11.24.60

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The ANCHOR An Anch.or of th.e SO'Ul, Sur, and Pirm-ST. PAUL

f~1I

River,

Mass.~

Thursday, Nov. 24, '1960

,. I PRICE lOe $4,00 per Year Se<ond Class Mail Privileges A~thorized at Fait River, !,,\asi,

V91. 4, ·No. 47

©

1960 The Anchor'

Taunton Drive Over $106,600 "You can sense by the attitude and feeling of the Taunton people that they are just as eager for a regional high school as were the residents of Greater New Bedford and Attleboro," declared Rev. James F. Lyons, priest-director, as he announced today that gifts already received approximate $106,600. "The interest and enthusiasm in the Taunton project mounts every day," said Father Lyons, who also serves as an assistant at the Immaculate Conception parish in Taunton, ",' "The minimum goal of $1,-' 125,000 seemed like a lot of .: l money at first, but, .I;l0W the people. r.ealize ,that if everyone meets his honest and conscientious obligation, we here in Taunton will succeed as they did in New Bedford and Attleboro." "The fast-growing diocesan educational system needs the third regional high school to meet 'the demands being placed upon us," Father. Lyons obTurn to Page Two

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"B " Films Up In Past Year WASHINGTON (NC) The . National Legion of De¢ency rated as objectionable nearly a quarter of the u. S. films it reviewed last year, compared with about 14 per cent the year before. The 26-year-old C h u r c h agency charged with classifying films by their moral content said 24.33 per -cent of the 222 U,S. {\lms it looked at were put in class "B," morally objectionable . in part for all. . Turn to Page Eighteen

~. PREVOST. CELEBRATES: Marking the 100th anniversary of the death .of their founder are Brothers of Prevost High School. Left to ~ight, seated, Brother Augustus; superior, Brother Robert. Standing, Brother Marcel, Brother Benjamin. All are graduates of, ·Prevost.· .

VETERANS LEND AID: Leaders in drive for Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro, give advice on techniques to Taunton area leaders now working for Memorial High School in that city. Seated, Rev. James P. Lyons, Taunton director, Robert McGowan, Attleboro general chairman. Standing, Rev. William D. 'rhomson, Attleboro director, Dr. Clement Maxwell, Taunton chairman.

Bishops Urge Every Person Accept Own Responsibility WASHINGTON (NC)-The United States is suffering from a breakdown in personal responsibility caused .chiefly by a marked decline in religious convictions, the U.S. Catholic' Bishops declared in their 1960 statement. l'he statement, issued at the conclusioR of ·the Bishops' a,nnual meeting here, said the decay ;of personal responsibility is evident

in f~mi~y J~fe, industry, 'ec?- '~{ tlie ;'basically mo~~l'evils;' i~ , . ~ . "At a time' when so much denOmIC hfe m general and In . the various sph'eres of life "and pends upon the soundness of our in:t'erllational affairs.' Pers':': . the .r~storatioil of' a .vigorous 'economy a.nd upon 'our ability 'onal. iesponsiphityis 'be'Ing, . seJf$e Qf· ~ers.~nal JresPoQ~ibility. .to pr~duce .to mee.t the needs of sacrificed, the, Bishop dec1!lred, bel:o~g ~~ImarllY to t~e flel~.l?f a rapldly '<ieveIOPI?g world, we by:a tendenc'y ,to .dlliegate too r~I'~lOn, . ' .' ' . . ' , ~ave pe~.~qaced WI~~ a,frequ~nt. ~ mUch: . responsil:iilfty to organ-:.. I~The'. 'forem~t . signs . o~. th~.la~k o.f truly responslblE! leaderizationS. decline of personal ~espotlsibil- . sh~p" both on' the part of rna,,"" Construction of a 70-rOOm retreat hous'e at the LaSalette They said that the. correctioft ity" are ·to . be . found in .. the TurD &0 P~e EigMe'eD ' family," the Bishops stated. "The Shrine in Attleboro will begin early next .year, Rev. Rene failure of parents to fulfill their Sauve, M.S., SUp'erioi",ann:ounc~d,today.Most Rev. James ~. 'responsibilities, as reveaied in Ccinnolly, Bishop'ofFaURiver, has granted permission to the the frequency of divorce, deser-' l1 LaSalette .Fathers·to build meditation, It is a weekend with tion and broken' homes, is a na· tional disgrace. Any delinquenQur Lady of LaSalette' Re- God alone." ·<:y. 'of, parents may well be retreat House. The' Retreat , I'The LaSalette Fathers' are 'I.'heChancery Office of flected in. thE' delinquency 'of' - The custom of the' Adveht '~ery happy to open' a Retr~at House wni be' iocated 'off the .• P'i'oeese . hlUJ .almoqnced. · Y0l;1t~, which. is n~w OO~On~YWreath, spread S9, ~apidPark Str'eet on the north end' of . House at the Shrine," .. said, · consIdered our greate~t nabonal '1···· th'U 'ted -St t th . t that'the investiture· of Rt.' Father Sauve, "because it'will the Shl'ine' gl'(>unds:thus assur.domestic problem}' , . y In e m, a es· a. 'bring rich spiritual"bless.ings to . 'R~v; Ber~a~d J. ·Fenton and ing complete isolation and tranThe Bi~hops" state'nwnt en.. - it . ha...~ .alr.eady· become. a quility to the rett:el\tall'~! ~'Thi8 the people of the Attleboro.. ar'eas Rt., ,~~v. 'iIe~ri, J\... .Ha~el a~' · titled, "Need' for 'Personai Re-" 'ch~rished part of Advent in the is . very important," explained .. and to the whole' dioce'se .of Fall 'Domestic Prelates will take · sponsibili'ty,'; said that "e.qualiy;· home." Father Sauve, "because' a closed River. It will give the oppor- place in St. Mary's Cathedral, Turn &0 Page Two . 'Fail River; Sunday evening, . con~picuous, is the' evidenc.e:qf ' 'The Advent Wreath is a wreatb ~treat is a time of prayer and \ Dec. 11, at 7:30 o'clock. . . decline in t~e sense of resp?~si-: made of evergreens that is either bi~ity within our indu~tt:ial . suspended from the ceiling or ~oth of t'he new monsignori organizatiQn and in our general piaced on a table, usually behave been service chaplains for ecol}omic life." . fore a family shrine or in some . . . 18 ye'ars and both hold the ra.nk other place of honor in the home. of Colonel, Msgr. Fenton ~n the Fastened to the wreath are foul' Army and Msgr. Hamel in the , standing- upright at , Air Force. . ',candlesdistance. equal These candles . "HOLLYWOOD (NC)-Decadent' movies' are hurting" : Msgr. Fenton is at present ,. represent the" four weeks of "The Catholic University . Advent. . e West, an international Ca.,.thoiic film authority said h.'e..re Chief of Personnel, in the Office ot' the ,Chief of ,Chaplains with is 'the keystone in ot.ll~ whole' 0n'th'eFirstSunday of Advent, this' we~k. Andrew. Ruszkowski, execqtive staff member ·of· headqu'arters' in the ·Pentagon. the'International Catholic Cil)ema Office (OOlC) in Brus- ~ Msgr: Hamel is .Inspector, Chap- national education. system/~usualiyin the evening, the room James ~L'.' ConnOI~is 'darkene~ and the first' cimdle sels, Belgium, said producers ' • lain General of the. Air Force ly, BIshop of Fall IUver, empha- is lit. The' candle' shining in the and moviegoers must work· .C()IJlf!land . iU)<t shlf~ Ch~J;llaio: . 'MATS wIth headquarters at sized' today' as' be announced the ' darkness is a reminder of' the animal offering' for the' world- time ~ when. h~manity was "sittogether for' better motion Scott Air. For~e Base, W. , pictures. "Motion picture . .'.'.. . The elevation of both chap- famous institution will be takim ting in darkness and in the up at all Masses in all Diocesan shadow, of. death" when the makers should feel an extra reA ThanksgIvmg.Eve Mass. lains came' at the request of churches next Sunday: ,. . promise' of the Redeemer came, aponf$ibility at this time when at Notre Dame Church, Fall Francis Cardinal Spellman as "From the hallowed walls ,of and' lit up the lives of men witb the West is struggling with the River has climaxed observ~ Military Vicar for the Armed this institution have come thou- hop'e for Ii Messiah. . bitter ideological propaganda of alice' by the Brothers of . Forces of the United States ,with The family th~n says some sands of leaders in the field of the approval of the Most Rev communism," Mr. Ruszkowski said in an interview. Chr~tian Instruction of Prevost erend Bishop - education, sociology and eccle- prayers usually offered for the "They must understand that if High School of the 100th ann~The sermo~ will be preached siastical administrative work," grace of a good and holy prepathey present a degenerate pic- versary of the death of theIr by Most Rev. James H. Griffiths, the Most Reverend Bishop ration· for Christmas. These ture of the West, they'll open founder, Ve~. John Mary Robert D.D., Auxiliary Bishop of New stressed in a pastoral letter family exercises continue every the doors to communist propa- de Lamennais. York. Bishop Griffiths is a which was read throughouttllP' evening throughout the first week with the one candle lit.. eauda. Many people will begin Rt. Rev. Msgr. Alfred J. E. former Chancellor of the Mili- Diocese last Sunday. Turn &0 Page Twenty Turn ·to· Page Two, Turn &0 Page Twelve Tun &0 Page Twenty tary Ordinariate.

Plan· Ret·rea't Ho.use·.··, At· Attlebo,ro" Shrin.e:·:·

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,Invest Prelates Su day, 11. .At' Cathe,dral .

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Most 'Rev.'


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Country ~aYes When It Gives

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F«:,I,I, River-Thurs, Nov. 14, 1960

WASHINGTON (NC) - The United States by giving aWB7 ',J/--huge stores of surplus .;foods • " feed the needy overseas is saving millions of dollars for taw American taxpay~r. This point was made by Au»iliary Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom of New York, executiV4 director of Catholic Relief Se~ vices-National Catholic W~ fare Conference. "In testimony before vario. committees of Congress, representatives of American voluntary relief agencies have pointed to the fact that the shipments of surplus agricultural products to the poor of mall¥ countries save the American taxpayers millions of dollars 111 warehouse and storage fees." Bishop Swanstrom said. "It has been reported that there are now more than nine million dollars worth of Ameri.can surplus products in. granaries and other storage faciliUelI throughout the country."

to the Pope would be viewed as "the simple and c.lear demonstration to the world that our two communions· can speak to one another with charity, joy and reciprocal faith." Father Tucci stated that the importance of- t he Anglican Primate's visit to the Pope should not be underestimated, but the very definite limitations of 'the visit \should 'be understood. He said that from the very beginning, the visit had been understood as "an act of courtesy ... and therefore of no official nature."

Retreat Houa;e

Continued from Page One tunity of making a closed retreat to more men, women and DRAWING POWER: Handy with brush an<\, easel, Continued From Page 01111 . teen-agers. The Second Sunday of Ad"Shut off from the hurry and actress Delores Hart tries her. hand at sketching a statue vent the second candle is lit an4 bustle of -the world, they will be of St. Francis of Assisi in Rome's Lateran Square. Dolores through that week two candletl able to free themselves for a has more than a passing interest in St.. Francis. She plays give their light through the faJa,o while from the problems and ily devotions. pressures of daily living and. a featured role in a new movie based on the saint's life. The Third Week sees three . concentrate on their spiritual Ne Photo. .candles lit unW, on the Fou~ ·welfare. They will .acquire a 'S~day, all four candles. ~ 'better understanding of their lighted to announce throughoul relationships to God., to· their the 'week the coming of. ~ Program~ families and to their fellow-men. A closed retreat makes p~ople NEW YORK (NC) - A pro- ties. Two years of careful study ~irthday of the Lord. Thecl!Dbetter Christians and better gram of direct aid to the poor . and planning have gone' into dIes are lit for the period qfthe Americans." and suffering in missionary . preparations 'for the new work. daily family devotions. This custom of the Adve. countries has been launched by Under the plan, made public Two Languages the superior council of the here .at the superior council Wreath originated in the 'su.The RetFeat House at· the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. annual meeting, a conference of teenth century in Eastern' Ge... Shrine will have 70 private . Basic to the project is the esthe society in 'this country' will many when people began to ta~. rooms with complete bath room lights from the open, where thev tl/-blishment of spiritua.l li,nes. of establish conta~t w~th a c.o~~er= burned as nature symbols,: into between each two rooms....There contact between AmerIcan Vm- ence of the society m a mISSion will· be a large Chapel, confer- centians and their brothers ary country to bring aid direCtly their homes as religious' symence rooms, library and all the abroad. bols. The practice quickly spread to the poor. other facilities needed. for comThe' program will be super. Catholic Rt;lief Services-Na- among both Catholics and Protfortable and adequate year round, vised by the councWs national tIonal Catholic Welfare Confer- estants of many countries. The wreath, being round, syJIP use. The food preparation will" committee on missionary activienee and the Maryknoll Fathers be done by the La .Salette Sis·will assist the program, particu- bolizes the "fullness of time'" ters..The retreats will be ~on­ larly in cases where language when the Messiah was born. II ducted in English and Fre.J.1ch. is also a symbol of glory ,and barriers present pI:oblems. Continued from Page One The construction will begin The new mission program is victory. The candle is the sign ol served. "We have the great de- expected to have both spiritual hope in the coming of Chris*, early next year. The plans are now being completed by the mand for a girls' high school and material benefits. The work and is also a symbol of Our which the Most Reverend Rev. Brot!ler Cajetan Baumann, ·will always be kept Vincentian Blessed. Lord. . The Advent Wreath is a beae. O.F.M., the famous Franciscan Bishop!s anxious to establish in in character, and.is not to inter':' .Architect who has been working .Taun·ton. I know the people Of ·fere with or detract in any y.,ay tUul custom that deserve4.. , a on ,the Shrine Master, Plan, tor Greater Taunton will stand from the work now being done :place in the Catholic home~~_~ squ,arely behind the Ordinary in 'Necrology,. , the past three .years.. by the society in parishes ii~,i~g preparation for Chri..., .this, the biggest dioeesap under- throughout the UniteJ. Sta~s. ma~ \; I: THE 'ANCHOR lists the an~' Expand Facilities .'" . taking ever in Taunton." . Help to be sent abroad wiD niversary dates of pries~ who The Retreat House is only one The' number of .aPJ?lications ::. i/.!. ,;. \ . : ,served,'the Fall Riv,er Dioee~ 'of' the' many structures" to be for. admission to Bishop Stang ·come from. suppieinentaloHerings slid from surplu~es: of Ole !. ~ince . i~ fomiat~on in 1~9~ 'erected at the Shrine in '1961. High in' North Dartino.uth in:',,' ,·When. II', tim. r ,",' , " ,. , i' :with. tJ,te. intenti?n, t~t the '~'Weare now entering intO· the 'creases annually, Father' ~yops individual councils. ' It is believed that the program, iaitbful will glve them a second' phase 'of 'th~ .",Shrine observed. Anxiouly, the pepple , ',"";,10 'retire .• '• • prayerful remembrance. ., Development Pro.p-am",: de- "in' Greater. Attleboro are look- il1 'the spiritual field, will greatly ',l',("j Ii strengthen existing councils here f' NOV~ 25 .cIated 'Father Sauve. This' phase ,jng,. forward. to" the registration I Rev. Philias Jalbert, 1946, Ad- .includes a . large .~afeterbl . and : 9f, '~heir children' at BisJ:lop ·and abroad, and that it will lead 'm.iilistbltor, Notre Dame, Fall hall,:' a new religious' articles .' Feehan High in the Fall of 1961. to the' formation of councils ill . ::', ..River. . "-The ,spirit which has per- places where they do' not now store, a monastery for the fathers exist. , ~.' .. NOV. M a n d brothers with adequate c0ll.;- . meated the last few workers' • ":1 '., Rev. James· R.· Burns, P.R.,. sultation rooms for the pilgrims meetings here in Taunton indi.. ]945, 'Pastor, Sacred Heart, Fall and '8.' Novitiate House for .the cates we will match the 'effort A FAMILY TIlEAT . River. La,' Salette Sisters. The third of New Bedford and Attleboro," .':,:{";-. , - - NOV. Z'J . . ..• ';-,"phase of ·the "SArine' Develop;': . Father Lyons said confidently. BAR-B-Q CHICKENS · Rt. Rev. Patrick E. Mcqee, ment Program" will compri~ Legion of Decency wy 7-9"S ~i9~8, Pastor, St. Mary, No. Attle- the Sm:inE: Church and the.pilI' '" 'The following films are' to be ";i~OfO;~. ',< .' '.: .'... grUn's .guel!thouse.. ..., . ;.: . NOV. 28 .' _' ," 'added to the lists in 'their respec:'.~ Rey. Adrien A. Gaut~er, 1959, _." '. "... Ordo " !; . , tive' classifications: FARMS· .. ·· ,'Unobjectionable ;for "adults: .•.. " ~'ra,st~~" St: R~~~.f.:ll Ri\!~r..·. ~ :.FRIDA.y--':S:t: ~?therine of:Ale]r- . The' Angry Silence; 'The Plun- .~45 Wash,.·ington St.,Fairhaven ;.~, Re Ph'll' R oss" 1958 Chapandria, VlI'gm .Just off Route 6 . '.. v. I lpe . 'D-aA 'Mand Martyr. P • derers. ~;lain, Sacred Heart Home, NeW' D~u~le.,., t"'f"" . ass, rop~r, Objectionable. in. part for an: r ' 'Watch for Signs ';276 Central St., Fall Ii.: ,.Bedford:· " GlorIa; Common Preface. " LegiQns·:.of, the 'Nile: (~uggesiive ~i. While out fora ,Drive' " .. ... ............ '·,SATURDAY-St. Sylvester, Ab- , costumes and dances; excessive .• ::' ,OSborne 6-8279 ;: '" .' Stop' at, this Delightful', Spot • bot and Confessor. Double. b~utality). . "',,1 White.. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect St. Peter of. FORTY HOURS Mexanqria, Bi:;;h,op and MatDEVOTION .. tYr, Common Preface. i • SUNDAY--:-I Sunday of Advent. · Nov. 27-0ur Lady of the Im. bouble' of i'Class.Violet. Mass Sa~. J. LClIGasse, Manager , 'maculate Conception;" -, . Proper; 'No' Gloria;· Creed; . New Bedford. Preface 9f Trinity. . J.",'., • 1872 ACUSHNET AVE. St. 'MargalOt," Buzzards" '. MONDAY':'-':Mass ;of' pteviou8 near Brooklawn Park Bay. " Sunday. Simple. Violet. ~aSs . ..',. .'::," ,"..;.:' :: • 'l'.'·' c'" ;.!·~q"ptoper,' . No'..·Gloria;.. Common NEW· BEDFORD, MASS• , D.ec. 4-St. Ant1:lony of Padua, ,. Preface.. . .. . ..... ' YOU , . ; ....'I't' ., Fall River. ' , ' . , '. h . ;- TUESDAY-Mass'of, prevIOUS S.~ Mary, FaIr aven. .' S'd'" S'im'" '1 . ' . .;tv.' , ' I 't"·· M .on regular savings accounts, '. ' . un ay. p e." .10 e . ass Dec. 11-0ur Lady of Health, Proper; No Gloria; Second and up to 1% EXTRA on Bonu, Fall River.' Collect St. Saturninu8, MartYr; . Savings Accounts. Inquire. St. Louis, Fall River.. Common Preface. , . .' .' WEDNESDAY - St. Andrew, '~"'··-'I. Dec. 18-8t. Bernard, Assonet. Apostle. ,Double of n Class. ,- . ~'. '. ~ =-~Red. .MasS : Proper;' Gloria; , St:' Mary's' Home, 'New

Advent Wreath

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Second Collect of .previous Sunday; Creed; Preface of Apootles. . THURSDAY-:-Mass of previ9us Sunday, S~ple. Violet. Mails Proper; No Gloria; CommoD Preface. .. :'.'

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THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 24, 1960

N.Y. Committee Asks State Aid For Education

Supreme Court Upholds Birth Control Laws

. NEW YORK (NC) - A plan that would give state aid to private colleges and universities, inc Iud i n g church-related institutions, was presented to Gov. Nelson Rockefeller by a three-man committee here. The proposal is part of a multimiUion dollar, long-range program for the reform of higher education in New York State. It calls for direct grants by the mate to private and churchrelated institutions. If such aid should be given, it will mark an innovation in the relationship between states and ~ h u l' Ch - l' e 1 ate d institutions which traditionally depend for support on revenue from stUdents, investments and contributions, educators said. Little Value' . Some states, and the Federal government, have made scholarships available to high school studel~ts who were permitted to attend the college of their choice, but these generally are of little or no' aid to colleges because each scholarship seldom covers the school's cost in educating the student. As to the amount to be provided, the report said it "should be no gl'eater than a small fraction of the total cost of educating each student" and that the sum should vary with the level of the degree being sought. Payments "The payments should not be so large," said the report, "as to change the character of private institutions-particularly so as to make them too heavily dependent on the state for their future financing. "We believe that lin aggregate payment not in excess of 10 per cent of teaching expenditures in private colleges and universities In the state would satisfy these requirements."

Sudanese Oppos~ Relocation Plan KHARTOUM (NC) - Recent demonstrations in Khartoum and Wadi HaIfa, Nile river town near the United Arab· Republic (Egyptian) border, were directE!d primarily against the Sudanese government's plan to relocate the inhabitant$ of Wadi HaIfa I (12,000)' and' surrounding countryside. (from 27,000 to 40,000). The area is to be flooded,· I forming a vast lake to make : Egypt's High 'Dam project posaib.le. . Wadi HaIfa is in the region of Nubia, where Christianity' once I flourished. Now the vast majorit)' of Wadi HaIfa people are Moslems. The territory is rich in ruins of gl'eat interest, including remains of Christian churches and monasteries dating from the lOth to the l,2th cen~uries. 'Peacefully Dispersed' : . According to a 'Khartou~ , newspaper, the people were ir!, vited to choose their new home from among five places. The place that got no votes, Khas!11 1 EI Girba, southeast of -Khartoum, was the one that the government decided "was the best for ihem," according to the paper. . Four cabinet ministers, three of them army. generals, went to . Wadi Haifa toaQnounce the decision, which was received with strong resentment, according to repol·ts. "Some troublemakers created a disturbance," the official statement saiC!. "They were gently and peacefully dispersed by the police." o

HARTFORD (NC)--~e Supreme Court of Errors again has· upheld the constitutionality of Connecticut's 81-year-old laws agamm; birth control. The state's high court unanimously reaffirmed. three earlier decisions supporting the laws, which prohibit the use of contraceptive devices and forbid persons, including physicians, from counseling on their use. The court upheld a New Haven Superior COUl·t decision which . rejected a complaint brought by Mr. and Mrs. David M. Trubek, both students at the Yale Law School. The Trubeks alleged that for economic and psychological reasons they were unprepared to have c~iIdren. Reject Argument They said they were being denied the opportunity to get information and advice on contraceptive measures they were being denied rights under the 14th Amendment to the Consti~tioo.

