~ocialAction
Department Avers Bargai'ning Process on'Probation
,." fh'e l
"
. WASHINGTON (NC)--":"The Social Acti~n Department of .the National Catholic Welfare .Conference warns labor and management that collective ba.rgaining is "on probation before the bar of public opinion." 'Unless labor and management compose their differ- cans are losing confidence in the ences and make a go of ab1lity ,of union leaders and .collective bargaining" they maJlagement ·representatives to may be "saddled with some · make collective bargaining serve
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ANCHOR
, ,./
; La·bor·Mas·s 1 At Cathedral ·1
An Anc.hor of the Soul, Su-r:e and fi'irm-ST. PAUL
') .Qn M:onday
Fein River, Mass., ThursClay, Sept. 1, 1960
Twenty thousand workers wiil be represented at the' · Solemn High Mass to be presided overby His Excellen-
PRICE lOe 1960 The Anchor $4.00 per Year Second Clo .. Moil Privileges Authorized ot Foil River, Mass.
Vol.' 4, No. 3S: © .,
Msgr~
'Bette.nC9U.rt
Death"ls ·Lalnented-
FATHER WINSPER
New Bedford
Jesuit Master F.or· Retreat
: The Most Reverend Bishop.. celebrated a Pontifical Requiem Mass yesterday morning j!1 Santo Cht:istoChurch, Fall River, for the late nastor -Of the Church, Rt. ReV-. Francisco C. Bettencourt who died at the rectory Sunday" Rev , " Edward. V -, ..W'msper, mQrning after a prolonged S.J., a, native of New Bedillness. Monsignor Bett.enford al,1d a member of' the court, who was 83 years of Jesuit . Mission Band staage had been a priest over tioned at Campion Hall, No. 60 years and pastor of the Fall Ri~er ChUl'ch since 1928. ¥onsignor Bettencourt was born in Praia, Graciosa Island, Azores. He came to the Fall River Diocese in 1911 and was appointed assistant at Espirito Sailto Church, Fall River. He also served as assistant at St. Michael's Church, Fall Rivel', St.,John the Baptist Church, New Bedford, and St. Peter's Church, Provincetown. In 1921 he found-' ed.Holy Ghost Parish in Attleboro and then in 1924 he was' transferred to Fall River as pas- , tor again to establish another parish, Our Lady of Health. He became pastor of Santo Christo Parish on Nov. 1, 1928. In his eulogy yesterday mornlng, Rev. Arthur C. dos Reis, pastor of St.· Michael's Church, Fall Rivel', pointed out the late pl'elate's unselfishness ·in leav. ing his own homeland to come Tum to Page Eighteen \. .
Diocesan Couples At Family Parley
At the Northeast Area Convention of the Christian Family Movement held in Portland, Me., it was suggested that a Diocesan Federa:' tioft of the organizatiol).· be fo~med in the Fall.River DioeeSe, according to Mr. and Mrs. Pa'ul A. D,umais of Notre Dame parish, Fall River, .contact coupIe for the area. Mr. Dumais, with other rep, resentatives from Fall River and Attleboro, attenl;led the meeting with Rev. Roger P. Poirier, chaplain for four Christian Famity groups active in Notre Da~ne parish. Groups in Tiverton have all>O been started as a r~su1t of organization work by the N 0 t re 'ts Mr . D I;lmals . sa'd I. D ame um, The Fall Riverrepresentattvoo reported to the' convention on 11 protest project during which they campaigned against aggestive advertisements of motion pictures. - Some 600 'attended the convention, including an .African eo u pIe representing foreign melllbers and a couple who brought nine childx:en, the eld.est 12 yeaI'll old. Some 40,000 ~uples belong to the organization in nearly all the 50 states and many countries throughout tbe world.
Andover, will conduct the annual retreat for priests of, the Diocese of Fall River starting Moriday night at Cathedral oCampo Father Winsper attended Holy Family elementary and high schools and graduated in 192.7. He entered the Jesuit Novitiat.e in Shadowbrook, Lenox, Turn to Page Eighteen "
Na me Fr. Cussen
Dean of Stonehill The Rev. Aloysius E. Cussen, C.S.C., well-known Pennsylvania educator, has been appointed vi~e-president and
MONSIGNOR BETTENCOURT
form o( compulsory arbitration." the department says iri its 196b Labor Day statement. . This would be '''disastrous,'' it'·· . . adQs. "A growing ,number of Ameri-
dean of Stonehill, College, North Easton, it has been' announced by the Rev. Richard H. Sullivan, C.S.C., president of the college. Father Cussen succeeds the R ev. J ames D.oye, 1 C .S.C., who has been transferred to· King's College, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. oA native of Winchester, Mass., Turn to Page Ten
cy, the Most Reverend James L. ,Cormolly, D.D., at 9 Labor Day' morning in St, Mary's Cathedral Fall River. '. . , For .the third successive year, the" United ,Labor 'Council of 'Greater 'F~ll River'· will' spon'sor this religious observance of Labor Day. . Rev. Arthur W. Tansey, rec. Turn'to Page Ten
the public interest. and, worse than that, are. losing faith in the vel'y institution of collective bargaining itself," declares the. NCWC department, whose director is Msgr, George G. . Higgins. Complete statement on Page 16 The statement says loss of public confidence in collective bargaining and increasing demands for compulsory arbitration are "alarming" trends. The next time public op.nion is disturbed by labor-manageme'nt quarrels, it adds, it "may not. be politically feasible or expedient" for Congress and the state legislatures "to look the other way." . However, the statement says the. situation "is not by any ,means completely hopeless." "Labor and management still have it within their power not on'y . to. avoid compulsory arbitration, but also, from the · mo~e po~itive point of view, to restore public confidence in the basic, soundness of free collec. Turn to Page Eighteen
Diocesan School'Enroliment . ' . Approaches 23,000' Mark .When classes :resurrie Wednesday' for the opening of school, aproximately 23,000 students are expected to enroll in the 57 elementary schools and 11 high schools of the · Fall River Diocese. The anticipated enrollment for the 1960· 61 school year is an all time classes at the Immaculate Conhigh for' the Diocese. Last ception School, New Bedford, St. year's enrollment totaled George's School, Westport, the 21;336; .while the total for . Sacred Heart· School, Taunton, 1958 was 20,492. · and St. John's School, Attleboro. The increase is due to the adA staff of 536 elementalY dition of the sophomore class at school teachel"S and 145 hign Bishop Stang High .school, the school teachers wi1~ care for this opening of the addition. to Mt. record enrollment. St. Mary Academy, Fall ~iver, The new educational instituwhich will provide facilities for tion,' Nazareth-on~the-Cape,will additional students; the opening be able to care for 36 exceptional of the new Holy Name School in studelits in their school in Fall River; and the addition of Hyannis.
Rites ,for Cardinal·O'Hara In Philadelphia: Monday. PHILADELPHIA - (NC)-Solemn'Pontifical Requiem Mass for John Cardinal O'Hara, C.S.C., '72, will be offered in the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul here next Mon'day. Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, will offer the Mass and James Francis Cardinal McIntyre, Archbishop of Los Angeles, will preach. Cardi-
Madonna Blue P.redominant Colora' Beautiful New Mt~' St., M.ary ',.Academy, .FallRiver
ByPatrida McGowan When nearly 500 students walk into, the ~hiny new building at Fall River's Mt. St. Mary Academy next Wednesday, few will realize that they ar-e writing the latest page ' in a history that reaches back to the 1800's. Not only .were the Sisters of, Mercy, who staff the Academy, the first religious commUllity to sei've the Fall River Diocese, coming to the area in 1873 when it . t'll d th . . d' cording to Sister Mary Gertrude, Mary Gertrude, who has been a was s I un er e JUrIS IC- a pioneer Sister at Mt. St. Mary. me'mber of the communl'ty for tion of the Bishop of Provi- Sister Mary Gertrude has been . 52 - years and has w'atched the dence, 'but they were the doing special research on the growth of the Sisters' educafirst to organize high schools history of the Sisters of Mercy tional plant from St. Catherine's here. in the Diocese with the idea of Academy to the Mount of today. In 1883 the Sisters opened St. preserving recollections of early Madonna blue pI'edominates' Joseph's High School in New days that exist only in the memthroughout, the new building. Be'dford and I'n 1879 St. Cather- 'ories of Sisters' ana students It is see'n in auditorium curtains I'n""s and chairs, in conference room ,. Academy, ,an outgrowth of active in bygone years. an 'elementary school that had . St. Catherine.'s Academy was decor, on walls. The auditorium ,started in 1874, began. in Fall' housed at 621 Second Street, in . fronts on Whipple Street,' where River. the building that is now the 'cona 'graciously curved driveway St. Catherine's was co-educa- vent for the. Franciscan Mission- . leads to sweeping. stairs. Surtional and among its students aries of Mary.. The school had mounting all is a graceful cross. was the father of Sister Mary m'oved ' from 'previous quarters Five Mount upperclassmen Olga, RS.M., present superior at Fourth and Roqman Streets. made the tour of the new buildat Mt. St. Mary. The high school No, doubt the students of those : ing with The Anchor photogcontinued until 1890 when it was 'early days felt something of the rapher and reporter. It was their discontinued' because of the excitement of today's girls as first look at their school home, pressing need for Sisters in the they in turn move into new and and their reactions were ecstatic. many parochial schools of Fall larger quarters. Loudest oh's and ah's came as River. It is a giant stride 'the Sisters they saw the beautifulaudito' A member of the, last gradu- of Mercy hav.e taken as they rilim with its capacity' of 701 IJting class, Mrs. Luella Little, ,enter their new building, and and the shining. gymnasium. still resides in Fall River, ae- none know it -better. than Sister ,.-UI'D to page Elev«
nal O'Hara died at 3:06 A.M. Sunday in Miseri<;ordia Hospital · here. He underwent abdominal surgery at the hospital on Aug. 23 for the secoild time within a 'year. He has been a patient at ,the hospital several times in recent months. Cardinal O'Hara first visited the Fall River Diocese Dec. 15, 1940 when, as Auxiliary Bishop of the Military Ordinariate, he toured Camp Edwards in company with Bishop Cassidy. Also in his military capacity, he was present Nov. 22, 1941 at the opening of the first U:S.O. center in the area, on Franklin Street, Fall River. The building is n~w the Catholic Communjty · Center and houses activities of the 'Girls' CYO. ' Followin'g the final tributes to the Cardinal here, his body will. be taken to .the University of', Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind" for burial. Cardinal O'Hara ,served as president of Notre Dame frpm.1934 until December, 1939, when he was appointed by Pope Pius XII to be Titular Bishop of Mylasa to serve u r,uru to P..,--e Twe
2
Unity Octave En'tentions Undergo Word Changing
THE A~CHOR-Diocese of foil Rivei':-"Thurs. Sept. 1, 1960
Pr()testant and Ortho~o~ At Liturgical Convention ,
GARRISON (NC)~The wording of intentions of the Chair of Unity Octave has been changed to eliminate "oveJlo:o tones that were not ,originally intended." The revisions include such changes as call~ng Orthodox "eastern Christians"instead of "Oriental siOllS had been under consideroseparatists ;" .referring to tiOD for some time and' were '~reconciliation" with the undertaken at the direction ~ Holy See in8~ad of "sub- Father Angelus F. Delahunt,
PITTSBURGH (NC) - AbOut 200 Protestant and Orthodox clergymen attended one or more'sessions of the North American Liturgical Week. They included Archbishop BcmJamin, head of the Russian Orthodox Church in Penn'sylvania and West Virginia. talks by' Fathers Julian Stead, Bishop John J. Wright of O.~.B., and H.A. Reinhold and .P'tt b h host, to Liturgi-' said: "The. remarks - IJlade by 1 S urg , such promment Roman Cathoeal Week, saluted the Prot- lic clergymen lead men'to be-
mission;" and speaking of "the S.A., superior general of the missionary extension ,of Christ's Franciscan Friars, of the Atonekingdom" instead of "the mis- ment. Approval sionary-conquest of the World." estant and Orthodox clergy at lieve that dialogue with the The changes were announced the week's giant banquet and Catholic Church now becomes He said the· revisions were thanked them for their "friend- possible." I -here by the central oHice of the submitted to Church authorities Chair of Unity Apostolate, which in this country and abroad for , ly interest." "While this ,does not mean' is directed by the Franciscan theological approval before they Bishop Wright called on that any fundaIll;ental differFriars of the Atonement. Archbishop Benjamin to take a ences which exist between the were formally adopted. , January bow at the banquet. He de- Catholic Church and non-CathThis is the new wording of in-. The Unity Octave is an eight- tentions for each day of the scribed the Archbishop as "the olic churches have been solved," day period of prayer for reli- Unity Octave, with the old wordPrimate in' a completely nonhe continued, "there is a defgious unity. It,isobserved inef.,. ing in parentheses: controversial sense of all the inite change_in procedure and nati(mally each, year during non-Catholic clergy who by in climate." January 18: "The union of aU January.' , ,. Christians in the one true F'aith , their 'presence revealed a co~ A spokesman for' the Fran-' and, in· the Church." (Formerly: munion .lnprayer, at,least, With ciscan Friars stressed that the "The ;return' of all 'other 'sheep' the Holy Father." changes in wording involve "no to the one fold of St. 'Peter, the The' audience, of 1,200; includchange of theological principle." one shepherd;")",.' ing '13 bishops at ·the head table, ,CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)The changes recalled revisions January 19: "The' return 011 gave the Orthodox prelate a PoPe John expressed great sorCAR~INALO'HAR,A mad,e in the Holy Week litl,lrgy separated eastern Christians, to standing ovation. ' roW on the dea'th of John Catby ,His Holiness Pope John communion with the Holy See." The Protestant and Orthodox dinal O'Hara,·Archbisl1op· of CQr~inQI,O'Hara·· XXIII, who ,dil-ected the ~ten'" (Formerly: '~The return of aa elergy seemed, enthusiastic Philadelphia, and, oHered . Mass ,ing of phrases whic)l might ha,v~, Oriental separatists to 'commuAOO about t~e Liturgical·Week. Contiitued from Page One for his soul at the, chapel of his 'been offensive to Jews. . " , ion with,the Apostolic See.") Military Delegate to Ca~holica The Rev. Mr. 'George J.Matey Summer villa here. The previous wording of the January 20: "The reconciliain the U. S. armed forces. Of .. Duquesne, Pa., a Russian The PontiH earlier had sent a intelitions had been in effect for Cardinal O'Hara's body will 4''{, years. A llpokesman for., the tion' 'of Anglicans with the Holy Orthodox clergyman, "(iescribed, radiogram conveying his blesstoe week as "ver~dnstructic:mal"" ing to the dying prelate:' On be 'taken to the 'cathedral to lie Friars, said .,the 'changes were See." (Formerly: "The· submi9and 'lidded that "much effort is learning' of CardinalO'Haia's in' state, 'today when the first of made ,inv~ew o( the, fact: th~'t sion of Anglicans to the auth~ ity of'the vicar of Christ.")', , being, expended in, the ~ight death he sent the :following mes- three 'other Requiem Masses for ','expressions, t6at were ql,lite 'Janu'ary' 21: "The reconciliedirection, particularly: so far ·as sage to Msgr: Thomas F.'Mc- the 'repose of his"soul will be customary at the time of, their the liturgy is concerned." He Nally; , vicar 'gen~ral 'of ,"the offered: Bishop, J. Carroll Mc- o~igin, have l!hifted in c~innQ~ ti~n" ,of, European .~rot~sta~~~ Cormick of Altoona..:Johnstown With th~ Holy See.'~ (Formerly. viewed the week ,as, !~creating ,a Philadelphia archdiocese: ;. taUon and have assumed over- "That tlie Lt{therans. and ' :a}i better understanding of a unity "With heavy heart' We have will offer the Mass, and 'Bishop t··· . . ' . - .', . tones, that were not originally other Protest,ants ot conti~ent~ received the sad news of the McShea wilFpreach. Other , intended." b.~!!ec!- on,,: charitY,'." ' , . . , , Masses will' be_ offered 'in the Europe may return to HoljT ,The' Rev~ ,Mr. Robert L. Kin- death' of' your beloved arch,The spokesman said. the revi- 'Church.") " .' cathedral tomorrow: and Saturbishop. Prayerfully imploring eheloe, ,executive· director of the day. , " Janu'ary 22: "That Ainedcatl divine' solace for the, great loss Council' of, Churches· of the, Ordained in 1916 Christians become one in uni6a Fittsburgb area," referred to of (your) father' and leader, We , Thousands, of ,people knew extend Ou'r profoimd sympathy -w~th the 'Chair of Peter." (Fo~' to the Archdiocese' of Philadel:. Cardinal . O'Hara through his merly:' "That Christians' 'm' phia, and beseeChing God to opinions' on educational matters, , NEW YORK (NC),-A movie America may become one ill FRIDAY-St. Stephen, Ki~g and grant him a most deserving re':' his service at Notre Dame Uni- dealing with hygienics" called 'communion with the ChaIr of , :ConfesSor. Simple. W hit e. ward, for so rich, dedicated and versity and. his, frequent travels "Wasted Lives and the Birth' of St. Peter.") 'January 23: "The restoratiOa Mass Proper; Glqria; Common selfless a ministry, We impart in behalf of Church or govern- ,!w,ins," has been placed in itil Preface. Votive Mass in honor Our special apostolic blessing." mental missions. C '(Condemned) claSs by the of lapsed Catholics to the. sacra:' The Cardinal was born OIl National Legion of Decency. ' mental life of the Church:" of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, May 1, 1888, in Ann Arbor, Mich. , The' agency said further that permitted. Tomorrow 'is the (Formerly: !'the return to the His 'family later moved to Peru, the production "has been faLSely . sacraments of lapsed Catholics.") First Saturday of the Month. incl., where' he attended paro- represented" as having legion' . January 24: "That the Jewish SATURDAY ~ St. Pius X, Pope PHOENIX (NC) -Coadjutor chial and public schools. approval. ,'.,' and Confessor. Double. White. . people come into their inher, The futUre Cardinal attimded , Mass' Proper; Gloria; Common Bishop Francis J. ,Green of TucThe legion stated that the film' \tan~ in Jesus Christ." (Former.:son praised the Holy Family Re:. Preface. " . ' the College the' ,Sacred Heart originally .as' titled "'Children ly:" ".The ~nversion. of. ~, SUNDAY - XIII Sunday After treat Association at' its annual in Mohtevid~o;" Uniguay, fOr ' of 'LOve." It'said the movie is Jews.") , . Pentecost, Double. Green. MasS meeting here-for',jts important several months and then se'rved "completelY, unacceptable #>r Ja~uary, 25: ''Themission~17 , Proper; GI9ria,; Creed; Preface contribution to the integration for"half, a year"as secretary to general motion picture" atidi- extension of Christ's kingd~ of family life.,: the tJ'. Mini&ter ,to Uruguay: of the Trinity. ' , ences and that it has been sen- through,ouftbe world.'~ (F,orm~ Bishop. Green, .0Rened the' at!1909 he entered .the Univer:' sati011ally exploited by K.Gor;; ly: "The missionary conquest, ~ , MONDAY-St Lawrence Justi~ sociation's 10th annual conven- ~~tY of ,Notre DaIJ;1.eJ 'an~ ~n 191i don Murray, P,roduction. ian, Bishop alid Confessor. . , th..~".wor~~ for ,Chris~.".), ,'; ; he, joined, the, Cqngregation ,,01. Simple. "White. Mass Proper; tion by, offering Mass, at' the The following objection against Franciscan retreat house, Casa Holy Cross. He, was ordained, oil, the movie was lodged by 'the Gloria; Common .Preface. : TUESDAY - Mass of previous de Paz yBien. Over 100 husband Sept..~, 1~16, in. the lndianapo!i8 l~gion:' "Completely unac~epi:': , Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass and' wife delegates from Cali- cathedral.,. .', ",'" able 'for general inotion picture Proper; No Gloria; Common ~ fornia, ·Nevada, 'Arizona,' and "Fath~r"",O'HaJ;!l returned ,to entertainment purposes is'.thiS Ohio were present. Preface: ' . Notre Dame in, 191'7 ,where he hygienic film (originally'entitled The family retreat association; was, named professor and pre~ 'Children of Love') which has Est. 1897 WEDNESDAY:-Mass ; of !,,Previ.or ous Sunday. Simple. ,Green. founded here in 1950, is process- feCt o{ religion, '8 post he held been sensationally exploited :1)y Suilden Supplies ing new retreat chapters' in' New until 1934, when he was elected , K. 'GOrdon Murray.' Prod.uction Mass Proper;' No Gloria; ComYork, Texa~, New Mexico and president of the university. mon Preface. 2343 Purchase Street and which has been falsely rep. 'In 1939 Father O'Hara was resented, either explicitly or in THURSDAY -':"'Nativity of, the London, England. Its purpose is "New Bedford Blessed Virgin Mary. Double to promote retreats for married iulmep. Titular Bishop of Mylasa e~fect; as approved by the ,wy 6-5661 qf . II Class. ~e. Mass. couples and assist on the parish and ari Auxiliary Bishop in the National Legion of Decency." Proper; Gloria; Second Collect level in applying', the lessons of Military Ordil}ariate, which is 0 the retreat to everyday living. charged with providing spiritual St. Adrian, Martyr; Creed; Preface of Blessed Virgin. . care for ,Catholics in the U. S. II armed forces, As Military'Delegate" 'he "visited armed for,ces Men. ,THE ANCHOR lists the an,SHREWSBURY .-(NC)-A !'e- personnel throughout the counniversary dates of priests who treat house for men of the Dio- t.ry, and baptized ,and confirmed BRINGING~ served the Fall River Diocese cese of vi orcest~r wili be estab- 'many soldiers and sailors, Shortly after his conse~rafion he was .since its fonJi:atioD in 1904 with lished here under the' direction . the intention that the faithful of the Passionist Fathers, Bishop appointed" by', President' Roose~ ',,;'. will give them a prayerful Bernard J; Flanagan, 01. Wor- v:elt all one of 18 m~bers of the Board 'of Visitors ot the U; s. ~ remembrance. cester announced. , SEPTEMBER S, The Bishop said that approval 'Naval Academy. . ' , ' , " In Marcli;"i945,he was named Rev; Thomas J. McGee; ~912. had been received from the SacSEPTEMBER 4 red CoIigregation of Religious Bishop 0'£ Buffalo, N. Y. In this ~"NION WHARf FAIRHAVEN, MAss. Rev. John F.'Haney, 1923. at the Vatican for the establish- post he received recognition for' SEPTEMBER 5 ment of the, house next Wednes- his st:ro'og stand' agahist racial Rev. Napoleon A. Messier, 1948. day. At that time the Passionists discrimination He adopted a '. . will take possession of a 48-acre policy of abolishing separate tract of land near the center of parishes and ~hools for Negroes in the Buffalo diocese. FORTY HOURS this town. _ Improves Schooi', System . Father Gilbert. Walser, C.P., DEVOTION In Nov'ernber;,' 1951, Bishop retreat director of bur 'Lady of INCq~~RA TED 1931 ,Sept. 4-St. Louis of France, Sorrows Passionist MOf.lastery hi 'O'Hara was named Archbishop ,'... Swansea. West Springfield,' has been of Philto\delphia and was enOur Lady of Mount Carmimed, temporary~superior,.and thoned as head of the See on mel, Seekonk. , retreat master at the>neiFioun- ,Jan. 9," 195'2: The Archbishop' ..": Sept.l1-St. Anne, Fall River. dation. Three bUildi.n.gs·~pn the immediately 'started a program St. Dominic, Swansea. property will be reliovated for to expand educational facilities in the archdiocese. Within six Sept. 18 ~ HolyCross, ' Fall u~e during days and ev~tllpgs of River. " recollection .but eventually' Ii years, 55 new parish 'schools J~ES N. OOluNs. Col., Pres. St. Joseph, Attleboro. new retreat house will be blli!t. were opened, and about 300 schools were improved and exSept.2~t. Anthony of PadRegistered 'CiVil and Structural Engineer panded. In addition, 14 new high ua, New Bedford. Membei' National Society ProfesSional EngineeR WOODSTOCK (NC) - Father schools were built, providing . Sacred Heart, Taunton. J. Harding Fisher, S.J., 85, for-: facilities for 35,000 boys and FRANqS II.. COU,R.lNS, ••, Trek. mer associate editor of America girls. THE ANCHOR , THOMAS. K.' COL~8NS, Sec'y. S\eeond-elaaa .nail priVIleges autborized . magazine, observed his golden Archbishop O'Hara was eleQ'Thursday Fall River.' Mass, Published evenjubilee as a priest at a Pontifical vated, to the Sacred College of a' 410 Highland Avenue. Fall "ACADEMY 'BUILDING \fAll RtVER, MASS. River. Mass•• by' 'the Catholic Press of the 'Mass 'of· 'Thanksgiving . here in Cardinals in December, 1958, by " Dioeese of Fall River Subseriptloa price Maryland. ' His Holiness' Pope John 'XXIlL b7 mall, pOGtpald $4.00 P8 year. . ,
Ponteff Laments Prelate's Death
l.egi'onCond~mn's,
'Wasted Lives'"
Mass Ordo
Bishop Lauds Family Retreat Association
of
'In
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Sturtevant' &,"" ,'Hook'"
Necrology
New Retreat House For" to Open
m~, COMn~G
THE,IIFRIARS
KING SIZE 'LOBSTERS
MacLEAN'S' SEA ,FOODS
~
f~
l~
COLLINS' &' SONS
GENERAL ., ,(tl~TRAaORS '. and'" ;ENGINEERS,
'Golden Jubilee
,
Professor Gives Conditions ,For Political Independence
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept, 1, 1960
,Social and Moral Failings Cause Te,enage Crime
WASHINGTON (NC) ..:-. A professor of government theory said here that national and other groups do not automatically enjoy a moral right to political independence under modern conditions. Father Gerard F. Yates, professor at Georgetown University, that . "political society, the state, said this in responding to is a natural society, that is, one a request for comment on ordained by the requirements of general principles applicable 'human nature." io the newly emerging nations, • "More concretely," he con tinespecially in Africa. The world's attention has beeR drawn recently to the Congo, formerly under Belgian rule, which fcll into near-anarchy following independence. The United Nations has entered the area in an effort to achieve stability. Conditions Father Yates, who received his master's degree from the London School of Economics and his doctOl'ate from Yale, ,l!8id the eonditions he sees necessary .for Independence include the abilit,. to maintain peace and, order, with pl'otection for the' rights of minority groups ~nd of foreign-
CHICAGQ (kC).:.....~n FBI man , Another 'condition,he ~id, i8 urged, Catholic War Veterans to • promise "of maintaining con:',' encourMe' ~or:e Americans. to tiiUona conducive to the ec0- show a pio'l'\eer spirit,llO,d ,deternomic" social, and cultural de- mination in the face of.' today'. \Oelopment o~ their peoples." , challenges. . ) " . Refel'1'ing to possible diilorder , Cartha' D. DeLoach, assistant from unplanned steps to inde- director of the Federal' Bureau pendence, Father Yates said 'that of Investigi,ttio~,said such a "obviously,under modern c6n- spirit is necessary to defeat the .Itions, 'where orderly tran:- "four marching ,columns" of siUon must be provided from 'crime, juvenile delinquen<:y, colonial tutelage to independ- subvel'sion and public apathy. ence, only such a bod,. as ttMt Mr. DeLoach told the 25th an. United 1I!'ations could, possibly nual national convention of the undertake such a task." veterans' organization: ' , "If gl'owing number's of AmerSociety of Nations so doing," he commented, ican citizens will but, revive the -ute UN would' act as the dele- ' qualities of 'personal cou'rage and gate of the only conceivable integl'ity in themselves and in. higher human authority - the still them in their children, society of nations, which is still then we will have nothing to fear. The war Will be won Inchoative, but' nonetheless and the four marching column's real." Father Yates, who was dean of the enemy wiiI be its unof the Georgetown graduate mourned and unregretted cas', , 8Chool 'from 1949 to 1954, said ua!ties.", "We need men and women," he, said, -"but from the pioneer pattern who will roll up their sleeves, east, it glance at ,the HILVERSUM (NC) - Father: heavens and 'Say, with true Dominique Pire, O.P., winner of convictiOn, 'Thank yo'u, God, for the 1958 Nobel Peace Prize, ha., bringing ine to the threshold. I announced he will meet other see the cha Henge and I" caD. Nobel Peace Prize winilers in take it from' here.''' ' November to discuss waya 01. contributing to world peace.' . They al'e Albert Schweitzer, Ralph Bunche and Philip 'Noel Baker. , MONTALTO DORA (NC), The Belgian Dominican priest Bishop Albino Mensa of Ivrea made his announcement while has ordered three months of addressing the World Youth Con- public prayel's in all churches of ference of the Young Men's his diocese 'for the return ,to the Christian Assoc'iation pere in ,Church of about 1,000 inhabi':' The Netherlands, tants of this northern Italian He also disclosed that he will town who left the Church' in probuild another of the villages for test over the appointment of a refugees that earned him the new pastor other than a priest peace prize, The new village will they had favored for the post. be situated at Mulhouse, l"ran('~, The h'ouble here began in 1958 , and will be named after the with the death of the local' French flier and author, A:nt.oil'& pastor. The townspeople wanted de St. Exupery. It will be deFather' Nicolas Averno to be signed by Le Corbusier. named as the new pastor. But the IQte Bishop Paolo Rostango of Ivrea did not make an appoiJHment because he was ill. He died in December, 1959: VATICAN CITY (NC) - A While the IVrea see 'was stilt four-man delegation from' Kavacant, an' 'adminis'trator was tallga province in the Congo has named as temporary pastor in presented a statement to the Montalto Dora. The townspeople Holy See on its position con.were angry because Father cerning its independence'. Averno was passed over. In FebKatanga province has declared ruary, 1960, about 1,000 of them Its independence from the Congo, left the Chlll'ch' in' protest and but its declaration has not been joined a sect whose local pastor recognized by the republic'. is excommullicated pl'iest; gov~l'Ilment headed by Premier Vittqrino G<>ttardi. Patrice Lumumba. According to Vatican sources, the 'Holy See is concerned for the safety of missions in the Congo. While it maintains a PARIS (NC) - France's nastrict neutrality regarding con· Honal Catholic daily newspaper tending factions there, it seeks has increased it.s circulation by to keep itself fully informed Oil one-third in the past year. the attitudes of the varioua La Croix, edited by the Augus. factions. tinians of the Assumption, registered a circulation of 136,500 in March. This was 34,000 above the PONTIAC (NC) - The board newspaper's cir<.'ulation the preof directors of the Conyert vious March. Makers of America will hold its This was the 'largest percent17th annual meeting here Sun. age increase reported by any day, Sept. 4. The organization French newspaper, France-Soil' was established in 1944 to foster registered the greatest numerical convcl't-n)aking by laymen un· increase fro m 1,312,500 to del' the guidance of the clergy. 1,372,000, CirCUlation of the Father El'win A. Juraschek of Communist' Humanite and the San Antonio, Tex.. is national fellow-traveling Liberation Nodirector. mained about the same., _ . .S,
LONDON (NC)-The Internat.ional meeting On crime and punishment sponsored here by the United Nations
ued, "it is a grouping of families and other societies resulting from their conscious need of mutual protection and betterment both , individual and social, at every level, economic and culturaL" "Nation and, state are nO,t synonymous;, though in modern Wl'iting they are often so treated and often enough their physical boundaries coincide fairly closely. 'Nation' 'primarily refers to culture; 'state" refers to social order," he said.
