11.10.60

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John F. Kennedy First 'Catholic President of United States .

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Diocesan Summer Resident Takes O.tfice Jan. 20 Next ,

The :'ANCHOR .(n

Anchor of the Soul. Su~, a,nd li'irm-ST. PAUL

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" By Russell Collinge

1'he election is over-the votes have been cast and counted-and, as we have been:I , told at some length, the people have spoken. Almost always, as the result of an election, : somebody wins. In this case the winner is John F. Kennedy. He is now the elected: President of the United States of North America. Naturally, we can look for action ,in: line with the expressed' views of Mr. Kennedy and' his party. There may, or' may not, be upheavals. Foreign policy must be considered -Government posts must be filled-a Cabinet must be put to work-and, no doubt, there will be a vast number of other vital and necessary tasks confronting the, new President and his advisors. However, all this activity will be on a national or international level and will not impinge too directly, on the daily life of the average citizen. But that does not mean that we shall be untouched. Not here on the'Cape it doesn't. . The down-to-earth, righthere-and-now activity and accompanying problems will centel': around, ,Hyannis and the neighboring communities. For it is understood ,that Mr., Kennedy will use the family home in Hyannis Port as a 'Summer White House. And if you think there was trouble and confusion around here with Mr. Kennedy as a candidate-picture conditions with Mr. Kennedy as President! . Remember that fence around the grounds? Thousands of sightseers leaned against that fencepeered through, around and over it. All in the hope of catching a fleeting glimpse of "him"-or. Turn to Page Five

Feill River, Mass., Thursday, Nov. 10, 1960 PRice IOc $4.00 per Year Second Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River, Mass.

Vol. 4, No. 45

, © 1960 The Anchor

Scholar,s,hip ,Honors Memory 'of' Priest :, The Boston, College Club of Fall River, with the coopof the Catholic Youth Organization of ,the Fall River area, has announced the' e!,)tablishrnent of a full tuition scholarship to B'oston College, t'o be known as the, Reverend Charles' A~ Dono- ' Chairman, John F. Kineavy, van Scholarship Award. The Secretary, and AttorneY Charles scholarship - which will be J. Hague, Treasurer. The actual' renewable for four consecu- selection of the award winner er~tion

tive academic years - will be awarded on the basis of, genuine need and scholastic as well as community and CYO leadership. It will be worth $900 a year. The award is named for one of 'the best-known and bestloved priests of the Diocese. Rev. Charles A. Donovan is reme;nbered throughout tl,1e area as the beloved director of St. Vincent's Home in Fall River from 1915 until 1930. In 1930 he became rector of the Cathedral. Father Donovan died on Sept. 13, 1949 as pastor of Immaculate Conception Church, North Easton. The committee heading up the Scholarship Award is comPosed ot Dr. John E. Ma~ning,

will be made by the Boston College authorities. ' Requirements for the schotar,ship application are residence in Fall River, Somerset, Swansea, Assonet or Westport; a registered male member of the Fall River Area CYO or parish unit; acceptance by the Dean of Admissions of Boston College; transcript of secondary school grades; endorsement by school priilcipal; a desire to enter one' of the professions (theology, law, medicine, dentistry, teaching,etc.); qualities of leadership in scholastic activities as well as community affairs; two letters of reference (one from the applicant's pastor 'or assistant pastor); and genuine need for . Turn to Page Twelve , ' ,

Stress Blariket an'd Bedding Need to' Help "World1s Poor "The general need for clothing overseas remains unabated" Rev. Francis A. McCarthy, diocesan director of the Bi~hoPS' annual Thanksgiving Clothing collection emphasized today as he prepared plans for the 1960 collection during the week of Nov. The total value of overseas 20-27. ·The pastor of St. shipments during the past year Joseph's parish in North was $~0,297,954, Father McCar, . Dighton sal,'d $20. -ml°11'IOn thySousaId. th A"mel'lca an d AfrIca . re-

PRESIDENT·ELECT JOHN F. KENNEDY

Bishop Connolly Spearheads , Taunton ,School Campaign 'Most Rev. James L. Connolly spe~rheaded the drive for the Memorial Catholic Girls' High $chool in Taunton last night at the first training session for the special gifts committee held at campaign headquarters at the C.Y; O. Hall on High Street. Approximately 100 chairmen from all the parishes in the area a ttended the official opening of the, drive by the Bishop. Foll.owing his committee members will receive ning today with ~pecial gifts talk, Dr. Clement Maxwell, campaign material. T o'n i g h t, 'solicitations, and on Nav. 23 with general chairman of the workers will begin making indi- memorials to be donated, follow_ campaign explained the pro- vidual contacts for special gifts ing training sessions on the 16th cedure of the ,project, and of the in their parishes. The first reduties of chairmen and members ' ports of the special gifts comof the special gifts committees mittee will be given Thursday, from the 13 parishes joining in Nov. 17 at campaign headquarthe drive. tel's. , priestThe first training session for Rev. James' F. Lyons, , the memorial gifts committee director of the area, spoke brief- will be held Wednesday evening, ly of the goals of ' the drive and Nov. 16. Brochures describing the, the best means of achieving the school' and the various possible ' goal of $1125 , ,000 . Workers memorial gifts will be distribwere }'nstructed Ol} use of spec}'al 'uted about Nov. 15th. gifts manuals which were disFull Swing' 'b t d t' th t' , t 1'1 U e a e mee mg. With the ,parish chairmen, The drive begins on the parish general chairmen, special gifts, level ,today, when special gifts and memorial chairmen. 'announced last week, the.campaign will get, into full swing begin-

worth of usable clothmg. bed- ceived the lion's share of relief ding and. infants' apparel was, . ' D' h }', d' th 1959 United States aSSIstance, the North. Ig ton ~ea Ize. m e pastor noted as he pomted out col;lectlOn. that in, recent 'years ove'rseas . rhis year's, ~ill be th~' 12th relief' programs of the U. S. annual col~ectIon a~d ,WIll be Bishops have expanded most conduc.ted 111. the natIon s. 16,5?0 rapidly th~re. ' Ca~hohc pal'lshes. Collect,lOns m Eight countries in South pa~t y,ears, have produc~d some A mer i c a received 3,248,495 12q million poun?s of usable 'pounds of supplies _ value,d at clothing and beddmg'valued at $4,617,375. Chile, devastated by $115 million. , earthquakes and' tidal waves in Jrather McCarthy reported the May 1959, got the largest total i959 collection pJ:oduced 14,908,- -:-1,528,386 pounlis valued at 077 pounds of clothing.' This was $2,118,852. ' . PITTSBB-RGH (NC) , the second largest gross total In addition,. U. S. Catholics , The' greatest threat to dem~i~ce the appeal w~s iililugu- c~n,tribu.ted $1,5281~86 in special ,octacy.. is ',irreligion, the rated: !twas exceeded only by 'collections taken -up, for, :r,elief of Pittsbtirgh told the 1956 collection-given im-the victims of earthqual\:es in :,Bishop ,members of the legal profession petus bY' the Hlmg~rhin rev.~~u- qhile., ' , ' " tion""':':in ,which more than 16.5 S,uppliestotaling' ,2,041,599 attending the second anllual Red million nounds,ofmaterialswere, pounds and :Valued 'af$2,979,937 , Mass in 'St:Paul's cathedral. eollected. Turn to Page,Twelve Turn to Page Fourteen

Ave'rs Ir,religion' Is 'Pemocracy's Biggest, Threat

of

Attleboro' Sch,ool The Most Rev. Bishop James L. Connolly, D.D., will.preside over the blessing of the corner stone 'at the' new Bishop , Feehan Redonal High School in AUieboro tom~r~ow morning,. v~t!l,-aD8' ,Day, ,at' 11

o'clock.

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All the faithful of·the a~ diocese' are' invite~.

area

and, 22nd. ' Parish assessments were an,nounced' at all the parishes last Sunday. They afe: St. Mary's, $260,000.; Holy' 'Family, East 'Taullton, $65,000.,' Our Lady of Lourdes, $75,000.', Sacred Heart, ' $90,000.; St. Joseph's, North Dighton, $50,000.; St. Peter's, Dighton, $35,000.; :1. Joseph's. $125,000.; St. Paul's,' $60,000,' St. Jacques, '$90,000.: Roly Rosary, $40,000.; Immaculate Conception, $80,000.; St. Ann's, Raynham, $40,000.; and St.' 'Anthony's, $110,000.

Bishops' Agency Sends Supplies' To Pakistan NEW YORK '(NC)-The U.S. C~tholic Bishops' overseas' relief agency' has' sent an emel'gency 'shipment ,of ' clothing and medicines to ,East Pakistan fot victims of the recent cyclone and tidal wave.. Turn to ,P~e Twelve


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-';'t.'fher~'n' .P'asfor "$ees Possibility.:·:~"

. THE ,,\NCI::O:;-"-Dioeese' of Fall Rive,..::::'Thufs.'Nov.10; 1960': ' ,", i ' "

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Jesuit Presen'ts" Program For Racial Integration

Of Reunion ROME (NC) - A Germaa Lutheran theologian said here that the time for groupa ()f Lutherans 1:A) join the

NEW YORK (NC)-Total integration of races is possible in the U.S. if the American people carry out a threefold program embrating effective laws, sound public opinion and deep religious faith, a priest declared here. "No one of these items taken alone will Deplorable, SituatloDS succeed in eliminating disAmong them, he said, are the crimination from our midst," following: said Father Robert F.' Dri"In every Northern city Ne-

Catholic Church may be at hand. The Rev. Mr. Max Lackman.. wbose acceptaT':e c': the papacy as the c.~nter of Cbristiar: unity has been censured by leaders of his own church, spoke at headquarters of the International Unitas Association, atholie:sponsored organization dedicated to Christian reunion. Pastor Lackmann is one' or the leaders of the new Germaa Lutheran league that promotes ,reunion of Protestants and Cath.olics.

nan, S.J., dean of the Boston Col- groes are segregated in their lege law school. He preached housing on a 'checkerboard' pat(Nov. 5) in St. Francis Xavier tern. . church at a special Mass for the "There is abundant evidence advancement of 'Civil rights in that able Jewish citb'ens are dethe U.S. The Mass, sponsored by prived because of their religion the St. Thomas More Society, of positions in business and was' ()~ by Father' Anthony ·banking to which they are enS. Woods. S.J., the society's titled. chaplain. "Evidence exists thatquaU. Father Drinan said the 1960s fied Catholic professors are not CYO WORKSHIP: Participating in a workshop on the The league is an outgrowth of wili be 'a decade of crisis, and as readily hired at city and state CYO in Ke~nedy Center, New Bedford, are, left' to right, "Die Sammlung" (The Gatherposed the following question: colleges as non-Catholic profesing), small but influential unity Made T. Hampson, Gerald Normandin, Nickie J{alife, movement "Will the ·sixties forever bar the sors." founded six years ago. necessity of bayonets in Little The Jesuit priest referred to Edward Tighe and Mary E. Foley. The leag e :~se1f, Pastor LackRock or sit-in demonstrations in ,the second part of his program mann said, will admit only those Lutherans who have "a cath.olie the South?" ' a s "the hidden power of moral consensus." creed and spirit," md will' be Threeway Program ;'It seems likely," he stated, organized into small cells ill "We must be .persuaded," he .. that by 1970 almost 15 million various German cities.· eontinued, "that total integra- Negroes will be living outside FINDLAY (NC)-Public and In Lima, a 16-year-old youth Its purpose is '.J explain cleMtion, the total disappearance of of the South. How will the peo- judicial apathy, is permitting a who last month attacked an 18all segregation and discriminadangerous increase in sex year-old girl and nearly killed ly to the Lutheran pubiic necell'h er, h a d been arres ted .tw 0 years sity for reunion with the Cath>tl'on, I'S possl'ble'if we carry out . pIe of 'the9 North' treat their new crimes, many 0 f them d'lrec tl y , readmg . bi 'ler f or moI es ti ng a c h·ld. a t 'hreeway pro'gram'. 1) a con- neighbors." linked to the 0f 0 scene ear I , olic Church. Encouraging Pressure bl' t' th h'r n tl' nuous appeal for our state and pu lca Ions, e new c al rna Blames J''':lges Public Dr. L.lckma~n was suspendecl Federal lawmakers for more and i'There is encouraging social of the Ohio Citizens for Decent - H f'" d $2; d t from his pastorate in Soest; .Gerbetter antidiscrimination· legis- and legal pressure," he contin- Literature charged here., pro:at~o~. ~~: moth~n a:;itt: , many, ··in the Summer of 1959, lation, 2), an evermore intense ued, "to give absolute equality·, Edward F. Castleberry of Cincampaign to inform society and to the millions of Negroes in the'cinnati made the statem'ent at he was a regUlar reader of smut after he declared in a book, that influence public opinion about North, but is there an adequate "the third annual meeting of the magazines,but that she was ,"the Church of Rome is ' symboi the inherent quality of all ni~n:, mora~ consensus that social group which 'has spearheaded afraid to speak to him about 'it, , set up, by God Himself for",the .truly cat hoi i c worlQ.w~de a'nd3) a crusade of prayer to the equalIt! should also be granted? the fight against obscenity in Mr. Castleberry.said. .' ~burep.'~, ' Father, humanity ... to en- ExclUSIOn of Negroes from coun- Ohio and served as a model for "The failure of jUdges," he lig~ien ... His children with, a try clubs, private hospitals, hous- other U.S.' groups, many of said, "to appreciate the serious- , He said in his Unitas lect\Jrfl lo.va .for every, man ~ ..." , ing, developments and superior. whom number churches or af- . ness of such cases can lead to a ·that the new'reunion league wilt . Father Drinan, who. was, cited positions in industry is so clear ' f i l i a t e s . ' breakdown in law enforcement , be a commun:ty with its,owR recently by the Massachusetts that one wonders whether the , 'Mr: Castleberry cited sex and promote increasing boldness form of worship, incorpating into chapter of the National Associa- humiliations endured by Negroes crimes in 'Cleveland' and Liina by six criminals." . " . the CathoUc liturgy an that .. tion for' the Advancement of who have migrated to the North in which . he alleged smutty , But the public 'also shares the true and good in the Lutherall tradition. 'Colored People' for 'his work in are not in fact more severe and reading ~atter was a factor. blame" Mr. Castleberry' addEld, the, civil rights field, 'said legis- degrading' that the ordi.!1ary Wrist Tap Penalties "for allowing judges to' get C.~tholic elements that have lators should take. steps to cor- Negro's experience in the.south." ' In both' cases he said the men away with it." been los~ as a result 'of the rect certain deplorable situations. Father Drinan said that educa- involved had been arr'ested for Protestant ReLrmat: win be tion to provide the moral con- earlier sex offenses and let off regained; he said. Among them sensus necessary for the most with what he described as "wrist p" according to Pastor Lackmafin, FRIDAY-St. Martin of Tours, complete integration of the Ne- tap" penalties;' . t "I . are" the' acceptance of the Holy ,Bishop and Conf-essor. Double. gro in the lIJoiih must·be based In Cleveland a man arrested W' -HPTGTON (NC) _ A Eucharist as a true sacrifice, .' White. Mass Proper; Gloria; on the concept. of .human dignity after 'series ~fobscene ph') Ie pri~st psychiatrist, Father Albert confession,' and the apostolic 1" Second Collect St. ,Mennas, and must stress that color or race calls. to 'a suburban Iiousewife J. VanderVeldt, O.F.M., ,has been" succession. .',. is irrelevant. _ was found to have two suitcases named director ,of .the Child ,Cen. ',Ma r tyr;·:C1:lmmonPreface. SATURDAY' - Ma, ss 0 f, the " "He ~tJlted, however" thateffec- filled' with. salacious pictures, ter ~~ the _C~tholic University: of Blessed Virgin for Saturday. tive legislation and a sound pub- 'reCordings and paPerback bOoks. Amedc a . ' .. Simple. White." Mass Proper; lie morality are not enougb to ''He'd been arrested twice before " The' center, in operation 'since "Gloria; Second Collect ·St. bring about equal opportunities' onsirililar charges Mr. 'Castle- 1916, treats eni'oHonal problems \\Martin I, Pope and Martyr; for all citizens. . 'i;" berry said,' , '" of ·children. .' " ,. i" , . :~t :n'reface of Blessed .Virgin. :. SoDs of God " Father V,uider-Veldt graduated SUNDAY---,XXIII Supday After·. "For we a~e 'not merely ~itiIitiesMeeti~g. in 1954 from. the 51. Louis, UIii, ,pen t e cos. t Do u ble. Green . Mass zens of the state for whom UlWS, ' '" :,:,: DETR,OIT,(NC)-Third bien_ versi,t,y med,icat school." .He'·, was " P rope, r' GlorI' .. ' " jt! ' a,. Second Collect are necessary," he said, "nor;ar,e nial convention ,'f the .National for Ii ti,me, medical dl'rec'to'r 0'f a , .. ; . NEW BEDFORD' c· St' D'dacu Co':'''essor' Creed' . .:' • 1 S, ,~""., ' w e merely brothers for whom a FederatioI), of ~odal~ties of, Our '40-bed' hospital' ,'and' an outp"a'.. '.::Prefaceof Trroity: ", . moral consensus is necessary:be-, Laqy will be held in Dett;oit, tient clini~ in. Pakistan. , ,'., ,.".1 MONDAY-'-St.~b~aphat~··:Bishop ·fore we can live together'in Jan. '20 to 22. The convention ,.,....... , INDUSTRIAL OILS I " , . i!'and Martyr."-Do'ubie Rea. Mass W . f' G d ' . . ' . " , t:'·. · peace; e are 'sons 0 0 're- theme will ..be: "The Family, <Proper; GI6r.ia ;.,CommoJ.! Pref-, . deemed and' joined forever in a America's Heart _ Challenge to HEATING OILS i;ace. , ll~·.::: real family. "'. Sod_ality \ction". TUESDAY-St. Albert the Great, . "We are gathet-ed here ..·.to ' iiMKEN .1.'·' :'iBishop, Confess.or' and Doctor give ..witness to the. fact that , '!;of the 'Church."'Do,u,b ' e. White. h 'N ' ' . P to' R' . OIL BURNERS ~ egro child or. uer. lcan THE ANCHOR lists the anCreed,' ~w en, a th f ,i,.;Mass, Proper',"Gloria,' BOYS WANTED 'for the . or .any 0 er ' 0.......,.' 18 niversary dates {)f ,prieSts who ;' Common Preface· h ill ted G 0 d F th . Priesthood cind Brotherh~d. 'WEDNESDAY-St. Gertrude the '. umlteda, , 11 four.. aHimer ,'18 served the Fall River Diocese lock ot funds 'NO impedimsu and a. 0 us m aJ:e since .. its formation in 190.t ,Great, Virgin, Double., White. t g d" .ment. wl'th the intention ,that the · Mass Proper; Gloria; Common IOU ra e . 501 COUNTY ST. ,:~P~face. . , . faithful. will . give them a Write to: ' TIr-RSDAY - 'St. Gregory the prayerful. remembrance. NEW BEDFORD .. , P O.. Box 5742 !:'Wonderworker, BiShop, and NOV. '11 . ,i' Confessor. Simple. White. Mass PITTSBUI.'GH (NCj -Bishop Rev. A. Gomez dii Silva Neves, Baltimore 8, Md. . WY 3-1.751. : Prope!'; G,loria; Common Pref- Jonn J. ~right of Pittsburgh has 1910, Pastor, St.' 'John Baptist, , ~ce. . ....".. ' .. , bl' '. New Bedford. ' . , .... ".' esta Ished a diocesan liturgic~l NOV. 1Z ~:~!,-------",,~,,commission, 'three of whose "15 Rev. James H. Looby; 1924, ANNOUNCING • • • members are laymen. H T t The other 12· :members 'are, ,Pastor, Sacred eart, aun on. FORTY HOURS Rev. Bernard Boylan, 1925, priests. . Pastor, St. Joseph,· Fall RivE;!'. DEVOTION The commission will work NOV. 13 Aptitude Testing and CO,unseling , :Nov. 1~-,-St. John·the Baptist, with the diocesan' musicaiid Rev. Louis J. Deady, 1924; ., Ed,uc,ational '. Occupational. '~::: New ·Bedford. building. commissions to put int0-Founder, St. Louis, Fall River. effect the 'liturgical directives 'of NOV., 14 , Notre Dame, Fall River. "Individual or Group' the Ho' ; See.' " Our Lady of the Isle, Rev. Francis J. Duffy, 1940, . " ',' ' . 405 County Sfr,eet WY 4-968 Nantucket. Founder, St. Mary, So. DartNew Bedford, Mass.· Legioll1 o.f ,::No·.. 20-5t. Anthony, Mattamouth. ) :: ~)oisett. Thefollowiiig films are to be . , ~. By Appointment Only NOV. 15 r, "St. Anne, NewiBedford., added .to the lists in their reRev. Daniel E. Doran, 1943, . ... , . 8egi,:,ning Oct. 1 . St. John the Evangelist, spective classifications; Pastor, Immaculate Conception, Attleboro. Unobjectionable for adul~: North Easton. Rev. Thomas F. LaRoche, 1939, :'Nov. 23-:S1;. Cat:.eiine'sCoil.- " Spartacus. Objectionable In part for all; Assistant, Sacred Heart, Taunton. · vent, Fall River. Butterfield 8 (boldly. suggestive ,:Nov.27-Our Lady of the 1m. ·treatment of costume, dialogue maculate 'Conception; and situations is offensiv~); New Bedford. Tues., Wed., Thu,rs.--Nov. 15-16-17--8 P.M.·' Goddess of Love (suggestive cosSt. Margaret. . Buzzards '-. . tumes and 'sit1lations-this clai. c.·Y. O. HAll, ANAWAN STREET sificationsppUcab1e only " to Inc. :;:Dee. Padua, printssboWB m. ~ntiDental Fall River. GaANDPRIZE AWARD&» EACH NIGHT U.s.A.). , St. Mary. 'Fait'baveD. FUNERAl. ,SERVICE Condemned: Magdalena (see' PORTABlE TV - STEREOHI-fI- CONS9LE TV news story, in this issue of Tbe . 'T,BB .ANCHOR, Participating units: Holy C.ross, St. Mary's, Blessed Sacrament, ""':$eeoD~-.mw Pl'lvtJceo6Uthm:izeCI Anchor)~' . 549 COUNTY ST. Santo Chrlsto, Immaculllte. C oilception, St. Domintc's, S5;' as FaU RiYer. Mll2l8. ,Ptlhl1a1llld flf1(!Q Separate Classification: CrownTbIll>SilQ Itt no :Highland Avenue, FaU Peter and Paul, Area CYO, and Catholic Scouts. . NEW BEDFORD, MASS. River, lIIasB.. '117 1ihe 'Catholic ,Preaa oItbe ing ExperIence, (see news stOrr' 4 Regular Tables-l Special Table-Each Night Dioeese of·F1rJl :RiTer. SubseriPtioIa J1r1ae 'in this issue of 'The Anchor)., _ man. JlCIBtipald "'-110 per . . . .

Anti-Smut Leader Sees Direct Link Between' Crime, Obscene Reading'

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ANNUAL (yO 'PENNY SALE"··

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, ,1Ifn;;J'1eter F",Nolaa;:p.resI4ent . : ,~ 'lobe Tal. . alsO.lseri- . elf St. Antho'ny'a Women:s Guild, 0 - - - - - - - , stated, "I think it's wOndet'ful. ,When I was go- ' in g , to big h school there was little chance for girls to attend Catholic hi g h school. I wondered what provisions would be made 'f () r :'the graduates of the new parochial grammar schools which have been S built in the area. ,Now the majority of them will Dot have to end their Catholic educations at the eighth grade level." ,

thu~ici.stic about tbe new sChool,

'Parish, though will be as head

saying" "It, will be a big job, but I guess we'll just all ,have to work hard to reach ;he goal. I am sure we can do it, especially since it is' the 'first drive of its type we have eve r had in faunton." Mrs. Valadao is the ?resident of the .vomen's guild at Hoi y Family East Taunton, an9- a.lshe has only one son, a part of the campaign of that organization.

NEW TAUNTON GIRLS' MEMORIAL HIGH SCHOOL

Rule Out Embarrassment - - _Case, Issue ,A s Re I1910n MIAMI (NC)-A court trying two' test cases on reli-

3

, ,~Ati - .', fonner' school' teacher " THE 'ANCHO~~ myself, I am interested in edu- Thurs., Nov.' 10, 1960 cation anyway, ,~'says: "Since we but with this :j have one girl "'I think'it's a wonderful opnew school I 'II who will be in have an added portunity for the girls of the 'the first gradcity of Taunton incentive, in that uating class at my little' daughto have a brand Sacred Hear t new beautiful ter will, I hope; School, and an-' s c h 001 to atbe able to attend other i it the tend," says Miss it," was the comsixth grade Catherine' Mcment of Mrs. there, we 'are of ear thy, R.!Ii".. Richard A White c'ourse very inDiocesan presiof St. Ann's ~erested and endent and TaunParish, Raynthusiastic about ton vice-presiham. As a new the new Catho-, '1arish, St. Ann's dent of the Counlic girls' high does not yet cil of Catholic school, and are Nurses. "I cerhave formal ortainly hope' evelooking forward to our daugh- ganizatio~s, but Mrs. White ters receiving the advantages of served as secretary for the ryone will share ,a new building and facilities church building fund drive and in the project so that only a comparative few the testimonial held Sunday for that we will have of the girls in the city can' Rev. Leo Sullivan, the first pas- the success of the campaigns in to~. ' enjoy now." New Bedford and Attleboro."

Mri.' .Joba"'I.'''~ell,., president·"

of the Women's :Guild of Sacred ~ H ear t Parish.

BECOMES TOPIC OF CONVERSATION IN 13 PARISHES.

