First 10 Donations to Regional
School Fund Tot ~ $110,000
The first 10 gifts for the new regional high school in Greater New Bedford total more than $210,000, Very Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher, campaign moderator, an nounced today. "This tre mendous manifestation of generosity is indicative of the enthusiasm with which the regional.hig'h school pro-' gram has been accepted in Greater New Bedford," Fa ther Gallagher declared.
JOSEPH P. DUCIIAINE l\femorial Gift!! Chairman
DR. ARTHUR F. BUCKLEY
General Chairman
The
ANCHOR
An Anchor
0/
the SOlll, SlIre and Firm -
-
Fall River, Mass. Vol. 1, No. 26
1~57
PRICE, 100 $4.00 per y~.
Fulbright Grant Provides Tour for Fall River Nun 8ister Sainte Veronique, 8.8.J. (Cecile Lafond), daug'hter of Mrs. Flol'estina Lafqnd, 83 Brightman Street, Fall River, has been appointed teacher of Latin, French and geometry to Postulants at the Provincial House of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Fall , Sister's studies in Europe, in River following a year of cluded general linguistics, French study and trav.el in Europe and Latin literature, and Roman on a French Government history at the Catholic Institute
Fellowship and Ii Fulbright Tt'av Gll grant. A' graduate of St. Matthew's Parochial School and of the Sa cred Hearts Academy, Sister re ceived her bachelor's degree from Rivler College. Nashua, N. H. She was awarded a master of arts degree in French literature <In absentia) by,Assumption Col leg'e. Worcester. In June.
'['urn to Page Fourteen
ST. PAUL
Thursday, Oct. 3,
Second Clm Mail Privileues Authorized at Fall River. Mass.
Contributions announced today by 'Father Gallagher have been made as memorial subscriptions. Memorial 'Gifts The advance phase of the buildirig fund campaig'n. being conducted from Westport to Wareham in the Greater New Bedford area, will' get underway next week. The campaign is be ing conducted to help defray the cost of the first regional high school in the diocese which will be built in Dartmouth, close to the New Bedford city line. Approximately 1,000 men, rep resenting 30 parishes in the cam paign area. win beg'in their soli citations as members of the Me morial Gifts Committee next week. offering parishioners the opportunity to designate indI vidual Items in the new building
'lurn to Page Eight
_
faU River M@l!\1 Helping Chur~h Grow in Africa Two Fall River natives are involved in the tremendous growth of Catholicism in Africa, according to thtL Most Reverend Charles M. Caval lera. I.M.C.. Bishop of Nyerl, Kenya. Africa. Brother Christo pher Cox has just completed sev eral years teaching in Kenya. Brother Pius Medeiros of the Consolata 'Brothers, formerly of Fall River. is anticipating his as signment to the Nyeri' Diocese, Bishop Cavallera told The An chor. The rapid spread ,of Catholi cism will find Africa 'a continent that will be one of the p1llars of, Turn to Page Three
JOHN CORREIA de l\'IELLO
Business Chairman
,Bishop Connolly Dedicates ,Kennedy Youth Center , Opportunity for spiritual and social as well as physical development will be offered the youth of New Bedford for generations to come through the facilities of the Joseph. P. Kennedy Jr.. Community Youth Center, Bishop Con nolly said after laying the' Bristol District Court in corner stone and blessing Third troduced the speakers follOWing the new building on County the religious ceremony and May Street Saturday afternoon. or Francis J. Lawler welcomed!
The ceremony was concluded in the presence of Joseph P. 'Kennedy, former ambassador to Great Britain. who established the Joseph P.Kennedy Jr. Foun dation which provided the initial gift of $250,000 toward the erec tion of the Center, Mr. Kennedy was accompanied by his niece, Miss Ann Gargan. Judge August C. Taveira of the
'children who' attend St. Co lumbkille' school in nearby Papillion and who have rid den the town's publicly 'owned schoolbu8 now must, make other transportation arrangements or walk. The practice' of transporting the children, which had 30 years Turn to Page Eight
Obesrvonce Of Youth Week
Turn to Page Thirteen
WASHINGTON (NC)-A note w hie 11' His Holiness Pope Pius XII gave to a spe cial envoy of the Premier
of Japan early this Summer, con tained this paragraph: "W~ere natural catastrophes are concerned, one can only bow before, what happens through the Almighty's will. But should a ca tastrophe occur through the per verse will of a man to dominate with all the retaliations that would follow-how could such an act not be reprobated and con demned by every upright soul?" The Holy Father made this ob servation as part of the long and! continued efforts he has exerted to have men put the advances of . 'i'urn to Page Nineteell1l
Religious' Attend Music Workshop
"Happier - Healthier Holier" has been announced as the theme for the Dioce san observance of Catholic
Turn to Pa/Ie Fourteen
the guests to the city. Both expressed appreciation to the Bishop and Mr. Kennedy for ,erecting the building. Training for LeadershiKD Commending the Kennedy family for their willingness to aid the ,underprlvil1ged. Bishop
Catholic School Leadership Race Pupils Denied
Again'Recalis Bus Service
Papal Warning OMAHA (NC) - The 15
P~an
Youth Week, Oct. 27-Nov. 3. Preliminary plans for the ob servance were drawn uj) at a meeting at Cathedral Camp by C.Y.O. Diocesan DirectOl' Rev. Leo T. Sullivan and area chair men fOl' youth of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women. Em phasis will be placed on how the Catholic Youth Organization can enrich the lives of young people physically, intellectually and spi ritually. Opening day, the Feast of Chl'lst the King, w1ll be observed as Youth Communion Sunday, with all young people in the Diocese urged to receive Holy Communion in their p a l' Ish
::~l¥> MITCHELL S. JANIAK Friends Committee Chairman
The 600 Brothers and Sis ters teaching in the 55 ele mentary schools of the dio~ cese gathered last Saturday
KENNEDY YOUTH CENTER DEDICATION: Joseph P. Kennedy and the Most Reverend Bishop unveil the oil painting of Lt.. Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. at the dedication of the building in New Bedford. Boy Scouts Ronald Perry (left) ,and Bernard' Cabral assist.
aftemoon at the Sacred Heart School, AUditorium, Fall River for a Workshop on r Aturglcal Music. They were present from Acushnet. Fairhaven. New Bed ,ford, Taunton, Attleboro, North Attleboro. and Fall River. Dr. Peguy Sullivan Lyder, a professor of Gregorian Chant at ths Pius X School of Liturgical Music of Manhattanvllle College of the Sacred Heart, Purchase, N. Y., directed the workshop. 'Dr.' Lyder has been at the Pius X School of Liturgal Music for over 30 years and is a nationally 1'00Turn to Page Eleva!!
(
...
McGuire to. Head Trave~ Section ,At!' VoHearn Exhibit iU1 Brussels BRUSSELS (NC)~Francis J. McGuire has been appointed di rector of the U. S. travel depl¥'t
include an auditoi'ium in the Vat Ican section. accommodating 1300 people. The auditorium will be used for'lectures, meetings and religious dramtts. The general theme of Civitas Dei will be the Church's role in the life of all men and all nations at' all times. Among some of the events planned to be held at theVati can section are: a meeting of the Christian Workers' Movement. an international conference on Christian humanism in. the world, an international meeting of prayer for Russia. a day de voted ·to the Oriental/Churches. and various 'national days. . In August 1958.· the Interna tional Congress of Medieval Phi los9Phy will meet at the Civitas Dei e.nd, in the following October. there will be an international congress of Cathollc trade unions.
October Good
Time' to Start
o
'1l"tilE, ANCHOR
M~ss
VATICAN PAVILION AT WORLD EXHIBIT: Some 26 countrIes will participa.te in the "City of God~' section of the International Exhibition opening at BrusseUs, Bel gium, in April,. 1958 the building above, the vatican pa vilion, will house exhibits and a "place of prayer" seating some 2,500. It marks the first time the Holy See has offi cially taken part in an exhibit outside of Rome. NC Photo.
Protect
Oct. .
Lady of the Holy Rosary, Fall River Our Lady of the Holy Ros ary, Taunton Our Lady of the Assump tion, New Bedford Oct. 13~St. Roch, Fall River St. John of God,. Somerset Oct. 2 O...,.St. Hedwig. New Bedford Our Lady of the Immaeu . late Conception. Taunton 1.Q Salette, East Brewster Oct 27~t. Peter,· Province town St. Michael, Fall River
St. Patrick. Somerset
6~Our
Church Persecution VATICAN CITY (NC) - A German translation of the Red Book of the Persecuted Church. a documented account of com munist persecution of the Church behind the Iron Curtain, will ap peal' Nov. 1.
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FORTY HOURS
DEVOTION
Confessor. Greater Do ubi e. White. Mass Propel'; Gloria; Sec ond Collect for Rain; Common Preface. Votive Mass in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus per- • mitted. Tomorrow is the First Saturday of the month. SATURDAY ~ Mass of the Blessed Virgin for Saturday. Sim ple. White. Mass Propel'; Gloria; Second Collect Ss. Placid and Companions. Martyrs; Third Col lect for Rain; Preface of Blessed Virgin. SUNDAY ~ Seventeenth Sun day after Pentecost. Double. Green. Mass Propel'; Gloria; Sec ond Collect St. Bruno, Confessor; Preface of Trinity. lUONDAY~Most·Holy 'Rosary of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Dou ble ofII Class. White. Mass Prop er; Gloria; Second Collect St. Mark, Pope and Confessor; Creed: Preface of Blessed Virgin. TUESDAY~St. Bridget. Wid ow. Double. White. Mass Propel'; Gloria; Secon,d Collect for Rain; Third Collect for Peace; Com mon Preface, WEDNESDAY~St.Jhon Leon. ard. Confessor. Double. White. Mass Propel'; Gloria: Second Collect Ss. Denis, Bishop. Rusti eus and Eleutherius. Martyrs: Third Collect for Rain; Common Preface. • THURSDAY"':"St. Francis Bor. gia,' Confessor. Simple. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for Rain; Third Collect for Peace; Common Preface.
MAKES YOUR . CAR RUN BETTER
What Yon Have
FOUNDER: Sister Mary Joseph, founder and direc tor of the Gallel'y of Living Catholic Authors sits at her deflk at Webster College, 'in Missouri, studying a collec tion of original manuscripts. The gallery is celebrating its , Bllvel'jubilee: NC 'Photo.
Ordo
..... BARDAHLo
What's. Your Number
FRENCH WEST AFRICA (NC) -The Christian Brothers who are in charge of the Catholic school here call the roll by num bers since names are almost use less. The school has an enrollment of 460 pupils. Three hundred and eighteen of them have the fam ily name~anou. Many of them have' Christian names that are alike. The teachers, unable to keep records any other way, have as signed identification numbers to the pupils.
1957
FRIIDAY~St; Francis of Assisl,
ment of the office of the com missioner general of the Vatican llection at the Brussels interna Schools are under way tional exposition of 1958.. Announcement of Mr. Mc and vacations .are over. Guire's appointment was made Many Catholic schools are by Paul Heymims, commissioner Benedictine Fathers
Beneral of the Vatican section of having retreats around this time, giving their students the Select New Abbott
the Brussels exposition. Mr. McGuire, 32, a graduate of opportunity to look at their souls SUBIACO (NC) ~ Fat her George Washington University after the hectic days of Summer. Michael Lensing, O.S.B.. has All Catholics are encouraged to . , Washington, D. C., and a former been elected fourth abbot of New employee of the Federal Bureau make a little retreat for them Benedictire Abbey, suc Subiaco. selves at this time. , of Investigation. He isU. S man ceeding the late Father Paul M. This week Pl'ovides a wonderful ager of the Special proje~ts de ·Nahlen,O.S.B. opportunity. Confessions are be partment of K.L.M. (Royal Neth The new abbot is a native of ing heard this afternoon and ei'lands Airlines). Scranton, Arkansas where he' . evening in all Catholic churches. . When the Brussels exposition was born-January 11._ 1916. He opens April 17, 1958. the event First Friday Masses will be said made his' first profession of not only on Friday morning but will mark the first time the Vat vows at Subiaco after completing Ican has been represented at such in the evening as well. Every his preparatory seminary work In has the opportunity to Catholic an international exhibition. receive Holy Communion as an. Subiaco Academy. He was 01" City of God dained on June 3, 1939. C'tlIed "Civitas Dei (City of act of reparation to the Sa(lred Abbot Michael has been sta~ Heart of JellUs for his own sins God) ," the Vatican's exhibition tioned at Subiaco ever since his and the outrages of men. Is about 150,000 square feet in The first ,Saturday of the ordination. At the time of his . area,_of which approximately 70 month is dedicated in a special election he was spiritual director per cent will be occupied by the the Blessed Mother. Here of students in Subiaco Academy. way to pavilion itself. Bishop Albert L. Fletcher of another day on which the is Since it is the "City ·of God," Little Rock wilJ confer the abba the pavilion will have no door "spiritual retreat spirit" can be tlal blessing on the newly elected and will be· open to all. A large fostered by attendance at Mass abbot.' . ,church. comprising one section of and the reception of Communion again. . the. pavilion. will be open at all Ste,al Catechism . During October we Cathoiics' Limes and will. be the site for vari NEW ORLEANS INC) _~ A are urged to say daily the Rosary. ous national religious cclebra 'Fhe spiritual tone of the whole 16th-century catchism in pic, tions by visitors of different na month can be set. in the next tures and symbols, prepared by tionali ties. few. days. Through the Rosary Spanish priests for Indians, has' It is planned that Masses will we are brought closer to Mary been stolen f,rom ,the Middle be celebrated all morning and ev ery evening·in the church, which who reproduced more' perfectlY American Research institute of than anyone else the virtues of Tulane University here. will have a capacity of 2,500. It was in a show case undel~ a her Son. And· through the recep . The section of the· pavilion re served for exhibits will contain a tion of her Son's Body and Blood glass top, The 14-page manu reconstruction of the catacombs in Holy Communion we come into , script is "pocket size,'~ and con sists of 14 pages bound in dark of Rome. According to Mr. Hey . union with the Source of all holi mans, the Vatican MuseulJl may ness and virtue. Thus we begin brown leather. Known as a "tes allow some of its priceless art the month in an ideal way~with tarian glyph," it is valued at $1000. trEasures to be exhibited in the Jesus and Mary. pavilion. \
R~le of Ch~rch Plans have also been made to
a,
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Very Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher of New Bedford (left photo) a~sists New Bedford. In the center picture, the Bishop is shown at the Bishop Connolly blesses the corner stone of the new Joseph P. right are Father John J. Murphy, Father J. Normand Hardy and! .. . .,.. " .
BISHOP CONNOLLY BLESSES THREE NEW DIOCESAN BUILDINGS: the Most Reverend Bishop at the corner stone laying at st. John's Academy' in blessing of the new st. Michael's parochial sch<?ol in Fall River. At the -right, Kennedy Jr. Cye building in New Bedford. Also shown in the picture at the Father Jaime V. Mendes. The' ceremonies were conducted last weekend.
Church Growth in Aricon See
Conti'nued from Page Qne the Church. The natives are now pagans, the Bishop said. but they have become very religion-con scious in the past 10 years and they do not want to remain pa gan. Catholic Action groups, the Leg'ion of l\1:ary and the expan sion of the Catholic School sys tem are all contributing to the conversion of thousands annually in the Diocese of Nyeri. The oPPol'tunity is present and the natives are very receptive to the Catholic Church, the Bishop said, adding the challenge of Communism and Mohammed ism must be met successfully if the church is to win the conti l1ent for Catholicism. Bishop Cavallera, who spoke at all Masses at Holy Name Church, Fall River, Sunday, is the former Rector of the Pontifical College for the Propagation of the Faith in Rome. Appointed Bishop of Nyeri in 1947, he has been work ing among the Kikuyu, a very important tribe in East Africa, l1umbering about 1,300,000. The mission of Nyeri was bad ly hurt by the war, then by th'e Mau Mau. Several missions were ransacked, two were burned, mis sionaries were killed and the whole flock dispersed, Owing to emergency measures adopted by the civil authorities a very serious 'situation was brought about and thousands of
people are in need of food, cloth ing and medicine. The mission has organized. a campaign of charity throu~hout the country and a crusade for souls. The result is consoling and, the future of the diocese very bright, Bishop Cavallera said. However, the need of religious centers, of schools, of means of transportation, teachers of reli gion and larger seminaries is great, '
Stonehill Deyotions
To Start Sunday
October devotions in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary will opell at 4 Sunday afternoon at the Grotto of OUt· Lady of Lourdes on the Stonehill College campus, North, Easton. This is. the fourth year of October devotions at the Shrine which was dedicated dur ing the 1954 Marian Year. Rev. Thomas C. Duffy, C.S.C., director' of the college building fund, conducts the IS-minute service which' includes the Ros ary, Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Memorare. The, public is invited to attend the devotions which will be held each Sunday throughout the month. The Grotto of Our Lady stands only a few yards away from the exit - gateway on Washington Street and is provided with ample parking space.
Minor Incident LITTLE ROCK (NC) - A thrown stick hit, but did not in jure, a Negro girl in the yard of St. Bartholomew's school. here following mob violence at Central High School. Father John W. Kordsmeier, diocesan superin . tendent of schools, who said he had a full report of the incident, described it as mirior.
Consec'roteAuxillory Sis,hops For Archdiocese of Newark . NEWARK (NC) - In an un usual double consecration cere mony, the Archdiocese of Newark has been given two auxiliary bishops. Bishop Martin W. Stanton, 60, and Bishop William W. Curtis, 44, were also made Titular Bish ops of Citium and Bisica, res pectively, in televised ceremonies in Sacred Heart Cathedral. Archbishop Thomas A. Boland of Newark was consecrator. Bish op James A. McNulty of Paterson and Bishop George W. Ahr of, Trenton were co-consecrators. AuxiliarY Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York, national di rector of the Society of the Pro pa~ation of the Faith, preached th~ sermon at the Mass attended by three-score archbishops, bish ops and abbots, in addition to hundreds of priests and lay persons. , Perfect Soul Bishop Sheen pointed out the important duty, of a bishop "to
The Franciscan
Fathers
Third Order Regular of St. Francis Ofier to Young Men and Boys special opportunities to study for the Priesthood. Lack of funds no obstacle. Candi dates for the religious Lay Brotherhood also accepted, For fmther information, write to
Well Prepared.
perfect the souls of his flock." He reminded that Our Lord looks to every bishop to carry out this task. He said the consecration cere mony means the attainment by a priest of the fullness of his voca tion. He declared that by conse cration a priest becomes "a spiritual son who will carryon the glorious p r i est h 0 0 d of Christ." Bishop Stanton of Jersey City was archdiocesan director of the Society of the Propagation of the Faith when named a bishop. Bishop Curtis was professor of moral-theology and canon law at Immaculate Conception Semina ry. Darlington, N. J.
NEW YORK (NC)-Fifteen priests, just returned from 'three months of study in Puerto Rico, h:we been assigned to New York archdioce1;e parishes with a large concentration of Spanish-speak ing pat'ishioners.
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CRUCIFIXES AND ARTICLES Of DEVOTION
STONEHILL COLLEGE
The Only Catholic College ill the Diocese oj Fall River
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, HOLLIDAYSBURG 12, PA.