Urges Pioneer Spirit Revival,
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POPE GREETS ATHLETES: Som'e 4,000 Olympi/? athletes were greeted by PoPe John XXIII, in a unique mass audience; in St. Peter's Square, before the Olympic gaines opened in'. the new Roman stadium. NC Photo: . .
pJan ',fol' ,'Wigwam'Cath'edral Wins Liverpool Architecture Competition' LONDON (NC) - The arehi- 'Arthur Bailey, of London. tecture eompetitioft sPl)llsored' The Gibberd' pla'n calls for a by Archbishop John C, Heenan round building with 16 great of Liverpool has resulted in the supporting concrete ribs spreadf1na'I choice of plans for an ultra. iog out around it. A central modern church of concrete and tower of'stained glass will cast glass .for_ Liverpool's Catholic ' sparkling light on the sanctuary cathedral. beneath. The "crowlI of thorns" The design calls for a "wig- will top the tower itself. wam" rising to a "crown of Underground Garage thorns"-a series of struts, eacb Vertical panels of stained surmounted by a cross and glass will be installed at the painted black in sharp silhouette base of the cathedral between against t~e sk,Y. The top of the the 16 slender concrete ribs. The crown "':"lll be 340 ,feet above roof above them, forming a ground level on a hlllt~p over- sliced-off cone, will be of copper. looking the busy port cIty. A t' f 3000 ' . . congrega Jon 0 over , . The . desi~n is the work;. of, people will be al?le to be sea~ed FrederlCk'Glbberd, 42, a BrItish in an amphitheater extendmg Protestant architect who also three-quarters of the way around de!ligned London Airport. It was the central altar. It is so designed picked from 298 'entries, sub· that no one' will be more than mitted for Archbishop Heenan'. 70 feet from the, steps of the' competition by architects ill sanctuary. many parts of the world. The cathedral will be built Three Jlldees above the mammoth crypt con" ' structed a 'quarter-century ago Selection of the plan.was made when the then Archbishop en~ here in London ~y a Jury, com- visioned erecting a classic church posed of ArchbH~hop Heenan; that would hive been the second Si,r Basil Spence" president of. largest in the world·. ,There' will " the Royal Institute of Architects,' be a giant uriderground garage and David Stokes, a member of from which churchgoers will the institute. To insur,e impar- enter the cathedral by escalators; tiality, the architects', names Work on the new Cathedral of ' were not revealed ,during tho Christ the 'King will begin next j~dging. _ Spri'ng and take about five years . For his winning design, Mr. 00 complete. The estimated cost Gibberd receives a prize of is' $2,800,000. $14,000 in a,ddition to his fee. The second prize, $8,400, goes to C. H. R.'Bailey of Kuala Lumpur, Malaya, and the third, $5,600, to
Rome Vicar Issues 'Rules for Priests ROME (NC)-The Vicar for Rome of Pope John has' issued ru les cov,ering the activities of. priests in Rome for the Olympiea. 'Clemente Cardinal Micara also urged all to extend to athletes the welcome"of "Catholic Rome," recalling the Pope'a concession to priests traveling with sporw groups, granting them faculties to' hear confessions. from the time of their, departure to the time of their return home.
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ended with the 900 delegates from 84 countries in neaJ'ly unanimous agreement on the moral and social lacks which are the basic, causes of the worldwide rise in teenage crimes. Expert after expert rose during the two week session to cite lack of parental control, brQken marriages, the absence of moral and religious instructionas the primary causes' of. the increase. Representatives of. both East and West, of specialized international a~encies af. filiated with the U.N., and Of nongovernment agencies rang. ing from Catholic to communist took part in the sessions. . The consenSus of the second U.N. Congress on the PreventioR of, Crime and ,the Treatment of Offenders was that criine, and its causes and consequencetl transcend the economic and p0litical divisions of the world. Shook!nC Effects The delegates agreed that 0bscene books, :i',ilms and television have genel:ally underminin'g effects, The most shocking effect. arising from the meeting appeal'ed to be caused by the facta li'nd figures on juyenile delinquency. Many. of the solutions confidently put forward by sociologists in the past we... judged wrong. In their pooling of ideas, backed by a vast documentation from United Nations headquarters, the delegates suggested as practical causes first the amount of money youngsters have to spend, and, secondly, the use to which· it is put in automobiles, motorcycles, records; dril:l~ and other entertainments,
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THE ANOHOR-Diocese ofiFolI River--.Thurs. Sept. 1, 196'0
VATICAN CITY (NC) -The 'first American-foundedseeular institute for men has received preliminary approval from the Holy See. It is the Secular Imtitute of Pius X, founded in' Manchester, N·.H.,in 1940 by Father Henry Roy. .
Father Roy was hamed ... Illewly approved institute's __
perior general inceremoniee III the mother house of the <>bJares of Mary Immaculate heN. A former Oblate, he left that eongregation to become the __ stitute's first priest-membew.. Secular institutes are socteUe. whose members, clerical or ~ consecrate themselves to a life of Christian perfection in the world. They practice the evSAgelical counsels of poverty, chastity andobedience,b\Jt do not wear a distinctive habit and continue to hold whatever :JOM they had before entering the institute. .
Says. Ohiq Lacks Law To Regulate' Buses
'VoOLUNTEERS' INCA'STRO l\1i1LITIA: There are . more than 200',000 :"volunteers" in the 'Castro miTitia forces, reportedly contt-olled by Red agents. 'Many joined for fear of losing ,theIr jobs. Even high school boys and girls have been trained as militia. NC P,hoto.
COLUMBUS (NC)-The Ohio State Department of Education bas no legal rigbt.,to regulate operation of privately owned school buses operating .by contract between parents and priva te schools. This is the gist of an informal ruling by State Attorney General Mark McElroy. His opinion was requested by E. H. Holt, state superintendent of schools, after complaints from some Cincinnati parents over alleged incompetency of drivers employed by other parents of school children. Mr. McElroy opined there is no existing legal provision for regulation. A spe~ial law would have to be enacted; he said, and . until it is supervision can be carried out by enforcement of present laws pertaining to motor vehicle safety and drivers' qU;llifications.
War VeteraDS The Pius X institute grew GUt of the U.S. branch of the Young .Christian Workers' movement and most of its leaders are in the U.S. But the institute Wall' established in the Quebec archdiocese by Archbishop' Maurice Roy, Father Roy's cousin. This transfer came about following World War II, in which most of the institute's memben served. Archbishop Roy, who was Military Vicar' of Canada's armed forces, became interested in the institute and aBowed it • .be established in his See.
A,rc,hb!i,sho~p
Accuses C:ritics .of Distorti'ng PI(lSto,f'OI Letter on Sc,hool Integration .
NEW ORLEANS (NC),...-Al'chbishopJoseph F. Rummel of New Orleans has charged that critics of his latest statement endorsing school integration "misrepresent and misintel1Pret his view.s. Archbishop Rummel eategoricallydeniedcharges that by issuing an .A!ugust ,21 iPastor.a1 urging peaceful pub'lic school integration he was endorsing the Democratic party ·.platform, "interference beyond -the bounds iana Citizens' C~unci1 and Mr. favoring communism, inter- of his ecclesiastical regimen." Perez "misrepresent and misinfedng 'in matters which do SUJlreme Court terpret" his pastoral "so grossly not ,conoern ,tIDe Church, 'or that a repudiation and refutation .The council said ina statement .
seeking to create a '~schiSlU" 8lU<lug Catholics. .' The Archbisho,p said {Aug. 23) that ,in ur,ging peaceful integrationof New Orleans public schools he had in :view "onJy the welfare of aU and the 'loy,alty w,hich we 'owe to -God"to ,country and to ,our ,Christian and American·wa.y 'of Hfe."
cannot be omitted." He said there is "absolutely nothing" in .the pastoral endorsing any party· or candidate. "Only a distorted mind can Bttach any political significance to any part of the letter," he commen ted.. Archbishop Rummel. sa i d charges ·of "·communistic· intent Assailed or subservience" are ",abundantArchbishop Rummel had been ly disproved" by his record and 8ssa'iled for issu'ing 'the pastoral that of the Church in opposition EnioyGracious living. at Bargain Rates by the South Louisiana Citizens' to. communism. Enjoy gracious livill9 of Mel ·.on this 20,240 ton transariontlll Council and by dJeander H. Perez, ReilgionsQuestion ·Iuxury . liner, 2 swimming pools, outdoor and indoor (indoor district attorney of Plaque. mines and St. Bernard Parishes He continued: "Contrary to· pool one of the largest afloot). Special sun and promenade (counties~. the theoriiing of the advocates deck devoted to pleasure and ,leisure. Superb continental cuisine 'In 'the pastoral, read in aU of racial segregation, the race by European chefs. Dancing, entertainment, movies nightlv. ehullc'hes o'f t'he New 'Grleans question jsa religious and moral All public ~ooms .aiT conditioned. Use ship as ,hotel in - ~ archdiocese, :the' Archbishop question, aHecting the principles warned that lJ:awlessness would of justice and, charity; the dis-' In Bermuda enjoy at "0 extra expense gu"est ticket 10 'a lead.,. result worn actions that "flout cUsSion 'is within the province of · hotel; use of golf course, .swimming pool, private beach, ••• the schoo1 integration decision." the teaching authority of the with evenmg 'dance and entertainment. He <designated AJug. '21 8 day Church and her representatives of pl~ay,er ",for .an early solution : .. Thus the writer's authority of t'he race 'problem in 'our midst to issue the letter in question CRUISE and to 'bring 'about 'a propitious cannot be validly challenged." response 'to 't~ 'cha'1'lenge 'for Archbishop Rummel said the ~ompliance woith the ruLing ·on charge' of promoting "division the iintegrationof our public or even schism" among Catho~. Expe..... maudecl "".5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12-13-14-'15_106 . ~hool system." lics is "unwarranted .in the face On May 16 iU,. S.Distri.ct Judge of" the November, 1958, state,In Nashuaeniay beach and privileges ~nd shopping Jr. Skelly Wright ordered public' ment of the U. S. Bishops opposfor bargains .galore in b.oth. porta for perfume, cameras. 1lchoo'!:s 'belle ito integrate ithe ingenIorced segregation, and jewelry, rMe liquors etc. . first ,grade in 'September, and declaring it to be contrary to . i>ne more :gr.ade -each ,succeeding catholic teaching. COMPLErElY' tNFORMAi _ year. "If anyone is .promoting However, Louisiana Gov. JimNEW ORLEANS (NC) - 81. schism, let the segregationists REMEMBEa: NOT just a eruiae but a COLUMBUS ASSOmie Davis took over the Orleans M~ry ~f ,the ~'fIgeIs'parish here examine their motives and CIATES CRUISE. You enjoy, complete infMmality .wit+. Pari'shpubl'ic school 'sy~tem ,on .is 'losing three 'aUar 'boY5--'but ultimate aims," be said. Ocean liner luxlIry. Service and eamfort all at a most JA 1'" the 'Fr.anciscanswho ,conduct lnug. "and saJid the :schools Children .Behavior moderatept"ice. Of the capacity for 1300 ACCOMMOwould open in ,September on a the parish are gaining three ,a8-' DATIONS ONLY 600 will be occupied. NO STATE. 1legregated .basi~. . piran.ts for' the priesthood. The Archbishop said that in 100M BElOW A DECK W'U BE USED. Racial) Integratwll Willia~ Kahrs, StarileyLong .calling attention to the dangers Archbishop Rummel also de_and Scott Stecker will 'leave next of opposing school integration elared iin his ,pastor-al letter.tihBt Tuesday forthe:Franciscans'by halting public education, he EXTRA ADDED FEATURE "in principle we' are committed preparatory high school in Cinwas simply taking notice of what CANADIAN CRUISE TOUR to it!he ,r.acial integr.ation .of our cinnati. . ·many commentators ·have said'. Ca:tJholic schools 'for reasons 'The:PariSh has three other "The issue ·is not what will Mon..... to ao..-,. t - MoReIeaI Oct. 27 Oft A....... whiOh 'lmve been repeated!l:yset seminariiul1l preparing for the happen in· the schools, for they 3~ forth in letters addr.essed ,to ,the Franciscan priesthood. Two are wiUbe empty, but what will Go .toMontreol .-itt-- i~dependentty or take our taun cleI:gy and laity of the .8l'chdio- in 'their fourfhyear at the Cinhappen to the behavior of ,our YoubaOrd s-hfpat Montreal Thurs. Oct. 27. Sail 1000 ilese 'in ~)ast years:" cinnati 'prep 'school 'and the third children when there is no school · mil.. Oft 1M, picNresque protected waters' of the St. (In 1956 the Archbishop an- is taking advanced studies in W, occupy their time and influ· lourenceRiv«: 300 miles dow,,"" Atlantic Seacoost. flOunced that ·the integration of Detro.it. eneetheir conduct," he stated. Rate includ.. stateroom, meals, shipbocH-d 'fun, dancing" archdiocesan· schools was under entertafnmeMetc:. If YO\I toke our trip to meet ship ... $tudy. A group calling itself the '. Montrecd y~1iI leave Oct. 26 via streamliner from Nor. 1&ssociation. ,of Catholic 'laymen Station, Bost_, spend night ,ir. Montreal .0. Hotel Shera"''.3S set up to block school inteton laurentian. Exp_ inchlde rail, t.oteJ. and traNf.... ~atri.on" .and inrt:egr.ation 'Of 'CBth_to ship,.~ for $30. olic schools was subsequently j)Ostponed. . :at ". . . .... III. . . . . . 1 •••".11. . . . . . . _ ...... (1n July, 1959, h<lwever,the lAJrchbisbop annoullCed that Catholic 'Schools be inte,era ted .no Ihcter than lpubllC' 1IChools here.~ '-.,. III 1"'1 UtI Archbishop Rummers paStoral 'MlS ;greetedbytbe South Lou.··""' 11.....18. • 1-11 ..... iSiana 'Citizemi' 'Council witth 'l1SWlLl1AM ST. NJ:W' MASS. ....... Of COWl . . . ";-.a .. 'tM dww1Ie .that ibe . . . cuitty . . that by issuing ,his pastoral the, Archbishop was supporting U.'S. Supreme 'Court 'schooldesegre:' gationr,ulings which, .have been attac:k;ed :for being "sympathetic with communist 'and subversive causes." Mr. Per.ez 'said the Archbishop~s pastoral "is in line w;ith the Democratic party platform of forced integration in aU area's of commumtylife, 'and.' it ,can only beinterpl'eted as the Catholic heirarchy',S' endorsement of (Sen. John F.) Kennedy for 8>Ilesident." '... Mr. 'Perez said he was '''raised as a 'Catholic from 'childhood," but that·heis "not an Archbishop Cathollc ... ·not a modernist Catholic." ''''I know many Catholics who have faUen away from the Church,and many more will 'do so if the Archbishop attempts to carry out this forced integration," 'he 'Said.. "The Archbishop is attempting to create a schism in the Catholic Church." Misinterpret In his reply to the charges, Archbishop Rummel said- the statements of the South Louis-'
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 1, 1960
New Publication For Students
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PEORIA (NC) - The .T. G. O'Brien Company has launched a new weekly publication to be used chiefly as a text for religious education of Catholic students attending public high schools. It is. entitled "Scope." The publishing firm said it will appear in two editions 32 times each school year. It added
that the publication can also b@ used as a supplementary text I.a Catholic high schools and as a teaching guide in convert work. Subscribers will receive ship.. ments of the publications at schools and' rectories for weekI, distribution to students. Nen year the company plans foUl' editions of the magazine.
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DESIGN FOR CATHEDRAL: Frederick Gibberd, 52, architect and town planning eonsultant in London, stands beside his winning design in the competition for completion of Liverpool's Catholic Cathedral of Christ the King. NC Photo.
CFM's Region IV convention at D'Youville College, the first regional convention of the or(fanizaUon. Basing his remarks OIl the CFM theme for next ,.ear, "The Catholic and International Life," he said it is a "most appropriate" theme in a world "filled with tensions and eonflict." "'This topic needs study by Catholics to remind them of their good fortune to be numbered as members of a Church that is commissioned to 'interDationalism' by Christ, Him.elf," the Bishop said. One-World Efforts Catholics have not "delibeI'Qtely neglected their vocation to international affairs and in8titutions," Bishop Marrocco aid, but "too many of the forces DOW seeking to create a 'ooeworld' are instruments of 'interDational death' rather thaft 'international life.''' "'One-world" efforts are 88lIOCiated in history with some of the best and some of the. worst peoples and movements, the Bishop stated. He cited Alexander the Great, Napoleon, Hitler Ilnd now Soviet Premier Mikita Khrushehev as having "'viSions of international empires' and international influences." "Whether for good or for ill," the Bishop continued, "all of them were trying to create a 'one-world' in which men would accept one authority, work for the same objectives and sacrifice .their individual aspirations on the altar of an international cause, or perhaps an internaUonal conspiracy'" Christ issued the "one-world" call to all Catholics, the Bishop said. He added: "The Catholic Ihould not only bring every phase of his individual life under the influenee of Christ, but must join in the Church's efforts to Christianize and sanctify' the thinking arid action 'of all men in all spheres of living." 'There are some Catholics "'w h 0 s e individualism and apathy are deliberate,inten-
Poverty Crusade
MUNICH (NC)-France's celebrated priest of the poor., Abbe. Pierre, has d~1ared only 11 Irtotal crusade" againlilt worldwide poverty ean aboUsia. inte... _ional tension&. .
this "includes their future leadership and influence ill international affairs." "It ia a question 01. whether international forces will dominate us Ol" if we shall influence them," Bishop Marrocco said.
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Says Christ Commissioned Church to Internationalism BUFFALO (NC)-The Catholic Church "is commissioned to 'internationalism' by Christ, Himself," a Canadian bishop told members of the Christian Family Movement in eonvention here. Auxiliary Bishop Francis A. Marrocco of Toronto said that "man's tional sins of omission," the need for an international Bishop said. He urged CFM community life is as old as members to make their children he is." He spoke at the "complete Catholics," and said
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'THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan ~iver-:Thurs. Sept. 1, 1960 4
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"Cardinal 'O'Hat~ , The . presence .in' the Di.ocese of 'priests of' the Congre-, . "gation of H9ly Cross makes Catholics of this 'area all the , more sensitive to the :Church's loss in the death of John Cardinal O'Hara;, ' . . , •, , 'The Prince of the Church:...:...the only, one of' hisrelig'~~s 'Congregation to reach that eminence-,.sPent ,tl).irty' year~' at ,the University of Notre Dame as a,student; professor;prefect of religion 'and ·finally-president. His'forty"eight year,S as a' ID;einber, or the ·Co~~reg:ati~~',Of'I:I()lY,.~ .Cross were marked by zeal'and'excellence in the accomplish- ' 'ment his duties. . , . , ",' But never was ·he so typical and stirring as .whenM ,uttered the ·humble and diffident words as he .was· trans" ferred fromOrdin'ary of the Diocese Of Buffalo. to shepherd " of the great· Archdiooe~~ ·of Philadelphia: '.'1 haye no pro·gramto. announce •.• '" nothing to 'preach but the.loye. of ,GOd'; ... If 'you kindly ·tellme your needs, lshaU do· : . my' best. to meet them., l-kno~ of: no :other way to: serve." I1fthese 'Words is seen'the :·m'aiJ..'he w~s":-simple, humble, . " .,::., learned in the 'things of the' world and wi8~inthe th.ings 6f .... GOd., He looked, upOn himself as one' called upon' by God to ,serve. No finer, eulogy eould be. given than to say'that he-, , served well both God and me~ .
