The
ANCHOR
Hierarchy Report Reveals
Major Growth of Church
Activities in America
of
WASHINGTON (NC)-Vigorous growth is.reflected in the activities the Catholie Church in the United States. • . Th.is growth, cpuple.d with t!'te nation's leadership in the Free World, bi'i~gs ste~dily mcreasmg requests for mformatIOn and ser vice. not only at home but also from abroad. Reports made by, depart
An Anchor of the S01A.l•.Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL m~nts and bureaus of the
National Catholic' Welfare
Conference to the annual River, general meeting of the archbish ops and bishops of the country PRICE lOe Second Clas. Mail Priviletreo V~I. here show that many diverse Aathorized at Fall River. M•••. $4.00 per Yea' ,------~----------- .problems were studied and dealt with in the course of the year. An observation made a year ago by Archbishop Francis P. Keough of Baltimore, chairman of the NCWC Administrative Board, was amply borne out this year. It is that, as the NCWC becomes more widely ,known, t, th~ conference receives more and more inquiries and requests for the aid of its facilities· and services, Education Program Interests and preoccupations of .the NCWC Department of Education ranged 'widely over the, entire m~ld of. education dur Turn to Page Fourteen
Fall
Mass.
Thursday, Nov. 13, 1958
2, No. 46
Arctic Missioner Credits Prayer For Rescue
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You Must Have Some Old Discards For Diocesan Clothing Drive NEW YORK (NC)-Expressions of thanks pour in throughout the year to headquarters of Catholic I Relief . Services-National.Catholic Welfare Conference from home- . less, hungry and needy peoples .all over the world for the . generosity of American American aid both military and Catholics to the annual econorriic. We can hardly find Thanksgiving Clothing Cam words to thank you enough for the great assistance from the paign. The 11158 campaign for warm United States in rehabilitating our war-torn country. The Cath clothing will be conducted na tionwide during the week of olic Relief Services-NCWC has been most friendly and generous Nf '. 23-29. Tt will be the 10th annual drive for usable used in sending clothes and food." Ten thousand pounds of used clothing, blankets, shoes, bed ding and other materials which clothing distributed last week to 1,187 needy families by Catholic Clan be sent to the needy over seas, regardless of race, creed or Relief Services represented 'the biggest single distribution this national origin. Won Hwan Cho, on behalf of year in Korea. the "poorer people of the Myung The used clothing was donated Dong church area in Seoul, to a total of 6,33i refugees, vic Korea" writes, "We have been time of a flood which drove them able to defend ourselves from from their homes an ,a sand bank eommunist aggression with in the Han River.
WASHINGTON (NC) "All our prayers were an swered by the rescue." These are the words of Father Thomas P. Cunningham, a' Jes uit missionary and one of the world's top experts on Arctic pack-ice, after a rescue plane scooped the priest and 19 other men from an ice floe on which they were stranded near .th~ North Pole. Father Cunningham's words were relayed here by Air Force officials who reported after the arrival of the men in Greenland Turn to Page Nineteen
C'a Iiforn iaVotes .Against . Pri~ate' School Taxes SAN FRANCISCO (NC) The. proposal to' tax this' state's private 'grade and high schools sUffered a big ger defeat in this month's vot ing than even the sagest political expert predicted. And the plurality by which exemption from a disabling state property tax was supported was much larger than that of 1952; the last time the question was on the ballot. With all but 518 of California's 26,896 precincts reported, the unofficial tally .was 3,237,714 " Turn to Page Nineteen 0
Rules Nuns in Religious Habits May Teach in Public S~hools COLUMBUS (NC)-A religious habit is no impediment to teaching in a public school. While "sectarian teaching" is forbidden in public schools, "wearing a distinctive garb does not amount to a teaching of religious doctrine'" Ohio At torney General William Saxasked: "Can mein~e~s of reli~ be has ruled. gious order teach in the pUblic Persons of "any religious schools wearing the religious faith or of no faith" may habit required by said order, lawfully be employed to teach and be compensated from public funds?" in public schools, Mr. S a x b e ' " added. The question apparently arose The attorney general's statewhen a local school district, ment was made in reply to a which had been beset by finan questio~ from Randall Metcalf, ciaI problems, leased 'a Catholic Washington County Prosecuting. school from the Diocese of Steu AttorneY,:. Mr. Metcalf's query TUfn to Page Eightee~
GOSPEL NARRATOR: Joseph A. Parks, retired Fall River attorney who was a Sunday School teacher at age 14 in England, reads the Gospel in English while Rev. William A. Galvin reads the Latin narrative at Mass in Catholic Memorial Home chapel, Fall River.
Catholic Memorial Home Residents Participate. in Prayers of Mass. The Catholic Memorial Home, Fall River, has joined the growing number of Diocesan parishes and institutions encouraging congregational participation in Mass. Lesd by 84-year-old Joseph Parks, residents joined last Sunday in °the brief responses resuits of this first effort,' said of the Mass. Mr. Parks, reFather Galvin. Residents and tired lawyer, and for 20 Si~ters of the Home will make years a member of th ori _ brIef responses at weekday . . e ~ Masses as well,although the Eng mal. Massachusetts Indus~rIal lish reading of. Epistle and Gos . ACCIdent Boa.r~, rea~ the EpIstle pel will take place only on Sun and Gospel mEnghsh as, Rev. d W!l1iam. A.Galvi~,Ho~e chap~rir. Parks, former member of lam reCIted them m Latm. St. Louis parish, Fall River, was Widening, of participation to instrumental. in enactment of the include the longer responses' of . Workmen's .; Compensation Law the Mass will ,depend upon· the of 191L
New York Radio Panelists Note Religious Resurgence in Russia NEW YORK (NC)-A resurgence of religion in the Soviet Union has led to a Kremlin counter-offensive intended to spread atheism among the people. "The religions upsurge has even infiltrated communist ranks," a radio program be- ' of the USSR, in cooperation with lieves. "Sovjet newspapers the news and special events de are filled with censures of partment of radio station WOR. The institute, whose headquar party and Komsomol (Young ters are in Munich, consists of Communist League), members former Soviet scholars and sci who are marrying in church, entists who fled Red tyranny having theIr children baptized, and are now producing studies or displaying verses from the dealing with life in the USSR. Koran in their homes." One panelist was Father Leopold The program was presented Turn to' Page Eighteen by the Institute for the Study
Retain· Famous Lester Lanin Band For Annual Charity Ball Jan. 7
REV. WILLIAM D. THOMSON
Bishop ~Connolly's Annual Ball for' Underprivileged Children will be held Wednesday evening, January 7, 1959 at Linc.oln Park's Million Dollar Ballroom, Rev. William D. Thomson Spiritual Director, Diocesan Central Council So ciety of St. Vincent de·Paul Last year's affair attracted aimounced. today. more than 4000 people from Father Thomson also alJ, every parish in the Diocese and all the newspapers in the area nounced that Lester Lanin hailed the event as a fabulous and his internationally famous success. dance band have again been re The Charity Ball will again be tained to provide the music for under the co-sponsorship of the the Chilrity Ball which has be SoCiety of St. Vincent de Paul come the top social event of Southel'n New England. , Turn to Page Eighteen
THINKING OF CHRiSTMAS .... Give A Subscription to THE ANCHOR . Send to Parents, Relatives and Frien~s-Daughters at School-Boys in:the Service A Weekly Reminder to loved Ones of Your Thoughtfulness Subscription Blank on Page' 13
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Praises' .J~suit University's
Football for Fun Program
By Donald McDonald
Davenport Catholic Messenger
Ihav~ just been looking over a whole sheaf of papers . press releases, data' sheets and newspaper clippings-des cribing the intramural football ·program 'at the Jesuits' University of San Frandsco, and I must say; after studying this material, ·that I think. . indicates' how fat afield the this school has come up with schools have strayed. the 'answer to a rather irn As Faurot has said,the blame portant question: How can a for this state of affairs must be college or 'a university satisfy . shared by .the college adminis the desire of its students 'to play' trations, from the· president football without .
down; by the alumni who do the' at the sam e
recruiting a'nd proselytizing; and time making a
by the coaches who - select the farce out of its
,players t'hey want the alumni to scholastic pro recruit and proselytize. gram so 'far as
Well, now, ·the University of the players are
San Francisco deci.ded, back in 1951, to get out of this sordid concerned and
without 'resort business. Along with Santa Clara ing to the hy and St. Mary's, all in .its area, pocrisy of "big
and about,40 other colleges, they time" infercol dropped intercollegiate football. legiate football
Student enrollment. so far as as practiced by
I can tell, did not 'fall off at any . so many of our
of the schools Nhich abandoned ,State and private uni~ersities? semi-professional football., But If aU' the ~vils attendant upon there was still a desire in the high _ powered intercollegiate . YOUhg . men at these schools to football were ever recounted in play the game; to test th~ir skill, one article, it would certainly to taste the competitive wine of add up to a pretty sordid tale. the sport. ,Don Fallrot, coach andathietic Three years ago, USF launched director· -of the Uriiversity of . an 'intramural footbail"program. 'Missouri, ;lifted the lid a little on the campus. More ..than" 200 bit' a: few weeks ago ~ithhis boys. turneci..up on opeIiil'lg day article' in The Sa'turday Kveniiig and even after the first week of Post, on the evils of recruiting the inevitable cOliditioning· exer high' school players. . cises, ·there were enough :boys,·to, Lid Lifted field three complete teams.' . , A few.years ago, former 'all:' Robert MacKenzie, West Coast J;\ig Ten player from the Univer . scout for the ·professionar Cleve sity of Michigan really lifted the land Browns; together with' a. lig in a strongly-worded article few,. assistant caches, organized in Harper's. the teams, fed them the tech , . He took. each one of the alleged nique of smart football (includ-' advantages of big-time c'ollege ing many of the Bro~ns' owri football~that it taught sp'orts formations and· plays), regula manship, that it wa!? "fun," that' tion football· equipment was the travel )'Vas broadening 'for issued, and thus the "Football' the players, that it engendered for Fun" program' .got under "leadership," etc.-and demon way. . strated, from personal ex peri Interest in the teams on the ehce, that these advantages were USF cam'pus ·runs high."'Weekly more illusory and mythical than awards are ,given to the best. real as the game is actually players. Competition is keen.' played in America today. $ome real, ta'lent has been U11 , BI.!-t, Isuppose th~ hypocrisy of' covered among the "ama~eurs." ~he sport is the 'most unhealthy 'Studies have hot· been perlal'; aspect of it.' . izecf oy' the tremenaousi>res~ures Colleges committed to this o~ big-time football (the 'season commercialized ·-brand of ,foot . ends ,with. the first week· in ~all try to' keep up at all costs a . Nov.e\.Il~r). There is none' of facade of amafeurism', (tbough-::~ ·the:::nigfltlT)are ',financial' prob everyone k!}o~!"tha't a·true'~ma.;. 'lems which haurit~il.s.llf~ ~chools teur who' would naively show in the past. .. . ,'.', " ~ ..~; ...' up for pl'actice .would be laughed . . MacKenzie l)~;i ;~}d ~he 'would to the sidelines '. since toe" only., 1i~e' to see other~s1ili:ools like USF playei~s the cmiches. will work (Santa Clara, St. Mary's, etc.) with are those whom' they and embark on the' .same program the "alumni boosters" have'se-' with a view to' eventuai'~nter l~cted, recruited and enti~~d to· school games played by the "all the campus 'with remunerations stars" from. each of the school's of 'various kinds). intramural league. Another hypocrisy in this. He see.s no, danger' that' this \ .'emi-pwfessional. set-up is the would lead to· the ·hypocritical ffction that the varsity athletes professionalis~ abandoned seven are supposed to maintain as years 'ago; since there would' be high a,scholastic level of accom no 'recruiting, no inducements; plishment as the nOll-playing the players would simply be students~' .. '.,:.., genuine stude~t~ wllo' wanted to What actuail y ' happens, of get out on the #eld.and try their cours~, is that' the. school' has 'skills -:..amateurs, that is: ' . This it ·seems. to' m:~ .- is the established a ~ery elabonite tu tor-system for., a~hletes,:imd in ':proper' plac~":oi, footb~ll: or any addition there is,' frequently a . ,sport; in·cQllege. Certainly: it great deal of. pressure, seldom makes it possible to have the having to be .~ade explicit,"on sport and one':;; honor, too. the professor/l. .to "take it easy" when grading varsity players. Perhaps one of the saddest aspecls .of the picture is the, faCt that at a time when 50 per cent of scholastically worthy. seniors PRESCRIPTIONS do not go to college because, in Joseph A. Norris, Jr. many cases, they cannot afford Reg. Pharm. to .go to college, l!othletes are '; ~. 686 Pleasant St. given, at the minimum, "free : .
New Bedford ride" scholarships - i.e.; board, room and tuition. WYman 3-3918
The justification for this is the ,. usual commer,dal one, tpe ath-· letes bring ip a great deal,of money at the'. ticket.·office ,eac~ . Saturday. '.;,;';.' "', ,.:. "",.", The fact that. a schoo~"so clear ly puts a higher\'alu~ 'on dollars than it does on "the inteliectu'al resources of scholarly, but non athletic high.. ~h6ol- : senio'is
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.- THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 13, 1958
Former Airman Pronounces Vows
In -Sacred Hearts Congregation
Brother Augustine Michael Father Damien of Moloklri, Falls, SS.CC., of St. Columba's Father Mateo, the founder of parish,' Philad'elphia, Pa., pro Night. Adoration and the En nounced his .temporary 'vows on thronement of the Sacred Heart Tuesday, as a mem ber of the in the Home, and Brother Eugene Congregation . of the Sacred Eyraud, the cannibal-converter Hearts of Jesus and Mary at of the Easter Islands in the Pa St. Joseph's Novitiate, Wareham. cific Ocean. Brother Augustine was pre Daily ~doration . sented to the Very Rev. William J. Condon, SS.CC., Provincial of The, Brothers of the Congre ,the Congregation, by Master of gation make a half hour 'of daily Nov-icesRev. Henry R. Creigh-' adoration and one hour'of night ton, SS.CC. , . adoration each week as an act Before entering tl. ~ Wareham' of love and reparation to the Novitiate, Brother' ,Augustine Sacred Heart. The Brothers work served in the U. S. Air Force in · in churches, schools, seminaries, Germany a"nd had been' stationed and monasteries operated by' the for some time at Otis Air Force priests of the Congregation. Base' in Falmouth. . Many priests and brothenl The newly-pJ.:ofessed Brother f:oom the New Bedford.and Cape joins the work 'of many pre areas and from Queen of Peace decessors of .the, Congregation Seminary in Jaffrey, N. H. wit among' whom are the' famed nessed tHe impressive ceremony_ Mter a short visit with his fam .. ily, Bother: Augustine will be FRIDAY-St. 'Josaphat, Bishop assigned duties in on'e of the
and Martyr. Double. Red houses of the Congregation.
Mass 'Proper; Gloria;' Sec-' " ond Collect for the Pope; Com Cana~lian mon ,Preface. SATURDAY - St. Albert the BRO. AUGUSTINE MICHAEL Great, Bishop, CQnfessor and NORTH BAY, (NC)-'Coad
DoCtor of the Church. Double. jutor Bishop Alexander Carter of
'White. Mass· 'PEoper;' Gloria; Saulte Ste. Marie has urged' ten
Second Collect for the Pope; ants to "show Christia'n charity"
Cr~ed; CO!llmon Preface. in aiding victims of a Sudbtil')l,
NF:W'YORK (NC)-Ana.ward SUNDAY-:-'XX:V Sunday After (O'nt~) strike.
for distinguished service to .the . Pentecost .(Collects,' 'F:pistle, Ina pastoral ret~er the Bishcip
mission work. of the Church has , and Gospel of VI Sunday after 'aid ~'the strike in the Internat
been bestowed 'posthllmously on' "··Epiphany) .. : Double.' Green, ioi'iaINickle" Company is begin
Cardinal' Samuel Stritch, Arch:' : MaSsProIier; Gloria;Secoild .., ing to take its' toll" md th~se
bishop of .Chicago. . "Collect St. Gertrude'the Great, affected . most by .it must 'be
"The honor" known. as the Virgin; .Third Collect for the · assisfed • Xavier Award, was, accepted' by , •Pope; Creed; Preface of Trin Bishop Carter also cited the a nephew of the la'te Archbishop ity· " , :'terrible responsib'ility" resti~g of Chicago, Father~lV1orris Stritch MONDAY - St.Gr~gorY , the on the shoulders "of union offie of ,Memphis, during the ,16th an Wond.erworker, 'Bishop'" 'and 'ials whom heurgeci to' do;every nual Jesui't b~nefit ~inl1er here. Confessor. Simple. ,W·hit e ~ thing humanly possible to 'bring Earlier / . this year Carc,linal Mass Proper; Gloria; Second the strike to' ~ quick end." S~ri~ch 'was .?amed Pro-Secre.tary Coliect for th~'Pope; Common of the Sacred Congregation for "It would be a travesty of jus Preface.' , . . . the Propagation of the. Faith: He tice," he 'declared, "if offician TUESDAY-Dedication of the died in Rome in May 'after his of the company and union hard arrival to take up his new duties.. Basilicas of St. Peter and Paul. ' ened their mutual attitude for Greater Double. White.. Mass The Cardinal had 'also served as the sake of an empty' victory at chairman of the American Board ProPer; Gloria; Second Colhict the cost' of untold misery to the for t~e Pope; Creed; Common families of the employees." of Catholic Missions. Preface. WEDNESDAY-St. Eli~beth of FORTY, HOURS
H',mgary,. Queen and ,Widow. When it's 'time ])ol;'ble. White.' Mass Proper; DEVOTION.'
Second Collect, St. Pontianu$, 'Nov. I&---:OUr Lady: of, the to ~ti~:. Buy P~pe, ~nci f\iartyJ;'; Third C.ol~ Isle; Nantucket. "le~t for, .the Pope; Common. St. .Anthony, Mattapoi-' I~r:efa.c,e.;·.'.' ., .. sett. THURSDAY.:..,..St: Felix of Valoi!l,. Nov.23-SL Stanislaus, ,Fall . Con£essoJl~ Double. White. Mass River. , ::rroper;Gloria; Second Collect St. Anne, New ,Bedford: '
·;...for the·pope; Common Preface. Nov..26:"'-St. Catherine's' Con-:
vent, Fall River. ~ . Nov.3O-:-0ur Lady of the, ., Imm~.culate Conception,' New Bedford. . St. Margaret,"Buzzards' C~;istmas. Bay.
Mass Or.do '
P,relate · Pleads for 'Strik.ers
Posthumous Mission Award for Cardinal
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"'Varied Sele~tion' of .Religious, , C,ord!' , .I
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Hate Literature Ban Now,ls Aim Of Government WASHINGTON (NC) Post Office and Justice De partment attorneys are now studying the possibility of recommending new legislation to curb the distribution of "hate literature" through the mails. This has been revealed by 'Herbert B. Wa~burton, Post Of fice general counsel, and As sistant Attorney General M?l:' ~lmAnderson, chief of the .Justice Department's criminal division. , Volume Increases The study has been prompted by the recen ,bombings and bomb threats involving houses of worship and schools. Some blame inflammatory "hate literature" for the bombings. It is said the volume of such propaganda has increased in 'recent months. Mr. Warburton pointed out that current laws ban only in flammatory literature which di rectly inci,tes to acts of violence. He said it is difficult, if not im possible, to prove in many cases that a given piece of literature ia directly responsible for an act of violence. Under the Constitution, Mr. Warburton explained, "there' is no prohibition against my de~ riding your religion, or your deriding mine. But it is'precisely that sort of literature that creates the current problem. He also pointed out that postal' author ities are not permitted to open first class ,lail in sealed en velopes. Constant Flow Studies now being made are also aim'ed at increasing the effectiveness of enforcement of current laws. He said the increase in inflam matory literature in recent months has been chiefly in anti Semitic and anti-Negro ,/oP aganda, Complaints received by the Post Office do not indicate an increase in anti-Catholic prop aganda, Mr. Warburton said. However, he added; a steady stream of "ha te literatUS'e" di rected against Catholics is sent thro,ugh the mails.
Red Vietnam Orders Missionary Ouster SAIGON (NC)-The govern ment radio of communist-held northern Vietnam has announced a French missionary priest has been ordered expelled from the country "with the, shortest de lay." It alleged Father Jacques-An dre Reginald, assigned to Lang san province on the communist Chinese frontier, had "committed acts contrary to the law and harmful to the security and pub,;. lie 'order" of the country. Father Reginald was one of the eight foreign missionary, priests remaining in red Viet nam. His expl'sion order came shortly after the ouster of two' Canadian Redemptorists, Fathers Denis Paquette and Thoma. Cote.
Sovereignty Si,gn
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The baldachin over each Car dinars',' throne' in the Sistine Chapel, is an emblem of IOver "
FIRST CENTER IN CAPE PARISH: in' right photo Rev. Joseph, L. Powers, Dio cesan ,Director of the Confraternity of Chri stian Doctrine, presides at Enthronement cer- ' emony in the new catechetical center at HoI y Redeemer Church, Chatham. Rev. Theo dore Brennan, SS. CC., pastor, officiates. Rev. Roger Doherty, SS.CC. stands beside Father Powers. Altar boys are, left to righ t, Thomas and Danny Corrigan, Michael McAllister and Thomas Olson. Exterior vie w of cente.r is shown at left.