CHICAGO AUXILIARIES: His Eminence Albert Cardinal Meyer, (left) Archbishop of Chicago, congratulates his new auxiliary bishops recently named by His Holiness Pope John XXIII. At right is Bishop-designate Aloysius J. Wycislo, native of Chicago, who had served as assistant director of Catholic Relief Services-NCWC for 16 years. Bishopdesignate Cletus F. O'Donnell (center) a native of Waukon, Iowa, has been vice chancellor of the Chicago archdiocese. since 1945. NC Photos.

Urges U.S. Catholics to Help Latin America

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However, the five-member court's decision, . writfen by Justice Samuel Mellitz, rejected this argument. The court said the plaintiffs failed to raise any questions of law that would change its December, 1959, decision that the laws were constitutional. The court's 1959 decision halJ been appealed to the U. S. Supreme Court and oral argument. are due next year. The complaint by Mr. and Mrs. Trubek was one of a flurry of test cases initiated inConnecticut in the past two years. Othen were begun by a physician, three married couples and three ministers.

LAS VEGAS (NC)-A Latin Father Considine declared next five years. . American expert warned' here that "any community of zealous Among the special problems that "the Catholic Church in Catholics may supply papal of the Church in Latin AInp.ric:\ Latin America today is in deep volunteers." the Maryknoll priest listed the trouble," Appeals to Women condition of· the agricultural Father John J. Consid~ne, . "Any U.S. parish may band wor~ers and t?e industrial prolM,M., New Bedford native, together with other parishes and etanat, the Inroads made by called for "dedicated coopera- provide a team. The Holy See co~~unism, a~d the shortago!' of tion" by U.S. Catholics with the hopes that many Catholic col- reJrglOus vocations. Holy See's program for the leges and universities ..,'I1 01'He pointed out that 60 per Church in Latin America. ganize a team, supplying recent of the 190 million people in Father Considine addressing placements as team members Latin America live in rural the National Counc'il of Catho.,. complete their overseas term. areas and that the "largest single lic Women, urged U. S. Catholic The papal call will be, heard, bloc" among" these a.re t~,e field Excavating organizations to be generous in ~e are sure, by many diOcesan workers or campesInos.. supporting the Holy See's plan a!)d parochial ,¥roups of w';men ~raditionaIly: ~e said, the maContractors for papal volunteers to seN'e in of the NCCW. tenal and splntual needs of Latin America. Among other. programs unde~- these workers were cared for by . 9 CROSS ST., F~IRHAVEN '" 1 taken by the U.S, Church to aId the owners of the big estates unU n d er th e " vo1un t eel'S pan, C th 1" • L t' A . h ' WYman 2-4862 , 1 '11 . t· L· f a 0 IClsm In a In menca e der at system of SOCIal patel'na' C at h 0 I IC aymen "':1 go 0 .\ 11\ listed' providing 400 scholar- r America to aid lay leaders there . h'" L' t· A" . ' Ism.. . . . . k on b e h a If 0 f s IpS to da.' In 1960 mencan In apostoJrc wor . 61' f"seml-. . However . . , with the outbreak of 'the C h u r c h . . n~nans t~rmf - ' . man- class struggle,' the campesin'}s For your Building Materials . .'. ' . cmg voca lOna programs In poor . have become aware of 'injustices .Father Consldme, dIrector of dioceses' paying 60 per cent of , th· t t t h . 'd Needs and Choice Building the, Latin America Bureau, ·Na- ·the con~truction cost o{ a. new 10 ell' rea men, e sal . Lots in the Greater Tauntof' .' tional Catholic Welfare Conferregional seminary planned for .. Area .' ,,~q,::e, said recently that .tl.~ ',lr$t "northeast Brazil; establishing 50 .The November m.eeting of the U.~. volunteers are expected ,to new' high schools and colIeges be in Latin America by the end in Latin America during the· Fall River Catholic Guild for ,INCORPORATED of 1961. . 1960's; and Sending 1,000 priesLs the Blind will be held next Sunday. afternoon in Sacred ·Heart Teams of Volunteers and ·Religious to ~he are':l In the School,' preceded by services in VA 4-7847 .- VA 2-4051 In his talk to the women's' the church' beginning at 2:15. council convention, he' pointed DENVILLE (NC) - ~ishop' out that the Holy See's plan James A: McNulty of Paterson, calIs for the volunteers to. be N. J., will· dedicate St. Clare organized into teams under the . sponsorship of Catholic organi- Hospital's new wing next Monday. The addition provides. a zatiOilS, padshes and schools.. . . . 'convent for the Sisters of. the He said the sponsoring groups Sorrowful Mother, 27 additional are to assume personal J;esponsihospital beds and enl~rged mahili'ty .for each volunteer, pay ternity facilities. for his training and travel expenses; and keep in. touch with WE DELIVER ANYWHERE him during his period of service. FAll RrvER, MASS. The volunteers wilI serve from two to five years, with an opMonday, Nov. 28, 5-~0 P.M. tion of serving longe~ if they" wish, he s~id. LUMBER COMPANY

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VIENNA (NC)-A public appeal for vocations has been made by a congregation of Sisters in Hungal'y, where the communist government 10 years ago ordered . the dissolution of 53 orders and the return of 10,000 men and women Religious· to civilian Jjfe. . The Poor Teaching Sisters of WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop Our Lady issued a calI to girls .John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, president general of the National "who want to devote their lives Catholic Educational Associa- to the glory of God in teaching Hungal'ian youth orin doing t 'on, will give the keynote housework" to tr~r the religious speech at the NCEA's 1961 conlife. vention in Atlantic City, N. J. The Annuario Pontificio, NCEA headquarters here anChurch yearbook issued at the nounced that the April 4-7 convention, the association's 58th Vatican, lists the Hungary's Poor annual one, will have as its Tea~hing Sisters of Our Lady of theme "The Objectives of Chris- Kalocsa as hav.in~ 934 members tian Education in Contempol'ary -a gain of 300 in the past 10 years. / Society."

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River-Thurs, Nov. 24, 1960

Supreme Court To Hear School Tuition Appeal

Restates Views on Catholic Education·· Size of F~m~my

MONTPELIER (NC) Arguments in Vermont Supreme Court on whether parochial school tuition can

By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.

Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University

"In your article,on family incomes and education I was completely astounded to read that you would tell a mother to, take a job so her children could receive a Catholic education. And just what did you mean by that last sentence abo u t regulating family ed in this approach should join size? I couldn't believe my Citizens for Educational Freeeyes! Is this a new doctrine? . d0m (3109 S. Grand Blvd., St. We have seven children, and Louis 18, Mo.) after two miscarriages last year when I asked the priest about regulation, he said 'God takes care of you.' Don't you agree'?" The article· yo u mention brought ·a flood of letters from Borne sections of the country -as I assumed it would. The reactions varied from mild protest to indignant anger and even CJ'Ude scorn. I was told that I was ignorant of Catholic doctrine and the facts of. life, that my statements were "close to blasphemy," "ludicrous," "don't sound like ~a' priest," "not in keeping with church's dictates that you have a large family and populate the world." "a serious blow to family life," and "make us ashamed of our Catholic heritage and traditions." In general the letters were interesting and revealing. It appears this writer would. do well tee. "absent himself from the lofty walls of security, calm and serenity in the university" and meet some "idealistic Catholics who face problems far-removed born the very secure Father Thomas." Evidently, I don't get around much, or travel with the wrong people when I do! , Uncharitable, Unjust One aspect of the reaction distFesses me as a Christian. Many or the respondents assumed that because they differed with me, they were not bound by the usual norms of charity and justice. Frankly, I am puzzled by the tone of some of the letters. Now let US turn to the source f'f ,your shock and astonishment. First, there is my answer to the question whether' a mothel might take a job in order to send her children to a Catholic IIChool. Most of the protests to n;y solution 'insisted that the children should be sent to a public school. This is not the' issue. If you read the letter, you will dis~ver that this mother wants her children to get a Catholic education. Her question is, may she get a job to make this possible. Worthy Objective If you read my answer, you will find that I spelled out rathell' carefully the conditions under which she may take a job. If the conditions can be met, she Is free to make her choice. Securing a Catholic education for her children is a worthy family objective, and she may feel less optimistic than some readers about the long range effects of a secular education. .AlIso, if you read the article, you will find that I urged parent groups ;lond teachers to avoid the unnecessary, costly practices now current in some schools. A few readers sent itemized acC(Junts oj such extra costs. Some suggested tackling the unjust double tax burden carried . by supporters of a religious llC~hool system. Readers interest-

Mass for Americans On Thanksgiving Day SYDNEY (NC) Catholic Dlembers of the American community here will attend an evening Mass in St. Mary's CatheCral on American Thanksgiving· Day. Protestants will attend their customary service in St. Steph€.n's Presbyterian church. Members 'of the American Society later :will attend the traditional 'Jhan~sgiving .dinner, at. the AmeJiican ... .National . . . . . . Club. -"':

Position :os Clear, But the greatest emotional reaction was aroused by my suggestion that "young couples might give the need for Catholic education serious thought in regulating the size of their families." My position is clear. Following traditional Catholic doctrine as expressed in canon law, I take it that the primary purpose of marriage is the procreation and education of offspring. Since the maintenance of our s0ciety requires an ever increasing period of formal education, and public schools are religiously neutral or negative, Catholic parents have the right and obligation to plan. for the religious education of their children. The added economic burden this currently involves should consequently be taken into consideration in regulating family size. Unlike ~irth Control Readers who are shocked by the term regulation should ponder the words of Pius XII (Mol':" ality and Marriage, Nov. 26, 1951), '~the Church knows how to consider with sympathy and understanding the real difficulties of the married state in our· day. Therefore, in Our last allocution on conjugal morality, We affirmed' the legitimacy and, at the same time, the limits ""::::in truth very wide-of a regulation of offspring which, unlike so-called 'birth control,' is compatible ,with the law of God. One may even. hope (but in this matter the Church naturally leaves the judgment to medical science) that scienCe will succeed in providing this licit method with. a sufficiently secure basis. The most recent information seems to confirm such a hope." Disturbed' by Venom Some correspondents insisted that periodic continence (rhythm) is· either ineffective or impossible. Reliable studies show that this is simply contrary to fact. Others maintained that a young couple couldn't know what their future economic position might be. Are we to bel~eve that they are incapable of making a reasonable judgment, , so that if they marry young and have several children in rapid succession, they cannot foresee the possible need to start spacing pregnancies? Finally, I was particularly d.isturbed by the bitter venom of some respondents~ They implied that they had their children only because they were obliged to do so. People who do not regard parenthood and the service of new life as a n<")ble privilege sbould not choose the vocation of marriage 88 their way of serving God.

be paid with tax funds have been scheduled for next Tuesday. The South Burlington School District is appealing to the court from a ruling by Chittenden County Chancellor William C. Hill. He held that the school district, which has no high school, cannot pay tuition for students who elect to attend a parochial high school. Attorneys for the school district had sought a continuance of the case until the January term, but Chief Justice Benjamin F. Hurlburd set the Nov. 29 date. If Chancellor Hill's judgment is upheld, several school districts that have to send students outside their boundaries to at'tend high school will be affected. Many students choose to 'attend Catholic secondary schools.

BIDS FAREWELL: One of Maryknoll's 17 Sisterphysicians and its first Sister-surgeon visits her ninemonth-old twin nephews, Mark and Matthew Smolen in Seattle before leaving for Pusan, Korea, where she will join the staff of the nearly-completed Armed Forces Memorial Hospital. NC Photo.

Reb e I s Release ~upils Unharmed MANAGUA (NC) - Some 200 students of the Christian Brothers' school at nearby Diriamba were released unharmed when the· revolutionaries who held them as hostages for three days surrendered to· g 0 vel' n men t troops. The 14 rebels who were holed up in the school gave up after the successful mediation of BishopOctavio Calderon of Matagalpa. Bishop Calderon promised to, serve as guarantor of Nicaragua President Luis Somoza's promise- that the rebels would be conducted safely to Ii military prison and- would receive a fair trial. The 56-year-old Bishop aecompanied the revolutionaries in the military bus that brought them the 20-odd miles from DiriamJl:' to the prison here in the ;.capital. The 14 rebels were part of a larger revolutionary force that had captured Diriamba. ·When national guardsmen retook the town, the small band seized ,the' Brothers' school and its pupils.

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THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 24, 1960

Canadian Catholic Workers Adopt 'Neutral' Unionism

Veterans Honor Society f~nD[J1l.der'

By Msgr. Goorge G. Higgins Director, NCWC Soe!aR Action Department

NEWARK (NC) -Howard E. Crouch, founder of a society that aids Hansen's disease (leprosy) victims, has received the highest award of the Catholic War Veterans. He received the Celtic Cross Citation Award for his work with the Damien Dutton Society. which he founded and directs. The society assists lepers in mission areas. Mr. Crouch, who comes from New Brunswick, N. J., received the ~ward from James W. Fay. CWV commander, at a banquet sponsored by the CWV's New Jersey branch.

In September of this year the name of the Confederation of Catholic Workers of Canada (CTCC) was officially changed to the Confederation of National Trade Unions (CNTU). The change was made following a vote by the delegates attending the labor was, in the contemporary setting federation's annual conven- of French Canada, a serious obt.ion in ·Montreal. I was in stacle to the expansion of the Europe when this decision organization. was announced, and I got the impression that over there it

eame as a surprise, if not a disappointment, 'to some Catho-' lies, particularIv in tho s e countries which 1UlI.ve Catholic o 11" Christian 'l1lnions. Even m the United States, where we have never bad and have never wanted separate Catholic or Christian unions, there may be some who wonder why the CTCC decided lI10t only to drop the word Catholic from its title but to eliminate from its constitution any explicit reference to the social teaching of the Church. Special Report The answer is spelled out in considerable detail in a special report prepared in advance of the Montreal convention by the executive committee of the creC. This report will undoubtedly have repercussions in Latin America and other parts of the world where the problem of socalled "confessional" versus "'neutral" unionism is currently under review. The first thing to bear m ,mind, the authors of the Mo~ treal Report say, is that the question as to whether or not the CTCC should "deconfessionnlize" has been under discussion for many years. It is pointed out that the discussion of this question within the CTCC started long before there was any talk about a posalble merger between the CTCC llnd the neutral Canadian Congress of Labor (the Canadian equiyalent of the AFL-CIO). In other words, the decision An September was not simply 11 tactical maneuver designed to solve the merger problem. Rather it was a carefully considered move designed to expand the membership of the CTCC and to extend its influence. Faithful to Principles Secondly, the authors of the report are at pains to emphasize that a decision to "deconfes£lionalize" the CTCC is no indica~iOlll that the organization ill changing its basic philosophy or withdrawing its long standing commitment to Christian social principles. "It is not a question of treaoon," the report says, "but, on the contrary, of fidelity to Christian social principles" and a desire to implement the~ principles more effectively. The authors of the report and the majority of the delegates at the Montreal convention believed that to achieve this objective it was necessary for the CTCC to deconfessionalize. The facts demonstrate, the report points out, that the confessional character of the CTCC

Canadian Foundation Asks Higher Grants OTTAWA (NC)-The Canadtaill Universities Foundation ,has asked Prime Minister' J 0 h Ill. Diefenbaker to increase federal educational grants. A delegation, led by' Father Benri Legare, OMI, rector of the Catholic University of Ottawa and chairman of the CUF, and including the heads of most of the universities of Canada, presented the request. ·The delegation pointed out that the current grant-which is based on a ratio between students and total population meant approximately $289 per pupil to a university; with the iDcrease in enrollment next year . . . would be down to $2111.

North American System Many non-catholic workers in French Canada would not join the CTCC so long as it was regarded as a strictly Catholic organization, and many Englishspeaking workers would refuse to join so long as it was reg a I' d e d a s a n exclusively "French" Canada organization. Morever, it was felt by the authors of the report and by the majority of the delegates attending the Montreal convention that the CTCC could no longer operate effectively as an ideological or "confessional" organization under the North American system of labor relatioWl law. Difference In Laws The law in Canada as well lUI In the United States confers exclusive bargaining rights on any uni0n which can d,,~n~~trate in n supervised election that it represents the majority of the workers in a given unit. A union which is so certified has not only the right but the duty to bargain for aU of the workers in the unit, including, those who belong to other unions or to no union at all., Under European labor relations law different unions can represent their own members in one and the same company or firm. The European system favors the development of separate ideological or confessional unions, whereas the North American system militates against it and makes it difficult, if not impossible, for a confessional organization like the CTCC to survive. The CTCC, in deciding to drop the word Catholic from its title and to eliminate from ita constitution any specific reference to the social teaching of the Church, was simply facing up realistically to the facts of life in contemporary Canada. It was not changing its basic philosophy, nor was it going back on its commitment to Catholic social teaching. It remains to be seen, of. course, whether or not the decision made at the Montreal convention in September will enable the old CTCC (now the CNTU) to expand its membership and extend its influence. I think it will. But whether it does or not, it was worth a try.

Cafrho~ic~ h)] Cerrosys C«ll6'ii'il[~)(QjBS'Jtill

Find 'lost"

VANCOUvER (NC)-They already have found 35,000 "lost'" Catholics in the Vancouver archdiocese and the figure 'may 80 higher. The discovery came through the Good Shepherd Crusade census, which was inaugurated last June at the request of Archbishop William M. Duke of Van·cover, who was anxious to find an estimated 40,000 "lost'" Catholics disclosed by Federal census figures. Father James Carney, census director, said the census taken already have listed 95,791 Catholics in the archdiocese, 35,000 more than 'were listed in previous chancery office statistics. The final census figure may show there are about 103,000 Catholics in the archdiocese, the priest said.'

t{l@~ors

It was the second CWV award for Mr. Crouch, who received the "For Country" award of t,W, New Jersey branch last June.

C@ndlemns M@vie

VATICAN VETERAN: This old fellow has spent the better part of his life standing hitched to a "carozza" (Roman hackney-coach) in St.' Peter's Square in Rome. And. like all God's creatures, he is at horne in the shadow of the dome. NC Photo.

Ma rkCompletion Of Cathedral ALTOONA, (NC)-The completed Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament was opened formally with the offering of a Solemn Pontifical Mass by Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the United States. The Cathedral's completioR under the administration of Bishop J. Carroll McCormick of Altoona-Johnstown climaxed a 36-year building project. Fifteen bishops, scores of priests and nuns and hundreds of laity assisted at the afternoolll Mass in the Pennsylvania city. Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, who preached the sermon, paid tribute to the late Bishop Howard J. Carroll, fourth head of the diocese, for undertaking the "titanic task" of completing the cathedral. Living Temples "A cathedral is a major meanl to ,the sanctification of souls; a temple of the living God, it w the center of the mighty work of making men into living templea of God," Bishop Wright said. "But the generosity and faith which have built this cathedral are proofs that such living tem- . pIes already thrive among you, or else the virtues which have made this day possible would never have been operative in your midst to produce so superb a monument to the piety, unitY" and generosity of a whole diocese."

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SOUTH BEND (NC)-A42 by 22-foot stained glass windoW" will cover more than half th~ front area of the new St. Matthew cocathedral, which will be built here at a cost of $750,000. .

NEW YORK (NC)-The National Legion of Decency has placed in its condemned class the movie "Port of Desire." "The negative elements of this film (suicide, perversion, adultery. exhibitionism)," the legion said. "are seriously offensive to traditional standards of morality and decency."

"I HOPE SOME GOOD PEOPLE enjoying the benefits of faith will help .JIB." This was the last lentence in a letter of appeal received from a pastor in KATHIPARA in INDIA. Three years ago this priest began his Missionary work there among ten Catholic families. He has had phenomonal success in hill ministry. During his first year he baptized 42 new Catholics and there are '-"~'~"'l' now 380 people desirous of entering the ___ "Church. Whatever suitable shelter he hall ~==~::"'--"E.Il been able to find has had to serve for the celebration of Mass; convert and catechetical instructions have had to be given In the open air. Having neither church not' school he asks if we could help him raise $4,000 to erect these two buildings which are now essential. Could you help hIm wHIliI a donation?

DOUBLE EXPRESSION OF LOVE A CHRISTMAS GIFT for the Missions in honor of a relative

or friend manifests both love' of God and love of the one in whose name tile gift is made. We will send {l beautiful Gift Card to the person or persons whom you might favor with one ur more of the following: I. A Mass or a Novena of Masses. 2. Perpetual Membership ($20.00) or Annual Membership

($1.00) in the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION. 3. A donation for the care of the Aged, Orphans, LepeTllo Refugees.• , 4. A "Stringless Gift" enabling the fulfillment of an urgent Mission need. 5. An "adopted" son or daughter in Christ, if you have the

means to pay for tile education of a seminarian or 11 novice. The cost of this education ($600 for II seminarian, $3~ for a novice) may be paid all at once or in installmentLJ. 3. A Sacred Article for a Church in Mission Lands: Mass Kit $100 Chalice ..•... $40 StatiolUl ..••... S2~ Altar 75 Ciborium ••••. 40 Censer . . . .. 2eD Vestmentll ..• 50 Statue ...••••. 30 Sanc'y Lamp .. Hil Confessional . 50 Tabernaclo • .. 25 Altar Lineno .. Hi! Monstrancl'l .. ~O Crucifix 25 Sanc'y Bell III

snx lHlUNDlRlEIIli DOLLARS supports a bo£, during ble sm years of training for the priesthood. 'll'HREE HUNDRED DOlLLAlRS supports a girl during her two years (/%/ of training for the sisterhood. Broken down ~ blio monthly or yearly !Jayments it would ~ Dot 00 too difficult for some of WI to fi-~ Dance the education of 0 seminarian or a ~~ 1I1ovice. NnCBOLAS AN'll'HlllKAD and PAUL KAlRiATTY are students at SAINT JOSEPH'S SEMINARY In INDIA. SISTER KIT A and SISTER DOROTHY are novices of the MEDICAL SISTERS OF SAINT JOSEPH, also in INDIA. If you could finance the training of one of them you woul~ lharo IJm the merits of their worl:l for God.

HUNGRY AT CHRISTMAS! Many Palestinian Refugees will be hungry at Christmas-tim. unless we raise sufficient money to continue helping them. Will you send a Christmao donation of $10.00 to these Refugees? Why not send the money as II Christmas Gift in honOi" of a relative or friend who "has everything'''' We will send thQ relative or friend,. in whose nama you give the money, a bealbtiful Christmas Gift Card.