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Poorly8erved' A public relations expert has told a Catholic communieations group meeting in New York that the 'Church is :"not generally hated, nor fearedt ' but is "freqliently misunderlltood." ' He went on to say 'that his hearers would be stunned' to find out how often the Church is misunderstood in this country. .' , . , .If there is ~nything that American ,C~tholics should' give to their fellow country-men it is a clear image of what the Church is. And if the image is a misunderstood one, the blame usually must, be attributed not to the bad-will of those. p1isunderstanding nor to their prejudice 'but to Catholics themselves. ' Most of those not of. the Faith see the Church as ,a growing power-see it in terms of buildings and institu-' tions. They see, as the public relations man, Walter V. Carty put it, "the brick and mortar aspects: great cathedrals •• '. growing college campuses .•. hospitals and clinics ..'. the homes of religious orders and the many institutions they operate." . If the image of the Church never grows beyond this picture, then it remains o~ a materialistic level entering into competi~ion with all the other purely natural and secular and ma:terial-minded organizations of the age. It is simply another corporation or, at most, a foundation with educational and charitable goals. The Church is essentially a spiritual organism. It must be presented as such. Its leaders and members must always project.,-and sincerely-that image. . The Church is th~ continuation of Christ in space and time. No aspect of it - no new building, no charitable project, no work of mercy,' no '. educational striving nothing must be seEm out of that context. AU must be made and seen as a working out in time and in space of the life and mission of Jesus Christ. If the Church receives ,,"bad press" and is misunderstood in this country, then all that can be, said is that she is poorly served by her own.
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TOMORROW.-.;St. Stephea el Hungary, King-Confessor. 0, "the'death of his father,Geaa; ~ , ,. .~, Steph~n. became king ~ ~ . 'Magyars of .Hungary. He maJ'l'~ GiSela; ,; l!.ister of Emperor ~ Henry· II.. ,Together, with' ~ ., ~ heip of·th~ Holy ~,:theyChri'" ...,: . tianized the cO,untry. He or«aA-' , ized diocesesa'na founded' ~ . ' ',' . beys; 'bringIng many famous 1~ . , 'eignmonits and priests tG the ''', eountry. Re,·was the father .. 8t.Emeric. In his late years, he was beset with misfortunes a~ cliHiculties. He died about l00a. He ·is the ~tional saint-heM .. Hungary.
Unc'hanging Bcises,Support 'Catholic 'Teaching on S~x By Father John L. 'fhomas, S.J~' Ass't Sociology PrOt.-St. Louis University
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~Isn't it about time that the Ghurch reconsidered its teaching on sex? Social conditions-and human nature have changed a great deal since the Church's doctrine was first' developed. What'wotked well in the past do'esn't"necessarily' 'make' sense' today. Mod·· . . of. life (our repl'oductive sys·· er'n Catholl'cs can't build tems) under our dominion. We their 'lives, on standards must also respect, as we respect meant for another day.· How life 'itself, the co-principles of
SATURDAY-St. Pius X, Pope. He was Giuseppe, Sarto, born ill 1835 at Riese, a small village ill northern Italy, and became the first Pope to be canonized in 24S ' years. He was serving as Cardinal-Patriarch of Venice jft 1001 when he was elected to succeed' Pope Leo XIII. He became ,known as the "Pope of ~ Eucharist~' for bringing about the custom of early First Ho~ Commuilion and advocating frequent reception. He also. WM DOted for revitalizing the woru of the Confraternity of Christiae . Doctrine and for bringing about reforms in Church music. He, died on August 20, 1914, was bea'tified in 1951 and was canOnbed on May 29, 1954.
can we follow leaders who refuse life that the Author of life has to take into consideration the . entrusted to our care' for. the, situations we good of the, human race, not have to· face in ,primarily ~or our pl'easur~ble' our daily lives?" use. . SUNDAY-Thirteenth Sunday, You h a v e . In other words, because o'ur after Pentecost. Generally this asked several sexual faculties enable us to date is the feast of St. Moses, questions 'a n d cooperate with the Creator in the' Proph~t. The Hebrew leader and mad e several procreation of new life, we'must lawgiver is described in the Book statements that, follow the divine plan in using of Exodus in the Bible, He died strictly speak. them. Procreation is the' most at the age of 120 on the bordeN ing, would re· noble act that man is privileged of the Promised Land. quire separate 'to perfo.r~ in the natural order. res po n s e s. MONDAY-"St. Laurence JusWhen considering the Church's tinian, Bishop"'Confessor. He 'reHowever,"I take it that the mateaching we must always be ,fused the offer of a brilliant mindful of the unique 'character marriage, fled from his, home jor burden of of fhe sexual act. It is the act, your complaint is that the that God has" ordained for the st Venice and joined the Canons Church is out of step with 'the Regular of St. George. He betimes in its teachings on sex,. so' conservation and propagation of. eame the first Patriarch of VeRthat Catholics find'it impossible the human race, .and it can be. ke and died in 1456 at the sl§e to live up to Her outmoded de. pr'oductive of life only through Of 74. mands. If true, thjs constitutes the 'special cooper.ation of the a serious Indictment, for sex 'Creator, the Author of each new TUESDAY St: Zacharias. touches .life so intimately and in li!'e. . .' _ . Prophet. He lived in the sixth sO many different' ways that the' Contr~y to P~rPOee eentury, B.C. He was the son of prom,otion of false standards 'the baseso{the~ p' remi~ ,~arachiasand became kno"(~ illl J ' Israel during the. reign of. K,ing ould erI'ously I'nhI'bit the moral W s tho e,' Churc,h conc"lud.es that' any. d eveIopmen t o·f Christians . ,use, . of, sex o.' utside of m.arriage' Darius as a contemporary of the Both contri}).:. h ave is contrary to.its purpose', Hence- Prophet Aggeus. Your' .. to , uted by their , exhortations te . complaint seems some , basis in fact. Some Cathself-stimulation or mutual-stim-' . aneedlng up the work of ,1iIe , olic couples obviously ignore the ula'tion of the unmarried", a're .... , Modern-day Christians have beeliladvised to he "star Church's teaching in regard to morally' wrong because' they" bui.ld,ing of the second 'fample. gazers." , marital fidelity and birth con-' constitute'the uSe of one's sexual WEDNESDAY _ St, Nemoriua A French professor has told the Workers' Catholie trol, while we oftep hear it said faculties contrary to theirpur-, and Companions, Martyrs. Regj~ that Catholic youth differ little pose. tered in the Roman Martyrology Action of France; "Christians more ,than .others should from others in the sexuai stand. Sexua,l relations outside of. as St. Nemorius, he is also knowD familiarize themselves with the fantastic world of the stars." ards they follow in practice. marriage are evil for the same: as St. Memorius but is moPe The proper study of. man is indeed God, and all that Res~tes Principles reasons,. and' they also represent popu.1arly venerated at St. MeeGod. has placed on earth' arid in the heavens. And the present But the truth of moral stand- . a 'serious violation of' justice: min. He was deacon of Troyes, rush into space demands that men know exactly what they, ards is judged by th'eir origin If one or, both' parties' are mar- . France. With five companions are getting into. To live ostrich-like on the earth refusing · and content, not by.their accept- ried, it is an act'of injus~ice·'.to' he was Sent by St. Lupus, under ance. Because Catholic teaching the marriage partner; if both- whom he served; to the camp of to take full measure of the skies above'is to· be 'negligent on ·sex is based on absolute, un- are' unmarried, it is ail injustice'. Attila the Hun, who then Wee of, all God has given for- man's benefit and enjoyment and ehanging principles it "makes to,the child uia't may result from. ' ravaging Gaul, to, implore mercy investigation. ' sense" ~oday as it did in the past. . such a union. of the Barbarian leader. Attila . Right uSe' . , , had all six beheaded, about.431. So while men' must pay first attention -to God and their ., At present the Church's teachHowever, the prayers of Bi~ 'ownsouls in relation to God; they would do well to turn trig is being questioned because these principles have been reSince the marri(lge, contract 81. Lupus were answered8nd attention: to' the' stars"and 'to have s~)lne famili~ity, some jected. We shall' answer your confersequal rights on both part-' Troyes was spared ~rom r a v . knowledge of the celestial bodies. . question therefore, by restating riel's in regard to marital rela-' the principles. tions, ph)'sic;al union ~ay ~ ..de:-, ' sired -by First, we have been created b y " , either , , ' spou~' , ' for ,. the.. . 01- ge,ared to another age? · purpose of showing affection' . Challen"e·God and· stand ina relations h Ip " .. .. and.. __ ov ChrisUa,of essenti!,l dependence on ·Him loye, .,h~virig c~.n!iren,. Qfo' t~e; 'Ibe. early Christians followe4 every moment of our lives. Sec- release!>f. tenSIon. All.. tre~. "this doctrine in a pagan workl 'ond, as rational creatures we can purposes are consonant wIth the. filled' with sexual excess, IlDCI know what is right and follow it. right..use of sex, .because the~ "many of them were martyred 1« The "right" way means we use marn~ge ,-bond umtes "h!Jsband. their beliefs and conduct. . '. OFFICIAL ~EWSPA,PEi OF THE DIOCESE OF FAU 'RIWR · thin'gil according to the purpose and WIfe 10 love; mutual s e r v i c e . . , · the Creator intended in creating' and procreative intimacy. "Modern Christians also face a .. , ... serious challenge in our poet.. 'ublilh~ weekly by The CathoH~. Preu of the Diocese of Fall River t h e m . ' On th~ other hand, ,It IS ri-' . Christian, sex-obsessed soc'Third, since God- places created ?usly eVlI to use mantal rIgh~ and' must be prepared for sacri••10 'Highfand Avenue things under our charge and do:- In .such a way that t~e.. act I~' fice. Following the Church'. fall River, Masi. OSborne 5.7151, ·minion, we act according to right delIberately frustrated In ltS ~at- leadership here is dilIicult Dot -, PUBLISHER reason when we use them for ur~l power to generate·. lIf~,. because Her standards are ~ our development and perfection (birth control), f~r ,such action IS,' moded but because they )WI Most Rev. James L. Connolly. D.O., PhD. in His service. ' C()ntrary .t9 the dIVIDe plan. contrary to' the whole climate of GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER God, Author 01 Life .We have outlined the essential· current opinion. Rev. Daniel f. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll Fourth; God alone is the points of the Church's teaching' In a sick society, the healatF MANAGING EDITOR Author of life. He has piaced on sex. W'hat i1'inciples or norms' . must be nonconformists - . . Hugh J. Gold... aeither life nor the C()-principle8 would 7.0~ judge to be outmoded iM ill .follow tftiei. crowd. ~ ..,.
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'roDAY':"::'st. Giles, Abbot. HI probablY was a Provencal Dr birth 'and was Abbot of a Be~ . . dietine Monastery on the Rhone river, wher~ the city of St Gi~ . DOw stands: He became one Gl ,. ';:'the moSt 'popular saints~f tiie , Middie Agesan.d his shrine Ie .• ,.. JlOPular" p'lace " of . ~ilgtiniag~ . Morethan'16CH:hurches in Eng..; .... . l&'nd alone were'dedicated in bill Dame. He died about 712.
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) Pope John.Ask. Olympic Rivalry: WJt~out Elu1'l~fY "
, VATICAN CITY (NC) ~ Pope, John told an, audience Of"'Oly'mpic athletes in ·.gt~ Peter's square "to 'giveari e)9lmple of. ,the . kind 'i
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'healthy rivalry. which . is "/it complete stranger to enmity and strife." , ." . " , ·He. also warned ,.them agatnst "giving exclusive. aUention,.,to the body as if to man's supreme good:~" ,', " , . Pope J olm reminded the at~,: letes,that they .were standi~g Qt\ \neliite of, Nero's. c,j.rc,us-al:\ anciell~ sports stadium-aod re~ ca'lle~,. that 'St.', Pi1,1s X ~d w~rm~y enc04~ag~d the fouqd~11 ~tt~e,modern Olympic Gl!-mes,.,. ,,~I~ds obvious/, ,the ,Pope ,con.. tinued,·"that We carioot ,wish victory to every team .or to each. individual, athlete. .'May the best: IlllIn.. ,win,' '. , . " ,.' "."'" ,'-Bulr thi's ·is, no' obstacle' to', 01,11' expressing the very 'strong dt!sil'e that· the contests· during these days ·will·, benefit you' aU llnd tha t from them everyone, without exception- will be able to :gain some advantage." '. . ·"It is not the prize offered itt the race," the Pope' went _oil; "but the 'correct exercising of the body that merits the higher' eSteem...· I,
"'" Praises 'SPO,rts . ":,, ,He, ,said that home life and' proper, tradition in training,. the young "bid us to be on our guard in athletic contests against giv-: lng' exclusive attention to the· body, as if to man's supreme' good, 'Snd against a cult of gym-' nastics (as sometimes happens) which can hinder the due carry:..' Jog out of accepted obligations." The Pope praised sports for' developing important qualities. From a physical point of view, he said, sports give rise to "health, physic.al strength' and agility, grace and beauty." From the viewpoint of ~e soul, he' continued, sports can foster "per-' severance, courage and the practice of self-denial." . In urging the Olympic Games athletes to compete without enmity, he declared: "You will display an enduring serenity and cheerfulness. You will be modest in victory, un-, ruffled in defeat, resolute in difficult situations. You will show. yourselves true athletes, giving to the great crowds of specta-. tors further proof of the truth. of the old saying - a healthy body possesses a healthy mind.".
Collective Marriage .' Ce~emony at Fatiin«;l FATIMA (NC) - About 500 couples will be married in September in a collective ceremony' at this shrine of the Blessea Virgin. They are all country people from the Portalegre area who have 'been living as married' ,couples, There is a' shortage of priests in that area. Portugal has fewer priests pel' Catholic than. any 'other country in Western Europe.
Pari.s Society Elect~ Sup'erior General . PARIS (NC)-Father Maurice, Queguiner, 51, has been elected' superior general of the Paris Foreigh Mission .Society here, succeeding Bishop Charles Lemaire. Father Qu~iner has served as assistant to Bishop Lemaire and as counselor of the" Holy' See's. delegatio'n to the United Nations Educational, Scie'.ltific alleJ.,CulturalOrganization. He ·.s a~ director of the review, Foreign Missions, published here. , The Paris Foreign Mission So,. clet'y was founded in 1660 and bas 91'6 members. .'
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Holy Rosary Churc~:Taunton, Serviiig'PoliSh
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C~~ol~':Qf,,;Arei;gl9 Welcomes .}Yew Pastor' .Allege, Merchant .' . , · B y Marion Unsworth . . ' This' week· Ii new pastor, Rev. Callistus Szpara, O.F.M..G,otlV., ,h~ ass\lme9, duties Posed as Priest as head of Holy Rosary parish, the only,Polish church in Taunton. He replaces Rev. To Bilk Widow,' John Zielinski,' O.F.M. Conv.;·, who h,as served the Polish Catholics.of the -city, ·for, the
CHICAGO (NC)-A ma~ past 16 yearS; the longest'pastorate 'in'the history of the parish. Back in 1899 at the tum, wh9 pos~ as' a . C~tholic of the century,' before ' 8 " • ' parish was' established for ..' priest in the alleged .millionthem, Polis~; immigJ:'~nts dollar bilking of a Florida who had come to' Taunton widow was released here on to work at a fuill ~ the nor.th· end and in the stove factories in the south end 'banded' ·tj)geth~r. . in the St. Stanislaus SoCiety;. , .. : .' '.
$5,000 bail. . d'dealer In' antiques was arrested at his shop' iri Chicago .and charged in a warrant as a , . fugitive from 'DadeCbunty, .. ' Fla., where he was· -indicted- fol', . , g~and larceny" He and four other men were accused of ob, 'talning '$1;155,000 in ca~h, reai 'estate 'and securities from Mrs. ·Genevra "l\IlcAllister, 71,.' of Miami. .D~qe COlWty alltho1:ities said the man was introduc~d tQ .Mrs. "lViCAliister' 'as -"Father' Leon 'of Leon, France." The authorities said ,the widow, was told 'ari orphanage in the French city was .in danger. of being dosed because it lacked funds to finance a lace factory where nuns worked. She was told that the factory supported the orphanage, authorities said. The fiv,e men w~re accused o~ getting the cash, real eState and securities from the widow between September, 1959 and March 1960. The case is sched'uled to go on trial in Dade County' in October. The man was released on bail pending a hearing on the fugitive warrant.
The'John 3rd SObieski'spa~ty,' which is still" in' existence,' replaced ,thiS' tW(}' ·yearS later. The people atteftded 'chqrch . at the
various:':~a~ishes)~rc:l~d'1;aupton. ,'\" ,~:" .;:. ':, "
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rier the was immigta,.~,~'··,iu'!li a cP!l~n.va,'~," .,.problem '.' for 'was ~. eased slightly: by·;J~ev. John '.. Chmielinski 6f &luth, Boston' who used to' come t& 'Taunton dur~ng ~astef tini.e~; ~ear coJ)- .:'.' fesslOns and·to admwIsler to the group in Poiish.. ' . '. "
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This work was later continued by Rev. P. Guzik and Rev. P. Basinski of St. Stanislaus, Fall River; and Rev. E. Uminski and Rev. Nowicki of New Bedford. Separate Parish By 1907, the need 'for a separate parish was recognized and Rev. Hugo E. DyUa was named first ,pastor of Holy ,Rosary Church. Until.a church could be built, serVices were held at St. .A:nthony's Church. ' ..
Construction of the new church began ,in October of '1908, and on ,Nov. 25, 1909, the first services were held in it. Father Dylla remained at Holy Rosary Parish until 1912, when he was transferred to New Bedford.' The second Pastor, Rev. S, Basinski, paid off the parish debt during his 10-year pastorate and in 1922 resigned his duties and returned to Poland because of ill health. For one year Rev. B. F. Skulik was administrator and in 1923 Billhop Feehan turned over the parish to th'e jurisdiction of the Franciscan Friars Minor Conventual, who still direct the parish. The first Franciscan pastor, Rev.. Michael Drzewucki, set about repairing and renovating the church and rectory. 'During the same time the main altar was enlarged, and a new organ installed. Father Drzewuckl also hoped to build'a school, but in 1926 he was appointed to organi~e a new parish in .Rochester. . During the follo..rlng f~ur y~ars, Rev. Stanley Jasins~i, Rev. Anthony Witkowski. and. Rev. Remy Fac, all Franciscan Fathers, served as pastors at Holy Rosary. . .In July, 19~, Father Szpara, who has now again been named pastor at the Taunton parish, came to administer to the Poli~h Catholics. His 12-year pas_. torate was an active one. Many improvements were made in the rectory, and the church was redecorated. addition, Father " Szpal'a established .the Children of
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HOLY ROSARY, CHURCH, TAUNTON Mary Sodality, the St. :Vincent de Paul sOciety, and arranged, w ~ e k 1 y Christian Doctrine,' class~s taught by Sisters for the' children of the pa.rish.
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Gor.czyca, directed the ,golden jubilee celebration of the founding of the parish, assisted by parishioners and members· of the parish societies;
Father Zielinski will go to St. Other' Societies Stanislaus Church in Shamokin, Two other societies were PiI., the scene of his first assignf~rmed under the leadership of ment after his ordination. His the next pastor, Rev.' Bernard successor, Father Szpara,' will Kazmierczyk, who served Holy find many old acquaintances 'at Rosary Parish from 1942 to Holy Rosary during his sec~nd 1944; the Holy Rosary Society pastorate there. and, the Third Order of St. Francis. When Father Zielinski came from Montreal to serve as pasTruck Body Builders tor in 1944, the parish' had Aluminum or Steel' grown to some 400' families scattered throughout the city. 944 County St. Since that 'time, modern im-' NEW BEDFORD. MASS. provements to parish property WY 2-6618 . have included' a heating system, blacktopping a parking'lot, and renovation' of the church, rectory and grounds. L~st Nov. Father Zieli~skl and his assisian~, Rev.' Benvenute:
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" Erners' 'Monas~ery'" . SAN SEBASTIAN (NC)-A former chief of the info~ation office of Spain's Ministry of For,. eign Affairs has entered the Benedictine monastery in nearby. Leire' as a novice. He is Luis Maria de Lojendio, who held his government post from 1943 tel 1941.
