Special Gifts Committeemen For New Taunton School ~eet Next VVednesday of
The ANCHOR An Anchor 01 the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST.
Fall River, Mass.,
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Appointment of the chairmen the 13 individual parishes which will raise a minimum total of $1,125,000 for the third diocesan regionaf high school to be located, in Taunton is announced today by Rev. James F. Lyons who has been designated campaign priestdirector by the Most Reverend Bishop. The new Taunton regional secondary institution for girls will serve the 2,000 .
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Thursday, Nov. 3, 1960
PRICE 10c $4,00 per Year Second Clan. Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River. Mass.
4, No. 44 : © 1960 The Anchor
Marriage· Counselling Seminar for' Priests
A seminar on Ma~riage Counselling will be held Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 28 and 29, for the priests of the Diocese. be conducted by Dr. Alphonse H. Clemens, Director of. the Marriage Center. at the Catholic University of Americ'a, the Monday seminar will be held at Kennedy Center, New Bedford. TueSday's ~ession will be held in Sacred Heart
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School, Fall River. Progmm' for both days will be the same. It will begin at 10:15 wit h registratfon. "Marriage Counselling,. a Tool for Pastoral Work, Dynamics of Personality and of Marriage Problems" will be. the fir~t topic of the day, at
Greater
Father Lyons announced today that the special gifts committee will meet in the Taunton CYO Hall with their pastors at 8 next Wednesday night. Special gifts solicitations may start immediately after this session. The memorial workers will have their first training session 011 Wednesday, Nov. 16. The chairmen chosen for .the V"arious parishes are: Taunton Holy Family--:-Joseph Mozzone, Turn to Page Twelve
O •. At'tie bo·ro.
Extensive preparations are underway at Sacred Heart Church, North Attleboro, as, parishioners make ready to celebrate the golden jubilee of the ordination of Rev. Joseph S. Larue, pastor. Events will include a Solemn High Mass of . . ,_.._ - - ~~-~-.,----, Tlianksgiving at 4 Sunday afternoon, Nov. 13, with Father Larue as celebrant and Bishop Connolly in at-
Holy'See Pledges $160,000'toUN Refuqee .Work UNITED NATIONS (NC) total contribution of $160,000 from the Holy See to, two United Nations refu-
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gee pl'ograms has been announced at the UN's 1960 Pledg· ing 'Conference for Extra~Budgetary Funds. .. , .' . Auxiliary Bishop James H. '. GriffitHs ,of New York repre. ~ sen-ted' the Holy'See at both con-' fe~ence sMsions. One was .de-~ · voted ·to~Palestine refugees un. de~ tHe. ca~e of the UN Relief ; and Wo'rks Ag~n'cy·for Palestine. · The· other.' concerned refugees: , ' Tu~n io 'Page' Eighteen ..
10:30.
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Pastor Is Priest 50. Yea rs
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Catholic pupils now in the public and parochial elemen-
PAUL
It will be followed by discussion of "A Framework for Diagnostic and Thera(: ~i.ltic Proce.c1ure." Following .a :uncheon recess, the afternoon wl~l be deYoted to practical advice on cond",cting counselling, interviews, an examination of. the characteristics an. needs of couples; and, as the closing'topJc, analysis of eases, . followed hy a discusSion
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REV. JOSEPH S. LARUE
tendance. A testim' '-- banquet · at Elks' ComlT',rnity :iall will follow 'the Mass, wit· the Bishop also present. A High Mass for children of the parish ",j'n be celebrated by Father Larue at 9 Monday Morning, Nov. 14 and a children's jubilee breakfast will fol':' low at 10:15, also at Elks' Hall. Honorary chairmen of the celebration are' Joseph Chabot and' Albert Pirlsonnault, parish trustees. Chait'man is Rene Pinsonnault,' aided by Adelard Ringuette and Mrs. Roland Riell· deau. Officers f.or the $olemn High · Mass will include, in addition to Bishop Goonolly· and Father' . Larue, Rev. Gerard Chabot,. ·assistant priest; Rev. Willi~m ColTurn to Page' Tweniy
Warn: CO:stro' Regim'e- '~Ians ~at,ional. 'Church· ii1 C~b'a .
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,. MIAMI (NC)~New warnings that Fidel.Castro hopes to create a "natjonal" Church in ,Cuba were voiced here by a newspaper and a former member ·of ,th'e Castro'reghrie. KnOWD : A~dres.Y:aIQegpi~o,.aformer under secrebiry of Ule treasury Dr.'C"mlens has an i n t e r n a - . who q~it the Cub~~ govern-. confiscate Church ~roperty and tronal reputation as. a marriage .' m~nt last March, saId he has put priests on State,salaries. eounselloi', an author and au:: " . PIrT$BURGH . (NC) '''no 'doubf' . that "Premier Diario Las Americas columtttority on marriage 1;1"" thefam-. . '; 1.'11(; ~ need :tf.~¢ek education : Castro has given'thought to nist"Rene'Veira Stated that de", , :,rum io Page SixteeD .' 'DR: A.:~: C,L~~E~.S, .'" .. beyoiul 'th-~':riorin'al ~chOol'
,P·rela.tes -Assert.... Ad"uit' ~ducation. H'Q·s'.VitcaI'.Role,
~,t'io:~ternationa~IY
'$qY$ .,Cat~'olic 'SC.h09r .G~~l, ·:~:i~~~~~~~i~~r~:~~;.:;1:~~;. to Develop I~tellect. ". ,.':. <ti~;h;~~~:~~a~~~:,~a~e :f~~m -'LAS VEGAS (NC)-The pritnary purpose, of a Catholic.
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. 't 11 't school is to develop.tlt~ m, e ec ,
:BI~hop; J:o~~ J, ~r~~ht o~ Pltts-~
d C· 'th 'l' . burgh,. honorary chairman of the hQ·. 0., orJU g:o,o :a . o~cs., : commission, ': and', t~om' 'Msg'r: Father C. O'Neil D'Amour of the,National.Catholic Educa- .Franci~·W. Carney.of the Insti.tional Association told' the 30th biennial 'convention 'of,the tute .of. Social Education, St. . ., . . h r ' . JOhn's C::ollege;' 'Cleveland,. the N~ttonal Counc!l of C~j 0 Ie D'Amour, associate se~retary in' Turn, 'to Pllge Eighte:en Women~ "Is the prImary charge of NCEA's Departm'ent . function to form good Cath- of' Superintendents, who' was olics?" he asked. "I would critical of taking children out ..
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say that it is not. Goo'dness is a matter of the will. The school Is primarily concerned with the intellect. "I would say the function of ~ the Catholic school is to form intelligent Catholics," said Fr.
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of an "already short" school day for religious exercises. "I know of Catholic schools," he said, "where at 11 a.m. children go to Holy Mass and receive Holy Communion. CerTurn to Page· Eighteen
Catholic Clergy Asserts P r i est s Rece'ives MedaI Need A'ssistance Of La'ymen . For Heroism WHITEMAN (NC) ~Fr. l?aul S. Haney, chaplain' at. the Whiteman Air Force 'lGase here in Missouri, has theen awarded the Airmen's Mtidal for heroism in connection wi~h an aircraft accident. The priest of the Gary, Ind.· diocese is the second Air Force. ehaplaih to receive the medal or . Us predecessor,. the l;loldier's. Medal, 'llwarded during the days . of ,the Army Air Force. . Turn io Page Eighteen
BUFFALO (NC) --'- The role of the layman· in the Church i~ to bring Christ to places "where the.. ' Roman, collar is .banned/' a priest .said here. .... . . , Father James J ..McQuad,e, S.J. '. of St. Louis, national' promoler . TUCSON ORDIN~RY: COof Sodalities of Our Ladr,.ipade·, adjutor,. B.ishop Frallcis J;. the statement in a 'ta~·. ~:~he, Green .has. succeeded to the fifth annual convention; of~·lthe. 'A" . .. ',.. S t ' h" .' . Buffalo !liocesan :CoU!1ci~.'Qf .. f1ZQ~a,. e~ a ,~ e re~lgna. Catholic Men." , ~. tlOn" of ..BIShop Damel-J. . Turn to Page Eighteell Gercke.
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a· .in~tional" church. ""-' .. : " '.' : . .:
.cree would,!J e ' a major. step toward creation of a' "Cuban . Mr. Vje,ra said the alleged .decree' will forbid Catholics to contribute mQ~'ey to th" Church, . and will put priests on the government payrop as iftheywe~ 'public officials. ' Dr. Valdespino, who until re..'. cel]tly lived .i\1 asylum in the Peruvian embassy in Havana, 'predicted "progressive .a n d ' . rapid disintegration" of the Castro regime, which he referred to as "communist," To back up his prediction he cited g row i ri g disaffection among the Cuban people as a result of problems and failures Turn to Page Eighteen
~r, !a!des,plp~,a o~et~~e"law . Ch~fC!t,..
· prC!fc::ss~r a~ ,t~e. :tJ1)~verslty of Haya"a a!1d a leader of the · Cu!>any~~th.. mov.e.~eht;" said .'Ca~tro . a~d ,h~s: ad:vJse~s have 'resolv.ed' 'l. dlYld.e ·"ehevers to · ,weaken !he',. forces .of the Ch~.rch." . ::.,... . .... . (Creati~n' .. of a "national" CatholicCllurch' I?l'oclaiming its independence of the Holy. See has been ,il 'tactic 'of some communist regimes, not~ble that of communist China.) Diario Las Americas, Spanishlanguage daily newspaper published here; printed a report that the Castro regime is readying an official decree which will
.' Former Red Says Communists Hope To Take Over World in '10 Years MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - A former communist editor has called on the Free World to seek to attract underdeveloped nations, sending them "not only career people, but people with a love of God and man." Douglas Hyde, fo.rmer news editgr of the intelligent, idealistic, impl'esLondon Daily Worker and a sionable students to train 88 communist for 20 years until future leaders," he . became a Catholic' in Mr. Hyde emphasized com1948, expressed this view' at the' munists "probably al'e making University of Minnesota New- . their . greatest strides of all man Center. . ' -".. among intellectuals in Latin Mr. Hyde, a British repreSen- . America," . , tative' of . the' . $ouihe.ast 'Asia' He also noted communists· are Treaty" and ·.the Pacifi¢. Defense. ". geari'ng . their' pla'n~ to the exbloc, _said. communists··!'.believe· . p~ctation. that. a severe reeesthat they h'avi:dO years in which' . sion will come to all countries to "prepare to 'taKe over ·.tlie- -that. have ,their economies tied world. So· they're going· after to that of the West.
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.Note Youth We.ek
,..'In Aitleboros:"'~,
r;r~~ibP~rish Parade
Attleboro and North AttlebO" activities for Catholic Youth Week. will include an evening Mass tomorrow at St. John's , Church, Attleboro, to be followed by a dance at 8. Sacred Heart CYO membe~ North Attleboro, will hold a tag day Sunday, Nov. 6, with pr~ ceeds to further the CYO p~ gram., '
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MARY'S, OUR LADY OF MT. «JARMEL, SEEKONK NEW BEDFORD A shower of gifts is planned Parish organizations' are joinby the Women's Guild of S1. ing in preparations for a .Buddy Mary's Church for SundaJ;' afterCommunion Breakfast Sunday, noon, Nov. 13 from 2 to 4, in Nov. 6. Teenagers and youths, preparation for t\.~ Annual of the parish clubs will receive Christmas Sale which will be Communion and bring a "buddy" held Sdurday, -·ov. 19. to breakfast. Last year over 500 Election of officers will be young people attended the event. held by the Guild at their next The Holy Name and Women's meeting on Monday, Nov. 7. Societies are providing food, ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, while members of all adult FALL RIVER' groups in the parish, are sharing The Women's Guild will con- in the work of preparation and duct a cake sale from 6:30 to 8, service 'of the breakfast. Roy Monday, No . 7, with Mrs, Har- Serpa will sPeak and Charles old Sayward, presidEnt, as chair- Silvia is general chairman. man. T:'e sale will 1:~ followed IMMACULATlE CONCEPTlON~ by the regular '>nthly meeting FALL RIVER at which a demonstration on The Women's Guild will meet · decorative art will be given by at 8 Monday evening, Nov. 7 in Mrs. Kathy Powell. rofrs. Etiward the church. basement. Atty~ F. Doolan will be hostess at the George L. Sisson' will show a so<;ial hour. travelogue, 'with Miss Florence , SACRED HEART, 'Lynch and Mrs. John Roach in NORTH ATTLEBORO charge of the program and Mrs. The annual installation ban- William Guilmette chairman of qUet of St. Anne's Sodality will, the refreshment comr.nittee. be'held Tuesday evening at 6:30 OUR LADY OF PERPTUAL in the Rome Restaurant. Rev. HELP, NEW BEDFORD Roger Leduc will be the guest Members of Our Lady of Perspeaker. petual Help Society will 'attend Mrs. Claire Deschenes heads a Mass for deceased members' the ar~angement committee. this' Sunday. A Communion ST. ,JOSEPH, breakfast will follow. A cake NORTH DIGHTON sale is planned for the church The Women's Guild will hold ,hall SUI!.day, Nov. 20. a pot luck supper at 7 Thursday , HOLY NAME, night, Nov. 17. T~e unit is ~n- NEW BEDFORD ,soring a library for young people, The Holy Name Guild will with books to be available on hold an auction at 7 Friday Sundays at the rectory. night, Nov. 11 iD. the church hall. A ham and bean supper will ' beheld Saturday, Nov. 5 and ST: AUGUSTINE, the annual turkey whist Satur- VINEYARD HAVEN , day, Nov. 1 9 . ' The Holy Name Society will ' · ST. MATHIEU. discuss the possibility 6fan 'FALL RIVER' outdoor shrine during the , The Women's Guild will hold 'Christmas season at its meeting a' penny sale Saturday,. Nov. 19 this month., ' 'at the parish hall. A Christmas HOLY NAME. !ale is scheduled for Sunday, FALL RIVE:~ December 11 and Sunday, Dec: The Holy Name, Society will 'i18, 'also at the, parish hall. The hold its annual Communion 'a n n'u a I Christmas party' is 'breakfast this Sunday morning planned for Tuesday, Dec.' 13 following 8 o'clock Mass. Elecand the next' regular meeting tion of new officers. and recepwill 'be held at 7:30 Monday tion of new members will ' be night, N~v. 28. held and Rev. Joseph L. Powers ST. PATRICK. will be guest speaker. The event FALMOUTH will take place in the school " The Women's Guild will spon- au~litorium. sor a Christmas bazaar from 2 to SANTO CHRISTO, :I Saturday afternoon; Dec. 3, FALL RIVER with Mrs. Norman Starosta 'as Members of the, parish CYO 'chairman. have made tentative plans for Drivers are needed for parish group, attendance at Mass, and Christian Doctrine classec: and }ioly, Communion on First Frimay contact . Sister Helen Marie days, a toy drive for children; a at the parIsh annex. Christmas play, a girls' basket" ST. MARY'S, ballteam and a harvest party. NORTH ATTLEBORO ',rhe, unit wi~l participat~ in '," Th,e annual penny sale will be the area penny sale to be held held in the school hall at 7:30 Tu~sday thr()\~gh Thursday; Nov. ,Monday evening, Nov. 14 for the 15 to 17 a~ CYO, Hall. Anawan ·benefit of the parish fund. John Street. J. McGowan and Bernard J. BLESSED, SACRAMEl'lT. Byrnes are cochairmen, aided by FALL RIVER a large committee. The Women's Guild will hold ST. PE':"~lt, a meat pie supper Saturday, Nov,' DIGHTON 12, 11t wh~ch Rev. Eugene Dion, . The Holy Name Society will pastor, will be honored. hold Its' annu81 supper Saturday, Next, regular meeting iss"et Dec. 3. Ney' regular meeting is for' Wednesday, Nov. 18 with set' for Tuesday, Nov. 15 in the' Mrs. Blanche Ouellette as chair- _ rectory hall. 'man. ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI, NEW BEDFORD FORTY HOURS Members will receive corporate ,Communion at 9:30/ Mass DEVOTION Sunday mornin6, No'" '!. A card Nov. ~St. Thomas More, party will form part of the next Somerset. ' meeting, to be held Monday, Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs. Nov. 21. ' St. Stanislaus, Fall River. ST. JAMES. 'Nov. 13-St. John 'the Baptist, NEW BEDFORD , New Bedford. .!~ women's mission is now in Notre Dame, Fall River. progress and the men's mission Our Lady of the Isle, will star· this Sunday nigbt at Nantucket. 7:30. Children will attend servNo\ . 20-St. Anthony, Ma'ttaices ,at 3:45 Monday, through , ~oisett. , Thursday" afternoons of' next St. Aime, New Bedford. - week." Giving tM, nii'Ssions are 5t; John the Evangelist, Rev. George E. Colby, C.S.C. and Attleboro. . R~v. Robert E. McDonnell, C.S.C. " Nov. 23-5t. Catherine's Con- ' vent, Fall River. , Nov. 27-0u'r Lady of the ImTHE ANCHOR lists tbean-' maculate Conception, niversal7 dates 01 priests who New Bedford. served the PaD River Diocese 'St. Margaret.; Buzzards sIDee its formation ill 190t Bay. with the Intention that tile faithful will give them a THE ANCHOH 8econcJ-c!lI8II :nail privileges authorized prayerful remembranCe. ,Id FaD River, MB88. Published VVeQ NOVEMBER 6 , TburudaJ at 410 Biahland Avenue, Fall ,River. 1Il1lll8.. by the Catholic PIUS of tho Rev. Patrick S. McGee, 1933. Diocese 01 Fall River. Subllcrh>tIoD III'Iee • mall. PClIItpaid "-00 per,... ' _ '_'_ I'ounder. 5L Mary. Hebr~ville. 0'
Necrology
Pelletier Is Director Of Stonehill Singers George G. Pelletier, Taunton, has been named director of the Stonehill College glee club. ; Mr. Pelletier, who has directecl several 'choral groups in the BoSton and Taunton areas is preSently musical director of st.. Ja~ques Church, Taunton.
, GLAD LAD: Edward Bielawa of Holy Cross School, Fall River, knows the rules of fire prevention and has a prize to prove it, won in ~ity fire department's essay contest. Admiring it are Rev. Vincent Wolski. O.F.M.Conv., pastor and Lt. ,John E. Jean of the fire department.
Pre,lates ,Call for' Mobilization Of World1s Economic Power SYDNEY (NC) -The Bishops riers to the goal of the abolitiOR of pov~ty and want throughout of Australia have call~ for , mobilization of the resources , the world." ef the economic powers of the . The, ~erarchy asserted that world to wage war 0 l want. -- the problem does not stem from Despite the fact that a large lack' of natural resources. ''It is part of mankind today lives unthe dead weight of outmoded der inhuman cOnditions, the)' social and economic institutions said in a pastoral 'letter, "there which do not fit modern, n~s, are no insuperable physical bar- ,but which are very difficult tQ change." the letter ,said.
,Mass Ordo
'The pastoral was distributed at aD the 'Catholic churches of FRIDAY-St. Charles Borromeo, Bishop and Confessor. ,Double. Australia Sunday. ,designated as SoCial JuStice Sunday. Heading White. Mass Proper; Gloria; the Bishops in signing' the pasSecond Col~ect SS. Vitalis and Agricola, Martyrs; Third Col- toral is Norman Cardinal Gilroy. lect of the Pope; Common Arch~isbopof, Sydney. Preface. Anniversar:' of the SodaI Conseieoee Coronation' of Pope John TbelBisbops stressed' man's "XXIII. Votive Mass in honor of'Uie Sacred Heart of Jesus duty to develop a "global soeial conl;CienCe.'~, They also said that permitted. Tomorrow is' the projects most likely to remove First Saturday of the Month. ., causes of poverty should norSATURDAY - Mas II of the mally have precedence over Blessed Virgin for Saturday; funds for either military or presShriple. White. Mass Proper; tige purposes. ' Gloria; Preface of Blessed The pastoral also made thill Virgin. ' point: SUNDAY-XXII Sunday' After "When a cOmmunitY is afPentecost. Double. Green. Mass 'Proper; Gloria; 'Creed; Preface ,flicted by any catastrophe the nations of th,e world are prompt of Trinity. in their charity. The demands of ' MONDAY -'- Mass ')f previous international _ justice, however, Sunday. Simple. Green; Mass have not been so readily recogProper; Gloria; Common Pref- nized as the demands_,of intern!ltional charity. ace. TUESDAY -!¥lass of previoui Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass Proper; No'Gloria; Second Collect Four Crowned Martyrs;, Common Preface. WEDNESDAY - Dedication of thi_ Aubertine Brough - Archbasilica of The, Savior. Owner Diree&or' Double of II Cm'ss. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second SpacioUs Parking. Area 'Collect St. Theodore, MartYr; WY 2-2957 Creed; Common Preface. 129 Allell 8t. New BecJlord THuRSDAY-St. Andrew Avellino, Confessor. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect SS. Tryphon and Com_ 'panions, Martyrs; Common Preface.
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Legion of Decency' 'The following films are to be added to the lists in their . . spective . "assifications: Unobjectionable for genenl pa&ronage: Cinderella. Unobjectional for adults aRC adolescents: Journ~y to the Lost City (this classification is pred:k eated upon a revised versio;n and is applicable only to prints shown in the U. S. A.); Magnift,.. eent seven; Secret of the Purpis Reef. '" , Objectionable in part fM alB GI ,B,lues (highly objectionab~ in that its theme glamorizes mOr;i1 behavior and its treatme~ includes' suggestive dialog\l(\, costuming, dancing and sit. . . tions); World of Suzy WODli/ (brothel atmosphere is morallrl unacceptable ,for mass enterlai. . ment medium).
, OS 2-2391
SPENCER
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Glee club officers, all fro. Taunton, include John Brassard. president; Elise Cayer, vice presid~nt; Jeanne St. Germame. ,treasurer.
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THE AN<;HOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 3, 1960
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CAPE CANA CONFERENCE: Mr. and Mrs. Willard Smith and Mrs. Frederick A. English, chairman of sponsoring committee, speak with Rev. John F. Hogan, one of the priest directors, at the' third session of the Cana Series held at· St. Patrick's Parish, Falmouth.