De'dicate Cathechetica I Center at Chatham , Holy Redeemer parish, Chat ham, is the site of the first permanent catechetical center in the eastern section of the Di ocese. , Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Dioc esan Director of the Confraterni ty of Christian Doctrine, spoke at dedication ceremonies, urging parishioners, to participate in the teacher training program sched';' o
Six Senators Among Georgetown Alumni WASHINGTON (NC) , Georgetown Univ,ersity'numbers six U. S: senators, 11 Congress men and three State Governors among its alumni. They are: Senators--:"Philip A. Hart, Michi gan; Harrison A. Williams, New Jersey; Dennis A. Chevez, New Mexico; Joseph C. O'Mahoney,: Wyoming; Lyndon B.· Johnson, Texas; and Allan H.' Bible, Ne vada. Representatives-John R. Fo-' ley, Maryland; JohnD. Dingell, Michigan; Milton W. Glenn, New Jersey; Joseph Montoya, New Mexico; Ed Edmondson; Okla homa; Francis E. Walter, Penn sylvania; Richard M. Simpson, Pennsylvania; Paul 'J. ;Kilday, Texas; David S. King, Utah; Burt P. Harrison, Virginia, and John W. McCormack, Massachu- ' 'setts who holds an honorary doc torate of laws from the Jesuit. school. Governors-Michael V. Di Salle, Ohio; Christopher Del Sesto, Rhode Island, and J. Caleb ,Boggs, Delaware. In addition, - one territorial governor, Peter Tali Coleman of Guam, is a Georgetown alumnus.
Magazine Continues WASHINGTON (NC) - 'The death of Pope Pius XII will not inte'rrupt publication 'of The Pope Speaks, quarterly magazine of papal documents. The maga zine has continued to publish recent messages of Pope Pius. XII. In due time it will the~ begin publishing the letters and addresses of the new Pontiff. '
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uled to start Tuesday, Nov. 18 at Holy Trinity parish, West Ha"rwich. He pointed out that the course will enable men and 'women to participate in the work of the new catechetical
Notre Dame Installs Stained Glass Wall
NOTRE DAl'~iE . (NC) A ,stained glass wall, believed the largest in tIle world, is now being installed in the chapel sanctuary of the new three-million-dollar Moreau Seminary on the Univer sity of Notre Dame campus. Designed by Father Anthony L~uck, C:S.C., assistant profes sor of ,art, the stained glass wall is 60 feet wide and 29 feet high. It portrays a group of angels enveloped in rays of flame and light.
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VATICAN CITY (Radio NCl -A coronation commemorativt medal has been issued by th. Vatican to mark the official be ginning of the reign of His Holi ness Pope John XXIII.
center, whil;h conducts a semi weekly program for area chil The medal was designed b, dren. . Aurelio· Mustruzzi. It bears the Solemn Benediction followed profile of the Pope on one side installation of Confraternity of and a relief of a tiara with a dov. Christian Doctrine officers. Fath er Powers was celebrant, Fath~r above on the other. Around the edge are the Latin words from Theodore Brennan, SS.CC., pas the coronation hymn: Corona tor of Holy Redeemer, was dea con, and Father Roger Doherty, ,'aurea super caput eius (on his head a golden crown is placed). SS.CC., curate, was subdeacon. After Benediction Enthrone Bearing the date November ment of the Sacred Heart took 4, 1958, the medal will be is place in the Catechetical Center. sued in gold, silver and bronze. In concluding ceremonies, cars The Pope will give it to those used to transport children to cat he receives in audience during echism classes were blessed. the year. ,
Poor and Needy ROME (NC)-The Pontifical' Relief Organization which as sists the poor and needy through;. out Italy"through its' diocesan branches has apportioned more than $8,000,000 ill aid and serv ices ,for the coming winter.
Issue New Medal At Vatican City
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P~litical Analysts Weigh
The Family Clinic
Fourth Commandment -Has Answer for T ro~bled, Girl
Position of ,Catholics WASHINGTON (NC)-Thirty years after 'the defeat of Alfred E. Smith political- analysts ar,e still trying to assay the amount,of prejudice that exists against Catholic candidates for high public office. . ' The elections just held . ~Pennsylvania and Michael- Di have thrown ,little lighLon Salle in Ohio. Mr. Lawrence was the subject. There are: some referred'to as:, the first C,tholil: • notable victories by' "candi- governor in Pennsylvania's his
By 'Father Jo'm L. Thomas, S.J.
'Assistant Professor of Sociology
St.· Louis ,University
,
This isn't a marriag'e problem, but ,it's 'very.inlportant . to me.' This' summer I'll be 15 ~nd a sophomore in high _ schooL My parents won't let me out in cars with teenagers. ' I .feel awful because everyone's planning things to do 'and B t-' h' d'ff -' -' .' places to go, and I'm going' , b 1f t k' ,eye.' u w en I erences anse, to e, e t ou " ,To rna e It who is more likely to be right? , even worse, Mother says I This doesn't necessarily mean won't be allowed oui in cars that "Mother always knows 'until I'm' 17. I'm really disbest," though there's a pretty gusted. ' g o o d chance that she, knows I think I know how you fell, mote than her adolescent daugh Susan. At 15 ter. Where does this leave you, . life seems very short and very Susan? Well, unless your parents full of things to change their mind,' I suppose do, so it's pretyou'll miss a few rides.' I'm not\ ty rough to be trying to treat this 'subject light"left out," a,s Iy; I know it is very important you puto it, , to you, and for that reason I ,Your mother have tried to show you that the has put her foot Fourth Commandment makes dow n because sense. she feels _. that God didn't give us'the Com- teenage dnvers mandments to limit our freedom lack .experience or lessen our enjoymt:nt of life. and lIke to show ,Each Commandment 'is a broad off. You argue that ~heY're not directive, 'telling us how all that way and beSides, when must act if, we would find real they give you your driver's fulfillment' and happiness in life. license, it shows that you, are T k' h' ,, t • f't t t k 'b'lT a Ing uman na ure as we l o a e on responsl I lies k ' t ' t ' 't . .. th t that go with it ... • I, now 1 ,,1 Isn _ surpnsIng , a '. '. we" don't always find it easy to . , Now, Susan, I qUite agree With follow these directives in' our you , t~at- all .. teenage drivers lives..Surely your parents desire aren t Inexperienced or careless. only' what thE\Y feel is best for A good many, of them are really you, Won't you be showing your ~xcelIent drivers. . maturity by gracefully accepting: Of course, as you admlt,there their decision! are always some "drips" who can't drive or like to show 'off, but you insist, all the kids in our cro'wd detest show-offs and rec ognize,them for what they are Members of st.. Hedwig~s par b~g babies." ish" New Bedford, will mark the" Granting that this may be church's golden jubilee with a true, aren't you overlooking a baIl Saturday night at Woodrow, very important- point, in this Wilson Auditorium. ' matter.:.-the Fourth Command A High Mass of ThanksgiviAg ment? Your p<lr~nts have de-' will be celebrated Thanksgiving cided that they don't wa,J;lt you Day, Nov. 27. to go out in cars driven by teen Rev. Emil Tokarz, O.F.M. agers because they feel th?t it is Conv,. pastor of the Polish par not safe"':""they may have other ish; Rev. ·Camillus Blaszczak, very' sound reasons which' they O.F.M. Conv., assistant, are honmay feel it is not, necessary 'to explain 'at present-apd you are lorary chairman and co-chair man ,of ,iubilee. arrangments. thoroughly disgusted, with them. Stanley J.' Szulik heads a, large' How does your a'ttitude relate committee in charg{ or arrange 'to the Fourth Commandment?· ments for the baIl; a banquet, God's . command that children and a souvenir album. " honor their father and !1lother surely implies more than blind, NationaHz~tion unwilling obedience. Does not the term honor involve respect,. School~ esteem, and an earnest effort to COLOMBO (NC) - 'Ceylon'~ understand their ,point of view'? only Archbishop has called on' Let's look at the problem as the, government to alloW' the they see it. They're not morons, Church to' continue its educa nor do they ,lack experience in tional work and to withdraw a life. They're not trying to hurt threat to nationalize Catholic you or make you u'nhappy. schools. On' the contrary, they have , Archbishop Thomas B, COElray, worked vel'y hard to give you all the things you now' enjoy.• a.M.I" of Columbo urged C~tho lic parents to appeal to the gov B,ut perhaps they' see danger ernment to' drop its ban on 'the 'where there is none to be feared'? establishment of new Catholic 'This is certainly possible, but schools. Father S, N. Arulnesa,n, looking at the matter objectively, O.M.I., of Colombo urged Catho do 'you sincerely believe that ~ou College at Jaffna, caIled the are a better judge in this matter govern-ment ban o'n new schools than they? Hasn;t their, own a "totalita~ian move.:' youth and their own 'past ex
""e
0
G~lden _Jubilee Pions '=or Polish Pari!"
. See' 'Threatening
perience taught, them a great deal? ", . I know, Susan, young people frequently insist that their par ents: do not. u,nderstand them. There is some truth in ,this state ment, of course, but most of the time it means nothing more th;m that their parents do not agree with them on certain points of conduct. The reason for this difference of views is not .far to seek. 'Teen agers look at- the world in terms of their own relatively ,limited experience and judge wha1;-...is important or worthwhileinJlife on-·the same basis. ' Just r' 'leet how your own views have changed sinc~ ,you were' a child! Parents, like,,'ise look at the world ,in terms of their past' experience-clearly, they have seen more of life than their children. In judging' what is important and Worthwhile, they conse -'Ien,tly tend to take a long range view, Hence we shouldn't be sur prised if parents and young ,people d<ill1't always s;;.e e~'e to
-
SEMINARY PROF:ESSOR: Rev. Robert L. Lussier, S.S.S., son of Mr., and Mrs. Armand Lussier, 103 Mason St., Fall River, is now a member of the faculty of the Blessed Sacrament Semi nary, Wauteka, Wis.
Bishop' \Pres'ides At Requiem .The" Most Reverend Bishop James L. Connolly, D.b. presided and gave the fiI1al absolution at the funeral Monday of Mrs. Ger trude' Regan, mother ,of Rev. John ,J. Regan, assist,g,nt ;rt the Sacred HearfChurch, Fall River. Father Regan celebrated his mother's Mass at St. Mary's Church, Taunton, assisted by Rev. W. F. O'Connell, SS. Peter and Paul's Church, Fall River, deacon', ,and Rev. No;man J. Ferris, Sf. Mary's Church, Taun ton,' sub-deacon. Rev. Francis J. Connors, SacredlHeart Church, Taunton was master of cere monies 3t the Mass. Chaplains t6 the Bishop were Rev. Thomas H. Taylor, p.asto. of the Immaculate Conception Church Taunton,and Rev. Fran , cis McKeon, pastor of the Sacred Heart Church, Taunton. Rt; Rev. Humberto' S. Medeiros, Diocesan Chanceilor, was master of ceremonies to th91 Bishop.
dates who' are Catholics. There were Catholics who went down to defeat. But there were 110 many consil;lerations entering into the recent campaigns that it will take SOme time to' tell, jf it is ever accurately known; 'how a candidate's religion, right-towork proposals, racial problems, , state referenda, and purely local 'issues affected, particular contests.. The triumph of Senator John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts was expected, but it was so decisive as to thrust him still fartner into the forefront of the' dis~ussion of presidential possibilities in 1960.
tory. From ,3 number of places ill the last few months there were reports that underhand politics were being played, not'only with regard to candidates but also with respect to local issues. A particularly vicious maneuver was employed in 'California ill an attempt to impose taxation on paI:'ochial and other non-prof it private schools. Almost on the eve of the balloting, when there was little time left to put 'the record straight, opponents of the religious schools went on the air with quick announcements over a iarge number of radio stations calculated to inject the religious issue into the voting. As it Great Interest turned out, the voters in Cali Great interest was stirred by' fornia repudiated resoundingly the victory of former Rep. Eu-, this maneuver and the bigoted gene McCarthy in Minnesota. He project it favored. si said to be the first Catholic , Analysts have less than two Senator from that state since - years to apply the lessons of this the Civil War. year's votings to the 1960 presi But here the situation will den~ial ~ampaign. The 1958 elec have, t~ be ,studied more, as ~i1l 'tions put a number of Cathoiics the larger ·picture. There were )n the political limelight. We ,numerous ,i~sues debated ~ere, can expect to hear much discus as they were elsewhere. " sion of the ,religious issues, The election of Edmund C. whether it is iilformed discussion Brown 8S 'Governor 'of Califor or not. nia, in a smashing triurr\ph over former Sen. William Knowland, caused commentators to mention ,NO JOB '1:00. BIG him as presidential timber. Mr. NONE TOO SMALL Brown,' a Catholic, i~trod~ced his family 'to a nationwide tele vision a'udience while making a victory 'speech, and remarked thai a son couldn't be present PR,INTERS because he was studyipg lor Main 'O!fiee a,nd Plant , the priesthood. It was~oted 15y some writers' lOWELL, MASS. that the victors in two other out slanding gubernatorial races are Telephone Lowell Catholi~S-:-DaYid Lawrence in GLS-6333 and GL 7-75ot
SULLIVAN, ,B.ROS.
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NEW ORLEANS (NC).....,.Re quiem Mass for F~ederick J. Digby, 65, widely known in U.S. sport circles, was offered (Nov.
5) in St. Leo the Great Church here. ,Mr. Digby was tile general .manager of, the Sugar Bowl Association and was' credited with originating the name for ,the annual New Year's Day foot ball game played here.' Before he took the post with the. asso ciation, Mr. Digby headed the sports department of the New Orleans Item daily newspaper.
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Sight~ess Man Operates Computer For GreatestT~1I Expressway
ALBANY (NC) - The com puter for the world's greatest toll expressway, the :>83-mile New iYol'k State Thruway, s op erated by man who has never seen it. He is James Stephens, 45, of Albany, who has been totally blind since 1941. An employee of the ThJ;uway for nearly three years, Mr. Stephens attended St. Patrick's school and Christian Brother Ac<ftlemy in Albany. He runs the elech'onic Univac File Computer that does the express way's complicated job of calcu lating, and he, is, highly regarded by his superiors.
a
'Processes Cards The Thruway's computer was installed at Albany headquarters . in 1957, and' by that time Steph en's had been with the Thruway for a yem', working with punched-card equipment then being used. The Thruway transferred him to computer operation, where
be began by feeding cards into the huge machine, which pro cesses Thruwa\y toll cards at the rate of 27,000 an hour. Later, Mr. Stephens took a Remington Rand course in "pro gramming" for the computer, and is now chief programmer for the big machine. \S such, be' works out the complex patterns the machine follows in solving each of the' problems the Thru way staff presents to the com puter. Complex Mazes The, "program boards" with ,which Jim Stephens works are complex mazes of wires, and would be confusing even to a man with his sight unimpaired. The computer, for instance, has to be made ready to' accept the road's ,basic "program'" which involves a startling· total of 13,320 different combinations' of toll rates. After this basic data is fed into the machine, there are constant variations of the program as needed information is both ·.d into and withdrawn from the computer. Guiding Mr. Stephens is Garlo, his seeing eye dog, who has been
with him for four years. Garlo accompanies his master to work each day and spends eight hours snoozing on the floor of the
Drama, 'Group Meets At ~ennedy Cen,ter Classes in fundamental dra matics will' be given for teen agers at 7 P.M. T~ursdays, in the Kennedy Youth Center, New Bedford. The cour:?e will 'include stage work, scenery, lighting, acting,
make-up and costuming, as out
lined by Victor R Hebert at an
organizatioll meeting. The, pur pose is to lay the groundwork: for a players group.
Well known directors and
managers from other dramatic
groups will ·be invited to speak
to the class No previous acting or stage experien~e is necessary for those wishing to join. Cultural chairmen for all CYO
groups in the New Bedford area
are asked to attend tonight's
meeting, to which boys and girls'
are invited. Election of officer.
will be held.
THE Af\lC ~OR Thurs., Nov. 13, 1958
New High School Drive Over Top In Little Rock
Thruway's tabulating depart ment. "This job is ruining him", said Mr. Steph~ns. "He's getting a bit lazy, I'D". afraid." Plays ,Golf Garlo also accompanies Mr. Stephens out to the local golf courses, where the Thruway em ployee is one of the stars of a group of eight or nine men who play golf in the Albany area. Playing with a companion who has his sight and who guides him to the ball. and helps him line up shots, Mr. Stephens shoots nine holes in the 'vicinity of 80 strokes. . A year or s9 ago, Mr. Stephens was given a civil service exam ination on which he scored high grade. He gives much of the credit for his success to his wife, who has spent long hours read ing him the manl,lals on file computers, and who assists him as he types directions on his Braille typewriter.
A home teacher from the State Commission for the Blind taught Mr.. Stephens Braille in 1942, and he received his first seeing eye dog in 1943.
Youth Has Place In Parish Work
. LITTLE ROCK (NC)-' Ten parishes of Pulaski County, which includes the See city. of the Diocese of Little Rock, have pledg~d $700, 000 toward the construction of a new Cath,olic High School for boys. Bishop Albert L. Fletcher of Little Rock said the minimum fund appeal goal was reached less than two weeks after 800 men began a canvass of all Cath olics in the region. The new high school will be ready for occupancy in 1960. Costing in excess of one milliOIl dollars, it will replace an out dated plant. .
Education Group
Plans Meeting
BLIND - CHIEF PROGRAMMER: James Stephens, ,blind chief programmer for the Univac File-Computer used by the New York State Thruway Authority, inserts a pro gram board into the machine. Blind for 17 years, h~ is a 'highly efficient worker, and also an excellent golfer. NC Photo.
ST. 'LOllI,S ,(NC) - American Catholic laymen are no longer Content with mediocre leader ship, Auxiliary Bishop. Lee C. Byrne of St. LOUis said here. Addressing 1,000 teenagers at the third annual convention o~ the St.. Louis Archdiocesan The second in the Cana Con Council of Catholic Youth, the ference'Series will be given at prelate tqok notice of the in 7:30 P; M. Sunday at St. An creased participation in parish thony's Parish, Fall River. affairs by laymen. This second talk discusses the It is essential that youth of relationship between parents today continue the trend, and and young children. shoulder their part of the re There will be a question and sponsibility for' successful parish answer period oftel' the confer'life,he added. Noting that many still' think Describes Tr,ip of the parish as a sort of "spirit Plans for a Christmas party and ual supermarket," the Bishop ,money raising events were dis cited the real purpose of the cussed at a meeting of the In-' parish as a doorway to salvation fant of Prague Guild at St. --a place where dne learns the Mary's Home, New Bedford. truths of God, and receives the Miss Julia A. Joyce spoke on a sacraments.
recent trip to Williamsburg, Va" Youth can take its place in and the meeting concluded with the work of the Church, and a coffee hour.. supply the kind of leaders that are needed, if tliey train for the task, and have a deep regard for TRAPPIST CHEESE their parish, he added. Cove r-ipene~ by the Monks
Your own spirituality must be SPECIAL
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ence and re'freshments will be served.' 'The Cana Conferences aim at brin,ging married couples to a greater 'knowledge of their v~ cation. The Conferences-four to the married couples and one to their young adult sons and daughters - are conducted by the Family Life Bureau of the Diocese.' ' The talks may be sponsored by a parish or any Catholic or ganization of the parish or Dio cese. The talks are open to married couples, non-Catholics as well as Catholics. , ~~
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"Seek first the Kingdom of God and His Justice".
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Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.C.. principal of the Academy of the Sacred Hearts, Fall River, i. among executive committee members planning the fourth an nual meeting of the New Eng land Regional Unit, Secondary School Department, National Catho)ic Educational Association. It will take place Saturday, Dec. 6 at MatignOll high school, Cam. bridge. Most Reverend John J. Wright, Bishop of Worcester, will be keynote speaker on the theme . "The Catholic High School Live. With Others." At other session. speakers will consider aspects of public relations for schools. This is the first time the see ondary sch<}ol department hM met separately from the college , department of the organization.
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-,,~,'\, /' Anniversaries are important-mostly to those immedi ~, /./ ately concerned and dOIng the celebrating. Some ann~ver '"'~' . 'saries deserve recognition 'by an entire _community. The' Diocese is witnessing an anniversary that is sig .. nificant to all-the tenth anniversary of Stonehill College. , The five hundred and twenty-five men and women '--,..- presently attending Sfonehill are cert,ainly grateful for ~ts existe~ce and are actively participating in this anniversary year.. , , The Fathers of the Congregation' of Holy Cross and the lay members of the Stonehill faculty are enthusia~tic , over the College's growth. These dedicated men have given . students of this area the benefit, of their knowledge of things secular and sacred. What can not be easily seen ,although unmistakably present are the many intangibles that. attach to a college. In any area a college-a!1d especially a L,iberal Arts College like .stonehill-stands out as an institution devoted to truth. In an age where exaggeration and fantasy playa role in business and entertainment spheres, it is good to know that the pursuit of truth i~ going ori with sincerity , and without a "gimmick." . A college is interested in trainirig leaders-men', who like the men of the current,ads, think for theIl!.selves. One of the intellectual evils of the day is that men aTe willing to accept not only pre-cooked TV dinners and prepared cake mixes but pre-arranged ideas and prepared thoughts too. ,There are very few who ate willing to use their o~n minds to arrive at conclusions-it is easier to accept someone else's . ideas, aU thought out and neatly packag'ed foraccep.tance. A college' teaches men to use their minds-and Stone Hollywood in Focus hip College has been maldng that contribution to this com .munity for ten years. . .
