GIRLS' REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL TO SERVE STUDENTS IN GREATER TAUNTON AREA
The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul. Sur8 and li'irm-ST. PAUL
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.Maxwell to Direct Campaign For Regional High School In' 'Greater :Taunton Area A campaign for $1,125,000 to build the third diocesan regional high school in Taunton will get underway next month, the Most Reverend Bishop announced today. The Taunton area secondary institution will be for the ed ucation of girls who live in that area of the diocese. . .Designed by Maginnis and Walsh and Kennedy, Boston. architects, the' main lobby of glass and aluminum will
The 13-parish fund raising campaign, under the direction of Rev. James F. Lyons, .assistant at the Im-
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, October 27, 1960
face the intersection of Church, _ Adams and Hamilton Streets, Taunton. This 'lobby will serve PRICE lOe as' the entrance to the muIti漏 1960 The ~nchor $4.00 per Year purpose wing on the left and the Second Class Mail Privileges Authori.ed at Fall River, Mass. classroom and administration on the right. The multi-purpOse room will be situated a few steps above the . looby and will serve as a Gymnasium and Auditorium. Folding bleachers will provide seats for approximately 600 or more sports' fans. Whe used as an auditorium, the seating capacity will be over 1000. The stage and dressing rooms are located at the' end of the room. The cafeteria which will seat approximately 350 students, will be located below the multi-purpose room and a few steps down Turn to Pag~ Thirteen
maculate Conception parish in . Taunton, and Dr. Clement Maxwell, president of the State College at Bridgewater, will begin next month. The parishes which witt participate in the third regional high school campaign for the Diocese are: . Taunton Holy Family, Rev. William H. . Dolan, pastor. Our Lady of the Rosary, Rev. Callistus Szpara, O.F.M.Conv.. pastor. Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, Rev. Thomas H. Taylor, pastor. Our Lady of Lourdes, Rev.. E. S. deMello, pastor. Sacred Heart, Rev. Francis McKeon, pastor. Turn to Page Thirteen
Vol. 4, No. 43
Bishop Request$. Faithful Adoptt Tithing. System LAFAYETTE (NC) Adoption of a system of tithing for church support has been requested of faithful' of the SCHOOL GROUND BREAKING: St. George's Parish, Westport, takes firs.t step towards the new parish school as Bishop Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, right, concludes the ceremony in the presenc~ of Rev. Edmond R. Levesque, assistant, left, and Rev.' Lorenzo H. Morais, pastor, center.
National Leaders in -Salute . To Catholic Youth Week .
. WASHINGTON (NC) - President Eisenhower has salute.d the theme of 1960 National Catholic Youth Week, which begins Sunday, as "timely and forthright." The theme is "Responsible Youth-America's Strength:' The President was one of many nation- Youth Department, National ally known figures praising Catholic Welfare Conference, the ann u a I observance, whlch sponsors the annual obamong them Rep. John W. servance. McCormack of Massachusetts: George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO; Vice Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, developer of the atomic submarine; Henry Ford H, president of the Ford Motor Company; and Thurgood Marshall, chief counsel of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Their comments were conbined in letters to Msgr. Joseph &, Schieder, director of the
Reports filed in the Diocesan CYO Office indicate a tremendous response to our Bishop's request that the youth of the Fall River Diocese respond with vitality to the Church's invitation that Catholic Youth iden.tify themselves with Christ The King. From Attleboro to Provincetown, from North Easton to Westport Catholic YO!1th will Turn to Page Nineteen
DR. CLEMENT MAXWELL General Chairman
MONTREAL (NC)-The former editor of the communist London Daily Worksays communists should
er
Di'ocese of Lafayette by Bishop Mllurice Schexnayder of Lafayette. In a pastoral letter read in churches of the diocese, Bishop Schexnayder emphasized that "In the Old Testament, God Himself established the method of what we now know as Church support. For example: 'Every year thou shalt set aside the tithes of all thy fruits that the earth bringeth forth .. .' .. The Bishop suggested that "b~ Turn to Page Eighteen
be fought "not by using their
means but rather through justice and charity," . Douglas Hyde; now a convert to Catholicism, aiso discounts current rumors of an irreparaQle ideological breach 'between the Soviet UniQn and communist China. . . He believes the present disagreement between MosCow and Peking is not one of principle, but centers on how communist doctrine is to be applied. Turn .to Page Nlnete_
Pop~ John Adds
Ordinary Grants Dispensations For Diocese The Most Reverend Bishop granted a dispensation from ~ast and abstinence for Monday, Oct. 31, the.. d&y before All Saints. The Bishop has also granted a dispensation fro!" abstinence for Friday, Nov. 11, Veterans Da.y. The faithful are reminded that whe"never they benefit from a dispensation they should compensate by almsgivilng or some other WQl"l!l: <!禄If saca:ifioo and ~hari.ty.. .
Keep Communist In .Open, English Convert Urges
Another Phrase To Praises VATICAN CITY (NC) The Holy See has issued a
!has
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decree adding an invocation in . praise of the precious
Blood of Christ to the Divine Praises, which are normally recited after Benediction of' the ~ ~ Blessed Sacrament. Tuesday Holydoy The decree of the Sacred ConTuesday, Nov. 1, is the Feast路 gregation of Rites was approved of All Saints and is a Holyday by His Holiness Pope John XXIII of Obligation; all Catholics must on Oct. 12. It has now been mad'! attend Mass and should consult public by Father 'Herbert Line.路... their local papers for,Mass-time berger, C.PP.S., Superior Gen.Turn to Page Eighteen listings.
UEV. JAMES F. LYONS Priest Director
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Ri,ver:-Thurs., Oc~. 27,1960
Stresses Catholic Duty to Maintain Faith, Peace
Protest Decision on Ethical Traini~g in Public Schools
NEW YORK (NC)-In • pluralistic America, Catholics have a special obligation "to keep the Faith and keeP the peace," a fotmer universit¥ president declared here.
DUNKIRK (NC)-Catholic pastors here have protested a State Education Department ruling which ended courses for character developTtlent and ethical guidance in 'local public schools. Father John J. Poole, C.P., pastor of St. Mary's' parish, said the ruling goes beyond even the U.S. Supreme Court's 1948 McCollum decision. (In that ruling the high 'court held that it is unconstitutional to cot:J,duct released-time religious education classes on public school property.) . Father Poole, act i n g 83 G;JJokesman for the Catholic pastors, contended that the new ruli.n¥ exceeds t~e McCollum deCISion' by barrmg character development and ethi~alguidance courses from pubbc school, as well as released time classes. The' ruling was made by Dr. John P. Jehu, director of the State Education Department's legal division. . Interfaith Cooperation The ~ocal school controversy ~gan m S~J;>tember, when the flYe ~athohc p~stors and the DU?~lrk CounCil of Churches pet~tIoned the local sc~ool .superJ:;tendent to set a~Jde tI~e for charact~~ ~nd ethJ~al gU,Jdance courses m Dunkirk High School. They requested the courses as a temporary replacement for released-time religion classes held off public. school propetry. Th~ churches' released-time programs had been impeded by the inauguration of double sessions at the high school-a step which 'became necessary when the .
. State Education Department Father Robert I. Gannon, S..J... condemned, a number of classspoke at the sixth annual Comrooms in existing buildings of munion breakfast of the Edirb ~easchools. " Stein Guild in the Roosevelt ~he r~uest for ch~;acter Hotel. Three hundred membeq ethical guidance courses. was. of the Guild, composed of Jewapproved by school supermten_ ish converts and other Catholics, dent Thomas Harney· and the attended the breakfast after local board of education. aSsisting at Mass in St. Patrick'4j However, the Rev. George G. cathedral. Brooks, pastor of the Adams The group's annual award was , Memorial Unitarian church, filed presented to Father Victor J. .a protest with Mr. Harney and Donovan, C.P., of Scranton, Pa., Dr. Jehu, alleging that the new . "in recognition of·the outstandcourses were contrary to the iDg contribution he has made rule established in the l'iJcCollum decision DIAMOND JUBILEE: Celebrating the 75th annivers- for better understanding between Jewish and Catholic Mr H . Ii d th t the ary of St. Louis' parish, Fall River, are left to right, Rev. ~ople." " . arneY r : e .; " character an d e. Ical gul a~ce Edward' J. Barns, curate; Bishop Gerrard; J. William McFather Gannon, former Fordo. course~ were not released-time Nulty of .Providence, first boy baptized in church building; ham University president and education and hence did' not. and Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, p,astor. now superior of the Jesuit Miscome under the McCollum ruliog . sion House here, Doted that 100 He also noted that for the past years ago there was "tremendous 18yea~s the YMCA and other bitterness against all Catholia groups have conducted similar in this country. classes in local' schools, and that Bans Compromise to ban the "character and ethi-. "Priests," he saie" jokingl]r" cal guidance" courses ~hile per;."were considered positively evil mitting these classes to continue and' the worst of the ,.,riests welle would.be "highly discriminasaid to be made monsignors." tory." "Today," Father ·J-annon deDr. Jehu agreed that it would clared, "intelligent Protestants be discriminatory and promptly laugh at what their fathers took banned all the cburses. very seriously." Ina comment on. this action, the Rev. Brooks criticized the He urged Catholics to meet State Education Department for their fellow Americans "half ha';'ing perinitted an alleged.vioway," to "take oH our boxing lation of the McCollum ruling gloves" and persuade every to exist for' so long. He also American to deal with each other urged that Mr. Harney resign in a charitable way-without as school superintendent. any compromise of truth. But despite everything, the FRlDAY-,-SS. Simon and Jude, He said Catholics should ~ Apostles. Double of II Class. local school controversy has paid to emulate Pope John, whom Red. Mass Proper; Gloria;., at least one dividend in interhistory would call "the Pope of Second Collect of the Pope; faith cooperation. The Rev. '" Reconciliation" for his work ia Ralph Booth of the First PresCreed; Preface of Apostles. "spreading the charity of ChriQ Anniversary of the Election of · byterian church said he believes by the amiability of Christ." his congregation would make Pope John XXIII. SATURDAY Mass of the available "any of our facilities for released-time classes of any Blessed Virgin for Saturday. faiths." . Simple. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Preface of Blessed Vir:Paint and Wallpaper gin. Dupont Paint The Fall River Clover Club 8l{NDAY .-:- Our Lord Jesus I Rear of Store Christ, King, and X~I Sunday will sponsor an Autumn dance" Saturday night, Nov. '12 at the 422 Acush. Av:e. after Pentecost. Double of I cor. Middle St. .' Class. White.. Mass Proper; Hotel Mellen, under chairman.Q,,~Ja,t ship of J. P. Flannery. A glee Gloria; Second Collect of SunPARKING club concert, and ,organ recital ~ay; Creed; Preface of Christ New Bedford . . · will ,be featured in addition to the King. . )/lONDAY .,.- Mass of previous the musice of Buddy Reise for . Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass dancing. Free Delivery 3 nmes Daily Proper; No Gloria; Common Preface. j () TUESDAY-All Saints. Double THE ANCHOR lists the anof I Class. White. Mass Proper; niversary dates of priests who Gloria; Creed; Common PrefComplete Selection of served the' Fall River Diocie8e ace. Holy Day of Obligation. MEATS. GROCEIJIES ! since its formatiOD in: 1904 . , WEDNESDAY-Commemoration with the intention that the. South PROVISIONS Sea Sis. of all the Faithful Departed. faithful 'will give them a ·249 Adams ·St., Fairhav811 Hyannis Double. Black. Mass Proper; Tel. HY 81 prayerful remembranCle. WYman 4-6441 Three Masses may be offered OCT. 28 by every priest; the first Mass Rev. Alfred E. Coulombe, is oHered .according to the Pastor, St. George, Westport, intention of the celebrant, the 1923. second for all. the Faithful Rev. Stanislaus Kozikowski, Departed, and the third ac- ,O.F.M.,Conv. Pastor, St. Hedwig. cording to the' intention of New Bedford, 1956 . the· Pope. The Sequence is NOV. 1 said in the principal Mass Rev. William H.· McNamara, only. Pastor, St. Mary, Mansfield, 1924. "!'HURSDAY-Mass of previous Rev. Louis N. Blanchet, Assist" Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass · ant, St. John Baptist, Fall River, Proper; No Gloria; Common 1927. NEW BEDFORD Preface. Rt. Rev. John F. Ferraz, PasI uKE BEING tlELPfUL MASSACHUSETTS tor, St. Michael. Fall River, 1944.. INSTEAD OF HELPLe5 Rt. Rev. George F. Cain, PBBFORTY HOURS THE WIff I. WAS 8ERlSlE tor, st. Mathieu, Fall Rivez" WE RenED 1MIs DEVOTION 1953. WHEEL OtAIR AtOM Oct. 3O-St. M i c :1 a e I, Fan NOV. a River. A memento for the repose 01. St. Patrick, Somerset. the souls of our priests. Nov. 6--5t. Thomas More, Rev. Joseph S. Fortin, Found. Somerset. er, St. John Baptist, Fall Riva; Sacred Heart, OaIt Bluffs. 1923. . St. Stanislaus, Fall ~iver. Rev. Michael V.McDonough, Chaplain,' St. 1IIIar7 Home, New Nov.1s-:-5t. John the Baptist, Bedford, 1933.' New Bedford. Notre Dame, Fall River. Our Lady of the Isle, Nantucket. Aus~;n Nov. 2~St. Anthony, Matta. . poisett. Inc. St. Anne, New Bedford. St. John the Evangelist, Attleboro. . FUNERAl SERVICE
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'Former Minister Tells Experience Of Conversion
THE A:NCHOR-
Thurs., Oct. 21, 1960
Say s Recruiting Priests Is Job Of All Catholics
CLEVELAND (NC) - A former Episcopalian minister told a club meeting here that he became a Catholie
SAN FRANCISCO (NC)In recruiting men for the priesthood, everybody must work at it, or everybody will
eight yeo s ago because "the Holy Ghost and some neighbors named Fitzpatrick". had their eyes on him. William' Kernan, now director of adult education at Fordham University, told the First Friday Club here: "The mists and the clouds have gone. I have the certainty which I have sought. I have a clean conscience and the whole world loo':s different." While he was serving as an Episcopalian minister, he said. he used to discuss religion with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fitzpatrick. his neighbors in Scarsdale, N. Y. They su,pplied him with, pamphlets about the Church, he said. but even before reading the pamphletr he had been bothered about the nature of sin and the relation of Ood to man. Powerful Intercession . Mr. Kernan said none 'of the Protesant explanations satisfied him, but the pamphlets helped. He recalled a day when Mrs. Fitzpatrick gave him a rosary and asked him to Uf ) it. He commented: "The intercession of the Blessed Mother was powerfu"" Conference with a priest followed and within months, Mr. Kernan, his wife and six children were received, into the Church. -One of his sons' is a Maryknoll seminarian.
suffer.. This is the' idea behind the vocational progl'am of the Archdiocese of San Francisco as described to a convention of vocational directors by Msgr. Leo T. Maher. Addressing directors from 25 areas from the Mississippi Valley to Hawaii, as well as all priests of the San Francisco Archdiocese, Msgr. Maher said: 1) Even if there were no priest shortage-and never forget it, there is-it would still be the responsibility of the laymen. especially the Christian family, to help foster and develop religious vocations. ' 2) The recent popes have been in the lead in restoring the proper image of the Church as "at once a supernatural union of men with Christ and an organized, hierarchical soci~ty."
,Layman's Task 3) There can be no such thing
as a "passive Catholic" - all Catholics, not just pope,· bishops. priests, make up the Mystical Body, and it is the individual layman's task to work for the well-being of the entire Church. ,"The number and quality of priests in any given area or in the entire wol'ld cannot be a matter of indifference to the enlightened and m,·ture Catholic." Msgr. Maher said.
Set Matta poisett Rite for Sunday A Wayside Shrine to the Sacred Heart of Jesus declaring Christ as King of the Highways will be dedicated at 3 this Sunday afternoon outside Knights of Columbus headquarters for Damien Council 4190, on Route 6, Mattapoisett. . This will be the 15th such shrine to be dedicated in the United States. The 16th is to be dedicated the same day in Cleveland. Eventually there will be shrines identical to the Mattapoisett structure in each of the United States. Each will declare Christ the King of the Highways and implore His protection upon the particular routes in each state. 'The dedication will ,be open to the public and will be conducted by Rev. Clement KilIgoal', SS.CC.
New Eng land Cenacle To Meet at Wareham A general meeting of the New England region of the Missionary Cenacle Apostolate will be held at S1. Pl'trick's Church, Wareham, Sunday, Nov. 6. A delegation also is expected from New York. The Missionary Cenacle Apos_ tolate is a group -4' lay people, high school age and older, who work separately from the nuns' Missionary Cenacle but with a sister 01' priest as moderator. They endeavor to bring back fallen-away Catholics, instruct children and converts.
College Newman Club To Hear Atty. Picard The Newman Club of Bl'8dford Durfee College of Technology, Fall River, will hear Atty. Raymond V. Picard at 7:30 Wednesday night, Nov. 2 in the college lecture hall. His topic will be sepal'ation of church and state. Atty. Picard graduated magna cum laude from Prevost High School in 1952 and is a 1956 graduate of Stonehill College. In 1959 he graduated from Boston Colle/{e Law School and passed the bar the same year.
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Fr. O'Dea Sings Mother's Ma'ss
PA~AL AUDIENCE FOR PILGRIMS: The Holy Father and the M~st Reverend Bishop talk together in. the Pope's private study in the Vatican in the course of the Fall River Diocesan Pilgrimage to Rome and the shrines of Euro.pe. After the private talk the pilgrims we're presented to Pope John in the Vatican's Hall of Benediction.
Urges Federal Auxiliary Aids For Private Schools
LITTLE ROCK (NC)-"It is a fair thing that those who pay their taxes for something as general as education' should derive some benefit from them," Bishop Albert L. Fletcher asserted here.. At the annual Bishop's Dinner of the Holy Souls Men's Club, the Little Rock prelate emphasized that this was his "personal v.iew as a private citizen," but his fellow Catholics are entirely free to disagree with him. He urged Catholics to give serious thought to the question of government aid to the parents of private and parochial school children. He said: "This is not an unheard-of (II' unusual procedure." A number of different coun~ tries provide such assistance, he said, specifically Canada, .En/{land, Ireland and Germany. Parents' Responsibility "It is true," Bishop Fletcher' told his audience of 150 men, "that we are not constrained to found Catholic schools. But it is equally true that parents have the responsibility to decide where their children wil go to school." Bishop Fletcher disparaged the "false belief" that "things are not as they should be unless all are the same; that things are
not the same if they are not equal; ,that two nickels are not equal to one dime because they are not the same." He disputed the argument that government aid to the patents of private school pupils would violate the 'prinCiple of separation of Church and State. It would create no conflict 'in this regard, he !laid, "because the one aided wou.ld be the parent, the individual citizen • • . the private individual who must decide where his child is to be educated." Such an approach is fortified by ~'history and tradition,"
High School Writer Wins Scholarship
Bjshop Fletcher said. All scho~ls in America up to the mid-19th century were private schools, he . said, and "George Washington and the other founders of our country were products of private schools." . The Bishop recalled that a fe,w years ago, the Government allowed the GI to choose the school he would attend at government expense and a number chose seminaries. Bishop Fletcher said he does not expect such aid to the parents of private school children to come about at any time in the near future. But he cited the fact that hot lunch programs are now widely provided at government expense for pupils in many private schools.
DETROIT (NC - W r i,t in g ability paid off for Gregory Mack, a studc.nt at Benedictine High School, Cleveland. He was seJected by a panel 'of Detroit Press Club judges as submitting the ,best written account of the keynote sp.eech given by a newspaper executive during the Detroit Student Press Association's convention at the University of Detroit. He received a Summer scholarship for a newspaper workshop to be held next year at the university.