Cana' Series' ·Makes Marvelous Ch(l,nges. in Participants' Lives By Russell Collinge Does there seem to be Jess frictiori in the family life of your parish? Less complaining' about your immediate geheration of youngsters? And is there less sulking on the part of your teenagers-not so much of the "no one understands me"?' D~es your pastor spend less timeactiilg as a marriage Counselor~and less. time reading heavy vol. the right decisions. And whe.n umes dealing with the ps.Y_. On a typicalCana Conference tl d It h h d th '" of the m c ' l r r l ' e d ' le yo.ung? u. . as reac e . IS holo e ... Y night, the third of the series- matunty, It IS the role of the state? Have· you stopped Parent Relationship with the pal'erits then to let him go, let beating your wife? Then-:... Adolescent,.--was given at St. him enter a career or marriage
REFRESHMENTS TOO: Mr: and Mrs. John J. Farrell
chances are that you" parish has Patrick's in Falmouth by Rev.. and create a new life for himself. .helpprepare for the social hour following the talks at the had the series of Cana ConferJohn P, Driscoll and. Rev. .John One of the great problems is that Cana Conference. ences: F. Hogan. of parents who will not let their . Pel'haps there is' a tiny bit of Cana III points out 'the' basic children go-'-who make them When your child complains that on him ... it may 'be that you. over-optimism in describing the fact of family lif -tha·t unless emotional cripples 'dependent a teacher· is .'~~gainst him," or owe the teacher a debt of gratieffect of these conferences-but ' there is respect and happiness· upon parents so that they can not ;down on him, or'always picking tude. Check up on the teacher'a it is hal'd to see how any place existing between. husband and even (;nter marriage' or leave ready' ·to enjoy' the heady side. of the' story, then maybe or . group could remain un- wife, then parents cannot create home to start a life of their own.. pleasure .. ahd excitement that you'll want to write a letter changed when exposed -to their the correct atmosphere in which The great~st cqmplimen~. par- 'goes with sports ::t"hievement. saying: . "Keep up the good impact. children can grow to maturity. . ents can receive is in their chilBut it's old ~tlJ.ff. "'hey've had work," In any event, it should : The Cana COrfferences; which . Another point that' is brought dren's ability to go ollt on their . all that in Little' LJague. be made quite· clear to the high started in Chicago, came to the Ol,lt is the nature of a. young . own as mature adults, grounded When they should be ready ·to school student that his first, and Fall "1iver ·Diocese i:1 ".951 and, adult. 'Parents must understand in sound ,principles and with. the savor the real joy of that first 'possibly only, job in' high school as' . a directed program, were that lhe' period of adole~cence is 'right values and control in thefr 'tuxedo or s'peciai dress for the is to study. made a part of the Family Life a period of rapid' growth and liyes... T!lere was one statement by :prom-it's all old' stuff. They Bureau-with a staff of ·dedi- ·change. .Their children are ' Dyring 'the conferel)ce 'it. was , had 'all tHat ih ·fourth grade; By 'Father Driscoll that should be cated priests, all specialists in changing. p.hysical1y and em. o br·. 'l,::ht out that p'atents have an trying .to live ''i~: our' children, .written large' and stuck on our the field', assigned to handle, tionally 'and mentally and spiri'. 'obligation to see 'that their chil':' . to give them what we have al- 'bathroom "mirrors: actual presentation of the conually. Unless parents can under- dren .get not only wh~t they want ways'wanten, ~¢ioad them with . WHEN YOU DESTROY 'THE ferences. stand these changE>3' they may·' -but what'. they need. That' 'too' much too SOOl1. AUTHORITY OF A TEACHER Any of the priests is capable treat th.eir adolescent childre~.. _children a'nd adolescents do" not ·.'Father Fi~col1 ~rided the conT "':"""YOU DESTROY YOURSELF! of giving the talks alone, but like youngsters instead of trying live in.~ vaCu4m-they notic¢ Working, with their. pastor, ference w _ h a deta·· of study of they prefer to work in pair-so to aid them to reach .maturity. ,'. what their parents do and check tile problems, Ch~ri5eS.. and .b~ Rev. James ·E. Gleason and his This eases individual strain, Youngsters must· understand", ',actions ,against precept. assistant, Rev. William E. FarwjJeterments peculi~r to the advaries the presentation-and al- .. from parents-the changes they. : There is no' llse. telling your 'olescent arid gave 'an' uncierstalld- land, the Family-Parent ComlOws for that happy ·moment are experiencing. They must, child not .to steal, and t'hEm brag- 'able i>;ct.' rc of hr to try to mittee of 8t. Patrick's Guild-aR when one of them can cay: "Er learn that adulthood means congirig, about how yqu cheated on understand arId deal ,with them. aHililite of the' National 'Cou~cil •• . I feel sure that my partner 'trol al)d especially control of the: ;Your· expense accou:',t; Children of Catholic Women-were can answer that question. Oh,emotions and; mood.s that assert, .become .what .. the.. ,family, is--'-so·, . However; it w~s· pointed ,out . sponsible 'for' bringing 'the 'Cana that'you can't stiirt training anyFather ..." themselves during. these years,';, :that parents .are faced with .set:' 'Conference to Falmouth. The Cana Conferences, aimed at Spirit of R'ebelliion ,.:ting· all' example:every minute of ·one \yho is 1'l: ... the early years, comT.littee is" headed by Mrs. paI:ticularly the very early ones, married people, stress the fact . Young adults no longer want ·".every day of every mont~ o:f Frederick A. English. are when the work must·br: done. that mal'l'iage .is a vocation and to t;lk:e things on authority and every. 'ear. , . ~he and her group are tll" be try, to give a better understand- are often rebellious against being· . Father Hogan, Director of St. "it ,was :'\lso. made: very ,clear congratulated . for makinf a that there, is· no simple" capsule ing of that vocation and' its told what to do. This is'when the., ~ary's Home, New Bedford, and worthwhile', contribution to the obligations, communication between children -m charge of the New Bedford solution ,for the m::ny. compli-. life of their parish; one that .... m cated situations .whi~~- arise ;n There is nothirig "neVl(" in the and parents that should have deCathol~c·.Welf~re.~ur~au, ~~,de .have )astirig, far-reaching and make-up of conferences. ,_. e veloped from the child'~ earliest' .. the pornt that everyth~ng comes . all <families. . happy results: First to ·Agree ideas, inst: .tions" suggestions, years pays great dividends. F~r. ..t~o. early for our children. In All (: this barely outline. the ideals-all the teachings of the the parent is then' able to Sit '" high school, fO~ example, they . And. Father Driscoll said he conferences"-:- do attend ~ heR 'wanted to ,be" the ·f·irst to agree Church 01' IT'".rriage and raising down and to re~son with ·thesholJld be star~Ing !>ut, in. real, 'you own Parish has the s~·ies. children, ha·. e been '8~'" , • for a adolescent boy or. girl, ·to make : basebal~-learnIng· to work ~br. "that·he·illld;·Father Hogan had' If you've already heard th~ long, long time. But the confer- him see why school is important, '. a p~ace .. on . the team, get~lI1g. the easy path-they. would 'offer !!tart over . . . •and see if you. ences bring them .Il together to guide him t() come to the ~eavlllg the parent. to put thIngs possible solutions and methods don't get fresh and new mat..rial and present them under five right decision regarding study Into actu;:lloperatlon. He noted and then they would go home, for" thought r .. ·1 action. c:;eneral headings: and scholastic courses. too that the results .of these con'. IIusband and wife relation.. There is a spiritual growth ferences c;:~uld not be evaluated h' that goes on also with young for some time. In fact, the pres,. s ~~. Husband and wife relationadults wanting d~eper under':' ent childl'~n wou~d have to. grow LIMA (NC) -American auInc. ship with young ·children. standing of the truths of their up. and raise thel.r .own child~en thoress Frances Parkinson' Keyes 3, Parent relationship with the religion and seeking to· relate befo,fe any definite. appraisal has come here to fulfil a resolve Fabricators of adolescent. these to' their personal lives and could be ;ffiade,. he said. . of .13 years standing: to write a 4. Talk to teenagers. the lives of those around them.' In dealmg WIth the child ~nd life of St. Rose of Lima. 5. Spiro .ual unity of the famThe young adult is torn besch~ol the~e was a w~rnIng When Mrs. Keyes visited Lima Hy. tween his obvious dependence on agalllst tak~ng. only on~ Side. of and 13 years ago, she was so t~ken All of these conferences hit 'his parents for many of the. ne- .any complamt 1I1to consideratIOn. by the life of the youn~ Dominhard-no platitudes, no soft cessities of life and his desire to ican tertiary that sh<: determined words .If comfort about "doing be on his own. A wise parent to write her life, St. Rose died 753 Davol St., Fall River the best you can," no. useless must realize t~is conflict, know NEWARK (NC}-:Tearly five 'in .J617 a't the' age of 31. She was headshaking. "'he prie~" -ivi g when to help hiS son or daughter pe.r cent of last' year's Catholic OS 5-7471 the first canonized saint of the 'them know their" stuff - they· go on ~is own while insisting high school gl'8Quates. in the . New World: know how important it is that that there be an equally·devel- 'Newark archdiocese have taken , . what they' have to say not oping sense of responsibility. the first step towards "a life in p~~~'~~~. religion.' .. only be said, but said in a way The parent must also know. when that will sink 'n and stay sunk. the young man or woman is They make sure t,..,t after the getting in too ·far-trying to conference no one will say attain' too much independence "What was it that Father said to too' quickly. Avon launches its 1960 Christmas. Business. Office HUll rs remember?" Use .of AuthGrity 9 :QQ.-r. :30 Eternal Triangle Parents must also understand Cash in on this profitable selling season by Always they make it clear that how to use their authority wisely except Wed. calling for appointment, NOW. Few territories all mal'l"iage is an E" 'nal Triand at the right time. They must IHSP.;NSING angle-Husband, Wife and God. guide a son or daughter in. an available .(won't be, later) OPTICIAN There can be no evasion of the atmosphere of love and affection Prcscripions . fact p' at God demands a great and security and understanding. For "~YCgla~8es NEW BEDFORD AREA - WY 7-7089 deal from .parents. In effect, He They must teach the young man . I"illed CAPE AREA - Hyannis, Spring 5-9306 says: "I have entl'usted this or woman to stand on his own 7 No. MRin St.• ~-RI River OS 8-0412 child to you-give back to Me two feet with the right sense of FALL RIVER AREA - OS 8-5265 a soul for Heaven," values and strong virtue to make ~
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Asserts Federal Aid to Colleges Is Now Fact ST. LOUIS (NC) - A Catholic educator said here there is "no longer any argument" about whether U.S. higher education should receive Federal aid. "All are agreed that there is going to be Federal support," Father Robert J. Henle, S.J.j academic vice-president of St.· Louis University and dean of the graduate school, said. Father Henle made his comments in an interview after returning from the Chicago meeting of the American Council on Education, the major organization in the field of U.S. Higher education. Members include other educational asociations and virtually all the major public and private institutions of higher education in the country. Total Over Billion The meeting gave major attention to the question of Federal aid and. how educators should react to it. They questioned how they could accept more government funds and stfll maintain independence fro m government control. . In a major address Dr. Everett Case, president of Colgat~Uni,:, versity, Hamilton, N.Y., said that Federal aid to colleges and universities now totals more than a billion d(rllars yearly. According to Father Henle, this money is about evenly distributed . between public and private schools. The Jesuit educator express.ed the'hope that as Federal aid increalles, it will remain only lil part of the support ,of colleges and universities. All Need Aid "But it will be substantial nevertheless," he, said. "As a source it is absolutely indispensable to the modern university's development." He stressed that all schools are dependent on Federal funds. "If the Federal government withdrew its substantial sup'port of medical education and research, the level of medical education of every medical school in the country would fall flat on its face," he said. "And I mean every school. They are all dependent on Federal support."
Government of Korea Lauds Msgr.. Carroll SEOUL (NC)-Msgr. George M. Carroll, M.M., director of Catholic Relief Services - National Catholic Welfare Conference. has been honored by the Korean government with a gold medal al1d letter of appreciation from Minister of Hf'alth and' Social Affairs Na Yongkyun. Since the enrl of World War II CR5-NCWC has helped millions of destitute Koreans with gifts of food and clothing. It operates more than 100 centers throughout the country where .needy persons are fed. The letter said that since Msgr. Carroll took up his present post f· April, 1946,. "you have given moral as well as material assistance to the needy people of this country. Meritorious and out-standing has been your work for refugees in assimilation projects, destitute persons, 01",phans and dependent women."
Delegate to Dedicate Two New Buildings DUBUQUE (NC)-The Apostolic 'Delegate to the United States will dedicate a college library and a retreat house dur. ing a visit to the Dl.buque archdiocese next Sunday and MOJ:1day. Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi will dedicate the Wahlert Mem-. orial Library at Loras. College on the first day. ~{e will receive an honorary degree from the school and will speak at an acaGemic convocation. The next day the Archbishop will dedicate North American Martyrs Retreat House in Cedar Falls, Iowa. Archbishop Leo Binz of Dubuque and Auxiliary Bishop George J. Biskup will also take part in the ceremony.
"Frenchie" 81 Kennedy Center Finds V oCuti-on' Working With New Bedford'Youngsters
Supreme Court Orders-Review Of Bible Ruling
By A vis Roberts "Of all the thousands of children I've su pervised, .eve found only two I couldn't oandie." That's the proud boast of Adelard "Frenchie" Bastarache, 46, custodian and assistant supervisor of CYO-activitiesat Kennedy Youth Center, New Bedford. (For the record, 'the two untameables were banished from the center forever.) Frenchie has served since the center op. , ened three years ago as "." assistant to William Doyle of this city, supervisor of CYO activities; Rev. Leo Sullivan, first director; and Rev. Edward c. Duffy, present CYO director. The custodian maintains the vast building single-handedly, and five nights a week he oversees basketball games, the game rooms, library and snack bar. During the basketball season Holy Family High School of this city plays its home games at the center, usually attracting 800 to 900 fans. Other. nights the CYO games are played before about 200 ~o 300 onlookers, adding up to a goodly amount of visitors as well as members for Frenchie to oversee. ' Technically, his weekends are free. But Frenchie is on hand at the center snack bar for special Saturday and Sunday activities which might include a Cathedral Camp reunion and dinner for seminarians, conven-' tions, style shows, pre-Cana conferences, Scout-a-ramas, and such like. Likes Kids, Mr. Bastarache, a resident of 17 Princeton Street and a lifelong communicant of St. Joseph's Church, is married, but he and .Mrs. Bastarache have no children. "Perhaps that's why I 'like working so much with the kids," he says. "I've been doing it, practically voluntarily, for 21 years. I told my wife when we got married that she'd have to put up with me working five nights a week for theCYO." Before his job at the Center, Mr. Bastarache worked days in a local textile mill, a laundry and a cemetery. His' evenings, then as now, were spent collect:. ing money for ba~ketball tickets in the Winter and for baseball
Name Pau'list Priest To Unity Secretariat VATICAN CITY (NC) - A Paulist priest from Milwaukee has been assigned to a fulltim~ post with the preparatory secretariat for Christian unity 6f the ecumenical council to handle communications with Englishspeaking non-Catholics. :
which barred Bible reading .. Pennsylvania public schools. The high court set aside the ruling of a Federal district couI1 in view of the fact that the Pennsylvania state legislature has enacted a· new, non-compulsory Bible reading law. In a brief order, the Supreme Court ordered the lowercouri to take such action as "may be appropriate" in view of the new law. The case involves a protesfl lodged against the Bible reading practice by a Unitariaa couple, three of whose childreE attended public school in Abington Township, Pa., near Philadelphia. The couple challenged tho 1949 Bible reading statute under which 10 verses of the King James. Bible were read. dailjo in public schools-as alill unconstitutional infringement ~ their religious rights. Book of Worship In striking down the law fa September, 1959, the Federal district court held- that since "the Bible in all its ve·sions ie 'primarily a book of worship, it is essentially a religious work. Thus the practice,'equired by the statute amounts to religiouo instruction or the promotion of religious education." Following this ruling, the state legislature la~t December enacted a new law which provides for Bible reading in public schools, but permits children to be excused from attendance ~ their parents object. In appealing the Federal court's ruling, the Abington Township school district argued that the new law eliminated the controversy between the parties to the case and made the issuell moot.
"Frenchie" Bastarache at Kennedy Community Center and softball tickets at the city's parks in Summer. When the CYO was first organized in New Bedford, baseball games were played at Normandin 'Junior High School and Roosevelt Junior High School at opposite ends of the city. "I had no car then," says the custodian, "and I paid my own bus ,fare to work at those games." Basketball was played in the Masonic Building hall and later J
Congregation Studies Cause of Jesuit
VATICAN' CITY (NC) -"l'he Sacred Congregation of Rites has began a study of the possible He is Father Thomas F. Stranmarfyrdom of Father· James Bersky, C.S.P., who will directly under Msgr. Jan Goo thieu, French Jesuit who was Willebrands, secretary of the . killed in a tribal war in Madagasc~r in 1898. unity secretariat. ' Father Berthieu was born at Father Stransky's work will be Montlogis, France, on Nov. 27, to carry out among the English 1838. He entered a seminary at speaking the charge given the unity secretariat by Pope John:'- Picaux in 1850 and later studied at the Saint Flour seminary that of. keeping non-Catholic where he 'was ordained on May' Christian bodies informed on the 21, 1860. course of the ecumenical counFor his first nine years as a cil's work, particularly with the views of non-Catholi': Christians priest he' was an assistant priest in Roannes and then he entered to the roper offices of the ecuthe Jesuit novitiate. After commenical council. pleting his training in the society he was sent to Madagascar-now the Malagas Republic-where he was. killed at Faravoay during a battle between French forces ST..PAUL, (NC)-The Catb&lic Bulletin, newsp".per ef the, fighting. Hovas tribesmen. 81. Paul archdiocese, has gone on sale at major public news" stands in downtown St. Paul aRCi Minneapolis. The newspaper said in an announcement this t.·PC of Sales was' begun to invite readership from non-Catholics. Most Catholic newspapers are . sold 0:1 a subscription basis, mailed to the· homes of readers, or made available ·in nicks in Catholic churches.
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News Dealers to Sell Catholic Pa'per
Blesses Plane SEATTLE (NC)-The first of three Boeing 720 jet airliners t6 be Eleliyered to Irish National Airlines was blessed here By Archbishop Thomas .A. ConR811y of Seattle. The blessed plane will go into comr.~ercial·service Dec. 14. between Dublin,' New ¥erk and ~to;lo
WASIDNGTON (NC) The u.s. Supreme Court hal instructed a lower court .. reconsider a 1959· ruJiftSr
. the CYO moved to various city schools for games, with Frenchie following along to collect tickets and admissions. . Frenchie thinks the center is "the finest. The children are supervised properly and 'learn good sportsmanship. They're a pleasure to work with."
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TtiE ANCHORSays Rae e' Issue Packing Box First Altar in S't. John's Parish· Thurs., 5 Nov. 3, 1960 Reflects Problem Has 4..000 Members Asks Hungarians In United States Now Attleboro Church " By· Marion Unsworth Cherish Hopes CLEVELAND (NC)-The Some. 80 years ago, Catholic residents of Attleboro, known then as East Attleboro, so-called Negro question exists in the rest of the walked eIther to St. Mary's Church, Attleboro Falls, or to St. Mary's in Hebronville to For Freedom
world largely as a reflection 'attend Mass. ~ater, when the Tifft estate in North Attleboro was purchased, the Attleboro Falls parIsh was relocated there. Attleboro then became a mission of St. Mary's, of its existence in America, acNorth Attleboro, and Rev. ,. ---~"-""-'''-'''-'---"._--"---:-~~.'.'.'-.',-~ q:ording to Auxiliary Bishop Floyd L. Begin of Cleveland. For Catholics, Bishop Begin suggested in a talk to the Cleveland Serra Club, the answer to the Negro question is contained in the answers to three questions: Did God create all men? Did a:l men suffer from Original Sin? Did Christ become man' 'to save all men? Bishop Begin said: "Christ did not become man to save only the whites. He came to save the whole human race .. The same methods and' the same rules are for all men. One Raee ''There is no question about the unity and SDlidarity of the human race. There is only one rnce. Anyone who would exdude anyone from the human l1"ace has already lost his faith Ai not his mind." Bishop Begin pointed Gut that whites are far outnumbered by the colored races of the world. "''When we meet Adam," he said, "we'll be just a little surprised at his color." He added: "Christ who was God was a swarthy, Arabic type. He came right In the middle in the middle of history and in the middle o( color-to save all men . . . "He became one with us ·in flesh and blood. He is a blood relative of every man, woman and child who ever lived. Exclude one,and you exclude Christ."
Pope Contributes To U.N. Fund UNITED NATIONS (NC) It>>ope John has contributed $2,000 to the U.N. Technical Assistance Program and the U.N. Special Fund. The gift, to be divided equally between the two, programs, was Qnr ounced ,by the Holy See's representative to the 'annual Pledging Conference, Auxiliary Bishop James H. Griffiths of New York. This is the Holy See's fourth such donation ,to the technical assistance operation and its third to the Special Fund. it has regularly made similar contributions to other U.N. programs such as UNICEF (United Nntions' Children's Fund) and the Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees. Vast BenefactioDs "During the past year," Bish@p Griffiths told the conference, "the Holy Father has distributed to the peoples of the less developed lands the large lNms of money contributed by ond placed in his hands by millions of humble, economically and politically disinterested men and women all over the world." Despite these "vast annual benefactions," Bishop Griffiths continued Pope John would not be absent from the Pledging Conference "that he might manifest his solidarity in these enterprises with the magnanimous men and women of so many lands, here assembled, as theu gird themselves for ,another year of struggle against ign(l)rance.
Cites Students' Need for Art Training COVINGTON (NC)-A Catoo-
He: educator believes "one whG takes living a human life ser:i...sly must take art.seriously." Fl'ederick J. Crosson, assistal'i't professor in the general program of liberal education at the 11niorersity of Notre Dame, made the statement in a talk to ,the Covington diocesan teachers' :inatitute. Dr. Crosson declared: "The :important thing is not that the student learn ,the names of famous artists, but that he be awakened. First, that he be convinced that there is a whole world to know, aDd second, that he takes the foleti~hts ?f seeing that '~0I'ld;" , '
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boro and celebrated Mass at
Union Hall, Railroad' Avenue, now the rear of Atherton's Furniture Store. The first altar was improvised from a large packing. box, and parishioners would prepare the hall each time Mass was scheduled. By' 1883, due to difficulties of travel and the increasing number of Catholics in the Attleboro area, this arrangement became impractical, and Rev. John O'Connell was named first pastor of the new parish of St. John the Evangelist. At first Mass continued to be celebrated at Union Hall, but after it was destroyed by fire, parishioners 'began making definite plans for a new church. The F. D. Bliss property on the westerly side of North Main Street was purchased, and a basement built ',to be used until the upper church was completed and dedicated Sept. 22, 1885. At that time the ,parish numbered approximately 600 people, and the new church accommodated ,700 persons. "Father .John" In 1891 Father O'Connell, known as, "Fatber John" to Catholics and non-Catholics alike, purchased land across the street from the church and built a residence for the priests. New_ ly ordained James 'E. Cassidy later Bishop of the Fall Rive; Diocese, served as his curate from 1894 to, 1899. When Father O'Connell died suddenly in 1910, Rev. David F. Sheedy, then' pastor of St. Patrick's, .Somerset, was appointed second pastor of St. John's. Since the parish was steadily growing, Father Sheedy foresaw the need for a new and larger church and concentrated ona building fund. World War I and rising prices prevented the church from becoming a reaUty before Father Sheedy's d;eath in 1930, hut under his successor, Rev. James M. Quinn, parishioners continued their efforts.