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8·2221
THE ANCtOOR Thurs.,. Oct., 3, 1957,
At Our House
WeU Bo'hjnced Breakfast . Pads SensitiveSyst~m·
','
Fall River Girl _,Enters Convent
By Mary ,Tinley Daly'
The mingled aromas of freshly made coffee; frying .lJa-, con, oatmeal-dld these tickle your o1{~factory sense this morning? And did your taste buds delight in', fresh melon, or chilled fruit juice? Was there an egg on the menu, and crisp buttered toast? Was O·tempora,.o mores! Gone al:e the table attractively, set? If so, you were prob~bly the days ,when the whole family going full steam ahead all got up at the s~me time, there morning long.' ' For tho~e who can attend daily Mass, there is 1lt111 plenty of time to eat be fore work 01' school. The n you're doubly fortified, 'in soul and body. ' If you're a
young mother,
the I:1ousework
may not have
gone like a ' breezl?, but' it ~':' Went. The quar ' rels of the children seemed just what they are, momentary annoyances to be settled by patience and good humor,not the rum blings of juvenile 'delinquency. If you're an older mother, you could turn your energies to the needs of your family and still have pep enough for neighborli ness. . . If you're in the business world, the boss's unreasonableness was "just one of those things" that you could smile off; silently. He'd " be better aftel: lunch . . . If you're a religious, the duties of the day didn't make a fright ening inroad on, your nervous lIystem . . . Good Breakfast Perhaps it·s a fetish' on our part, but' the good breakfast plank is one of the strongest in our own particular platform and we'll stick with it; For years, we've preached it at our house . and now we proclaim it to our limited public. ,Pad the nerves of a morning, is our theory, and they stay cushioned all day. It has not always been easy sailing and "Mom's breakfast pitch" has caused unconcealed )ibes at our house. "You want us to weigh 200 pounds?" the dieters ask. "I just can't eat much early In the morning, another says. ' Well, okaY .... When they were little children they .ate the equiv - alent of the ful1 number seven breakfast on any restaurant" menu (the $1.50 order) and ate it. hungrily. Now, it's only the Head of the House, ll-year-old Ginny and I who have "dinner in the morning"-to quote. Let Them Diet To go back to the dieters: a llhrug and sigh of resignation greet our contention that food taken in the morning, should. be a goodly portion of the day's nu trItion reqUirements because you work it, off, don't sleep and let it settle into fat. Al1 right, let them diet as they will. It's not worth arguing about. And those Who have "a late ,cycle." Granted ,there are peo pie like that, right at our house and possibly at yours-those who are a ,bit letpargic in the early hours and gather momentum as the day progresses. These are at their best In the late afternoon and in the evening when 'we of the early cycle are sagging at the lIeams.' Fine. Probably a big breakfast is not their dish of tea. so be it. ~ Lunch Extras However, for the lunch packer it's a wise idea to keep an ey~ on who is eating a good breakfast and who is not. An extra slice of meat in a sandWich, and perhaps a hard boiled 'egg, added for somebody who Is rushed out of the house early,; a' second piece of fruit for the ODe who negiected to drink juice; a few extra cookies or a bit of candy for the late 'cyclist who will be in need of added energy by lunchtime. 0
Na.lTIe Nun Acting Dean of Nursing Scho'ol at Catholic University
was a goodly representation at Mass, everybody sat, down at the same time to a, hearty breakfast, and the lineup of, school lunch bags that we could fill almost with our eyes closed. Nowadays, everybody has different morning mood as the alarm clOCks go z-z-zing ... Breakfast, anyone?
Sister Charles Marie Frank, a, member of the 'Congregation ,ot the sisteios of Char~ty, ,of the Inrarnate ,Word" of san Jintonio. Miss Elizabeth Louise Amaral, Texas, has, been appointed" act..' daughter of Mr. and Mrs.,' Alfred Amaral, 371 Crescent Street, -il;g dean'of the ~hool ot mirsing education, Catholic University. AnnoUncement of the appoiht-, nient has 'been made by Msgr~' William J; McDonald, acting. rec tor., 'Sister Charles Marie; a native of st. Louis, had her basic nurse training at Mullanphy HOSPital School of Nursing, St. Louis. She withdrew in her senior year to enter 'the Congregation' of the Sisters of Charity of ,the Incar nate Word of San Antonio.
\'ice- president ,of the National ' League for Nw-sin'g, chairman of " tho::' Na ti~nal League for' Nursing j Committee on the Future and',' wnsultant to the Advisory' Coun-" cil of :Nursing, Veterans Admin Istration. , She has published a number of articles in hospital, nursing, and 'public health journals.
,Taunton Nurses Communion Mass
EducationallY Equipped
a:
Her nursing course W!\S com pleted at St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing, Paris, Texas,' in 1930. The Bachelor of Science degree in nursing education, with a major in teaching, was con ferred on her by Incarnate Word College in 1939. In' 1943, Sister received her master's degree from Catholic University. She also Diocesan associations affili completed 'the advanced course ated with Massachusetts Chap Fall River, is one of 23 Postu iu. psychiatric'nursing at Catho In 1940 ' tel', International Federation of lants who has ,entered Mary Im ' 11'C Unl'versl'ty j'n 1947. , ~he attended'the graduate school Catholic Alumnae, have been in,:, ' vited to attend First Saturday maculate Novitiate of the Daugh of education at St, Louis Univer.. Mass and Communion at 9 Sat tel's of Wisdom at Litchfield, sity. urday morning'in the Basilica of Conn. " S i s t e r Charles Marie, a 'l'egis o Our Lady of Perpetu'3.i Help, Mis ,Born in Brooklyn, N. Y" 'Miss tered X-ray technician, served in sion Church, Roxbury. --:.AiparGI attended St. Michael's that capacity for four years at A Continental breakfast 'will Commercial High School there, the' Santa Rosa Hospital, San be served in the high school hall ,and completed her studies at Anto~io. on t¥lleghany Street immediately 'B. M. C, Durfee High School, Fan 'Consultor General, following the Mass. River, last June. , In addition, spe has sel'ved as Miss Mary J. O'Gorman, pres,S!')e will be stationed at Litch- a lecturer in the Army Medical ident of Mission High School fiJ:lld for 18 months before tak-, Field, Service School, Fort Sam Alumni. Association, is chairman.' ing her fir~t vows. Houston, Texas.' . 'In'1953, she was named con sultor general, and supervisor of hospitals and schools' of nursing 101' the Congregation of tlle Sis ters of Charity of the Incarnate Word of San Antonio, and will CHICAGO (NC)-TheEnglish' 'Miss Luel1a R. Hennessey, R.N., I!erve in that capacity until 1960. doctor who received the com-, was guest speaker at the opening She ha:; been visiting professor mendation of His Holiness Pope' meeting of the season 1957-58,~ of llursing education at, C. U.'s PiUll XiI for perfecting amethod'~ ,Stonehill' Col1egeGuild, held in School of nursing education. of so-called' painless childbirth the Col1ege Library, with Mrll. W. Currently. she' is the third ,will begin a U. S. and 'Canadian' Leo Welch, presiding. tour here oct. 17. , 'Miss Hennessey,' a graduate US REMODEl YOUR He is Dr. GI:antly Dick-Read: nurse of St. Elizabeth's Hospital, who was mentioned in a 'January' LAST ,YEAR'S ,HAT 1956, addres's l'n "'hlch the' Pope' Brighton, told of her nursing ex perience for 'a Maharajah and gave moral' approval to a new h'is fainily,' and 'of the three . ,HATS MADE TO OR[)ER . psychological method. WITH YOUR MATERIAL Dr. 'Dick-React whose book,' years which she spent with the Joseph P. Kennedy family when "Childbirth Without Fear," was: Mr. Kennedy was ambassador to published in,the United States in: Grea't Britain. 292 Ead St. ,New BedfOrd 1944, will lecture, Oct, 17,'to 19: ,'She also told of hel' experiences at the Academy of Psychosomatic ' when she attended, the coronaWY'3-6176 ) " Medicine here. ' The physician, who' is not a tion of Pope' Pius XII with the ' , Kennedy family: " Catholic, is gen rall y credited Miss ,Margaret C~, 'Murphy. with perfecting theories and chairman, assisted' by Ml'S. Ed COX techniques worked' out by fol1ow ward Tracy as co-chairmau':wiite ' ers of Dr. IV,an Pavlov, Russian Home mode psychologist and physiologist. in c~arge of. the, social. . CANDIES . ,This method aims 'at assisting" , CHOCOLATES' woinen in childbirth to' col1abci 150 .Varieties rate with nature and overcome' groundless fears and anxities. It ROUTE 6 Near is' based ;J.lpon prenatal insti'uc~ Fairhaven Auto' Theafre . ,tion and exercises, and, ideal1y FAIRHAVEN, ,MASS. Big V~lue~ in Used Cars
,does not involve the use of anes- , thetics during birth. ~" JOHN FIGUEIREDO
Catholic Alumnae Mass Saturday
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The Taunton Guild of Catho lic Nurses. under the patronage ot "Our Lady of Fatima," will hold its annual communion breakfast. on Sunday. October 13. immediately following the 9:15 mass' at the Immaculate Conception Church, Taunton. Breakfast wiII be served In the church basement with Judge Frank Smith as guest speaker. Members l\re asked to meet In the Church basement at g, o'clock in uniform.
Nursing Dorector NEW CASTLE (NC) - Sister Mary Eulalia, controller of Sa cred Heart Hospital in Manches ter, has been elected a director of the New Hampshire League for Nursing. Mrs. Germaine Fon taine, assistant director of nurs ing education at Notre Dame Hospital in Manchester, is the' new second vice president of the league. ,
.. ST. PAUL (NC) - The C'atho lie 'Digest will mark its 21st an niversary in November of this year. From its initial circulation of about 13,000, the Digest has increased its monthly distribu tion to approximately one mil lion copies each printing. It also publishes six foreign editions.
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, You Buy It A Section A Week! You Assemble It' Yourself I Praised by Scholars, Educators, , Heads of Universities, ,Editors! This dictionary is one of the very finelt an.d most highly hOnored In the worle!. Please read the following com. menU from (lminent authorities:
"THE NEW CENTURY DICTION. ARY has ad"antagcs found in no other unabridged or lar/:er English diction. ary ••• In its definitions, and in the number of new terms, .the text is thor· oughly scicntifie Bnd modern." .;.. DA VID H. STEVENS, Director of Hill' manities, Rocke/eller Foundnlion. "The most convenient general die· lionaryl"-HIENIRY N. MacCRACKEN, Former President, Yassar Colleg~.
"For ready reference, bOlh for form and 11\aller, I find I am using it more frequently than any other."-CHRIS· TIAN GAUSS, Dean Emerilus, Prince· Ion University. "As a newspaper edilor and writer, I find THE NEW CENTURY DICTION. ARY most useful. Its 'large type is easily and quickly read, and the defi. nitions are in understandable, everyday English, often made more explicit by quotalions from examples from mod ern aUlhors." - DAVID LAWRENCE, Editor, U. §. News & World Repora.
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®The ANCHOR
Weeldy Calendar Of Feast Days
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAU ROVER Published Weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese' of fall River 410 Hili(hland Avenue Fall River. Mass, OSborne 5-7151
PUBLlS'HER.
Most Rev. lames L. Connolly, D.O., Ph.D. CENERAL MANACER ASST. CENERAL MANACER !Rev. Daniel F'. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. lohn P. Driscoll MA~ACINC EDITOR Attorney HURh I. Colden
Kennedy Community Center
The dedication of the Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. 'Com munity Youth Center in New Bedford gives ris~ to many thoughts. , The first is one of sincere gratitude. to this young man's father andfaIl1ily who contributed so substantially to making the dream of this Center a reality. Th.ey have made it possible fot thous~nds of boys and girls, men and women, now and in generations to come, to enjoy ad vantages that. otherwise they would not 'have. This is charity. . The second thoug'ht on this occasion .is one that is especially healthy at this time. In an age .when goverp. ment is having so much to do with our lives, it is good to re-emphasize the place of private charity in the A,merican \ scheme of things. The Kennedys have given millions of dollars for edu A Million Prayers cational,. recreational, social and cultural facilities. They have pointed up the obligation that· they feel~ pos sessors of a fortunate amount of thi~ world's goods-to sJ:1are their wealth with others. They are demonstrating that private charity from families and inqividuals has a heart and a warmth and a Christian spirit and motivation By Joseph A. Breig that government ,giving' can never possess; Cleveland Universe Bulletin - And a final thought: The Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. I have sent the following letter,~dated on ti;e feast of Center will surely be the occasion for many to offer prayers for this young man and for his family who are doing so Our Lady of Ransom, to Pope 'Pius XII. much for other young people and other families. That is Dear Holy Father: readers of my weekly "column," which is pUbour obligation toward those who , have done so much for us. lishedThe' in' a number ofCatho-' lic newspapers in the·U. S., and to the service of his brave, Canada and Hawaii, have loyal and beloved Hungarian At the outset of this Month of the Rosary, October arranged for priests in vari- people. to the 700 Masses 1957, we reiterate the counsel heard by most .of you from ous parts of the world to offer b'11\ addition ff d f 1 the pUlpits of your own church-to recite and promote 700 Masses for Joseph Cardinal emg 0 ere or Cardina Mindszenty, and the other spiritual the Family Rosary. . Mindszenty of gl'f ts a I rea d y mentioned, . the Hungary and all ' All activities performed as a family group tend to rea d ers are 0 ff ermg 250,000 brief asp i l' a t ion s, 192,000 longer
bring the individual members into closer union one with other victims of prayers, 168,000 intentions at the other. And what higher form of activity could we in communism. These readers Mass, 13,250 sacrifices, 1,950 foldUlge in than united prayer, it brings us closer to God; are also assistlowings of the Stations of the Cross, and 6,200 yi~its' to the begets unity and happip.ess in the family; and makes of us ing at 25,690 Blessed Sacrament, better and more productive members of society as ,a whole.' Masses in Car-
,
Offer Spiritual Bouquet For Cardin,al Minds·zenty
October DevotIon
Political Commotion During these next few months nature's colors. pale into insignificance before the gaiish political posters which are blossoming out on trees, fences and' abandoned build. Th f th b' d t ~ b th mgs., e ,song 0 e 11' s seems mu eu y e sonorous .tones of campaign oratory. This is the season when the newspapers, radio, tele. . . t ions makes an ap- vIsion-every medium of commumca peal to "get out the vote." We echo that appeal. Not only do you have a: right to vote but an obligation. as well. Don't let laziness, indifference or unreasonable cynicism prevent you from exercising that right, and 'fulfilling that obligation. When you, cast your ballot, do so intelligently. This demands preparatory steps. Examine the, roster of aspi'rants'to public o-ffice. What is the candidates basic ' h e qua l"f" d for th e p.articuIar pos t ? H.ow we II IS Ch arac ter. 1 Ie to which he aspires? If he has held elective office, what has his record been? To vote for a candidate purely on the basis of national origin, religion, hope_of personal gain or for any such narrow reason is bigoted, selfish, and un-' reasonable. o The newspapei's these past weeks have been .filled with deplorable incidents that have been taking plac~ in Littie Rock. Perhaps there would have been demonstrations in any event; but- the fact is that these were occasioned by the regrettable action taken by Governor Faubus of Arkansas in placing the state guard at the school to prevent the colored children from entering. And this he did iIi defiance of a Federal Court order. The most charitable conclusion tllat we could reach is that he exercised poor judgment and acted imprudently. And the people of the State of Arkansas stand condemned because t he man who lit the fuse to this powder keg was elected. by them to this important ,post. The possibility of an identical instance here" is quite unlikely, but comparable decisions may need to be made. They will be. m~de in your community, in your state, in bId i ff' h h your count ry by men w 0 ave een pace n. 0 Ice through your vote. Yes, we do urge you to vote, but vote wisely.'
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Oct. 3, 1957
TODAY - St,Therese LlsleulK (Little Flower of Jesus), Virgin. She was born Marie Francoise Therese Martin in 1873 at Alen con, France, and at the age of Iii entered the C If I'm e Ii t e com munity at Lisieux. Her progress in the spiritual life was such that she was made Mistress of Novices
at the age of 22. She died In 1897,
. but her brief life was remarkable
for its humility, simplicity and patient el1durance of suffering. Since her death innumerable miracies have been credited to her intercession, and devotion to her has spread all over the world. 'In English, - 'speaking countries she is known as the Little Flower of Jesus. She was canonized in 1925. TOMORROW - St. Francis of Assisi, Confessor. He was born In 1182 and was early inspired with a love of poverty and humll ·ity. Many Joined themselves to him and were constituted a reli gious Order by Pope Innocent III. The 0 I' del' I' a p i d 1 y spread throughout', Christendom. After Visiting the East, St. Francis al ternated between preaching to the multitudes and fasting in desert solitude. During' one of his retreats, he received on his hands, feet, and side the prints of the five wounds of Christ. He died in 1226. SATURDAY _ St. Placid and Companions, .Martyrs. He was born in Rome of a patrician fam ily in 515. At the .age of seven his father took him to the monas tery of Subiaco and at 13 he followed St. Benedict to establish a monaster'y. Five years later the, place was overrun by barbarians 'who burned everything to the ground. St, Placid, his two broth ers, Eutychius and Victorinus; his sister, Flavia, who had come to visit them', along with Dona tus, ·Firmatus, Faustus and some 30 other, monks, were put to death for their faith.
SUNDAY - St. Bruno, Confes sor,The founder of the Carthu sians was born in Cologne about 1030 and studied in Paris. He was made canon of Cologne and later held the same office at Rheims. ~With six companions determined.. .to forsake the world, he retired to Grande Chartreuse. There they were welcomed by st. Hugh, Bishop of Grenoble. Later St. Bruno was called to Rome by a former disciple, Pope Urban II. The bustle of the city disturbed him. He retired to the mountains ot Calabria, where he founded a second Cha.l'tel'house. He dl'ed about 1101 and was canonized 500 years later.
dinal MindszenOur spiritual bouquet further' includes 14;000 recitations of the ty's name, and are offering 21,000 Holy Com- Hail Mary, 2,200 of the Our munions and 193,000 recitations Father, 2,334 morning prayers of the Rosa~'y, and 30 evening prayers, 671 spi,Altogether, the readers have htual 'Communions, 383 meditacontributed more than one mil- tions 200 hours of the Psalms lion spiritual exercises of various and '15,000 special acts of self~ kinds 'for Cardinal .Mindszenty, denial. In response to a suggestion made In my column ,after the cardinal Other Sacrifices took asylum in the ,American Your Holiness doubtless will be d t k' th t i . ddltl legation in Budapest, {ollowing move 0 now a, n a on, the Soviet suppression of the readers.are.abstaining from supHungarian people's rising for pel' 485 days and one has pledged
freedom in October _ November, amendment of his'life, In tribute MONDAY - Feast ot the Most
1956. to Cardinal Mindszenty, for his Holy Rosary. This feast also com This is the second such spirit- sacrifices, and in petition for his memorates St. Mary of Victory,
ual bouquet offered by these liberation along with all others a day which Pope Pius V insti
,readers, for the victims of com- under communism's yoke. tuted be kept each year in
munism. Somewhat inore than Many hundreds of other spirit- memory of the victoi'y granted to
two yeal's ago, I for'wal'ded a ual gifts were received in such the Christians in a naval battle
im- agams t t h e T ur k s a ft er Invo k'mg similar gift from my readers to various f orms as to make it' Your Holiness. practicable to Ifst them all. It the help ot the Mother of' God. We were deeply moved to re- will perhaps suffice, to repeat TUESDAY _ St. Bridget of celve in return, through the ·that more than a milllon prayers Sweden, Widow. She was' a mem apostolic delegate to the U. S" altOgether" ot differing sorts, bel' of the Swedish royal family Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Ci- • w~re contnbuted ~n love and ad- and was born in 1034. She mar cognani, Your Holiness' specia~ mlration.for Cardmal Mindszenty ried Prince Ulpho of Sweden and
paternal apostolic benediction in and the countless other persons they had eight chlldren. Many appreciation of our small e.fforts. who ha~e borne th~ brunt of yeai,s later she and her'husband The readers have been pro- commumst persecution for' 80 separated by mutual consent, He foundly encouraged by 'the evi- very long, not only for Chr~st but joined the Cistercians and she dent fact that God has watched for. us also, as we well realIze. founded the community of St. with most special Providence over This second spiritual bouquet, Saviour in the Abbey of Wastein.