In the presence of Most Rev. James J.Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Rev. Thomas E. O'Dea, assistant at St. James's Ch'urch, New Bedford. offered a Solemn High Mass of Requiem for his mother, Mrs. Marguerite E. O'Dea. Assisting Father O'Dea this morning in the 1m' aculate Conception Church, Taunton, were Rev. James F. Lyons, deacon. and Rev. John F. Moore, subdeacon. Rev. Martin V. Buote was master of ceremonies. In addition to Father O'Dea. Mrs. O'Dea is' survived by her husband, Mauri-:e O'Dea. Interment took place in St. Joseph's Cemetel'y, Taunton.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,
Oct. 27, 1960
Leader Asserts Asians Devoted To Democracy
Good of Entire Family Goal Of Marital D.iscussions
MIAMI BEACH, (NC) Democracy under American leadership is winning the fight against communism
By Father John L. Thomas, S.JJ. Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University
"If you can tell us how to 'have a good realistic talk' with our wives, you will earn the gratitude of probably eight, or nine out of ten of the married men of the country. 'Realism' and related areas, such as 'thought' and 'logic' and 'reasoning' seem 'out of many present and fu'ture fac· bounds' when trying to ar- tors, only partially known, .are rive at decisions and coop- based on prudential judgements, erative operations w\th one's not absolute certitude. You may wife." Your letter called to mind the old cartoon depicting a couple in the mid s t of a quarrel and the wife is protesting, "Can't we have just one good argument without tr yin g to be reasonable?" I suppose the age-old, perennial debate concerning the relative merits of ma!l,.culine and feminine differences in dealing ", . ".1 'problems will continue as long as men and women exist. Especially in marriage, however, the debate seems somewhat pointless. Husband and wife coqstitute a unique partnership in which, according to the Creator's design, they are, to fulfill the purposes of marriage as complementary "helpmates." Success results from mutual completion, not competition,' so there's little to be gained by debating who makes the superior contribution. Useless to Try The difficulty ,you mention, however, is primarily in ,the field of communication. To use a modern jargon phrase, "How can husbands and wives main"' tain an effective dialogue since they apparentiy take such different approaches to the solution of common problems?" Some wives. complain' that their husbands refuse all serious discussion with them, while some husbands insist that it's useless to try-their wives won't listen to "reason." , Let us assume that a couple relatively mature, serious, and responsible, yet unable to discuss their problems. How can they foster more adequate communication? First, they must examine their attitudes regarding the nature, need and purpose of marital dialogue or discussion. Since marriage involves a couple as complementary partners in a common enterprise, somehow the experience, insig~ts and viewpoints of both must -be considered. . Though marital problems always involve at least two perlIOns, there is a strong ten iency to seek a one-sided i>r unilateral solution to an inherently bilateral situation. Each partner NYS, "Let's be reasonabl~-do It my way." • Prud~nt Jackements Precisely becauSe husband and wife are different :J1Jt ~omplt' mentary, adequate solutions to family problems must draw on the contributions ')f each. This in no way interferes with the husband's leadership in the home. French fathers are noted foe the authority they wield in li1eir families, yet as Marshal Foch once remarked, "Frenchmen show how intelligent they are by always consulting their wives before they make any important ,decisions.", In this connection it is well to reflect that the' ,decisions you reach, because they. involve,
be wrong, and this thought should. keep you receptive to' your partner's views. Find Pertinent Facts Second ,you should "structure" your discussion. 'Start out by mutually defining all the dimensions of the problem. What . are the known pertinent facts? What principles or premises of values supernatural and natural, long range~and short range . . . are relevant to the solution? Learnho\v to distinguish personal predilection from essential principies.. Most of us tend. to identify our learned preferences and "ways of doing things" with what is morally right. Many marital differences result, from disagreementS 'over means, not ends. When such differences arise, it is well to recall the old saying, "There's more than one way to skin a cat!" "My way," may not be the only acceptable way under the circumstances.
Austrian Bishop
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VATICAN CITY (NC)-'-Bishop Stefan Laszlo has been named Ordinary of the' nc~N' Eisenstadt diocese in Austria, which replaces the Apostolic Administration of Burgenland in accordance with the agreement reached earlier this year' regarding enforcement of the concordat between Austria and the Holy See.
50 YEAR PINS: Four oldest members of St. Jean Baptiste D~Amerique Councils received 50-year pins at the joint installation ceremonies held in New Bedford. A total of 24 pi,ns was gi'\ren out. Left to right: Mrs. Ovilla Miranda, 1903, Joseph Lamothe, 1901, Mrs. Albertine Robitaille, 1903, and Mrs. Alma Gagnon, 1908.
Growth' of Catholic Church 'Continues in Free China TAIPEI (NC)-Statistics for the year ending June 30, 1960 show a continuing growth in Formosa's Catholic population, which has more than doubled in the past four years. The statistics released by Church authorities here show that Catholics now number 181,- of additional priests arriving 571 compared with'80,661 in eaoh-' year-most of them mis1956. Adult baptisms during sioners 'ousted from Red China the past year totaled 13,772, -was considerable.
The most widespread lay oralmost the same number as in Viewpoints Differ' ganization, the Legion of Mary, the previous year. There were Perhaps the most fopmidable is now established in every' area 7,971 infant- baptisms. obstacles to maintaining satisof the island. Jesuit-directed 'Priests in Form~sa total 534, factory marital dialogue stem sodalities of Our Lady are growof whom 157 are Chinese. There ing in number and influence. from another source. . are 363 Sisters, of whom 208 are Although husbands and wives A Young. Christian Workers Chinese, and 64 Brothers, of organization has 'been set up. may start out by trying to define th~ dime!,!sions of the prob- whom 17 are Chinese. Numerous Cathol.c secondary lem, that is, the pertinent facts There are 45,829 persons takschols have been established and the relevant principles, they ing instruction, in Catholicism and others are .being planned. may soon discover that they do . prior to baptism. P~D University not give them equal weight in A committee of 'priests under :Regular Increase reaching a decision. the chairmanship 01. Auxiliary The consistency in the numIt is not surprising that masBishop Paul Cheng of Taipei ber of adult baptisms during the culine and feminine viewpoints hal been formed to coordinate last two years is a good, sign, should differ since men and apostolic work among CQllege according to many missioners women are differently involved here. It gives promise of a reg- students, and· a large student in maintaining the family enterular increase in the number of 'eenter to be located near the prise.. national university is slated for conversions in future years, they Neither viewpoint is wholly completion in the immediate say; adequate or complete, so that The Peak in conversions was future. it is only through sincere discusUnder the direction of Archreached in 1957 when there sion of differences that solubishop Paul Yu Pin of Nanking were over 25,000 adult baptisms. tions conducive to the welfare Up to that time the number preparations are underway for of the whole family can be the establishment of a Catholic reached. . university. Total Good During the last 10 years CathThis latter point is worth reolic hospitals have been placed For peating. The purpose to which in operation at the rate of alGENEVA (NC) -A Vatican both husband and wife are commost one a year. diplomat has announced that the mitt~d is the achievement of A steady supply of Catholic Holy See raised $160,000 for the total good of the whole famliterature flows from two pubrefugees during World Refugee ily. lishing houses and there are two, Marital discussion is too of- Year through issuing special weekly Catholic newspapers postage stamps. ten employed as a mere techwith ,growing circulations. This was part of a worldwide nique for imposing one's viewphilatelic campaign' during the point upon the other. Rather refugee year, which closed June it ,should be an attempt to 30. achieve a good transcending the indiviq.ual partner-not "mine" Painting, Decoratins or "thine', but "ours."
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Pontifical to Mark Pope's, Anniversary WASHINGTON (NC) -Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apos-, tolic Delegate to the United States will offer a Solemn, Pontifical Mass on Friday, Nov., 4 in celebration of the second anniversary of the coronation of Pope John XXIII. The Mass will be in the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception on the campus of the Catholic University of America. Archbishop William O.·Brady of St. Paul will deliver the sermon. Sponsored annually by Catholic University, the Mass is traditionally attended by members of th~ foreign diplomatic corps and officials of the United States Government. Following' the Mass, the Apostolic Delegate will ' hold a' reception.
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Portent of Vileness "Mr. Khrushchev's blustering threats and bad manners in the General Assembly of the United Nations are a portent of the vileness of this menace to our peace and fredom. It'is clear that his intimidation and rocket-rattling are intended to inspire·fear, particularly to new and small nations. "He seeks to make the new and small nations tremble in fear that they might lose their freedom by siding with a pow"!' not as mighty' as Soviet Russia is picturing herself to be." , Recalling that delegates from his republic stood up to the Khrushchev insults in the UN General Assembly, the vice president pointed out that small nations such as the Philippines are not afraid of communist threats and tyranny. Would Die Fighting "We were not afraid," he said, ·when we sent out soldiers to fight communism in Korea, when our delegates, beginning ~itb Gen. (Carlos) Romu)o, defied communism in the United Nations, when we outlawed communism in our country. when we suppressed an armed communist uprising in our land and when we refused to recogniz~ Red China and even Soviet Russia. "We will not be afraid of the missiles and rockets of Mr. Khrushchev because we are so passionately' and irrevocably devoted to the cause of democracy that we would rather die fighting for liberty than live in tyranny and slavery," Mr. Macapagal continue,ti., '
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throughout the world, the vicepresident of the ,Philippine Republic asserted here. Diosdado Macapagal, an alumnus of St. Thomas College conducted by the Dominicans in Manila, said that the free people of Asia are acquiring a "fanatacism" for democracy. He spoke at the 42nd annual con'vention of the American Legion in Miam,i Beach Exhibition Hall. "'We must fight together for peace because that peace is menaced by the deadliest ,enemy to human liberty that has stalked the earth, which is communism," the Filipino leader said.
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5
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Oct. 27, 1960
The Particular Council of St. Vincent de Paul Saciety of the Attlebo",? Area sponsors Legion of Decency List CIS a public service to readers of The Anchor.
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Alamo ..... Hur Big Circul Big Night BIoad and Steel IIr'oth of a Boy Orcu. Stars CosflOCks faco of Fire For tho First TIme Fov the Love of Mike "'ecklo. Gollant Hours Groot Day, Hayo Rockot. Will Traye! Horcule. High Timo Invisiblo Invaders· Journey to Centor of Earth
A-2 -
Upholds. Ordinance Banning Obscenity CHICAGO (NC)-A Municipal Court Judge who last Spring struck down Chicago's anti-obscenity ordinance as un~onstitu tional has upheld the city's new ordinance to rp.place the old. The ruling by Judge Norman Elger affected 15 cases which
The Boy Who Stole CI Million Tho Loot World Tho Magic Boy Tho Sword and the DraaTho Three WorldI of Gulliver Thirteoa Fighting Moll 13 Gholts Thirty Three ComO to ICiII Town Liko Alice Twelvo Hours to ItIII Twelve to the MUnder 10 Flags Walk Toll Warrior. Sla.,. Gilt Weltbound
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SUB-PRIOR:. Father Bernardin J. Patterson, a.s.B.. has been appointed sub-prior of St. Maur's Priory, South'" Union, Ky. A native of St. Louis, he is one of 14 Negro Benedictine priests in the United States, NC Photo.
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Bishop, of Leeds Deplores Sexual Standard Decline WORCESTE& (NC) Bishop George Dwyer of Leeds declared that the time has come when everyone
should be alarmed at the general decline in sexual standards. The public is being "corrupted down to the level of adolescent" peeping Toms," he told the Salford. Diocesan Catholic Moral Welfare Council in Manchester. • Legislation is not the complete answer for suppressing the current preoccupation with violence and- cruelty in literature and entertainment, he saidpublic opinion is II:l0re important. Separate Classification Bishop Dwyer, a former superior of the Catholic MissionAnatomy of a Murdor-Subject motler exceoch bounds of moral acceptobinty c.d ary Society, attacked films, proprioty in the moss media of ....tertoinm""t. newspapers, books and priyat0 B - Objectionable in Part for AU clubs. He quoted a recent Time magazine report of a list of films And Quiot Flows the DaR H Man Rebel Breed at a film festival whose themes Boot Generotion Happy Anniversary Riot In Juvenile Pri_ ran the gamut from adultery to Beloved Infidel Heod of a Tyront Rise and Fall of Botwoon Timo and Eternity Hercules Unchained Legs Diamond incest with overtones of perverRoad Racer. Bluo Angel Homo Before Dark sion. He mentioned notorious B1uoboard's Ten Horrors 0;' the Black Museum Roakio memoirs published in some . Honeymoons House on tho Waterfront Room 43 . Svnday newspapers, which he 110m Reckleu Hiroshima, Man Amow Room at tho Top '0 said made many newspapermen Bramble Bush I, Mobster Solt Kittens Go To CoIIeee almost ashamed of their proBroath of Scandal Intent to Kill Sign of the Gladiator fession. Ivcket of Blood Inside the Mafia Solomon and Sheba Can Can It Started With a KI.. Some Came Running Obvious Muek Corry on. Nurse Jack the Ilipper same like It HOt As regards books, no nove!/. Clrcul of Horrors Last Mile Sons and Lov..... today seems complete without a Crack in the MirrOl' Law Tho Squad Car Coy Tough Leech Womaoo Strangers Whoa W. detailed description of sexual Daddy.O Let's Mak. I,oYQ Meet encounters, the Bishop said. He Lil' ~bnOl' Studs LonigalS Desire in tho Dust said that publishers have Eighth Day of the Woeil Macumbo Lov.. Subway ilo tho Sky reached a point of cynicism that Middle of the Night Summer Ploco ElectroniC Monster even a new edition of a novel Elmor Gantry Missile to tho MooR Surprise Package by G.K. Chesterton carried on Femolo Naughty Girf Take a Giant Step its cover a picture of a squalid Femolo and tho Flosh Never So Few Three Murdere.... Rvo Branded Women Of Lovo and LVISt Tall Story bedroom scene-"presumably to party Girf Tunnel of Low Rvo Gates To HoU attract, certainly to disappoint" Forbiddon Fruit Patinum High School Virgin SacrifiC\) -the public looking for that Frankenstein's Daughter Porfect Furlough What Price Murder kind of thing. Pretty Boy floyd Where the Hot Wind 810_ From Hell To Eternity From tho Terraco Prime TIme ¥(ho Was That Lady' The law has to leave scope for Gongstor Story _ Psycho Wicked Go to HolI serious literary treatment of Gene Krupa Story Push« Wife for a NiglW human problems, Bishop Dwyer Girls Town Quoen of Outor Space Wild RivOl' said. But there is a great mass of Great St. Louis Bank Rat Raeo Wind Aero.. the E ~ stuff which could and should be Ilobbery Rally Ilound the Flag., Boys Young Captive. suppressed. In some instan.ces it Gun.. Girls and Gangster. Young Jesle Ja_ is hard to draw the dividing line but there was still quite enough C - Condemned obvious "muck" below the line Mademoiselle Strip....... Ravetll Adorable Creatures to clear away first. Rosanna And God Croated WomOllt Mating Urge .... of Gra..
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have been filed in Municipal Court since the ordinal.ce WaB e!1acted April 14. He set Monday, N 'r. 14 as the date of the trial of a newsstand operator accused of selling obscene. publications in violation of the new law.
Teachers' Seminar In Negroes' Homes CHICAGO (NC) - A Catholic: interracial group here is sponsoring a race relations seminar for teachers in Catholic higb schools, featuring - "educational home meetings;' in the home of Negroes. The seminar is under the sponsoring of Friendshi:v House, an interracial center. The "educational home meetings" are intended to supplement formal talks and discussions by bringing together participants in the homes of Negroes for a studT of race relatiolUl from a personal viewpoint.
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6
THE
ANCHOR-Di~cesel
of.Fall River-Thurs.,.Oct. ' 27,, 1960
W,eekly Calendar 'Of Feast Days
The 'Devour~r
Failure' :by DefauHt' For all their h,ighly vaunted imagination and ingenuity' in using modern methods in the exercise of zeal, American Catholics thus far have failed misera1?ly in 'adapting television to the service of the Faith. The fault ,does not lie with the television networks. Even if they were not practically forced by the conditions of their licenses to put aside time for religious programming, the networks are showing a wonderful desire to, give the people what they want and high on the priority list is religion. For people are genuinely interested in religion':"-perhaps mere curiosity, perhaps intellectual, inquiry, perhaps honest seeking-but real interest. The very presentation .in tel~vision plays of nuns or priests in even minor roles evokes comment. For the Catholic Church cannot be easily ignored. Men wonder at this vast, complex world-wide organism that cuts across racial and cultural lines, that captures the hearts of men and .in the process gives them the freedom of the sons of God, that enlists the services of scholar and peasant alike. The Church may be loved or hatedbut she cannot ,be ignored. And so she has a ready-made audience. But the programming is not present. ' Bishop Sheen, of course, has done magnificient work on television but what' a shame that his il:l the only name that comes easily to mind. ...' . There are' dangers ,in television, to be su~~., Inept technical prese~tation,' tasteless programs" amateurish efforts-these'would make of the Church a figure of'mockery: But difficulty has ne~~r been a valid reason for, default. .. The president of the Westinghouse' Broadcasting Company' has deplored this :failure in the religious programming field. He has stated that "not a sing-Ie new idea of any consequence has been found in religious t~levision in the past eight years." Surely' 'the fa,ult lies with those whose interest it is to spread the Faith and make it ,better known and loved. , The Dominican Fathers of Providence College have served this area well in the past with excellent programs on television. It is hoped that they will expand their efforts. And it is to be hoped that the national television networks The editor of the Question and Answer column does not gua;antee to answer anonymous queries nor letters Irom unidentifiable sources. In eve". will be presented with religious programming that, will instance the desire lor anonymity will be respected. To that end, names give the Church in all her dimensions of beauty and goodare never appended to the questions, but unless the letter is signed ness and truth in excellent technical settings. there is no assurance that any consideration will be given it. But one thing is to be desired above all else--that Don't the' banns of marriage tice of cremation (to state it , Catholics will not fail by default in the use of this medium. always have ;.0 be read before mildly) it is, not absolutely
Twelve Into, Ten
any ma,rriage in the Catholic C~urch? In the CODE OF CANON LAW, ten canons are devoted specifically to the publication of banns. To condens' these into a briefer form: the code decrees that the banns of marriage should be published on three successive'Sundays or Holydays (usually at the main Mass); the bishop of the diocese may permit them to be posted in the vestibule of the 'church instead of being announced from the pulpit, but this is seldom done. Canon 1028 No. 1 probably ans'wers your question: "It is left to the prudent judgment of the Ordinary (Bishop) to dispense his.subjects, for. a legitimate cause,' from the publications." So, while the publication of the banns is the usual procedure, it may be omitted if there 'is a sufficiently serious reason. • • •
Monsignor Fredflrick G. Hockwalt, executive secretary of the National Catholic Educational Association, has announced that the programs and plans, committee is now looking into ways of compressing the traditional eight and four years elementary and high school course into ten years. There is, a possibility that some students in Catholic schools may do in ten years what it now takes twelve. This is a possible solution to the problem of rising schools construction costs and expanding enrollments. A factor favoring this speed-up course is the thought of school buildings standing vacant for 'three months o~ the year, and the further fact that the school day itself is limited to about six hours. But'there are other considerations that prevent the immediate sweeping generalization: a longer' school day and a longer .school year. Any school faculty must be given ample opportunity. for study and preparation in the course of the day and the year; the st.udents mllst have time to think and to assimilate and to study; summer vacation gives the chance ,for make-up work, preparation work for the next school year, and the opportunity to What are "fanons"? 1 know study in depth what has been taken in a survey way. they are some kind of cereA}1d there is always the practical consideration of sum~ llJlloniid robes, but 1 repeat, what are they? mer work to earn for future"education. FANON when llsed in the In some locales, indeed, the weather itself must be singulal.', refers to the red and a factor in any' talk of longer days and shorter summer gold striped vestment worn only vacation. ' . by the Pope when celebrating So the problem itself is not easily solved nor quickly· , 'Pontificial High Mass; it is made dismissed. It is right that an educ<ltional group of standing of white silk with narrow 'red should take it under study and give the benefit of their and gold stripes and is worn over the alb on the shoulders. It is findings. ' also salled 'the 'orale'. CertainJy the N.C.E.A: should study the investigations In the plural, F ANONS refer of other groups that are looking into the ~ame problem so to the two small flaps which that the judgements and experience of'inany may be brought hang down from the back of the mitre. Other names for these to bear on this matter that affects so vital a segment of (]aps--'infulae', 'vittae', 'lappets'. Ameyican life as education. '0 • •
@rheANCHOR
OFFICIAL NEW~PAPER OF THE DIOCESE O~ FALL ,RIVER Published weekly by ,The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, 'Moss. OSborne 5-7151
PUBLISHER' 'Most ~~v. James, L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER Rev. Danielf~ Shalloo. M:A. .'Ji,'
..:. ...
'ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGIN.G EDITOR "Hugh-J. Golden",·,,,,.. .• ,_,,'C'
n know that I, as a Catholic. «lannot have my body cremated after death; but 'what about _this situation-a person who has left· the Catholic Church wants his body cremated, and has instructed me to take care of the arrangements. Is this er-: . mUted? As your question seemS to indicate, you know that Chur.ch law denies ecclesiastical burial to anyone who has left orders for cremation' of his body after, death: The law further states that, .this ,wish for cremation should be ignored,J. e., ,a Catholic may not carry out this, unlawfUl wish. . While Christian ,and Jewish tradition frowns, upon, tbisprac-
wrong or evil in itself, and it is permitted when there is sufficient reason (such as in time of epidemic). The principal objection to this custom is that it is intended as a repudiation of Christian teaching, particularly the doctrine of the resurrection of the body. To imply that cremation I could 'deter Almighty God from resurrecting the bodies of the dead is ridiculous; the reason for the prohibition is due to the attitude of ,disbelief .or (Iisdain on the part of the person ordering such disposition of his ~arthly remainS. 0
0
•
TODAY - 51. Vincent and Companions, Martyrs. His com,. panions .were 55. Sabina and Christeta. They were SpaniardfJ who were martyred under Diocletian at Avila about 308. Little is known concerning them. TOMORROW-SS. Simon anel Jude, Apostles. These Apostlea ended their careers together ill martyrdom in Persia. Simon'. missiOl.ary field was Egypt, North Africa, Mesopotamia and Persia. Jude (T~addeus) was the brother of St. James the Less, and a relative of Christ. Simoa came from Cana in Gallil~e. SATURDAY - St. NarciS8~ 'Bishop-Confessor. He was BishOJJ of Jerusalem about 180 and is said tq have lived to the age of 116. 'One miracle attributed to him consisted of changing weD water into oil for. lamps used hi the Paschal feast. SUNDAY-TWenty-fi~st Sun.. day after Pente~ost. Feast of Christ the King. This feast on the last Sunday in October wu instituted' by Pope Pius XI to , pay homage 1,0 .Christ, the Rulft. of the world. Consecration 01. the world. to the Sacred Heart ,is reilewed each year at thai time.. Generally this date is the 'feast of St. Zenobius, Bishop;. Martyr. He was Bishop, also physician, at Aegae (now Ale~, andretta) on the coast of Asia . Minor. He is said to have been martyred with his sister, St. Zenobia, under Diocletian, about
a
290. .