Bishop Presides At Nun's Mass
The fu~.E::'al of Sister M. Igna_ tius, '"',Po prLcipal of Dominican Academy, Fall River, was held Monda)' "Iorning from the convent, with a So~ · ..... n p' ,-, Mass of 'Requiem celebrated in St. Anne's Church. Most Rev. James J. Gerrard D.D., V.G., Auxiliar:- Bishop of the Diocese of ::"all River -'resided .. Serving as chaplains to the Most r ""!rend Bish--' ", ~ Rev. Donald E. Belanger and Rev. Regi"-'d M. Barrette. The officers of the Mass were Rev. Henri Laporte, O.P. celebrant; Rev. Antoine Lanoue D,P., deacon, and Rev.' Clement N. Paquet, O.P., subdeacon. Rt. Rev Raymond T. Considine and Rt. Rev. Hn-"erto S. Medeiros were ,present in the sanctuary. Sister Ignatius leaves two brothers, the Rev. Edwarcl Brown, an ,Oblate missionary in Ottawa, ·Canada, and Martin Brown of Venosta and -a sister Mrs. Ernie Morris ('·f Low, Que:
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ST. JOHN'S CHURCH, ATTLEBORO Work had just started on the new edifice, when," on Feb. I, 1932, the original church building was ,burned to the ground. During the nine .:lOnths required to· cOl)lplete the new edifice, Mass was celebrated at the old Bates theater. Father Quinn labored at St. John's untq ill health forced him to retire Un May, 1949. Curates serving under him included Rev. Thomas J: McLean, 1925 to .1934; Rev. Edward F. Dowling, ,1934 to 1949; Rev. Joseph Canty, 1935 .to 1942 aRd Rev. Arthur W. Tansey, 1946 to 1949. The fourth pastor, still serving in that capacity, is Very Rev. John J. Shay, who arrived in Attleboro in July, 1949, from St. Joseph's, North Dighton, where he was also pastor. Under his direction, St. John's School has been planned and erected, and opened in 1954 with one grade. An additional grade has been added each year, until now there are eight, and first graduation exercises will be held this year. Staffed by the Sisters of Mercy, the school now has an enrollment of over 400 pupils. Since Monsignor Shay, who was named a Monsignor in 1958, came to St. John's, the parish has noted the 25th anniversary
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of the church, in 1957 and in 1958, the 75th anniv~rsary' of the founding of the parish. Assisting the pastor in his work with 4,250 parishioners are Rev. James F. McCarthy, curate since May, 1949, and Rev. Edward A. Rausch at 81. John's since April 1954. ' Other priests who have sel'\Ted as curates in the Attleboro parish include: Rev. David F. ~heedy, 1886, who later became Its second pastor; Rev. W. H. McNamara, 1886 to 1894; Rev. .John F. McKeon, 1900 to 1907; Rev. Joseph P. Lyons, 1907 to 1910; Rev. John P. Doyle, 1910 to 1915; Rev. Francis J. Duffy, 1915 to 1921; and Rev. Edward L. O'Brien, 1921 to 1925.
WASHINGTON (NC)
Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. Hannan of Washington has exhorted Hungarians in exile to keep alive their hopes and Soviet fears for the eventual liberation of Hungary. At a special Mass commemorating the fourth anniversary of the Hungarian revolt against Soviet domination, Bishop Hannan said: "Never, never, let the Soviets forget that someday there will be a day of reckoning and Hungary will be free." He declared that their very presence at the Mass was testimony that "freedom can never die if free men will make ~ live." Freedom Fighters Attend About a thousand persons attended the Mass in St. Patrick'g church, including Americans of Hungarian extraction and former Freedom Fighters in the revolt. The Mass was celebrated by Father Ladislaus A. Iranyl, S.P., a native Hungarian and superior of the Piarist Fathers' house at the Catholic University of America here. Throughout the Mass two hungarian Freedom Fighters stood guard before a Hungarian flag that stood in the sanctuary along with the flag of the United. States. In his sermon, Bishop Hannom cited the snubbing of Hungarian puppet Premier Janos Kadar at the United Nations as a heartening example of the free world's contempt for what the Soviets did and are doing in Hungary. "All decent and freedom-loving delegates walked out Olll Kadar," he said.
Blesses School COPENHAGEN (NC) - The first boarding school for young Danish Catholics has been blessed by Bishop Johannes To Suhr, O.S.B., of Copenhagen.
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,Of.'feast Days :' '
The installation' of" area and parish Catholic' Youth Organization officers and the current celebration' of Catholi~ Youth Week point out-,-in single events-what is always 'present: that every y'~ung man and womanis always in the ,spotlight and that every week· is:' always Catholic Youth Week. ' . :,/.,
TODAY-St..Quartus, Confe... lived in the first ce'ntury; he' is mentioned by St. Paul m his Epistle to the Romans ae "greeting' the Christians ha Roine." Some traditions describe him as one of the 72 discipleS. others add tha~ he was a bishop. Special services are' good and, a week ded'iCated to a TOMORROW-St. Cl:Jarles Bo~ ,worthy an!i speCific cause is excellent. But these dQ ilot . romeo, Bishop-Confessor. Scion o~scure' the basic fact'that the ideals of Ciatholic yoiJth that ' of an ancient Lombard fa~ily, are highlighted in the course of a few hours 'and, daYl'lare he 'vas created a cardinal at tbe being lived hour ,by hour'and day, by' day in the,lives'of:the age of 22 and made Archbishop 'overwhelming majority of youJig adults. ..., . of his native Milan by his uncl~, Pope Pius IV. In an age of lax The three percent of the youllg' people who get into diffidiscipline, he was :" model. of culty are 'spotlighted by the press. The hig of juvenile . austere virtue. He was largeiy delinquency is easily affixed to person. And little is made responsible .for the ~uccess of . the council of Trent and for the of the ninety-seven percent who go along living quiet· lives 'administratil'n of. the council'! of resporisibility. , . decrees; Throughout Milan',' The Catholic Youth Organization should, receive 'due great plague, he remained in the notice, then. Its members should be congratu'lated for findcity, constantly attending the sick' and dying. He died in 1584 ing responsible expression for their. growing maturity and his body was enshrined through such a worthy g'roup and for such worthy purposes under the high altar in hi. as self-development and increased interest in the Church.. cathedral. And when there is hl1k of irresponsible youth, let there SATURDAY-SS. Zachary and be equal mention made of those who have come to public Elizabeth, parents of St. John the Baptist. The opening pasattention this week-yourig adults of the Catholic Youth Sage of the Gospel of St. Luke Organization who are mindful of their role in the Church records the story of the Angel and in society. . Gabriel appearing to Zachary and informing him that his wife, though advanced in years, would bear a child. Zachary was struck The announcement that the Anglican Archbishop of dumb until the angel's prophecy was fulfilled. It was St. ElizaCanterbury will pay a courtesy call on Pope John in the beth, a kinswoman of the' Blessed early days of Decernber has aroused more than mild interest. Virgin, 'who at the Visitatio~ Historically, this wiJl, b~ the first time' an Archbishop of, uttered the words which 'are ,Canterbury has called on a Pope since the Protestant Refor,. , By· Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy " now a part of the Halt MaryTo hear Evelyn Waugh tell it, in his Toui-ist in Africa "Blessed.' art thou .amongst mation which saw England lost to the Church. And while the' projected visit is ~alled a courtesy one, iUs impossible .(Little, Brown. $3.75), he was feeling .old and even decrepit women and· blessed .is the fruit to imagine that the subject of the reunion' of Christendom when, just after Christmas, 1958, he ,s~t out for a' two. of thy womb." · months'holiday in East Africa, "It is not so easy, as it was ., SUNDAY - Twen'ty - sec~rid ' will'not come up.' ' , " Sunday after, Pentecost. Gener-' , ' , ' . The Vatican ,has: been "counselling ,all along against thirty years ago to find a· wisely' does' n'ot pretend. to be . ally this date is the feast of'st. u'ndue hope that the 'coming EcumenicaJ 'Council' will see retreat;" he ··says,. "Tourism,' John Gunther: But he 'is' more. Severius; Bishop-Martyr. He was any strong 'movement to reunion: But,af ,the":same.. tiine; and politics have 'laid waste· . incisive ,than Gunther, and even, Bis/lop, of:, :qarcelona ill Sp'aift it has been urgiiIg'prayers that 'suc:;h"a' 'movement 'may at ~ ·ev'~rywhe,re. No.r.is fifty-five Gunther's better in. hi3. succinct and was put to death in 303 the best ~ge for travel;' too .' old and po'intedremarks~boutprob- under Diocletian's persecution. least be talked" a:oout in an' atmosphere ,of charity and,' for.the jungle, too young for the le'ms and'issues involving His martyrdom consisted of havbrotherhood. And the 'very strength ,and vigor of the · beache", .0 n 'e .' - Africans.' ing his head pierced with a spike. Catholic Church' as .shown 'in the Ecumenical Council may must seek re-' Thus when he reaches RhodMONDAY - St.. Prosdocimus, esia he reflects on the deeds and Bishop':Confessor. He was congive those'not of the Faith reasonto pause and to examine freshment i n fame of Cecil Rhodes. He lays secrated by St. Peter as'the first their own position more carefully'i,md to see 'what reunion the spectacle of' G)ther people at to that supposedly great man's' ~ishop of Padua, Italy, wl'\ere 'witt! Rome ,implies 'for, them. ." , "imprudence and dishonesty" he' conver,ted, a multitude of ,work, -leading , 'The concept of the Church, the s~c17amental'system,,the lives quite difmuch of the division and animus . pagans. He died abc··t 100. between'whitesand plackstoday. TUESDAY-St. Claudius and!. infallibility of the Pope 'are 'some of the dogmas that must · ferent from Rhodes, he says, was "a vision:" €ompanions, Martyrs. His com.be clearly underStood by non-Catholics so that they may one's own." He ·traveled ary and almost all he saw was panions were SS. Nicostratutll, understand well what stands in the way of reunion: ' to and from . fhailucination." He points out Castorius 'a Ii d ,Symphorian. . :So this forthcoming ,meeting between ,the 'Holy Fat};ler ric~ by ship; that Rhodes believed not only They lived in the third century and Dr. Fisher, while it ,ma'ynot produce immediate spec~ , For air travel that people of a color other than and were seized while engaged white were ,inferior but also that in bury,ing the bodie..; of martyrs. , taCular reactions; is a further indication that ,the "dialogue"_, he has nothing. , bet~eeri Catholics and non-Cathblics shouldcoritinue in an ' 'Qut ,loathing" and ,he speaks the -Anglo-Saxon race would Imprisoned, and scotirged with bitingly ,of the horrors with. rise and rule supreme over lesser whips set with metal, they':r&. ever-increasing atmosphere ~f· charity'and"~OM~ . which 'it, is replete for him, breeds like the'Latins (who, by' ,fused'to give up their .Faith. At .~ "'Appended 'to' ·the 'catalogue of the way, are excluded. from, the the order of DiocletiaQ.,they WeN SOl'. He
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Waugh Deflates Prevalent Fallacies About Africa
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, ' Very much in' the,ne~s lately' haf~enlhe idea~'~f'." ~itheringly,ttierei~.thisfur~h~r ism was'perilously like H~tler'&' WEDNESDA:Y-:-Dedication 01., •. "" ..",. " . ' , '. . ". "dIsparagement, "It IS a CUflOUS Reduces :Prejudice' ' , the \ Lateran 'ArchQasilica' at dIalogue -the atte~p~, ~f, ,~~ncere ~athQhcs and::Pr~fact.thataeroplaries.have.added 'In a' few' paragraphs, "Mr: . Rome. It <,was dedicated orjg~ tesUints and Jews to f~nd pomts of agreement,wlthout nothmg' to ·our enjoyment of, Waugh, does 'more to" reduce nally to the' Saviour and at • any sacrifice of principle or. doing violence to conscience; 'height; ,The buman' eye still re-, racial prejudice and racist prac- later date to St.' John., It ,is' the '" 'A splendid' contribution. to this' spirit "'of dialogue is . 'ceives the' most intense iinages tice' to howling .nonsense . than arch basilica of the patriarch 01. '~~, in a team'of Catholic 'ProteStant and Jewish 'scholarS while the observers' feet ,are ~anya.niore solemn autilor does, the West, 'who is the Pop~, and , ,.,,, , , ' planted on ,the grol'-ld or on a In a whole book. ' " is- the~: mot,her 'and head of ali who have begun _work.on"s' new English translation, of "building.' The aeroplane belittles· , And 'he slyiy puts the needle: churches in the Eternal ~ity':and the, Scriptures: '~". . . ·..· , - a l l it discloses;" , into' ?s; as when he S3,ys,:"In " .the world. '.. J " '. The first volu'mes \vill appear in January of 1962, Enj; J Ship's 'Llbrary , Washmgton; D. Co'" whef). I was' ., . The sea jou,rneY· was a long. last ,there, I vis,ited a s,,,~~egated , Ing: "entirel:; .novel lmd' e;,tj;e~ • and ,there wi1l!b~,'thirty paperback volumes in all; ,tli'e last: com;,:-- ;.,.;~ ;... '1'n~l\. " " one 'Jt s~ems that Mr. Waugh P,ets Cemetery. Th~ loyed ones' '.'African," as 'well as "one 'of:tbe .. . d . 'spent most' of it readint;. He ,were separated not by th~ir own' most beautiful and 'original '. T . ~e scho1ars are preparing intro,uctions and corn· speaks with. pleasure of the colour ?ut by that O~' their own- 'churches in' the modernwoi'ld. to . memanl:::> lUL' au tue OOOK:>' of· the Bible as' well as trans- ship's', lib r-a I' y (this is a', ers' black and white ,pets of, wHite other Discoveries ' lations. ' . most unusual'line, evidently, at, women lay.' indifferen~ly, in one . The'reare other adventure. The need th~t this work 'will fill is readily seen and least in one respect). n consisted q~arter;black and white. pets of 'and discoveries detailed' here: appreciated: A Bible acceptable. to scholars of the three of several thousands of books, blac~ women in another:" for ,example, a half-f:hrisiian n<L a mere agglomeration, but'a ,He also deflates other 'long sect which holds it immoral to major religious groups: In the country can become a' basis' carefully selected store, with' preva~ent. fallacies co~cernin~rest on Sunday and therefore of ,discussion and c~n serve to. ~larify differences and something for ever"' taste. Africa; for, example, ,that the is in a frenzy of activity on that point up areas of' agreement.' . . Once 'arrived,' be began a Europeans br0l;lght peac~ to an day; a convent school where , And the' fact that !:Jcholars of the three religions, can progress that seems ~. 'rdly to ~mbattled contment. Always he "charm~' is listed in the curricu. d . h have been restful. He visited IS. on ·the. a.l.ert ,for traces, o,f a lum; a C-overnor General wh A SIt· own WIt o.ne another and work in an atmosphere' t t d t ..., , Kenya, TanganYika, and the h.Is t ory, i C.I~I Iza 1O~, ar s. IS Jn~_ .when he' thinks a party 'has gone devoid of prejudice and bigotry is ~ ·tribute to their ser.,. Rhodesias, ,touching briefly hvel~ ~nca, WhiCh, will belle on long enough, has an ~ ide ,play vice of the. ,truth. elsewhere. ' , . the flcbon that the. past .was an a recording of the 'death' 90ng 'What he has set down here :is a?ysmalblan~ unhl w~lte for-' from ,"King Kong; an American not a formal study or even a ~Igners came 111 and too..: over. religious leader who hasbeea . , . . . , . , · . · · , · " ' c o n v e n t i o n a l h . a v e l b O O k . I t , , : L i k e TV Cowboys . ' .traveling through Africa crowncomprises, rather, diary jottings He is. ·not ehthusiastic about ing pimself king of the world in expanded arid polished after nis the's~gn~ of Europeap and p,.,mer- as many countries as possil)le: i return home.. " , ican culture l!ndtechnologyportrait"'f George ,VI inscribed ' '.' .".' .'. .: " The approach'is primarily per- which he sees proliferating in to a r ,ish. "as a record of, the . sonal; almosf ~as"31. But a Africa: It'saddens him· to watch 'invaluable seryices ,rendered by OFFICIAL N~'wSPAPER:'OF. ~tH~ ()IOCESEOF RIVER ~ealth~f experience and reading . the Hehe,' once a people ·of £01'- him. to his own '::f)unt~Y.and . , , . ,.", - , ,., . " ...., : un,derlies whatever he says,' a,:,d midable' local repute, "swagger-" 'People and, to the British .qo~ P~blishttdwee:kl,Y The Catholic Pr~ss 'of t~~.D!oce's~ of fall the lpanrier ',of 'saying it is, ,of ing abo,ut th~ streets with spurs,' er n!1ient in~ advancing. the l\I~ ',},,410: HighlCina~ Av~nue'. ' " ': ' course; provocative and amusing. ' ornamented' leather-work ):>ril., le~ religion.!~ " : - SeeS ,ISsues Clearly liant ~hiits .hugehats"~iike TV" Of. fuis, M~.· Waugh rem~rk8, , " . . fall Riv~r, ~as~: , .. OSbo·rne 5,,7151" , ':For 'awhile the reader may cowbOYs.:' ,. 'Hit se"med an odd tribute:#"~ PUBLISHER '" ." ' feel, "But there 'is practically no The new buiidings' he finds the D~fender of ~'le Faith." , ~ost ,R.ev. James 't," Con~9I1y. ,0.0,. ""hI)" evidence in these pages of Africa mostly hideOus:' But in the Ser, So' prominently and disturbingly ima Mission; under the' direction .Spiritu~1 Dire~to, : ". GENERAl"MANAGER'", 'ASST~'GENERAlMANA6ER 'in the :headlines today. This of the, remarkable Father' , RO¥E' (NC)....;.Father John J. 'Rev', Dqni~I,f:·Sl)al.loQ. M.A. .'Re~, John. ~,:Dris~oiD might htive beeR written . 30 Groeber,he came upon a school Flemmg of ,Brooklyn.,has.',been 6£: art 'and architecture' which appointe~, splritual- director of years ago." " , ' ,:" "J' '." MANAGING EDITOR· '·The impressiOl\ Is false and ,he' calls"exhilarating; and'which , the, NOl'th American College iii Hugh :Jl~' Golden" eventually dissipated.,Mr, Waugh has already Pfoduced wood-carv- '.Rome.' . , ' , " ,: I
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.'1" U: rge's' 'C' a.thotIC~ Press Present::·\ 'God's Truth' I
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Hub Cardinal';Says Faithful .Has Duty'to Spread Tru·th'
NEWARK (NC)-Catllo.. lies, in the. communications media should "present God's t rut h as best you can through your job and' yoUr personal life," Archbishop Th0R.las A. Boland of 'Newark, M. .1.. declared at the first dinnel' meeting of the New Jersey Catholic Institute of the Press, a' professional organization for Catholics in the communications fIeld. Stressing the importance of the communications media, Archbishop Boland noted that the' late Pope Pius XII gave some' 40 talks on the apostolate of the press. . Richard .1. Walsh; radio and television producer .....w ith the National Council of. Catholic Men, also spoke. He said Catholics must share the plame for the upsurge of prejudice in the presidential campaign. Many Catholics do bot understand the nature of the C" urch and many of those who do have failed to communicate Its true image to others, he said.
Fears Communist Power in Italy ROME (N:::) - Communists may take over Italy legally and peacefully, a priest - editor warn~d ~ere.
Fathe.r :1oberto TuccI, 5 ..1., edltor-in-chief of the Jesuit review Ci"ilta Cattolic: said he based his sta~ement on the large size. of the Ttalian Communist party lind its increasing success in elections. He noted' that there are 1,789,353 Communist party members in Italy, more than the combined membership of all other Comm. nist parties in western Europe. He addci that the party .~ has well-trained leaders, many of whom we!'e schooled in the Soviet Union. He said that the communist party in Tt'lly, in -' '::toral alliance with the leftwing socialists, bas i. aRed its share of the popular y te from 31~r cent in the 19/3 elections to 37' Per cent in 1958.
Urges Peaceful End Argentine Crisis
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B UENOS AIRES (MC) . Buenos Aires' Cardinal _ Al'Chbishop has called for a peaceful solution to Argentina's government-arrr v crisis. Antonio Cardinal Caggiano is'8U~ .an appeal to both government and· army leaders to, '~save peace, ,and sacred 'unity at ,aa costs." .. ' The Cardinal spoke as a group ..of generals forced the resigna'tion of War Secretary Rodolfo ,.Larcher 8-': four other cabinet ministers, and pressed. demands for a change in the policies of the government. headed by Pres.1.den~ Arturo' Frondizi. Among the. c~anges demanded by .ttJ,e Generals is a crackdown on com-' munists and supporters of former . ~~sident Juan Peron, ousted ill 1955.
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Is Falthful NaYlgator For White Assembly
A. Aim e C 11 rd N th Attl 'n 0 a ,. or l7 boro, WI serve as faithful na~lgator of Edward :':)ouglass White Assembly, Four t h Degree Knights of Columbus. for the eaming season. The Assembly Includes· members from Franklin. No rt b Attleboro, Mansfield. Taunton and Middleboro. Others installed with Mr. CoIlhrd included Oscar Desrosiers, Attleboro, cal>tain; Hugh Moran. .'B.'aunton, pilot; Douglas, CumGillings, North Attleboro, comp.. <lrl'oller; John J. Coyle, Mansfield, ,,inside sentinel; Kenneth A. McCarthy, Attleboro, scribe.
LAS VEGAS (NC)-Every member of the Church ~ot just priests and bishops, has a responsibility to spread the truth revealed by God, Boston's Cardinal said here.' RichanI Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston~ has told the 30th '. biennial convention of the Some answer as leaders, some National Council of Catholic' as loyal followers. Some bring Wom.en that the laity's re- God's Will by direction, some sponsibility is clear. "There by indirection. Some are obliged are vast areas of apostolic action, seemingly unlimited fields for good works, which the hierarchy and the ordained representatives of Christ cannot reach' or, if they reach it, cannot success • fully perform," he .pointed out. The Car din a I mentioned teaching, politics, medicine, business, law and scientific research. Works Of Love
'to do their work in public, some labor privately, unknown an4 .unsung.
VitaUity of Faith "But ~he fact remains that we all share in the work," the Cardinal said. Noting papal calls for lay assistance to the ChurCh, the Cardinal told the women they can best answer this caU "and most effectively counteract the power of our communist foes," by promoting the NCCW, "whose manifold works of love serve to protect, promote and preserve the spiritual life of both benefactor and beneficiary and, incl--dentally, constitute a vigoroua vindication of the divine origin, mission and perennial vitality of our Holy .....aith."