Cardinal Mindszenty all through Holy Fath~r, Is therefore another
the long and agonizing course of inadequate but heartf~lt attempt WEDNESD~Y-St.John Leon
the living martyrdom he has to express the gratitude which ard, Confessor. 'The founder of
suffered in the cause of divine we in America owe to those who the Congregation of Clerks Reg and human rights, so cruelly at- have suffered so greatly for the ular of the Mother of God, he tacked by armed atheistic tyran- truth expressed In our Declara- was born in the 16th century in ny. tion of Independence, that "all Luni, Tuscany. He cooperated ' men are created equal and are with St. Philip Neri, St. Joseph ,]Pray for lLiberation endowed by their Creator ,with Calasanctius and other famous ,We are hopeful that as our certain inalienable rights" among holy men of the time in restoring .prayers have been answered In which are the rights to "life, Church discipline and converting Cardinal Mindszenty's deliver- liberty 'and the pursuit of hsp- sinners. He is looked up,on as one ance.from the hands of his com- piness."_ ' of the founders of the Roman munist captors, they may In due We ask Your Holiness to accept College of the Propaganda for time be further,answered by his once more, In the name of Joseph Foreign Missions. He died at the finalllbel'ation and restoratiOn to CRJ"dinal MindszentY,our little age of 60 In 1609, and was canon. bill episcopal dignity and duties gift. lzed in the 20th century.
to
Books of the Hour
THE ANCHORThurs.• Oct. 3, 1957
Cana Conference Manual Best of Kind on 'Subject
Irash UN Cast for
By Rev. D. BernaI'd Theall, O.S.R.
The New Cana Manual, edited by Fr. Walter Imbiorski of the Chicago Cana Conference (Delaney Publications, Oak Park, Ill., $3.50) is one of the best pieces of writing about the Cana movement, its objectives and methodology, that I have ever seen. Not' only is it down-to-earth and and re-explalned to him the intensely practical, as well meanings of the Mass and thE')' and even then he Is as deeply spiritual in its ap sacraments, not entirely convinced. proach but the whole Is presented with a thoroughly professional
~~~~~ri:~dcrl~~: ri,;::c~r'~~"':;-;':'~';\i'l::,"
Bl'ead, water, wine, salt, oil even blood itself-have different meanings for him than for the "peasant," and so he 'Is contln uaIly missing many points. In the light of this model'll Ignor ance Fl'. Pepler has some Inter esting and challenging things to .say about many details of the modern "liturgical movement." Need for Community The solutions Fl'. Pepler pro poses are too long to detall here. Suffice It to say that he realizes, the impossiblIlty of any sort of romantic retul'll to the Middle Ages, '01' of scrapping modern machinery In order t9 do things by hand. Immediately necessary" though, Is the restoration of a form of real community llfe the City as seen by St; Thomas Aquinas, but not the megalithic city of today, where communica tion between the members Is all but Impossible; and then the contribution, real and personal, of all members of the community to the dally life of the Church: materially as weIl as spiritually. Like Fr. Vann, Fl'. Pepler touches in this' book on many of the problems that bother such model'll Inquirers as Mrs. Lind-. bergh, but he adds the real spi ritual dimension that Is missing In such otherwise Impressive books as "Gift from the Sea."
coming brevity , ::'0, It Is In a for- . , \i mat that might : i "1' well make older : , ' Catholic p u b- ,,' Ushers en'vlous !:~:" and Imitative,,':,," Furthermore, as a statement of c";",:,. NATION-WIDE CONCERT TOUR: Soprano Carol organizatlo n a I ,:~>:'J Hoppe (left) will perform for Catholic ~olleges, high principles" prob schools and parIsh groups In a nation-wide concert tour lems, and meth ods, the book Is sponsored by the NatIonal Catholic Music Educators Asso
a model that could well be used ciation, Washington. She Is a graduate of the Catholic by many another group desirous University of America. Her accompanist is Jean EIchel
of making things clear to its berger, composer and pianIst. NC Photo.
members and to the uninformed '. public outside. 0 The role of each kind Qf per Good Investment. Marianist Missioners son involved in Cana and Pre WASHINGTON (NC) - The Leave for Nigeria Cana conferences-married cou p,8. Office of' Education has DAYTON (NC)--Three Maria-' ples, host couples, the priest and published a 232-page book Hstlng nist missionaries will sail from the doctor, the prospective in scholarships and other typell of New York: Oct. 9 fOl' Nigeria, law is carefully defined and placed in context. There are sug \ financial aid available to under marking the Marianists' first gestions for further reading, and graduates at Amg'lcan unlversl venture into Brit1s~ Wes.t Africa. brief descriptions of Cana work ties and colleges. , The thre~ miSSlOnal'leS are: as It is carried on in specific Father Wilham Anderson and Cathollc institutions are In archdioceses and dioceses 'of the ciuded In the volume. It may be Brothers Bernard Jansen and country, with a national list of obtained bY' sending $1 to the Raymond Streiff. They are ex directors. It seems .to me that Superintendent of D0cument~, pected to land at Lagos, chief many other Catholic groups and Government Printing Office, port of Nigeria, Nov. 4. even non-Catholics may find it Washington. A second volume on ff<~'11k;~:,\'L~, a fascinating demonstration of aid to graduate students is also ' ' the th()Ug'ht and care that must ~ now available. be expended if tOday's marriages are to succeed. Shorter High School r l" 'Peasant's Religioll' ~ 795 COUNTY STREET ~:1 P.rogram Proposed A book that one wOlild like all 8 NEW IBEDFORD young mal'l'ied couples, and, for. TOLEDO (NC) - Two Toledo that matter, Catholics every ELECTRICAL educators have expressed their Industrial Oil Burners ti where to read, is Riches Des belief that the high school cur CONTRACTORS if~} pised, by Fl'. Conrad Pepler, O. P. riculum can be reduced, without Sprinkler Systems ~j Residential - Commercial (Herder, $3,25). scholastic harm, from foul' years Industrial Like his English Dominican to three. Piping Contractors 11 confrere, Fl'. Gerald Vann, Fl'. At a time when other proposals 633 Broadway,. Fall River Pepler Is concerned with the for coping with the problems of WYman 7·9150 OS 3-1691 separation between modern man t,he soaring school population are and the realities of a religion that being alred, Msgr. Norbert M. was intended to bring Ollt the Shumaker, dioceslln superintend . very best that is in his nature ent of schools, said this revision to be, as the first chapter calls it, would accomplish a 25 pel' cent "Nature's crown," This Involves economy. an examination also of the true However, both he and Msgr. !l I'elation between natme and John L. Hanington, principal oP grace. Central CathoIlc High School Arriving Daily Catholicism, and only Catholi here, In expressing favor for a cism, claims Fl'. Pepler envelops shortened high school period, MAKE YOUR. SHECTION "the whole man, body and soul, agreed that an obstacle, to the LAY IT AWAY with his emotions and charac plan Is that It must be adopted ter, his physical feeling's and his ,generaIly, rather than piece-meal ~USHING~S Imagination, together with his and gradually. 27 PARK STREET mind and heart. It envelopes man 586 Pleasant Street as a part of the universe, sanctiIvory Monstrance 292 'UNION STREET New Bedford fying his relations and contacts MUSHENGE, Belgian Congo with the animals and with the (NC) _ Five native artists here stars." . have just completed a monCatholicism is, therefore, a strance of ivory In Bukabo' style, "p~asant's .religlon," for "the 'the ancient traditional style of Since 1922 peas~nt is Ideally.the man ~Vho the region. Fabricators ".f Is. wise with a Wisdom del'lved, The monstrance which re dIrectly fl'Om the Lord's handl-' quired more than a' year of ivory wc,>rk In nature. T.he_ peasant f~r 'carving, wlII be exhibited at the Stee~ the purpose of tillS argume':lt, IS Brussells World's Fair next year. and the. one. w~o tlIIs, the. SOil or The artists were trained here at WOlks, cIeatlVely wIth. hlS hands the art school directed by the and fmds his wisdom m what he Josephlte Fathers. does, because what he does is a human activity conjoined. with 5-7471
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HOLIDAY GIFTS
Voti'~
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UNITED NATIONS mc) The United Nations General Assembly rejected communist China for membership again this year, but by a dwindling majori ty. It voted 47 to 27, with seven abstentions, in favor of a United' States motion' which bars at least for another year any change In the present situation in which the Chinese delegation Is that of the nationalist govern ment of Formosa. The roll call vote saw those opposed to the U. S. stand which Henry Cabot Lodge, head of the American delegation, said Wlll' taken "sim,nI,V because tl) admit the Chinese communists WOllIn stultify the United Na tions and would thus destroy the usefulness of the United Na tions"-plck up three more votes than last year. Among them were Ireland and Morocco, which had voted with the United States , last year.
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~~~u~~~,~vities of othel' natures
Classically, the peasant is elthel' farm~r, fisherman, or shepherd, ,and it is only to the ~xtent to which one, at least partiaUy, and in accord with his state in IIfc, enters into one of these occupations, that he wlIl fully appl'cciate the Church and her system of worship. Industrial man, on the other hand, Fl'. Pepler feels, has not the peasant's ability to enter in to the world of natural symbols, and so even the Catholic of our time who is educated in Church schools from kindergarten on must constantly have explained
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8
'D'heelogy fer Laymen
Sle ~ohnJls Epist~e Supp~ies Ett~~tQHrn@tB~n @~
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Oct. 3, 1957
Fulbright
HfJ@ven '
Continued From Page One and at the Sobornne in Paris. At the Comedie Francaise she at tended performances of the plays of the great French writers~ Corneille, :ijacine and others. Visits, Notre Dame In Paris, Sister Sainte Veron i que visited the Basilica of the , Sacred Heart of Montmartre, the Sainte Chapelle and several mu seums, including the Louvre, Cluny and Carnavalet. Her travels included visits to the castles of Vincennes, Ver saiIles, St. Germain-en-.Laye, 'Fontainebleau, ,Pierrefonds and Compiegne; the cathedrals of Chartres, Reims and Rouen, and the Abbey, of Mont St. Michel. Highlights of Sister's year abroad were pilgrimages to Li sieux, ,Lourdes, ParayO~le-Monial and Nevers. ' , Sees Pontiff During the ChristQlas holidays the Fall River nun' visited the medieval town of Bruges. Bel gium, and the Cathedral of Ghent, famous for' the 'master piece, "The Adoration of the Mystical Lamb" by Van Eyck. Sister Saint Veronique spent two weeks" in Iitaly where she visited Florence;' Assisi, Naples, ,Pompeii~ Venice, Milan, Stresa and Isola BeIla. On Easter Sun day she saw His Holiness Pope ' Pius XII and listened to his mes ,sage' delivered from the Loggia of St. Peter's Basilica. She. also attended a publlc Papal audience in the Basilica. On her return ,trip to Paris she visited Laus anne, Switzerland.
!By IF. J. §heed
"Eye has not seen nor has ear heard, nor has it en tered into the heart of man, what things God has prepared for those who]ove Him." So st. Paul tells the Corinthians, quoting Isaias. Till we reach heaven, we shall 'not know what heaven is: But, in the inspired word of God, we are will ,think about It, is the lie.fini· given glimpses. In heaven tion of happiness. But' observe that all this is we shall know God in a new based upon doing' something,
way, and love Him according to which by nature we cannot do. • j the new Knowledge. The natural powers of man's in We s h a I 1 Pl":;'~=-"
tt'llect fall short of seeing ,God' know, says St.
direct by a double Iimitation Paul (l Cor.
as we have seen, our natural way xiii. 12) as we of knowing is always by means of are known. It is ,ideas. so that we cannot see any a ' mysterious thing direct; and God, being in phrase, more finite, can never be within' the dark than light, hold .of our natural strength, or RECEIVE MASTER'S DEGREE: Three 'Sisters of st. but, soliciting the strength of any finite belng Joseph stationed in Fall River convents have been awarded our min d s whatever. ' powerfully. We Master of Arts degrees. Left to right they are Mother Fran New Po",ers aT'e not to know coise Therese, S.S,J.; Sister Marie Emmanuel, S.S.J., and , Putting'.tt bluntly the Ufe of God with the , heaven requires powers which"by Sister Sainte Veronique, S.S.J.' "arne knowledge nature we do not possess. If we with which He are 'to live it, we must be given knows us-for He knows infinite .0. ly and we are incurably finite, new cpowers. To make a rough Continued From Page One lights belong to the community comparison: if we wanted to live but with a knowledge similar in on another planet, we should and are paid for by public funds. kind to His, different from our need new breathing powers, of prec.edent, has been ended by ~1:JY ;, . , not turn out these present way of knowing. which by nature our lungs have the school board in the town of 1Ights.. In the same ver~, st. Papl not got. To live the llfe of hea 1,034 about ten miles south of L N · S J makes another attempt~ to ex TWO t. OSepfiJ uns 'len, we need new knowing and ' Omaha. press the difference between our Joving powers, which by. nature The sudden board action was Get Master's Degree knowing -here and our knowing our souls have nQt got.• Two Sisters of St Jo~eph sta- initiated by a complaint, of a there. ,"Here we see through a For heaven our natural life is I . '. .. ~ III ass in a dark manner, but then not sufficient, we' need Iluper resident about \Ising the town's tlOned In Fall RIVer convents face, to face." St. John (l natu!=al life. We can have it only bus to transport the non-public have been awarded master of mts In.lil.2) says "We' shall see Him by God's free gift, which is why school pupils. The complaint was degrees. lis-He is." And we remember Our , we call it grace (the world is re Sister Marie Emmanuel, S.S.J., sent to the State Attorney Gen CECILIA NEWTON Lord saying of the angels (Mt. daughtei' of Mr. and Mrs. Manual lated to gratis)., Sanctifying era 1 by the Papillion school su xvjii. 10) "They see the face of, grace will be our next topic. It. Costa of Worcester', was my heavenly Father continually." Everything the Church does is perintendent. The .legal officer of awarded her degree by Boston 13edng' is the key' to life in connected with it, and can be the Stat~ held the 'practice illegal College, where she majored in heav'en, ' understood but cloudily if we do 'under a 1953 ruling he made. English, She is assigned to St. INSURANCE We 'Shall See Him Turn Out Lights J;ot grasp what it is, Theresa's Convent. E, A. Fricke, who is chief rao Mother Francoise Therese of We can approach the, meaning ban (master) of the Omaho unit St. Jean Baptiste Convent was in two steps. First, those in II(nights of Columbus
REAL ESTATE of the Masonic Tangier Shrine. granted an M.A. in ReligioUs heaven shall see God, not simply Visit lI.aSalette
, Guidance by the Providence COl-' made the complaint. believe in Him as now but see '7 No. Main St. Fall River, Mass. Thomas P. McDonough Coun- , Atty. Gen. Clarence S, Beck lege Summer School of Theology. 'Him. Here 'on earth' we do not cil, Knights of Columbus, North notified the school board of his flay th'at we believe in the exist ence of our friends, we see Attleboi'O, together with all other four-year oJd ruling that the FRANCIS J. ' them: and seeing them, we know local Catholic organizations, will transportation practice violates them. But, second, we shall see conduct their animal. pilgrimage the Nebraska constitution's pro vision against, public aid to 'God face to face, see Him as He to the LaSalette Shrine at 3 Sun de,y afternoon, with Chan'cellor church institutions. liees us, The True Voice, newspaper of The Church has worked out James' P. McNamara, Catholic, 222 UNION STREn
for us a first beginning of the Activities Chairman, in charge, the Omaha archdiocese, asserting TEL. WY 6-9784
meaning of this. Concentrate assisted by JosephH. Achin and that the bus rides are safety and SO. Dartmouth welfare benefits for all children, upOn the way we know our Edward G. Lambert, Jr. Objec NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
tive of this pilgrimage is to pray said in an editori al : and! HY,annis friends. Our knowing faculty, our "Street lights burn in front of intellect, has taken them into for the relief and suffering of Dartmouth
some parochili:i schools and also Jtself, How? By the idea it has ,the persecuted people oi Hun illuminate 'and safeguard the' , formed of them. By means of gary. 0' GENERAL WY 7-9384
Rev. Edmond Lowe of St. properties of parents who prefer ,that idea, we know them. The INSURANC"E Hyannis 2921
Mary's Cnurch, North Attleboro, the 'parochial schools. ,These richer the idea, the better we know them; if there is any error who will address, the group, will be the celebrant, assisted by Rev. in our idea of them, to that ex r·----------------------------------------···--~ We're Proud! Ito Be Your EDSEL Dealer for
tent we do not know them as Edmond Dickinson, Sacred Heart Church, North Attleboro, as dea New Bedford and Surroun'ding Towns
they are. This is the way of hu man knowledge, the "seeing con and Rev. Armando Annunzi SEE AND DRIVE THE
ato St. Mary's Church, North At through a glass in a dark man 'tlebboro', as sub-deacoil. ner" which is the kind of seeing of officers is slat
proper to human nature. It is the edInstaIlatioh for Wednesday night at 8 in
nature of Olll' intellect to know the Knights of Columbus Hall
things 'by means of the ideas it directed by ,District Deputy John
forms of them. Tucker.
o 480 Union,. Street New Bedford WY 9-6241 Direct Contact A beef pie supper wiIl be served v Salesmen BOWLING • SKATING
'MANUEL MONIZ JR. Here below we know God like ' with Roger Sarazin as chairman 11M CARNEY Special Arrangements For
that, by the idea we have formed assisted by Past Grand Knight ARTHUR TAVEIRA BERN'IE NISSON of Him. But in heaven, our see 'Riphard Phippen and Ernest BEN BLACK BANQUETS DEALERS ing will be direct. We shall see Glode. ARMAND'TAVEIRA Him, not "through a glass," we
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can get to. it, perhaps, is to ' think of the idea we now have of God: then try to conceive of P. O. BOX 7 ~ , FALL RIVER, MASK God Himself taking the place of the idea. Endosed is $4 Subscription Charge. Please ,That is why the very essence of the life of heaven is called the send "TbeANCHOR" for One Year' to ' Eeatlflc Vision-which means the ,seeing that causes bliss. . . -. . . Just as our knowing faculty, .Na~e .... the intellect, so our loving facul I' I , ,
ty, the will, Is to be a direct con tact with Go,d, nothing coming : Adqress .... ~
between, God in the will,' the I 111m In God, love without detour .: Post Office ;.',; ~,' .•' :' .. '.'. ~, ' '..•
eradmixture. So it will be with : " ,
every' one, of our powers-ener:- I 'C"t' T' ' , , ' . . "
'Ilislhg at Hs very fullest' upon 'its , I' 1 yor ,Ow~ ' , , . , , , . " , .', : " .. ',' ',' ,
;supreme object. A1Jd that, jf.you' ~~_'_._~·~_~:__ .~"._·"'__ .·~_._~'; •••• "IIi_". •• ~.~
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F. L. COLLINS & SONS
, INCORPORATED
1937
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
and ENGINEERS
JAMES' HI. C()LLlNS, C.E., Pres. Registered Civil' and Structu'rai Engineer
Member 'National Society Profe"ional Enllineers
,
FRANC05 I.. COLLINS" JR., lI'res. "THIOMAS K',: COLL~NS, 'See'y.
" ACADEMY BUilIDlING:
'FALL RIVER r MASS.
o
Tlftl! ANCIHOR ThIlJri., ~t. 3. 1957
Papal Encyclical Suggests Dramatic Balance in Films
9
Oppose Bingo NEW YORK (NC) - New York state's Protestant churches have opened a drive' against amending the State Constitution to lega1l2e bingo games. On No vember I). citIzens of the state will ·be asked to vote on an amendment Which would legallM the game for use by churches and charitable groups.
By William H. Mooring
On October 17, Hollywood celebrates "its Golden Jl,lbl lee.