MONDAY SS. Ampliatus. Urban and Narcissus, Martyrs.. They lived in the first century ·and were mentioned by St. Paul in his Epistle to the Romans.. Greek traditions mention St. Ampliatus as, a bishop and all as disciples of Our Lord who preached the Gospel with Si. jI ndrew in the Balkan countries. The Roman Martyrology, adds that they were slain by Jews and Gentiles. TUESDAY-All Saints. In addition to the persons whom the Church honors by special designation or' has inscribed on tho Calendar of Saints, there 31''many whose names are not recorded. Pope Gregory IV, in the , ninth century, decreed that thd feast should be kept by the Church in honor of all the Saints, named and nameleSli\, known and unknown. WEDNESDAY All Sonhf Day, which commemorates all of the faithful departed. All Souls' Day was' introduced ,bf' St. Odilo, who lived in the 11th century and was abbot of thO famous Benedictine 'Monasteri at Cluny, irance. SubsequentJi the commemoration was extended throughout the Church, and by a decree of Pope Benedict xV' all priests are permitted to offer three Masses on All' Souls' Daj.
,,' What Is the "Angelus'" Where does the name come from? When'did the' devotion start? . The ANGELUS commemorates' the mystery of, the Incarnation of Christ. It consists of three versicles and responses, each one of which is followed by a Hail Mary', and a final pl·ayer. It 'mnvests Non-Catholic takes its name from the first word of the first versicle in WASHINGTON (NC)-Nor.rbil Latin "Angelus Domini nuntiavit Mariae".:-"the anJel of the Lord E. Dodd, of Phoenix, Ariz., W8.jjl invested as a Knight Commander declared unto Mary". The Angelus is recited at 6 A.M., noon' Grand Cross of the Order of st. Sylvester at Georgetown Univep. and 6 P.M. sity here. Although there may have been The formal investiture of tIKi vestiges of the practice prior to honor from Pope John was bethe middle of the thirteenth cen- stowed by Archbishop Patrick tury, it was at that,time that A. O'Boyle of Washington. the custom of reciting the Hail The honor was conferred upoa Mary in honor of the Incarnation Mr. Dodd, a non-Catholic, for hie seems to have come into. prom- outstanding achievements 28 inence. In the following century, director general of the World more prayers were added and it Food and Agricultural Organiza,became a popular dev.otion in, tion from 1948 to 1954. The 0r:imitation of the monastic night ganization 'is a special agenCJ' prayers. The devotion,in its pres-' of the qnited Natio[ls. It WH ent form. of prayer and time of established in 1945 to aid in the recitation seems to have been, struggle against,hunger and ma},;. in general usage in the fifteenth nutrition. or sixteenth century. ~ During the Easter Season,. the, in regards to other Masses ill Angelus is omitted/ and the their daily schedules; religiouil Regina Coeti is recited in its orders, because of the number of plactl . priests t1i~t they !lave,' are in 0 0 • ' better position to fulfill the Jeo:o quirement of celebrating these What lathe meaning oil Masses on consecutive days. "Gregorian Masses"? . .. • .GREGORIAN' MASSES are ZI Where does the word "cui-. ,series of thirty, Masses celebrated dees" come, from and wbat on thirty'successive days for the does it mean? . repos~ ,of the soul of some de... CULDEES is a word of Celt.te ceased . person. M"ost parishes origin, now obsolete. It applie.e would be unable to guarantee 'to those who devote themseivel fulfillment of this obligation;be-,' to divine services" either _ 'cause of parochial commitmenb monks or secular priests.
With Papal' Honor
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Ireland to Mark 15th Centenary Of Saint's Death DUBLIN (NC)-The 15th eentenary of the death of St. Patrick will be marked next yea r wit h celebrations throughout the land he made Christian. This was announced by Jolm Cardinal D'Alton, modern successor of St. Patrick as Archbishop of Armagh. He ma,le th~ announcement at the end of the annual meeting of the Irish Bishops at St. Patrick's College, Maynooth. The "Patrician Year," ~s it'has been named, will open March 17, 1961, the Feast of St. Fatrick-The Cardinal said:' , "The Hierarchy propose to celebrate in 1961 the 15th centenary of the death I)f Saint Patrick, the most commonly accepted date for the death of the Saint being 461 A.D: "The opening ceremony is planned for St.. Patrick's Day'in the Primatial City of' Armagh, so closely associated in Irish· tradition with the life and work of our national apostle. n ."This ceremony will be followed, it is hoped, by oUler celebrati'ons, arranged by direction of the local Ordinaries, in place~ . particiJlarly associated with SL Patrick, such as the holy mount Qf ~roagh Patrick, or not~d as centers of especial devotion to the saint, such aii St. Pa~ick'8 Purgatory, Lough Derg." Mission Exhibition Cardinal D'Alton added that a missionary exhibition may be held in connection with the Patrician Year. This would detail the work done by Irish misSionaries throughout the world, he said. He said the Irish Catholic Historical Committee is preparing a three-volume history of the Church in Ireland and in areas evangelized by Irish missioners. He said it is hoped that the first volume will appear during the Patrician Year.
Bishop Warns K of C Against Compromise
Holy, G~st Parish, !lttleboro, Cherishes Memory of "Reverend Father Sam"
7
Thurs•• Oct. 27, 1960
Asserts Personal Holiness Source Of ReaI Action
, By MarionUnsworih Around 1918, in a section of Attleboro then called Lonieut, Catholic residents attended church either at St. John's in Attleboro, or walked approximately, six miles to St. Mary's ASBURY (NG)-A bishop Church, Hebronville, of which they were offically parishioners. Pastor of St. Mary's at that time was Rev. Patrick McGee, known as "Reverend Father Sam." Each week, Father characterized personal ho~ "Sam" bicycled from Heness as the wellspring of any bronville to Lonicut, bring:- -effective apostolate and fruitful Catholic Action at the ing candy for the children, first statewide convention of the who used to sit along a wall near the railroad bridge for their catechism lessons. Soon a delegation was formed by the parishioners, for the most part o~ Portuguese extraction, on the advice of Father McGee, to petition the Bishop for a parish of their own. Permission granted 'for Holy Ghost Parish, plans were drawn - up' for a church" and Rev. Francis Bettencourt was named first pastor. By May 26, 1921, the/church was completed, and the first ,Mass was, celebrated by the long-time friend of ' the parish, Father McGee. Three years later, Father Bettencourt was transferred to Fall River, 'and Rev. Manuel Salvadore became the, second pastor at Holy .. Ghost, Att~eboro on June 17, 1924. Before he left, however, Father Bettencourt had purchased. .a house on Palm Street to be used as a rectory. It is still part of parish properties. , Father Salvadore remained until 1927, when Rev. Thomas McNulty came to Holy Ghost to guide the parish for the next eight years, during' which time it increased in numb&- of soula and in activities. Longest Pastorate Then followed the longest pastorate in the history of the parish, that of Monsignor John J. Sullivan, who serVed there from Jan. 5, 1935 to Sept. 12, 1951. In 1947, Msgr. Sullivan purchased a new and larger home on Linden Street across from the church, for a rectory, and altered the original rectory to be used as a kindergarten. It also was due to Monsignor Sullivan that the Missionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity, or the Trinitarians, first came into the Fall River Diocese. They staff the kindergarten, and conduct Christian Doctrine classes 'every day ex>"
TORONTO (NC) - Catholics should not become so docile to criticism that they let themselves be "argued into compromise," Bishop John King MUSllio of Steubenville,. Ohio, said in an address ~o local Knigbts of ColumQus. ' The Bishop particularly warned ST. LOUIS (NC)-Men volunCatholics to avoid compromise in their attempts to square teers ,conducted a "flash census" Catholicism with other people's throughout the 81. Louis archinterpretations of Americanism. diocese which also was geared , to promoting religious vocations. "It seems to me that some writers are going so far in their The volunteers left a leaflet protestations of loyalty that they dealing with vocations at all give the impression that it would Catholic homes and requested prayers for them. The census be unpatriotic even to listen to the admonitions and instructions provided up-to-date information, on conditions since the last of the Supreme Pontiff." he ,said.
HOLY GHOST CHURCH, ATTLEBORO cept Sunday. Other projects undertaken b,. the Monsignor included the purchase of a second house on Linden street for a Cenacle for the Sisters, property used as a parking lot and playground for the children of the parish and additions to the new rectory to provide more room. The playground has since been dedicated as the Monsignor Sullivan Memorial Playground. ReV. James A. Downey succeeded'Msgr. Sullivan, in 1951, but died suddenly the following year. In November, 1952, then, the present pastor, Rev. John F. Laughlin, became the sixth pas-
Flash Census Points up Shortage Of· Religious Vocations in See '
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THE ANCHOR-
official census in 1959. During the last 10 years there has been a decline in ~e ratio of priests to laymen and also sharp drops in the numbers of Sisters and Brothers despite an increase in Catholic population Arch':' bishop Joseph E. Ritte~ of S1Louis said. ' ' Fewer Sister:" Brotbe~ . In 1950, accordmg to StatiStiCS, there was one parish priest for every 865 Catholics i,n the archdiocese, while today the ratio is one priest for every 1,088. There are 531 diocesan priests today, compared with 501 a decade ago, and in the same period there has been a net increase of 144,626 Catholics. There are 700 fewer Sisters-. 3,205 today compared ~ith 3,944 in 195O-and fewer Brothers, 367 compared with 391.
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'tor. His curate is Rev. Edward 3. Sharpe. Father Laughlin's pride and joy is the new kindergarten. an addition to the original Palm Street rectory,then kindergarten, which is considered one of best appointed in the Diocese. With a present enrollment of 105 pupils. Father Laughlin reports that there is a waiting list each year of youngsters anxious to attend. In addition to his work on the school, which also is used for C h r i s t ian Doctrine classes, Father Laughlin has renovated and redecorated the church, rectory and playground since hiS arrival in 1952. Originally a bus transported children to and from the school, but recently the Portuguese American Civic. Clubhas donated a station wagon to the parish, which the Sisters use to drive the students to classes. Members of Holy Ghost parish are aHiliated with the o\ttleboro Mother's Club, and sponsor a Catholic Youth Organization, Girl Scout and Brownie Troops.
, TAVARES UPHOLSTERING AllWORK CUSTOM MADE DAY -
AFTER 66 YEARS: Mrs. Winifred Ford, organist. fQr
plans for retirement. The 84 year old North Attleboro native 'is on hand several times a week at St. Mary's forfuneral~ weddings, high' Masses and oth~r liturgical ceremoiIieS:
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BUSANDA (NC) - L new clinic and hostel for victims of Hansen's disease (leprosy) has been erected by American missioners here in 1'anganyika. Heading the 'mission 'are Fathers George D. Daly, M,M" of Hohokus N. J .. and John E. Bergwall, M.M., of Milwaukee" Wis.
6~ years at St. Mary's Cqurch,' ,North Attleboro,.has no
Holy Name .Societies Of New Jersey here. In the keynote address Bishop George W. Ahr of Trenton re-' minded more than 1,000 delegates that closely allied with personal holiness is the recognition and fulfillment by the Holy Name man of his family responsibilities. "It can, I think, be readily understood that there can be no genuine holiness in a man who is sinfully negligent ,of his duties to, his family," declared Bishop Ahr. "And; conversely, genuine holiness will radiate itself most clearly and most efficaciously in the Intimate associations of the family circle." Model of Virtues "'If we are to speak of influence of the Holy Name Societies in our own tinies," Bishop Ahr said, "we had better be sure that in our own times we have real Holy Name Societies and real Holy Name men. "It .,goes without saying that a real Holy Name man. will be • model of the basIc virtues implied in the obligations of conjugal love and fidelity, and wiD faithfully observe the Commandments of God designed to safeguard the sanctity of the horne. "But I would like to see the personal sanctity of the Hoi,. Name man expressing itseU in all the virtues that were exemplified in the head of the HoI,. Family, and being reflected in a well ordered, peaceful and happy bome. 0< After he has developed his personal holiness, after he has ordered his household, the Holy Name man can think and act in terms of the Apostolate and Catholie Action," Bishop Ahr said.
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THE ANCHOR..:-Diocese <;If Fall
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River~Th~~:'; Oct.. 27;:1960'
Prelate Suggests Role for Women '
Find Space in Home by Lookin'g, 'Just,Aro~~d the Corner~
CHICAGO, (NC)-Albert CaPdinal Meyer urged 2,500 members of~ the Chicago Council of. Catholic Women to fight comBy Alice Bough Cahill munism through their civic, i-e-' , A friend disarmed me the other week by saying, "I'm ligious and welfare groups. glad you came to see my seven-room apartment.'" She is a "Communists st=ess action and widow and I knew she had had to retrench' and move to believe they can win' without' smaller quarters, so I wasn't expecting seven rooms. It was risking total war by attacking the weakness of our moral fiber," amusing as she show.ed me Fortunately all the working area the Cardinal said. "Therefore ,through her new three-room was on one wall and' a corner, all our efforts must be directed "around the corner." And it of another. toward decency and moral liy.. is finding room around the ing." It was hidden by a series of corner that I want to talk about. folding screens, placed far Cardinal Meyer asked the A "music room" had been cre-' enough from the stove and sink women to stress' "continual to give plenty of clearance for ated by use Ol action;' in their work. working.• n attractive old dropan alcove in the He said their organization Call living room and leaf table was !Jlaced i~ the cenhelp to correct such current conter of the unused space, thus because of the ditions as "diversity of values partitioned off, with a glass extra attention NURSES DANCE: Catholic Nurses Guild dance held at and conducts, lack of legal sup:;. closet to hold dishes placed' she had giyen to against one wall and a dresser Country Club of New Bedford, included, left to right: Miss 'port for stable marriages, 'devalthis spot around Grace Regan, R.N., chairman, Miss Carole Holeson, R.N., uation of paren~hood, confusioa. _against the' other wall. the' corner, my of· the modern women, and fail- ' friend 'had with her' escort Willi~m J. Kerwin; Island; and Gladys O'Connell- at ure to define the role of tIM added immeasa tea service, and the, drawer sexes." , urably to the space is used for 'linens. e 0 lor of the, The Council of Catholic Womroom: ' Poreh Solarium en, with more, than 450,000 mem..' A back porch got named "801I Shelves which bers working in 451l <Issociated Forty-five members of the high school records and charac- organizations in the Chicago took'only inches of space had arium," and it is so attractively been installed to provide room furnished that one ca!l use it for ,junior class at Sacred Hearts ter traits. area, sponsors progr.ams of civic, The scholarship group inciudes welfare, educational and reUfor displaying and storing her just that. My friend said that all' Academy, Fall River, have taken wonderful record album collec- Summer she ate her meals out Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude, Madeline DiSanto at Albertus , gious activities. ' tion. One shelf was deep enough there, for it is equippe~ with Tests as Educational Testing Magnus College; Fernanda Carto hold a hi-fi ancl a wall not gaily painted chairs, a tea cart, Service of Princeton, N. J. of- reiro at Boston College; Helen used for shelves was just large a bureau, a good supply of snack fered the "trial run" for the Gannon, a National lIo1erit Final- Women Lay Teachers ist, at Seton' Hill; Elizabeth Adopt School Uniforms enough for a cabinet, with loud- trays and colored glass tumblers. third year. The tests are a trainil)gGetola at Seton Hill; Winifred speaker. A, tall standing lamp SPRINGFIELD (NC) - The, Maybe you have cut corners, ground fc;>r high school juniors, Welch at Emmanuel; ,Mary Lou' gave adequate lighting, and' one seven women lay teachers at St., overlooked them, taken them for' and form a helpful preparation Knight at University of Rhode could, with the slightest tinge' Theresa's parochial 'school here But if the 'corners in for NationaI Scholarship and Island; and Gladys O'Connel , of imagination, call this a "music granted. some ofi2 your ex- College Board examinations. Sac- Rhode Island College of Educa- in Ohio have adopted a uniform' tended or 18rooms inches were out from room." for classroom wear. red Hearts students have taken tion. . Library Corner the wall, would it matter'much! advantage of the tests on a vol',Such facts prove, according to, ' Their new dark gray suits not' The. "library" in this apart':, Chances are you wouldnit miss untary ba'sis and results show Catholic educators, th,,~,Catholic only serve as a "symbol of au-, ment was likewise a corner, in~o: those few inches of floor space. that the practic~ has paid divi- high, schoof graduates are doing' thority and an aid iIi command-:, which was fiiteda flattop desk' But if you once had the chance d' ds ' . ' en. , a credit~ble job, and displaying ing the respect of ~he children,", with shelves above it all the way to enjoy a music corner, oj ." Among the 225 students gradu- staying power in these" days of but also provide an ,answer to; 'to the ceiling; A 'convenient 'built:"in cabinet at the right of library created ~ith shelves and atiilg ,from' the academy in the keen competition for admission the daily question of "what· to, ~milt-ins "around a cornet," - past 'four, years, 50 per, cent are to col1e~es; ',.' ' we~r,'! ' a' spokesman for ~ uje desk housed telephol1e boo~s. ' you'd ,ne·'er be' without' 'them.' DOW registered in 20.liberal arts teachers said. By rounding corners of deslt and shelves, hazards 'In the traf- Look twice at unused corners 01.' ' eo 11 e g e II and universities CorlV~rt Danish Castle They, plan to add appropr.a~ fie: lane ,were eliminated: Call, your home, and your search for Jbroughout the country. Ten Into CisterCian 'Convent' , insigriia to 'the uniforms. Six: m.ore usable ,space' will :Je ove:.' per cent are holders of substanthis'room 'a librarY,or study if' Charity' of Mount St.' A Sisters Your bedroo-!n, for '~xample" tial scholarships earned on the " COPENHAGEN (NC) 70U wish.' ',' , Joseph also teach at 'the schooL', 14th-century Danish caStle is' to Here's what my' imaginative can become a quiet reading room basis of College Board grades, be converted into a convent for' friend called her "guest room." with corner bookshelves' and Provincetown Unit,', Cistercian nuns. Halloween Dance She had another alcove that was cupboard space beneath. Shelves Sostrup Castle in northern, New officers of the Catholie A HaIlow~n dance for 7th, not being used and she set about will give the bedroom distinction Jutland-the Danish mainland-' Daughters of America of Proy,to· use it for a much~wanted' and cupboard space, is a valuable 8th and 9th grade students will be held from 7:30 to 10 tomorrow has been bought by the only incetown include Mrs. Mar;' . guest room. She built'some book- addition to any room.. night at the Catholic Commun- Cistercian community in Dtm- Avellar, grarid regent; Mrs. shelves, 'added 'gQOd lighting I sin~erely feel that if ity Center, Franklin Street, FaR mark. 'Until now the nuns have Catherine Cadose, vice regent;:, and used a sofa bed. space you're l()oking for, you Call' , The magic ·touch was a folding find it just around the corner River, under sponsorship of the lived in a former dairy 'in Aller_ Mrs. Mary Chapman, monitor.' ' slev about 30 miles from here. Mrs. Florence Kenney, treasurer..' door which' gave the alcove the literally. If you've got the right ~YO. p'rivacy needed for a guest. She angle', you've got 'the space. And ' used a ,heavy-duty' cover' and every room bas its right angle, p'lenty of pillows. 'When the sofa usually there 'are at'least foUr. bed sheds them, her, guest has a full-sized Ded, as well as a chair - D'Youville' Alumni and reading material. Such an Margaret d'Youville Alumni ~rrangement could also offer one' an inviting retreat during the Association of St. Joseph's Home, Fall River,' will have Antonio" day. . I've accounted for the "music Barabe as preside:1t for the next toom," the "guest rooin," and three years. Paul Lamontagne now I want to' tell you about will serve with him as vice pres~ the "dining room." Here's how ident, Jeannine St. Laurent will she created dining space in a be secretary and Alphege Belisle large, old - fashioned' k~tchen; will be treasurer.
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ARTISTS IN' CLAY: A ceramics class is among activi- ,,' ties offered by th~ Fall River CYO. Left to right, Mrs. Robert Banville, St. Louis deFrance, Swansea, instructor; Miss Elaine Souliere, also St. LoWs de France;, Miss JaRice -Suart, S~. Patrick, Fall RiveBo
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THE ANCHORThurs.. Oct. 27, 1960
Sells Vacuums with Energy Worthy of Better Cause
Convert Becomes Mission Sister
By' Mary Tinley Daly You think you are immune to the "sales pitch 1" That 100- can smell it a mile away? So did we. When a telephone eall comes, usually at dinner time, telling us that we are the lucky winners of a dance course, letting us in on a low rate on a magazine subscription, up with a handful of grit and announcing that a decorator' a disgusted expression on his (:or a pn.otograph.er, or a face. "This rug is clean?" gutter spout man) "will be Versatile Cleaner . in the neighborhood and would like to have a house like yours as a sample," or when they 6"""'~:'" give us bar- ~,/ gain prices on L ' a cemetery lot
In defense' of Willie Mae and the previous brown-suiter who had sold us our present cleaner, we picked, up the challenge.