Priests to Attend Chartres Cathedral Marks 700th of' Consecrati.on' Theology Pa rley Anniversary, CHARTRES (NC)-The Cathe- as it now stands was' begun in The annual regional meeting

,of the Catholic Theological dral of Chartres, considered' by 1194, although major portions of Society of America will be held many the most beautiful Gothic preceding cathedrals have been gious observances in public schools has refused to admit Friday, Nov. 25 at St. John's church in the world, has cele- included ill it. The kings of Christendom contributed to the ,testimony that such observances can cause embarrassment Seminary, Brighton. ' . brated its 700th anniversary. Berlin's Philharmonic Orches- work, because Chartres was a and emotional conflict in some students. Dade County . Two papers will be read, one . J d' F't G d at 4 Friday afternoon by Rev. tra played its birthday serenade center of international pilgrimCirc~lt u g~ rl Zb' o~ on Four high school principals' 'Alfonso G. Palladino, S.T,D., and thousands, of well-wishers age. sustained defense 0 JectlOns took'the witness stand to defend ,professor of dogmatic theology came to wish it many more birthSt. Louis, King of France, is that if the embarrassment of religious. activities in school. at St. John;s and one at 6:30 days to come. said to have journeyed 17 miles some pupils were admitted as They said the emphasis of such by Rev. Pius J. 'Lutkus, M.S., Julius Cardinal Doespfner, on foot to the consecration cerer activities, was on their, educa.,. S.T,D., professor of moral theol- Bishop of Berlin, was in the monies. He and St. Ferdinand. • valid argument against re 1- tl'ona'1 value rather ,tha'n their ' " gious practices, "we would have ogy at LaSalette Seminary, cathedral for the concert per- King of Castile, donated !9me to remove from the schools every religious content. Ipswich. formance of Beethoven's Solemn of, the cathedral's magnificent ' ,vestige of God's name." They pointed out that students Father' Palladino will discuss Mass. A Parisian choir, the'Eliz- windows. Defense counsel also argued are not required to take part in - the thought of Teilhard de abeth Brasseur Chorale, joined The origins of Chartres cathethat. the Constitution does not ,such acti lties. Chardfn and its theological im-. the German orchestra to sing the dral are pl"e-Christian. It is said that before the birth of Christ guarantee freedom from "emThe principal of Miami Beach plications. Father Lutkus' topic Mass. barrassment caused by noncon- High School, Irvin Katz, said the' will be ne'w approaches, to the The cathedral's famed win- 'priests of the Druidsvenecated formity." school's year-end observance is meaning of forbidden servile dows, which had been darkened . on this spot a wooden statue of , with the arrival of night, waken-' a seated woman holding a child ,Judge Gordon decided, bow- a' combination of Christmas and works.' . ever, that such testimony could the Jewish feast of Hanukkah. Dinner, will" be served at 5:30 ed beneath floodlights illumin- on her lap. The statue was ealled be put on the record for future The student body is predomin- and priests are invited as guests atingitsexterior, They glowed in Virgo Paritura-the virgin who use in case 'an appeals court antly Jewish." " of Richard Car.di'nal Cushing. , blues and reds above performers is to give birth to a child. . Christian missioners arrivinfl overruled him. He, said the observ.ance seeks Re~ervations should be made by and audience: ' The anniversary celebrations in Gaul-modern France-;-SQw in , Professor ' "t0 d i d t d' g of' th e Tuesday, Nov. 22 with Rt. Rev. Education ev~ op un ers an III , ndman, professor two ' grea t re l'g' B,ake' r, M. Hi, I Ions, " an d '"JS no t , Law.renee, . J. Riley, 'vice-r,ector had been opened earlier by the child-bearing virgin a figure . 't If" of .St., ,..Tohn;s' Semin",ary. ' ' Maurice Cardinal Feltin, Arch- . of Mary, ,Mother of ChriSt. In , , 1" of' education at the 'University of 'a re IgJOUS program m ~ se . , bishop of Paris, in the presence 67 A,D" they consecrated the Miami who formerly served ,30 A third-grade teacher, describof the. mayor of Chartres, 15 . grotto in. which the statue stood ,.ears with, the Dade County ing ~'a~teractivitie.s in her, class, bi'shops and several abb'ots. The • as.a church in her honor: It ill h d te t 'f'ed that . testified: "We J'ust' sing little, t h 1 opening ceremonies marked the believed' to have been' the first :i~;re~y~~:'pl:ced si~ Ia state 'E~ster 'bu~ny: songs' ailddraw traditional anniversary' of the' 'church ever dedicated to the 01. ,emotional 'conflict ,by rel~- pictures{~,. , ' ,.Investlture of candidates .for . cathedral's consecr1tion' which' Blessed, Virgin. The present gious . ob~crvanceS . cQntrary to: The Mi,ami,CounciJ o~ CI;lUr<:hcs 'the F'ali::;River: Bishop 'Feehan ,probably, took' plllce i ,on 0et.· 24;" cathedral',of, Chartres, as succestheir' beliefs. ' "', ' ," , :and,'other intervenors have. sup': ., Circle ·;'No.'168·: Columbian 12~O., ",","~ ' . sor to that :!:"urc!t. ,~Iso succeeda., ... .H~ app~ar'ed :as ~itne~ fQr, ".plied, an.:attQrn,ey, to, ,r~ply'_ tc> the : 'Sq~rr~'" \ili'l ,t~ke :place on Suneon~ruction:of.. :the ca~lledral, to tha ~ honor.' ," ~'plairitiffs if!. .t~~,' ,two cases ,c!targ~:; th.at,.rel~gious observ-, day, Nov: -13. Chief Squire' Paul, that are being tried, simultane- ,ancl;s, Ill, Dl\de Co.u~ty SCQoo~s are: . Sweeney,' has, .ianno'unced'·, that' ~~ly. One case .W;a~ broug!tt, by, unc~mstitutio'nal.- '... , ,.'., th~cerEimony."will,becondiiCt~d ail .. agnostic supported. by the .. " "... -.• ' . ' - ' b y , a special group of'Squires ' t~orid'a Civil, Li~rHes, , Union,' . ·Ret·reat at·.. ·Lakeville- from 'Ansonia,: Conn., and all ,the ,oth~r .by thre~ :Jew~.anda 'FQ'.,r:'· D'.·."o···C'es''an'. , ',candidates ,', :should' be· ,at the, , rse"s' . ' . Unital'ian supported, by th~ I'llii U Knights ,of 'Columbus iIome; Arnerican Jewish Congre!!s. '.',. . ..F'o~ty-f.i~e !'llemb,ers ,of the Franklin"Stree~, 'Fall River" at .,', .. Mr. Hindman.,said that. soci~l., ,Jr,alL ,River _Diocesa~., COl!.n,cil of- 1:00 p.m~'Slinday afternoon. - , pressures on r'1pils to. mak~, ,Cath~licNurses have inaqe .res-, ,', Candid.ates Will be 'informed , ~hem conform, fa ~hat other er~atlOns fora retreat to t>e held, 'on, what':-theywill need for the "', pupils are doing can nullify,the thIs' weekend at Our LadY ',of 'ceremony, which 'is' open to all' "~OIUllt' "y" aspect of reli~ious Good, C9uns~1 :Retr~at, Hpuge,. 'Squires arrd tciJ.ights'Of 'Colum':' ' 4)bservances in school: ' - ,LakevJlle..;Rev. ,Feh x ...Talbot,.. bus members. Refreshments Will'" "Compulsion ,to go along with S:J. is ,retre~t master. foliow th~ :rnvestit'ure. tbe group is frequently muet" ,The retreat will begin at 7 ' ~pplications for membership str'lnger than, parental action or Friday night with a buffet sup- milst be 'completed' and submit- ' anything else," he testified. per, and will close Sunday after- 'ted by to:day, accordiiig to Dep": A psychology professor from noon at 3. uty Chief, Squire Paul'Dutra. ' the University of Miami and a Mrs. 'William Maloney chairpracticing psYchiatrist ,from Mi:" man announces that rese;'vations ami backed up Mr. Hindman's are 'still available l'lnd may be 'testimony. made with her. The spiritual SCRAP, METALS event is being sponsored by: the WASTE' PAPER..,... RAGS Medical School Gets' Fall River Catholic Nurses' TRUCKS AND TRAILERS FOR announce the J Guild, for the Diocesan organ-. Grant for Research PAPER DRIVES of 'J " ' :,:,,,-,,' JERSEY CITY (NC)-A grant ization. CHURCHES, SCOUTS and of neal'ly one million dollars for CIViC ORGANIZATIONS Congratulates Shah medical research has been .' 1080 Shawmut Avenue, NEW , VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope given to the Seton Hall 'UniverNew Bedford WY 2-7828 sity College of Medicine, the John has wired congratulations largest grant ever made to the to Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi 'of Iran on the birth of his school. The award of $971,768 was son and heir. made by the division of general medical sciences of the National "A politician thinks of the next Institutes of Health. It will enelection; able Seton Hall to establish, AT 1 P.M. equip and staff, a clinical reA Statesman, of the ncxt gen· search center here.. eration." The center will be used for ROUTE 28 - IYANOUGH ROAD close observation and care of for Bristol County REYNOLDS·DEWALT patients' with rare diseases and Near Airport those who are receiving new William & Second Sts. drugs or treatment. The facility New Bedford WY 6-8234, will be 'one of the first of its' kind in the country. Completion of the research center is expected , ~E "E 3 Times "~ by mid-1961. ' Free Delivery Daily >

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To Hear Pharmacist Members of the Fall River Catholic Nurses' Guild will hear Reginald Gauthier, pharmacist at St. Anne's hospital, speak on new drugs at their meeting set for 7:45 Wednesday night, Nov. 16. Miss Frances Cash is in charge of arrangements.

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THE ANCHOR-'Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Nov. 10,1960"

Labor, Management To Attend Retreats NEW~ (NC)-A series of evenings of recollection for labor . and management personnel was inaugurated here by the Guild of St. Joseph the Worker and the Pope Pius ,XII Institute of the Newark Archdiocese. The monthly' sessions will feature confessions, an evening Mass and a sermon, followed by

Catholic Women's Council Report~ 13,000 Affilcates

LAS VEGAS (NC)-The National Council of Catholic Women now has abOut 13,000 affiliated women's organizations, an increase of' nearly 1,00.0 since the council's last convention. Miss Margaret Mealey, executive director of the NCCW, gave this report Voting delegates to the con.to a business meeting of the vention here approved a change federation at its 30th bien- in Miss Mealey's title. Heretonial convention here. Miss fore, she has been executive sec-' Mealey reported that since 1958, the year of the last convention, diocesan 'councils were established in the Salina, Kan.; Mia-ni; Wichita, Kan.; and New Ulm, Minn. dioceses, bringing the number of diocesan iederations to 107. She said the 1961 leadership institutes sponsored by the national council will be 12 in number next Surrimer, as compared to seven last Summer. The sites were not announced. Miss Mealey said the institutes will study "various aspects of community crisis--urban r,enewal and 'suburban and rural development; the specific recommendations of the White House conferences on the 'needs of youth, the aging, the handicapped; and the needs of the world community as highlighted by the forthcoming ecumenical council." Golden Jubilee She noted that the World Union of Catholic Women's Organizatior~ marks its 50th anniversary this comin:' May with a meeting in Rome. The union is a federation of 36 million women in 60 countries.

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Chinese Reds Send Bishop to Prison HONG KONG (NC) - A 52year-old Chinese bishop who reportedly has been in jail' in cdmmunist China for years has now been formally sentenced to a 15-year prison term, it was reporteq here. Reason for the Red sentence on Bishop Peter Joseph Fan of Paoting was not known here. Bishop Fan received his episcopal consecration in 1951. The Annuario Pontificio, Vatican yearbook of the Catholic Hierarchy '~hroughout the world, has listed him as being "in jail for the Faith" ever since 1953.

Receives First Copy VATICAN CITY-Pope Juhn has received the first copy of a book containing the talks he gave during his first year as pope. The book, "Discourses, Messages and Talks of the Supreme Pontiff John XXIII," has over 900 pages. '

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NEW YORK (NC) A Catholic editor and expert on Bible studies has urged adoption of an interfaith

"Bible re:,der" for I'se " public schv"ls. The "Bible reader" ,would be made up of newly translated excerpts' from both thF' Old and Toolen that was attended by New Testaments, according to Father Walter M. Abbott, S.J., more than 700 people. Father Abbott makes his proThe Apostolic Delegate said posal in America magazine, na"my heart" is with the struggle of the Church' in the South. He tional weekly published by the Jesuits. An associate editor of also said: "I was he~e 28' years America and a cofounder of the ago and today commg here I periodical New Testament Abhave seen a miracle performed by Almighty God through~Arch- stracts, he has written and bishop Toolen as his intrument." , spoken widely on Scripture Earlier, Archbisho~. Toolen studies. He says a "Bible reader" coloffered a Solemn Pontifical Mass· of thanksgiving in the historic-' lection of Scriptural passagesin a new translation ,acceptable Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. Auxiliary Bishop -to all faiths-would' overcome Fulton J. Sheen of New York religious objections to the reading of sectarian versions of the preached. , "The thoughts of a ,priest on Bible in public schools., Open to Challenge his golden jUbilee-h~, se~s no A comp~nion article written by man ,bu~ ~~ly Jesus, Bishop Sheen'sald. He sees our Blessed Father Robert ~ '. Drinan, S.J., Lord when someone s~e~ks of dean of t!le '1oston Colle.'l- '1W What. he has done, T~ls IS our school, says Father Abbott's pro- . posal mi<:ht resolv'l religious disblessmg as, well as hIS, for we putes over Bihle reading in pubh~ve found,~ man who has been lic ,;.chool, but would leave the With Jesus. practice still open to challenge on constitutional grounds. Cardi~al In October, 19"9, Father Abl' '<'t said in an America article MONTREAL (NC) - A Carthat a uniform English transladinal stressed here that adults tion of the Bible acceptable to are to blame if smutty literature both Catholics and Protestants is available to young people. is "a real possibility." His Eminence Paul Emile CarIn his , article he discloses dinal Leger said in a talk that if that a team of Catholic, Protest, adults read off color literature, an* and Jewish. scholars is' now tha t is their responsibility. working ,on a new English trans"But you must not sign the lation of the Bible to be pubdeath warrant of children by allowing the children b wallow lished in this country between in the sensuality and orgies, of 1962 and 1966. '!'he project is under the direc- , crimes being committed in our tion of Dr. William F. Al' ight midst," the Archbishop of Monof Johns Hopkins University, treal said. He hit out at sensaBaltimore, one of the country's tionalism as "light fingered-genbest known experts on Semitic try of yellow journalism whose unique preoccupation is to en- languages. 'Gre~t Work' rich themselves while demolishOther pal~ticipants, according ing others." to Father Abbott, include Bo ReL::ke of' the University of Basle; E. A. ·Speiser and Moshe Greenberg of the University of Pennsylvania; Father Mitohell PITTSBUP.GH (NC) :- The Dahood, S.J., of the' Pontifical two-year-old Mount Lebanon Biblical Institute, Rome; and Township zoning controversy has "many others." been settled in favor of the Diocese of Pittsburgh. . The new translation is to be The Mount Lebanon, Board of published in 30 paperback books Zoning Adjustment handed down in the Doubl~day publishing a ruling permitting the diocese' company's Anchor 'Book paperback series. The first volume' is to build facilities for a new parish or a seven-acre tract it scheduled to appear in January, 1962, and the' last, sometime in owns in the Sleepy Hollow Road 1966. area. Father Abbott declares that The decision climaxed a series "this great work of co~bined of public hearings and the filing (' .tholic, Protestant and Jewish of a court suit by the diocese. The court action was continued scholarship could turn out to be pending the outcome of the apthe common Bible we need for peal to tpe zoning adjustment 'theological and ecumenical' disboar'do '. cussions, ..:. ,,'

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Prelates Hail Archbishop Toolen On 'Golden Jubilee in Priesthood MOBILE (NC) - Archbishop Thomas J. Toolen, Bishop of )lIobile-Birmingham, was characterized as a "living slave of Christ" by Richard Cardinal Cushing, speaking at a pageant honoring Archbishop Toolen on the goldel" jubilee of his ordination to the priesthood. The Cardinal and Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to, the United States were among more than 30 prelates from the United States, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands who took part in the two-day celebration honoring Archbishop Toolen. Cardinal Cushing said the jub'ilarian 'is a "living slave of Christ" in the "sense that he liyes only for Christ." The Cardinal added: "He thinks the thinking of the Church. He speaks the language, of the Church. Cardinal's Gift As a special jubilee gift in memory of the late Msgr. William Toolen of Baltimore, brother- of the jubilarian, Cardinal Cushing made a donation of $150,000 to a community of cloistered Carmelite 'nuns here for the completion of their monastery and chapel. The community was established here 15 years ago through the financial assistance of Cardinal Cushing. Archbishop Vagnozzi spoke at a banquet honoring Archbishop

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retary of the NCCW. Her new title is executive director. . An appeal for Catholic women to help fight hie: ,way deaths was made at the business meeting by Miss Agnes Beatop, director of the safety division of the All-State Insurance Company which has given financial assistance to the NCCW'S highway safety program.

She appealed to Cathoii.c women to check the adequacy of their local driver licensi,ng laws, to look into the procedure of traffic courts, especially in the area of, ticket- :;xing, and to try to get all schools to begin driver education programs. In another session, a Post Office Departm :t spokesman sought the cooperation of the women in ridding the mails of smut. Chief Postal Inspector David H. Stephens of Washiagton,-D. C., said two ,major factors are behind the large increaSe in mailed obscenity: 1) the "fabulous profits" that can be made; 2) "a definite tendency toward liberality on the par~ of some courts in defining obscenity."

refreshments, a conference and religious exercises. Purpose of the new program is to implore God's blessings O!l workers, to promote recognition of common dependence on God, and to provide an opportunity for labor and management to assemble in. a spiritual atmoDphere.

Says Adults To Blame for, Smut

Settle Zoning Case In Favor of Diocese

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ENTHUSIASM OF TAUNTON WOMEN STIMULATES SpmIT OF CHARITY IN EVERY SOm. President of the Sodality at Holy Rosary Church, Mrs. Wal~-----...,ter D. Pelezarskl said, "I certainly feel that a longheld dream of man y Taunton parents has come true. This is another step towar d building better youth. We've really "::en in need of a girls' Catholic high school, and I certainly believe that it will LL.;...;.;_....zlL...;,--,...J be a great asset W the whole community, both the building itself and its stupe'1ts."

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NEW YORK (NC) - A television essay on the birth of a baby and his rebirth by Baptism will be broadcast by the National Council of Catholic Men in its new program, "Directions '61, A Catholic Perspective." Actress Helen Hayes will be featured on the program in a poetry reading and Father John La Farge, S.J., in a commentary on . the religious issue ia. the presidential election. This will be the first use of the "magazine format" of television programming in a nationwide religious broadcast. The NCCM program is having 1ts premiere, on Sunday, Nov. 13, on the ABC-TV ,etwork. Local broadcasts may be delayed. The arrival of a baby and his baptism were photographed in a New York hospital and church by Jacques Lowe, whose camera work has appeared in such national magazines as Look, McCall's, Fortune and Jubilee. Miss Hayes will read the spirited verse of Phyllis McGinley's "Saints Without Tears." The program w:ll conclude with Father La Farge's commentary. Television producer and writer John Alcorn will act as host for the program. ' . Martin H. Work, executive director of the NCCM, called the . new format of the series "an exciting opportunity to present the experience of the Church in our time." ABC-TV has apportioned equal time during the year for .Jewish and Protestant "Perspectives" on "Directions '61." Subs~uent programs of "A Catholic Perspective" will deal with Catholic education and the theology of work.

Says World Problem Need Spiritual Cure CLARKSBURG, (NC)-Prob!ems facing the world_sre "such that require the kind of lasting solution that the' liturgy can give," Bishop John King Mussio of Steubenville told the West Virginia. chapter of the International Federation of Catholic College Alumnae.. Speaking on "The Liturgy and Modern Unrest" at the group's annual Fall meeting here, he ~. noted that the malady oppressing the world today is a spiritual remedy. The liturgy, said Bishop Mussio "is not a set of rules. It is not a ceremonial. It is not an outward show or external expression of mere conformity; nor ia it a mere revival of ancient custom or practice. It is far deeper than this: It is the manifestation of grace, of the divine life, stirring in the soul of every member of the Body of Christnot simply as an individual, but as one of the community of faithful, as one of that Body vivified by the Spirit of God Himself, whose Head is Jesus Christ."

The president of Sl Ann'. Sodality at St. Jacques Church. Mrs. Leo F. M u r ph., said, "Now, because of limited facilities, only ,a small number of Catholic girls can receive a Catholic high school educ a ti 0 n. Soon, with our region.al high school, a much greater number will be afforded the opportunity to pursue their higher education under Catholic guidance, which is very important for their training today."

Continued from lP'age I()lnca advice and suggestion. Because, naturally, everyone knows how oh, happy day, "her." to handle almost anything better It would seem to be a normal than the people who do it for a and perceptive act to replace living. that fence with reinforced conAnd here comes the snapper: crete and, possibly, tank traps. Because the Summer visitors to every guest would wear a big Hyannis are a determined and number and outside the fence hardy group, with a highly de- someone (someone, my eye! veloped curiosity-and they do ME,) would sell programs identifying the guests. "Get your not abate their curiosity because programs here. You can't tell of fences or policemen: or regulations or jammed streets ()l' who's meeting who without a other people or ordinary cour- program. Get your numbers here ..." . tesy and politeness. The Unlocal BoJ'S So the headaches start-a dull Which reminds me of another throbbing in the collective temples of the police departments. problem: what to do about the About now the various head- off-Cape pitchme'" who will quarters of the civic authorities move in and settle near the are laying in a goodly supply of . Summer White House and sell _aspirin, bromo, and tranquilizers. souvenirs. Don't think you won't There is the ~~affic problem. hear from the local, established Cars. And more cars. All want- souvenir dealers about that. And how about the anguished ing to be in one small restricted space at the same time. And the cries of "unfair"-"dragging' the problem of getting them out of White House in"-which may be that area after they have proved expected when it is found that some establishment is known as they couldn't all get in. "Kennedy's"? And the fact that if some of And, spreading the problem the crowd had pushed in that fence and swarmed over the load around, what are the other Cape towns going to offer in grounds ... well, as a candidate, Mr, Kennedy would have had competition? Certainly I underto smile and smile and shake stand that there are still a numhand after hand. But now-Mr. ber of dignified, reasonably_ Kennedy is President. And that rated localities offering "all the makes a big, big difference. Part joys of undisturbed nature and of the difference will be the salt water bathing-but let's be Secret Service-which has its realistic, huh? And we have not considered own rather strict idea of what constitutes fit and proper be- the possible results of the cumhavior around the President and ulative bad temper engendered in sundry tycoons who summer his family. And there is the problem of on the Cape but commute to meetings. Important meetings, New York. The ones who live with important people coming around' Hyannisport will come and going. The problem being .to back to the Cape gnashing their find a-path for them to come and teeth because, all day, they . go on. A helicopter shuttle or-. have heard: "Oh;Osterville? So new subway system from the you're one of that bunch g:f other side of the canal might Democrats, are you? rd never have ,thought it of ,yOI1, Chaunhelp. ey." And important meetings and And the tycoons woo live elseimportant people bring the problem of finding and keeping where will corne back muttering track of the crackpots.. An ex- in their beards because what tremely difficult job in the Sum- they heard all day, was: "Db, mer-because how are you going yeah. That's where all you dieto tell? And the problem of hard, hardrock RepUblicans live. overcrowded cottages and "no more vacancies." Sure, this problem would seem to be for the MANAGUA (NC)-Pope John. hotels, motels, and real estate has sent $5,000 to flood victims people and not for the police. But here. The floods in this Cenwould_ you care to bet on who tral American nation, which reends up with them! sulted from 14 consecutive days And protocol-who gets the .of torrential rains, caused more parking space. And what about than 100 deaths and left 5,000 traffic lights? And who can families homeless. bump who or pre-empt space on the Nantucket boat?

First Meeting OKLAHOMA CITY tNC) For the first time in Oklahoma's

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President of St. Paul'il Women's Guild, Mrs. John Sehondek 'n 0 ted, "Since we don't have a :;>arochial school in our parish, the Memorial High School ~ may be the only 'hance our chil:lren will have to attend a Catholic school. We've been very 'Horried abo u t setting them into parochial school, so we feel very happy that they will receive Catholic high school education, That's why we are' so enthusiastic about the school."

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"While we in st. Mary's Parish are fortunate in having a high school for lirls, there are () the r parish 3chools that will soon feel the 'eed for high 3chool training for their girls," commented Mrs. James E. Gallagher, president of the St. Mary's Guild. "The time is at hand when provision must be mad e for girls from all the parishes inthe area, so that they too can benefit from a Catholic education."

Bet you take the boat to Boston just to avoid Hyannis." It is all too evident that Mr. Kennedy was not kidding when he said that 1961 would bring problems. Of course he was thinking of the easy ones-not Hyannis. But perhaps the authorities could use some of Mr. Kennedy's own words to break up the tl'affic jam on Scudder Avenue. Like: "Now hear this. You elected Mr. Kennedy as President-you must believe in his program and what he wants. Then remember this, Mr. Kennedy said 'America must move forward!' So come on, Bud, you in the green sedan. 'You're part of America-so MOVE!" It is plain that our police authorities will have a hard time keeping abreast of these problems, let alone solving them. But you, as an individual, can help to ease the pressure and be the solution of at least one problem. What to do is simple: When you have your car aU loaded with kinfolk or friends -don't drive over to see where the President lives. Instead, take some long and interesting drives away from Hyannis-visit all the Cape towns from Chatham to Provincetown. Don't give in to common curiosity and vulgar interest. H enough of you do this it will, indeed, solve one special problem-mine. Because if you're all off visiting Provincetown, maybe I can . get close enough to the summer White House to see what's going on and maybe I might even get to' see the President or his wife. Or, if my luck is in, maybe both!

Mark Centennia;1 RICHELIEU (NC)-The Oblate Press here in Canada has run off two million stamps commemorating the forthcoming centennial of the death of the founder of the Oblates of Mary ImmaCUlate, Bishop Eugene de Mazenod.

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KQ 8-1918

ON CAPE COD

JOHN HINCKLEY & SON CO.

"I am so happy that there win be a new Catholic girls' school in the area," said Mrs. William R. Powers, president of the Queen's Daughters. "Of course, it is very much needed, and I hope that the appeal will be 2l ~remendous success. I'm sure it will be sin c e everyone seems to be very excited about the prospect, and the sketch of the new building in beautiful."

rnso~rru@bID M~M@rruQ1]SS Afr 'C@mJ@rrtH)~ ~ [)l1 AI?@®[[\){fQITU@ SAN JUAN (NC)-Bishop James E. McManus, C.S.S.R.• of Ponce, P.R., is in Buenos Aires to attend the InterAmerican Mar ian CongreSfl there. Bishop McManus will take part in the congress, now in session, and also in the Latin American Bishops' meeting scheduled for next week. The Bishop's meeting will be de:, voted to parish life in' LatiD America. Bishop McManus said before his departure that" expects to return to Puerto Rico by Nov. 25 for the enthronement of Bishop Alfred F. Mendez, C.S.C.. as first Bishop of the new Puerto Rican Diocese of Arecibo. He will be the only member of the Puerto Rican hierarchy attending the meetings in Buenos Aires. Bishop McManus was a signer of two recent pastoral letters in which the Bishops of Puerto Rico forbade Catholics to vote for the Puerto Rican Popular Democratic party because of what they called its anti-Christian and anti-Catholic philosophy.

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CHUNCHON (N C) - The United States Anny through Armed Forces Aid to Korea, has given $5,000 worth of medical equipment and supplies to the Columban Sisters clinic here, where' six Sisters, includuing a doctor, nurse and laboratory technician treat 400- patients every day.

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LOWELL, MASS.