THE A,NCHORThurs., Sept.• I, 1960
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Pious "Union Has 75 Members WEBSTER'GRGVES (NC)-
'THEANCtiOR-Dioce'se of.FatlRiver-Yhurl. Sept. ll19~ "
'.C·ur'tain Tricks Give Solutions, d "In 0,'WS To Many'Pro, bl 'em W·
·A society for women - . both married and single-who wish to dedicate themselves to Christian perfection while continuing in their state of life in the world now has 75 U: S. members. The group's formal name is tho Society of the Daughters of St. Francis de Sales. It is officially 'designated by the Church as a "pious union." Bishop Charles H. Helmsing of Springfield-Cape Girardeau, Mo;, will conduct the firSt U. S. closed retreat here for members of the society, starting Friday, Sept. 9. Bishop Helmsing said he believes the society may be the answer to the Church's need for well trained, devout wqmen in 'parts of the country whei'e there is a' shortage of n1,1ns. ' ~pprov,ed by Pope
,By Alice Bough Cahill Maybe, it's a French door, maybe it's a kitchen or dining or living room window that presents a problem. There's a , way outfor all these problems and a solution that eliminates many an eyesore. A few years ago many and have the casem'ent window . houses had a French door in curtains fit into the recess. This would be done with a curved the living room, leading to~ a rod ·that fits into the recess to ' much-used porch. If it were bridge. bhe gap between the
uncurtaineci, it presented a great drapes and the window. contrast to nicely curtained winDining Room Curtains _ dows. . A di'ning room might be cur-, : The· solution tained in this way: ~o assure here is to curmealtime, privacy, use curtains tain this door' over the lower casen:J,ent. By like the winleaving the upper casement I1ndows. Use. a 'curtained, you admit sunshine' valance fro m high enough to avoi.d the eyes the . c e iIi n. g, of the diners and yet brighten.. s.t ret c h 1.n g your room. across the door In one dining "room where '-It is composed of lay women frame, 59 the there was an' ugly. small· high of' aU walks of life,'" he said. side drapes will square window that wa's an eye- . '. "The society is a forerunner, , hang outside it, sore, the owners built. a' breakof many recently .fo.unded sec~ allowing one to' front-type cabinet right over it, ular institutes, and was papally 'open and close+the door freely. . thus 'hiding the eyesore and, approved by Pope St. Pius X.~ , . The drapes may !lang straight gaining more storage. '1910. It has some 5,000 members or be tied back, .tying the door ·For a'kitchen wIndow' flanked throughout the world, but mily . :iil with the room aild making it by cupboards, you may like' the. in recent years has it been intro-. look 'like the windows on 'the cafe curtain idea.' Arufflect·· duced extensively. in the Unite4 adjoining wall. These draperies valance is all you'll need for a FIRST COMMUNION DAY.: Tarasco 'Indiall .States.'~ (especially the ones th~t h~ng, top curtain. Attach the lower . , . . , . , " . . " ' . ' ,.While there is no secrecy straight)., should be arranged on curtliirtrod to the' ,;sides of the . :~hildr¢n. in MexiCo were instl~i.i.cte~ forJ[irst Holy Com~ 'about: the society,' the names 01. : a .traverse rod. Open, the drap~cupboard, and in thIs ,way 'your ,niunio'l'l by the catechist' team'of st.· Ro.bert :S~llarmino; itS members are ordinarily not eries cover the.edgeof ,the·door curtain can ·be pulled clear of group of 'native young ladies who have taught religion to made known, according to Del:lrartle; closed, 'they c~mplete.ly the window. .... .. ;,-.., lO,OO() children in the past 15 years. NO Photo. '' "phine H. Madill of St.Louis, who cover the door making' it look Some people. like ~~ieldin.g . is American provincial of thi! 'like'the other windows.. shutters. For privacy and fresh .organization. The Salesians fol": Such a treatment gives yOll air and·sunlight,.youjus't open, ' . .low the'example of Opus Dei and .... freedom in arranging your. fur". .the window, clollC the "s~lI~t~ers :.someother Se(:ular in!;ltitu,tes ill. niture.· A cardiniil r.ul'! is~tokeeJ! and adjust the 'louvers ~ a ' O'r'iat~,'. 'on~ ~ this regard. . " " window· .treatments· alike to, .straight horizontal position. T/le . CLINTON'(NC)~Three~Sis" ,',bum next, year, will'be also . "The ultimate attractionmuet ,avoid confusion, .par~icullirly i~ .only curtaining i wquld,' use, in . tel'S of' St. Francis left. ·for. the donated' ,by, the . oil, operator~ lie in the insistel1c~ on the dU~i~s . ,;. small-room. " ':",., " . : . this case. would be', •. valance 'Bahamas to conduct the first for- . ,There iS'no' Catholic parish iii.' :of one~s !ltate in· life," she, said; ". '. Picture Witidowi· . across the' top that would.be high eign misSion.undertaken by their. ,Freeport' ·The .nearest parish ill . Thus, a married wpman ~ust ..., Milllyhom~s'boast 'a' picture ,enough· to barely b.rush againllt ·inotherhou'se, . Mount· St. ,Clare,' .six ·miles.awaY·in'Hunter.· .have the.consent of.her husband _hidow,. which is 'the' room's the top,of-the shutters. " here in: Iowa'. , ,c. ,. .' " The Sisters were 'invited to·· to' join ~tte' soCiety:"'.' . - - , , . 'poirit Of interest. ,Apart from the Before you' decide on yOUI' , The Sisters .will· staff a school ,:conduct ..the,.scho.ol by Bishop _. 'draperies' which, when open, you ". windowtl:eat.ment, ..make.sure . endowed -by a wealthy non:' 'Paul ·I:.eonard' Hagarty, O.S·.B., ,Compani~n 'Magazines: . ,;' may 'wa~t to clear the entire you· knQwwhat ,yoq, expect to, Catholic oil operator ,in Freeport. who is,a:nath~eof·Gre.ene,Iowa,' NOTRE'DAME (NC) -The ",window, the' arrangement of achieve. If you carefully analyze .. ~he anonymous donor equipped .,and studied under the Franciscan .Catholic Miss magazine has b~ . 'your furniture at thIs' window; what you :want,' and choose your a school and,' a ranch..type house Sisters in his boyhood. . ,acquired ,by the Hply Cross " and·the C'olorthat you use-in·this cur,tai~s, dr,8Peries,an4 ~h~~ter8.. ,complete with chapel to be; used ,"Sister. Mary' Eleanor will ~ .Fathers and w.m bepublish'ed furniture, will help. emphasize accordmgly, .there . ',are : many ·.as a, convent. The 'school will ,the superior of· the"convent' and' ·as a companion magazine to the 'this point'oflnterest. things .theY· wiil .~ ·,Jot·.yoUt-,: .operatefrom kindergarten to ·principal.of the schooL 'Her fel- ·Catholic Boy. Catholic Miss has Cafe curtains are' a good cure rooms. . ' ' ' , . , Jhe sixth grade temporarily: low missionaries' .are' Sisters ·8 monthly ·circulation ot' l03,3'1d., ' for'the liviiig-in-a-goidfish-bowl A . good window:··~eatinent A 'new, larger school, to. be Mary Jeanine and' Mary Francis: ,and Catholic Boy, 90,982. .feeling. Hang them high enough should be both decorative and to protect you from eyes of functiona~., Floor';" to ,.. C~~l~ng 'passersby when the. draperies ,drapes'~w:ll mak~ you~.. ,celh~~ 'are open 'and to give' a hand- . higher, but }f,You. want the c~il some streetside view of +h~ \V:II- . ing ,lower, "~ang '. short· WIde -dow by. hiding ariy furniture drapes in a long 'strip of grace";' (like sofa) placed ,io .front of ful folds. ' i!. For complete' privacy, you can ,~use('draw drapefies. ' "Mission of, Mercy .Aid$ :In a room with a sioping ceil.. ing, you' might' solve' this prob- Two' Girls From .France lem' by. fast~ning a, valance' to . DAvENPORT (NC)-A hands.. the ceiling, allowing' it· to drop across-the-sea mission of mercy, down to cover the drapery hard- has been' completed at St. V,inware. Have both' draperies and cent's Home 'here in Iowa. valance turn at the 'sides .to fit Two. girls, known only ~ 'against the wall to give a neat Joyce, 11, and, -;Joanne, 7, are appearance. ,coming here 'from Paris, France, " This ,can be a "meany," - a ' to live at the home ,while their "recessed window.' An attractive' mother ·recuperates from,:a seI'i-, '. 'and pi'actical treatment' is' to . otis iilness.The soldier~father of, ,harig'drapes against· the' wall to . the girls died recentlY· in France;, .. make the windows lleem wlder ; ...Arrangements for, .the' girls'-,,;, stay have .been. 'c<l,n,tpleted . by' " . , " ,'.J . Catholic' Charities of;tl!~ p'av;eQ:-;.; : '. ,,' port 'diocese and by the. Army. " Th.e girl~' lather,: was t!r0lll.",Io.\Ya.., " The mother; who' had, h,eard of >', . . ./ · st. Vincent's Home; r~uested .. ; . that her' children be eared for at the home until she. recovers 'A Fan River-Trust;Atioo' LoaniB' You' may al80 place' your insurance from her.' illness. Joyce, and the ·~~tica('and economical ''o/a1; '. with' "'your 'favorite, broker'.' and' .Joanne are' expected'to: live at ':,.. the home fM about six mont~s•. . t9 finance the purchase of· yonr '. have the' premium included iil your
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,Parishioners Stilt ~~p Promise o,f Y~ars Ago'.' ,
POSTULANT: Entering .Sisters, of St. Dorothy at Villa Fatima, Taunton, Monday, Sept. 12, is Delia Leonardo' Santos, .daughte.r . of ·Mrs. Mary Santos, 134 Last Street, Fall River. A grad-. uate of Durfee HighSchool, Miss Santos is a member of Our Lady of the Angels parish. 0,'
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PITTSBURGH (NC)~J>arish ioners 'of St. Michael;s'" church h'ave kept a promise' ,made 'by' , their predecessors 111 years ago. " Pa'rishioners of' the church in. 1849 vowed to· observe an' annual' day {,')f prayer and thanksgivi,ng if they were spared in ·the chol::era epidemiC of .that year. The · promise has'been kept each year. . Four Masses are offered annually on St.· Michael's "Cholera Day": one for those who died' of the disease, two in hono,," ,'of · .St. Roch, 811d.one for the Blessed · Vir~n. .
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.you 'pay. Low, Bank' Finance Stop in for complete detailfl at our Chargesa!ld·have ,the paymenti ~ain 'Bank or at any of our convenient Neighborhood Branches.' tailored' to 'fit YOUI' ' income. ." '. , , ' '. . '
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Total A..... Over $30,000,000.00 '.
College President· PITTSBUIWH, (NC) '-'Sister .M. Muriel'has been named president of Mount Mercy College,' succeeding . Mother Margaret Mary, 'wbohad 'set"Vild since 1952.. '\ -
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MIlG.· FedenJl , FLINT· BRANCH
~~19'P1easant S~
DfPO'II"rurmIItU e.~, .' '1__ ,~"" '. SOMERSET BRANCH SOUTH END BRANCH 891 ~"'Y Street' 1~ South ~ Street
Vacation F'und Goes into House . Repair.Kitty,.Daly's Stay Home By MarY Tinley Daly With thanks to the guest columnists who have authored -At Our House" for the past two weeks, the original author returns. During first vacation planning, vistas were boundless. Imagination ran riot as the Head of the House and I considered where to go, what . one of oW' yo·ung. "I don't see to do. A couple of travel why we can't go away" from bureaus deluged us' with the younger group. If we'd mail: world tours, Europe, planned. that vacation better,
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Sept. 1, 1960
9
Becomes Novices In Kentucky
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Three young women from North Attleboro were participants in ceremonies held at the Convent of St. Catherine of Siena, Springfield, Ky. A fourth will profess vows Tuesday, Sept. 13. .Sister Joan Vincent, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. McGowan, 54 Pleasant Street and Sister Rita Marie, daughter of Mrs, Blanche Goodall, 65 Smith Street, were received as novices in the Dominican Order. They are studying to become teachers FOR SERVICE TO LEPERS: Dr. Leroy E. Burney, in the community. left, U.S. Surgeon-General, presents a certificate to Sister Sister Mary Louis, daughter of Hilary Ross of the Daughters of Charity of St. Paul, who Mr. and Mrs. Louis Shepard, 241 has ministered for 37 years to'victims of Hansen's disease Broad Street participated in • ceremony of renewal of vows. (leprosy). At right is Howard Crouch, found,er and director She is assigned to Ii school in of the Damien-Dutton Society. NC Photo. West' Virginia. Sist~r Michell~, daughter of Joseph Sherliza, 49 Fisher Street, now' a novice, will r1' r-ke prOfession at a ceremony slated WASHINGTON (NC)-A nun Public Health Service Hospital. for Tuesday, Sept. 13. who has ministered to victims of (Leprosarium) in Carville, La. Hansen's disease (leprosy) for She has worked in' the hospital Holy Union Concert 37 years was honored here by as a biochemist since 1928. She Sisters of the Holy Union of Surgeon General Leroy E. is the author of numerous ar- the Sacred Hearts will give 11 Burney. ticles published In scientific concert Thursday night, Sept. 11 Sister Hilal-y Ross, a member journals on the clinical aspects at the Park Theater, Taunton. A similar program will be offered of the Daughters of Charity of of Han!!e.n's· disease. St. Vincent de Paul, received a Sister Hilary was honored on in Fall River Sunday afternoon. certificate citing her outgtanrlin~ the occasion of her retirement Sept. 11 at Sacred Heart Audicontributions to the care and from the leprosarium in Carville, torium. welfare·· 'of' Hansen's disease which hils ~een. staffed by Daughters of Charity since 1896. patients. The certificate, presented to Since,1921j when the Federal Sister Hilary at a ceremony in government took over operation SCRAP METALS, the Surgeon General's off\ce, of the institution, the nuns have WASTE PAPER - RAGS also Cited her efforts in the de- been ..0. S.Civil Service emTRUCKS AND TRAILERS FOR velopment and communication ployees. PAPIER DRIVES "Sister 'Hilary will leave ia of scientific knowledge concernCHURCHES, SCOUTS and ing leprosy; Septembet for Japan, wh~re she CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS will perform. auXiliary, medical 1080 Shawmut Aveo.ue To Serve iD Japall services at a crippled childr:~n's New Bedford WY 2-7828 Since 1923 Sister Hilary has hospita~ to 'be constructed, there. been on the staff of the U. S.
Caribbean, Mediterranean cruise, perhaps we could look back on U.S.A. with all its wonders. it nostalgically. .As it is, we Canada and its don't. Stern ReaDt,. historic religious This year, the Head of the Ilhrines, Mexico. Bouse and I were poring over All this was plans, with maps laid out on the flattering, but diping room table. Then somebardly realistic. thing else poured! A flash of We looked at lightning, a clap of thunder, a the pretty picdeluge. Once more the basement tures, dreamed flooded. • dream of the "Gutters?" I asked the Head of tuture when the House with raised eyebrows. Ireland is our . "Gutters," he answered sadly. Ileal objective, "'Time has come!' bome of . our Next morning, we made sa forebears. Unfortunately, not this year - Dor appointment ~ith the gutter man ~who also happened to be a Dext. Coming down to earth, we re- general contractor.. With eagle Ylewed where 'we had vacationed eye, he pointed out that when rebefore. Came forth the resolu- placing gutters, he might as well tion of a quarter-century., "Never do the trim on the outside of the return to the same spot. It will house. "Gotta keep outside. wood not hold its fOl;Jller charm." Be- Painted or' you're illl. for aides. there are so many, many trouble," he . warned. Then places to visit in a lifetime. Our "while the men are on the place" ehlldren have .paraphrased ou~ why not do a couple of rooms on . "!Don't go back" philosophy into the inside? So it's vacation amidst .fixerthe teasing, "They'd ~ever ~ uppers. They'll be finished a 'em back!" few days and a few dollars from ,. Sandy Cottages the limit of our vacation time There was a honeymoon in . the mountains of Colorad~.; then and ·budget. .Well, that's how it goes thill early years at one beach after yea'r ...:.... we're like' turtieu with another. It usually meant a . rented cottage from which sand our }jouse oil oui- backs. . eouid be swept - half out the Catholic· Vets Auxilia~t ""ont door, half out the back. There were the usual cooking Reelects President and household chores, carried CHICAGO (N C) - Wilma on with lesser comforts than at Masek· of Bridgeport,· Conn.., was bome but in a· relaxed atmoo- reelected president at the 12th phere. Little babies could have annual convention' of the Ladies Membership Tea their toes dipped into the ocea~, Auxiliary of the Catholic War Members of Immaculate Contoddlers go a bit fartner, .the Veterans, ception. Women's' Guild, Fall rest of us take' turns at swim. The . women's organization River, will hold a membership ~ing and baby sitting. ' ,. meeting was held concurrently tea 'Sunday, ·Sept. 18 in the ,Then the year we found TH~ with the' 25th' annual' Catholic church hall. Mrs. William BenPERFECT PLACE. at a price ~ War Veterans convention here. nett '. is chairman, with Miss • stonish anybody. A big .house, The auxiliary's first national Florence Lynch as co-chairman. elose to the beach, outside show- "Woman of the Year'" awa'rd . A spaghetti supper is' set for ers, a fire· place. "We've really went to Elizabeth A. Goodman of Saturday, Sept:-, 24, with Mrs. got sometfling!'" shouted . 11- Brooklyn, N:Y., who was' hon" .Wright· Turner as' chairman. year-old Johnny, always o'ne f~ ore<f for h.er. participation .in . • bargain. . . Catholic Action.programs,cllllr'::, ' . We did. The "something" ·wllS itable activities ~ancifor the applural. We had bites all over plication of the principles Qf the us when we finally gave up the papal social encyclicals in' the perfect place four days· bef~re operation of a factory which she the lease was up. Coming home, heads in Brooklyn.'. ;, . we unloaded ourselves, our gear and our "somethIngs" in the driveway before entering~he bouse. Blankets and clothing bad to be divested of the "sOmethings." Then there was the summer· ~ ea.tIonatecI when the Head of the House and . .v....... I set out with another coup~e, earefl.'ee as ourselves, to "~ougn Distributed by &t." Unfortunately, we decid·ed 60 "rough it" at a popular resort during the height of the season. : Beverage No reservation. We ended 'up 331 Nash Rd., New Bedford sleeping. on the beach and coming home baggy-eyed· newt WYman 7·9937 Dlornin~. , , Other nonchalaRt vacations have been better: one when the broke down in the mountains of Tennessee and 'we found a' log .' cabin; another when we took all : the kids and landed at a lovely Carm home near' the waterfront. There were a couple of short, term ones when we spent wild:--. Jived for a week in the manner ' CHARLES F.·VARGAS to which we would like to be254 ROCKDALE AVENUE come. accustomed, Fun, ··after a N&W BEDfORD, MASS. eashioll ... Once we went for the do-ityourselves vacation we'd read., about in the daily paper. "Millions of people,"'we found ourselves quoting, "are'· spending their vacations In our locality. Have we 'explored our own domain'?" We explored vigorously, but .. eomehow it didn't have much zip. -oh, heck, 'I've seen that," from
Honor Nun 'for 31Vears' Service To Victims 'of Hansen's Disease
AW. MARTIN
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New President ft. LOUIS (liic)' - Mother Mary Blish, former assistant to. the president of Maryville· College here, has been named preoident of the college. Mother.Blish succeeds Mother Marjory Erskine, who served for three JlreIWS as Maryville president.
It's chopped peeana a~ pecan eandy ·cru'l1ch swirled 'through luscious Hood Ice Cream.. We .call it Hood Pecan Round-Up Ice Cream - you'" call it ••• "teRme. H Rotmd-QP some today t
m Pilm eM HGlf·~ eft ~ lIood SH C..-. DeaIM'
PECAN 'ROUND-UP ICE CR.EAM
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Sept.' 1, 1960
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AI , NAZARE'l'H.ON-1'HE.CAPE: Some 300 people attended a reception and silver tea held at Our Lady of the Assumption Church,' Osterville, for Nazareth-on-the-Cape, new school fOf exceptional children which will open its doors this month in Hyannis. Left, left to right, John J. Bowes and,Robert F. Sims, both of Osterville, chat with Bishop Connolly. Center, th~ sons of Willie FJ.:·echette, .Osterville, kiss the pr~late's. ring. Right;
Cape residents and Summer visitors enjoy tea hOUf. Left to right, .stand. ing, Mrs. Kay F. Dooley, Mrs. Philip Bernier, Mrs. Charles O'Connell. Pouring, Mrs. Roland Derosier. Nazareth-on-the-Cape will accommodate 36 children and is open to all youngsters of all faiths: It will be staffed , by four Sistel;s of Mercy. There is much enthusi~sm on the Cape in suppori of 'this new project. '. .
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Father Eaganl··C'~SS.R., of'Ta"unton' Polis.h Reds Den,an'd Priest Says'; Churchmen . Condemn "Suspension" TV'W,it,hout.O, fe, ing" Positive' Aid To'Address Mi'ssion· Conference ,lIishops . BERLIN (NC)-Pol~nd's ~ilf,
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Amo'ng the pr:oini~ent' speak-. the "1960 convelltion 'theme Is, Hant atheists have c'alled on .its DETROIT (NC)-Church lead.;. . minds," Father Harrington said. Conct;pts" ,i'n,. Inter-., ',co,mniUliist government "sus-s too often condemn television' ers fo r the 11th animal ~ission,' - "Ap,ostolic t C t , eto,r "All ·the lawlessness of the f Sec~etariat three-day, c~nerenna Ion o-oper;.llOn: ' . . pend;'. the bishop who is vi<'ar. . . g 'th t ff" w ' " Of ces ~eginning Mo,nda~, Sept. '12" As .rri~mt'berst'h' ' 16? '~tseligbiO\iS: . g~~ej:alof His Eminenc;e .stefan . ~~~ft~::~~nntri:~tioo:s 'o~ ~~~~~,:' doensto'ta~daktehea cVreirmyehSeOaflththyedEI'e~~.'! ~ · "", <Ichl:ngton, D" C" will .b.eS ,the, commUlH e l l?nes, ,ro-", CardinaJ ,W,ysz.Y.ns.k . .i, in the Ar,cb-. own, a priest-journalist declared, • R th d les,' t I t k rt , , • : In W Rev,'Francis J. Eagan;'?;S "'_." ers:' ..an 'siserswi. a ~ pa .. dioceseofGniezno.· '.. here."'" ,,',' ", "SeeltReallly '. born an<;l raised in. I?, t~. confer~nces In: .t~elr ' ~- ". ' , ,.' ,. , , ',' ...', who,,,,wa.s,, , . "his firSt' Ma~" flces ',as super:lOrs;, voclitJ0n d]r-: ~ ". Gazet~ P,omorsk.a, ,a Polish Fa'th¢'r' .·::Jeremy aa~r,:i~gto';,-.. ' He ~id, t~~,t.:the popes ,conY TauT,l,wn , and !la~~ '" _ . :" '. '>', .. ,i'eCtors,' ··edi.toi.'s,·. educators,'''' etc.,''', commulHst.. Journal; reports, the 0 :F .M .,"'spo .. ,, k'"e a t 'a b rea . k"fas 't 'f0.,., 1,·,stantl taughtb that t , hav.e. k 'I't' th ' men, I ,th er~.... , " ". ":'il ddr~s8 . to 'discuss ,problems; exchange Asso~iiltion of Freethinkers' and lowing a Mass 'at ,Gesu' chlir~h ' mus se~. rea I y m 0 secu ar Father FranCIS W,I,~ , . information a'nd snare, ideas. Atheists have, charged 'Bishop ff ed- f b" f D t 't' and spiritual spheres, and 'toe . S l' ors on 0 er or mem ers 0 e rOI s fl···' . the panel of lVl'aJor . upe I . 't' Members of seven.fay apostolate . LlIcjan Bernacki with violati,ng·. d" d TV 'd' Th ,0 ten te eVlsJOn· msulates men "Norms' for V~cat~oJl ~ecru.l organizations alsO will'take part. both the Polish Constitution and press, ra 10 an me 18. e against 'reality by creating a h b vocatIon dlr' the 1956 Ch' St Mass was part of a thre,e-we.ek wholly make-beiieve world. ors". He as een R " After 17 years as a missioner . urch- ate agl'eeworksl).op held at the Umverslty, ' ect,or,. operating 0,ut. Iof if th.e ~Fa'ther McGul're 'organl'zed the', ment. The "violations," the paper . not just a question 01. In of, Detroit by the National Fran••It ]s demptorist provinCia 0 lce., Mission Secretariat, in. 1950, at .said, consisted in Bishop Ber-' ciscan. Institute of Radio and." scheduling more religious pro;'" New' York, since 19?4. . the ,di.rection of the Bishops of nac~,i'sspeeches. agains!, the. Television.' grams, but of.bringing God into .Previously, he was· a' parish the United States. He co-ordi- atheists' league and his appeals .. all 'Programs," he said. "The di. priest in Boston for a year. b~., nates ·the work of 166 niissionto. Catholics to oppose it. The 17 Franciscan priests par- . rector of Ii 'script or a sCI'ipt f,ore spendin~ seven y~ars 'HI~ sending societies. thrqughout the The .atheists' .group ""ro,te to '.. tkipating in the institute" are ' writer: need, not have a directly . h' work.III'Euerto e" 'year' ' office . ' being' , pans , , RICO. . h . ~ the natiOilal for religious. ." familiarl'z'ed' WI'th' the'op- "~eligious .theme or mellsage ~ut also served III a Brooklyn,par,ls. ' , affairs'in Warsaw.. to demand the portunities and techniques' of ., only have'God 'in his"own life for Jour years: Bishop's suspension, Gazeta Po- . up-to-date religious radio and' :and ·mbtivations.'" 900 at Convention ,Co~m-I$sion ,morska sai,d. Bishop Bernackitelevisi6n production> More than 900 mission repreVAT,ICAJIl ',CITY (NG)_Two~as ?,ne ~f the 11 Poli~li ,bis~9?S, ., "It is the duty of 'television" I. sentatives, many from. far places U. S.,prelates have been'named~m~nsOJledby the old StalJmst to- provide food for '.men's in the Churcn's global~ apostoto a preparatory commission for . !eglme be~~een :1953. and 1956. I late will attend the conventi?n, the coming 'ecumenical councii. nco acc~rding to the Rev. Fred~J:~ck Bishop John J,' Cody' of Kan-' ' Fabricators of A. ,McGuire; . C.M,,·!'Execuhve sas City-St.. ,J,oseph (Mo.), 'has 'Continued from Page' One \ '. ". , Secretary member of·the"" the new Stonehill adminish·aloi.,,~A, Str,'uctur~1 . Hof ' ht!').e ' Missi0!l n' oun'cedSecr«:'that been, named M tanat. e' as an ., " '. Comm'l'sSI'on fn. Studl'es·. and is a graduate of Bo'sfon College; ' ~ d Seminal"ies. . . .. " . o" ' ' , ' " • :,24-HOUR WRECKER' ;" an Class of 1941. He attended Holy M' "> Archbishop Patrick'A. O'Boyle Cross College, Washington, D,C., SERVICE of Washington has been ap- and the University of Notre 35 H .' Continued fr~m Page One , 753 Dcivol St., Fall Riv. P ointed a consultant of the s'ame Dame, and was ordained as a .ILLMAN ,SrREET tor of' the Cathedral and ]ji~ commission, Also named a con- member of the Congregation of NEW BEDFORD ·05 '5-7471 cesan Director of Social Action, 'sultorwas Archbishop Octaviano Holy Cross'in 1947. WY 6~8343 'will be the celebrant of the. Marquez'Toriz of Puebla de los Mass, Rev. Walter A. Sullivan Angeles, Mexico.' He received his Master's Degree from Columbia University and Rev. James Buckley will be in 1950. deacon and subdeacon, respectively. Rev. Paul F, McCarrick BERLIN. (NC)-Stefan CarFather. Cussen served at will act as master of c~rerronies., dinal Wyszynski, Primate 'of King's' College,' Wilkes-Barre,' It is fitting and significant Poland, has summoned, the Pa., from 1951-i960. He was that the Labor Day fe~tivities Bishops of Poland to a m'eeting vice-president of the college for , include this spiritual aspect, on Thursday; 'Sept'. 8" th~ fea:;;t the past five yeaI'~,.. The Church, t,hroughout all of . of the Nativity· of the Blessed her' history, has, insisted upon Virgin, it was reported' here. The the dignity of work. Her Divine episcopal conference is to take Founder chose to support Him- place at Czechtochowa, ~ite of self:and Mary as a carpenter. the shrine of Our Lady oi Jasna 2666 NORTH MAIN FALL RIVER Maintenance Supplies When Bishop ConT\olly meets Cora, patroness of Catholic with prominent labor men and Poland. SWEEPERS - SOAPS TELEPHONE OS 5.,.7992 union officials at Mass on MonDISINFECTANTS day, he will be acting in the traFIRE EXTINGUISHERS St. Elizabeth's· Church, Fan dition of the Church in which he River; will hold its annual clamis a shepherd. A' leader of t'he Church of God will be once. boil, auction and .field 'day at more asking the bles~ing of God the church grounds on Tucker 18B6 PURCHASE ST. upon those who labor and will Street, Sunday, Sept. 11. Gilbert NEW BEDFORD show to all men that the Church Amaral is gelleral 'chairman. He "'iiI never relinquish her claim announces that the chimboil will. WY 3·3786 as champion of the WOJ;king .be held rain or shi~e. man. The speaker at the Solemn COME IN SEE - and' DRIVEiHig)l Mass wilL be tile Rev. Benjamin L. Masse" S.J., whom Victpr Riesel iuis proclaimed O!'1e of the outstanding scholars in .....he World'. Most Beautifully Prop~rtioneeiCCH'S· the, field of labor-managemtmt: at F,ather Masse wnl :be hOllored at a dinner on the' 'eve of the' holiday at White's, restaurant. No. Easton E. Bridgewater' Norton Attending' this dinner, will be . representatiyes of each union Randolph PBainvil1e hol9ing membership.in the UniFORD DE~LERS FOR OVER :t8 YEARS' ,. ted: Labor Council. Rev. Father .·and theMw Brockton Tansey ';0 Q'l1;ed among the in1344·86 Purchase St. New 8ec:Iford~ MeIn. vited guest~ I
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 1, 1960
NEW ACADEMY BUn.. DING: Five lucky upperclassmen get a preview of thebea!ltiful addition to Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River. Left, Arlene Crawford (left) and Cynthia Franco tryout the new cheinistryphysics laboratory. Center, there's everything. but food in. the new cafe-
FBI Expert As'ks Greater Int eres.t In 'W'orld Affa.·r's
11
teria, and that'll be there by next Wed\lesday. Left to right, Jeanne Galland, Michele Paquet, Joan Majkut, Arlene and Cynthia. Right, Michele, Joan and Jeanne approve seats in the 70l.-capacity auditorium. No one-' well, hardly anyon~will mind going to school in such a new buildin~!