Thecft@gsan

WASHINGTON (NC )-Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New' York, made his annual award for distinguished achieve:ment in sacred theology at the Redemptorists' House here yesterday. The recipient, Father John Quasten of the Catholic University of America faculty, is now in Rome. The medal was received in his name by Father Edmond D. Benarci of the un!·versity faculty.

5

SYMBOL: This new symbol has been adopted by the

National Catholic Apostleship of the Sea Conference. It was submitted by Father George C. Magee,porl chaplain' in Brooklyn. NC :PhotA.

~'l2earfistOlissions~'I FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President Mltr. P.t.r P. Tuohy, Nat'l Sec', Send all communication. to:

CATHOUC NEAl EAST WElfARE ASSOCIATION 480 ILexlngton Ave. ,at 46th St. New York 17, N. Y.


6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs, Nov. 24, 1960

Weekly Calendar ,Of Feast Days

Clothing the World's Needy

God iJrn the NatioRllal Scene

TODAY-St. Clement I fJJl .Rome. Pope-Martyr. A first ceotury convert, he was the third successor to St. Peter, who had consecrated him a bishop. Hu. famous epistle to the Corinthianal restored order in the Church in Corinth. He governed the Church as Pope for about 10 years and died as an exile and martyw under Trajan about 100. TOMORROW-St. John of the Cross, Confessor-Do...tor. He was born near Avila, Spain, in 1542 and·was ordained a priest in the Carmelite Order in 1567. Influenced by St. Teresa of Avila, he founded the Discalced Carmelites, and his work was for-, mally approved by Pope Gregory XIII in 1580. He underwent many trials, was persecuted and imprisoned. He died in 1605. He was canonized by Pope Benedict XIII in 1726, and named a Doctor of the Church by Pope Pius XI in 1926. FRIDAY - St. Catherine of Alexandria, Virgin-Martyr. She was put to death by means of aD. engine fitted with a spiked wheel, about the year 310 ia .Alexandria, 'during the reign ol Maximunus Daza. According to legend, .before her martyrdom she met and vanquished 50 USIC U S pagans in arguments on philo&The Church's role as traditional patron of the arts has ophy and for this reason is coo-' not simply remained in the field of aesthetics but has passed sidered the patroness of philo.. ophers. over ·into the field of finance and sociology ip. the ArchSATURDAY _ St. Sylveste., diocese of Paris. Abbot. He founded the SilveaThe other evening the Cardinal Archbish~p attended a trine Congregation of Benedic-' program of sacred music given in an early fifteenth century The editor 01 the Question and Answer column does not guarantee ta tines, sacrificing a brilliant church near the Louvre.. These concerts were first organized answer anonymous queries lIor letters fro,!1 unidentifiable sources, In every ecclesiastical' career to do so. . instance the desire lor anollymity will be respected. To that .end, names He overcame many difficultiea by the late Cardinal Verdier in nineteen, hundred and are never appended to the questions, but unless the leUer is signed in establishing his institute, and' thirty-two, and since that time they:have raised more than there is no assurance that any consideration will be given it. . died at the age of 90 in 1267. ten million dollars to build one hundred and fifty churches I~ this day and age, my this sin and all sin for the future. . . SUNDAY _ First Sunday of in the suburban areas of the Archdiocese of Paris. question must seem ridiculous, It aids us, too"in cultivating the Advent. Generally this date '. he six million citizens of metropolitan Paris but the topic came.up in a convirtue of humility. the feast of St. Virgil, BiShopHalf of t versation with one of, 'the While .repetition, of past sins is C nf 'H h . . essor. birth e waswho an Iris saint live I'n the suburbs. And a survey has shown that while girls'. She claimed that it is recommended, it should not be of0 noble played a eighty-seven per cent of those born in the Paris area are sinful to use cosmetics; I hasoverdone. It is' sufficient to men- prominent part in the'apostolate baptized as Catholics, only about twelve per .cent of them ten to add that I don't agree tion one or two past sins to of Germany. He' was aided • The with her. Perhaps if she sees accomplish the good effects men-' his ",,:ork by King Pepin and the P ractice their religion' with. a degree of'. regularity. , i t in print she will be contion.ed in the. preceding. para- K" h b' E .. '. purp'ose of these mus.icprograms, is ,to ral.·se money .to. b.uild mg s !lon, w 0 ecame mpel'OI', vinced. It' isn'~ sinful is i,t? , ~r~ph: ,. " Charlemagne. ~e served as Bisb.' churChes so' that there would be. a·churc:hno more than , In ordinary' circumstances, in' .' . ': ..•.•. • . . " op of Salzb1.!rg and died in 78fo.' . iwo th~usand.feet away fromevery':r:esident ol.the fast- ,certainly is not. 'sinful to use·' .lsn'Ht just·as .s.inful for per- .'., 'He wascailonized in 1232~ "' growing suburban housing developmen~.: .... '. . '. cosmetics. '.Intention, however," .~:~ to h~;v~r-in~Ulgent w~t.. " : MONDAY-St. Sosthens, M"';' , .And' so. these· music eoncerts,h;lV~maintained.the can make: it ,sinful; thi~ is true: .elr e. eA"as It w.ould.~ : . tyro In.th.e first century'he_~ 'Church in 'Pa~is as a patron of fine music and,all the while,··~of ,almost any: ~OOdd" tthh~ng. t~at., ~:~n~em ~ negl~ct. ~he ehil- .. the ruler of the ..synagogue vi' , . l' I" ' "'1' . I . d I'" "you can name--goQ II1gs can·t, ./:-, "Corinth and bec'ame a dl's'cI'ple ~ . they ,have been h.e pmg so.' yea soc~o ogl.ca . an ,re.. lglou8 be put to.ba·d..use... · '. '.' .. ,., , '.' .'. . . '. . ", ' , .Th t d ff lt th 1 i I S~~' Paul. He probably is the' problem brought 'about by the rapid .growth 01 population. If makeup is used to arou~ .....,.. Ill,~' I .!Cu .. " eo o~ ca' "Sosthens, our brother," ·meD.,;. , in all the suburbs. And.....:...a happy situation~the financial impure passions in ,oth,ers, it. is,•. qt'h~!;ls J~.l1 ~'danf·~w,.. etr.A~dactua.IlYh· tionedi~ t~e ,introduction of taW' -, . ' -'. h t lly a ser~ous matter' if ere IS no e ml e answer whlc .. , advantage does not seem to have :been obtamed att e Da .udra 't' f . 1 't" dt ' 'wlluld ·apply.to every case sinc'e fir~ E~lstle of St. Paul to ~: . h . f . .. I" '. . . ~se ou 0' rea vam y an. o. h' . ,. ' " ; Cormthlans. Some contend' that expenlle elt er 0, mUSIC or re I g l 0 l l . ' . deceive, it may be 'venially . t, ~re. are',varymg degrees. of. Ii ft . d' b ' 'b' ', , . , .' . neglect and overindulgence. . .e a erwar s ecame a In''S· mfuI. Most women ,are not ex- ". , . ' " .. ' ,.,,' . and· went to a martyr's death. . . cessive in their use of cosmetics; ,~n gen~ral.there IS a prll1Clple ", .' , . .,' but use them to be nea't attrac- th~t states that 'virtue stands in . TUESDAY - SS. Saturninuil A ·Lutheran minister and two Lutheran ,laymen "in . tive and more presentable or to pl,e middle'. The vi~tue in this 'and' ,Sisinius, Martyrs.. Satwi-. Germany have founded the League for Reunion of Protes- conceai some defect.· If this is ca~e is, the proper care 'of the . ninus,' said to be a CarthiginiaB so the question of sin doesn't child, If the parent slides to t~e by birth,. was a priest in Rome. tants and Catholics. "' a~ply at all. negative; side he is guilty of Sisinius . was his deacon. The,The program of the League calls for a brotherly union The question is one that has neglect; If the tendency is too were sentenced :lS Christians to based on a properly organized spiritual life; a binding arisen in ages past, with per':' fa~ to the positive side, he is hard labor and ·subsequently. ' ., about· 209, were martyred. The,. order of prayer; a new order of worship combining Biblical haps more justification. It was· gUIlty of excess. Both of these parental atti- were buried in the cemetery ~ · tradition with traditions of the Protestant worship, and once asked of St. Francis de Sales. The good saint was not tudes can· be seriously sinful, St. Thraso. elements of the Catholic Mass; and a'Protestant catechism . WEDNESDAY _ St. Andrew. devoid of a sense ,of humor; he but to ~ete~mine which ,is. the that would be acceptable to· the Catholic Church. answered:" "Some persons may more gUIlty IS abnost as diffIcult Apostle. A native of Bethsaida iD. The league is seeking members principally among object to it; others may see ,no as to choose between th~ unfor-, Galilee, he was the elder brother Protestant ministers arid laymen. It hopes that the time harm in it; but since you ,ask my tunat~ly too fre~uen~ product of of St. Peter and also was a 'fish· will come when contact can be mad~ with the authorities advice, I shall take a middle of the .smners: .whlch IS the. more, erman. A disciple of St. JaM the road course by allowiq.,g you (or. less) deSirable result m .our the Baptist, he was the first 01. of the Catholic Church and at that time the Protestants to rouge one' cheek." It IS not ~ocla! .structur~-the sPOl~ed . the Apostles to be called by must be in a position to show the biblical and' religious difficult to imagine the twinkle brat or the reJected. neurotIc? Christ. There is no certainty of values that they hold and which are acceptable to all and in his .eye when he gave this It depends O? the Individual lIis mission labors after t'he answer. case. But deflmtely, both sys- Ascension but 't . II which they would not want to giye up. terns are . I '. , I IS genera ,. So, while use of cosmetics may ,serIOUS y wrong. agreed that he worked in Greece This is a serious desire for unity and for a seeking out be sinful because of ulterior ti • • and the Balkan countries: Trad~ of what can unite and what specifically divides. More and mo~iv~s of the 'use~, the va,st In a' church booklet, there. has it that he was imprisoned; 'more non-Catholics are searching their own consciences maJorIty of .wo~ankm~ may I,n was a picture of a "sacrarium". scourged and crucified on aD. It looks 'like' a Sil1k to me. X-shaped cross at Patras' ic and examining their own religious values. And they are good conscIence retam theIr membership in the ladies' auxilWhat is it for? Achaia. It also is recounted that finding that once prejudice has been' removed and charity iary of the painter's union. he remained hanging on the reigns, they can come to see that there are many things • • • The SACRARIUM is used for cross for two days,' pr.eaching that Catholics and Protestants hold in common. And they Why do we have to repeat disposing of. the ashes of sacred to all who came near and ensins that We have already con·things, used or. unusable holy treating them not to hinder ~ are then led to draw up some clear views on what keeps fessed every time we gO to . water, water used in washing the .agony. them apart from Catholics. eonfession? ' sacred line1!s and similar' things. ---._ _ It differs from the ordinary sink It is not a matter of obligation in that its pipe leads directly to to repeat past sins every time the ground rather than into a Communists Force that you go to confession, but it sewage' system. Seminary Closings is very strongly recommended. - SAIGON (NC)-The commuThere are several good reanist government of North Vi~ sons for this recomme!1dation. Au~tri~rn JOMrnClllist~ nam has forced two Catholie OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER Let's name a few. This practice Deplore Prooaganda seminaries in Hanoi to close. Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River helps us' to renew our sorrow SALZBURG (NC) - Catholic The seminar:ies were asked to for past sins. It enables us also, journalists have asked the gov- include a comunist-sla"ted "cul. 410 Highland Avenue to renew our resolve to avoid ernment to ban books that subt- tural" program in their curricFall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 ly glorify nazism while pretend- ulum and, would have been PUBLISHER Cardinal Protector ing to condemn it, subject to control by state iAMost Rev: James 'L Connolly, D.O., PhD. VATICAN CITY (NC)-AloiThe Working Group of Aust- spectors. . GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER sius Cardinal Muench has been rian Catholic journalists urged When these conditions were Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll appointed protector of the School the ministry of.. the interior iii. made known to the rector of the MANAGING EDITOR Sisters of Notre Dame by Pope the same petition to stem a 'seminaries, he decided not .. Hugh J. Golden John. rising tide of obscene literature. reopen them for the fall ten:a. Although Thanksgiving Day had been celebrated occasionally in America since early Colonial days - and especially here in Massachusetts-it remained for Abraham · In to sIgn, . . 1863,th f' t t' I I Th an k sL mco m e Irs na lOna annua giving Proclamation. The text of that Proclamation gives much food for thought, and especially' to those who inveigh against the "new arid bold attempts" to push God into the national . scene and who invoke the "traditional" exclusion of the Almighty. . In part, the text says: "Now, therefore, I, Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, do hereby appoint and set apart the last Thursday of November, as a day which I desire to be observed by all my fellow citizens wherever they may be, asa day of thanksgiving ap.d praise to Almighty God, the beneficent Creator and Rule~ of the Universe. "And I do further recommend to my fellow .citizens . aforesaid, that on occasion they do reverently humble themselves in the dust and from thence offer up penitent and fervent prayers and supplications to the Great Disposer of events, for a return of the inestimable blessings of peace, union and harmony throughout the land, which .it has I d pleased Him to assign as a dwelling place for ourse ves an for our posterity throughout all generations." On this Thanksgiving Day no different ideas need be introduced. Lincoln's words say all and~ say it well. And they establish quite firmly the true traditional American attitude toward God and His place in the national scene. I

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Reports Spread On Conciliation In Yugoslavia ROME (NC)-Five Yugoslav bishops now in Rome will not comment on reports . that their nation's communist government has offered to regularize Church-state relations. The Yugoslav prelates are here officially to take part in meetings of preparatory commissions for the corning ecumenical council. Vatican of£iciaIs have also refused to comment on the conciliatory move reportedly made by the.' regime of Marshal Tito, which has persecuted the Church since it came to power after World War II. Latest reports from Belgrade said the offer of the Yugoslav Federal Executive Council to regularize Church-State af£airs was made in reply to a memorandum from the Yugoslav Bishops, who met in Zagreb in September. The Bishops' memorandum reportedly pledged the loyalty of 6,000,000 Catholics to Yugoslavia's government and consti'tutiori. The Bishops are alSo said to have stated that they now view the 1953 law on religious llffaits, which they opposed at the time it was passed, as competent· to "assure' the normai development of relations' between the Church and. state." At the same time, .reports iltated, the Bishops demanded more freedom for religious education, the right to publish and circulate Catholic literature the restitution of certain nati~nal­ ized ,Church properties and the return of parishes' civil records taken by the government. They also called for Churchstate contact through ·the Bishops . or their representatives rath.er than through priests' associations sponsored by t~egov­ ernment itself.

THE ANCHOR7 Our Lady of Assumption Parish, New Bedford Thurs., Nov. 24, 1960 Serves Catholics of Cape V er~an Extraction Students Mis$ion

By Avis Roberts The only parish in the United States for Catholics of Cape Verdean extraction, Our Lady of the Assumption, was founded in 1905 in New Bedford. The new church, built in 1957 at Cherry and South Sixth Streets, has a great attraction for Catholics throughout the city-it is the only church which has a noontime Sunday Mass. Formerly located at 368 South VVater Street, the original Assumption Church C-, . had a colorful past. It form'. erly served from the 1840's

Crusade Founder To Aid Lepers

vvABAG (NC)-A veterall American missioner who founded the Catholic' Students' Missjon Crusade while still a seminarian is on his way here to New Guinea to care for victims of Hansen's disease (leprosy). The missionary, Father Clifford King, S.V.D., volunteered for his new post in the mountains of New Guinea at the agtt of 72. He joined the Divine Word missioners at the 'age of 2L While at their seminary in Techny, 111., he founded the Catholie Students' Mission C r usa de, which today has a million members and is represented in 3,100 schools in 50 American dioceses. The crusade keeps Catholie students informed of the goalD and problems of the Church's missionary effort. Father King, a native of Mineville, N. Y., went to China as a seminarian, and was ordained there in 1920. He served as a . missioner in China until 1941. His next mission assignment WlUl the Philippines. , ' Escapes ..Japanese He escaped by submarine from the Japanese invasion of the 'Philippines, and later became personal secretary to Thomas Cardinal Tien, S.V.D., Archbishop of Peking, who resided at the Divine Word Seminary in Techny after the Red takeover in China. When Cardinal TieD went to Formosa early this year as Apostolic Administrator of Taipei, Father King volunteered for his new post in New Guinea. As chaplain at the leprosarium at Yampu near here, Father King wiill serve the 500 patients and 1,000 outpatients now cared for by two Holy Ghost Missionary Sisters and 14 native orde.r. lies.

as a seamen's chapel, a Jewish synagogue, a kindergarten and a supply store for needy residents. Bishop Stang bought the building from a New Bedford businessman Aug. l!i, 1905, for the Fathers of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Belgium. The· parish was dedicated by Bishop Stang on Nov. 26, 1906 and the first pastor was tbe Rev. Stanislaus Bernard, SS.CC., who came to this country from Luxembourg. He lived at the monastery of the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts in Fairhaven. Venerable Father Bernard, chaplain of Sacred Hearts Academy in Fairhaven, is now 84 years of age and in his OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION CHURCH. 58th year in the priesthood. He served all pastor of St Joseph's New Bedford Church, Fairhaven, until his retirement in 1944. ' Special collection~ and parties several feet to the west of the " Father Bernard' served As- found a warm response from the church prop'erty and now serves sumption Church until 1917. He parishioners and by September as a rectory. was succeeded by the Rev. Arn- 1956 enough money was on )i'and Many Activities old Derycke, SS.CC. The Rev. ' ' to start construction of the"new There are many parish' activStephen Couturiaux, SS.CC., was .$200,00"1 ~l:lurch. ities. 'Among them is the _very pastor in 1924 and he was suc- ' The last Mass was sung at the active Our Lady of the Assumpceeded by the Rev. Egbert Steen- old'church by Father'Bernard on tion Club, which donated the beeck in 1935. The Rev. Hubert Sept. 1, 1957. The following day main altar of the new c!turch. Vlasselaer was pastor from 1945 the first Mass was celebrated by Other activities are the' Holy to 1947 when the present pastor, Father, Couturiaux, now, in Name Society, Boy Scouts, Girl the Rev. 'John Godelaer, SS.CC., Washington. Bisho~ Connolly Scouts, Cub Scnuts, Girls' Choir wail appointed., blessed the cornerstone June 23, and Association of the Sacred The first assistant pastor of 1957, and the new church' on Hearts. Three years ago the church lli::the parish was appointed in 1948. Sept. 2, 1957. ' He was the Rev. Edmund G. The church, of modern Roman quired another old New Bedford architecture, and seating 490, was home for use as a convent. Seven Francis, SS.CC., now pastor of St: Mary's Church, North Fair- completed.in less than a year. It Sisters of the Order of the Love tJ,aveil.. Father' Francis was one has a solid bronze. tabernacle of God, . whose mother house is in Spain 'came to the parish. of the first Portuguese-American- with hand-carved figures. priests to be ordained into the A large two-story home ,wan After learning English they asAmerican Province ,:, of the ,acquir.ed with the new church sumed the teaching, of kinder-, property. It was formerly the garten, pre-primary' a'nd ca'te-' Fathers of the Sa-:red Hearts and parsonage '.of the ,First Congrechism 'classes for Our Lady he was the first Portuguese- gational (Unitarian) Society of 'AsStim'ption children. They', teach .. 0 . R '" " American priest to serve at Our New Bedford. similar classes at,St. Mary's in' IglOft Lady of the ·Assumption Churcl!.. "The building was moved back WASHINGTON" (N'C)- The Fairhaven. Five other. membern , ' ,ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-A '11he ·second assistant pastol",' the , . ,'" " ", , ',-' '" :, ".. ,. , Eraocis\: Cardinal . Spellman, p~ ;the~rder came~e.r~.rece~tiy " resolution .stating, ~!tat. re.ligioUs Rev. Raphael Flammia,'was'apaward. for outstand'ing-work"Jn from' Spain to learn Eriglish·.," progra~s l~ public schools are pointed .in July 1950. '.-; ,,:, ,C' U: ,e~. ;theology was presented by, the They' formerly' were' Wi~h' 'the '~unconstItutIonal' and shoUld,' be Cardinal to Msgr. John, QiJasteft Lash~d by H~~icanes . '"Cou,rses~ ·order: in Cuba, '",'" \ ',,- '. < ,banne~ was adopted by the womof; the Catholic Universfty ,6f '" N, the parish ',grew ~t became apparEmt that, the ,low-lying "':"WASHINGTON(NC),-- COnAnMlrica: ' , ,"" . ...., 'o' ... .." " .. ...,. ,-,-" of AmerIca. Delegates to- the .,.iJThe.Cardinal ... Archbishop'dl church" on Water '.Street, was too 'fraternity ,of Christian Doctrine l'brancb convention represented New. J York; who' .was' here' fo'r 's~afi. :it" \1(as lasl!.,' 'by ,hurd- :training '''courses" w.ill 'be ,held ,;the annulil, meeting of the U~ S. ,caries in 1938, and 19'44' and during 1961 for prie~s of' Brazil CHICAGO (NC)-Freedomda . so~e 500 synalWgue sisterboocb '~tro~ swimmers' ,br~~t,ed ,tb,~and' Argentina~ , . " "" the U. S. is being challenged by in the U. S. and Canada. ' ~atholic Bishops, made the pres!Archbishop RobertE. LuCey 'Of communist slavery, the former entation to ·a priest representing tides to rescue, sacred, vestmenta. ' . ,'" San' 'AntOnio', Tex.,' episcopal chief of the Army ordnance mia~sg!,., Quasten, whQ was called chairman' of inter-Americah "r~ ,sile, .command" warned here.; , . W RO)lle to assist in prepratiQPS '" , C~NTER-, lations for th~ Confratenritj' ijf for the ecumenical council. . ~o meet this challenge of the rPaint and Wallpaper . '1yIsgr. Edmond' D. Benard, ,,' OKLAHOMA ,CITY (NC).:-, Christian 'Dodrine, 'said 'two communists we must have edu. Dupont Paint ' dean of the school of sacred the- .lfour priests froIr., Oklahoma courses will' be conducted for cation," retired Maj. Gen. John ology a't the university, accepted have left for the Midwest and Brazilian priests and one for B. Medaris 'told 1,000 'People lit,. Rear of Store the"a·ward for Msgr. Quasten ill Eal!t, to recruit women graduates Argentine priests. tending a fund-raising dinner ~ 422 Acush. Ave. it brief ceremony at Holy Reand students of Catholic collegeS! The courses will be given by for the De Paul University schoL.., Q,,~,.~ cor. Middle St. deemer College, house of studies to assist in this diocese's state- three U. S. priests'- Father arship fund. PARKING wide lay catechetical program. James McNiff, M.M., director of for Redemptorist Fathers. "We no longer have the choice CCD work at the Bogota', cONew Bedford lombia, headquarters of Ule Latin between surrender and death, as Arrierican Bishops' Conference, in past conflicts," Gen. Medaris said. "With the challenge of and two priests of'the San AntoRussia and the Ghinese communio archdiocese. . nists, we, are deprived of a Archbishop Lucey also s~i:d choice. We' must condition ourthat' Bishop Alberto Deane 'Villa Maria, Argenti'na, has re- selves to the certainly that the communists • • • can never be quested a special course in CCi> New England's Playground trusted." teaching methods 'for nuns and lay catechists of his diocese., A Plan YOllJfl' DOJlnce ~arty 8 training course 'for clergy is'tenf~$lhi@fi"il S!hl@W$ @11\ld] tatively schediJied in Lima, PerU, for January, 1962, he. added. ~(OlIl'il<qJMe~ •

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SAO PAULO (NC) -Carlos Cardinal de Vasconcelos Mota, Archbishop of Sao Paulo, Brazil., and president of the Crusade for a WorlClwide Thanksgiving bay, has called for Thanksgiving Day prayers for the' Church in Cuba, now suffeting persecution.