. A college is dedicated to principles. This is especially')
true of a Liberal Arts 'College. Some. persons would have all colleges teach their students "how to pick up a fast , By William ,H. Mooting, buck." They would have, colleges be 'simply vocational schools. The Liberal .Arts College' like Stonehill aims at . While Eric Johnston, for the Holly;wood movieprodue giving 'its students principles-not only principles of good ers, trades Soviet Russia 10 American pictures at a cut fate ness but principles of science and the arts. There,is so much 0:( $60,000 per, CBS-TV steps up'the-time1y offensive it growth in the sciences, for.instance, that no one can learn opened with Playhouse 90's "Plot to ,Kill Stalin," to show all the details and theories in college, theories that may ,us the ,tricks of communist illiteratep~oples are offered 'a , ehange momentarily. But if a man or woman learns the Russia's world-wide propa short-cut to prosperity via a basic principles of a science, tben he has tbe equi~ment to ganda mill.' , . "do-it-yourself kit", the price of which the Reds forgot to men , handle his field and to keep up with the new developments , "The Red Sell'~, this sea ' son's debut of "The Twentieth tion: within the field. • ' . Century". Sunday series, included This: fa~cinal:ing CBS report The whole community, theJ)., and the Diocese, are grate"'; some hilarious should open the eyes of millions ful to,Stonenill College f/Jr what it has contributed and what film used by in America. It heartens" those of it wiiI do for the area. '" the many-sided us 'who for years ,'have tried ._ And Stonehill's greatest pride at this 'tenth anniversary ,Soviet propa vainly to warn fellow-Americans that not all-indeed, very little is not only iIi its physical expansion and growth but in its ganda machine. '-Soviet propaganda is "sold contribution to the area of men and women students 'of Hammy Russian 0 r s were hard". The soft· touctl deceives truth, ' intellectual 'leaders,' enjoying competence in their ,, act seen as Roose 'more' people. ,"The Red Sell" sets chosen fields while ~bleto participate fully in the under ,vel t a' n d a new pattern in TV newsre standin'g and enjoyment of all branches of knowle~ge. Churchill, 'try porting, should appeal particu
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T elevis·ion -Dramas EXPQse Soviet Propciga~da_T ric.ks
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6
-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 13,- 1958
'Weekly Calendar
Of Feast Days,
TODAY-St. Didacus, Conies-' sor. A native of Seville, Spain, who liVled in the 15th century, he was a Franciscan Brother, who attended missionaries of his Order in the Canary Islands and a~ded them in their work. He was noted for his v penance and contemplative prayer, his devo tion to Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament and to the Blessed Mother. He died in 1463 in Cas tile. The many miracles wrought at his tomb led to his canoniza tion by Pope Sixtus V in 1588. TOMORROW - .St. Josaphat,
:aishop-Martyr. The first of the
Orientals to be canonized form
ally in 'Rome, he was a_ native
, of Viadimir, Poland, and became
a priest of the Order of St. Basil
He worked tirelessly and per
formed rigorous penances for the
, extinction of the Eastern schisms.
At 39, he became Archbishop of
, Polctsk and increased his effortl!l
among schismatics, 'winning
many converts. Although warned
against visiting a parish in Wi
tepsk overrun by s~hismatics, he
faced the danger and was put to
death by enemies of the Church
on NoyeIIiber 12, 1623. He was
, canonized by Pope Pius IX ill 1867. SATURDAY - St. Albert the Great, Bishop-Confessor-Doctor. This famous Dominican philoso pher and theologian, ~ho was'the ' teacher of ';t.• Thomas Aquinas, was a German and one of the .greatest of the Medieval school men. He declined many ecclesi astical dignities,' but at leng~ was persuaded by the Pope to , accept th~ Bishopric of Ratisbon. After three years of able wor~ he' was 'allowed to return to hiol convent at Cologne, where ~e died in 1280 at the age of 88. His works 'are pUblished in 26 folio volum-es. Pope Pius IX pro-' claimed him as Doctor of the Church. SUNDAY-St. Gertrude, Vir , gin., She lived in the 14th cen tury and according to tradition was a native of Saxony. She was II Benedictine nun and' waa blessed with high gifts of mystie prayer. Her work, "InsfnuationeJI Divinae Pietatis," is held com , p3rable to the writings of 'St. Teresa. '
ing their best "treachery"' o~ larly ,to the movie-going.. public -peace-loving Joe Stalin at Yalta and any naive, Hollywood pro in 1945!' , ' . ',ducers wl:lo believe, with Eric ,Any, racket that does ~ $350,000,~00 a year' b~sines8' , 'This specimen of Soviet "lend_ Johnston,that ,America can do is very big business indeed. lease," although c~m'ically ob,vi "'exchange_films" business with When that racket sends out 50,000,000, pieces of man ous to enlightened, Americans, Soviet Russia without getting probably deceived' millions of ~gypped'~., . a year that is a guarantee that it reaches significant por Russhin and' satellite slaves. lion· of the citizens. \ ' ..... Ghoulish Film . MONDAY - St. Gregory, the It is not the kind'o~ filrnKru When many of those receiving the circulars are y()ung , The case of .32-year-old Bar schey's boys will send over for Wonder~orker. Bishop-Confes liters it'is time to ,take a',more studied view at the racket. our American 'theaters. Russia bara Graham, executed in 1955 sor, He was born at Neo-Casea for complicity in"the brutal,mur And ~speCiaIlywhen it has been «aIled, by a postal official, turns out 325,000 trained propa rea, a pagan city of Pontus near der of' Mrs. Mabel Monahan, the Black Sea and about the year gandists a year, at::3 cost of three "'the most di~gusting racket we have ever uncovered." , p~vides ,repel'lent and rrorbid The' racket is the, peddling of filth thr9ugh the, mail. and a half billion' dollars. These , material for a controversial film 240 became its Bishop. At his fellows will know how expertly accession there were but 17 U begins when a smut-peddler buys a mailing list contain titled 1"1 Want to Live". to wrap up the Marxist message Christians in the town and OIl, mg the nam~s' of youngsters' who have sent, away for juve ,iIi "made-for-America" pack-' This exploits in intimate and his deathbed he thanked Go~ horrifying detail, Mrs. Graham's that th~re remained only the lIile merchandise. Then the youngsters on the list aI;e sent ages. j CBS-TV does the nation-a painfully delayed, "on-again-off , same number of idolaters. Hiol rirculars advertising pornographic material. . title of Thaumaturgus, or Won Until recently postal officials have been able to do little greati service by. showing how aga'in" execution in San Quen tin's gas chamber. The final Red Sell" is cunningly de derworker, came from .his gift , ln' the way of convicting these filth-merchants, despite the "the signea' to put over communism is steps from the death cell after of miracles. He took part in the thousands of protests from butraged parents who found various "markets". her last confession of sin,' the Council of Antioch in 264 against out what kind of mail was being sent unsolicited to their green lethal room, the chair, the Paul of Samosata. Objective Reports children. The old law governing pornographic mater.ial called , Five' CBS newsmen stationed straps, the slamming door, the cyanide, "eggs", the hissing meTUESDAY-Dedication of the for prosecution in the place where' the mat~rial was mailed in such' far flung places as South chanics, the rising fumes and the Basilicas of SS. Peter and Paul America, India, China, Egypt ~usually Los Angeles or New York. Since the courts have and Finland, use lively n~ws final gasps, all are graphically The Basilica of St. ~eter after it been loath to convict in these cities, the racket has flour- • films ' w a s enlarged 'was consecrated. to illustrate their brilliant shown. ~ , ished in the hands of about a dozen or. so dealers. Noth{ng is left. out. Nob'bdy, solemnly on this date by Pope and objective reports. There are The last Congress passed a new law with teeth in it. startingly frank interviews wfth not even the dead woman's hus- Urban VIII. The Basilica of St. band and little, son, is Ilpared. Paul was rebuilt more beauti This law 'authorizes the government to prosecute 'mailers a Finnish publisher and an Inlii Should such a' film be made? In fully after its total destruction ian ,mticommunist worker. of obscene material in the community where themaii has anything but .. a pagan society, by fire. It was dedicated solemnly "The Red Seil" shows, how 'been received. would it .be permitted? on December 10 by 'Pope Pius IX, Russia spends more to jam 'our , This law ,is a battle won by decent people in theIr "Voice of America" broadcasts , The screenplay by Nelson Gid- but the feast was transferred to this day. ,.,. fight against filth. It needs the cooperation of parents than we do to produce th~m; how ding and Don Mankewicz com-,
those who find such obscene rna'terial sent to them. presses police and court records, WEDNESDAY - St. Elizabeth
last year's Moscow Youth Festi 'val attracted 34,000' youngsters ~ticles by San Francisco's Pulit- of Hungary, Widow. The da,ugh
, from 131 countries, including the zer prize-winni~g crime report- 'ter of King Andreas 11 of Hun
er, Ed Montgomery, and personal gary, she was born in 1.207 and
USA and cost' one hundred" mil lion 'dollars, .which is ,rather letters left, by' the executed when only four years old ,waa more than th{' entire cost of woman. promised in marri,age to Louis, 'running the whole United states A violent, sickening narrative son of the Landgrave of Thur Information Agency! traces moral rebellion' through' ingia. She was married to him in Thirty million books a year, in mor~l sin to murder an~ death. 1221. Upon his death in 1227, she OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF 'THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER a . 'dozen 'different 'languages, It charges the police witp., en- was reduced to pov~rty and Publish'ed weeklyb; The Catholic Pre~s' th~ Dioc~se of Fail River with var~ing social and political' trapment by 'trickery, and tape , ,forced from, her ,home,with her . . . ' .. .~, \ '41 Hig'hl<irid~' 'A'v~nue' emphases come out of·the, Soviet recording 'and makes the charge children, by her brother-in-law. propaganda system." All, disguise stick. . , ~ , ,' At length, she'saw, her, son, Her Fall River, Mass. '", OSborne 5-7151,: in 'different ways the .theme of , , ,The original Mov'ie. Code .ac- man, reinstated in his inherit
PUBLISHER<." . . . Marxist communisqi . for Peace knowledged, that because ,films .ance. She joined the Third Order
,'Most"Rev; james L. Co'~nolly, D.D:,"PhD.,,'. ' . ' :' versus 'hypocritical war-monger deal 'ill actual, representations, . of St. FranCis, 9f which she i~ the
GENERAL MANAGER' , 'ASST. GENERAlI MANAGER I, ing in America!' are· more penetrative and more Patron Saint. She was nl;lted for
, , . " ' ," • " , Most 'often in t~ese books, • realistic then printed desriptjons, her charity and good wor\{s. She
Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M~A. ' ,.~~v. John P. Driscoll gr~in" ;of; ,truth' is.... exaggerated , they: 'should not necesarilybe died in 1231 and was canonized. ... ':', 'MANAGIN~EDITOR" " . ' ,p arid" 'distorted, ;19" achieve total free to deal in anything that i.I four, years 'later by Pope Greu '".''' Hu,g·h"J•. ;.G~olden;::.', ~~. .... l"~ misrepresentation. :The ,PQofand ' -suitable :foi: t~e public' presa. ory IX. ,
That Decency May' Advance a
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THE· ANCHO~ Thurs., Nov. 13, 1958
,
New Collection of Belloc's Letters Reveal Gr~at Man·, ,
Lewd Literature Leads to Crime
.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S.·'Kennedy "Portraiture of a man like me wh9 changes mood and eXpression is particuJarly difficul~. This one of Gunn's makes me look like a powerful gorilla with a grievance: .which I believe is a frequent aspect." So wrote Hilaire Belloe ,: ~ . in 1929 in a letter to ' " suggests·thatmost OJ: thIS royally CharIes GoodwIn. It IS among entertaining book which in , the 310, covering 44 years, total' effect, is m~rvelous 'self included in Letters from portraiture, has to do witb us Hilaire Belloc, which Robert
Speaight has edited (Macmillan. $6). That Belloc did indeed, atIeast at tim e s re semble a gorilla
with a griev ance, may well
, be 'the opinion of many readers in the United States w hen confronted with Belloc's opinion 'of America and Americans a s • here stated. It was far from flattering. True, he did write to Mrs. Mervyn Herbert, ''1 do like your countrymen and always have! They are courteous and·they tell the truth-a thing one· never hears nowadays in England." , And he wrote to his son Peter that Americans are "the happiest and most generous people in the world. They have no hypo.c risy or concealment about them and they are most courteous." , But almost all other references to us and our country are quite savage. Thus, when Belloc' is travelling, the presence of Amfi!r icans in a hotel, inn, or town spoils the place for 'him'. Of a ship which has about it little .' else to his liking, he grants it the merit of never having carried an American. When he is in tbis country lecturing, he is driven to fury or despair by American in'trusive ness, talkativeness, standardiza tion, noise. "Americans," he says, "never use privacy in any form and they fill the whole day and every day with slow and uninterrupted , o:mversation ..• They both love noise and fail to distinguish its various categories. . ..••• They don't distinguish be tween hammering, shrieking, bangs and, violent bell-ringing of a shrill and piercing sOrt; but their preference is for the inter mittent clash of metal with metal," " Element of Truth
7'
CHICAGO (NC)-Lewd liter ature is "a stepping-stone to crime." "Practically every one we catcb in major crimes has in his possession prurient books," said Richard:Q. Auerbach, agent in charge of the city's Federal Bureau of Investigation office. "'You don't hear much about this lascivious material as a big crime," he added, "and yet it is." Mr. Auerbach spoke at the first annual dinner sponsored by the Elgin Citizens for Civic Decency. He particularly praised the group .for its efforts to keep obscene magazines away from juveniles, and for their work aimed at getting young people to join in the move to keep lewd magazines away from teen-agers. Rev. James Renz, president of the' civic decency group said cen sorship was not and will not be the organization's aim. Instead, be said, the representatives of the organization will conti~ue to try to enlist the aid of retailers to keep lewd magazines aW87 from jnveniles.
and our country. Such is not the case. . ~ . Word Pictures
Mariy of the letters were writ ten when Belloc was travelling in Africa,' Corsica, Sardinia, Poland, not to mention' countries or places. more frequented by the generality. They are packed with word pictures .which sometimes are like fine, tiny etchings, some-. " times like gloriously painted' canvasses: Of more· familiar' spots in . France, Italy,' and England, for WARM·' GJFTFOR WINTEIl'S DAY: This young example, there 'are .fresh impres..,. sions. Simply for 'its definition/'" Korean -girl, one of the 6,000 ieft homeless by recent floods and depiction of places, the book in Seoul, smiles as she receiveS a wool scarf along with other would be very worth while. clothing from America, through Catholic Relief Services. But more .valuable still is the Miss Sighle Kennedy of New York is CRS project supervisor insight into Belloc the man, helping Korean Catholic Women's Committee. NC Photo. which it affords, We see, for ex ample, that for him the Faith is everything. As he say's, "The F,aith is Reality, arid ... through it all falls into right perspective," . At leas& this is the opinion 01 Monsignor Joseph T. Ryan who re There was nothing of the mY8 SEOUL (NC) - The first cently sent Ul'! his monthly report OD condUions ID the Near East. tic about him, and the consola foreign Catholic women's.retreat Mons~D"r Ryan is your representative among the poor and the tions of religion figured little in in Korea has been held at the Ii~Dleiess Palestinian refugees. He wrote In part, ". • • ..uns and his life. Doggedly he clung to the . U. S. Army Retreat Center Iiear here. .' , troollS .will never bring peace· to the HoJ), Land, nor anywhere else Faith; it was his anchor hold. lor ·that matter. These people h'ave nothinc to ea~ no place to _sleep. "His" love' of the Mass and his Eleven Ca~holic women attend aDd DOW they are beginning to lose hope. Our maln IDteres& Is .. de.votion to our Lady are evi ed the retreat. They are mem aheller Ulem from the 'cold of wInter aud to feed as many all P05 dence«' bers of the· U. S. Armed Force.s able, ~arUcularly the childrl."n. I can Wle every penn)' you send Rather often he predicts that in Korea, U. S. Army Nurses me-aDd still·be forced to tUrD large ntimb~rs awa)' hungry." MOD other religions wiil' decline, that Corps, embassy staffs or wive.s UgnoI' Ryan'a appeal needs no comment· from' us. A food paeka... .paganism will obtain everywhere .. of forei~n businessmen in Seoul. -enough &0 feed a family for a week costs $10. Will you shan outside the Church, and that The retreat was conducted by J'our ThaDkspving dinner with the siarvlDIt relu&,ees of the HoiI' there is to be.a decisive struggle Father (Major) Daniel P. Shea Land? between the two. of San' Francisco, Catholic Chap ruST IN CASE YOU .DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH YOUR Another of his preoccupatIons uiin, Seoul Area Command. . , CHRISTMAS CLUB MONEY . . . AND EVEN IF YOU DO! MAY is falsified history. More than WE MAKE A $UGGESTION? REMEMBER THE MISSIONS! once he says something like this: ,COME ONE - COME ALL "Things are put out of' propor A GIFT THAT WON'T BE EXCHANGED the da)' tion and the.. most important after Christmas Is aD article for the poorest House eI things are left out, so that tbe God on the missions of the Near East. You can choose general effect is complete false an)' article you wish and we win be happy to send Wed. No~. 19, 1958 7:30
hood.'" And as an example be . our beautiful GIFT CARD aDywhere In the world .. cites a book "759 page.s in length" tell of your generosit)' &0 Our Lord which was done HOLY ROSARY PARISH HAll
and "of close print." . .in the name' of a fril."ncL Here are some sUlCestiO'" Beattie St.: Fall ~iver, Mass.
"It deals with the Christian lor YOUR Christmas Us&: origins after Constantine .and Tickets. 75 cents
" . Clialice .• : $40 Altar ..... : .... $100 Mass book .. , ... $%5 car~ing one on to the eighth Altar stoDe 10 Candles .••••••• %0 Mass vestmentll .', Sf .century. It does not mention the • BaDeiaal'J' lamp . 15 Crucifix ••••••.• Z5 BeD ,.... I . MasS qnce. This is as though. you REMEMBER THE MISSIONS' OF THE 'NEAR' EAST IN YOUR were to write a history' of the WILL ••• AND THE LORD OF THE MISSIONS WILL REMEMBER Jewish 'dispersion without men " YOU! DO·IT NOW! . . tioning the synagogue; .. From the letters we learn ." TO CRIES 0,. THE POOR-have &;u;hed
more about "1elloc the writer. He the hum 01 SISTER CECILIA and SISTER
considered that he did not write . " This is by no means to be dis-' well, and his poetry often took LOUISE. They 'wiSh &0 serve 'the unfortunate
missed out of hand as mere or years to perfect. "1 am one who of Leba~on-but each must 'have .. ,benefa~
neriness. The criticisms have a by' nature writes commonplace . tor who Win pay $150 a year for the two year
large element of truth in them. '-~rse, which 1 then slowly tinker periOd of DovUla&e training.· Would you care
One suspects that a great part lUld turn.into less commonplace." to have "a DUD iD the family?"
of the trouble lay in Belloc's be His Heroic Poem in Praise of ing a writer, requiring'seclusion Wine was begun in 1911, finished HA VE YOU FORGOTTEN A LOVED ONE IN THIS MONTH OF
and accustomed to close concen in 1931. NOVEMBER ••• SEND YOUR REQUESTS FOR MASSES TODAY
tration on the steady production He sizes up people and situa~ BEFORE T~ MONTH 1S OVER
of books, articles, and other tions' shrewdly. He writes in A" NEW VILLAGE ~ •• NEW PEOPLE ••• THE OLD PROBLEM.
writing. (He .mentions, for ex 1913 of Churchill: "1 do not WheD your missionaries began to work !Jl the village 01 RaJakad
ample, that on one trip he com think' be can be Prime Minister r--'iK'iFr""''''''''"" (So. India) they lelt they had something entirelJ'
pIeted two books, and not incon for a long time, but that he will siderable' ones.) Dew. Surrounded by a deWle forest (the hom.
Now, non-writing people the be Prime Minister oltimately I 01 wild elephants) the poor natives had no COD world around suppose that writ am almost sure." And in 1921, ~~~"JJJI. - tact with the outside world. The work has pr05
Add a pinch of. nutmeg, ing is easily, indeed effortlessly "What all Europe wants is. a pered. The grace 01 God has Hooded the soula
ci~namon or allspice to y,oung soldier in France and that done, something as easy as 01 the natives aDd ill less than five years the
Hood Economy All-Purpose smoking or drinking cocktails. quickly. But it won't be granted," ::::::'I~~'\:,-I Holy Spirit has sent more converts thaD the
Cream. Serve in pitcher to They suppose that it can be Holiness First small chapel win hold. These new Christia~
pour over fruit puddings and have supplied much 01 the material, \ the labor
done anywhere, in any circum What he prized most in people cobblers. It's simple - and and the land. At preseDt they need $3,000 to complete the work.
stances, and in jig time, and that was holiness. Of Cardinal Mercier leaves your guests talking Will YOU help them? it is perhaps abetted by people he says "It is a benediction to about what a smart hostess peering over the writer's shoul see that man.... Holiness has '.