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And I've just had an idea about that fence. Leave it as it is but make viewing ports in it -like the ones they have at building jobs for "sidewalk superintendents." On days when some big meeting is on the public could peer in and watch the doings and,. like the sidewalk superintendents, they could offer

I"r1f ANCHORThurs., Nov. 10, 1960

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Save in person, or save by mail. Hent your money is insured safe by an agencv of the U. S. Government.

fEDERAl Of FALL RIVER

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',Presld'ent-Elect . :" :.' . "~:;~::', ~~~~:::\'~?~':~.::\~;.1~~'i:Nd::'i(::~·:·''':~; , 'Tlie' electiOn of John.F.,t{eri'nedY '3:Sfir~tC~th'9iicJ9' bePresiderit' of ·the' United States is a:: tribute to the I>OHtical . : " . maturity of 'the American voters; ' T h e y h~veheeded th~ provisioJ:1s·· of the ConstittttioJi ' . . and have excIudeda religious qualification for the highest . " ". ,'office the land. They have turne.dc:leaf ears to atte~pts .. to dictate, their .choice on th~. basis ,of bigotry. Most . importantly, they have ,made the choice on the'basis of leadership' and, the isSues; Artd that is as "it shot.il~ be.. ' , .It would be puerile, of course; for'AlQerican.Catholicsto.· : display unseemly giee over the, tUtTI. ofeyents, 'Dllrfngthe · eampaign, . Catholics hav~ insistedthilt a· man's :religion· · be not introduced so long as the man himself 'possessed ' · intelligence and character' and 'iritegrityand would be , guided in his d~cisions by his conscience. Tha,t js'stiIl':the , position that Amer.ican Catholics take. '. , :. " They have the right to expect that the President-elect · will show bias neither for nor against them nor any other religious group. And he has given assurance that this is his pledge also. " '. So it remains only for all men of good will to, assure Mr.. Kennedy-not only because he is a Cape neighbor but in view of the critical office he will hold through such critical years-that their prayers will be with him th~t God may guide him in the discharge of the great responsibilities that will be his. '

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- ..TODAY~St.Aricire~AvelJjno. . Confessor. He 'lived in the i 7til . ·centur.y: and Was amembet Of ;the Theatine Order. His zeai aDd . 'eloquence gained him the ffiend'ship ot'. St~ Charles Borromec''and other. prominent ecclesia~ ,tics. He ~as' commissioned .. '. reform abuses in Church disci.pline' and· to establish Theatine houses· throl,lghout Italy. In hill .work he was blessed with ~ .' gifts' of 'miraclEis and prophecj. ·At the age of' 80 he died at tM 'altar' as he was preparing to 'offer, Mass'. . . TOMORROW-St. Martin Tours, Bishop-Confessor. He w•• '8 . native of Hungary' and wa. educated in Imperial Italy. At 15 he joined the Roman cavalry and was noted for his charity,. particularly forasharing militarr cloak with beggar.his After five years in the army, he, returnect

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placed himself in the hands of St. '4 ,. ,. , ..~v/ n . Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers, and 11 ~:'(i, ~.' -;~~., . \ years later became Bishop of ~~ ~, j/'///Tours, He was blessed with the ..• ".~~/, . .'" .:.;~ffl/;/lJ. gifts of miracles and prophecJ[. I, He died November 11; 397. SATURDAY - St. Martjn 1, . ' P o p e - M a r t y r . He occupied the In the course of his recent performances in and around A IBJ· ~~e R See from 649 to 655 HJs the United Nations, Khrushchev was asked what he thought Aflmh'jjir~Can~ ~uQn 110 ',' o;;~?tion to the Monoth'elite of New York City. He replied: "It's a terrible city. It's. all rE N_ ' heresy, incurred the enmity Of r@lrM,OrK.er§theByzantinecourt.·Thisheresy stone and no greenery. Now I know what Maxim Gorky held that Christ had only a meant when hecalled it 'The City of the Yelllow Devil.' H By Rev. Andrew M. Greeley divine and nota human will And one of his companions,staring out a hotel window at Msgr. George G. Higgins will be in Europe for the next After several attempts on his the traffi'c below, could only say, "Cars, cars, cars. That's several weeks. During that time Father Greeley will be his .life failed, he was seized, held guest coiumnist. Father Greeley is the author of the book The . prisoner for a year on the IslG , all you have. Aren't there .any peopl~?" Church and the Suburbs (Sheed and Ward, 1959). A second'. of Naxos and subsequently It is no wonder that as the American standard of living book on the problems of American young people is scheduled' brought to Constantinople, where rises and more people are able to indulge in more luxuries for publication in early 1 9 6 1 . ' he was subjected to' many kinds the American dream is thought of in terms of machines We Americans like to flatter ourselves that social of ignominy. He (ied in the . and stone. The creature that ingenuity and inventiveness . iiljustice is rapidly,v~nishing from the national scene. We Crimea. ' SUNDAY-Twenty-third SUR, and pJ;'oduction and free enterprise have built threatens at' are pJeased, to think that in this affluent society the day after Pentecost. Generally times to become a Frankenstein that will dwarf the makers exploitation of man by his fellow man has ended. We have this date is the feast of st. and push the human person into insignificance. , . . persuaded ourselves .that, result of a deliberate ,plan to Didacus,' Confessor. A native of Seville, Spain,hewho in the Amerl·can·.s', a're, of, course, gagdet-minded, and th'e e'pI·_ with the exception of a few keep 'farm 'wages as 1ow as pos- . 15th century, waslived a Francistome of success is reached when one lives in an all-gadget isolated pockets of. injustiCe sible so a handful of rich farm can Brother, who attended .milihome-with electronic garage doors; push~button windows which will be'taken care of corporations. can continue tq . sionaries of his Order in.. the and curtain' walis, and all the latest' of electronic devices. .. in a' few years, there are no .pile up huge profits. Canary Islands and aided, them , . situations in our republic that If you can drive by the vegein their work. He was noted fasr Indeed, during the recent New England hurricane, one ,cry to . heaven table farms or the fruit orchards . his penance ,and contemplative housewife found herself not only withou't the convenientes . for vengeance. . around our big cities and see the . p'rayer, his devotion to Our Lord of her modern kitchen-she could not even open 'a can of We mig h t dark skinned. workers picking in the Blessed Sacrament and to food because the can-opener was electric, too: ' h a v e some justhe food you eat and 'gnore the the Blessed Mother. He d{ed ill tification for dislocation of their family and ,1463 in Castile. The many mir.. And so in the midst of things there must' always be .the , thus ' deluding religious life which, the present., acles wrought at his tomb led. consciousness of the person. In the midst of conveniences ourselves if it· . system of, farming involves, then to his canonization' by Pope Sis.. there should be a certain amount of self-sacrifice to keep a· 'were not for you may have a conscience as . tus V in 1588.' , ' '. '.. . " ,., . . '. ,, t plight of hardened as the from men who der'I'ght sense o'f values about ,thO l·ng'''. ., , he . liberately profit the suf'MONDAY-St. Josaphat, Bish. The human and humanisingvirt~es'of sympathy knd' , ~he farm la~or: feriilgs, of these 'oppressed peG- op-Martyr: The first of the Oriun.derst,an.di,ng· il,n·d., kin,dne's,s mus.t. n, e~,er.. ·be,.,su,p,.,p,l~n.te, d,': b,Y' , learr'lay.ndthPe~r4troc(lu,= . p"1' ',' '," to be canonized' formalli e~ ... " ,:, . . ' " ," .'. entals in Rome; ,he was a 'native, of • bigness and ,success and, technology whlCh;,turJl.men',mto 000 migratory ,. No Powerful Lobby. "Viadimir;-'Poland; arid became a ' autofuatonsand sOciety into one huge, machirieshop; , labor~.rs . wh,o . arEl, without. a The farmw~l'kers~ and cs,": " priest of the'Order of St. Basil ,', . .-' , . . " " . ," , doubt, the ,poorest of our ,poor. pecially the migrator~ workers ,He worked' tirelesssly 'and peir:'"hIfou$r961"W'hae'nye,ya,ro'.u(,),.,r,w''089 ce,.n~s,I'Sa,~ n, '~have no powerful lobby. The formed rigorous penances'for the rk a National Farmers Union,' The :~xtinction of the Eas' .rn'schismi. . ·An interesting article .in The Wall Street Journa!',last'· dec~nt ~age :,011, which ,a .~a:", 'Bishops' 'Coininittee for', Mig.:. . At'39 he' became Archbishop Cll month was entitled "The Catholic Church: How It Skillfully' "fan support hill).self ~n~,n.fs fam.'" ,rant • Workers; a few 'other : Poiotsk and increased his efforU' 'Manag~s ,·,Vast, .Religious, Soc~al'. "Eco,itomiC ,an.,d' Dipl, Qm,~tie ~ 'fI1aY,r.'m',thl·a~bn, r'we,re,', ",can",ov.e.rlOok, ,the . groups-:-,.these'l,\re the only ones am 0 n:g schi~matics, winnin, . ' . who are much interest~d in eras- many. converts. :Although warned' ,. Complex. , ' ',' , I f "bei,ng ex,cluded fr,om al. thoIS 'bl0t on our ' 't·IonaI against visiting a parish in"Wimg na As ,might be expected, it was "iritten fro.m thepOin,t I, Jr.1o's~ every sing~e ,soCial bene- ' record. tepsk overrun by schismatics, he of view of a staff'reporter used to investigating and repOJ,:t- " fIt of ~h~ last 30 years-the Fair' The' efforts of these groups faced the danger and was put ing on' large corporations and evaluating their modus oper~ ::t~oa~orl SL'tabndardRs IAt~t, ?hBe Na - have not stopped a 'bill to' renew·' to death by enemies of the d " d ff' . 'Th 'I' b' , , , a a or e a Ions oar, Public Law 78 which through. a Church on November 12, 1623. an d I an e ICle.ncy. e artIe e. was 0 Jecbve m.lts approach un'emplo'yment', c'om'pe'n'satI'ons', maze' 0f tec h' ' lIes permI'ts He was canonized by Pope PiUII mca l't' -with no point to prove and no axe to grind. And the old age insurancEl,' minimum the importation of 'Mexican IX in 1867. Catholic Church comes off quite well in it. health and.' social services - if workers who are not really TUESDAY _ St. Albert the Throu~hout the article there is a tone of admiration this is i?, k~epingwith the dic- needed, but who do create an Great, Bishop-Confessor-Doetos. 't d d ' b d" , - tates of Justrce, then we can pre- oversupply of workers and de- ThI'S famous Dominican philoa-, .th a t th e Ch urc h can b e so um e an un en mg. m matters tend that five,' million farm la'-· ..,... press wages even more. . opher and theologian, who waa of faith and morals and yet so flexible and quick to ad' in orers do not exist.· But the powerful lobbies the teacher of St. Thomas affairs of local import. The old idea-still held by the unImport Mexicans whose members stand to profit Aquinas; was a German and' ope informed-of a vast structure in ,which every detail of If it is,right to import Mexican 'from such low rates have reof the greatest of the Medieval thought and word and action is dictated from Rome is labor when there is 'already ceived something of a setback. schoolmen~ ¥":e declined many,,_ firmly destroyed. ' e n o u g h domestic labor, so that P.L. 78 was renewed for' only ecclesiastical dignities, but a¢ t b d d six months. There is talk of length was persuaded by' the In general, the article can do much good in convincing wage ra es can e ep~esse drastic revision. Pope to accept the Bishopri.c 'of ," . '. ' . even more, then we can Ignore The Wall Street Journal readers that .the Chur«.h-:-m her' the plight of the migrants being . ,However, the oppressors of the Ratisbon. After three years.·of organizational, aspect--is handled with efficiency 'and':-in .dragged across the country in farm W'0rkers are not 'too wor- 'able' work, he was allowed :~ her, organism, asp'ect--places her greatest reliance and' op,en trucks, by· unscrupulous ·ried. ·They can. presume that return to his'convent at Cologne, . .. h r f ,most Americans' .really don't where he died in 1280 at the age considers as her greatest asset thefa'ith'of her five hundred' contracto~s w.o pro It out 0 . care what happens to the mig- of 88. His· work_ are ·publish~ , . ht '11" b human mIsery. an d t wen t y-elg , ml IOn mem ers. > ' . , If it -:is: right to' pretend that rap ts wh 0 work on their farms. in 26, folio volumes. Pope Piuil the' farm labor question is an They <;?n fee' confid~nt that .IX proclajmed him as' Doctor 01. ' a t t a c k oil the family 'farmer, there WIll be,' no ,popular outcry the Church'., . .' r' t f 'f' against an injustice which has: ·WEDNESDAY-:-:St, Gertr~~ ~~:~1l;v:r~1~.'~lf~ra~ f~~,f~r::,;s,' gone on so long undenounced: '. Virgin. She live~ iri\the 14th ,hIre 70 per cent of the farm Indifferent to Christ '''century and,accordil'- tc! t~~di:;, 1b th .' t ' , ' ,',' '.' "'. ,tion was a nat've of SaxOliy: She :, ·a or, ,en ,we .can:res; t:asy They canbe'certam that PL " "'B'" ""'. t·· . . 'd ." " , , .. ' , . . over' th~sufferr1).g. of people 78 'il" b' '" . . .... , was a ene,·:c me nun an W38 OFFI.C,IAl NEW, S. PAPER OF THE. DIOCESE, OF:FALl RIVER;, whose .plight".-l.s, ,·.as.·bad ",I,'f not "the WI 'n,ot 'campalgn~most' e:a m~Jor' Issue of m ,blessed of mystk electIon . . . with ' H' .,high " kgifts ' . "I ...-' .. " worse, than e "Okies" of the th' ' ; '" '" . prayer,. D' .. er 'p', woI;', nsmu.a.' Published wtlekly byoThe Catholic Press of the Diocese,of;Fall'Riv. ,,' . ....'. ' . . . . . . . . ,emlgra,nts c:lon.tvot~,any- .. u'" t t" ". h,,~'" hi . .", ',. ;.' , ' . '. ·1930's, " . ' .. ,' . " h'ow Th' '., 1 , ' , ' ,ones, Ivmae·" Ie a IS,... ,I!, 410 High,land' Avenue" ,,',., ' . . Di's'I' c'a"te' ' d' 'F" a'mil'i~ , ", ~~.can re a~,so. long as comparable to the'writings of st. "'.. 'ignorance and md,Ifference T .. , " , Fa II RIver, Mass. ' , OSborne 5-71-51", ,., 'If idsin',keeping with Ameri"'blinds, people to the consider- ....:.....,e_re""sa-.;..._._'--'-'--_......:._~--'..:...:.....:....., PUBLISHER, can ideals that .little children be able' amounts of human misery ly and .. systematically,. denied, Most Rev. James'L'Connolly, D.D.i·PhD. forced:to,;work~.16 hoUrs a day that still exist..'," '., these ,good thirjgs., ' .. ,'GENE'RAL MANAGER',' :',', ASSt ,hENERAl' :MANAGEIt . ",ulld«:r"'t~~ bla~ing .sun 3in~ sle~p .' 'They know that most Ameri. They. know that affluence~,earl' if' D'; I FSh II'MA' ' i I ' " j 'h , r{" I " a t mght·'1n foul 'smellIng, shan", , caml wln:be, far.too·busY .enioY:"" brlrig' a remarkably 'call\HiSed .•~, , ~n,~ " '.,' (1,00•.. ', ,.,,' ..e~ .., o'~'" ~riICQt,;ties, lthen-,we ~iln forg~tthat the" lng-the gOOdtbings wblch ,pros:' 'consci'ence:-:-anda .stony: indif~ , ' ., , , . ,,' '-MAN~GI~9,EpITOR' ;', ' ~"'" 'suffering 'of' tpe:,farm workel',it!perity ~rings:to 'pay-any ,'atten-: 1er(mc~·to: drrjst i~. the ·1~~st.,eI.' .• ' t.: .1':: " . . Hugh 'J~, Go.1d.en:.. ' ~'~-,~ ilOt·a,:cha.nce·~~re.nce.:',~ut·the . -tio~ ,t~ th9se 'w_qo,._ar~·d~elib~r~~~~ . Hi.~ . 1:;)rothe~fJ. ;~"f'd~· ..~.".

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. .; DESJRf.: .FOlt ~~:w. SCHOOL SO GRt;~T ..'JJHAT EV~n:Y .MOTHER IS NOW EDUCA·TION· CONSCIOUS:·, ',',:i:f r.J;'-;,.~ .••.:J:~, .. ~. ··~" .. ;:~.l-!.· .:J':~.. ~:i·, ..... ' _ '" "II

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Mrs. Willtun L~cuyer. prEl/lident of Immaculate. Conception Catholic Women's Guli(( sars that "the CIty of Tau n ton . has been too IQng 'w i tho u f 'adequate facilities for training'· its Catholic g i r:' l' S. We have· . our own grammar school. but· each year ~ore·' "of our .gi r 1 graduates are· unable to en t'e r St. "-----"'-~Mary's becaUse there simply is not room for all who· apply."

"Although my children are .~North.,.Dig~ton surely ap,small,a.ndwill not be thinking plauds:,*~ iiiea:o( a new·,Cathoof going to high , lic high school school for sev(or girls...• said eral years. I'm lI1's: Chall"nes fA.. sure . that· there lI'erry, head of 'are many in the ~he . W 0 lil en's area who will 'Guild at ~t. Jospl'0fit by a local eph's Par ish" CathOlic gill' Is' North .Dighton. '. H i g h School," "We h a v e so sa i d·.Mn- Ecll- , , ' : m a n y youngsters v,vard F. ,Goulart, ' ,. 'right in our own ?resident of the . o;>arish that will .yv'omen·s Guild be able to take . t St. Peter's . advantage of its Parish in Digh~.: facilities. that we ton. "When. they will do what we do get older, it are able to conwill be a blessing to have a tribute' to its success. We sorely school available to them." need the sehool"

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Mexico's Bishops Urge C.hristian .Social Reform MEXICO CITY (NC) Mexico's Bishops have callecl for a Christian program of social reform t9 halt communism's advance ill Latin America. The prelates spoke in a statement issued here at the end of their annual meeting, which coincided with the beginning of a Marian Year to mark the 50th anniversary of Pope St. Pius X's proclamation of Our Lady o~ Guadalupe as Latin America"s pntroness. They included in their stat.ement "brotherly greetings" to the Bishops of Cuba, where the Chu,rch is under attack by the regime of Premier Fidel Castro. "We share with them their fears and anxieties in this hour of trial." the Mexican Bishops Bald.

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Speaking of their own country, they declared: World Undermined "Those who think that 'our own country is not in danger of being infiltrated by communism .are· mistaken. Let us not delude ourselves. The whole world. is being undermined by de-Christianizing forces that are conSciously or unconsciously allied .with communism." . A number of communist 'Ot'ganizations are now at work in Mexico in the politictal field. and among labor union members, te·achers and 'farm workers.' The number of Red militants is about '1,000. They.have about 100,000 sympathizers. Since the' end of World,:ar IT ~!exic, has been a center for' communist infHtl'ation of other Latin American· countries. To combat the Red threat ·the .Bishops urged' all Mexican Catholics to put· social justice and Christian charity into ·prac-

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Ainu Couple Married In Catholic Churc.h, SHIZUNAI (NC) -The first couple of the dwindling Ainu race to be married in a Catholic church were married here in the presence of a U. S. missionary.. Jrather James W. O'Neill, M.M.. of Omaha. Neb., witnessed tl).e .c:eremony in his mission in S~i­ zunai, stronghold of the few thousand Ainus fighting for sur.vival as a racial group here .in northern Japan, . The Ainus are island abor,Igines and their origin is ptys,terious. It is believed that they migrated from Siberia to Japan during the Stone Age. Th~y are • Caucasoid people ~·th light ,eyes,. heavy beards and a 'com,.pletely non-Oriental language.,

':Establishes Easter" ; .Jl.ite Sees in Franco',:

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has set. up two Chm:c·li )~risdictions in France. for:~ ,i~yza.ntine and th~, Ar~~ap. ~~.tes., . . .. ' I:.' .l;Ie.appointed tw~ new bish~p'il ~ ,~er:Y'e as. Qx:di"ar,ies, '?f. ~e new Sees. A II Eastern Rite Catbolics ..1ft France had been· under· the jurisdiction of'Maurice··Cardinal ,iF.eltin, Archbishop of' ·paris, :since 1954, when PopePius.xn set..·upanOrdillariat· 1 for, them .and named Cardinal Feltintbe Ordinary. ,'. , ... ', ..' "

"We definitely need the new school, there is:rio doubt of that." said Mrs. Ed. ·wall"d·.If. LyncJh., S t, .J 0 s e ph's Catholic Women's Guild president. "In fact, 0 u r· daughter, who is now 12 ,years old, hopes to be a .< member of the fir s t freshmen ' class. so we ·are most interested .in the school and the success of the drive. I guess we'U. aU' be busy· on it very

soon."

tHE ANCHOR-.·., Thurs., Nov. 10, 1960 "The new Girls' Memorial High School will be an asset to ,the comm\lnity .. as well as par~ : ' ents and girls. I The curriculum in this type of s c h 0 0 I," says Mrs. AugUst Varella of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish, "is based on C h r' i 8t i a l! principles a n ci will develop a religious ~n d scholastic program of the highest· calibre. It will be a wonderful opportunity."

Retai.n Language of Ch.rist in 'New Bedford Parish of Our 'La,dy of Purgatory \ By Avis C.· Roberts The original Syriac spoken by Jesus Christ is retained in the Maronite liturgy of the .ass sung at OUI" Lady of Purgatory Church in New Bedford" The 550 parishioners emigrated or are second generation of a small band from the legendary mountains of Lebanon near the eastemshoreof the Mediterranean Sea. The communicants of the church belong to the Maronite Ri~ one of the ancient liturgies of the Church of Antioch... The Maronites are known for their unceasing attachment to the See of Peter, despite hardships and persecutions. Lebanon is the only Near East country which is predominantly Catholic. The New Bedford parish was founded in 1917 under the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph Chebeia, Maronite apostolic missionary. aefore erection of the first church the Lebanese worshipped fn St. Patrick's chapel of St. Lawrence Church. In 1919 a wooden portable church· was purchased and was dedicated by Bishop Feehan on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, Dec. 8. The little church was the place of worship for the next OUR LADY OF PURGATORY, .NEW BEDFORD 15 years until it was d.estroyed by fire on Dec. 27, 1933. Bishop and pastor. St. Anthony A new church organ, costing . Heroic Efforts of the Desert -Church, Fall River, $3,000, was installed in the The pastor, the Rev. Geor.ge served as pastor from 1938 to church in October, 1958, the gift J'owdy, made heroic and success- July 1954 when the present ad- of Our Lady of Purgatory Ladful efforts to sav·e the Blessed ministrator, the Rev. George L ies" Guild. It was presented on the '25thanniversary of Father .Sacrament. After the $10,000 Saad, was appointed.. fire disaster, only the rectory at . F>or 20 years Our Lady of Pur- Saad's priesthood. New stained UFranklin Street· remained. gatoryparishioners had DO glass windows and a new marble 'il"ihe communicants. then . held . church. Before· ,comple.tion of statUe of oUr La'dy of the Imt1;leir religious services in the the ·tlew chUrch in May, 1954, ·maculate Conception were dedi_ basement of Holy Name Church, Father Eiddescribed the 20-year cated JUly 13. 1958. iii their own rectory and at St. churchless period, "As the peaOrganizations .active in the Boniface Church. pie of Mose!l wandered in the church are the CYO, Sacred Monsignor Ghebeil;l was pas- desert toward the Promised Hearts Society,.S~. J!?se~h's So-, tOr of the church from 1917 to Land.· thus we ,pursued our dality and the choir. Frequent services are held for the Leban- . 1922 when he returned to La- march wearily towards our goal. takia; Lebanon.· The next, pas- But the Israelites had at least ese-American Veterans Associators were the' Rev. .Joseph light; during. the day. a cloud, tion a·~d its Ladiefil Aux~liary • A.waN1 and' the Rev. : George and at night, a pillar of fire .••. Sebhalani who .served for' six Our journey was m·ostly in the months each. His Beatitude·Paul dark--'but the pe()P.le kept goPeter Meouchi, Patriarch of An- in,i ahead/' . 1 LI'I(E BEING HELPFUl tioch and the 'Whole East, ad.Another Bose INSTEAD OF HELPI..E5S ministered the· parish from 1923 On the blessing and laying of 111£ WAY I WU B£R)IlE to 1925. His successor. '!Vas. the the cornerstone on Sept. 26, WE REWT£D lM~ Rt. Rev. Peter P. Aschkar, who 1953, Bishop Connolly told. the· WHEEL CHAIR. FROM served as pastor from 1926 to parishioners. "This is !l day of i930. .. happiness to me, to see another rose offered to Our Blessed Father Jowdy was pastor from Mother under.a title dear to ~930 to Sept. 21, 1938, when he was drowned in Fairhaven ina Her." 'Chor Bishop Rid sang the first hurricane. Father Joseph Eid, now ChOi' Mass in the new church on Mothers Day. May 9, 1954. The church has a seating capacity of 240.

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Decency Legion Bans Magdalena NEW YORK (NC)-The National Legion of Decency has called the German-made movie "Magdalena," a Magna films, ". blatant violation of decency" and placed it in its condemned clasa. The legion also announced thai it has placed the movie "CroWDing Experience" in its Separate Classification. The movie, dealing wit.h the program of Moral Re-Armament, a quasi-religioWi movement, was produced bT MRA. "The low moral tone which permeates the development of the theme of this film is compounded in treatment by II. blatant violation of decency in costuming, dialogue and situa-. tions," the legion objected to the "Magdalena" movie. Ambiguous Theology Regarding "Crowning Experience." the legion said: "This message film which presents the pr'ogram of Moral Re-Armament, should be vie we ~ by a Catholic audience with certain reservations because the film reUes too heavily upon emotional argument and because the religious expression which it gives to personal reform is theologicallT ambiguous. , "A 'Separate Classification' 13 given to certain films which, .while not morally objectionable in themselves, require some analysis and explanation as a protection to the uninformed against wrong interpretation and falso conclusions."

Add this c'.Holiday Touch";

TOUHEY'S

COFFEE VIENNESE

:P,HARMACY

Top a piping hot cup etr' black eoffeewith a dollop of whipped cream. It makes , a fitting finale to the most sumptuouS holiday feast., And it's so easy to make.)

Father Peyton Ta'kes Crusade to Chile

CONCEPCION (NC) -Father Patrick Peyton, C.S.C., has taken his Rosary Crusade'to the south of Chile where a cataclysmic onslaught of earthquakes and tidal waves wrought death and destruction last Spring.' . "The Irish-born Holy Cross priest has set up central offices for his southern crusa'de here ill the third largeSt city of Chile. ·His itinerary in.cludes the cities of . Valdivia. P·uerto 'Moun1t; Castro, Ancud,Temuco, ·Orsono and Los Angeles. The last rally .of the Family' Rosary will.' take place in Punta Arenas, in the ~ South next Sunday, '. At the end, of' a .. five-week drive for the FamiIyRGSa1'Y in Concepcion, at least 25,900 people assembled under a driving 'rain to recite the Rosary together and to· hear· Father.· Peyton . speak.. Some newspapers ·put the number.llJf those .attending' at .. 40.000, or .40 per ·cent,·of the,dty~s entire population.. " ', .. ' I.