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Tissue over our own vacuum, we
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went over the portion of the rug and got still more grit and -well, we ".' dirt ' have a stock This was getting to be a yesanswer. Quickand-no debate. est way out t. "But the inadequate 'cleaner to say that you 'have cannot keep your we've been ill home as you would' 'like' .it,;. the same busiBrown Suiter declared "And cerDeBS. . tainly not the way it should be "Yes, ma'am/ ~<@i\, for this fine young. daughte~ of . , ' comes the 1"~1!" yours. Do you want, your home answer. "Well, you know how fully c1ean-or are you satis• goes!" I fied to have it half-clean?" Matter of fact, during the Dramatic pause. eourse of their growing-up, our "Oh, I guess half-clean is ebildren were salesmen for such ' O.K.," the Head of the House (!except the cemetery lots) 90 we know that side of salesrnanwas not In the prep book 8bip too. of .Mr. Brown Suit. "Ah," he Ginnra Surprise wagged his finger and laughed.. Last night, though, Super "You must have your little joke, Salesman caught us. sir', but I know you don't mean . "Going to be home-both 01. it." . pou-at a quarter to eight on Onto a new tack, he showed 'l"uesday?" Ginny had asked us how his cleaner would deIlonchalantly a few days ago. moth our clothes, shampoo our «rve got a surprise for you." hair, even brush our teeth. This Since we're usually at home was too much. .. 7:45 on Tuesdays, we awaited For more than an hour 'we the surprise. It came In the fonn watchE!d wonder after wonder of a brown-suited young man performed. However, we were' who rang the front door ben not in the maket for a new with a beaming, "Good evening! .cleaner, even though we felt· I hope .you feel as well as yoa slightly guilty about Ginny's look!" knife and fork. In our lounging clothes, we "Can't sell every time," Brown we hoped that we felt better Suit said cheerfully. "Anyway, lban we looked. I thank: you fOl' listening. I , , The young man, bowing frOm neededpracuee on .my sales" t'te waist, presented Ginny with pitch.'" ber "surprise," a knife and.fork. If' h d 't be our vacuum, a n en tirs' item in a future trousseau. . -And now, folks," he launched. perfectly good, ;;.e d have signed -rhanks to that foresighted on the dotted I e. As the young man packed, ~p etaughter of yours, you will have an opportu~itY to see' a demon- the whole gear, we .could see In "'ation that will revolutionize retrospeCt the ,frustrations, of your home. Yes, sir, revolution- our own children when they had ize it!" ' eh":barked on such. salesman.. Frankly, we were-In no mood 8 Ip. Ginny, .perhaps,· will think:'" tM- a revolution, but found it was simply another vacuum twice before she falls for an" cleaner salesnuui done up ill other come-oft. 1960 style. Brown Suiter "hapUrge College Students penedto have handy" a machine that brought forth unbounded To Work for Justice enthusiasm on his part. With a PURCHASE (NC)-A resoluwhirr and a zip we found oureelves paying In time for tion ul'ging the Catholic college student to become an active &inny's knife and fork. "You think your house is member of his civic community clean?" the young man asked. as well as his parish was adopted at an inter-regional meeting of "'When was this· rug I a s t the National Federation of Cath.teaned? "Yesterday," we answered. olic Colle'ge Students here.' -Willie Mae alwaYlI cleans on 'The meeting at Manhattanville Monday." College of the Sacred Heart With a paper tissue over the brought together at a Human ftcuum bag, Mr. Brown Suit Relations Conference delegates, did a square foot of rug, came from the Philadelphia" New England, Washington, Lake Erie and New York-New Jersey Regions. . . The ,resolution, which be presented to the NFCCS 18th National Congress in Pittsburgh next August, pointed out that legisla-tio" alone is insufficient to secure interracia' justice.,
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ANNUAL CHRISTMAS SALE: Student nurses of St. 'Anne's Hospital, Fall River, prepare articles fO,r their sale on Nov. 3, 4, and 5. Left to right: Muriel Thiboutot, Fall River; Patricia O'Brien, Somerset; Madeleine Michaud, Fall River; and Eleanor Kokoska, Taunton.
Inv I 't eMou"nt St. Mary Academy ," To Participate in Colloquium The College Entrance Examination Board has il'vited Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, as one of ~ ~ secondary schools in the country to attend its eighth C.olloquium on College Admissions. The Colloquium is being held at Arden House on Harriman Campus, Columbia University, Harriman, N. Y. 'It will conclude SatiJrddY, and follows the adjournment of the College Entrance Bv~i'd's annual meeting in New York Cit'. Th Colloquium will have fOl' its general th :rie:' "Counseling in SC?ools and 'C~lleli!es." This is ~heflrst CoIloq';llUm to concerl\ Itself who~ly With the' problem of counselIng." . Mt. St. .Mary Academy and Newton High School, Newtonville, are the _.lY tvn Massachu_ setts secondary schools listed as active participants in the fourday session. Several New England colleges as well as colleges from all' sections of the country will also be in attendance.
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Mt. St. Mary and Ursuline High School, Youngstown, O. are the· only two reprt' ent...tives from Catholic secondary schoola in country. At the College Entrance Examination Board meeting which preceded the Colloquium, Mt. St. !\fary Academy cast its first vote ~ one of 50 member secondary sc~ools in the Uniter States. Last y~r the academy was voted in as a ,member of the College En_ trance Board f()r a three year period. Mot. St. Mary will serve as a n~w testing center for the greaterFall Rivel"area in the. admin_ istration of the College ;ntrance Examinations in December, January and February of the current' sChool year. Sister Mary Carmela, R.S.M., principal, attended the Board meeting and is at the Colloquium as the official delegate from th~ academy.
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PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A St. Louis woman doctor has become a member of the Medical Mission Sisters. She is Dr. Hanna Klaus, now known as Sister Miriam Paul. A refugee from Austria, Dr. ·Klaug ia a convert from Judaism. Sister Miriam Paul said hero that her first contact with Catholicism came from a Catholie student at medical school. She became friends with him and was perplexed by his answers to moral questions facing the medical world, she said. "I soon got the best explanations to ,most of the questioM . . . from St. Thomas Aquinas. Within a year and a 'half I was eonverted.'· 'Dr. KlilUs came to St. Louis in '1952 to join the staff of the Barnes Hospital Group here, one of the nation's largest. . Sister Mil'iam· Paul said • st.or}> 'in the Catholic press pro_ vided the incentive for her to become a Religious. "I was reading the St. Louis Register," she said. "I noticed a story about the Medical Mission Sisters of Philadelphia, and their new headquarters m st. Louis. ' , "I had heard previously about the Sisters, and the' newspaper adicle convinced me to find out about 'the society on my own. I made my first contact at too . society's convent in St. Louis."
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10
THE ANCHOR-Diocese
Cif Foil
High School CeD.
River-Thurs., Oct. 27, 1960
Course .Opcens m... Fall Rivell"
Two Am®r~@[fU~ t[@ ~@c®iwe Consecration· F~OM Pope
Eighty trainees representing twenty-six parishes have. 'started a teacher - training' course on the high school
NEW YORK (NC)-The consecration iIi Rome tomorrow of two native Americans by Pope John XXIII brings to a total of five the' American bishops who have been con~ secrated by a reigning pontiff. Latest to gain this distinc·tion are Archbishop Joseph was promoted to the metropolF. McGeough, new Apostolic itan See of New York. Deleg~te to South Africa; Since .the c.onsecration in ~790 - d. A T Bishop Ed- of the flrst.blshop of the Umted ~n UXl lary '. States John Carroll, of BaIti.
level at St. Louis Church Hal~' Fali River. The twelve-week' course is being conducted from, 2 to 4 on Saturday afternoon by Sister James of the Our Lady of Victory Missionary Sisters, Wes* Harwich. ward E. Swanstrom of New Yor~, more' there have been nearly Rev. Joseph'L. Powers, Dioc.: executive direct'Jr ?f Cathohc 700 'Ame;ican bishops conseesan CCD Director, welcomed, Relief Services-NatIOnal f.:ath. crated Each year since the Civil the group and introduced Sist~. olic Welfare Confe,-:ence. The War i~ 1865 there has been at James. Sister explained the 01'former is a native of New Yo~k least one me'mber of the Amerganization of the Confraternity. <:ity, and the latter was born In ican hierarchy consecrated here of Christian Doctrine, ·stress,ing. Brooklyn, N. Y. , . or abroad. the importance of the individual . His Holiness Pope PlUS XII parish unit and· the absolute ne- . was the first Pontiff to Iconse-' DO cessity of the parish executi~e. crate an American bishop. 8 . board to achieve maximum CCl) Among the 12 missionary bishops output. be consecrated in St. Peter's v Representatives of the follow- . basilica on Oct. 31, 1939, were . ST. LOUIS (NC)-Archbishop ing parishes registered for t~e. Texas-born Bishop Louis La Joseph E. Ritter of St. Louis has SCIENCE BUILDING: At Georgetown, University, course: Ravoire-Morrow, S.C., present warned against Catholic Schools Fall River: St. Elizabeth's.' Washing,ton, D.C., Father M. P.· Thekaekara, head of the Bishop of Krishnagar, In<!ia and :which might graduate students Physics Department, shows students the architect's model Blessed SacrarilE~nt, Holy Name,' the late Bishop' William F. 19norant of C~rist. He told 3,000 Saered Heart, S~. Joseph's. Alsa.·. O'Shea, M.M., Vicar Apostolic of. grade and high school teachers. of the new $4,200,000 .Science Building, for which ground Immaculate Conception, Notte Heijo,. Korea. A native of Ne~ attending· an archdiocesan teachwas recently broken. NC Photo. . . Dame, Espirito Santo, St. AnYork City he was 'among the. ers 'institute: "It is almost unthony of the Desert and St., Maryknoll' missionaries i~pris-' believable that we can ,have . Boch's. o'ned by the Japanese dllring th~ public schools' ari-~ not have' ~nSIYe · New Bedford-St. Lawrence's.' last war. He died in New Y!>rk, Christ taught in them; and yet Immaculate Conception, and S!'.; on ·Feb. 27, 1945. if is entirely possible.,"",' . Mary's. Mission Bishops .' . The Archbishop, cite~ Latin" SPOKANE (NC) Young . The' Bishop assertec' th~t reAcushnet: St. Fra.ncis Xavier~ ,', In St. Peter's basilica, on May; .. American communists .w' h 0 Americans must be given more' ligion must again become a reg.,. Assonet: .St. Bernard's; AttIe-.:: ~. 8;' 19'60, Pope John· XXIII con:- "came from .Catholic home~ and .. intensive 'religious training toula~, part of public school edu- boro: St. 'John's, St. Theresa'~ secr'ated 14 missionary bishops. graduated from ·Catholic· col-' withstand 'the pressures of comc1;Ition .if this country is to con::. . 'North Attleboro: Saci:ed Heart;, 'One of these was 'Bishop 'Louis leges.'?' ,; munism,. Bishop Bernard J. tinue the war against commun-, North 'Westport:' Our Lady oil' A." Scheerer;. O.P., of :Murta~,~ . "He. speculated~.that 'such. peo..:·: Topel of Spokane declated, sup:', ism.. He noted that clergymen in Grace; . Ocean . Grove: ,st.; We'st Pakistan. Born in Philil:-' p6rting his contention by Cithlg Red-ruled· Poland. are free, to MichaeJ!s;' Somerset: St, Thom~. delphia, he is 'one of a fa~il~ . p'le' become communists·becaus~ . iii#' "son'y record" ~f Ameriteach:religion in state schools, of ten' in religion. . . many' Reds diSplay a real,com-' can GI's -who were prisoners' of but that: in this country there' is More, St. John of.·God; Swan~~ 'It is interesting also to note, paiisi!>rdor tl1e, poor, while.some: the communists during the Kora'gelleral ban' against sach'a St. Loui~ of France; Taunton:. st.: , Joseph's, Immaculate Concep1hat His Eminence FranCis Car_Cathol'ics 'including educators" ean conflict. . . . practice." . re~ain oblivious to, s,ocial i.~jus- : , ' .. . . tion; westport: St. George's.. " '. dfnal Spellman, Archbishop of . • Th~ Bishop spoke ~t the dedi..:' .,: ~'We have laws againsti~," he :New York, a nativ~ of Whib:nan, ..tlce." '" . . , ',(:ation' of the Col~e'ge of Great· . sa~d .. "But .~~ must .get b,a~~ .to consecrated in. Rome' by the : "I kn-~ .you teach a multitude'. Falls! Mont.; c~ting Army psy~~e fou~ l' s -read~n~, ,~ltIng.' ," Asks Court to Review', 'then Papal' Secre,ta~y of- State,. of things,~' A~chbishop.Ri,tt,er a~-' chiatrists. who . claimed that . r.~thmetIc : and· rehglOn, the Comics ·Law Ruling Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli, (later. seried.~'ii know youcannot con- , Amefican' Gi's: imbued with re:' Bishop said. WASHINGTON (NC) - The' Pope Pius XII) on Sep't. 8, 1932. tinually :"~ - t~lking 'about reli-:- ligiou's' principles successfully ,Wh~n. la~s bar the. teacliing V.S·. Supreme Court has beea. Named 'to' the titular See of Sila, g10D. Bu(shouldn't· C:;hrist be. 'in. stood up against communist of rehglon In the public schools, asked to· review lower wu". he was appointed Auxiliary" everything you .do;·so that:your, .brainwashing when '·theY were.tl)ese laws should be changed, .. rulings' which held unconstitu-' Bishop of Boston, and il)." 1939 pupils can see'Christ in yo~?", impri'soned .in Korea: .a~d "the sooner the b~tter,'" tiona 1 a Maryland law' hannii\« . , I ; ; . ; The Church always has viewed Bishop .Topel declared' The wall , crime' comic books and those '., er~: religion as an essential part of,' .sepa~atmg Church and State to- emphasizing lewdness. the school's curriculum,Bishop d~y IS not;. the wal~ that Thomas, · In a petition submitted to ft)e Topel. said. The view was shared J~fferson was talkm~ about, t~e cOurt, Baltimore Police Com1 d If .by th~ fo'unding fathers. 01. this B.ls~op aqqe~. :E;nemles ?f reh"MADRID (NC) Spain's' allow: workers)~to Ive In a. I - .country, he stated,. and only, in .' g!OUS ed~catl~n ha~(' .distorted , missioner James M.• Hepbroa, Young 'Chl'istiari Workers have, nified manner." .' \. recent. times. has it been perthe meanmg of the .Flrst Amend- . and Saul A. Harris, state's' a4torney for Baltimore; argue that'· -Adequate· ..salarIes: They. . .1 f th C st·t· , . a ffirmed that workers have a ." ff" ttl t to verted by enemies .01 religious me~. 0 . e . on; 1 utlon •,with. the law ·is a validexcrcise CJi' jright to share with' capital "in' shou~d b«; . su . lelen . a., eas· . education. telhng .and tragic. effect; he . the profitS, decisions ,and 'plans provide' for t~e·ne~ds of a s t a t e d . , ' the state's police ~wer. !of production." worker and .. ~us ~~mIlY; under He said the real attitude oi the' They also demanded' a free . ~ormal conditIons, ,andsho~ld founding' fathers was ex iressed WE' DELIVER' ~NYWHERE 'voice for' labor. 'Workers'should' r,epresent' ·"a just .remuneratlOn clearly' in the Northwest Ordlbe able, they' said, ~·to express ..for Jabor." , nance,passed in ·1787 :-.n<l' re':' :their 0'p ini 9 n and make it. ef~ec7 ' . ' Reprt<seniaiive Un.ions'i>ENVER' (NC)...,-'-The Jewish ena,cted in 1790, Which stated. jtive, partic~larly: when. It ~9 :\ ..... ~Free labOJ.~unions: "In'the National HoBie' for' Asthmatic. that; religion, morality and _ LUMBEi COMPANY !inatter o.f. Imposmg ob~lga'J.'mll pr esellt drcum~tances it ~s m0.r e Children 'here will 't>e ho'nonid knowledge are necessary lo.r· . SPECIAL-4x8' Prefinished V ;8nd saCrifICes on them. . urgently' ,necessary than' 'ever bY-St.' Anthony's' Hospit~(,l1e,re good citizenship arid man's nap:" ~: 'rheir views· were ~n a state.. ·.before ..that' iabot' :union ~or,J'an.i'; ,on November 3 lor outstanding piness..·':: .. . ., ·.Groove Mahogany PaneUng 'inent adopted by 230 YCV'''·lead"\";''zatiori~ .remain' removed .'from s~I'vid!'in the 'fieldof healt'h. ,,,,.' ., : $6.40 sheet ·ers on Spain's "economic crisis, any politic!llactivity; .that they.·" The 'Catholi~ ~ospital'~}ir~,t .Boy .Scouts Rett:eat . its readjustment .and .present '. b'e ~uly'l:epresentative·andful;.a~nu.al A.nthom~n Award!!l?ec~- . . 'DETROIT : (NC)-More than '2452 High~ay mate of reactivation." Reactiya:'fill'wifh complete' independence flCally cites the~te Mrs...Fa~.nIe'· "1200 Boy Scouts and adult lea'd·NO. 'SWANSEA tion refers to the Spanish g.}V-.·, t'heir authent.ic function of de- E. Lorber, a Russian-Jewish Im' I' . . .' t·· h . I' . ded th h .' ers rom 50 parishes here took . ,. . ernment's relaxation of certain . fense of 'therighti 'of the ·work..,. "fmlgrhan ~ 0 ouln. 'd e ome ,. part in their annual retreat.' . fRontier 9-9~9-9601 anti-inflationary measures' ~ ing class." . . or er exemp ary I ea l s an d . make the national economy -Recognition 01' the priority works." . . , I~-------------"";. more active. .. Of. iabor "in. business, "hi ae_Sister ~Mary Lina,~ ~dministra. The statement, released only cordance with, its 'superior quai- ior,.'of the hospital, said the. anORREIA.. &,:' SONS JlOW, was adopted during a. co~~ ity.. over' capitaV' . ...... ' . nual award is intended to. honoo : .. "'.. ' ,:.' ,ON~ STOP', \ 'gress of 10,000 .members of the· '-Full information' 011 econ-' tJ:Iosewho have ~ade, "outstand~ i YCW . held.h~fe .at the end.~.. "omic . problems:'. Workers . must iug, eontributi<>Ds in' <;::olorado to " ," ,',.SHOPPING ~t:NTEI ...., " . \' . · . Tuly . 'Msgr. .Joseph· Cardijn; ·have·".",+-.u··e·.'iUtcitmafion" to·· the h~.a.lth,of their. fellow."men. J' . ' ., .. f. '~Televi8loD' e· rDrni'un' ·;found~r of. ~he ·YCW,~attend~d .. : . thesHuation, a'tJdplans f9~'~';' t~1f~u~h the.. care.or.~eatment·'9:. ." . . .. .' · '': . . ' . '..... . The statement,also.called fur: "nomic. reactivation." ..' - .·,.the 1JJ(~k.,.,j)r. . ,handicapped, "OF' ' •. A'pp••aDeel8 ~ Gr~r~. ,.,' ".' . J' -Job security: "No one. in . .,,~ '. .,; . . ' ". : tlirough researc~/;' '" '.' . :,"', '..'" . '.. .':,: .. . h .N ~ t·lona ' 1 ..om H S'-. Hew ., · ;''''onscience should. resOrt to dis~ ,; CO' ur:t:\. .:p' ··0·.·. S' ·C·' 00' '.....Th e. J' . eWI.s. .. e..." :"",'I", Aile. 93 BecifOrd '. "' . ;'n am•• 'J~ .51. .... : · 'missal except as a last resort.., and . ' . . ;.. ,.. ..·.a"non-sectarIan, free, care'In~t~"f'~ 'after having honorably exhaustPraye.r .I,n: New 'York' 'tution~or children with iptrac:-' ed all possible means•..' . . BRObKLY.N,(~<::)-Voluntary ·table al'!th.ma, that. is, "asthma . .' . . . : -Unemployment "compensa-,tecita~ioil-jnpublic schools of a . that do~s .n.ot respond to conven'" .. tion' It 'should' be. sufficient to· . 22-word prayer:' recomril~mded tional' ·treatment. At present it . ." .. . .' . :.., . . ... by .the State Board ot'Rege'nts . has 1~ .patients.·from all over 180 Liberty St. ., . Ban S.howingof..-Film . has been ~pheld,by the ~t>peal{ ·the Unit-e<! Statesand.r~present: PI~~bing -' .,He(;iting • dOt· late ..Divi~ion of The:State·Su:- '~jng .15.... dl~ferentrehglOUS 'den U IC U I orlum. preme CouJ.:t.·· " nommatlons,. . . Over 35 Years PAIlIMI SHREVEPORT C 'C)-Anew 'Five' Justices oHhe state's s e c - ' ... . '. of 'Satisfied Serv'ice
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, 05boi'M. 2-2143 produced by Protestants and . the ond''August highest'1959. court havemade ,upheld . '. 806 NO.' MAIN STREET " film Other 'American's Uriitedror· ruling by . .. Separation of Church and State JuStice Bernard S.. Meyer in ,Fall River . OS 5-7497 ;(PO-\U) was barred from a pub- Mineola' which 'saidthe prayer's '---------...;. ..1 'lic audito~ium here. recitation does not violate con..........-:-_~--------~----~--------_~ ,-., Officials of the· State .Exhibit stitutional 'provisio'rtsregal:dfn'g. New Engla~d's Playground. .COME IN - SEE and DRIVE ~Museum canceled a' scheduled: separation of Church and. State.. · Plan Yo'.ur Do'nee'Party ·showing of the mQvie' "BQycott",. The prayer, recommended by 'after a Catholic lay leader com- the Regents in 1951, 'reads: Fashion Shows and .:J1lained that the minis; an~i-' '.'Almighty God; we ~cknowl.ed,g~, "The World', Most Beautifully PIlO~ortioneci Cars· ;CatJ,nJic. our dependence upon Thee an~' .. Ba'nquets .. ·at .' Louis J. Mathieu, grand knight we 'beg Thy blessings upon us, of a local Knights of Columbus our parents, our teachers and out. I. at. Lincoln Park's ~ouncil,. said in a statement t9 country." 'MILLION-DOLLAR the' office of n. H.B; Wright, Use of, the prayer in'publ~: BA'LLR'O·O"M' '.' ClArator .of the museum:. "If you schools was challenged 'by the' believe in separationo{ Church New York Civil· Liberties Union:" Can .ROLAND GAM.ACHE 'FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 yeARS '. :and State, why should ,public' ina sujt' brought in behalf offiv~.. ' . , . ,; . property beui'(lrl '" :lamba~t . residents· of·the Herricks. School: WYman 9~984 ,1344-86· Purchase St. . New Bedford, Mass. :,a.o~~';1,~_.~~~e's__ r~li~J~~J,~ .. :.~.: .....:e~~!~~!.~f,_~.a~,u:9?~~t~: ',;~";'."- """.-.-..-,---------~--.."""...,. , ~------..,;,-....;-----...,;--_._~...--_--...,;..".