The Prince of the Church delivered the keynote address at the convention of some 3,500 representatives of more than 11,000 organizations affiliated with the , NCCW. He said vocations are sometimes spoken of as if they belonged only to the' priesthood or Religionus life. "This is not true," he said. "Every call to a good work or to your 'works of love' is a call from God. Every dedicated career that contributes to the adNEW YORK (NC) - A misvance of the Kingdom of Christ sioner came home here with • is a vocation." "Prelates and priests, Religious story strange to the 20th century and others who live undervows," -immigrants cut off from the he declared "do God's Will in outside world. Father Michael A. Gould, 'their way, a way of unique and M.M., said the immigrants are DEDICAT£ WAYSIDE SHRINE: Rt; Rev. Msgr. incomparable excellence. 350 Japanese - speaking OkinChristopher P. Griffin, State 'Chaplain of the Knights of Loyal Followers awan families who .have miColumbus, speaks at dedication of Wayside Shrine to the "But you, in all the honorable grated from their Pacific island pursuits of your lives are no ·to Bolivia, with the aid of the '~red Heart outside K of C headquarters of Damien less called to do that Will even Bolivian government. . Council"Route 6,~attapoisett. though the nature and manner "We will broadcast progrllP'll ,.Of your' vocation be different.· . of news, current events and "Clergy and laity alike are gion, as well as leSJOns in ligricalled to bring the Gospel to culture a'nd the Spanish laoour generation, to penetrate guage, to accelerate their inteLITrLE ROCK (NC) -Reli- God's caU 'to religious life. the temporal order with the gration into Bolivian life," said gious who teach high school _'. Consequent'y Father Poage saving principles and preceptS 01. Father Gould who plans to seek . "must know ~h.e vital statisti~ 8:Ilid, "the haPl: 1~c.Js and accessi- ..eternity. aid for the radio project before of heavywelg.lt contenders bility of teachers" mu t not be "The response of some to 'that returning to Bolivia ill earlt if they hope to p~oni.ote voca- overlooked. " eaU·1s direct, of others, indirect. 1961. tions, Arksansas' Catholic school teachers have been told. '. Father Godfrey Poage, C.O., of 'Chicago, American secretary for the Po n t if i c:lI Work for R e rig i 0 u s Vocations told the 26th annual Catholi-: Teachers' Institute of"the Diocese of .Little Rock that teachers· must develop "happiness' and accessibility" as traits 'if they are to in'~:e~st young peoIile 'in religious ' . :""Youth is never irl.ftuenced by .teachers they do' no( like," Father Poage asserted: : . '·~Kidci.ing and " joking with . yoimg' .people can help break down the reserve' youth feels .toward··religion; 'and' religious. 'Humor has a w'ay of 'relaxing tension," he contended, and .since the' chief difficulty in
Plan Bolivian Radio' To Aid Okinawans
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'Cleric 'Offers Advic,.. to Religious Seeking to Promote. Vocations
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',pr~~oting vocatiohs'iS"eli~iting
the mterest of youth, techmques that have been found by prudent experience to be most effective" should. be employed. . Father Poag' said "filling minds with spiritually stimulating mate~ial" ': ?f primary importance In vocatIon work. However, a "y()Uth has to see why a religious vocation is intl'insi11 ' g....-..l.. bef b ' ill k ca y ~ . ore e w ma e the practical Judgment to accept
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Repo";' Misswrterfrom' 'fJI.·River ' be~ut~~~c~~~:C~~r:~:~;~D
People whose idea of necks, stre.tched-out ear lobes AM By Alice Bough Cahill lower lips pulled out until they can accommodate saucers:- they ,are among the more Do you know what an antique is, or are you laboring than half a million inhabitants 'of Gulu, Uganda, Africa w~th whom BrotherChristopher . under t.he impression that a piece of fur,niture giv:en to a Cox works. A native of St. :Patrick's parish, Fall River, Brother Christopher ,attended 'member of your family in 1900 or 1910 is an antique? To , its grammar school, entering 'fQr two nights and two daysc be' a real antique;' an article (furniture, silver, chiJia, etc.)' the Brothers' of the Sacred ,then' that s~de is. bricked up and must ,have been made before ' H" . , the other SIde opened, The prootapering (not the thick, heavy . eart upon completion ~f ess . for firing continues for .. 1,830. At that time, things, type). Then there was the ped- eIghth grade. Before hIS similar period. were made by ,skilled, con- estal table which' was made first assignment to Africa in "Soon the interior of the kiJ8 scientious craftsmen, care- 'later. The earliest types w:ere 1933, he served in Canada,' is a glowing white-hot mass of ful, oh so careful, of their repu- stretcher tables and' gate-leg Natchez and Bay St. Louis, Miss" tations. In' fact, craftsmen of tables. ,'. '. . and New Orleans, He's been in those days de' No modern room is really fur- Mrica, since the th~rtie!i, says' pendeCl on t\e nished without table:.; and stands his brother, James M, Cox of .quality 'of' their of some sort and' aritiqueS can SS, Peter and, Paul parish,' Fall . wares to bring' easily fill this need. Ourances':' River, with his, service interin'busi'n. tors knew riothing 'about after:.. rupted only by home visits and Since ,ttility 'dinner coffee; so you finei a period du.ring World War n ,DO' low ~bles' among antiques. If' when he was in Paris and Rome. waS tit' 'chief .~ con ,ern 'of the you must ha:v e one, you will A man of, varied accomplish-, , 'craftsma. w',o have to buy 'one ,of modern de- me. n t s, Brother Christopher thLartisign or one adapted from an' old' teaches hi Gulu and acts as liai' rna CIe we now. call ' 'design. . . . Son among IIlission stations, His . ant i q ~ e, his ..Antique ~hairs of 'strl;ligbt knowledge of three or four Swa:.. . ' simple lines fit well into a mod-" hili dialectS makes him hival-, .p .; 0 d u c' wa,' sturdy, and has ern home. Of the earliest vari~ uable in dealing .with the' many 'endured. This craftsman had a . ties, the Windf~~ is still a fav-peoples included in the vast tersense • good proportion and orite. The Chippendale style of riiory covered by the Brothers. balance, .'hat is why we say that the mid':eighteenth century and In spare moments, the misone can use antiques in a modern the Hepl-lewbite and Sheraton 'sioner has rewritten a definitive home, styles of ',;le end of that century ,sociological study, "The RyuOf 'course, ,anyone can walk are to be had, and if your tastes kyus," which was a project of BROTEER CHRISTOPHER through a museum and see a bed run to the formal, these are the the Sacred Heart Brothers. "T h '15 one exce11ent f eatwl'th rope l'nte, .wI'ned fOJ; a styles you'll want. Gulu Shrub urbia ere sp:ing, supp 1rting a straw mat,A set of these would probably Brother Christopher says that ore about Uganda, and 'it is the tress, but who wants to sleep on shoot one's budget full of holes, Alokulum, the area of Gulu inexhaustible supply of brick:" . S b, 'II it such ,a b' ed'?, Yet .beds, tables, 'buth one or two of any of these where he is stationed, is so ver- making material-mud. chairs and chests are essentials rna ogany pil;lces heightens the dant that it's dubbed Shruburbia. has to be dug, puddled and tone of any room. ' O f ." 'a'y's housekeeping, as they In Alokulum, the Brothers moulded i nto the rIght shape were before 1830. Much Interest, . t ency, se t '1Il the k'l operate a native novitiate. "For and conSlS 1 n But it is the cleancut lines of Of course, people have always such a purpose, it is ideal, for and fired. interested in antiques, the muse' urn bed' that' you like,', been , ' . ' but it's a sylvan solitude such as "The 'employment bureau' , . ... . accepts applications. from ' they ar '"- as u'p-to-dato ,, those smce .the' ' war ·there has been . a would appe al to .a' TrapPist. then movement .tostudy " '1' d'.' ' . t . ' of any bed you ml'ght find com- determined . In training, there are, 40 as- SOl 19gers, wa er earners, san d' • g off the' asse,mbl" line toda, Y', ,our natIlm's history (evidenced' ,. " mud puddlers,' ' furnace " W . ' ' d"i t ' . ' pirants and two sCholastics who heav,ers, 'Innersprl'n,g ,mattre,sse. "oweve,r, b'Y ithe1 Increase nd'erest in' his- are ready. to begin teaching.' tenders, brick 'carriers, grass .' 't' ., make today's beds fa" more com_ . t or ca SOCle les an 1D 'preservafortabi than those of a hundred tion work) . and to colleCt Three other natives are already , .car,J;ier~ .and thatchers. · , as re li Cal 0 f an h'st· iii the classroom apostolate. "Firing' the kiln is a manyears ago. '. .. an t.1ques 1 arM No matter how'much one loves past. The Sacred Heart Brothers sized job. The four arched tun;miiques, 0l1e .wouldn't think of Since the war we have built staff two' secondary schools in ,nels are bricked up on one sid,e sleeping in all. antique bid fitted new modern bomes into which Uganda, reports Brother Chris- . and filled with firewood from as if was when made: The person we cim place our antiques, 'those topher. They are among over the other. Once the fires are who b'_'s an antique bed of any friendly things that' have been 1,000 Catholic teachers who lighted they IJlustnot be al-. sort has' a durable a'rid handsome' in many homes in the course of have 'nearly 40;000' students un-, ' .lowed to go Ol,lt until the firing piece of furniture, which can their long life, feeling very sure der their care, in ,200 ,primary is over. . be made as" comfortable as de- that they add a. certain distine- and 40 post-priIl1ary schools. ' "When the draught forces the sired with a good mattress and tion to our home, whether 'they Building Progra.m fire thro.ugh the mass of dry soft blankets and coverlets, have been inhei'iteti or, bought. Of particular interest to the woodj'it 'quickly turns each ,Can Mix Antiques Brothers' at the 'moment is their tunnel into a roaring cavern of You can firid chests of draw- New Bedford D. of l ' huge building' program, It will ' ~ame." Billows of smoke from ers in a variety of woods a n d ' . be completed .in· about two' the wood· and clouds of steam there is no incongruity in using To Hear Mary Manning years, says Brother Christopher. from, the drying ,bricks envelop a mahogany chest with a maple Junior Circle, New 'Bedford He describes the operation of aD the whole structure. bed, As long as' thp. design' is Daughters of Isabella, will ob-, African brick-making kiln., "Firi"g continues on. one side good all sorts of,antique furni- serve Catholic Youth Week this tu're can be mixed in a home' and, Saturday afternoon by attendit will be congenial., ., ance' at 12:10 Mass and reception As for antique tables j perhaps' of Holy CbmmuniOn at the Fran:the commonest type of old' table ciscan Chapel. . . Following Ma~,refreshmenta. , Is the ordinary fO'1r-legged kil)d, the legs square or ,round but will be served at ,~OrlleU HaU' and a regular monthly business '" meeting will follow at 1:30;,' Women in' Southwest highlighted by a', talk on vocaHelp Train Seminarian tions by Miss . Mary Manning, SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Catho- past president of the unit alid . ' lic women of Texas and Okla.:. 'present director' of youth· for the' .' . homa have sent a gift' of $350 .to Diocesan Council' of CatholiC ' " ,'., Archbishop' Robert E.' Lucey: of Women. ' San Antonio for the education of a native Mrican to the priestHyannis Whists hood. Father 'McSwiney Cii'c~e; By.;. " Archbishop Lucey, in express- annis n.al}gh~ers of lsabella,wiIi . ing thanks for the gift, said he, sponsor a series' of card' parties .. wolild for'vard it to Arehbishop , beginning at, 8 each Saturday . . John K, Amissah of Cape Coast, night at K of C Home: Mrs. Mary Ghana, for. the education ,of a Velloneis chairman; Next' regnative seminarian.' , . ular meeting of ,the unit is set The money was'given by DiOc- for Tuesday; Nov.:22 at' 'the , esan Coun~ilsof Catholic Women H o m e . ' ': of the six Texas dioc'eses and the Oklahoma diocese - Oklahoma City and'Tulsa - . within the metropolitan province ,of' San Antonio, Each council contributed $50.
will
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fused brick. Cracks that· havoe appeared in the' walls are pIa&tered over and the kiln is left to cool down, Such cooling-oil takes about two weeks." . About 100,000 bricks will be needed for classrooms and laboratories, says Brother Christo.. pher., "Then, if the political situa~ion allow~, ~ c?,apel w'iR be buIlt, God wIl~mg, , ' ' Brother ,ChrIstopher last vi&!ted Fall,Rlver about three yeaN a~~. ~e IS, due home for ·another. ' :VISit m abou~ two y~ars, sa~s hit brother. A Sister, SIster Andrew ' Joseph of th~ Da~ghter~ of the Holy Ghost, IS stationed III Waterbury; Conn.
D'CCW Un I'ts Pia'n, CCD Actl'y' I'ty
Conf · '0f C hrIstian . rat eql1ty Doe-trine l~nits will replace' study clubs in affiliates of the Diocesan CounCl'1 of Catholic Women, it was announced at the New Bedf or, d D'l~t':ICt . Council meeting. In' other business, Miss Kathleer.C. Roche, district president, requested that ~~filiates appoint chairmen to represent them. '\t, Dl'ocesan Retreat Leag'ue mee." ' mgs. It 'was noted that the Retreat Lea~ has speakers avail' 1 1 ' ab e toexp ain the retreat movement, to groups. ' Speakers are also available • explain the. diocesan and De-: tional framework of the Co"ncil of' Catholic Women and pamphlets further explaining it are now bein; distributed'to aHiliates, said Miss Roche. . An open meeting explainin, the Catholic Youth Organizat n' will be held Sunday, :t-Tov. 6 at Kennedy' Center and affiliates will send two teen-age represeatatives. Miss Helen McCoy was announced as " ~w discussion groull chairman.
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Sucordium Rummage
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The Sucordium Club, mothers' auxiliary of Sacred Hearts Acad:'. emy, '. 'all River, will hold its semi-annual rummage sale from 6 to 8 tomorrow night at the Academy auditorium, Prospect Street. 'Co-chairmen Mrs. Joseph A. Campbell and Mrs. George E. Duffy announce that items for the sale may b'! left at the hall any time tomorrow.•.
Quee'n's Daughters Taunton's Queen's Daughters will meet at 8 Monday' night, Nov. 7 at CYO Hal:. 1. demonstration of use of cosmetics will be featured. Mrs"Rob, ..t Hill and Mrs. , Mat'thew .McCarty 'are 'Co:- : ,c~irmen.
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,,$chooJday .:Pa..I$.: Means'\X . : - ..' ~~:.~~c~9.~~~~~~se ~.r~" Riv~-:-~~r$:, ~C?v. ~I ~96~ 9 Complete Overhaul of House . "SiSter .Sooutmaster" Has Get Tough Policy Visi~., Qf .
For
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twenty-od~Y~:~~~~: : : have met monthly
one another's homes. That's what I mean, and the 8eatence i8.goi~g ~9~y as'is, with no q~otation'marks around the word girls. Granted, unless we had started those meetiftgs when' we w ad , e.-e gr. e the evening paper, he munnured IlIChoolers" the term girls "You know, ~ sometimes wonde: would .hardly apply anr il maybe ..." more. We started them b&Though he left the sentence cause we are aU alumnae of too unfinished, I felt like a criminal Ame college-'"--Trinity. who has just missed detection. Words are funFrom that time on, preparations By things. When for the advent of the girls have a warm, friendhad at least some semblance of 1y connotation reasonableness. Not much, but attaches itself some. to a word, that Arbitrary Deadline meaning sinks In an unspoken pact, the Head deep into the of the House knows as well as I eonsciousness. do that the visit of the girls is We ..: I . merely an arbitrary deadline. ba .r s may 'The children know it too. All ve more a~d t 't gray 10 accep I. m orehair our accuMatter of fact, the girls mulatew'rinkles' couldn't care less whether the and g d h'l back bedroom is papered, the ran c I medicine chest divested of stale dren, .but to ourselves we're stiU nose drops and iodine, the mag_ the girls. . azine rack cleared .: back numSesqulalU1~1 Meeting bers. The girls have been our Other groups to which I belong guests, and we theirs, dur'ing lire named on the realistic side: Ladies of the Parish, News- days of stress and turmoil, in paper Women's~ Club Women's good time' and bad. There is no Board, etc. Well and g~Od. pretense whatsoever. They have As I started to say' before the in the early days of our meet~ foregoing explosion' caused by ings, fed babies, put them down tilt: giggle of a teen-agel' looking for naps, helped fix luncheon, . cleaned up afterward. . over my shoulder a~ the initial sentence: We girls rr~et monthly. . As we grow older, the tempo From first announcement to of friendship ,has not changed. the family that it's my sesqui- Perhaps the girls pull the same Annual turn to entertain the sort of semi-blackmail on their girls, until the last olive, saltecl families as I do on mine. Dut and mint are consumed the Reward comes to the family flowers are wilted and th~Wft by a dinner of casserole:-de-Iuxe, out, and the silver starts to re- since I always fix' twice the tarnish, our house exudes aA amount the girls can eat· the best aura of excitement. salad I can make, h,omemade When the children were smau, rolls; fr,nciest dessert in my repthey used to enter more fully ertoire; olives, pickies, nuts, into the spirit of the girls' visit radish roses and carrot curls, ftey polished silver, slicked u~ items we de 't have every day. their rooms like soldiers before Best of all, comes an IS-month iRspect!on, ironed linen napkins surcease from silly jobs-to-bego' out seldom-used wedding done. . . present dishes, cut and arranged Once more, thanks to the girls, flowers. our house gets caught up on the They even rehearsed names of long overdue un-dones. CIte forthcoming guests so they Se H'· h C' R I· could. mee~ t!te ladies without e 19 ourt' u m9 embarrr "'1lent. 1n School Tuition Case The Head of the House too MONT~ELIER (NC) _ The always got into the act.' Still Vermont Supreme Court is exdoes, in fact. Though we enterpeeted to rule during its 1960-'61 tain couples rather frequently tenn on a. lower court decision end non~lialantly, "-"hen the girls which banned use of' public eome, that is something special. funds to pay tuition for parochial Falling into a long-established school pupils. pattern, the Head of the House The ,South Burlington, Vt. can easily be persuaded that, school board is challenging a with the once _ in _ 18 _ months ruling, by Chittenden County went imminent, deadline has Court last February which held arrived for fixing the catch in that the practice violates the the back door, rearranging pic- Federal and state constitutions. tures in the living room, putting Because South Burlington does up extra shelves in the kitchen not have a public high school, mowing' the lawn, painting th~ the school board had been paying porch, doing all sorts of things tuition for some students within which, ordinarily, "can Wait." its jurisdiction who attended Only once-long ago-did I parochial and public high schools press luck too far. Then, after a la Burlington. aries of duties ,cheerfully perNew Bedford 0 of I fonned, I urged him to "fix the Hyacinth Circle 71, New Bedbl'okeD pane of glass in the blllJe- foed I;)aughters of Isabella, 'will aent window, ~d do it tonight... hold an installation an'" banquet "Girls coming ill Vi8 the base- at New :Bedford Hotel at 4 SunIllent'!''' he asked quizically. With day afternoon, Nov. 20. Mrs. • shrug, .ignoring the broken Damel J. Dowd, State Regent window and settling down with wUl install new officers. :'
W Ilk Boy Scouts-and They Love It '. ' By Patricia McGowan , "Dot-dash, dash-dot •••N The class of eighth graders sat goggle-eyed as Sister St. Charles suddenly interrupted a discussion of the invention of th tel h to t th bo rd d ·te a. M ors~ code message. Most were mystified; e egrap urn to e . a an ,:,"1 but one freckle-faced lad Jumped to hiS feet In eXCitement as Sister finished. "D'ya really" me' 't?" h d manded. What Sister had anI. e &written was "Anyone who ean read this has no assignments tonight" Th od . e c ereade.rs, all Boy Scouts, were astomshed. "Where'd a Sister learn the Morse code," they wanted to know. "Girls don't lear.n that stu~f." Sister explamed that her four ~r?~he.rs, all B,oy Scouts, had Imbated her into the myai:eries of <;ode and many other parts of the Scouting program. . After that, she found herself k d 'th' , . as e WI mcreasmg freque~cy for help on Boy Sc')ut Merit badges. She became an official merit badge counselor for New· Bedford Scouts then for Fall River boys' wh~n she was transferred to Blessed Sacrament School in that city . ' ,SISter Scoutmaster Now in her twentieth year as a counselor, Sister often has as many as 20 boys eoming '.0 her }~?R. 20 YEARS: ,Sister St. Charles receives plaque in for. assistance and testing on a~preclatIon of 2~ y~ars' service to Boy Scouting from merit badges in a single day. Richard Cote, Institutional Representative for Blessed SacShe examines for four different citizenship badges, schol. rament Troop 20, Fall River, as Life Scouts Raymond Boland arship, reading and dramatics. (left) and Maurice Lussier (right) look on. She's known as "Sister Scoutmaster" to the other Sisters of boys were recognized recently The youngsters' opinion? "She St. Joseph at St. Teresa's Conat a parents' night assembly is tough-but she doesn't make vent, Fall River Provincial held by Blessed Sacrament us feel afraid." And they really H 0 use of the community. Troop 20. She received a plaque appreciate their badges when They'v~ bccome accustomed to "in grateful recognition" of stlr-' they've earned them "the hard such Sights an an enthusiastic vices rendered to Scouting." . way." ' boy showing Sister. St. Charles Just Like People ' "But I really don't need any h?w his troop performs an In- reward," says Sister.· "Just There were a couple of nondian war dance. working with boys is so 118tis- Catholic Scouts, however, who "I .prayed Reverend Mother fying." tJ;"embled at meeting a Sister, w~uldn't ~ome along as that was She finds that boys in Scout- said the tall, dark-eyed nun. gomg on! laughed Sister. ing are almost invariably good Their own counselor couldn't She says her interest ~n Scouttake ~hem for a long ti.me, they ing dates from her childhood citizens and that they do much explamed, "and we figured a to. counterbalance the poor imwhen she. .p.articipat~d in, all pression of youth given by many Sister would take us if she posScout activIties pOSSible with sibly could." less fortunate ,youngster,S. ' her' four brothers. Most of Sister St. Charles' Occasionally, of course, she'll "Mother didn't mind dodging teaching career has been spent run into a boy who Ropes she'll flags as we signaled from one in eighth grade classrooms, but end of the house to the other, let him get by easily on a merit she is currently principal of St. but she put her foot down when badge test. "But I signed a Joseph's Preparatory School I . want~d .to go on an all-day promise that I'd make sure where aspirants for the comhike With the Scout troop," she every requirement for every munity take high,school courses, reca~~~'''I couldn't understand badge is'met," says Sister, "and and an instructor at a teachers' I insist that the' boys do all wh~. , . institute for nuns already in the , their work." Sister s 20 years of servIce to classroom. In the latter depanment, she teaches educational ;1sychology and principles of human geography. Sister's entering zestfully upon Sacred Hearts Academy Alum- also scheduled lilt that time. her second 20 years of Scouting nae Association, Fall River, will ., . hold an' informal dance SaturFamily day and a fasl\lon show with only one small, worry. day night, Nov. 26 'at St" Anof Sum~erstYles are'planned When is she going to find time drews Memorial Hall,' Ocean for AprIl an... 'an alumnae spon- to read a stacIt !>f Boy's Life Grove'. sored glee club concert will be magazines one of her admirera Co-chairmen are Mrs. Elizabeth held. in May. Corporate Com- pressed. upon her, with ihe Connefy Burns and Mrs Jean munlOn and' a breakfast will cli- promise of "lots more to come, Monarch O'Brien. . max the year's calendar in June. Sister." Other activities planned for the year include an aJumnae mother and daughter reunion at 3 SunGlay afternoon, Dec,U, with :the program to include a chapel ORIGINALS DRAWN BY THE ceremony and a' social hour. A cake sale'will be held Jan. 14 with Mrs. Mary Burns' Gagnon Sistf'rs of the Holy Union of the Sacred He~rts as chainnan ana a Lenten spiritual program is planned for March 'On Sale Qt' att H04y Union Convents 16, with election of new officers
Sacred Hearts Alumnae List Events for Com i ng Yea r ' '
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Moving'ToG.·Fast ForComm'unists' . NEWARK (NC)-Is Fidel Castro moving too fast for . hi$Red friends? ,Recent ex" iles from Cub~ .say he is.