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)~~Dio~~~,e of-Fa" River~Thurs,Nov.24,1960 .

·'Ghristmas COmeS Early To Children of Per"

A·Family Began' Christmas . So .Center It Around' :Home

roLl (NC)-ehristmas came ~arly this 'year for 1200 need~

By Alice Bough Cahill If you haven't been looking at the calendar, all you have to do is' to walk into' any store and you'll see signs of .Christmas. This week one of the department ~tores was hanging Christmas decorations; the d!me store had all their cards and fancy wrap-. A tre~ decorat~ with gingerping paper on display, and bread cookies (made by the the artificial trees have family on a day when it is too added one made of aluminum cold to play outdoors) will also foil. All these harbingers re- delight a child. A small tree mind us that we must begin our decorated with toys is ~deal for own plans for a shut-in child, for he can not the holidays, only see it, but play with it. for Christmas Want to decorate your hall? is what you Again, you might get a small make it. Maybe tree for a hall table and trim it part of it is the with artificial red carnations. green wreath (Or use the flowers you wore in on the front your hair last summer, or if you door, or a tree have a flower-laden hat you CAPE LEADER IN WEST: Mrs. Gilbert J. Noonan of decoration that don't want, salvage this for dec- Falmouth, President of District 5, entering the conference a six-year old orations.) . . hall at the NCCW convention in Las Vegas with Mrs. Roland ,made in school Also, you can cheer hail and un d e r the stair walls at Christmas time, E. McSweeney, National vice-president from Brattleboro, guidance of his and display cards at the same Vt., and Miss Margaret Mealy, executive director of the Sister. Begin planning now time. Stripe your walls with NCC\y-. you can have a whole month Of .Christmas cards! Run bands of

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children in this sky-high Aftao "dean city, and Santa Claus came in the red_ robes of Msgr. Edward L. Fedders, M,M" head of 'the independent prelature of Juli. · . Tickets were distributed m the public schools to the 1,,200 neediest children. Each child then "cashed" his ticket at the Maryknoll mission where Msgr" Fedders presented him with a · bundle of second-hand clothing sent to Peru by U,S. Catholics. There were bundles for boy-a and girls. Although Msgr. Fedders worked hard to get them into the right hands, a few boys wound up with skirts and a couple of girls got Roy Roger&!' Levi's.

Bible Reading Ruling Binds Public Schools BALTIMORE (NC)-A rullIlfl favoring Bible reading in pub"; lie schools is binding on all Of Maryland's school system, ThO.. mas G. PUllen,state superinteDdent of schools said. Mr. Pullen has mailed out

Financial Difficulties Force Closing .~~~~;: 1~t:~:e;u~~~er~ ~a~f: :state•. 24 school superintendents in th,o Of C. atho Iic C II ege f or W omen The ruling holds th.~t· .

red ribbon from ceiling to basehelping to ttirninexpensive dec- . board, securing with "matching orations into part of your fam- thumbtacks or cellulose tape. 0 Pin the cards along the ribbon ily tradl·tl·on.· . . TULSA (NC) - Benedictine' Chrismas began with a fam- strip at in.terv~ls, al~~wtihng., thhe Heights College, Oklahoma's bandh to dpee... roug . I'ly, that's why, as 'Catho.lics, it colored' . four-year college, will close ltShas such a hold on th'e heart, . between eac car. . doors in May, .1961, because of why it's important to endow our Children's Rooms financial difficulties. . children 'with . memories of If your children are' gaining The closing of the 44-year-old home, of stories of the, ii,rst a consciousness. about the ap- institution conducted by Bene'Christmas and the little prayers pearance of their own rooms, dictine Sisters, was announced . a child can learn. ' . . you might plan to give them' by Bishop Victor J. Reed of The rea son we consider . gifts for their rooms and watch Oklahoma City and Tulsa. ' Christmas worthy of so much their eyes light up on Christmas , He said the diocese will pui'· effort at 'home is 'be~ause it be-morning. Gifts· which make, 'chase the 'college' property for ·gan with St. Joseph, our ,LadY hQme a., place. where. your. about $1.5 million, and indicated and the Christ Child· in astable, daughter can. entert~in,. o~ Your it may be converted into a Catha place that, howeve'r alien and son pursue ·hls 'hobbles, wll~ not olic junior high school in the humble, was for a little while only' make-- the holiday .season 'Fall of 1961. . their home. . . more f!ilstive, but will last, wh~~ . Bishop Reed's' announcement Do It Yourself bought with car.e ~nd thought, came after members of the board You can start right now mak,. throughout the whol~ year.. 'of control,w;hich he appointed 'lng 'decorations for 'your home, '. A girl,· would appreciate 'earlier this year to study the col·with everyone having a part in matching" bedroom ensemble -: lege's financial.. condition; m~t· the project. Get some papier- drapes,' bed covering, .dressing ·with the Benedictine Sisters. mache Santas in the"dime stQre; table .skirt, vanity;I,amps and '.8 "B,ened~ctine ~~ights College whitewash them and fill their floppy-eared dog .on her· pillow. 'was establiShed i~ Guthrie, packs with' holly'. T~ese, can. be 'Something. else she!d like' woul!! Okla., where tht!' Sisters had' a decoration for man~~l.or,boo.k- ..be a gay floral'chi~tz c~air ~ founded a 'motherhouse in 1889. case top. Junior, c~n :take, one .of .curl up in al).d read. :-.. .. " ' ..' The college ,was tr.ansferred to ·these to a shut-in peighbor to . ,For brother,- a plastic leather... Tulsa. in 1955~ Last year it extend the season's· blessings. , c:overed chair is practically boy- granted 18 degrees.. Another dime-store. invest- proof, washable and resistant to '. St. Gregory's 'of Shawnee; II inent is a red dust ;pan. Put a scratches. You might get him ~ nail hole in the. center of the desk with open shelves at l1~de back, so you. ·can h~ng, it; then to hold radio and books, or a' fill it. with holly. Or use ,ever.,' globe, or knick,knack shelves greens from the 1>~ck. yard and 'to hold his hobby c:ollection.. . NEW ORLEANS (lITC) - Sisthose pine cones, the children'. ;c .. ter Mary Magdalen is probably brough(' ho~e 'from' .~amp this "Cardboard College" ,the nation's leading iong-dist. summer.. WIth red ol1cloth or . _ .' . .. , . , PHILADELPHIA (NC) , "':- 'ance commuter. florists's paraffined ribbon tie big;"perk'y bow on:the ha~dle. . "Cardboar~ college,", nickna~\e . Every' Friday afternoon Sister You can hang this alone, or in a of Barbelin' Annex; ,.a two-story :Magdalen boards. a' jet in' New grouping of three or more if tempor.ary structure built at St. .OrIeans and flies to New· York. you have the wall space. 'Joseph's College ·13 ,years ag~) t~ Ev~ry .Sunday:sh~ .boards ~ jet Even with a big '.tree in. the provide classrooms for. Veterans in New York and ,flies back to living rooin.· for the familY: to -of World War II, has been razed . NewGOrleans in time to meet her enjoy, you might- ad~ o~her by students ,and alumni after. . Monday ~ classes ;it. Dominicall trees in the children's rooms. A :Bishop ,Joseph McShea, adminis- High School, where she teaches '. . ',' youngster would love a small . trator· of the Philadelphia arch- .Spanish. tree with. small cars,~planes, etc...diocese,· d~dicated the college's . Her commuting, which, will :""or if he is still a toddler, use . new $1,100,000 Bellarmine class- . continue throughout the .school· small toy animals.' .. -room builc;lilJ-g.. "year, makes it poss~ble for her to .attend' the weekly meetings in New York of the consultants to the Modem Language Materials Development Center. The center was set up under the National Defense Education Act to develop high school language programs and materials in French,. German, Italian, Spanish and Russian. Sister Magdalen is the only nun on the IS-member panel of· consultants. Her traveling expenses and those of other members' who come from many parts of the country-are paid for by the government.

two-year junior college for men, Bible reading in opening schoo! is the only other Catholic insti- exercises is constitutional' but f h'19 h ' . t h e thO'a't pup'l'ls who obJ'ect to l't m;·:...· , t Ut·l~n er I earmng 10 ... o. state. be excused. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"S

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Prelate to Bless Shrine Windows

By Mary Tinley Daly It is amazing that one who doesn't budge when aft atarm clOCk jingles raucously only six inches from pillow at , 6 :30 a.m. can detect the slightest jingle of a phone bell at , ':30 p.m. If you have teenagers at your house, you know what I mean. The auditory read, assignment to the absentee. nerve, it's a wonderful thing. Well, according to the letter and so adaptable to moods. of the law, we have enforced the "But, Mom, I didn't even rule of "no disturbance with

WASHINGTON (NC) - The . rose windows donated to the National Shrine of the Immacllco late Conception by the International Federation of Catholie Alumnae, will be blessed Saturday. Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle. of Washington will bless the windows and will offer a MaSIiJ hear that alarm clock!" from a homework." of Thanksgiving for IFCA memfrantic teenager, taking rollers "At the Mail Box'" bers and friends at the Mary out of her hair, As to the bell-ringing during Memorial Altar in the Shrine struggling into the dinner, there' are rulee crypt. u n i for m. about that also-and just ~bout The altar, also a gift of IFCAo "Never mInd, as silly, ) was presented on Nov. 19, 1927. ·I'll make it." When the phone rings during and dedicated on Dec. 8, 1928, She doe s, grace before dinner, everybody by the late Bishop Thomas J. though it means looks up and the one saying the Shahan, rector of the Catholie a quick drink prayer gets it over in a hurry. University and the first honorof orange juice, The Head of the House desigary president of IFCA. • piece of toast nates First Answerer. The huge rose windows, domclenched in her "IT it's for me, tell 'em I've inating both ends of the shrine tee t h as she gone to the mailbox," he shouta. transept, were given by thoupicks up her "C;h-h, Daddy," from First Ansands of IFCA members in this books, I u n c h swerer. country and Mexico as a memoMARKS JUBILEE: Sister Marie Elizabeth of St. Anne's bag and takes From then on, the game really rial to two late directors of the off. to catch the 7:25 bus. begins. With a no-phone-after- Hospital, Fall River, marks golden jubilee with "business federation - Bishop Patrick J. Curfew Time seven curfew, before-seven callil as usual" as she distributes operating room garb to student McCormick and MagI'. Edward B. Jordan, former rector and In the evening, it's another are frequent. Frequent? They nurses Madeline Manha (left) and Annette Williams. vice rector of the Catholic UniMory. Though deep in homework are incessant. versity; the late co-founders. If the call is for First Answerafter dinner, with bedroom door er, it will be her turn to answer Clara Douglas Sheeran and Siselosed, when the phone rings ter Mary de Paul Cogan; and 'downstairs, that upstairs door next time. If it is for somebody living and deceased membero <d Opens as though with an electric else, that somebody else answers ,Monday was the golden jubilee ).ife-serving the patients of the ,the IFCA. beam. Comes sotto voce: "For the following call. It's a jumping me? Please, let me take it this jack game but people Seem to of Sister Marie Elizabeth of St. ,Dioc'ese's only Catholic hospital. Now working in the operating Canadian Sulpicions time~" , , enjoy it. "Now, if that's for Anne's Hospital, 'Fall River. It's always "this time," though your mother," the Head of the There was a special Mass and room, as she has for the past 40 To Direct Seminary tltere is a rule at our house that House now and then interjects, relatives gathered to congratu- 'years, Sister spent the first 11 , MONTREAL (NC)-SulpicianlJ years of her religious life as a ~body, but nobody doing home"tell 'em she's gone to the mail- late the jubilarian. But apart from that Sister nurse in the wards of St. Anne's. of the Canadian province will box." Why the "mailbox" rouwork is to take phone calls from 'Born in Canada in 1884, her take over direction of the maiA , onward. tine? It's his way of saying, "not spent ,the day as she has the other 18,000 odd of her religio\W family moved to Fall River, from seminary in Bogota, Colombia. .: Enforcement of this rule is not at home for the present!' where' she' entered the com- in February, 1961. lIS easy as it sounds. Often it'inThe gone-to-the':mailbox wall They were requested to do lI@ niunity May 4, 1907. Profession volves us as a link-in commun- picked up somewhere along the came in 1910 and she has spent by Archbishop Luis Concha Coricat~~n resembling trans-Altantic line - perhaps 'Subconsciously her entire religious life at St. doba of Bogota and Archbishop Dews. dating back to the time he had Anne's with the exception of 10 Giuseppe Paupini, Apostolic: "I wasn't at school today," gone to the mailbox to pay an WILMINGTON (NC)-A sis- months at the community'a Nuncio to Colombia. eomes a soft voice over the oV,er-due phone bill just as the terhood in India w~ll be helped The Canadian Sulpicians have motherhouse in Tours, France. phone, "and I just wonder what telephone company called. been in Colombia since October, by Catholics of the Wilmington "She Spoils Us" the religion lesson is? I got the Only good thing we can say diocese. 1949, directing the minOl' and In ,addition to her hospital major seminaries of the Archmath and I got the history, but about' our evening telephone 'The "Mother Theresa Leper duties, Sister is infirmarian for diocese of Manizales. There are could you find out for me what rule is that it certainly keeps the the religious issue--I mean, the calls short. Those of us-and I'm Fund" drive was opened here to the nuns on St. Anne's staff. four Canadian Sulpicians and eeligion questions--are?" the worst offender-who like to supply two ambulances for the "She spoils us," said one of seven Colombian SulpiciaM ia : We promise. Tiptoeing up- chat on and on to friends must, work of Mother M. Theresa, them. "Nothing is too good for the archdiocese. !'tairs, we enter the sanctum perforce, keep conversation to founder and superior of the Cal- a sick Sister." Rejoicing with Sister Marie anctorum of the homeworker. elementals with a whillpering cutta - Delhi - Ranchi community Elizal;le~ ,on her jubilee day "Who was that on the phone?" chorus in the background: "If of the Missionaries of Charity. NO.IOS TOO lie from homeworker. I'A boy?" you don't get offi how's anybody ,While visiting wilmi~tOO was '11 younger blood sister, NONE TOO SMM. "No," we answer succinctly. going to get through?" Mother Theresa had a reunion Sister Venaide, also at St. Anne's. SOmehow, by keeping down the Well, after seven o'clock, the Vvitli Francis ,X. Norton, wli~ Milny nephews, nieces and other Dumber of words-as in the tel- phone is ours! spent two ,years 'in India work':' relatives liVing - in Fall River egram-we think we are undis-lng ;"';'ithCathoiic Relief Serv'ices joined 10 the festivities, as the' turblng our homeworker. Pick- Radio Drowns' Out - , National Catholic Welfare jubiliarianmade a solemn 'N' ing up the assignment book, we' Conference. Mr.' Norton is now newalOt her vows. PRINTERS Voice of America, ~ek today's rellgion assignment. executive secretary of the DelaMONTREAL (NC) --'~oscow ware Council'for Industri81 ;, ,Prevost Alumni" Math, English, history, Latin. l'rench. Here it is. No, that'. Radio often drowns out Voice of Peace. " The' Alumni Association Of America broadcasts in Canada'~ ":Nearly ,13 years' ago, 'alter 20 PrevOlrt High School, Fall River, testerday's assignment. .....11111. . . . . . . . . We turn pages; 'the silence ia Arctic region, according to years of 'teaching as a member' will bold" its 'eighth annual "oken· and we hav~ to, aSk, Father Joseph' Meeus, O.M,I.. of the Institute 'of the VirglD fashion 'show at iI Tuesday night, who has spent eight years. -in the Mary; Mother' Theresa received. Nov. 29 at' White's restaurant. "Where's your religion?" . . 1-. . . . . . . . . . " " ' '" ' , ....ustifiable giggle, as teenager Arctic,' Permission to minister to Cal- Rogel' Gendreau and Andre eepeats, "Where'. my religionr The missionary, who has a cutta's poor, including 200,000 Plante are co-chairmen and an.. me, I hope!" five-month furlough, 'has been lepers and several hundred leper nounce thilt proceeds will proIOSTON . In stern pare D t role, we stationed at Ivuyivik, 1,500 miles children. vide a four year scholarship to OCEANPORf, ... '" point to the assignment book. north of Montreal. He said he A native 'of Yugoslavia, she Prevost High School and a colIII pantomime, teenager finck plans to visit his mother, Mri. 'AWTUCKII', L L became an Indian citizen to iden- lege grant to a high school grad"e assignment. ' Madeleine Meeus, ill Brusllela, tify herself with those she serves uate. We chomp down the stain aDd Be14:.i 4ffi. , and founded the Missionaries of Ch\uity, who now number ,119. ~tive wqmen:, '

Nun,ot St. Anne's Hospital Notes Jubilee With Business as Usual

Faithful to Aid N,uns"'in ,India

SULLIVAN BROS.

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','," 'Attleb()ro" Dist'riCt ' "Affiliates'of the, Attleboro District of the Diocesan Council of Catholic' Women will hold an open meeting iIiSt. John's par.... ish hall, Attleboro ,on Feb. 1.

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.1.S ·:a,:aIl~bl~. to,~he· d,l ~~d s!1ft~rIng· and·othE!rs .1,1qable to pra,ctice. ,the devotion in: a ·church. " HIS, . Holmess' Pop~... J.ohlt '. TAl~~~,(N~)+Mot:el;th·an: ., !],'his has been .made. possil;>'e~hr.ough.the Catholic ListenE!f:Library, "establ,ished.,:last· .., f',XI.~~ <.has .. ~rg~d< ,.:n~hgI~_~~, " ~,~~OO~.,u~!yersIty· ,a.~~.,~Qnege . ~ug~st at:,the. 'h~meof Mr:and Mrs~ MerrilL Maynard;. Taunton... Sjghtless. themselves, . ':'8!1~e~I9,~s_ . '~::~~Qp'er.at~' :)~ . , . •. ~t.4de.'},ts .. ,~tFe.n~ed"a:~a~.s tp.e Maynards longag~.rea.,. . . . '~.' .. ~t~e~.r, a~o~,tol~.c~ork. an_d .not.'~