'4ASS OFFERINGS ARE ESSENTIAL TO YOUR MISSIONARIES you~.
der or bustling in and out of the about it a power like none other.. . .. REMEMBER THEM TODAY. ---="" room. Americans are perhaps It convinces, attracts and can-
And. you're smar:t to order '"TO SERVE AND NOT TO COUNT
. more prone to this abominable firms. It also reveals ... Age is a Hood Economy All-Purpose THE COST .•." This is ty decision made
error than Europeans. revealing thing.' Men who have Cream for the holidays. It by ANTHONY and GREGORY. They wish
Moreover, when he suffered, lived well are better with age, whips in 20 seconds, creams .. enter'8 seminal'J' iii IDdia to prepare to
the indignities of which he' bit and men who have liv'ed ill are coffee, glamorizes pies. pud be priests. BUT. they must wait uDtil each
terly complains, Belloc was here much worse with it. But holiness dings and desserts. There's boy has a sponsor who pay $100 a year
on a lecture tour. Anyone on a in old age is amazing, it has the . for the necessary expenses 01· the. silt years
no substitute for real cream lectiJre tour has 'to resign him ,hint of paradise." Seminan course. Will YOU help? 'WiD you
when you want real goodness .e.lf to denial of privacy. These letters show how strong- ' mopt ODe 01 these boys as a "SOD 'w
for, only pennies a serving. He has to attend dinners, ly 'attached to his friends Belloe . "Ju"ts&'l". _ _......;.......;.. _
Get H 00 d meet half the population of any - was. He poured out· to them what . GIVE TO WIN THE WORLD FOR CHRIST. Economy . All area where he· speaks, inspect bis . gruff exterior bid· from' Purpose Cream '. t~""'the' gr'ounds and b~i~dl.ngs of others. He was tenderly solicftOu. .at your: store .,~.I college's and other institutions, for them', and bis letters of .sym and be constantly' quizzed aboutpathy when bereavement. callie or door.
trivia. It is amusing to bear Bel-to them approacbperfection.
. FRANOS 'CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President toe roaring against such wastefUl I have' read 'few collecUoni ol
Magr. Peter P. Tuohy, Nat'l Sec'y
,Donsense, but one feels sYmpathy let.ters as ;steadily eDgroSslng .. ,. . Send all communications to:
'for him, too. ~ One strongly dissents from' CATHOUC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
I fear that I have used a Iot.al certain views strong17' stated ia 480 lexington Ave. at 46th St.· New York 17, N. Y.
lPace ~or Belloe;s ~adv.ers16na theine B,}t othe'ril conuDand a'd;. WATCK "26 MEN'· IVERY SUNDA., 7 ~7::1O I'M . '0Il America and Amei-lcaWi. TlU. miratiOll and asseDt.
Open Retreat Center For' Women in Korea
".AND THE SECRET WEAPON IS FOOD·•. ~"
Surprise Night
Add this "Holiday Touch" ",
SPICEDfRUIT SAUCE
==-=---"u
will
.
dh'l1ear FastffiissionsJJ:l J
SMALL .BUT ACTIVE' COMMUNITY : Teaching,'114 ,youngsters indema, F.S.S.J., superior, with Dennis Uchma; Sister ,:M. Syniphorhinand ,~ ail eight:'grade school and, care of the altars and sacristy at Holy Cross ·Dorothy Polka; Sister M. ;Cyril 'with Kathleen E.; $zulewski, Sister, M. ,Parish, Fail River; provide opportunity for 'service to the small commul1itY.'Martha and Sister M; Leoncia: ,Daily, every student-is instilled· With the of 'six Fr~lliciscan: .sistt~rs of St. Joseph. Left· to right are Sister M'.Nico-, : love of St. FranCis and the industi-y of St; Joseph. ' ,~
0'
'FrancisconNou,s S:t. :.Jo·seph'
Sto" Polish' Parish School'
. At Our House
_When Dad's' Away I-Iousehold Is Very Tidy out-Very Dull,
'If you!re among those who prefer blond es, Holy Cross school, Fall, River is the place for you to visit. It serves the Polish parish of the Holy, Cross and the youngsters . " By Mary Tinley D a l y " . .attending it are predominantly f a i r h e a i r e d ' " "~ 'Four Franciscan Sisters of St. Joseph ,staff the schO()l,' ~ach supervising 'tw9 grades. The Head of:tlie House took off for a week~s businesa' Two more are assigned to . " , ' """ '. , trip ... ' k' d t" 'dema, F,S,S,'J" superior. , Today more than .500 members mg u les In the t' . This, on the face of it, sounds like a tame lead :'f6r aily h om.ema . , W e .visited the'classes in turn,. are ac lve In teac!"ng, hospital, kind of',acolilmn. However, when you have only on~inan convent. They form the 'only being' especially impressed by w'ork, care of the aged, and the left in a household of women Dishes :were out of .t~ way in .community of their congre the posters in the 7th and ~8th ," operation of Negro, missions. " , -women' of all ages-and . jig~time, for the dinner.ha~ been gation in the Diocese. They and grade room, the work of Sister Aspirants may enter the com-' :'. ' h' h' '. ' -T . k' d f qUl..ck-but dull-:-the .kltchen their predecessors have been in Symphorian. Mottoes in English munity's 'Juniorat- after 'gradua~ W ~n e s away-l s m 0
cleaned ,and we sat dow,n. to help Fall 'River since 1922: , 'and Polish· adorned the blacktion from grammar s~hool' and'~' strange. ' . "
Ginny with homework. This It was aiter school hours when. bo'ards. "We frequently have' are accepted from then until the '.:
The·tizz of. getting the Head arithmetic-why; it's so much onto a 7 A.M.plal1e was dizzy : harder! lng, .'.' . "Daddy explains its," Ginny '~All ,set';, ..he told,· us, the" commented,' "He doesri't just sit evening before, and. write ·all those· figures. He, par k-i n g his doesn't try to ,do it ~y, algebra "packed" bag and then get it back to arith and briefcase by metic. ,Didn't'" you ever study the., front door, anything but algebra, Mom?" "now let's just Even the 'TV shows were ·relax." different: no fights; no westerD8 WereJaxed -just love stories. al right. Had a The days went farewell dinner, the'n made out '. Happy HomecomiJll'.. a ,few checks As to meals-well we didn't for 'bills looked ' 'cut calories' completely. This at TV' a'rid pre .was a chance to get away tem pared to turn in porarily from the "start-the-day early. right, real" breakfast and in "That bag feels mighty light~, 'dulge in our silly juice, sweet Markie whispered as ,the trav buns, coffee and/or milk. eler took his shower and .gave At dinner time we never once forth with '~Shine' on Harvest had the former' fixture on the Moon". '. table-a bottle of Worcestershi.re 'iCompleat' Traveler sauce.. We had lots 'ofSalads, A sneak downstairs preview ' hamburgers--even went in for showed the contents of the bag TV dinners (eaten in front of the to be: one razor, one can shaving TV, too) for, frankly, conversa cream, three sets of underwear, tion was far from sprightly. • missal, two pairs 01 socks, two On the final night of "Ladies shirts, two, detective stories. Week" we were all settled cozily With the concert going on up in front of the .TV when we heard stairs, we added another shirt, an the slam' of a taxicab door and extra 'pair of shoes, pajamas and then the fllont door of our house • collapsible umbrella. (He will ba:lg open. , hate us for. it if it doesn't rain "Hit I'm ;homel" and will wonder; how 'it got there In two minutes, 'the living if it does.) ,Again; zipped up, the room w.as ,a·. shambles: ", bag opened to distribute:gifts, 'dis- ' bag awaited. ,his lordship's, de parture, pound's he~vier' but no gorged laundry,. newsp,aper CliP more space-coJ;lsuming. pings, souvenirs of the trip .•• Came dawn and 'the br-r-r of everybody talking at once ..• ' the alarm cio~k. Punchy we That same evening: no more donned housecoat, wondering .primly folded' towels: They ate' ,how nuns and monks get .up at now, wadded soggily on the bath-' this unearthly' hour. every day'- room floor, Once more, the house Strong, ·black coffee was indi .resounds to, the shower '00' full eated; , , , spray and' that fami1iar,,"~Shine "Got some sausage?" came a on Harvest Moon'!.. stage whisper from above, "And Our house once again .11
eggs?"" ' manned;:-:-thalik 'goodness! . \
At 5 A.M.? Personally we set- I . ~ •• Ii tied for the strong'black coffee. •
on.
Six A.M. and he was off... That first day, of. an unmanned hbuseholdwas .unusual':"'- and kind of fUll' 'Batlltowels hung
::~m~rt~~~~~t6~~~{:i~:sa~~:~:
,tube,shQw:er" .. ~urtai.n extended itS full length ·to drr·.. ' At 'dinner,we had'our ·favorite chow mein'(w:hicll"'the Head 'of the House'·'despises) and fruit for dessert. ' . .. ./ "We can'h:ave all the·low cal orie diets' withoutariy te~ptations!" Pat said "No potatoes and
gr~~?'~oi~i~~~';;!and'
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we visited Holy Cross; but many Polish language classes," said age of.' 30. Further"information of its 114 pupils were still 1n Sister Symphorian: "It's a 'pity' maybe' obtained from Reverend evidence, Several were engaged 'for the children' to lose' the Mother General,' 'Immaculate in the merriest method of floor tongue." . Conception Convent, SquUfPaik ; polishing we've ever seen. Soft' In first and' second grades a Avenue, Hamburg·:N. :y:., ,,' rags underfoot, they skated vig story circle surrounded Sister" orously 'over t~e claSsroom floors. Mary Cyril. The pupils proudly QC~~!XlO(:>OOOiOC)oOOOC~x)O "It's. a wonderful rainy day demonstrated, too" a 'colorful mean~ of working, off recess abacus made by· Sister from wire and energy," confided Sister'M. Nico- ;l'nd painted spools. "I teach counting and 'colors at the same
CONTRACTORS BUILDERS
Seminarians Helping
Japanese Orphans
WASHINGTON (NC) - A Catholic' charitable' organization, r~ising its funds 'through tears, bazaars and bake Sales, has do nated more than $12,000 worth of farm equipment to an orPhan age' in Japall. 'Washington's Good Samaritan SOl;iety, made 'Up of 125 persons of moderate means, raised the money to aid the Angel Guard ian Orphanage, in Ha~kaido; Japan. " . A fully equipped tractor was purchased with, the money. It will be used on the orphanage farm. The equipment was sold to the society at' cost by the International, Harvester Com- pany. Its retail price would be about $20,000. The Japanese gov ernment will waive import duties.
time," she explained. Not ohly does the small com munity teach in Holy Cross school, but it conducts catechil!m' classes for public schoollchildren, both in Holy C :ass'parish and in Holy Rosary, Taunton. Care of the altars and sacristy also falls to;; the Sisters. Their community was founded in 189'( in Trenton: N. J., by Very Rev. Hyacinth Fudzi!1sky, O.F.M. Con., and Sister M. Colette llil bert. Sister M. Colette was orig-.,. , inaiIy. a mem ber of a community .' with headquarters in' P\>land; however; when that community. de~ided to terminate its foreign 'missions, Sister Colette, upon the request of, members of ,the American clergy, founded. the new community.
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Change to Attractive Colors
Women Receive Papal Blessing
Apparent: in Jewelry Trend By Ellen Kelley The new Fall fashion trends in jewelry create exciting interest! There's a captivating change to new Fall colors that go with ready-to-wear's new and lovely shades: ruby
red, olive to emerald green tones, topaz, amber, pumpkin teal blue, sapphire, black If' 1 t· ' ca Slmu a es rIver otter. The · plu m, t t or t Olse arne thys, mink look shows up in stunning brown. Gold beads make a mink-dyed muskrat in manstunning accent to many made "mink" mutations. new Fall colors. Combinations Seal makes beautiful handbags are striking and widely-shown. indeed. Genuine leopard coorYou'll note two or more tones of dinates with leopard trims on one color, two contrasting colors, ready-to-wear. Fake leopard is colors interspersed with mock again in the fashion picture, alpearls, with gold or silver beads, though it is not expected to and you'll exclaim over the duplicate last year's overwhelmbeauty of beads or stones of difing fashion success! ferent sizes and shapes blended Small fur clutch handbags will together, be especially popular, because of Crystal jewelry is' a perfect their chic looks and modest medium for brilliant color and prices! color-combinations, slat~d for There are new and interesting big ,fashion performance this glo'1'e trends for the new season! FalI.:Especially lovely is "VitColor isvtlry important. You'll rail,',' a stained· glass crystal that note ,russet tones, dull, brassy looks wonderful when combined gqld tones, green with an, olive with other crystal beads. cast, red with ruby or' wine Higher Necklace tone. Although spaced jewelry bibs Vibrant reds and blues are ~d long roPes will continue to also very good, fashion-wise, for be big fashion news, an importhe new season. You'll note these tant new trehd, keyed to new brightly colored gloves in such necklines, is the necklace that is popular materials as cotton, higlylr, fits closer to the neck,. or suede, nylon, jersey, leathers, .. closely spaced in multiplewashable and otherwise! You'll atranci effects, bringing l;Jac~ dog, nOte. new prints, too, especially collars and chokers as a real paisley and floral prints, which fashion change! look particularly lovely in jer.Jewelled hair ornaments willsey. be W Jhe Fall fashion-fore. You'll note the mohair influThere's a big demand for headence in knitted gloves. Actually band~ and headache bands, to they sometimes combine mohair complement bouffant hairdos. with wool or. brushed orIon. Smooth coiffures also have comFurthermore, you'll note a new plementary hair adornments. and wider color range in Fall's One of the most effective I've ' knitted-gloves-in-general! seen is a triple-row, jewelled The new driving gloves are exheadband worn higher on the tremely handsome, are slim and head. sleek, have leather palms, back There's a new softness that of jersey, mohair look or furmows up in silhouette in the blends, in lengths up to eightnew handbags. , Leathers are button! Striped leather palms softened via draping, shirring, are a feature on the mOl _ funcpleats, trapunto. Even box bags, tionaI types. Lined gloves, satchels and. tote b~gs look soft leather or nylon, are styled to when done III fabnc! retain a slim unbulky look deIlandbag Shapes Significant spite their fu~ctional linings. Handbag silhouettes are Furry mittens are to the fashlinked. to ready-to-w:ar shapes! ion-fore. Popular indeed, are Yes mdeed, handbag shapes bla<:k or white "fox" (actually have a real"fashion significance inexpensiv~, but lovely bunny tIlis Fall! Some bags are given fun)! You'll note plenty of racnew "promotional handles" via coon mittens too as well as the use of "silhouette" names. stencilled "leopa'rd," usually III general, the handbag that cOmbined with leathe~ palms. looks "thin" has new base roomAfter-five gloves are very ine~ and softness. Incidentally, glamorous. Some are stretch there is great fashion-gain satin in lengths from shortie to ICheduled for underarm and 16-button type! l\/[atching-color 8lightly-Iarger clutch type handfox cuffs add drama to black or bags for the new season! white gloves in shorties and In leather handbags, colors longer lengths. Twenty-four sometimes coordinate with stunkarat gold and silver jersey are Ding effect! Handbag colors shown in just about all lengths, '"'latch shoe colors in many inare nothing short of-fashionstances. Leading shades are elegant! '"Tartan Green" (to go with ~~~~~(!::j!=1'I::1!;:::lt~:1l:=2=(!::j~ alive-type greens), "Bittersweet" ~d "Briarwood" that coordinate with the many important russet and brown tones. There is, as ELECTRICAL well, "Beetroot," good with CONTRACTORS Pa11:'s important blue-cast or aeadential - Commercial wby colors! Industrial You'll see new mohair leather
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ANOTHER DIONNE DEBUT: Annette Dionne Allard, second Qf the ~amed Dionne quintuplets to give birth to ,a chi~d, affectionately holds her son &s the prQud father, Germam, looks on. The baby has been baptised Jean Francois. NC Photo. '. ' , ..
District One Women to Conduct Discussion Meeting Tonight A demonstration discussion club meeting and a talk by Rev. Franeis McCarthy, pastor of St. Joseph's, North Dighton, Diocesan moderator of discussion groups, will highlight tonight's open meeting of discussion groups of -District One of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, Scheduled for 7:45 in St. Louis' parish hall, Fall River, the meeting is open to members of discussion groups or to those interested in joining one. Mrs. Frederic Tuttle, district chairman, will preside and introduce Father McCarthy and Miss Mary Dwyer, Diocesan chairman of discussion groups. Father McCarthy's topic will be "The Discussion Club Move-
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ment In Action." He will make suggestions for organizing and running groups, and will lead a question and answer period. Study club materials will be displayed at the 'meeting and Advent wreaths and a Christmas crib will be used as table decorations., Mrs. Tuttle reports that 19 discussion groups are active in District One, according to latest figures. Members begin with a study of the first 13 lessons of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine catechism. It is recommended that they proceed to a !itudy of the ten commandments, following which they are free to choose study topics. The St. Louis parish discussion group is choosing Bible study, Mrs. Tuttle noted.
LAUNDRY New Bedford
WASHINGTON (NC) - The apostolic blessing of His Holiness Pope John XXIII has been imparted to all members of the National Council of Catholic Women. The Pontiff gave, his blessing in gratitude for the assurances of continued loyalty given by members of the Women's Council on the occasion of his election as Pope. News of the blessing was contained in separate messages sent to Mrs. Mark A. Theissen, NqCW president, and Miss Margaret Mealey, executive secretary of the council. The messages, signeci by Msgr. Domenico Tardini, Vatican Pro Secretary of State, described the Pontiff as "warmly appreciative" of the good wishes of the NCCW.
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WATCH "26 MEN"
EVlltY SUNDAY 7.71'MJ PM
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Pope John#s Early'Education By Joseph A. Breig Cleveland Universe Bulletin
Marianna, the mother of Angelo Joseph RoncaIli, thought to herself that her boy ought not to go off to the seminary without something-at least a modest something -to give to the rector toward his schooling. She put on he,r shawl and breathing, outdoorsy folks. went out of her house in the It is recorded that a hearty rttl'n f S tt II M t parish priest told Angelo's; 1 "e VI age 0 0 0 • o,~ e mother that she ought to chase - Under the Mountam him away from his books beItaly. She trudged along the cause' what he needed was open cobblestone streets that ran up air and exercise - "he'll ,have and down the plenty of time for books later." hillside above I have my doubts that the priest the Po Valley. lived to be 77 and ~as hale Marianna was enough still to shoulder the a humle perburdens of being a pope. son. She was Angelo's brothers we are told so humble that were irritated With' him becaus~ if she felt any when they went out to gather embarrassment, firewood, he carried a book with ~he,' suppressed , him. I am reminded of my sisIt as' she entered the home of ters who were annoyed with me neighbor after neighbor, and because I was usually to be told her story. found sprawled on the floor on Valiant Mother my stomach, my nearsighted It 'was a simple story that hurts eyes c10se to the printed page, the' 1 heart even in the telling Boys the Same many years later. She and her An old schoolmate in Sotto Il husband had very little 1l40ney; Monte recalls that because An_ their ll-year-old boy was goinggelo was very good in his stiidies, away tQ become a priest; would he was sometimes held up a$ her friends contribute to a little an example by the teacher, collection toward his education? This pedagogical folly, naturally We can understand Marianna's enough, infuriated the othel' fe~lings. A mother dbes not mind boys, and occasionally they so •much being shamed herself; threw stones at Angelo as he but' she d'hes not like to think of walked home. pov~rty shaming her son, mak"But he only laughed at us," ing 'him feel like a kind of his schoolmate relates. There is nuisance and burden. deep significance in that fact for Tha~ is why Marianna went anybody who wishes to underaround to the ,houses of her stand the temperament of the nei~hbors, asking ,for, donations. new Pope. When she returned to her own, Eventually, on! of the larger house an hour or two later, she boys rebelled against the bullyplac~d on the table tw~ lire - a ,ing, and appointed himself Ancouple of cents - and burst into gelo's protector. In my own case. tears. She had failed her son; or it was not a larger boy but at so she thought. smaller boy who came to my res_ Only God knew then that the cue; but how he could fight! boy was destined to become Role of God Pope John XXIII. As to the moral of all this, I God does such things. ,He does suppose it goes back to one ot them through mothers like Marimy favorite topics-that people anna Roncalli, and through really ought to let God have fathers like john Baptist Ron- something to do with rearing calli who had counted on his their childrelt. Some modicum elde~t son helping him on the of social custom is all very well. farm but consented cheerfully but God-given indiViduality is a whe~ the lad told him he wanted thing precious beyond words. to be a priest. . The word "bookworm" is a Lover of Books loaded term. It is brainless; it i. Young Angelo was a book- a mere epithet. It no more worm; and because of that I feel sensible than calling a boy who very close to him. 1- was a book- loves sports a muscle-field. But worm, too; and like Angelo I of course we all admire athletetll was subjected to the annoyances and despise scholars-until they afflicted upon bookish boy's by become, great scientists or phiweUlO.meaning, out-going,' deep'" losophers ... or popes.
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ROME (NC) ~ His Holiness Pope John XXIII's intimate knowledge of, southeastern Europe.-Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Rumania, Greece and Turkey-will be an important asset in his difficult task as Supreme Pontiff, an exiled Yugoslav newsman writes. For nearly 20 years the Holy Father, then Archbishop Angelo Roncalli, served the Holy See in that part of the world, first as Apostolic Visitor and later Delegate to Bulgaria from 1925 to 1935 and then as Apostolic Delegate to Gret!ce and Turkey from 1935 to 1944. Archbishop RoncaJli was a popular figure while he, was in Bulgaria and was on good terms with Bulgarian 0 l' tho d 0 x Church dignitaries, the writer points out. Now virtually destroyed by more than 10 years of savage Red ,persecution, the Church in Bulgaria was a flourishing community when Archbishop Angelo Roncalli arrived in Sofia, the nation's capital in 1925.