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.:[>i'strict,'·, :COUfiCif, ., Meets Sunday'·

'Consi'der' AU· 'Fej'cts 'in Choice:, Of", .Pap'e'r,orPai:ntfor":WaUs"

Tbe first quarterly meeting .,

Cape and .Islands DistriCt Five 'of the DiOcesan Cour"

: ,CaUllie Woinen will be held at 2':31 t)lis Sunday afternoon· .'j. st. Margaret's Church, Buzzardll Bay,; Hostesses will ,be St. Ma"':" garet;.Mary Guild. ' Theme of' tl)e meeting' will be the need for lay volunteers in the work 9f the COnf.ratert·tY'of Christian Dl':-'rine., ~ev. oseph L. Powers, Diocesan CCD irector, will mOderate' a panel diScussion on the subject. District officers request· that , each Cape and Island' affiliate of the Council f :nd representatives to the meeting. '

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,' , ,', "\By . Alice Bough'Cahill"" ' _.It's often h,ard to answer,' "Should w.e paper' or paint' our walls?" So .many factors' enter into such a decision, it . is well to consider each separately. No matter what kind of house;'Do,matter how large or small, the room, ~alls a~e' its:largest color area. A ,Plain unpatteriled pap e rs room. with 'a northern expos- 'come in iovely colors. Rememlire 'may have: light, but it is ' ber, however, that if walls are'in a cold light' a~d will need a plain color- (this applies . to warm colors. In dark rooms, 'all the' light warm tones should be used. Here we go again, talking about COLOR-but color does play an important part. in 'our lives' and in our decorating scheme; , Background and color are two important principles after you have decided on. 'the first principle type of house you want. Scale and, individuality' are the other ,tw~ princ~ples. ' Having determined, the type of room that suits not only the bouse, but the environment, the, way to make it is to build the bil<;kground. Background varies in ciifferent ,types. of houses. If walls (as 'well; as' woodw9 rk and: floors) are not right, no aipount of beautiful furniture wiIi overeome ~he. ~efect. ' , ' , " .' , Suppose . you'ye a' Coloni~l Muse. Your walls :Q1ay be gaily · papered: or painted white, cream, · ~ay or a delicate color. Today J:~producti9ris.of,ina·ny 'Colonial" • ,p-atterns.- are obtainable; Be sure 'to look for colors that you'd like' ·to live with. .

papez: or paint) the room will be colorless unle'ss there is pattern ' elsewhere in the room. We use the word "colorless" in the sense that it loo/{s :void of.color values. In such it room, gay chintz 'might be used for hangings, and a chair or two, while a large . piece of furniture and a larger ar~a of space, stich as a rug, mlght be darker and plain. . Big Patterns Big patterns are. best for big rooms. Sometimes one will use a big, bold pattern for dram'atic " . effect ~n a small room in which ·one does not spend much time like a hall, bathroom, or dining room; Once again, however, we say that. in general small patterQS are your best bet for small' rooms.'

Council RepresentativeS To 'Attend Conference " WASHINGTON (NC) - FiVe representatives of the National Council of Catholic Women' will participate in a U. S.-sponsored', national conference on day care for children here on Nov. 17 and' 18.

'STANG TEAM, IN .ACTION:'. Members ,of' Bishop, " , , Stang's hockey team at play ag~inst" SO,merset High School. H k . If" t ft' I d ' . oc ey IS on y one 0 a varle y 0 spor s me u ed on the new school's athletic program for girls. ",

Allov.er .patterns are good for rooms _that, see a lot ")f, use and need the 'spacemakhlg . effect small patterns can have. Allover . ' , ' , . ' , ' . C patt!lrns acr~ss' ~alls and ceiling " blend dormers ,mto the room., ' " '. " , Horizo~tal'stripesmake a ceiling ,: ni look hIgher. or ~,.wall shorte~. ' " By Avis C; RobertS·, . Miss Moore hopes her g'irIs Wallpaper, In short, can' do a, ' , ' .. '. ,.' camouflage job f l' ' " . " " The physlCal well~bel!1g of 150 will participate in sports as fu11-· '. . 0 you.. , g i r l , stuqehts ~t :Blshop Stang fledged members of tile Bristol If yours IS an old @use with. High School, North Dartmouth, . County Girls' League next year.~ uneven· ,plaster, be, sure.to the.responsibility ,C?f their per-. This year Stang girls are playitlg: ch?ose a pat~erned pa'p~r to dls- 'Bonable, enthusias,tie l>pysical ~nofficial games in the ~eague: ~lse. ~he IrregularltIes.. You ,education instructor" Miss RoseAlso under,Miss M00I:e's juris-' 'wlll fmd that. the. canvas bacl!: mary :Moore." , . ." , . di~tion are the nine Stang High: of coated, fabrICS wlll co~er wall In" addition to teaching two cheer leaders and the' school's' .. ,".. . . : .., ' .. , .' f 'cracks, ~nd protect your plas- Freshman history 'clils~s, ,Miss ,p'ep squad~ Eventually'. s'he' ,ho.pes.,: , : If you, ,.;Area.dy ha~e most, 0 , ter PlaIn paper does ot d" . , : . cracks .' . J l · IS~ . Moore . all daily 'physical. educa- . to have, t.he entire s·tud'ent' .bod.... your furnishin,gs, be sure th. e. ' gUlse . , . . . 'Y . ap'~r, picks up, otiler colon m, ". .,,' . . . ' . ' tion classes and, oveI.'Se,e~ the in· t,h~. pep 'Sqt:".d.· . " P When you plan paper for one ',' school's varsity' sports program . A' . ·the·room. Of.course, if you are room,think of adjoining rooms. until:5 each'afternoori. ;':' .. '. . t present,·there are:·team: starting from' 'scratCh;, you can' I ' . , ' games': relay races, and gymnas,.' choo'se, neaiiy, anf' cc:iiors _: So' f YO\1-' are I!-0t papering them " The first-of-the":year program tics arlit ~isl' M90r~ plans ide,,"19n 9, a$"yol1, think th,ey'.re ~or~h' now, when, you do, ,you might· incI1ldesweigh inlf and measur";' spread' track and 'field activi';: repealing in rugs, fabrics, or ;lc- r~peat the same color combina_ ing of the' girl§,'exercise classes ties in Jhe Spring. .' Cessories.·. • ' , ' bon;- but vary the shades, ,or let and a physical 'fitness testing: ". '. "' , . . . the same color be an accent in' program. Every .girl must par-·. A 1959. graduate Qf Bridge-' ,: If you, go in for more formal . one paper and' the background' ticipate in physical education, water State Teachers. College,' styles; ·iik.~ a Georgian interior; of another. unless excused by a physician. IYtiss' Moore taught part time a~' such' a· room should have the . Labor is expensive, so buy As the school year gets under Bishop Stang during the '59-.'60 more formal, Colonial papers. good paper and let it remain on way, Miss Moore will supervise acade~ic year,before taking up Maybe you are ~sing Chippen- the w,alls forsevel.'al years, :thus field hockey until the end of f.ull time duties this semester. dale furniture in your room. An saving' additional labor costs. November; basketball through appropriate paper tei use with February, volleyball . through" Chippendale 'furniture is oQe. Cardinal Praises Role' March, and softball until th~ end with an Oriental motif. of' the year. Next year the inThen, there's a room with Qf Christian Women structor hopes to add square and formal French furniture (not to . SYDNEY (NC) - Christian, 'modern dancing ~o the physical be confused with French Pro- women can stem tOday's ,tide of education ,program. vineial) which calls for paper immorality and dishonesty better with a very formal feeling. With than ~en,Australia's' cardinal" , Hyacinth 0 of I Hepplewhite or Sheraton furni- said h e r e . ' 'Members of Hyacinth Circle ture, you might use light landNorm a n Cardinal, Gilroy,. 71, New Bedford 'Daughters of scape scenics and colorful Archbishop of Sydney, speaking Isabella, will hold a Christmas chintz designs. A, pa~~~ with at the opening of a new second_ sale and bean supper from 1 ·to back shadings, as a scenic, ary school for girls to be con': ; S SatUl'day afternoon, Dec. 3 at makes, a room look larger. d~cted by the Sisters of Mercy, Odd Fellows Hall. Other. Christ-· NATURA"t GAS , saId: , ' mas plans include a party, for ' •. Bishop's Night ' "The role of the woman in the' : children of St. Mary's Home and: BUZZARDS BAY 'New'Bedford Catholic Women's world today is of immense im':' a Christmas 'social for members GAS COMPANY , · C)--') : will hold "its a~nual portance to the.welfare of man.. Tuesday, Dec. 13. I Hyannis-Spring 5·1070 BisJ;1ep's Night dinner at 7 to- kind. She, more than man, can Buzzards Bay....,Plaza. 9-4704 · night at .toe New Bedford Hotel. stem the tide of immorality and _ . .. Bishop 'Connolly and Auxiliary" Of dishonesty that threatens to . , , Bishop Gerrard will both be in undermine the C:::hristian stand... GA$ , "t"\. DIL. ~atA.~ . a'tten'danc·e·. Mrs. V'l'ncent J. ard of life that has been our, .' . Worden is in charge of the eve- glorious heritage.' But she can f-1~.: LIGHTHOUSE ningf assisted' by. a large com- succeed only by: having a'noble E I d' PI d , GAS COMPANY : , . mittee. '. ",' , . ideal, by striving to maintain it New ,ng an s aygroun ~cirmouthport-For~st ,~·3S9S ," " ' . and by fea~lessly advocating i~ .Plan'\'our, Dan~ Party WilLIAMS PROPANE " Closet Hollywood' \ ,: Fashion' S'howsCind GAS CO., INC;' Falmouth ,",:"~irriball :S-:4515 : Banquets. '. Mission Movie· Extras

Stang High School Gi rls .EnJ' oy,.: ,Var ied At hi etic Prog ra

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FOR YOUR' GAS

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The NCCW'will be represented, by Mrs. Charles Cushwa, Youngstown, Ohio; Mrs. Emerson· :aynes, Arlington, Va.; Mrs. Sar-, gent White;. Fails Church, Va.; Mrs., John McCormick, Falls Chu:'ch, Va., and Mary Ruth Lewis of' the NCCW headquar-' tel's s t a f f . ' . , .. Theconferenc~ ~ill be spo~-, l}ored ':ointly by the Children's Bureau, ,U. s. ,Department of: Health, Education and Welfarct and the Women's, Bureau' U. S.:' Department of·Labor. A ~ecenf survey 'by the Bureau of 'Census' showed that riearlY·400,OOOchil.' dren u.ndel"12 years of age' care' for., themselves whIle their' mothers w'6~k'''arid' that: i3S'oOO of these' ehlldren'are 'under' 10.: · . .... .

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~'lIoliday: Touch"

REQUIREMENTS

ON (APE (OD'

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, DETROIT (NC)-8tudents at Our Lady Gate of Heaven School :here have "gone Hollywood". . They were used "<: "extras" !n ~he pr9duct~on ofa color plovie, "A, Miracle on DemaDd If 'filmed recent"., by the 'Ja~ Han~y OI:ganization for the Pon- . tifkal 'Association, of' the Holy' Childhood. " The picture, soon to be avail~bl~ for ,~hoo~ thr~ughout ~lle, ~ath, W~O> praised

by an

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ence of clergy and laymen at • premiere here.

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,WM.T. MANNING to. WHOLESALE:AUT\O.MOTIVE

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tt,9J't:,.~:n~·::,~h~I~.~ . Thoug,ht

THE ANCHOR-

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To,:Pray for-::,.Dead·al·Me·als ..

.LjtLJrgi~ol .Group Sefs Study Day

. ".": . .' - .. ' By" Mary Tittley' Daiyt.',.;: ., . : ',A letter roceiv~d' some time, '.ago . should, we feel, be answered p·ijhlicly:/.'Dear Mrs. n.aly.i."O.ne thing puzzles me and perhaps ,.youcan.,straighten me' out. Why, after we've oojoyed a wonderful meal, at the 'Grace after" meals' do they add that' lugubrious note· : '0-'ness--a ., '.: . . ' f I sense 0 one. . came a·sa a bout the souls of the falth- ,liness perhaps wouid be a betful. departed? Don't get me ter term. wrong. I pray for the faithWithal, came the feeling ot ful deRarted. But after a joyous comfort .that there is something occasion, even such as a ban- we really can do for them. Our qu.et! Couldn't prayers, Masses and sacrifices tillS p ray e r can make a positive contribum 0 r e approtion toward their happiness. priately be added following Through Centuries a Mass? ''Mrs. It has been that way always. B.F.W." We read that the early Church That puzzles was one great purgatorial _somany people, ciety, with prayers for the dead Mrs. B.F.W. found in the oldest liturgies and One often notbreviary prayers, in the earliest lees, ('~ .... ~zjally Christian inscriptions. at a banquet, One of the oldest religious orthat talk begins ders of the Church, the Benedicto bU~z before tines, with all its branches, had that fmal, "And may the souls this in mind. Particularly was of the faithful departed through this so with the. Order of Cluny, the mercy of God rest in peace." which long ago inaugurated All People are brought up short Souls' Day. Down through the when, with talk flowing freely, ages came the· confraternities, everybody in good mood. stories established in the Sixth Ceneliciting laughter, comes that tury, the associations of brothersolemn phrase. hoods of prayer, founded chiefly However, in this month of to assist deceased members witn Nove'mber, when our thoughts Mass prayers. and prayers are especially At the beginning of the 19th 81a?ted toward the poor souls, century came vigorous new asJan t it rather inspiring to re- sociations extended to the entire member that those prayers were Church such as Our Lady (}t int,r";iected all .through the year?' Suffrage, founded in 1841; the That it is not Just one month in Archconfraternity for the Relief 12 that the poor souls were in of the Poor Souls.in Purgatory, our thoughts and prayers? the. Catholic League for Con-, It's easy to forget. Perhaps not stant Intercession for the Poor "'forget" but postp(}ne 'the Souls in purgatory, the Order Uloug~t of the departed with' it of the. Helpers, of the Holy Souls. subconscious "wait-until-NovWh th b d d to ember" attitude . ' e er we .are an e ... . gether with others in such: a We Always Eat prayer movement .(}r whether Ruman as we are we never we merely offer individual forget to eat. For SU~VivaIGod prayers, this month of N(}vem-. has instilled into US the ~arm" ber brings to mind more forci... el(}ck, which tells uS when it is' bly. th~ ever the. duty and time' to re-st(}ck. With that im-' pri'!ilege which is ours of-. ~l{­ pulse, comes the pleasure of tending Christian charity be-. eating, particularly' in compan- yOl1d the grave.. wnable surroondings. This very Mass time, meal time an1, to I"egularlty of eating, with the paraphrase an old song: Janunatural thanking God for giving ary; February, June 'or Noverr,as "our daily bread" is built-in ber-it's aiways appropriate' 10 equipment for Christis·ns. says prayers for the departed. As a Communion of Saints, It seems to me, those now living Mt. St. Mary Juniors might very appropriately remember at every meal those Hold Prom Tonight Climaxing a week:-long obwho once broke bread wi th us. Lugubrious? Not really, Mrs. servance (}f American and CathB.F.W. One moment of pause, olic Education Week, students one brief prayer for the depart- at Mt. St. :Mary Academy, Fall River will hold their annual ed cannot seriously impair the junior prom tonight at CliH gaiety of any dinner party. Walk, Manor, Newport. PrecedAs November started, you at your house, we at ours, listed ing the dance, girls and escorts will meet at the academy gymthe names of the departed for wh(}m we wish the parisb Massp-s nasium to dedicate the event to offered. I~evitably, each year Our Lady. Other events of the week inthe list gr(}ws longer. This year it is longer than ever-so long, cluded election debates, a ring In fact, that an extra sheet of ceremony and a career day at paper had to be inserted into the Vetetans Hospital, Brockton. A parents' night featured a' special envelope:' As we wrote those beloved program and' announcement of' honors. . names (}f relatives and friends, Purpose of the week, accord:ing to Sister Mary Carmela,. R.S.M., principal, was a dem:onstration of the religious, academic, civic and social activities open to Catholic students.

'ft\tlI'S;';': Nov.' ~ l'O~·19iSl)~',

A stUdy day on the liturgy be sponsored Friday, N(}v. 25' at St. Mary's Academy, Bayview, in East Providence by the New England regional 'commit. tee of the North American Liturgical C·onference. . Beginning at 10:30, sessioJ18 will .be open to all priests, religious and laity. The theme is "Worship 0:£ God, Center of the Christian Life" and the day'e purpose is to increase understandiJig of the liturgy and participation in liturgical acts principally Mass and the Sac~ raments. w~ll

PARISH AUCTION: Left to right, Mrs. Stephen Ledwell and Mrs. Edward F. Molleo, in charge of auction to be held at Holy Name parish hall, New Bedford, at 7 tomorrow night, show Rev. John J. Hayes, pastor, cut glass that will be feature attraction.

'G· Stead' YOth UC Ode 0 pposes 01 ng y ButSanctions·'Going Steadily' .

WASHINGTON (NC) - Parents .should :not permit their children to g() steady, but may . permit them t(} be "going steadily," a youth code of the Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Women recommends. . The code defin.es "going steadily" as attending. more or' less fol-mal. affairs with the sameperson, but going to other soCial events with other persons: .,. The code, based on' the recom": mendati{)ns of the Archdiocesan' Councils of Catholic Men arid Women, the Catholic Youth Organization, and. the Office of Education was presentM form": apy to members of the Council (}f Cath(}lic Women at 'it9 convention here. Social Pr.essure Other parts of Ute cooe urge parents to prohibit their minor children from attending drivein motion picture theaters, to discourage .them from owning cars and to forbid them to drink alcoholic beverages.

Mystical Bocb The morning session will be shared by Rev. Benedict Ehmann, Watkins Glen, N.Y., discussing "Tbe Mystical Body of Christ" and Rev. Frederick R. McManus, Catholic University, whose topic will be \"Offering the Sacrifice together with Christ." Bishop McVinney of Providence will preside. Lunch will be followed by special sessions for priests, religious, seminarians, lay people belonging to liturgical associations, catechetical instructors,

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The code's preamble states: terest in liturgical music. "Both parents and children are 'Holy Mass will be offered at faced with the social pressure of 5, followed by dinner and an 'following the crowd.' To resist evening sessi(}n beginning at 8. this pressure alone is quite diffiEvening speakers will be Father cult. Ehmann, Mrs. Mary Perkins "Yet, if both parents and chil- Ryan, and Rev. Francis Weiser, dren knew that they were n(}t S.J. Most Rev. Thomas F. Maaione in resisting such pressure loney will preside. . , .• i,f they knew. that there . Anyone interested in attendwere others who thought as they ing all or part of the day may did, then they might .gain from c(}ntact Rev. Joseph P. Henry, such unity added strength in .f(}l- general. chairman, at 118 Taunlowing their convictions.". ton Avenue. East Providence. , . . . - - - - - - -......- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ,

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POETESS: Sister M. Madeleva, president 6f St. Mary's College, Notre Dame, has received the 1960 Spirit Medal of the Catholic Poetry Society. of America. NC PW~" ", • t . ~: :'.

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pAYTON (NC).- Auxil,iary Bishop .Paul F. Leibold of Cine:iimati asked college ·students to "correct the false

LONDON (NC)-The British press has'generallyhailed the announceinentthat Anglican Archbishop Geoffrey F. Fisher will visit Pope John ill early December. The announce'. nient of the visit by Lambeth palace, headquarters here of Archbishop Fisher, Primate . The meeting will be the first of the Church of England, personal encounter between the termed it simply a "COUl·t- spiritual leaders of the Anglican esy" call. However, the Brit- an'i the Catholic Churches since

image of the ugly Catholic'! that exists in the minds of some Americans. He also warned that "a secular generation will fall into the Marxist trap by default if not . by intention." He counseled the NFCCS delegates to "replace the false image (of the ugly Catholic) with the true image of the loyal subject of Christ, the King of love." Reviewing the question of Church-State r-elations, Bishop Leibold said it would ·be "most ul)fair to judge practices (not principles) in one country. or period with practices in another," and' added that "none of . the systems of government can claim canonization· by the 'Catholic conscience.'.~