T'HE '61 FORDS
FORD .MOTOR SALES COM·PANY
'.':; r
FBI Director Scores
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Oct. 27, 1960
11
~@[f\I A~(l]in T OJ Hec@ ~lmQg~ts
Luke
Fidel Castro Regime
.~I~MI BEACH (NC)-The teachings of God ~nd the sta?lhzmg fo~c.e of relig.ion are needed urgently today to r~kmdle a SPIrIt of 'patrlOtism which will combat communism, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has declared. "We must be real champions of Amer- he asserted. "They display how ica if we are to defeat our craftily an entire and basically enemies within and with- peace-loving nation can be maout," the FBI Director coun- . nipulated as a pawn to su'pport
One Mo&"e Yeo r NEW YORK (NC)-Luke E. Hart, Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus since 1953, has been reelected unanimously for another one-year term. The election was held here at the regular quarterl:, meeting of the board of directors of the fraternal benefit society of Catholie men. The board also elected lInanimoll~ly John W. McDevitt, superIntendent of schools :It Waltham, Mass., as Deputy Supreme Knight. A member of the K. of C. board since 1955, he succeeds William J. Mulligan of Hartford, Conn.,' who I'ctiI'ed from the deputy post which he had held since 1949. Mr. Mulli'gan will continue to serve as Supreme Master of the Knights of Columbus. Fourth Degree. ' Also reelected unanimo~sly were: Supreme Secretary Joseph F. Lamb of. ~ew . York City; Supreme Treasurer Francis J. ~eazel of Asheville, N. C.; Supreme Advocate Harold J. Lam- . boley of New Haven, Conn., and Monroe, Wis.; and Supreme' Physician Dr. Gerald 'Lunz of New Haven, Conn., and }{a~i"" ton, Ont. 'The board also reappointed Msgr. Leo M. Finn of Bridgepor~' Conn., as Supreme Chaplain, and FredW. Colby of Fargo. N. D., as Supreme Warden. .'
the policies and programs of inseled as he recalled that three ternational communism, with its yeal'S ago he mentioned "a Soviet leader named Nikita Khrush- hypocrisy, guile, deceit, subv.ersion, violence and thievery. chev, many throughout the "There, the Trojan snake of world were still trying to learn how to spell his name." , communism has discarded its "But the American Legion and disguise for brute force and the FBI both knew what to ex- slaughter, communism, shed of all its false smiles, is on its pect from this, fork-tongued bloody march again, not only in 'front man' for communism Cuba but in every country of who piously professes friend~ the world. The resultant misery ship one moment and then so pompously pronounceq t hat and mistreatment of the citizens of countries into which the tenyour grandchildren will live under the heel of communist sO- tacles of communism h a v e reached should serve as a clear cialism," Mr. Hoover continued warnirig to all freedom-loving "His Hitleresque tirades and peoples of the world." harangues have exposed hi~ Incessant Struggle. and his cohorts to the entire Communist party leaders overworld as leaders, without conH~IL-CH~IST THE KING!: Sunday, Oct. 30 the science, of an unmoral tyranny look no opportunity to pervert CatholIc world ~111 observe the Feast of Christ the King. In - the most godless atheism ever academic interest, Mr. Hoover the Gospel, ChrIst testifies to His Kingship. John 18 :33-37. said. The struggle to capture devised in the mind of man." . minds and loyalties of AmeriNC Photo. Home Grown Traitors can youth goes on incessantly The FBI di'rector disc1o~ he added. . , ' that last June the State D,epartTruth Is Basic n:'ent estimated there are some ,"They have openly lectured 30,000 trained spie~ in the Rus~ to student groups at colleges and sian and Chinese communist . NEW YORK (NC)-A priest universities throughoutt he' .bloc serving throughout the population expert said here that ed or periodic, is the only legicountry," he declal·ed. "Alarmworld. He said there never has timate means of regulating offing, too, is the' ease with which "strenuous efforts" must be be~n a government in history spr.nl' where such regulatIOn. is made' to help the economiesQf which placed heavier emphasis' S?me major ,educational institu- uhderdeveloped nations with int1i~ated by circumstances'" he tiOns have been duped, under stated; ., on espionage than present-day expanding population~ , the much-abused term of 'aca. " Ru!!sia. He added that "America Father William J. Gibbons must adhere to the laws ,of God demic freedom,' into pel'mitting S,J., member of the Interna~ O.f underhanded attacks,to be made and man" to ~ombat the 'entional Union for the Scientific . NEW YORK (NC)-Some 3,001 on democratic institutions and croachment of communism and persons attended II Pontifical' officials of government by lil- Study of Population, in a lecture Red espionage. at Fordham University, estirnat:. Mass of thanksgiving marking. s~ructors. responsible,' for the '. Most Rev. Jallles .J. Gerrard, "Standing side by side with ed the. world 'population will these speciillistB in internal. i'n- higher ,education of our young double within 45 years should Auxiliary Bishop, will be prin-- the 50th, anni'{ersary of the con_ . people. . cipal speaker at the seventh a~- ' secration of St. Patrick's cattied-' trigue," Mr. Hoover said, "are the' present' trends in birth arid "When academic freedom fails nual dinner and business meet-· ral. those home-grown traitors who . Fra~cisCardi~al Spellma~ to· recognize the importance of death continue: ing of the Catholic Pharmacists" call themselves members ()f ~ "Thus a world population of' truth a~ the .basic requirement Guild of St. James of the Fall ~rchblshop of New York, preCommunist Party, USA, and over six billion is perfectly posRiver Diocese, to be held at St.' s!ded at the ceremony. The cele_' readily admit that their purpose for college classroom lectures sible by the year 2,000," he said. and discussioris, then the useJames Church, New Bedford, : ~rant was Auxiliary Bishop Jos-' is and always has been the "The Western Hemisphere south eph F. Flanllelly, cathedral adfulness of our colleges and unifrom 1 to 4:30 Sunday afternoon communizing of America. ministrator, and the sermon wall versities is a, thing of the past" of the Rio. Grande may well Nov. 6, ' In All Fields reach 232 million by 1975; t~e, preached, by Auxiliary BilihoP' Mr. Hoover continued. ' .. "These fanatical discip'l~ of A)~ pharmacists, phYsicians" U.S., 200 million by' 19M." Philip J. Furlong' .. . . ' '1· Only .One· Goal dentists, nurses and their friends Marxism are eagerly worming ProPerly, Devel~ped .. ate invited to attend. Rev. Albert their. way into such fertile fieldts ~ ·...~e have failed in o~ edU,. . Global resources, if properly' F. Shovelton 'is model:ator for' ,of endeavor as youth, laboJ:, educatlonal processes' to inculcat~ usep. and.: developed, could sup-, the group, which has' as its pur-' cation and raci!.!l minorities," he t~e basic element of American' port comfortably several times pose the application of Catholic continued. "The diabolical in- l.ush>ry, our philosophy of gov'the number of people expected principles to the profession of lfluence of communism on youth er~lI~ent and our., moral and within the next few decades pharmacY,and the carrying out ;was . manifested in the anti.. s,?~ntual ~oundations," the FBI , JOSEPH M. DoNAGHY':. . ' of an active program 0' charity. ,American student demonstration d~rect?r said. "It is time to make' Father Gibbons said. "There is no immediate pros. owner/mgr. in Tokyo. It further was in evi~ our hIstory and traditions glow The Sunday program will inpect of .either mass starvation on 142 Campbell St. ;dence this year in communi9tdude a business session,' holy' a~d t~rob. W.e have heard about an internatfonal scale Mof lwur and the dinner. Miss Janice ,inspired riots in San FrarlCisco, ~~enca with our ears, but not New BedfOrd, Masi. standing - room -. only," Father· No""ak is chairman, with Joseph' Iwhere students were duped into WIth 'our hearts., . . ' WYman 9-6792 Gibbons said. !d ! s g l' ace f .u 1.. demonstrations . '''The .co'mmunists never rest Rebello as co-chairman. . ' - The- Jesuit priest said, "'~t .against a Congressional commit- m carrymg out their design for HEADQUARTERS FOR .' Normand H: Menard is pres-' tee. the deStruction of America needs to be.recognized 'hat rates' Jdent of the guild. He annoUlices COLONIAL AND of growth are high and are in"These students were stooges of whether their efforts are TRADITIONAL 'URNITUW! that the annual Mass' for livin'g a sinister technique stimulated clo~~ed with an aura of respec- CI easing in many of the under-' and deceased' members will be by clever communist propagan- ~ablhty or are boldly disclosed developed areas' least prepared· .held at 11 this Sunday morning' to cope with their needs in terms dists who remained quietly conm their true light as in Cuba" at St. James Church. . cealed in the background. No he warned. "A communist wiil' of, capital, skills,' popular educa- ' Complete t~on i.lnd social organization." . field ill overlooked for commu- enter an alliance or' 'co-exist' your Building Materials Do~trlne .Steadfast . nist infiltration, educational; Ollly to advance communism. :Needs and Choice' B~i1ding ,cultural, civic, political and re·Father Gibbons' noted that . Despicable Guidance :'igious. :; Lots in the Greater Taunton, : "The words of Len'in are well man's reproductive potential .is . ....: . :' Better WakiL'Up: '. geared to race survival 'under ""Area . .~ remembe~, 'We, !Jo,notbelieve I: "We are at war'with 'the com~ primitive conditions 'of, health, ,JIlunists, and the sooner each In eternal morality arid we exand welfare. . ' ',. Jed-blooded' American. realt~~ ;~se ~ll t~e. fables about mol'': ,Nevertheless, he said, the Cath-, " "·'.N cO it P 0 RAT E'D .:. ahty·.', Lenin said that e~~j.y lie :that th~ betferand' safer we' wil~ 'deceit; or knavery is 'be en~ olic Church would' not change !be," Mr.. Hoover emphasiz~1 her doctrine on artificial bIrth , .. ;rCommumsm destroys, and den..l 'co~~!lg~ . 315 goo~.,· pro,vided' it ·,eontrol.' . .iVA~7847- VA 2-4051 " furthers world revohition," Mr. :ies ~very spiritual value. Those . ,"Continence, either protract'" HQ.Over said. "What better exwho hate GOd must' 'bring misamp~es are there today of this ery in their wake. They must be despicable guidance in human BEFORE' YOU brutal and cruel and deceitful." conduct than we find' in 'Khrush., ". .'. : Denouncing' Fidel Castro's re--· chev and Castro!" iuY - TRY .' gime in Cuba" Mr. Hoover said TAUNTON, MASS. SAL~S "'the proxi~ity -of. danger' is es~ I. peeially apparent to us here RENAULT - PEUGEOT .·THE. BANK ON HONOLULU (NC)-An early today, as lesS, than' 100 mile~ Parts - Sales - ServiCe from our shores a, gang of .~dmissions program will ~ put TAUNTON GREEN mto effect at Chaminade College OLDSMOBILE bearded' bandits exhibi~ daily here in September, 1961. Father the chaos and corruption which Oldsmo~ile. Peugot • Renalt Member of Federal Depo.lt 6'1 Middle Street, Fairhaven closely ·follow the dictatoria~ Robert R. Mackey, S.M. presiInsurance Corporation dent, said the program will per'usurpation of power. mit qualified students who have Crafb ManipUlation "'The commui1ist-inspired de- completed their junior year in Ivelopments in Cuba graphically high school to enter the college ON CAPE COD 'demonstrate the cold-blooded as freshmen. !ruthlessness of tyrannical rule" Maintenance Supplies
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:THE ANCHOR-Dioces,e of Fal.' R,iver-Thurs., Oct 27! 1960
God Love You'
Revive 'Hostility to Church In, Reconstruction Period
By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. Dear Friends: , , The sum total of love in the 'worRd has been iner-eased bi yoar kindness to the poor, hungry and leprQulJ in Mission Lands everywhere. In' ~eslgnating a day as MiStllon SUnday we sougbt not to make the poor rich, but *0 make the r!ch ,,poor in sPirit. To feed a human being withoat loving him is to treat him as a beast, but to feed him and love him, as you have done, Is to enrich yourself with the blessing of God.
By Rev. Peter J. R~hiH, Ph.D. No public acclamation of the valorous participation pf eatholics was uttered by the Federal Government after General Lee's'surrender at AppomattoX:; the voice of the prostrate Soutli was throbbing too low to be heard on any subject. Catholics had prized would be staffing all the reserthe public commendation of, vations which would be allotted. President Washington on No such difficulty arose, Out their courageous contribu- of approximately 80 agencies ,tion to the success of 'the Ameriean Revolution. Perhaps it was a mark o f '
seven were assigned to the Church, The Indians living on these particular reservations numbered about 17,000. In contrast, such latecomers in the evangelization of the Indians as the Methodists were entrusted:" with 54,000 tribesmen.
the progress of the Church 'b'a t after t b e C i viI W,ar her JIll e m b e r l!l One 'by one, western bishops we r e ' n Q t made trips to Washington ,they singled ou t could ill afford. Vague and in,fo r praise.' definite' promises were the most By 1865 most any prelate obtained, and none A'm. e r i _ o r these' were fulfilled. As oans recogmonths added into years, the hosaized t hat ' tility to the Church of executheir Catholic: fellow c~tizens' tives of the Indian Bureau bewould do their part for GQd and clime more evident. eountry . Father Deshon If anti-Catholicism was dormA Pa~list priest's intercession ant during the ,Reconstruction offered a happy method of cirEra amolig the general run,oI. cumventing them. Before his people, ,by no means had it' dis- own conversion to Catholicism appeared entirely. There was .no, and study for the priesthood this recurrence of the Know-Nothmg George Deshon had ,been both period when mobs were aroUsed. classmate and roommate of ,to an unreasoning fury ,against IDysses Grant at West Point; the Church, by 'harangues OR The chief executive received street corners. The bigotry was him in the National capital ,and ta' high places. at, .his Summer home, in Long In a 'sense the opposition was Branch, New Jersey. directed against the Church fui.1Iis reception was 80 cordial filling the final commissionre~ that' Deshon reported with enoeived from our' divine Lord. thusfasm: "We will have all the while He was o~ this earth: "Go, agencies, in which the Indians Ulerefore, and make disciples 01., are Catholic." The Paulist was IIll nations" (Matt. 28:19). , to return to his previous 'a88lgn- ' Indians Conver1ed ment considerably chastened in Unacquainted with the true spirit. Not a single 'of hd the American Indian Wll5; Qrant's pledges was executed! • Pe'rfect, subject for the fulfil&Perhaps improvement could Inent of Jesus' command. Re- be effected thl'ougli permanent atricting our attention to ,the, repre~ntation in,' the national English colonies, settlem~nt and capital? That proposal, seemed eonversion were twin objectives unobtainable because of lack Of tn, the Catholic cOlony of Mary- money' to finance it. land. Episopalian Route aefore a landing was made In 1873 Charles Ewing volunconsent of the Piscataway, teered.to be a' lay apostle. T~ tribe was obtained; soon almost non-CaJ;holie father of this all of. these redmen were con-, Ohioan had- been in two presi~rled to Catholicity. dential cabinets, and during the The civilizing influence al. Civil War Ewing had risen to ' ehristia'nity was early recog- the rank of General. aized by the Fed~ral govern,As a successful Washington ment. During WaShington's ad-' attorney he accepted the posi-ministration $200 w~ allotted 'tion of Catholic Indian Commi8annually to two Catholic Indian sioner, contil'luing in the office missionaries. A n agreement without a single cent of compenwith the War Department to' saUon until his death in 1883. conduct a school 'for Indian boys Aided by a veteran Indian , brought the Jesuits to Missouri, missionary named Father JeanIII 1823. Bapti~te Abraham' Brouillet, Father DeSmet Ewing promoted the education\ , Among the group was Pierre- of Indian children. Here Cathahan DeSmet, who became the lie teachers excelled where most famous of all apostles w those of Protestant denomina-, the redmen. Years later came tions failed "abjectly. Yet DO dramatic proof that the redskins, other reservations were assigned l'ecognized him as, the ambas-,. to Catholics; In 'fact, priests aador of the PrInce of Peace., were rigorously' excluded from "fter Sitting Bull had sworn to. aU agencies assigned to prote~ , kill the first white man he saw,' tants. ' alone Father DeSmet visited To ' a Catholic Indian who; the mighty chief and obtained a' asked for' a "black robe"' the peace treaty. , agent on one reservation replied: .. But the Indian was bound to "Washington has dp.dded that, be disturbed as settlers contin- you must get to' heaven by 'the ued to push into lands which . Episcopalian route." had been promised to 'him "as' (Next Week: >Catholics Win long as grass grows and water Religious Liberty, for the Inflows." dian.)'
one
the
OR, , ~M;;,~,."''''''R?i~'''''''1 A. W.cMARTIN
In his mesSage to Congress Dec. 5, 1870, President Ulysses S. Grant offered a· new approach. The President's own words were: "I determined to give all the agencies, to such religious ' denominations as', had hitherto established' missionaries lIIlong the Indians .. '. ," ' Already some reservations had lteenentrusted to' the' care Of tbe Society' of ' FriendB._' With that assignment there scarcely eould have been ,any,quarrel, for the Quakers had folfowed the Catholics of' Mar,.iand in ~~ tog the Indians fairly. Indian Bureaa 'Hostile When the plan-soon lmow1l .. Grant's Peace 'Policy _ was aimounced, Catholics haited it with enthusiasm. With a record of. continuous care of the aborigines since, 16:l4, it appeared ~~.~~~, .p,roblem,. ~;.~~'.'.~~~~
,
S. Sacrificiaf Christians
The Catholic in America
SCRAP METALS WASTE PAPER - RAGS
To receive a stranger's gift could be humiliating even to the poor who are' as conscious as you and I of their personal dignity. But in response to our appeal, you sent your gift because' of love, and thus treated the poor and suffering as your friends. Whether you know it not, behind them stands the Lord, and one day you will' hear Rim say: "I was hungry and you gave Me to eat .•• naked and you covered me ••• sick and you visited me .• '." " ,
or
, SPECIALIST: Father Joseph B. ,Gremillion, of the Diocese of Alexandria, La., has been mimed to the staff, of Catholic Relief ServicesNational Catholic Welfare Conference. He will give special attention to the program 'of the Food and Agriculture Organization. NC Photo.