Fifty years ag'o Colonel William Selig brought his one-camera film unit from ChIcago to Los Angeles to shoot the late Hobart Bosworth's "Count of Monte Cristo" on craft one thousandth as much as a sunny, hotel roof-top.Soon the story· prejudices and sales afterwards Cecile B, de Mille man·ship processes implanted by
and Jesse Lasky took over a barn movie peddlers of years long among the orange groves long gone. They thought Cinema was since obllterat-, spelt with an S-I-N ... ! cd by a now: Yet to invite the young leaders fading Holly- \. of Hollywood today, to study and woo d Boule-! REDS TRY TO CLOSE HER SClIOOL: Saying '~No" understand Pope Pius XII's re vard, encyclical, "Miranda Pror t~ a' Com~~nist Government is the role of 80-year old Having, been ; . ;' ;$" . 'cent sus" would be to arouse scoffers. SIster Veronica, Mother Superior of Santa Chiari School around Holly-, /<;,,:X~i' In this. however, His Holiness. for. 25 ,of r~:~.\.c."",'f.:t!.';"';i.. wood "well aware of the ... difficulties in San Marino, the world's smallest republic. She Is shown Its 50 yems, I ve :', <.$;., with some of her st'udents. San Marino recently ordered which today confro'nt those en 8 een great tJ (.,
SisterVeronica to close the convent school. The persistent
changes mostly in the building gaged In the motion picture busi of studios, the development of ness" seeks to re-dlrect movls . little nun promptly refused. ,Many of the 15,000 inhabit new machinery and the boosting producers and directors to tradI:' ants of the tiny Communist state support. the Sister and. or "busting" of new personalities, tlonal truths "on' ha·ppiness and she believes she will win in a showdown of the state versus Hollywood Is not so much a place • virtue, on sorrow and sin ... on as a state of mind and this has the social problems and human the people. NC Photo. desires." changed hardlY at all. Clearer Perspective When I first a1'l'lved in 1932 A~\fCB" 'TO Here is suggested Q pattel'11 of "King Kong" was drawing the GOODRIDGE (NC) The he is able. It has been estimated teeners. Now theY're flocking to balance; a clearer perspective such as,. might recall for Holly "oldest. altar ~Oy" i? the Crook- that most altar boys serve an a dozen other cheap, horror pic ,LA8EU.rE~ dIOcese III Mmnesota this tures. The late Jean Harlow· 1V00d, forgotten factors in the ston month is celebrating his lOth a.verage o~ eight years-from the drama of life they presume to anniversary as a Mass server. was playing the same roles Mari fIfth .01' ~lxth grade until senior lyn Monroe, Jane Mansfield and mirror for us. The Holy Fath He is Matthew A. Mutnansky. year In hIgh school. other imitators are dQ!ng today. er's words do not connote movies 71, who said he intends to keep Although ,as a boy, Matt Mut With a wink Jean Harlow once Without meaning, of which there on serving Mass just as long as nansk~ aSPl1:e~ to be an altar Like you, we're Velfl told me. "We've got to .give the are alreadY too many, but rather boy, hiS ambItIOn was denied. In wary of what W0 algLio public what it wants". To this the contrary. Realism relates to the area of Slovakia where he And to us our label Is @UBIk' Continues to CBimb was day the movie people continue good as well as to evil and If reared untll he was 14, that signature. Our food-ax the first TOLEDO (NC) For dramatic conflict, without con ffiving the public what they think privilege was reserved to the perts shop around. ~he~k fusion, were squarely balanced time in the records of the Toledo sons of some of the nobillty. It wants! and recheck, test and try diocese, more than 10,000 infant between the two, millions of peo He came to the United States Improvements and Defects any and every Item be baptisms were reported for a ple mIght get from Hollywood in 1900, but the necessity of Talkies came and stayed. Third fore it carries our stamJ}l year. The total for 1956 was earning a living and later pro dimensional movies popped out, what they hunger for: entertain of approval. And U's Ollil]"
10.077. Ten years ago, 'it was viding for his own family kept then popped out of sight again. ment to raise their hopes" not when we can match tEt\)
him fropl realizing his boyhood The wide screen took hold and cast them down; to fortify, not 7,332. quality of the best on ~h0
the The new annual edition of falsify their moral standards; to ambition, He started as an altar color films 'Increased, ImprovIng market and bring it tG many films and showing up more Inform, not inflame them; to diocesan Year Book shows that bl'y In 1947, at the age of 61. you 11 little bit lowell' Catholics in the 19 northwestern glaringly the defects of many cheer, not confuse them and to priced do we place S1ll1l:1l others. Closed-circuit TV and broaden their perception of man's Ohio counties of the diocese now a product on our sllelvell. number nearly a quarter of a destiny as a creature of God. "pay-as-you-see" movies for the ~ar
This is whlit makes Mill) million 249,279, an Increase of Ton,y PerkIns home are on Hollywood's door Stop & Shop label a Slllll'0 Min t PI. Used 7,564 over the previous year. On the same Western street step right now, but both carry a Sing. Blk, Sillg. sign of good eatlng and familiar line of goods. set, Inside the Paramount studio Converts In 1956 numben;d 1,325, a great value ••• every 1952 .75 2.65 .35 and increase of 51 over the pre This fabulous, fasclnQtinff bus grounds where he and Henry time. vious year. 1953 .70 2.85 :30 Iness of make-believe has never Fonda just made "The Tin Star," given me one dull day. but I am young Tony Perkins and I ate 1954 .75 1.10 .10 ,. still left wondering whether mo supper together, with a crowd of 1955 .45 2.50· .20 tion pictures are ever really go people called The Westerners. 1956· .55 2.50 .25 iug forward or whether the whole They are a mixed group of men. Specialists in •. and women from vai'ious trades game Is one .giant merry-go Special Floral Arran·gements. JOHN R. TWEEDIE and professions whose common round. In five years Olle has wit P.O. BOX 118 bond Is their love of the West nessed genuine, if sporadic, at o Funer~ls G Corsages NEW BEDFORD, MASS. tempts to win for Hollywood a and Its history. ,<i Weddings 0 Hospital They were going to see "The I'eputation for propulsive Ideas equal to its physical growth but Tin Still''' later. It was much' 2082 Robeson St. the giant still has the voice of a later, in fact, because theY talked fall River OS 5-7804 so much about the pioneers who midget. followed Junipero Serra and - Narrow Choice Some people deplore that the ,helped to settle the land of the movies have sold America short. Missions. Although Tony Perkins can "Narrow" might be Q better word ~ATERERS for Hollywood indisputably has hardly be called ill. Western star (he played a Quaker In "Friend narrowed Its preponderant liter The Finest in ary choice to drama'tization of ly Persuasion" and a baseball • BANQUETS. WEDDINGS. PARTIES played in "The Piersall story") il,llclt sex, organized crIme. poll Ceramics tical crookedness and domestic hIs presence in character e.s the •. COMMUNION BREAKFASTS superficialty until poor account young sheriff of "The Tin Star" Is given of American Ideals to somehow symbolized the dura peoples abroad. It has clung, bllltyof the Western film theme; the backbone of Hollywood suc with Irritating evIdence of Im Emily Perry, Prop. 1343 PLEASANT FALL RIVER mature ·showmanshIp, to Bar . cess since the movies began. Es Opp. 5t. Lawrence Church pecially since, at nearbY, tables num and Bailey methods of ad PHONE OSborne 3-7780 sat such old cowboy heroes and vertising, the only signs of cau New Bedford, Mass. tion being synonymous with v1llains as Ken Maynard, Hoot copying. "Copy what made money Gibson, Tom Keane, Rex Lease, S c last month," still Is the prevailing Bob Steele, Raymond Hatton and Guinn (Bad Boy) William's. maxim. I have never heard of a West There have been many good films, of course, as weil as a few ern film producer going broke, nor (If a cowboy star who did not great ones, but as unschooled pi i RICH IN FAME oneers who could not spell theli' retire to Q comfortable old age on , RICH IN NAME iii " his own "ranch," One marked OWn names have been replaced ~ Keep your Gold Bond handy for relief ~ change, however, has Gqtl1e over by younger men with college di ,. From the discomforts of SUNBURN. :\[ plomas, the output of movies big-scale Westerns In which non PRICKLY HEAT, POISON IVY, CHAFING. ' from which Hollywood earns Its Western stal's such as James and ATHLETE'S fOOl. GOLD BOND III thG ~ bread and butter has not been stewa'rt. Kirk Douglas, Robert fundamentally improved. 'roday Taylor, Stewart Granger, Burt ideal medicated powder 'for tha entire i: one hears more talk of art Lancaster, Van Heflin and Alan family. laka Gold Bond to the beach-on sometimes of morality. but HOl~ Ladd have lately been appearing. four vacation-on week-and visii~. v~u They've and more become more Iywood's main merchandise still .will, an[oy i~ lloothing aid the year gives little sustained evidence of like gangster pictures for violence round. either. and brutallty. Fortunately "The Tin ·Star" Lg not of this pattern. Slil in Clnell!ll!Jl ~~~l~ lllUl~~lif • Some of the movie makers rt)S exciting. intensely human, and full of action. quite reallstic complain that "censorship" stuus ~1~lNJ~'W' B<aliifi~ R@~<clJ Hollywood's growth. Others that but it Is clean and gets the Le , fF~~ij ~ij'll'@1i' OS;. fBl-5~t!#' TV competition is the bug-bear, gIon's "Family" ticket. ThIs will be good news for Tony Perkins; Neither of these hamp~l's the for war:d move of Hollvv/oo{! s~recn- teen-ago e.dDJ.I.r.er,g.
IT HAS BE GOOD 1b 8E
Boy of 10 Years Is 71
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Represent Religi~us Teachin'g Co mmunities In Diocese ,
Sr. Marie Jeanne Chanshoff, R.S.D.; Sisters of st. Dorothy, New Bedford; Sr. Mary of st. Barbara, C.S.C., Holy Cross Sisters, Attleboro; Sr. John of the Cross, O.P., Dominican Sisters, Acu~hnet; Sr.. Mary' Our Lady'of Mercy, F.M.M., Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, Fall River; S1'. Julienne. S.C.G., Grey Nuns of Quebec, Fall River; Mother St. Victoire, R.J.M.; Religious of Jesus and Mary, Fall River; S1'. M. Justine, ,C.S.B., Bernardine, " ' Sisters, New Bedford.
Irish Chaplain ToGiveTalk A formt:1' A~my Chaplain, Vet eran of the Allied Invasion at
Navy Chaplains Plan Quantico Meeting , WASHINGTON (NC) -:rotty Naval chaplains from 14 nations will traver to the United States in October to. attend a NATO ",Naval Chaplains Conference in Quantico, Va. Nineteen Catholic chaplains fi'om 10 North Atlantic, Treaty Organizatittn nations be in cluded in the group to arrive here from Pads on Oct. n. They' will spend seven days i n the Quantico area and 10 days touring the nation. Adm. Arleigh Burke, Chief of • Naval Operations, said that the Chaplain's program, "together with our moral leadership pro gram, in which many friendly nations have shown active inter est, promises to add significantly to the mutual understanding and good will among all free na- \ tions."
wlIl
DULUTH (NC) - TtlI' new Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary here has been blessed by Bishop ~homas A. Welch of Du. luth." Auxlliary Bishop Laurence A. Glenn of Duluth offered a Po'nti fical Mass at which Archbishop , William O. Brady of St. Paul, a native of Fall River, preached. The cathedral is a basilica. styled church ,with a soaring tower Visible, for many miles and an' adjoining parish administra. tion building. Construction was started in the Fall of 1954.
CHICAGO (NC) -..: The presi dent of the Mid-American Peri odical Distributors tpld felIow . ' Gall ColIins, Nancy Egan, Caro wholesalers h,ere that unless theY lyn Souza, Mary Tavares' and refuse to distribute filthy litera Marylou Tl'eadup at st. Lukes ture, "obscenity and trash wlll Hospital, New Bedford; Janice 'flourish." DesRosiers and Marguerite Mun Charles Levy Jr., urged 650 ,dorf are' at St: Luke's as Lab 'Technicians; Albert Jaros, at the delegates at the association's Carney, Boston. George Marcelli three-day convention to work no is attending Kenyon Business with churches, police depart .' School. ments and civic bodies to main At its first meeting, the Mon signor McKeon Debating, Club tain "a sensible standard of de-' elected as President, Robert Law-' cent iiterat.ure" in theIr com munities.
11'1' ,'59; Vice-President-Treasur er, Marilyn Young; Secretary, . The wholesaler m'ay lose money
SUMMER STREET Roseanne Thomas both '58. The by eliminating bad material, ad., ,
mitted Mr: Levy, who is presi
Club is under the direction of At torney Maurice F. Downey, Holy dent of the Charles Levy Circu
Famlly, Class of 19,47, Boston' lating Company, described as the
591 SUMMER ST. College, and Harvard Law School world's I a l' g I' S t wholesaler of periodicals. graduate. Recently the Club be "But control over obscenity or ' New Bedford WY 3- ~ 346 came a member of the Narragan just' plain trash in periodicals sett Debatipg League. All Bundles Insured While mlist lie' primarlly in the whole in Our PossessIon saler's hands," he said. Peddle Line LINZ, Austria (NC)-Czecho~ slovakia's Ministry of Education has _tepped up its anti-religious campaign. It has told secondary teachers to concentrate on in instilling the doctrine of atheistic communism. ' It is also ri.:ported that the mini~try urged headmasters of O~l the secondary schools to see to it SALES ....... S~RVICE - 'NSTAU.Ar'ON that "ignorance" and "supersti ,1jon" vanish from classrooms and MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURFEE ST., fAILU. RiVER that the students' minds "be in fluenced with political and scien tific knowledge."
SpotlightingO.urSchools HOLYFAMI,LY HIGH, NEW BEDFORD
Anzio, wiil speak to the st. John Berchmans Society, Fall River, Wednesday night.. Rev. Columcille MacSweeney, a native of Spiddal County, Gal way, Ireland, received his edu cation in Irish seminaries and at the Catholic Institute in Paris, where he was ordained. He served as a chaplain with the Irish Army and the American Eighth Army during World War II. It was as a chaplain with the Eighth ,Army that Father Mac Sweeney participated in the beachhead invasion at Anzio. Since the war the Irish priest has served seven years in the foreign missions at Mauritius Island in'the Indian 0llea11. At present he is temporarily s tat ion e d at Sacred Heart Church, Fall River. '
New Cathedral
Wholesalers Can Clean Up Books
Graduates in College
Holy Famlly is represented in many colleges, universities and' nursing schools this Fall by members of the 1957 "graduating class. A check reveals Marie Arabasz is eni'olled at Catholic University; Mary Beth Mosher at Emmanuel College; Patricia O'Leary at Salve Regina College; Lynda Boyle at Boston College; Donald Aspden and Maureen McCarthy at the University of Massachusetts. ' Kathleen Burke, . Claire Chausse and Neal" Wall at Fr'dgewater State Teachers Col lege; Mary Lou Horne at Fram ingham Teachers College; Daniel' Paradis at Dartmouth; Robert Surprenant at Northeastern; Florence Dewhurst, Patricia'Har rington, Nancy Leach, Carol. Munay at Mercy College. Patricia Quinn at Mt. st. ViI! cent College, Halifax; Rosemary Burke at Mt. Ida Junior College; Richard Moreau, Rona,ld st, Ge lai~ and Robert Tweedie at the Massachusetts School of Pharm acy; Andre Cyr, Kevin Dawson, Robert Lamothe, Thomas Mello, Raymond Millette, George Rog ers, Cynthia Ver'cellone and Paul Wilson at New Bedford Textile Institute. Six Schools of NU1'sing are rep , resented. Ann Aylward, Claudette Dufreane, Joan Galligan, Joan Manha, Rosemarie Motta, and , Rosemary Norton are enrolled at st. Anne's Hospital; Fall River; Margaret Moore, Catherine Pen dergast, and Margaret Thorn ton at St. Elizabeth's Hosptial, Boston; Jean Galligan at Car ney; Margaret Tomlinson at New England Deaconess, Boston; Mary Jo Harney at Union Hospi tal, ,FalJ.,River B.!lTbara,Bancroft, Jeanne Beaupre,. Helen' Bram-' welI, Joyce Brodeur;Susan Burke,
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Over 600 Nuns at Liturgical Workshop
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Fall River
Sr. William Marie, S.U.S.C., Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, Fall River; Sr. Gertrude of Flanders, SS.CC., ~acred Hearts Sisters, Fairhaven; Sr. M. Nicodema, F.S.S.J., Felician Sisters, Fall River; Sr. Mathilde Joseph, S.S.J., Sisters of St. Joseph, New Bedford; Sr. Mary Carolyn, RS.M., Sis~ tel's of Mercy, Fall River; Sr. Anne Elizabeth, S.U.S.C., Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, No. Attleboro.
Workshop Continued from Page One
Bishop's Night Next Tuesday
Plan Field Day At Nanaquaket
ognlzed authority on liturgical <.> music. Mrs. David W. Boland, gen The Catholic Woman's Club of As a basis for the program, Dr. Fall River will hold Us annual eral chairman, announces the Lyder presented to the te6chers reception in honor of Most Second annual Holy Union Field Day and Bazaar for the benefit of in the first part of her program a Reverend Bishop James L. Con the Sisters of the Holy, Union of detailed outline for the teaching nolly at 8 next Tuesday night. the Sacred Hearts, wlll be held of modem music. She stressed in the Sacred Heart SChool Audi from 10 to 5 Se.turday at St. James Convent, Nanaquaket, particularly the Importance of torium. Tiverton. developing In the children "hear A concert will be presented by Mrs. Thomas F. DiNucci of ing eyes and seeing ears". She emphasized that the children Christopher Lynch, brilliant Irish Fall River and Winifred Laugh lin of Taunton are co-chairmen. ehould know music structure so tenor, and Volya Cossack, out Mrs. Richard J. Leary, gym well that when they hear a musi standing young pianist. Mr. nasium . Instructor at the Sacred eal composition they can Imagi Lynch, a protege of the. ·great Hearts Academy In Fall River, natively see the page of the music, and that when they see a John McCormack, is well known has organized and will supervise the field relay races. StUdents to American. radio and television page of music they can Imagina . tively heal' the music playing. audiences for his many appear- of the fourth through the eighth In treating of the Plain Chant ances on the "Voice of- Firestone" grades in schools conducted by of the Church. Dr. Lyder stressed programs. Miss Cossack has been the Holy Union group In Taun particularly that the text is the acclaimed both In this country ton, Tiverton, Portsmouth and Fall River, will compete. An most Important part of the music. and In Europe for her musician award will be presented the This Is In contrast to modem ship and technical excellence. school scoring the most points. music where melody Is the domi The hospitality committee Booth chairmen are: nant element. Plain Chant Is comprises Mrs. David W. Boland, Mrs. Thomas F. McCabe, prayerful music and she con Mrs. Hector E. Barrette, Mrs. aprons and handkles; Mrs. Al stantly Illustrated this by play Francis V. Carey, Mrs. John J. ing the recorded music of the Crawford Jr., Mrs. Thomas J. bert Laughlin, country store; Miss Claire Leddy, 'hand-knits Monks of Solesme, Internation Fleming, Mrs. Romeo McCallum, and crochet; Mrs. Joseph Fer ally renowned for their Interpre Mrs. John C. Mullaly, Mrs. Tim nandes, green thumb. tation of Gregorian Chant. . othy J. Murphy, Mrs. Russell C. Mrs. Robert Nagle, cakes; Mrs. A feature of the afternoon was Ouellette, Mrs. Alfred J. Roy, and Mary L. O'Sullivan. and Mrs. the formation of a GOO-voice Mrs. J. Joseph Welch. Dominic Corrigan, Christmas choir of the teachers. Dr. Lyder A coffee hour will follow the guided them through parts of.the concert under the direction of gifts; Mrs. Raymond Phillips, dolls; Mrs. R. J. Ashereio, novel LX and XI Masses of the Gre Mrs. W. Arthur Leary. ties. gorian Chant. Plans were made Mrs. Hugh J. Golden, religious to have this choir sing the open articles; Miss Catherine McKeon, ing Mass at the next Convention Buddhists Propose candy; Mrs. Henry J. Miller, of the Catholic Teachers Asso National Schools white elephant; Miss Mary E. Di ciation In Fall River In the KANDY, Ceylon (NC)-Cey Nucci. grab bags and Miss Mary Spring. ll_.ese Education Minister W. E, Boland. special prizes. The Workshop was sponsored Mrs. William P. Crawford and Dahanayake stated 'that no has by the Catholic Teachers Asso Mrs. Elmer Stafford, Jr. will ty government action will be ciation of the Diocese of Fall . serve as co-chairm~n of the River. The Rev. Edward J. Gor taken on Buddhist pi:oposals Luncheon committee. man, A.M.,LL/D., Superintendent that Catholic schools be nation of Diocesan Schools. presided. NEW FOUNDATION alized. GOREBRIDGE, Scotland (NC) The proposal has been put for -The first permament founda It(l)yrrnen Should Take wm;d by the Buddhist Commis tion of the Congregation of Holy DlI'Ilterest in Schools Cross has been opened h~re by sion, which calls for nationaliza CINCINATTI (NC) - Catholic Archbishop Gordon J. Gray of lo.ymen ought to take a "keen tion by next January of all prl St. Andrews and Edinburgh. vaw schools receiving govern interest" in public schools and Superior of the new house, their teachers, as well as In ment ald. Although the commis which will serve as it retreat "Catholic education at all levels." sion Is an unofficial body; its house fOl' men and boys and as Father Edward B.· Rooney. report has the backing of the a juniorate for boys aspiring to S. J., head of he Jesuit Educa i'uling People's United Front enter the congregation, is Father tional Association In the United coalition. Willian1 Purcell, c;.S.C.· States, oUered this counsel. He cited the wQrds· of Father John B. Janssens, S.J., Superior General of the JeSUits, who said: . "In the mind of St. Ignatius of Loyola, worthwhile Christians must not only be good (Ind' cuI tlL"d persons, but, above all, men (,f Christian action, with their SlY• .IJAMES CONVENT GROUNDS attention riveted on the majesty of God and on the honorable D\!A~A.Ql\,D.Ai{IE1T, ll'~\fIE~1i'ON, ~.B. service of their fellow men." Father·Rooney said one of the @(C'l!''- SF 1957 ~ @g@@ ~oMo \f@ 5)g@(D) ~oMo purposes <rt'J a Jesuit high school i~ to develop a knowledge and Pllm::I:S G&:.I!.@IU I!.l!.llN\CIXlIE©N appreciation of "our American herjtaee of democracy."