ish press regarded it as much the Anglican Church split from more significant. Rome under Henry VI.II .400 ,The Daily Mail said:' "That years ago. something more than pleasanLambeth palace announced the tries will be passed ;.s obvious 'historic meeting in this form: from' the minds and characters "The Archbishop of Canterof. these two Christian leaders bury plans to leave London Nov_ and from what each has said 22 for Jerusalem where he will and done." be the guest of the Anglican The Manchester Guardian Archbishop.in Jerusalem, the · stated: "Everyone who cares ·for Most, Rev. Campbell MacInnes, · Christian, unity' ought to. welcome it (the visit) and wish D r , ' '''His Gra~e will visit the holy · Fisher good l u c k . " " places and call- on the Orthodox LAYMEN ' RETREAT C th"d 1 · · C ' · · . patriarch of Jerusalem and the . ." . : . a e' i'~. amp was the .scene "., More. T"an Cour.tesy h f . of another suc.cessf.ul d.iocesan.· r.e treat,. th'I·S one' for lay'.m·.e,n.' "The Daily" .Telegraoh de-. eads 0 other churches in the . clared: "The v.isit cannot be~. Miadle ,East,expressing in perS~own, .left t? right, are Joseph A~ 'Saladino of F~irh~ven,' ,: treated merely as a courtesy., 'It son the close friendship which .. RIchard G. Pr-att of ,Falmouth, ·M~i:;hael F. ·Fitzgera-Id·of.Fall . Hono'r Separation . marks an awareness by' both has long' existed between the River, alld Oscar A. Desrosiers bfAttleboro. $mphasizing that American · communions that the distiility Anglican and the e a s tel' n . . / '. ' Catholics uniformly honor sep· among Christians is too great a churches. aration of Chu'rch and State, he scandal to be ignor.ed and' too "On his way back the Arch'" 0 'poihte~ out that corifusionabout _serious a: weakness to 'be'left un- . bishop hopes it will prove posthis. positiQn .arises from' mi'sremedied:" sible .for hiin to call at Istanbul' . 0 understanding, .The Daily Herald said realists to visit His All Holiness Athen::'. 'rhe National Council of Catbolic' Women has urged the . "In Europe," he said, ';it · would regard' the' visit as "the agoras, the.· first Ecumenical U· . mean~' a 'c0ll'l:pIEi~e isolation. (Of opening Of diplomtic relations Patriarch of the Orthodox ~llted States to scrap its ·immigration quota system based religion 'fro m pu.blic. life). Here, · rather than the first step to.re,: Church. : .on· origins ip. favor of a "just and charitable substitute:" ~t 'means" a'refusal to grant" any' union.'" "AfterlstanbuUhe Archbishop' . Delegate's at the 30th national conven1;iou' of the NCCW In privilege to one .religious de.The . Daily . Sketch said the of Canterbury proposes to' spehd '. Las Vegas. have ui'ged also..' nominatio~' in prefererice te , meeting is a' "first hopeful sign a few days in .Rome· in ·tI].e·, that. the th~it~d States au'" '. derdeveloped countries so tnat 'another by niea.ns of an .estab· that the 'faith' they :sharemight ~ourse of which he will pay a' t.heir pe.ople may attain to a con- '. lislied religion. But it also means · triumph over the doctr.ines they', visit of courtesy to His Holiness" thorize ·"at least" twice the dition f lif~ w.ortn8- .of the·;dig.!· '. a distinction' between State and , do n o t . " . . ' Pope John' XXIII. The' Arch":' . number 6f irrimigrantsnow nitr l,)f '!lan." . . ClJu,,"ch which.is compatIble with .,,:,'" . First Meeting .. ' . , : bishopwili return t~ thlscoun:' ,;1diriitted' uliaerthe quota system. . . .', . .'M·igratory: Workers., ". , ,go~~ !eeling ~d' mutual. ~oopThe announcement by, Lam- ~ry on Dec c' 3.'~ '.' , '.' The Cotincii has appealed to the.':' ',fhe' ,NCCW urged support for' era.tIon .'.' ' , ' '" . . beth,palacegave no ·exaCt.da.te· -ir~hbish()p Fisher ~will' b'e ·a~.. : ~ov~r~l~erit..t0 'extend. the visas' . effort~~' p.toIl1 otea . progressive. : ~:!n this. ·rlur~list~c soc~ety. ~. · f~r-.,tl:~e ~eeting.betweenArchcomp~nied .on'Ns tour .by. th.e of exiles in rie~d'of protectlo.h, .p~an torredu~tion of armaments· J wl).I<:h we lIve an~,.lIl, whIch we "blshop.. Fisher. and. Pope' JQhf.l, .' Rev..John. Satterwaite; "general ~ espeCially Clibans.· . ' , " . , within .the .. .framework . of. 'th~ :. ha;ve .prQsPeI:ed and.will ·.ontinBut, the .Archbishop's .' schedule . secretary of the Church of Eng-' : -' Th~NCCW'has ~uggested that· , un.rte~ Nations. The' council SI.ij{... , ue': to prosper, we' shall'e~c:r calls .for· hini to be in Rome from . land c.ouncil·on inter':'c'h~rch re-' . i~ the natip,nal origins quota SYs':' --.gested tLat such a plan ·!?e.gjn ~rpve ourselves most loyal CItaDec. 1 to 3 . . , ' lations·... , . ' . .... " , .te01. canpb$ b~ aQQlished, quotas ..wit,h . th~ lim:it~tio~ ofm~cle!lr . ze':ls. of our gr,eat coul)try, ob~ '.1.:..' at ·le.ast'.should 'be based on the . weapons and mclude an ade- . ever:y IO.ta of .COfl'o . U .1960 census. Under ·the McCar- .- quatesystem.of inspection. stitutIOn and, the law of ~ rim- Walter immigration act, the .. The NCCW also called' for: a lan~, becau~.. We . recogm~e number !>f. . persons from, any "strengthening' of;- respect· for through our ~~Ith th~Ir auth';'l'ISANTIAGO (NC)":"'A CathOlic the peopie,.it noted ar-e "rell- . .c9 untry to 'be admitted to the . international law a'nd the. World . ty; from God, the. BIShop. sauL Action study issued 'here .has giously 'iilit~raie."'The· same United' States is.'.based on the' Court, so that disputes!between callel;l for a 'thing is tiue, it said, of many number' 'of .persons of that nanations can be settled peacefully to ovel·cQme~Ides~read.reh- among.. the" educated classes tiohal·originliving.in,the Uriited and juridic.a:ly.", .... NEW,:.<?RLEANS (NC):-Ken-.· gil,luS ign~nin~~j.jlJ,.}~~.tih ,Amer- .froni .' ~hich·the '-Churc'hmust .. , States in 1920. '. '. ," .' r!l~. C01,lncil urged' national neth H . .-:ochaffer, president of the, i c a . : "\',' " , ' . find' its' future' leaders .:both' ','.. , ., "leg~sl~ti~n to protect 'tt:Ierights,!: Californi~C:?.rnpl;l.ny, has pr~::' . It als()',tirged~':li~.driv~,-t9:~Om~. 'pries't~·and'lay'p:1e.i:i. •. :' '" ' . . .' .... Catholic' :rress. of migratory ·:70rkers. 'It· ap-' s~nted. an· unrestrIcted gJ;ant of· bat what ifc~l~S'.t!1¢:'''.d~pe~sonai- '. • ImmenSe'Task:"" '. ... '.A: resolutiof.l on· 'family life' pealed)o, affiliated groups .,t9·· $3,500 to .LoY?la..University ,oi. . t'IOn o.f 'th' . . mar; " b! T h. e T.atin; . . Americari . Bishops' ". urg'ed . "for the. the "S OUtho as l. -'~ th'e. comlza ,e:comm~n .. .··pa.·re·nt';' . " to ".band . . . tog'ether''. ~o,r k .~I' th 1oca I age,ncles part u.L commul1lcatIOn medIa.. ThIS, It. Coun~il has e.stimated that 70 ' . WIth other.' ap~n~s to ~hscourage,. Imprqvement ·of the. ~ealt~ahd, paI1Y.s· .program .for aid -to edusaid, threateps,;th~ a.re?'s spirit-:-" per.,,(ient of tpe.area!s .CathoHcs' ·ste~dy,.·c'?rnpanY;,.k.e~plngamong··.:«;;g~re ~f" ""or~ers;,. ,It urged .. cation. ,'.' , " -. · ual values .anc;l.rpak,es; ItS people go Jlot.. know -th~ fundan:tentalsof'':>' gra.m~ar and hIgh. ~hool stu-., ?bove'. all . that assIstance,; be, F(;r y'our 'Building Materials eas~, vic~imll 0r'pr6pa!Janda.. . ,thli!ir·:~~ligion:···.._ .....:~ ~~.l1ts,. , i : . . . , . ", . g~v~n.:.:th()se~ryin.g ·tQ. bring :reli.,. . The: study: was imbUshed' here . "An iinmenSe,task of'ed t"'. ~. fC-\lP,1J.t.\qn, .ag31qs t.... th~. :.. gIO.L\S. ,~d.ucabon to mIgrants al}d. .~~e~.i'.and.Choice. .Building .·Oy. the' Iriter-Arrref'icariSecreta" '. is necessary ·.because. wI'thUI~na tiohne,,,,.~StPreada·I"I°f.d.ObJ~.cNtICOIclawbleff.l.Il~ert~:-:'· ,. th~ircl1i.ldr~n,; , . ., . Lots in the Greater Taunton . .... . . . '." . . . . . ,ure· c e, upon.. ' . a I Ia e$ ... Another It" '. d nat .io.r Catholic-Acbon"ltis de-',~ bosom ·of our ·continenCs society tOt.' k ., .' 'd ,. '1;;' , t ... el" .·t . . ... , re~ u .IOn ,U l' g.e . ,:, ..,.:. ,A~.':· .' g,, ·signed for use as, a. basis'for. dis-:. forces "'are'" a·rising.·,. wh···Ii' " .',: 'b~; .e P9slh~ve.s an., . agalns ".;'. ,str?n . llUPPOl:t. for the ··CathOlic·. u cussion at' th, .Inter~An1e~ican; '. brii-igrf;ga r~pid'de.Chri::ia·~iil'a~···'Pth . IC~, IOl,':S' dt,a~ "hcolntr~bult~ . , to ..'. 'pre~s:' , :' .. . .' ': ". ..,' \., ".: ,.. 'h r A t ' W 'k"t b' h leI .' c' - •. " -' e'~or.a an ·psyc 0 ogica co~,. ._.,.,. · C . at 0 I~ .lOn . :e~ .. 0 e e,., tlonp. the study.said, . ;.:, . ruption:.·o'f· youth and .adults;,' .'. ,I------~ ...;.~--...;.,~.,~ .;...,;I . I c'O'~ 'm Mexlco.·Clty begInnIng . "The··ba·sI·" . ··.. b··l·ty \H. -!~ . . ., . , .. . - ,....Satur.. ' , c r~sponsI~Il . . .• . .. . CC>~.REIA '&.. day, N?v: 26. " ' , .., . Latm 'Amer-ican Cath li .' t Techmcal ASSistance . .... .... OCS IS 0 A I t· . ,... . t· , . .. ONE stOP , .VA 4i'7.8~7.·-: VA. ~-4.051 ~. . provide.an.,adequate.'and·effec;'; .. reso u IO~ ~m ",hns Ia~ umty . Needed I\eforins . The study y,;:arned that tomo~' ti.ve· :·ari.swel' 'to.. ~pir.i~u~l,""reli~ .' c:alled for Rrayer ,to, sURPort' ~he . 'SHOPPING CriNTER row's Lathi America will. I>e' . gIOUS, ,cultural and social.needs,: ~ffort~ (jff ope , Jo~? to .brIng shaped by communists unless the "The sol~tion' ·Of the ·economic.ab9t,It .: greater ~I1Ity. amollg , . . area~s Catholics '-limnth a' cam-·. ~roble.J!1.~. of, Lat.ip .. Amerlc;l.is, Ghr;sban people.'I, It aske.d •.. Television: • Furniture · . . •. .' . , . '. . ... 1m . 'bl 'th' . . ,. . NCCWmembersto show "POSI . .•. ApP.lianceli • G. rocery, :,... ., '. paign".forh:b.a41~:,~¢e.d~~:l' reforms .. pOSSI. e.,.1"1 "opt .,~.: . m.6I,>iJiz~-, ,'. :.. ,. , , , . . , ." ;~ · in accord witq.,Church teacl:tiitgs~: bon of si>Irltualforces." . ' .. . . tlV~ c.hallty . t_o~ard ;ill pef~on,s,"" 104 A~len' St•• Ne~ '~e~fO~d': • .." ...... . . . .. ' . '." _ .,-, '.c. .' .. '.. .": especIally. ·enemles' of Chrlsten. , .T~ls. cam~a~gn, Ita.dded, m.Ul1~. B· h''''' f' "R'~': ·~I·.';··'f""""". !, dom."· ·c'· " . ' ":'~ : . , . , WYman 7-9354 ~. a.lm.ed at o~e~c.om.lI1g.Jhe'qe- . I.S c.?~~ e:I~<,:,;;lt~,t~~. . PI1' foreign, '~19, 'tile '~Cc.w''' .~.-,~, ----.;..."'!"'~~ ~I~Ien~Ies ~~Ichma.ke ,?athol- . (lalled"fb't: ~n·'''adequate,. toorlC!S~ ~n La~l? A::reqca" "lI. ..forP~~J\r{.. (NCr...,...,Six'~hti·nqf~ i,d\nated ai~d. ~ell-~0t,Ind~d Pl'~";. ~ahst~c r~hg~on...... ." .:.. famIl~e~~left i p.~meless .because ! gram of. techl1lcal a.s~Istance and .A largepa,r~. ~tJhe: .J11l:\sses qf of a .fIfe h~~e ",ere aided.b~,-io6d ! of devel.opmenkc.apltal for ·.unThomas F; Monaghan Jr. supplies seilfbythe U. S. dth- I ..'. . . olic Bishops'· worldwide relief Treasurer CO.. . agency.' .. . . The agency,. Catholic Relief·. LAS VEGAS - Th~ National Services-National.Catholic WeI.. 142 SECOND STREET Council of 'Catholic Women was ~·a~d.,Bur"e~s Plumbing Heating tare ,Conf¢rer'tce·, .. distributed . 'p'~a\sed by Pope John :at its ;lOth 37,000 pounds of flour and 600 OSbor;,~ 5-7856 , bi.erHl!al·conventiori iidhis resOrt pounds of 'l;lried "milk 'to' the 9ver35' 'Years . ,. cttnteli. ',_,. " .. i . , ' .. " ·homeless. -:.. " , .. of. Satisfied Se'rvice . '.,-- ".'.' . ~.. .NEW ,,'.BEDFORD ,... .".. ;" . · .. The :::<ipll.l .. message. reads, in ... ' ': .. ",. ".. t ' .' .' The,·.fil'e:,~tai-ted·ln, a m~rket:" ...: . part: '. '. .... : .... , '806' NO: MAIN-STRE'B '. , .. :WYman 2~5534'·· ... place. _. and destroyed.· wooden • '.'We j.a~e 'pleasure hsending,' • ~ouse/l over.a w\!le' area before . 'FaIlRlver:' OS '5-7497 through your' good offices, Our It was brought i.fnder. control..' : ~ · .fuessage of felicitations:' encour., ~~~~~~~~~~ agement aildprayerful wishes to ~ ~.... ~ ~ the offitei'sand memb~rs'of the ~ F;AM~LY TREAT . '. . .l'.l ~ National . Council QfCatholic · Women; as they meeUri·:biennial ::-:'. . '" convention· in ·,the·· citi of'Las . WY '7-9~ '6 .. , ' • :::'.'INSURE';:'YO'UR' 'MERR~ CHRISTMAS · Vegas" .'-- : .• , :: ..'; .... , . . . J,O·$EP~:M. :{D.ON'AGHY ,.. "In' :p'a~;ticuI~r;~We.wiin .to ,ex..: . ROS··~E.LA·· l ~I '.. .".: E~r.rfYour ·.. lic:(ay.M9 ney rep':~senting" : owner/mgr.... ~. I~. ':. '..' AVO,N,Show,:AVQN TV-~dve,,!ised Gift. pre~s Our', personal' gratitude fo~ . ·142 Campbell . $I, .' . · the unstillting aid gi;verr, to the ':' .FARMS ,:: :.'- : .:.. ... S.ets. and Toi!etries. . ". :,.,., '. ~, poor· and· afilicted. thrqugh ,Our .! New ; aedf~;d;: .MaH•. ' 14~ Washin~ton St.,' Faifhaven. ' .:i.!·; .... '.:' For. pe~son~1' intervie~ 'in yoUr.,·.home'~ private st9r~roolll:, W: w.1J.i~h the 9-6792 . , . member associations <:if the coun'. Just off Route' 6 "IS·THE:·TIMEtO.~ ... cilsend:~generqus giJ1ts.. food, HEADQUARTERS' FOR ,; Watch for Signs...· :'::NEW: :BEDFORJ;). AREA -,. vt/'J. clothing 'and 'other necessities of , While out for 3 Drive' I' 'CAPE AREA H' • COLONIAL AND Stop at this Delightful .Spot .' : .. : ''''':',. yannls;'-Spring 5-9306 life;', to be distribut¢d'~ by the 11lAI:lITIONAl" FURPliITURE " .' '. FALL· RIVER ·AREA-- as· '8"'5265· .. . 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Protestant'· 'Sees~Th'omism~ Bridge Between Fa'iths \

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Thurs., Nov. 10, 1960

11

Profesor See s Role of Newman Clubs Increase

TOLEDO (NC)-The teachings of St. Thomlls Aquinas are "a bridge" between Catholicity and Protestantism, acc()r'ding to a' Protestan't professor. Dr. George Lindbeck, a Lutheran who teach~s philosophy at Yale University, made this evaluation at the second He said St. Thomas' underannual meeting of Toledo's standing of the sacraments was ", . . "by no means antithetic to at Ecumemcal Institute, WhICh least the Luthern positions." is sponsored by the St. Paul Dr. Lindbeck compared the

CHAMPAIGN (NC) Newman Clubs' at secular colleges will play an increasing role in forming Catholic

lay' eaciers, ac-ording to a Catholic professor at a . lte univerLutheran cong~'egation. Thirty- teachings of St. Thomas to those sity, five Catholic priests were among of St. Augustine, another l?octor William J, Whalen, assistant the 140 clergymen in the audi- of the Church. professor of English at Purdue ence. He said that the "tendency to University, told the 1raduate Dr. Lindbeck said the Protest- fear the sensible nd despise the fac1'lty shiff league of the Newant judgement on the truth of St. body, so prominent a feature ·of man Foundation at ,. 'JniverThomas's teachings "must be Augustine's thought, is utterly sity of ~llino' that there is an strikingly favorable." lacking in Thomqs Aquinas," incorrect impression that the "If one asks," he continued, Unity of Man majority of those attc ". secu"whether there is historically "But, for 'the very reason that lar unI\ Jrsitles are weak or lax any other philosophical-'theothe Bible also, stresses the unity Catholics. logical system which is more .of man, at this poin" Aquinas is SODALITY. UNION: At a day of recollection held at ,Newman orgimizations, he Christian, which is more com- in the right, and. all that Augus. Cathedral Camp~ Lakeville,for some 250 members the said, whic;! were formerly simple pati'ble with the'" iblical witness, tinian puritanism which has also Communion breakfast sodeties, the answer is likely to be 'no;' 'been strong in Protestant 'circles -Queen 'of Peace Sodality Union of the Diocese are (fro'nt) have become on many campuses at'least for most Protestants who must be rejec·~ed, even as the - Mary Badwey, Sacred Hearts Acadeuw, Fall River; (second a substantial educational, cultuare' 'rooted in' the Refol'rrtation." , Cath,olic Church ,has· attempted -row, left to right) 'Rosemary'Orsi, St.-Mary's High School; ral, social, and spiritual force 'in Conformity to Bible ' to reject it," 1;>1". Lindbeck added. Taunton; Diane St. Denis, Dominicim Academy; Fall River; the lives of these Catholic stuDr. Lindbec\c: said, .:that the' . ~e> sumqIarizerl tIis 'po~ition as (rear, left. to .right) JohnO'Ri;>urke, Holy Fam.'ilyHigh dents. PJ:otestant judgement ,9f th.e follows:' "In both emphasis on truth of Thom.ism-the theolog':' 'grace: and. on the Scriptures, School, New' Bedford; Paul Charla'nd,Prevost High School, Financial ·Reason ical and philosophical system ·of ...Thomas was closer to the reformFall River. Speakers included Rev.•Joseph Powers, Rev. , Mr, Whalenl author of several St:Thomas-is based on whether· ers than were -the Catholic theobest-sellers in the fields of Edward J. Mitchell and Rev. Robert Kaszynski. it conforms to. the Bible. . logians -whom they corifronted." Catholic relationships with nonHe asserted th'at the objections, Dr. Lindbe~k said he does Catholics and family economicS, of modern Protestant theologi;ms not think Christian unity can -be claimed that the primary reason to, ,Thoini8m apply more .to .the _ ,attained through compromise, or most students attend the secular. .tea.chings of St. Thomas' follow-. that it will be achieved soon. He R~ign U1~iversity is financial. ers than to the teachings of St. urged Catholics and Protestants - VATICAN CITY (N-':-Pope; Archbishop of Milan, the first of By the time his own oldest, Thomas himself. . ' to ,lear:n from e~ch other, John said here he looks upon his 38.carq.inals~reated by rope child is ready for college, he said, . first two years as pope as being John, A . .:mdi' were 32 car- pr.edictions are that it will ,cost "in conformity with the Divine, diI;lals, 1 .• , bel'S of the 'pagal $4,500 per year for higher educa-, wilL" ', court nnd diplomats accredited' tion in a private school or a totaR The Po;-: self-appraisal.was 'tot~eHoly.See. ' of nearly $90,000 for· his five children. ORANGE (NC)-Because there The only help the missioners made, in answer to the official' ..... Re~eives GOOd Wishes was"no 'ide'nt:iflcation' betweeh"' -received,. al)d still receive from " congrat~lations ,of the Colle~e, The' Pope went to· the Hall' ~ . . Most parents find this expense Church and state' during tne ' the·Nigerian g~vernment,'was in o~ ,Car~hnfl,ls,;OI:l!h~ sec,ond anm., .. Vestment:· after Mass to receive completely. beyond their meanS, ' . ' . ... " '. .. versary, of hIS cor,onatIon. " " " colon Ial 'perIOd' In' NIgeria, the , the·form of salaries for mission_' ;",h, t', I t' "n "ft' ,the,cardmals, whose good v"ohes he' ,claimed', particularly ·when s '" h th' '. b'l "t ' 't" , ' , ' ~ . e congra u a 19 came a er, ' , . . 'b' ' ChU ,·.c ere IS'a e 0 opera e' ary tel\chers, he' said. . M' ' t h "s' t" h l' b" . were suppressed y t h e dean',., of they have to pay: the pledges,' ..... ·f'l·'·'t· 'h';" '. ,lie. e IS me cape, III ' .. 'peace u a mosp e.e !lOW said , that the non:violent - aG' assm . Cd'" , 1M' t' y. .' th'C e o II ege ,0fC,ard"ma 1S,' E ugene tuitions, and other financial obH;' gations throughout the ~'ears ~ :t~at in~e,?en.de?~e. has, ~rrived.. re~olve' of. the independence, - lOvanm a r In a on l?l, Cardinal Tisserant. . That IS the OpInIOn of Father question in Nigeria Africa's' e . The Pope replied that his an- fore college.' Mlc~ael. ~oner, .S:~.A.; W~~-. most populous indep'~ll(ient na. O· ", nlversary gave him'a chance to • bO!-"Il. m,ls~IOnerVI1lrtrng here ~n -tion, was due to wise Britlsh .... I look back at "the road covered N~w .J~rsey after 15 years l~ rule. Some 20,000 Nigerh~c; w~re I~ in the past two years;" which he . NI~.ena. ..' able to gain university degr~es LAS VEGAS (NC)-Mrs. Ar- ': described as h's "novitiate in 'the 1 No one could' IdentIfy the.' under the British. thur L. Zepf of Toledo, 'an offi- Chair of Peter." ~hurch with the. Briti.sh· ,~olon:" '. Father Toner said that N(g- cial of Catholic wonen's organ- .' The road· has ,been good, he . lal. government 10 NlgeIla, as erla has about two million Cathizations sinc..l 1945, has be~n said. : the ·natives could and did in olics in a tota1 population of 36.' elected to a. two.,year term :as : "It is a -road' already traversed the~ Congo," -Father Toner exmillion people.. , . . presider;'t of the NationalCoun- brilliantI: by Our venerable plau:ted. ' , ' . "While this . may hot' seem cifof C'Jt~olic W:omen.. ' ,: predecessor-s," he added. "All We H.ke a largepe~centage," he said, . fMthrs , TzoelePd·f,o· fDol~omceesal' n,prceoslu'dn·ec,nl.tl " have t? dOisb:con~inUe,all(mg---t~e, e .' ., ' . . "It must be' remembered that s~me way" eanng' a ways: 10 : theselwo milHon wield··an in:' of 'Catholic' Women. imci' 'padt" mind and heart the ineffable goal ,fluence.that isou't of proportion national chairman' of NCCW's . proposed.. to us by. the Divine L*S VEGAS (NC: ..:;. Cathollc to their' small' humber. This· is committee on foreign relief, sue- Master'" " " 'T,he, Pqpe received manytele- . .organizations.. should publicly, ". because they 'ar'e' the 'educat'ed .. ceeds Mrs:' Mai'k A. Theissen 'of sl!Pport civil rights measures as '. people.!' " . . . , ", Covington, K y . ' . gr~1TIll Qfc~ll}gr~tulations on, his, . p~rt. of .a·.pro~nun· ,ot ",pQsitiV,e He' added that the pagan ~ ". Namedfirst vice president \\ias'; anniversary, including one..from. 'hI~ :actiqn,,·to ,~nd,ia~.lal iQ~~stic;~.,<tn pIe '~ar~' l)lovin.!(J.'apjdlY' toward . Mrs'. Robert'·!:. Wittman: of El, Ita,lian Pr,e~ident Gi()varini <;iron.... H' • 01 "OUCU',: of Africa~ Missions. . . 'Christianity·.', 'Comml.1l'ifsm· is' Paso Tex. .. .' , ch~:,,' : , , ' .'," , . " ; , -, offiCial said hlbr~::, :;" . , not athreat;"hecontil1Ued, but Mrs.' RolaridE,M:cSweeneY'of .•- .. 'The recommeridationfor ~ore ;" Mohammedanism';' which 1S also' 'Brattleboro, 'Vt.,became seC<>li.d '.'. C~tho~ic' ,involv~~.l)t~~n. 1e~.i~- : making converts. among the pa'gvL'i-president; Miss Marie D. J . lative .efforts to fight, d'tscnm-. ans, could prove trou blesome 'to - Kleinkoff .of .'Lakevillle,'; In·d.;' ination 'came ,from J,ohn F.' De- Christianity in the future: .,' thirdvice-pre~ident;Mrs. Philip y' 'H' ~ury, Los ~nge~es ar.ea director.. ','I think the 'firial'sttu'ggl~ in M. Dampf, Sr" of Jefferson City, ' ' . ,of the Gahforma Fall' Employ- Africa will be between.Moslems Mo., treasurer; Mrs. Charles .A. : . ment praCCticehCl?mmisSi~n.t. . and. Christians - communism Gartltand of MdyrtMle BeaJch" S. C ·,; .~,'.'. ¥!-6Y"'5"92"'~ ....If ::tll' at 0 IC orgalllza Ions won't count "said Father Toner _ secre ary; an rs.. ames S .; ~& . .. spoke out with a, clear, unit~d '. who is a m~mber of the. Societ~ .. Adams of Dallas, a member' of CHARLES F. VARGAS voice;. this' would' be a tremen: . .. :the executive' b~ard; . . The new, president of the 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE dCi'us co'ltribut~on to :~c,h.ieving 12 Nuns' F-rom 'India intenaclal justIce," he s~ld. ' .' . '._'. . NCCW has been.anatioilal dil'E;c~ , 'NEW'ieDFOID, ~S.'. :, Addresses Wom~n . ' ,StudYil~~.~~·:· " : tor of.~he. organiz~ti,qn:sin~e195.8, ,Mr. D~h,1fy. told, ,a ~ess,IQn of. CHICAGO' (NCr -..:..::. T weI v e She fIrst became an officer .Ill c. > t~e 30th bfelmial C,oil\Te~Uon ~f nuns whoal'e .natives Of' India :. 1.941>~ when ~he w!1s elect.ed r.eA,P~LE·GING'ER the National Council of Cathohc arrived at St; Xavier College : cordn"g secretary, of . l,\ deanery ·Women. that Catholic groups . here for an orientation program .. unit.. They're simple to ,make, yet "should not delu'de . themselves in the American Way of life. ~~,,-,.-~-----------.", glamorous to serve. Bake with well-meaning gestures as a The .nuns will study later' at " R, A. WILCOX CO. "gin'geroread' ,'mix in' waffle SUbstitute for ,.pos,itive ,a~tion." college!l conducted by the Sisters . iron. Spread' waffles with . OFFICE FURNIT'URE :"How many Catholic organ i- of, Mercy. Each of six colleges· applesauce and top' with -' zations are there who substitute will take two nuns. ,The nuns In Sloel<, for ..,,,,,'edial. O.. li.el'Y' 'whipped Hood Economy AIlpicnics for minority children, . will return to India to teach after' • DESKS ' • CHAIRS Purpose Cream.. and the distl'ibution of balls and they receive their degrees. . FILING CABINETS .... You'll find ·this .a ·different bats to minority, baseball teams, Sister: Mary Josetta, president' :.. FIRE' FILES , " . SAFES: for concrete action to~ard solv- of St.Xavier, said the' arrange- . and delicious h9lidaydes.sert. ing the national racist aberra- ment'is part of aprogtamto en"; ·FO~DINq.,TA8LES. .' . So,. 00. s.mart. O.rder Hood· tion," asked 'Mr. Delury, a past courage Christian education 'in AND CHAIRS" I~conomy All-Purpose Cream' vice president. of the Catholic . India and thus' strike ~'a blow at' 'R" A 'WlLCO'X 'C~ .' (or the holidays. It whip~ in : Interl'acial Council of San Fran- communism there." The 12' nuns ~ . v . . 20· seconds, creams coffee, . ~isco. .come from Ch~lI1ganacherry,Ker- , " " . 22' BEDFORD' ·:5T: ' >, : glamorizes : pies, puddings' ala, India, where communist 'fAll :RlVER '5-7838' Florida, Nurses_ ,",on:or 'were ousted. fr0r? offic~, in 1959. ~ 'J and desserts. There's'no substitute for real cream when Catholic Associate Many. CLOISTERED CARMELItES, '·you want real goodness for ST. PETERSBURG (NC)- A :'in 'forcign' 'Iands, ,mcmbcrs of' the Catholic nurse received the an';' only pennies a serving. Get ~ Electrical 'same Ordcr asSt,'Therese of LisieuI,:. nual Community Service Award . ·Hood EconQmy ~i '. Controcton ',lack:, sl;.fii'cicllt food and clothillg,: of the Florida rurses Assol::iation A 11-' Pur p'o e" -::.~ ..· Con~enls :a~e . ~n' ,deplorable cOl1(li~;, .at: its coiwention here.' .. ,.,_ Cream at your . .iion; New metl,lOds of .liyq~ih09d must Mr~...LiHian L, Smith of West store or door. , Palffi Beach, a member of the :he dcve(oped'io enable them to sup-' FNA since 1943, v'as cited for her · port theulselves:' Because you are in·' , · terested in', assisling' a CIoiste~ed. fuU':t~rrie volunteer work. in the . ~ Carn~c.li'te,·w'rite:,· . " , past as a pr'ofessional nurse. She :T. ~. is·;\ past president of the Palm . CLOISTERED CARMELITE fUN'D B~ach Chapter of the Miami. ,944 County St. . ' c / o Fr. B~l1ar~irie Wils~n, Diqcesan Council of Catholic . .' '0.' Carm. ....HE' JIM BACKUS SHOW" Bedford Nurses and is now ~cond vice , '2?th North "Broadwuy','Joliet, 'III.. ' EVERY THURSDAY· 7~7:30 PM '

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Pope John Expresses Satisfaction With First Two Years of

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·O:perates, ,Peacefully in Nigeria

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To Honor .theSacreci Heart

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Without God)." Jubilees inevitilbly bring forth comparisons of pas twit h

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. while we were in Soutb America preaching a mission, a bishop told u~.!of a conversation he had with Fatber Mateo. Father Mateo was aiiwell' known arid saintly priest who through the world preached the enthronization of the Sacred Heart in, homes. It seemed that one' day; a· nun. came to him saying that she had had revelations f±'<mi'th'e·t&ered Heart. Father Mateo thought he would test her by:c!lite:<:ti!ig;' !'if:thiS is io:~~sk. Our Lord to ten you asia of ~~ y~uth." :- ... ;: ./ ",~., '.' , ' ... .'