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.here markmg the reorgam- l' d th d' f .' 1 ,rivalry hamp~J,' the gpO<!" of t~ . ,., '. . :., _ , I z e , '. e nee 0 speCIa '. Church: .. . . ' . ,~ .' ,·zabo~ o~ _the Catholic Students . spiritual facilities for the .' . ,; ..: ... :." ." '. . , 'Ass6clahon:' • '. ~".., .'; The poP~. sP9ke at an au.dlen~ ; A~:l{iliary ,Bish~p PauLCheng " handIcapped. To thIS end, ,g,r3:h~e~ to '~uper~o!s'of·.'Itali~n . .. ~hih-ku:ifig. of ,taipei celel:irat~d for the past three :.y,ea~s they . ~elIg.lOus. co~mun~tIes. :wh~·. we!~ · the' Mass at'. Intern'atiohat House. have. been most actIve m fur:. holdmg ,their. :natlOnal congr~811 · The assoCiation's neW-director . nishing tapes of religious interin Rome: . Father EdWard Murphy, S.J., of est tot~ose. with access to tape .lIe' said that, ~it'. tl)e·past 4t , San' Frantisc.ci, said the large recorders. However, they felt years tne, popes have given 11U1'r\· attendance' af. the' Mass '. was. that a greater number of people erous indicatiol)s they ·favor. 'a : "proof 0.£ tne zeal' of olir spiritual woul~ be able to use· a record coordinated 8postolate that .~ · directors.and the"entliusiasm of player. . not "exposed.~ ,!!seless and dam'. th~ student group iead.erl;;"·· They ,contacte~ Father Mata~ing delay ',because 'of lack .~ Construction of a large student t~ew" O,.F.M.~ Director. of the :agreement, because of claims to -~eriter is about to begin: it .will . FranCiscan Aposto~ate ~f the exclusivene.ss o~ work, or,G~ : be' staffled by Jes'uit "Fathers Way:.of the Cross, and natIOnally forbid, because .of a certain kind :'and' 'will have a' large' cnaplH known retreat J?aster. With of'intolerance toward the work ;'3n 'auditoriumconferei1ce ~oom~ Father Miller giving the medita-also precious-::-cairied out .. J)y '! and a residen~e for priests:'. ", . tion .ancl application,. and the I ~others the same field of the ~" The new 'center wiUreplace . )Maynards: ~he r~spo.nses, a re~~ Lord.'" :'twQ s!TIall student centers op- ord of t~e.StatIons wa.~ cut ~n . . . '~rated by the Jesuits near: Na- ihe studIOS of Taunton s radiO . Bishop's .Supervision :tional TghyanUniverslty ari'd the ,station WPE~,with JOt,II: ~cCarPope John recalled that ia : Normal. University, Taipei's two th~ .as engmee~ and ~hchard 1957, when he was Patriarch of · major universities. Ank13n as techmcal adVisor. Venice, he made the same point. . Proportion Increases :The. record was then produced He noted also that the Roman About l' 500 of the 20000 uni- by RCA and is being distributed. Synod last January.. resulted in · versity an'd college students in by the Catholic Listener Library, . , the requirel!1ent that Religious i,1P~ Taipei area are Catholics. with Mr. May.nard as ~o.ordinator. and diocesan priests work to,That is 7,5 per cent of the stu. SpeCial CrUCifiX . ·.gether under the Bishop's su.:~ent popl!lation. There are about The Mayni:lrds ~xplain, "Most pervision and not in oppositioB. \80,000 Catholics on Formosa, ~:8 of those. who r:celv e th~. re<;,o.rd Pope John said cooperation repel' cent Qf the total population .make. so~e k,md . of f.manClgl of 1.0,000,000,. contnbutIon,..covermg the. thr~e . ,·sults. in good' works. "On the d 1l t f . d other hand," he added, "one The proportion of Catholics in - o. ,.~r ,c?S 0 , .preparmg ~n, . knows from bitter experience :..~e student body has incr.easedmal1~l1~ It, but some are bemg that 'fragmentation of energy is ; .by, . half within the past·, two . ,Provl?ed . ~,E?r those. una ~le .' to a notable and dangerous obstacle ;,)lears. To cope with th.e ,increased . contnbute. .,~ ~~ecla~ly md~~- . , . ' to liberty itself,' 'to the sacrect WAY OF !HE ~ROSS,: ~r. and Mrs. MerrIll Maynard, 'ministry, and to the apostolate.'; ,,»uJ1lber of Catholic students,:a .. gence~ ,.~r~clfl~ ..IS .glven with.. , '.eo~mitteeof ~r~~sts .U,?dt;r Tai -:- ..... ea~hr~C?r~ ... :" . . , •. Taunton, show how the blind or others of the handicapped ;!pel'll new ,Auxdiary Blshop,has,H .~ls.proJec~.pr:oves.se,I~-,. can make'the"Way' of the Cross at 'home' by ineans of . reorganized the Catholic.: Stu- . sup-,~prtmg, . we expect to:- cut . · dents' Association. " .! • riJ?rerecordsiillhe future,'f Mr. l\e~ly-produced LP record. a.-nd.~pecially.blessed crucifix. ". 'E:~ther Murphy,' ihe':assoCia- .. Mayn~rd 'said~'''We ~~e .alrea.dY . WIth the Maynards are theIr Seemg Eye dogs, Fawn (left) · -tlon's new director,. 'has'been plannll1~ a .recorded, !JIls!lal, wlt.h. and Hildy. - " . :·working.among students>he';e the ord~nary of th~ lV"-;'s on one · since '1952.' is 'a'proj:e~sor' at. , r~cord, and the pI:operof the nards' work through their mem_ 'Maynards .are finding the"same' · Nation'aJ. :Tai~an .' Uriiversity. '. ~entEm seas~n. on .~nother. It.is . bership In the. Catholic Tape '. response true of their new rec·.Fifteen of his fellow-Jesuits 'now .hoped',that, thiS might be ·pre-. Recorders' of' America, Intei'na':', ord. "We have received letters . tional; the Gatholic Tape Guild, from mi!lsionaries in Africa,' a · ~re teach)n'g at :'yar'iouli seCular,: pared•.for Llmt of 1.961'." 'universities 'and col~~ges in 'arid" ~ .,The, tapes .pro~lde~ .:b~~he and' the Catholic Union of .. hospita~ in - the west, a shut-in: iiI ·the south.". .around Taipei. . , . . .' .' . .LI~~ar.y. are ~·dlf~er~nt· proJl- ~ Suffering in America.' , . . . . . ,., OSitIOn from the' record;' 'since . . Records can be obtained from "E.'n' g' lis.h. Cathol."c·s· __ ". -they .are than Length .borr'owedrather ' . . .SomeFull tapes are 'ofBooks· full .length the Cathi..lic· Listc-.1ers Library . . ' ~ ,1" pur~h~sed; T,~~s. is . ~easibl.e ,bt;- . books;, including '-"Imitation ,of at'P.O:. Box 4, Taunton. . . en ••ons ... ,, I .' ,:c..ause".of ·the,lr·'subJect 'm. atte.r.. · . Christ," "Problems of Pain;" .. ' PllfAY·.iI ilOOK '. :'''' LOND.ON (N.C) -7 The: 'thre,e. .·SiI;lC~·' they.copsist 0·' books se;: .. A"D' M'•• AL ~ .... an.d l a half. -rid li~il' Cathol.ic~'.i~.·. :.l,eeted,';' CathOlic, :'progrllms ''\in'd . 'fWby· ,Must I- Suffer,''' :~Theology ' ',and Sanity,." '$eed's -of Contem-""ng and. and' Wales will, ha;il:e ·.devotional material borroWers ' . , fOR NEW SPIRITUAl' STRENGTH 'provided' $84 riliUioil ·f~t'. CiltH..... lrieed' to :hear them' 6ril y once.. .plation"" and, others.' There are ., AND GRACE INIMANITE ABUNDANCE . · olic education' ",vhen' tne p'reserit ..On".the 'other hand-,. the' records .Gregorian also: musical tapes; primarily: of , I;' . ' chant .arid '. ot11er (buHding program· is completed will ,contain· material' that the ',church music. . . You will find in thi, i. in 1963, ..' ., ~(flic~ed.:wilJwant,~o' use, over a -., "Altogether, tne. Catholic ,ListThey. of.-t,ime. '. gem of devotion and . hwill haye. bjlilt 7.3.7. Jpng.p.eriod . ten~r Library 'has' 'over, .300 spirituality the very maJor.s.c ?ols since t~~;?verha~l ',: ·Rev. Mariol.1.:~oessler, a l\.iichi- tapes," said Mr, Maynard'.,Since .. ~EW BEDFORD' : lof the natIOnal educatIOn system ..·g;ifi r:riest who,·publishesrecords 11 d' . prayers 'which the I was started in 1944, Costs will tp distril:~te·to-tl::' cp':onically, a Istnbutjon is through himSaints said, prayers'for . t 11 t t l $196 ' . ',!!e,lf, he ha.. conVerted 'part of ,the . INDUSTRIAL . OILS j ac. u~ Y'. 0 a . . mIl~i,on, $112 ,ill, asked ~r. "Mily.nard to dis.'ff' ' .' . the d.ailyD.eec1 as well J millIon' IS bemg proVided by . tribute tapes of Scripture read.:1>, ~c~coh~ected to his h?IlJ.e 'into as for special occasions, ;. national or local authoritie!l. ing, !<ve Maria 'P'· 'r'ams,' 'Hou'r a. fIlmg space' for tapes and rec-' HE;'TING OILS ords. He has two tape recordc·ts pE:ayers which will be .of St: Francis, and other broad:" which allow him to copy' tapes of hiestimable help III . TlMKEN Taunton 'Vets casts of " special .. interest' to . requests dictate. .. every way; Installation of officers of . Catholics. . A secon'd source oitapes 'is Dr. With requests for tapes 'comihg . OIL. BURNERS i Father. 'John P. Washington Post A CHOICI 0' PlHI BINDINGS A' in from all over' the world, the $3.50.$4.750$6.50-$10.00.$12.50 .' 11799 Catholic War Veterans of. .Alfred . Berger of the National Bridallditlolll.. White Leathe.. tIS & Council .of Catholic Men,. who' ~. Taunton wiil be held at 7:30 " you, locol IIoobfor. connol ,upply · Saturday 'night, Dec. 3, at Our provides liturgical subject lecyou, wrIte 'or no.... 01 near,d deal.,. Building Contractor turesarid Catholic' Family. tapes. \" Lady of Lourdes' Church :Hall. ,501 COUNTY .Sf; In addition to' these, the' e ar~ j Committees are in charge of The EDWARD 0100LE CO., IDe. . ,Masonry', t: entertaim;nent, . invitations, r~~ individl~al' contributions .from. PUll.lSHfRS .,.' .' ",Ni:W BEDF.ORD· people acquainted 'with the May:" ] freshments, 'hall and publicity. 1, , 19 'ARK PLAca. NIW YORK 7, H. 't.

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Instructs Movieland' Children' in, ,California

Propitious Time For Unity Steps

·

Ti::O~:-ri~~~Nw~~~N~L~y ""

'Catholic Prelate / By 'PatriCia McGowcU. Asserts Bracero Movie· stars are 'run', of·' the' mill' to Siste r 'BlancheMarie;·l.H.M.~i native' of St.Joseph's.· P 09.'a In .Ra .. c ket

,. r. parish, ,Fall River, 'who's 'spent' 32 years as an Immacliiate Heart Sister iri Califimiia. 'She's· taugh' inanY'children Of screen luminaries and says the:mairi lliffere'nce'''between . WASHINGTON (NC) ,Aor, the reestablishment, of 40Th b ;religious unity, according' to them and otherS is that you see their 'maids and chauffeurs: far more .frequently 'thim';' e racero program haa ,".Archbishop KarlJ.Alter'of ·Cin- . you.-do·~theiF·parents;. ".P-ar.. '. " .: .,. developed into a.ghastly fu... . cinnatl. .: ents come to school affairs ternational racket," the U.S. Archbishop A.lter noted that . when possible, but so often ·.·Catholic Bishops were told by there is current today "a wide- . Archbishop Robert E. Lucey l>f spread desire for the reestab- they're on location," she 'San Antonio, ex~cutive chairman lishmerit of unity among all who sighed, . with obviously regretof the Bishops' committee for claim the name of Christian." ful thoughts of the movieland· the Spanish..;speakint,;, in his re"The strong ecumenical move- children so often without their . port' to U. S. Hierarchy. ment of our separated brethren" parents. . "But we treat the movie child..; - The Archbishop referred -to t~ is a propitious' moment for a' generous approach to a solu- ren just the same as any others," bracero program, under which she said briskly. "We make 'no Mexican nationals come to work tion of the pl'oblem," . he said. on farms in the U. S., as a Archbishop Alter spoke at a special fuss over them." Sister, daughter of· the late Mr. "wretched business." Pontifical High Mass marking ,the 100th anniversary of the ; and Mrs. Hugh H. Martin, enter':' "Under the 'provisions of Pub. dedication of Fod Wayne's Ca- :ed the California sisterhood .lie Law 78," Archbishop Luc~y "ttiedl'al of the Immaculate Con- :through the 'late Msgr. Francis. · stated, growers'. association and ··ception. . Conaty, a native of Taunton; who ,corporation farm owners' hi:l~e ,,',In, his sermon, Archbishop sc'rved in the Los Angeles d'io'been able to import nea~ly JUter referred to "the great cru- ; cese (now archdiocese). -. 500,000 braceros from Mexico for sode" set in motion by Pope She visited cousins in Cali~upposedly seasonal labor in John "to stimulate a desire for fnrnia and went to pay her i·e-· American agriculture. On fOl,lr Christian unity and to create a speets to the Monsignor. He occasions since 1951 the law has favorable climate for its reali- directed her to the Immaculate · been given a two-year extensiOB zatlon." Heart Sisters - and there she ·by the Congress, even when unstayed, graduating from Immac,employment was a major probDesire Among Christians . L os u 1a t e H ear t C0II e ge 111 lem in our c0l!ntry. "His convocation of an ecu- Angeles and spending her relimenical council to be held in glOUS career teaching in grade "This has had an adverse efthe ,near future, is not only a. schools staffed by the cornmunfect on the employment and recognition on the part of the ity. . wages of citizen agricultur1al Church of the growing desire saine As Ever workers. The bracero program among Christians everywhere to has developed into a ghastly In,recover a lost unity, but it is Sister visited her native parternational racket." . ish when in Fall River and re.a'iso tl'Je prelude for a further :ports that "it's the same old St. Survey Opportunities <;xploration of the means neces- Jos ep. h's" Th e r e WaS ... no parThe Archbishop said in .hit! /illry to. it," the Archbishop said. oehial school' When' she was a TRANSPLANTED F ALV 'RIVERITE: Sister Blanche 'report that" the regional office' of ,.,Outlining the necessary" rc- )'oungster, but she recalls mak; qu~remellts f;or .Christian t.\nity, lng. her 'first communion' in the' Marie, LH.M., Fall River native, now a religious in Cali- · the Bishops Committee for' the A.~<;h~ishop .Alterdeclared .that fl;t~rch and .bein~ cO\lfirme,d ..foro.ia, chats with (left) Mrs. Joseph T. Drury, niece and ·Spani'sh-speaking was able 'to bring'17 priellts from Mexico'te "we will make no progress there by Bishop Harkins 'of 'Mr~~ Lillian Martin, sisterOin law, as she visits hOl\le tOWn. · ;work' ;among· Spanish-speaking toward·. unity . unless 'we lay Providence. ..... .. . . a.side all prejudi<;c:'an d cUl~i:'.' ('He only came once every five many schoOls ·in· and around -to. Fall River_was five years ago. migrants. vate, i!lstead, th~ spiiW ;~f true years," she noted, "so there was ~Los Angeles. . On this trip· she saw her niece, He als~ said that the regio;(~ charity. III will and 'thetevival always a large crowd to be con- _Sister Blanche Marie's last visit ·Mrs. Joseph T. Drury of Our ·office is' "making a one-year of ancient g, rievances will profit 'survey of employment opporL~dy ~f. F.atima parish, Somerus nothing." .... . . firmed." .set. and' her sister-in-law, Mrs. t~ilities for Spanish-speaking Sister has taught. all grades "Neither," he COiltinu'ed, "will 'from 1 through :8.. She has -no ..LiIlian Martin, also of Somerset. -migrants .with funds provided bJ" \ mere cooperation in' a 'mutual favorites, enjoying all teaching Anoth~r' sistei-in,:law, Mrs. a charitable !foundation." program of social welfare serve It:vels. She is at' present at Holy John C. Martin, is a luember of LONDON (NC)-Most Englillh -·Holy Name :parish, FallR~ver, The Archbishop stated that our· purpose. The' unity we seek. Trinity School' in San Diego,. must'be a unity in faith, in sac':' where -she has been stationed _people·.areashamed of the court and her brother, Raymond' H. most Spanisp-speaking migl'anUi .ra. ~ents, and in discipline." decision allowingptiblic 'sale of 'Martin; is still a member of St. ·would prefer-for theh-. OWIlll~his year.·She has taught in ~he unexpurgated edition of D. _sakes and out of consideratio}'1 Kight Understanding ,Joseph's H. Lawrence's "Lady Chatferly's for tHeir wives and children-=Holy :Se~ St,udy,ing: ·:Lover,". , Ariother requirement for' the a Catholic bishop. said otowork the year-round at hom'e, MarquettePlans ug~ ,"in~tead.. of seeking. a fl'ai!ile teestabllshmen't' Qf Christian . Cause ·of American.. "here: . ~nity 'i~ ~"a 'l"ight . up~~rstandihg , VATICAN CITY (NC) -'-The 'I ". Auxiliary .Bishop Thomas B. ')E~p(j,nsi()n Program' -:and un"c.ertain livelihood f~lIp,!_ of the nature arid function of the preparatory wod~ !or.th(l beatifi.,. 7Pearsonof ·Lancaster· said that ;.Mlr.,WAUKEE (NC) -A 10- · :,il}g Se':1S9rtal crops with all. t~,e <::hu,cl1,'~,he S~M'i .,:, ,,' ;. . cation: Of KateriTekakwitha, -the 'decision,' following a test year,$45-million development' ~il~a.rds; ,anii tragedies il1vo~v,4l,d · He said: "The question at'issl,ie ; 117th-centurYAm~'ricari India'n 'case of Britain's new "obscene :prog~am has been announced for :m the hfe of a wanderer.". is: Which carn~-first-theChUlich : womali, may be completed with_ publications' law," 'resulted' in .Marquette University. 01 the Scriptures? Which is ~l)e in the':next year. -allowing "something to take '" . Father Edward J. O'Donnell, bedrock of unity 'llS' 'well. as tile ; Sacred Congregation of Rite!! .place that is against its very in- S.J., president of the ·university rtuthentic source of' ..doctrlrie? I officials !'tav¢ revealed the beati- tention of the prote~ting of pub,: 'said 'that Marquette will need to HOW.did the.' first (:hristi~H1s;... i,fication'" 'pl'ocedure 'has been .:J.ic andp'rivate morals." , '" :raise' $30·million· while another learn~ Jhe trut~s·ot· their r~li­ :speeded-up -by beginning an Moral Law '$15 million is anticipated in re"ion?,',',: . -..:"...: ' rexamin~tlon o£ a·second possible "'.' Billhop Pearson, writing 'infu:e , . C.hurch First _ . I search grants and loans. miracle said to have been 'C':1th9lic Uerald, national wee.kly I '''During the firs:t 150 years: of :: granted through her intercession. C'twistianity," he said, "the If the miracle is approved, it .newspaper., . asserted that "th~e Scriptures of the New Testa- could take .less than a year to 'legal decision does not affect ment were not yet' assembled clear the way for declaring her the moral law and conscience, . , lind the Church's teachings are into one book or volume, and "Blessed.". Thomas F.' Monaghan Jr) . 'our guide in this." . hence were not avaihible to the Approval of two miracles is individual faithful as a source required before the steps lead- . "Out of this trial one thing has Treasurer of instruction. Most,. of these ing to beatification can be com- 'emerged,'~ he said, "and that lS C h r i s t i ans, moreover, could pleted. One miracle pel'formed that most people are ashame~ 142 SECOND STREET . 1, neither' read nor write, but were i through· the' intercession of ,of the decision because it ha's dependent for 'tpelr jnstructl~n ;Kateri Tekakwitl'1a ~as exam;- 'highlighted the indifference of :the past years ·to the ever-risii1:g OSborne 5-7856 t1pon the sPQkeil word. . . 1 i,ined and' approved seve'l;al years 'tide of corrupting' books and , "It was the Church. which se- ;,ago. . '944 County St. :pictures which exploit 'tll.e le'eted frOm the many early , FALL RIVER New Bedford Christian writings those divinely Trading Stamp Drive -spending power of moder'it :youth." inspired, and rejected others as

:',is·.~t "a propitious moment"

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-People Ashamed -Of Book Okay . :

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MONAGHAN ACCEPTAN(E (ORP•

;apocryphal or non-authentic. "The simple and irrefutable :f'3et is that there would have been no New Testament if there had not been first a 'Church' to see to its formation, to ensure its authenticity, and to preserve it in accurate reproduction during the 1,400 years before most people could read or write, and before p.ointing was invented."

Earns School

~us

,

ERLANGER (NC) - Three million trading stamps collected by students and friends of Mary Queen of Heaven school in this Kentucky COmmunity provided the school with a new bus. Father Paul Ciangetti, pastor of Mary Queen of Heaven parish, arranged in September, 1959 for the trading stamp company to provide the b.us for 2,500 Medical Center Now books of stamps rept'esenting purchases of $375,000. :Affiliate of, Cath. U. Disc jockeys helped' to plug · OTTAWA (NC) -The eight- the drive. In mid-October the million-dollar National Defense school was still some 500 books :lVIedical Center will be an af- S11Y of the 'goal, but Father Cian:filiated hospital of the Catholic getti posted the cash difference ·University of Ottawa. and obtained the bus. ; ; . It will be used as one of the . The. priest said the school still · ~niversity's medical faculty is accepting trading stamps, b~­ i teaching facilities. . cause "in another year or so " The new 350-bed Army, Navy . we're going to need anothE!r and Air Force Hospital is ex-. bus." pected to be ready next May. SOU rce of ,Success · The affiliation agr~ement was I$igned by Father Hen'ri F. Le'-': UIJOUNGBU ,(NG) - Korea's : kare, OMI, rector of. t~e univer.,.· Catholic Prime ,Minister, John I~ity, . and Rear AdmIral T.. B. .M. Chang, ·told; U.S. troops her.e 1 ~cLean, surgeon ge~~ral of .P1~ .that prayer Is the source of llis ~f:~~dian Ar~~ F9r<:es; success. '.' ,;., .' '

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12

THEANG:O~-Dioc~seof Fall River-Thurs, ,Nov. 24, 1960

Natittnal Pl~~tfg~"Q~~'~;i~~

Of SeconC:ory

Ir~,or~ance

By Most Rev. Fulton J.

By, Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.

~heen.

D.O.