Says Afro-Asian Nations Control World's Destiny .. WASHINGTON (NC)World peace and the future of' the United Nations rest , with the 42 Asi~n and .African memb~r states, Dr. Victor Andres Belaunde, former president of the' UN General Assem_ , bly, saidi)ere.' , The Peruvian diplomat said it, seems to be "the destiny of God'~., that as coinpl!nsatio~ for previous exploitation and injustices the Afro-Asian, ations nOWCORtrol the world's destiny. These riations, he added, "a~ the instrument of Divine Provi~ dence tQ' bring ~ peace 'to the world." He spoke to ?"O members' of the ,John Carroll Society,an organization of Catholic business and professional men. , Dr. BE':aunde urged western' nations to encourage Afro-Asian'" nations in the belief that world peace is 'their principal mission in the United Nations; to develop, the closest spiritual, cultural and _' educational ties with them; and to emphasize' that the West had' no mat~rial'designstoward them. God Sole Judg-e Answeripg a question oD. Soviet Premier Nikita 'Khrush~, chev's true motives aUhe United Nations, Dr. Belaunde quoted an old Spanish proverb: "Only God can judge the intention." He said he deeply regretted, Khrushchey's attitude and con-' duct, and, describeQ the Soviet leader as clever, shrewd, dis~ agreeable, spectacu~ar and with some talent as an actOr. I,n answer to another question, , Dr. Belaunde said he'thought the present United Nations meeting had strengthened the westera position.
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CHARLES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE
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God Love' You for yoar saerittee and' for seeing that the burden of the poor and sufferill&' in the Missions' is their need. whereas the burden of as In Amerlea ill our abundance. You' have earned the need tha&weighs down the poor man, so now ,he earries the superfluity that weighed you. down. By sharing a portion 01 his distress through love, yoo win enJOy, a share in hill privilege. which is to Invoke God's' blessin~ _ your charitable heart. Your sacrifice sent ,in response to our' MISSION SUNDAY appeal rejoices us,·not just because you have seen the needs of the ~r with the eyes of the flesh, but because with your inward eye y~u have seen Christ in them: "I was hungry and you 'gave Me to eat." Because Christ was poor and needy, it was rigbt that He sh.ould enter into fellowship with those like Him; but it was also jUs~, that we who aid the poor should see Him as receiving our gift and therefore prepar~ for His love apd blessing.
If, we had asked merely lor'a gift you. woold have given what was YOUR own; bot because we asked lOr saeritice oat of love for God, yoa gave what you saw was ms oWD~ Thus yo. helped the needy by relieving their want, and yoa helped Y01ll'8elf b,. aeknowledging that, all gifts eome from Him. I ean thank YQU for_ the dooble favor, but the Lord will biess yoo for' both. ODele It was shown to' be God's cause. both :YOUl' heart and your band were ready. God Love Yoa! Most Ilev. 'Fulton 1. 8h_ ,National Direetol'
, Each decade of lhe WORLDMISSION "ROSARY fa a different color (Red, ,Green, Yellow, Blue, White), to symbolize each of the five 'continents and to remind you to pray for the suffering of the world. For an offering of $2 and your req'ueSt ~ will send you this WORLDMISSION ROSARY so ,that you can always help the p'boc of, the world through your prayers.
Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to 'it and mail it to the Most Rev. Fulton J. 'Sheen, National Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 'Fiftb Avenue, New'York 1, N. Y.. or,your:Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North 'Main Street, Fall River, Ma~. '
DAUGHTEIlS Of ST. PAUL , Invite young girts (14-23),1'0 labor .. Christ', ..... vineyard atI GO Apoatt. 01, !be Edition.: PrOll, Radio.' MovioD and , ... vision. With mode", ,W••;o_r, Si.t.,. bring Chri.r. Doctrine 10, an. .-gordl... of race, color or -.d. Pot information write to.
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Drive Committee Continued from Page Oue St. Anthony, Rl Rev. Manuel j. Teixeira, pastor. St. Jacques, Rev. F. Anatole Desmarais, pastor. St. Joseph, Rev. Patrick B. Hurley, pastor. St. Mary, Rt. Rev. James Dolan, pastor. St. Paul, Rev. John J. GriUin, pastor. Dighton St. Peter, Rev. Alfred J. Gendreau, pastor. North Dighton St. Joseph, Rev. Francis A. McCarthy, pastor. Raynham St. Ann, Rev. Leo T. SUllivan, pastor. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop 'of Fall River, has announced the appointment of a priest and eight laymen to head the campaign in the Taunton area. The Taunton, regional school, will be the third to be erected in the diocese within three years. The first regional project was Bishop Stang Hig' School in North Dartmouth which serves the Greater New Bedford area. The second diocesan regional high school is now in the process of construction in Attleboro. It is the Bishop Feehan High School. Plans call for the commencement of classes in the Fall of 1961. The Most Reverend Bishop announced the following appointments to direct the fund raising campaign: Rev. James F. Lyons, assistant at 1m mac u 1 ate Conception Church, as priest-director. Dr. Clement Maxwell, general lay chairman. Dr. Joseph F. Nates, special gifts chairman. Walter H. Gorey, memorial gifts chairman. Manuel J. Drummond, publicity chairman. Attorney Hector Demers, assoelate general chairman. Edward Trucchi, associate special gifts chairman. Matthew H. Bury, associate memorial gifts chairman. Joseph G. Quill, associate publicity chairman. Dr. Clement Maxwen Dr: Maxwell, native of Taunton, received his A.B. Degree from Holy Cross College in Worcester and then matriculated at Fordham University in New York City where he received his master's degree in arts and a doctorate of Jlhllosophy. Dr. Maxwell has devoted his entire working life to the education of the nation's youth. He began his career as an assistant professor at his alma mater, Holy Cross, and then headed the English Department at the Newman School in Lakewood, N.J. TheJ;l the Taunton educator lectured at Boston College and was in charge of graduate study at the State College in Bridgewater prior to his appointment as president in 1952. He is a member of Kappa Delta Phi, Alpha Psi Omeg~, University Club of Boston and the Dickens Fellowship.' Dr. Maxwell, who ml!kes his home at 11 State Street in Taunton, is an honorary member of the Immaculate Conception conference, 'St. Vincent de Paul Society. Dr. Joseph F. Nates A graduate of Boston College and Tufts Medical, Dr. Nates has been a resident of Taunton for the past six years. He is married to the former Dorothy Kalinay and is the father oll three children. Dr. Nates Is a member of, St. Mary's ,Men's Club, the Knights of Columbus and is active in', Pre-Cana and Cana work in the Taunton area. He is a member of the Morton Hospital Staff and resides with his family at 54 Summer Street. He is a veteran of World War n and the Korean conflict. He is a member of American Board of Urology, Fellow of American College of Surgeons, member of American Urological Association, member 01. New England Section of Amerkarl 'Urological 5oc:1eQl.
THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 27, 1960
13
School Building Continued from Page One from the lobby. The kitchen, l<>cker room, shower room and boiler room will be located in this section. The two story academic wing, to the right of the mian lobby, will contain 12 classrooms, busi_ ness practice and typing rooms, three science rooms and a large labrary. In additions, the new school will have special accommoda_ tions for student activities, domestic science, art, bealth and a teachers' room. A small oratory is also contemplated. An addition will be built on to St. Mary's Convent, St. Mary's Square, to accommodate the Sisters who will serve on the faculty.
DR. JOSEPH F. NATES Special Gifts
~hairman
L,~_. A..TTY. HECTOR DEMERS Assoeia~
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~
General Chairman
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WALTER H. GOREY Memorial Gift Chairman
JOSEPH G. QUILL Associate Publicity Chairman
MANUEL
DRUMMOND
J~
Publicity Chairman Mauuel J. Drummond Manuel J. Drummond, a prominent Taunton businessman residiJi.g at 45 West Weir street, Taunton, is a p1ember of Our Lady of Lourdes parish. He is the founder and owner of the Drummond Printing Co. and has been active in local civic and church organizationJ. _ Mr. Drummond is an honorary member of the St. Vincent de Paul Societyo! Our Lady of Lourdes parish, Past President and, Lieutenant Governor of Taunton Kiwanis, past chairman of the Taunton area Catholic Charities Special Gifts Committee, a director of the Taunton Community Chest and a member of its Budget Committee. He is marr,ied to the former Mary Silvia of Taunton and is the father of two children. Mr. Drummond brings' years of ex-' 'perience in fund rllising ~nd', publicity work to the Memorial High Scl,1~ol Driv~ of this area.
Guild for Blind Meets Sunday i'n Fall River
.', '~:~,;'*:~' ""/':-
1,,: '
L·:-
eatholic Guild fQr the Blind, Fall' 'River region, will hold its monthly meeting. SU'nday afternoon in Sacred Heart School. ' Prior to the business a.q.d social 'program, Rosary and ' Benediction will be conducted in the
i -t',"; ':
Recommend Film NEW uORK (NC)-The National Legion of' Decency has recommended for family patronage Walt Disney's. movie, "Swiss family Robinson."
ASsociate Special Gifts Hector Deniers The associate general chairman is a practicing attorney in Taunton. Married to the former Yvette Yelle, he resides, at 14 , Danforth Street. They are the, parents of five children. Their son, Richard, a student at St., John's Seminary, will be ordained to the Priesthood in 1961. Mr. Demers is a former City Solicitor, serving in that position from 1954-1959. He is' a member of the Taunton Bar Association, the Bristol County Bar Association, a director of St., Jacques' Credit Union and a member of the Franc"O-American club. A member 011. St. Paul's pal\Ish, he is affiliated with the SL Vincent-de-Paul and the HQly Na~e Societies, of the J)arish.
••••••••••••• A FAMILY TREAT BAR-B-Q CHICKENS WY 7,..9f16
MATTHEW H. BURY Assoe. Memorial Gift Chairman J~ph Quill This is a name-and a voice familiar to all Tauntonians, for he is manager at Station W.P.E.P. He is very ~n~ive in the affairs' of the Community and well fitted for the publicity chairmanship of the Drive. He is a member of the' Board of Directors of the Taunton' Association of Commerce, also on the Budget Committee of the Community Chest, and serves as the director of public relations fQr the Morton Hospital. Mr. Quill lives on Sunset Drive, Raynham and is a mem-, ber of Holy Family parish, East Taunton. He is the father of children.
three
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Walter H. Gorey Walter H.' Gorey, managing director of the Nason' Oil Com- ' pany, resides at 19 East Britannia' Street, Taunton and, is at member of Immaculate Concep-' tion parish where he serves 38 president of ,the parish confere'nce' ol the St.' Vincent de Paul Society. " A trustee -of the Taunton Sav"; ings Bank, he is married to the former Elizabeth Galligan. Matthew H. Bury Mr. Bury, chairman of the Sales Division of Reed and Bar_ ton Company; is well known in. civic and religious grouPfj throughout the city. Married to the former Lena Lamoureaux,: he resides at 94 Dean Street. They are the parents of three to of the Boy Scau ts. He is a m«;!mber of St. Jacques' Parish.
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, Edward Trucchi A resident of 27 Myrtle Street. ' Taunton Mr. Trucchi is a mem_ ber of St. 'Joseph's parish illl Taunton He is the father of five, children, three of whom are enrolled in St. Joseph'~ School. He knows '.he value of Catholic High School training ~s he graduated from Msgr. Coyle High School ia 1943. At present he is the head of the "Fishers" a very important phase of the C.C,D. program. He is also a member of the ,St. Vincent de Paul and Holy Name Societies at the church. He operates a market on Kilmer Ave-. nue.
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Main St., cor. Bedford-Open Fri. 'til 8 P, M. 7
.: '1,4
THE ANCHOR-1l)iocese 'ofFcln .Rive..-lhurs., .Oct~21,~ ,1960
Waits 40 Yeon
· ""Re·d I'P,erli.11 IIin·Clleasiling .• S.ee.s D.a,i;ly in ',So'uthAme,rica
To Join Church
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!By :Rev. An'drewM.
'Gr~ley
Msgr. 'George :G. BiggiilllS will ,be in ,Europe ,for the :ned several weeks. During that ·time:Father 'G1'eeley 'will ,be !his guest ·c6Iumnist. Father Greeley .is. the 'author 'of ·the 'bOOk 'The
i:lhurebaud the Suburbs ,(Sheedaud 'Ward, 1959l. A second , ',book on the problems -of American :YODDg ,people IssChedlile4 ,for ,pU:blicati~n iinearb 1961. ' . During the dark days of the Second World War two , grim cartoon characters became well knoWn in England and the Uni,ted States. Each .time a new country fell to the overwhelming PQwer ·of the ffiiemy "Too Little" and ~'Too 'Latestood proudly by and' '~ur~ 'l1hesame factors areh;ving veyed the wreckage. As F~del their ,effect today south of the Castro and his bearded buUy Rio Grande. . . ":l '1;. d ~~ . Whether we Americans like it b@ys recenliIY P UCl\;ellueJ.l". : or not ,e th ,na ti onal'st d eSll'e . .f or .. . 1 ehlckens m the'· 'comfort ~ political and economic indepenManhattan hotels, many AmerI- dence an'd .mato..lal . 'ty , .....pI'osperl can,s wonL~tet~e~ is the greatest single social force If 'Too I e at work 'among the under;, and "Too 'I1a~e", 'developed ~ountries. ' shou'!d be res-' And, whether we like it or ~ected . and not, the Russians 'and the Chisent',to S01,lth 'nese have .persuaded the newly Amenca. .. 'educated technical 'Classes iD., ''il1h~ process of these countries thatcommwrlsm 10.s 1 n ~ South is .the ,shortest and 'surest way A ~ 'e r 1 ~ a :0 : to independence and affluence. commumsI? 18 Wm ,by . De'fault -wen .0 n I t:s "litis not so much-that 'the way; mdeed, It . ' . _. '. communists. h'a'Ve defeated us,in may a'lready '\:le too 'late to stoP a debate; rather they have won the pro:e~s. We mayb1uster . bY default as American indifwhen NQkIta. Khrushchev tells ference responds 'to co 'st us that the Monroe. Doctrine is propaganda with 'a no'lom:~~~_ outmoded. We may Issuesolernn dere warnings th~t,Guantana~o. 'Bay !p~pag8,ndacampalgm .cost and the Cana'! Zone are still ours. lIIloneyand .the richest nation in We. may celebrate, the conde~- Ithe. 1W'0rldcan'tpossibly afnat.lOnof Castr~ by ~e 'Orgaru- 'ford to spend very much money I18.tionof Amencan States. in waging a war of' ideas among , Verbal Vletori~ its . "Good Neighbors;" 'These verbal victories rea~Jf"Much 'less can 'We aff01'4 , to .pr(}venothin.g. A pro-l'I:ussianp<iurmoneY into South America government is in ~rmcontl'oi in ,to help in development proRavana;cCDmmUDlst agents 'are grams which might ease the swlirmJing ,ov:er South America; awesome poverty whicb afflicts the old resentments against most at. the people on' the ,con': "Yanqu!" imperialism ~re 's.eeth-· tinent and seems to 'be growing mgagam. PopU;lar feeling tS 'be- worse instead -of better. ginn'i;ng to wo~der whether:the Until recenUy" at .least, ,talk ' Russum ,and Ounese 'Way to '000ofa''MarshaIPlan' for 'South nomic indepenclenceare not bet-· America" was enough :to 'send ter ,than the :apitalist. ,members !>f the Appropriations, , Pro - A.:nenca~governments and Finance Committees ,into' a 8l'e growmg dubIOUS about 'their blue frenzy. ,safety. and. stability. The tides Nor was the American tax-' • of .nationalism and revolution payer at all .sympathetictO the' whIch have swept .the wo~J.d for notion that more money might the,last 15 years are washing .up be deducted from his fat pay on the ,shores of South Amenca check to aid such distant COUDand, .as ~ ~r~ca and~, crontries as Bolivia or .Paraguay. mUnISmlS !'ldmg the ,ti~e. We Hold 'The Bag 'C~rnmunI~ l?enetratio.n In We"did have mone)';, of course, Lati~ ~enca. IS 'becommg ~n . to send guns and tanks and jet election ~ssue~ Just ~s. communist ,fighters to South American govpene~ra'tie:m in .Chiria wa~ an ernmentswhose leaders proudly eIe~lO,?, ~ssue eight. years.. ago. wore American medals wbfle" Wh~le It IS ~ gOO~ thll~g that t~etheY,Condemned eonununism and !Latm Amerl.cansttuatIon lbe '~lS- ,grewl'ich and fat £rom the gi-aft eu~ed durmgtihe c8.ll?Pa1gn, 1l'Ihioh seems to be esseutia1to oel\her party can claim inDOalmost all sOuth Americlmdiccenee. tatorships. Desire IndependenOlt . 'When the time came for Through two administrations these "friends ·of. the United we have failed to listen to the .States" to make their hasty decountless warnings about what partures,tbe ,fleei.ni leaders was going on in South' America were holding the money, the and as a result we have had ,new leaders were holding the Fidel raving on the banks of the guns, and Uncle Sam was holdEast, River. ing the bag. China was not lost so much Must Face Fed. by communist influence in our Only history ,can ,tell whether government as it. was .by ·indif- South America 'has :been 10stalference among our people, and ready; but if the communist tide GtuiJidity among our leaders. is to be turned back, !twill take imagination, persistence, flexi: bility" and lots of,inoney~ if"nereasing numbers of Americans are going to have to be willing to spend severS'1 years of their lives, fJ.ghting ,the cause of freedom (and Ohristianity) in Latin American countries. The American taxpayer will have to face the fact that communism cannot be fought on & Shoestring and.thatlipservice to the Monroe' Doctrine bas not' to date' protected that cherished pillar of American foreign pol"icy from its most serioUS peril in a century.
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SCOUT AW ARD: Explorer' , scout from: Post No. 16~ "~k":" Anne Church, ,New Bedford'. was presented Eagle Scout award during ceremoniaq held at St. Anne School.
Ad,ministrators Discuss 'Problem O:f 'Waiting Room to Heaven' MONTREAL (NC) - About 170 delegates gathered here for 'three days to .discuss programs in the administration' of . "the waiting room of, heaven".Catholic cemeteries. " Paul Emile' Cartlinal . ~, Archbishop of Montreal,opened the conference's 13th annual meeting.. After ,welcoming .the delegates from' 66 archdioceses and ·dioceses to his '.See. the Cardinal noted that cemetery administration ·hasbecome a complex and demanding task. He commended the conferenee for its efforts to keep in Drlncl. despite administrative dernan'if., that the ,burial of the deadmusl first and foremost be a work of. religion, ,never letting the devotionalaspeetsbeswept awaT by efforts toward efficient adminisbration. Msgr. Thomas E. Simo~ cemetery director in the Phila,delphia archdiocese, told his COlleagues in the keynote address that "the doctrine of Christian burial is calculated to ,show . respect for the 'bod¥ created to the image and likeness of God and to reflect belief in three consoling dogmas: the communion of saints, the resurrecmcmofthebody and ~ everlasting." "Without these ·beliefs • be said""there is no re~ for Christianburial;,the~ Is ,DO reason to have any respect for' thedead.... At the closing convention 'banquet. Auxiliary Bishop LawrenceA. Whelan of' Montreal told delegates that cemeteria
:ROBERTS.
'WEAlTHY;B:EN,EFACTORS fd Ule'Mosiem and BInda faiths bave erected beallUfal temp" '" worship iD KAlPPAMANGALAM iD INDIA. So IUlcJem la I( no.. UaeCatliolio Chapel In this to_ Uud' ,~,.S. vJ,. .u must be tom doWB BInGe tile foa• .(" ~d'datiOD Is cramblinr and the walla are f.tr. ~. ,cavine in. The people bave beea ' Q# . 0 able, dllriDc the past several yean. .~ ~ to save a'few bWlllred dollars 80 that DieT might stan buildlDr • DeW iChurch. $4,000 will be needed, how. ever, to pat up a suitable buildlq. It would take mallT )'ears. If ever. for 'U1e people to gather this amount mODe)'. Father Joseph Ksnnath Dr HoIj PaIWs MiJIirm Ai4 of and his parishioners will be deepb furtht,Orimkd Chtmh rratefuJ 'for an)' donation. to 'help
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erect a Churcb whiell the)' :hope, In simple beaut)', will oomfavorably with the HiDda aDd Moslem houses of worship.
pare
ALL SAINTS-ALL SOULS On the first day of November we will bonor the countlesa souls wbo served God faithfulJy bere on eartb and wbo now . enjoy the eternal bapp1nessof heaveD. OD the seoond day of November we ,wlll'remember those souls wbo, baviug Served God well on earth, may now be atonlng for their slns lnPurgaWl'J'. Our remembrance of the Poor Souls will take the fonD of ~esandprayers·otfer~d fortbem. lfyourdeceased lovedones ,not already members of the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST 'WELFARE ASSOCIATION" Why not' enroll them this Novemberaotbat the, might" Ifther are stW in Purgatory,enjoy the 'benefits of the .prayers and, good worb of thousands of llIli8s1on~! ' Perpetual 'Membership: A.t1lluaiMem~: 'Famlly ..•• ' '100.00 FainiIs' ...••••••••••,•..$5.00 ,individUal '. ....20,00 lDdlvtdual •• ••••••••••• l.OQ
are
OUR MISSIONARIES NEED MASS OFFERINGS.
