurs. Aug. 18, 1960 ',-"

Abstitn~IT'll(:®

Conlinued from Page One . : I. She attended BrIdgewater State reachers' College, graduatirig il1 1959 with a B.S.. in Ed. degree. Last scholastic year Miss Moore taught at Roosevelt Jun. ior High School, New Bedford. and was at Bishop Stang two afternoons a week. ,This year, , with increased enrollment at the ·diocesan high school, she has accepted the full time position. Miss Moore expects to activate field 'hockey" basketball. volleyball and softball teams among the girls at Bishop ~tang. They will play against other schools this year, she said, .but will not enter league competition until 1961. Miss Moore has headed a staff of 20 counselors at Our Lady of . the Lake this Summer. Enrollment of campers has varied weekly, with a high of 115 registered last month.

Uniomoi '·Urges. Program To. Corre(;fr' fD)uoQnkong Among Youths SPRINGFIELD (NC) - The Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America meeting here has called for an information progl"am an.d abstinence pledge to ~rrect the increasing problem of. dririking among youths. ' At the' union's 88th annual eonvention, it was resolved that an information' program should begin at lea!Jt in the freshman :rear of high school. The resolution suggested that a pledge of total abstinence by youths would be "for their own protection." . It added that such self-denial would confer many spiritual benefits upon them. The union also resolved that tile expression "Drunken Driving" be changed to "Driving After Drinking." Msgr. John W. Keough, presfdent of the abstinence union, . h l' offered Mass in St. 'MIC ae s Cathedral to open the conven-

tion. . Bishop Christopher J. Weldon of Springfield, who presided at the Mass~ delivered the main address at the convention banquet. The' convention also' resolved to remember the late' Bishop' Duane G. Hunt of Salt,Lake City, Utah, in all the Masses o~ the union and in' the closing prayers of the convention. Bishop Hunt had been' a member of the society's advisory board, and "~1Il ardent worker for .the cause of abstinence," the resolution said. New Obscenity Law lPasses COllJJII't Test': .

