'J:auntonSchool Drive Total Tops HalJ-Miliion Mark : "'The extremely generous response in the first two phases is clear' indication tt;.at the Taunton regional high school campaign for funds will be a complete success," Dr. Clement Maxwell, drive director, declared today. His sentiments are. shared by Rev: 'James F. Lyons, priest-_ di'rector, who today observed that the half-way mark toward the minimum goal of $1,125,000
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has been reached. "We are door canvass,. starting Jan. 7," happy and proud to report declared Father Lyons, a curate today that the special and at the Imm"culate Conception m""1orial gifts .~,. .,,~ Taunton parish in Taunton. regional school now total more "Of course, the total amount than. $525,000," Father Lyons of special and memorial gifts said. . will continue to increase during "The mere fact that we have .the Yule !leason," said Father achieved such tremendous sucLyons as he intimated he excess in memorial and special pects that more than 60 per cent gifts is the best barometer I of the total minimum goal. will know of to forecast the recepbe realized before the house-totion our workers will receive house canvass of individual gifts when they begin their door-tobegins.
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The ANCHOR \ FaU '""'"
Dr. Maxwell noted that parents are v e r y enthusiastic over the planned regional high school for girls' in Taunton. "This is the third regional high school Bishop Connolly is undertaking in the diocese. Bishop Stang High in North Dartmouth is' already in operation. Classes are being' conducted' for Freshmen and Sophomores an(I next year a Junior .Class will be started," the president' 0 f Br-idgewater S tat e Coli e g 'e
lirits JSilllitati()ll Of P()pulation As Bad P()litics
NEW YORK (NC)-Population limitation, "whether or not it is good morals, is bad economics and bad politics," according to British economist Colin Clark. Mr. Clark, a specialist in population questions, says that an expanding population "is generally beneficial, even when judged only as a matter of economics An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and li'irm-ST. PAUL and politics." He writes in the December issue of Fortune magazine that population growth River, Mass., Thursday, Dec. 8, 1960 "provides a beneficial stimulus, often indeed is the only stimulus • PRICE lOc .powerful enough to shake men © 1960 The Anchor $4.00 per Year out of their established ways ,;,..Mail Prlvil~gel ,;,.. Authorized at Fall River, Mass. _ :;Ocond Cla~1 and customs and make them seek something better." Mr. Clark is director of the Institute for Research on Agri. cultural Economics at Oxford University and a director of the Econometrics Institute of New York. His analyses of the socalled "population explosion" have received widespread attention. . He cites Great BritaIn, Japan Turn to Page Nineteen
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Day of Prayer We, the Bishops of the United States, call upon the Catholic clergy and laity to dedicate Sunday, December 18, as a day of prayer and. penance for th'e Persecuted People of the World. We salute our suffering brethren in humble admiration; we pledge them our solidarity; we offer our prayers that in the midst of their suffering the peace and hope of Christ will sustain their hearts.
VETS INSTALL: Taunton Catholic War Veterans install new officers. Left to right; Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, chaplain; Edward Cameron, outgoing commander; John L. Coady, new commander; Robe:t:t E.Joy, past commaader arid installing officer. .
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UrgesCatlwlics Protest,' Breakdown of M~vies \~\ WASHINGTON (NC)-A committee of U.S. bishops has added flashes of lightning to the storm gathering over alleged sensationalizing in Hollywood films. The five bishops who guide the work of. the National Legion of Decency charged Hollywood with' "bold departures" from decency and called for an "unmistakable national protest" by the country's 40 million Catholics.
LA SALETTE ILLUMINATION: Thomas Manning, Mary's 'Parish, .Nort6n, carries Infant to manger as I!'a S~leW~ Shrine, Attleboro, 'holds annual Illumination of ~ristmasdisplaY. Rev,. Rene Sauve, Shrine director, is .Aright.
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Legion of Decency-this coming Sunday. The bishops charged Hollywood with allowing its own productl'on code to be compromised and boastfully ignored by some filmmakers. Noting the U. S. hierarchy's support of self-regulation, rather than legal action, the prelates called for reform of the code administration. They also said Hollywood must come up with a system of self. classification to protect youths from material they are not yet mature enough to understand. The bishops specifically criticized Hollywood for the "subtle and insidious introduction" into Turn to Page Eighteen
The Bishops noted tliey are not alone in concern over the moral.quality of movies today. "We cite the widespread criticism which recent Hollywood films have provoked' throughout the entire country," they said. · The appeal to Catholics to help clean up' m.ovfes was made by the. Bishops' Committe for Motion Pictures, Radio and Television: as' Catholics throughout · the nation are preparing" to Members of the St. Vincent · subscribe . to the pledge. of'. t ·the de' Paul Society' and of the' Diocesan. Council of Catholic Women - are meeting with' enthusiastic 'welcome's ali they go :about their pleasant task of . W A:SHING'l'ON (NC)-The Motion Picture Associamaking contacts for the Severith ,
Di()cese A waits 8ish()p's B(1.ll On Ian-. 11' St.
pointed out. Construction of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro is D;loving along· rapidly and the first class. of freshmen will 'beadmitted for instruction at that school in the Fall of 1961, Dr. Maxwell said, as he expressed the ,hope that it will not be to.o long into the future before the doors open for the first fr~shman clas$ at the Taunton· secondary educational institu~ion..
· Fil~. 'Associatio'n Denies
··U~,S;. $i.shQP.~/· 'Indict~ent
Annual Bishop's Chari.ty Ball.to· ."tio~ of: ';America' :h~s responded to .the Catholic Bishops' ~e. h.el.d .at pncoln Park's l\:fil- " : indictment of Hollywood;g 1~60 film fare with a sweeping
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Ballroom .on Ja~.}~ . ~ei1ial ~f, the pr~late~' c9arges. The association of major H: Fra~k'Reillya~d Mrs: Rose' ,filfn .pro~ucer~, ,-,nder ~wh~se "We d~ not ag~ee that l:IollyWASHINGTON '(NC):-program, valued. at more Mullaney, Co-Chairmen of. th~':, auspi~el'l> th~ ,controversIal wood has made a 'bold and unthan $121,000,000 'conducted' last ~ear :for the needy ,bri~Jiant ,event~ "X:~PW'~ ...tJ:!at ."praduction.code of"~he;in-' precedented' departure f-r 0 m ov.erseas by the globe. girdling', :relief ,organizati.()il .main- many. ~re . l~o.kmgf<?rwa~d .to.. : dmitri operates . took' issue . preyiously accep,te~ mora~ sta.ndwl}at.l:9 now accepted as the area . .' . '. U S' B'sh' "C "t ards," the aSSOCIatIon SaId. "We tained by'-:American Catholics•. 'Arch'hishop~arl J. 'A~te~',of • social event, of' the ye~r.. " ,:,' ~l~ .th~ .. ,. ;.') . op.s ~ o~~m. - do not agree ,that 'objectionable Cincinnati, w~o. ". suqlll~teed, , '1'" '1'9"'9,", to' 'Septe"m'ber 1'96.O. .A. 'feature of ,this year's' Ball. teeo~ .~~~lOn P.I~~ux:.es,.;~adlo 'films' have created a 'national h" is:ArtMooney 'w,ho ~ill al?pe~r', ;~nd,:Telerl~l~~, WhlC? ,made. ·the 'crisis.' We dQ not agree that the the annu~t report 9£ C. at 0- The agency: receives' its prinCip81 with his famous l\:I!}M ~ecoreF ~ndlctme.~~. ., ,,,' production code administration lie Relief Services~Nation,.r,' .)' 'Tu..n~'Pag.e".Flve' . ing ,Orchestra.' A native' of . , . 'is presently ineffective.' The at Catholic Welfare C~f~fer'·In"vest·•.ture" Lowell,' M<?oneY's'bfirst attempt ~Cht.st·mas ,Vigil,' facts do not support any such ..ence at·. the meeting' o· the .. . . at organizing. a and. was .in. . '.' . , . . . conclusions." untry,s .. Catholic , ,hie'rarchy " :i.'heChancery OU~ce has . high school where',he ·plaYed·aU'. 'The' .Chancer.y Office' has The association's statement re, noted that for th,e. j'o~r~h, . announced that. thepubUc is \ ,the' .school's dimces:After: grad- " diioected/that Friday" Dee. 'Z3, was ,issued·from its' headquarters '.' ai~ht year the agen~y C;list.rib. invited to the Investiture 'of . 'uation· he gav:e' up,·the idea&f," should .be'. obServed··.. by .all here. ed more than one b.illion .. Rt. Rev. Bernard J, .Fenton . '/ pursuing music as.a. careeran!l. Catholics of' the Diocese' ·as· 'In·the·Motion Picture·Assodaunds of relief materJals t~ and. Rt. Rev. ·HenrI A.' Hamel .- accepted an apprentice!!hip as the Dai'of Fast ·and complete tion's rebuttal to the Bishops, • tIi~ needy overseas. . ' as Domestic Prelates to be held . a linotype operator.. Being a, Ablltine'nce.'infullfillment 'of the organization said film pro:~e report co v ere d the 'Sunday: ~ight at 7:30 -,in st. :. printer'!! dev~l didn't appeal to the' requirements o( the duction has been in "a process agency's activities from October )Wary's Cathedral, FaU' River; Turn to Page Eighteen' "Christmas Vigil. . Turn to Page' Eighteen
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THINKING OF CHR!STMAS
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TH~ ANCHO~-Diocese
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Sisters to Rare High Schools'/
of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 8, 1960
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Sister John Elizabeth, S,U.S,C-. principal of Sacred HeSIU Academy, Fall River, is amOlli1 four representatives of Catholic secondary schools appointed to membership on the standing committee on the evaluation GIl independent secondary schoo. of the New England Association of Colleges and Secondaq Schools. . This marks the first time -Catholic school representativu have been appointed -to officiail positions in the association. The Fall River school has beea an accredited member ·of tbe New England Association since 1941. It was re-evaluated f'Oll' continued membershiu for :Ill) years in 1957. The evaluation committee will set up teams of visiting committees to inspect schools apply.. ing for new membership or reevaluation. It will then ·review reports of the teams and vote on recommending the ·schools visited for' Association member;a. ship. Sister John Elizabeth is a1£o , past secretary of the New England regional unit of the secondary school depar1ment· of tho National Catholic Educationllli Association, and one of the pioneer officers in the organizatioa of the unit. She serves at present· at! a member of, its advisory board.