New Mount St. Mary Academy Opens Wednesday
Tanganyika Convert
Continued from Page One Classrooms in the academy are located in hallways, neatly' To Head New State They were loud in approval, too;· feature separate desk-tables a\1d conc~aled ill lockers. They'll be DAR-ES-SALAAlvr (NC) of tbe -lollipop-bright cafeteria . chairs, the latter of a pleasant" used by teachers needing. to Tanganyika, latest African state where multicolored chairs create. leaf-green color. Walls a're in . COmll1ll11icate with Sister Mary. to win self-rule, will have a NOTRE DA'ME (NCj.'~,· ~ gaY and relaxed atm~sphere," varying' pastel shades, and rooms" Carmela, principal. Catholic Chief Ministel' when An expert on R~d techniques for ~tudent lunchtime. eorinect by" means of intel'ior The Academy's·old auditorium it becomes autonomous' in Sep. ..' No more double lunch periods,' ,doors~.. ' . is in -,prOCess of conversion into . tember. . for ..w.9r~d. oonquel'!t: urged for the .girls, sai~. S!~ter ~ary.. . 1JDi~~~TelephoDe Serviee a library" said Sister Mary Car.. He.is Jules Nyerere, who hari American. youth to take a. Olga, The cafeterIa' WIll seat all A . ·umque . touch:. telephonetlmela.. The' former balcony will declal'ed that" self-gOVJl'nrllent . lively ?nterest in' world affairs' students at a single ser-ving. . . . . beeome'aprofessional sect'ion for will' not result in the violence and to avoid, confusing the The superior. is also' "chief Catholic-Red Tension te.achersand there will be a that accompanied. the gra'lting threat of communism with the electrician" for the new building. Result..s'in Violence special reference area as well of independence· to the neighlegitim:;lte aspirations of emerg- She's an expert on the location as a guidance 'room where girls boring· CongQ, Racial tension ing nations. ' . of switches and fuses, "I ought HAVANA (N<;::) - Growing can browse among college catathere led to attacks on Belgians Addressing more than 4,000 to be able to do i.t," she 'comtension between Catholics and logs and other guides to higher and other whites and tribal di. 1 men,ted, "After all, I teach leftist backers . visions have been a cause of delegates at the 19th natiOna t' . of Cuba's revolu- educatl'on. , ., C physics!" 'She gets her nightly IOnary. regime. broke out. into national disullity. Catholic Students MISSion ru- exercise, she said, as she makes viQlence ·befOl~e the op~ning of The' new. building ·will be Mr, Nyerere is a convert who ~d~~~~~~~ln,ti~~e:ei~~~p:ti~~a~. an inspection tour Qf .the three-. the First Nati()oal' Catholic . blessed 'this month at a date to gave lip a teaching pos' in a the Federal.Bureau of Investi- story .building, making' sure Youth Congress here. be announced, said 'Sister Mary. Catholic school six years ago to deciai'ed: 'that al~ doors and windows are A pI;iest.was shot by police and Olga. There will be an open found the party Which has led g atin.n,. 1< secure. ·.·.• Catholic y()uths .were beaten house for the public and a special" the campaign for self-govern"Communist· efforts to sub" and detained in Las Villas provview'ing 'd~y ,for Sister:s. '. .ment hel'e; the Tanganyika vert these. underdeveloped na- , Await Court Ruling' ,.nce.· ' . . Perhaps stude';t feeling is best National Union. tions often tend to obscu,re the The congress, o!'iginally Sched-. summed· up by one girl's heart- _ - - - - - - - - . . . . ; . - - fact that there are actually two On Sunday Cases ,. uled' to open in .Havana cathefelt ,exclamation at first sight major social problems with BALTIMORE (NC) _ A' mate' 'dral, .opened in La Saile School . of' the new building. "Wait'll which we must c~mtend. legislative group will withhold to avoid possible disorders. Diane sees THIS!" she exploded. Pose Challenge recommendations on a proposed Some 600 delegates from all Not only Diane, but every girl "We must, of course, meet re- Maryland Sunday sales bill unparts of Cuba attended. • at Mt. St. Mary ill due for an l'IOlit-cefully the threat of comtil the U.S, Supreme Court rules Congress sources said that a extremely pleasant surprise next mupism. But we .must also .at on Sunday sales cases now:be.. Spanish pl'iest, Father Marcial Wednesday. the same time meet with equal fore l't. Bed' oya,. S .., J .was· woun d e d 'In . resourcefulness t he c h a 11 enge State Sen. Fred C. Malkufl, the leg whil.e protecting Catholic posed by the determination of chairman of the judiciary com- . youths sought by quban aJ.1thorthese underdeveloped nations to mittee of the state Legislative ities.. The priest was taken to a attain their legitimate hopes Council, disclosed this after his hospital and has been allowed and aspi!·ations." group heard testimony on the to ·see no one except Coadjutor You Hoye Mr. Sullivan called for "an proposed bill, which wOJ.1ld des- Archbishop Evelio Diaz y Cia of increasing awareness of and ignate Sunday "a general we~k- Havana. . interest in world affail's, com- ly day of rest, recreation and bined with a penetrating and family activities" and would IDEAL LAUNDRY analytical approach to the false ban unnecessary Sunday bUM'Insurance Agency appeals of communism," , ness activity. Paint and. Wallpaper T:h u s equipped, American During its last session, the FOil River OS 8-5677 54 PlEASANT STREET youth will be able to distinguish U.S. Supreme Court agreed to Dupont Paint 'NORTH ATTLEBORO 373 New.BoMon«Rocd "between the natural revolution rule on four cases involving the TEL. MYrtle 9-8231 .. '-~ 'Rear of Store of rising expectations, and the constitutionality of Sunday sales CIIID.U». 422 Acush. Ave. cynical effort of world commu- laws. The court is expected to ~t:'.t3Br' cor. Middle St. nism to superimpose its coun-. hand down its ruling sometime terfeit revolutionary program" after it reconvenes in October. PARKING . upon that natural revolution, the New Bedford FBI .official said, AS A HOLY CROSS FATHER Symptom of Disorder "If we are to be successful in Priest-Teacher Home Missioner Free Delivery 3 Times Daily overcorni;lg communism," Mr. Foreign Missionary Parish Priest Sullivan warned, "we need to FAIRHAVEN For information about tho keep in mind that communism BUSINESS AND piONEER STORE Holy Cross Fathers or is more a symptom of personal DUPliCATING. MACHtNES Complete Selection of and social disorder than. }U. Brothers, write to: Second and Morgan eause." MEATS - GR,OCERIES FAll RIVER The real cause of "the present HOLY CROSS FATHERS PROVISIONS plight of the world," he said, is W"f 2-0682 OS 9-671:2 North Easton" Massachusetts 249 Adams St., Fairhcwen to be found in the "COI'rosive E. J. McGINN, Prop. WYman 4-6441 ideas" of materialistic thOught. ·SSiSjS" iSSiiSSSS;,.:SS\ )E " "For example, an incl'easing number of people are no longer decisively influenced by their eonvictions in ·GOd,.·moral values, . purpose, freedom, and 3U. immol·tal soul," he said.
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THE ANCHOR_~DioCes~ of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 1, 1960
'.
Coni'emplates Lower Status ' Of Breviary Friends' Feast
.God
Bishop of Reno '
The other day-it was the 8th of .August, to be precise -we marked the, feast of Sts. Cyriack, Largus, ,and Smaragdus, _martyrs. We, did so, always, with loving unction, for surely 'no such phenomenal combination. of names is to be found else-, ' Now it happened, the story where in the calendar. Time gOes on, that the Princess AIwas when it was a feast of temia, daughter of Diocletian, semi-double rank, dignified was possessed of Ii devil. She
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Let Euclid rest and Archimedes pause, 'And' what the Swede ,intend, and' what the French.' Prudently he cautioned, ''To' measure' 'life learn' thou "betimes," but the burden af his feast-day greetiIi.g· was that, the 'joys oC 'life should be accepted ,as thankfully as.its cares, a sen-, 'timent .which consorts ill, with, MOWn's avowed PurItanism:'
knew that only Cyriack could cure her. So her loving father ate humbie pie and invited the Deacon to take over. Persian EpisOde The exorcism worked instan- > taneously, and the Princess and her mother were baptized. As a reward, Diocletian gave Cyriack CARDINAL PROTECTOR: a mansion near ,the Baths, which Pope John has appointed became a Christian basilica. Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, So far so good. But the King former Apostolic Delegate to ot" Persia's daughter wa~ like:wise vexed by a,devil, an afflic- the' United States, as Cardtion endemic to noble maidens, inal Protector of the Cathit seems, Off went Cyriac;k with olic' Student's Mission Cru' his ,companions, Largus and sade. NC Photo. Smaragdus, the- cure acl;omplished, and the whole court was converted.
was
Back in, Rome, hQw'ever, the evil":ininded Maxinlian took' lid": , vantage of the absence of Diocletian to seize upon the three thau'maturgs and had them beheaded, out, beyond the city on the Via Salaria, near the Baths of Sallus,t: On, the following 8th o'f' ,August the, Pope brought their bodies to" rest in the Ceme-' tery known thereafter as .C;::y':' ria,ck's: ' " ' ," ' 'Pure Embroidery' ,The whole'story isa 'delightfi'll :exampleof' how' the-"Romali' hagiographers, o{ the 5th and 6th centuries invented out 01. whole cloth. There was a church in Rome 'hamed for St. Cyriack, as-·well' as a cemeter.y, b~t, absolu tely, nothing was known· ,fot' certain ,about, the ,donor., It is quite possible that there' were several martyrs of" that' name, dating .from' the period of Diocletian's wholesale persecy.. tion. But' nothing SubstllDtiates the much later account of theexorcism of, the princesses, and ac:. tuallY,"from ,what we know 01.' Diocletian, nothing' lessprob-' able could be imagined. The Persian episode is' pure, em..:. broidery.''''
.~! i
Love
Y011
By' Most Rev: FultoR·J. Stteea~ I).p. , . . .
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.
by three nocturns at m;ltins; thim a few years ago it fell to the lowlier status of a simple Office. Now, alas, with the ell a n'ge s announced f o'r the breviary and missal, the c h'a n c e s are that it will be reduced to no more than a eomri\emoration. : Hence it was that, we felt called upon' to devote special attention to the three heroes of the 'faith whose exploits are recalled that day" and'whose intercession is sought in .the court of heaven. It was , by. 'way of a fond farewell. True, our acquaintance withthem,thus far has been more 'formal than intimate. ·We have never known . a,n'y 0 n emiined Cyriack, and among our friends none'answers ~ Smaragdus. The case was,differen~ with John Milton,> 1(Vho, wrote a ,noble sonnet, to y,oung CyriackSkinner;"whose grand.,. Clither was a learned judge.. Tt,e. s!,mber poet'was in jovial mood .~ gaY, willing, .for the non~,
• • ", - . . . . .
Become A Sacrificing Servant
Reminds, Nation$ Of -~ Emigrants Natural R'ight' O
OTTAWA (NO)-Thehead of the Holy See's work in bel1alfof emigrants s~id her'e':'that the Church "de-
plore~the fact that natio~s demanding internatio~al freedom Qt· movement for th~ir goods deny thisjlaturai· right when 'it ' comes to people."" ',' '. Archbishop Giuseppe Ferret.,.' io~ president of,Supren-ie Eini';: gration Council, told the fourth world. congt:ess of the International Catholic Migration Commission: " "Em.igration is an inalienable natural right of man that the nation, or nations, rather, must . . " recognize, respect and de- . fend." '
Seven hundred years before Our Blessed Lord was born. lsals the prophet deserl~d 'Him a8 the "suffering servant." St. 'Paul. looking back on the life of Christ, said: "He took upon Himself the form of a'servant. He was a sufferlnJr servant."ltwas particularly on the night of the Last Supper that Our Blessed Lord 'lived up to that title of slave or servant. He laid aside his garments which are the' marks of status and dignity' to signify 'how He laid aside the glory of His divinity in beeoDiIng-, a man. He girded Himself with a towel whieh Is the mark of a slave, for in the East, the Slave' wore a towel about him as walters today wear aprons. He poured water Into a basin which was a kind o~ symbol of self. emptying, or a pouring out of His life for ouIl' salvation. He , washed the feet of His disciples which was the most menial service one man could render to another. Our Lord did these thlng-s as aD· example to us to teach lIS to take OD. the bardena of others. Love'doeS not ask if the other: person deserves what we are doing; he may even be a crue~ and ;rele~t~ess enemy. Neither doelI love consider the expense of tOll and saCrifIce , and the suffering that the intervention may . " cost; it' stops at nothing in order to b~neflt and relieve. Love identifi.es itself with QthefS , so as to suffer' their, ad¥ersities and pains; , , Herein is the explanationQf our missionaries' who .take on the unpleasant, unsavory ,and slavish tasks as ministering 'to the lepers in India or Africa. They pour the water" of their lives nito the bowls of the hungry and the needy, that they may be' cl~ansed in the th" Blood of Christ. , '
ijI~rlJ~n he~V~?
Ii J_f
. Do you think is It . is not nearly as heavy 'as bearing the- yoke 1% of our OW}l choosing, t~e ,galling Yoke- of. I'@ self. You think it Is hard to pour out the self-like water to wash the feei of lepers; it' Is not nearly as hard as living with oneself because one refuses to pour out some of our blessings for Christ's Sake. Each'day, make' a little sacrifice; for example look i~ five store windows, but not the sixth, and offer the'mor'tification. ,of the eyes for the missions.. Do without a' desSert, ora ,trinket, or a newspaper.p,ut the savings away, and at' the . end' 0; the' month send'them to tbeHoljFath'er::th'rough his soci~tyior the' Propagation~f the· Falth;WilI you "become 'Ii Sacr'lfleing servant' for the missions as Our Lord .becani~ .' sacrifiolng servan't for your' 'Soul'?: , . ':.:': ... ".'.""
up
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, ,GOD LOVE YOU to M.L. for $10' i'I am sending this OsmaR amount for the Missions. I almost spent it for some French perfume." . . . to M.M. for $5 "I used to go .out ,to lunch every day. Since I have stopped that practice I put sOm~ money aside ev.erT week for your wonderful work." ... to J.N. for $1 ",I am ten years old. I was going to spend this dollar ,on milkshakes, but 1. made a sacrifice and·gave it to the Missions." ... to Mrs. C.B. "Two of my sons. are picking peaches this summer and are giving fifty cents each week to the Missions." . .
gaeredRig~
, 'Cut oUt this column, pin your sacrifice to it, and, mail It to the Forced 'migration,' and selfish' Most, Rev. Fulton J. Sheen', National, Director of the Society for national restrictions 'on, immithe Propagation of the'Faith, ;366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y.. ' Pot to DeaUi gration violate "the sacred right or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, of man' to ,seek: his well-peing' 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. But what about the ,original wherever he wants,'.' Archbishop, !K. Cyriack and his companions? Ferretto said; But he 'added that ,What, indeed!:The, legend ,tells DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUl some . regulation is required if 'us that' duri~ the final phase of emigration is to achieve its nat.. : the .1,l.ge, of the- Martyrs,' when I...,ite voung, .girk: (1~2lI'1O, labor .. ural goal of "the mostfavorllble' , Christ's ,val9 .vi..eyarcl a. CHI . . . . . of ... : Dlocletian and Maximian shared distribution ,of mankind on ,the Editions" Pross, Radio,' MoviM ancl fol" ·the imperial ttU-one, the R~man Needs Hooseeieaning' surface of the earth." ,viIiOfl. ~ Witb· theie' modem mean., theN Christians were dragooned to, No question, from ,this 'and' He said also that for such' a' .lWllional"/' Si'le.. bri..g Chri'''' Doctrine iabor on themonumentai Baths: , '10 011,: r.gard.... of 'race. coior or weed. . other examples of p'ious legend' reason as overpopulation a na'of Dioc~etian.. , .." ',' For infOrmoliCHl write to: . 'preserved' in the Roman Bretion may justly restrict im'migra. , 'Cyriac~, a young. nobleman, 'REV, MOTHEA, SUPIRIOR 'viary, that a ,thorojlgh 'house-,. tion. But, no ,nation, he 'said, ' organized 'Ii group" of' his fel':' 10 SY. PAUL'S An eOSTON, 30. MASS. cleaning ,bas long been needed. should exaggerate' such claims ;lows to succor the ;victims, faint'There is more 'than enough in the and'bar access to needy and honing and. starving as they were~ !TIartyrology. founded upQn subest foreigners for "insufficient ,Edified by such 'zeal," the' Pope; Rt. 6 betw8811 history, answerable' to and barely justifiable reasons" .St. M;ucellus, promptly 01'- staritial the most rigid scientific ,tests, to ,,"Account must" be" taken ~ Fall'River &.' ,dained them to.. the diaconate. dispense with the accumulation the calamities, ,adversities and: ....wBedford But they were caught in their 'of fables that has crept il). and suffering afflicting mankind, pious ministrations by the Rom- found; lodgment., _, llnd even if the" well-being'''of an prefect, who' "treated them.,' , The. history, of liturgicll1 prayer' the country, and that of' the pontumeliousIY'i~ arid' puf Several is a palirripsestof the history of per50n ,seeking immigration apto .death. the Church .1i.erseif. 'In"lin un": pear to 'require, application ·of'. , ,critical 'age it waS .'considere4 restrictive law mitigation of. the """'~"""'''''''"'''''''''''''''''''~''''''I'"'''''''''''~_:i egitimate' ahd' ~veh' 'inEif1tOtius law should be ,sought,SQ··as not 'to rewrite the Acts of the Mar-:, to 'forget Christian 'charity and tyrs, lettipg pious, fancy" suppl:f the sense, of soligarity which. for any dearth of facts which: ,exists among all men, sons of .: might be encountered. TodaY. 'common Eternal Father" we are 'eiC:a'cting in. out:' : ~,/.'.~' >, -~. -- ~-" . ,- .. " requirements. '
more"
Old Friellds . Yet, perversely, we are glad that we grew up,' and matured (insofar as that may be said of us) using the: old breviary and. ,missal. It has been like living in a comfortable old' house, filled .. ' with \l!'ell-loved-and shabby fur-' , niture, with the walls cluttered with I1ictures. in, dubious tas~" ',handeii iiown ':'frOn1:' "coiuittess generations of ,the past. , Housecleaning is a necessary business, as we who live in ab- ject: fear of' house~eepers know ,only too well. The furniture has A F RIC A N MARTYR: , to be changed"the walls washed Blessed Charles Lwanga, down and painted in bright new native ruler in Uganda in colors, and doubtless, in time'to we will get used to it all. central Africa, was burned come, But when the 8t~ of August 'at the stake in 1886, a year , rolls around again, and we shall after his ,conversion to the look in vain for the feast of Sts. Faith. Beatified'in 1920, he Cyriack;' Largus 'and' Srriar ~gdus you ,will pardon Ull if 'is now being considered for.' martyrs, we feel a trifle lonely. They WeN :canonization. NC PhotQ. friends,:from way ',ba~k. ", ,,' ,
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The Catholic hi America
...THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 1. 1960
Establish Catholic Press To Fight Printed Abuse By Rev. Peter. J. Rahill, Ph.D. In the early years of the 19th century a Catbolie eould have viewed life in these United States with great satisfaction. The number of the faithful had grown steadily, with natural increase and conversions aided slightly bY' immigrants from the Old throughout the country. Xt conWorld. The first bishop OIl tinued to present Catholic teachthe Church in the United ing from 1822 until it was added States, John Carroll, had to the casualties O!f the War
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Cci'tholic Schools Save $42 Million For Minnesotans
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ST. PAUL (NC)-Catho. lie schools save Minnesota taxpayers an estimated $42,682,143 yearly. This fiKure
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is based on official cost estimates of the Minnesota state department of education's bureau of statistics and enrollment figures listed in the Official Catholic Director~. The saving to Minnesota tax'payers made by Catholic schools was estimated by the Cathollc Bulletin, newspaper of the St. Paul archdiocese. Catjlolic schools' saving to taxpayers was estimated by multiplying the cost of educating one pupil in. the public school system by the total numb.er of pupils is Catholic schools, .