YOUNGSTOWN·(NC)-Ohio's new antiobscenity law passed its first legal test as a judge' banned ' sales· in Mahoning County of a U....&. book he labeled "obscene.~' II" II. NEW FACULTY MEMBER: Miss Rosemary Moore,' Common Pleas Judge Erskine . Maiden granted a permanent inrecently appointed physical education director for girls and, Vatican to Restore junction against sale of the book. teacher of history at Stang High School in No. Dartmouth, RICHMOND (NC) - A ' ~er" . 'The case represented the first discusses, the program for the coming year with Principal State Supreme Court ruling cou'rt test of the new law, passed Gate a,nd To .... " VATICAN CITY (NC) - Aa last year by the Ohio legislature. Sister Ann Denise, S.N.D. may be necessary to un-lIIftused medieval gate and tower The law permits authorities, to snarl, 'confusion over Vip. fill. the Vatican City; walls, are file civil actions asking permannlYers~ry ginia's new Sunday sales law. being restored by order of POlle nent injunctions against the sale Officials in many sections of ~~n. . of obs<;ene p·ublications. " " '. .' .. '. .'. . . the state have delayed enforceThe gate and tower are.located Prosecuting Attorney ThomaS . LOURDES: (NC)~Afch~:)lsb~p· EVang~lza.tI91l .of t~ Workers';. ment of the new.Statute pendinc tlOII\e distance fro~' that part Of '.Deit- said he intendsto'file;sim- Paolo BedolI, ApostolIc .NuncIo , Worl~, " . .' • constitutionality ruling. &he Vatican, best known to tour-', il~l", suits ,agalnst· more thl,ln... to France, celebrat~d a l'ontifi.cal ." ,~n Ule ~~on1 da,. Arehbish~, , Confusion over the 1960 e..,;. Wos, St., Peter's Basilica ·lind the. . dozen magazines and bOoks he, High, Mass on Ule Feast of t~ EmIle .MaurI~ ·Guerry: of Cam- . ted 1 h b" sed b Vatican.Museums.·,'·' '\,' named ,in petitions last Fall as ASsumption ,concluding' the o'bbrai;president·ofthe'EpisCopal. ~cR' haw'd~ d~e~'m~~ea h' ~ JU The 'gate, called the, Pertusa . otiscene." The case's were disServanee he~e of the 10th anni:'Commisaionof tbe Wo~king"aia IC'~ton to gel.s ru 109 W ICu f' '. '. L._' Id 0 ff"ICla te d a t a S 0 1emn ..· . ' coun erth ru't'mgs of, ,,4ie, is.. ,at the southeast end omiSsed pendingth'e outcome ol.versary of the . foundmg of t... Wor, th . coun. the· Vatican walls. It has been the ca~. , . . '-Workers Catholic Action. Mass of Thanksgiving. The topic . 111 • ree er CI les. .ealed,,'r ith bricks since the y'~al" On the opening 'day, the pilof his sermon was: "Let us offer-Hustings Court Judge M. ~' 1500, when assassins .failed, in Benedictines to Open: grimage of the Workers Catholic' our sacrifices an4 our life for .I)()ubles ruled that. all. secttoN _ atte.mpt to murder the Duke Action' was met at the Grotto the evangelization of the world of the law are constItutIonal exAlphQnse of Bisceglie at the'CoUege'in Rich,"ond by Bishop Pierre M; Theas of of labor." . cept one ba~lOing.sale:s of sporU .cler of Cesare Borgia. , : RICHMOND (NC)---:Benedic- Tarbes and Lourdes. In the afterOn the'final day Bishop Theas and recreational equlpn;tent. H. T,he tow,er was originally part tine· College, the first Catholic, 'noon Auxiliary Bishop Marlus called on 'all the pilgrims' to par- . also held that the state .legisla" at. the defenses' of the Vatican.. institution of hi'gher learning in, 'Maziers of Lyons spoke' at the tidpate .iri· prayer for the work- tUl"e did, not unwittingly rePeal III the late 19th century. it bethis. city, will begin classes· OD. . solemn inauguration in the. Pius ing-world. The anniversary conthe law: shortly after passing it an observatory, which was Monday,. Sept. 19. X Basilica. His topic was "The, ' cluded with a sermon by Arcblast March. abandoned when Pope Pius, XI , The college, a night school e... '. Place of the Holy Virgin in the bishop Guerry in. the Grotto.-·: .This decisiOn ill contrary to moved the Vatican observatory tension of Belmont (N. C.) Abbey . rulings of courts in Hampton. to CastelgandoUo.'· Colleg~, was established at 'the' ,Lynchburg and Newport News " . request of Bishop John·J. Russell which held that the legislature of Richmond. Courses will be ,had in effect repealed the law. offered in philosophy, sociology, The measure is, part of 'Ute Continued from Page One BUENOS AIRES (N'C) - ;An In Buenos Aires,' slum a........ 