Re~®gWB~g Str~tt® Ag~ PARIS (NC) More than 10,000 private schools in France-nearly all of them Catholic-have taken advantage of state aid offered them under France's new school law. The Ministry of Education said that at least 10,400 schools had applied for contracts that would enable them to receive financial assistance from the government. The final tally has not yet been reached, the' ministry said. Almost all the 11,400 private schools in France are Catholic. The rest are Jewish, Protestant or secular. In August the six cardinals of the French Hierarchy counseled primary level Catholic schools, attended by students age 6 to 14, to negotiate "simple contracts" with the state. Under this plan the schools receive state. aid in return for a limited amount of government control. The cardinals suggested to Catholic secondary and technical schools that they should negotiate "contracts of association," which give more state aid to the schools but subject them to more state control. Options Under the law, private schools also have the options of remaining without state control and without state aid, or of becoming a part of the public school system, with all expenses paid. and full state control. Even those schools that reject state aid are to receive additional indirect state aid under the new law through increased financial help to parents of school children. The parents turn this money over to the schools, Under a "contract of association"-which may apply only to certain classes rather than to III whole school-the government controls teaching methods and class hours, Religious instruction is given during school hours. Teachers a"'! named by the state in agreement with school authorities, The state pays teachers' salaries which are virtually the same as those paid to ,public school teachers, Local governments must pay operating expenses at the same rate they pay for those of public schools. Simple Contract A "simple contract" provides for state payment of salaries of teachers whQ' nave the·' 'same qualifications as public sch?ol teachers. Other teachers receIve , only partial pay from the state. Local governments may pay operating expenses other thCl:n teachers' salaries. School authOrIties name teachers with the approval of the government, which exercises only limited control
Necrology 'IHE ANCHOR lists the anniversary dates of priests who served the Fall Rive" Diocese since its formation illl 1904 with the intention that the faitllful will give tbem .. prayerful remembrance. DEC. 11 Rev. Edward L. Killigrew, 1959, Pastor, St. Kilian, New Bedford. DEC. 15 Rev. Mortimer Downing, 1942, Pastor, St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis. ' Rev. John F. O'Keefe, 1955, Assistant, St. Patrick, Fall River.
over the curriculum and administration of finances. The. "simple contract"· has proved by far the most popular choice. Of the 10,200 private elementary schools in France, 8,842 have requested the "simple contract." Almost all the private secondary schools--1,164 out of 1,20l~-have ask e d for the "simple contract," and so have 165 technical schools. The "contract of association" is a far second in popularity. Seventy-one primary schools, 261 high schools and 80 technical schools have requested it. Subsidies The small number of· schools preferring the status quo will keep their private character to the full extent, and will receive additional indirect aid through higher subsidies given by the state to parents of their pupils. One high school and eight technical schools have asked to be' absorbed into the public scho~l system. Under the new law, chaplaincies will be created under certain conditions for state-aided schools. This amounts .to religious instruction from a priest. Parents must request the creation. of a chaplaincy in the . school attended by their children. Chaplaincies have been provided already. for 250 high schools and 114 .technical schools.
Legion of Decency
Dec. 11-0ur Lady of Heal~ Fall River. St. Louis, Fa~l River. Dec. 18-8t, Bernard, Assonet;' St. Mary's Home, New Bedfor,d. , .'. Dec. 25-St. Helena's Convent, Fall River. St. Anthony's ; Convent" '...Fall River.
'Urges Pray·er, Cooperation With Church America
The following films are to be added to the lists in their respective classifications: Unobjectionable ·for general patronage: Desert Attack; Wackiest Ship in the Army. 'Unobjectionable for adults and adolescents: General Della Rovere. Unobjectionable for adults' Virgin Spring (prints shown ~ the United .:.states). Objectionable in part for all: Jazz Boat (suggestive); Where the Boys Are (mqst of this pict~re ,glamorizes' objectionable standards of behavior). Condemned: Come Dan c e with Me' (grossly , suggestive presents material in morally un~ acceptable manner); Love Game (serIously ,offensive. in theme and treatment). Change of Classification' Private Lives of Adam and' Eve Changed from Condemned cla~ sification to Morally Objectionable in Part for AlL Suggestive customing, dialogue and situations remain, but sll"'-<~'1tial revisions that have been made justify the cHange in classification.
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Legiona~ies Meet The· annual reunion of the Legion of M~y" held for units throughout the Diocese, took place this year -at Dominican Academy, Fall River. Legion-· aries. from ::"airhaven, Fall Riv~r, New Bedford, ·Somerset and Taunton attended. A variety program was presen.t~ and it was, -announced that. next year's reunion will be held' iD Taunton. . -... ~
, ~Iumni PartY'
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St. Vmcent's AlUmni Assocla-·
THE ANCHOR tion, Fall' River, will bold a Second-eliu.~ -.-,i1 privilegm ·authorlaed - lZhtistmas party at 8 Sat(lrday· at Fall River. M'ass, ,PUblished every night, Dec. 10 at St. Be-r·.n"ard's ' Thursday at 410 Highla;nd Avenue. Fall ,.' River. Mass.. by the CaiJlwlic Press of the Hall, Assonet. Gifts will be ex':',Diocese of F;all Jtiver. SUbscriptlol!.ua- ' . . by mail, postpaid $4,OO,per· year; " . . ..' -'dlangea ,. . \'~r. 'o,
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J)lUIl11l0l!)1l' @f I Junior Circle 71, New Bedford Daughters of Isabella, will go Christmas caroling Tuesday, Dec, 20. A penny sale is planned :for February. The unit is collecting canned goods for Christmas baskets distributed by the White Sisters, Miss Anne Marie Szulik has been named to the office of custodian. " '
December activities for Bishop Cas sid y Council Swansea Knights of Columb~s, will inclUde exemplification of the second and third degrees Sun-· da~, Dec. 11, Q meeting Dec. 12, a visit to Rose Hawthorne Home Dec. 13, a fund-raising event ,Dec. 17, children's party Dec. 18 and Council party Dec. 19. )
FORTY HOURS DEVOTION
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.. FRIDAY-Mass of previous SUDday. Simple. Violet:· Ma951 Proper; No Gloria; CommOlil Preface. RETURNS HOME AS MISSIONER: Sister ,Maria SATURDAY-Ma..q,s of prevw. Theresia' Okada of Hami, Japan, the first professed. Japan- ... Sunday. Simple: Violet. MaM ese of the Xavier Mission Sisters, receives the mission Proper; No "'~l~ria; .Seco~ crucifix from Auxiliary Bishop John A. Donovan of Detroit, Collect St. Metchhd,es, Pope and Martyr; Commo?;..Preface. at the departure ceremony before returning to the soCiety's SUNDAY-Gaudete Sunday, III mission in Kochi, Japan, to work among her· own people. Sunday of Advent. Double of NC' Photo. I Class. Rose or Violet. Ma. Proper; No Gloria; c7!eedI B~$hcn Preface of Trinity. Ii" MONDAY - Mass of previoUII m~Latin Sunday. Simple. Violet,Mellll . Proper; No Gloria;. COnun<la QUEBEC (NC)-A Canadian seminaries and dioceses. Preface. . ' • bishop, just returned from a The Latin American seminaTUESDAY - St. Lucy, Vir. three-week visit to Latin Amer- ries came to Canada through the and Martyr. Double. &d} ica, called for sympathy, prayer cooperation of the Canadian Mass Proper; Gloria;· Seconct and collaboration on behalf of Catholic Conference's Commis-· Collect of previous S un da3C the Church there. sion on Latin America together Common Preface.. . ~ Archbishop Maurice Roy of with the Pontifical Commission WEDNESDAY-Mass .of .Em~ Quebec made this appeal to on Latin America, or as as a .'. Wednesday in Advent', Simple, Canadian Catholics as he re- result of agreements between Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloturned from the Inter-·American their bishops in Latin America ria; Common Preface. ' Marian Congress in Buenos and various Canadian seminaries THURSDAY - Maslj ·of previ~ Aires and the Inter-American and dioceses. . Sunday. Simple. ~Violet. MaN Week of Catholic Action which .Pr.oper; No Glo,l'ia; Commoa opened in Mexico City. Fall River G M i i d P r e f a c e . , ' . Meanwhile, it was announced in Ottawa that 32 seminarians ,Fall River Catholic Guild for Afric~n from Latin America are study- th~ Blind members win hold ing this year in Canadian major ·their annual Christmas party· VATICAN CITY (NC)-Vat1C:lm seminaries, next'Sunday afternoon at Sacred Radio has started a special Father Marcel Gerin, P,M,E" Heart Scho!>l. The af4'~;r will be broadcast three times weeklr a director of the Canadian Cath- preceded by Rosary and Bene- for French-speaking people jQ West Africa. olic Office of Latin America, diction at 2:15 in· the church. said that number .will be larger next year due to additional scholarships offered by Canadi~n
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Cardinal Spellman to Make Annual Visit to Servicemen
THE ANCHORThurs., Dec. 8, 1960
Liturgy Expert Asks Full Use Of English
NEW YORK (NC) - Francis Cardinal Spellman will round out 10 years of Christmas visits to U.S. servicemen with a 17-day airplane trip to Alaska, Canada and Greenland this year. The Archbishop of New York, who is the Military Vicar of Catholics in the in Thule, then offer midnight armed forces, will celebrate Mass at the Air Force base. On h i 8 Christmas midnight Christmas Day he will celebrate Mass at Thule Air .Force Mass in the ice tunnel. Base, Greenland. He will offer one additional Mass in the Army ice tunnel in Greenland, according to the official itinerary. , The Cardinal will leave New York next Friday and return on Jan. 1. The tradition of the Cardinal's Christmas visits was begun by the prelate himself. Through the years he has sacrificed his own Christmas at home and braved nU,merous obstacles, including ~low-zero temperatures and a schedule that leaves few minutes Of free time, to greet servicem~n. Likes to Go ""I really like to go because itpUtS me in close contact with people," he once explained. "It' also makes me feel like: a parish
Midnight Mass The Cardinal will leave Thule on Dec. 27, arriving in Sondrestrom Air Base, Greenland, for an overnight stay. He will leave Greenland on Dec, 28, and arrive in Frobisher Bay, Baffin, Island, Canada, the same day. 'On Dec. 29 the Cardinal will arrive at Goose Bay Air' Force Base Labrador. He will leave on Dec, 30 for Harman Air Force Base, Newfoundland. Cardinal Spellman will stay overnight in Argentia, New-, fourdland, on Dec. 31 and.ar.:. rive in' New York on Jan. 1.
i»as.tor Now Fir,e Fighter 'Chl·ef ., ,
NOTRE DAME (NC) _ A liturgy expert has urged pasto.rs to use as much English in the Mass as present liturgical legislation permits _ "and then to hope and pray for more." "The more vernacular used in Mass by the people the better will be their active, intelligent participation in ~"e Sacrifice" according to Msgr. Robert Sherry, pastor of St. William'. church, Cincinnati.
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Msgr. Sherry notes in an arti_ cle in Ave Maria magazine that the use of English for many prayers and hymns at Mass was specifically approved by the Sacred Congregation of Rites in its September, 1958, ins'truction on lay par.ticipation in the liturgy.