MIAMI (NC)-Pornographic literafurEds sent by fiist class mail to more than a million childreri; Mrs. Richard W..: Simpson, special consultant to the Postma'ster General told members of the DadeCounty·douncil for'Decent LiteratJre.· One of' several consultants ones to say, she declare~, 'WllO. ,t'ravel ,throllghQllt the - last that mere. possession of obscene nation warning of the al- literature: and . pict~res will leged smut being dissemin- .make a child a criminal, but she
They report that when Anastas Russia's. deputy premi' visited Cuba; he was very . angry withnot Fidel, because Fidel "JaS very ~irst, reliable; and
~ikoyan,
second, because he had gone too. ated through the' mails, Mrs. emphasized ,that 80 Per cent 'of fast, He said that ,Cuba had al-. Simpson is" the wife of a former . t.he youths 'aI:rested in the last. ready arrived at the point which eongre..sman f rom .Hun t"mg t on, .two years have been collectors took 15 years .to reach in Czechof obscene literature, Pa., and the mother of six chI'1 _ . oslovakia-and that Fidel is "Au.thorities also point out," dren, ruining Cuba. "F'lrsc t l' 'I " h sex ass mal, s e sal'd , she said,."that " . criminals· and ' . Is it true that Fl'del is r'ul'nl'ng sex murd~rers nearly always "h"~ always . .been one of our Cuba? The exiles think so-they . '. f ree d' oms. F or f our have a long record. of addiction precIOus speak frequently of the ruin that ' to pornographic~-ot sadistic macents you can sen d any th mg an d terial." , . has overtaken their beloved' be legally ·'assured.that no one country; . ,ey'speak.of the terror. bil.t the addressee will open it." "Sometim~s the 'children show' that reigns there; 'of the hunger ' p' an l'CS what they.have reocel'ved' to thel'r . and. distrust thl" Castro has . . P os t Off Ice "ut the filth now mailed by parents,'j Mrs. Simson said. . eau'sed ... and the hatred. It is "If SOj'YQU are lucky. Save the .th~' means toht' childrenf" someh as e.nvelope ,wl·th l·tS' ,conte'nts and uncharacteristic, they say, fOf" YOrOlng.-as·eig years 0 ;:Ige, as Cubans to have so much hatred ca~sed the Post Office to panic, give it to the local postmaster. for one another. . He, ,ass.is.ted. by' the -' federal ",rill. said . . . 'Militia Example )&xplaining that· the innocent eO,urts, will do the rest,'; she ad.cc.lle-on advertisement for a vised. What has b~ought about alii banage of pornographic picthis? ?erhaps a few examples tures and lewd circulars may be will show the causes. stRmps, tOY automobiles, or a Take the militia, which Castro model plane, she said that more has rganized. Almost everyone than 70,000 complaints about MOBILE (NC) _. A formal has to belong to it. Even a 70obscene mail ,have come in to .Golden Jubilee Mass of Thanks': year-old man, working in one the Post OHice this year from giving ~a's hel(j here yesterday of the cigar' factories, has been· parents,' . to m'a,rk the 50th 'anniversary ot' told to join the Militia-or lose :In 1958, she continued, inves- the Ordin.ation to the priesthood' his job. Castro has now started tigations conducted by the Post .. of Archbishop Thom'as J. Tool":: a children's militia-for those Office caused the ~rrest o~ '293 'en, Bishop' of' -Mobilp.-Birming:'; f~om 7 to 13 years old. ~rsons. l1am. . ' I The militia, however, is not . , Youths Collectors . Presiding at the Mass was' ar unmitig~ted joy to Fidel. He '. P.ost Office'· inspectors are' the' . Richard C~rdin~1 Cushi"g, Arch-' is worried 'because so many bishop of 'Boston; a' close per-' people now h'ave guns, and is sorial frien'(}'of Archbishop Tool-' 'beginning to tak.e back some of ,en. The sermon was preached' the arms and' ammunition, Ii by Auxiiiary··BishopFulton J.:' seems that some of the militia' . .. Sh . f' . have stepped across the line to Ston~tiilt'College win cO:ndu~t:- :.e:I'I;'o· New: YO:k, 'I?ationaI J' oin those rebelling against Cas- . it's fIrst 3cholastic Press.' .Con- .. director of the 'SocIety Lor the. ference Satur<iay Nov. 19.' - Pro, pagation~of.ttie Fai..th. " . . , . rule, taking their. rifles and· GR.OS,T..'LY:.· :.G.O.O.D ...:TIM.E·'. Resl'd'ents at C.atholl·C·· tto's bullets with them and that hall ·.According· to.AIton L. CaldArchbishop 'Egidio , V a g n o z z i , ' " .' , . . well; ;Jr., lecturer in journalism Apostolic 'Delegate to the'Uriited 'H?t:ll.e,'· Fall River' and' Our" Lady's Haven, - worried .Fidel. .. at 'Stonehiil d.iredo r pi ·the States, dign. itaries. fro.m.·' F:alrh.av;en, w. ithI ill the ings.. sent . The7,000 reports ,are that he ·bae II P t h ' militia to fight in the conferenc:, . ~t (Will', be: open, to a .. parts· Of ,'the United ~tates" a.r l,es "wet:,e . ~ d ~t botl;I residences. Top,-le£t to right, Mrs: -'mountains, 'and, that their .com-!Iecondary . schools· throughout.. who came to h9 nor A.~~hblsh~~,.. Walter ,Leach, Miss; Mae: Quigley' .Mrs. "Esthe' L tho .. f . New.England.'.:, . . ' ·Toolen. Tbe Mass was held 111 h M' . . ' -. '" 1.;".' "~ • r, a ~m ~ mander is' a: communist from . S~eakers fnclude working "', t~e Cathedr~t'OI the-Immaculate, t e . ,em~:>rIal' HO~~1·:tS.elow,:Abble·:Wye; ~ar~h Foley. and· Czechoslovakia. . newspapermen' 'and educators, Conception and was televised oy' Mane Le!1har~"9f,Our Lady's, Haven. . , , ' RebelBDangerous, , ," who will address $eminargroups' a Mobile station . .:,' '; ;':/ ; . ,;':-,'; .:: .... ' . . : ; " '" .... . . The rebels are dangerou&-and '0.':I the v:arious' phases of 'news- '.' ,~he actu.al. date. of ~rch,bi~h~p: r1c.an:\:~S.ailo. Castro knows it. They are'doing , paper work, Toolen's 50Ui ordmatIonal anm.,. , ' .' .. ',. .... ~, ';,'. ,r:"" .. .' .' ' . ' to' him what he did to Batiaia,' . . Th~ daY-longprogr~ll~ will.be":versar.y. was Sept; ~7; On tha,t. and 'he knows 'the pattern. Toe lnghhghted by a. raneldlscusslOn, d~y .he .. celebrated a. So.1emn . . . . .. " . . ; ',.. ..' . . ' '. . da" he .returned fror' his visit·tO' of the key teen-age problem's of: .Pontifical.;Mass arid received: .KAO.flS~UNG (NC) -.-P~rson;;: the 9hma'mamland by the com-: the UN; six' bombs were e.... the day. Two newspaperm~n'and' congrat~lat.ory ..messages. fro'm::: nel of ~he U, S, seve~t~. ,F!eet';· rri~Hi.ists; ,Sister 'Hilda'catn~;,~' ploded in Havana. They were not two college Ilrofessors will be' Church and civic dignitar.ies in-" hilv~. glv~n-. ~IO,OOO}}I\'Qrth,. of .' Formosa m,1,948 with other: ~is-" big··bombs'-but.they had a nul-' p;tnelists. . ". eluding· Pope' ?ol,1n andPresi-·. me~ilcal supphes.' to; ~Ister . Hll~a.- t~rs' ?-f. hel:". congr~gatiOl1.': ~~e 'san~e value; they warned Castro : In conjunction with the Scholdent Eisenhower. . " ,. MeIer_of ~t .. Jo~p~.~ Hospital In Sisters. ~pened a dIspensary m· that his ti~e too is coming. astJ<: Press' Inshtu~e,'a newspaper.... ,.. p' " ' ,FoTrmhosa. I' ' . d I'" d 11949, ~nd' a' ~'ospi~l two ~l?nths The other day,' refugees frollll'" , " ~mpeti~io? is ,b~ing e~riduct~d- ...... ame pan.ls r:'1~Stl;" e. sup~ les w,ere ~}:ve~e: ~ter.... ,";: ...... ~.ub~.~y, the rebels c~me down' "" by.: the..,:oIle.ge, Jour!l~l,sm ,deR 'R t 'J' d .'_.' by th~, USS Yhl~an. w~o~e cre.VI .: .'~l!lle .gyn~c.o~ogY!lnd' ?b~~~t< into Havana' and stole equipment-. ~ar.tT,enJ:.' : ..... ,>... . ,:. . oman ,. 0 .~:" U ge ~ '. ',d.~nate~ an .eme[.ge~cy g~,nerator~·,"r~cs '"ar~" Sis~er' Hilda's' .vspeci~I". f.r0ni-ah'Qspital; .Smuggled· jt~ eMIt ' " ,:" .:,~El~e.,:,yat,ion..sare. ~i~ited' to ' . V JyrI9:t\~ ,(~p'r ..(N~);' -:- .. ~.~ ,th~ .. hosPital~arlUF ...ttU!hY~!l.k' ':",f~~lds., .~~rc.~m~tanc~s.h~,:"e··mad~ ., ()£:the city. ·tci Use in the mo~' . ,~!,:"e: .st~ff '.. n.r~!llbers 'aild: ,two' . ~panlsq :iPp.e.~ .pl· t~e.:;9~us,p'e~ '" ,.~hIPs .. o~. t~e., ~e :~mp.t~lee~,.: .. t~~· t9-:-y~.ar:-ol~: .S,i~~el' a ~!ll~- 'tilins ~or.' their. own 'hospital\; : fl,lcul~y, &g.vlsors .from each par.,.,~cuJ~r,.!ns~~t~t~~!ls ,be~n nalDe,d _~hli;h_: ~patr~ls "th~ ~!or01~s~.:.te!lt ~Il-rOl.~nd ~urgeon, 'During . . "" ." . '" ticipating; ,secondary schooLand ~ by Pope ~ohn .as ay~dge of. the. Str.alts;, often. anchOr .hl . Kaohs'- ; "per'10"yearS St.JosepJ1's :she': For. Y~Ur 8uildi~g 'Mat~ials 'must ., he: ~ade before ·'T.uesday,· S~cre.<.!..~o~,llnRo.ta.,.~t1~e_C,:,ur<oh'. " . iun~,. For.l11os~'slargest.har~r:' ha~ .delivered :~ii average ,'of' 300 . ~ov:. 15.. , :'. . . , ' , _', h,lgh ~~,uM:of appe,als,::' . O~flceFs and·.menh~ve not?n~r ··ba~ies·.~ndper~orm.e4' up 'to ~: :,Needs' and Choice" B~ild.i~1I Lots. in...t'" ·Gr:eater .Taun" . Further ..mformation may, be . . H~. ~s 4~,-ye!'lr:-~.I~· .~,ather ~l- w,.ltnessed Sister ~.Hl~da .MeIer s . 'maJor operations~eachyear." ,,-, . " .' Area . obtafneci, lrimiMr. caldwell:.at vado!; .. 'C~nals, ,a native. 01. work for 'the people ·of~.Kaoh;'·.. : :' - ': . . .' .,.' ' .. ." ' . : .... '. . : . College. " ., . . - ' ·Valen<;~~, - .~, . ,siuilg,Dul havel!admanY':occa~ .1.' ' B'ro~' . . ,. .. , .' . . : ..,. : '. .., . . .. f-at,h.er,C~na~8· .b~gan'< specialsions' to .be gratefu!"·for·hermed"'.: ... ,,Re'g ime'. Den ies"': i~ed. sj,tidies)n c;snoJ.1 l~~ imnte:': ical skilL pUr:in~)ne.,yearlshe -; , , 'j H'C O'R P'O'R A'y ED • .•.. '. ...... dlately .. after. his' or<Jination in operated. o"n . mne.navy " men -, "ONE STop· TAUNTO~· '. ':~ltes·.to;'C.onde.mJ1e~ 1~4~ .. H:e.:rt;c.e~ved,:adegree in: strickenw.i'th acu~e,appendic.iti~.·, ... SHOppiNG·C~NTE.· . VA.·4:.7847-:·...VA·2-4051 '. MIAMI (NC) _' Tho'se con-' clvll,Ia", fI:om'the University.of .. Dubbeg,",The H~a~ing .sister {)f:o .' . -deinn~'d to'~death by Jheregjme ~adrid ,al\d. on~ in .canon law' ' Formosa" ..in, an. a.*ticle:}n .t\l~ ' I ' . Telev.isi~D _.• Furniture of ,Cuban "Premier 'Fidel Castro' ,from the Lateran University in August .. issue of. ,the Reader's ~. -'.. ... are beihg~denied the last sacI;a- Rome', At'terwards 'h~ earned an Digest,' Sister Hilda fs Ge'rman:' .• ~'PPliances • 'Grocery: ' mEmts, anewspapef here ·has .."3dv:ocat~'s . diploma :fro.:n· the born and U.S. trained, Amem!?er; ,10f Alle·nSl•. ,N·ew Bedfor~ stated. .' .. . schoof of theRoITlan Rota,' . of ·the ; Franciscan' 'Missionary :." '.·WYman '7-9354 ., . . The Diario lie la Marina,. Sisters of the Immaculate Con- -~-~-.....-------~ .JI,avana daily-:-in-exile published Hondu,'r,an Prelates ceptiqn,' whose motherhouse" is JOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY here, said: "We have learned, Erico.urag'e Cuba"ns' in Paterson, N, J., Sister Hilda that tho'se sentence'd to 'die (by obtained her medical' degree. at owner/mgr, the Castro regime) were .. t<iken TEGUCIGALPA (NO) - The George ,Washington University, 142 Campbell St. to. th~ ex~~ution wall without Bishops of Honduras have s~mt a' Washington, in 1938. New Bedford. MaH• Plumbing - Heating .being allowed' to receive reli-' 'joint messag~ '(>t. encourageinent. '. She.was sent by her 'superiors .gious aid,". .. to the .~uban HifYrarchy' ~n its to China in 1941. Forced: to leave WYman 9-6792 Over 35 Years Another C.uban· newspaper-in- struggle ..againsteommuJiist in. . of Satisfied Service HEADQUARTERS F.OR exile,' Diario EI Avance CrioUo'; :{iltration, .... .' " _ COLONIAL AND 806. NO. MAIN STREET declared that since taking ov'er . Th~ five Honquran prelates ,'.' I TRADITIONAL FURNITURE the government in January, said: . .Fall River OS 5-7497 1,959, the Castro regime has "We have followed with . ~t~~ . claimed 12,238 victims _ dead; broU~erly affection 'your' incor'~~ wounded and prisoners, ruptib!e attitude in face of communist infiltration which atNew England's Playground COME IN - SEE - and DRIVE tempts to make of (your) beauYQur Dance Party President of Panama .tiful, island another satellite of the mos~ brutal police system of Fashion Shows and Plans Real p',ogres's ~he World's Most Beautifully Proportioned Cars" PA-NAMA CITY (NC)-Pan- our time." . . Banquets at ama's ,ew president has promised a social action program to Papal Comr,'lission at Lincoln Park's fight Red propaganda with real VATICAN CIT" (NC) -AIM fredoCardinal Ottaviani, Secre:':\ . ILLION-DOLLAR. progress. President' Roberto F. Chiari tary of the St:preme Sacred ConBALLROOM says, "The time for words has gregation of the Holy Office, has FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS Call ROLAND GAMACHE ended, and the tim for positive been named a member of the action has begun.", President Pontifical Commission for BibWYman 9-6984 1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Mass. Chiari is a practicing C·atholic. lical StudiC9
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'Trace Sympfoms Of Indiffer~nce To Morality
'THE ANCHORTh~rs., Nov. 3, 1960
O'fTAWA (NC) - The Canadian Catholic Conference expressed "grave an. xiety' 'over' the "growing
creeping indifference to morality. Msgr. John J. Devlin, West Coast director of the National Legion: of Decency, mad e this diagnosis befol'~ the annual conferem. h~re of· the., Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Women. "The universal flight from Almighty God is caused by the present day indifference' to recognition of what is right and what is wrong," Msgr. Devlin told 1,500 women at the Beverly Hilt<,n Hotel. "And the Holy Father warns us that this indifference today continues with, a creeping growth." Claims of State· Msgr. Devlin, moderator of the ACCW, said "the extravagant claims of the model'll state over the Jives and destinies of its citizens have become so commonplace that we arc in danger of accepting them as normal and natural. "It amounts to this," he said, "that the state's wishes' in this regard have become the citizens' measure of right and wrong." Msgr. Devlin referred specifically to marriage, which he said is denied not only a supernatm'al aspect but even a natural sandit:' by -~me states. "FOI"gotten are the' inspired '" )rds of the Book of Provcl'bs, 'Sin maketh the nations miserable,' " he said. Beat Generation ..Anothcr· aspect of the flight from the recognition of right and wrong is to 'be found in that strange breed-spawned in, our own day-called the beat generation. Young men and women seemingly devoid of all spiritual reSOUI'ces within themselves, re-" luctant to face'the realities of life not knowing and not, cal'ing whence they came '01', whither they al'e 'going,'" the Monsignor' addc4· "How aptly the wOl'ds ,of J'ude : '1 his epistle de,scribe them, "These are they w.h.o d~file' the flesh, despise dominion and blaspheme, majesty.''' ," "'rhe world is spil'itua~ly .,llick ' and to its' sickness another element has contribute 1 in no sm~1l measure, and that is the sick
tendency on the part of commerce and industry to consider Sunday as an ordinary wOI'king dllY." Canada's cardinals, a l' c hbishops and bishops in plenary session here said that "if this tendency should one day bc confirmed by legislation or, by increasing toleration, should come to be accepted as normal in our, society, then all who pl'OlIdly profess the doctrine of Christ would witness the disappearance of institutions which were established through the unceasing efforts of many generations." , - .
.St.
LOU8DES: Upper photo, 'Bishop Connolly celebrates
motion picture," Msgr. Devlin
de~a~~~~da recent analy'sis of Mass at the Grotto of Lourpes with the assistanc~ of Very Rev; Leonard;1. Daley, pas~or:..~ick e in'ovies b~ '~a~tin",c;}~igl~'y;.. , of St. Francis"Xavier' Church, Hyannis.' Lower photo,.: a section.... of, the congregation
J~., ~n the MO~lOn PlCtu~e Hera~d; offering·the M;as~ Vfi~h ,phe Bishop,' ."- '" ,of Sept. 24." " , ,-~,'",'" Hol.lrwo~ tha~ si,c~ motio!I,i>i~tur~ equal a slCk mdustry.', ,.,
'.Msgr.' Qevlin co~c1~ded by reading.l;l message gIven ,to the ACCW by James Frallcifl, Car' di.nal, McIntyre, Arch~ishop of ' Los Angel.!,!s as th~ bas~s for th~., .:. tbe\Tle'of thei'r. confe.renc~.,. '~here , ar~ some, thlllgs ,m ,human Ufe that do not change" th rollrdinal wrote' "One of the~e di'stinction between' right d rong ,This distinction can::t b: elim'inated, no Inatter how novel may be the suggcstion. It is the root of all society.It is the. basis of all government. It is the medium of judicial decision." ,
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Children Give $5,000 To . RelieveL~pers
VIENNA (NC) -:- Austl'i~n schoolchildren have givcn their second $5,000 check :.within two years for the relief Qf victims of Hansen's Disease (leprosy). Rcpresentatives of> the Austrian :: at hoi i c Youngsters' Groups handed the chcck to Count Raoul FollercHu, a 62year-old French lawyer and author who in the last 30 years has traveled half-a-million miles in the service of lepers. Count Follereau pointed ,out that a remedy (diamino-diphenilsulphon) is now available for the disease in its early stages, and that two dollars' worth is enough to cure a victi\Tl completely. He said that with the $10,000 donated by the children, 5,000 lepers could be made healthy again.
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Prelates' . De~~ore Growing Practice Of Sunday Work
LOS ANGELES, (NC) Sick movies, state secularism' and' the beat generation are three symptoms of
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leigh Dickinson Uliiversity aI,ld curate 'a~, .Holy.. 'Dnmty. ch~rch,. the' chaplain" of an off-campus Ii~ckensack,:.was" appomted Newman· Club' producedhO chaplai~ in November, 1958: ',The , change in' th~!"school's:ban on .club has ap~ut 13? members,' ." student.religiq.us groups. , .Tile, club IS dem~d use of un.l-' F ther Frarids A. DeDomenversity' facilities 'and '~eets,m' "'~ ha lain' of the' Newmariborrowed facilities. Qff:-~ampus. CIO, c .p . ' t· " t h The university' a pnvate' 00-' Club; saId after hiS ~ee mg WI. ' " ' ,Dr: the Ulllverslty president..... "Dr. Sammartino. derstand that the. m.te~nty and MINNEAPOLIS (NC) _ A formation o~ the md.IVI?ual stu~, public school official has apdent is a higher prmclple ~han pealed for public school instructhis unity he ",ants to achIeve tion on the role of religion in' at Fairleigh Dickinson." , national life., Prior to the meeting Dr. Sam\ Dr: Robert 13. Snyder, supermartino had stated that the forintendent of the Wayzata public mation of religious clubs at the school system, said: "In spite of New Jersey university would be ,the fact that the public school a divisive influence on the stucannot teach denominati6ilal bedent body. liefs, .they can and. should teach He said the school's board of much useful information about trustees tried tO,stress the "onethe religious faiths." ness" of the student body and He said such information on does not want "the Protestants religions Gould include "the imto gather in one corner, the pOl'lant pal~t they have played in Catholics in another, the Jews establishing the moral and spirin another, and the MohamHual ~alues of AriI.erican life." medans in still another." I~iable to Expulsion Dr. Sammartino confirmed that under university regulations students seeking to form on-campus religious groups like the Newman Club are liable to Joseph A. Charpentier expulsion. He expressed doubt, R.eg Phartn' however, that the question of TEL WY 6-«;)772 expulsion would ever actually PRESCRIPTIONS arise. H902 ACUSHNET AVE. The Newman Club of FairNEW BEDFORD leigh Dickinson students was 01'-
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GENERAL, (ONTRAOORS and ENGINEERS JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E., Pres. Registered Civil and Structural Engineer Member National Society Professional Engineers
FRANCIS L. COLLINS, JR., Treas. THOMAS K. COLLINS, Sec'y.