'St.ate criminal code. Shortly', afhistory; , accounting;' business, -He is in residence at the 'com- theology and English. . tonio Cardinal CaggIano ca lied are called "misery towns.". . ' tel" it was passed, the legislalIDunity's. center house in Merida During the ceremony, Presiwhich since 1943 "has served as Credits will.be given'to quaUattention to the communist . dent Arturo Frondizi. ,of Argeniture adopted r~visions which the residence of the Mission" lied students by ·Belmont 'Abbey threat.' to· Latin American. ~ni:- t~na tied t"e sash of a general may have repealed the 'criminal Superior, a Language School, a College, which is accred,ited by, '.v~rsities at a ceremony honoring of the. Argentine Army around co~. . mission supply hQuse an d as a I,the Southern Association 'of Colthe Carmen Virgin, patroness 01.' the statue. Several regiments -==="W''''''';==liF==:W===llCl It refuge jor' th.e tired, mission.er,," leg, es. qnlY,hl.·gh school gra.duates , rendered military hono.rs to the Free Delivery 3 Times. Daily . to a booklet describing, .'vJ III be . e I IgI ble, f or cre d I, t bU t the Argentine armed forces. . f had >fbeen placed according .'" . • B. " statue, whlch FAIRHAVEN Maryknoll's work in the area.. a~u\ts' may take courses on a :The ArchbIshop of ,uenos on an" army gun carriage for the All missioners. gather in M,~r.." n~ncredit basis.' ",. . i. " ,. .':Aires'spoke during a brief cere- .. ceremony.. . : PION EER STORE twice' a year ior annt.\ar'reBenedictine College will be the . mony here.' He said: .,' , Complete Selection of treats 'and conferences. Between' second college in the Richmond "Most Latin American univer. Reappoin't R'ector MEATS ~ GROCERIES times the \;ermanent staff is kepf 'di.ocese. The Religious of the sities contain'much atheism, and MONTREAL. ENC) Msgr. · PROVISIONS' !busy ,w,it·Ii., missiq,n ~)Jpply work S.acred Heart of Mary conduct communism ,has taken .posses- Irenee, Lussier has been reap. ,249 Adams St.,', F,ai'rhaven and cOl1s'truclion .. The work owes . Marymount Junior College for sion of them. These Agnostics'. pointed ,~o a s~cond, five-year a lot, says the booklet, to' Father' "young women in Arlington. say that th.ere is no God, that term as, r,ector of the University, .WYman,·4~6441 Melancon,' among' others, who'" there are no commandments, of Montreal.. Msgr: Lussier, 56, U::!1I1===='E:E==;;;;;;;l)IE:E==~)L:::::i keeps"supplying almost everyClaim Oblate Priest and they want to create a new was first appointed rector on thing that is needed and, what is· Forst in Labrador law of love for humanity. In Aug. 5, J955, succeeding Msgr. more, keeps us safe and 'sane." -this manner they dazzle our Olivier Mauraull There's not much time in the STOCKHOLM (NC)-A Canpeople. While 'misery towns' missioner's busy life for hobbies, adian geographer here has exist in the Western World, peobe says, but he does enjoy play- claimed that the first scientific pIe are dazzled by' the promises Est. 1897 . 10'10 ra re I'dle m 0- explorer of Central Labrador in ." lng th e, pial 0 f com~untsm. Paint and Wallpaper . ments. Friends say that the Canad,!1 was an early Oblate misBuilders Supplies music;ll interludes are much sionary, Father Louis Babel, " lI,arracks' Now'Hostel ' I[': )'~Pont : Paint .' , . 2343. Purchase Street looked' ,forward to and .that d,M.I.· '. ' . MIAOLi (NC) ' - A former" .:"'-1.' : Re!U" ~., S,to..e' , ". New Bedford Father Melancon is possessed of. ·T. P. Jost, associate professor police' ba~ra(;ks' has been . con:..' nue ta'ent. Too, he's managing of geogl'ap'l~y, at the University verted 'into' a' Catholic hostel i 422.AC';l.S~. Ave. WY 6-5661 , Q.t:.t.... . ;cor.. MIddle St. II little: relaxation-:" in the New:. of Ottawa, made the claim. in a 'for meli students by Maryknoll . . ' ; PARKIim England, sunshine· while he'. t~~hnicar'paperto the 19th InterFathers here' oil Formosa. Fa'-' bere.. " . . 'national Geographic Congress . . New Bedford ther Vincent' R. Capodanrio, . . .;, . ~White~s m,eeting here in Sweden. . M.M" hostel director, will move The first Oblate Fathers in with '10 students in Septem. ' NSPECIAC'MWc reached Canada in 1841, and by ber: Miaoli is a center for higher from Our Own the year 1900 their missions exeducation throughout this al·ea. tended thl'oughout the Canadiall Tested' HereiN north. ~cushnet, Mass. WY 3-4457 Mr. Jost said that in studying BUSINESS AND. Father Babel's writings, ,~'One • Special Mitlc DUPLICATI~G' MACHINES must 'come :to the conclusion • Homogenized Vtt. D Mflk Second and Morgan '54's. that although there were several • Butter-milk people who before Father' Ba~l FALL RIVER • Tropicano Orange Juice visited different parts of L<ibl'aWY 2-0682 OS 9-6712 • Coffee and Choc. Mille dor; his accounts are the first to E; J .. Mcy'-Nh4, P~op. • Eggs - Butter . b,~. really 'scientific and detail~d," .:.; ". " "!%%%%$%%% .'-7 ::;;:;%.%}%%%\. The eXJ;llorer-priest, who~e, .1 .•-:. travels 'occurred' between 1866 '~ " and 1875, died in 1912 at the age of.' , 86. ,