,HARDWA,RE Sa'm~
are truly "the waiting room of, heaven." '"'In your, administration, you must remember that it is the resurrection of the dead and life everlasting that makes' their existence and your work purposeful," he said. ' . ------....;.:---------------------
J. LaGasse, Manager
-AN ETERNAL AND UNIVERSAL KINGDOM; a Idhrdom at truth and life: II kingdom of holiness and grace; a kingdom of ,instice, love, and peace"-all who are in -
the 8peCilllservice of Our ,Lord as IlJrlests, Sisters, and 'brothers, strive to make 'his Kingdom known and loved by everyone with whom 'hey come in contact. ID lINOIA, CYIlUAC VAZIllAYllL and MATHEW VAi', AL][]L are preparing foil' ·ordiDatlon to 'he
l872 ACUSHNET. AVE. ,near Brooklawn Park , NIEWralEDFO~IDl, MASS.
DIIOClEASAN IPIlt1lESTlHlOOJI); SlISTER' }\1 LOllJRJI)]E MARnA Dnell BlISTER ANNE' ,;"p..~~~, ~" CElLIA -are preparing, foil' profession as SACRED lBlEART SiSTlEl&S. ,By 'their dedicated Uves the Kingship of Christ, and all
'1[' [J'iD O'i)O .u'@rio @ ~ F'(Qi{t&i1elf~ BOYS WAN'f1ED .for the ' I"lr'iesthood and 'Brotherhood.
:.hat it implies, winl .bemade !mown to countless numbers of iheh cOiIDtrymen. By .financing the education of a seminarian or a novice yOIll hellll spread the Kingdom of Christ. in Mission ,ountrles' of tbeNearandMiddle lEast d& ccsts 5609 t@ edilcnto priest, $300 to edlllcate a slGter.,
Lackot funds NO Impedi,; .ment. '
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A THOUGHT ,FOR NOVEMBER
, A fitting way to bonor the memorY of a deceased r~lat1ve or rlend Is to donate a Sacred Artlclo to a Mission Chapel. 'viassKlt ' $100 Chalice , ,$40 Stations $25 \Itar ' , , , . ; . ' , 75 Ciborlum • • • •. 40 Censer ....• • •• 20 ',~ass Vestm's, 50 Statue ' .••••• SO Sanc'y Lamp ••• 15 ~~onfesslonal •. 50 fabernacle.... 25 Altar Linens ••• 15 'Tonstrance .. 40' ~uclfix .•••••, 25, . Sane.., Bell •••• I
Write to:
P. O. Box 5742 :Baltimora (I, Md.
,'iSave :With .Safet~'.'
'''LEASE REMEMBER GOD AND EllS MISSIONS IN I'OUR .~.AST ,WILL AND'll'ESTAMENT.
,~1t
, '~'J2ear1ist01issiol1S~,·
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KNIGHTS BREAKFAST: Present at Communion breakfast, McMahon Council, Knights of Columbus, New ,Bedford, held at council headquarters, were Manuel A. Sylvia, chairman, and Most Reverend James J. Ger-rard; V,G~, D.D., Auxiliary ~ishop ol'·the Fall River Diocese.
BLANCHESTER (NC)-Don"t be. discouraged if someone you invited to enter the Church said "No." If you'v:e planted th1! seed, time and God's providence may do the rest. 'Take Mrs. Julie Lodge, for instance. Forty years ago a young priest in Cincinnati suggested she might like to join the Church. She didn't exactly say "No". She said she would "wait." She waited 4{) years. In.tbe meantime, her husband died. Two years ago .she was hospitalized with a broken hip. She went to a convalescent home near Blanchester, 'not knowing that the priest who had spoken with her was stationed ill a nearby town. Single-Minded Recently the priest heard Mrs. Lodge was at the rest home and decided to see her. A singleminded man, he repeated his invitation of 4{)years ago. . Now 90 years Old, Mrs. LOdge decIded she had enough"of waiting. She asked the prieSt to bap.tize her 'immediately. Two weeks l~~~ she received her First Communion. Fo~ Ju1i~'~dge. the long weit ~as over. For ·,the priest '(who .insisted on remaining anonym,ous) , the design of God wu Colear..
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New: Bedford ,& ,Acushnet ';~perative
Banks'
FiANOS' CARDINAL SPELLMAN,Prosldont.
, Mser. PotcrP. Tuohv, 'Nat'lSoc'y
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S~lnd 'all communlcatlonl to:
'CATHOliC NEAR EAST WElfARE ASSOCIATION ,~O Lexirllgton Av~~ at 46th 'S,~ ,~~w Y~~,17, N.: Y. "
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Thrift Sale
The Parish Parade
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THE ~~CHOR-Diocese of F.a" River-Thurs., Oct. 27, 1960
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ST. MARY'S, ST. ANNE'S, NORTH ATTLEBORO FALL RIVER The Holy Name Society will The CYO will "told a pilgrimhold a Communion breakfast age to LaSalette shrine Sunday, Sunday, Oct. 30, with Gaston R. Oct. 30. Families and friends are to attend. Leclerc, French vice consul in ip"" Boston, as guest speaker. Re\!. Richard Madden, O.C.D., author of a life of Christ for S VTO CHRISTO, teen-agers, will speak to parish FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women young people the evenings of o will hold the first meeting of its Nov. 14 through 16. A dance is planned for Friday, study group at 7:30 TuesdJIy, Nov. 4. ·Nov. 1 in Fatima House. Mrs. Agnes Rezendes is leader. OUR LADY OF VICTORY. The council will sponsor a CENTERVILLE mystery ride starting from the Our Lady of Victory 'Guild parish parking lot at 6:15 Saturwill sponsor a Christmas party day night, Nov. 26. Mrs. Laura for parish children. A Christmas Pontes is chairman. bazaar is set for Saturday, Nov. ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT, 19 1n the church hall, with Mrs. FALL RIVER Harold Bragle and Mrs. Stephen A four-point program is under B. O'Brien as chairmen. . way in support of the parish building fun" with the aim of HOLY CROSS, constructing a parish .social and o FALL RIVER education center, to be the nuParishioners will hold a recep. cleus of a future parochial tion for Rev. Vincent A. Wolski, '" school. . O.F.M.Conv., and his new assistCornerstone for the proposed ant, Rev. Joachim Dembeck, building will be laid at 2:30 O.F.M.Conv., Sunday, Nov. 13. Sunday afternoon, Dec. 11. SANTO CHRISTO. Religious ceremonies w.ill be followed by a parish social the same FALL RIVER The Council of CathOlic Women evening at Venus de Milo hall, will hold a mystery ride SaturSwansea. The new building will be day, Nov. 26. Next regular meetused for catechism classes, meet- ing will be Tuesday, Nov. 15. ings, breakfasts, lectures, a day ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, nursery and Arabic school FALL RIVER Funds will be raised through a The Council of Catholic Women parish drive, building program will hold a turkey whist Saturbook, parish activities and a day, Nov.. 12 brick-selling project. CST. ELIZABETH, BLESS~D SACRAMENT, FALL RIVER FALL RIVER The Women's Guild plans a The CYO will attend corporate turkey whist for 8 Saturday Communion on National Youth Sunday, Oct. 30. A Halloween night, Nov. 19 in the parish hall. party is planned for Monday, Mrs. Manuel Oliveira is chairman. Oct. 31. New officers include Lenny ST. JOHN BAPTIST, Letendre, president; Jeannine St. NEW BEDFORD Laurent, vice president; Monica The parish will sponsor a Mercier, secretary; Lillian Labazaar at Kennedy Center Frivoie, treasurer. Next regular day and Saturday, Nov. 4. and 5CYO meeting is set ior Monday. Rev. George E. Amaral is genernight, Nov. 7. al chairman. A large committee NOTRE DAME, will handle booths and games FALL RIVER of various types. The Council of Catholic Women ST. MARY'S, will be represented at a fair for the benefit of blind workers, NORTH ATTLEBORO John McGowan is chairman of Saturday, Nov. 19. Mrs. L. Alfred Renaud is in charge of arrange- a committee sponsoring the anDual penny sale, scheduled this ments. year for Monday evening, Nov. Under a new arrangement, a High Mass will be celebrated 14 in the school hall. Proceeds for each deceased council mem- will benefit the parish fund. ber in addition to recitation of SACRED HEART, the rosary. TAUNTON Mrs. Robert Messier is chairThe Regis 'and Trinity clubs man of a holiday fund-raising of the parish will sponsor a project. The next regular meet- scholarship ball at 8 Saturday ing will be held Monday, N~v. night in the Cotillion Ballroom. 28. The council's anniversary J. Emmett Wellwood is chairwill be celebrated and Mrs. lohn man. Proceeds will 4 benefit a J. Mullaney, president of the four year scholarship to be Diocesan Council of Catholic awarded to a Taunton youth by Women, will be among honored competitive examination. guests. Mrs. Albert Petit and Mrs. Robert Petit are co-chairST. JAMES, men. NEW BEDFORD The annual Christmas party Msgr. Noon Circle will hold a will be held Thursday, Dec. 8 giant penny sale Tuesday, Dec. at White's Restaurant, with 6 in the lower circle. Mrs. Leo council officers in charge. Tick- J. Telesmanick and Mrs. Henry ets will be available at the Luckraft are chairmen. November meeting. Membe" are urged ·to take HOL¥ TRINITY, part in the current Confraternity WEST HARWICH The annual parish reunion will of Christian Doctrine teacher training cc ':se being held at St- be held at the Cape Town House, Saturday night, Nov. 5. Dancing, Louis hall, Fall River. entertainment and a buffet supST. -::ICHAEL, per will be on the' program. FALL RIVER The Women's Council. will SS. PETER AND PAUL, hold a penny sale. Wednesday, FALL RIVER Nov. 16 in the school. Mrs. Cosm'o The Women's Guild will sponFedeie is chairman. A cake sale ' sor a special whist party, open will be held Sunday, Nov. 6 and to the pub"c, at 8 Monday night, the next regular meeting is set Oct. 31 in the church hall. Mrs. for Wednesday, Nov. 9. Arthur L. Duffy .is chairman. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, }'ALL RIVER Holy Rosary Sodality will hold a banquet Sunday, Oct. 30 in the Town Rocm, following corporate SAN JUAN (NC) - Francis Communion at 11 o'cloclt Mass • Cardinal Spellman had a wordand a reception for new mem- just one-for a Soviet newspaper bers. eharge. HOLY NAME, The Red paper, Literature and NEW BEDFORD LIfe, linked the Archbishop of TJ:e Holy Name Guild will New York with the United States hold an Autumn dance in the intelligence service in a recent parish hall at 8 Friday night, article. It said he "personally Oct. 28. Mrs. Edward F. Molleo participates in the .work of the Jr. is chairman. American intelligence· service." . An auction will be held Upon his arrival at the airport Friday night, Nov. 11, also in the here, the Cardinal was asked t4t ball, with Raymond Woodhou.- comment 08 the charge. He as auctioneer. ..ruled and l"eI)lied: "Stupid." •
Cardihal Has Word For Red Charge
at,
Week' 5 B'e§~ Meat Buys! Young, Tasty and Tender . . • for Delicious Fall Eating! Supe~1, quality
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lean, mildly smoked, sugar cured -
delicious!
L~5ic Shanl~;a
39c Ham Slices 89c Whole Hams 53c 49c YealLegs 35c Beef Liver Bacon 59c 35c ·Be,e:f
HAMS
L8
LB
Tender, Lean,
FENAST
Milk Fed
LB
Tender, Nutritious, Taste Appeali~g
LB
Sliced - Lean, Mild, Sugar Cured
LB
Buddig's -
Sliced Smoked
n
3'120% PKG
.>arne Low Self-Service Prices In All Stores in This~AAA Vicinity-~ - (We Reserve'" Right to Limit ~ntiti'") ~ --~~~ RRR_.- •• ~ A ~ ~ ~
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FANCY CORTLAND - U. S.
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No. 1- 2 1A
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and
up
APPLES 5 49c LB
BAG
Grapes. 2 Grapefruit 5 B~G A P~G Spinach cA~o Cranberries' 2 Carrots r Hallowe en Special" CANDY BARS 24 Save Ie DONUTS DUNCAN HINES· 3 LUCKY WHIP VICTOR SHRIMP EMPEROR - Sweet, Juicy - Serve ChiDed
LIS
SEEDLESS - Red; White
KING SIZE -
Grade'
Firm - Luscious - Ripe
CELLO PKGS
Crisp, Flavorful
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BARS INCTN
.An leading Brands
JOAN CAROL Plain, Sugar or Cinnamon
PKG
of 12.
Eady Aml3rican CAKE MIXES
REG PKGS
• 90z
DESSERT TOPPING
CAN
Medium Size Cleaned
Raisin Bread
4V.oz
CAN
33c 39c 29c 23c 25c ·I o
89c 19c 98c 44c 49c
2" LOAVES HB 49C
Betly Alden
~'Ent.r Raisin Brood Swooplleles - FREt TRIPS Entry Blanu in All Stor.
F!HAST
ON of 19c Nickel Raisins IlB 49c Salted Peanuts Jumbo CELLO Winter Hill V2J~L 49c Apple Cider" IlB SALTINES PKG 2Sc Nabisco Premium IlB Quarters CTN 37c Imperial MARGARINE REG PKG 29c Popcorn en REG 2Sc 2 CANS laChoy 120z Snack Educator (rax Favorite PKG 29c 51'IcedBeef' ExtraFinastFancy' 3V.oz JAR S9c FancY
6~KGS
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FIHAST
GAL JUG Ok
READY /0 POP
Magic Th,ow·AwG¥ PopOl
Bean Spro'utl 01. Chow Moin Hoodleo
Baked Beans Rnast-
2
LB 12 oz
CANS
49C
CLIP ALONG DOTTED LINE
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GOOD FROM OCT. 21 to NOV. 5
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.When you bur two 12) " 0'. Codl.,1 GI• .,os .t our spoci.1 19. ,.I.i1
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LIMIT ONE COUPON TO AN ADULT CUSTOMER·
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.-.. 2'6 . THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.;Ocj. 27, 1960
·Catholic Youth Week Oct. 30- Nov. 6o
'iRespo,nsible Youth --America's, Strength"
Permanent Aims· and Purposes: • To emphasize youth's potential, by spotlighting their capacity and willingness to assume responsibility •• ~'. • To encoulI'age youth-by making the m aware of their opportunity f~r good ••• • T@ display the talell\lts u ' albilities alnd resources of youth, and to reveal modern Cat~olic ycuthlis depth of spirituality •••• • To foster_frequent reception of the ·Sacra.ments among Catholic Youth.
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Tltis Message is Sponsored By Tlte Following Incliyicluols ancl Business Concerns in Greater Fall Riyer: Ann Dale Products,mnc. Enterprise Brewing- Co.
Globe Manuf~c:turing Co..
International Ladies Garment Workers Union Gerald E. McNally, Contractor
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Sobiloff Brothers'
Cascade Drug Co.
Brady \Electric Supply Co. .
Sterling Beverages, mnc:.
Textile Workers Union of America, AR-CDO
Hutchinson Oil Co~
Gold Medal Bread
MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.
Mason furniture Showrooms t . '
Plymouth Printing C~., Inc.
George R. Montie; Plumber Stafford fuel Co., Inc. .
Strand Theatre
\ Yellow Cab Company
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:BERLIN (NC)-The .Cardinal cases, national boundaries canBishop of Berlin has appealed not correspond exactly with nato the Catholics of Poland and tionality. Germany to wIpe out all mut"Full rIghts for mi~orities, ual suspicion and enmity and to confidence between peoples, ..strive to Insure peace between borders open for trade and our nations." friendship--these are the decisJulius Cardinal Doepfner said ive tasks for the future." the people 'of Germany "rememExpiate Injustices ber with grief and shame" the . . . . ti ces the P 0 I'IS h p e o - .Narrow natIOnalIsm and engrea t lDJUS . . mlty can only pOlson relations, h p I eave suifere d In the p a s t . C d' I D f 'd I While Germans should not forar lOa oep ner sal. twas · ti he sal'd then that he spoke of the great get th ese InJua ces, , . . t' G h ' fl' t d "both nations should stop reck- lDJUS IC~S . ermany as m Ic.e . th i ' tl'ces com on Poland m· the past. onmg up e nJus -.. .ThesE! m. st each 0 ther" Justices must be exp18ted, not IDI'tte d agam . Cardinal Doepfner spoke out forgotten by. the people of Germany, he said. ' in a sermon In St. Ed ~ar d. s Then he said that after 1945, ch~rch he~e after a perIod 10 it w~ Poland that inflicted inwhich PolIsh leaders had been . t· b II' f 'ts charging West Germany with JUs ICes y. expe 109 rom I. k' v n e for the loss of its ne~ly acquIred western ternsee mg re e. g . ' torles German people whose eastern terrItorIes to Poland at f '1' had li _.... th f .... nd f W rId W r II. .aml 1«;S Vet· ere or ",e e 0 0 a centuries. Greatest Wish "I think both nations should . stop reckoning up the injustices He asked Poles to accep~ It as committed against each other," a fact that the great~st WIsh of he said. the German people IS to keep "In the unity of our holy peace with their .neighbors. All Church and the love of Christ responsible Ger~an lea.de~s an~ free of bitter memories, free of theoverwhelmmg maJOrIty 0 all ideological provocations and the German people exclude re- attempts to impose solutions on ~urse to ~ar as a means of ~et- each other, let us strive to intlIng an?, dispute Germany ml.ght sure peace between our nations have WIth Poland, .,the Cardmal and thereby initiate the peacedeclared. . fuI unification of the people of The 47-year-old prelate then Europe." l12id: "The future unIty between our peoples and nations is more important than the boundary question. We have learned from a past full of misery that in many
Decency Legion Condemns Film NEW YORK (NC)-A movie called "Never On Sunday," distributed by Lopert Films; which deals with an attempt to rehabilitate a prostitute, has been evaluated in' Class C-condemned, by the National Legion of Decency. At the same time the legion evaluated in its "Separate Classification" a movie titled "Girl of the Night," produced by Warner Brothen, which has a .imilar theme. The legion posted the following objection to the "Never On Sunday" movie: "Both the pernicious theme and highly indecent treatment of this film are mora))y unacceptable. In a mass mf'dium of entertainment it offers serious offense to public Slid private morality.. " Questionable Entertainment The legion explained that its "Separate Classification" is reserved for "certain films, which not morally offensive, require some analysis and explanation as a protection to the uninformed against wrong interpretations and false conclusions." Citing the reason for placing the "Girl of the Night" movie in this category" the legion observed: "Presentec:t in the form of a serious quasi-documentary, this film because of its subject matter (the analytical study of the rehabilitation of a prostitute) ill questionable entertainment for .the motion picture medium. For this reason it is intended for • specialized and mature audieoce and its exhibition should therefore be JOemicted."
Peru Indian to Study At Boston Seminary LIMA (NC) - A full-blooded Aymara Indian from the Andes has 'left for Boston to study for the priesthood. Domingo Llanque, 20, is one of six Peruvian seminarians invited by Richard Cardinal Cushing. Archbishop of Boston, to study • t St. John's, Boston's major seminary. The Peruvian seminarians will remain in the United States for the entire course of prepartion for the priesthood. Mr. Llanque spoke only the A~'mara language until he was Dine yearl! old, when he began to learn Spanish i.n a rural mountain rehoot. At the age of 14 he entered the minor seminary of the Maryknoll .Fathers in Puno, where he began to study English. He now speaks all three langu..zea fluently.
THE ANCHORThurs.• Oct. 27. 1960
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Cardinal Urges Poles, Germans To Forget Injustices C)f Past
17
Urges Laymen To Know Faith
AT WHITE MASS: Medical personnel of the Fall River area gather at St. Anne's Hospital chapel for annual White Mass. Left to right, Francis J. D'Errico, M.D., Bishop Gerrard, Anthony Bernardo, M.D.
Ask Red GovernmentTo Restore Riphts VIENNA (NC)-The Catholic Hierarchy of Yugoslavia has asked the communist gov 'rnments to restore ri..;hts of the Church, it was reported here. Word reaching here indieated that the Yugoslav Bishops, lJ?eeting at the Croatian provin-
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cia I capital at Zagreb in September, outlined a four-point program. It was understood that the Clonditions set forth by' the Bishops were presented to representatives of Marsh? THo's regime in Belgrar ~ iD ICtober.
DUBLIN (NC) Catholics must keep developing their knowledge of their Faith as they do their professional studies, the Primate of All Ireland declared here. John Cardinal D'Alton, Archbishop of Armagh, was addressing the annual meeting of the council of the Catholic Truth Society of Ireland, of which he is president. "Religion," he said, "must not be kept in a watertight compartment, so that it can have little influence on our daily lives. We need to live our Faith at all levels. "The professional man who fs well grounded in Catholic teaching and who is actuated by supernatural motives in his work, can be relied on to render better service to his clients and to the community at large." Cardinal D'Alton called it t\ mistake to see theology as a field reserved to the clergy. He said that all are theologians who reflect on or discuss such problems as man'srelatlons with the Creator, the real basis of human dignity, the' significance of the Incarnation and Redemption, and the destiny God has in store for men.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs."Oct. 27, 1960·
Ad'ds Phrase Continued' from Page One eral of the Congregation of the Precious Blood, which requested the decree. The new invocation is the first change, in the Divine Praises since the insertion, of the words "Blessed be her glorious Assumption" among the praises .of the Blessed Virgin JI'" 'y. That addition was made in i953, three years after Pope Pius XII declared Mary's bodi' . issumption into heaven a dogm:l of the Church. With the new at;dition, the Divoine Praises are as ,follows: , Blessed be God-. Blessed be His Holy Name. Blessed be Jesus Christ, true God and true Man. Blessed be the name of Jesus. ' Blessed be His Most Sacred Heart. Blessed be Jesus in the Most, Holy Sacrament of ;. ,Altar. ' Blessed be His Most Precious ,Blood. Blessed be the great Mother · Of Cod, Mary mos' holy. Blessed be her holy and Immaculate Conception. Blessed be the name of Mary, Virgin and Mother. , Blessed be St. Joseph, her most chaste spouse. ,· Blessed be God in His angela. and in His saints.