'HOLY UNION. ANNUAL \
FIELD DAY &. BAZAAR
Fall River Council Women Plan Recol1ection Night Plans for a night of recollec tion on Oct. 24 at St. Jean Bap tiste Church, Fall River, have been completed by· District One officers of the Fall River Council of Catholic Women. Mrs. Theo phane Lavoie, Spiritual Develop ment chairman for the district, outlined arrangements for the meeting, open to all afflllated groups of the area. Other activities scheduled un der the direction of Mrs. Frederic Tuttle, District president. Includ ed a celebration of Catholl!? Youth Week in October, to be held in conjunction with the opening of the Fall River Girls' CYO Center, and a retreat at Cathedral Camp. East Freetown, to be held this week-end. The retreat wlll be climaxed with a supper for members of the diocesan Retreat League. with Bishop Connolly present. Any woman of the diocese may make the retreat and join the Retreat
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League. Further Information mRY be.obtained fro~n Mrs. Tuttle at 851 Middle Street, Fall River, OSborne 4-9858. Miss Ruth McArdle, District chairman of discussion groups, presented plans for a Spring demonstration by participating guilds.
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Spotlighting Our Schools SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY, FALL RIYER
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head committees ot students at th~ Field Day and Penny Sale at
ViiI! ANCHOR ·111~,.., Oct. J,1I957
-
Per.ry; Vice President, Mary Louise Andrews. Sophomore.: President, Alice Oliveira; Vice Pre sid e n t, Claire Reinhardt. Freshmen:. Susan Pepler, Prest" dent and Sally Ann Mulhern. Vice President. President and <, Vice President of the Children of Mary ~odality are Catherine Nor-' ri8 and Anne Fitzgerald, respec tively. Mary Agnes Caron 11 secretarY~Treasurer and Marcel la _ Fleming and Ann Farley. sacristans. < Sandra Mandeville and .Elaino Daniels will represent the Acad emy i1'1 The Standard Time. Th~ater of the Air, as an nouncers.
A cast of juniors recently pre Nanaqua~~t. se?lted a radio skit envolving the The Rosary Club held its lirst portrayal of ShaKespeare's Mac'" mee~ing September 20. This club, beth for their classmates. Mac comprised entirely- of seniors, re brth-:' was played' by Rita Faria, cited the' RosarY'in the convent while Genievieve Frank took the I;arden before the stat,ue of Our part of Lady Macbeth. Mary Lou Mother of Fail' Love. The presid Simcoe portrayed Duncan, king of Scotland while Theresa ing officers are Claire Tonry and Gomes, Judith Jolmson,' and Jacqueline Bouchard. , Janice Wojcik staged the parts JESUS-MARY ACADEMY, ot the three witches. FALL RIVER A creative writing project con The importance of youth's.re eucted in connection with tile sponsibility as lay apostolate, seniors' study of Chaucer's Can terbury :fales yielded original was stressed by Rev. 'Matthew pr...logues in Chaucer's style SUllivan, SS,CC., St. Joseph's DOMINWAN ACADEMY.
FALL IIUVER
basp.d on pilgrimages of modern Church, Fairhaven, at the stu life. Honorable mention was giv The Sodality of Our Lady held en the foIlowing students: Vivian dents' retreat. its first general meeting of the The faculty in conjunction new school year. The meeting was Rocha, Leslie Salvo, and Rita Louise Souza for their portraYal with the members of. the' Ma conducted by senior officers: pre of a literary pilgrimage; Mar donna Chapter tOf the Honor So- . tect, Claire Sinotte; vice-prefect, ceIla Harrington, Barbara Lima, ciety elected Lorraine St. Georg Claire Reilly; secretary, Hannah Fernanda Carreiro, and Sheila es, class '58, as school president Sullivan; treasurer, Elizabeth Cronan for their accurate depic and Cecile Nadeau, class '58, as Menard. Rev. Donald E. Be~ tion of a pilgrimage to a reli vice-president. .1anger is director of the group. gious shrine; and Ann Delaney, Class officers who were nomi~ Unit leaders, whose duties will' Catherine Costa, Mariette Char nated are: Seniors, President. begin within the next 'Neek, are: Jeanine Babin; 'Vice-president, . Catherine Perry, Saint John's est, for their rendition of a pro Jacqueline Caron; Secretary; Ce logue to an athletic event. senior unit; Mildred Midura, Round and square dancing . cUe Nadeau and Treasurer, Flor Saint Paul's jupior unit; Agnes classes have been organized by ence Heon. Gallagher, Saint Matthew's' Juniors: 'President, Pauline sophomore unit. It was an Mrs. Mary Leary with Lois Souza, Gagnon; Vice-president, Jean ·a senior, as assistant instl'uctor. nounced that a probation class of Pauli£le Dumas was chosen nette Gamache; Secretary, Claire new candidates will be organized head cheerleader for the Red Harrison and Treasure'r, Colette in February. Plans were inaugu ' Team and Mariette Charest for Roberts. rated for a Holy Hour on Mon Sophomores: President, Patr!- . day. Feast of Our Lady of the St. Agnes Team.' . Phoebe Champoux, a junior, cia LaFleur; Vice-President, Pau Rosary. prim!1ry patroness of the line Beaulieu; Secretary, JaCqUe group. 11as been electcd head-cheerlead er of the Kays, the basketbaIl line LeComte and Treasurer. Howdy Week at Dominican saw . team of St. Catherine's Church, Pauline Boy. alI. high school students sporting . Grade 8: President, Claudette identification tags be,aring the Little Compton. Senior Agnes Crombie provided Beaulieu: Vice-president, Phyl~ colors of the yea.rbook theme. An lis McMillan; Secretary, Jean autograph contest, one of the entertainment for the member ship' teas of both St. Joseph's nine Picard and Treasurer, Joan features of the week, was de Bernier. signed to help freshmen get ac anti st. Mary's Guilds. Mistress of Ceremonies who quainted with upper classmen. The film, Macbeth, l'eleased by wCJ'e nominated for the various The· prize was awarded fresh Hallmark Hall of Fame and star classes' are: Diane Duquette, man student councillor Margaret ring ,Judith Anderson and Maur Pauline LeBoeuf, Georgette . Medeiros, member of Santo ice Evans will be shown tomor Nunes and, Claire Durand. i'ow to seniors and juniors who Christo parish. At ·the organization meeting of· have recently made a study of MOUNT, ST. MARY'S; the Student Council. officers for the play. FALL RIVER the year were elected: president, Chosen as officers of the De vice-president, Members of .the orchestra . Claire . Reilly; brabant Debating team are the elected the follOWing students as Claire Sinotte; secretarY,Elaine tollowing seniors: Barbara Le Maltais; treasurer, Barbara Ar vesque, president; Mary' Lou officers: Gertrude Murphy, pres ruda. . ident; Eleanor Bedard, vice pres O'Neil, vice-president; and sec Dominican Student Council is ident; Rosalie Stowick, secretary; 'retary-treasurer Mary Beth Trai Jacqueline Costa, treasurer. . a . representative body, every nor. Marie Roberts, Sheila Cro Glee Club officers are: Mary homeroom being represented by nan and Gale Martin are also Lomax, president; Nan Price,' an ele~ted delegate as well as the senior members of the team. class president. This year's gl'oup secretary; Janice Blake, treas l\'ISGR. CO)'LE HIGH,
includes the follOWing: Muriel urer. l'AUNTON
At the general session of the . Boutin, Noella Beaulieu;' Anne ·The next meeting of the Alum Narragansett Debating League,. Marie OuelIet~, Sheila D~Moura, . ni Association will be. held De La Salle Academy was chosen Louise Pelleiter. Judith Dias, 'rhursday, Oct. 24.' President as president; Durfee High, vice Claire Audet, Theresa Bisson, Paul Cayer requests all alumni president, and Coyle High, secre~ Sharon Vermette, Diane Larrivee, to communicate with the Alumni tary. This meeting was held at Beverly Rebello, Donna Silvia, Muriel. Cote, Margaret' Mederios Associatioll'at 61 S~mmer StI;eet, Mt. St. Mary Acadeiny with' re Taunton, giving notice of their presentatives attending _from and Di~ll1e Ross. Meeting every Monday aft present addresses. , Prevost High, Coyle High, Domi A Fall dance will be held at nican Academy, Sacred Hearts ernoon, the· council aims to de the school on Saturday, Oct. 19 Academy, De La SaUe Academy. velop a s'£Ilse of responsibility, to by the Alumni Association. Mount St. Mary Academy, Holy toster good student-teacher re Henry Griffin has been named . Family High, St. Catherine's lationships, 'to provide a forum Academy, Attleboro High, Rogers for student expression, and to 9.S coach of the school debating assist the ·faculty through the team for the current school .year. High, and New Bedford High. Athletic Association of the services of various committees. SAINT MARY'S HI811 SCHOOL, Academy sponsored a supper, The Alumnae Association will TAUNTON open t'o the publlc, at 6:30 Wed ..have the annUl:il Mother-Baby The senior class held a cake. nesday. Oct. 2', in tile academy program next Sunday in tile school auditorium. sale September 29, the proceeds auditorium and cafeteria. Pro going to their yearbook. under ceeds are for the benefit of. the ·th_ direction of Jucl.ith Megan, athletic association; Miss Jane PREVO~T HIGH SCHOOL,
business r;nanager of the Corona. Russell, New Bedford, is coach of FALL RIVER
Appointed to serve as officers The officers of the 'Mission the association with Sister 'Mary Club are: Elise Cayer, president; Daniels will represent the Acado. to the Sodality of Mary are Nola Burgoin, vice-president; Next Tuesday members '-of the Prefect Raymond Robillard and Vice-Prefect Richard Desrosiers Elaine Van Zandt. secretary; and seniO!' class will sponsor .:an 'ac Mary Ellen Parker, .treasurer. quaintance party for the fl;esh-' together with Richard Gendreau ail Secretary and Robert Trem ·The club is in c!)arge of coIlect man class in the academy audi ing stamps and cards for the torium. Senior class officers 'and .bby as Treasurer. , Also elected were the officel:s missions.In Africa and will take sodality offIcers are in charge' of of the Debating ·Team. Paul on; a special meaning this year, arrangements. . as': Sister Blanche Agnes, who Officers of the Forensic~ Cllib Gosselin as Prestdent, Peter Lus tallght many of the students are Carole Mattimore.· president;; sier. Secretary and Ronald Gag . when they were in the first MaryB u t 1e r, vice .presldent; non. Librarian.' Senior class officials who were Marilyn Kennedy. secretary; e:l'llde, has recently gone to Afri Margaret·.Gl~iffi~l,treasurer. . elected are the following: Presi ca':for mission·work. ' dent. Paul Gosselin: Vice';Presi Xhe Catholic Action Club {JUi dent, Robert Vincelette; Secre cers" are; Patricia Cooper,presi SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY. tary. Roger Raymond and Treasdent; Maureen Kiley, vic~-presi- FAIlRHA.!JEN·:. . ." . dent; Barbara CuPak, secretary; Class officials elected £91' the - urer. Norman· Phenix:
Michael McPartland, class of
and Elizabeth Carbonneau. treas-' year are: Seniors. Cathel.'ine ·N<!r:':' wet'. They will conduct the drive 'fis,' ~resident: Anne Fltzget'a1d, '57, has entered. ·the Card-inal
O'Connell Seminary in Jama[ca
V.ice .President,and Gene G9;lla for "Catholic magazines and lit Plal.ns, wl'1ere .he wUl stud.1 tor
ertitufe .in 'tlie schoo1. ,. gallon, secreta.rf";T.{'easw:&~.·." .
· ..On Saturday ,tlJ,c' se~liors' ~~J.!. JunlOl;s:' Preslderit, Katilleeu the prlcsthood.
Miss Phyllis Powell and Miss Claire Nault are shown boarding an Air France plane at Logan Airpoit: ~oston, as they depart -for Paris to enter the Novitiate of the Sisters of the Pre sentation of the Blessed VirginMary who staff st. Anne's Hospital in Fall River. ST. ANNE HOSPITAL GRADUATES:
De
SD!veroJubi~ee DURHAM (NC)-Father J. Desmond O'Connor, one-time na tional chaplain of the National Newman Cl~b Federation and 1l0W a pastor here, has marked the 25th anniversary of his ordi r.ation. Father O'Connor was tM first chaplain to Catholic stu cents at the, University of ·New HlUlipshire.
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Davenport (Catholic Messengeli'
page, we saw a picture of two jubilant white players on the Mil waukee Braves' baseball t 6 a m pouring pin k il:hampagne over the head of a Neg r 0 team-' mate Hen l' y Aaron. whose 11th - inn i n g home run in a game with St. Louis oh a d !Clinched the National League pennant for the Braves. Why is it that a Negro in Little Rock, Arkansas, is considered less than human, while a Negro in Milwaukee is treated as a hero and, sports-wise in this situation liS perhaps a little super-human? It isn't just the geography in volved. I don't think Northern whites are any more honorable than are Southern whites. Cicero is in Illlnois, not in Arkansas; Levittown is in Pennsylvania, not Louisiana; and Trumbull Park is in phicago, not Birmingham. Get Along Fine One of Negro Hank Aaron's teammates on the Braves is 8 white boy. Joe 'Adcock, who was born and raised in Louisiana, and the two apparently get along just fine on the baseball team. Anyone who tries to simplify the racial issue in this country is bound to oversimplify it, that is to say he is bound to distort It. But can we discover anything of value from the fact that a South ern white boy like Joe Adcock and It Southern Negro like Henry Aaron hav,e learned how to work and play together like two human beings? Professional baseball - and football, too, for that matter has proved two things. First" it has proved that once a white person really gets to know a Negro, ne begins to see the Negro as a person, not as a Ne gro. He begins to understand that the Negro, like the white, has human anxieties, ambitions and' 5ensibilities; that the Negro, like the white, is subject to all the human emotions - love and anger and sorrow and jo~; that, in a word, the Negroes and the whites are "all in the same boat" <of human existence. The white man can, of course, learn this simple truth notionally, from textbooks or from teachers, re ligious or secular, but, for ~any. real assent to this truth only comes from living and working with Negroes. Ability Only Test Second, interracial sports have' proved that 'ability) not skin color, is the only test of a man's practical value, his cash value, if you please, to a team. HeBry Aaron's crucial home run meant about $10,000 extra in World Series money for each man on the Milwaukee baseball team this year. I know that there are some race bigots - North and South - who wouldn't take a million dollars to play alongside a Negro. But the majority of men. and so far as I know. every major league ball-player have 'enough com monsense to waive. for their OWn pocketbook, whatever racial an tipathies they may have. And as matters work out, usually these' antipathies do not return because, of the first principle, above that knowledge and experience dis solve fear and bigotrY. Sports, of course, is not the
armed forces have virt~allY wiped out. segregation barriers. Here, agam, the white soldier has dis covered the absurdity of nurtur ing ra~e prejudice against an otber who is putting his own life on the llne for the good of the platoon or squadron Qf company or regiment. Happy Results " Federal civil service has abol ished race segregation with simi lar happy results. Several years ago I had an ,in teresting talk with a Federal bu rea\.! chief from Washington who told me that during the war a number of Negro girls were hired' to work in the Pentagon as clerks and clerk-typists. On'e white girl in this man's bureau stormed into his office, informed him that she was from Virginia and would never under any circumstances consent to work alongside the Negro girl whose desk was ad jacent to hers. The bureau chief shrugged his shoulders and polltely advised the girl from Virginia that the deci sion to work or not to work was entirely up to her. The white girl walked out and stayed away from her j,ob for three days, then. because she needed to eat, 're turned sullenly to her desk. Like Other Girls Three months later, the white girl voluntarily walked into the chief's office, apologized for her earlier behavior and said that Allee. the little Negro girl was -surprise!-just like the other girls. What is more she had grown quite fond of Alice and the two were more than just co w 0 l' k e l' s, they had become friends.' 'Knowledge is not, of course. the dissolvent of every interracial tension. Virtue, natural and theo logical. is indispensable. But vir tue without knowledge has an uphill struggle and, judging by current newspaper headlines, the struggle. for many people, is not yet finished. In some sophisticated and lib eral circles, sports is looked down upon with more than haughty mien. Some of our sophisticates. who are sincerely upset by the In terracial violence. might look with a more docile eye upon the de facto interracial peace along the sports front.
More lay Teachen Answer to Pro!b>Uem BELLEVILLE (NC) Lay teachers in the e I erne n t a l' y school of the Belleville diocese now make up approximately 25 per cent of the entire teaching staff, , There are 105 lay teachers this year in a teaching staff which totals 451. In 1947 there were 'only, seven lay teachers assisting the various teaching Sisters. Neb l' ask a's archdiocese of Omaha reported last week that 28.5 per cent of its schools are staffed by lay teachers.