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Sees Casale's Stout Heart Conquering Present Slump

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~ ~. ~-llHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River- Tf1u r:s. Aug. 18,1960

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Cantelloand Bragg Blithe Spirits of Ol'ympic Team

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question ie o~ asked, "Why does a basebaD o1ayerinvariably siump miserably the season after con_ quering his league as a rookie 1" As far back as the days of Abner Doubleday, no one has been able to come up with a

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By C:hudc Johnson BERNE (NC)-Clowns'of the U.s. OlympieTracik and Field Team now tapering off for this weekend's final preOlympic'calistllenics against. the Swi!=;s standard-OOareJl8 here at Berne are a couple of 'ex-Catholic college stars.. The names ,of these laughing heart, Theresa Fiore Tn Fi

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suitable answer. The sopho- priestcool'dinated t.o guide Jen:y more jinx, that plague of toward the major leagues. one-Summer's d' tI ration Jerry created a name for bimboys8l!'e All Cantello and are Italians. Terry'S' mo~ which has. festered in the self on the sa;ndlots of Brook~yn. Donald Geol'ge Bragg. These 'e~ at preparm,g spaghetti, . From Cathohc Youth Orgamzaare big names in intems.- ftlvlOli and [asagne. aJ enreers 01 so many m ' ~ tion, POllce Athletic and tional track 'and field, and the -when r was a~t 'Vil'--o"~ 'Dill leaguers, has found ~ home th UJ • Le' 1 to faAmert 'n UU, v," .. u time in Je~ry Casale, the Boston - ~c:sntrialagl~~u.:rry lads haveeonsiderable in oom- Mo up to Terry's house weel[en~ Red Sox pItcher. . blazing righthander with power mOD. 'I'heyare world ll'eoord and put on iour Cl' five pounds," Jerry is a StroPPing yeung to hit the ball into the Gowanml holders in their r.espective cln- Don grins. ' fellow from Brooklyn. A year Ca L derspecialties, roommDtes for. Thrzan bag' e.'Cceptional size. ago he was ·the Sox' most 000- ' n . a . the Roman games and both ma- strength and bone structure fcg sistent moundsman. He won 19 c.Llkofe mChostyhoungs!eJrs In.::,' ~culated.at 'Cat!J;olic colleges s vuulter. Most "skypllots" l}l'e Ity ur.c es, erry aspl ID the Philadelphia area C::m' ~ alm st •. . ht L.._ n ~• .,.... games and 10s t e~ .AU< .. AU'W.I to play in Ebbest Field ina uni' ' . . - ~~ ...y; , () S1unny f e IIows in place club. fonn with the word "Dodgers" 0 L Y M PI iC WRITER:' tello a bncll:e..,<rroom just the 145-165 pound class, with Roof Falls IB Ch (C _~. hn before leavmg tbe U.S., Slil!:l . the lli'm of village smit'hys. tied 'th t mm.ate Tom written across the shirt front. aries G. . huci:l.) .Jo -huddy Bragg plans to be 11nar- 'Tarzan at his trimmest never e . WI ea ; the But the Brooklyn club wasn't te spo..d-- ed'tor of 'ed b f th . Brew:r for fourth place :n interested. Nor were the Yan- son, ve ran ilOl!l 1 71 e ore . esumreer AS over. will get, beJow 192 or 193 pounde ' AmerIcan League in pItching , . , The Tidings, Los Angeles Bragg, curly-haired, hnndsome egain dn his lifetime. kees, GIants, WhIte Sox, PIrates, _, I V~'l 'TTy .. h t h row i n '" s h u touts, eac ~11 f h h'1m tr you ts . archdiocesan news''''per, will anu muscu ar u' an.ova.... As the big international gh_ t' 11 f st and u.u. 0 w om gave r-"' l I s t th !!ted ttl vw th ree. Ex eep J(~no y a . hI cover the Olympic games' in . a umnus, a . ~on ' I '. . e . nears, Tarzan 'expects to be m therefore, as, . if! most cDses, l\oIoves Up .Qunc 'Y pole vaultcelhng to 15 feet,· 9 A-I flying 'condlition troubled by wildness Jerry manA fonner semI-pro star and Rome for the N.C.W.C. Newa and cne quarter inches in the •. , . '. aged to keep his st;ikeout total Red Sox scout,. Frank "Bots" Service. NG Photo. Olympic Trials. He admittedly I m rapIdly ;,oul1dm~ intn higher than his bases-on-balla Nekola, was mterested. He hankers to play Tarzan in the shape for Rome, be saId. He yield 93-89. AU in Ell! n fnne signed Jerry to 0 Boston conmlt."lilfl'l8 JAlLn f1""MlS' movies. . may Oir may not go over the bar sesor:,s work. tract in October, 1951, and the 1I'lWI1f"'.... "l6tn tJIlt:) "I' exh'b.ti. t" h d at]5 feet here at Berne tbi:;J· Then the' jinx teased Cn&l!e. following Spring he began the I! 1'1_ ~II . " . 't m .fUil 1. I ?