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educatIon.al;' ms.htuhon, w~s, lom'lel,". c'athe.~r.al of this 'A)pi~ ,founded m. 1941. It, has, ~~ en- .. village. R el'§' of Fr(\lIce. have ul lionorary canons of ' rollment ,of more, ·than 11,1)00 , been made' s~udents. , . . '. "Embrun,since the reign of'Louis ' ,Father. DeDome~cIO.!lald D~., xl. in the 15th century, when S?m:martlr ~ ·tol.d 1: I -that rell.. Embrun was a diocesanscc"arna g:,ous. clubs r ~I!ht. be allow~d. . a"c~ntet;:: q~ pilgrimage: :. • ' .. e. ,entually t I, .et on~he ~a~h- , S?n, N;.J., campus oft e \,ImverSlty,- where many.of the students are residents. However, :he 'declined to say when the questio.n would be presented to the Ulllboard of 'the, pl'lest rep~rted. . IOUTE 6, HUnLESON AVE. MeanwhIle, other Cath.o~IC Near Fairhaven Drive-In spokes~en have ~ntered th~ p.ICItalian Dinhen Our SpecialtY ture WIth statements protestlllg Service On Patio the university's ban on' student religious clUbs:
~eter S~mm~rtmo, Official. Asks. Course coul~n't'un~ ,On Role of Religions ve~sity's
BROOKLAWN
In the statement issued at its annual meeting, the CCC expressed the belief "that our federal and provincial leaders will, in their wisdom, fir{.l ways, to overcome our present' difficul_ ties, and even to anticipatc possible future economic fluctuations in such a way as to uphold the sanctity of the Lor'd's Day in years to come." Power of Money "Today, when militant materialism is attacking the forcetJ of good, are we to yicld to the pressure exerted by the po,wer of money against our sane and democratic institutions," .the CCC statement said. "Will Sunday work' eliminate unemployment? Will the abolition of the Lord's Day call down upon our country that 'protcction of Divine Providence which we all know to be so urgently necessary?" Concern about the future of Sunday, the statement noted-, arose at a time when the Catha:'lic Bishops "give thanks to DiVineProvidence which has -inspil-ed ,the leaders of our cou~ try to', take. a firm stand in the defense of world peace, to make generOliS plans for helping the under-developed countries and to propose measures which, we hope, will prove effective' in wiping out the' scourge of unemploym'ent.'! , , , The Popes, particularly, from Leo JOn to John XXIII, "have r~minded us time and again t);tat the observance of Sunday is II clear iridication "of a sane ceo:' nomic and, 'sooial ordt>r,"tbe statem~;"t' added:, ,: '
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, . : Is II mile'and ., half .too far to. walk to Mass on Sunday! A missionary bishoP. last week told us of a leper who had lost both . his legs above the knee caP. Every 'Sunday morning he walked on the stumps of his ,legs, over ,. gravel road, to attend Mass anel .' J,'eceive Holy· CommUnion. The Bishop, one' day, cui up an old tire and made caps for his stumps. The leper now considers himself the most blessed 'man in the parish.
Another missionary Bishop told as that he b'as 2,000 natives III his ~rish, everyone of whom reeeives Holy Communion eveiy Sunday, after vudginl'~enty and thirty miles to Mass. ~earby are about 200 EUropeans who come ·to Mass in automobiles, and not over two of them recei~e HQly Communion every Sunday. Anatole France one day said that Catholics could not possibly believe in the Real Presence of Our LOI;,d in the Eucharist; otherwise they would receive every morning.
BJSflOP CONSECRATED: Bishop Alf.red F. Mendez, C.S.C.; has been consecrated at Notre .Dame University as the first bishop of the new Puerto Rican diocese Arecibo. His new 1,200-mile Diocese was established July ,30 by Pope John. NC Photo.
. ' our Lord looks down from high' heaven
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upon these souls 'iiI the Missions; how He must'rejoice at their response to the Faith! To uS He has given not only Faith, but the -- blessings of prosperity. A little act of self-denial Is nothing eompared to what others sacrifice for their Faith! We all want' a "private audience" when we go to Rome, and yet if the Holy . Father ever asked how much you gave him last year for all the Missions of the world, would you not be embarrassed?
Rota Disposes \ Of 243 Cases
Remember the Society for the ll"ropagation of' the Faith Is VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Dot one of many mission organizations; it Is the ONE principal Sacred Ro~an Rota, h i g h Church-court, disposed. of 243 Society which helps all the Missions here in America, Latla cases during its last term. inAmerica, and the Mission lands everywhere. That is why the HoI,. cluding 152 decisions in marFather has said that he "Is to be flr~t and principally aided." riage cases., Let not the leper on stumps outdo you in love of the Lord! During the year 1959-60, judges of the Rota ruled that GOD LOVE YOU to J. M. for $10 "I have been wanting to send 72 of the ·matrimonial cases you 'a donation for some time but I did, not have that much to brought before them were 'not spare. Now I am going to do without something, so that you can ·true marriages and therefore use this money for whatever purpose is most necessary." ... to R. C. were null. The 'lther 8/J marand friends for $5' "Instead of paying fifteen cents a cup for coffee riages were judged to be true on coffee breaks, our small office staff, decided to brew oUl' own marriages. coffee. This is the difference for a month." ... to R.T. for $10 ''This is for the leperS, I promised to send you this amount for favors Ninety other cases before the received." •.. to Mrs. T. ''My husband was burnec;l this morning Ro,ta have been' removed froOl in a boUer explosion and won't be able to work for some time. I the docket either because the litigants have' been reunited decided to send this $5 in the hopes that God will make his recovery fast." . because the case was abandoned by those who brought ;t bp.fllre the court or because 'of d£olth Would yOIl like to keep up to date with the activities of or ,peaceful settlement. out of missionary Church-;to learn what the.Holy. Father's emissaries are court. . doing aU over the globe? Why not subscribe to WORLDMISSION, One other judgment was a quarterly, scholarly review ed~ted 'by Most. Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. given in a long-standing case . A year's subscription is $5.00. The address is WORLDMISSION 366 involving a legacy left to a reFifth Avenue,New York 1, New York. . ' ligious organization. Of the 243 cases definitely Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and maU it to the disposed of, 72 were handled' Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for either free of charge or with a the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, 'N. 'Y., reduction in cost,of the expenses or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, incurred. 368 North Main 'Street, Fall River, Mass. . At present there are about 600 cases still before the Rota.
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Continued ';;'m Page One general; William Powers, special; Stanley Markowski, memorial. Our Lady of the Hoiy Rosary -Sylvester Sowiecki, general;, Stanley, Koss, special; Frank Bielenda, memorial. Immaculate Conception-Wil- ' Ham Fagan, general; Atty. Roger BALTIMORE (NC) - TeenB. Champagne, special; Francia agers should be forbidden by J. Morrison, memori~l.., parents to, go steady,' a code Our Lady of Lourdes--Edwarll adopte(i by the. Department of Franco, general; Arthur Botelho, Education of the Baltimore arcllspecial; Antone Vaz, memorial.' diocese recommends. Sacred Heart,- Hugh Flynn, " Going steady is defined in a general; .WilliamP., MacLean,' booklet released,by the archdiosPec,ial; John ~., Eagan, memo-. cese in connection with National rial. .'. " ' .. Catholic, youth' Week fre-' St. Anthony-Frank G., ~ico, quen~ and exclusive dating. a general;. .:Joseph F. Leca,special; promise. to date no one else and" Robert Mendes, memorial. acceptance, by friends of iIlese St..JacqueS-=-Henry. 'Galipe~u.,· conditions. . general;' Rolan'd Auclair, spe~ial;, . - - - _ ...
DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL
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Church Mission~Wo;k Gains More Support ST GAL
· L (NC)-The Catho,.. 1ie C hurc\1 in Switzerland has .. y . j to launched a "M' ,lSSlOn ear spotlight the needs of the missions throughout the world and do something about them. First phase of the year's program involves, a massive campaign to inform the, people through the press, radio and tel_ evision, of the needs' and difficulties of the'Catholic misSions in,.underdeveloped countries. 'rhe second phase consists of letting Advent aside as a period of, special public and. private prayer for the missions and the IIlfssionaries, throughout th,e
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\ STONEHILL SCIENCE DAY: High schoolers from throughout, the Diocese attend the third annual Science Day for Secondary Schools sponsored by Stonehill College. Upper 'left, Coyle juniors, left to right, Richard Shea, St. Patrick's, Fall River; John Dalton, St. Mary's, Taunton; William Desmond, Sacred Heart, Fall River; Kenneth Powers, St'. Ann's, Raynham. Lower left, juniors from ~t. Anthony's High Schoo), left to
Bishop Mussio Suggests' TV, As Aid to Catholic Schools
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Xavier Alumnus WiDS Fourth Drexel Award NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Victor H. Labat has been awarded the 'Francis Anthony Drexel award of Xavier, University here. It is the fourth time in the 35,:, year history of the school that file award has been bestowed. lt is named for the father of the late Mother Mary Katherine Drexel, S.B.S., founder of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament for' Indians and' Colored people. Mr. L'abat is a member of the arc!hdiocesan school board and chairman of the department of , industrial arts and alumni director. The' citatibn called him "a teacher and' a" distinguished '€atholic layman .. : an' undaunted leader in religious, civic and human affairs .. '. recognizing the' basic truth of the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man." , 'rhose who have received the award in the past are Archbishop Joseph F. Rummel ,of New Or,leans, DI'. Ralph Bunche of the United, Nations and Mrs. Mal'7 ,McLleod Bethune, ~.n educator.
Univac Invades Three High Schoois T 0 Prepai'e Deta.-I e d .R ed eport ar s
CLEVELAND (NC) - Univac ranged in alphabetical order ae-the "thinking" machine--has cording to class and division, all invaded three high schools here. ready for mailing. Grades of students at CathedAverages, class stand in/!. honral Latin, Chanel and St. Joseph or rolls and other record data. high schpols are nC'--- being are computed at the same time. coded, collected, compared, sortCoded letters, explained on ed ,and summarized at Sperry- the back, tell parents how their Rand's Univac Service Center child is doing. here. U Johnny gets a grade of 75M, A better picture of the stu- for example, it means he is doAmerican Parochial' , dent's achievements and how his ing fair, but that he is inattenpl'l'formance compares with oth- tive in class. The letter P inSchool System Best era is expected. forms parents that they should VATICAN CITY (NC) -The' For teachers use of the com-' make an appointment with the late Cardinal Pietro Fumasoniplex electronic'device has elim- teacher at their earliest con. Biondi proposed before his death inated at least six separate op- ,venience. worldwide development, of' erationsand hours of paper- ,.. ~ schools modeled on the AmeriCan work. parochial school system: . ' McMULLEN Now all that teachers do ',. Cardinal Fumasoni-Biondi was Inc. ,mark a grade and a code mimApostolic Delegate to the United ber, then wait' . '1ile the maMOVERS States from 1922 to 1933. He died ~hine does the rest., SERVING in Rome July 12,1960. The operation is based on the Fall River, New Bedford The proposal of the former familiar punched tabulator prefect of the Sacred CongregaCape Cod Area cards, one with registration intion for the Propagation 'of the , Agent: formation and others for ,each Faith was'made in his letter AERO MAYFLOWER lnibject taken. At the end of which appeared in the 're,cent each grading period, all cards publication o~ official documents TRANSIT CO. INC. ,'are sent to the Univac center. on the coming' ecumenical coun. Notion-wide Moven Ready for' Mailing cil. ' Cardinal' Grateful WYmon3-G904 Wheels whirl, gears grind_ 304 Kemp~n St. New BedforcJ BOSTON (NC)-.,..Richai'd Car- and out come report cards, arMee,t in London: dinal Cushing, • ~chbishop of LONDON (NC)-=-The 10th'In- Bostori and chairman 'of the U. S. ternational Congress of Catholic Bishops' Latin America Commitdoctors will be held iri 'London tee, has' thanked the' Catholic in 1962, it was announced here Daughters of America in Iowa at the 50th anniversary banquet ' for their $500 contribution to the of the Guild of St. Luke, SS. BishofS' ,Latin America, proCosmas and Damian, British' gram. He said it was the first he Catholic physicians' organization. ' had received.
PEORIA (NC)-A Catholic bishop has' Pointed to television as a likely solution to the problem of too few Catholic schools for too many Catholic children. Bishop John King Mussio of Steubenville, addressing the annual assembly of U.S. diocesan school super- dents of the National Catholic intendents here, declared: Educational Association whose "I thank God that' children ~~~?quarters are in Washington, are clamoring at our doors." He cited the encyclical of Pope Pius XII on communications media, "Miranda Prorsus," as support for his idea of putting television at the service of Catholic education. "There we' read. that the pr'imary end of radio and television is to serve' truth and virtue. Isn't this the aim of our educational processes? "How tragic it is to have these great media of communication, so closely geared to the aims and methods of our educational system, ignored In the search for a solution, to the staggering demands made upon the educational service· of today." Bishop Mussio said the use of television in education "is not a theoretical or untried method, rather. it is a sound pedagogical approach to the educational needs of our day." In delineating the problems of modern Catholic schools, the Bishop commented: "Today the secular taint of ltving as it touches !!ven our young people has shocked the consciences of our, Catholic parents into a realization )f the vital need for Christian direction in the upbringing of thetr children. Now I rejoice in the tremendous growth of our Catholic schools; I thank God that children are clamoring at our doors." "Of course, there, is a' panie factor involved when facing the educational dilemma that has resulted, but I am still of the 'persuasion that we will get nowhere in our search for an effective solution to our school problem by dallying with the threat of turning our children over to the public school system." Bishop Musslo spoke to • session of the annual meeting of Ulle Department of Superlnten-
right, ,:J;..ouise Menard, St. Anthony's; Diane Duhamel, Robert Poirier, Raymond Bouchard, St. Joseph's; Louise Jodoin, St. Theresa's, Henry Guilbeault, St. Anthony's, all of New -Bedford. Right, representatives of Sacred Hearts' Academy, Fall River, left to right, Sandra Marcoux, Mary Louise Murphy, Mary Elizabeth Sullivan. The Holy Cross Fathers report ' that more than 600 students were in attendance.
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:14' lHE' ANCHOR,..,.,oioe:ese 'of:;FCJU River......:rkl:lr:S.r'N6v. ~!J/ 1960.
'",Total Absti~e~~,~ ,Act of Charlfy';~'" Ca.rdinalSays '. '.
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M~tRev. Robert J. Dwyer,;.D.D. , Bishop ofllteno -., .
MONTREAL (NC) - ~ Cardinal-Archbishop of Mon,. treal has called total abstinence from alcohol ape,r-
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":' . Win lose .or draw, the candidacy of Senator John F.;. Kennedy' has 'provided the American Catholicco~ilInunity !With "material for reflection more' than suffi~ie~t to last, as J,lelloc used to phrase it; along generation~:Where a little jroup of scholars had urg~ Today it is '~ politic4l embar~ithout much reactio~, that rassment, as America strives to ' \ve' take a close look at our-, weld tt.e Or~anizatio~ .of Am~r-: " . th . . f b- ican States 1Oto a Viable umty, se)ves 10' e mIrror ~ pu . for the Legend is' forgotten
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petual invitation to holiness.· . Paul Emile Cardinal Leger ; has said in speeches before tWo ~~f--tolaI abstinence societies: . . "For ttie individual who abstains, from all· alcohol. the mortification that he imposes 011 himself niakes him bigger before God. And when he does it out of concern for his neighbor and to lead others to temperance, hill act of mortification becomes one of the most .beautiful acts of charity. "It can be said that total abstinence is a perpetual invi~ tation to excel oneself, to render service to others and consequently to sanctify oneself."
lic opinion, 'the, c~~plUgn ~as neither by itS creators nor its forced this narCISSistiC exercISe . 't" . · All VIC uns. ~po~ us. , . How much of the seemingly th~t e ~e; inexplicable reluctance of the no. p easm r Latin world to line up with Big :a~ter~~:'to :~r Broth,er in th~ st~uggl~ a~ai~ · lf t Y t the new MarXIst unpel'Ialism IS se -es eem' e due. to its. survival might well l~ ~-~~ as others see U.i pre~ccupy our Sta.te departme.... could b~ for us ' durmg sleepless mghts. the beginning Strong Bias FATHER OF. THE BRIDE:, Members of Fall River of wisdom. The writing and, b~aching of NEW YORK (NC)-A $1,000 Our concern history throughout the seculariBlackfriars Guild rehearse for '''Father of ·the Bride," to be award for "notable community, Is not the image zed weSt, and particularly in produced Monday and Tuesday,. Nov. 14 and ~5 in S~red serVice" will be presented to. a of us projected our own country, all during the Heart School auditorium, Fall River. Left to rIght, Wdham citizen of a South American. by .the professional bigots. nineteenth century and on. to the nation .in a ceremony here next Were we the unmistakable vision present, has been shot through A. D'Elia Jr., Alice C. Harrington, Charles Mendes, Mary 'l.'nurSuay. of the Bride of Christ, without with Ii strong anti-Catholic bias. Elizabeth Wilcox. The prize will be one of the sPot or wrinkle, they would still It is arguabie that it is in this Lane Bryant International VoLreport us as the Scar~et .W~m?,n. field, rather ihanin theological unteer Awards. The name of the ~ideous to be.hold. It IS ~he~ livor philosophical controversy, South Amer~ ~an winner has not ing, . poor thmgs, and It IS too that the real harm has been done, ..o..._--:::b.:.;:ee::.;:..n~an;;;;;.:no:;.;..un..-;.c..;.;.ed_, _ much ~ expect that they s.hould the distorted image created. WASHINGTON (NC) - The . ' give up The memory IS . st'll "d of , bread and butter th B10t the 1 V1V1 mere mterests of tru . u we h'ldh od d . th should be gravely concerned our ~wn c I . 0 ays 10 , ~. with tt>: image reflected in' the' pubhc sch:)()ls 10 a 'Vestern City, a ·new· regional seminary_in, east10 1888, was purchased that, )'ear bJ' CathoUcs of the CopUe mind of that vast. body of Amer- how the textbo~ks suggested that .ern Brazil,near Recife in ,the RUe III MlNIA In EGYPT. TrllllSlonned Into a church and reo"_ h' h ' h 'ts nsciousl'" it was only WIth the Reforma- Archdiocese of Olinda-Recife. . tory, Ii served as the CopU. Cathotio MOans w 1C In en ,co I t' th t lib t d lighten ell' not the Protestant tradition. Ion a er y .an en .It will serve ·five ecclesiastical ,Cathedral from 1886 untO 1933. Wben 'Faith, Gift of GOd ment ~ntered the world~ to strug- provinces, inclliding 19 archdiothe new Cathedral 'was b~lt In 1911. It' t th t hould ex- gle With the forces of 19nOl:'ance ceses and dioceses in eastern In the nOl1hern secUon of MlN'IA. ',. . IS. n~ ." a we s , , ' .' and' oppression-and if there peet, reahstlcaUy, an exa~rep- . ' d 'b't·th· t th latter Brazil with a Catholic population &lie 'old make-sl1l1t ODe oontlnUed to . If th t' 'w' , . e 'li"~ were any ou a . ese of' more than eight million•. ' 'lene as &he·Parish church' for ,~. Iica. . a e"e so, w ... : '. to be'd tif'ed ,'th ... ~ '. . Id ' be .. were 1 en I WI ..The plans for theU. S. Bishops' , babitants 01 &he older. part of the ol~•.· , to. thInk, there wou no Catholic' Church the teacheIil The Coptic Catbolics of MlNIA nUID- . coOperation in the.' seminarY further problem. because there "'d 't . 'tal 1 th t th ' would be no fUl:'ther basis.for ~a e 1, crys. . c e~ra e~ . ber 6,000 and two padahes are project have been approved'~y the tragic separation of Chris- ,.,ere, beyond questIOn.. . , 'eel' 'to cUe for the_the the Pontifical Commission fOr tians. .. . Enormous Problem Latin America. Word of the comparish ID one section 'of the eil)" and · But faith is essentialJ,y a gift Certainly there have beea mission's approval has been re...:.. .;",.' ft1-d....... :. AU the old INuish ID another seeOoo. The '.' rtII«r'J ~ n.old "ho_thedral" Is near. 001of God, not a matter of image or' valiant effortS made to root out ceived here from Archbishop even of understanding. We can- this bias. C",nscientious schoJal'8 'Antonio Samore, secretary of the fir Iht Orimta/ ChtmlJ. lapse and a new chureh and 1'eCl~"" ;not predicate God's action. more of all persuasions' or of none Holy See's agency, by Richard are bacl17 neeclecl. 55,000 will 'oover the cost of these two stnlO:'than to say that it is the heart of have endeavored to correct the Cardinal Ctishir,g, Archbishop &urea. The People win ... able, to raise some of ibIS monel' &hemof .Boston and' chairman of the _va but outside help Is needed to ,atberOie oomplete amoUJi&. ' :the mystery of his mercy and iJilage, or at least to bring it into ~ ~'. U. S.Bishops" 'Latin America ;·justice. reasonable 'foCus. Our business is not with the ' . Committee, THANKSGIVING AND CHRISTMAS ;'gift'itself, it is wi~ the removal But the .task has only partia~ . 'Details of the' proj~ct were 'of the obstacles to faith whic~ been carned out. and there are made public by F!lther John i. GIVING THANKS,to God at Thanksgiving-time ftUs the minds'; . ; encumber the minds of owr vast areas where ~t has not e~eD Considine,M.M., liire<;tor of the of most of us; at'least briefly, with thoughts of all the good , contemporaries, been attemn~ed. . Something 4tin America Bureau, National things that God has given .us. We begin then, too, to think about Poisoned Wells 01 History needs to be ~a1~ here, unfort,uCatholic Welfare Conference. Fr. " , what we .will give' othe1'8. at Christmas-tlme. ' .' In the American Protestant nately, of thefal1ure of C;:athoh , "' .. ., Considine is'·a· New Bedford mind, even when it is honesuY the~selves ~o produce the scholnative.' ' . .GIvING GIFTS at C~rlBtmas·time,'or at 'anytime, external"" atriving for fairness and! objec- arsh,lp reqUired to set the record manUests our love. for. those ..to whom we give the gUts. . The . ,. Th~. seminary which. will ac'Uvity, there is a hard resid~ s.tra1ght. feast Of .Christ's blrt~. is .especially the time of giving, 'for lIN' .'. commodate 300, will be built oa., ,'D18trix of fear of the Catholic .. Too often we have relied "08 a matching funds basis, with, 60 ,. arG.' more conscious. thell, '~/ln at any other 'time of the year. ., , Church, Layer over layer.it has rhetoric to do the work which ~. cent of the ·money provided ." . o~ ~'8 love for: ~ In.glVlng ,us His Divine Son. ' . ' , -: ':. 'been formed during four'ceritur-:- .only scientific training and en", .. ,.'., ". : . -. j... , .,: ,",. ...., ,'. ",. ,,", . . by J~e V. S. Bish!)ps and 40 ,per :ies violence' and bitterness. ' tire deyotion . to the tr,ut~ can ,~nt.. by .Br~zilian Catholics Gf <'. " .GIVING NECESSITIES to: the ..Poor;, .ofthe Holy Land .hu. . , '. Luther's commission to the perfomi. Yetit may be suspected been the special concern of the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WEL.·· .' t4~ a~a ~ be .served.,. , .' ".. 'Centuria'to'rs" of Magdeburg that ,that were our scholarship beyond 'FARE' AssbcIATION since' the ·partltlon of Palestine,. t.welve. 'they rewrite history in such \l !reproach and'many times more · .years :a~~. ·~aCI1. Cbr~tm~ 's!nce ~~e,!I, "~alestini~ faa,Ui~s '.ID,': 'way as to destroy the previous 'productive. t~at it is, .th~re would .:x:ile.a~.d inStitutI?nll of',.lllerc:y sh~lterlngaged. orph1ine~' sick,:: .' 'concept·, of·the' Church as 'the' 'still remain an 'enormous proban~ ~iP~Ie.rf~lesti~~ana,h~v~ re~lved g':fts.mad~ f?1j8ib~ bJ', ,.. , living Body of Christ· and subitl- lem before!-ls,. . our ne ac o!'!", ,:. ,.,' ;', ,. .' " .: . ." ' tute an ,interpretation of unmiti. Needs .DeeP. TberapJ' WE APPEAL to aU of you. who. win be thanking. God fOl' 'gated cruelty. and complete diil- .,- It has bee~. saidrepeated17 10 much this Thanksgiving, D'ay, to 'send us a glft'for the PALo" 'regard for .Christian' e~ics. and .that the Catholic Church in ESTINIAN REFUGEES, 10 that they will thank Almight)' ~ OIL BURNERS" 'morality, was' ,unquestionably America need~ a much .better foIo the material eareHe is taking of them throtigti you. .:. , Also comple&e Boiler~ Burner one of the most successful ven- .program .of public relationS if or' Furnace Uriita. Efficient ,:tures in brain-washing the world her image is to ·be brought into low cost beMlng.' Bumer and' A, GIrr of .$10.110 .",ill help substantial" In bringing food. . · has known. true pea-spective. Right enough, fuel 0.11 sales and service. · clothing, shelter,-just .the ,basic necessitles-to the poor of :' Long after, when the ~riginal so long as public relations meaD the Land of the Fb:;lIt ,Christ!D8S Could you. send .a donatioa . Co.~ i bases of his quarrel WIth the more than mere advertising and now, 10 that we wUl be .~ble to suppa, these thinp 'at .ChrfA:. 00 Mt. Pleasant Street : Church were either rejected or emphasis on advantageous news maar. New Redfprd WY I-zm : forgotten, the man.ufactured releases. : myt/:l con~in'led to poison the ·.The distortion ill deeper·thait POVERTY 01' SPIRIT. bumUltJ', eomp1lll8loa. Jas6cle. ·lDel'ClJ'. : wells of history. . the newspapers' .it requires a · p~ 01 hean. traaqal1llt)', wIIUD&'Ile5S to sutrer--&IIeM wen . ' , ~1I~ck Leg-~nd . therapy more penetrating thait QualIUea 01 an the saints; poIisessecl ID their , Out of It, In due bme, emer~ed a press conference. It has to get lulaesa by Christ. aU who _aid imitate Him · the B~ack Le~end of Sp~~1Sh inside that hard resi1ual matriJt I&rlve for tb_ eharaeterfat1c8 of lIOaI. ANCatholIc t~rror1sm. As a ??btical 'before it oan dissctlve it. TONY PURAYIDATHIL and THOMAS POT,weapon It was magRlflcently 'BUSINESS, AND HBNPUIlAKAL. semlaariauat SAINT 16: effective, one of the most pow~ . DUPUcAnNG MACHINES .SEPH'S SEMINARY Ia INDIA. . . . SISTER : erful bludgeons in the. hands of ~nd ancl Morga" SIs. CLOTILDA aacI SISTER 'pros MABIA. · the British foreign .office in its novleea 01 th ADORAnON ,81STBRS also ~_ FALL RIVER .long contest ~or imperial su,', .. DfDlA.waD& to ....... u· fuII7 u possible a~~. 'premacy; / . WY 2-0682 ,OS 9-671'2 _____ted Ia the BeaUt1IAlea. U JUII MaId a -.tit.~: J: McGINN~ Prop. . uta or a ncwlcle J'ou woald Ite belplqto &ftIa IDClIl aad ....... ... who. Iivilll ~ the aeaU&udea. wID draw . . . . . . 0CMIIItrrIIIeII e10ser to CIuist. $800 Is.the oos& of tralalac alemlaariliBl' . ...... &be coa 01 tnIaIac a aovlea.·. .l ' . ' . FORT SMITH (NC) -All the priest~ in the United States could . COnsult :oot overcome South America'li: PLEASB REMEMBER ,GOD AND. HIS' llrUSSIONS IK "Youa· . :shortage of Clergy, a mission ex~ ," WILL.-' . ·pert declared here, . ' '. : ,Father Henry Clocker, natiorial :Secretary of the CaJ1i~lic .Stu'dents' Mission Crusade, told stu·dents at S1. Scholastic~'lCAcad FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN. ·PNsId..... ·" " ~ ~y that even if every priest in , Miir. P!~er', Tuoh,.. Nat'l ~/ .' ~ . 365 NORTH" FRONT STREET ;.' .' .,. Send 011 comlllunieatfoni toI .: . '... : this country were to: volunteer EXeter 'for South' America, that contiNEW BEDFORD cATHOLIC 'NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIAnOtf· .... Dennisport a 8-2291 'nent would still lack prieSts. WYman 2-5534 480 lexington Ave~ at 46th St. '~e~ Yc:»ik l? N~ Y. ·.There are about'54,OOO priesis in 8-2292 MAIN ST. ." -..t... ..'" __ ~ United 'State9~ .