Bishop of Reno The saintly cure' of An once wrote bbe following to Pauline Jaricot, who founded the Society for the Propagation of the Faith: The classic picture of young Edward Gibbon, sitting "No, one who supports the Society for the Propagation of the Faith "amidst the ruins of the Capitol" and. ruminating on ,the' will ever lose the Faith." John XXIII, when he was the National decline and fall of the Roman Empire, is strangely and , Director of the Society for the Propagation of' the Faith in Italy, , disturbingly contemporary. We have met him ali too freqwrote: "St. 'Margaret Mali" said: 'Blessed are they who die after a lifetime of devotion to the Sacred Heart;' but I say tWice blessed uently of late, divested of ' " - O"n, For them, whatever the are those who in that love of the ,Sacred Heart die after a lifetime his peruke and smallclothes specific details ,of their analysis, of service to the Society for the Propagation of ' the Faith." and everlasting smirk, and 'Christianity itself is in the late speaking, not in the orotund Autumn of its career. phraseology of the Augustan Broken Wheels Two basic spiritual ideas are here united: 1) the preservation Age, but in the smartest of upGibbon in his day described of our FaiUi; and 2) t~e salvation of our soul. As regards the to - the - minRome as having fulfilled her first, how many today are losing or surute journalese. long cycle, long enough, forturendering their Faith, principally through nately, to supply him with more id t' r HI'S cur r e n t pride eDgend ere d b Y a secu ar e uca Ion 0 theme is the' than abundant material to write through a second and iBvalid marriage! about, In our times we have .. d e C 11' n e and The best parant ee 0 f k eeplDg your F al'th fall 0 f the read men like Spengler and is to give it to others. The best way to give American emToynbee, to mention only the MARIAN SCH,OLAR: A it to others is through our missionaries. , I d P giant generalizers, propounding an'd the best way to reach them is through plre, n roo the same historical philosophy I d' h I ' M . 10 i n g numbers ea mg sc 0 ar marIO gy, the Holy Father who 'lifter collecting your be tells us that of basic pessimism. Father Eamon R. Carroll, alms for the Society for the Propagation our evening is It has been difficult to resist Carm., assistant profesof the Faith, makes the distribution to ~II I:fIt e already far ad-' tthh tempttatio.nth tot dagtrhee with sor of sacred theology at the areas and all missions. . It@ vanced. If you em or 0 WI S an e enor" N," have a prophmous weight. of their erudition. Cat hoI i c University of The words of the Holy Father implY11{ etic eye you might even see, Under their'tutelage we have America, was named to rethat this sacrifice for the spreading of then!: pacing through the fallen col- ~re; i~n~~eu~::~t~f ~ef:~: :~~= ceive the 10th annual MarFaith in Africa, Asia, and other areas of'" _umns of the Lincoln Memorial, ianist Award of the Univerthe world should not be sporadic but constant. Because the missions • procession of Zen-Buddhist cession of broken wheels, some happen now to be in grave need; we are asking the Catholics of monks chanting their litanies as of' them . interlocking, others sity of Dayton: NC Photo. the United States to construct 1,000 chapels in honor of the Sacred the sun sinks into the Potomac. standing in isolated abandon. Hearl in mission lands, There is only one condition: you must allow "Now this is riot merely a la- ment.IndiVidUaILif~C.YCle· thi.! Holy Father to decide where these chapels will be built. We , t a t'IOn on the ecl'pse of the C on t'mue . d f rom'P age'. O' '. know that it is' more satisfying to one's ego to name the place, but men 1 There is, certainly, a kind 'of ne it is more pleasing to ,Our Lord to humble oneself by allo,wing His · 1 prest'ge Da t IOna 1 , that fruity. grim satisfaction to be derived. t 0 b e I'leve th a t 1'f mora1 re g enmatter of contention between from this cycle theory., It re- eration is not possible they, must 'Vicar on earth to name the place. ' the contestants in th~ late presi- duces history, which we find ex- .turn East. dential campaign. It goes much cessively taxing to understand. Seldom. Immorality, deeper than that, though ob- and intolerably exhausting tAll '''It is noticeable," he. said, ,We can put up a chapel for a, minimum $2500. what a Joy riously the prestige factor is study (for' all its incidental fas- "that Soviet ,pictures seldom it will, be to know that somewhere on 'this earth, our Lord in the DOt'to be ignpred as an Indica- ciriation);' t6 something . which ,'" show 'immorality. 'Some who EuchariSt is being 'adored for the ,first time! Not many of our tion of the way things are shap- ,we ,readily assume ,y{e can im.,.' desire hll'mil health IIiayget the' readeracan afford $2500, but, we know a thousand c,an. For the lng' up. m~diately understand and. which. "impression from Soviet movies millions" we ask only a dime a bY in' the name tlie Sacred 'Amedca, so we are told, has, weare never weary of examin- ' that this ,morality, c.omes ..from Heart. At the end' of 'each month send your offering to the Dol,. bad her days; she is finished, io:g, the life cycle '0£ the indi- - 'Soviet' philosophy. ,. , Father ~hroughbis Society for'the)"rOpagllotioD of the' Faith. done for. In brief and rapid vidual himself. ' "Though such films may be IlP8n, at least compared with Man.is born, he matures" he moral,'" Mr. Ruszkowski obmost other' nations and cultures, declines into senility. He cannot served, "they are 'not Christian. LOVE YOU to A.W.R. for $15 "I consider myself a very me has had p.er dawn" her help himself. By taking thought This is where the matter of com- luckyGOD girl; I have had twelve years of Catholic education, and am morning with the sun rising con- he ,can add no single,cubit to hiD initmEmt comes'- in." , starting four more. God has also given me many other wonderful fidently to its zenith, her bril- stature, nor is, he individually' The ta'u,. s~o\v-speaking Polgifts, Please' use ,this money 'that perhaps others may share in my llan.t high noon; but now the respon,sible f~r such phe~omena ish Peruvian, whose appeararice gift of Faith."': ... to Anon fO,r $10 "Now 'my debt is paid." ... to shadows are lengthening and as the lengthening .or shorten-- suggests a professional version E,M. for $10' "I, made a promise to myself to send something to' the night is coming.' ing of the life span. of Gary Cooper, saHi moviegoers the Society for the Propagation of the Faith if I received any 'It is as though her experience' So, the ,theory argues, is It 'and critics who wish to improve scholarships for' college. I received enougq. to pay for my whole were too concentrated, too in- with' cultures, with civilizations, films should riot forget to utilize first ,yeat." tense, to endure. Other' powero with nation-states; Their cycle : their strength.' . ' : ' are succeeding us, other cul"'" is 'no more~than the mammoth 'It is'riot enough to 'seek +egu-'-.--, tures'are preparing to take over. enlargement of the individual's; 18tlori ofobjectiona'ble' 'movieS, Cut ,out this column, pin your sacrifice to' it and It to the Ilis useless for 'us to complaiIi," Convenient, Theory , Mr. Ruszkowski said.,' H~ sugMost ltev. F'ulton J. 'Sheen,National Dii-ector of the SOciety for .tur more useiess for us to re.;. 'This' is eminently convenient: gested four steps for considera8isi':We are caught on the'wheel and lucid. It saves tilneanel tion. the'Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth' Avenue, New York'I, N. Y.. 01. historical determinism. Our sPares' us much' useless worry.' or your Diocesan. Director, RT. REV. RAYMONDT. CONSIDINE, .F~r ,Steps ' Amei-ican cycle has come full AU we have to do 'is' to discer~,' , ' ' ',I. Good movies can be encour,;,' 368 North Main Str~t" Fall River, Mass. lIOund. ' - through the magnifying glasS of ag~4' ~y,g~ving;ithem b.O,xoffice: _. . Cycle history, the pattern as it, is UR-" patronage. c" , ' folded 'in the - Wagnerian GOt-, G~d',influencesirathe InThat perceptive critic. of terdari1.meru'ng. , . ' . ' ';.'" , letters, Father,WalterOng, 'Yet 'before we seal our'cOm:" dustry should be' supported in S.J" d.eals masterfully with thil! niitmentto' this theory there; their effortato 'maintain standards., . ·cycle'theory" of history in the" areatleaStcerlain'questiDns to 3. ,More persons of strong. eurrent issue of the Notre D~me be asked and answers to be supReview of Politics. He notes how plied. And it needs to be 1'&- moral convictions should entel' deep are its roots, not only ia marked, tritely enough, tilat the movie industry. 4. Audiences should be. eduthe thinking of the outright God -alone possesses. the key determinists, but in that -jl'per.:. of history and He has not chosen eated to givep,reference to better haps a majority .of Chriatiaa to reveal it to us. It follows that films. Mr: Ruszkowski advocated the ~ial 'philosophers as well. any solution we envisage 'bI DO education of movie patrons to FAIRHAVEN, MASS. UNION WHARF For we, have been persuaded. ,more than tentative. appreciat.e the cinema as an art fperhaps conditioned isa better Cycle or Evolution word) fo accept, almost without, Are we permitted, actually, to form,but he rejected the idea. of : question the universal' validity, transfer individual experience. art for art's sake. • .. "False 'Attitude . , " of this theory ',which condemns I to' universal experience iIi the' D~UGHTERS Of ST. PAU~ '''Art for ad's' sake ·is essen';"" each c,ul~ure to repeat, success-: maHer' of history? 'Does man.,. . Invite vouag girt. ('4-23' .. labor .. ively and endlessly, the individ- - kihd as a whole simply repeat" tially a·false attitude," the PeruChritr., "ott, vineyard aa; aa Apottle of tIM ual pattern of birth, maturity" iri. larger scale and through iri-. vian' lawyer'! said.' "We must': Ed.ition.: PrMl. Radio, Movi.. and r ... and death., cotnparably ,greater lengths, ot.' kn.ow' ,the' hierarchy of values: "i.iOll, With ....se modem m.a... .. There· are ,spiritual values, 'and' "'isaionary Sl.ten bring Christ'. Oodrln.' ,'The sole exception the Chris-. time,ihe' iife~pattern of the jn~ to all. regardlODO of race. color or _ .... tiari philosopher' would make ia dividual? Is the birth of' a na- even soinehuman' values, that are superior to artistic values." po, lnformaticm writo to: in favor of Christianity itself" tion really like the birth of a REV, MOTHER SUPlltllOR , Mr, Ruszkowski was careful to which, because of its supernat- child, its maturity like that of SO R. PAUl'S AVE. BOSTON 30. MAH, ural origin and p1,lrp.ose, is to be a grown man, its decline a repe- explain that emphasis on sound exempted from this' inexorable tition of old age!.---Even at the moral content does not mean role. most casual glance, the differ..; that poor art forms are ex'cus'The determinists, manifestly, ences are noteworthy and up- able. He stated' that the Internahave no respect for this excep- setting. . And have cultures died with tional Catholic Cinema Office . made a worldwide study of Jesuit· College' Deans nightfall and the winter's on- had SoutlL set? Was Gibbon writing history all methods of moral regulation To, Meet • IR when he inscribed, ~ome'- obit- of films. State censorship, he NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The' uary, or was he simply too tired added," is not the most effective ,Wh~ ~:We eentral Dean's Conference of to bother?' Is' Spain's colonial', way of solving the problem., " " Self-Regulation the Jesuit· Educational Associa- empire' a 'memory, or is the mat: : COMPLETE , tI,on will 'meet at. Loyola Uni- rix out of which is springing .Hesaid self-regulation:is best, ' RE~TAt 'W<;)RK UNIFORMS \"ersity of the South here Friday now the full vitality ,of tomor-' and that if self-regulation 'apand Saturday, Nov. 25 and 26. ,row's world? . pears to be ineffective, groups SHOP TOWELS Educators will come here from Is history, ,to put a period to. seeking to strengthen it should . the Chicago, Detroit, Missouri the questions,,'a .cycle or an evo-' be supported. A~ao Reclaim Industriaf Glove. and Wisconsin provinces of the lution, a closed circle hooped, : "Catholics are: not isOlated ill Society of Jesus. with steel rungs or a continuous this," he said, "because many Among the subjects to be con- and expan.ding,stream? Father other groups Me preoccupied .ldered are theelogy, philos- Ong wonders who was the wiser with the moral trend of films." ophy, the junior year abroad to philosopher of history, Gibbon He stressed·· that there is llIl Jesuit colleges, ROTC, modern ~r Darwin., F~r us the subject obligation to 'have :nora! regu- , , Succe_ to ' langu'age "teaching, the Ameri- Is of vastly' greater importance- lation. He, did. ~ot, hold, that the ~. En"~~ '0¥WaII '. c;:o. eao college' teaching pro'{ram than our. immediate prestige- public had to remain powerless , , : II lIG. . .t ,A"e.. N•• ' Bedford arid a device for improving »tu- status. Is 'winter ahead, or haft·, J:)'efo~~" claims; of, ~!l:ege4 ,~t OIl! ~tlrwriting. . 'we )'et to'sm'&U'the spriDfa? . " ~e part'of' prodliceriL"" ," • " , ."",:~' .'~r--e~.,,", T~n ~".1II'Y ':!-~~'"

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·1WtE ~-DioceH 01 Foil River-Thurs, Nov. 24, 1-960

THEY SEW A FINE SEAM: Girls at St. Joan of ArC School, Orleans, may participate in Saturday afternoon horne economics classes as part of the school's extra-curricular program. Left, left to right, Cathy Collins, Katie Ryan, Diane Purpura learn hand-sewing. Center, a preview of,

Decisions Available VATICAN CITY (NC) -The 42nd volume of the decisions of the Sacred Roman Rota, high Church Court, has been published by the Vatican press. The judgments were handed down in 1950. According to Rota practice, full texts of the legal argument are not made available to lawyers and scholars until 10, years after, decI isions are made. ...;. •

things to come as girls investigate kitchen facilities. They'll start cooking next semester. Left to right, Cindy Thorne, Kathjr Duffy, Ruth Gallant. Right, they've graduated to sewing machines. Left to right, Jeanne Delaney, Lorraine Fitzgerald, Mrs. Robert Crowell, instructor.

Saturday Is Home Economics Day in Orleans $60 MiHion Sent. To Assist Arabs For St. 'Joan of. Arc Seventh Graders Girls at Cape Cod's only Catholic school, St. John of Arc in Orleans, learn not only reading, writing and arithmetic, but cooking and sewing too, thanks to Mrs. Robert Crowell, a parishioner who has set up a home economics course open to all seventh grade girls as an extra-curricular Saturday afternoon activity. Mrs. Crowell is happy about the . I t of extra - currlCU ar na ure ful feeling to know that each basic sewing sitches and pro'the course. "It's a wonderchild is' there because she cedures."· --, Next step will be pattern se-,

wants to be," lihesaid. "They are there to learn and there's no " discipline problem." , Meeting from 2:30 to 4 each Satur,day' afternoon, the girls are at present wrestling with the OUR, LADY OF ASSUMPTION, ST. MARY'S, ., intricacies 'of skirt· _ making. NEW BEDFORD OSTERVILLE _ "They are making a gathered The Women's Guild wiiI hold skirt as their first project," exPrizes donated for a parish bazaar to be held Saturday, Dec. a fashion shoW at 8 Monday . pllilined Mrs., Crowell, "and in 3 at Veterans' Hall include ,a night, Nov. 28 at Keith Junior th,e process theY' are learning the siipcover and an automobile High School. Mrs. Joseph Mills lubrication job. Mrs. Robert is in charge of arrangements. A F ..Sims is chairman of the event. Christmas party is planned for Monday, Dec. 12. . BLESSED SACRAMENT, SACRED HEART, ' WASHINGT01'l (NC)-Father FALL RIVER ; . OAK BLUFFS Clarence D. White, a priest of The Women's Guild will hold The Women~s Guild will hold " the Archdiocese of St. Louis, has a Christmas party Sunday, Dec: a children's Christmas' party in 'been named an assistant general' 4:at Red Angus Lodge. A calen- the parish hall on the afternoon secretary of the National Cathdar party is set for January. of the day that schools close for olic Welfare Conference. ,The parish CYO and Boy Christmas vacation. Members The'. appointment was' anScout troop will co-sponsor. a • will make Christmas wreaths for nounced' following a semiaimual turkey whist in the church' hall the church. A delegation' will ' meeting here of the NCWC AdSaturday, Dec. 3. attend a meeting and auction ministrative Board, which made sponsored by St. 'Elizahethis the' nomination. SANTO CHRISTO, Guild, Edgartown oil. Monday, Msgr. Paul F. 'Tanner, a priest FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women Nov. 28. . "of' the Archdiocese of Milwauwill hold a children's Christmas Next regular meeting is set kee, is General Secretary 'of the party from 2 to 4 Sunday afterfor Monday, Dec. 12. It will feaNCWC. Father FranCis T. Hurnoon Dec. 11 in the lower ture a covered';dish supper and ley, a priest of the Archdiocese chur~h.· Mrs. Florence Reis is Christmas party. ·Members will . of San Francisco, is also an aschairman. A members' party will donate gifts to Rose Hawthorne . sistant general secretary of the be held at 8 Sunday night, Dec. Home instead of exchanging NCWC. 18 at the Chanticleer, Tiverton. them among themselves. Father, White, ,who served as ST. GEORGE, . an Army chaplain from 1945 to Mrs. Veva Cavaco is chaIrman. New officers will be elected at WESTPORT , 1955 and is a reserve chaplain a meeting set for 7:39 Tuesday The Women's Guild will spon- 'with the rank of major, has .been night, Dec. 1 3 . , ' . sor a harvest dance at 8 this spiritual moderator of the St. Saturday at Stev.enson's,North Louis 'Archdiocesan Council of ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, Dartmouth. Chairman is Mrs. Catholic Men and the St. Louis FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women Robert Long, aidec" by. James Archdiocesan Council of Catholic will hold a malacada breakfast James Sherrington, Mrs. Joseph Women since 1955. He also and cake sale following all Welch, Mrs. James Handrahan served as spiritual director of Masses this Sunday. The annual and Mrs. John Francis. Proceeds the Archdiocesan Union of the Holy Name Society at the same Christmas party is slated for will benefit the school fund. ST. ANNE, time.' 7:30 Sunday night, Dec. 11 in NEW BEDFORD :the parish hall. St. Anne Sodality will hold a ST. PIUS X, Christmas party Tuesday, Dec. VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope SOUTH YARMOUTH 13 at Copicut Lodge. Gifts will John has named' an American : The annual Christmas bazaar be exchanged and transportation Passionist priest, Father Caspar is planned for 3 to 10:30 Monday, will be available, with a bus Caulfield, C.P., as Consultor to Dec. 5 in the church hall. Mrs. leaving the parish school yard the commission he created' to John F. Martin and Mrs. Dennis at 6:30 the night of the party. prepare mission topics for disJ. O'Connor are co-chairmen.' ST. JOHN BAPTIST, cu.ssjOI), at tbe forthcoming ecuAll parishioners are asked to -NEW BEDFORD menical council. donate food and other items for The Ladies' Guild ~ill hold a sale. ' cake sale after Masses th"is Sun:" .day in the church, hall. A ST. MARY'S 4'JATHEDRAL,' Christmas party is planned for . FALL RIVER : Mrs. 'James A. O'Brien, Sr. 7 Wednesday' night, Dec. 21 in '.: ' Inc. the church .hall. Gifts will be and Mrs. Frank Moriarty are " co-chairmen 'of the annual . ,exchanged., .' Newly elected officers to be ,Christmas sale to conducted FUNERAL SERVICE by the Women's Guild, on Fri- installed at a J;muary. banquet ;-. '. . aay, Dec. 2 from 2' to 9 P.M. in are .Mrs. Charles W. Duponte, , .. 54~COUNT)', ST. the school. Members will donate president; Mrs., Guy Caucci,'vice ,president; Mrs. Robert' G. ,Clark, ,to the various, booth/! which Clude aprons, fancy work, candy, secretary; Mrs. John P. Pateakos, . " NEW' B~F~~D;, ~AS~ •. treasurer. ' ' cakes, dolls' and a mack bar.

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WASHINGTON (NC) - The Catholic Near East Welfare Association has provided goodo and services. valued at $60.11 million to Palestine refugees since its founding in 1948. The association was organizecll to cooperate with the Pontifical Mission for Palestine, which 11 engaged in relief work for the 1,087,000 Arab Fefugees displaced by the war for Palestine. The association reported that since 1948 it has sent 9,700 ton. of' food, 7,200 tons of clothing and 61 tons of medical supplies to Palestine refugees. It has sheltered 20,500 refugee~ , supported 274 social welfare centers, educated 37,000 refugee children; built 344 schools and' had the services of 1,032 priests, Brothers, Sisters and lay personllo..

girls will start cooking and then Orleans mothers .can look forward to· some little helpers in their kitchens. Mother of Three The mother of three children attending St. Joan of Arc, Mrs. Crowell deftly intel-weaves care of, her own youngsters with teaching. Her two 'littlest ones attended class'with her, but their interest is in the playground facilities rather than the sewing machines. The eldest Crowell is happily occupied with a ballet WILMINGTON (NC) -Archclass.. bishop EdmoJ;ld J. FitzMaurice, Mrs. Crowell is also part time whose right leg was amputated teacher of home economics at above 'the knee on May 20, w"illl ~rewster Elementary School. return to Wiimingtonfrom Ir'e~' She notes that the Joan of Arc,. land after Christmas. The 79-'" Girls enjoy all advantages avail-. year-old'retired Bishop 01 Wilable' to public school children.' mington suffered a blood clot im his ,leg while visiting Tarbert, County Kerry, his birthplace. .

Returning Home ,

Nun Receiv.es Award For Therapy Work '.

MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-:'-Sister' M. Rudolpha; director of the School of Anesthesia' at" St. John's Hospital in Springfield, Ill., has received Ii special citation from th~ American Association of Inhalation Therapists. The award plaque was presented by Dr. Vincent J. Collins, associate professor of anesthesiology at the medical school of !Il'ew York University, during the association's annual meeting here.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs, Nov. 24,1960

15

_J TEENAGERS' PRIEST: Rev. Richard Madden, Q.C.D. addresses capacity congregation of Attleboro area teenagers at St. Mary's Church, Norton, as he conducts three day "Teenorama." Right, the Carmelite chats

with. James PontoliIo, Clarence Rich and Beverly Roy. He is author 6f . life of Christ written especially for teenagers and he travels country giving talks and reb:eats for youth•.

Evening Masses Carmeli,te Priest's Norton 'Teenorama' Attracts Ask Beatification Of Missionary To Mark Pope's of Attleboro Area Youngsters Hundreds BErRA (NC) - The Bishops of 79th Birthday this Portuguese East African By Marion Unsworth