~IS "ed ~_ a ~ weekend, but lots of coachu th · h wou Id Iead him to OllilA. . ~"" ml us gotten' ...... won't r ' d 1'f h e He seeme!l destined for an even caree: w h IC v VtiJVmffll~C JI [i"" shy,SWIll but notgnn. now. "- I've _. be too. suprIse better second year. Two quick' the bIl{ ~ea~u.es .. " , I . ' , .' , "l1:.... mt6~ AtL lI .f!,4!!I1!!!' over being: timid. But sometimes! . goes mto. orbIt ?fiCe the ,games I wins over the Yahkees and Jer~ .' .' At San Jose In the C~hforma . "~~ ~~ ~ " ~l!I 'l",~ '; II I ·talk big to 'keep ..up my 'confi... )~~t up'd~~ay, 11'1, !~I?", .Dontt .. "'''. was on his w<lt>'Biit then 'the I 'State L.ea~u~, .Terry won 14-13 R6~E (NC)-,-AthJetes J!Il. odence.!' If~!,get, ,pe s, an ,~hlblbomsi. ..• ' ,[. proverbial r(Jof feR in,' His record "and w~~~ed' 211 ~"attel\s '11 nOb' ~h~ .... .the Olympic. Games who. win "'." ,.Embryonie:Ttmw.n .. " I'" '." ",LaSad!e . JillaJJUHIlG ." ; tad '1':29 h' b eson .nextyearhelabotedforAlany ... . C tIl I .' f~,,,·f' ~o~ s n s :.~ 'tr~~ asts - eft. ,;n the"Eastern Leag'ue '<;;ee;,s- 'be reCEilvedm·audlMce'next",oc"·'·Thisembryoilic '.F<l'rzanha(iie1." "&llan(':J~'iJJ.0,.. an, a u!"nus °Oa' dl ,'I 'Aa s stexcee . sb)~~o~Ov~' _boro irlthe Caroliria L~agu'e 'Wedn~sday, Aug. 24 b~Y' Pope ,. cidedl it' pa:ysdivfdel1d~"to ad~'" '. mi; ."oGO~~et'hIS~ mf~,dtehrn fiVil'''' ".r:'. ugu.seems' " k ' · " . ·.. h P·.'d· '.·'t·L'·.'···.',·· '. ,.I·'·'·'h·'.· ..... : "",. .! .'." • snowmanship"to' his sky-'climb':"o,,, a , la s· 0 e leu . ber. t' ". ' : I.RQano.,«,;~nt e .l~ ~on ~ague. ,~Rhn WIll e~.hIS we~~.a.ge}~·I" n" events;"He"stands"1i've f€e\ ',' ..,~. __..... ·He splIt 16 declslons that Sum- . 13 lanlWages mg act. Two weeks ago e .1' . a' h" 1 '.. " . " .• P1'9b~"m UUIWl '.' .... ,'- . , •.•. ' ,:. .' I. ' ... : ' i" .. " ,. 7 ,.",' /' dished up a generous portion of seven.· an. one- a f mcheli', " But the -jmx'twill find. that ~,.p'\er. I ' ." ..• '. 'no" .', ",The ,audience, t~ be,lteld i!i 'ham Hollywooo-stylefor Los" .'scales'·'on1y 165 and 'hardly' fig':' ".,,', ,XheJ;l the bIg push to .l'enway St Pte' S 'U 1 h r ' , 'e t ' "t' ' " .. e quai t has chosen a durable"resourceful ,I P~rk go~ 'futo'high gear' In' ~954 . . ~d.r,s qbyuare ,·Y'l l," aMs~,.~ .. AngeJessportswdters-bY issuing .. m.ths ~L.c°elm'pe.e!'n ts her~, .,';' guy who has managed to,clear .," "'" an au: r e s s lta . l YS'. IOls....r a'blood-curdling Tarzan yell in . WI 'J"V 111 glan sue 'ae his hurdles' and' 'maintain fl ,h~ wa~~~i-8.a~AJb~?y,a~dJ' t~e "of Ddense,.:GiI,dio ,Andreott~,... answer to the challenge ~ u,steammate Billey, a taU' 220- '.":' "'· · · · den.?, t f th ~ " " I ' c' QtymJ,>ic " head ' ,coach Harry''S~y-. I.' " h d '...... -ri··san., Y e.t h' smooth sense of, balance. ',. tn~-t . , . . two seasons , . .found . . " erry . , :w,.o I~'i?resl vympnc puun ,~, e.s h o.Id,e!'",' . At the age' of, six,. Jerry felt .. J;e~Irm? th.e bes~ thAe wa~ t~, Organizlng . eommlttee.. 1 - ' ." der ,'. " " ". of the accepted world record of ,. ues his first great loss, the death of th°fferAmlD .two AtrIPI~-ti leagh . . Both addresses 'will be in It brought down the houSe, 282 feet, three and one-half encan on, w ere . L a t·m. Aft erwar d s, th e P ope,8 . · his father. Nine yenJ'fl ID t er h Ifl h'e 17 lost SSOCla 11 fo Lo " vill and a few fellow OlympIans re- inches. . mother died of heart trouble, . e ;~n. 'd the P r,.f' m~.~. address will be read by priests spondedto the primitive jungle A tough little Marine lieuteo-. h ael ~~ 110;0J' over loudspeakers in the folseveral months after 'an older ~ ue,anh call from various corners of the ant, Al employs the swiftest brother Dom, a butcher, bled W S agF , w. ere. ~56was lowing languages: Spani)!h, Po- California State Polytechnicsl run-up to the line of any speaJ'lly .....I·tt·109 an ranClSCO In • l'.IS, h G erman, It a I'lan, A ra b'IC, . . the b ' T weIve f eet . death after accldenta College cafetena, lOCllted at man In usmess. himself ift the abdomen witb a stout Hearl R\HlSian, French, Rumanian, P~mona, 'Calif., where the U.s. before letting the shaft fly foJr cteover. Uncle Sam beckoned in 195'1 Hungarian, Chinese, Japanese team was in training from A\1t1out into the sky, he dives head>Clerieal Guide and the six-two, 200-pounder and English. ust 1 to 12. long towards the foul line-The day befare she died, Mrs. spent that season and most of The Pope will receive mem"This was tame, You should praying he won't skid beyond. Cnsale toJeJ h~ ~!der clIildrel1 ,~e '58 campaign iri Germany.. . bers of the International" Olym.i. .. 