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the respect of all who knew between the States. him. In 1808 he became the Partly to answer the taunts 'lnd fir s t arch-· calumnies which had combishop of the menced with the jUdicial up.. country, with holding of the seal of the conf 0 urn e w fessional, publication of the dioceses comTnuth Teller was cOlllmenced in ing into beNew York in 1825. In the next ing at the few years more and more bishsame time. ops followed the' exampleoi The spirit John England in using newsJohn Cotton papers to answer critics of the had expressed Church. in saying that Anti-Catholie Literature Average Costs "it was tolThe rigor 'of many penal'lawtl For the 1958-59 school· yea~ eration that was relaxed or removed by the last for which figures are made the world anti-Christian" Parliament's passage of the 1829 available, it cost an avcl'age of 150 years before in Massachu- Catholic Emancipation Act. By $287 to educate one public ele:::~s ~:~i;:'IOny apparently was no means was this belated 'jusA'fOP ST. PETER'S BASILICA: The fame~l Sarripietrini, mentary school pupil. Catholic Occasionally the improvement tice unopposed in the British' the .steepleJ·acks and. generalhandym.en' of the Vatica.n elementary schools last yef}[ enIsles. Hundreds' of pamphlets in the position of the faithful were printed in: England and" maintenance staff, are cleaning.the copper ball and 'cross rolled 118,317. Total estj~ated .prompted a reaction by those 'made their way tei' the' United :that crowns the famous cupola of St; Peter's Basilica in Saving: $33,956,979. who' were incensed at any recStates. . Rome. NC Pho' to. . ,. In 1958-59 the' cost of eduognition . of the "Church of· These vilifications 01. the _. . '.' . cating one pupil in a public high ·Rome." . school was $431. Catholic high Church were distributed here; Ileeognl. Seal with the ancient libels retained S scl).ools last year enrolled 20;244.. Tot a l e s tim ate d saving: During the War of 1812 stolen they were oftentimes'reprinted $8,725,164. property was returned by a New without reference to the Eman:' York resident who was a peni- cipation Act.. Over and above . BUFFALO· (NC)' Msgr. me on a tour of, the house ·they , The Catholic Bulletin comtent of Father Anthony J{ohlthe pamphlets were about 30 Roman J,. Nuwer said it wall lik~ built. since· the war," the Mon:., mented that' the tax savings for mann. When the priest refused newspapers whose' sole or prin- . Uold home week." . lilignor said. "The building cost the coming 'year will probably to testify in court :the cry went cipal topic was the "Church' Of. ". The pastor of St. Mary of Sor- a ,million l;lollars, donated by be larger thim the estimated up that the confessional was a Rome." rows church ~re. was talk,ing Kolping Society members all figures, because education costs shield for thieves, and Father Most infamous amOlig them about his rec~nt trip to the 37th over the world. have' risen since the 1958-59 Kohlmann was indicted.· .. was The Protestant, started in .International· Eucharistic. Con:"It occupies a full block and school year, on which the cost . Th'e court demanding he anNew York in the first month of gr.ess in. Munich" .Ger~any.. ~ is· able .to accommodate hundreds· figures are based. swer, the priest replied: "It 1830. The initiai article comretired. brigadier general ·in the· of young men ,who pay as .little would be my duty to prefer inmented Oft the 'revival .ot the Army Chaplain. Corps, the Monas'$2.50 a week for a ·room· and. stantaneous death or any tem- Jesuits. . 'signor wl:\s stationed in 'Europe are 'also to have their meals in poral misfortune, rather than -It continued:- "The sleeplesi in the.post,:,Wprld War II occupa'- the,house at a moderate cost." disclose the name of the peni- and wily exertions of. the de...· tionera.. . : The Kolping 'Society provides tent in question." votees of 'The Man of 'Sin' '(ap"All my. old friends reme~- homes' and spiritual contacts for' Plumbing .-- Heating While all .the' judges were' pellation l~vied at the 'Pope) .bered ~e, well and we1~omed me young .men, working in large Over 35 Year6 Protestants,' speaking through . constitute. a serious, topic ,of as.a frie.nd just -returned from a . cities.' , .' . ': DeWitt Clinton the 'New York scrutiny to all .persons' . . ; It, short journey," t~e ,Monsigno~The Monsignor"said he 'also of Satisfied Service tribunal ruled the priest could is therefore intended to issue a sai!,!. "In Vienna, for ins~ance, visited Innsbruck, Austria, where 806 NO. 'MAIN STREET not be forced to testify. weekly paper which shall be ex- practically the' whole staff of' he stUdied· for the priesthood. Fall River OS 5-7497 This legal recognition of the elusively devoted. to a portrai- the Bristol Hotel, which was my seal of the confessional roiled ture of Popery." headquarters for four. years, Christian Values some who were intensely a n t i - , lined up along the street and . SAN JOSE (NC) - ' Latin Catholic. A series of pamphlets. The Jesuit' :welcomed me personally as I AmeriCa's problems should be imd writings spewed forth, flayCatholics were still sparse in ' stepped from a taxi." . solved according to Christian ing .the Church and her mem- New England when a journal t o ' Signs. of Prosperity values, not radical ideologies, bers. . ' present the Faith rightly was The Monsignor said it was the the Rerum Noval'um Trade Catholic Immigrants first p~blished in 1829. M?st of same .in' all other places he re- Union Confederation said at a Europe had been involved in the enthusiasJl1. and the' finan- visited. He said t~at the GIs of meeting here in Costa Rica. war almost from the time of the cing came from the convert- the war days wouldn't recognize American Revolution. The Uni-, family of the Taylors of Con- Cologne, Munich' and Vienna PliNTHS White's Farm Dairy ted States had been drawn into necticut. ·today. the struggle in 1812. After The second Bishop of. Boston ' '1n place of bomb-gutted ..... 0ffIee &lid' P'hnII "SPECIAL MILK peace came in 1815 there was an was a Jesui~, Benedict. Joseph 'buildings there now are modern IDWRl, MASS. Upsul'ge in immigration to the Fenwick. On his. first visitation office buildings, apartments and From Our Own United States. . to Maine he found Catholics at hotels. Signs of prosperity are Tested Herd" ~Lowell Though it was a trickle com- Belfast afraid' to confess their everywhere. People drive around pared with the torrent of mid- religion because of fear of their in modern automobiles, dress Aevshttet. Ma... WY 3-4457 (II. , . , . . . century 'and thereafter, the in- neighbors. . in .the latest fashions, instead Impelled to strengthen these .of the rags 80 common in the • Sp.eciol Milk flux. of people inevitably incited faithful as well to counter- .earlY .postwar days.'" . • Homogenized Vit. D.IlMHc: hostility. Some were unable to act the assaults, in the same year Msgr. Nuwer said he had been • Butterm ilk IOSlON see the need for lidditionallabor 1829 Bishop F~nwick founded in instructed I;)y, Bishop ,Joseph A. • Tropicona Orange Juice for the new factories, for opim:. OC~~POIT, ing the West, and for internal Boston a Catholic journal. Its Burke of Buffl\lo, to visit the • ·Coffee and Choc. MiMi PAWTUCKR, improvements, such as national antecedents are jndica~ed in the :headquarters of'. the' Catholic .• ' Eggs - Butter roads. title, The Jesuit, 'which' was not .K91ping Society in C910g~e with . MoSt of the, newcomers were so happy a name for restraining ·a view, .towarq ~rection of a poor and few wer~ educated. hostile pens and voices.' This :Kolping House .ih·Buff~lo.. Yet Professor Ray Allen Billing- paper was a predecessor of the ' ."The society's officials took Year Books Color Process ton holds ·that these and other Boston Pilot of today. objections were minor. "FunCalldles III DarklleSll . ~'. . Electricat . B~ochu~es' damen\ally," he has :~mphasized, It was through these· Taylors ' "the aliens were opposed be- of Connecticut that a Catholic ~~ Contractors' cause they were Catholics: " publication began iii fa~ distant Hostility did not become iR- St. Louis. In 1832, when ·Deodat. ordinate and wiqespread at Taylor offered to undertake the .~' once, but the rancbr grew as venture Bishl,lp Joseph Rosati steadily as an untreated ulcer. wrote in his diary: "I will assist ~ F 5 ET LmERPRESS Bishop EnglaDcl him with all my power:" ,Notwithstanding, during these At the moment the bishop 1-17, COFfiN AVENUE Phone WYman 7-9421 years it appeared that an in;- could have given no financ!:ll 944 County St.·... proved understanding was be- aid, but soon Pope Gregory XVI New Bedfordi MoHo . New Bedford' Ing reached between American sent him $3,000 to help complete Catholics aAd those' not of the the cathedral commenced the Faith, previous year. From this money Several positive advances Bishop Rosati diverted two huncame from Irish-born John Eng- dred dollars to establish the R. A. WILCOX CO. land, first Bishop of Charleston. newspaper Shepherd. of the Val... OFFICE FURNITURE Mass .had not been offered in ley. I" Stoes tor I",,,,edtale Oellvo" South Carolina until 1786, and The lowering clouds of antithen by a priest from a ship Catholicism' were not to be dis• DESKS • CHAIRS which had 'halted in Charleston's persed until a terrific storm had FILING CABINETS harbor. been endured. If the attack was • FIRE FILES • SAFES DOMESTIC & HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS It was from this same "Palnot repelled, the defenders of FOLDING TABLES metto State" that the first Cathth~ Faith undoubtedly were AND CHAIRS Service olic newspaper, The United strengthened by the dozen States Catholic Miscellany, was Catholic ne'wspapers commenced R_ A. WILCOX CO. MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURfEE ST., FALL RIVER commenced by Bishop EnglalAd during these years. two years after his arrival. Next Week: InflamatoryDia22 BEDFORD ST. Never of large circulation, the tribes Ignite Charlestown' ConFALL RIVER 5·7838 journal. nevuthele81 dre\Hate4 '¥em.
'Old' F·:' ., W e I"come .rlen d ·In' Europe. World Wa''r .1'1 Army' Chao plal-n
GEORGE M.MONTLE
SULLIYAN BROS.
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American Press, Inc. fRI NTERS -
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Phone OS 5-7484
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.!.HE ANqiOR-:-:"..
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.Val.ue..:Cleveland .' . Catholic';'Schools
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Thurs.,_ S~pt .. 1, . 1960
-Pre~cte$ Declor 'i(ri·sh ~mo~ifatioiri<'
e , : ' At' '$·r2,5'~{il·lion·:,·~ ': . ct~v.~~.~NpJNC).";"
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The ·,total: ,valu~':· ofv. .Catholic schools ,'in"the' '"diocese: here has reached almost '" 125 miJ,lion dollars ,....,.:repr.esentiIlg a
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:""'\DUBLIN (NC)...:.:.The Irish '~i~4'ops .have ,st~ted "t,qa.t ~continuing large-scale, emi·grationfromIJ:eland is.their
huge savings to ,taxpayers .in/the. eight.,counties .. comprising·· the Cleveland diocese.; . ~ .. ' According/to· a recent surVey by the diocesan bureau of aocounts, physical assets of the schools alone totaled $124,912,770. Land values were ignored in the tabulation. The figure includes. two seminaries, one college, 14 high ·schools and '181 grade schools operated. by ,t!:).e diocese valued :' :a( $77,453,59Ik,,:The three col:~>,i~·g~~:. 2S' hig~ ~schools, and one
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::"in'Ostobvious cause of anxjet9" and a' source of many social 'and economic evils. _ The Bishops spoke in a joint pastoral letter issued in con.nection with the promulgation of the decrees of their 1956 national synod. The decrees of the synod, which ··have been approved by the Holy See, are now being communjcated"to the:: clergy. They' will go jntq~.,effec(·,. , ..', ' , ",. .
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means to safeguard the religious . life of those who leave our . d t . . . th t' th country 0 secure a ey shall notanmerely preserve the Faith in themselves but shall become, by God's 'grace, the. means of communicating iito °t?~~~ci~l measures pave been
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SOMETHING' NEW IN CATECHISMS: Pope John receives a complete set of the St. John's University·sou·nd-and.-filmstrip .c..atechisJ:ll" from .Bi.shop Charles Greco of Alexandn"a, La., chairm,art of .the U.S. Eprscopal Committee-of' the Confraternity-of ChrI'stI'an DoctrI·ne. At the ceremony. are, left to right: Msgr. Charles M. Walsh,director of the New York CCD; Fathe,r David J. Coftey, Providence ~CD ··d.irectot;· DeCla~:x. McMullEin, 'president of Brian' Press which produced the catechIsm; BIShop Gr~o; Father J'oimP. Breheny, prin~ipal of Cardinal. Spellman High Schoolo New York,apd :Pope John. NC Photo. ".' ' , '. ,.
Pope Praises Filmstrip Catec~is~.,~a.d.e.~~,.U. s.
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Catholle' school system saves taxpayers an ··estimated. $45,401,000 in operating costs a year. This includes $35,638,900 .for grade .schoois and $10,762,120 for high sc~o:~si rn Ii t c:i en;ollment for Catholic schools in' the CleveIlmd diocese this fall is 114,000
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. . . sistance of all the faithful 'are ,. CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) ".- . in the Pope's Summer resldenc.e in baving it used more widel¥5,OOO will be enrolled in coJ.asked in this mostiltiportant Pope John haspraise(~: a 9Ound- h e r e . . throughout the worleL ~eges and universities. field of the lay apos~o~ate." .. ' ..and:"color fi~m,strip series ,of the .The Pope told the assembled ..;.;-.;...--.:.-;..,..---..;.,.....;..,o;........~~-~---~- - - - - - - Baltimore. Catechism.' group "that' teaching the cate:,. . stress Religious." IristrueU~ . C h' . The po~e spe~t hali an hoUr. chism is among: ~7. hurc. , S ... ' ..' . -.. . The Bishops said that through in speCial audience 'with Bis~op gre.~test responsIbilIties. and In 1944 a new Community :Of'l!uDS,' the SIST~RS OF .CRABthe development, of modern Charles P. Greco of.Alexandria, praised the .new c~techlsm as ITlC of TRICHUR, WIlS founded'la the'Dlocese'of Tl'ichur, la means of communication·Irish- -L' h' 'of 'the'~ US" a wonderful mnovatlon in cate- ..... ~ . .,..... ·~·~S"~···Oj,"·."-"· relNsseDIA.,s. ope' An·'e·fd·e·."'thesisfim,te.n'!hOUteuse OfofUDthcl-. men at home as well as abroad a., c airman.. . . . . . . h t' 1 .. ,- ti ~ . :Bishops' Committee for th~ Con- c e !ca msuuc.. on: are today inmo,re direct and ':fraternity of Christian Doctrine.. :t;Jlshop G,reco. ~Id the. Pope ~ d'\p.:.4CommUDity.-:~. .Or?banage and a frequent contact with influences d ther . porters of the cate- 'hailed the fIlmstrIp catechism as _ . 4#' , Medical. Dispensary,-la the viUqe 'l t the 'F 'th than 'they all 0 sup . ·"th f' t th t· h beeD. '\I' 0.. ' 0 f CHOW'ANN'ooR' h ost l e o ,at h' . pr du'ced by St 'John's . e Irs a ." as ever (II, . . • .This h ouae also c Ism, 0 " . . . , d " d 'f' 11 sked to ~ ~ b ... '. , ha ve been in former times. .; one ans~ecI..ca y a . fA" ecame e .M0 therh···· ouse an d N0 ... ..• .University in New York. They added that. 'lour '~efense , . . . . . , , : : : '.', 'see how ChrIst was portrayed l a · , ·."ate and it remains as. such &ocIu. must largely be found in a sound ': The project, -Called St. John"a the film. .t flJi·'the. past· 16 .yea.n(·the members Christian education. 'Importan't catechism, consists of .31' .filin- . Used Su~sSfullY , . of the COllllDlunit, have grown to progress has 'been made in the . .'strips and .31 records that cover . .'.. . . nwnber 150~. In addition to the 01'essential matter of religious in.;. in 'entirety the contents of the . ~e sound and fIlmSt~IP c~tephans, ,there. are prese.nUy living a& struction of the young." . Baltimore Catechism. The mod- "chIsm r.epresen~ the first t~,:"-e Dt HrL. PaIhtn Mimon,'. A:.1 CHOWANNOOR 55· Professed Sisters The Bishops' pastoral, similar ern-day catechism has been acthe entire. Baltimore. catechism lH; nMI .and Nqvices. The 'origlnal builcUDg bl to the one they issued at the claimed by educators in the. has .been presented. m such. a 1m 0rimJtII ChtmII so over-crowded" that the Convent time of the national synod in United States' and by mission,. way. ~Qre than 130,000 ?f the Iection and the Chapel mus& be, enllll'ged:;' T~. cost of doiulr 1956, also declared'that the tra- arIes . th rou ghout the world . The, catechisms presently mh use" ....wiU,'be'" '$'2,500'• . Am' are C th li b ditional aspects of Catholics' project took.l0 years to complete .ID " etrhlcan. t?t t~ c ~ 00 in Ireland "are as manifest now d t b t $300 000 an d m 0 er IDS 1 U Ions. SEPTEMBER RITUAL as they have ever been." i . an co~ a ou ,. Mr. McMullen said the cate::. BUSY· AMERICAN PARENTS' READYING THEIR YOUNGThese, they said, ·include ,Wonderful IDDova.t~ chism has been used successfullT STERS FOR SCHOOL' _ Labor Day .passes and oil go the high standards of morality'and Bishop Greco pr~sented Pope .in leprosy" colonies in ·Australia. chUdren, bright and shiny, most of them dressed in brand new 'fidelity to religious duties, cor- John with a complete 'set of the .prison study-clups in the l.!nitejl school clot,hes .and shoes. For the REFUGEE CHILDREN startdial relations between the clergy catechism lind at· the Pope's re-States and, the African mission;. log :the school year in schools conducted by' the PONTIFICAL and laity and the sanctity of quest projected part of the series ·aryposts. . .' " MISSION there will be no new clothes or shoes - for· these family life. on a specially prepared sc;reen The. catechism is being trans-. , chUdrenthere. would be' no 'clothes of any. kind, no teache.... lated in an official' version. in . no ~ext bQoks, in fact nQ schools' at' aU weI;e it not for the gen. .... '$panish and French. So~th and 'erosity of so many Catholics, When o.ur two schools open at • 0 . ~ ·Central American bishops' andDBAYEH and JISR· EL. BAS~A. tlie cpildren will be wearing COne~e priests have 'shown great interclothes d9P.cited 'at, tile tl~e ofth~ Tha.n!'sgiving Clothing Drive ~. '. ...;;J . ~ , .est in the .nov.el(presentationOt sn,d every~l;iing essential to ,the proper running of a school will WASHINGTON (NC)-¥ou'ng' ·throughout .,t~e· United:. Sta~ ~the catechism, Mi'.. McMullen, . b~ paid. for withmo.ney sentto'us)o answer to our Refugee people ponderil1g care~rs mi~Il;.~ ..;: F~ue~cy ~n.a la.ng.u~.g: .is not ~. ~!d, and various .Vatica.ri. .offi",:. .~pp.eaI8. " ..' ; well give some thought to/the exammatIonrequl-rem.ent, 'but it .,pals have also expressed mtere14 . HAVE YO.U EVER HAD. GREGORIAN MASSES CELBBRATED foreign serviceofthe..Uni~d::, must be achieved bef~re>ano.ffi-.·:'. ' : . " . . . FOR ·YOURDECEA.SED 'LOVEDONESf States. . cer can adva·n~. ·in. the'forei~,. ;;Asser'ts Communists;' The U.S. Department'of'State ··service., " ' . ' '. "; "'1 f'I' C' h h" .' . ::,IIi. two y~al'll tlnie~ISTER'JEANNETTE and. SISTER VIKhas announced that it wiJI hold . . Candidateswhopass·~eoral: . ftl CENT will be anxiouslY and. nervously' awaitingOtlie openin, its next written Foreign ServicEi test will be' givena'physical ex.-· • DETROIT (NG)~C;ommuniSts. '.' ctilY of school -..,. theywlU .be starting, as ~/. and.. a background . are 'infiltrating some churches 'in Professed' Religious their' lifetime work W Offl'cers Exami'nation next Dee.' ;, amination . t·19a t'Ion.. ·If foun. 'd qua. ill'Ied" ' ·.the U. S., a form,er·n.a, tio. n~lcom- _ .'of. . 'teaching . . .. the chtldren . .. .' ~ 10 in some 65 centers .in .this mves of· their. n~tlve -" GIh:l" country and' abroad. It is "seek:'- .. in 1111 respects.. ~and~d~tes w~l~. be mander of the Veterans of 'For... land. They are now novices. of the. SIS- ;;:::;~ ~ ingto interest undergraduate and. placed on. a reg~ster andappomt- 'eign Wars charged here; But he rERS OF TlIE SACRED HEARTS OF' . '1 \. . graduate students in such fields me~ts Will be made from this :offere4 no pr'oof. ". . . JESUS AND" MARY in a novlUate' in as economics, public and busi- register as .needed. . '. . Timothy ·J.,Murphy of BostoD, .LEBANON. To .train a Sister costs $300. ness administration, language 1£ a candidate does not receive 'a lieutenant,colonel' ill the Army Could you pay for' the trainlag of Sister and area studies history and an~" appointment .. within 30 : reserve, .told th~ VFW national Jeanette or Sister' Vincent. The money political science. ' mo.nths from. th~·.date; of . th~ . security committee he attended may be paid in installments. To be eligible for the examina.- . written examma~lOn, hIS. name a two-week. ~ourse at the War . ------,----tion candidates must be at least' will ~. removed.· from ~.,'. ,Colleg~, Carlls~~ B~rracks, Pa., REMEMBER, GOD AND ~IIB MISSIIONS IX YOUR WILL. 21 ~ears old and lJnder 30 yearsre~ister. , . . . ' "wheret~ ·dang.er :of~boteur,l ; "THE HARVEST. INDEED IS GREAT, BUT THE LABOft,. of age as 'of Oct. 2'4, 1960. Per~a!ary Range . ",. ra~d. a.?lt~~ors, Inftl.trattn.g vaBRS ARE FEW" -:- this observation of Our Lord, spoken 80 sons 20 years old .may apply if· rlOUS w~lks of A~,erI~~!,!- life .was many' centuries a"o, is still true today. H''. Upon appointment, the candl- emphaSized . . . . · college graduates· or seniors in: 'date will receive three c o m m i s - ' Holy Church Is in constant need of more college. . . ,,~'Speakers. ~t, the. college lao ren'. THOM''AS KUR''ISU'MMO·TT'IL and ., sions' "'from ·the' .President--as .. d til t at h Applicants' must be American 'Foreign servlceOfffcer Class 8, warne. a. commUnI save FRANCIS"KUtTICKAL,"iltudents at SAINT citizens of a, t ·.least nine years' . . s,ent. ,age~ts" 'I~tO ~<;>me ~ our, .. JOSEPH'S SEMINARY ia" INDI'A:', a- two as Secretary in the, ,piplomatic chur h to g h gh 0 t and .w standing. 1£ ~arried, ..a. ~nd.i- S .. . d . V' C lot " c es am.~ p ss . boys who 'wislt' to' become priests.;·.It is their date's spouse ~eed not be a'citi-" erVlce,an as lee' on~.... , " le~d ~~ch"g!,ot!p.s ~~ cl,'eate .dIlt-,. . ' . .. .. . . zen on the dat'e of the examina- Career., " . order, he saId. The foqner, . ' desh'e to labor for. souls U. the ..harvest of tion, but cit~:ienship must ha~e . A newly appoint~ o~icer'B .VFW h:a~ 4~1~I?-ed,to.!1a.lIl.e,~~ .' . their own native land. ''If you .·coud P8¥ f~ been attained' prior to the date fIrSt tour of duty m~y' be ~n the ..churche,s InfI1U:a~ed by .t,llE; ~. . 'the education of one of these boya, the cOlifla $600. f . t . it th . State Department here, or m·one·..·bilt added"that tliecollegeteac.... . MASTER, mRCYON~'US" o app~~i~::;'~ral e';e:~IC:~:;.. C?f the 286 embassies; legati?ns':""ers docu~~n:ted 'their chargeS, , CHRIST STILL HEARS ·AND·. ANSWEio4il 'lhro."rb _ 'd t " .' ' cIa ' alld consulates abro.ad. Starting ..... .... .... C an d I a es passmg a one- . Y. sala . ran'es from .' $5 625 to priests, slster~, .. a~.. b~tbel'8" w:bo are . devoting their lives to written examination testing fa$63~ g. d ':d' ' . , : ' - . ' ungarlan,e S 01 these' afflie~d ~~, THE. CRlC ,OF TH~·,LEPER8.·lCou show dlity in English expression " '. . ,pe~year;, e~l,l mg u~.Il" 'p •. t 'C · , · · t ' to the t.e be .., .' " : ' , " ·qualiflcatIons,expeI;le.nce, ~~"l-.". raes . Of.., ...~,m.~~.n .....". . merey.~ . ,,~ ~ ~.yoU ~ a ~mber Of our DAMJEN g~nera.l a.blli!y and backgrO~n~" tal .status, and age~:;a:t tim~.~ , ,;,;. YIEN~A" (Nf;)"7.~ p~~~~t and" .."., LEP~~. ,CLl!B.. ~. ~~es fO! ~eD;lbershlp.la tbls .Club are on. Will WithIn ~~n~ months be ~Iy~rl: " appointment. An aPllointeewill' . deacon have been sentenced to dollar a monU! aDd the mone, oolleeted in this W4¥ Is used • oral examInations. by' panels" 1 ' tao """11 . '1 b h H' build. stall, and maintain, Leper Hospitals. meetin in re ional . centers a s? ,~ecelve cer lfl':,;;r 0Yfliln.<;e~, .. lal,y ~ e ungarI~';l.c~mmun-, · g . . . g .. " I ,i ,plus msurance, me<;l!cal, .ed':l~a-· .. ist· regime, ,~or criticIZIng the' STRINGLIilSS GIFTS HELP US IN URGENT NBfiIDS. 1 Larges·t'. tional and retire~ent~~nefits,.· • athe~st mann.eri.n which a com' . " . " an,!l.annual and sIck·, leave. mumst was bUr:led . , '.~' :~' , ':', O l i •s '·S··,,·OOS· ",: . . ~' , . · A~ILLO, (NC)-'-Seventy-"The' closing date' for filing Charged with .inciting oppositwo students.' studying to' serve "applications is Oct:' 24, 1960.' . 'tion to the regime, Father La~lo as priests in the Amarillo diocese Application forms and other . Szokol. was given atwC)-year '. FIANCIS CARDINAl SPflLtMAN, P...kfent. will be enrolled. this .Sept<;!mber information canbe'oblairied'hi' '.jaiLterm arH!fined $42. Matyaa " ~.Po""'. ~.Ha3l1Sec~/ 1 in seminaries" the largesf·Ii'i.Qn:' '..wrilLrig _.• iminediateli' ''to .. ,the ,Horvat!},: identified as a deacon ' . . ' . SOnd an _~to: ber in the diocese's 34 years. Board of Examiners' for. ~.the· ':working with Father Szokol, was CATNOUC NEAR lEAST ~A1l! A$$oaATlO~ Twenty-seven of the total are Foreign Service, Department sentenced to 18 months and fined ~OO I!.o1t06il~ A'tJO. ~ ~~ ~ IMQ'W V@!l'k 11, N. 'i. new seminarians. State, Washington 25, D. C. '" $25.
S'IX'T'EEN .YE'ARS OLD
for
Careers in U S f'oreolfillR' Servoce"·. Grcii'dua.· t,eS' Olrnen to Y oun'g
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Judge Upholds University's Right to Buy land ft. LOVIS (NC)_Tbe state _laM Be right -~ - discriminate .gainlJt religioWl institutions just beeause they are religious, a judge ruled ill' upholding St. Louis University'. right to buy land ill lID urban redeveloPment projeet. III taldDl the 'adion, Judge Roben L. Aronson, of the st. Louis Circuit Court dismiBBed a _it brought by tbree meMber. ei Protestan&6 and Other Amer, <0
.. ,
- THE AHCH6I-Diocese of Fori River-Thurs. Sept. ,1, 1960
kans United for Separation ol eonstituted a public subsidy till Church and State (POAU). He a religious organization. rejected their eonten~n that The 600-acre Mill Creek ares, I8le 01. the- land to the univer- filled with Negro slums until alty would eon~titute a ~iolation cleared this year" was owned by of the, principle of ~urch and the st. Louis ,City Land Clear'; State sep8ratioll.' 8nce for Redevelopment Area. 'I'he three plaintiffs, eaUing The university purchased' loti ,themselves "Public Lands for f635,742 an area of approximatePublic, 'Uses, Inc.,", ciaimed ~t.. i:y six blocks east of iis camputl Louis University's plans to pur-, . " " - A chase 2t.34 ~re8 in the Mill ~nd ~dJacent to it.. T~e -J?<? _V , Creek Rectev~iOpm~nt here suit aimed to block the Sale.