Scott Tombstone ST. LOUIS (NC) - Dred Scott, the Negro slave who helped to precipitate the Supreme Court decision that carries his name, finally has a tombstone. ,' The .slave•. whose trial took place in 1855-56 (the decision was given in 1857>.. has, been. buried for years in ,an unmarked grave in Calvary Cemetery here. Legend has it that ~e became a Catholic before his ,death 99 years ago, in 1858. "
1
~~~~"",J:;
Jay IDOllllalliill M!cJi))orrnallqJl
. ,1'he pict~res of interracial activity seen in the' na tIon s press ~hI~ past week o~ two have not all been tragic. I got to thmkmg ab?ut ~hlS the oth,er night when the front page of one dally newspaper showed a white man in Little Rock Arkansas . , kicki.ng a Negro in the chest, only area in American llfe where and m that same edition of whites and Negroes have learned the paper, on the sports to llve together peaceably. The
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A'lL'TlLlEBOIJ.? Cll!UR~~ PlLANS ~EW SCHOOL BUILDING: Work is underway o~
new tw~-classIOom bUIldmg for kmdergarten pupils at the Holy Ghost Church school
m Attleboro.. The ,new struct~re, which will cost in excess of $25,000, will accommo
date approxImately. 1~0 pupIls. Rev. John F. Laughlin is pastor. Sister Joan of Arc,
a ~~mb~r of the relIgIOUS community of the Mission!iry Servants of the Most Blessed
Tnmty, IS in charge of the school. .
~
..
Ke~!11edy
Community Youth Center Dedicated
Very Rev. Hugh A.' Gallagher.
The former ambassador 'men pastor of St. James Church, and
tioned his heroic son only briefly. Connolly emphasized the train Rev. Louis E. Prevost, pastor of admitting that he is overcome ing for leadership that wj]) be ,available for young people in th'e with emotion when he thinks or St. Joseph Church. Very Rev. Humberto S. Me Center through working together' tries to talk about the young deiros, chancellor of the Diocese. Navar lIelltenant who gave his in community and spiritmtl afand, Rev. John P. Driscoll. secre Jife for his country in World War fairs. / The philanthropy of Mr. and n. He said New Bedford has a tary to the Bishop. were mastel's warm place in his heart and he of ceremonies. Mrs. Kennedy, the Bishop point thanked all for coming. In the procession led by Rev. ed out, has been characterized by Rev. Leo T. Sullivan, Diocesan John J. Murphy of St. Lawrence the peace of soul they have ex Director for the Catholic Youth Church as cross bearer were Rev. tended to' others who need help Organization, said the functional J. Normand Hardy of St. Anne's the most. Recalling that Mr. purposes of the building have a Church and Rev. Manuel An Kennedy had proposed the com close connection with the purpose drade of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel munity center.project to him five of the church-to develop the Church, holy water bearer; Rev. yeal;S ago, the Bishop said it image of Christ in the souls of Henry'B. Munroe of Holy Name seemed at the time too expensive. youth. Church, mitre bearer; Rev. An Charity however, he saia, has . Faith Will Dominate drew Jussaume of St. Therese a chain reaction. One door opens The faith we profess, Father Church, crozier bearer. and 10 others are opened. God in Sullivan said, will be carried out Items in Cornerstone His goodness touches the hearts in all phases ot ,our life, cultural. Placed in a sealed copper box of laymen as He inspires priests civic and social, by the people encIosed behind the cornerstone and religious., Laymen blessed who will be in charge of the were copies of the Anchor, The with material goods are inspired Center. New Bedford Standard-Times to give of their substance to the Prior to the speaking program the issue of the Saturday Evenln~ unfortunate. Bishop CO,nnolly and Mr. Ken~ Post containing a feature on the The Bishop expressed confi nedy stood by as Bernard Cabral Kennedy family. and a copy of dence that a logical effort can and, Ronald Perry, members of the Congressional Record con be made to further the work for Boy Scout Troop 17 of St. John's taining Senator John F. Ken exceptional children, begun re Church, unveiled a beautiful 011 nedy's address on Youth Week. cently in Fall River, to other painting of Lieutenant Kennedy Also a message on youth by parts of the .Diocese. in the foyer of the buiJding. The Pope Pius XII, a photograph of . Grateful to Kennedys Bishop, then blessed and laid the' Bishop Connolly and his message ' Expressing his gratitude to the cornerstone and blessed the ex on youth, statues of St. Joseph Kennedy family, the Bishop terior of the structure. Inside the and St. Rose of Lima, patrons of blessed the memory 'of Lt. Ken main entrance' he blessed the Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy. nedy and sai't he would' keep crucifix and placed it on the Also enclosed were medals of precious in his heart these par lobby wall facing, the entrance. the Blessed Virgin, St. Michael, ' ents and their children for their Rt. Rev. Msgr. James J. Ger St. John Berchmans, St. John generosity and sacrifices that rard, V.G., pastor of St. John the Bosco, St. Dominic Savio and St.. others may benefit. Baptist Church, headed the large Maria Goretti, all special patrons In brief remarks Mr. Kennedy group of clergy present, which of youth. noted that his appearance at the included Very Rev. Leonard J. Names of the first youth ad- ' dedication of a new school in Daley, Dean' of Barnstable Coun visors to serve in the Center, a Hyde Park in memory of his ty and pastor of St. Francis ,program of activities planned for ' son the previous week was his Xavier Church, 'Hyannis, the the ensuing year, and 1957 coins first public appearance, in six Kennedy family parish. were also enclosed. ' years. He said that the satisfac Attend Bishop The new building was open for tion he gets from seeing the new Chaplains to the Bishop were inspection by the public Sunday.. institution and the realization of
all the good it can do more than
justifies all that the Kennedy
family has done for other people.
Foundation Requires Effort
Asserting that requests for I help, particularly for children. 880 SOUTH MAIN ST. - FALL R~VER come constantly to the Founda
tion, Mr. Kennedy said it is im..;
possible to do all they would like
to do, Operation of the Founda
tion, he said, requires more time
and effort than his business en
Safety-rested Used Cars .0 terprises. It is a great satisfac tion, he said, when they have Telep&1lcliI11Ie OSborne 8-5236 men like Bishop Connolly to car
ry o¥t their wishes.
Continued From Page One
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THE' ANCHORThun., Oct. 3, 1957
Schoo~'
Continued from Page One
OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, NEW BEDFORD Mrs. Mary Galvin and Mrs. Maria L. Gomes, co-chairmen, w!ll'head the following commit tee for eo cake sale, slated fOl; Sun day morning, in the church hall after all masses. Committee comprises: Mrs. Mary Alfama', Mrs. Julia Gomes, Mrs. David Hawk, Mrs. Paul Grace, Mrs. Mary Jacintho and Mrs. Manual Cabral. Proceeds of this sale will be used for the church bullding fund. OUR LADY OF GRACE, WESTPORT Mrs. Lorraine Emond, Presi dent of the CatholicWo~en's Guild, announces that the Spir Itual Development Committee will sponsor a living Rosary at 7 Sunday night, Oct. 6, in com memoration of the Confraternity of the Holy Rosary Sunday. . An invitation to take part in the ceremony, is extended to the Holy Name Society, the Teen Age Club and all members of the parish.' . After benediction. a coffee hour w!ll take· place in the par ish hall, together with acceptance of new members.
•
SACRED HEART, ATTLEBORO Twelve new members have been accepted by the SQcred Heart Cub Scouts, making the total membership 36. Plans are underway for a Hal lowe'en Party to be held in .the near future with prizes to be awarded for 'the funniest and most original costumes. ST. THERESA, SOUTH ATTLEBORO Mrs. John Powers, President of the Confraternity of Christian . Mothers today announced a cake sale w!ll be held Octobel: 6 in toe church hall after all masses. Chairman is Mrs. Helen Myette Plans for a Christmas sale, scheduled for November are be ing formed. The group will meet ~. again on Monday, October 21 in the church hall.
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ST. pAUL'S, TAUNTON The annual rummage sale sponsored by the Catholic Wom en's Gulld will be held at the Legion Hall on Cedar Street to morrow from 10 to 4. Mrs.' Peter 'McClellan is chairman.
.. On Thursday, Oct. 10, the in
stallation of officers w1l1 be held.
The new slate of officers consists
of Mrs. Thomas Unsworth as
President, Miss Eileen Henchy,
Vice President, Mrs. Oscar Hed
berg, Secretary, and Miss Mildred
O'Connor, Treasurer. SerVing on the Board, of Direc tors are Miss Helen Shove; Mrs. Lorraine Place; Mrs. Louise Mc Carty, MrS. Anna Hudson and Mrs. Loretta Conroy. The committee in charge of installation night comprises Mrs. Ann Rebello, Chairman., and Mrs. Rose White, co-chairman. ST. JOSEPH'S, ATTLEBORO A banquet scheduled at 6:30 next Tuesday night heads the agenda for the season 1957-58 planned by the Ladies of St. Anne. Corporate communion will be held Sunday morning, OCt. 20. Officers and committee mem bers chosen are: Chaplain. Rev. Ubalde DenaUlt'; Honorary Presi dent, Mrs. Joseph Nadeau, Presi dent, Mrs. Juliette Gaudreauj First Vice President, Mrs. Ar mand Pinault; Second Vice Pres ident, Mrs. Adelard Gagnon; Seo retary, ,Mrs. Ernest Charlebois and Treasurer, Mrs. JuHen Forget. Counsellors: Mrs. Francis Te treault, Mrs. Henry Flynn, Mrs. Frederick Poirier and Mrs. Ro meo Michel. In charge of the slclt Is Mrs,
Ovila Tondreau; Sacristy, Mrs. Herbert Lavigueur; Mistress of ceremony, Mrs. Armand B?ucher; Publicity, Mrs. Albert Mousseau and Banner Holder, Mrs. Ernest Charlebois. Bearers: Mrs. Joseph Doucette, Mrs. Cam1l1e Dudemaine, Mrs.. Clara Croteau, Mrs. Ephraim Bachand; Mrs. Amedee Marien. Mrs. Joseph Nadeau, and Mrs. Francis Tondreau. . Special Committee: Mrs. Ar mand Boucher, Mrs. Mark Mer cier, Mrs. Jean Fortin, Mrs. Maurice Labbe and Mrs. Llllian Devaney. . OUR LADY OF LOURDES, . TAUNTON A candlelight procession, with recitation of the Rosary w1l1 take place, Saturday night at 8. from the church to, the outdoor shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes, followed b~' sermon and Benediction. Boy" Scout, and Girl Scout troops wlll be organized on Mon day, October 7. Christian' Doctrine Instructions have been scheduled as follows: Public' High School Students at 7 on Monday nights; Confirma; tion class, at 3:30 on Monday and Friday afternoons; First Communion 'classat 3:30 on Tuesday and' Thursday 'after noons, and on Saturday mornini £It 10 for' all chlldren of. the parish. Film strips and slides are shown to the clasSes at the end of each weeldy session.
as memorials to loved ones, living or -deceased. _. "Such 'warm hearted generosity and enthusi~sm Is a certain in dication that our drive will not only' reach, b~t exceed, our $1, 500,000 minimum need," Father Gallagher asserted. Name Chairmen Meanwhile today, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Bishop of Fall River, who. plans the erec tion of a number of regional high schools throughout the· diocese, announced the appointment' of four chairmen to head up the Greater New Bedford campaign fund. . The memorial plan will be conducted on a "first come, first serve basis," Father Gallagher asserted, noting'the availability of many memorial designations'. "Organizations and firms will find this an excellent means of honoring. founders," the pastor of St. James Church, New Bed ford; added. . House-to-House The 3,400',men who responded to the volunteer appeal wlll begin , their training' during the week of Oct. 20, the fund campaign headquarters announced today. It is planned to conduct 'an inten sive house-to-house solicitation through the volunteer men work ers in Noyember.
.SEGUINo Truck Body Builders
Youth Week
Alum~num
or Steel 944 County Sf.
Continued From Page One churches. Local activities of the five areas wlll be climaxed with a Diocesan program in the. new Youth Center in New. Bedford later in the week.. Planning the program with Father Sull1van are Mrs. Charles Dupont, New Bedford area; Miss Shirley Givens, Attleboro; Miss Mary Neville, Taunton; Mrs. Harold Hayes, Cape Cod, and Miss Mary Cronin Fall River. Miss Mary Cole is Diocesan chairman.
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WILD BEASTS~PARISHIONERS???
The Holy Father sent UIJ a letter from the missionary ill Am India. who describes the vast.area he lerves: "There Is thick forest about and wild beasts nearb,". The thou,ht of St. Francia made us wonder whether thll man also preached to them. or maybe Invited them to join his 2,500 'parishioners In worship. We don't know. ':... -But this we know. Althou,h he hlmsell lives In a corner 01 the school. his onl, ,:"',,, ": thoughts are to arlve his people and their . . :::f".•. .'. ': Lord a small chapel ($2.500) and provide a '"':i/,,}.' , cemeter1 ($500). and' later to add on to, The H Iy ;":";l 'M" A'd the school. His flock has ,Iven ,enerousl, a 'Jt1' I WIO" "" In proportion to their poverty. Can you help?
pOOr)'.
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asad~ertised
in leading Newspapers & Magazines ALSO AIR, STEAMSHIP CRUISES AND TOURS /For free' folder. Write or Call
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VAndylke4-9691 Taunt@n Inn (lobby)
IF GOD IS IN YOUR WILL, YOU'LL BE IN HIS
ELIAS -
JOSEPH -
Despite 78 years, he dally hand-feeds th~ Invalids I1vlng in class roo'ms and hallways of his house the past nino years. When trouble fell on the Holy City in 1948, his people fled here for shelter; for, their homes 'either were hit or· lay In "no.man's-land". The healthy are now resettled. The Inv.alld aged and mental cases remained. He begs an alms to help build a few rooms for them. For each $5 gift he sends an oriental picture, In gold and russet, of OUR LADY OF THE NEAR EAST.
GRATEFUL FOR.FEW ~~ Because
We K.now Our Business
.BI'S GOOD BUSINESS For You to Kpow-Us"
INSURANCE BIl.OC~
Frank X. Parron
•
Perron
•
Yes. the little Near East boys and girls In our schools . will be the Church then. Won't you help us train theta for the task. Join BASILLIANS, our mission club for school support, DOLLAR-A-MONTH:
~'l1ear £astOlissions~,
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPEllMAN. President
- FAILIL ROVIER -, os 9-6418 Hugo~,
TOO FEW
We mean the friends who realize how terJ:ibly Important lor the future Church Is the training of NATIVE SISTERS. We need $150 a year during two years to train poor,\,but zealous, girls like Sisters Annie, Brlgit and Tresa In Indla: and Sisters Joseph (Lebanon) and Joh'.' lErit.rea). If only more' would belp b.y "adopting" one!
HERE IS TOMORROW
• FRANK X. PERRON GMINUlI'I&
GEORGE
JERUSALEM'S .FATHER JOHN
BUREAU,..INCo·
PILGRIMAGES'
Perhaps this November you~d like to enroll your lovei ones, Our enrolled members share each year In 15.000 Masses (a dally Mass at the Vatican for the do ceased) and In' the prayers and good works of thousanda 01 Near East missionaries. Annual enrollment $1; pello .petual $20. We Issue.a ,beauUful PURGATORIAL CER TIFICATE for each deeeased 'perpetually enrolled. The living enrolled also ma)' gain plenary Indulgence. 53 day. a yeer.
Names of stallwarts In the annals 01 Old and New Testameni thnes. We hope they'll be stallwart missionaries In years to oome la their native Egypt, India and Lebanon. But first we must trala them for six years. Each year It costs $100' to keep one. Can yoo . help one with this yearly sum In any convenient payments?
Sea Sts. Tel. HY 81
WORLD WIDE fRAyED. S~RVIC~
in
TRAVELER'S
You'll be thinking 01 your beloved departed In November. We're praying for them, too, and thlnkJng of our poor Near East mission . aries; Many live almost solely from YOUR MASS OFFERINGS. Send them today whUe you remeJI1ber. You may forget tomorrow.
ATWOOD
TRAVE1~
Speciali~ing
regional director, also addressed the members. Miss' Alice E. Fitzpatrick, 64!) Third Street. was elected presi dent and' Miss Margaret E. Shea, 267 Hanover Street, vice presi dent. Raymond F. Powers will continue as secretary and Miss Mary Cummings as treasurer. Miss Gertrude Mercier is hospi tality chairman. Members of the chapter pro vided entertainment. Hostesses were members of St. Joseph's Parish Women's GuUd with Mrs. Thomas MacDonald as chairman.
PURGATORIAL ENROLLMENTS
South •
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The spiritual purpose of the . Catholic Guild for the BHnd wall explained by Very Rev. Josepl! Sullivan, Diocesan director, to the Fall River Chapter at its first 'meeting of the season in Sacred Heart School. M~etings are preceded by ros ary and benediction in the church, Father Sullivan said that members may have the blessing of Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament arid the jntercession of the Blessed Virgin through the rosary devotion. He reminded the members that they are constant ly in the prayers of the priests at Mass and of the Sisters. Father Sullivan assured the members of Bishop Connolly's prayers and interest in their wel fare, noting that His Excellency had founded the guild in the diocese. The director also commended the interest and efforts of driv ers, e'scorts, and local parish guUds: Rev. George E. Sull1van.
NOVEMBER MASSES
., WY 2-6618
1636 Acushnet AvenuQ New Bedford, Mas••
Director Addresses Fall Ri'ver Blind
Ceor~e
lIIedard
Msgr. Peter P. Tuohy. !IIat'l Sec'y
Send all commu~icatlonsto:
CATHOLIC NEAR leAST WELFARE ASSOCiATION
480 lexington Ave. at 46th St.
o
New York 17, N. Y.
I
The Family Clinic
I
THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 3, 1951
Simple Arithmetic Solves Teen Age Night Problem
CathoDic Vefere.Jg'\J$ To E!ed Offic~rs Catholic War Veterans Post will elect officers at a meeting at 9 o'clock tomorrow night In the CYO building In Taunton. . .;~li C~tholic veterans in the Diocese are Invited to attend and become members of the Post.
By Rev. John L. Thomas, S. J.
St. Louis University
What's a reasonable time for teen-agel's to get in at night? Our two oldest children are now in high school, and this question keeps coming up constantly. It was dis cussed at one of our PTA meetings, but opinions varied 80" much that most of us came away more confused than have this information. Second, before. Are there any reli you should know when the af Is expected to be over and able norms parents can fol fair how your children Intend to come low in this matter? home. In terms of this informa A European observer has re marked somewhat maliciously, perhaps, t hat American par ents spend half their time wor rying a b ou t when their chil dren wl1l tum 1n, and the othel' haU about .' how they wl1l tum out. He al 110 commented on how.well American par ents obey their children. There Is more than a little truth In these observations. Some parents seem to be afraid of their job. almost as if they doubted theil' right to Instnict, guide, and supervise their chil~ dren. Elementary Arithmetic It should not be too dl!!lcult to work out the basic norms con cerning the time teen-agel's ought to get In. In fact, It Is a matter of rather elementary arithmetic. The average teen ager requil'es at least eight hours' sleep a night. Individual needs may vary. but the average Is a safe norm to follow. Now If you add In the time required for dressing, washing, morning pray ers; and eating an adequate breakfast. before starting for school at eight or eight-thirty In the morning, you will fInd that bedtime should normally be around ten o'clock on school nights. There's nothing mysterl-" ous or difficult In figuring this out. Indeed, If an Individual child l'equlres more sleep. has special l'esponsibllIties around the home 1n the morning, or must travel a considerable distance to school, the time for retiring may have to be even earlier. Must Be Limited Furthermore, since the eve ning Is the only time normally available for doing homework. pursuing special Interests such as hobbles, practicing music, and so on, spending some time with other members of the family, and getting needed relaxation after a long and busy day, It should .be evident tlUl.t going out on Ilchool nights must be limited. This also Is a matter of simple arithmetic. No matter how you plan It, there are only twenty four hours In a day. Since time 1s limited, first things must come first. Weekend evenings, when the problems of homework' and sleep .are not so pressing. the question of going out and of a reasonable hour for getting In appears Ilomewhat different. Young peo ple have social obligations and should be offered an opportunity to fulfill them. Teen-aR'ers enjoy going out at night just as you parents do. They like p!\rties, traveling, with the gang, and the reputation of being a good sport. Learning to mix socially with others Is an essential part of the process of growing up, but It may cause you parents some worries. Must Have Information What can you do? First, you should know where your children are going, with whom they are going, and what they Intend to do. Some silly parents think that to require this 1nformation COll stltutes an Invasion of their chil dren's privacy. This Is absurd. Because parents are responsible for theh' children, they must
tion, you can then set a reason able hour for getting in. This hour should be reasonable, that Is, certainly. not later than one o'clock under normal circum stances. Finally, you should train your children to notify you If they wl1l be late or if they need your help.
f·irst America n To L.aos Mission SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Father Matt .Menger, O.M,I., 28; Is en;. route to Laos, Indochina, where he will be the first American to work In the missions there In re cent years. The Oblate of Mary Immacu late priest Is the son of Henry Mengel', former general 'manager of the Southem Messenger, now Incorporated Into the Alamo Messenger, newspaper of the Archdiocese of San Antonio. Father Mengel' was enroute to' Indochina ·last November, but was permitted by his sUf)eriors to return after an automobile accident that month killed his mother and a brother, Father Henry Menger, also an Oblate.