'have seen Cantello and me up' -and lands on his hands. (And of . reachi.rtIt ,pi~ Committee at Castelgan'dolfo, in Eugene, Ore., where we' had . ~r~gg ,thinks he's an exhibitionoo Louis, Mary: ,o~ ~nn to· give . "The I?Dg .Terry a chance to make a career . ftle lll9Jors. became. fl teaJ~ty on. Monday, .Aug..29. He will be a pre-Olympics warm-up meet' 1St.) , in baseball for himself, "Don't ~a~ ~n 1~~8 'when Jer~y aPr>«:ared given thr~ m~als t;ommemorat7' in' late .Taly. Some· of the feiCanteno hllS more color tha make him go 'to work. He c::m In 'hIS first. g~e WIth t~e Red iJ)g the' Olympic Games. The lows dared us to dive off a 45- any weightman in history of the always work." Give bim II . Sox. ~ut hIS bIggest .thrIll was. medals will be made of gold. foot bridge ~t.o the McKenzie modern OlympiCs. with the poscl1once," she begged. They did. n~ to come un!11 ~prJl.15, 1959, Ililver" and bronze.-River. We did, and it wowed . sible exception of those famoua: WhHe Mary _was making a when he won hIS fIr~t big league, . The .Olympic Games win be. 'em. After that we took n wild old hammer-throwers from New . bome far Jerri and Ann with start over WashmlIt:0n and held from Aug. 26 to Sept. 12., four' or five hours' canoe ride York' known as the "Irish herself and her husband in II capped the afternoon With a 450Broth'ers I'IL__ do:n the river'. It .was grea.t!U Whales." This fellow is likely to quiet residential area of Brook- foot ho~er. . V~'Oiru . Aren't you~fraid you mll!ht be the most popular foreigner lyn, JelT)' had c:ome under the The JInX stHl hangs or.! and "'. Y. Pro G,,·dders get hurt and mISS the plane rIde' in all Italy before the games en4 . influence of a young priest, Rev. .that afternoon ~ast year probab~y n to, Rome'?" I asked. September 11. . John J. Kean of St. Francis· seems a long tIme ago. But he 11 WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-A "Oh no, Tarzan does s t u n i s . · , Xavier Church. Father Kean was push that 'ole debbil~' plague team of Brothers of the Sacred. like that all the time," said Medler to Attend Gamee . the reassuring strength behind. out of the way, l!l family and n Heart has whipped the New Bragg. He is 25, getting grey at Both of AI's parents weN the teenager and family and priest in Brooklyn are sure. York professional football Giants the temples ("it's worry over born in "Italy. Mom Cantello left .. _ ----- --" . three straight times here. clearing that bar, way up thar") the U.s. by boat in mid-July and The Brothers are Summer and a likeable fellow despite the already. is back on her native school students at St. Michael's "exhibitionist" exterior. soH awaiting the arriyal of her College, where the mighty Weight Conseto1lB' "bambino" for the ceremonial Giants are in training. The T . 1 f t "U"_ b I Olympic spear-throwing. a " Mom was born on Iy 75 k"a.Oa Brothers formed a team and be- 1 arzan' ed fr Isa 196so a.d ~ t 215 .came the champion of the Sum... oon o~ poun s ~ Q meters from Rome," says AJ. mer sc,hool. stu,dents. . '. after settmg the world s po~e . "My dud died when I was o~"" vault record of the OlymplJ: " •..., ." .... ~ The ,powel'tul Giant/! wat<:hed·.. Trials'July 1 at Palo AUo, Calif. ~ bab~. , . ' . the BJ;"o~ers win· the champion.,. . "I celebrated making the team .' :Thi~' ~i~t-hearted. Mar in. , . ship game, then ,challenged the, by eating everything I'd' denied' mmte~~Qt ~~ ma!,ned, on t~, :: . 'champs. The Brothers de.f~ated.. myself in 'training fur months'" base at Quantico, Va., last week,the G!a!1t.s .. in three games by ,Bragg siUd. "Boy did l' eat!" ' :', e~d and. he'll honeymoon. ia scores.·of 21-:-6, 21-11 and 21-:]6. Bragg always lias had to bat- Europe right after the OlympIC'lL Just to keep the record. tre excess weight, 'esPecially af- I "It was a big military wee:1-.: Iltraigbt, the Brothers were play_ It£r meeting his blonde sweet- . ding," Al grins happily. ''We, ing volleyball-not iootball. had five Marine officers in full Taunton Ten nis dress, crossed javelins and ali. Renames Gym TheaiInual eyO tennis tour-tha·t jazz. Jackie will meet me" SOUTH ORANGE (NC) nament for all boys and girls in in jolly old London town right; Seton Hall University has re-' Taunton will start Tuesday, after the games.'" named its gynuiasiwn the Arch.. Aug. 23, with players competing DespUe all the fun and clown-. bishop Walsh . Gymnasium ifl in junior and senior divisions for ing, AI Cantello and Don Bragg, honor of the.f¥'st Archbishop cd 11 to 15 year olds and 16 to 21 are dedicated Olympic warl'iore.. Newark. Msgr. 'JOM J.Dough- year olds respectively. Entries both determined to bring hom.' erty, university' p~ident, alsO must be made by $ Saturday ~old medals from the 17th mod-: announced !pat; theuniv~~ity'.i evening. ern gam~s. . . basketban fe.am.· w~d·;pl~..; ;& , . 25-game sch~ule this yeal', }'VitA five. games scheeh.dedfor ,,l'iew York's Madisol(~\Jal'e' ·GaNien. '.' +-