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By Rev~ Peter J. Rahill. Ph.D. Colorado being known. as ~pe "Ce,ntennial Stat~H is ~ eonstant reminder ,of the· series oflOOth- anniversaries which the United States commenced .tocelebratein1876. ,And it is not parenthetica'1 at all, but very pertinent, that this commonwealth resplen- and agnosticism when he Doined dent in natural wonders other New England intellectuals :adopted for its moi-t~ "Nil at BrookFann. Sin e Numine (Nothing Long before the collapse of

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.." A'f~W' we'ek,s: la~ . wh~' the n~ret~Ji~, Father Mateo inquired if 'the Sacred a~8.rt had revealed to her a sin .of his youth. The nun answered: ~'The 8acre<l 'Heart. 'said: . 'What I have forgiven"I have' forgotten. But· ·.there is one thing I shall never forget and that is that when Father' Mateo was in the first year of the seminary, he luld such an ardent love of Me· that be burned in his breaSt My Holy Name.''' It was true, Father RECEIVES A WARD: Mateo hed tG admit, and the authenticity of Honored by the Ita!ian gov",: her revelau01\ was confirmed. ".

that experiment, in communal life on a .craggy Massachusetts hillside, Brownson had departed on his unceasing quest. The 'end present, and of the long road was hisinstrucwith the nation the Cathtion and ,baptism b ' the Coadolic .... I'.. lrch jutor Bishop of Boston,' John t ben had Bernard Fitzpatrick.. ermnent for f-ostering italmultitudinous ··Gifted Pea The number of small statueS and eol· reasons for Shaking his I_ompadoured ian-San SalvadoriUl 11lnder..;. i»red pictures of the Sacred Reali one sees thanking God. black hair from .pulpit ,and plat- standing is Carlos Siri..asin the poor homes in Mission lands is • A s- the form, Brownson long since had sign of hope for the world. They mean that sistant direciliorof the Latin United States estabIisL his ""'putation as a the Sacred Humanity of Our Lord Is the of '1876 was lecturer. But his powerful voice American Bureau of the soureeof grace, redemption. blessing and 1 a l' m 0 r e was not the equal of his more N.ationalCatholic Welf&ire resignation even among the trials of life. proud of that gif,ted pen. Conference in Washingtcm. indefinable Americanism ,than of For years his Quarterly ReHow diffel'ent is the hatred of God and redemption ID a NC Photo. view was eagerly awaited in" .Khruschev who .at the United Nations meeting_.said that he was multiplication of numbers and expanse of ,boundaries, :sothe Washington. He considered that - ,there "not by the graoe of God.'! Iri that ugly cameo of negation Church gloried in the intensity part of his l1fe terminated when . is the, spirit ,of .helL ... of Catholicism more than growth he entered the Church. Bishop Continued, from Page (}De' and size. But if figures were to Fitzpatrick encouraged him to went to nine territories in Africa' In the face of tbis we wondered if eoul(l' not ilet up thou,be cited, those ,of the Church continue publication because of -Algeria, Dahomey, the iEgypliands of little chap.els'in Mission 'landsdeclicated to 1he Sacred :were even more impressive than Catholicity's' need of a bold tian' region of the United Nab Heart. We can ,put' up;a ehapelfor as iittle as $2500. Do you know the totals for the nation ,of which champion. Later the British Republic, Ethiopia, Cameroon, ten people who' would Diake a 'sacrifice' for the spread of t~e Quarterly Review admitted that Liberia, MorocllO, Nigeria an d, love of .the Redemptive' Heart of Christ? In South Americn we 'sh'e was a part . .. "Brownson is the best' of the met one professor'. wboreceived $50,000 from a foundation in the - ...· Iic Educa t'Ion Tunisia. C.......0 Romish. editors,."., .. ' , '., . United :'States' to spread Commuillst doetrlue. Shan Baal have Ch ar1es 'arro C 11 World Wide Program Wh en £'·a th'U" 0 c' Many have hailed this br'oad. d th D 1 t' OO'!Ina . ,Other areas receiving maioI,', . benefactors' and .Christ ·.havenoJ:le? . Signe e ec ara IOn " . e- shouldered: New' Eng1arider' as reUe{aid' included: iI<taly to' :_'-'pendenceonly two buildings in the most important ,convert 6f d. U 't d Statesco uld ac t u all,y the !last cen:bury. In 1865 Brown- which were,sent'1,223,394 'lll()unli. . Help lis :1iJ, \his 'pl~~aI'dbig~~f ~he'l~ve, !»f Christ in o~r,~i~ ~e' Dl e &.. h ch es. Ma ss son discontinued his Review for valu~ lands. W~ ask only. that 70u 'apow"th't~ Holy Father to8eeide ve ca 11e d C a,th0 Uc cur, .... :at ,$1,745,081; Spain 769,.was 0ff ered 'm prlva . t e ,GIlles b I where the cIiapels :w.m ,be', tiunt.· OUR GOAL IS 200 CHAPELS atirn,eto·~oncentrateon his "'en- 704 pounds valued .at $1,139,899; ~ f f t' ... South Korea 772,957. pounds valIN' HONOR OF THE SACRED HEART BEFORE JANUARY L :a.or', ear 0 persecu, Ion. etrating ,stUdy,:Tli.: '·America··n . 'd'" l't 5000 Republic. 'uedat $1,159,219,' Forme·" O. De h undreyears' a er '/' . ....." 708,- '~Y'1he' Sacred' Hean' bleSs :you for helpiDg to save others and th1lfl. save; you.rseif. Send' your. ofleriDg to Most. Re.... JI'altOD I. Catholic churches .adorned ,the " Fat.b.er Beeker 243 pO,unds valued at $977,749 'Sb'een,&6SFif'th.Avenue,:NewYork 1, New York. lad n.. Th ey were nee d e d f or the Fortunately ,that verT year . and South 'Vietnam6'JS,840 ,~~. ,~.," '"', ,"," ~::;;.. " ~_.:- ':~~.':":: .: ,.:r-....J,:'~~-.-.-..- , ..:..... ," :" . :oj • 6,000,000 faitihful,'a wondrous gave birth to .another 'Catba1ic pounds valued at $961,634. n ments to ,the remaiDiE,gSI the '15000 8hi,.. "'GODLOVE .YOU· to 1ifi$;,W.E.B. foe $20 '.'We have. just comrou'It, "Ip l'Icat·Ion of , ' i - lval i t e r a r y periodical Whose merit ,- t C a thO.m;o ,._- '.... -" the "",merlcan .. 'c o nt ri land 'ilea. 'without' a scratch; I ...n also wasu recogniZed outside ,ot e s varied in liizefrem piet~d,a'j4:'OOO niUe.1tY{bl: Revolution. the Church. There was a marked 2,600 pounds to '521,852 p@URds. ,lim' sQ ·grat~fu1for.t~o'ur;,saf~ r.e~\l1"Il. Please accept this offering as .~aY Q{·sbowing··tiji.'~t'J,WIKS·:" •. ': to M.F. and. frie~ds tor $T8 . Then there bad not been even similarity -to BroWnson in its Most Urgent Need -Wear~'thi'ee girlg:'iwel:~e; 'ahd thirteen 7ears ~f age.' Last"wed: a.sitngle. PlaI'OChi:13 SCblOlogl ; in tehre ed~t.or;:t·':;·'" " a'b'O'Thute 10asntkur,e.~enatn,ndee~, SecdedDI'nter"g, we beld oUr backYarl1 /eAdtival' from which we r.eal,ized a.to~. ~ cen enma year 'U ,co e e S w e . <ISaac . Heelter·.:·:likewise had .... 'U hap'p~ly com:b~secular an~ . ,been inthe group.at Broalc Faim .men's .work .clothing and shoes $T8. We would like ,yo'Ll .io:1ise the money for the less fortunate people of the world."" ;.: ~:.tO ·l\IJ;rs. A,C. for $5 "1 am lonely. This ill relIgiOUS education. . '. .. !be£ore ,his :searchendedm. ,the ani! clothing for infants and Orestes Brownson , : 'Catholic' Oh.urch.·· After. he had' cbildre!1;~'Fa t he,r. ,McCarthy for those who are lonelier;" ,. o ne 0f the sill:,ooges,volces t" f 'b' . ~ "_J_' .". .' - 'stressed'. He'said: . or , " een ·orwu..ued .• a: priest;:Aie .. .. "It w'a's' ,the reserv,e" ,stock _~ Cathol~c education. ·in the 19th . founded ·,thePauUstFatliers to' .... "Cut out :!hiscoIUffiJll, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to Che century came from a man who. carry tQe gqspelto."otber,S!le.ep . clothing we held ftomlastyea.r'·s Most Rev. Fl<l1ton J. Sheen. National Director of the Society for bad never seen a Catholic school not of this fold." " .Thanksgiving collecticiIU which the Propagation of the Faith, 366.Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y.. of any kind asa boy. But from. ' Recognizing -that the printed. made it 'possible for us ,to move or your Diooesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE. childhood' Orestes A. Brownson . .page would reach SQme who prmptly "and fully to assist in 368 North Main'Street;_FaU River, M~ had sought to kno~ . the would never hear. the .spoken ' the emergen'cies and disasters of Abnighty. . vyord~ Hecker began ,publication ,the past 12 months in Chile; in DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUl Seeing soldiers driUing for the of the Catholi~ World. Though Morocco, in' Iran, inInwa,in War of 1812 when he was about the circulation of this monthly: Pakistan and in Puerto Rico. Invi.. ,oung girl' (14-28) .. lldtor ' . Christ·s· vast flae}'QrcI ' .. an ApOI.1e 01 1M nine, on his return home he re- publication was not larg~ its "The clothing collection is our Editions. Presa. Radio, Movie. and ported having seen two men influence was ,so powerful that a basic source ,of this type of relief ";sioo, Witb th_ modem meDIW, ..... talking about ,God. 'The discus- new light dawned for the faith- material and we are entirely "de-.tinionary Siste" brillg Daetrille ,lion of eternitY:bY ,two onlookers £ul. pendent' upon its success!' to idl. regarcflen of rae.. calor or ___ was more impressive to this child Unintended Compliment For' iIlforlROtiOO write to, than soldiers :l'esp!lendent in An unintended compliment UV. MOTHS SUPEltGe W1:iforms and muskets. , was given in tlie founding of an . Oontinued ,fTom Page (1)ne 50 st. PAUl'S AW, aOSTOtt 10. MASI. ·Asatisfyingknowledgeaf. 'Cod organization called the American -Catholic' Relief Services-:Nadid not come easily to :tibe ~n-' and, Foreign Christian Union. Its . tional 'Catholic WelfaTeConferUUating intellec:tofBrowllooo. de'clared purpose was to improve ence announced that tJheshipFirst a U'n1\T-ersalist minister" the literary ,output of Protestantsment coptained 2,{)O() baies ..of t • Chen a U~tarian preacher, .he in' an~-9athoJ.;~,p'ublica~c;ms. " . ~lothing, 1{)O bales of .blan'kets~ was hovertng between a~sfl,\ " The tItle· of ItS magazme tlbe '1oo'b 1 . f ",,' ' h ' 1 A g' d d . Chr" , , ,' ,. . .' ,a es () 'louse ~ .. , OQ· S an • -.-.> .. ,. lst~n; World, was too .close : $50;OOOw'ortli of' medicines. for ,coln<7det;Jce to Father,}feCik- ... The !I.2!1::'ton shipment left er, 's 'pUb!lC8;tH~n. :R~ven.uefor;~e \~New 'York· City a'boardthe 58 Continued from 'Page One· scholarship aid.' A1Ppli.cations ~ f Ir~tyear. was, $138,526.~.!>-8 Steer' Chemist and is scheciuled ' Illay be obtained :fll1omthe' high . was 'Wi ual . with ,'pUbli~tiqn$'"to ahive in Chittagong, East school principals and .guidance-, found¢ ~n hatr~~e,gold:min~ Pakistan, in December. directors ,of ,the ,area and upon ~etered out., By ~67~, th~ann~al " :¥sgr. John F. McCarthy, CRS"; . completionlihould b,e ,mailed t9 mcome had dt:0pped ,to one::-thir-:- : NC'wC ',assista.ri.t executive direc- . . j:~'ftC' ',~S ..t tbe Secretary,. of the Award teentQ" of the initial·Y.ear.... tors'aidthat' most of the mate1ft.. A Committee, 'Mr. John 'F. Kin- ' Both'in and outside t~e Chureh : iialo 'shipped' '.'lme ,:fll1e>m tihe·· UNION 'WHARf ' , . " . . ...; 'fA1RHAVEN; MASS. eavy, 6 Perron Avenue, 'Somer- . the educated. felt !he Impact of ' organi~t:ien~s supplies received ~~~~~'~~~'~~.~·~'~·~··~·'~'~·~~'~~~'~~""·~'·~~·'·~~~~n~ set. D~iil(ninefor ,applications is the works ,of Bro~nson andthrou,gh:Catholic Bishops';annual :," .' .. ,':' ! P Mar:ch 1, 196L '. C;:lothitlg i :.:::•.,.11I..•.. ' 1Ii,• • • . • • ,••. •:"IIi._Illi;:.:ii., • ... .• .. ··,,:IIi!;:·,Iii-E·";·.iI··''''''·:·'··T"I!I· a~lChYf cOD~ened ~or ~he II C('junThe Monsignor noted that tihe . . ' .' ,'.' . I _,~. . ~ :'1: : I:, ' .I:'OIII~ .. Cl ? Ba1tunore ~ 1868, annual nationwide ,collection W'ill ~ . .'. -' '...: .: . .,

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This is ·the Weather for Clam Chowder

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Retreat League to Hold Open Meeting

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;'. . VATICAN 'crry (NC)':'- The . inarbie '~ltar' that st06'd in;: the . grotfo Lourdes.,from 1907 .to 1958 has: been placed in the,replica of the Lourdes Grotto iJil. the Vatican' gardens. The altar," was presented' ;:tc Pope; Joh'J1 "by Bishop Pierre M,a~ie 'th¢as: of Tarbes and Loi.l1:dell as 'a symbol "of· the close union which. has always united Lourdes and Rome," Bishop Theas recalled, in· a letter accompanying the. gift, th-~ it was at the marble altar that four future popes cele. brated Mass before their 'election to the papacy. They were Popes Benedict XV, Pius Jq, Pius XII and John XXIII. The Bishop also noted that hundreda of cardinals, thousands of bishops and tens of thousands of. priests o~fered Mass on the same altar, which stood in the rocky cave where the Blessed. Mother appeared to Bernadette.

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:: "': . 'By :Rt, Rev,'l\1sgr, John S. Kennedy' ., r .. Jean 'Kerr's "Please', Don't Eat the Daisi!'ls," though a ldaisy·, was'al#o' as,Ieeper: Its;'phenomenal b~st seUj!lg recox:d :~as a com:pletesurp~ise .. Its· ~xc~lle~~e';'~ hurilOr. ·.w~. obvious,' but humorous books are very lnfrequently among, : the best sellers, espeCiall~ if of the' secrets, of. t~e ~oPularity. 'they' comprise' magaz'me of Mrs. Kerr's work; the reader . pieces, and if. the author is . can recog~ize hi.mse~ and ~is hot an established name, like dear ones In t~e sItuations whIch P.erelman· or Thurber. Mrs. sheThPresenhts. rts 'h'ld' " , k along when us, s erepo a CIS ~err s boo came . , '. pleasantly inquiring "When do were In short , , , h 'umo·rous works .' " ' , •. . 1'0\1 thmk Y9u're gOIng to· be s~pply, al~o, It dead, Grandma?" Each'of us has ~'a s pubhsheJ had a similar iDquiry blandly put ~t just the right to us. time to ~et on The .point is that she does not ~any ~hnstmas misrepresent childre.:l, does not ~)ft hst~, Once gag up· their speech, but gets it Its qU~hty w~s just right. ~ecogmzed, 1 t E l i Title '. d t the toP xp a rut race 0 Her misadventures in afrof the ~har~ planes, in cosmetics departments, :nd :;:a t~ere . in swanky elothes shops at the .or;:eSr ysecond beach are vastly entertaining. eo 11 f' c t ion Her wry comments on men, of short pieces, The Snake Has her letters of protest to which we All the Lines (Doubleday, $3,50), c~';lld all pu~ ?ur,nam~. h~r ~e­ f od as its predecessor. hrlous gratifIcatIon lD fmdmg ; h : m~~ner is the same. But that she is. actually ~ ,high status there is no se:lse of let-down or t~pe, h~r sav~gh;.sml1Ingac~~unt mere r~petition. Mrs. Kerr'is 0, a .p aywrl~ s woe~- . e~ definitely not a female Harry lawIII h~e k~?l~g t lots 0 peop e Golden. One reads the new entry ug 109, a wm er. with, as much delight, with as Thek titie~ It co~~,f~O~ a many smiles, 'chuckles, guffaws,' remar 0 er ,son hrlS lOP ler. in' the first bstance.. Cast as Adam In, a sc 00 p ay as. . f E about Adam and Eve, he comSatll' c ye plained that his part was poor. The author is still posing' as "That's the lead," she' told him. the put-upon wife, and mot~er. To which he replied, "Yeah; but who looks a mess, IS always' m- the snake has all the lines." volved in· a " fracas or ·misunder:. W· oe d h ouse 0 mm'b'us . l' ' standing or ,SOCIal gaffe~" Ivmg Although she defiantly claims strenuously m the sUburb~ a~d to be middle-aged Mrs" Kerr .is actin~. th~ country bumpkm~' actually a young: woman. We the big cIty. . d er weer h th s h· e WI'II s t'll ·sement won 1 be , t' 'KI' There IS IC 109 ,amu '. . making merry in print when she to be, had from·her succeSSiOn · ' bof reac h es th e age 0 f'P • G· • W· 0 d epredIcaments as she descrl . d'10 g to h'IS h . es h ouse, w h 0, accor t eBm. b r A sharp ..and publishers is 80 (no, 79, says ~. . ~t ew~re. Wodehouse). satir.lc eye IS at work here" a In ho·nor of. his birthday darting, deadly tongue,· You . . . ' whichever It IS, there appears a pro b a bly remem b er th e devas . W d h' . 'b II d Th · t k ff F ncol'se 0 e ouse,omm .us ca e e t a t mg a e-o· on· ra .fP G W d h (S' , 1S Wh'1cw h as' in Most 0 • , 0 e ouse Imon 5 agdand-s. npovDe E T D . and Schuster, $6.5(». . l cue m , , , , , . If Uk Woo In the new work one encou'n. , e ,me, you are a. eters "Can 'This Romance' Be house addIct, you hav.e pr?babl.y Saved?" which lacerates Lolita already read everythmg 10 thlS , ". , !3ook of almost 7qO pages. But far more effectively than dId the 't' . t b bl th t . .. 'il serious critiCisms ofthatpeculw' 1 IS ~I,ls, pro a e d,a ~fuU.Wl opus' rerea ,.every\ wor .)Vl ., !In, . t· 'd abated 'pleasure, Th',IS pIece .con ams consl erIf' d lf 1 h' g hi h'l' fl" b t't I oun myse aug 10 over a e I anous 00 mg; I,l 1 a so . the idiotic contretemps which spots and,. skewers, the key pre,., . " b . th ~ . . f "J . d " M ·'N··b'·k· " L ' goes y e nllme 0 . eeves an ' tenSiOns of r. a 0 ov s nove· th S f S ' , j 'lth' .', ' . , .......'. e ong () ..()~g~, a " oug h. I Three Genera~~orut . must have gone ,·.through~·:'it a ': Mrs. K~rr's' talents -"are evi- half-dozen timEfs before; And so ~ently in~#ited; ·She.:: does a with as 'nlUch of the rest 'of the' sketch of her, m~,ther wh\ch sug-: conten~s:of the piump volume as gests as much, .H~~ ~otherw~o~e, I have ·sampled. .... " to her concetmng the DaISIes . . »qok, "Darling, iim',fit'marvelous the way those olci p.i~cesof yours . 1inally catpe. to th~ .surfaeelike Continued from Page One'. s dead body!" . . . Bishop John, J, Wright . 'said And her ·literary gifts'· are that the basic concept of,'democshowing up in the next genera- racy, '~its. very foundation;':was tion, as, for example;· 'in' her when God said.to man: 'Subdue small son's note: "Dea~ Mommy, the earth and rule over it:' '!.. John is made as you because you He stated 'that when Christ won't let us put our snowballs later said: "Render to Caesar the 'in the freeser but I am not '~ade things that are Caesar's, and to at you because I love you Your God the things that are God's," Friend, Colin," it was as if there had been added Secret of Popularity to t~e original words of God "a . Colin and his brothers should, kind of charter of democr.acy, in justice, collect a portion of vindicating man's rights of au-, -the royalties from the Snake thority' and protecting the sound book, They, their sayings, their premise of democracy." doings figure largely in it. . . Divine Sour~, Perhaps Mother has polished Bishop Wright said that·if.over these a bit, but they. have the the ,ceftttiries "the' democracy ring of authenticity. That is one that was in the begiQQi~g'¢~ased to exist,'" it was alwaYs:l;>ecause man fbrgottwo ')a~i(:: p,r~!l~iples: his right,t9,CtJ,Oose .his·rulers, and the divine' .'saurce:·'of his VATICAN CITY (NC)-Ital- r i g h t s . ' · , . · . ~ ;~:,,'. .. .. 'ian communist leader, J?aln:tiro : "The. first an!i:~gre,atest.4ariger .T ogliatti has been criticized 'by··.. to ·demOcracY;';.~~~~!~h~p:9Said, Dsservatore Romano. .for violat- ."is irreligion, fofg~f!(\llp.¢ss·.of iilg the truth. - _. .' God," and 'the nation's~prim~ry .. The Vatjcan ceity ·newspaper's need today is "clear, honeshind 'attack on the' communist 'lei'ller· . deep thought." ~ ... ~ . was occasioned . :by "a, ..television...· "~nd because we are a· devout· ;program i~ which ,Mr. Togliatti ~nd Patriotic people," t~e Bishop. 'explained to'itewsmen' the"Itaiian. ': 'added; "'our 'thotight 'sHould'take' Communist p~r~'s,political pro..,. , the fo.rm. of prayer." :gram, The dajlylinKed h.is~'sCorn~. '.. 'Bishop" Wright'. lauded tlle' ;of the truth" .to tpe conduct of. American system, of gov:emment.. :~ovie~ Premie~ Niki~:I~~rusJt"" . , .'~O~~~ repul;)li:c;!' he said, "was ·c:hev at the Umted Nab?l1s. Gen_ foundedahd.dedicated to a gov;eral' Assembly. It asked·f·"Cari"·a'·-: '.'ei·hinent: by ,laws, not men, ~:. 'society liv.e_ in .anorderly... way. . that ,·the-,people. could achieve: :under the'·-constant:sliiTi'U.lus"of· :the' So.v~reiglitYuiatcomeS t9~

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COMMUNION BREAKFAST: 500 youths of Mt. Carmel Parish, New Bedford met with their pastor for a "Buddy Communion Breakfast" in observance of CYO week.. Shown, left to right, are Rt. Rev. Antonio P. Vieira, pastor, Roy Serpa, main' spea~er. and Charles Silva, Jr., chainnan.

Sister Madeleva Gets Poetry Society Medal

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afflicting man 'may be seen In a Catholic h~spital at BIIARA· NANGANAM in INDIA. conducted b, the MEDICAL MISSION SISTERS of PHILADELPHIA; there, too, as In all our Catholic hospitals. may be seen the most tender and dedicated care being given to aU the suffering' patients. These siste1'll, like the members of ~very Religious Com· munity, are heeding the words of Saint John,. the Beloved Apostle, "My dear children, let us not love, In word, neither with the tongue, but. in, deed. and in truth." In the five years since . this hospital has been operating t~e ... '1Zt HolJ:Falhtr's MisJiqn Aid sisters have a,lmost worn themselves fur tht Orimta! Omrrh out' in their daily ministrations to Ihe sick. So tremendous has" Ute daily .work-Ioad become that .saUve DUrses must be trained if the hospital is to continue '10 operation. The admiration and the Inspiration aroused by the won of the selfless sisters has led to a limre ~ the part or inan)' native girls to become nurses. In ,order tokafn the gim . there must be & plaee to house and educate them.. An estimate.. Df $20,000 bas been given for the erection of a Nurses Bome•... 'This'is Ii' great deal of mone)' and although It is possible, 1& .. Ilardly probable,' that one· beJ1efactor could. suppI)' 1& aIL The amount·· can be ·realized" however, by' an aggregate of. smaU gifts. Could you send us something' to start a fund for th.. ' NursesB~meT; . . . . . ,

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ThenovlUate of the SISTERS OF CHARITY In LEBANornombers among Us novices girls from all, over the world-gir" who are anaoua to spend their Uves as Religious In the ~1IIm.r,.1lIUI 30m here with native Ibtsln intensive training for &heir Ule's won among the people of Our' Lord'. OWB land. SIS~ LOUISE .and SISTER JOSEPIIINE are two, 01 the novices here; It wiD 'eost -POO· te support &hem durina' &heir two J'Can of~. Coald FOU pay for one of,themTYoa ID!IJ' pa)', the eaUnI ac..onat at once or 1Nl7.1n lnstaUments: of '150. a year" .. ' .•

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makes' s' substantial gift in any country, A gift of this amount· to the Refugees of Palestine will supply an, entire family with food 'for a whole month, 'Th'us $10.00· given to these Refligees' Is·truly a colossal gift. Can you send such a donation for these 'poor people? U you send it now we will be able to give It to them for' Christmas. U you are able to help them wilb • gift of $10.00 we Will send you an OUve Wood Rosary from the Hol,Land as a token of appreciation.

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GEORGE TBAMARACBERRY' 'aird PETERTBAZBATURU· TBIL 'are students at SAINT JOSEPH'S SEMINARY:in INDI~"" ".' . The)' will' spend six ,ears there in 'prayer' and'·stlid; before' '~eir' ordinaUoil 'tOUie , ":., HoI)' Priesthood. Coming from poor families, , .. neither of· these OO)'s is' able to' suppI'y any' "'of . the mone)' neceSSlll')' for his sUPPOrt durbnlr these ,ean' of pr~parlitlon. S600 wUl' 8nance the' education of ,ODe Of them.. Ji . J'oilcomd pa)' ,for. the education of either George' or·. Peter· the mone, :'ma)' be· paid, all. a& once or In in. .. ' a&alIments· of $100 a )'ear: . .

VATICAN CITY (NC)-MSgr. Angelo Pedrorii 'has been roe-. assign~d 'as the' Holy see's permaitimt obserVer at the United Nations.. Educational; Scientific and Cultural Organization.

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THE MOST REVOLTING DISEAS'ES

NEW YORK (NC)-Sister M. Madaleva, president of St. Mary's College, Notre Dame, Ind" was awarded the 1960 Spirit Medal of the Catholic Poetry Society. of America at a dinner here, . Clifford J. La'ube, society president, made the presentation address.. He- lauded the Holy Cross nun for' her poetic arid educational achievements. Actress ,Helen .Hayes read sev-' eral of Sister ,Madaleva's ,poems, and Barry Ulanoff, professor of English at Barnard College, gave ' an address. Four previous winners of Spirit Medals were present:' Mr, Laube, John G. Brunini, Francis X. Connolly and A. M. Sullivan.

BAYONNE (NC),;-Twonewsdealers. here were fined in Magistrate's Court .for· offering .for. sale magazines containing indecent. piC~tires.· .. " . ' . . Th~y~ere f(jlmd' guilty by Judge .Bart 'R:: BoyIe and .were fined $10. each;' tl)e maxim·un1. possible for a 'fir~t offense under the i92'i' cityordi'nai-!ce under !"hich they. were tried., . The convicted men are Philip Cea arid Alex Pope; Their lawyers 'announced the ,case will be appealed 'to· HudSon· County Court; , they claimed· that the prosecution 'failed to establish proof. of'a 'community standard by which the 'magazines could be judged~ ,

Crack Down JERSEY CITY (NC)-Hudsou County Prosecutor Lawrence A. • Whipple has ordered all law enforcement agencies to crack down. OIl merchants dealing ia

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'JHf .~NC~-Dioces. of Fal~:Aive"'-l:twrs.Nov. 10, 1960

acy. Center, she s'upervises work in the laundry and right, she is in th~ sewing room where women make clothes for both men and women patients. Bandages have been made for these lepers by women of the . Diocese. '

WORKS WITH I.,EPERS: Sister Mary Campion of the Marist Missionary Sisters, the former Gabrielle Jarry of New Bedford, has varied duties at her post in Hansen Home, Jamaica, a hospital for victims of leprosy. Left, Sister, a registered pharmacist, works in the hospital pharm-

Instilling Proper Values Top Job Of Educators LAFAYETTE (NC)-The big job of teachers in the U.S. today is to instill the proper values in their students, a priest-educator told some 650 Catholic schoolteachers here. "To have all the knowledge of the world and to have no values or no standards of value is to suffer the loss of one's soul," said Father John Walsh, C.S.C., head of Notre Dame University's education department. He addressed the annual teachers' institute of Lafayette diocesan schools. Greed is Service The Holy Cross priest posed the following questions: "How many are the people in America who know what they sta~d f9r, and why they stand for ~t-and who are willing to stand up and be counted? "On the other hand, how many, are' .the people whose minds ,remain so open that they never clQse firmly enough to really care? "How many are the people whose standards of quantity rather than quality, money rather than work, greed rather than service, science rather than, wisdom, the technical rather than the human, and the power of the individual?" "Value of judgments must be learned in the home and in church as well as in the school, Father Walsh said. "If the teacher is bold, clear and firm in judgments of value," he said, "then the students will come to sense and understand th role of values in human life."