, ANNUAL BREAKFAST: Fal1"'River P~i'tic'ula~ Coun.:. eil members of the St; Vincent de Paul Society hold animal communion breakfast 'at St. Louis de Franc'e parish, Swan-Msgr. Sherry writes that the sea. Left to right, Leo Leclaire, Jerome Foley, Raymolld Vernacular Society in the Un'l~ ,Carroll, all officers of the .Society; with Rev. Arthur G. , , ted States advocates eventual Dup.uis, pa,stor of St. Louis de France. use of English in the Mass for
'MARCHE (NC)-When a'pas:tor here in Arkansas decided to priest again." ' haul water for the cistern that The Cardinal's first stop will serves his parish, he didn't' be Elmendorf Air Force Base in realize he was lining up another Anchorage, Alaska, on Dec. 16. job for himself. He will visit Fort Richari:lson in Anchorage; Kodiak Air Force, The pastor, Msgr. Thomas J. , Base; Galena Airport; and Eiel- ' Prendergast 0 f Immaculate BURLINGTON (NC) - ProtSOD and Ladd air force base, in Heart of Mary parish, bought a estants,' Catholics and Jews , Fairbanks. . government surplus tank truck sh'ould forget past differences He will leave Alaska on Dec. to haul the water, because this and learn to trust each other, a %2. small community has no munipriest told a Catholic observance ,He is scheduled to stop over- ,cipal water supply. The truck is sponsored by the Burlington night on Dec. 22 in Cambridge equipped with a hose and pump. , Interfaith Council. " Bay, Canada, and to arrive at A few days ago, when the . 'A good. waY,'to build such trust Monsignor's new $100,000 parish,·is, the" 'dla . Iogue " ,me th 0, d sal'd Thule AI'r Force Base on Dec. ·23. h I On Dec, 24 he will celebrate SC 00 and hall were dedicated, Father Robert J., Welch, asso"'-. he got a surprise. ' morning Mass at the Army base Bishop Albert L. Fletcher of ciate professor in the Iowa State Little Rock, who de'tlicated the University school of religion. Mission Father Aids buildings, pinned a fire chief's' , He declared that in this' type badge on Msgr. Prendergast and of serious ,exchange "each perPlane Crash Victims placed a fireman's helmet on his son can say what he believes SAN MATEO (NC) - Two head. and why he believes, what the Guatcmalan airmen died but a The pastor's parishioners had' contents of his religion are, a'nd passenger was saved through arranged to designate him as how it fits into daily living." the efforts of an Alnerican mischief of a volunteer fire depart"Each can t;lk intelligently of sioner after a light plane crashed ment because his tank truck his religion without giving in the rugged mountain range full of water is the best fire, here. fighting equip~~nt in town. Legion of Decency· , When Father Edmund McClear, M.M., realized that the Plans Holy Hour, Link Delinquency plane, flying very low over his NEWARK (NC)-More than remote Indian' mission, would With School Laxity 1,000 priests and laity are exnever clear a 9,500-foot ridge 'of PHILADELPHIA (N C) pected to attend a Legion of the Cuchumatanes mountains, Oversimplified school work is Decency Holy Hour here in he packed Holy Oils in a firstpartly to blame for juvenile Sacred Heart Cathedral next aid kit and set off on horseback. A few minutes later the aircraft delinquency, Dorothy J.Willman, Sunday, the 'day the legion a St. Louis school teacher; said pledge, is given. rammed into a mountainside. Archbishop Thomas A, Boland Father McClear, first man at here. Miss Willman told the Teach- of Newark will preside, preach the scene of the crash, removed er's Sodality of Philadelphia a sermon and, lead in recitation the three victims and anointed that the competitive nature of of a special prayer begging God them. The pilot was dead. The children demands tougher school to "grant that all will rej¢ct copilot died as the priest recited assignments than they are now what is opposed to Your Will in prayers for the dying. The getting. motion pict\Jres,. on the stage, on Maryknoll missioner adminis"The American youngster, the air waves and in print." tered first aid to the survivor, surrounded by many captivatwho had a broken leg and ining distractions, all too often' ternal injuries, then helped an Mass for Troops loses interest in studies, develops Indian rescue team. NEW YORK (NC)-Frederhabits of laziness, 'mental sloppiness, and, too frequently, the ick Boland, president of the characteristics of the typical United Nations General Assembly, and Francis Aiken,lreland's problem child," she said. Minister of External Affairs, led the Irish UN delegation to a Israel Orders More Mass here for the Irish troops Time for Religion killed in the Congo. JERUSALEM (NC) - Israel's Ministry of Education has decreed an increase in the time devoted to religion, classes in secondary schools. 'Maintenance Supplies It has also sent a letter to secondary school headmasters SWEEPERS - SOAPS urging them to make arrangeDISINFECTANTS ments for religion teachers to FIRE EXTINGUISHERS take Christian students to church on Sundays (which are regular schooldays in Israel) and holy days. 18B6 PURCHASE ST. The Ministry's action was taken at the request of Melkite NEW BEDFORD Rite Bishop Georges Hakim of WY 3-3186 Acre. ,-
Profess,or Urges Mutual Confidence Among Pe ople of DOff I eren t Fa °th I S grounds on his convictions," he stated. Father W~lch recalled that historically Catholics and Protestants have treated each other badly, but he added' that "the Protestant, the Catholic 'and the Jew should forget history at a certain point and . . . learn to trust" each other.'" " The Burlington Interfaith Council here in Iowa sponsored a Protestant observance in 1959 and is planning a Jewish observance in 1961. '
Fall River ·CYO The Fall River CYO willsponSOl' two Cadet dances thi~ month at Catholic Community ,Center, Franklin Street. One 'will be held tomorrow night from 7:30 to 10 and the other, a combined Christmas and New Year's party, will be held from 7:30 to 10:30 Friday night, Dec. 23, also at the Center. Both dances are open to seventh, eighth and ninth l:rade students.
, all times when the priest speak. to the people. This system, he adds "leaves Latin for all the silent prayers of the priest. at the a"'1r, prayers which are neither heard nor meant to be heard by the people." , Growing Desire "All over the world," he says, "there is growing an irresistible desire on the part of the faithful and zealous pastors for more vernacular in the public liturgical prayers of the Church, e" pecially in the Mass . . • .
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MONEY NOT OBJECT,: William J. Thaler, a 34-yearold physicist who turned down a $40,000 a year job in private industry to teach at Georgetown University \ for • $12,000 yearly salary; developed "Project Argus," an around-the-world method of monitoring nuclear e.xploaions. NC Photo.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of. Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 8, 1960
4
, U. S. Catholics Give Millions
Contents More Important -Than Method of .Packing
Continued from Page One support from the annual Bishops' Relief Fund Appeal, which is usually conducted in parishes throughout the nation on Lactare Sunday.
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D. Bishop of Reno
Archbishop Alter submitted the repori as chairman of the board of trustees of the agency. He noted that the program included huge stores of surplus food ftom the U.S. Government, made available through the International Cooperation Ad. ministration and the U,S. Department of Agriculture. Also distributed were vast supplies of clothing and other commodities donated to the annual Thanksgiving Clothing Collection conducted throughout the country.
Some weeks ago we found ourself (such are the curious. uses of bishops nowadays) presiding over a demonstration of how to pack a suitcase. Let not the uninitiated mock nor the cynics sneer. Herein lies a great art. It is not to be acquired by native instinct, which can only be described as nor by any mastery of belonging to the area of hope: theory, nor by anything less the books one had planned' on arduous than the closest readin~, the documents to be re-
viewed in moments of contemconcentration and unremitting plated leisure, the letters urgent toil. On this subject we speak for their' answer. with authoriSame Confusion ty; not, indeed, Back they went into the suitthe authority case, singly and in pairs, with of the sucprecisely the same resultant cessful practiconfusion as before. It was n~t eioner, but on that we had not tried, bent our that of one who mind and feeble talents to a has plumbed' better ordering of our private the ignominy chaos, ·struggled against the. of failure. demon of disarray. We did not, The lesson had"been clear; no therefore, atfault was to be found with the tend to the zeal of the demonstrator, nor demonwas our suitcase any less capastration with the jaded eye of • cious than his. The fault, dear theologian listening to an expoBrutus, is precisely in our stars sition of the penny' catechism. that....w e cannot pack our bag. We were a tyro in the presence Talent for 'Packing' of a professional. Victim through The late Maurice Baring once' the years of our own lflmentable edited a book entitle' Have You inefficiency in this exact and exacting business, we could not 'Anything to Declare? It was a highly personal anthology of but admire the deftness of the those snatches and passages of demonstrator, and how, with consummate ease, he proved great literature which had, bethat not merely two, but an' come part of his intellectual incredible number of objects baggage, the things which, as he fancied, he would be able_ ~ could be made to occupy the same space at the same ~ime. declare as thegarnerings of his The laws of physics were blithe- . earthly pilgrimage when he ly laid aside; it was a triumph came to the customs house of eternity. - of art over science. But Baring, besides being In Awe of Magicians one of the kindest and gentlest Our bemused mind went back of men, was clearly possessed of to the occasion, when, as a vety a talent for packing. Every item small boy, we were hoisted to was labelled, each one was in the stage at the parish bazaar, its place, from the Greek Anthere to play the role of roundthology to Jushkin, from the eyed wonderment as'. the amaBible to Baudelaire. teur magician produced eggs and Surveying the sorry outcome rabbits ollt of 'his silk hat. ' - of our effort, we wondered 'what We have never quite· gotten a figure we would cut as we over it. Assured thereupon and opened our suitcase for the thereafter that it, was' only celestial inspector. sleight-of-hand and genial imImage of Mind posture we ~ "<1 to the evidence Is this, one asks, an image of of our' e , · · J t, the hat had the mind?' Dreadful thought, been v' it brought yet torturing in its insistence. forth .. ' ·'ontents. There are those happy souls l' '. all our who, carry, their ideas neatly IT ~ted 50packaged, all in ceUophane con.: awe of tainers, all fitting accurately into the narrowest space. And ~o."" , I ",qrP"~~ : . ,.,. there are those whose ideas, or' .~,...~~. .1"~Q,~ ~' ,llimaufry what might pass for them,- are heaped ill a magnificeMe of '''''~~~' '.', went into ~foJ>.. ,O !h~4"'" 06:,' . ,. ~",&..;,'t>.",,,, t:: ~ . eas our seldiSorder. ,,~" ,:;: How many thoughts, like dere."..~ \-'\ ".;-.~<!~ nas always been ~<:>~l"..~ ~""~~rae sufficient fOr! our lict pyjamas, have been lett l.f<;)'1>~ for the duration 'of the hanging in closets in anonymous e:1ontemplated journey, the demhotel rooms? How many schemes onstrator included the wants of to save' the world have been an entire family. buried in the unplumbed reAnd whereas our wrestling cesses of the suitcase, to· be has been with the limitations of dumped out at journey's end, space, there seemed to be. no their usefulness expired? limits to his control of capaCity. The only hopes for this travLong before the final item had eller. is that when he opens his been stowed in its appointed case for the final inspection, the p.ace we had given over the atcontents will be reckoned, not tt.mpt to keep pace with hill the way they are packed. St. prestidigitation. Peter, who travelled a bit himThe only exceptions we know self, might understand. to the general rule that packing a suitcase is an acquired art are R. A. WILCOX CO. nuns. Long experience and careful observation "have convinced OFFICE FURNITURE us that religious women gain I. Sloe" for Immediate (hUnJ'7 mastery in this matter by a kind • DESKS • CHAIRS of divine inspiration. FILING CABINETS It is a free gift of God bestowed- at the taking of the • SAFES • FIRE FILES habit; it may be greater in some FOLDING TABLES than in others, but it. is shared AND CHAIRS by all. This may be' taken, as Hilaire Belloc might say, as a R. A. WILCOX CO. Dogma of Faith. 22 BEDFO·RD ST. Habitual Condition FALL RIVER 5-7838 The demonstration came to its end. Back to our hotelroom we went, filled with fresh confiWhite's f«llrm D€lIiry dence. But within moments we were reduced to our habitual "SPECIAL MILK condition of quiet c'lo-.... air. Choir cassock was buried somehow From Our Own under the simaI', both wrapped . Tested Herd" mysteriously in the ample folds Acushnet, Mass. WY 3-4457 of the mantelletum. Sash and birettum were at the bottom in• Special Milk extricably entangled with shoes • Homogenized Vito 0 Milk and shirts and shaving kit. Meticulously we extracted • Buttermilk these items, some peculiar to the • Tropicana Orange Juice costume of prelates, others com• Coffee and Choc. Milk mon to the male of th':! species. • Eggs - Butter Then there were those items
FIRST: Msgr. William J. McDonald, rector of the Catholic University of America, Washington, D..C., is the first American to be named president of the Federation of Catholic Universities, which includes • everal pontifical institutions, has' more than 50 member universities. NC Photos.