UTRECHT (NC)-The Bishops province have petitioned Pope Many towns worry about teenagers loitering on street corners or speeding around in John to beatify the first missionof the Netherlands have ordered the celebration of evening Mass cars, but the problem was small in the' Attleboro area last week. For three evenings more ary to shed his blood in the in all the country's churches on than 350 enthusiastic boys and girls attended a "Teenorama" at St. Mary's Church, southern part of Africa, Father the 79th birthday of Pope John., Norton. Each evening's program consisted of a talk, Benediction, and a second half-hour· Goncalo da Silv~ira, a Portutomorrow. guese Jesuit who was killed inI . A birthday collection was talk. The attraction for the "The difference between a psyUrging the group'to more fre- Mozambique in 1561. taken up on last Sunday, younger set was Rev. Rich- chiatrist and a priest is that a quent visits to church, and more Bishop Sebastiao Soares de Nov. 20, for the foundation of an ard Madden, Q.C.D., a tall,· psychiatrist removes· guilt from frequent Communion, Father· Resende took the petition kl institute in Rome for the educa- good-looking Car mel i t e a person that does not belong in concluded, "One of the best Rome. tion of lay missionaries. priest whom the teenagers were him, while a priest removes ways to make the world better Father Goncalo da Silveira The Dutch Bishops thanked soon calling "Father Richard." guilt talat does belong in him." is to bring Christ out into the was born in 1521. He entered the God for Pope John's reign in a Speakl'ng of the blessl'ng of world with you. Don't complain Society of Jesus and after his 1 letter ordering the Masses and N o t on 1y was, til' ~ c h urch ful, but several extra seats had to confessl'on ' he added , "Be honest about the. condition of the world ordination gave missions all over collection. They said: "Speak- be added to accommodate the ,with the priest. Don't give un- unless you're going to do some- Portugal. ing in human words, we ·would overflow. necel!sary details,. but don't be thing about it. Imagine what He then left for Goa, in Porta.. say that this is the Pope the Known throughout the country vag1Je. And, never; I beg of you, Christ in you could do in your ,guese India, where he was ape. Church needs in these times. He for his talks to youth and his _ ~et shame. or fear cause you to classrooms,' in the stores, in your pointed provincial of his ord~ shows great wisdom and he unwriting, chiefly in yotith maga- .make 'a bad confession. In the homes." First Martyr derstands the needso four time. zines, Father Madden is as- state 01 mortal sin, the only Fathe.r Madden, who has been, In 1559 he went with two othft "He knows the world and he signed to St. Therese's Monas- friend you have, the only one as he terms it, "on the road" for Jesuits to Monomotapa, whick loves mankind. He tries ·to find solutions for the problems Of" tery, Youngstown, 0., ·but .. he whocan'reli~verouof it, uftheeightyear!l, claims he "just fell comprised the present Rhodesia into" his work witb ·teenagers~ and the Zambezi river basin. T_ today in his great and lively spends most of his time ,travel-' priest. " "The tro'uble today .is that we HI just started, ,working, .wi,tb local chief or king in Mozamfaith. He gives himself to every- ing from place to' .place 'Oll' . . ,don't get the whole' picture, 'the. kids, then. staI:ted, writing. for bique had asked to seeChristiaa body he meets, with captivating speaking' engageme'nts. Most of his traveling is done' reality that· Christ, w·alked this. YOl,lth, ,magazines.'.' .. '. . missionaries. However, after. simplicity and with great and' "Although hill traveling pre':' many had been 'baptized, the endearing kindness. He never by plane, since there is usually." earth, and breathed· ~is. air," little .time between appoint-. Father s a i d . ' ~ents 'hi from seeing· in~st ,of lll chief turned against Fatherda. puts himself in the foreground, ments. Tonight, for instance, he ·"1 ·question whether'yqu really' the results of his work, he keeps Silveira and he was martyred ja but neither does he ever forget .. what a solemn task has beeD. lsspeaking in Dayton;· '0: "Now believe that 'Christ is present in 'in contact with many youngsters. March, 1561. I'm a member of the 100,000 mile that tabernacle. If you did, 'you The result.,.-"I've become congiven to him." club," he said laughing, "you wouldn't act as you do, talking vi need that the91d.principles of they pin buttons on you and whispering. You wouldn't the Church are right, regardless University to Honor know, and all that! Pretty soon· it will walk in,Jrou'd crawl into church of all this talk about the modern age." . Former President ' be 200,000 miles." on your h an d s ·an d k pees. " CINCINNATI (NC) - Father They're Not Devils His writing includes two Cardinal Dedicates - books, "Men in ,Sandals," 1955 Celestin J. Steiner, S.J., chanWhat does this priest who h' . ' cellor of the University of .... "'.CWC Add· . w lch IS now published in five spends most of his time on youth. ..,.ew •.,. Itlon· languages, and "Father Madden's Detroit, will receive the St. WASHINGTON (NC) - His Life of Christ," which came out Francis Xavier Medal of Xavier think of teenagers? ~'0J;1, sure," Francis Cardinal last June; articles for High Time University here on Sunday, he answered,' "I like them. Eminence CHARLES F. VARGAS They're certainly not angels, but Spellman, Archbishop of New Magazine, a weekly; the monthly Dec. 4. 254 ROCKDALE A VENUE Father Steiner, who was presi- not devils either. They're in York, officiated here at the bless- publication of· the National NEW BEDFORD. MASS. there some place in the middle. ing of an addition to the headCouncil of Catholic Youth' and 8 ~ dent of Xavier from 1940 to 1949, will be given the medal by Every generation measures up quarters of the National Catholic bi-weekly sermonette -put 'out by ~ when it's called upon." Welfare Conference. Queen's Syndicate, a short pithy Father Paul L. O'Connor, S.J., Father Madden's talks are 'The Cardinal imparted the Xavier president, at the annual g eared to the age and interests bl . sermon of 300 words' published esslllg during the meeting of in many Catholic newspapers. alumni universal Communion of his audience. "I used to give the NCWC administrative board Sunday observance. The medal parish missions and retreats also, here. is conferred each year on a perThe eight - story addition son who exemplifies "the quali- but now I concentrate on the younger ones," he explained. dou~led the amount of office ties that distinguished St. Fran"You can't do it alL" space for the NCWC headquarcis Xavier." His success in his field is at-tel's. The former building conFather Steiner, a native of Detroit, presided over ,the period tested to by his audience, which tained 38,000 square feet of him its full attention space. The addition includes a of Xavier's greatest growth. He gave whether he was making a serious private chapel. OIL BURNERS fDf is active in professional educa~ point, or telling a humorous Also complete Boiler-Burner tional organizations and civic incident. or Furnace Vnits. Efficient affairs, and has been a pioneer in lOW cost heating. Burner and "Everyone of you has a desthe use and development of edu- tiny to be happy," the Carmelite CORREIA & SONS fuel oil sales and service. cational television. priest told his Tuesday night ONE STOP Stanley Oil Co., Inc. audience. "That happiness can 480 Mt. Pleasant Street SHOPPING C:NTER Carmelite Theologian only be destroyed by serious New Bedf"rd WY 3-2661 sin. Don't try to make any 'deals' To Receive Award - Television - Furniture DAYTON (NC) - A leading with God. You take pretty good • Appliances - Grocery scholar of Mariology has been care of yourselves in other ways, ~ 104 Allen St.. New Bedford named to receive the 10th an- for heaven's sake, provide .for WYman 1-9354 nual Marianist Award of the your soul as well." Turning to the prominence of University of Dayton. ' Real Estate Loans The award, the university's psychiatry today, he continued, Savings Bank Life Oll'isurance highest religious honor~ will be Education Program to Father Eamon R. Carroll, O. Christmas. and Vacation Clubs WASHINGTON (NC)-Father Carm" assistant professor of Edward J. O'Donnell, S.J., presisacred theology at the, Catholic Savings Accounts MAKES YOUR University of America, Washing- dent of Marquette University, 5 Convenient Locationli Milwaukee, is among 12 eduton, D, C. CAR, RUN BEnER Father Carroll, a native of cators named to advise the U. S. At New Car Dealers Chicago, won the "'lariological' Office of Education on its new NEW BEDFORD and Service Stations Society's annual award ·last year program to improve qualificain recognition of his Marian tions of high school teachers Everywhere scholarship. training to be couuselors.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thucs, Nov. 24, 1960

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Cooper's 'No Little Thing' Is Catholic Award Winner By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Elizabeth Ann Cooper's first novel 'No Little Thing' (Doubleday. $3.95) is the winner of the Doubleday Catholic Prize fiction award for 1960. It is not a great work of art, but it is a genuine one. It treats a delicate subject incisively yet tactfully. That it is a about him is discovered or first book and by a young threatens to become discovered. woman is surprising, such is He has fought to kill his conthe maturity, even wisdom, science, to forget his obligations,_

even his faith. which marks it, and such itD EUement of Sacrifice technical excellence. It is the Perhaps now things will go story of Father better for the pair. The setting Michael Mundy, is entirely new, remote from five years orthe past and among strangers dained when who gradually accept the newwe meet him, comers as friends. the only child But Laura has changed. Her of parents with bravado is gone, and her cyniintelleccism. Paradoxically, there is an tual and artiselement of sacrifice in her life ~i c interests. which has been altogether misHis father is Ding in the past. . dead. His first She has been the instrument appointof this man's fall; she also plays ment was in a a major part in his return to Wlall town; he found the pastor there uncon- grace. How this is worked out lIenIal and critical of what he is the author's to tell, not th~ reviewer's. Suffice it to say ,that considered the curate's intemperate zeal. Now Father Mundy the development of this part of the narrative is credible, as is is station.ed in the city. Tbe parish is old, run down, the denouement. Dellcate Subject poor. The pastor is old, too, but The subject, as has been said, kindly and patient; he appreis delicate, extremely so. There dates Father Mundy's excellence and sympathizes with his are people who would wish it left untouched. It is not, howsense of frustration. The senior ever, beyond the bounds of curate, in early middle age, is proper discussion or. art i s tic quietly efficient, not a creature treatment. It has been put to of moods as Father Mundy is. leering or tawdry uses in other Motions of Religion Everything about the parish books, but not in this one. The point is that Father depresses the young man. The people he finds dull and unre- Mundy's failure, as it takes him sponsive, going through the mo- years and agony to learn is one tions of religion for a half-hour in love. To his priesth~od he has brought high and rare gifts, OIl Sunday, but not living the reality. The parish organizations but these are like a fine. setting lacking the jewel for which it he considers monuments of fuwas made, since love is missing. tility. He is betrayed by passion He is vexed by what he conalders his own complete inef- then driven to utter dI-sloyalt; fectiveness. He seeks in a prayer by unrecognized pride. It is only an answer to his difficulties and when he is beaten flat that the Irtrength for his burdens, but actuality, operation, and discipline of love are grasped by from it he gets no satisfaction. him and he can get up and It is so circumstanced that he first meets Laura Dunne, 24, a return to his Father's house. Moves Evenly ainger in cheap night clubs. Mi!l!l Cooper presents this Laura, despondent, has attemptdeftly. She could easily have ed suicide; were it not for the priest's chancing upon her, the botched it, but has somehow attempt would have succeeded. avoided every possible false He saves her life, checks on move. The story moves evenly with a d m ira b I y controlled her recovery. 'forcefulness. The writing is Test Case She should be a Catholic, hut smooth and spare. . There are' accents reminiscent boasts of having given up religion as a fraud. She has had a of Graham Greene, but they do hard time making a living, hut not serve, as does imitation of has greedily enjoyed the life of Greene by other novelists to remind one how far f~om the senses. mastery is the work The despair which led to her Greene's in hand. try at suicide clears away, and For a contest to turn up a abe scornfully informs the priest that she proposes to go her book of the quality of Miss Cooper's is very unusual. It JOdless way unchanged. seems that a career _of considHe determines to win her back erable importance has been to the practice of the Faith. He launched; its advance will be Res her periodically, but the meetings always become angry expected with great interest by dashes. His failure to influence readers of 'No Little Thing.' her sharpens his feeling of failure, and he becomes obsessed Name Heroic British wih the idea that this is a test Chaplain Coadjutor case for him. LONDON (NC)-Msgr. ThomBlind to Danger as Holland, private secretary to It is, but not in the way that Arch~ishop Gerald O'Hara, Aphe believes. Although his pas- o:!'tollc Delegate to Britain has tor has discerned and feared the been appointed Coadjutor of danger in the situation, Father Portsmouth. Mundy has been wholly blind to Bishop-designate Holland 52 It. Suddenly he turns to Laura won the Distinguished Se;vic~ as a woman, for comfort. Hard- Cross for bravery when he was ly has he sinned when remorse a Royal Navy Chaplain during burns' and scourges him. He the D-Day landings in Normanpledges that he will never see dy in 1944. her again. He . taught philosophy at the But some time later she in- English Seminary at Valladolid forms him that she is to have a Spain; was port chaplain at child-his child. He runs away Bombay, India, and also worked with her. in Colombo, Ceylon.-He became Alter an interval of five Archbishop O'Hara's private sec1ears, we meet them again, liv- retary in 1956. As Coadjutor in ing as man and wife, and bring- Portsmouth, he will assume ing up their daughter, in the much of the work of Archbishop Southwest. Theirs has been a John H. King, Bishop of Portsfugitive existence, sending them mouth, who is 80 years old. from place to place as the truth

New Bedford Serra

A holy hour, sponsored by the

Serra Club of New Bedford, will be held at 3 Sunday afternoon, Nov. 27, at St. John the Baptist Church. Speaker will be Rt. Rev. Msgr. John A. Silvia. All are invited to join the Serrans in their petition for an increase in ftligious vocations.

St. Anselm Professor Heads Broadcasters

DURHAM (NC)-Father Gregory Kelleher, a faculty member at St. Anselm's College in Manchester, ,has been elected president of the New Hampshire Educational Broadcasting Council. He was elected by the group at its annual meeting at the University of New Hampshire here.

THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 24, 1960

17

Mora ~ Theology Institute Part Of University ROME (NC)-The Higher Institute of Moral Theologyp conducted by the Redemptorist Fathers in Rome, has been made a part of the graduate division of the Pontifical Lateran University. The institute, called the Alfonsian Academy in honor of St. Alphonsus Liguori, was begun three years ago to conduct graduate courses in moral theology. It' is the first of its kind. The Academy, which has 52 full-time students and 20 parttime ones from various nations, dioceses and religious orders, was established under the authority of Father William Gaudreau, C.SS.R., of Braintree, Mass., Superior General of the ·~ . 'V .•... ~ , Redemptorists. Its faculty includes two American Redemptorists, Fat her s B ern a r ell -_.'-..~ Haering and Francis X. Murphy. FIRST CISTERCIAN LAY LEADER: In ceremonies First in History in St. Ida's Conv~nt Chapel, Prairie du Sac, Wis., Rose Msgr. Antonio Piolanti, recto.. Takacs of New York becomes Sister Mary Benedicta of Lateran University ,announced the institute's inclusion among S.O.Cist., first American to make profession as a Cistercia~ faculties of the university. lay Sister, receiving simple vows from Bishop William P. "It is a true and proper Insti':' O'Connor of Madison. Left to right are Bishop O'Connor tue of Moral Theology," he said, Father Placid Jordan, O.S.B., Sister Mary Benedicta and "the first of its kind in the whole history of the Church. Taking Sister Roberta, prioress. NC Photo. its inspiration from the teaching of St. Alphonsus Ligouri it will enter deeply into all the problems of moral life in their natural and supernatural aspecttJ NORTHPORT (NC)-A Jew-' each store. The teams are made according to the need of the ish merc?ant is ?~inging ~e up of students from school art modern world, under the guidance of the teaching authority true ChrIstmas SPirit to Mam Street in this New York com-- classes and members of art of the Church." munity this year. . clubs and similar organizations.

\y' . ~~\

Jewish Merchant Brings True Christmas Spirit to Main Street

~

Milton Jacobs a hardware store proprietor ;""ho heads the local Chamber of Commerce is inducing an ever-growing n~m_ her of businessmen to display a Nativity scene in their store windows.'

Each team will be given a' specific subject, with' pictures and other help supplied by the clerical advisory group, and a bu.dget for ~aterials. Cash prizes are bemg donated by local organizations.

Mr. Jacobs admits he was doubtful about the project at first. "Few people realize how much a merchant depends upon Christmas business," he said. And to ask him to give up his street window display of mercbandise in his best seasonwell. I liked the idea but I was skeptical." Mr. Jacobs approached his fellow businessmen cautiously. When nearly all of them expressed interest in the Christmas project, he enlisted the aid of local priests and ministers and talked the board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce into sponsoring the plan.

For the first time since modern merchandising hit Main Street in Northport, the usual Chris.tmas _ display. of toys, clothmg ana luxllries will be replaced by scenes depicting ancient shepherds, the star of Bethlehem and the Infant Saviour born in poverty..

Art Students Aid The day after Thanksgiving, store owners will remove display merchandise 'from their windows and turn the windows over to the Chamber of Commerce. The chamber is assigning a different decoration team to

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs, Nov. 24, 1960

CGtho~oe

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A. P.A. Movement P'v@motes Anti·C~,"holicism 'in 90's

By Rev. Peter J. Rahill, Ph.D. . ~ With periodic regularity but with ever lessening ·viru·lence, a flaming rash of anti-Catholicism has disfigured the usually benign countenance of Uncle Sam. From the outbreak of the War between the' States his urbanity had been almost undisturbed. will -render it .necessary to reThen in the 1890's a splotch move or crowd out the American beca1l!e ever more livid until heretics who are now emalmost all of his face was ployed." In the hard times this

distorted. Why? In the three- imposture· callously increased quarters of a century 'which has the fears of those out of work or passed since in danger of losing their jobs. , that canker More outlandish - and more receded from widely believed-was a bogus Uncle Sam's encyclical letter of Pope Leo face, an anXIII, supposedly dated Christawer to the mas, 1891. First published by CONGRATULATE CHAMPS,:' At testimonial for St. question has Traynor in his Detroit Patriotic Patrick's, Fall, River, baseball team, intermediate CYO been. sought. American, this false papal letCatholic sucter absolved Catholics from any Diocesan champions, are, left to right, Richard Michalewick, cess with the 'loyalty to the l,Jnited States and captain, Bill Monbouquette of the Boston Red Sox, John Indians deinstructed them "to exterminate . spite the oball heretics" on Sept. 5. Not only "Fus" Kenyon, coach, and Bishop Connolly. s t a c 1 e s of did every A.P.A. newspaper reD Grant's Peace print the forgery, but it was '<l:~®lPt, II Policy, the III Plenary Council, broadcast even wider by handContinued from Page One that George Washington warned 'and 'the first Apostolic Delegate, bills and leaflets. agement and labor," the Bishops the American people they should 'to the, United States 'have been The mayor of Toledo bought a said. ' indulge with caution the sup'suggested as irritants. 'Winchester rifle to repel the inCynical Reaction ' position that national morality More proximate to the out-· va'sion, but the panic was great"Among the evident instances could exist without religion. :break of the sore was the fourth est among Midwestern farmers cif the breakdown of personal ·A fresh evocation of the princentennial of the discoVery' of who had never known any of· responsibility most deplorable ciple .and practice of personal 'America by Columbus. To those the faithful. When the date lias been the widespread cynical responsibility can revivify our who had accepted the -laiTh. of a passed with no disturbance of reaction' to the recent revelation society and help to stem the eomplete Protestant heritage any kind' by Catholics, the 'of dishonesty, 'waste and mal- seemingly inexorable march 'without ever consulting history, A.P.A. press' lied that it had feasance in industrial relations.": toward the automation of human 'that Columbus and his sponsor, .been written by a Jesuit in order' Personal responsibility and in- beings and the steady loss of that Queen' Isabella, were' Catholics to 'discredit their organization. itiative have been characteristics freedom which is man's distinc'was a dismaying shock. 'A.P.A. Belt' of this nation, the Bishops said, tive attribute," the statement If all this was false, there' was Seven Founders but "pressures are growing for a . said. Forweal or woe; organization no question as to the increase constantly greater reliance on Cure Inertia 11II necessary. Unfortunately for' in strength of the American the collectivity rather than on· It will cure the mental Iet~­ the Church a group was waiting ·Protective Association,' Though the individual." The tendency argy and inertia :which permit large councils were in Boston ' in. the wings of the American and in San Francisco, the A:':P.A. to delegate excessive responsi- organizati<;ms to usurp, mainly by default" the rights of their stage for its cue. This newcomer, bility to an organization is disihe American Protective Asso- was strongest in the Midwest. cernible in international affairs, members. It will stimulate a selfc:iation, was spawned in 1887 at In fact, newspapers of the time the Bishops said. Many citizens reliance· which will automaticalthe railroad junction of Clinton, called. the' area from Ohio seem to feel that mere adherence ly restore the balance between Iowa. With six others a 60-year- ,through Kansas and Nebraska to the United Nations absolves freedom and security. It will reold lawyer named Henry T. "the A.P.A Belt."' the nation from further responsiject unwarranted pressure from Bowers fathered the A.P.A., as In 1895 President Traynor bility in the international order, g~OUPS that seek unjustly to the organization was familiarly boasted of 2,500,000 members. they added: aggrandize their power and will known throughout its' life. 'Most students of the movement Same Root Cause restrict them to their lawful '. Of the' seven founders, two believe his claim was highly ends: It will see' in all busi· l ' "However varied the above gg e t B t f d had no religion, while the o'the,r xa era e. u no Ina anness ventures of whatever size a ' mentioned ·evils, ranging from ' e f r five were divided among as Sw er Ca n b e g IV n, 0 secrecy mea~s of serving' others as well ; Diany different Protestant sects. was one ,of the inducements for the single act of wrongdoing to as self. It will hav'e an immediate . LAn ardent Mason himself, many joining.. the moral laxity of the mass effect in every sphere or life·',Bowers , 'BI"sIIO'P'. 'McNamara . mind, the root caus.e is. the same 'in the home, in the office, as drew heavily on that O ne 0 f th e f requen t ou tb rea k s -the reJ' ection of person~l re- well as in the 'workshop, in the i order for the regalia and initia-' i tion he devised for·the A.P.A. .'brought on by lectures given by sponsibility," the statement said. factory, 'iri our schools, in our · alleged ex-priests and nuns ocpersonal responsibility re,- cultutal groups.". . . "f ree an d de l'b I era teac·i,~oreover.,. the Masons were b a .curred in Kansas 'City, Missouri, qUires .Individual Person Lfertile source of new mem ers in 1894. j, V.·McNamara called ceptance of one's obligation in . 'The Bishops .said that 3n. Of. alli~;hiSkey Bill' "'liifuself "Bishop". and ~a(r ~'loil'g that position he' oc~upies"":"in effective' 'respOrise to the call for I " .' 'record of involvement in riots "Ule family, in the ch,urch, in,the '! After' siJ!: years of slow growth ., . " . , personal responsibility need not. Iii as far east as New York . 'corporation, in the labor union, ~wait ·for. ~ masS moveme!1t, but I 'un er Bowers, the A.P.A. achis' wife sold tickets ;fora'· ':"in ~I;te community, i~ the nation, As j,quired a new pre~ident in Wil... . Sunday night 'lecture,' a' .pistol· iri-the 'fanlily of nations," the "belongs to the individual person.. . They 'added:: "Such a response,' ',.liam J. H. 'fray.nor. A former B' h 'd ' was prominently dispiayed con IS ops sal . , 1:S!lloon .keeper,. Traynor,' .was. the- table . beside her. \vh'en "As a people. we seem to be by a 'representative' number,' 'given 0I1ly in' the silent sanctu: quickly tagged "Whiskey Bill," , !'and it is true that he did inject "Bishop" McNamara appeared' moving 'more deeply into a .s~n..; ary of. the, heart; will begin' to ,Dew. spirit in the organiz'ation·. on' the 'platfornl he carried are';' . sate culture," the statement have' its' ,lea'vening eff.ect.' Our I In Canada and later in Michi- volver and a Winchester rifle. " continued. "There ·is an. exces,. appeal for action is made directAfter two hours and more of ': sive pre()ccupa.tio·n' with ma;gan ,Traynor had' published anti- abuse of the, Church,. and local' .ferial security a,t the expense of ly to our Catholic f~llow-ciU­ 'Cat~olic, newspap.ers. PrQbably Cath'olics by 'M~Namara sto~e" spiritual weU,,:oeing. Uniformity zens, but, it reaches' ouf also, to all American-sA who face the same ·his experience had much ·to do . . . .. , ' . landed on,the·stage. Later it was' of thought and supine loyalty . problems as our~elve.s,"".. ,' , . liwith the increase in' A.P.A. .. h th ·t j;"scaridal sh:eets," which by the charged that a cohort of Mc- "to the 'orgamzat!<:>n, weer 1 . · , Namara· .had· dropped ..the rock 'be' the industrial corporation, English ','Minister' i;follq",:ing year numbered at least in order to promote customers the labor union; or the political VATICAN CITY. (NC)-Brit:,; 'TOF"'als'e .. ,.., -.. -the for 'a second lecture the followparty; are too often encouraged ,charges against d d d Th ' .' ain's new minister to the' Holy , I. Churc,h and her members ha'd ·ing Tuesday. , , . an rewar e. ,e orgamza- See, ,Sir Peter Scarlett, presented · been . characteristic . of '.every '. Though the secon<t perform- . :tional man, cloaked in a sort Of , ' , , ,'ancewas 'Dillen "Foi<Men Oniy " anonymity,rather than the re- his credentiahi 'to" His Holiness 'American anti-Catholic move" , . . 1 . d"d I . f ed Pope . John . x*m, L'ike' ~U1 ,men·t. The allegations .often- all ~omen' who had the price of sporislb e In IVI ua, IS' avor predecessor, he, is ProtestanL - ,.. ," .. .; times were ridiculous; still they admission 'were allowed' in the: and advanced." ' · ieerltingly originate(i from lack hall. McNamara la'unciled. an ' Moral Causes, ~f 'knowledge rather than.'kno',V·n ,',attack .I!All :ofobsce.nity:ani!, filth' ,'~If '':He ,'~re tq r~~tore man to lies.! " ...' ... :: ':., ~m .the ve~erableBlshqp o.f Kan- :. his sense"of .personal responsiNo such extenuation could I:)e s~s City and two .pri.~sts, one of: oil,ity an<f tq tile ,acceptance of made of the literature of tlte'V hom succeeded as 9lsho p,some .life as a mission,'!' the statement ~89Q's. T:w o blatarit' forgeries ,y!'!ars lateI;'.. ,::., ,,;'. . " continued; "we must understand were propa'gated on a. national'·,The Kansa,s. City .. Star ac- more clearly the moral cauSes scalcaitd for a time ·did 'great, no.w\edged .that M;cNamara's lan.- which have. u'nderrnincd men's harril to the Church. The United .guage !=oul~ qot be printed. For responsibility." .States being' plagued.' by: -the' the: riot which broke ,out.the , "First among these ·causes has. Panic of 1893, the A.P.A.' 'pub.:. newspaper. headline was ."He been the marked decline in the . lished : "Instructions to '. Catllo~: b!lrely escape,9' alive.", ,force· of religious convictions," lics'~' supposedly ,signed by lead~.. Next Week: Catholic Editors, the Bishops said. They recalled ing members of the hierarchy. 'Expose AP.A. Membership~ .!""'"_.... ;... ~ This spurious document said .' that jobs were needed, to sup-, SPENCER' !:·port a mythical army, and "this:.