New Bedford Mi~§ionary Says Modern Drlliigs Make Future of Today's Lepers Bright

Missionary Britdl@es Gap for PeU'uvROIl1S ACORA (NC)-A u.s. mis-

sionary has bridged the gap between 20,000 Peruvians and the outside world. Families living in rural areas here, some 12,000 feet above sea level and about 21 miles from Puno, had long dreamed of the day when a permanent bridge would span the treach;erous Acora river and link them economically and socially with ' every morning where patients city life. can buy cigarets, sweeties, soap, Father Charles F. Girnius, etc. For recreation there is a MoM., of Maspeth, N.Y., made women's basketball team and a the dream a reality by turning men's cricket t'eam. Movies are the bridge problem into a comshown twice a week in the rec- munity project. He used volunreation hall, where at Christmas teer labor and built a 75-Coot, and' on certain special occasions. rock and concrete bridge that there are stage plays and con- cost only $800. . certs in which the actors perform enthusiastically." . Seminary Visitors ~ PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More Sister Mary Campion last .visited New 13edford in 1959. She than 10,000 people attended is expected to make another "open house" at St. Charl~ Seminary in nearby Overbrook... home visit in four years. ,

Since her profession in 1953 as a Marist Missionary Sister, the former Gabrielle Jarry, now Sister Mary Campion, has been assigned to Hansen Home, Jamaica where she works with approximately 100 patients suffering from leprosy. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gaston A. Jarry, St. Anne's parish, New Bedford, Sister Mary Campion attended St. Anne's grammar school now, he shouldn't answer to teach school part of the day, and Holy Family H i g h such a baby name. He's a strong- supervise the laundry, sewing, School. Work in her father's minded liUe fellow, and took etc. ·"There is a small canteen open drug store developed an in- the advice to heart, so whenever

terest in pharmacy and she be- anyone would call out 'Sugah,' came a registered pharmacist he'd put both little hands over prior to her entrance into reli- his ears and yell back, 'I can't hear you, I can't hear you,' until gion. his right name was used, and She terms today's treatment of then he'd break out in a big lepl'osy a truly encouraging field smile." of medicine, saying that all paThere are nine Sisters on Hantients admitted to Hansen Home sen Home staff, including the are discharged in from one to Superior, who has been at the five years with the disease ar- • hospital since its opening 20 rested and with little or no dis- years ago. One Sister is a doctor figurement. and two are nurses. Pleasant Surprise "Besides the actual medical "At the moment there are ap- work, since this is a Government proximately 100 I?atients in the . institution, there is enough bookhome, located in Spanishtown, keeping to occupy one Sister's about 14 miles from Kingston," , time; another supervises work she writes. "Visitors are usually in the kitchen, still others must pleasantly surprised at the sight . Plan Boys" Retreat which meets their eyes. "Looking out on: either side At Hamilton Carmel from the main office building A retreat for high school boys dividing the men'$ 'andwonien's . considering a religious vocation 'compounds, they' meet· nicely- will be held at the Carmelite kept grounds and 'ward buildings Retreat· House, Hamilton, Friday that the patients take pride in through Sunday, Nov. 25 to 27. keeping spic and span. The retreat master will be Rev. "There are actually' few suf- Joel Schevers, O.Carm., a memferers admitted now who are ber of the Carmelite Mission totally or even partially disabled. Band for three years, and presThe blind and disfigured here ent . director of St. Therese's .now' are for the' most part those Carmelite Chapel at Northshore who contracted the disease be- Shopping Center, Peabody. fore the sulfone ,drugs came into There will also be talks by common use. Rev. Thomas Finnegan, Arch"Prior to the use of these diocesan Director of Vocations, drugs, if a sufferer survived the and by representatives of other ravages of leprosy and the dis- religious communities. Reservations can be made with ease 'burnt out' of itself, it left Artists to Restore the victim with terrible charac- the Retreat Director, Camelite Rubens Masterpiece teristic facial 'disfigurement, or Retreat House, Hamilton, Mass. ANTWERP (NC)-A treasure with blindness, or with twisted of Antwerp Cathedral, the . or crip'pled limbs, or with merely "descent from the Cross" by the stubs of hands and feet." When it's time Peter Paul Rubens, has been Sugah Grows Up taken down for restoration. There are about 15 young peoto retire • • • Buy The painting was damaged when French soldiers .took it to ple among, ·the patients, notes Paris in 1794, and again when it Sister. "Our youngest child was was removed Crom the cathed- about two years old when he was ral ,for safe-keeping during admitted about a year ago. He World War I and World WarII. - soon became everyone's darting A first scientific examination and picked up ?ugah as a nickof the painting at the Brussels name. "A short while'a'go he was to'ld' Royal Institute of Art revealed more extensive damage than that since he was growing up , had been expected; An interna.. tional body of art experts said Aid it would take yeal1lof work to. Korean Instifutions . restore the painting.· . " SEOUL (NC) - The 'Catholic Double Number Wometi.'s Club of Korea has, STRATFORD-ON-AVON (NC). raised $2,500fOf' the support of -Catholic scouts in England and two' Catholic institutions. i.1l Wales have almost doubled their KQfea.·: I . . . ' . ·.,276Central.St;; faA .Ii".,: numbcl's, in the· past 10:years andjo,. Sharing the ,ni.oney,wUl he the· now total over· 20 000 in 612 ,Star of, the Sea Orphanage in " . OSborne 6-i~7' . groups, it was anl1ou~ced at their' . Ir,chon .and the Columban Sisa.nnual meeting here. :" . ters'clinic ,in Chunchon~ . 0

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16

THE ANCHO~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Nov. 10, 1960

Grateful to, Pope Benedict For T[fonation Privilege

Harvest Sale

By Most Rev. Rollert J. Dwyer, D..o. Bishop of Reno

.

"It is November again,." Quite unlikely is it that a forgotten essayist, Montgomery Carmichael, who penned that somewhat lapidary opening gambit many years ago, ever dreamed that it 'would echo in the memory of a whole generation of seminarians Mass that great sequence' of who are now priests,some Thomas of Celano, the Dies Irae, of them, indeed~ elder whose haunting ~trains have in.: priests. With every return spired so many composers to go

of All Souls' Day we waited for farther and d~ worse. Marathon of Praying the Professor to read the essay to us a g a in, For centuries, almost to our hoping, as semown times, November 2 was offi-, inarians will, cially reckoned as the second that it would day in the octave of All Saints, consume much ,and while the Mass could be time. The ProoHered for the faithful departed, fessor n eve r the Office continued to be that failed us. It was of the octave with the Office II quiet threnof the Dead· thrown in for good ody for the demeasure. . parted, a gentle This must have meant a marameditation on thon of praying, and undoubted': th'e narrow ly kept many a monk from his bouse. The appointed domestic tasks. It was leaves .re fallen and the grass is only in 1913, with the reform of' sere. It is November again. the breviary under Pope St. Pius Indulging our wayward curi- X, that this duplication was osity, we find that it was St. Odo, abolished in favor of the present Abbot of Cluny, who first desig- Office of the Dead. nated November 2 as the. day for It is no uncommon thing nowthe commemoration of the dead. adays for priests to offer three Before that time usage varied Masses on Sundays and feasts of widely' throughout the' Church. obligation. But before the priviThe Byzantine East observed the lege of "trination" was extended 'Saturday before Lent; the Syri- in view 'of the needs of the laity, ans preferred the preceding it was restricted to Christmas Thursday; ,while ·in the West it, and All Souls. was left to the discretion of Indeed, there is still a diHerbishops and abbots, and almost ence, for while on those days the any - convenient day might be Church permits a priest to offer fixed upon in a given region or three Masses "out of devotion", monastery. he must have a public reason on True, Amalarius of Metz, the other days. '9th century ,commentator on the Curious Origin liturgy, opined that it, would be The origin of the .triple celefitting to remember the faithful departed immediately after the bration on All Souls is rather commemoration of the Saints, curious. it seems that in 'the 17th but since All Saints had not yet century the Dominican convent been determined for November in Valencia, Spain, had become something of a local Westminster I, he cautiously left the date Abbey, a.burial place for all sorts open. of worthies and unworthies. Efficacious Prayer At each tomb the friars were S1. Peter Damian tells us, in obliged to offer Mass on All his life of St. Odo, how the good Souls' Day. But soon there were Abbot was impelled to his choice. more tombs than priests, and so A pilgrim to the Holy Land, his the good Fathers conceived the· story goes, fell in with an ancient ingenious solution of offering as hermit who in characteristic many as three Masses each to .eremitic fashion quizzed him on discharge the obligation. ,his life's history. This custom ,was tolerated, Leawing that he was from then praised, and spread througFair France he besought the pil- out Spain, Portugal, and the colgrim to carry a message back to onial Empire. Pope Benedict the Abbot of Cluny. He had XIV finally gave it sanction, everheard the demons of hell though only for those areas, ill complaining that Odo's monks 1748. were snatchin'g' entirely too many Extended to All aouls from their clutches at the Not until 1915, when the 1st last moment by their incessant World War was raging, was the and highly efficacious prayers. privilege of the three Masses on , The message in hand, the Ab- All Souls extended to the entire bot promptly ordered all his Church. monks in all his monasteries to Pope Benedict XV, heartdedicate November 2 as the Day b~oken by the fearful carnage, of the Dead. . disturbed by the ruin and General Acceptance spoliation, of so many ancient' Now the actual rescript dates monasteries and churches with from 998, four years before Odo their funded Masses, and in symbecame Abbot, and fails to men- pathy with the impoverished tion the eavesdropping hermit. who could no longer afford even It was not until the 14th century" a modest stipend, proclaimed the actually, that the Cluniac'custom favor for all. gained g e n era 1 acceptance He was not the happiest of throughout the West. Pontiffs, either by temperament The liturgy of the day was or the circumstances of his reign, borrowed from that of Good but for this, surely, we can. Friday, with necessary altera- remember him with gratitude. tions in the antiphons, responses,. He knew the meaning of Dies Bnd Lessons. It is interesting to Irae. ' note that whereas 'in earlier times" the Church sang Alleluia Four Negro Students in her Mass for the dead, as though to 'hail their victory over Win Crowe Award bell and their birth to life CHICAGO (NC)-The Catho_ eternal, she gradually substituted lic Interracial Council of.Chicago a more sombre theme. has paid tribute to the four Maurice de Sully, Archbishop Negro students who launched the of Paris who began the building sit-in demonstration movement of Notre Dame, is reputed as one presenting them the 1960 na~ of the formulators of the Office tiona 1 Thomas J. Crowe Award of the Dead. And in the 14th of the council. century there was added to the They ar!'! students at the North Carolina Agricultural and TeChAssumption Prep nical College, Greensboro, N. C. Assumption Pre p a'r at 0 r y ?-,he sit-in movement which they School, Worcester, will hold its 1I1augurated last February has annual scholarship and entrance led to the desegregation of public, examination at the school Fri- eating facilities in many parts of day and Saturday, Nov. 25 and the country. 26. It is open to eighth grade The four students are Joseph boys aJ)d further information EzellA. Blair, Greensboro' may be obtained from the D~rec-' A. McNeil, Wilmington, N. , W of Admissions, Assumption David Richmond,alSo of Greena.',~. ",', . ..J.IareparatQq ..~.. W~~~t,ec... ~b:' ~~ .~ra~~l~.~ ~cC~.~ .. . .... MaM:'" . Was lDgtoD"D.-...... .'. ;.,~ ...~'

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......

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Nov. 10, 1960

CAMPFIRE GIRLS LOOK FOR LEADERS: Campfire Girls of Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, put on a mother-daughter tea for the purpose of appealing for new adult leadership for the organization. Left, left to right, Honora Edward, Carla Anderson, Ann Maynard take part in candlelighting

Movie Censoring L,GW Now Before Su~reme Court

WASHINGTON (NC) Attorney for the City of Chicago has asked the Supreme Court, in evaluating

ceremony. Center, showing charter to Rev. John G. Carroll, Patricia Lyons (left) and Carolyn Meyer. Right, with doll mascot, Susan Hersey, Catherine Wilcox, Ann Dolan. The enthusiastic youngsters are hoping to enroll equally enthusiastic adult-leaders.

Students Express Sympathy to Cuba

Campfire 'Girl Units of Sacred Heart Parish Of Fall River Need Aid of Mothers By Patricia McGowan Teas may become a rather ho-hum routine for busy club members. Get out the silver service, pull on the white gloves and let's go. But it's different when eager little Campfire Girls and would-be Campfire Girls give a mother-daughter tea. It's spiced by flying, sliding small girls running in and out of doors in blissful disregard of teatime etiquette, and it departs from the usual tioned their mothers and several Blue Birds. formal chitchat in that signed up to aid the present Candle -Ceremony everywhere are to be heard leaders, Mrs. John Kenyon, Mrs. At Sacred Heart, ""Iothers and the pleadings of children would-be members watched as . John B. Reed, Mrs. James Carey

movie control laws, to recognize that there is a "vast difference" between films and other forms of "speech." Robert J. Collins, Chicago special assistant corporation with their mothers路 to "Please Campfire Girls and E',ue Birds, counsel, has reminded the court be a Campfire Girl leader, momsuddenly changed from shriekthat the difference between the mie, so I can join." ing dynamos into sedate little Impact of films and that of Scene of this l,Inorthodox gath- ladies, marched into circle forprinted media justifies "prior eensorship" for movies which ering was Sacred Heart school, mation surrounding a candlewould be unlawful for news- Fall River, where two Campfire holder. Girl units and a Blue Bird A serious little voice said, as paper:; and books. group of baby sisters have been its owner stepped up to light a The court also heard attorin breathless activity since last candle, "I light the fire of Work, Deys for a movie distributing Spring. for Wohelo means work." (Wocompany insist that as far as Campfire Girls are fifth to helo is the motto of the Campfree speech rights are concerned there is no difference between eighth graders and Blue Birds fire Girls, standing for Work" , films and other media of com- are second to fourth graders. Healt!:l and Love.) Two more candles were lit for They have a program based on munication. Felix J. Bilgrey of New York, Indian lore and customs which Health and Love, then the girls representing the Times Film includes creative arts, drama, returned to their places as Rev. Corporation, said such systems service activities and social ex- John G. Carroll, substituting for periences. Their bright uniforms Rev. John J. Regan,路the group's of "prior restraint" of films as that employed in Chicago are an include blue skirts and white chaplain, appealed to the mothunconstitutional restriction on blouses, with red neckerchiefs ers for assistance as leaders. for Campfire Girls and sleevethe free speech of movies. After that, the individual onPractice Spreads , less red and blue vestees for' slaught began as children petiDirect target of the Times COI:poration in the present case -involving a movie called "Don .Juan"-is the whole practice of so-called prior censorship, now LONDON (NC) - The 30,000 Many of the immigrants are In effect in four states and about . Irishmen who come to England . recrllited for big new road15 cities. building projects in rural areas Under such systems, movies each year are unobtrusive mis_ must be submitted to a city or sionaries, an Irish bishop said -where they live in campsand for new housing developstate review board for approval here. Bishop James Staunton of ments on the 'ciqes' fringes. before they can be exhibited Ferns said the immigrants from publicly. Most Active Up to now the high court has Ireland are giving a boost to the Bishop Stanuton pointed out Church here' similar t... that left undecided the question of that through arrangements with given by their countrymen who whether censorship boards and his committee such .building film licensing procedures involv- came to England to escape the squads sometimes bring their ing prior censorship arepermit- Irish famines of the 19th cenown priest with them or are tury. ted under the Constitution. sent visiting missionaries from Staunton, se':rf>tary of time to time from Ireland. Irish Growth in Religion theBishop Irish Episcopal Committee seminaries, he added, art' now for Emigrants, denied that many Rises Rapidly sending about 33 priests, speof the Irish immigrants are cially trained to work among WASHINGTON (NC) A .Jewish religious leader told the poorly educated as Catholics the Irish in Britain eaeh year. annual conference of U.S. Air and lose their Faith on coming The British and Irish B;3hops to predominantly Protestant Force Command Chaplains that maintain close relations in this church and synagogue member- England. Such a claim is an absurd ex- matter and many prie'sts here ship in this country is increasreport that the newly arrived aggeration, said the Bishop in ing much faster than the popuIrish quickly become the most an interview published here in lation. active members of their congreRabbi Morris Lieberman of the the Universe, national Catholic gations, Bishop Staunton sai.d. Baltimore Hebrew Congregation, weekly. He quoted Bishop George Dwyer of Leeds, English speaking at the conference's WE DELIVER ANYWHERE closing dinner said that 65 per industrial center, as saying: Loyal Catholics cent of the American people now belong to a church or syna"The vast majority (of Irish gogue. He said the movement immgirants) are staunch and toward such membership can- loyal Catholics stronger Ul the LUMBER COMPANY not be ascribed simply to "the practice of their Faith than' any For your Storm Window, desire to conform or to achieve other national group in the Doors and Insulation Needs, status." country." call us. We stock all types. Ireland, although outside the Rabbi Lieberman stated: "I believe the real reason is to be British Commonwealth, has a found in the nature of the hum- special agreement with the Uni2452 G.A.R. Highway an situation today-in the al- ted Kingdom which allows IrishNO. SWANSEA most desperate search by mil- men to come here with passparts ]ions of men and women for a and gives them unrestricted FRontier 9-9600-9-9601 philosophy and program of life." residence rights.

Bishop Declares Irish Immigrants Serve as Missioners in England

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and Mrs. Robert Christopher. Campfire units choose Indian n a m e s . Translated, Sacred Heart's groups are "Merry Hearted Friends" and "WeAre Friends." The organization is dedicated to the spiritual ideals of the home and training for family life, the unique role of women, and on beauty and aesthetic v'alues. Or, as the girls put it in a song they sang for their mothers:

JERSEY CITY (NC) - The student council at St. Peter's College here has expressed sym_ pathy with Cuban students "in their hour of deep trial and in particular with their suffering of seriolis violations of their rights as students." A council resolution said that the body "endorses and encourages the efforts and aet:vities of the student groups of Havana and Villanova University (in Cuba) in their battle against communism."

Blackfriars Play Fall River Blackfriars Guild will produce "Father of the Bride" at 8:15 Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, Nov. 15 and IEl at Sacred H :rt School audiJorium, Fall River.

Seek beauty, give service and knowledge pursue, Be trustworthy ever in all that you do Hold fast onto health and work glorify And you will be happy-is the law of the fire.

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.Honors Pastor

Open' House and'· B~k Fair

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Rev. Leo T. SUllivan, first pastor of the newly .established St. Ann.'s Parish, Raynham, was· honored lit a testimonial given Sunday by mem"ers and friends of the parish. An' estimated 250 .persons attended the event which was held at the Town Club in Raynham. Invi.ted guests included Msgr. James J. Dolan, Rev. William Morris, Rev. Norman Ferris, Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. O'Brien, Mr. and Mrs. R.oger L. Hall, and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Porter. John E. . Smith' served as master of ceremonies, and Joseph L. Scanlon presented gifts of clothing and a chair. . ·General chairman, John E. Smith, and secretary, Mrs. Richard A. White, were assisted by a large committee.

The ·Par~sh. Parade

ST. MICHAEL, . ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER· FALL RIVER The parish will sponsor a testi.:. The' Pa~ent - Te"cher' and monial banquet for' its ·former Alumni Association will hold an open house and book fair Sun- pastor, Rev. Arthur C. dos Reis at 7 Sunday night, Nov. 20 in the day, Nov. 20 at the schOOl. A Christmas party. and. children's . parish, Essex Street.' August P. Curt. is.get:Ieral ·chairman. . Yule fete are slated for December. Next regular meeting will ST.LOUIS, be Wednesday, Dec. 7,. with . FALL RIVER eighth grade mothers acting as The Women's Guild will hold its annual, Christmas .bazaar hostesses. Wednesday, . Nov. . 30 in' the ST. MARY'S', . 'church auditorium. NORTH ~TTLEBORO Many 'gifts, including electric ESPIRITO .SAN:TO, .' items, furniture, .toys, jewelry FALL ~IVER:·. The CYO will sponsor a turkey and religious goods. will be whist party at 7:30 Nov.. 20 in'the among prizes at a penny sale to be sponsored by parish men at parish hall. The public .is invited refreshments will be served. HEADS AMER;ICAN LEGION: The new national com- SS 7:30 Monday evening,. Nov. 14· in and . L ' R. Burke, left, of FA'LPLETREIVRERAND PAUL, man. d er. 0 f th e: A merlcan egion, William TI'ck'ets are aval'lable from' all the school hall. CYO members' -r at the door. Long Beach, 'Calif;, shown with the-retiring' national comMrs. Milton Kozak will repreParish women are forming· a Robert Lajoie is chairman, aided m.ander, Martin J: McKneally, is a. former president'- of the sent the Women's Guild at a committee to sponsor. l' food by John L. Pontes, ticket chairsale for the blind next Thursday. table at the sale. man' 3.nd John Miranda, in . Newman Club at the University of California at Los A,ngeles. A Christmas party is planned for ST. 'JOHN!S, charge of publicity. NC Photo. M onday, Dec. !i in the parish POCASSET . , ST. JOH', BAPTIST,' ST PET' 'S S.... hall, with Mrs. Raymond Dooley The newly-organized Women s CENTRAL VILLAGE •. ER, T. ANTHONI'S, as' chairma'n and Miss Maureen . Guild'has had for·its first season. Th Lad' 'G 'ld 'll h Id . DIGHTON' MATTAPOISETT McCloskey as co-chairman. Mrs. Nestor P. Robidou as pres. e. ~es. U l . WI. 0., ·a The annual. turkey whist, The Rosary-Altar Society has ident. Mrs. Eari UacDonald, vite ~otluc~ su~per at. 7:30 tomght ..sponsored by the Women's Guild, enrolled 30 new members. The The parish hall will be open president; Mrs.' Sprague Spooner, .In· th.e pan.sh hall. The reg!Jlar' will. be held at eight Wednesday ~nit will sponsor a Christmas from 9 to' 9 Friday, Nov. 25 to recording secretary; Mrs. George me~tll~g Will. fol,low. A tu~key evening, Nov.' 16 at Dighton' party for pre-school children receive clothing donations for . Towers, treasurer; Mrs, Irene' whist IS set fo.r 8 Saturd~y: ~Ight, Elementary' School, with Mrs. Sunday~ Dec..1~. Games parties the Bishops' CoIle~tion. Members' Nov 12 also In the hall 'M p., I . . 'of the Women's Cuild a're aske'd' Christian, corresponding secre. . '. . ." , . ary avao as' genera chairman. . w~ll be held during December tary. .' . IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,. The· next general meetfng. of.· under the chairmanship ·of Mrs•.. to volunteer their services lUI 's theme will em- FAL.L RIVER .' . the unit will be held Thursday, JohnCarlos.· packe~s. .W . N 7 h' . S Members saw an. entertainDecember Th e phasize the keeping of(~hrist in omen's GUild will hold . ov. 1 at t e rectory hall. A T. MARY'S. Cliristmas, especially in cards a"cake sale following. all Masses film on the. duties of a hostess MANSFIELD' ment by children from St. Pat'd home decorations. A tour of this Sunday in the church hall. will be shQwn. The Catholic Women's Club rick's school at the November . A th p' I h'· '11 t t . ht· St m~eting. The' program was aran M ~s. n ony asca,' C <llrman, several homes will be conducted, OUR LADY 9F G'RACE; . WI . mee omg In '. Mary's after which tea will be served ..requests that ca~es be ieft in the NORTH WESTPORT' Hall with Mrs. RUfus\GalIipeau ranged by Rev. John J. Delany. at ili'e' home of Mrs. John Nelson; church basement from 2 to S The Women's Guild I annual p'residet:it, presiding.' Entertain~ ST. MARY'S . A 'Christmas bazaar is planned Saturday·afterno~ri. ChristJ:nas party will beheld at. meilt will be provided byCoyie '. NORTH ATTLEBORO .for Saturday, Dec. 10. !\ turkey whist is scheduled White's Restaurant,. Tuesday, High School Glee Club,. a 40 . The Parish Guild will rri~t 'in t Other activities for the year .for MO~1daynightj Nov. 14, 'aiso Dec..6.. Reservations. must be.' voice' gI:OUP 4irected by Brother th~ sch06lcafet.ei-i~ at 8 Tuesday have 'included a potluck supper, in the ·halt Co-sponsored by 'the • made by Wednesday, .Nov.' 30.' Albertus. Rose Hawthorne Home night' Nov. i5. Mrs~ Thom'as a penny sale and a discussio~ of . Hoiy . ~.a~~· .·~o~ieiy.. i~d the, . Mrs. Marie Danis is in charge of will receive 'proceeds' of a spa- Mull~ns will show slides of a'ti'ip . ,.. ,the relationships. among various Women's Guild', It Will start at '. a forthcoming candy sale. ghetti supper held recently, at to Ireland. . . . . ' : .' Ch'ristian groups; tl)e latter .led 8.' Donations of. 'cansfor' the' . I ' . whi<:h' more' than . 500 'wer~. 'A re'ception for 'the "Sisten of. by'Rev. Thomas'Brennan', S.S.C. partY. Il)ay 'b.e·left 'in the b·aSe;,·· ST. MICHAEL.. ser;ved. . Mercy, staffing the parochial oLStonehill College,' . ment, at ·any time.. 'OCEAN GROVE . HOLY NAME.' school wHI be held from 2 to 4 S1'; ·l."AUL, . : . . . . ..~Henn 'Nev'eu, Cub Scout Of. . FALL RIl'ER . . this 'Sunday' 'afternoo'n in' the ANNE'S. ' . ". TAUNTO-r ;.' : . . ..,' ··Pac~ 5,' sponsored by American'· francis J. Devine is hew pres-,' auditorium. All .w·omen of the "FALL RIVER. .~. ..'.:'.. The, Catholic', WcilA en '(' Guild' : Le~ion.Polit ..30.3 of Swansea, be':' . iderit· of'the Holy Name SOciety: parish are in.vited.. . , . The'W~ined;s 'Reserve' auxn-" hear 'instructions' on "the .... came the' first ;Cub in the Swan'- . OUR .LADY ;OF"LOURDES ' '; . .earn· _ '. .".', s;lle. O?nnell' and.see}Ilms pel awar.d . ' J•.' The. }loly .. . of. . Fa. " ·East· Mam Street .Tuesday, 'and . mg· fA ·Nunls·Llfe In the: Congo Of. • held last Sunday.. ..: . .Wellfle~t and. Truro Will receive ' w~cih~~dai~:. Nov: 'is,and'' 'f6~:' ~·taken··by"Sister.· Blanctle. Agne's;>,": R~y'·,,~~~i~~~..~ar:e~,t,ri:I~de.;t~e:· ;<'corpor~'te"Cofuffiunio~ 'at.. nine .. To.'ge.·.t.h~i' .' , :"T,ue'sqay.'s '=. ~ou'rs" ·will' 'be ":-ftom.: .. S1'U .S:C;, af"~heir. -regular. inonth-' ~ward ,.;;tnd·.sppk~-.lon the' work· o'cJoc~. '". Mass' ~ this SuncJay· at:· .: ',. .'.10 "to" 8 'arid...· Wedn,esdiiy·s.:f"om" 'ly meeting t9night: : . . .. ,:.,: InY,olved. glen!:!' i~. the son of Mr;. ·;·Sacr~d. tleart: Mission··in Tru'ro::' .,., St~ys together'" "iloi'tri'to 8. Mrs: Theodore PrOulx:' , ...., Mrs;·' Joseph' 'B: 'McCarty and, '" and ·'·.Mrs.. Normand -Neveu).' The unit wiUmeetat'8 th'e same ..' . . . . . ,.: , . . . . . ' .. ij in charg'e' of arrangementS::' .Mrs:·,Paul"Mic·hnef ·at~lco-chair;. - Meta,coll)et':Ave!:lUe, ·Swansea"evening at the:;Wellfleet·church. . THE' : "":'i'fi'e 'Soci'al Gr6up' \viil nold a' • 'men for'the' evening. :.Mrs.: Mc..;~ "and is a fift.h· grl\de p.upilat..St.. All members '~l'e requested "10 e FI·RS~:'·NATION·AL· .:. ' ..Whist'.. Saturday, 'Dec:3' and:; a'·· . Cai'ty is'lllsoser:viQ'g >on.'the;Micha~rs ·School;:...· :.' :., .. : attend. 'and ne~members rna,. . "Christmas party Saturday, .'Dec... ·November Altar' Guild;:; ..~,', .... : Den "mother's, qth~r Cubs and ... join at this time.', .." ,,)o:~~xtre~ular·.~ee.tingJs'W¢d-.' ~OLY <.~, .. " . :, ,'.re~re~ent~tives·.o(the.BOY Scout· ST;DOMINIC'S~::i AUle~r~Soutb 'A&tlebore ~esdar! De~.?:.·· , . :fAUNTON' .." ./.:..... -'::.Ol~ga,n~ztaftIor-hwer~ .aII!ong t~~~~, ,SWANSE'~.,,,::~ " : Seekonk . ., ." ." , .. , , 'T"'h" ~ W· '. '." G' ·'ld")·ll· :t" presen •. or· t ~ ceremony,•.· ' .'."'f~•. Installation 0Wofficersand In:' .' '8T' 'JO'SE'PH'S' ,'. e omen S UI WI mee Th HI" N . '. S '. f'S 'd t · · ,. . . .' . . ;.,.. .' , , ' :;,.' . Monda' <Nov":14'with'it v .j'fi. . ~. 0>: arne oClety 0 . t",·,,~c.lo.n of: Ne.,"Members into' . . A~LEBORO' ..... . . '.' "E' B' 'Yd'·· f:S't"V"':'''': ·tle.. H: o.. n. . Michael's wilr.hold a,Fatller-Sorl,the Paril!h C~O:: will·' be held .::::===~====~=~ '.. . . ' ~ . '.,' .,!. . oy 0 . ll1~en some . b kf t f n" 8 ..coc I k' NIi5 d ' ··h '1..: '. . r .' New of~ic.~r!;,of the'!"adie'~:of ·FallIUv~r,.as·spe~ker"WOrhe~:··Mreathli~S °dOW:l.n~ . ?'L . "':··R..·I)·.a Y l·ntlg,t-::!it 7:.00·,·o'<;I?Clc: . W Ste.. Anne Incl~de .M~s. Joser~·belo.Ijging.to Qther'parishes a~e~' D ~Rss. diS. ~nh .~y l11orn~ndg'd <:::IS' e ev, CyaO~r,.A·;lSUlhv.an;:PI~_ '".: .' What,. About· Y'ou?' : . N.a~eau,h~norary pre~ldent; M~s. 'i.nvitedto attend tl\e :meeting~" . '. ea IS c;alrman, al e :~y ~. {!san; . .Dlrector wI~1 be .1"." . :.Romeo Michel, president; .. Mrs; .... .. ' :. .. large committee. ReservlltjOnS stalhng officer.; The officers are:· Arthur . should. . be made tomorro.w· ·Mary. . Lou.' .Dubuc ' Jr . " first .. vice p'. ' ,S1'..HEDWIG, NEW BEDFORD ... ' . by . . • . ; .Babiarz , : . -' President·, ident; Mrs. ConradlV~aigret,·s~c... '. ~ h . '., .' ...• . : .", nI~ht. . Cyn~e. .Monn, , ~rice-:-President; on~ vice pre~ident;·M:r~.. Joseph H.oly.}'lam~ SJclety ~1~1 " SACRED HEART Patl'lCIa Tellerr : !?ecretary, and Lussier secretary' Mrs. Jlilien ,spo SOl' .ltS. e~ghth a~1l1u.al dance·. .... •. . Leo Dube,. Treasurer. Forget,' treasurer. : . ,', ,satur~~lmght, No.v.l~,~at~Wo~d".. N~~T~ AT:r~E:~.~O 'lIh Id' . ' ~ Membe'rs will-receive corpor~ow. I son .. aU~I.tpp,U!l1, .w,lth ~. : .. e.. ~me .0 ~.I Y WI 0 . " . ' 0 . Ole; mun' t'h' S·'u' d' y' . proceeds ~o .b.eneflt· tile . ~hurch ,ItS .~hnstmas sale. a.t 10 Thursday . Father John. P W h' t' a te C om Ion IS n a 'b 'ld' f d St'l . . "mo lI1 . g No '17" th . h' ." as Il1g on. morning at ,S.o'clock Mass. ' . 1,11 l~g .. un·. an,ey J; Szuhk. r!1. ,.,. v. : m,. ~ pans . Post 17~9, Taunton. Catholic ." 'IS chairman. . -hall. Featur~d . WIll· be Jewelry War Veterans' "will' taOII . 'ST.JAMES ha ~ d.rna . d ~ I' ems, t' . ' Saturda'y , NOTRE DAn,E; , :. . w'h't l e e Ie-' officers DeIns.3' t new 0 FALL RIVER NEW BED.FORD. ". . ph~nts,'~pr.ons, toys, ~ak.es, nov.- Lady of Lourcies',chu~ch~aIl.ur Members of. the 'Cllristian . A mock JUI:Y tnal under dlreceltIes and trays. A wIshll1g':well :-....- - - - . ; . . . . - . - - - - - - FamilyMov~ment will hold a tion of Atty'. Paul McCawley will will also be an attraction, and' cake and' pastry sale "after ali' feature: the ~eeting" "of. . Msgr. t,:"o bicycles will ,be awarded: Masses this Sunday.in 'the choir Noon Circle to be held at 7:45 dll1ner, with. Mrs. Norman Jette' .. .•. a Franciscan Sister! ioft of the lower church. . Wednesday e'l(ening, Nov.'16 in as chairman, will be served from Truck Body. Builden . . .. ; , . the .church hall. Mrs. Leo J. Tel..; 11:30 to 1. Mrs. Stanley Ryng is . Aluminum 'or Steel Girls·sixteen·and·ov.... are needed OUR LADY OF ANGELS, ,esmanick will preside and Mrs.' general chairman of the sale 944 C~unty St. to serve God as Nurses_ laboratory FALL RIVER . Frank T. Francis a[;dMrs. Joswith. Mrs. Paul Paquette in . NEW BEDFORD, MASS. and X·ray Technician., Accountant., Dietitians, Seamstresses, Cooks, and The Women's Guild will hold eph' Ferreira will be chairman charge~of the wishit:Ig well. . Wy 2~6618 in othe~ hospital departments. its anl\pal Christmas party' at . of the following cClffee hour. Mother Mary Elizabeth at St. Mary 7 Saturday night, Dec. 10 in the Members may bring 'guests. of. the Angels Convent, Rock Island; parish hall. Mrs. Irene Michaels OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, Illinois, will. send you more inforand Mrs. Alma Viveiros are co"; OSTERVILLE . mation on this happy life. chairmen. The guild sewillg The Women's Guild will hold a for an Special consideration is group will meet at 7:30 WednesChdstmas bazaar' Sat~rday', Dec. , given··to "late" vocations. 'oay, Nov. 16,·also.in the hall. 3 from 11 to 3.at Veterans' Hall The Holy Name Society will Osterville. Proceeds will benefit hold a mystery ride starting the church building fund. , • • • • ••• •• • from the church at 6:30 Saturday HOLY NAME, night, Nov. 12. . NEW BEDFORD '. . . Co~sult':' ',' :: IN NEW BEDFORD - IT'S A parish turkey whist is slated The'Women's Guilciwiil sponfor Saturday, Nov. ':19. Ar'thur' SOl' a gigantic auction at 7 toFurtado is chairman. morrow night in the church hall. .GEO. : .: .' .. " C'HEVROLET . Raymond Woodhouse will be ST. MATHIEU, .:; , ,~uctioneer. and Mrs. Edward F., . FALL RIVER Molleo is chairman, assisted by " . A parish' bazaar will be held -Mrs. Stephen' Ledwell. There FOR THE FINEST TRAOE .EVER Saturday, Nov. 12 and Satut:fl~v, will be doorprizes and. a turkey will be raffled." . Nov. 19 in the parish hall, startSUCCESSOR TO LOUGHLIN CHEVROLET . EXeter Auction items inClude beding at 7:30 both evenl;16~' ~Cl'U-' . . iii Der:t.nisport . ceeds will benefit t"e building, room and dining. room sets, other 8-2291 565 MILt ST•. Open Every Evening WY 7-9486 fund .. Bertrand Desmarais imd furniture, .antiques .and mirrors. 8-2292 MAIN ST. Cut glaSs will be' featured. Raymond Poisson are chairmen.