The supplies distributed in the name of the American people go to the needy without regard to race, creed or color, the report stated. The surplus food alone distributed in last year's program had a value of more than $64 million, the report said. During the year the agency made- 1,761 shipments of relief materials to 64 different coun.. tries, Archbishop Alter reported.
Consecratio'n Rite Set for Dec. 22 PHILADELPHIA (NC)-The consecration of Bishops-designate Francis J. Furey and Cletu8 J. Benjamin as .Auxfliary' Bishops of Philadelphia will take place here in the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul on December 22. Archbishop Egidio' Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the United States, will be the consecrating' prelate. Bishop .Joseph McShea, Adminiiitrator of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, and Bishop J. Carroll McCormick of Altoona-Johnstown, will be the co-eonsecrators. I
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Honor Sculptor NEW YORK (NC)-Croatianborn sculptor Ivan Mestrovic, 77, was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Mr. Mestrovic, one of the country's best known Catholic artists, is a faculty member at Notre Dame- University. '
He said' that the CRS-NCWC emergency program for the vieUrns of earthquakes in Chjle last year totaled $1,151,000 jn supplies and. more than two million pounds of food. The agency continues to maintain large relief programs in Spain,' Portugal, Greece and Italy, but the main emphasis of last year's program was centered on assistance to the poor in the uqderdeveloped areas of Latin
America, Asia, the Far East . . . Africa, the report said. "'It. was possible not only .. maintain broad programs 01. assistance to practically all 01. the countries of Asia, but .. enlarge the programs alre~ established in South America and Africa, and extend them into many of the countries in these two continents not previously assistecl," the report related. Refugees Archbishop Alter reported that during the year CRSNCWC helped 4,531 persons /lI) immigrate to the Un'ited States and also aided 7,751 persons in' resettling in various other countries. The report also said that 14,328 refugees were assisted in integration in European countries. The report said that the 1951 Thanksgiving Clothing Collection resulted in donations of 14,908,077' pounds of clothing, blankets, shoes and bedding from American Catholics. The report valued the donations at $26,089,134 and .said that the clothing was distributed to the poor in, 53 couptries. Emerarencies In addition to aiding the vtetims of earthquakes i~ Chile, CRS-NCWC a 1 so' conducted elllergeney programs for victi~ of floods and other disasters in Brazil, ·the Congo, Hong Kong, Iran, Japan, Mexico, Morocco. the Philippines, Puerto Rico ,the Ryukyus Islands and in Florida, the report said. '
NO JOB lOO 110 NONE TOO SMALl
Convokes Synod LOS ANGELES (NC)-James Francis Cardinal McIntyre will solemnly convoke a Los Angeles Archdiocesan Synod next Monday, the seventh synod in the 120-year history of this See.
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The Parish Parade ST. MATHIEU. FALL RIVER The annual Christmas party of the Women's Guild will be held at 6:30 Tuesday night, Dec. 13 at White's restaurant. ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER Scouts and. Cubs of the parish will participate in a transparent tape sale. Cubs will receive corporate Communion at 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, Dec. 11, and will hold open house in the school recreation hall Friday, Dec. 16. New members will be enrolled at that time. ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER The PTA and Alumni Assoeiation will hold a Christmas party at 6 Sunday night, Dec. 11 at Harmony House. Joseph Amaral is chairmn. HOLY TRINITY, WEST HARWICH The Association of the Sacred Heart will hold a Christmas bazaar 1 to 5 Saturday afternoon, Dec. 10 at the church. Mrs. Joseph Crowley is chairman. BOLY NAME, NEW BEDFORD The Ladies' Guild will hold a Christmas party and exchange of gifts at its meeting 'Monday, Dec. 12. OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP, NEW BEDFORD The Women's Guild will hold a card party Feb. 11 and III Christmas party and gift exchange Sunday, Dec. 18. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold. Christmas party Saturday, De~. 10 in the par.lsh hall, featured by a ca tered dinner, an exchange of gifts and dancing. Mrs. Irene Michaels and Mrs. Alma Viveiros are co-chairmen. ST. JOHN BAPTIST, ~ENTRAL VILLAGE The Women's Guild will hold its regular meeting and exchange 50 gifts at 8 tonight in the parish hall. Mrs. Thomas Rogers, Mrs. Gilbert Santos and Mrs. Henry Shelter are in charge ef refreshments. A regular whist party will be held at 8 Saturday night, Dec. 10, also in the hall. Mrs. Manuel Oliveira and Mrs. Austin Potter are co-chairmen. The annual parish children'. pllrty will be held from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon, Dec. 11 in the parish hall. Mr. Sweep Whiskbroom and Buzzy Baloney will entertain. ST. MARY'S. FAIRHAVEN· The Couples' Club will hold 11 Christmas party Sunday, Dec. 18 at Our Lady of Angels Hall. Mr. and. Mrs. Leo Grennon are chairmen. The unit plans a parish dance Feb. 11 in Pulaski ball, with John Gouveia and Eugene Duval as chairmen.
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SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO The parish school will hold its annual exhibit from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon, Dec. 11. All parents are urged to visit and meet their children's teachers. Also on Sunday afternoon, a Christmas party will be held from 2 to 4:30 in the parish hall for children of members of Duvernay Council 42, St. Jean Society. Mrs. Rene Robert fa in charge. ST. JOHN BAPTIST, NEW BEDFORD The Ladies Guild will hold • Christmas party at 7 Wednesday night, Dec. 21 in the church hall. A buffet will be served and gifts will be exchanged. Miss Emily Correia and Mrs. Arthur Viera are co-chairmen. ST. HYACINTH, NEW BEDFORD The Ladies of st. Anne win hold a Christmas party Wednesday, Dec. 14 in the parish hall. Gifts will be exchanged and there will be a turkey dinner.
ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT, FALL RIVER ' The Blessed'Mother Guild will hold a Christmas party at 8 Tuesday night, Dee. 20. Mt. St. Mary Academy glee club will entertain and gifts brought by m~mbers will be donated to needy children. The unit is also co-sponsoring a social in cooperation with the parish Holy Rosary Sodality on Sunday, Dec. 11, date set for ground-breaking ceremonies for a parish social center.
ST. LAWRENCE. NEW BEDFORD The S1. Lawrence Discussion Group will sponsor a religion C<ilurse to be 'given by Rev. Thomas G. Brennan, C.S.C., of Stonehill College. Sessions will be held at Holy Family High School and will begin the second semester of the academic year. NOTRE DAME, FALL RIVER Tile Council f)f Catholic Women will hold a Christmas party 10night at White's restaurant. A Communion breakfast will be held Sunday morning, Jan. 29 in Notre Dame School hall following the 8 o'clock Mass. Rev. Roger P. Poirier will speak, and Mrs. Raymond Boulay is chairman. Next Council meeting will be_ held at 7:45 Monday night, Jan. 30 in Jesus Mary Academy AUditorium. New officers will be elected. SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER The Women's Club will hold a special Christmas whist party at 8 Monday night, Dec. 12 in the parish hall. Mrs. Arthur E. Duffy and Mrs. Edward Johnson are co-chairmen. The annual Christmas party was highlighted by an account of his recent pilgrimage given by Msgr. John J. Kelly, pastor. Gifts were presented by the clergy of the parish and the Sunshine Group of the Golden Agers entertained. Santa ClaW! distributed gifts to members.
ST.' ANTHONY, MATTAlPOISETT The Altar-Rosary Society will hold a Christmas penny sale at 8 Monday night, Dec. 12 at K. of C. Hall. Mrs. Alfred Faria is chairman. ' Fourteen new members have joined the society.
PRAYERS ASKED: Prayers have been authorized to obtain beatification for Cardinal Herbert Vaugha~~ former Archbishop of Westminster, England, and founder of the Josephite Fathers mission society who work among the Negroes in the United States. NO Ph"
ST. GEORGE. WESTPORT A variety show -will be presented by' parishioners with Mrs. Bradford Eddy as director and Mrs. Napoleon Bussiere and Mrs. Ralph Souza - as co-chairmen.· Time and place will be announced at a later date. OUR LADY OF LOURDES, WELLFLEET The Holy Name Society of Wellfleet, Truro and North Truro will receive corporate communion at 9 o'clock Mass this Sunday morning. The unit will hold its monthly meeting Sunday evening in the upper church lmmediatelT following Advent 6«VU:e.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Dec.
~,
5
1960
Urges Public, Private Schools Cooperate ~UMET
(NC) - President Henna.J B. Wells of Indiana University has stressed the need for friendly cooperation between private and public colleges and universities. He noted that all Indiana institutions of higher education "work together toward common
goals for the educational adva&ol tage of Hoosier youth." "In this state," he said, "we have a long, successful ancl proven tecord of cooperation be-tween private and public co,," leges and universities-a trad,," tion which we are determined ttl extend into the future."
SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY
CHUCK ADMINISTRATOR: Auxiliary Bishop Remy Augustin, S.M.M., of Port au Prince, Haiti, has been named administrator of that doicese by the Holy See following the expulsion by the government. of Archbishop Francois Poirier. A native Haitian, Bishop Augustin is the only non-Mrican Negro Bishop in the world. NC Photo.
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Prelate Requests Nuns Modernize ST. PAL U(NC) - The Archbishop of St. Paul urged more sisterhoods to change their religious garb to conform to the demands of modern life and the appeals of recent popes. Archbishop William O. Brady expressed his exasperation with communities who "modernize" their habits only by "taking out a tuck here, or a pleat there." The prelate spoke at a Mass for delegates from 55 religious orders of men and women who staffed displays viewed by more than 33,000 persons during the first St. Paul archdiocesan religious vocations exhibit. The tWO-day display was sponsored by the local Serra Club. Archbishop Brady also urged that communities seeking vocations not compete with each other, but cooperate for the sake of the Church.