WASHINGTON (NC) -Supp<)rters of international political organizations should not set their sights too high or move too fast, lest they jeopardize progress that has already been achieved. Dr. William H. Roberts, professor of political science at the Catholic University of America, addressing the annual conference of the Catholic Association for International Peace, said this means that there must be general recognition of the fact that at present the United "'l"ations is simply a framework lor diplomacy.
CHILDREN'S TV PROGRAM: Gruffy is up to his usual antics, pulling the hair of his companion, Trilly! Together with their creator, Sister Mary Serra of Maryknoll, they appear on a regular Sunday morning show over NBCTV in New York. NC Photo.
Father Cavanaugh Warns Catholics Against Sensitivity to Criticism JOLIET (NC) -An educator who charged a dearth of Catholic leadership in this country, said here that Catholics should not be too sensitive to criticism, even to self-criticism. Father John J. Cavanaugh, C.S.C., president of the UnIversity of Notre Dame from 1946 to 1952 and now coordinator of its public relations and development program, spoke to a "College Day" convocation at Joliet Catholic High School. Warning against too much sensitivity to criticism, he said this caution' applied also to "selfcriticisinthat' at times appears disloyal,' embarrassing and filled with a kind of breast-beating wrath." Easy Excuses "Let us not rest our minds and our'hearts in easy excuses of mediocrity," he sald. "Other' peoples' have lately come from.
im~igrant stocks, others llave to battle bigotry and they Seem to turn these adversities m doubled energy within their souls towards the finer achievements of life," he added. Father Cavanaugh said American Catholics must further develop a "restlesssness for excellence" if they are to produce their proportionate share of leaders. The Holy Cross priest said the dearth of Catholic leaders that he alleges may be attributed in part to "defects in the Catholic educational system," but it is also due "to many catfses beyond, the control of the educators!' . Among these other causes he listed "insufficient respect for intellectual and social leadership in Catholic homes" and, the "fail- , ure' of Catholic adults to, carry on their education in later life in an ordered and effective way."
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Notes Limitations Only if the limitations of the UN are recognized and its potentialities are not exaggerated, Dr. Roberts warned, will the organ-, ization be able to serve a worthwhile purpose. A sense of "historical reality" must t-ake precedence over "utopian dreams" in assessing and' dealing with the UN, he asserted, adding: "At present the organization can serve only as a permanent framework for multilat-· era! diplomacy." And effective diplomacy, he' emphasized is necessarily confined today to "strictly delimited situations." The principal inter-, national' problems "cannot be solved by negotiation," pe said, because the "value systems" of' the' oppOSi~g world powers are "too antago'nistic." , Dual Purpose It is for this reason, Dr. Rob-' erts 'continued, that the United' Nations cannot be an effective political organization and its· supporters should not entertain false expectations concerning it•.' Further evidence that political, cooperation depends on shared, values comes from the fact that harmony of values among the~ members of such essentially mn... itary organ~zations as NATO and the Warsaw Pact makes it pos-. sible for tbem to serve political as well as military pur~oses, be , said.,
Early Popes,
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in S~ptember, 1934, wh~n he was DOVER (NC)-Bishop :M:attpresent during the state visit of' thew F. Brady' of Manchester King Alexander of Yugoslavia to has' laid the' cornerstone and Bulgaria. He was on the plat_ blessed the new three-story form' of the Sofia railroad sta$625,000 St. Ann Home' for the tion standing near the ArchAged here. It is the third home bishop, waiting for the 'c!rrival of 'of its kind to be' constructed' by King Alexander's train. 'NeW HaIilpsMre Catholic Chari. , , When he learned that the ties, Inc.
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WAS.lIIN9TON (NC) - .A priest of the Clevelan<i diocese is among 12 citizens na.med, by PresideptE:isenhower to the, national committee for the White House, Confere~ce of Children and Youth to be held here March 1960. He Is Msgr. Raymond J .. Gallagher, ~ssistt;lnt director of ,Catholic Chatitiell il), the Cleve.,., land diocese. '
Our Lady of Victory Courl, FaU,River, Massachusetts Catholic Order of Foresters, will hoW installation ceremonies Sunday. Nov. 16 at 6 P.M. at Stonebridge Inn. according to announcement made by Chief Ranger Rose Fin- ' neran, Members and friends aN invited to attend.
COLOMBO PLAN EXHIBIT: Mrs. Fanny Cortez Gar.cia of Manila only woman to head a delegation to the Colombo Plan Conference in session at Seattle Nov. 10, points to a display of pictures showing Colombo Plan in the Philippip.es The Colombo Plan is a cooperative program for raising the standard of living in underdeveloped Asian countries. NC Photo.
Archbishop Flays Attempt to Link Church With Right- to Work Laws ,
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"Our intinerary," he said, Htook us into a number of coun~ tries, with ,differeQ.t language, histprY and background. But everywhere ~e were welcomed as 'brethren,' everywhere the Church was the same. It was a consoling. thing,to realize the worldwide charilCter of the Church from priictical experi- , ence~"
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.In advertisements and pamphlets published by supporters of the right to work legislation~ They claimed that the quotations showed the three popes approved such laws. Archbishop Mitty declared that the quotations, were "taken out of context" and created ."a false impression." The'attempt to link the Church with right to work laws is "a gross misrepresentation of the facts," he said, adding: "Individuals are perfectly free to vote as they see fit on any issue, in accordance" with their conscience."
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that his regime uph'" " freedom of religion. Premier Abd al-Kar;m Qasim told a delegation of bishops which called on him that the coup d'etat of July l·A "put an end to the rule of tyrants and laid down the iJuudatlOns of justice, freedom and fraternity - no discrimination among communities and races, equal rights for all individuals under justice and freedom' "Had it not been for the men of religion and the sincere persons who are working for the sake of the country and mankin<i, our,morals would have disintegrated," Gen. Oasim told the bishops. He said also: "Religious dignitaries are always the apostles of peace and good to the people. They are the pillars of the State and the people." The Christian community ia overwhelmingly Moslem Iraq totals less than five per cent 01. the population. Chaldean. Rite Catholics make up the bulk ol the Christian community, witk Catholics of the Latin Rite and dissident Jacobites and Nestorians counting for most of the rest. In addressing the Christiaa bishops, Premier Qasim, whose rise to power wa:s accompanied by the slaying of King Faisal D and other leaders, said: "I thank God who has provided me with this opportunity to meet with you. My happine81 in meeting you is indescribable. May God bl~ss your efforts, which seek the good of the people and the homeland. I should like you to convey my greetinga and wishes to your brethren. I urge you to' work as one hand with all freedom and sincerity. I ask God to guide our steps .. serve the good of the people Peace be with you."
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BAGHDAD (NC) - The head of Iraq's' revolutionary government has assured the country's Christian bishops
HYDERABAD (NC)- An Indian cabinet minister has strong,SAN FRANqSCO (NC)- Atly criticized the conversion to tempts to link the Church with Christianity of his, eountry's so-called right to work legislaformer untouchables, now known tion has been scored by Archas harijans or depressed classes. bishop John J. Mitty of San FranMinister of Railways Jagjivan cisco. Ram, only harijan member of The Archbisho~ objected to India's cabinet, declaJ;ed con- the use of quotations from Popes' versions to Christianity have be- , Leo, XIII, Pius XI and Pius XII come a serious matter and urged government action to stop' them~ Bishop Says Church The Minister of Railways claimed that two of the reasons Unity Impressive harijans leave Hinduism are: "temptations" offered by ChrisBURLINGTON (NC)-Returntian missionaries, and the "soing from thousands of miles of cial injustices" they suffer as travel in Europe, Bishop Robert mem bers of a depressed class. F. Joyce of Burlington declared He added that he was not op"one outstanding thing which posed to conversions prompted struck me about our experience by sincere conviction. was the unity of the Church."
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Indian Official Hits Harijan Conversions
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.THE ANCHORThurs., Nov• .13,
newsman had been sent there by a Yugoslav newspaper to cover the event - which represented the reconciliation of Bulgaria and Yugoslavia - and that he was a Catholic, the future Pope askep him-many questions about Yugoslav-Bulgarian relations as seen from Belgrade's viewpoint. He noticed that the delegate was very well informed and spoke fairly good Bulgarian, having heard him speaking that language with Bulgarian officials. He once asked the writer to visit the nunciature and they spoke of his friends in the Yugoslav hierarchy. He knew well both former Archbishop John Rodic of Belgrade and Ar.chbishop Alojzije Stepinac of Zagreb, since elevated to the College of Cardinals. When he passed through Belgrade and Zagreb on his trips between Sofia and Rome he always stopped to visit the two prelates, he told the newsman. From his conversations the reporter got the impressIon that he was pleased with theimprovement of relations between Yugoslavia and Bulgaria, especially since the Holy See is always eager-.c,.to promote and preserve peace.
Catholic Minority Catholics of both the Latin and Byzantine Rites numbered only about 50,000-a small minority compared with the country's more than five million members of the 0 r tho d 0 x Chutch - and were scattered throughout the nation. But in soma, Plovdiv and a number of other 'cities and towns they were influential. From the time that Pius IX oon'secrat,ed the first Bulgarian priests of the Byzantine Rite in modern times in 1861, the Holy' See had' shown a special interest in Bulgaria. After Bulgaria became an autonomous nation'in 17888, the Vatican Secretariat of State sent its best diplomats to Sofia, regarded as an important listening post. The years Archbishop Rancalli spent there were years of a gradual stabilization follow!ng a turbulent era in the Balkans. Between the years 1930 and 1935 the writer paid several long visits to Sofia and' on a number of accasions met the Apostolic
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~as Intithate Knowledge
Of Southeastern Europe Nations
Cautions World Peace Backers Move Slowly
Insight to His Character
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Students to Have Missals,
SlO(1'~~;~hting Our Schools ST. MARY'S HIGH SCHOOL, TAUNTON
Each student is obtaining a daily missal as a step towards more active participation in Mass. Seniors have begun taking entrance tests for colleges and nurses' schools. Tests will continue through March. Posters for each class are eneouraging observance of the bonor system. The freshman slogan is "My Own Homework? My Own Marks?" Sophomores chose "Follow in My Footsteps. and Be Honest at all Times." Juniors have "God Sees Everything. Can He Be Proud of Your Work?" The senior slogan il. "Join or Die." MONSIGNOR COYLE mGR, TAUNTON
Special classes in Gregorian Chant have been conducted in one of the sophomore religion classes,' with Brother Albert Ciri,.9.s.C., as moderator. With ~,the aid of recordings by the Benedictine M on k s af Solesmes, France, submitted by George Simmons, members of the class have learned to idenlily' the eight modes in the Benedictine interpretation. Also discussed were the origin IIId revival of Gregorian Chant. Outstanding students in this study' were Owen Smith, Richard Knot, ,,'Michael Stefanik, Timothy Doyle, Carl Bevilacqua, William Greene and George Simmons. Many juniors in the religion classes have subscribed to America, a weekly' magazine published by the Jesl,lit Fathers ()f tile United States and Canada. SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY, FALL RIVER
A unique campaign of ejaculations for the tIoly. Souls is being cond4cted thi,s montb. Boxes containing typed aspira":' tions are at the head and foot of each stairway.Students going up or downstairs take a slip from one box, recite it on the stairs, aad deposit in another. The project is sponsored by junior Sodalists. Opinions of students in EngIWt schools conducted by' the . Religious of the Holy Unif'~ will .
James F. OINe;/I
Two additional key leaders have been appointed for the $100,000 Easton Fund for Stonehill College, according to an announcement made today by Abraham Brooks, Chairman.
Attorney William T. Condon
will serve as Chairman of the Special Gifts Committee and Mrs. George A. Carter Jr. as Chairman of the Volunteer Clerical Committee. Attorney Condon has an objective of $20,000 of the Easton goal of $100,000. His committee will seek gifts of $39 to $312, payable over a three year pledge period. Co-chairmen with him are Robert W. Andrews, Jacob Brenner, M.D., William L. N.elligan and Postmaster Clement Coughlin. " Mrs. Carter's committee" will be responsible fori mass maili,p,gs ,in Easton and preparation of PREVOST mGH SCHOOL volunteers' campatgn kits. a.er FALL RIVER ' Co-chairmen are Miss Marguerite Carter, 'VIrs. Grace DeColi;' . ; AngEllo Stavros, inathematiclii';'MA.RKS PENING OFPONTlFICATE: His Excellency and SCIence teacher at DurfeE!' bus, Miss Kathryn E. Healey and High School, has been named Archbishop Amleto Giovanni C<>cognani, Apostolic Delegate Miss, Hazel Luke. Prevost's basketball coach. to the United States, is shown in St. Matthew's Cathedral, Roger Desautels was unani- Washington, where he celebrated a Pontifical Mass marking WASHINGTON (NC)-Fathmously elected president of the the opening of the reign of His Holiness Pope John XXIII. recently organized Russian club. er William J. Clasby of the U.S. The principal's list includes Archbishop Patrick A; O'Boyle of Washington presided. Air Force will preach at the two seniors, five juniors, six. Many diplomats attended. In the pew at right are the Ampontifical Mass which will open sophomores and 1'1 freshmen '. bassador and Countess De Areilzaof Spain. Photo by Reni. the Seventh ~ational Conference wbo have attained highest hon- " NC Photo. . on Catholic Yauth Work, startors. ing Nov. 17 il" Williamsburg, Va. 0,
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a p pea r in the December "Shacady News." The English teenagers and their American counterparts will give their viewpoints on the intellectual life of students in the two countries. Nancy McNerney and Susan Roy are gathering American opinions and Gladys O'Connell is contacting the English students. The Marian Players will, present a three-act play, "Lena Rivers," on Thursday, Nov. 20 at 8 P.M. at the Convent Hall Prospect Street. ' Representatives of Bridgewater State Teachers' College Katherine G i b b s Secretariai School, St. Anne's School of Nursing and Bradford Durfee College of Technology spoke at a parent and daughter night held in observance of National and Catholic Education Week.
APPRAISER lEAL ESTATE INSURANCE
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov; 13, 19511 .
LETI'T BE THE MEASURE OF YOUR FAITH AND LOYALTY SEND IT TO The National Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N.Y. who will send it to the former Naticmal 'Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Fdith in Italy who is now
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THE, ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 13, 1958
Holiday 'Parti~s
I
The Parish Parade'
OUR LADY OF FATIMA, SWANSEA The Women's Guild announces that the cake sale scheduled for Nov. 28 has been postponed to Saturday, Feb. 7 at McWhirr'a, Fall River. ..... The December meeting will be held on Monday, the 1st and will include a lecture on floral arrangement. Mrs. Augusta Sim coe, chairman of youth activities, is organizing a parish CYO unit. Fall River Blackfriars Guild will present "The Song of Ber nadette" for the parish. Mrs. Malcolm Melvin is in charge of arrangements. Activities already scheduled for 1959 include a potluck sup per for guild members and their families on Monday~ Jan. 5 and an Old Fashioned Dance to be held jointly with the Holy Name ~ociety on January 10.
ST. MICHAEL'S, FALL RIVER A' Christmas Fair and penny sale will be held on Saturday, Nov. 15 at 7 P.M. in the school hall under' the chairmanship of Miss Evelyn Almeida. Booths will include cho<:olate, toys, . Christmas cards and gift wraps, cosmetics, homemade food, jew elry and sporting goods. . A gift shop will, feature Christmas presents' at discount prices. ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, CENTRAL VILLAGE A fashion show featuring old time gowns will· highlight to night's meeting of the Ladies' Guild. Miss Lillian Dion of the Mansfield Catholic Women's , Guild will model her collection of oldfashioned clothes, assisted by guild members:' She will 'be accompanied at the piano by Leo McCauley, Mansfield, . and Mrs. John Hol land, guild president, will read a commentary. The affair, start ing at 8 P.M., is open to all wo men of the parish and their guests. ST. BERNARD'S, ASSONET The Women's Guild is spon soring a Christmas sale Monday, Nov, 17 at 8 P.M. in the Legion Hall~ A bride doll will be among prizes and games will be played. ST. MARY'S, SEEKONK The annual Christmas sale sponsored by the Women's Guild will'be held Wednesday, Nov. 19 from 12 noon till 10 P.M. in the church hall. Booths will include apronli, children's table, candy and specialties, food, fancy work, jewelry and religious ar~ ticles, novelties and parcel post. Refreshments will be served all day. The sale is under the chairmanship of Mrs. Ruth' Pat tangal, guild pr·esident. NOTRE DAME, FALL RIVER A teen-age whist will be held tomorrow night in the school hall at 7:30. Mrs. Wilfred Gar and, youth chairman of the wo men's guild, is in charge and announces that a turkey will be among the prizes. The guild will be represented on Thursday, Nov. 20 at the sale for the blind at the Fall River Woman's Club. Mrs. L. Alfred Renaud will supervise the booth from 1 to 5:30 P.M.
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IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, FALL RIVER , The Women's Guild and Holy Name Society are co-sponsors of a whist to be held Tuesday, Nov. 18 at 8 P.M. in the church hall. Mrs. Wiliam F. Bennett, guild preident; is in charge of the annual Christmas party to be held Monday, Dec. 1. ST. JAMES.
NEW BEDFORD
Mrs. Ann Ryan, president, will
lead a meeting, of Msgr. Noon
Circle at 7:30P.M: Wednesday,
Nov. 19 in the lower church.
Plans for a penny sale to be held
Tuesday and. Wednesday, Dec. :2
and 3 will be formulated. Mrs.
Helen Connor and Mrs. Mildred
Coyne are co-chairmen for the
MRS. CECILE GROBE social hour.
HOLY NAME,
FALL-RIVER
.Women's Guild members win . participate. iii:' the.' annual sale . Cecile Clement Grobe will be" for the' blind at the Fall Rive~: guest· pianist at Notre' Dame Wo' Wo~en's'Club Tbursday, Nov: men's Guild second .anniversary · 20. On Sunday, Nov. 30 the Guild will be hostess for'a meeting of . program Monday,· Nov. 24 at Jesus-Mary Academy 'auditori the Catholic Guild for the Blind um, Fall River. at Sacred Heart School. The Guild will attend a Mem Mrs.. 'Grobe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George J. Clement, 35 orial Mass for deceased members Oliver Street, Fall River,. is a Saturday at 7:30 A.M. The Rose Hawthorne Home sewing grou'p . graduate of Sacred Hearts Acad emy, where she studied music · meets weekly on Thursday at 1 under Sister Agnes Lucy and · J,>.M. in the parish hall. won the Key of Music and' a H()LY ROSARY, scholarship to the New England FALL RIVER ' Conservatory. The executive board of the Later studies included courses Women's' Guild meets tomorrow at Juilliard School of Music, New al7:30 P.M. Guild members will York, and work under Dr. Carl particIpate in the sale for the Friedburg" noted ,pianist and blind at the Fall River Women's composer. At present a resident Club, Wednesday, Nov. 19. Mrs. Jennie Imbriglio heads the com of Paterson, N. J., Mrs. Grobe mittee in charge. has given· numerous concerts in New Jersey and 'New York. She A fashion show and piano se lections form'ed entertainment is a faculty member of the Car for the Novernber ' meeting. Mrs, negie School of Musi«;lj '.. .... John Souza was program chair She will appear in Fall River man and introduced· Miss Bar again in JaQuary as pianist with bara Dagata who prepared the the Fall River Symphony Or fashion show' and Miss Lena chestra. Bevilacqua, pianist. Mrs. Arthur Despres and Mrs. OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, Charles Santos y.rere co-chair OSTERVILLE ' · men for Surprise' Night.. Special The Women's Guild will con awards co-chairmen 'were Mrs. Anthony Pannoni and Mrs. Emile . duct a whist and bridge party at Durand. . .7:45 P.M. next Thursday at Aunt Tempy's Tea House in Osterville, SACRED HEART. with an electric blanket as door NORTH AT"'LEBORO prize. Miss Margaret Hansberry Officers' for 1958-59 of the and Miss Mary Cross are co.. Ladies of St. Anne Soda1ity were chairmen. installed by Rev. Edmund L. Dickinson following the annual . The annual Christmas bazaar will be held Dec. 6, with Mrs. banquet presided over by Rev. Jerome BO,wes as .chairm.an. Joseph S. Larue, pastor: Rev. The.CYO parish unit has been Roland Bousquet of St. Joseph Church, New Bedford was guest .o.rganized for boys and girls from grades 7 to 11, sponsored by .the speaker. Women's' C ild as part of its Officers include Mrs. Leo Catholic Youth program. Piette, President; Mrs. Paul Pa Elected officers were Peter quette Vice President; Mrs. Al' Nese, president; David Lewis, bert Davignon, Secretary; Mrs. vice-president; John McPher Joseph Beauchaine, Jr., Treas urer; Mrs. Roland TondreauU' son, treasurer; Terry Bowes,' secretary. The group will meet and Mrs. Gerard Desilets, Ad the third Sunday· of each month visors. at Aunt Tempy's Tea House fol During the regular monthly meeting held in the parish hall lowing benediction at 7:30 at the church. Rev: Edmund L. Dickinson in sir. JOSEPH'S, stalled newly elected officers of the Children of Mary Sodality. }'ALL RIVER These include Miss Simonne The Women's Guild meets to-' Dubuc, President; Miss Denise night at 8 in the parish hall. Pinsonnault, 'Vice' President; The CYO met to repair Christ Miss Anne Dufault, Secretary;' mas' toys for needy children last Miss Suzanne Alix, Treasurer. night. To obtain. materials to Officers of the Junior League continue this activity, members of the Sacred Heart for teen-age will sponsor a cake sale. Cakes boys under the direction of Ray may be left at the school from mond Lacasse include Roger 2 to 4 P.M. this Saturday. Alix, President; Paul Bourgault, . Vice President; Raymond Mar tineau, Secretary; Ronald Saul nier, Treasurer.