:area
15
Announce "Design Contest!' Winners PITTSBURGH (NC) -Archi- $1,00(1 were presented by Bishop teets from Paris, Cincinnati and JOhnJ. Wright of. Pittsburgh at Alexand,ia, La.; received the 'a ceremonial banquet climaxiDfJ Lercaro Prize for church design the Liturgical Week. awarded' at the 1960 Nor'tb The winners and their prtzee AmeriCan Liturgical Week here. were: Michel L. R.Pillet ~ The competition, named fur Paris, France, first prize; Otw Giacomo. 'Cardinal Lercaro,- Bauer-Nilsen of Cincinnati, ~ attracted a 'total of 256 entries. ' ond prize; and John J. Boogaer~ The gold, silver and bronze ~r. of· Alexandria, La.. thb'4 medals -and eash awards totalinM priie.
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16
Stress<es Common Interest Of Labor and Management By Msgr. ,George G. Higgins Director, NCWC Social Action Department r
1960 Labor Day Statement
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 1, 1960
Several years ago a Catholic publishing house in Ireland published a small volume of essays by a group of laymen on the art of preaching. The several contributors to this, symposium unanimously agreed on the over-riding importance of one point in parti- labor was rather hOPele~slY on' cular, namely, the futility, the defensive. not to say the harmfulness, . At the present time, however, of excessively negative criti- organized labor is no longer cism from the pulpit.
looked upon, even by its friends and supporters, as an oppressed and defenseless minority, but rather as an increasingly powerful and influential 'segment' of American society, fully aceountable for its own actions. Publie Interest
Here is the way one 'of the writers puts it, respectfully but very frankly "I am a f r aid , that too often' our preachers entirely ignore. It is to be expected, then, that, what we, the increasingly .as time goes on, silent faithful, Labor Day sermons and Labor expect to hear Day statements- in the Catholic in a sermon. . • press will have less to say about' They address us labor's rights and privileges and as rebels whom more about the respons'ibility of they must sub-. labor-and of management-to due' as idlers . serve ·the public interest. wh~m they must shakeup; as In all fairness, jf should be. hardened sinners whom' they noted that this is also the burden must needs terrify; as the pr~d of many of the speeches and that require to be humiliated; policy statements currently as the self-satisfied who need emanating from the labor moveto be disquieted. . • • mel1t itself. . "But if you come to examine Under the latter heading, let It there is really nothing easier me cite, for example, 21 recent than to put forward a person's address by Arthur J. Goldberg, duty; and to hand out reproaches General Counsel, United Steelcosts nothing either. • . . The workers of America, and Special thing which is really difficult Counsel, AFL-CIO. Mr. Goldberg expressed regret • . . is to give us a taste for (lur duties, and to awaken in us a that in terminating the labol' wish to do them and to be 'gea- agencies which served the counerou~ in thn doing.N try 10 well during the critical days of World War II, "we too ' positive AttUude hastily abandoned that sense f)f There is certainly much to be common' interest and mutual -Iliid for this point of yiew with purpose of labor and manageIl'egard to the matter and fGfRl ment which provided sudi subof preaching. stantial support f« our war It is undoubtedlY.easier-and, effort." generally speaking, less effecMore Than lust-loa tive - to criticize people negaDuring the war, he continued, tlvely for the neglect of. their "both labor and management duties than it is to accentuate were truly conscious of Presithe positive and to awaken in dent Franklin D. Roosevelt's atithe faithful a burning desire to monition' that 'heedless self':" pra~tice virtue for the sheer love iilterest is not only bad morals, of God and neighbor. but also bad economics' - all But what about the sermons admonition which still holds true which are delivered in so many today," of thc parish and cathedral Mr'. Goldberg's plea for a sen~ churches of the United States on of common interest and common Labor Day? And what about the purpose in the field of laborLabor Day statements, columns management relations - closely and editorials which are pub- parallels what the clergy and the lished every year in the Catholic Catholic press are likely to' be press? Are they open to the saying with increasing emphasis criticism of being, to:> negative! in the months and years that lie Frankly, I think not. ahead. Labor Influential In summary, whereas they formerly tended to stress the imIt is my impression, that durportanee of justice in the field log the past 15 or 20 years there of labor-management relations" has been much more emohasis in the future they are more from the pulpit as well as in the likely ~ be saying-to 'borrow Catholic press, on labor~s rigbl.s the words of the great German and privileges than on labor's theologian, Romano Guardiniduties and regponsibilites, mueh .that if we are sincerely dedicated more praise of labor's accomto justice, we must see It more plishments than criticism of its than mere justice, that "we must mistakes .and of its faults anc1 find' a power capable of breakinc imperfection.. the ban Of injustice, something This was fully warranted and strong enough and big enoulil'h to amply justified by the fact that ktercept aggressiOn and diBarra IIntil very recently organized it: love."
MationG~ Catho~ic
Welfare Conference Social Action Department
Labor Day in 1960 finds both labor and management on the defensive and collective bargaining on probation before the bar of public opinion. The reason for this is not far to seek. Rightly or wrongly, public opinion _ in the brutally frank words of one competent observer _ "is sick and tired of what it con:Siders selfish, irresponsible stupidity on both sides . . . ," and, "no longer willing .to say 'boys will be boys,' • •.. , is calling for the p o l i c e . " . In ou,: judgment, this is 'putting the case against labor and management much too strongly. The fact remains, however, that, with or without sufficient reason, a growing number of Americans are losing confidence in the ability of union leaders and management representatives to make, collective bargaining serve the public interest,
and, worse than that, are losipg faith In the ver, institution of collective bargaining itself. This isli rather alarming turD. of. events. It means,' among other things, that, given another round of crippling strikes or lockouts, labor and management might be saddled with some form of compulsory arbitration as' a !,ubstitute for free collective bargaiaing. The fact that they escaped this dismal fatel:a 1960 is no guarantee that their luck will hold out indefinitely. On the contrary, the next time that public opinion "calls for the police," it may not be politically feasible or expedient for the poli~ (meaning, in this context, the Congress of the United .States and the-several State legislatur~ to look the othec way.
Restore Publie Confidenee The'situation, however, is not by any means compl!'!tely hopeless. Labor and management still have it within their power not only to avoid compulsory arbitration but also, from the more positive' point of vi~w, to restore public confidence in the .basic soundness of 'free collective bargaini~g and voluntary labor-management coope~atlOn.. ,This presupposes, o( cou~~e, that both labor and m~nagement, fully realIzmg What. the~ ~re up agamst, are prepared to meet pubhc opmlOn at le~st halfway. It also presupposes that the AmerIcan people and their elected representatives will have the maturity and the good judgment to make haste very slowly in the field of labor-management legislation. \ To substitute compulsory arbitration. for' collective' bargaining would be disastrous. Sim-
ilarly to "cut the unions down ·to size" or to limit collective bargaining to the plant Or' company level, as some Americans have. petitioned the Congress to do, would be a serious mistake and would undoubtedly create more problems thaD. it would solve. In arguing against compulsory ~rbitratlon an~ the other restrictive proposals mentioned above, we do not mean to imply' that unregulated collective bargaining Is necessarily an adequate method of handling labor-management relationa under any and all circumstances. . On the contrary, there may well be need for additional legislation to safeguard the publie interest in emergency situations endangering the security of the nation or adversely affecting the health and safety of its citizen&.
Step in Right Direction We are convinced, however, that no such legislation should be enacted until the National' LabOr-Management Conference which recently came into being at the invitation of the President of the United States has had an opportunity to formulate its own recommendations. The convening of this National Labor-Management Conference in the S{lring of 1960 was a significant step in the right direction, and, while it did not get off to a very auspicious start and has yet to show any measurable 'results, it deserves the encouragement and support of the American people and should be given ample time to. demonstrate its usefulness. For our own part, we sincerely hope that it will be eminently successful and that it will eventually lead to the establishment of continuing labor-management conferences or councils in all of the major in-
dustries in the United States. The purpose of these proposed Industry conferences or councils' would be three-fold: (1) to develop greater understanding and a better spirit of cooperation between labor and management; (2) to make the parties more acutely conscious of their mutual obligation to serve the public interest; (3) to enable them to tulfill this obligatiOll more effectivelJ' than they are now able to do. The public has a vital interest in ·the wa~ and price decisions of labor and management. Unfortunately, however, even those labor leader. . and management representatives who recognize this fact - and their number, in our opinion, i. greater than the public realizes - are not in a position to do very much about it at the,preselllt time.
Limited in Scope The reason for this-as more and more economists are currently pointing out - is that collective bargaining, almost of its very nature, impels both parties to look more or less exclusively to their own narrow advantage and to operate, so to speak, at cross purpOses with one' another. Moreover collective bargaining is rather limited in scope 'and is generally confined to controversial matters which ail too often tend to divide rather than unite labor' and manage,m e n t . , This ill not to sa,. that collective bargaining should be discarded. Not ,at all. Free collective bargaining between unions and employers is not only desirable but necessary. We need more of it rather than less. That, of course, is why the Church insists' so emphatically OIl the right ot
.
Joint
labor to organize and: on the obligation of employers and government to respect and facilitate the exercise of this rilibt.· Nevertheless collective bargaining is not enough. While it is an important step in the right direction, it should be supplemented, wherever p'ossible, with new forms of labor-management cooperation fitted to the particular needs of individual companies and industries and designed to safeguard and proD).ote the common good. For example, there could be regular labormanagement meetings on the plant level, distinct from discussion of' grievances under negotiated contract•. Such meetings could anticipate problelDB and develop patterns of cooper~tion, without interfering with agreement. reached under normal collective bargaining.
~enci_
There is a genuine need at. for a series ot industry-wide conferences 01' councilt along the, lines. indicated above-joint labOr-management agencies in which the two parties can systematically relate their. wage-priee decisiona to the public interest and, instead of working at er~ purposes with one another, can eHectively PNmote the general economic welfare. Moreover it UI to be hoped that III due time these industry-wide groupings will be federated into a permanent national labor-management conference Ol: oouneii within which the ethical. guide lines of a sound national wage-price policy can be periodically revieWed. "It is easy to be skeptical," as One distinll-'
,
uished economist hal recently pointed out, "that .. INch an understanding could be brought about in a society which properlJ" treasures the diffusiOil of authority in its economy as in its politics. On the other hand, it a now widely appreciated that the beggar-thy-neighbor' tactics built into the inflationary procesa ultimately benefit neither eapital DOl' labor' liDd damage the c:ommoa
intereat. "Under such cireumMancel, It. should not be beyond the wit of a nation which has made . federalism an art to harmonize the higher interest of the community with the continueci vitality ot its private economic institutions."
Gratifying Dev-eIopments III recent months there have been several developments which encourage us to share tM optimism reflected in this statement. One 01. these " . developments has alreadJ" been mentloned-~ convening of a preliminary National LaborManagement Conference under Presidential auspices. Equally noteworthy was the establishment during the past year, in a number of basie steell compa_nies, of joint labor-management public committees empowered to recommend, for the consideration of the parties, a plan for the equitable sharing of the companies' economic progress.
And, last bUt not least, It is gratifying to noW that a growing number of high level c~nferences are currently being hel.d unde.r private ~uspices on ways and means of unprovmg collective bargaining and developing a greater spirit of public responsibility on the part of labor and management. All of these developments represent genuine progress. They should not be expected to solve aU of. our problems in the field of labor-management relations. They will, however, bring up for serious discussion by the two parties many of the right questioDB-8nd this will be all to' tbe good.
.'Serve the Lord Christ'
MEDAL FOR BROTHER: At a ceremony in the National Press Club in Washington, the U. S. Maritime Administration's, Meritorious Service Medal was presented to Benedictine Brother Mariil.Us LaRue (left) by Seeretall' 01. Co.mmerceFrederick H. Mueller (right) ,NO Pho1;Q.
In 'conclusion, it remains for us to extend to labor and management on this annual holidaya holiday which properly belongs to both of them as co-equal partners in the American economy-our congratulations on what they have accomplished in the past and our cordial best wishes for the future success of their efforts to. promote the general economic welfare. It is our earnest and prayerful hope--in tbI words of Pope John XXIII--':that there "maT • • • reign in soelal life tl'ue chari&, • • • mutual ... spect; the will 18 oollaborate, a familiar, 1lDII·
fraternal ellmate according to the enlightened suggestions contained in the letter of Saint Paul to the Colossians read ill today's Mass of Saint ;roseph, patron of the working-man: 'Whatever you do in word or in work, do all in tb~ name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him •.. Whatever you do, work at it from the heart as for the Lord and not for' men, knowing that from the Lord you. will receive the inheritance ·as your reward. sen. the LonI Christ (CoL 3:11, aa-24).' -. " . . . -~.
Mass Monday, Labor Day St.' ,Mary's Cathedra I 9 a. m. Preacher: Rev. Benjamin L. Masseo SoJ)" Associate Editor of AmerDcOI
PUBLIC DS CORDIALLY DNVDTED
•
A Prayer for Our Members
o
God, Creator of things, Who ordered mankind to
la~or, graciously grant that, by the exampie and
patronage of Joseph, we might do the works which ,You command and attain the rewards wlhludll You promise through Christ our Lord. Amen'.
UNITED LABOR COUNCIL OF GREATER FALL RIVER AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR and CO NGRESS OF, INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATiONS • Journeymen Barbers, Local 331 • Amalgamated Clothing Workers of AmericCII, Local 177 • I~ternationa' Ladies Garment Workers Union" Local 178 • Insurance Workers, local 21 • Musicians Union, Local 216 • Brotherhood of Railway Clerks, Victory Lodge No. 2097 • National Association of letter Corriers, Branch 51 • Textile Material Shippers and Clerks • State, County and Municipal Employees, locoI 1118 • United Furniture Worker!! of America, local 159 • Textile Workers Union of America • Structural Iron Workers, Locol 37 • Brewery Workers, Local 137 • United Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers, local 28 • Theatrical StQge Employees, lQcal 57 • United Rubber, Cork,Unoleum and ptostic Workers of America, Locol 261 • Plu.mbers Union, Local 135 • Iron Workers, local 31 e Maving Picture Machine Operators, Local 424 • Fall River Typographical Union, Local161 • Bartenders Union, local 99 • Firefighters Aa&ociation, Loc~ 1314 • Notional federation of Poet Office Clerks, Loco! 511
-
IN MEMORIAM To Dedicated Leaden of' the Fall River Labor --Movement _ JOHN GOLDEN
JOHN It MACHADO
JOHN REAGAN
JAMES TANSEY
WILLIAM R. MEDEIROS
JOSEPH P. DYER
MANUel J. LOPES
MAliANO S. BISHOP _
18
Mourn Prelate
. THE ANCHOR-Pioces.e of Fall River-Thurs. Sept 1, 1960
Continu~ from Page One to this Diocese and minister to the needs of the many immigrants who came to this area. Such was Monsignor Betten.:. court's zeal that he was a model , , By Chuck Johnson of priestly discipline- in his re" ROME (NC)-Appropriately it was a Pope--,-the poet, llitiOilS with the people and in his a ttitude toward his fellow Alexander Pope-who said: "A little learning is dangerous priests and in his own life. The thing •••" Swimmer Paul Hait ~f San Jose, Calif., spotted prelate was an outstanding ada'Russian athlete on his first day in the Olympic Village ministrator as is ,evidenced by the parishes 'he was called upon and decided to promote some. American. ' citizen), and other to establish, and by his work international' goo d will. memb'ers of the U.S. women's done in Santo Christo Church. Walking up to' the fellow track and field team.lmmediThe structure has been newlysporting the U.S.S.R. insig- ately the outspoken down-torenovated and is now debt-free. nia, he extended his hand and business freckled giant .livened Monsignor Bettencourt was said engagingly:. things up at Olympic Village. made ,a Domestic Prelate by . "I'm Hait of Amer-ica. Hi·ya·... He called the U.S. men's team Pope John on Oct. 4, 1959, and The .Russian looked at him warmup meet in Berne, Switzerwas invested in his robes of digwith a frown, and replied pious- land, little more than a "silly nity in the Cathedral on. Jan. ly: sightseeing. tour." Complaining 4 of this year. "Nyet! No Hait. No Hait. it killed five potential' practice. Assistant Priest to the Most Friendship. Friendship." days, and weakened athletes on. NEW AUXILIARIES: Pope John has appointed Msgro ·Reverend Bishop at yesterday'. the 12-hour train ride back to Cletus J. Benjamin, left, and Msgr. Francis J. Furey, Phila- Requiem Mass was R,t. Rev. Big Krumich , . Rome, he charged: The Soviet athlete making the . "Those Olympic officials just delphia pastors, as Auxiliary. Bishops of the ArchdiOcese Humberto S. Medeiros, Chancellor of the Diocese. Deacon. of. the , biggest impression here is Jan wanted,.tosee the Alps.". of Philadelphia. NC Photos. Mass was Rev. Laureano C. dOl Krumich, 7-foot-3 basketball ,'qlga (Fikotova) Con noll y Reis and Subdeacon, Rev. Maur~nter. His size and strength,on sounded off, too, abj)ut Texas ice Souu. Deacons .. of Honor , the.' boards probably account in weather, segregation and inade, 'Rev, Roland Boule, Rev'. Johft were Rt. Rev. John. A. Silvia and l,arge part for '. Soviet ,Coaclt· qua,te: housing during, the· Na... · Continued from Page One S~ephan Spandarjin's apparent ,tional', AAU Mee't, at· C'orpus. M ass. ~e "was ordained, in 1931t J. Galvin. ,Rev. Henri R. Canuel, Rt. Rev. Alfred J. E. Bonn.eau.. . . , unconcern. ' his First Solemn Rev. Clarence J. d'Entremont, Acolytes were Rev. Joseph "'" , . _ abo u t· America s Chr.l·s'tl', ,Te'x.', I'n Jul·y. 'So, "rl'ght ", and celebrated O'Donnell 'and' Rev. Ernest·J:. vaunted 'speed and'" ~oring po- now 'the 'Con'' nollys m'ust ·be, con- ' Higli Ma,ss i~ 'h~s' parish ' church; Rev. Willia'm H. O'Reilly. . ' tent.ial. ',' . ' .' ',siderect' No." 1 storm 'center . of" '. St, ,Lawrence's, New, Bedfo~d. ,. : Rev. Ernest R. Bessette, Rev.' Blais., Censer .bearer wu Rev. eY;~'g~i~t~ded~:a~:~h:~a::e:''the. U.S. team. Since ordination the .1960 re- John G. Carroll, Rev. John. J. John G. Carroll, Mitre 'bearer Murphy, Rev'. Donald' Belan~,; ~was Rev. Bento R. Fraga, Book · fOr basketball in the interna.... · .. :', ,Wants to Wtit treat mas~erhas 'taught at Cran-. ger;,Rev:'Ceral'd Boisvert. B~arer. Rev. John. P. Cronin, · tiona,l" gaines; , yet coach Sp'ari.~" . Despite his' blast' at ,the Berne wel,l Prep~ served as prefect Of. '·Rev. Johri J. Delany Rev.' and Ca,ndle bearer. Re.-. Re~ cI.rjin told the pre!!s her~: " . . . . . joY~id~,,,Conn?llYsaid in, all sin~ the imniacuhiteConceptlon. Par- William J. ·McMahon. Re'v Lu- R. Levesque, Gremiale' Bearer, '. "Oui" team is much younger, eerlty. .NC?thI9g can do more wish, 'Boston, and is' now' it mem': cien Jiisseaume, Rev.' Jose~n JI'. Rev. Bernard A. Lavoie. Masten · and much faster' than in, 1956; :. i~pl'o,ve relations 'betw~~~ Illen ber of the Mission Band of t~ , O'Donnell; . Rev. Anthony' Me. 'of ceremonies were ·Rev·. John H~ and we are 'as tal(adhe.Amer~,'. and, 'natiol).~.,thlln th~ Qlympic .: SOdeiy of Jesull-: ' Gomes. . ' . .. . , ' Hackett and Rev. Anthony K. ... · ....,' " '.. Ga~es.:', Th!,! ex-Boston College . F.atlier 'Winsper has a sister ris Rev. l)9nald ,A.C~uza,' Rev.' Gomes. -~ ., .. Qu~ried about' how he plans " star,. n?~ .a ·pari.shiorer at St. and brother livhtg in. the DioEdmond L. Dickinson, Rev. Chanters at the' Office of the · tit cope y,'i th 'ace scorer Oscar ~omca s. chur~h III Santa Mo~- cese, Mrs: Christopher Limerick , Ernest E: Blais,· Rev. James A. Dead .which was recited. after Robertson, he' professed.' comlca, .Cabf., .ex;cludes a general of St. Lawrence's Parish. New McCarthy. Rev. Adaibert Szk- ,the "transfer of th~ body to the "lete indifference' to 'America's turmng back to God, o! course. Bedford', .and a brother Francis, lanny. Church on. Tuesday afternOOll famed' 'iBig 0.;' Olga Connolly, a .trim,long_ a member of St. Mary's Parish, Rev. . William J. Shovelton, were Rev. Arthur W. Tansey, " " Remembers Russell ste,mmed brunette, with a shy So. Dartmouth. Rev.. George E. Amaral, Rev. Rev. Eugene Dion, and Most "Robertson? Robertson?'! he smile, said: "I feel so proud to First Week John P. Driscoll, Rev. Albert F; Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D.. deadpanned. "We' CIon't know be an, American." She also feeis The following Diocesan priests Shovelton, Rev. Louis R. Boo... . V.G., Auxiliary Bishop ot. the him so how can' we worry about ,she'lt have 'to shatter, her own. ,win attend the first week's revin. Diocese. ' Then he let his guard Olympic discus throw rE!cord' of treat, Monday, Sept. 5 through Rev. Thomas' J.LeBlanc, Rev. Burial ~as in St. John'. Cem.. down a bit: "He' is only 6':'foot176-fee~ 1%-inches to .win ~or Friday, Sepi, 9, with Mo'st Rev. • 5," the Russian skipper' said. the Umted States. "I feel it is James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop . Maurice. E. Par,ent. Rev. Manuel tary, New ·Bedford. ·Andrade. Rev. William E. Far"He .cannot worry us Bill my duty as a miw c~tizen," she ., of the Diocese, presiding: Jubilee 'Yecubook Russell did at Melbourne," added.' ". Rev. John F. Laughlin, Rev. land, Rev. Rudolph Frick. Plans for the Golden Jubilee Rev. Joseph Oliveira, Re'f. While admitting he ,has daz' Francis McKeon, Rt. Rev. Hugh celebration of. Espirito ' Santo . ding speed and shooters to Holy. Fafhe~ Blesses A. Gallagher; Rt. Rev. M. P. John ll. llackett, Rev. George J. school, Fall River, include publiSouza, Rev. Andre P. Jussaume . spare. American Coach Pete Tertiary Cornerstone Leonidas Lar!viere', Rev Thomas cation of a yearbook of graduat;. Rev. Norman. J. Ferris. ' Newell said cagily: "But we're H. Taylor. • ing classes. A high Mass of not· looking' at it as a Cinch.' . CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)Re~: Edward B. Booth, Rev. . ·Rev. He.nry T. Monroe, Rev. thanksgiving will be celebrated , Over-confidence is the one-eerAt his summer residence hen! Leonard J. Daley, Rev. F. Ana- Ed;ward J. Rausch, Rev. Walter at 10:30' Sunday morning,' Sept. 'tainway io get.kn·ocked over!" Pope John. blessed th-e c~rner; tole 'Desmarais, Rev. John A. A .., Sullivan, Rev.. ' Edwa'rd A. 25 in the parish· church. . . ',They may cha'nge tlieir: minds' storie Jorthe Divine Word Mis- Chipp~ndale, Re". Joseph K. Burns, Rev. Luciano Pereira. If the reigning 'OIYrP-Pic champ sionaries' new tertiate now un~' Welsh.' ,. Rev. Roger L. Gagne, R~., and world record holder whips ~er,coilstructiori in nea'rby Nemi; Rev. Walter J. Buckley, 'Rev. Edmond J. Levesque, Rev. James A.Clark, Rev. Paul F. COrlQolly, the Soviet Union's strongest eiti'The' cornersto~ iii destined Joseph Sutula, Rev. Edward . menS for another' h'ammerthrow for the chapel- ......on. the terti ate JI'.' Do",,!ling. Rev. James E. Rev. Bento R. Fraga. ' ',old medal, but' right now' campus which ·will be .called St. Lynch, Rev. Arth'ur C. dos Reis. . Rev. Edward J. Mitchell Rev' America~ Olympics' officials un• . John's Chapel in honor, of the Rev. Asdrubal A. G. Branco J. Adden Bernier.' Rev. Arthu; doubtedly wish Harold Connolly' Pope and· 'of Father" John.. ~ev. J. Orner Lussier, Rev. AU~ K. Wingate, Rev. Vincent F.,Dia" were o'ut"of their hair. ' . Sch,uette, S.V.D.,Superlor' Gen- relien L .... Moreau, Rev: Edward ' ferio, Rev. James F. Buckley. NEW BEDFORD . Sightseeing Tour .eral of the Divine Word MisJ. GC!rman, Rev, Jose, M. B. Rev; Robert F. Kirby; Rev.' King Hal flew' into Rome ',sional·ies. . , Avila. ' Roger J. Levesque, Rev. John V. · aiong with' wife Olga, ~the 'de. , The, tertiate'in Nemi· is some- ... Rev. Henri Charest. Rev. Cor-:- Magnani, Rev. Tliomas C. May. INDUSTRiAl OILS fending disCllS throw queen' thing new in the training pro- nelius J.~eliher, Rev. Maurice hew, Rev. Daniel F. Moriarty, Czechoslo~akia (now an gram of the 85-year-old society. H. Lamontagne, Rev. James F~ Rev. John. J. Smith. .' HEATING OIlS It will. provide a half-year's McDermoit, .Rev. William D. spiritual . rejuvenation for the Thomson. . , .TIMKEN MEN 17 - 25 society's young priests from all Rev.. William E. Collard, 'Rev. Continued from Page One parts of the world after they William H. Jordan, Rev. LaurJOIN THE NEW all .URNERS dve bargaining and .voluntary .have completed appl'oxin)ately eano C. dos Reis, .R,ev. lloward SoCiety of' Brothers of A. Waldron, Rev. Leo M, Curry.' labor-management cooperation," five years of acti"",e service. Scdes & Seryice Rev, George S. Daigle, Rev. the So(,:ial Action Depart\llent ,OurLady of Providence Alfred J. Gendreau, Rev. Alfred aid.' Coad JO u tor o'f T u. cson R. Forni.' Rev. Bernard J. Fen- , For information write to« Serious Mistake FATHER MASTER ' 501 COUNTY ST , The statement called on labor Pledges to Serve ,All, ton, Rev_: Edmond Tremblay. . .St. Joseph,the Worker and management, "to meet vubTUCSON .(NC)-A 'pledge of NEW BEDFORD Ham Supper lic opinion at least halfway" and service to the' priests, Religious 'Novitiate The Wo,men's Guild of. St. at the same time urged' the and laity of the Tuscon diocese ,Warwick Neck, R. i. 3-1751 John Baptist Church, Central public and the legislatures to was made by Bishop Francis J. "make h1!ste very slowly' in the', ,Green before more than. 1 000 ,Village, wil.! sponsor a ham and field of labor--m~nagement leg-persons in St,. Augustine'scathe- ' bean supper· from 5:30' to 7 Sat. urday night, Sept. 3 at the parish '" dral here. ,_ , islation.". " BUCK OSSICK'S " ' It declared: ''To' .substitute The pledge .was made by the, hall. eom'pulsory~r~i,tration for ~lBishop in his sermon during the lectIve bargammg:would be dls-' cer.emony of his enthronement astrous, ,Similarly to 'cut the as Coadjutor Bishop of, Tucson. "BONNER, FLOWERS . Prime, Aged Charcoal Broiled Steaks" . unions: dow.n ,to siz~~ o! to limit He . had serveq as,' Au'xiliary Spec14lwt. itt that collectIve bargammg to the Bishop. of. Tucson. since 1953. ,~oast ~eef -..: ~afoOd - Special Poultry Dishes . SfH(liol'F~ A.rm~-*" plant or comp~nY lev'el, as some " "To 'my broth . ts I Am r' . h t't' d th' er prIes WEDDINGS AND BANQUETS ' 4-9881 e ~cans ave pe, I lOne , e piedge whatever help and en• Funerals • CorsageS. IN PRIVATE ROOMS MAYFAIR 4-9979 C?~gleSS . to do,. ,would be a couragem'ent my limited capaci. • Weddings • Hospitaf lIerIous mistake and would unties allow me t g' F th 91 CRANDAll RD.-JUST SOUTH Of ROUTE 177 2082 Robeson St. ' lItoubtedly create more prob- d t'd S' 0 Ive., or e Ie th 't ldl" evo e Isters, I shall ever have Fan River os 5-7804 ms an I wou so ve. the same fatherly interest which Bishop Gercke has shown. To the Stonehill Alumni Set devoted people, I dedicate whatever talents and strength I have," family. Pi~,nic Day
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 1, 196~
Holy Cross Gridders Open Against Harvard Sept. 24
Portugal Observes Jesuit's Centenary LISBON (NC)-The centenary of the birth of Father Francisco Rodrigues da Cruz, S.J., whose cause of canonization is being introduced at Rome, has been celebrated here and at his birthplace in Alcochete. . The Jesuit priest, who was known throughout Portugal as Padre Cruz, died' at the age of 89. He turned down several posts of honor to carry out his work among the poor, and always carried a small black cotton bag with alms for the poor.