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Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, visits tbe Pontifical Relief Organization'! new seaside summer camp '"r()lidoroN at Ostia. Dear' Rome, fw an<lerprivilegecl eh1ldren. aDd.

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CAMP NURSING SERVICE: Nurses from Fall River and New Bedford volunteer services for youngstei's at St. Vincent de Paul Health Camp. This project is in its third year. Left, Mrs. Ella McNally, in charge "of nursling s~rvice, checks health ~ecords with Terence keenan, co~mselor-5nfirma-

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rian. Center, Mrs. McNally checks pulse Qf Michael Roderick, Wareham. Right, she looks 'at possible poison ivy of John Philip Souza Provincetown, as Ben Cano, Harwich, waits turn. Supervising is Joh~ Andrews, head counselor. '

Catholic Nurses Are He,a Ith .C~mpVoluntee~s

(:ontinued fro~ Page ODe job, is unp~id a'nd loving,'vol\An-, ,A.nna DonovlHl, and Mrs. Mary. for counselors are of great a8- 'tee rs . . . .. ,;, 'Slgnorella. : ", sistance in'making sure th,at ex-, ,;They, too, deal out T~C. '!V(e' ' 'n's likely that when the ,~e~l'.,' \ 10U~\ ;, LEOPOLpVILLE-(NC)-=- tended treatment~i8 properly bad one' youngst~r," recalls a ~~red for ~ampers ret~rn h,ome' . BENNINGTON ,,(NC) _ , ' " , :, n,une, "who .calpe in daily for It s M~ther s turn' to ~Ive thelll;' T''h "b .' d' ' ' P remier Patrice Luinumba," 'given'. " Nur'ses check :,the camp daily, ,weeks ,to 'have a.' bruised knee' ,TLC pllls.,-for "campslck head-, e, aSlC. ~ceJl.cy of the . ' returning' 'from ,his 'visit, to. says John An4r~~s"'lf,there's 'cared for., The, 'bruisedisap-', ,ache.'! , \ ' American'p~ple':'. will not the:,U.S.; has 'said his go no "business," they 'may simply p;eared: but ,he still ca~e for his 'allow: the question, of relig~ ernnlent will do away WIth what phone 'in, but if there's trouble h.ttle bIt of ex:tra attention. Most. 0" 0 ion to become an issue in the , called the predominant "posi. of any sort, they're"right on' the " 1ley k I h e was f rom a h ome he presid~ntial election campaign, tion of the Catholic Church in where no one bothered much CAP DE LA' MADELEINE <Gov. Abraham Ribicoff of Conthe Congo. about him, ~nd he loved being (NC)-A national day of prayer ~necticut has said. ' . Mr. Lumumba charged BelASBURY PARK (NC) ....,..The fussed over. for successful cooperation was' 'Speaking at a dinner which lium had a "Church dictator- first state-wide convention of 'On the' whole, however, the' held at the national Marian op.ened the Vermont campaign ship under government protecC!lmpers are healthy, says John.' s h r i n e , ' for the election of U,S, Senator , " the Holy Name Society in New tion" and he charged the Church, Worst casualties this Summer The Shrine of Our Lady of the' John F. Kennedy of Massachu" Jersey will be held here Oct. 14 for 80 year's, had slowed up the to 16' at the Berkeley":'Cart~ret h.ave been a couple of cut heads Cape was also the center of, a setts, Democratic candidate for 'development of the Congo by Hotel and the Civic' AUditoriu~, by over-enthusiastic bunk-mak., novena of prayers asking God's President, a, Catholie, the Conopposing free political actiVities: based on the theme "Holy. Name er's who fell from the top storey. blessing on the Canadian hiernecticut Governor said: Mr. Lumumba made no men- -Catholic Action." The nurses don't wear uni-' archy., The ceremonies on the "Sen, Kennedy's race against flon of the p,astoral letter issued h Th'"vmas A . B 0 I an, ~ forms at the camp. Idea is not Feast, 'of the Assumption are the Vice ,President Richard M. , A rc lb' 1 IS op 'by the Bishops of the Congo of Newark will preside I\t the to alarm the youngsters, who are -most -solemn of the year at the Nixon, the Republican candiwhen the Congo marked its in- convention's opening session and all too likely to associate a Rosary shrine, , d a t e , will be the hardest fought dependence from Belgium last deliver the principal aadress at white uniform with a needle jab; A I' C h b ish 0 p Marie Joseph and most, intelligently conducted Sune 30, The Hierarchy at that t:le banquet. Those who've participated in Lemieux, O,P., of Ottawa, chair.:. campaign in history, I am contime recalled that 'the Church Bishop George W. Ahr of, the camp project,' which