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tutes to improve th~ subject mat ter knowledge of high school and mathematics instructors. Dr. Arnold Ross, head of Notr. Dame's mathematic department, said approximately 40 teachers will be acceptf;!d for the program,. which will begin next Septem-' ber. He added that Notre Dame University has conducted a teacher - training program ia mathematics since 1947.
NOT,RE DAME (NC) - The University of Notre Dame has received a National Science Foundation grant of $209,000 to conduct a institute for high school mathematics. teachers during the 1959-60 school year. The university is one of 32 col': leges and universities to which the foundation .awarded grants .totalinl,; $8,600,000. The funds are to be used for campus inst!
Fa II River Native' Guest Pianist
i· The ~~CHOR i
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. Notre; Dame 'Receives Math Grant
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142 SECOND STREET FALL RIVER
OSborne 5-7856
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ConUnued from Page 9ne, tel' of serious concern in numer .; :mg the past year, the Most Re,\', ouS areas; It said'. that recent SoCiill Action I "Albert G. Meyer, ArchbishopCongressional .~ction to '. permit Internation~ crises, threa~ to elect of' Chicago, reported as prokecutio'n of" puryeyors of world peace; the economic reces-" · episcopal chairman. such matter at" the place' the sion, labor 'union problems, and He said the department staff material is. received; as" well as racial tensions wereoutsUinding collected and interpreted statisat the place at ,which it 'was ' among'inatters"that engaged the tics examined in some detail the mailed, should help, materially, 'attention and study of 'the 'position of the lay teacher in in combatting this evil. NCWC Department of Social ·the .Catholic school, and, in the . As an example of how governAction, Archbishop Patrick' A. field of curriculum, took a hard mental relations can touch the O'Boyle of Washington, i'ts epis ll)ok at the Rockefeller~report, life of Catholics as such, the re-o copal chairman, reported.· "'The Pursuit of Excellence,". at port cited a recent 'Government'In dealing with these prob educational television, arid at the effort'to develop uniform adoplems, he said, staff members of state of mathematics and' science tion procedures in' cases involvthe 'department issued several in the par 'chial schools., ing military personnel. The policy statements,' participated The status of religion in Cathprogram was first drawn in such' in many meetings,' and endeav olic schools and the problem of a .manner that' one briaf referored to spread knowledge of spiritual guidance in pUblic~du- ence in it would have excluded Catholic principles by talks and cation continued to be.questIOns the participation ,oi, religious publications. :of 'prime importance, 'he ad,ded. agencies. ' , '. H ld The report recalled tnat the 11e g ISlaKOREA CHURCH DEDICATION: Bishop ar,o ' . In the field of na t IOna 'Day-to-day working arrange1957 Labor' Day Statement issued tion, the department was espe- ments with all departmentS ,Henry, S.~.C., Vicar Apostolic of Kwangju, South Korea , by the department emphasIzed "eially concerned about the ~ed- 'and bureaus of the NCWC help blesses the Catholic Church atIllo. The pastor, Columban the need for rank-and-file ac.tiv , eral aid proposals of the ,Elsen- "gre~tly in ke~pingit':'abreast of .Father Thomas Kane, of Chicago, is at right and Father.' 'ityforthe purpose of developing hower administration WhlCh ulthese continuing developments, Patrick Donohue at left. The,' church was a' former ,army principled leadership.', ' '''timately became the, National . the Legal Department said. "quonset. NC Photo. . ,. ' , " '. -, Msgr, George G. Higgins, di . Defense Act of 1958, , ,' rector of the department, tE!sti ."" In' l',nternatl'onal affairs,' the Council of'Men and to become active partici- ' fied' befo're' ,a House Agr'I'culture ' ing' in' effective Ieadersh"Ip, In 'departme'nt conHnue.d its·, ~ork, The 'National' Council of Cath':' contemporary religious and so- ,: pants 'in these; that subscriptions Subcommittee on the matter of , . with the NCWC Foreign Vlslt?rS olic Men continued to maintain cial issues; and in council work. to "The 'Catholic Nurse'"in- '. iniportel'i , :M:exic'an, farm iabor. ·'Offi·ce. 'One 6f the outstandmg ,the same high level of develop:From its inception, the report "creased' from 11,252 in' 1952' to He' called attention: to' serious programs in this. area was the ment it has en::>yed for sevel,1 brought out, the NCCW has over 23,500 per issue last year; family problems created by this International High School S!U- years, Archbishop, Karl J. Alter geared its program for affiliated that the tentn NCCN convention, program, ,citing the statement of , dent pfogram of 1957-1958 WhICh of ·Cincinnati reported as episcoorganizations _ now· numbering held 'in St. 'Louis last May drew 'Mexican bishops in this regard• . brought to the United State~ a pal chairman of the NCWC :De- 12,000 in 105 diocesan councils- representatives from 88 diocese, Archbishop O'Boyle said an :total of 89 students, ,79 from "partment of Lay Organizations. to the educational and religious Guain and Canada;' that the 01'important organizational : step 'Eur'ope and 10 from Latm Amer'Not only has there been an needs of American women. It 'ganization receives ,ftom the forward was taken during the lca. The Latin America program increase in the number of di- said· that when, in 1920, the Ame'rican Nurses Association the" 'year with the formation of the was a joint venture, of the ocesan council, affiliated to the 'American Bishops recommended names of foreign Catholic graduNational Catholic Social Action NCWC and the State pepartNC€ M ,' but there has been a to the .new federation programs ate nurses who come to. 'this 'Conference. Its purpose is .to "ment ,'considerable broadening of its for the "study of It:gislative' is- 'country' to study and the areas in stimulate, and, aid American , Th~ Department of Educatioo,program services, he said. The sues" and '''citizenship education Which they are to study. . Catholic laymen' to , undertake it was stated, continued its r~la-, NCCM: cooperated with the Na- for . im~igrants" they foretold 'The NCCN' represents the" In- :' organized .~ocial ,activity. Head , ,····Uonship with vir~allY eve,ry Im-' tional Catholic Community Serv- .. the present NCCW program of" ternational Cauncilof Catholic .quarters will. be lit th~ NCWC · portant national group In, the' ',ice, in the development of the published informational services Nurses at meetings in the 'United and Msgr. Higgins is a member field of education: Especlally Military Council of Catholic' in 17~fields ranging from spirStates of the rorld Health 01'of the conference's. board of di dose relationships were mainMen of the U. S. Armed Forces itual development to internaganization, and the non-governrectors. 'tained with the American Coun-, 'of Europe. , tional 'relations. ' 'mental committee of UNICEF.' ,Other .organizational activity 'cil on Education, the Association Addition of a'new'department ',In' addition ,to these infor~a- ,'It is 'currently Serving on'''the ,on the part of the director dur 'of American Colleges, and 'the to the NCCM national off.iceto tional servicel), it was ad~ed, the Maternaland'Chiid Health sub- ing the last year included mepl ,'\( S. Office of Education.. Condeai specifically with the pro- 'NCCW lias moved directly into,co~iite Qf'uNICEF.~' " · .. bership in the National COIl,1mit - tinuing dep~rtmental' ser~ices gressive development of counci18 ' the field' of 'education through Catholic Press " tee. on ,Migratory Labor, the ·,,'ii\cluded the program of 'Amer- and a leadership pngram wasconierences for leadership train. , United Auto Workers Public Re . : iean Education Week observ-' noted. 'In' the first' six months ing wherever there are Catholic Catholic' publications ·in' 'the .view Board, the American Mot ance, , ' o f its existence, this department 'organi~ations of Ainerican,United States re~ched a total of ors Clergy Pa'nel, and the Labor The Archbishop said the conducted two regional,leaderwomen.. ' . 581 last year, and their ~ombihed . Education Committee ..on., the NCWC department continiIes~its 'ship training conferences' and On~ staff member of the drenlation mounted to 23,716,- Ethics of Collective Bargaining. 'effor'ts to file up-to-date infor- 'seven diocesan training confer'418,Bishop Albert R; Zuroweste He also attended eI'ght natl'onal 'h 1 NCCW concentrated last year on mation on tlfe Catholic sc 00 ences, aided in the" conduct of .such training' ~ithin, dioceses, of Belleville, ilI.,· reported' as meetings of major importance qstem,' including diocesan nearly ten other diocesanwide 'through deanery workshops at episcopal chairman o·f· ·the dealing with social and econom.ie school reports, handbooks. and ' conferences; and prepared workNCWC Press Department. 1 'Th taff I 'con I' 24 diff ' t which' parish ,w0!Den were More tha'n 90 per 'cent of the prop ems. , ,. catalogues, e s ' a so shop out mes on ,eren traI'n'ed. Another staff member, . J h F C ' SS . t ' 'd rabIe' time 'b' ts b' d' il bl' to ecelesI'astl'cal' dI'VI'SI'Ons of the Father 0 n . ronm, tinues 0, give conSI e , su Jec to e rna e ava a ,e n a l,5-wee'k tour o'f the Milit tr t.., d "to the assistance of studentS pur- affiliated organizations, . U.S. and island 'possessions now 'associate direc or, ·concen a e "Iuing research in 'educati~n, he The Archbishop Said the tary Council of Catholic Women are served iii some manner by' " his activities on problems con noted.He also said it ConsUlts NCCM has put major emphas~ ,organized one. year' ago, offered an approved publicatioh; <he nected with Catholic s9cial edu widely and frequently.:with the on the national committee systraining ,to ,64 organizations 'ofnote<:t . cation, the Archbishop said. He· " , woomen at 27 bases in lectured at varl'ous semm'arl'es, te'm In l'tS de-velo'pinetJ.t program, , ,Catholic ' ,, ',' " ...that ' best ml'nds in highly specialized ' 1 d ,...France . Bishop Zuroweste, said ';'m"cludm'g the Nort~ Amerl'can :. 'fields of research, and develop- : 'and 'for the fifth 'year bas p'ro- " E ng an " . ,-",rmany, ' , ... . 'd Spain, Italy, Morocco and, TurNCWC News Service. dispatches 'College in Rome; worked with '''ment, and that reports' an 'moted its own' Catholic' Action k ' now , ,', go"to' ,pu bl'lca t"lon~ ...I.n" .6'1 incipient Catholic ' employer "Dlonog'raphs flowbg out of these Award' con'test to stimulate: iney. 'h"g'h th 't "ts , , t th' d cOun tr'les, a new ,I ; ...a 1 gr'oups,' and revised extensively . committee assignments "have terest in local prog"rams. ' ' . In addihon ' 0 IS eanery or '. ' " b h d .ne~or,k of dome,shc c0l!esP,o~d- hI'S' 1950' publication,' Catholic ;': 'been given.wide distribution" ' . More than' 750,000 'copies'-'Ol area training gIven y ea th al _ Cath'olicMeriwere printed' in quarter:s. ,staff workers, two .. e~ts ~s ,~~~e~mfh e :atI,~~ 'Social' Principles: He also'con " . Legal Department 'the' eleventh year of its pUblica- ,newly "organized diocesan coun- "~e,ne,.wI,,,, ,ep ,an ,WI er ,'·tinues his work with organiza ",'Deve'lopmen'ts arl'sl'ng I'n, pres- . tion;' ,more than .. 130 balf-hour CI'Is-Was h'10 gt 0, n D ,C th~t 'd ,there tl'O'ns and individuals concerned " :and Jef . - :,~l,e~hv~ty, 'f . ts a~, ' 130 83 ent-day 'are constantly af- radio' pro'grams broadcast' by ,ferson City, Mo.-received" ex- ',. oi'eI~ corres,?o~ e,~ " 10,... . . with probiems posed by world ' , . tra' , co~ntrIes and terrI~orIes; that Its communism,' .fecting the Church' an d C a th NCCM over' the NBC,' CBS and terisive pre-orgaDizahon ' hm" 1 R orne B ureau coverage d piVOta The report recalled that the f tabl t olics in new ways, the repor 0 ABC networks reached average ing, and 22 already es IS e h b d d d th fl the NCWC Legal Department inw~kly' audience'" of 5,500,000' diocesan councils requested and . as, E!en expan e an e ow Catholic Association for Inter 'cated. .. 'h f of news from a,ll of Ita,Iy greatly natI'onal Peace' had issued p'>o'lic" listeners', 50 half-hour TV' pro- received assistance eltt er rom , iT dI , Ch h m,creased; t h at it h,as sharply statements on The United States Government relations, urc grams planned' and produced by tbe national presiden or na-. d h b f I , ta t' , th' d' mcx:eas.e t e num er,o papa and the Refugees', United States and State re1ahons, xa IOn. NCCM in cooperation with NBC tional'staff durmg ell' locesan t ts d t b b d ex ,Issue 0, suo SCrI, ers an Foreign Trade Policy; and the the publl'shl'ng I'ndustry, and in- a nrl CBS reached an average of conven t'IOns, . th t t h d I ff ts .. a 1 as rna e specla e or Latin American Disarmament f 1ea d ersh Ip ternational-affairs are ' some· 0 three, million persons weekly. Longer ,courses in t' I t ' d f t t' al 0 supp y, s OrIes an eatures Proposal, The Annual Peace h h the broad fields Th; ,council received wide' actraining were offered by na Ion . '1 inC wth ICI' ma ' a l ..a b out t h e ,space-age consciousAward "was conferred on' Father tel'S of parhcu ar a 0 IC con- claim, from professional and re- '. officers and staff, on' a regIOn , h' h dd I ' d cern arise~ the rl'>port signed by ligious'sources, for I"ts four-part basis at six four-day institutes nthess. bWI,IC .,' sUn en y, grIppe Raymond McGowan, 'former diI h f ' , e pu IC mmd. rector of the NCWC Social AcBishop Emmet M, W a s 0 film proJ' ect, "Rome Eternal," attended by a total of 800 women ' 'opal II d ' t ' The episcopal chairman retion department. Youngstown, Oh 10, epiSC produced@for' television. at Catholic co eges an lOS 1 ""al'rman 'of th'e department, ' t " t 'd I separated called that the News 'Service,had The CAlP, it was also reC11 In the interest of greater effitu IOns a WI e y J' the past year received a specorded, held a number of area · t d t sa e " ciency, the NCCM has, consoli- points. . , In a brief survey of some of dated all of its radio, "TV and Six more such leadership cial blessing and strong encour- meetings on such subjects as dis 'nts at ,whl'ch legI'slation, ' tr . ' . t't t 1' 1 1 be held agement from Pope Pius XII. He armament, reciprocal trade, and the pOI film work in a New York office. ammg ms 1 u es w f 1959 recalled, too, that a resolution the needs of Africa, The asso can and does ha've a specI'al inThe NCCM also distributes kine- in the summer 0 . terest for Catholics .:- h o s p i t a l s , ' had ,bee,n adopted on behalf, of ciation has an official observer, scOpes and films to schools, parNurses Activities the more than '400' Cardinals, Mrs" Rober.t Giroux, who repre publications, schools, housing, ishes and organizations throughAr hb' h ' etc.-the. report noted that in out, the cou'ntry.' ~ A membership of more than , c , IS ops and Bishops of TUrn to Page Fifteen Latin America lauding "the in. ,relieving nonprofit sc h 00 Is 0 f The NCCM . had- representa- 21,000 in 101 dioceses 0f .th e , S h' d b' valu,.a,ble services" ren,'dered by the b urden 0f th e roam,:f ac t urers ' tives present at some 40' meet- United tates was ac leve y
and retailers'. tax lao ; y~ar, CO,n- ing's of governmental and nonthe National Council of Catholic Noticias Catolicas, the special
, ht d tt f "d' N ' , th 1 t ' Arch serv,ices in S,panish and Portu gress rig, e a rna er 0 IS-' goveI:omental agencies 'in the urses m e as year, parate treatment" which hi;ld ascourse of the Year.. It alSo parbishop ,Alter further reported.guese issued by the NCWC Press
sumed .considerable 'proportions t,icipated in 'the meeting of the He said there had been an in- Department. The Bishop also
, W or ld W a rII. '" bl'IC , rna Ie mem b ers h'IP ID , . remarked that .featured-' since Intermitio'nar 'Federation' 'of .crease' 10 schools had ahyays been'exempt ' catholic'Men 'held'in Rome ,ig the council· and an advance in spe'aker, at' the Catholic Press
from this tax burden. . ".OctOber, 1957.' " '," the program of Junior' ASsociate Association convention .last May
The report said a discussion :of" " . Membership:' , called the NCWC Ne~s SerVice
the proper relations . between Women's Affairs Volunteer pursing service' on "the best 'Catholic service of
Church and State continues in Officers and ~taff of the Na- .. the diocesan level also showed a ,:world coverage on the globe."
, this country, and that it has been ·tional Council of Catholic Women growth, with 16 councils averag'In addition to providirtg stead , stimulated in recent times by the ' were engaged last year in one:of ing 54 hours a week in the care "'ily expanding' coverage of ,cur.,. MILliON DOLLAR emergence _of Catholics as promthe most extensive -and. intensive 'of the sick 'poor. rent news' events; the, Bishop
inen't political 'leaders, by;school ·programs of adult' trai~ng , in Fifty_per cent of 'the affiliated " pointed out, 'the---News" SerVice
BALLROOM " bus' transportation cases, by the Council's history, Archbishop coUncils' .now offer scholarship. applied corrective truth insev:' ·1 ·tempts to emorce ante~nuptial Alter reporied for tbis' division " to 'students entering Catholic eral instances to scotch false re;; Available for promises, and by the 'questionof .of, the, Department of' Lay Or- schools of nursing, the teport ports regarding the Chw-Chand
Ba,nquets, Testimon.ial., Etc. religious instruction ~n public ganb:aUons" said. its work. The service also made
schools. ' In keeping with the current ' It "was stated· that the NCCN special efforts to report dev~lopfor 'f~1I Inf~m~tion Contact 'The department'·noted ,a "ris- interest' in adult educatioq and has advised" its diocesan affi,li~. merits ,a,round' the country in, the
ing' widespread distribution of development, he 8aiCi, from'Port- . ates to acquaint their meinber~ . intensifying campaignacitizens
ROLAND GAMACHE
ol;>scene ~a:tter'in-our country," ,bod, ,Ore; 'to Ankara" Turkey,' ship 'with the'research program.' 'are waging against obScenity'iia
WYman 9-698'" and said:this isliecominl;: a mat- Catholic women received train- of' profewooal organizations, print. c'.
0'
life
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Ch~rchStatus
in U.'S.