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THE ANCHOR:-Diocese of fan ·lliv~r-Thurs.,Nov.3,'1960
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YOUTH AWARDS: Girl and Boy Scouts and Junior Daughters of Isabella from all parts of the Diocese crowded St. Lawrence Church, New Bedford, on the Feast of Christ the King as Most Rev. James J. Gerrard opened Catholic Youth Week with a solemn presentation of Ad Altare Dei awards to Boy Scouts and Marian Medals to Girl Scouts and Junior
Illinois Educator Proposes' Aid for Private Colleges GRAFTON (NC)-Private' colleges must receive some form of puQ.lics~pport to insure a first-rate syst,em of higher education, the' president of'the University Of Illinois has said. Dr. David D. Henry has urged public and private colleges and universities to go only to publ.ic·. institutions, nit behind the recommen- but "also the differ.enceo.f o~inu .e .. ion among the pnvate mstltudatJons of President Elsen- 'tional spokesmen." hower's Committee on Edu"Although some ask for Fedcation Beyond the High School. Dr. Henry argued that Federal aid is already being given to higher education, but it is an uneven program that is not a substantial help to these institutions \ which expect enrollments to double shortly. . . Ample Precede~ts In the history of: Federal grants of all kinds, he said, '''the precedents are ample for aiding institutions and· organizations, whether public or private, which are operating in the national welfare." He cited Federal stibsidies to agriculture, to transportation, to hospitals and to highways. A barrier to a "clear view" of Federal grants to private insti-' tutions, he said, is not only the historical opposition of' those who thin'~ public r-~';ts should
Daughters. Left, Boy Scouts .preparing to enter church, center, girls enteJr between honor guard of Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus of McMahon Assembly, right, view of church during ceremony. Marian Medals were conferred on 50 girls and Ad Altare Dei Awards on 68 boys. This was one of the many activities around the Diocese during' Catholic Youth Week.
Americans to Give Argentina Statue WASHINGTON (NC) - U. S. Catholics will., be represented soo~ in 'one of:Latin. Am4;!rica's great~st shrines of the Blesse4 Virgin by a statue of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. The ~tatue has been given to the. shrine of Our Lady of Lujan, near Buenos Ahes, Argentina, by the' National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. It is one of 25 statues of Our Lady being given to the Argentine shrine, where devotion to ihe Blessed Virgin dates from the 17th century, in connection with the Inter-American Marian Congress to be held in Buenos Aires November 9 to 13. The statues honor the Blessed Virgin under each of the speciai titles by which she is venerated in the nations of the western hemisphere.
eral tax exemption for' educational expen.se, as a? indire.ct Fe~eral. subSidy to, pn"~'''! educa.tlO.n, msofar a~ .It would permit mcreased ~Ulbon, oth~rs refer to F~eral. g.ra?ts as If they ~ere e~brel~ I~~mlcal .to educational mtegrlty, he saId. Four Points He urged public and private colleges <\nd universities to support the four recommendations of the President's Committee,' which is now defunct: Home' of' Martyrs. Th points; he said, are:' 1) Becomes .Seminary· continuation of Federal loans for revenue -producing facilities, LONDON (NC) ...:... An estate such as dormitories;'" 2) pay- . belonging to an English family . ment' of full costs .. 01. . research .which. gave two martyrs to the and service'contracts with insti- C.hurch ·has become a seminary . ' f or· . for. 'Iate .vocations•. lutions; 3) grartts- i n-ald slum clearance where education-. The Blessed Sacrament Father, al institutions are involved; 4) •.. bought the' 40-room medieval - grants· for constru"ction of aca- house, 'Blakesware; and 50··acres demic ·buildings. of parkland near Wa~e ,in lJerifordshire fr9m the Catholic Ger-
Pope Conse'crates E'ight Bishops;' 8r~::g:;ard,i'~~~rmerow~er, of 'Church is ~ngland's premier Catholic, m· Sy mbolls CaIIsTh · e I'.. .Baronet and is related to Blessed VATICAN CITY (NC)-Eight which has been announced and' Miles Gerard and Blessed Ed:' .
newly consecrated bishops sit- is being prepared; a vision of ting enthroned in St. Peter's the seminaries and institutions were hailed bY Pope John as of higher Catholic culture the symbols "of the Church's acti.. world oyer; a vision of the re~ vities and anxieties in this par- resentabves of the Apostohc ticular hour of history." See in countries in Africa and Pope John consecrated the Asi~; a vision. of ttheh.dtiOCes~s . ht bishops - two "of them which are openIng 0 IS ory 10 elg , . the 0 Id an dn.ew ' Americans-on the second anni~ wo rId ." versary . of his election to the B.I~ an sObVlOrS. r,efere~ce to papacy. In a discourse at the end . hiS oP thwar;: ro~ s ~. ~ a~ of the four-hour ceremony the ead 0 f e . ~encan IS ops Pontiff alluded to the. fact that overseas. chanbes agellcy,. the in the two years he has been .Plope sa.I~ the ~tehremohnY'twbals P Pe he has created 38 cardinals a so a vIsion 0 f e c an a e °d onsecrated three groups of institutions (of, the 'Church), an h c h'Ig hI Y men' t ' t b' mprising 30. in' all onous an d operaIS ops c o . . h . Po e ing effectively in meeting conThe . new . bishops ,t ~ ~ stantly new demands created by ·consecrated .mclude two Amert- the most urgent necessities of cans, Archbishop Josep~. F. Mc:- the terms." Geough, the new Aposto .-: Delegate to South Africa, and Auxiliary Bishop Edward 'E. SwanMEN 17 - 25 strom of Brooklyn, N.Y., execu- . JOIN THE NEW tive director of CathQlic Relief Services-National Catholic WelSociety of Br:others of. fare Conference. 'Living
Vi8io~'
It was the Pope himself who best summed up th~ :ceremony when in his discourse he called· the assembly a "stupendous 'and llving vision of the Church today .•• a vision of the council
OurLady of Providence For information
writet~
FATHER MASTER
St. Joseph the Wo;ker Novitiate'
. Warwi~k Neck~ R."
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mund Arrowsmith, who died. for the Faith during the Reformation.
Marshall. Says Denial' of Rights Endangering U.S. Government . NEW YORK (NC)-"The denial of basic constitutional rights' is destroying the. very foundation of the principles recognized 'by all of us as inherent' to our own well being and to the future of our government," a leading, Negro spokesman has warned.
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Recipients of the awards were' George A. Moore of Cleveland and William Duffy, Jr., of Wilmington, Del, Mr. Marshall said "each individual Christian whether in New York, Mississippi or Florida h~s,the definite responsibility. -
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THE' ANCHORThurs., Nov. 3, 1900
Asserts- Serious Problem$ Beset Soviet RI.!l$sia
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LOS ANGELES (NC) Russia is in serious trouble and the West should capitalize on it, Ar.chduke Otto
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von Hapsburg told a Pacific '. Coast regional meeting of the Catholic Press Asociation, stressing that the balance of -power is shifting in favor of the West. "The situation is gradually playing into our hands," he said. "Now is the time to talk clearly and 'strongly to Russia. We should not lose our .nerve or put on a display of weakness." He offered two reasons for his optimism: ' 1) The eastern European satellites are draining over a billion rubles a month in idd from Russia, more- than she can stand. 2) The rift between Russia and Red China is more serious than the West realizes. Changed Position "The Hungarian revolt," he said, "fundamentally changed Russia's whole position in Eastern Europe. . "Since 1957 an uninterrupted procession of satellite finance ministers has gone to the Kremlin asking for economic aiel tQ forestall a revolution in their countries. . "In the past 24 months Soviet, . aid to Eastern Europe ,has been 28 billion rublesc-a nice sum when you consider that the eM:ficial exchange is four rubles to the U.S. dollar." Dying Doctrine With Russia in g r o.w i n g .. trouble on both its European - and Asian frontiers, now is the '. time for the West to bargain bard for a settlement of the east European question, declared' Archduke Otto, son of Cha~les IV, .last king of Austria-Hungary. "Weare suffering in this free world from an inferiority complex," he said; "Too many believe communism is the wave of the future. Our West. has lost much of its faith. We must find again the strength of deep moral fiber. "The threat is more in our weakness than in their strength. Marxism-Leninism is a dying. doctrine. It has been proved faulty and it wOl,lld die if not backed by military might.H
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NEW CROP - Fancy. Crisp
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Continued from Page ODe iIy. He took his bachelor's, master's and :octor's degrees at St. Louis University, and has been a professor at Fontbonne College, :::t. Louis University, and Catholic ~Triiversity. . - At the latter, he has since 1946 . bee' director of Family Life and Marriage Counselling Institutes. His publications include many books on marriage and the fam- . ily and he holds membership in a large nr'llber of. or,::.::J.izations dealing with sociolo:", economics ::J.d family life. The FC'~ily Life Bur' .lU of the Fall ~iver Diocese 1..; sponsor.ing Dr. Clemens' seminars unde: the direr ~ion of Bishop Connolly. Priests active in the giving of pre~Cana conferences will supervise arrangements in New Bedford ard ....a11 River. . It is announced that books CUi the subjects cOvered by J)r. Clemen" will be on display --at the seminar and attendants w~l receive material suggestedb,. the ·speaker.
LOro:TTO (NC)-,Yather ,Eel',nard Moffitt, T.O.R., lhasbeen named mission procurator eftihe Sacred Heart province of Franciscans of the Third Order Regular: . Father Moffitt, a native eM: ,Pittsburgh, was ordained to the priesthood in 1955, and .has served in parishes and schools i.n Philadelphia. As mission proc'Illrator he will be in charge of obtaining and ·shi.pping supplies and equipment for the 'CQINllU1l..' . '~it,.~s;India missioa, , . -
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 3, 1960
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Celebrate Catholic Youth Week Throughout Diocese .
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1-, Plan to Begin Work On Canadian Shrine
Lutheran Bishop of Berlin Sees Ecumenical Council for Catholics PORTLAND (NC) - Bishop Otto Pibelius, Lutheran Bishop ot. Berlin, Germany, says he thinks the Ecumenical Council will be a matter for the Catholic o church and not for Protestants. "We do not expect the coming together of chuches will be improved by the coming council, and in it the Roman Catholic church will consider its own problems in which we are not directly involved," he has told the Catholic Sentine\ newspaper of the Portland archdiocese. He was asked if his church will send an observer to the Ecu-
Cardinal Blesses College Building NEW ROCHELLE (NC)F ran cis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, dedicated the new $1,500,000 adminJstration and fine arts building at the College of New Rochelle here. Dedicated as the Mother Xavier Fitzgerald Memorial, the building was named for a pioneer college administrator, who was registrar. from 1915 until her death in 1950. The building provides classroom and studio space for art, drama, music and speech, as well as offices for the administration and faculty. Msgr. John S. Middleton, P.A., pastor' of St. Peter's Church, New York, former professor at Dunwoodie 'Seminary and the Cardinal's secretary for education, gave the dedicatory address. Michael A. Morrissey, Rye, N.Y., business executive, who is completing his term as trustee and chairman of the college's President's Advisory Council, was awarded the Ursula Laurus Citation for "distinguished llervice to the college."
GASPE (NC)-Construction of a national cathedral- shrine marking the Christianization of Canada will begin here in 1961. Archbishop Paul Bernier, Bishop of Gaspe, announced following a meeting of the diocesaon committee in charge of plans for the proposed new Cathedral of Christ the King.
menical Council .if invited to do
so. "I do not think the Protestant church of Germany will send I:l special observer, but 1 am sure the World Council of' Churches will do so-and it surely will be from one of our Protestant churches in Europe," he declared.
Su preme PontiffVisits New College Building ROME (NC)-Pope John paid ters . of St. Bede's College for late vocations here on its dedication day. The Pope was received by the college's rector, Msgr. Charles Duchemin, the faculty and students. He made a tour of the new building. The college was founded in 1898 by Pope Leo XIII for inidIUe-aged men studying for the priesthood. It has been maintained since by the English Bishops.
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istrative personnel in 15 Frenchspeaking countries of Africa. The Lovan 'um Unive-' y is 11 Catholic school which was established in Leopoldville in 195'1 and is affiliated with the Univer_ sity of Louvain, Belgium. Its nursing school was opened jill 1958 with assistance from the Rockefeller Foundation.
Dorothy Cox
.Timothy Bryant
CL.A,M
NEW YORK (NC) The Rockefeller Foundation has given a grant to the Lovanium University in Leopoldville, the Congo, to help it establish a graduate nursing program. The foundation said the money will be used to help establis~ a center of graduate training for nursing instructors and admin-
Archbishop Bernier noted that it was here on July 24, 1534, that French explorer Jacques Chartier pl' nted the cross: This historic act, he said, made Gaspe the "cradle and, as it were, the baptistery of North America as a Christian continent." Site of the proposed cathedral is a promontory at the point where the York and Dartmouth rivers meet the Bay of Gaspe.
a private visit to the new qU'ar-
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. THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall,Ri;'er-Thurs.;Nov. 3,1960
Jesuit' University' Head. Advocates Colleges Tetlch Philosophy ~f Life
WASHINGTON (NC) - Col-they impnrt, but as teaching a leges. and universities should way of life." teach a philosophy of life for the' . All educators he said face the wel£~re of society, the president problems of "th~ declin~ of morof Georgetown University be.- ality in our country, 'the rise of lieves: 'rampant secularistic and mateFather Edward B. Buim, S;J., rialistic phiiosophies and attisays the. furiction of the Cat~olic .tudes among our people and' institution' of higher education 'their consequent evi13 in increasis not merely to teach, the forinuing crime rates; juvenile delin": las of Catholicism, but to impart quency, lowered standai'ds· of' the Catholic attitude toward life morality and even the blatant as a whole. . flouting and scoffing at the natuBut, he added, the necessity ral virtues o.f hon;sty, ,thrift, of giving students ."a consistent cour,~es'y, ~usmess mtegnty or ~md unified philosophy of life" is patrIOtism. a burden not only for Catholic institutions but for all educators "who regard their vocation not Continued from Page, One the light of the information commission'~ presirient. "If it is true, as the presidential debaters say itls, that the Continued from Page One decisions of the future will be . Father Haney was cite? for made by' voters~ 'then it is of lhis action during a 1959 incident supreme importance that we imin Adana 'Turkey, when he part to adults" an,' e'nlightened played a leading role in. aiding sense of responsibility,'" Bishop crew members of an aIrplane Wright declared. that crashed. , "In a democracy, in a voting Removes Injured· , nation. s\lch as Qurs, adult edu"Despite the' intense heat ~nd cation programs consequentiy 'dapger of explosiont the Clt~ have a: significant and vital " , lion said, "Capt. Haney unh~sl~ role," he said. lVIsgr. Carney echoed, this tatingly entered the b~rnmg thought. "To stand still intellec, 'aii'craft and succeeded In removing' several injured' crew , tually is, deadly" in.' a world and, members to a place of· safety. national environment that con-, " . . tinually change," he said., ·To Attain Maturity , The first to, get the .medal, . ','The strength of our demogiven for ,heroism not mvolveng actual combat wit~ the e~ . cratic society and the v:itality of ,~,. s Fathe,r (MaJor) Wll- the' Catholic ,Church .in' the emy" .wa. h environment" he , . CHAPLAIN MEMORIAL: , lIiam Travers, O. Carm.! w t o American received it in 1955, accordll1g ,0 argued, "are dependent up'on.the This I3-foot ;monument honAir Force Chie~ of Chapattainment of intellectuill' maors' the memory 'of Father lains Office in. Washmgton, ?,C. turity b'y our citizens aRd' reliJohn Washin,gton, one of Father Travers: w3;s cited' ~or gious'maturity by the members offering aid an.d comfort to'~",,:~ of the' Mystical 'Body 'of Chr{st."· the, heroic four chaplains Msgr. 'Car~ey outlined' st~p~ who die.d wh~n'thetroopship" soidiers trapped by ,a' 250-mllltmete'r cannon'. '.. ..' toward crE!ating ,8 climate for "Dorchester';' -\vas .. sunk, in. ' ... "Ahilough there was danger Catholic adult education "which , tli~ North' Atlantic in 1943. . of' gas '. explosion, fire . ~nd the would contribute to this "fntel- NC·'.· p" hoto. :',' ", ' Possibility' thatt.he'severed: gun lectual mat,urity." "The, educability of; the adult and carriage might roll forward and crush them, Capt, T"~vers must be brought to the attention . Continued fron:t,Page ,One remained with the soldi~.. ' the 'of .our Catholic educators," he , cO~l)1ented" anci. "the great de-, under the mariqate of: the ~, ,dtation said. ' sir~ of adults to continue fearn"'lI i g h 'Comm,issipner, for Refu,ing ~us't be made' clear to ,the teachers: and administrators' of ge;~e' Holy' S~e's' c~ntribution' '. . .. . ,Continued from .~age One , .our· educationalsyst.em." represents the, net i~come fro'!!· of the' Castro l'egime, ainong, the sale of a special series. of them:, C 00· 00 . , ' " Vatican City postage stamps and. , '''Farmers' who ,were at'. first Continued' from Page' Oo,e ',first-day covers 'issued to ,com':' , promised ,land as' 'result of . memorate World Refugei! Year." "a'"grarl·an".reform 'n'ow find,th,'em- tainly as a priest I,"Hlust ack" . ' ".mcome', " .. " " One fourth of the,total . . 4ielves /working on state-owned nowledge that' Mass; and Holy, will be allocated' to the Pales-' ';'llectl've farms, At the, same 'Communion are beneficial to tine 'Agency .and' . the remammg .' . ;. w time, agricultural! production is ' the child. However: an a~ edu~ \hree-fourths to the High ComtaIling.; " " . . " ,: : . " . cator, t'feel' this" is Ii' violation rriissi6ner for Refugees;:"Bishop Workers have' seen., t Ii e i r. of the' purpose of the school." Griffiths told' the: conference. " unions' taken over. by commun-" Father, D'Amour, priest of ' 'Applauds ,Decision' ' ists 'and their wages decline., . the l\1:'a'rquette diocese,' spoke: to' "'This' allocation', he saiei,' is' in " Manufactured, Currenc:J~,',,' a group discussing the., first' line with "suggestions of' those The national bank directed by joint' effort by the",.women's· who" have, directed 'and ad..;" .""rneslo" "Che" G'uev'a'ra, Ca's"t'r'o:'s council arid '"the Nation'al Coun': .. ' "" ,, ' vanced World Refugee .Year/' right hand m;m, "manufactute~'~ c. il. of Ca~holic Mer. ,-' cpncern~ ~ .TheHoly See's representative' currency which contributes,' to ", ing :home' and' school associa-' ,told the confe~erice that: "no' one. ' inflation and a declining .value tions, the' 'equivalents' in paro- more. readily: than the Holy See of Cuban mopey. , . , chiaI' scho.ols 'of parent:teaclier' applauded" Jast year's. UN de-. associations.' :., . , ", , , , ., , The. Treasury , Ml'nl'st~,y . cision. to continue" the .Palestine' .' has ·set, . aside ta~ reforriland..irial,iglu'at':' '. . Frank DiScussi,ons. ,Relief andWol'ks Agency, which . ed instead a program .of high ' Father D'Aino'ur said: home'~recc:ignizec;i that' despite intri':' should' be means . ques. . t',ax'atl'on al'med a't "wiping' out school gro'ups . , " cate and unsolved political , , prl'vate ent·erprl·se. of "frank . and. detailed' discus. ' one' millioq , , ' " one ." ' tions, refugees, 'A growing oil s.hortage in, sion" of issues between p a r e nmillion t s · 'human beings " ,. simply Cuba will soon force the regime, and teachers, ,,', ' . could not be abandoned with , "Parents" ., .. to l'nsll'tute gasoll'ne ratl·onl"ng. ., ' he said , "must be ',callolJs indifference." Commenting .on increasing convinced 'that they must reas~ tension between the Church and' sume mariy tasks t.hat they have the regime, Dr. Valdespino pre~ delegated to the school. Teach~ ORCHID ,DINER dieted that the Church would ers must be convinced, they must, '[: prevail because of its inexhaus- rellhquish 'respopsibilities they "The place to meet your friends" tible moral strength." have assumed or that have been thl'USt upon them." Open 24, Hours Home-school associations, he stressed, must get parents back Cor. Kempton' Street and into the· educational process and Rockdale Avenue must give the teacher an under:':' NEW BEDFORD, , . The youth committee of the standing of the modern Ameri:'
ContiIiued from Pagel ,One ,,' the Roman collaria' banried.-' ' Father McQuade stressed that Bishop Joseph A. Burke of the mission of the Church is to Buffalo told the' 500 conventioo Christianize the whole world" delegates that "when the Cathoand "the. Pope, bishops. and lic Church speaks in matters of priests can't do the job alone." faith and morals, it sPeaks for The layman in the Church is Christ, who is Go~l." "the bridge between the Church For this reason, Bishop Burke and the world,"he said. "The said, the Church "must be un'lay apostolat.e must carry Christ 'compromising in matters of to where He is needed and where truth' ana principles."