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Governor Vetoes Bill Affecting Migrants· TRENTON (NC)-Gov. Robert B. Meyner of New Jersey vetoed a bill that would have repealed an executive department order requiring farmers employing eight Qr more migrant workers to provide hot and cold running water for them. Purpose of the bill was to assist farmers who have not complied with 1959 order. However, Gov. Meyner noted. that of the 826 migrant labor camps affected by the departmental order, 97 per cent have complied with or are in the process of complying with the order. His veto message said the bill "would reward the few farmen who have refused to comply and, by contrast, penalize the vast majority who have acted responsibly."
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6
Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Dec. 8, 1960
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Free Press and Responsibility .
Mayor deLessups S. Morrison of New Orleans has suggested a three-day moratorium on news coverage of the city's school desegragation controversy. The Mayor has said that newsmen' were responsible for some of the demonstrations. held by 'irate segragationists. j'I did see with my own eyes'Qn Wednesday, the' sixteenth of 'Novem':' ber, a camera cr~w 'in the Civic Center actually setting up • scene," the :Mayorwr~te in a letter making the suggestion ,to 'newsmen, arid'w,~nt 'on to qescribeh~w the camerman perslhided' a g·ri>up· of: '~emonstrating students to respond i like:a cheeriiIgs~tion after setting, up' cameras; adjusting . ,IOhrid levels and giying, ~ 'sign~I.· .' ." ... : , . .• ~ " The .Mayor: said' that -he has .already conferred with , :De~s represent~tive's' wno ate all convinced ~h~tif. they -: '. ,were·' not· on the scene ,eaen day' the ·.demonstr~tors. would ", ,'. '. Dot be either. "'.':: " . . ' . .. . . ' . ' . . . :'... The' 'Mayor esp~iany' disturbed over' the name' this ... .. ,' trpu,ble' is glviiig, to N ~w, Orleans, :especiaIiy c.<msidering t~at less than one,..tenth of one percent OF the CIty'S populatIOn has beeh involved in the demonstrations. , .' .. T'he .right of;~' fr~~ press 'and free ,news outl~ts is a· 'valuableone, but the common gqod alsO has a pl~ce .in the Beene. And a free.·press .lives up to its .purpose ,only when· it remains a ~esponsib1.e.press; television'coverage is responBible only when it repo.l·ts 'significant news and not 'when it 'distorts the·truth Or .incites to disobedience of l~gal':and' mo~af principles.: ' -. ,·As 'Pope. John said Sunqay,to a'group of 'Italian jOiIrnalists: "A newspaperman must, haye the delicacy... of . a physician, the versatility of a man of letters, the shrewd- . ness of a lawyer and the.res·ponsibility of an educator." , ' Is this ·combination too much to ask for in return for the guarantee 6f ~ free ''press? Can there be such a thing freedom from responsibility? , .
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TODAY-Feast of the Immaeulate Conception. On this day Ja ,1854 Pope Pius IX solemnly declared as an article of Faith that Mary, the Mother of God, WM by singular privilege of God preserved fr.ee from all stain of 0riginal sin. This is the patrooal feast of the United States: . _' TOMOR~~W ..:.....St. Restj~~ . Bishop-Martyr..Little is knOWll of this, .African martyr ;,. other " i.itan 'that he served all Bishop ol , Carthage' and' that St. AugU:sti~ , toward the end of the fourtta century, preached a sermoo" ill ,"]iii honor. ., ... ':-~. .
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;SATURDAY :- St. Mel~hiadea.. 'Pope-Martyr. A1so known 'as St. M~lti~des,. he.su·cceeded St. EOBebiu~'as Pope 'ill 311. He ·w.. ,~h~en' the honor 'of martyrd9al .. ' because of 'the sufferings he' uB:,derw~nt. in the time' of Dioei. . .tian.His pontificate W;:lS short,· but he witnessed the triumph. Of Constantine over Ma~entius and reorganized \ the government. of the Church which had been laid desolate in years of persecution&. He presided over p' ~ Council ol Bishops from. Italy and: Gaul which decided in favor of Cecilian as Bishop of Carthage again.. '. Donatus. This did not hinder the later development of the Dona':' tist heresy in Africa. He died . . .Jan. 10, 314. .
. SUN,DAY -:- Third Sundayol , .Advent. - Generally this date - ili the feast of St. Damasus I,Pop&. Confessor.' He was a native til Rome and attended Pope Liberius in exile. He succeeded Po~ The addition of new members to the United Nations is Liberius. He commissioned St. . .Jerome to correct the Latin text • sI'gn of vI'gor and II'fe I'n that great body. And I't also calls" The editor of the Question and Answer column does not guarantee 10 . nor 1etters I rom um'd entl'f'IQ hle sources. I n every of the Holy Scriptures. St. Dafor 'the exercI'se of a sense of adaptatI·on. answer anonymous quenes ' t erms 0 f instance the' desire lor anonymity will be respected. To that end. names masus is famous for having reoTo minds used to conceiving of the world In stored and beautified in Rome are never· appended to the' questions, but unless the letter is signed a western European culture, the unfamiliar names now there is no assurance that any consideration will. be given it. the tombs of the martyrs. He filling the headlines stretch horizons and widen, vision. They Didn't Christ allow an exthat many of them are listed died in 384 at the age of 80. drive a person back to the atlas and globe, and shift the ception to the prohibition' of as "confessors". Does this MONDAY - Our Lady ol focus to a wider scene than ever before. divorce and remarriage? I mean that they were priests Guadalupe. This feast comStill and all, it is somewhat startling-and shrinks the refer specifically to the quowho heard confessions. Also memorates the apparition of the . tation from St. Matthew's in the same list II see that some Blessed Mother to a humble Illworld considerably-to read from the depths of twentIeth Gospel: "and I say to you ·that are listed as "doctors". Please dian, Jua.n Diego, in 1531 011 .century America a statement, 'made in all seriousness, by whosoever shall put away his explain this term also. Tepeyac hill near Mexico City. the Tanganyika Minister of Home Affairs, George Kahama. wife; except it be for fornicaAlthough in current vocabu- The great Ballilica of Our Lady Speaking with all the sang-froid of a senior British civil tion and shall marry another, lary the first definition of. the of Guadalupe now stands on the servant, the Home Minister has stated to his countrymen: coniinitteth adultery." Doesn't word' "confessor" would be a spot of the apparition. PoPe that mean He looked upon priest who has faculties'to hear Benedict XV decreed Our Lady "I must remind all that all witchcraft is illegal for whatever ff" t' d ' adultery as su lelen groun s confessions, it also has a sec- of G ua d a 1upe as pa t roness _ purpose-such as removing other witches." for divorce? ondary definition _ one who. Mexico., Such a statement summons up a whole different kind No. While this is sometimes suffers ill treatment for the, -.rUESpAY.:....:St. Lucy of of life and culture. It 'forces the'. mind to pull away from the alleged, the Catholic Chil~ch, Faith of Christ. , ,cuse, Virgin~Martyr. She WN • gagdets and polite conformity of this cou.ntry and to consider maintains that a careful readmg· This latter definition ,is .cloSer ,Sicilian and one of the mO&t ··the'customs.and background of other peoples' of other lands. of the nineteenth chapter of to the sense in:wh!c,h the word. famous' of the. ~mirtyrs put.tIe ' . . . Matthew, of.which the.qi.lOtation is: used i~the liturgical·classifi:.>' death under Diocletian about , So' in .'spite 9f its. startling implications; the statemeri~ . above is a part, should dispel any. . cation. CONFESSOR as'used'iB:-" 304: Sh~ is' cOlllmemorated .daiJ; does, serve. the purpose of opening eyes and. minds to.a wider misunderstanding; You neglect,ed: the calendar-of the' saints refen' 'm:'-the Canon of the Mass.. whi.. ' . . to. complete the s~nte.nce inyOlJr . to •• ,canonized, male.saint ~bo· Chrilitians were being lOught _.w~rld than jus~ imm.edia,teo surroun.din~s. . . . : 'quotation. '-It goes. on to: ~Y:was not 'imirtyr,but was"re'-""'out, she distributEidher . I·S:··tO·'·'r·l·,C···. '''and' he that shall "marry her. ~owned'for his sanctity of· lif~' 'lo""the poor and was denounclt.i "."H· , ~ 'that is.put' away,' committeth and fearless. professionol·hJa b}'a young noble to whom her ..' : ; 'The statements ~eleased by' both Holy 'Father arid adultery.'" Adulter.y is a sin com-, faith: Many of the.se co.nfe~n· mother wished to give··hef. .. . niitted only by a married per- . were subjeCted, to humiliation... : _marriage. '·She endured tortur. -·the.Angl,ican Archbishop of Canterbury after their historic' son, hence Christ presumes that torments,and to'rture, justilbOrl . ·at·Syracuse and· was put to death' meeting in the Vatican last week deliberately said veryli~tle. a valid marriage still exists;, of actual martyrdom. by ,il sword driven through_ The Pope, speaking to the Cardinals who made the annual marriage is not a unilateral con- " . To make a finer distinction In ,throat.' .' " re treat with him, said that !'one must place his trust in 'the tract, I.e., it ap~lies not to one the litl,ll"gical classification, t h e ' . . person, but reqUlres two. confessors are subdivided into WEDNESDAY - St. Nicasm. grace of God without hastening judgements and forecasts...· Look back to the beginning of 'those who were bishops, non- and, Companions, Martyrs.. S&. Dr. Fisher told newsmen .on his arrival in London that' those that same nineteenth chapter- bishops, doctors of the Church. Nicasius was Bishop of RheimA. who' objected to his visit were simply "out of date:' In answer to a direct question, and 'abbots. The title DOCTOR With his sister, St. Eutropia, aDd Wisely, neither party expected' radical changes to take Jesus said: "Have you no t rea d designates those men who were a number of the clergy and . I . .' bo that He' who made man from ·the noted not only for their eminent faithful, he was put to death tor place after four centuries of a difficu t SItuatIon. But th beginning, made them male and holiness, but' also' for their emi- the Faith by barbarians __ parties know that the visit could produce only good - . female? For this cause shall. nence in learning. This title' is' invade~ Gaul about 407. creation of·a new atmosphere of good will and charity. And man' leave father and mother, reserved for very few '-'- men ° ° the 'minds of men have,been turned to a problem once called and shall cleave to his wife, and. who,'were ·theoutstandingin- ., . insol~ble. Men's heartS are, as never'):>efore, looking for the 'they shall be two in one .f~esh: U:llec~s, of· . th~ir, tiine,recQg, eletnents that unite ..and :not'at the differences 'that divjde. What therefore God hath Jomed. DlZed as' suc~,:no.t·orily. by·tne'" ''l:U~A (N,C) - 'Judges '. . together, let no man. put ·asun- Church, ~ut by the secular world ~wyerli 'should lead the way .ill' A~<l this is the ground in'wl:Ii~h God m'ay be pleased to SOWder.". . . a s well \.' ., making - ~ clearer distinctJo. His grace of reuniol1.· What kind of ',growth ,that grace will· . In.theten~h chapter of the ..,. , bet~een llin and crime, the eoetake, :what length of time it·uwi~l take fQr, the harVest, OI1)Y' Gos~el accQr~mg to st. ~~rk, re-' . ., gregation at the annual Bed God. knows; But men' must; after. the example, .of Pope' John ferrmg to thiS same questlOn, we.. '. What'ls the . 'meaning fIJI Mass here was told. " re.ad;. "When .His disciples as~ed "sepu!crum"? Is it' • ,Fathe.r James McNamee, pae:. ,and in his 'own words·, pray and remainseren~~ 'Hlm concermng the same thmg, , &be 'altar? ' .' tor lof the Church of the Mad. . He said to them: .'Whosoever lene here said that sin is a shall, put away his wife. and Yes, . the SEPULCRUM ill. ter: betw~en 'man and God·. . . marry . an~ther, comm~tteth part of the altar. It is the square IIho~ld not have the punishmeRt .. adulter.y agamst her. And If the. or oblong opening in the Mensa of a crime.' . wife shall pu~ away her husband, or altar-top into which the'altar "F'ather McNamee distingui~ and be married to another, she relics are deposited, or that place. 'betw.een sin as generally a 'prl. committeth adultery.''' which contains the altar-stone in vate matter of overindulgence OFl:lCIAl NEWSPAPER OF THE DiOCESE OF FAll RIVER St. Luke's version of the Goa- a wooden altar. aod crime as a matter in which . pel rules out any question of • • • another is injured by the actioa. Published weekly by The Catholic·Press of the Diocese of Fall ~iver exceptions to the law against He~sl!id that there are still ~ divorce and remarriage. What Is a 'catafalque'? laws' on the books which pro41 Q Highland Averi~e He quotes Christ addressing hibit actions that should be COD. Foil River; Moss. qSborne 5-7151 Himself to the Pharisees . A CATAFALQUE is a frame Sidered' private sins, such, all "EVERYONE that putteth away shaped like a bier, covered. with some antidrug laws and' __ PUBLISHER his wife and marrieth another 11 black cloth or pall and used called ,"blue laws." Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD. committeth adultery." (Luke, during Masses of the dead when'. XVI, 18) the coffin and the body are not, fun:eral service. There is also GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER present and over which the ab- another type of 'catafalque' o • • iev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll 1II01ution for the dead is given. which is not seen very freIn reading the weekly eaneBT~e name also applies to the quently; this is a structure built MANAGING EDITOr !dar of saints that appears in stand or support on which . the above the casket and covered Hugh' J. Golden the ANCHOR, I have noticed, casket ill placed during the with a·palL .