Missioners Continue Work in Thailand ST. LOUIS (NC) - A coup d'etat by Thailand army officials· is not expected to Interfere with the work of American mission aries there unless a full-scale civil war occurs. Although no word has been heard from any of their mission aries since Aug. 28, Redemptorist officials here expressed the belief that missionary activity can con tinue In the southeast Asian na tion for the present· time. In previous communications the missionaries gave no indica tion that a revolution ,was im minent. The mlUtary coup was bloodless. The new head of stateI has promised to continue the nation's pro-Western policies.
Federal Grant COLLEGEVILLE (NC) - St. John's University here In Min nesota has received· preliminary ·approval on a request for a $1,636,000 Federal government loan for the construction of a new dormItory building. The funds will be used to erect a residence hall which will house 400 men, Construction will begin In the spring of 1958.
St. Jude Novena EVERY THURSDAY AT
10 A.M.-12:10 P.M.-5:10 P.M.
7 P~M.-8 P.M.
Broadcast WSAR-8:45 P.M.
DAILY MASSES-7 A.M.-8
A.M.-8:45 A.M.-I0 A.M.-12:10
, P.M. CONFESSIONS-DAILY 8:30 A.M. to 9 P.M.
15
John H. Schondek announces.
"Plans will be formulated for ;;he joint installation and char.. tel' night to be held in Novem ber. The installation will featm:e the Honor Guard from New Hampshire and the installing committee from the State De partment of Connecticut.
Represents Vatican ~E~VICE TO CHURCH.REWARDED: Archbishop MaxlmllI~!l de Furstenberg, Ap9stolic Internuncio to
Japan, in ceremonies in,Tokyo, confers the honorary privi lege of Protonotary Apostolic upon Msgr. Paul S. Uchino 82, Prefect Apostolic of Urawa, in recognition.of his long service to the Church in Japan. The award was made by Pope Pius XII: NC Photo.
Social Conscience Best FORT WAYNE (NC)-"Smut, like smog, will not disappeai' by court ordel' or police action," Bishop Leo A. Pursley of Fort Wayr,e said here In urging Catholics to support a campaign against" newstand filth. "An enlightened and 'respon aible social conscience" Is the most effective weapon against all· such evils, he declared. The Bishop' said he is taking part in a local drive because its purpose Is to "rid newstands of publications so plainly porno graphic as to remove a1l question of their character and nullify a specious argument in their de fense," But he warned that police ac tion alone will not stop· the evil, because indecent literature "wUl
crawl back again .and again-and crawfts the proper word-so long as there is any chance of making a dirty dollar out of It." "A little straJl{ht thinking In the light of moral principles will indicate what we ought to do," he said. "But It will be necessary 10r enough people to do It."
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12:10 P.M.-3 P.M.-5:10 P.M.-
II P.M.
Broadcast 'll'ues.-WNBH 10
A.M. & WALlE 7:30 P.M.
We~. WSAR '7 P.M.
. For Further OlnfoD'mation C111J11c11 N1oYeIJ1lCl Booklets . Please'write to:
OUR LADY'S CHAPEL FRANICOSCANI FATHERS 572 PILEASANIi SiREEr NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
. years of satislaction lo,Iood shoppers I 5 BIG WEEKS OF SENSATIONAL VALUES!
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16
Sage and Sand
Knox Translation of Bible Rated 'as Great Wr,iting
Poles 'Receive American Aid
By Most.' Rev. Robert J.' Dwyer, D.;D., Bishop of Reno
'
, A slig'ht man with a quizzical expressipn in his eyes, ' half humorous,.half baffled, wearing a clerical colla~, sev 'eral sizes too large, that was the picture of Monsign01;~on aId Knox on the end-papers of his more recent books. The writer's personal acquaint ance with him went no fur scholastic mind than his re~on ther than that, unlesS 30 struction of the Oxford common' room through the centuries;' , , years of reading his books Learned Restraint,'
i,
I
•
. THI! ANCHOR- ~ Thurs.• Oct. ,3. 1957J
'NEW YORK (NC) The Church in Poland has established! bona fide Catholic' charities agencies for the distribution of relief supplies. The ~ew agencies, set up by His Eminence Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of Poland. are the first major Polish Cath olic organizations of their kind since 1949, when' Carita~, ths national Catholic charities 01' ganizatio,n, was wrested from the Church by the Stalinist regime in Warsaw. Msgr. Aloysius J. Wycislo, as sistant executiVe director of Catholic Relief Services-Nation al Catholic Welfare Conference. has disclosed that Cardinal Wy szynski set ,up charities agencies in a number of major dioceses for distribution of relief supplies recently shipped by the American Bishops' foreign aid organization. Catholic charities organiza tions are to be established in aU dioceses in Poland., The monsig nor said tha t in each of t,he Sees where the organization has been established, a priest approved by the Cardinal-Primate has been appointed to supervise disti'lbu tion of relief material. . Msgr. Wycislo has reported CRS-NCWC had alreadY flown some $70,OOO-worth of medical supplies to Cardinal Wyszynski. Since then, 105 tons of used! clothing valued at more, than $363,000 have been. shipped tG Poland for distribution by the Cardinal.
and articles might count for A lesser man might have let, it something in! knowing a man. go at that. Satire was out o'f Certainly his passing at the end favor and wit was hardly a cleri of summer was lIke'that of an cal indulgence in these times of intimate v friend. He 'had shared genial earnestness. Whoever it too mucl. of his mind and his was that first conceived the idea spirit to make it anything less. of Monsignor Knox as the trans He had shared with the entire lator' of the Sacred Scriptures English-speaking Catholic world. must have had daring as well as inevitably his rendering of the literary taste. Yet how well he Sacred Scriptures comes to mind 'knew his man, and how well, that as the greatest instance' of that man had served hlsnoviceship sharing, yet even leaving his and profited by its buffetings. work -as a translator aside, how He had grown to control. the vast is the debt we owe to this language,' he had learned the restraint that means the differ indefatigable and refreshing apo logist of the Faith. He was tire ence between irresponsible geni less and he was never stale. The us and a great writing. impressive volume of his pub For, taken all in all, the Knox, CLOTHING' FOR POLAND: A quarter-million pounds lished works rarely if ever betrays Bible Is great writing. Those of of relief clothing for distribution by Stefan Cardinal Wy a flagging of the buoyancy of his us who were nurtured on Chal 6pirit; even. toward the end when' loner's Douay are bound to miss szynSki, Primate of Poland, is loaded in New York under age was catching up with him, ' its antique flavor, its virility and supervision of Msgr. Aloysius J. Wycislo, Assistant ~xecu lie wrote with all the zest and directness. The last thing 'in enthusiasm of dauntless youth. Knox's mind was to supplant" it; tive Director, Catholic Relief Services, National Catholic Magic of Freshness he only' aspired to give to :our Welfare Conference. Ship Capt. W. A. Griffen of the S8 He possessed what Walter 'times another......- version which 'Mormacrio is at right. NC Photo. Bagehot, in' a happy phrase, might, somehow, st'rike fire 'in called "the fresh eye." It was im t.he contemporalY mind..We are, possible for, him, . of course, to perhaps;-too, close to it to judge Eldd anything substantially new it without the prejudice, of ling NEW YORK (NC)-The Daily. John Gates, 111 which he, com to the apologetic he was at pains erlng phrases. Yet how stalwart , Worker will be smaller. mented on the resignation of to set forth in modem dress, He it is, and how much it reads as The official newspaper of the', <?lark, foreign editor" Joseph wa.s anything but an innovator .if it were written 'first in our own communist party in the U. S. will from both the paper and the and his multiple preoccupations tongue. That,-after all, is the su left him little time to develop preme test. Th"e echo of Chaucel' reduce its -pages from eight to, party. whatever-taste he had for scie,n is in Genesis, and st. Matthew four, and will eliminate its pres The party division ranges from tific theology. Yet whatever he 'is as English as the Earl of ent Friday edition entirely. Un those in favor of a strong pro- , touched, whatever he dealt with Clarendon. Soviet stand against those who be ,it the most threadbare and Perhaps too English for our der the, new plan; the 12-page favor a less militant pro-Soviet NEW BEDFORD pub~ week-end Worker will be jejune, of topics, came from his American ta!>\:e. It may be that, position. The former, according ,lIshed on Fi'iday instead of Sat pen,transmuted by the magic of 'time will point to the Knox ver to Mr. Gates; are resisting the bis freshness, bion as indicating the cleayage .. urday. , The retrenchment' follows in policies laid down by t~ national Satire was his original forte. , of the two literary cultures. That' wake of disclosures of internal convention in February, which • ,In all his life he wrote nothing detracts nothing from its great strife party and a reported sought to guarantee to pal'ty ness or its value; 'It simply marks 'loss ofin45the l1;ore acute, nothing more stimu per cent in,the' party's members the right to dissent. lating, than his foreword to his a stage in the road. He'might membership. which is now peg own Essays in Satin;, and there find It theme for an essay in -ged at 10,000, compared with are 'those even now who would celestial satii·e. ' , N.ICK,ERS,ON
17,000 a year ago. The postwar say, that he never wrote a better 'peak membership was reported . FUNERAL
book than' that. But satire, as he 'Attaclks. Legislative
to have been 74,0000. al. too presciently predicted, is SALES & SERVICIE
, The paper said the Wor~er had , : and ,Attitude on Divorce ,been out of style these<days. It is par kept going in recent months ST. LOUIS (NC)-The ease ticularly out 'of style for priests, 501 COUNTY Sf. only by tapping every available :Monu,ment Servic~s_ who are instructed, very prudent- . with, which divorces can' be ,ob source, by. heavy borrowing and NEW BEDFORD Iy, to catch their flies .with the tained threatens to convert the bY' iIldivid'uai sacrifices. Serving the Cape and
' Salesian honey i'ather than with marriage contract Into a p.ational Surroun,ding Communities
"Frankly," the statement said, i;alt, The Church today has found death certificate, 'lawyers and, WY 3~1~~~ CAPE COD, MASS.
"we have reached bottom." fmployment for all kinds of 'judges were told he.re at the an A'il. apparel,1tly serious split nual Red Mass,' , '" minds and talents. blit she 'is within the ',party came to oUght Father David' T: ,Thomas, as still a trifle' leery 6f satirists. recently in an article by editor Come to think of it, she has , slstant to tIJe St, Loyis'al:chdiq-, never encouraged a counterpart cesan chancellor and it doctor of of Dean Swift, with his saeva ,canon law, scored the' tendencies of some legislatures to ,enact ,indignatio, ' DISTRIBUTORS OF laws 'which work to weaken the Defender of the Faith family. _ HARDWARE AND INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES
Yet wit, the essential ingre ·'Inc. "OUI' law must staunchly up dient of satire, is a gift of God HOUSEWARES ~ MARINE SUPPLIES
hold the sacI:edness and 'stabil by no means to be despised, In formed by charity it can give.to ity of the family," he said. "The the presentation of Catholic dangerously high divorce rate <>549 COUNTY ST. truth 'a clarity and sharpness, a has led thoughtful men to con 15 MAIN ST. TAUNTON, MASS. punch and a freshness,' which it sider remedial legislation that NEW BEDFORD, MASS. all too often lacks. It was a long will show the bond of marrlag~in VAN DYKE 4-6921 novitiate that Ronald Knox had ,Its true light." to spend tempering the steel of lJis wit to be ready, at the end" to merge as the most successful of contemporary defehders of the SUll~VAN Faith., , FUNIERA( HOM~ There are those who might be F'UNERAL HOME inclined to bewail' the seeming 986 Plymouth Ave. 550-Locust St. Fall River. Mass,
@ ,,& • ly wasted years when his inter Fall River ests were as varied and 'unpre. OS 2·2391
8 dictable as those "Broadcast Rose E. Sullivan
OS 3·2272 Minds;' he so pungently satirized. Jeffrey E. Sullivan It could be argued in rebuttal CD that the man who could set be @ fore us such fare ,as Barchester Q Revisited and' Let Dons Delight O/~@wrr~Ql) had already earned the gratitude of the discerning. And actually. for all its brilliance, there is no ,fUINHE~AB. m-a(Q)~rn ~ mo. penetrating a critique of NORTH EASTON ~~ @) 1I..o.o._ _~ Funeral Liberal Protestantism than his 571 Second St. recreation of Trollope's tight Directors little, right little Barchester, just Fall River, Mass. IE. BRIDGEWATIER' 469 Locust St., Fall River ,
as there is no more balanced an ": " , OS. '9·6072
appraisal of the timidities and lIE'n.. OS, ~-33& ~ betrayals of the uncommitted
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Young Workers Moveme,nt Offers Great Potential Msgr. George G. Higgins is in Rome to attend !he Second World' <Congress 01 the Lay Apostolate. He has asked Fr. Geaney to be his «guest columnist" durIng his absence. Fr. Geaney is' the au.thor 01 G book, You Are Not Your Own. He also writes lor several Catholic magazines.
struck me rather strangely sInce menon in the histOl'y of the world of workers becoming a leisure I know some of the 215 Ameri class. ' cans who left 1:"'••., ...."'....,,"",".•.,..'"_ the States in Tremendous Potential three chartered YCW Is far from having the planes. They are wide acceptance In parishes that not workers In th.e Christian Family Movement has. Youth does not have the the E u l' 0 pean 1 d e 0 10 gi c.a I stability of married people. One sense, p e 0 pIe week they seem charged. The who have form next week nothing goes right. ed a community They are riot rooted in the parof destiny be Ish through home ownership and cause of ines membership in the parish PTA. capable and oppressive conditions The parish priest might find it of work. They do not feel that hard to locate the~ if he thought their work sets them apart from he had a mission to them. other segments of society. Our The only compelling reason for own Labor Day safari seemed to a priest to dedicate a good share point up the difference between of his priestly apostolate to this the YCW elsewhere and the organization Is that thIs age American YCW. bracket represents a tremendous Worker's Game potential to the Church. Through Labor Day 1957 was for me a a vital, small-group operation uniquely American experience. like YCW their lives can be 'fo~ The evenlnK before a young at 'cused earlier. shaped more radi torney who represents manage. cally in Christian thinking, and ment called to volunteer to serve committed more fully to th'e Mass and to remind me of a golf Christian life than can that of date we had planned. The next the adult who year by year Is day we drove to a public course' becoming more irrevocably en and were paIred by the starter trenched In his ways.· Nineteen with two strangers, presumably Is a better age to face up to the not Catholics, who were produc missIon of the Church than 29. tion workers In a local plant. I 39, or 49. The YCW Internatlon offer no excuse for my partner at Congress points to better days and myself who proved no match for the YCW In the United for our opponents except to men States. tion that we were playing our first IS-hole game of the 'season. Our partners, on the contrary, because of a factory tournament. were frequently on the course. LOS ANGELES (NC)-The re The first sociological observa tion I would make Is that It seems ligious groups which build and uniquely American that labor, cperate schools relieve the state management. and the clergy e,f a considerable burden: the could meet under such relaxed Hollywood CItizen-News said In and egalitarian circumstances as an editorial. "The public school system pro a public golf course. The second fits from the relief it enjoys at observation 1s that the produc tion worker Is now forming a the expense of the parents who leisure class In American society l::end their children to private and taking over the sport whIch Institutions," the newspapr stat ed. was once associated with the so It refuted claims that religion 4:alled idle rIch. The golf course Is sponsored schools threatened the an island of paradoxes. The point is that the American public school system, The-claims are being made, the editorial 1s not "worker" conscious. How ever. the YCW is one in essence noted, by a group that seeks to everywhere. The ideals of the ,'e;mpose taxation on religion sponsored schools in California. YCW elaborated by the Holy Fa "The tax exemptions which ther in his address are equally applicable to AmerIcan, French, they now enjoy were granted by and Indonesian youth. Briefly. the voters in 1952. The tax ex emption is similar to that per-' YCW holds that ChrIstian prin ciples must be restored to every wItted in the other 47 States," area of life the younff adult observed the Citizen-News. touches by his presence. ,Notes Polish Plight' . Need Solidarity '- In one nation or a part of one To Caution America nation the cl'ucial problem .youth CHICAGO (NC) - The 18th faces might be the ill effects of anniversary of Russia's invasion grinding and oppressive work of Poland was noted by the Pol conditions; in another the devel oping of a new leisure class. Each ish American Congress as a lesson group of young aduits needs to to those "who refuse to recognize be the yeast In the leaven. Each communism as' a dangerous needs the solidarity that comes threat." Charles Rozmarek, pres from a movement. Each national Ident of. the Polish American movement needs to communicate orgahization, said "the menace of with young adults in other parts communism Is not dirr1llnishing." of the world so that a world The key to America's surVival, solidarity of young apostles akin he added, Is that It must always to the unity of the Mystical Body be stronger than Russia. can be established. Break Agreement In . this country the Young FRIBOURG. Switzerland (NC) Christian Workers for some years - A "gentlemen's agreement" tdid not 'Seem to grasp the impli cations of the fact symbolized in reached about two years ago be our Labor Day golf match. They tween a group of Catholic theo seem almost exclusIvely con logians representing a Swiss cerned with the trade union Bishop and the Moral Rearm movement. In the past few years ament Assembly has been re there is no indIcation that they pudIated by the MRA.
Press Opposes Tax on Schoo,ls
11~
Patronize
By Father Dennis 'J. Geaney, O.S.A.
Previous to the Labor Day weekend 30,000.young men and women met in the Square of St. Peter and listened to the Holy Father who drove to Rome that morning from his summer home. It was the First International Congress of young Christian Workers. --'- - - The New York Times re are playing more golf, but it Is . obvIous from their recent re porting the event referred to markable growth that they do it as a labor congress. This understa,n<! this singular pheno
THE ANCHOR TIiII8US., Oct. 3. 1957
the
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'IN GOD WE TRUST' PLAQUE: Bought with private contributions a bronze plaque bearing the Great Seal of the United. States and the motto "In God We Trust" has been erected in the U. S. Post Office at Ossining, N. Y. It is the first such plaque in New York state; The committee responsible for the plaque was-inspired by the chi'istophers Movement. Pictur~d at the unveiling are Postmaster Fran cis X. Hannigan and Mrs. Irving N. Valentine, of Ossining. NC Photo. '
God and Our National Motto OSSINIG (NC) - A bronze plaque bearing the Great Seal of the United States and the motto "In God We Trust" has been installed in the U. S. Post Office here. . This was the first such plaque to be authorized for installation in a post office in this state. Mrs. Irving N. Valentine of Ossining and Postmaster Francis X. Han' nigan obtained the permission from the Post Office Department in Washington, D.C. The plaque was bought with contributions from private' indi viduals at no expense to the government. The first plaque of this type was installed in the Durant, Okla. post office earlier this year. Indianapolis was the second city in the nation to put up the plaque with the newly approved motto. "In God We Trust" was offici ally made part of the permanent design of all U. S. currency by an Act of Congress signed Into law by President Eisenhower on July 11, 1955. Subsequent legislation has made I It the official national motto of the United States. It will appear on the new Treasury notes to be cIrculated October 1. and has been incorporated Into the design 'of the standard three-
cent and eight-cent postage stamps. The motto first appeared on the two-cent coin minted by the U. S. in 1862. Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase, with .the approval of President Lin coln. used the inscription as sug gested by the Rev. N. R. Watkin son, a Baptist mInister of Ridley Park. Pa.