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New Bedford District Council of can home. Catholic Women, under chair-' , manship of Miss Mary E. Foley, . ~~~Q~~~~~~~~~~Q~~~~~~~~~~Q~~~~ will sponsor a Catholic YO\lth. "', Organization Workshop' at 7:30 Sunday night,' Nov.' 6 at Kennedy Center. Broch~res 'The program will include ·an introduction by :Edward Tighe' Jr., area CYO president; ·a· his,. . tory of the CYO by JohriRohr; and an explanation' of 'its four , , point program by s.elected area members. ' OFF S E ""':;': LETTERPRESS" Rev. E,'ward C. Duffy, area CYO chaplain" will speak and 1-17 COFFIN AVENUE Phone WYman 7~9421 musical s-lections will be offered by member:- of the Ji.m~ New Bedford, Mass.' ior Daughters of Isabella, Hyacinth Circle. _ .
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, THE ANCHOR-:Thurs.. Nov. 3, 1960
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Non-league clashes around the circuit are topped by the Attieboro-Mansfield fray which is long on tradition in that locale. Inter league competition brings together Barnstable and Taunton and Falmouth at Vocational. Barnstable won its first game of the season last week, a 15-6 decision over hapless Bourne which was also seeking it sfirst Conference victory of the season. Sunday Game The Crimson of New Bedford have Ii Sunday encounter with Malden Catholic on the latter's field. The Eck forces, lowbridged the last two times out by West Springfield and Brockton, have their work cut out for them inasmuch as Malden, also a Class B power, has a very respectable 4-1-1 record up to now. Here and there on the sports beat: Ed Meehan, Harvard freshman by way of Oliver Ames, was elected captain of the Cross County team last week. Meehan was an outstanding miler at Ames where twice he won the State title. With the University of Mass. grid squad is Fall River's Ray McDonald. The former Durfee three-sports star is holding' down a guard position wit.,. the 'Redmen ... TomArruda, Fall River's gift to the Giants' organization, won his first game in the Arizona Winter League last week, a 10-0 decision over, the Orioles. The Cubs and the Dodgen are' also in the circuit. With the Cuba is ,Danny Mt.rphy who was signed out of S1. John's Prep early last Summer' for a fabulous bonus. Mention' of Cross _ Country ,recall that Lawrence High of Falmou~ won Southeastern Mass. honors last week. The Cape flyers put together a sp~endid 5-;0 season to lead the eight team circuit home. See you next week.
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Archbishop Berry. Heads Conference ATTAWA (NC) --Archbishop J. Gerald Berry of Halifax, bas been named new chairman of the administrative board of . the Canadian Catholi~ Confererice. The"CCC is the voluntary asl!lOCiation Of the cardinals, archbishops and bishops of Can. ada. It is the. Canadian counterpall't of the· National Catholic Welfare Conference in· the United States. The CCC administrative board has as "ex officio!' members His Eminence James Cardinal McGuigan, Archbishop of Toronto, ilis Eminence Paul Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of Montr~ai, and' Archbishop Maurice Roy, Primate of Canada.
CYO TOURNEY: Winners in CYO golf tournament, left w right, Robert Nowak, St. Casimir, New Bedford; Gene Mazzone, Sacred Heart, Taunton; Richard Begnoche, St. Mary's, New Bedford; Charles Reedy, Holy Name, New Bedford.
State Flag Flies Over New Ohio Building at Rome Boys Town ROME (NC)-It was a proud day for the Buckeye State when its flag was hoisted over the Ohio Building of Boys Town of RO,me. _ A town counell was called on' .that day by the bo~' mayor and his councilors. As he called the meeting to order and stood for opening prayer, tlu:ee cardinals, three archbishops and a bishop, priests, diplomats and governmental representatives of three nations stood with him. The distinguished delegates at the Boys Town council meeting were Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, Giuseppe Cardinal Pizzardo and AmI e to Cardinal Cicognani; Archbishops Edward Hoban' of Cleveland, Martin J. O'Connor of the North American College in ;Rome., and Giuseppe Burzio of the Titular See of Gortina; Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Krol of Cleveland. Also Irish Ambassador to the Holy See Leo MacCauley, American Embassy Minister Outer-
St. Mary's U. Honors Hollywood Composer SAN ANTONIO (NC) - St. Mary's University has honored Dimitri Tiomkin, one of Hollywood's distinguished composers, as a Distinguished Professor of Music. Officials of the university conducted by, the Society of Mary said the institution's honor was chiefly in tribute to Mr. Tiomkin's score for John Wayne's movie, "The Alamo," which bad its premiere here the same day. Also, in connection with the film and the Alamo itself, Father Peter V. 'logers, O.M,I., offered the opening prayer at a service at the former Catholic MissiOiIl which .became a fortress.
bridge Horsey, Prince Marcantonio Pacelli, former Rome Mayor Urn' rt,., Tupini and representatives of the Italian government. The meeting opened with welcome addresses by Boys Town councilmen--or councilboys-in Italian, English and French. Then Theodore Gullia, representing Governor Michael DiSalle of Ohio, and Joseph CavoJi, representing Mayor Anthony Celbrezze of Cleveland, presented flags of the state and the city to the Boys Town council. Archbishop . Hob a n then blessed the cornerstone of the building and the eminent guests signed a parchment to be sealed inside the cornerstone to record the event for posterity. The mayor of Boys Town left his bench to play the clarinet with the Boys Town band. While the band played The Star Spangled Banner, the flag of Ohio was raised aloft. It thus took its place alongside flags of the states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey and California, each flying over the buildings that their eharity had given to needy Italian boys. .
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WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr. Bertrand J. Gulnerich has resigned as field representative 01 the National Center of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine here. The resignation was accepteo with deep regret by Bishop Charles P. Greco of Alexandria. La., Chairman of the 12-member bishops' committee which guider the CCD. Msgr. Gulnerich, 49, resigned on his physician's advice after almost two yeays of illness. He is now in 51. Jerome's Hospital. Batavia, N.Y. Bishop Greco praised him fol' his "outstanding service" to th(' CCD. "I commend you most highl~' and thank you in the warmest terms for your contribution to the development of 'the CCD in this country," Bishop Greco sai<; in a letter to the Monsignor The letter was made pubJir here. Newspaper Columnist Msgr. Gulnerich, a priest of the Buffalo diocese, joined U!(' staff of the national center in 1954. He traveled extensiveI)' throughout 'the Unite-l states on \ behalf of the agency chargee with the religious education of Catholics outside Churc' educational institutions. Msgr. Gulnerich wrote II weekly column from 1956 to 1959 which was made availabl(' to Catholic newspapers by ~ Feature Service of the Piell[ Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference.
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travels to Fairhaven, and in Conference play, Case is at Bourne, in addition tJ the aforementioned Dighton _ Wareham tilt.
Objec;tionabl.e Movies Harm Film Industry RALEIGH (NC) - Al,bert M. Pickus, president of Theatre Owners of America, warne,d here, of "inestimable long - range harm" to the movie industl'J' from objectionable films. Mr. Pickus told the annual eonvention of Theatre Owners of North and, South Carolina: "I feel most sincerely that Hollywood is confused in its own ' definition of 'success'... I would not term any picture a successful picture ... if its basic theme ill not in good taste.' I do not ~lieve a picture can ever be termed successful ... if its advertising theme and its approach is unwholesome." Mr. Pickus said he has been told by "theater owner aitatheater owner" ,of "adverse public reaction" to "tasteless" an4 "overq sensational" moviea.
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By Jack Kineavy Undefeated-untied Durfee and once-beaten Somei'set, Bristol and Tri-County leadei's, respectively, are inactIve this week on the competitive front but you may be sure that both camps will be humming as Coaches MontIe and Kinney i"eady their charges for eli- Ueboro tussle _ winless Dartmaetic games one week mouth doesn't figure to break hence. The Hilltoppers have into the victory column against a holiday date with Coyle on the in and out Rocketeers; Coyle
Nov. 11th, while Somerset treks to Wareham the following day for what shapes up as the game of the year in Conference circles. Durfee, the surprise package of the 1960 sea son, can clinch the BCL title with a victory over arch rival Coy 1 e . Should this materialize only powerful New Bedford, the Red and Black's traditional Thanksgiving Day opponent, will stand between the amazing Hilltoppers and an undefeated season. Somerset, de fen din g Conference champions and themselves somewhat of a pleasant surprise this campaign, can register a second successive title with a victory over Wareham which must get past Dighton-Rehoboth this week, to stay in contention. The Regionals started fast but crippling injuries to halfback Ernie Carpenter and playcaller Carl Stonstrom have caused the Falcons' attack to sputter the last three times out. Coach Dick Dial thinks that Stonstrom may respond to direct the Falcons against 'the powerful Capeway eleven wbich 'continues to show to advantage despite the loss of its first two quarterbacks. Wareham lost to Attleboro, 6-0, last week in a non-league tussle. The defeat, the second. of the year for Coach Frank Almeida's team, dropped the Blue from ,contention in Class C. Moving up to share third .,lace in the listings are Attleboro, '59 runners-upin the division, and Somerset which has now won five straight after an opening day 16-0 loss to Mansfield. Plymouth and Don Bosco, both undefeated to date, r.ank first and second, ~~spectively, in Class C. Class Leader Dennis-Yarmouth, D pacesetteF, had, to stave off a desperate last quarter surge. by Dighton last week to preserve its record inviolate. A successful poinas.;. after-to~chdown play iced a 1412 victory for Coach Red Wilson's team. The Green. goeli against, 13rovinceto" "1. on Saturday and will wind up the season entertaining Falmouth one week later. Oliver Ames, the area's third unbeaten-untied aggregation has a Saturday date with Canton which currently ill 3-3 on the season. Ames has FoxbOro and Randolph in that order. Should both they and Yarmouth go undefeate":, the Cape squad will annex the title on the basis of its higher point 'average. In either event, . there is an excellent chance that the D crown will stay in Southeastern Mass. League games in the' area in-' elude the Dartmouth-North At-
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa)'tRiver-Thurs., Nov. 3, 1960
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GOLDEN JUBn~EK: In,an ,outpouring of aff~ction" parishioners of -Sacr.ed Heart Church, North Attleboro, are preparing a m~mmoth golden jubilee celebratio~ for Rev. Joseph ~., Larue, pastor. At left, Rev. Edmond L.· Dickinson (l~ft) ,.curate at Sacred Heart, with Father Larue. Center, the jubilarian with Holy Union Sisters from the parish school; left to
African Missions ....Ieed I'ncrea'$ed 1"11II · t ance L'ay A SSIS ,
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right, Mother Marie Lucille, superior, Sister Claire Elizabeth, Sister Paul Rita. Right, Rev. Roger LeDuc, curate, goes· over celebration plans with . Roland H.Fregault (center), tjcket chairman, and, Robert J. Deschenes, 'in charge of ushers for the event. AU parish so'cieties and organizations are represented on the committees. .
Fc;lther Larue· Marks Golden Jubilee in Priesthood
., Continued from Page .One : lard and R~v. J;l~rnard ·Guillet; AA I . s .' 'Masters' ., cha pam. , . of ceremonies, Rev.
:Describes, Need .Of Vocations
,ing .the Congregation of the Holy ,tar. He. lived at St. Joseph's' ,Cross. . .. Rectory in Attleboro until he ' Uses Restaura.nt ,,·was able to arrange, for a recCLEVELAND ('NC) - A N ew , Father Larue's first assign- -. tory. and' temporary chapel in QU.EBEC (N.e)-Lay as- John Hackett, 'Rev. Robert' ment was to 'St. Jacques parish, (South Attleboro. Jersey vocations director has .cited the example of the Saints sistance to African missions Kirby,' Deacon, Rev., .Arthur,. T aun t on., > H e. ser,ved " th ~re, f or " After 21 years at St. The- :as a way of meeting the .nee.t ..:.....:. both through personal' Bourgeois, .:M.S.;' . SUlldeaco,il, : nea~ly ~5 Ye.a.r~. At the t~me t.he 'resa's, ,Father Larue was trans- ,for priests in the' United states ' Rev, Roger .Gagne. . pansh cOl:nprlsed :the entIre cIty 'ferred; in January 1,947 to Sacred service and financial aid-,- '. 'Assistirig chap'ia:ns to Most Rev. 'a~d. Fat~er Larue became' a f~- .. ,Heart; .North Attleboro.' Tli~re ,and Sou!h A'!1erica. inus.t be. stepped up'if the Chu'\"ch '.James J. Gerrard; Rev, J3'er'trarid ~ ~1~I~r sight. a!! . he cycled ab.out '.he. reactivated many parish soMsgi: William F. Furlong, vo.. ~. J(): prosper there. 'Chabot, Rev; George .MarCil; vlsltmg parishIOners: the, SICk, :cieties . ,.and org!lnized several 'cations. direetor' of the', Newark.. : This"-is the opinion. of Dr.O:F~M,' Rev. 'Eugeiie Mal'coux,ag~dand'~entalpatIents at the ,yo,,;', groups.·,· :N.J. Archdiocese; ;told:a meet~ C'atideJoubert, a., y~un·g·,Cana-. ,'Sup'edor'of,the College de Levis,' ',' State H"Ig hI'Igh't's·o. . f 'th'e JU "b"l',· , "in'g of 'priests '.and- vocational , .Hospital. " ' . lanans dian' doctor whQ· returned' to 'Canada; . where Father Larue :. Oct:l,-1925, Father Lan,le w~s . years' at :Sa,creCl Heart' have in- ,represe'ntatives here that 5,500 Quebec .rece[}tly after sp~.nding was a :student', :wilf preach.,': - made pastor of St: ,'fcheresa,s . cluded ·c~lebr.ation' of . the 25th Catholic, churches in .this coun-. :/ · three 'yem's in I." orthern":Bh9de- . Rev:' Roger D.;~ LeD'uc' Churc~, 'SQut~ Attleboro,. "W~en.anniversary of the' parish school, ~try "ha ve no· priest . as~igned to sia, 'He was aceompanied home. : speak: at.. tjie .chil(f~en"s' High : he arrIved to eelebrate, the first •establishment of a yearly schoi- ' •.them. He said that South Amerby, his w':e .and.:three .chiidr·en, ,Mass 011 Moriday: Sister Eveline : Ma~s on.oc~. 4, the ,paqsh boun- :ilrship' .for a' member of. its grad~ 'ica ·needs 200,000 ri-iore J>riests. two of .whom' 'Were' ·boni ·'in 'M;ari'e, S·,U.S.C. will ,be direct!'ess : danes ~e1l1amed~Ulte. vag~e, no '.uaUng 'class' and the 'organiza'-, ~ Msgr, 'Furlong said: Africa. ,':, . "for the Mass; to be sung b>':- chil- ·~arochlal p~op~rtIes were m e.x- . tion a special' class for excep', Dr,' Joubert emphasized. the 'drenof the, scnool..' , .. , , ' 'Is.tence" p~tlshlO.n~rs, wel'e .muclt tional ehildren. ' ',' - "llistorJans ·tell us about the need. for:lay missionaries to ta~e 'Born in Canada ,'. '. '. dIspersed.,. ' . ". Th" . . h ld '. b'l '. early religious' people like- St; '. 'over much of ,the ,time-collsum. Flith'er'-Larue' began:'his ·pas-· ',' e'pa~~s, go, en JU I. ee was !Bernard of Clairvaux. He estab;.' ing work 'i~ .g,iission areas and, Father Larue,: sixth in,a' f~m-.'. 'torate with ,:a: restaurant for h.is marked m 1954 "a~d;t, modern ?lished' 163· monasteries and filled'., "free'th'. . 'rgy forspecifica!ly ,ily of sevim,chiIdr't!ll,was'hor.n churchand,a.counter:forhisai-- .'convent':for ·..the ,~Isters ?f the 'them, Ws s~id ·that, rriothers ,hid., , ' . , in' ,the province.of : Quebec in . . , " ,Holy UIUon, who staff the school, . " a'piritmi1, tasKs:":'- .. . '1886. The family mo"ve--d' to. New" : .' '. . ,. . , .', , , , niv.~.s ,dedica'fed in 1956. A parish ·their children' a'nd' ,,wives' iheir , . '. '., 'h" 'd"C ·th I' . :husban,ds, whe~ . passed, :" 'l·n. : In ,addi~l(?n,: .sal. !.l o,'~s : Bedfordin 1892;bec~inin~ me,I};;" ." '.bulletin, .has, neen distributed' . .f countries where the Church IS 'bel's, of "st." Hyacinth' . parish. ,~'Is .sinci.195S'·and, calendars. are a' :through i,liei r to:W ns .: "', . well established '.'must be .gen~r- 'Father Larue attended, the ,pa":, : ROME' ('NC)....:.The'Coilege.Of·:·yearly.gift:·to·:parishioners., '.' . _. "If'we were saints,·we woolet, ' " ~us ,in 'su~si~iZing,I!t.issio~.p r 9j:- . rQchialseh60l, and' in' 1899 'was . St. Mary of the Lake, houSe of 'Dialogue' MasSes are' a :featiu-e '; ;·.~ttraet: enildren ,ill spit~ of, ih~ ..: · eets.' .:.' .... _~ .. ',. -~ directed' by -Re·v.. Antqine Ber..;. . h~igher :studie.s. in _Ro~e 'of' the: ,: ot pa'rish;l'life'l -and' it';ha'$' been a. " ;di~tracFiQ;n~ '~f ~the..world.", : • : ':.~" ,.,poor.Relations ' . .: ube., [}astor, to the College. de ,Archdioces~' .of Chic~g~; wi~l 'great happi~·.to.th~ pastor~o .: Msgr:,': Furlong.~ alSo' 'told;'7 01,,' ~ .", :.;,; ., He,.- .said· ; that. b ....southern 'Levis'"near" Quebec, wli.er~', he. 'celebrate' ItS. ·25th .~nlllversary Sel :Holy., CommUllions con;- -Mrs. John Va"oghn;'a 19th .cen:': ' : " \ ' " , I , ; , .• ~~ric~; .. and·,~~p,ec!aUY ' .. No~~hpur11,ued .further.studies..... ' " ..Sunday.. ,' "", , . -stantly. incl1ease. In 1959,.fo1; ~x- .tliry,English,convertwhO·prayecl ,~~n ' ~hodesla .. : C'~ t ho 11 e s",,'" '~e entered th~"&e,ll1inai\"e :de, .', .~ore· ,COmmonly called' "The ample; nearly' 40,000 Commun-" -,for~ vocations'for--her 13' chU,,' poor relations' m. comp~r- Phllosophiein l\:Iontreal in 1905. Chicago -House," .the colle'ge has .ions were';dis4-ibuted iii the 'par- :dren. '~e note'd: .... . .' , " , ison··with·.the'missionaries of and· the' Grand-'Seminaire in servedsince·its foundiItio'l\ as'a ',ish:" ' .: . C ';-',:'" . , ' > . other sects who are seeking" to .1907., He" was ordained i~' S~P.- . "place 'of' tesidenee 'for priests,: Twelve; :young' men ·of the "Ail ffve of, her daughters enwin converts. . ' , .tember, 1910' by Bishop' Feehan " of the Chicago archdiocese who ,parish have ':entered the'priest-- .tered the ~onvent. All eight of He said :Anglicans. Jehovah's of Fall River. He' was the fourth 'come' to' Rome' for, graduate h90d,'six'during Father Larue's 'her sons entereii the seminary Witnesses and :mis3ional'ies of, of his family tQ enter r,eligio~, . studies. It has sheltered some .pastorship, and 22 girls have en- ,and six were ordained. Three the Outdo Reformed Church· al'e one brother becoming a Brother ,75 such' ·priest-students dur"ing tered religion; seven under of those became, bishops and one a cardinal." . all ,winning large' numbers of of Charity and two sisters enterits existence. Father Larue. . converts as a result of the material benefits their churches can offel; na lives. ' Dr, Joubert naid tribute to Catholic :',lissie-naries, both· men and women, for: " C1 1perhuman" efforts, But he said they must be backed up by fin' 1cial ai, if their w. 1':: '. to payoff in .rP.suIts.
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86-Year-Old Prelate Resigns Tucson See
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WASHINGTON (NC). - Pope John :1as accepted the resignation of Bishop Daniel J. Gercke of Tucson, Ariz" and named. him a titular archbishop., . On the retirement of the 867ear-old prelate, because ',of advanced ,years .and .:poor health" the Most Rev'..Franeis J., Gr~en,. who,was'named'in MaY; ll!il Coadiutor_,,:aisbop;:.~.ith .th!'!J.ight, of suceession, succeeds:to the·~e~.,· " Bishop .q:ercke, :who 'has led, the southern Arizona dioceSe of,· some ,276,000' Catholics since 1923. was promoted by the Pope · to b~ Titular· ,Archbishop" of ·Cotyae';m. '.
BusBli1less Session . PASSAIC (NC)."-:'T'he Eastei'n' · unit· of the Catholic Business, Education Association wi'll hold, its ."mal meeting ,at Pop~ Pius, XII Diocesan High, School ,hel'e · Friday. ·-Nov. 11." .-'
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