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TV· ·to· Feature Live Rehearsal Of '@,S'!.eanf. NEW YORK (NC)'-Television viewers througho.ut the cwutl!y will get a. look at the dress; rehearsal for a NC'i.1i York Cliristmas t1miiition on 'the Dec. 11 "LQok Up, 'and Live" program. . The show, produced, on. .~ ClZllumbi3i Broadcastirig System by the National Council. at Cath:.. oli~ 'Men, will feature: a·video;. taped! dress: rehearsal! of the, an;' nuaI: Christmas. pageant staged at New 'York's Cit~i;' ctenta>· .and Crnmegie JHlall bY' children from the Anir~ Zahn school!. of. the
.S·~(I J(fJseph~s, Par~Il;,
New Bedfo,d;, Marks" , .(;@lden Jubilee at Pontifical' Mass
THE ANG:HORrThurs., Dec. 8. 1960
Ona of the' outstanding parishes of the Diocese, St. Joseph's, New Bedford~ is this yeaIr marking its golden. jubilee. Highlights of the observance were blessing and dedication of a $50,000: oltg'an and celebration of a. Pontifical High Mass by Bishop Connolly. Mass wasi followed by a banquet for nearly 700. Twelve of the ~() pri'esw. who have: come' from,tha parish were on the' aItu for the Mass. St. Joseph's has. also, given 50'· giltls to'. reIi;. gjous, life. TheY,' a:ue mei:r;iliei1Si
of: 1G cong,regatioos;, while the, prieSts are' in seven\co~unities as w.ell as: the d;iocesan: .p!:iest-; . hood. Boy;s. of the pariSh 'are r~p resented. in sjx' blTQthem1oo.d!i., A . lasting 'memorial:. of: the> celebration will be·. a sOuvenir album. edited for parlshiooers b11 . dance. Msgr. Louis E. Prev'ost, pastor'of Plans; fOJ! the, progwm origin:St. Joseph's. In' a pl:9iogq.e.:the. ally called for the childrendo pasto~, nores that .his· proouction" perfOl'm the pagean1r.-a retelling is; nQ/l: one 001. "t):l:e' long solew.n ef the CttEistmas. storYr-ius.t: as tex~ m vogue ina, more, lei'si-, they do iJJl its J!inishedi f'oJrm. , urely' age:" . . .. Bull. wllile watclling a rehearIt~s fat>· from that. Typical is a al. a p!l'oow:er decided' that. the comment on parishione1'S' whose· most e6fe<o:llive sho,w for' .teIe- - sole . ~~1Iion to St:.. .Iosephls: yision w.oul:iiJ! lie a look at the school, renovated at a cost of . rehearsal .itse:tJi. Thall. is what $315,000, was a favorable remark will lle. seen on the ,Dec. p pro.,. "0111 the 39£( delicate tints, of:,the p-am. paint 'in the classrooms' and corMusi~ an the pz:ogram will be ridors;. apparentiI:l" in their own: _ 'the Peloquin. Chome.. The mind, it was' the only attentioD' will be. telecasi f1rom la:30 the: school' had! ever need:edl, Yes" .. 11: A.M. 81 lithl'e pa:i.ill! with deticate tints! Well, after alD,. even a, pastor bas to be reminded, occasion~ of:. Our· f.ord's counser to Bia. Apos~les: 'Wlhen you shall have QUEBEC (NC)-eatbo1J.e stu'-, done aU these things; that are dents of Quebec~s, inatifutiions ail' cominanded you, sail": Weare higher learning have been asked unprofitable servantis;! " , to set an example in 1Ibe: Cmsade As a whole, however, the book 01. Sobriety launched b;, Arch>pnesertts an admirarrIe. picture: of bishop Maurice Roy of Que~ec. 81 b~~ efficient pariSh, "a living Auxilia.rry Bishop' LioneIl Audet. cellJ oj' the Mystical! Body of of Que~" in a special message. <i::furildl," Endpapers; show an .. the students, said! in pan: aerial view of the' parish plant, 'Tlrom here to Lent anch c:Lwring whiXrh occupies an entiire. block, 1111 the year of tlie Cl!USade,. stu- dhminated ~Y' the lo.ve1y erucidents of the diocese, suppalTted fomn chUJTeh... Other buildings are _ their prQf'essors and teachers-. the, schoolJ.. JTeCtory and convent. must be mobilized far the salvaBegan in 1910 tion of all.~ St. J'osepn-"s history began in: 19;];01, WIhen the parish was sepDUBLLN (NC)-Mother Ruth amttedl born Sl Anthony of Mary Sheehy of the· Religi<>us- of Padua. Until 1913', Masses were the Sacred Heart" the on1Jl! sai:d in II: former casino. Tl'1en daughter of the late ~ud:ge Eru!-. II: combined church-school was aene Sheehy of Dublin, is: tl'1e- erected, ·with six classrooms and fIr.dl nun to be: admittedJ. to> the, III laJ1~ ha1ll accommodating 900 Mass,-goers, All this, was, undev Irish Bar. the d'ir.ectfun· of St:. J'osepl:t's first pastor; Rev. ~Iater Monsignoll)'· .Tov:ite Chagnon., Jilrom, UHO tm 1:923, priests, Of' the· parish haqi no· rectallY. Father CIiagnon,. "totany a);leIrglc: to, wastiJlg: money'~ and.. anxious' to, p¥ovide; a. church. and school.for ~:.,.people,. rented ,tbe;·.·seeondl f;l;OQl" of II' three-stQry,tenement, hQ~:for himself and hiso,assist-
Irish Nun-Lawyer'
t~fIItOlic; .Grou~',.Ai:d~ . Vic.ftims of Mon_on: : "Ml'ADRAS '(NC}-':::<:atbolic or~ If.ai:iiZabiollS ancIJ individuaLS: have sped! to> the aid of floodvidlims; in Ma:dras; here in India.. MOlle than 20',000' persons were' made' homeless in a moosoon-fed flood!. that swept away houses; shanties; telephone· poles' and
trees.
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Archbishop, Louis Mathias of MadlTas: and Mylapore gave· funds and food to the mayor's: relief chest. Jilather' O. Mantovani, S.D.B.. put three cooks· into· operatton to· feed·' hundreds,' of homeless, including. nursing mothets I. and undernoUrished childten. He erected'temporary shelters foil' the homeless,: .arid sent boys from his, school to beg sheets and blankets, from house~We. In. the city.> ,J.
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~'Sl Teern-A\g~· Cl'u:b l. Bl:>y7 and
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1922. that. Father Chagnon felt able, to p.t':OCleed, w,ith. );tlaIlDing; of the present. parisb. bui.lldin~ Tlie- :fiWstl pastOIr remainedl at the· helin> 06 St.. .losephls; "folt, 44 )leallS; v,eneuatedl by; his: p.eQple andJ 81 mode1J off zea:1 fo'!1' his assistan~~' He; was> folliJ.w:ltd by the: pI1esent. pastoll,. MsgF; Prevost. One· o£ the- neW! leader'. ms:1l. tasks; WIltS: thee' reno:va:tion 06. s£hoo1. anch conv:ent. An e:xttJ;eme~ activ;e panish, organizations at. Sh. Joseph's, inc:lude: the: Le~e o£. the Sacred Heart" St.. Vlincera:t. de' Paul 80c:iet;lr" Third <D.llder 05 St. Jilranc:is,
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BOYS WANTED. for' the ,i Priesthood! and B'ro~hOl"hood. [adol e.f.', fl.D~c:Il) NO· Im('Gcn:. mG~
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they intend tc b.lo.<;k the, advance of C01l1?
munism" m former United Na= ticintJ official decrared here. . A live-and-Iet-live attitu,a toward'commtmism means doom ,fOr the Western world, Charle. .. :A. Malik, a formel' president· of th~ U.N. General Assembly, told the annual founderll' day: dinner Of' 511. Lduis Universityr. . M.r: MaliIli made clear that he .. hi no.t. ~oaating; a' inilitary offeosej. but- ll" campaigtr ta remove communiSt. philosophy from
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The' liturgy is: t.Jie Churcb1s most effective Ii1ea.ns: oj! dra·wing childJien':J; attention' fioin t'eIevision and' .other 'Vlisual diStractions, llttil!gy expert said h~re,: 'Fatiler'lp~~nlr~;:X;.'Wlbi~r~ S..T~ , of' Weston, (l::oIreg~' deidllred tha t obServance ili,' /he home . liturgical' retlgjoui eustoms' "is the gr,a;t~ me~ oiv.is~al r.e:: . l ' of" children. ligjous.. ed'u£al!ion '. '. . . He.li!SSed\ that liturg'Jr in th~ home, is, an- effe<rtive' (munterbaJanc:e to:"TVi -and.. otl'1ev media c~g ,"~ot'1dLyi,. shallbw and nonreligious' . inflUences. in the home." Father Weiser, authol' of "Religious; CUstoms, in, the Jilamily," told. 1,00'0 l:'elega1es, to, III New England! negional litungy; study day.: "It is of the' utmost. importance in our time that the little ones in. the Iiome: learn about. Cod and God!s kingdbm in a: way similar . to thai: of' tl're nom:e~igiou8 worldly' ;presenta1Jio'n~" .. " " .