By Jack Kineavy Schoolboy footbaJJ aspira.:nts throughout the state wili report tod~y for their first practice session of the 1966 season. In most instances, physical examinations and the issuing of equipment will have been dispensed with earlier this week permitting coaches Chicago? '1'bey'll pro bob I y to get right down to brass repeat. ' tacks with their young Suburban Finals charges. The season is schedCYO Suburban moves into the
sophs in halfbacks Billy Joe and Larry Glueck and fullback Lou Rettino so the Wildcats should claw again.
Medic CaUs Signals A pair o~ weighty tackles, 235 pound Bob DeMarco and 255pound Ransom Piltz, both good pro-prospects, will hold the line for Dayton. Coacih Zajdel is happy over a quartet of excellent first-year backs in Jack Unver.ferth (a top-notch pre-medical student) at quarter, Andy Timura and Dan Miloserny at the halve!! and Bob Michigan at fullback. His biggest problem will be to find another Steve Palenchar, at guard. J\nonal Moratorium Coach' Ed Doherty at Xavier a rou~h, schedule awaiting him and ,quarterback Rop C()stellC? ml!llt do '~, big job for " 路 ' b Jm. Then 'there aN the perennial Massachusetts:, rivals"Boston '~911ege and Holy Cross, for whom a moratorium on friendliness be,tY\'een, Jesui~, and between neighbors is called on one Saturday' 'afternoon each November."" ",.' The Eagles have 17 monogram winners back and,a lecture hall full of sophs, 46 to be exact. The strong right flipper of Johnny Amabile, the,pass-catching arms of end Lou Kirouac and the fleet legs of halfback Dick Gill are the extremities to watch when the season gets underway (with Navy at BC Alumni stadium Sept. 17). Crusaders Open 'at CambrldA'f) , Heading Hefferle'll brigade 01. rookies are halfback John Janas, fullback Harry Crump, center Tom Hall, ends J~rry Donovan and' Art Graham, tackles Har:ry Kushtgian and Dom:Antonellis and guard' Dave Yelle. Meanwhile' 'in" Worcester, Dr. E~die Andersdrl' h~ a braceo( good-looking' 'sophomores ,in": cluding halfback 'Tom Hennessey, quarterback Pat McCarthy and end 'Bob Hargraves. They'll be ready . to open' at lIarv81'd Sept. 24.' "," , . Sm~1l Colleges . ", , If, your interests tend toward the small-college elevens, approximately 11 Catholic institutions will field football teams and the griddel's to watch are John W. Ray's boys at John Carroll U~iversity. The Clevelanders were undefeated in seven contests last year and won the' Presidents' Conference championship. But in New England, 路the season will' really begin and' end Nov. 26 when the 'Eagles 'and Crusaders clash ,at Chestnut Hill.
has
RequestAccreditation Of Religion Courses MANKATO (NC)-The Minnesota State College Board voted to name a committee to investigate the possibility of state college!!' granting ,credit for "eligion courses taught on campus. The decision' to name a committee followed a request made by six chaplains of Mankato State College student religion centers-one a Catholic priest, one Methodist, two Lutheran end two Presbyterian ministers. Father Pau. Halloran, chap;' lain of the Newman Club, at Mankato, said he is "very hopeful" the committee will decide to grant a maximum six credits toward graduation for religion courses taught either in state cOllege classrooms or in campus religion centers. Father Halloran said there are only three other states in the nation whose state colleges do not accredit campus-taught. religion courses: Wisconsin, New York and California.
19
Football Season. At Hand; Many Coaching Changes
By Frank DeRosa Those cleated gents seen grunting and groaning over fJun-drenched fields, of green in an otherwise quiet campus setting' are footbaJJ players and for them Summer is but a memory. Last Fall was generally a season of fluffering at the eight Cath. to 18 veterans' of last year's olic schools whose teams are miserable season and the memin the ranks of major col. ory of 1959 has all 13 ready for leges, 80 there'll be many bear. Bell has a trio of flashy hours of running, el'ushing and llkulling' ahead. The University of Detroit and Holy Cross were the winningest clubs, each managing to cop six out of 10 games. Boston College stayed above .500 with a 5-4 record and Notre Dame finished at 5-5. Nothing to write home about. But letters to the relatives were even less frequent at Villanova, where the Wildcats were tamed nine times in 10 games; at Xavier in Cincinnati, where the gridders went under six, times in ten; and at Marquette and the, University of Dayton, where similar 3-7 totals were recorded. , Hefferleat Heigh" 'If coaches 'make the difference, however, redemption is' at hand at Boston College as Ernie Hefferle initiates his first. campaign ill 'Chestnut Hill since leaving 'the ''Washington Redskins' staff,' and at ,Dayton; where Stan 'Zajdel will give assignments each Saturday afternoon. It'll be a' clean start too for Alex Bell at Villanova. He took over for Joe Rogers late last season but 'this one will be hill fl'om the beginning. Koharich Headaehes Bad enough to have a poor season, but' when the 'few stars that shone depart via the diploma route then mentors are really in a tizzy. Such is the case of Joe Kuharich at Notre Dame. He has to replace the great Monty 'Stickles and passing wizard George'lzo. Many Echoes will be launc~' before Stickles hi forgotten at South Bend. Monty booted field goals to win over' Army in '1958 and Navy in '59. In three searons he "garnered '127 points, leading the Irish in scoring as a sophomore and junior and finishing behind JoeScarpitto taR year. Lettermen Galore In Milwaukee, Marquette , Coach Lisle Blac'kbourne has 21 lettermen returning but he'U have to look long and, hard to find a man 'with 'Pete Hall'lI talents. Hall, currenUy fighting for a berth with the New York Giants, owns Marquette's passJng yardage mark of 1,589. And Pete didn't playas a soph! Soph Terry Zang hopes to' take Hall'l place. Also gone for Blackboume are back Jimmy Webster, brother of the Giants' Alex and 1I1so a candidate for the New York eleven, and back Silas Woods and end Larry Hubbard. End Dave Thiesen, and guard Bob Osterman are leading soph hopefuls. , Detroit Prospeeu Bruce Maher is the big loss at Detroit. The diminutive Titan , was a slightly underrated superstar last ,year, scoring 74 points, the most. by. any' Detroit player in 22 years, and rushing for 595 yards. Coach Jim Miller has 15 letterm,en back and,sophs who may make the Titans move this year are quarterback Jerry Gross, ends Jim Fox 'and Mike Hughes ond guard Bill Whitford. Alex Bell can look' forward
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uled to open in all circuits Saturday, September 24. An unprecedented number
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CAUSE ADVANCED: The writings of Father Leo John Dehon, fourider and lifetime Superior General of the Congr~gation of' Priests of thfi &cr.ed Heart, have been approved' by the Sacred ,CongI'egationof'Rites and Pope John. NC Ph~to.
second game of a best of three series final next Sunday at Hanson Field, Somerset. The home 1 b . c U WIll be fighting for survival against league champion New Bedford which took the opener, 6-2 D ' at artmouth last Sunday. Bob Koczwara tossed a seven hitter to gain the decision over Somerset's Jim Bridgeman who limited New Bedford to five i' b ' sa' Ieties ut was victimized by Ii 'Shoddy defense. ' ' Both teams will be without the services' of star players on Sunday. Dan DaLuz, New Bed-' ~()rd's sparkling shortStop, hoo already left for the University of Tampa where he has accepted SIl athletic scholarship. Bridge':' man,' a varsity letterman at路 Colby and the ranking candidate ,for 'the center position, was
grid, debuts in County are Don Montle, l?urfee; Jim, Cassidy, Attleboro; Kevin, Cadieux, Dartmouth and Hal Cornforth, . Fairhaven. Montle sU,cceeds Luke Urban who retired, f~om active coaching la;st, June. . Cassidy, a native of AtUeboro, will be going home after a highly scheduled to report on Tuesday su"cc'essful tenure 'at Case. Jim at Waterville. takes over 'from Bill Madden .Also seeking berths on the who has accepted p~sitionin Mules Varsity will be a pair of the guidance department In 10 D ri Attleboro. 'Cadieux, n~ to th'e' nner u 'ee High standoUts, '"Some 235 children from St. scholastic 'scene but well-known Dick' Bonalewicz and Charley Vincent,'s ,'and, St; Joseph's iri area grid cirCles for his worK ,Carey. BoUl started for the Coloy , yearlings last Fall, Carey at Homes" 'Fall 'River, and St. Mary's, Home;' New BEidford, with the Fairhaven Varsity ClUb,' quarterback and Bonalewic'z at together with Sisters and priests; takes over the Dartmouth post fUllback., Coaching the line' '~t' were guests' of the, annual pic- vacated by Bob Larson. And iii the Maine school is John Simp-' 001'1, former head coach at Som:" riic and outing sponsored ,by the Faiihaven another familiar' figure, Mer'Entin, has relinquished erset. High. St. Vincent de Paul Society lilt the grid reins. The newly formed Bi-StatE Bourne Scenic' Park. : Tri-County will have a couple $choolboy Soccer League' has' Under direction of A. 'Clayson Of. new head C9aches, both of formulated plaris to get the sea:Tucy and Frank' B. Cook' of whom moved up from assistant- son underway with a clinicBuzzards Bay; the program in- ships. Defending c):l.ampion Som- jamboree at Westport High ort cluded a 'cookout, horseback erset will be guided by Sherm Saturday, Sept. 17. President riding and games. Kinney, former aide to Carlin, John P. Harrington announced 'Worke~s assisting in maki~g Lynch who assumes his new that the clinic will be conducted the daY a success included John post at Bishop Stang today. ~y Pete Renzulli, honorary presO'Callahan, Jolin WilsOJ;l, Jim Haridling the grid fortunes at ident of the Empire State Junior Bolles, John Carafoli and Alec Case will be Jack McCarthy, Soccer Le;1gue of New York. The Consoni, from Corpus Christi former Cardinal JayVee coach six team loop includes, Westport; parish, Sagamo~e. and head coach of baseball at Diman, New Bedford, New 'BedFrom the' Bourne area were the Swansea school. ford, VOcational, Attleboro and George Theroux;, Tom McCand,Most of the changeS that were Wilbur High of Little Compton: less, Walter Murphy, Earl Dwy- made' in the N.C.A.A. Rules 1or, Area representatives turned er, '. Fred , Comings, ',Fred" Mc- the 1960 season are, in essenee, m fine performances in the ~ C,OIniskey, Bill Brady and son, edi.toria,l. The major change COIl- ond Award CYO golf tournam'eni Ed S"ay, and grandson, "Jimmy cerns ' the, modification of, the at' the Andover Country' Chili McLaugtllin, ,Jeft 'Luce and substitution rUle to permit one M!>nday;' Alan O'Neil finisl\~ .JimmY Wenzel. substitute to enter the game Ulird with a 79 in the Seriior Representing ,Otis Air FOI'ee ~y,time . between s~cessive divisio~.' Bob Begnocpe posted 0 downs.. ,In, grid jargon the.-sub- an 84 'and tied for fourth In the Base was ,Henry Kusiol. , Among special 'guests was H. stitute so, employed is called the Intermediate group and" Gene ,Mozzone and Robert Nowak Frank Riley, president of' the "wild card". ,The legalization 01. this method plaCed, seventh and eighth; JoeCentral Council: of the St. ' Vin' eent de Paul Society for' U~ of communication, made ,famous spedively,,' in Junior play. Diocese. ' by 'c9ach'Paul Brown, of nie ",The Ted Cooney Mem~r.i~ Gleveland Browns, is aime~ at Trophy awarded to the outstandeliminating coac1)ing from ing performer went to Dick Find Letter Written' sidelines in any form whatso~ Keegan, Dartmouth College Cardinal Newman ever. 'Sideline coaching 'hasal': sophomore, whose par-equalling ,BIRMINGHAM (NC) A' ways been included in the cate72 spreadeagled the field in the letter written by Cardinal John gory of unsportsmanlike conduct Intermediate division. Bob PieHenry Newman in 1848, was in the rule book, but it has 1rzkiewicz, of Stamford, Ct., II found, among a, bundle of docu- flagrantly flouted. Catholic University graduate and ments in a 路tea chest at Bishop's Professional football, popular a chemical engineer took Senior House, here. ' as it is, will be hard pressed to honors while Jim McDqnald, 14 The letter was written to move 'baseball from its front 'and year old Springfield Tech sophcenter spot on the nation's sports on1ore,\edged Providence's Bruce Bishop William Ullathorne Morin by a stroke ,in Junior Vicar Apostolic for Centt~l pages. ,After being at sea for a England in the', days before the' couple of weeks and getting joust competition. l'estoration of, the Hierarchy: Iii s glimmer of what. went ,on in the world of sports, the impaot ~'the Cardinal, then a' 'newly converted priest, ''denied a'rumor of the tight A.L. race is just Mo"y a IlYcJ wire would bo a doaC that he intended to leave his making itself fell Baltimore 'OM if'it'weren't fo, the conneclioAe. home in Birmingham and move s'eems to' be the sentime~tal " to London: Cardinal Newman favorite, the Yanks the iogi~ai choice. ' Whe,re, does that leav~ said he meant to go to London later. REYNOLDS-DEWALT Gets' New Gran't He offered Bishop U11athorne the use \of-a house in the district CINCINNATI. (NC),-Xavier W.illiam & Second Sts. which has since become Cotton University has received a ,grant College, now one of 'England'll of $6;950, for its "brain, wave" New t!edfea-d WY 6-8234 big 'private schoolS for boys. ' reljearch ,program from' the Since Msgr.'H. Francis Davis Public l;Iealth Service, a division vice' ,postulator of Cardinai of .the ,U.S. ,Department of The KEYSTONE Newman's beatification cause, ~ealth, Education, and We~are. appealed for personal writings WareMU5e Salesroom by the Cardinal, more than 100 New and Used letters have come to light, mostly ~fFftCE IEQUIPMlENT "The Fa~ily That written in this country.
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• THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 1, 1960
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..ORCHESTRA 'AND CHORAL GROUP OF HOLY·UNION. OF THE'SACRED ,HEARTS,. S'ays
.Migration
Over 100 Sisters of the Holy, of its kind to be given in this Union' of the Sacred, HeartS will ~rea.· appear in their first public con' 'Soloists and Conductors' Creator cert ne,xt' week.. , On ,Thursday: In the' choral group Sister Bar": "O'l'TAWA The an d F rI d ay eve~lIlgs" Sep.t 8 an d bani Thomas is soprano' soloist. Archbishop of Montreal told 9, the group will appear at the Sister began her voice train'ing an international migration Park Theatre, Taunton, at 7:30. with' Mr. A. Edmond Furgiuele Sacred Heart SchOOl Audi'; while she was a student at the" meeting here that the, na~ 'fhe tol'ium! Linde~ and 'Pine ,Streets" Academy 'of ,the Sacred Hearts. tions must recognize that mi- Fall River, will be the scene on She has since continued voice gration follows the divine plan, ~unday afternoon, Sept. 11 a~ 3 work 'at Peabody Institute' Bal~ , Paul Emile Cardinal Leger .. o'clock. ,timore. " said that there is a tendency' to see only '''the negative aspects A special performance 'will be '. Sister James Alberta is trumof migrations, the problems and' given Saturday aftel'l1oon, ,Sept. pet soloist' in 'the orchestra. upsets' which they entail.!' But' 10, in Fall. River for all the 'Sister is very much at home . "the divine plan is apparent Rcligious, with this instr.umeilf' having from the days of Abraham, the . In the" 70-memb~r' Chor~i" played it· since chiidhood. 'I,'~e ' ,·first immigrant' to' the chosen group and the '32':me mbe r ,0,1':' ,C~>nductor of, the orchestra IS land," he added, 'speaking to chestl'a are S,isters from the Holy" , Sister St~phen ~ary who holds more than 200 delegates to' the Union schools I'n Fall River 'a degree m musIc from the N~w .FO\lrth ,C'ongress of the Inter- Tatin'ton Tiverton and Poris~ England Conservatqry of MUSIC. , national Catholic Migration mciuth. For the ~ost part the' C?nd~cting the choral group is Commission. Sisters are classroom' teachers Slste,r Stephen Helen a ~,raduate Recalling' the history of the who have had, scmemusical of PIUS X S~~ool of MU~1C ManChurch, 'Cardinal Leger noted 'training and who enjoy playing hattan College of ·.the Sacred that it can be said "the Church and singing together. 'Heart. lives from migrations. We ,peo- ' . "' , . Sister Maurice' Louise, dir~c-' ple of America, above all, should , Their program' r~n~e~ from ,forof music a't St. Mary's :in never forget that it was the ~ach to Ler?y And:rson .and Taunton is "Concert, Mistress. movement of immigration which ~nc!u,des c~asslcal;~seml~classlcal, Sister Stella Marje is accoinpari": ' brought the Faith. to the land relI¥lOus and contem~orary,,se~ ist 'for both groups., ' in which w:e live today," lectlOns. The concert}s th~ first 'With the exception of three oi.'Follows ' Plan,'
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Greek
Prelate' to Welco,me' Cerne'te'" O'fficials
Sisters', Group ,to" 'P·resent ,'Concert
O r t h o d o x ' -Leader
four' Sisters who are music , DES PLAINES (NC) - The speciaHsts; , all ,the members of Cardinal-Archbishop of Mon:.. both . ,groUps ,are' classroom treal will welcome delegates to teachers. Some few have learned the 13th annual. meeting of ,the a~new instrument for. the orchesNational Catholic Cemetery.Con~ tra, under. ,the , capable guidance ference in that Canadian city; of Sister, Maurice Louise. The the, first to be.heldoutside the. pian for this venture was formu": United States. ' .' lated last Spring and the music ,Paul-Emile, Cardinal Leger ~ distributed during Easter Vaca- will speak at the opening session ' • tion. The Sisters practiced'indi- on Oct. 11 victually and in small ,groups , Keynote speaker will be Msgr. Whenever these were available. Thomas E.' Simoils, Philadelphia J:.~rger group rehearsals 'began after close of school in June. Not Archdiocesan Director of ':eme'teries. His topi~ will be "C'hri~ until mid-August when aU the tian Burial with Dignity, AttenSisters had retul'l1ed from Sum- tion and Devotdon," . ' S ch ~o I s, R e t rea ' ts an d V amer cations 'did complete, rehearsals take pla'ce..
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DETROIT (NC)-The move for reunion of theEastern ,ary classes, Fall River, ,for the, Orthodox Churches with the Roman Ca'tholic Church is at. pupils of the Somerset, Swansea .. , ' ," , ,,aild Dighton' areas will' s~rt ' ' , its most promising stage; in history, according to the' head ''classcs·Monday,'-Sept.' 12. "'. ' , ,of the Greek Orthod()x Church in the Eastern.·heini~phe:re. ' ) ' ; ',,' ' Archbishop' Iakovos, prim- 'just as Our Lord did,~' ~the Gree~ IT'S AI.I. RIGKT10 ate of the Greek Orthodox prelate :xplain~d, "He was persecuted Just as we are persecuted , SHOP -AROUND FOR. Church of North and South but we do not ha've the-moral" America, say\s the "friendly and spiritual' strength that' He SOME THINGS, BUT attitudes" of both His Holiness Pope John XXIII and Athenagoras I, Patriarch of Constantinople, had created the mQSt promising atmosphere for Christia'n unity since the ancient split between the churches of the Eilst 'and West. The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, of North, illld South America has about 1,150,000 members:, Archbishop 'Iakovos believes -world political tensions, have, failed to dampen reunion hOpes,. . "The skies are not completely 'cloudless but the' clouds have scattered and do not' darkerl the heavens as before," the Archbishop ,declared, Hopes for reunion sprang up with the announcement .that an ecumenical' 'council'would'be held in Rom,e. '''We live' in very crucial times, '
had, But we must strive for it." The Orthodox leader asserted the Catholic Church's devotion to the Blessed Mother would, prove no, deterrent tounjty with Eastern Orthodox believer's. ' , Most,Ble~ed One. " "We cannot ,separate. the, Son from the' mot~er; alld"we do ~ot:' thirik this is <either"superstitious or idolatry,'\A..rchbishop Iakoyos ,said. .'~We believe that. inasmuch, 'llS she' was the most" highly chosen one, 'she" is' the blessed', one." ':... ,. ",,', " , ' ' "The difference is th~t :wher~-:' as it ds dogma, With Rome, ,it: is tradition with' us. We l:>elfeve and practice, but' we nave "riever made it dogma. Altil<:iugh, have, 'no such te'rm ,as 'Mariology,," Marianisrn is very realand.true ' ..for, ,Us." ' ,'
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