Dro, C~@w Sees (Close, Ties ,Betwe@U1 Moscow, Pek.ing, By Rt. Rev.- Msgr. John S.. Kennedy Absent from the wierd goings-on in 'and about the United Nations these last few weeks has been Communist China. But that baleful giant has been very much in'the minds of people trying to .figure out why Khrushchev has been performing as he has. blighted expectations which the There are those who main- Chinese have endured, arid tai'n that his whole course of shows how cleverly the Comspeech and action has been munists exploited these and repdesigned to impress the Chiresented themselves as the· /(uar'nese Reds, rebellious against his antors of relief. lead, with his Mao-Tse-tung , ability to domThe Communists, moreover, inate the world had a long-range plan, stuck stage, browbeat grimly to it, used every opporthe. Western tunity to advance it bit by bit, nowers, ',a n d 'instantly capitalized on the miswin the adtakes of their opponents,never berence of the· relaxed' presstfre. ' q n e 0 ,m Their performance ispraemitted nations, tically personified in Mao Tseespecially those tung, the' headman. Sketching of Africa. Mao's career, Dr. Chow points ,:'But th'is is out that Mao joined the party lSheer," specula.,. when it, numbered but a' hand~ tlon. And so is almost every-, ful and' indefatigably worked thing that is written about Comhis way up. He had many remunist, 'China, far ,more tightly verses and more than once was shut ',off, from the rest of the in imminent peril of ,be·ing hqg~obe than' the Soviet empire. uidated, bilt he held On. Something of an, inside view of . He never expected to be,masMao Ts'etung's sprawling doter of China so soon. As he and ritain 'is ,provided by, Chow' his associates judged conditions ,Ching-wen in his, Ten Years of a'fter World War II, they were Storm (Holt, Rinehart and Win- in a much better position than stan. $6), translated and edited, 'they had anticipated, yet it by Lai ,Ming. would still take many years for , Dr. Chow, at one time pres 1them to get complete power in. dent of Northeastern University • their grasp. tn Manchuria, belonged to the Their swift acce'ssion to' such China Democratic League in the power was facilitated;' accorddays before the Communist ing to Dr. Chow, 'by disastrous - takeover. He was drawn into mistaKes made py the West, and united front activities' with the especially by the United States. Communists and for eight years Changes Pattern (1949-1957) heid prominent Once they had undisputed con'positions in the Communist gov- trol of the country, they began ernment. its, transformation in the pattern utterly disillusioned he final- of their choosing. Dr. Chow goes ly made his way to Hong Kong. 'i!1to considerable~detail as to the What he writes here is drawn machinery for the suppression from,his own experience. of opposition, for re-education, Follows Krl'mlin Line for manipulating human beings. The book is not from his pen. Dr. Chow speaks :sadly of the He first wrote it in Chinese moral and cultural ,decline about two years ago. Thus, al- which he observed, and which though today's headlines tell us,' he contends is;continuing at an h accelerated' pace. ' ' of intense, friction, and per ap~ an imminent rupture, between- Undoubtedly some questionMoscow and Peking, Dr. Chow ' able features of traditional Chidoes not even hint at anything nese' society have been swept away, but swept away too have ot. the sort. been its inherent and inherited On the contrary, he repeatedly asserts that the bonds bestrengths, to be replaced by Red tween the two' are close and standardization. ' 'practically unbreakable, with ' The author does, not hesitate Mao, Tse-ti.mg faithfuly followto speak of the people's condition bIg the line which the Kremlin under Communism as "hell, on lays down. This may mean that earth." The famous planni~g of , 'Dr. Chow is misinformed, that the Communist system has, he his information is out of date; maintains; led to appalling or that the jousting between waste. 'China and ,Russia is simply show Everything is primarily geared to mislead the'rest of the world. to reinforce the power of the But if this book is of little ruling elite, who enjoy 'every help in' evaluating the situation 'luxury while ,want and, often, 'between the principal Commu- starvation are the plight of the nist units, it is enlightening both ,masses. Revolt, Brewing as to how the Communists came. As he sees it, the people are to power in China and as to ,what their rule has meant for thoroughly disenchanted. He ,the millions of ordinary people, even feels that 'revolt is brewing everywhere. Sim:e the gov~ : in that, vast land mass. ernment has a monopoly of Impressed by 'Promlses . Thus, Dr. Chow dwells on the force and does ~ot scruple to corruption within the Nationa- use it barbarously, attempts at iist government, on the prolife- revolt have hitherto proved futile. ,ration of rapacious officials in its employ,: on the, government·s , He writes, "Th(;:!re are, however, skirmishes and battles, and failure to do anything to improve the living conditions of sparks flying in this darkest . the people, on its hostility to period of Chinese history. • • constructive criticism and its Time is wIth' the Chinese peodenial of democratic rights in ple! Victory belongs to the Chinese people!" , the name of national security. , In the vey long run, undoubt.. All this alienated the people, ; .caused ..,ihem to de,spond, dis- edly. But there is a dearth in these pages an'd in current n~ws posed them to listen favorably to promises of an amelioration of signs justifying one's being sanguine abqut the near future. , of their lot. The chief yield of a book like Such promises the, Communthis is to put on warning those Ists were quick to make. Dr. ,Chow briefly summarizes the living, and thinking themselves : decades of deferred hopes and secure, where communism has not yet prevailed.
Peace Association Re-elects President WASHINGTON (NC)-Charles M. Herzfeld, chief of the U. S. Bureau of Standard's heat division, was reelected president of the Catholic Association for International Peace. " Dr. :-Icrz.felC:, a well-known Catholic scientist an ~ writer, was fiI'st elecLd to the presidency of , the CAIP last year.
Priest Marks Golden Jubilee of Ordination
GROWING MOVEMENT: Ove'r sixty l~dies spent last weekend making a retreat foJ;' diocesan laywomen at Cathedral Camp. Left to right, Mrs. Alfred H. Doyle, Edgartown, Mrs. Edward S. Smith, N. Attleboro, Mrs. Joseph C;. Motta, New Bedford, and Mrs. James E. Lynch, Jr., ~f Hyannis. I '
Prelate Requests Tithing System
and of the diocese. God requires Continued from Page One nothing less. The Catholic can cause many of appeals that come to u~, e. g., United Fund, Heart offord nothing less," he wrote. Fund, March of Dimes, and The prelate's appeal for tithothers of that nature, as well as ing is the third such approach, to the cost of tuition in our Cathchurch support announced witholic schools, and the ,different in the past two weeks. collections, ordered fl'om this However, the two earlier ones office, one's donation, to such . involved individnual parishes, causes might well make up five ,not an entire diocese. They were per cent of our income. In such St. Agnes parish, Cleveland, casc, there'is still the obligation Ohio, whose pastor is Auxiliary of giving five per cent towards Bishop Floyd L. Begin of Clevethe support of the Church." land, and St. Loui" parish in Louisville, Ohio, in the YoungsRepeated Appeals town diocese. Bishop Schexnayder said he is confident that such a system will enable every parish to ,take care of its own needs without having recourse to "fairs" and other such methods 'of raising 'Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm. money. , DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM Complaints resulting from repeated appeals will soon disconSUPPLIES tinue, he said. "Each wage earner 204 ASHLEY BOULEYARD must assume his fair share in the New Bedford expenses of his parish ,church WY 3-8045
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· PITTSBURGH (NC)-A priest who was boril in Poland, ordai::ed in'France, and served in eight U. S. Sees will observe ,the golden jubilee of his ordination Saturday. Father Joseph A. Pobleschek, C.S.Sp., chaplain at San Rosario He a I t h Resort, Cambridge Springs, P;J., will offer a Solemn Mass of Thanksgiving in the chapel of Duquesne University, here, where he taught from 1911 to 1915. Duquesne is conducted b:' the Holy Ghost Fathers. · A native of Posen, Poland, Father Pobleschek studied at the Holy Ghost Fat,hers" seminaries at Cornwells Heights, Pa., Norwalk, Conn., and Chevilly, France. He was ordained to the priesthood Oct. 28, 1910. Subsequently, he served in the Cincinnati and Philadelphia archdioceses and the Lafayette, La., Little Rock, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, Saginaw, :and Erie dio-
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Appoint Nobrega Coach of Sports At,Holy,Family
By Jack Kineavy Scholastic football moved past the season's halfway mark· last Saturday and the traditional phase of the schedule lies just ahead. This week's slate of games finds most area teams engaging in non-league contests,' for the most part. Bourne at Barnstable to win in Bristol County play. is the only Tri-County Con- The 'range of difference, howference clash, while Taun- ever, may not be nearly as great ton is at Durfee and Voca- as comparative records suggest. tional visits Coyle in Bristol County action. The top attraction of the day is the New Bedford - Brockton fussle in the Shoe City. The Brockton juggernaut, 5-0 on the season, is currently tied for the Class A leadership and i I! considered to be even more powerful than the '59 squad which annexed the title.' New Bedford, its record marred only by a 13-12 loss to West Springfield two weeks ago, has a 3-1 mark and is rated a good, solid ball club. Brockton's coach is Chet Millett, an All-East guard at Holy Cross where he was a teammate of Carlin Lynch, athletic director and head coach at Bishop Stang. This is Millett's third year at the Brockton helm and he has yet to be beaten, Brookline is the only school that .has had any success against Millett's teams. The Wealthy Towners, coached by Harry Downes, tied Brockton in '58 and again in '59 before succumbing this year. Undefeated Elevens The area's sole surviving undefeated-untied teams, Durfee and Dennis-Yarmouth, go into action this week against Taunton and Dighton-Rehoboth, respectively. The Hilltoppers boast 11 5-0 record, a startling reversal of their winless 0-8 slate of a year ago. The Red and Black white-washed' Fairhaven Saturday, 18-0, with Co-captain Lee Woltman turning in a spec_ tacular 94-yard touchdown run. Tauntol1 has won two, lost three thus far. This also repPesents improvement over a long '59 campaign in which the Herr' "I{S were able to salvage but one victory, that over Durfee by a 14-0 margin. On the basis of comparative scores Durfee will enter the game an odds-on favorite. It must be kept in mind, however, that this Is a keen if not a traditional rivalry and the Hllltoppers can ill-afford to rest easy. 'l'he Somerset - Dartmouth game offers a study in contrast. The Raiders lead the 'I'd-County Conference; the Green has yet
Convert Urges Continued from Page One Mr. Hyde said the Chinese 'Reds hold to Lenin's doctrine that war between communism and capitalism is inevitable--.-despite the fact that Lenin did not foresee nuclear war. By contrast, he points out, the Soviets favor co-existence, in the belief that subversion and small brushfire wars will serve their cause, but world war would not. However, the former communist editor added, the time may come when Red China's industrial power is increased to such an extent that the nation can challenge the Soviet Union and impose Its doctrine Oft world communism. Mr. Hyde said there are both advantages and disadvantages in the freedom of action enjoyed by communists in many Western nations. When communists are permitted to operate openly, they are easier to keep an eye on, whereas observation of their activities is more difficult when they are driven underground, he said.
New Prexy
This is another old rivalry which dates back to the days of the Narry League. Somerset came up with its best effort of .the season last Saturday trouncing Dighton-Rehoboth, 20-0. Cocaptain·John Fitzsimmons scored· twice on passes to lead the Raid- . ers. Dartmouth, meanwhile, outplayed Taunton for three periods only to have the DiRubio charges catch fire in the final quarter to score twice and take home a 12-0 victory. Stymied on the ground, Taunton went to the air early in the fourth quarter and the accurate tosses of quarterback Charley Rebello brought the Herrings down to the one whence fullback Dick Motto lugged it across. Taunton's second score. came in the waning moments of the game on 8 5 yard burst by Bob Cordeiro. Comparable Powers A closer look at the relative strength of Bristol vs. Tri-County will be afforded by the Wareham-Attleboro meeting at Hayward Field. The Jewelers, 4-1 on the, season, are in second place in the County standings and Wareham, undefeated in Conference competition but having played one less game than pace setting Somerset, is in a comparable spot. Both had big days Saturday. Wareham notched its third Conference win running rough. shod over Barnstable by a 41-6 margin. Attleboro, forced to come from behind after Vocational's first quarter touchdown, gained momentum as the game wore on to fashion a 36-6 victory. The Jewelers took last year's encounter, 14-12.· Saturday's meeting figures to be another close one; it's another of those keen riva1l'ies. ' In other contests throughout the area, North Attleboro which played a scoreless tie with Coyle last week, ,entertains Milford in 8 non-league game. Mansfield, rolling along once again after an early season 14-8 setback by Oliver Ames, travels to Swansea to engage a Case High team that has shown signs of jelling. The Cardinals lost their first two, the n bounced back against Franklin and Dighton-Rehoboth and last Saturday they came from behind to tie Falmouth, 8-8. The number of one point victories seemed to be legion in collegiate ranks last Saturday. Here in New England, Tufts had IS squeaker against Williams, 10-9, while Bowdoin surprised previously unbeaten Colby, 1514. Incidentally, the Mules' sophomore tackle, Dick Bonalewicz, former Durfee star, was named linesman of the week in New England by vote of the grid scribes. Dick plays both ways for Colby and line coach John Simpson, former Somerset mentor, rates him highly. ,
Begins 'Cente'nary ROME (NC) -Rome's yearlong program for commemorating the 19th centenary of St. Paul's arrival here has opened with an address by His Eminence Giuseppe Cardinal Sirl, Archbishop of Genoa, on St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans.
Jack Nobrega has been named· baskethall and basebaH coach for Holy Family High School in New Bedford. He was well-known as a former player and an official umpire and city basketball league coach. He is 30 years of age. He follows Ed Lowney. Lowney resigned after 11 years of service.
NEW PASTOR: Representatives of parish groups welcome Rev. Arthur C. dos Reis, new pastor of Santo Christo Church, Fall River, with a gift. Left to right, Mary Carreiro, Girl Scouts; Father dos Reis; Mary Cabral, Children of Mary; Joseph Cabral, Council of Catholic Youth.
J.,eaders Salute Youth Week Continued from Page One identify themselves "/Vith" Christ The King through various religious programs in their parishes ·and in the five CYQ Areas. They will consecrate themselves together with their words and actions to His Service. They will present themselves to' the Diocese of Fall River by announcing through action the fact that responsible youth first rely on God in all-things. Communion breakfasts, religious ceremonies surrounding the installation of parish and area CYO officers and Holy Hours will set the theme of Fall River's Catholic Youth Week. Indeed, Fall River Diocesan Youth will present themselves as responsible youth and America's strength. President Eisenhower declared in his message that "as the religious leaders of our land help our young people prepare to fill positions of trust in the ongoing life of our nation, they perform a vital service to all." Concept of Freedom "Our society's achievements and future promise are based upon the. concept of freedom..,which in its highest sense is the - opportunity for individual selfdiscipline," the President said. . Rep. McCormack noted in his message that "the chief present dangers to America lie in irresponsibility in" ita various phast:s." "The chief hope for America," be added, "is that we foster and develop in our youth, a spirit that will not merely ·accept, but eagerly seek and assume responsibilities; that will. adventure with courage and determination; a spirit that will work unceasingly to build America's prosperity, to secure America's peace, and to spread through the world America's freedom."
Mr. Meany said that at present "the nation needs to concentrate every available re. solirce on building the moral, spiritual and intellectual caliber of our youth." Honor Achievements ' . He said that through such observances as National Catholic Youth Week "we as adults can . show our youth that we prepared to honor their achievements in an even greater fashion than we deplore the misdeeds of a relatively small number of our young men and women." Admiral Rickover, citing education as a ohief means of developing responsibility in young people quoted from his book "Education and Freedom": "Basic to political freedom is personal independence; and this can exist only where the mind has been unshackled from ignorance, from dependence on the opinion of others, and from fear of disagreeable facts." Youth Has Obligations Mr. Ford commented that due 10- the "widespread abundance" of the nation, "it must be especially difficult for our young people to recognize that life if! more than just receiving and that they, too,have obligatiolltl." "I don't think that we can ever repeat too' frequently, both for our sons and daughters and for ourselves, the necessity of doing, what we ought to do simply because we ought to do it," he said. Mr. Marshal referred, to the "broad moral issue" involved in efforts for racial equality and predicted it will receive greater attention in the future. "Man will recognize man lor what he is without regard to race or color or place of origin," be said. "The youth of today, ift many respects, are closer to this moral belief than many older pt.>ople. Therefore, recognition of youth and their willingness to face the problem deserves the VATICAN CITY (NC)--Costa 8Upport of all of us." ,Rica's new Ambassador to the Holy See, Franklin Aguilar Alvarado, has presented his credentials to'Pope John. Mr. Aguilar replaces Prince Giulio Pacelli, who resigned several weeks ago. Est. 1897
Rev. Justin J. Quinn, director of Holy Family High School and assistant at St:Lawrence Cliurch said, '''We are fortunate to get a man of Nobrega's background to handle our teams. It was difficult to find an individua~ to replace Lowney. In Nobrega, who has gone far, we feel we have a coach who can carryon the traditioJl8 of Holy Family." Nobrega, star basketball plaY'er, attended New Bedford High and New Bedford Institute of Technology. He married the former Barbara A. Constantine, they have one son, David Michael 21h. Nobrega plans to meet players em Thursday and start practice
on Monday at Kennedy Center. Regarded as' one of the finest guards to come out of New Bedfor... High he play' " and coached the Fairhaven Varsity Team ana Panthers A. C. team.
are Cardinal Blesses
Catholic Weekly LONDON (NC) - William Cardinal Godfrey, Archbishop of Westminster, paid an official visit to Fleet Street to see the new offices of the Universe, Britain's biggest Catholic weekly newspaper• The paper is celebrating _ l00th birthday this year, Cardinal Godfrey blessed the building, staff and machinery and all persons connected witb its production. The Papal flag flew over the building for the visit. " ·The Cardinal was received by Douglas Woodruff, chairman, and Christopher Hennessy, editor and. managing director, a~ received each of the staff personally. He was accompanied by his secretary, Msgr. Derek Worlock, who is also national chaplain of the journalists' Guild at St. Francis de Sales. ' - The Universe has a circulation of about 500,000 and claime 8 weekly readership of over' million'.
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DETROIT (NC) - Forty-one year old Father Laurence V. Britt, S.J., will formally take office as president of the University of Detroit next Sunqa,. Oct. 30.
19
THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 27, 1960
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Feast' Qf ChristtheK:lng Marks .Catholic Youth Week ,
,SPIRITUAL: Rev. Francis Connors, Taunton area CYO SOCIAL': New Bedford area teen-agel's practice the social graces at CYO-sponsored 'danc,es held at, the Kennedy Community Center. Left to right, -in typical grouping, Ann ,chaplain, gives Holy Communioh to Donna Murphy; area ,Morrisey, Fran Harding, Mary. Anne Marcotte, -Joe McCann, Marcia Champagne, Ned . vice president, of Sacred Heart pa"rish and Richard Simmas, . area president, St: Joseph's. Tighe. The CYO provides programs and facilities to supplemen.t those of the parish.
ATHLE'fIC:Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Diocesan Director CULTURAI_: The complete four-point CYO program does not neglect mind-stretching of CYO activities, discusses basketball with Edward Doolan but gives young people opportunities to take part in discussions. ',Rev Bernard Sullivan, Jr. (left), and Charles Sullivan, both of St. Mary's Cathedral , Attleboro area CYO chaplain, joins.in a typical session with, left to right, Peter McCaffery, : William Adair, Carol Ann Lajoie, ·Eileen Dyer, Ann De Costa. team, Fall River.
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,Share In Ford Grant
NEW YORK (NC) - Notre Dame University and Loyala University, ,New Orleans, have named four scholars to sharE,l in a $140,000 grant of the' Ford , Foundation to 25 institutions, to study j1,lvenile delinquency, the , Foundation said here. " The foundation also announced . that St.' Louis University hasbeen given 'il $25,000 grant for , a study, of urban planning and . renewal. The stu"dy will be made by 'Father Trafford P. Maher, S.J. ' The grants of $2,500 each have been assigned by Notre Dame Uni~ersity' to an instructor, Frank J. Fahey, and a graduate student, Gordon Di Rieryzo. , Loyola University has give,n its grantf9 to Prof. LawrenceL. , Bourgeois and Daniel B. Alexander, Boys' Guidance C~un sclor of the New Orleans public schools. '
Card iR'il<Ol I Protector VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has named Jose Cardinal Garibi y Rivera, Archbishop of Guadalajara, proteCtor of the Discalced Carmelite Tertiaries whose motherhouse is in Guadalajara.' . '
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