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(JIlC)>-'I'liis. taft tJie ffilnnan- 1)orde~ is; ~ pallihc! 1'0> ceIel)rate, the' centeu.. . of. time death" off ene' of itiI two, famous. sonsI' JlIhuw Gruliec. aomposen' otr till!! Clwistmaa liyirnm "&rem.tt NiglUl'" <Dv:en me· memor)'l of' it3l ot1ie'l'· famOUs. sou. Adom Hitlen;. it has; cast 21 m.antr. a!I obliv;ibltl. OIl
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... ~A:YONNE ,(Ne) .! 'C.. , F;lther Doininic:' J:. Delmonte;, .paStor· of Assumption ci)urch B:ere, was.. pnesented' witn.'tlie A\miW &ward of. 'the, lilayonn~chapter!' ~ the Aniel!iJaan, JewisQ,\ Congreslil- fbi' ",c.i:e,ating better understanding._ ~t.w.eelll all peoRl.es.:'.
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·1f:AIIRHA\VENi P1:0:H EER STO'RE~' 1
Complete' SeJection of' . MEATi$ GRCll<U:RIES, . PRCI>V,ISJONS; A'd:mSi St" . Fairhaven .... . WYman' 4-64~n· . D
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WOl1th~ of. note aJle" ~ housekeepens: fon- St.. J.osephi S\ rectol'7. Msg,:. Prevost. describes. them: "Wllo has cli~ of" maintaining this big' home, preParing; mealS, answering; the phone and' the door?' Wh3'j, the' three sist'em They· dOn't weal' a religj.ous habit" no, but they are. sisten!· just tlie same. Cod' made tl1em so at birth. They are' tlie MiSses lLouiSe, fda; andi E~ly,n. Asselin." Msgr~ Prevost's' assiStants.. to whom, he pays; ma~ t'riout'es, in the' pag~s. of the: souvenir albwu' are' R~. .roseph Martineau,. Rev. Eouis Bbivin' and' Rev:. Roland BOusqj.xet: The latter is; the aiJ.tliar 'of: a serieS; of' Anchor articles onasp~ts,of"the liturgy.
S~PPING~. CO(r,-,
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Flield' 01' Shnle "Where iii; the field"o11 struggJla. ~?' It is:o.utsfde· the Iron CtIrtam. It is iil Asia; in, Africa, .ill Latin. America" in thl!':' hearts. anel soulS- of free men eVeI:ywllere.· "Wil:!fS' and' means: must be fOund' to> carlT over" tl'te' struggle to> me otl\er siae' of' the lroa €brtain/" Mr: MalHtl Saia. "'l'b.. mindS· ot!' me, communistlr ta their 0'WflI homes. must' Be- t'roub:IedJ ••• tlIe reafrm aff fteedma ~ develOp' ii:n~aS! 1-01'" penetrat·fit.., and, det'acl\ing; as' much, of' ' ,~. ~unist' wolll(j) as- ~
1ihe· £acuity; tbday>. One- 011' the originaf siw SiSters' is' still at the scliool\. artliougjiJ retiredi.
Jesuit Stresses· litu:rgy inl Home E:AST' l?R0iV!DIDENCE
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ST. LOIJlS (NC)-West>
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LILY OF' MOHAWKS: A ISeeOnd miracle attrib~ted tQ Y1!nerable Kateri' Tekak..., witha, a 17th century AmEmbn Indian woman, has eede<L up her cause for' tification. Bom in 1650 lin the Mohawk tribe. m New ;I'-ork state, sl1e is the. first native American to 00 declared "Venerable Servll!lt of God:' NC Photao
C.ommuniSim
"'¥O.Ui cannot. roU' back. the enemy>,:" he> said" "if you are all the tUne on: the deferisive, if the. lltruggJ'e- iSJ alwa;p;s, carried ou& m. Jiome em backyard:"
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A,dveni Wreath,Christmas'Crib .' H'old Real Meaning,of Yuletide .
By Alice Bough Cahill
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.Bishop Tuesday Members of the Fall KiWI' Catholic Women's Club wiK hob1 their annual Bishop's Night at 8 Tuesday, Dec. 13 in Sacr~ Heart School auditorium. Bishop Connolly will be guest of holUlll" Featured will be the Empn Op~ra Ensemble, with Mi. Doris Doree, Miss Norma Whi~ Donato· Bucci and Leonard Potter. Miss Adele Newfield will accompany at the piano. 'Phe program will in,elude CavaUeria Rusticana, Christmas solos. bF Miss Doree and selections :fI!oIa Merry Widow Fantasy. Mrs. Anthony f}eary is cb~ man' for the coffee hour. Put presidents will form the hospitality'committee for the eYeDot ing. . Mrs. Michael J. McM~ club president, announces the' appointment of Miss Margaret M. Lahey to chairmanship ~ the art department. Club members will serve today at the Christmas Seal sales booth at the main post office.
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If you have received the December. issue' of some of
the householdmagazinesi you have read many references
to "family traditions.... · It's heartwarming to realize that the world is ready to admit the worth',. Of tradition~ .. . .'. . traditions that hold the famOn Saturday evening, Nov. 26, ily together in the home, the whole family should gather despite outside competition. around .the wreatb'for'the 'blessAs Catholics we havericlt ing of the wreath by the fath~. \
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Honor
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A prayer for the first week (Col.. lect of the MasS for the Sunday) is said and one candle is lighted by the youngest child and left bUrning during the evening IOn. meal;" . . This ill' the Following the prayer fOr the INDIA COMES TO, M~RCY: .Sister Mary Eleanor, eeason of AD-' second week" two· candles . VENT, when RSM, registrar of Mount Mercy College, Cedar Rapids, lighted by the' oldest child, and we have an opallowed to burn as before.· After Iowa, discusses curricula~ offerings' of the college with portunity t~ obreciting the prayer for the third Sister Joselet Mary, center, and. Sister Elizitta, right. Both .erve the most week, three candles (including Sisters hail from once communis.t domin'ated Kerala, India, .olem~ ,and the rose) ~re lighted by mother. andattertd Mount Mercy College under the,·.program "India reverent trad~ Father generally lights all four tions of Chris. candles after the pr87ers for the Comes to Mercy." NC Photo. tianity. E a c h fourth week.' year we sugHyannis 0 of J Of course there is no hard and gest that the first decoration that you put up for Christmas f8st rule as to who will light the Ch~ld Father McSwiney Circle, B,ro,0 annis Daughters of Isabella should De the ADVENT candles, it's a' privilege to be granted to various members of AVON (NC)-For'centuries re- oldest of whom is a freshman at' hold a Christmas party Tuesday.. WREATH. . The idea 01. the ADVENT the family as circumstances per- tarded and handicapped young~ St. Alexis Hospital nursing Dec. 13 with Mrs. Donal4 WREATH is no longer new. mit. sters have been the children school, Cleveland. Coombs as chairman. So, when you read :these. popa nobody wanted. . . Commercial concerns market. adwnt wreaths and even munici- ular' Duigazines,.· encoUraging' But for 14 years Mr. and Mrs. palities are·adopting the custom. families ·to establish traditions, William Gauchathave sought We are told· that im Advent be proud that ·the inspiration for . out these children and· brought Wreath hangs over the entrance celebrating Christmas came from them into their home to lavish - love and care upon them. to Boston's City Hall and the St. ,Francis of Assisi in 1223. Est. 1929 :Ma'yor of Boston lightS the first It was he who built a creche, The Gauchats began their "Come where the Sisters shop" candle of· the Advent Wreath. using heroic life-sized figures apostolate'in 1946; when ·they In some households the chiland 'for over' 700 . years, the agreed temporarily to board it dren are so interested ill this humblest Catholic Church, 01" the retarded. boy. He died soon custom that they want a wreath most ornate cathedra!,'· hae , afterwards, but iIi the short time In their own room. Get busy this erected it' creche for ebristmas. he w~swith,them;"heopened the Stretch night slippers _ $1.00 ' week and with your family ma~e And many Catholic homes' are . Gauchats' eyes to a need-and.to Att~che bag exclusive with us _ 1.95· your wreath, or if you prefeJ:, . using nativity figures that have 'what they could do to help fill it. Leather Pullman Slippers in case 1.9$ buy one. . been' iii' their families for, years. , Since then they have pioneer$tretch Nylon Hose 1.45 • 2.50 Easy to Make If you' do not aIready hiwe a eel in opening' their 'heime to Convent grade 'hosiery 1.35 __ 3 pr 4.00 It's easy to make a wreath. creche, .resolve this year to get severely handicapped and menRegulation Rain Capes 15.95 This is one direction we've been one. There are many varieties tally retarded children, many of given. Take two boards and on the market, but remember whom would never have known 48 SUMMER STREET, 3rd Floor . fasten them at right angles. The that a really beautifui one' can family life and affection had it BOSTON 10, MASS., ~A 6-1614 - LI 2-9546 length of the boards depends on be handed down to future gener- not been for the Gauchats. the size wreath you wish .to ations who will be proud to di..At present they are sharing their home with six handicapped make. Bore holes into the ex- play it. tremities of these boards, into Our suggestion is-buy the children. In addition they have which four candles are inserted. very best you can afford, per- six children of their own, the Take a h~avy piece of wire .(a haps only three figures at first, barrel hoop or wire lamp shade to be added to from year -to hoop will do). Attach this to the year. Thomas Merton, in speakerossed boards and wrap pine or ing of the Abbey of Gethsemani, cedar branches around the cir- says "places, like persons, have cle., their identity." Does your home Since purple is the color of have identity? Give it the idenadvent, we use four purple .rib- tity of a, Catholic household, bons to suspend this wreath preparing for the birth~ay.of the , from the ceiling. Christ Child, " Maybe, however, it is not convenient to suspend it from the Colle~Honors WQmOA spot you wish your ,wre~th to be, In which case one places it on a· For Commu!"ity Service table. Get three white or purple STEUBENVILLE (NC)-:Mrs. candles and your fourth can be Emma Caner zeisof J Steuben~se. ville received the Po'verello' As you know rose-colored' Medal of the 'College of Steubenvestments are worn on the third ville here in Ohio in recogniSunday of Advent - Gauaete tion of more than a half-centUIT . Sunday and the' rose' candle is of community service. for that Sunday. The evergreen The Poverel~~ Medal is given wreath with its four candles is a annually to some individUal or symbol of the Church gathering grOUP who "exemplifies in our her children around her to pre", time' the Christ-like Spirit of pare for the Great Coming of charity which filled the"life oC the Redeemer. The cirele repre- Sot. FranCis of Assisi." -' sents the flow' of time; the four .Mrs. ZEiis caine to Steubenville • candles dividing the wreath 1ft 1906 and was' active for more ., designate the four SundayS of than 50 years in coinmunity a1Advent. fairs. She is a charter member ., of t~e Jefferson County chapter." Movie Rating Measure' of the Red Cross, served on-the In State Legislature - boards or.two h\ospitals;, and ALBANY (NC)---,.A· bill under established a residence for workwhich films deemed objection- ,ing girls. Until 1955 she :was able for children would be la"; , ~hairman 'of the c~ty planning . beled as such in New York state ·and zonmg eonimission. has been prefiied for the second. .. N·,ortl;- At'tl"eb, r'o:O' of.11 consecutive 'year in the state A u legislature. ' '.. . ':" Benedict Circle,North AttieThe bill's .. sPoilsor;. Ass~mblY"'· '. boro Daug!lters of Isabella, .wilt maJ;l Joseph J:.'weiser of. New.' hold a card party Tuesday mght, York City, wili-forma'llf intio:. Jan. ~4 at Hotel Hixon for the . '" duce the measure after the legis- benefit .. of ,Rose Hav.rth~~e:.. , lature convenes Jan. 4. Home. Mrs. Gertrude Stanton . ':t'he bill would permit the df.:. and.. Mrs. T?eresa Blazie, . .