has' man o~ the Canadia.n Episcopal vin~ed th~t Kennedts religious had backed Congolese indepen-' rrcnton will 'deliver the keynote meant giving up a goodly slice CommIssion on Latm AmerIca, behefs wIll not be an obstacle de!lce in separate pastoral let- addr'ess and preside at the conof precious free time include opened the ceremonies of the and that religio~' will be most tel'S in 1956 and again in 1959, vention's general seSsion. Also from Fall River, Miss 'Angel~ final day by offering a ~idn~ght i?significa~~ in the final elec, After the government in late .participating will, be Archbishop Harrington. Mis Helena Gould, Mass at the outdoor shrme. " troll result. luly anl)ounced that its PI'OCelestine J, Damiano, Bishop of Miss Mary Quinn, Miss Kathergran'! ' called, for separation of Camden; .Bishop James A, Mcine Nash, Miss Amanda, Gauth- ' Church and State, Auxiliary M .. "V f'[ P-' "'.' '. ,'v ier, Mrs. Mary Quinn Sullivan" Bishop Joseph Malula ,0£ LeoBishop James J. Hogan of TrenMrs. Ann' Fleming, Mrs. Kath':" poldville said: "In the indepentOil; uov. .1 leen Sherry. Mrs. Mary Berdent' Congo, the Church seeks' Father Denis P. McCar'thy, O,P" nardo, and Mrs. McNally. DO sp'ecial privilege; her ambi-' national liirector of the Holy From New Bedford have come: tion is, to continue her work, of' Name SOciety. Mrs. Dorothy Koczera" Miss salvation, charity and peace as . in tile past." , Bishop Mal~la also stated that,· the Church was "at the source' ,of the wonderful emancipation ,DETROIT (NC)-The Ameri-,," country. will, ' join in a get-outef the African Negro peoples,'_ can Legion's national commanthe-vote campaign for the presi- , the, Con,golese in particular." d er h as advocated " a ,reaffirma- . dential election in November. tion of belief in God asa means Discussing .international affairs, • of rediscovering ithis '\ country's . Mr. McKneally contended that "sense of purpose, national pride tl)is country shOuld have taken' 'WORCESTER (NC)-Some 300 ' ,'and old~fashioned, patriotism," an earlier and more positive delegates from all parts uf the Martin.J. McKneally, New'York stand against the regime of Fidel United States are ~xpect.ed at attorney -and World War. II Castro in Cuba. the 47th annual fun-day con- veteran, has warned the 42nd vention of the :Knights' of Lit.hannual convention of the legion's liania, to be held here beginn;,ng M i chi g a n Department that' 'WASHINGTON (NC) -Archnext Thursday. "~here has been a consi<;ierable, bishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Aposletdown in' patriotic fervor in, tolic Delegate in the United, : Wa·ys of aiding Lithuania and', our country, and to many of us, States, is enroute to Rome. On eounteracting the impact of it. is very alarming." . his way, the Archbishop w'n communism on that Soviet,The ,best way to rekindle v.j sit . England, Ireland and ruled nation will be discuss':ld America's'sense of purpo,se, Mr. ' France: He plans to return to at the convention. ' McKneally said, is by "r~assert- this country in late October. o Bishop ~ernard J.' Flanagan ing our active doctrines and beof Worcester will offer Solemn lief' that 'God is the ultimate A FAMILY TREAT !"ontifical M~ss for delegates in reality and we are His creatures, St. Casimir's church on the clos- 'and, that-our, importance derives . CHICKENS'. ing day of the convention. Dur'simply' fro~ that fact." ing a banquet later the Knights The National Commander said , W~ 7-9336 • of Litl'\uania Award Medal will Legion posts throughout the, , .' ian chosen for his contributions ian chosen for his contributio'ns FA'RMS" . to the cause of Lithuanian lnde: MELBOURNE, (NC'):2......A'u-icilpendence. l45 Washington St., Fairhaven iary Bishop Arthur Fox of MelJust off Route 6 . The Knights of Lithuania was bourne has labeled as "atrocious" founded in IfH3 as a religious, a Melbourne television station's' , Watch for: Signs patriotic, and social organization sponsoring of a debate between While out f~r a Drive of Lithuanian-Americans. The Australian, school children 'rin tSt-p at this Delightful Spot society has s'ome 5;000 members. so-calle,d mercy killing. I• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~

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K' n'l-g' hts of' L:thuanl·a Plan 41th Convention

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