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 13, 1958
Continued from Page Fourteea sents it at the United Nations Department of Public Informa tion and at the U. S. Mission to the United Nations.
merable problems. 'Family unit1 was helped by expanding the definition of the word "child" for immigration purposes, and by conferring non-quota status Youth Work on many near ,relatives facing a The National Council of Cath long \ wait for qurta visas. It olic Youth, which coordinates also benefited the skilled classes the work of the national Catholic needed here and helped answer youth organizations in the the continuing demands by, United States, enjoyed growth those wishing orphans for adop in ,size, quality and prestige, tion, the report said. Archbishop Leo Binz of Du In add'" 'n to a great volume buque,' episcopal chairman of of office work, department staff /' , NCWC Youth Department, members ~ade numerous ap said. pearances at official hearings at The Archbishop reported that which aliens were ordered to the diocesan section of the coun show cause why they shOUld not cil now has 76 archdiocesan and be deported. Threatened depor diocesan affiliations; that 475 ta,tion of illegally resident Yugo club, are affiliated to the Na slavs appeared as a possible new tional Newman Club Federa governmental policy in the tion; that 182 Catholic colleges course of the year, presenting a and univ~rsities belong to the new problem in th~ field of im National Federation of Catholic migration. Heretofore, these and College Students; that ~ 65 camps other persons from communist have joined the National Cath countries were ~iven long ,tem APOSTLES TO SAILORS: In charge of the Apostle olic Camping Association, and porary asylum when claiming that the Conference of Catholics fear of persecution if returned ship of the Sea in Buenos Aires, Argentina, are these two in Youth Serving Agencies has bike-riding Columban Fathers, Father John M. McFadden of to their lands of origin. 117 charter members, The department, it was noted, Cleveland, and Father Owen O'Kane of Ireland, In a 30-room Prestig!'l-wise, the report noted was also able to render 3888 sepa the two priests provide a home with entertainment hostel, that one of the NCCY's repre rate services to members of the for sailors Who come ashore. NC Photo. sentatives to the Young Adult clergy and religious communi Council of the National Social groups. Releases averaged about' the Office for UN Affairs tt ties during the year. Welfare Assembly was among The department operates one a week. tended sessions of 12 United Na eight persons elected to attend The bureau is established to through a central office in Was.h tions bodies spanning the entire the 1958 World Assembly of' ington and offices in' New York give information to other-than . year and the regular briefing '''outIl in New Delhi, India. One Catholic newspapers; magazines meetings o,f the UN Department and El Paso, Texas. The report of the NCCY's delegates is showed the branch offices to be at;ld radio-TV. of Public Information and the among the National Social Wel During the year, the office re workirig in direct contact with U. S. Mission to the UN. fare Assembly's representatives people arriving and departing, leased a total of 172 news stories. The office distributed to spe to the 1960 White House Confer and providing a wide variety of Sixty of these were of general cialists and others 3,000 copies of ence on Children and Youth. interest. The rest went to special services, including tlt'e oppor 40 memoranda on various meet National Catholic Youth Week media.
tun~ty for attendance at Mass ings, trends arm publications of was celebrated in 26 archdioceses and the reception of the sacra The bureau has also been con the UN. and in 107 dioceses throughout ments. '. cerned with charges of alleged Regular service, liaison and the United States last year. Na persecution of Protestants in exchange relations were main tional 'Youth Adoration Day was CCD Expands Colombia, Spain and Italy. Six tained by the office with all' observed ,on Pentecost Sunday, news releases and ,significant "Fruitful progress" are the NCWC departments' and related bringing to a close the Commun articles from Catholic periodi words that best describe the national organizations, interna ion Crusade which began the cals were distributed. Lengthy work of the Confraternity of tional Catholic organizations and previou~ October. The. Out correspondence was carried on Christian Doctrine in the U. S., the Conference of International standing Catholic Youth of the Bishop Matthew F. Brady of with Protestant leaders. Catholic' Organizations. Year Award arid the Newman Manchester, N. H., reported for The report noted that there The office distributed some 900 Award were presented again, are now 55 diocesan information the episcopal committee for the United Nations documents and while the Archbishop Noll CCD. Under the guidance of the \ directors. Fifteen were named publications to interested or Medal for Outstanding Leader during the past year. committee, he said, bishops, ganizations or individuals. It ship was presented for the firsi priests and laity 'have marched "The availability of diocesan also distributed 75 copies of time during the past year, at forward as a well organized BI directors to editors and net "The Red Book' of the Perse the National Federation of Cath work program directors has team in the war on religious c"lted Church" to UN delegates olic College Students' Congress ignorance. . made for more complete and ac and supplied them, on request, in San Francisco. curate local Catholic reporting," Nine archdioceses and 38 di.:. with papal and episcopal state "Youth" and "Program Serv oceses participated in regional .. the report emphasized. ments on disarmamen't, the ice," the publications of the The bureau held press confer CCD congresses in various sec
rights of parents in education College and University. Section, tions of the <;ountr.}' during the ences in five U. S. cities for vis and racial segregation. the "Directory of Catholic, year. CCD T ·.titutes for priests itors who represented the Vati Camps," and "Trailsigns" all en can's exhibit at - the Brussels Community Service 'were held in six dioceses; Five joyed increased circulations, it CCD Leadership Courses were World's Fair. The office pro A broad and continuing need was stated. duced a brochure on the Church for the services of the National held at widely separated points Archbishop Binz said the in the United States for publica Catholic Community Service is to prepare tra'ined priests, Reli NFCCS-CURA program con tion at Brussels. Some 200pho indicated in the annual report of gious and laity to assist in the tinued to help needy students in 'work of the CCD. ," tographs obtained from U. S. that organization submitted to other lands, while the ;NFqCS Catholic organizations were sent its board of trustees. Offering special assistance to Scholarship Program annually to Brussels for disp~l:'Y' ' Of 137 USO operations desig the teaching apostohite in Latin provides more students from , nated to its member agencies, Ameri<;a, scholarships ~ere 'Papal Documents Southern dioceses with college granted by the episcopal com NCCShas responsibility for 33 The NCWC Publications Office educations on the condition that mitteeto 15 priests from that services,' or 24.01 per cent of tl'!e published six papal documents they return to their dioceses and whole. Tliirteen NCCS' staff area that they might attend lead in pamphlet form during the last be of assist~nce to their bishops. ership courses in San Antonio, 'year, bringing to -46 the number members arEl assigned to such The total program of the Texas. important overseas areas as the of encyclicals, addresses and NCWC Youth Department, as Bishop .Brady said there are Eastern Mediterranean, North apostolic constitutions of Pope seen in its member organizations,' now officially appointed CCD Africa, Rome, Naples, Paris, presents a comprehensive and priest directors in 25 archdioceses Pius ~II it has available in this Tokyo, Seoul, Manila and ,yuam. form. compelling view of the Church's and 107 dioceses. Assistant di , During World War II, the PSO The office also printed and work for and its investment in, rectors have been named in 34 and' member agef,lcy programs, distributed 35,000 copies of the' Catholic' young people, it was Sees. This, he said, is evidence statement entitled "Censorship" except for the Camp Show pro stated. of the continued interest of the gram, were limited by the Gov which was issued by the Bishops Immigration Cases Bishops of the United States in of the United States in Novem ernment to the Western Hemis Some 41,000 separate cases in bringin~ religious knowledge to phere and the possessions of the ber, 1957. volving 49,293 persons were all. United States, including the In all, 168,612 pieces of litera handled by the NCWC Depart Attention was directed to the Philippines. For the past several ture were distributed by the ment of Immigration in the past growth of the Lay Committee of, years, USO has been 'in a posi Publications Office. Including year Bishop Joseph M. Gilmore tion, through agreement with the the CCD National Center. The periodicals and reports, close to of 'Helena, Mont., episcopal committe is made up of persons Government, to provide services one million pieces of literature chairman, told the meeting of officially appointed by their to American troops wherever were mailed through the facili bishops. they are stationed. bishopS to represent particular ties of the office during the year. He said that well over tw.o With anarmed force of 2,600, dioceses and to foster CCD work Peace Efforts thirds of them had been success 000 authorized by Congress, and among the laity. To date, 97, fully completed by the end of members and alternates have The importance of Catholic 'their families totalling another the year, even though the cases been named from 64 archdioceses "awareness" of national and in 2,500,000 persons, the task of involved the mobilization of and dioceses. At its seventh an ternational efforts to promote providing for their spiritual and many thousands of doc·.Iments, nual meeting, this committee religious needs is a matter of justice and peace was stressed countless conferences and tedi vast importance. Five of every in the annual report of the took as its theme: "Toward a ous research. Thousands of Serious Formation." The theme NCWC Office for United Na 12 U. S. military personnel are them had to be conducted in is from the' address Pope Pius stationed at bases overseas,' and tions Affairs.
foreign languages. The services XII gave to the Second World The report was signed by the only by closing clubs in the included obtaining nearly 13,000 States has the USO been' able to members of the Bishops' Com
Congress of the Lay Apostolate immigration visas, bringing im , in Rome in 1957. establish club services ove~seas. mittee for the Pope's Peace Plan. ',' migrants from abroad, prepara'During the last year, 8,600 Among efforts by the Office tion of petitions for visas, ex~ Information Bureau local volunteers gave 940,000 for UN Affairs to promote Cath pediting issuance of passports, Americans from suc"hdiverse olic ,"awareness," the report hours of volunteer service in and securing re-entry permits. , groups as railroad workers, USO-NCCS programs. In the' cited especially ;J. monthly news Bishop Gilmore noted that a 'housemaids and businessmen same time, 294,128, items of Cath letter" reporting, UN' activities large percentage of the depart- were' assisted in beco~ing ac and publications, activities of .olic religious literature and ma ment's work • ~sultel:I in reunit- quaintEld with, the addresses of , international and national Cath terial were distributed to mem- , ing families and 1n quieting the late Pope Pius XII through bers of the 'atmed forces through olic organizations and relevant the distressing anxieties of faIn_, the work of the NCWC. Bureau chaplains and USO clubs. statements and activities of the ilies and frien,ds. of Information, Bishop Lawrence The NCCS program of serving, Holy' See. The passage of the Ken,nedy ~. Shehan' of Bridgeport; Conn., patients in Veteran Administra-· Two thousand copies of each Act of 1957, it was pointed out, reported. issue of the newsletter ,are 'dis tion hospitals functions in 96 has proved of enormous benefit He said the bureau had issued ' tributed OIl five continepts, the archdioceses and dioceses; serv to clients of the department and. to specialized periodicals" the . ing 171 hospitals. One hundred report said.. has enabled it &.0 I01ve inDllo- ,Hol,yFathe1"lllWlar~ tovar.ioUa, In addition, representative. at Catholic organizations and jO,
I
l
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15
cieties are participating in the NCCS-VA hospital program to serve the 110,448 daily patient load. The report paid tribute to Catholic leadership, both cleri cal and lay, for its' help in secur ing the inclusion of the USO quota in some 1,400 Community Ches'ts and United Funds during the year. Money derived from, this source enables USO to oper ate a total of 195 clubs and other types of services, 20 of which are overseas.
Sea Apostleship A total of 223,405 seamen vis ited seven maritime clubs of the National Catholic Apostleship of the Sea Conference during the past year, according to the con ference's annual report.' The report was submitted to t~e U. S. Bishops by AUXiliary Bishop L. Abel Caillouet of New Orleans, Episcopal Moderator.of the conference. The Apostleship of the Sea h~s 34 priests serving as chap lams, and its marftime clubs are loca,ted in the ports of Mobile New Orleans, Portland (Ore.): San Francisco, San Pedro, Seattle and Wilmington (Calif) In the past year, the confe~~ e~ce provided residential IaciJi ~les f~r 396 seamen,. conducted mtervlews with 6064 seaflllen not on ships or in ho'spitals, aided 5,195, seamen in distress, con ducted 559 recreational program. a?d provided 4,749 ships' libra rIes. The conference's report show. ~he follOWing statistics on spir 'ltual activities: baptisms 26 con verts, 1,7; confession: 8,445; CommunIons, 16,490; sick calls, 540; Catholic marriages, 31; at tendance at daily Mass, 16,896; and attendance at Mass on Sun days and Holy days, 15,139. The report lists the followin, other pastoral work: priestly visits to ships, 2,217; religioua i?structions..... given, 1,216; voca~ bons of seamen to the priest hood, 7; and religious literature distributed, ,78,979. It was noted in the report that "in practically all ports ~her'e ill a scarcity of priests so that the number of priests who can de vote their full time with De other assignment to the care or seamen's souls is small."
More for Missions The income of the America. Board, ·of Catholic Missions for the year ending July 31, 1958,' was the largest in its history, according to a report submitted to the annual Bishops' meeting by Archbishcp Leo Binz of Du buque, Iowa, the board's treas urer'. Receipts during the year to taled $2,758,707.48, Archbishop Binz said. The Archbishop pointed out that this record figure wa. achie"ed in the last year during >'rhich the late Cardinal Samuel Stritch of Chic~go was chairman of the mission board. He ex pressed sorrow at the loss 'of the Cardinal's guidance. '
SAVE ~10NEY ON
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This Timely Message Is Sponsored, By The fol lowing Public Spirited , . Individuals and Bus; 'ness Concerns Located in Greater Fall River ,
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Sage and Sand
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 13, 1958
Influence of Recent Popes Affects, Church'and World
17
Japanese Bishop Gives Thanks To Cardinals
,
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.
Bishop ·of Reno
Back in 1931 G. K. Chesterton wrote a book called The Resurrection of Rome. It was not one of his great books, on par with The Everlasting Man, or Orthodoxy, but it is filled , with flashes of his genius and there are chapters that fairly .glow with his infectious en seemed to his contemporaries, thusiasm. It was largely the reading the newspapers and sum of his reflections after forming their purblind opinions, a visit to the Eternal City in to lack somewhat in comparative
FUKUOKA (NC)-There were almost as many Cardi nals here as there were in Rome for 'the conclave, but
'their purpose was quite differ ent. The Cardinals in Fukuoka were all laymen, members of the St. Louis Cardinals basebal] stature, there is increasing evi those seemingly halcyon days team now ·on a barnstorming dence of a'conspiracyof misrep following the signing of the Lat tour of Japan. resentation. It broke his heart, eran Treaty. It The National League squad but he had not failed the Church catches his boy was met by Bishop Dominic Fu duriqg the grim years of the ish delight in kahori of Fukuoka, who thanked First World War. the swirling the .cardinals for a favor eight We are too close to the last baroque of its years ago. two Popes, Pius XI and Pius XII, churches and It ~as in 1950 that Bishop to pro)ose anything in the way statues and it Fukahori had written the Society of final judgment. Vastly differ echoes his opti to Aid the Missions in Cincinnati, ent they were in personality and mism over the FORESTERS iNSTALL: High Chief Ranger Edward to tell of the Biwasaki Lepro method; the one serious to the. settlement of Roycroft of Massachusetts Catholic' Order. of Foresters, sarium near here. point of strain, the other, eqUally the Roman Father Barnabas Shimura, who standing left, chats with Rev. Walter Sullivan, chaplain, question. 'serious, endowed with an almost had been ministering to the vic magical optimism. . r"r Chester Chief Ranger Arlene Gaspar, seated, Vice-Chief Ranger tims of Hansen's disease for ton there were really, two res_ It would be difficult to imagine Brian McNally and Past Chief Ranger Barbara Gaspar fol 20 years, had himself contracted two men better qualified to urrections, ~ that of the Papacy, lowing installation ceremony at Catholic Communit~r Center, the disease, the Bishop wrote. govern the Church during her which had so astonishingly \ re The priest had reported many Fall River. period of gravest trial, con captured its asceridancy over tJ:1e deaths among young victims, and Christian world, and the polit fronted with the most dan told of the need of some form ical revival of Italy under the gerous and subtle heresies of her of recreation to lift the boys' leadership of Benito Mussolini. experience, and stripped of all morale. He said he had once It is easy enough for us now to but her moral and spiritual au seen a St. Louis Cardinal uni thority for the contest. sneer at the latter, knowing <l Rev. Walter A.·Sullivan, chapBrian Hickey, .Senior Conduc form, and asked for Cardinal what we do of the sorry after New Phase lain' of Our Lady of Fatima tor; Virginia Matthews, Junior emblem ,for his players. math,· but Chesterton was' far ·It will be an absorbing study, Court, Massachusetts Catholic Conductor; Loretta Frain, In As a result, the priest received from being alone in his miscal in after - years, to review the Order of Foresters, and Edward side Sentinel; Ellen Mooney, a genuine Red Bird uniform and culation. personal influence of these Pon Roycroft . of Randolph, High Outside Sentinel; Gayle Greeley, jacket, and his young players Indeed, were it not for those tiffs upon the Church and upon ·Chief Ranger, were among speak Head Captain. got facsimile uniforms, alonr fateful de"cisions which followed the world. There is no doubt ers at installation ceremonies Ronald Cabral was marshal, with a ·huge Carp-inal pennant hard upon the Ethiopian a'dven about the fact, that each of these held at the Catholic Community assited by Nancy Cardin and with the big Red Bird insigniL ture, the whole .course of West~ succeeding Popes, has stamped Center, Fall River. - Sandra Davis. Gifts were pre The resulting publicity in Jap ern history might have taken a something of his personality; Those" installed included Ar sented to Past Chief Ranger Bar an led to donations of some different turn, and we should be . something of his mind and tem lene Ga'spar, Chief Ranger; Brian bara Gaspar and Past Vice Chief $10,000 worth of drugs for the admiring the prophet who read per, iJpon both.' Ranger Carole Kelly. Nally, Vice Chief Ranger; victims, Bishop Fukahori J'e the future so accurately This is relatively a new phase Margaret· Connors,' Secretary; ported. in the history of the Papacy. Go Michael Murphy, Treasurer. Foresaw Gradual Decline The Bishop made a point of back beyond a century, and it meeting the Cardinals person The mistake about Mussolini becomes almost impossible to ally and thanking them for the was incidental; the judgment VATICAN CITY (NC) - A trace this 'precise influence. The gift of eight years ago. about the resurrection of the bonus of a month's pay was authority of the Holy See is Holy See was central, and time granted to all employees of the there, as always, but it is much PITTSBURGH (NC) - Du has confirmed it to the hilt. , Complete Vatican by His Eminence Bene less personal, not to say less in quesne University's ne:w $2,500, It was by no means' clear, 21 detto Cardinal Masella, who timate that it has become in our 000 Rockwell Hall, which will years ago that the Papacy could acted as head of the interreg house the schools of law and maintail,1 its position in the mod-' age. It suggests a deepening num government of Vatican City. unity of the Catholic. body, a business administration, will be ern world. There were many, The bo)lUs is· called a "Sede keener awareness of the bond dedicated Nov. 15. even among those who wished it Vacante" bonus and follows a betweer:r the Rock and the Named for Col. Willard F. well, who could only foresee its traditional custom, partly in Church. Rockwell, chairman of the Uni gradual decline and its relega recompense for the additional At the same time it implies versity president's advisory tion to the museum: burden of work caused by the the enormous burden that de board, the 10-story structure is It seemed incredible that in a vacancy of tlie Apostolic See. scends upon the shoulders of the the. first classroom building world of massive power politics man who is Peter. It half reveals, erected in 25 years. It also is anything so tenuous as moral even to our human eyes, the the third and largest building authority, vested in an aging reality of the grace which is erected since the university man in the Vatican, could exer inseparable from the burden. launched its 20 million dollar cise any influence worth consid For today, when the glad words campus expansion program five ering. are spoken: We have a Pope, the years ~go. Stalin's jibe, :when· he asked meaning is much more:·We have '" _ _~. :--, TAUNTON, MASS. how many divisions the Pope Oil BURNERS a Father. commanded, may have shocked ' Also complete Boiler·Burner . THE BANK ON by its sheer brutality, bu~ it also or Furnacc Units, Efficient epitomized the thinking of the low cost heatiJl~. Burner and TAUNTON GREE,.. fuel oil sales and service. politicians who prided them FUNERAL HOME selves on their realism. Member of Federal Deposit VATICAN CITY (NC) -The How is one to account for this 916 Plymouth Ave. Vatican has awarded French t80 Mt. Pleasant Street Intlurance Corporation Resurrection of Rome? Certainly, Fall River Minister of State Pierre Pflim New Bedford WY 3-266'7 on the human level of personal lin the Grand Cross of the Order qualities, the Papacy has, been OS 3-2272 of Pius IX. singularly blessed during the DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL The official chronicle of the past hundred years. In contr~st Holy See's decisions, Acta Apos In"i.. young girls (14-'231 to lobar .. to other periods of its lon·g hIS Christ·s _st "ineyard as an Apostle of- .... tolicae \ Sedis, also revealed Edificotions: Press; Radio. Movies and Tele tory, whel1 men sat ·in the Chair award of the same honor to Paul ";sion. With these modern means. these of Peter who wer~ less than a.de Hymans, Commissioner General llIlissiona'1 Siste.. bring Christ's Dodr. quate, again humanly speaking, of the Vatican's Civitas Dei 10 all, regardle.. of race. color or creed. " for the task imposed upon them, for iftformatioll write to: pavillion at the Brussels World Funeral "ome the Pontiffs of our age have been REV•• MOTHER SUPERIOR Exhibition. The Commissioner singularly well:"'chosen. 550 Locust St. 50 ST. pAUL'S AVE, BOSTpN 30. MASS. General of the whole exposition, Fall River. Mass. Pius IX may have been crushed George Moens de Fernig, has by the temporal tragedies of his OS 2-2391 been awarded the Grand Cross. t9 reign, but he possessed a tough Rose E. SullIvan of the Order of St. Gregory the resiliency which simply refused Jeffrey E Sullivan Great. to acknowledge defeat. Leo XIII who succeeded him had the vision of what the mod P. O. Box 178CG ORMOND BEACH, FLORIDA RESORT • ern.Papacy could mean. He could Funeral Home not bring it to full realization in MOTEL. 10TH ANNIVERSAIlY
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FALL RIVER, MASS. OS 9~6072 Christian mind and the Christian OS" 2-3381 heart. 'MICHAEl J. McMAHO~ • ..DD. .55 Wilfrec( C. James E. .Dramatic Theme Licensed Funeral D'irector There followed a Pope who Driscoll Sullivan, Jr. Registere~ Emba.lmer . ST.. T! • was a Saint. ·The unimaginable • CITY paradox of a country pastor in :.•••• Spec;al 101" A ",,;versllry Scasoll Rale.v • • • • .; the Vatican, interrupting his NICKERSON Michael C. ,Austin prayers to guide the Church 18 Hole Seaside Golf Cours~ FUNERAL and through the shoals of Modernism, Country Club Dining Dancing Inc. while the rest of Christendom MONUMENT steered blithely on to theological 4 Swimmjng Pools SERVICES shipwreck, ·is a dramatic the~e FUNERAL SERVICE that awaits its historian and Its 650 Private Villas BOURNE· SANDWICH. NASS. poet. 549 COUNTY ST. Serving
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,Religious Resurgence in Kussic.
...