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NEW YORK (NC) - Father Wllliam P. GaUdreau, C.SS.R., 14th successor of St. Alphonsus de Liguori and first American Superior General of the Redemp torists. will arrive In the UnIted States Oct. 3. This will be Father GaUdreau's first visit home from Rome since his election in, 1954 as Superior General. During his v.isit he wlll confer with provincial superiors both here and In· Canada.
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. Austerity for .AU·' .,.'
,God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. What would l'OU think if the Hob- Father told th~ 33.000 Jesuits throughout the world to stop both smoking and pleasure trips and in general deprive themseI'ves of "not a few comforts that laymen may legitimately demand!" Well. He did! But, this austerity message is not for the Jesuits alone. .The Holy Father in the same message said that it applied to all religious orders. \ But not religious orders alone. In his letter on Lourdes ·he asked all priests and laity to forego the pleasures of the world and to de velop "a love of penitence without which there is no hope of eternal salvation," . Our Lord's first sermon was "Do penance." .
It was· the first sermon of John the Baptist,
of St. Peter and St. Paul. It is the recurriI)g
theme of the Vioar of Christ. For six years
it has been the ·heart of the God Love You
Column. In every issue we give examples of
sacrifice and penance on the part of the laity
for the sake of the missions of the Church.
We ask you to deny yourself a pleasure, a
luxury, a need in order that you may sacrifice·
yourself and also that we may sanctify the
1,500,000,000 pagans in the world.
Just think ... if you denied yourseif one cigarette -a day at the end of the year you could send $-1 to the Holy Father through his Pontifical Socien' for the Propagation of the Faith for the poor of the world. Last year the American per capita expenditure on tobacco was $63. And yet the Catho lics gave only ;JOe apiece to the Holy Father for his 135,000 mis sionaries. No one can be saved without some self-denial. No line can give the equivalent of-their'sacrifices to a better. cause than that for which we. plead for as Pius :;'{i said: "Charity to the Society for the Propagatlo'n of the Faith exceeds all other chari - ties as·heaven earth and as 'eternity time." .
HOLY CHILDHOOD SEAL DRiVE: Charlot Byj of New York, displays the posG tel' picture· she has complete,d for the national, Holy Childhood Association of Pitts 'burg'h,' to association, director Father Augustus a.Reitan, C.S.Sp. It will be, displayed in Catholic schools of America to launch the annual sale of 250,000,000, Christmas '.. GOD LOVE YOU·to-K.T.B. ~'This $10·:co,uld .haye bO!lght.,the· 'seals starting this month. The artiSt has depiCfea,the Holy Child feeding an Eskfmo, an lovely sllk scarf that'I have, been, looking at ~very day as I pass a. African and Japanese baby trom·t,he same bowl of Christ's charity. Th~ sale aids 'neglect- ' certain store window, but inslead.let it buy.something to warm the " ' body and soulaf one of the pooi· of the world." ... ,to L.W. "Instead ed .children in all Catholic mfssio'n-Iands. NC Photo. of buying' a current bestseller I borrowed 'it, from the library and saved this $3.95' for the Holy Father's Society for the Propag,ation. of the Faith," . ; . to T.H. "This is $10 which I wOl\ld have spent on a _date if 'my girl' had not decided tl}at we ought to sacrifice once in a while-we're very happy to share our fun with the missions."
Asse.rtsChurch' Properties Hike Values in Residerit'ial Are,as
,Migrate to" South ROME (NC)-The bulk of .• Vietnam's Catholics who form erly lived in the Red-dominated! north have migrated to the free republic of the south, according to statistics compiled .by Fides. mission news agency.
ST. LOUIS (NC) Kansal! Coeur officials tried to exclude City Mayor H, Roe Bartle has a Jewish synagogue frOlll the people w.ould clench their fists as a sign of Communist com defended church construction in al'e'a by its zoning laws. Such radeship. It has been said that within ten to twenty years Africa residential subdivisions as a fac action could have been avoided will have become 'it Christian land or'it wiII have fallen into the tor Vitally necessary for com by "foresight" in drawing up the hands of the Communists. . By saying the WORLDl\'IISSION munity development, He took original zoning ordinance, said ROSARY, with its green decade dedicated to prayers ·for Africa, strong exception to those who the Missouri mayor. you can help to win Africa for Christ. Your $2 sacrifice-offering protest against new parochial The city of Creve Coeur asked will help to support one of our missionaries who is working for schools because they, would al~ for a new trial in the case after the souls of the Pagans in Africa. Address your request to: So legedly destroy property values. . its original zoning action was ciety for the Propagation of the Faith, Order Dept., 366 Fifth ONE_STOP "We have to have churches turned down,by a St. Louis Coun Avenue New YorJi 1 New York or your Diocesan Director. imd schools in order to really ty Circuit Judge. The request was , . ' CENJrER SHOPPING --make a community," the Kansas Cut out this coiumn,. pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the City executive declared. "And as denied recently and the city indi " Television 0 Furniture cated it would appeal to a higher Most Rev. Flilton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the far as depreciating values collrt. The St. Louis archdiocese • Appliances • Grocery Propagation of the FaIth, 366·Fifth Avenue, New. York I, N. Y., or - churches and schools will im your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 pi'ove . property values l'ather has indicated that it will remain 104 AlIen St., New Bedford a party to the case if the appeal North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. '
WYman 7-9354 than tear them down." is filed.· . Mayor Bartle commented on the recent Creve Coeur case in ·•••m••• B••••••• ~ ••••••• g •••••••••••••••••••• ~.~m which Archbishop Joseph E. Rit tei' of St. Louis intervened as a friend of the court when Creve COVINGTON (NC)' - Today's mine the durability. of the demo "critical period" cries aloud for cratic process in its power of l'()II~JI ."nll III Lo'"c \\'IU, DEAl~RS DI~TRIBUTORS persuasion· through· sound' leadership to expose the peaceful NORMAND'S DONUTS "dangerous demagogues" enter-. force of law," ing the current debate on the "Indeed, a critical period such AND proper sphere of the law, judges as ours, cries aloud for the sound and lawyers were told here. .. Msgr, Robert J. White, former leadershIp of ho,nest !Ind. coura dean of the Catholic University geous men, trained in the law, 961 ACUSHNET AVE. NEW BEDFORD of America Law School, gave this broadened by a knowledge of :: . WYman 2-6592 III opinion in his sermon at th~ an history and dedicated to the nual Red Mass offered by Bishop sound progress of law lmd gov :l:l KI.'\IlS - OJ'E .... 1i:\'I~~I~GS William T. Mulloy of Covington. ernment. ~~~~~, Honest Criticism "For. only such leaders can ex :lljp Ashley 111",1. \VI' 4-0l1S4 "l:aw. in o~~r t~me is as br~ad .p·ose dangerous demagogues who GI~RALD 711 ,\sh",)' 11I'·11. \V\' 7-11::::>1 as lif~ Itself, said .M,sgr. :White, rely upon hate, denunciation and a retired Real' Admiral m the threats in arguments devoid of l " Navy chaplain's corps, logic and sometiines lacj;:ing "For proof of this, we need honesty," Msgr. White said no help in look no further than the. pres ent phenomenon of our tlmes solving these problems can be an unprecedented assault ~~on expected from those "who seek GE~~~AlCONTRACTOR the Supreme Court for deCISIOn I' e f u g e in their intellectual covering issues in diverse areas. caves," or from "selfish men who 266~ NO~jj'1HJ MABNI $Ti'o -- IFAU, IIUVEIPl Such attacks reflect deep and would measure the law's proper wide cleavages in public feeling. . . 'sphere by a yardstick of non 'ifELlEPg.{lON~ 0$ 5-7992 "Now criticism is recognized as interference with their vested one of the powerful safeguards political or financial· power," ~@D' . G~~£1l'~~ of American democracy. How . ever; such criticism is valid only !m~ll)f@~l} R. A. WILCOX CO.
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fairness and charity, Violence as The a weapon of criticism or resist In Stock For Immediate De.Iive,rv ~m$ll $A~~ [D)~IP{)$n ance must always be outlawed o DESKS Q CHAIRS and condemned," he said. FILING. CABINETS ~ATION~~ ~AN~ Msgr, White stated that th~ fAl~ R~VER ,problems of law being discussed () FIRE fiLES 0 SAfES . of New Bedford Mass. today - such as its function in GlrEfElNi ~OOM CHAllUOif CtOOM FOLDING TABLES Main Office the field of Federal and State WIEHlGlEWOOIDl ROOM AND CHAiRS Union and Pleasant Sts. relations - affect all Americans. Peaceful Persuasion . North End Branch Business Breakfasts, Parties W~~(OX "Indeed, these problems pose AwalOabOe for Social Organizaf6cI1lls 1200 Acushnet Ave. questions the solution of which 22 BIEIDIFOIRID S'1l'. Member Federal Deposit Will test ,our in'telligence and PIHOINI~ OSborne 6-822 ~ FAILIl. ROVIEIl 5-7838· , . insurance Corporation charadel' and niayeven' deter If more people would hold a rosary in their hands fewer
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IE, WOOD & FRANCIS I
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THE ANCKOR
Alrea fans Expect Excitmng Schoon~oy Grid Campa~gn By Jlalek KiJrneavy Somerset lIIigb School Coach
Previewing the opening of the interschola~t~c grid we observed that the calibre of competItIOn ex hibited in tune-up scrimmages was such that area fans were in for one of the most exciting campaigns in recento years. Last Saturday's results lend credence to that Somerset at Hanson Memorial Field, 21-7. Halfback Charley J)i modest prediction. Glavanni tallied twice for the In only two of the 13 con Green H01'l1ets, but Co-captain ~eason
tests played Involving Southeast ern Massachusetts teams were the scores one-sided. Monsignor Coyle High laced Ba1'l1stable 38-0, halfback Eddie Boyle chalking up three touchdowns to gain Indivi dual scoring honors for the day. Wareham, perennial Class C. contender, romped to a 19-0 ver dict over Rindge Tech of Cam bridge in the day's only other rout. Evenly Matched There were three ties played, two of which were scoreless af fairs. Dartmouth and Fairhaven llnd Dighton and Falmouth (a Narry League game) were the llchools unable to penetrate each other's last white line. The third deadlock involved New Bedford and North ftttle boro. North cal'l'ied a 7-0 edge into the final two minutes of play, but'was unable to stave off a final New Bedford thrust in the waning moments. The home club Iluccessfully rushed the point to pull even 7-7 and that's how it ended. I\lansfield Triumphs The cynosure of Bristol County. competition was the Durfee-At tleboro game In the Jewelry city which saw the defending cham pion Hilltoppers prevail by a 14-6 margin. Fleet halfback Gerry Elias was in on all Durfe~'s points, twice carrying for tallies llnd subsequent polnts-aftel·. An other B.C. contest generating plenty of excitement was. the Taunton-New Bedford VocatIOnal Betto In Taunton. The Artisans held a 14-13 advantage going into the fourth quarter, but Co-cap tain George Hodgson's second touchdown of the day put the Herrings in the van, 19-14. Dimi lllutive Dick Mon'is starred for Vocational. scoring one touch down and .booting two points
Baptiste was the heavy-duty man all the way. Raider halfback Jim Rockcliffe went 65 yards for Somerset's lone score. NalTY's de fending champion, Case, went down to defeat, also in a non league clash. losing to strong Oliver Ames, 13-7. COach Val Muscato's North Easton club cop ped the Class D title last year. In other games throughout the area: Bourne 20, Provincetown 6 - a successful debut for Coach Lou Bouchand of Bourne; Lou formerly coached at Case; Dracut 21, Nantucket 6; Randolph 19. Middleboro 0; Yarmouth 21. Hanover 7. Take Your Pick The Stoughton-Coyle game at Hopewell Park. Taunton, fea tures another top flight gl'id weekend which will ushered i~ with EL night .contest on Friday between Dartmouth and Fal mouth on the latter's home field. Off Its splendid showing at Fair haven, Coach Joe Bettencourt'~ charges must be. favored.. The Coyle game, however. is rated a toss-up. Stoughton. coached by . a former B.C. star, "Tuck" Twomey, has a formidable club. Last Saturday, Stoughton edged North Quincy, 7-6. North Quincy Is at North Attleboro this week. Coach Ed Marx' boys looked po tent on occasion in the New Bed ford fray. Again the nickel must stand on end. Two games in the New Bed ford area are headline attrac tions. Voke goes across the bridge to engage Fairhaven, while New Bedford.is at home to Barnstable. Look for Coach Tom Eck's crew to break into·the win column. Up Attleboro way, 'l;'aunton will be in town seeking its second suc cessive Bristol County win. Coach Qfter. In Class D competition, a Bill Madden's veteran team, atrong Mansfield eleven downed smarting from the Durfee revers al, Is apt to prove too much for. Gus DiRubio's green but good sized Herrings. Focal point of D competition will be the Scituate-Case contest in Swansea. The visitors opened with an impressive 25-6 win over Marshfield, But Case sh01..l1d ben efit playing at. home. Other area contests have Somerset at Prov incetown, Dighton at Nantucket and Wareham at Middlebbro. Durfee has an off day. New Bedford Program The most complete high school brochure we've ever encoun~ered -it compares favorably with many college releases-is that published by the Department of Athletics of the New Bedford Public School System, Tom Eck, Director. It includes a directory, biographical data on the coach ing staff, an analysis of the 1957 outlook, premised on last Spr!ng's
practice, and a wealth of statis infOrmation that should
STONEHILL CONCERT: tical prove invaluable to press and
Major Albert Schoepper, i·adlo. A novel feature of the
New Bedford football Renais
director of the 159-year old sance is the inauguration of a U. S. Marine Band, is a vet complete Junior High School grid program. As a prelude to the eran of 23 years with the varsity game Saturday, a Junior
country's oldest military High Jamboree was played and
£ymphonic 0 r g a n ization. the innovation was enthusiasti
cally received. Each of the three The band will give sfter Junior Highs will play a six noon and evening perform gnme schedule. Somerset and Wareham being the only outside ances at West Junior High, opponents. With a Sophomore
B.l'ocktE>n, Saturday under toom schedule, and. of course, 1\
Varsity, the impetus lent
the auspices of Stonehill Junior to the New Bedford movement is
College. tClT.If1c. It'll bound to btJar fruit.
Thurs., Od. 3, 19$7 <Colllltilllluelill from Page One
rlcience to the service of peace, rather that the purposes of war ond destruction. The Japanese envoy had gone to Vatican City
to seek the Pontiff's support for
a movement to control atomic and n).lc1ear weapons. Machine Mistake The Pope's words refer to the possibility of a tyrant deliberate ly stal'ting an atomic war. World ~leaders fear also that a nuclearweapons conflict might be start edby men, but accidentally and not deliberately. Now there has been added a further wear-.that mechanical devices, not men, might accident ally start an 'atomic war. With nations talking in terms of inter-continental ballistic mis Biles, of ultra-modern methods of detecting such missiles In flight, and of anti-missile mis siles that wiII intercept an en emy missile and destroy it in the skies. man Is relying more. and more upon electronics and auto mation. _ Mechanical Reply Nations are striving to bring these three devices to perfection, because if a hostile missile should be l!\:\lnched, it would requite in stantaneous detection and inter ception if counter measures are to be effective. Thus machines would be on the. alert, and would go Into action upon receiving cer tain impulse. One possible situation now suggested is that detection and retaliation machinery might be set off even without Q hostile mis sile being in the sky. How would this sensitive machinery tell the difference between a hostile tnls sile and some other fast-travel ing object. say a meteor? It Is. theorized that some .foreign body, bringing a reaction from the me chanical detector, might auto matically set off retaliatory mis siles, and the world would be at atomic wai' without man ever lifting his hand. It. nlight even be at war before man knew it. This awesome situation, appar ently. is not yet at hand. Few people know the stage of devel opment actually reached in op erational ballistic missiles. The Ail' Force has announced the de velopment of radar equipment that pick up a ballistic mis sile 3.000 miles away; and. has said that it will be operatlOnal in the near future. The perfection of the anti-missile qlissile has been said by the Oepartment of Defense to be a long way off. As' of now, there is no practical de fense ag-ainst a missile attack, and nations are striving to build up the quickest possible retalia tory action as a determent to such an attack.
CYO Girls Plan Winter Progran1
LEGAL COUNCIL: Thom as A. Brennan, New York attorney and prominent Catholic layman, has been appointed legal counsel for the Catholic Press Associa tion. He is a graduate of Holy Cross ColI e g e and Fordham University Law School. NC Photo.
Catholic Educators. Plan Convention WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Catholic Educational AssocIation will hold its 55th annual convention in Philadel phia's convention hall, April 8 to 11, 1958. Theme of the convention will be "The Right to Educate-The Role of Parents, Church, State." , A roster of distinguished lawyers and political scientists will be In vited to discuss issues In this gen eral area.
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The formal opening of ~he Fall River Girls' CYO, sponsored by the National Council of Catholic Women, Fall River District, will take place Sunday, Oct. 27 with "open house" at the Catholic Community Center, Fall River. Located in the Catholic Com munity Center the organization will provide a gymnasium-audi torium equipped for basketball. voIleybaU and badminton; a spa cious lounge, a television room, a combination study, a meeting room and a game room which will offer facilities for ping-pong and table games. CYO is opened to girls ranging fl:om 12 to 21. The girls will be divided into three groups. Junior High for grades seven to nine. Senior High for grades 10 to 12 and the young adults for high school graduates and' over. A program has been outlined and, will be put into operation based on demand for Discussion groups, dramatics, debating, ce ramics, photography, folk danc Ing, first aid, foods, clothing. baton twirling, art and basket ball. Weekly dances for the different age groups are also 'planned.
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This Timely Message Is Sponsored By The Fol lowing Public Spirited lildividuals' and - Busi ness Concerns Located ill Gp'eafer Fall -River
AU Mac's Diner
(Justly Feimous)
Ann lOaIe Products, Inc•
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Drive' Slowly.. . Carefully For The Child You' Maim May Be Your Very Own
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Sterling Beverages tinc. Vextile Workers " Union-CIO "
Wan. N.
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& Son, Inc. (The Original)
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They dart into the streets .... Watch. out for childr~n' when yolYl dll"i've-adults must accept ' ride their bikes without a the res!p@nsibiDitw f@1l" their .thought to traffo,c conditiolnls
5«D{fefy. .GlI1d in most cases are obliviollJli
Mooney and C.o. Inc.
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@\!!J1l" P@Uice De.. . p«llrfl'merrnll's' tlhlli"'ouglhJ@l\B1l' Greater. 1F«ll9D ~over ~re d@iJl'il~ tlhleill" lOt.. ll'il'll@s'd' to ~each safe1l'y to cur chOB..;
dlrell1l. But because they are
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«:lhloUdr(91!1 tinley sometimes f@l!"get..
.at aU timesY
t@ th<9 dall'llgers aroull'ilcdJ 1l'lhemo 0
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Traffic laws .... Practice Cau~DolJ1l
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SlOW~
P and let Our .
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hildren CROW-UP \
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