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Continued from Page One A legion spokesman said concern over the rise in objectionable movie fare has prompted preparation of a special statement. It will be released November 30, he said. The legion said 66 U. S. films were family fare, P.-1; 47 were morally unobjectionable for adults and' adolescents, A-2; 51 were morally unobjectionable for adults, A-3; 3 were condemned and 1 was separately classified. Of the 53 foreign films it inspected, the legion rated 14 as A-I; 8 as A-2; 16 as A-3; 10 as "B"; and 5 as condemned. Annual Report The summary of the legion's activities was contained in the annual report of the Bishops' Committee on Motion. Pictures, Radio and Television, headed by Bishop James J. McNulty of Paterson, N. J. The report was presented to the U. S, Bishops at their annual meeting here. The term of Bishop John King Mussi of Steubenville as a,member of the Bishops' Committee ended this year. He has been succeeded by Auxiliary Bishop John A. Donovan of Detroit. Bishop .Donovan will serve also as episcopal moderator 'of the Catholic Broadcasters' Association, a post held by Bishop Mussio. . The committee's report praised steps being taken in some Catit:.. olic circles toward training in film' appreciation. Praise was given "the work which has been done in 'the Archdiocese of Chicago by the Adult Education Centers, the Summer Institute for Teachers oil Motion Picture Education at Loyola University of Chicago, and a similar project which was instituted during the Summer for high school students in the Archdiocese of Newark," "These initiatives in the study of the film can in time produce greater Catholic influence both i':l film making and in film exhibition," the report stated.

Young Reds NEW ORLEANS (NC) -One out of every ·three of the children born today is bound to De Communist-bred, Douglas Hyde, former communist, said on the forum of Loyola University of the South here.

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Capacity l~rong Present At Lowney Te$timonial

By Jack Kineavy A capacity turnout was on hand last Sunday night at Gaudette's Pavilion in Acushnet where the popular Ed Lowney, former Holy Family mentor, was tendered a testimonial on the occasion of his retirement from the coaching ranks. Featured speaker of The Hilltoppers are 6-1 on the the evening was American season; New Bedford has a 4-3 League umpire Bob Stewart record. The Crimson took last of Canton. In attendance at year's gatr..e handily, 42-0. the fete was a host of sports figures representing all sections of Southeastern Mass. and including coaches, officials and athletic directors with ·whom the genial Irishman had come in contact during his eleven highly productive years at the Holy Family helm. The affair was under the sponsorship of the Touchdown Club of New Bedford and was emceed by AttorneY Fred Sowa, chairman of the dinner committee. The curtain will be rung on the 1960 schoolboy football season today when a host of traditional games are scheduled to be played throughout the area and the State. Aside from tbe intense rivalries, a great deal hinges' on .the outcomes of ,several contests. State TUle A victory for Coyle over Taunton will give the Warriors their second successive· Class C title, a feat which if not unprecedented is, fo be sure, uncOmmon. Attleboro, at home, to North, has a shot at a tie with Durfee for Bristol County League ~onors if it can get past, the Rocketeers. The Hilltoppers, their BCL slate completed, compiled a fine 6-1 mark in league play. Wareham can cinch the TriCounty diadem with a hollday victory over Bourne which has, yet to comE' up with its first Conference victory. Coach Frank Almt:ida's club will take an unblemished 5-0 league record into th~ game which is also expected to have a bearing on the determination of the Conference;s i'ndivlliual s: 0 r i n g' leader. Dighton's Merrill Pidgeon is the current pacesetter with 50 points 'and his season concluded. Len Lopes, Wareham's bread and butter runner, bas 46. . It would .·.ke a Wareham defeat and a Somerset victory over Case to boost the, defending , champion Raiders into a title ~ .with' Wareham. The initial-phase of,' this ' condition is :considered most improbable. CaSe, on the other hand, coming· on strong after a weak start, :can move .into a second piace deadlock with Somerset if victorious to.morrow; . , " .. Darfee-New Bedford ': Prestige lnd persqnal pride 'are the factors at stake in ttk Durfee;-New Bedfor4 :game. The CJlilltoppers. under' Don Montle llave surprised even their moM :ardent at..mirers with the brand .of football they've' shown this .year. New Bedford, on the other hand, considered a real threa.t .for Class B honors in pre-season :.analysis, . feU victiM to the 1njury jinx in transmitting the · most ambitious, grid schedule ·iltteDlpted by an area school ill years. . Durfee, led by its great halfback Lee Woltman, is reported to be in fioe. physical shape for Ute Crimson who ire' hopeful of 'having co-captain Bob Lyonnais, 'injured' in th/ Malden Catholic. · game, back on the firing line.

In other games around the circuit, Fairhaven will be at Dartmouth in a BCL encounter; Foxboro travels to Mansfield and Barnstable will host Falmouth in the Cape's only game of the day. Coach .Ial Conforth's Blue can pull even on the season with a victory over Dartmouth. The Green, however, have taken two of their last three ball games, the latest and 18-6 :erdict over New Bedford Vocational. Foxboro is indeed going into the Hornet's nest at Mansfield. The 1959 Class D State champions were upset by North Attleboro the last time out arid Gentili and Co. are apt to be in a vengeful frame of mind. Coach AI Stuart's Foxboro eleven extended Bill Parson's club last year before dropping a 14-6 decision. Such is the nature of these traditional games that past records prove more misleading than helpful in Ute final analysis. .' We trust that good weather will set the stage for the SChool spectacles 'which will be attended by thousands of partiSa'n fans working up an appetite ~Qr' the Jsumptuous turkey repast to follow. Everyone can't win. To tbe victors, plaudits; io . the losers, there's always next year.

. Holy Cross-B. C. The final intercollegiate gambit in these environs is set for Saturday at Alumni Stadium, Chestnut Hill where those two ancient Jesuit rivals, Holy Cross and Boston College, will collide head-on. Both enjoyed sUC::cessluI outings last Saturday, Holy Cross downing Connecticut, 30-6 and Doston College coming through with a stunning 25-14 upset over highly-touted Clemson. The victory was the third in' as many weeks for the Ea'gle's . who have lost five and' tied on~. 'ng the B. C. team w'a's . Sparkl soph.o,m.ore ha,lfb.ack Joh!'1' 'Jan,',s \l'ihO rainbled .61 yards with;n in~ercepted 'pass' early in the first q~~rter,to start the scori~g ,P,araq,e.. Before' the half ..was o'verthe E~gl~s had rackec:l. UP ,s" 25-1> l~ad which. they' weJe content to "'rotect over the 'reDilli~i,ng distance. Aiding, and abet~i~g the strong running Ja.nas was' ano'ther sophom" , 0're, 'fullback Harry. Crump, who la'st

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JERSEY CITY (NC)-A dOOo> tor active in the campai,. against indecent literature w. given the top award of the Newark Archdiocesan Council .. Catholic Youth. ' Dr. Matthew C. McCue fIf Elizabeth, first chairman of the Union County Citizens' Cooperative for Decent Literature, J'&.cei~ed the council's Pro Deo et Juventute (For God and Youtb~ Medal. The medal is awardee! annually to a layman for ou$.. standing youth service work.

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Seminary Recto.r Calls for New Frontier in Fostering Vocations , " NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Par-

. rector of St. Joseph's Mina!' cnts who discourage their chil- Se.minary in St. Benedict, La., dren from religious vocations saId too many parents oppose are "picketing <!le vineyard elf their son's wishes to enter minor the Lord," a seminary rector ·seminaries. He spoke before . said here. 1,200 persons at the annual . Father Anthony Tassin, O.S.~., luncheon of the Council of Cath- Church L~§es fPeii'rnroit . olic School Co()perative Clubs. M~;~;Irn\fJ He said that when parents BURLINGTON (NC) - The .ask their children to delay their South Burlington Church ci vocation decisions until after Christ has lost its permit to senGl NEW YORK (NC)-"Readi- graduation from high school, mail at the special low rate f~ ness to obey" is the key to re- the children lose their desire non-profit institutions. sponsible adulthood, Catholic for religious life. Postmaster John J. Burns SQid young people were told here. Too Many Parties he revoked the permit because An . _ Father Tassin also said that . the church had mailed out mated "m the measure that its youth is lacking in a sense of there are too many popularitr rial which was "actually politto th t t t' contests, too many May queens ical" rather than religious. .' r'e's'pons'b'l'ty · 1 1 1 ,k d"a M ex en J hIII competing with the Blessed VirAm enca wea . ene, sgr. 0 n . 1 f C d' I g.in, and too many parties. .. P B re h eny, prmClpa '. ar ma Sp'ellma' High S h 0l ' d "We have failed to give proper c 00, sal . . n . challe.nge to Catholic youtb~" .. , He said many qualities' 'help th B d' i make a person mature, "but for "';e n:; ; .. ' y,oong people especially there' 'is to cry out in the welter of Mardi , .-' pne .quality that cuts acrosS most Gras." . . . others~ separating the, responsib1e ,He called for. a "new frontie~" rom the irresponsible,ancl that ,in the promotion of religious a ~eadiness to obey." ., . vocations among young men and .for Bristol County ':.': "tJnless we learn to obey,' we .women in: the 1960s, and a sys... ' I;ro •shalf'. never, become responsible ,tematic program of spiritual ·.,~erspns," he told young people ':formation of Catholic youth ,in at a ceremony in St.. Patrick's cathedral. ' " th e h. ome tha t incl u d es f"1 a~1 y ," , devotions.

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ROME.·(NC).....,;Italy's .Catholic. pld~mobile.- Peugot - Rencilt oriented -: Chr'istiaft-, ''Democratic .67 Middle Street, Fairhaven. party sUffer~(t slight" losses andthe leftist'iP.artiEfs'·tscored small '--------....;,---~ gains in nationwide elections Physic.ia"s to Hear for local and provincial'offices. The Christian Democrats, still :Value of Sports Truclc Body Builden , SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-Tbe the nation's largest party, won .;. .value of sports will be diScussed . ~.3 per . cent 0.£ the' approxiAluminum 01' Sleel ,by Victor DiFilippo, chairman of mately 32 million votes cast in ., , 944 County St. . the physical education depart- the elections.. ~n the 1958 parNEW BEDFORD, MASS. 'ment at Seton Hall University; liamentary eleCtion they got 41.2 WV 2-6618 . · in two papers at the American per cent of the votes. The communists and leftwing Medical Association's national convention in Washington begin- socialists together polled 38.9 ning November 26. His topics per cent of the votes, compared will be "The Education Aspect 01. with 35.9 per cent in 1958. The Sports," and "The Place of Com- Communist party alone won 24.5 , bat Sports in the Physical Ed\&- per cent of the vote, 2.7 per cent more than two years ago. cation Program."

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Newark eyO Honors Anti-Smut Worker

TESTIMONIAL BANQUET: At testimonal banquet for Edward J. Lowney, retiring basketball coach of Holy Family High Sch~l, New Bedford; are, left to right, Mr. Lowney, Atty. Ferdmand B. Sowa, president of New Bedford Touchdown Club, and Rev. John F. Hogan, principal speaker.

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WEST SPRINGFIELD (NC)He's known as "Rabbi" Donovan in some circles, but actually he's a Passionist priest. The niCkname stems from dedication to the cause of better relations between Catholic and Jews possessed by Father VictOl' . J. Donovap, C.P. Now he'll scheduled for a series of addresses on the Hour of the Crucified radio program on his favor.:. ite topic, "Judaism and the Catholic Church." Father Donovan's series win begin November 27. His topic will be "Pope John XXIII and the Jews." His other talks are scheduled for December 4, U and 18. A native of Randolph, Mass. who was ordained in 1936, Father Donovan was given the 1960 Edith Stein Guild Award October 15. The award is made annually to a person for promoting better understanding between Christians and J eWIl.

'Starting at left guard for B'. C. DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary To live we must conquer un- . and playing a whale of a game Bishop-designate David M. Macertainty, and we must have until shaken up on a punt return loney of Denver will be conSe"; the courage to be happy. late· in the fourth quarter 'W8scrated here on Wednesday, Jan. Coyle's Dave Yelle. Dave, .All- -4,. by Archbishop Egidio Vag- ), REYNOLDS-DEWALT Diocesan in 1957, is another of,nozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the Coach HeHerle's scintillating .United· States. CQconsecrators William & Second Sts. Soph~mores ~om. whom .a "r~at ,will, be .Archbishop· ,urban ".j. .de~l IS ,expected In the en~mg , ,Vehr of Denver and BiShop ~~­ ., New .Bedford WY 6-.234' two s e a s o n s . ' , ' . ,. bed M. Newell. of Cheyenn~. ·."HolYCro~, 5-4 on the' Sea~n:rheceremony will take place .also . has Ii potent sOphomore 10 the Cathedral of the Immacu,brigade hearted by quarterback ,late· Conception. Pat McCarthy of Lawrence; fUil~ back ':(OI~l Hennessey of BrookBEFORE YOU line ~d. ,epd,Bob..Hargraves of ".'. BUY - TRY Fall River..Bobwas a unanimous Taunton , choice The Anchor's 1958 AII. Diocesan 'eJeve~; .

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THE:f\NCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-jhur~, Nov. 24, 1960

'Many Graduate' ,Degyees Make

c.'WASHINGTON Uo UW"ilD~Me .(NC)

~hen four American Card-

inals blessed four '. new ,buildings at the Catholic .University 01 America here last 'Wednesday, they ,foc4sed atten"tion .upon the unique character -of the school. : It is truly a nation!!1 univer'sity .belonging to all the Catholics in the United States, It was 'f~tinded in 1889 to commemorate .the centenary 'of the establish~ . ·ment of the Catholic Hierarchy. 'in this country. .. . .. . It is moreover a, pontifical university. Pope Leo XlII gave .his· approbation' for it$ 'founding ,on Aproil 10, 1887: The Apostolic -Letter, Magni Nobis Gaudii, of :March 7, 1889, forinally approved the constitutions of .the 'university and granted' it, as a -pontific'al institution; power ttl conferdegress. The university was incorporated. t.>y C;:ongress. O!l 'April 18, 1887, and began to operate on November 18, 1889. Ten~chool~

, The university is located on a ·140-acre campus 'in the ·.northeast ,section of Washington. It 'has 10 :different schools, and these have numerous departments. Its fac:ulty of 464 instructs a st.ud~nt ·body of 4,400,. including, 1,050 .priests, Brothers and seminar.ians, 328 Sister:s, 1,758 laymen and 1,264 laywomen. , · The university places heavy emphasis on graduate wo~k. The ~ration at the June, 1960, commencement of more than twothll'ds graduate and professional degrees to less than' one-third 'undergraduate degrees is held to be unique'among all the universities of America." Eminent Alumni The school's m~re than 19,000 'living alumni include some 55 .members of the Hierarchy in the eontinental U. S.; 150 teachers irt 50 major seminaries. and curiae 'throughout the country; 40 'presidents of institutions of higher learning; hundreds' of . trained librarians employed in various types of libraries; more than .75 directors and assistant directors of Catholic charities; · many L.undreds of priests, Broth·ers and Sisters staffing patholic.. ·elementary and· high schools, .. . .. '. colle'ges teacher-training insti'-' . UNIVERSITY BUJLDING8 BLESSED .BY CARDtutes, ~tc·,;· and. thousands' of . INALS:· .The 'fo~rCardihaI8: of. the Catholic Church prie§t~ .. Some 700ed.ucati()mIJ iri- ~ the. United States: indiv:i~~ajlyblessed.four newbuildingg .stitutions throughout thecoun-' '.' on the Catholic ·l:J.iliversity . A~erica campus d.uri'ng · try are 'affiiiatedwith the uni"; ·versity.,-' . . , . . . . . :the annual Bishops' Meeting in Washington, D.G. Upper . ' ,New Buildbigs' : left, his: Eminence "James Francis: .CardinaIMclntyre, · ,Ttleir'EminencesFtancis"yar,':' A~chbishop Los, Angeles,b,lesses a crucIfix in· the·, new dinal Spellman, Ar:chpishop of <wings .0f... John.K.. Mullen; Me·moria.,.! Library,jupper right, • New York;' James FranCis ·Car'dinal McIntyre, Archbishop of ..

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,O~dina:ry~' ~equests Support' for . C(J~holic University'

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. :Continued from p:a~~:'orie to Catholic educational· ideals. .leaders in the fields of education,. .. "It .is .good to see thfs .devel':' '!This is not a mere 'matter of .sociology and ecclesiastical ad- ,opment and' to 'knowthat _w, ~ ,Bishop Co~;;olly's: ,statement I"espe<;tively: a new south wing ,urging, suppori,~f tQe~ollection, .giving. to . build"a parochial ministrative ~ork. " ... have had some part in sustaininl . , · to Caldwell Hall, two new wings . ' . - ., ., . th t" . ' , . , . . ',. . " r.·,·. · o· . f M u'II""n L'b· .. C:·, the.lllstttutlOn·m "Just· now ,the University. "is 'it.. I rary, ona ty' Hal'l',..,for ', .,. ' eina' lOn s.. .school or .even a high , school. The ,. . , " ' . . . ... a' new --dormitory :''£01''· lay~eil:;·· c.apltal, .sa.ld:i >'., ' •.•. ,.',,, " : . 8atholicUniversity· Js the key.:undergoing a .considerable- pro:' ' ,'''So·, we~ ,urge one and' ali to: . and a' new social ceil.ter~· . ... , ',: "Eyery· year, :,throughout· t~e " stone in our whole 'ilational '.gram ,of: expansion .marked ·.this . be· consistent- iJisup'porting: the '., . , '. .These improvements' ,'giye tlie' . whole ," Ynit~d ~ States, . Cathohc .educationaf system> From:. the year by the dedication of, four' cause' of CaUiolic .education-.oll :univel'liity "a-sheiCca'pilCitf 'for m~~.al1d womell.giv.~ ~ener~usly . ·hal.owed walls Ofthisinstitu:' :new buildings: -, .. .. ;S,undaY; NO\rember ·27th.":', .: '800,000·' books, expand gre'atly ,~~tipport oUl; C.athohc. trBrver:- ,·tion 'have 'come thousari.ds of 1~~'~"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~~~~~~~ the opportunity for. social" f~nc- ,sity. Next Sund~y, the flrs~ ~un-. ~.r~ ,tions for faculty and *ldents, ,of, IS the traditional . 'IN· N·EW·, B'ED'.'F·O'.'RD -IT·"S·' pr9vide living quarters.for Jrlore day for such gIfts to be collecte~. I 'lay students and provide addi"The Fall River Diocese has an ' Continued From Page One ,tional facilities for priest- grad- 'outstanding record over the.past. .·Bonneau, pastor, celebrated Mass uate students. . " We trust that there will be a and preached. Congregatiol1al .. GEO. CHEVROLET · . continued expression of devotion ,singing was by the student body 'K of C Defamer.' GetS ,, , . of Prevost High SchooL S~ntence· N~w. HC?nor~ Previously the entire faculty FOR THE FINEST TRADE· EVER , OPELOUSAS (N.C)-'- A 'man' ,V Ichms- of- NaZism of the high school,· accompanied TO.·" LOUGHLIN 'who apologizedpubiicly for cir-", ..BERLIN," (NC)-Julius Carby' a delegation from the'Prevost . . . SUCCESSOR . .... '. . CHEVROU~T ., ~ulating the 'bogus Knr'ghts of ,.' dinal Doepfner·'has laid, the ·cor- Alumn! Association,'· attended '565' 'M'II~l ST. 6p~_",. E~'e"tEvening WY. 7;-9486 . 'ColOmbus ,oath gotof£h~re with nei'storie" of' Queen of .Martyrs ,ceremonies marking ·the aimi- ~i · 'a reprimand' from Jiidge,···· <.... -···Churcn, "oeinjf built "here-to versary at .theprovincialhouse . Robert Tyson ·of Ray"ife:; LIt, .' co·m'mer:ii.6riite 'victims of·nazism.· of,thecommunity in' Alfred, Me. ·1 . • • • • ¥ • • • • • • .• , t• . • • • ¥ • • • • ¥ • • • • • • • ¥ pleaded gui,lty to··.a<charge of" ' Thousands,of· persons watched, defaming the K.· of C. by c"ircu- 'as· the· Bishop .of ·Berlin per.:. ON 'CAPECPI) lating the ·Ollth. But'because \le·formedthe ceremony 'at· a site . apologized publiCly for 'his ,a<:-', "near Ploetzensee· prison, ·where .' , tion, District Judge Nolan Mocisa, many of the ,Hitler regime's vic- . suspended a' sentence of a year . tim·s'· were executed. Present in jail and a $3,000 fine, depen- were Hedwig Klausener; widow dent. upon Tyson's good be- ~ of the first Catholic killed by havior. nazis in Berlin, and the city's "It is with great regret that Catholic mayor, Franz Amrehn. I face an AmeriCan citiien, enThe church is being erected in riched with all that this great fulfillment of a vow made by eountry can give him, who has participants in the 1958 German South, • Sea Sts. thought so little of 'its people, so Catholic Congress here. All GerAMPlE PARKING Hyannis Tel. HY 81 , as to risk its safety ·and sanity in . man dioceses have ·contributed defamation.",. Judge Moosa said•. toward its constrl1ctio~,·

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