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By Jaek Kineavy

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A solid slate of interscholastic football, spiced by a couple of traditional ho1id~y contests tomorrow and featuring the Saturday meeting of the undefeated giants of the Tri-Conference, highlights this last fun weekend of regularly scheduled play. action 0111 Saturday is the Taum.Most teams have an ~pen ton-Fairhaven game in the Blue'. date one week hence, then Stadium. Fairhaven, plagued ~ follows the season's final injuries, fell prey to Coyle, 20-0, round on Thanksgiving.

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last Walek, while Taunton and Barnstable waged a scoreless

~po;n~eq~~utPe·tht~tav£a:rte_SO,P~h.~~'~:~~'~;.'.' ::1(I~O:~e::~cl~~s ~~: p~~~~: alty tomorrow 1 to get the holi- ! "'~;I j~"~ day program underway. The game will be played in the D a I' t m 0 u t h High Stadium; kick off time is set for 10 A.M. This will be the Sophs' first venture into varsity competition and' their second contest in five <jays. Stang and Somerset Jayvees battled to a 6-6 tie on Monday.

enters the critical stage and this, too, could go either way. The CireuJt

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p. relates .to. Bless !F'ou:r' BUildings t.

I· WASHINGTON (NC) .. ' Four U.s. ca:rdi~al.s will . .bless four new buildings at the C~tholic University of

Amel!'iea on Wlednesday, Nov. 16. Francis, Cardinal Spellman, Al'e1'llllisflop of New York, wi~ bless all. addition to Caldwell HaJJ! flhat includes a modem auditorium. where the U. S. Catholie Hierarchy will meet annuallly. 'Fh.e Cardinal: will unveil a bronze plaque in memory of 'William L. Galvin of Baltimore, who for many yearS' was tile treasurer of Catholic University. James Francis Cardinal McIn. tyre, AEchbisbp of Los Angeles, will bless two new wings to the John K. Mullen Memorial ~ brary.. Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, will. bless Conaty Hall, a men's dormitory named in honor of Bishop Thomas J. Conaty, who was, the university's second rector. Albert Cardinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chicago, will bless the university's new social center. Msgr. William J. McDonald, university rector, said the new buildings complete a stage In the universily~8 building development program. He said that two O'ther buildings, for the scho4!ll oj! engineering and architectur.e and for. the department of bioloID', are "nder construction, and. tha,~ a third, for the school Of pur!;ing, is, being planned.

U's about that time of year again for us to t-e giving some serious thought to the annual selection of The Anchor's AnDiocesan team. In checking back over the All teams of the past couple of years, we note with pleasure the number of young men who have gone on to college, many of ,tqerrtto star on the gridiron for their respective schools. Foul' members of the 1958 AllDiocesan team have Varsity STANG LINEMEN: Ready for the Apponquet backs status. Bob Hargraves is one of are Guard Paul Bisbee, Fairhave»,. le:lit, and Tackle Henry The big game is the Durfee- Dr. Eddie Anderson's five scinCoyle contest at Hopewell Park. tillating Sophomores at Holy Cclneia, New Bedford. Taunton. For the first' time in Cross. Tony Day of Mansfield is several years the clash will ~ave a starting guard at. Columbia, · the holiday setting Which has as is Charley Carey at Colby, and done so much to enhance the Paul Levesque, former Taunton traditional rivalry. The Hilltop- luminary is with the Boston pel's will take an' impressive 6':'0 College squad. The Spartans of Stang High thusiasm of the team have imrecord into the Warriors' fray The '59ers of whose exploits elash· with Apponquet High pressed Coaeh Lynch from the in quest of the' Bristol County ,we've heard inclUde Dick John_ ScllClOJi 'tomorrow morning at start. title. Coyle 4-1-1 on the season son who is doLog a·bang-up job I@ o'clock 8J1j. the Dartmouth New Bedford" Fairhaven, and 52-6 victor oyer Du'rfee l!lst at center for the Boston Univell'- Stamum. lit 'will be the first Acushnet, M a I' ion, Buzzards Nun New Pr.esident year figures to be a formidable sity Freshmen; Mike Kuliga, a varsity game for Carlin Lynch's Bay, Dartmouth,. Westport, Somfoe. flackle on the same club; Bob No. Dartmouth eleven. Of Medical Librarians erset and Fall River are repYoke-Crimson Tavares, A.I.C., via Somerset . SEATTLE (NC)-Sister Mar.y The Freshman and Sophomore' resented on the squad. In another major hOliday at- and former Haider teammate Joe Eugene, H.S,M., of St. CatherThe probable starting line-up traction Vocational hosts croS&- DiGiammo who, is having a great teams have an .overall record ine's Hospital, Omaha, Neb" was town rival New Bedford at. Sar- year at full !back. for Dean 011 five ;mns, four losses and one for tomorrow will be: Ray Tou- insllalled as president of the· Ian and. Richard Collins, ends; tie... The Freshman and Sopho'gent Field. Both teams ~e ip. the Academy. Tom McCabe and Henry Cor- American l&o':J..:ociatio< of Medical throes of losing streaks bul recComing up one week from awl"e teams. have an overall reia, tackles; Paul Bisbee and Record LLrcurians at th~ group's aids won't mean a thing after the Sunday, Nov. 20, is the Ed ll'ftoJ'd of five wins ,four losses Bob McCarthy, guards; and Bill 32nd annual national cc.nventiolll opening whistl~ tomorrow. Last Lowney testimonial at, Gaudette's and one tie. The Freshman club Constant, center~ The ball carry_ held here. has lost only one game, while year's' meeting was a.J!leJ!l0rable Pavilion in Acushnet. Ed reMiss Ann Ball of Johns Hoping quartet will consist of Tom one, Vocntional coming fr.om be- signed this Fall as coach of lIhe losses ." to, the' Sophomore Giasson or Ray LeBlanc. q.b.; kins Hospital, Baltimore, was 'hind' to tie the powerful. basketball and basebaJ,f at Holy unit have been due' to the fact Tom Perry .or .Lee Michaelwicb, named president-elect. . son, 12-12, in the waningm~ il'"amlly High, a. position .that he tha1I .they. have been playing r.h.Ill.; Bay Shemumor Jolu:a About 400 persons attended thE juniOJ' varsity teams with two ments of the game. The dead- held with honor and distinction Ellis, I.h..b:.; a~d Bill Keny of con.vention". including a numbe? lock was the only blot on New since 1948. If only a smattering amlI .three years experience. . of· religious from Catholic b~ Dick Rebello' at fullback. · Bedford's otherwise '. , !spotless ~f the friends' that the genial . pitals throughout the nation: ". 'l'he improvement ,sincetbe Other members of the squad · !edger. '''TUbba'' ~acied~ringhis.c~r ~gpract~ce on Sept. 'l" is :. Dighton travels to 'BoJ~ne to- attend, the' place ifl-. going to be .very, indicative ot. a bright fut- who, will see action are Dan GQnsales, Art Rebello. Bill Ross : morrow in the only Conferenceero~ded. '." .... , ' . ~, for., the sPa".rtans of No. and Sylvester .Maloney at the I: game of the day','bulan Saturday ':'~,:yo~ ther~,·. '. '- .. ,~ou1b. The spirit and enend spots. The center of the line :. it's Somerset at Wrreham in a .. . .. ... , . ,;. , : will have. Walter Bayliss, ,Pat battle of the" Tri-Counly un,'~t~ '1897 .. " :.t. Foley, Elill McGrath, Len Seqbeaten .elevens. Each has .a:4-j) . " .w.ra,.. ; ,Tony Ponte and' Brian . "Builders .Supplies' "., . league'record and the title 'hangs Bartkiewjcz. :,' in the balance, even though both" LONDON (NC)":':":'P'our pri~s,'cJnimt' said; ""to' .see how in so 2343 ·.~urch~se. Street t The reserve backs are' Bill . '. "New' Bedford bav.~, ~!J.rt.h~r,.. comm~tJJ1.ell~ 011 including an Amerii:an, "have 'manY'places'where St. Paul bad Rousseau, Larry Ferreira, Ch~­ Thankagivillg. '.'. . returned'here after' retracing the. workeiithere is hardly a vestige li~ Frallco and Bill Aguiar. WY 6·5661 Wareham; . despite the loss ··route ,'of the 'Exodl.i"s and St. of Christianity today." ' through ·injury of its two rank- ,Paul's "journeys' in five weeks.. ~ At" Gallipoli, 'Turkey, the La.rid ing quarterbacks, bas managed Father Blaise .Turck, O.B.S, of Rover was 'involved in a serious White';s Fa'rm Dairy . to' fashion a commendable 5-~ Mt. Angel SeminarY,St.Bene- crash,' but the priests escaped. overall record. Somerset, at full diet,' Ore., and his three compan.- unhUrt. . . "SPECIAL MILK strength since the opening day ions made their trip in a Land Tbe expenses 'of the trip were From, Our Own loss to Mansfield, has a 5-1 slate Hover; a British jeep _ like covered by a gift given to Father Tested Herd" and of late has shown great scor- vehicle. Oll'ehard on his retirement 'as ing potential. The Capeway . His three compaJiions were Madmaster of· St. Benedict's , Acushnet;· Ma-. WY 3-4457 Olt BURNERS eleven, however, is strong de- Fatbers Bernard Orchard, 6.S.B., Abbey School here. 'AlsO eompleR Boiler·BurDer fensively and has good size. Thill Piers Grant-Ferris, O.S.B., and • e Special Mille .. FI1FD&ee Unlta. ..Effieieat· should be one ol'the best game. Hubert Richards, O·,S,B. , e H'omogenfzed VIt. D Milk low cost .beating. Borner aDd Plan Buildings 'of tne year. . . 1m three weeks the' party eButtermilk , .l'ud.oU salee and service. CONVENT STATION (NC)In other games around the cir- crossed the· desert from the Nile i e Tropicona. Orange Juice Oil Co., euit, twice-beaten Attleboro, up- 'River in Egypt' to the Promised 19ishClJl James' A. McNulty of e Coffee and Choc. Mi'k Paterson broke ground here for t80 Mt. Pleasant Street . set by' Mansfield last. week. Land; the journey the Israelites e FgS- - Butter New Bedff'l'c11 WY 8-2'" a· new' ncademic and science 20-16, 'visits "Dartmouth which made with Moses in 40 years.' building for the College of St. only hast week broke into the At Mount Sinai they were we1victory column with a surprise comed by the Orthodox monks of Elizabeth and a lBO-room juno:. 14-12 decision over North Attle- the ancient monastery there and iornte study hoUse for the Sisters COME IN - SEE". ":'·,and 'DRIVE boro. North's Red Raiders, mean- allowed. to celebrate Mass on the of Charity. , whiie will seek to regain the porch. winning touch against a stout Ma.gnificent View "lhe Wartd's Most Beautifully Proportioned Car.Mansfield team better' known "I waS startled," Father Oras Gentili and Co. The talented chard said, "wben I stood' on the af SHEET METAL All-Diocesan Junior personally the same spot 'where Moses was led the Green Hornets to the and saw the Promised Land in J. TESER, Prop. stunnning win over the Jewelers. the distance. The view L magniRESIDENTIAL Wrapping up Bristol County ficent and in the distance are the INDUSTRIAL fertile lands of what is now IsCOMMERCIAL '.' fORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS Releases Stang Girls raeli territory." 253 Cedar ~t. New Bedford Later, tracing the journeys of Basketball Schedule St. Paul, the priests stood in the 1344-86 Purchase St. . New Bedford, Mass.. ' WY 3-3222 The schedule of the varsity ruins of Ephesus and read aloud basketball games, for girls at passages from the Acts of the Stang High School was released Apostles. . , yesterday by Miss Rosemarr "I was saddened," Father 01'Moore, physical education director at the school. Dec. 6, Fairhaven High, away; Dec. 13, Case High, away; Dec. at 20, Dartmouth High, horpe; Jan. 5, Durfee High, home; Jan. 10, DistnDufecl by Prescriptions called for Taunton High, away; .Ian. 19, and delivered Jesus Mary Academy, bome; Jan. HEADQUARTERS FOR 24, New Bedford Vocation~. . Beverage Co~ home; .Jan. 25, Somerset High, DIETETIC 'SUPPUES home; Feb. 2, New Bedford 331 Nash Rd.. New Bedford 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 High, away; Feb. T. Westport New Bedford NEW BEDFORD, MASS.' 1 WIlUAM ST. WYman 7·9937 High, aw~.

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THE' ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall'River-Thurs. Nov.l0.1960 I

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..to' right, Claud:ette Lapoirif'e; Moiher~St. Jeartnette. Center, left to right, 'Mother Ma~.Elaine,Michelle Autliiet,·Mot~er~Mar.y Constance. Right, left to right, M~t~er Marie :d~ l\loritfort, .Marie-Anne Guertin..'

. THEY MADE 1'HESTATIONS: Novicesfroin·F~lIRi~er are among girls at theprovincialh.Quse of the.Religious of Jesti.s :aild '-Mary, Hyatts7 ville,Md., who erected an outdoor Stations of the Gross. Left picture,Jeft

'Asserts Prese·nt···· Is'Gold~n .'Era" '. For Laymen ' NEW ORLEANS

Hele,n HO'yesAsk, Women's S.upport , LAS VEGAS (NC) - Actress Helen Hayes ,has appealed' to Catholic women to support· the National' Fc;>imdation's research pro~r·am. .

(NC).~

'~This is th'e - golden e~a of

the laity," a Bishop said here, "Happy is the priest who has his laity' organized to work under his direction, especially in endeavors of the Con.;. fraternity of Christian Doctrine," Bishop Charles P. Greco .o~ Alexandria, La. ":lid at a Pontifical High Mass offered for delegates toa regional conference of the Confraternity· of Christian Doctrine in the New Orleans province. Bishop Greco, chairman of the episcopal committee of-the CCD, declared that in the world today "'the harvest is ripe but the laborers are few.' " "Only a small number heed the cali to the religious life, but there are 'ardent members of the laity," he said. "The laity is . indispensa ble." . . '. '., Heart of CCD Father Louis Putz, C.S.C., of the University of Notre Dame also stressed the importance of the CCD. "The laity is at the heart of our society," he said. "It must be a laity who knows the Gospel and the Gospel must be translated to life." Father Putz also. declared that oppositioQ to the Church is due ,to "ignorance," not "prejudice." . Father William McCoey of ' the CCD national center in Wash.;. ington,~D. C., described .the Confraternity as "the choicest. field of Catholic ,Action."

, Miss Hayes stressed the foundation's efforts to discover why 250,000 babies born yearly have defects. · The' actress, widely acclaimed as the first lady of the American theater, speaking at a civic banquet which climaxed the convention of the National Council of Catholic Women, said: .' "My feeling for plays is guided by Faith. I find I can appear only in a play in which there is an affirmation of my Faith."

, "CONSTRUCTION. CREW;': Front' row left to right, Mother M~ry Constance, Mother -Marie de Montfort, Claudette Lapointe, 'Mother. Mary ·Elaine.Rear, .Michelle Authie-r, Marie-Anne Guertin, Mother St. Jeannette.' . .

Jesus-Mary Novices From Fa~l' Riv.er .Make .. Stations· of Cros~. in Unique 'F~shion . Every Catholic has made the Stations of the Cross, and. so have. the novices cif the Provincial House of the Religious of Jesus and Mary in 'Hyattsville, Md. But they've car'ried further than ,the rest of us,. Nineteen novices,' including, seven graduates of JesusMary Academy, Fall River, have constructed an outdoor "via dolorosa." Work included clearing of a heavily wooded '20 Guertin Court, North Attle- '-ier, :daughter of Mrs. Louis section of the' novitiate boro; and from Swansea, Claud- Authier of. Montreal. grounds;' cutting down trees ette Lapointe; daughter of. Mr.. . "Looking at the section as it .is and leveling ground. 'Prepa- and Mrs. Victor Lapointe, 745 today/' reports a professed re-

ratory'labor over, the stations themselves, made by .the father 14' of .a professed religious, were installed in cement foundations 'Dial-a~Sa'int', and surrounded by .fiowers and DALLAS (NC)-More than 14 shrubbery. million calls have been made in A stairway at the end of the three years to 'more than 100 Way of the 'Cross, also novice"Dial-A-Saint'" telephone instalmade, leads to a 12-foot cruci-. lations across the nation. fix, standing in a rock garden. This figure was reported by Novices and postulants from the Bureau of Information of 'the Dallas-Fort Worth diocese in its Fall River who worked' on the project include Mother ·St., Jean.,. . announcement that it will inaugnette, the. ·former Antoinette urate f plall h.ere. ' .' . Gamache,daught,er of.Mr. and C'allers get a 60-second inspirMrs.' RerieGamache,. '7,09 County .ationa! message on the' life of a Street, FalqUver;'MothEir Marie. saint . ~hen telepho~ing, any de Montfort, the ·fOrmer·· ·Lor- . hour of' uie day or night. AS raine Blanchette,' niece Of ·Mr. :elsewh~'re, )ocat Pri~sts,·n.arrate .;md Mrs.':Ernest ,: Moreau, 49 the life.of the day's'saint on. tape . Smithies Street, Fall' 'River; : recording.' An automobile. dealer Mother Mary Elaine, ·the' former is sponsoring:it here as 'li' public Annette Jusseaume; daughter (if service.. Mr~ and Mrs. Paul Juss,eaume"9~ "'..IJ Barnes Street, Fall River. . eCOlrw ~romenJ Also.Mother· Mary. Constance; MILWAUKEE (N:C). -:... Marthe former Theresa Michaud,' quette University' has . a-record . daughter orMr. and Mrs. Ovila number of. 11,501studerits en-' Michaud, 98 :'Raymond Street, rolled for the first semester of the Fall River. 1960-61' school year. University From North Attleboro is offiCials 'said last .. year's . first Marie-Anne Guertin',' 'daughter semester enrollment w'as 10,746. . of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Guerti~

Million Teiephone Calls' .

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Bark Street, Swansea. " A Canadian who graduated 'from the Fall River academy and also participated in the making of the Stations is Michelle AuthI

Vincentians to Meet At Memorial Home The'regular monthly meeting' of the. Fall River ParticuUir Council; Society of St. Vincent' de Paul, will 'be held a.t the Cath": olic ·Memorial Home at 8 Tuesday night, Nov. 15. . Members will be guests of' St. William's Conference of the 01'-' . ganization ,an~ ~enedictionw:ill be given .ill ttle Home. chapel at 7:45, followed by' the meeting in the· recreation hall: '. , ...., . .,

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ligious from the Hyattsville community; "it is hard' to believe"that 19' novices were re= sponsible for all the work involved. It would no doubt have proved impossible without the motivation supplied by the Con:' gregation's motto: Praised forever be Jesus' and Mary!"

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Miss Hayes explained she believes "the purpose of the theat( 's to show mankind to himself and thereby show' man in God's image." · Miss Hayes, who addr~ss~d.· the 3,000 NCCW delegates and guests, has been national chair':' . man of women's activities of ·the National Foundation sinc'e December' 1949, the year her dal,lghter died of polio at 19.

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