Continued from Page One ' Braun', A.A., director of Russian Religious and Missionary Devel opment ,for the Assumptio,nist Community.' Father Braun, who
spen't many years in-Moscow, re
ported on a census that he had personally observed while in the Soviet Union.. i"q'hat census was taken," he said, "to mark the 20th anniver sary of-the Soviet Russian revo
lution in January 1937. And the
ninth question on the blank in
the Russian language was thus worded: "are you or are you not a believer'?', More than 70 per ce'nt of the people dared tp put themselves down as believers in God." Two Unequal R;ights Rev. Alexander. Schmemann, professor of church history at St. Vladimir's Orthodox' Theo logical Seminary in New York, observed that "according to the Soviet Constitution; two rights are guaranteed: the right of re ligious'cult and the right of anti- . religious propaganda." But he asserted that these two rights are not equal because "no orie can go 'outside and, preach his faith or present it as' a sort of challenge to ,the ideas of society in general; to the whole ideQlogical structure. , ,He 'stated that the regime" hQwever, "has all the poss,ibil,., ities of preaching, defending and presenting atheism -as a ,sort of scientific outlook." Go;ernment· Approval Prof. 'Alexander Bogolepov', former vice chancellor of St.' Petersburg IJniversity, declared that \. in Russia "the Russian, Orthodox Church depends on the SOviet Government in its organ ization."
"No clergyman can be used
Charity Ball Continued fl'om Page One' and the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women' with H. Frank 'Reilly and Mrs. Emmett P. Al mond heading their respective croups. Father Thomson noted that every region of the Diocese will endeavor'to emulate the: enthus':' . lasm 'and, support given la~,t, , "ear, by Very Reverel1d Leonar4 ~. Daly, ,pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church in Hyannis and Atty. DanielF. Sullivan, Presi dent of the Particular Council of' sf. Vincent de Paul for the, Cape and the, islands. "Because of its tremendous success last year 'we expe'~t that tickets will be at a premium" Father Thom ~n said. "I sugg'est that every one who expects to attend the Ball in January get their tick ets early. Lester Lanin proved why he is in Such aemand by high society. His music symbol,..
hed the ultimate in, dance or,"
chestration. You can count' on him to play the right music at the ~ight time because of his wide spread and longlasting popu bility and impeccable taste. And whether he' is playing a cha-cha or rendering a waltz you are adapted to the mood autoinat~
cally because of the famous Lester Lanin 'Beat'-Father Thomson ,cqncluded.
•
Nuns
In
Habits
without governmental approval," he stated. "All economic, reli gious or church bodies, depend at every stage 0;' the benevo
lence of the atheistic state.~'
yasis Feisullin, a political emigre of Tartar nationality, de clared that the USSR "sees in Islam its most stubborn and ir reconcilable enemy and aims at , its complete destrUl,tion."
Saints In Crosswords L . . . - - - - - - B y Henry Michael------.....
ROME (NC) ' - ·Pope John
XXIII will probably take posses
sion of his cathedral church, the
ArchBasilica of St. John Lateral},
on Sunday, N9v. 23.
The Lateran 'archbasilica is
the sea't of the Bishop of Rome,
and thus the mother church of
'Chirstendom. ,The probable date
for the Pope's enthronement is
that of the Feast of St. Clement
I; the third sllccessor to St. Peter. St. Peter's Basilica' in Vatican'" City, 'where the Pope's corona
tion took ,place, .is actually the
patriarchal basilica for the Pa
triarch of Constantinople. But as
a result of the 'Schism of the' East, there has,been no Catholic Patriarch' of Constantinople for a long' time.
Vision_sMora I ity reaching .Need'
46 )~mployed WITH CHRIST n HE WAS 41 Columbus' deIN HIS .......... :. WITH ........,... ~~~i~d:dylftly 59 ~r:~~~: Pv~'::'~I. 5 Related AND JOHN 11 UIstrlet in 51 Plead SI'ai" 52 "Prepare for '8 U. S. State 48 WorshIp 18 Heu"e publicatiou 9 One who leers 49 (;It,rus frolt '19 Unpaid but due 53 Fags 10 Shed skin' (pl.) 29 Conditional 54 Inhabitant 011 Aothorizatloa 50 Musical 'release 58 1\lale tnrkey for travel instrument. It Ringing metal- 59 HE WAS 11 Publlo 51 Fadal growt.. , 110 vessel 1\IARTYRED speakiog 5S H1ggles ZZ Holr P,erllon. BY THE 11 Member of the 54 Consomed ZlI II; S. Stat.. 60 Tensile clergy liquid. (abbr.) 61 Susceptible of 10& I<lncl..slU'tl 55 A metal 114 Father 'being erected 15 Ingest 56'Mediterraneaa 15 Saint, feminine 113 Trap 18 Doctora i.le (abbr.) 64 Natlooal Box(abbr.) 51 AdJacent Z8 I.eglo" ing Assoclatio!, 114 loduce 59 (loe who wean 29 );"thn.iasm (abbr.) 28 A Biblical "hevr.. ns SO RE WAS 65 Resting plac6.1 territory 60 CHRIST AN 1;6 Noise n A staple food CAI.T,ED HIM U River (Span.) 61 Disllgurement 28 Daybreak "SON"OF Sli ..•..relgn 68 Intelligeoee 29 Bring Into line 88 1\(ore frollo69 Fissore _ 30 Protective ' 6i vi'~~·"caosln .. SOOle 10 Preposition ,garment itching
11 Coal tar dye 11 Appetizer 31 Pacillo island 6<!S6 S~;tVreantl!lInegd' Pllasrst y • substance 14 Rendered fat, 32 I,et IIl 19 Repentant ' 1~ I,aud ' 3lI Made a rocl< (Q lief...,,, 19 Catapolt ml.take 81 If ~j TRA V &1 HI<.: WAS 80 Sheltered S6 Acoesses )]J,l<lD TO _ N);TS WHEN 81 Pointed arche. S6 Single . 69 CI ..thed CHRIST 82 Candles performance. 10 ~;ocourage' CAT,T,ED HIM 88 Kiod of animal 38 Witless ooe 11 Small bed .2 (lulde ' 8 4 Bellefii 39 Fathers 12 Collection .S '('ake medicine nOWN fI Propoooded 13 Sh .. rt sleep .. Follower 1 Tap 45 )'Inger 15 Vessel (sum,,) 2 Period 10 ti.... flI City I n ' 111 (!uallty (somx) J .. Non-metallle S Obstroctlon Vermont 11 Place elemeot 01 HE WAS &G The...for. 0 18 Englisb l e t . ACROSS I Deduetlon
11
,
:"~lU1~~fgN
here by a well known theolo gian. People who seem to feel that a Church made up of human beings should nevertheless be free from all imperfection "re fuse to take seriously the Cath olic doctrine of original sin," declared Father Gustave Weigel, S.J.' "Christ warned us that scan dals indeed must come . . " he said. "To paint the Church as existing without scandals is to do her a disservice, because she would not be the Church Which Christ promised.'" Father· Weigel, professor of ecclesiology at Woodstock (Md.) College, a Jesuit seminary, spoke at a meeting of the U. S. Catholic Historical Society. The great majority of Cath olic historians, he said, approach their work "with' the same de gree of freedom a~d lack of in hibition which characterizes their non-Catholic colleagues." ; However, he ~ar'ned, there are a fe~who "write with an ill concealed nervousness. : . They hedge and· stammer when they talk of certain events, lest the Church be misunderstood. They are always thinking of the weak in faith and will say nothing which might scandalize the little ones. "In some we note a real con spiracy of silence so that certain events be not known. The ulti mate result will be very bad, because some one not of the Faith will discover the evidence and bring it forth in a way that will scandalize the little onea even more." "
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·MADISON (NC) ,- Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell has said the "very business of educa tion is excellence, discipline and faith." " ,Speaking at Farleigh Dickiil,.. son' University, an institution under private coritrol, the' Cab-' inet member,said: I "It's been said that the cynic knows the' pr.ice of' everything and the value of' nothing; and in 'the same way, far too many of our students' in this country 'know the facts 'about eve:-ything and the meaning of nothing. ':1£ this is an indiCtment; to an extent, .of our rrtodern education:' SolutioDOD Page Nineteea al approach, I 'mean it to be. For I think that in our striving for
Delay Canonizations
the widest possible participation in education, on the proper dem
Until Next Year ocratic assumption that each per VATICAN CITY (NC)-Can
son 'is entitled to an education" we have ,often overlooked comonization of Blessed' Charles of
,pletely the need' for excellence. Sezze, and Blessed Joachina de
Vedruna y 'Mas, scheduled fo'r
"In otir anxiety' not· to frus trate and. warp a.chil<l's perso~ Nov. ,23, has been postponed; The ality, we often overlook the truly ceremony will probably be held
monumental need for discipline. on Pentecost Sunday in 1959.
"In our attempt to' avoid re
Blessed Charles of Sezze was ligious conflict in the 'Classroom, . an, Italiim' Franciscan Brother we completely abandon to" the who died in 1670. Blessed Joa local minister or pastor or' priest china was a ,Spanish, widow who , the vital necessity' to teach our founded the Institute of the Car childre'l the, basic moral" and melites of Charity ,and died in, 'ethical refere~ce and frame'work" Paint and Wallpaper 1854: of their lives. And .thus we pro
duce many' so-called educated
men and women to whom God is 'FRANCIS J. a vacuum and religion is a quaint relic from a by-gone era when people didn't know any , , . . " cor. 'Middle St. better." 690 PLE~SANT STR~ET , , New Bedford , WY'7-0746 Ford Grarit NEW BEDFORD, MASS. NEW YORK (NC)-The Uni
versity of Notre Dame has 'been o / awarded a Ford Foundation -Window Company grant of $153,000' for research / GEN.ERAL ALUMINUM and' conferences in law and con WINDOWS - DOORS temporary affairs by its law INSURANCE school and Natural Law Institute. CANOPIES - AWNINGS Ray Hunt 1783 Acush,;'et Avenue WY 4-4551
GEORGE M. MONTLE
.4
-
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 13, 1958
NEW YORK - ' Catholic historians who are "obsessed with the need of 'defending 'the Faith'" were chided
Pope 'Takes Over Basilica Nov.. 23
Continued from Page One benville and employed a religi
ous order to teach in it. Mr. Metcalf stressed that "there is no question so far as Plumbing - Heating my' office is "concerned on the Over '35 Years background or ability of these of So.tisfied Serv'ice Sisters." However, he said he was' "frankly concerned" over the 806 NO. MAIN STREET lawfulness of their teaching in 'a . FaU 'River . OS 57,7497 public school while wearing religious habits. . ,~ • •, ~ . Properly Certified . • ,y . Mr. Sax be's reply said: .:'_ OU'"',, ' . " "Aboard of education may. • ,RAVE ab~uf· 'fi?m •• '
in its discretion lawfully, employ •
persons of any religious faith or t EVERY.BODY DOES! ' t,
'0(00 faith to teach ill the, public t Bar-B-Q Chickens ••
schools, provided' they: ar'e 'prop-- t , · . ' edy ,certif~ed. " . ' . REALLY' FRESH ' : "Public'schools must be so . • ' " ~, . EGGS •
,concluded thatthepupi~s!attend:-' • ; , ..... ing them are. not subJectec:J. to,,'.' " , _ ',' ':' '. ;,,; '. ' •. , ,.. secta,.ri~n . t~~ch,ing,.butwearin~,." ,t ," ", '. . F~R.MS,· .' ;. .' .. .dlshnchye garb d~s:, ,not, '", t ,145' Washington St:'Fairhavent ~ . '~m.ou.nt to a ~eachi~gof relig}gus·, :t·., ,Ju~t-6.f( Rou~e' 6;.'" . • i:toctru~e" ~hlchtl,le lawforbldll." , ' ."'_.';7,.•: . .~ •• •..... •• •'...,."•,.:+:• • .J _. " .•'... _1 "''''':': ", •. "", ,.. -: . .' ._ • ~-
18
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' - - - - --~'------~-~---~----------
Sports Chatter
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 13, 1958
Coyle-Durfee Contest Top Schoolb«;»y Weekend Game
19
Ice Floe Rescue
Continued from Page One that their conditions were good By Jack Kineavy despite being on the crumblin!: SOJ'!lerset High School Coach . ice island for six days. It hardly seems possible that the 1958 grid season has . The 20 men, scientists and Air reached the twilight stage- but the calendar indicates that Force personnel, had been camp ing on the ice floe about 30G Saturday will be the last weekend round of regularly sche- , miles from the North Pole 1£, duled contests' prior to the annual Thanksgjving Day rival- .' gather data on the Internationai ries. Top game of the day ways all year. Geophysical Year. will be the Durfee-Coyle Up front the big Durfee line In a series of violent storms. clash at. Hopewell Park, is anchore4 by co-caI>tain Bob the floe broke in two separat Taunton. This series down Hargreaves, a rangy end with a ing the men from their landln/: good pair of hands. Center john through the,years has produced strip. For a time, it appeare<~ Connell is a bulwark in the mid more than its share of exciting they would have to cross aboul football and dle of the line and although Al a mile of open water to get te. there's every La:lroie and Otis Sampson are no the runway. But extremely low indication that longer on the scene, Coach Ur temperatures froze the water and the 1958 meet ban and assistant Fred Dagata they were able to run across. ing will pro have come up with suitable re Father Cunningham, 52, is l\ vide more of placements. missionary to Eskimos; workin/. the same. out of ,Point Barrow, Alaska. Hif Nickle On End Unbeaten-un knowledge of Arctic ice-packs, Comparative scores against tied Duffee will gathered through years of travel worthy opponents point to a lay its perfect . .MEMORIAL UBRAtly: Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J., in his missionary area, is well elose contest. Durfee tipped At five-game rec presIdent of St. Louis University, points toward a model known. tleboro, 16-6, in the season's ord on the line He was retained by the Alas opener and the Jewelers regis of the Pius Memorial LibFary, now under construction kan Air Command as a civilian against a once tered a 20-14 decision over on the university campus. NC Photo. beaten-once tied Coyle eleven. consultant and spent severa] Coyle, the Warriors only defeat. The Bristol County title rests in periods on the floating ice floes. However, Coyle nudged North the balance. A Durfee victory Attleboro by a two touchdown the most hazardous project o~ will put the Hilltoppers beyond margin a couple 5Jf, weeks ago, the Geophysical Year studies be Continued from Page One ing made in the area. ' the reach of all contenders, while against taxing the schools and pr!>fit schools no longer fear pun and the Rocketeers f;!xtended The priest was one of three .. a Coyle win will give. the War .itive taxation. The tax would Durfee who were' hard pressed 1,628,801 in favor of taxation riors a shot at no less than a have affected 643 Catholic, 39(1-, men who made the initial land to eke out a 22-20 verdict. The . a plurality ~f 1,608,913. tie. pending the outcome of the ing on the floe in 1957. 'rotestant and 43 Jewish and However, there was one un nickel stands on end in this one. ' Taunton game on Thanksgiving. nonsectarian schools. sure note .in the amoun't· 'of vic In ,another . tradition-packed In the final d.ays of· the c~m Warriors Recover tory shared· by Catholic Pro rivalry, Nf:)w.Bel;iforcf. .vocational paign, opponents of exemption Durfee :enjoyed an off week testant and civic h;ad~rs who had takes on the Crimson of' New last Saturday, while Coyle con-. Bedford at Sargent Field', New fought to defeat the~xation. resorted . to techniques that brought censure not only from tilmed its rampaging recovery,' Bedford. The setting is very . 'P . . a.d. state figures, but in one instance belting out Fairha "I, 28-12. We nearly the same as last·· year Howard Freeman, a local pub from the Federal. officials, say recovery because the War when the Trade pulled, off' an lic relations counselor who had Both President Eisenhower and riors have battled adversity all amazing 13-6 upset. served 'as chairman of the "Yes CITIES SERVICE Vice President ,Richard M. Nix year. At the sea~on's outset, on 16 Campaign" which advo Prior to that victory; Voca DISTRIBUTORS on issued statements disassoci Coyle appeared to be the team tional had been winless in 13· cated taxation; hinted his back ating themselves from radio an to beat, with three-quarters of ers may try to breathe life back consecutive games. They h'aven't, ' nouncements which claimed they into their cause. . ' Gasoline
the starting backfield of the 1957. won since but the' Janiak' forces undefeated team returning to If it is to be presented voters' favored taxing schools. Mr. have demonstrated an aqility' to Fuel and Range
Nixon termed the announce duty. . for the fifth time, it would have move the .ball. . . '. to be by. an initiative measure ments "bigotry and falsification." Then followed a series of crip Picks Whalers pling injuries which divested the The Trade have been their such as was the case this month. Blue and Gold of the services for own worst enemy, however. If It was' Proposition 16 on the long OIL BURNERS California ballot this month and the season of two of their All they can avoid making costly was known as Proposition 3 in County, All-Diocesan backs, Ed miscues against the Crimson on G. E. BOILER BURNER. "'NIlS Boyle and Pete Gazzola. A chest Saturday, they could make things 1952. ~ut now thanks to its defeat, injury" s.helved the third boy, interesting for the favored cross-·: For prompt delivery
the' 340,000 children attending Pete Bartek, but fortunately it town rivals. BOYS WANTED for the thf:) state's 1,076 private, non & Day & Night Service
proved not as serious as fir.st an ~New. Bedford, playing a strong
Priesthood and Brotherhood. ticipated and Pete was out only independent schedule this year,
lock of funds NO impedi Rural Bottled Gas Service temporarily.
will take a' 4-3 record :into. the
ment. . Despit~ the loSB of. personnel game. The Crimson· have taken I' .-. . . , 61 COHANNET ST. Write to: of this calibre; the' W~rriors the 'measure of Provid'ence':'Cen .. ' FflANCISCAN, FATHERS,
TAUNTON have a' commendable 4-1':1 rec
.. ·0. $ox 5742 tral, North Attleboro;' Chicopee
o ,572 Pleasant Street ,Attleboro - No, Attlebore . ord, the tie:' beiJ;lg a· 6-6 affair and Fairhaven, whiieloslng to Baltimore ',Md. Taunton with powedul Sto~ghton.
. Rihdge Tech, Gardner aild North 0 'WY 6-8274 New 'Bedford Gains Momentum Quincy. The nickle says New ','. CONFESSIONS
Quarterbacking the potent' . Bedford. ' .'
, E'very day - aii" day . Coyle offense is yourig Bill Hoye :Qaily: from 8:30 A.M. and
The area's oth'er undefeated who is as good a pas13er as the,re' ellCyen, Somerset, irlvades the
continuous to 9 P.M. (and
is in scholastic ranks. Backs Ed prep school ranks this Saturday,
"""before all Masses)'
McGovern and Barney O'Hearne Sunday: from 7:30 :A.M: and
playing host to, strong' Tabor
have done a. trCIhendous job Academy at· Hanson Field, Som
. cotltiimou,' to '5: P.M.
teaming with Bartek to keep the erset. The Raiders will be shoot-'
DAILY . MASSES: 'i A:M:, 8
ground offense rolling. and ing for their .third' consecutive
'1. A.M., '7:45·A.M.,· 10' A.M.,. Up front, ends Fitzsimmons victory over the prepsters in a and 12:10 noon.
and O'Boy, tackle Houde, and series that was inaugurated in
EVENING MASSES: every center Levis have done yeoman 1956. Las't year's clash provided Thursday and First Friday' • GENERAL TIRES • DELCO BAnERIES work. The latter two have turned plenty of offensive' fireworks, at 5:10 P.M. in iron man roles in most of the Somerset winning, 42-20. Tabor • PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS , ROSARY and BENEDICTION gam'es to date. This is a club will take a 4-1-1 record irito the FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS _ "'C,"'DORT Daily 5:10 P.M. that's still gaining momentum. game. On the Durfee side of the led ger, the return 'to duty of quar terback Shin Kupiec should give the Hilltoppers 'a lift. Kupi~c ap-, peared briefly-twice in p'unting situations-against Taunton, and he should be ready to' go, !low Coach Urban will use him re mains to be seen. Charley Carey, a conVerted ha1fback, has been nothing short· of terrific in the role of interim sig·nal-caller. Woltman Tenific AFTER--... Rounding out the starting backfield for the Red and Black will be senior Dick Bonalewicz, hard charging full back, and 'the outside speed-boys John Mooney _ CUSTOM. : ' : YOUR : and Lee Woltman. The latter, only a sophomore, is one of the : BUILT : CONVERTIBLE : brightest prospects to cavort on Alumni Field in some time. The : FURNITURE: C~II TOP and SEAT : boy has'played terrific balf both
xn
. Defea·t Move to Tax Schools
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Election as Pope Climaxes Distinguished· Career
',. JOVIAL VENICE PATRIARCH:, The then Angelo Cardinal Roncalli greets New York Cardinal Spellman at one of their 'many meetings in italy.
FOUR. - CENTURY TRADITION: .President of France Vincent Auriol bestows red. biretta upon.Papal Nun,;. cio after eievation to Cardinal. .
.. GRAND NEPHEW' OF POPE:, Curious little relative starts to try' on' Cardinal Roncalli's ~iretta for size• . G
·His Holiness J:l0pe John XXIII
FOOT WASHING CEREMONY: The Patriarch of Venice washes feet of officer of mass on Maundy Thurs- . day. '
j APOSTOLIC VISITOR: The Holy Father was consecrated Archbishop of. Aeropolis in 1925 while he was . serving as Apostolic' Visitor to Bul garia. He also represented the Vati can at Turkey a,nd Greec,~ .'
CIVIL OFFICER GREETS CARDINAL: ,Pope John was named. Patriarch of Venice 'three days after his elevation to the rank of Cardinal. He is welcomed to the Italiail'City .(above)' by ci\ril officer.
VICAR OF CHRIST: Newly elected Pope John discusses affairs of the Church in the United States with His Eminence Francis Cardinal Spellman. The latter, a Massachusetts native, was born in Whitman in the Greater Brockton area.