~ ~--.:t.._;, • .' rector of the motion picture div~ ,c;h~11'men, ~Ill I;le .~deq, ~ • . ". .. sioh of the State Education De- ~ge committee. , Ih' ~"1lR8-Wf'~··(j8-pmtres,....;.rm8Olf·'ttf·-a.,o-. partment to designate films un• • • • • y • • • • • • • • suitable for children when so pastry chef" &wor. in :~ delig~ desSest.. It's Daturally authorized by the Board of He:' better Hood 5tMwber.rw:. WhiR b Gream· DeSded between gen:ts. 'SCRAP METALS fluffy yellow cake md· bi1lo~ ~ mel'inglleo. ~ HoOd~ WASTE PAPER - RAGS Bak~. ~~~~·,Y9wr hO~~~~~~t.~I~'~ 'Best SF)iritual Book . TRUCMS: AND TRAiQ.IERS rrO/lt MILWAUKEE (NC)-Spirituai PAPER DRIVIES, Life magazine will present a .. ". ".,., ..... ' .. ,' CHURCHES, SCOUTS and plaque to the, author· and pub-·· . 'CIVIC' ORGANIZATIONS @~ ~;;;~~fJ&!:&7·,*·ift~-~ Iisher of .w.hat editors jl,ldg~. to ' ....1080· Shawmut Avenue' be the best spiritual book pub,.,~,~~, .~4lcI ',:.~~'W,~!" New Bedford WY 2-7828 lished, in .1964 . , .. -- ... traditions and at no time can they be more meaningful than during the Christmas sea.
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First" Co~mun:ion Day Brings Thrill to Grandparents
1'HE ANCHORThurs., Dec. 8, 1960
9
To Honor Mary At Aca~emy
By Mary Tinley Daly It was eight o'clock of a frosty Saturday morning in • suburban parish. Notwithstanding, the church resembled • metropolitan cathedral at Christmas, midnight Mass. By f :30 the last seat was taken in the tightly packed pews. Fifteen minutes later, men heard clearly in the dead sil. h' an.d women, dressed t· ·k .In ' t elr ence of the church. N 0 a squum. fi nes t , S t 00d , lI e cIgarettes or whisper from the devout in a package, jamming aisles seven-year-olds; only sound an
Members of the Alumnae Association and Sucordium Club of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, will join to pay tribute to , Our Lady at 3 Sunday afternoon, Dec. 11 in the convent chapel on Prospect Street. Rev. John H. Hackett, newly appointed academy chaplain, will preside at a ceremony during which senior class members joined by alumnae and Sucordium Club officers will offer a lily at Our Lady's altar. This is the first year the two organizations have combined for the traditional ceremony. Mothers of seniors, former Sucordium Club members and. their alumnae daughters are invited to attend. A reunion and social hour will follow in the school hall. Mrs. Elmer J. Stafford, Sucordium Club president and Mrs. Marjorie Tokarz, alumnae heaet, are co-chairmen.
and the rear of the church. This occasional whirr of' a movie day and hour were of supr~me camera or the cry of a baby. imp 0 l' t The chancel was opened and • nee: Firs t the children went "unto the altar e 0 mmun of God" for this precious momion Day. ent-reception of Holy ComAn aura of munion for the first time by a lftlbdued e x class of more than 150. From citement pretheir devotion, it was evident Yailed. Young that they knew the importance mothers could of the occasion-proof that St. DOW relax. Last Pius X was right in advocating Right they had early First Communion. been at the As parents, the Head of the ironing board, House and I have thrilled to had set rolls such a sight many times. Now, tor the celefor the first time as grandbration breakfast, had curled parents we were present when ~ National Conference hair of little girls, laid out the our eldest gra!'-'~"dld, Lu Anne; finery for the morning, arranged made her First Holy CommunHonors Nun-Principal tor baby sitting and transporta- ion. , NEWARK (NC) - The nunMon. ' T h e r e was a stinging behind principal of a Catholic School SOUNDS GOOD: "That really sounds good, doesn't it?", Earlier, they had helped with the eyes, /l few' moments when asks Sister Barbara Thomas, S.U.S.C. (left) as Sister in nearby Irvington, N. J. has that important "Examination of breath seemed suspended, a ferbeen given a special citation Kathleen Joseph plays "Music Through the Years," newly for Conscience" preceding First vent prayer that the innocence her. efforts in improving eonfession. On down the Com- 01. today might ,continue on, and released album recorded by Holy Union Sisters. Albums human relations. mandments they had gone with on. Sister Mary Gerard of the are available from Holy Union Records, 466 Prospect Street, the youngster. After CommanclA Is 0 came Iil prayer of School Sisters of Notre Dame, FallE,iver.Proceeds will benefit the l;ommunity's building ment eight, came the comment, thanksgiving for the fulfillment who is princ,pal of Archbishop fund. "'These other two aren't for of the nuptial blessing given us Walsh High School, was given ebi1dren. They're grown peo,. 110 many years ago: "May you the award by the New Jersey plell' sins." Then the plaintive, both see your children's chilRegion of the National Confer"But, Mommy, look at number dren even to the third and ence of Christians and Jews. ten. I sure have wished for a fourth generation." beck of a lot of things I never Well, ,we don't look that far CLEVELAND (NC)-A "get- norance. It's a shame that everylOt!" ahead! However, what a privi''The Family That Mommy then had to explain lege to see even one of our ting-to-know-you" approach to body panics and flees. when a ~ difference between wishing "children's _children" receive more Christian race relations Negro moves into a neighborwas tried here when 15 white hood. We certainly don't intend Prays Together aDd "coveting thy neighbors' Our 'Lord. IIOOds." By 9:20 of that fEosty Satur- persons visited two Negro homes. . to moye. Our children play with The move was sparked by Negro children and get along Stays 1rogether" Long-Awaited na,. day morning, the church and . parking lot were cleared. 'Indi- Caritas, a Catholic inter raciaJ, fine. They find Negroes good group headed by Joseph New- neighbors, as we do." ~ow, that First ConfessIon was vidual family celebrations took THE Mrs. Newman wife of the ewer. The long-awaited day had over to mark this special never- man, a Negro. FI RST NATIONAL ;;; The 15 whites were from 10 Caritas president and a former llITived. to-be-forgotten day. ' Y~ung fathers, armed with Anew group of little Catholics Cleveland parishes. They visited school teacher added: BANK "Years ag~ I was hateful· aovle and still cameras were had received theiB' Lord for the the homes of Mrs. Jessie Bailey Attleboro-South Attlebore posed as the Une of shivering, .!lrst time and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. when I ran into racial prejUdice. Seekonk white-clad seven-year-olds filed . Earl Harris, and Mr. and Mrs. But now I'm wiser. Besides relaHoward Baker. tions are improving." Into the church. Everybody on Ch G· I ' C II ibe boys' side had a fresh hairange Ir S 0 ege For most of the white persons, _ , all the girls were in curls. Into School for Boys it was their first sOcial call on a Grandparents, godparents, ST. LOUIS (NC)-Maryville Negro family. For the Negroea, -.ants and uncles, older sisters College for women will be con- it was their first - chance to .w brothers--all awaited the verted. into a boys' high school sound off about their feelings. procession. For the eyes of each, next Fall. Prejudiee, Ignorance ENJOY WARM RESTFUL SLEEP AIJL WINTER there was just one target, The college, conducted for 88 , Among the whites was Martin "'ours!" "There he is, rounding years by the Religious of the Ribar, father, of nine who is WITH THIS BEAUTIFUL the turn." "There she is, on 'the Sacred Heart, hao been· purblind and lives in a mixed other side, right behind that chased by the Augustinian FaNegro-white neighborhood. In. Iled-headed girl." thers, Mother' Lucy Lamy, answer to a question on why Through the crowd on the superior of the community, anNegroes had such a hard time outside steps came the inevit- nounced. climbing to the top, Mr. Ribar a b 1 c latecomers, bystanders The college will be moved to said: gladly making way for small, a site 15 miles from St. Louis in "It's largely prejudice and ~ panting, white-clad figures. time for the opening of the "Sorry, battery trouble," school year in September, 1961. gasped a harassed young father. Father John L. Seary,' O.S.A., "Alarm didn't go off u from provincial of the Augustinians' I uKE BEING HElPfUl -.other. Midwest Province, said the high INSTEAD OF I4ElJ1lIiS!l "'Unto the Altar of God" school will have a freshman class 'TME WAY I,WASBEFOII£ Mass was celebrated by the of 150 students and will eventuW1l RENlED nus pastor of course, in keeping with &1y become a fowr-year school WHEEL CHAIR FROM tradition on this memorable with 600 studentB. dRy. The Latin words could be Q
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White Persons Visit Negro Hom,es To Irnprove Race Relations
An Ideal Christmas Gift
ELECTRIC BLANKET
TOUHEY'S
Young Writers
American Dodor Visits Eye Clinic in Nigeria LAGOS (NC)-An American .,e doctor has returned for a brief visit to an eye clinic he set up at a mission in Eastern Xigeria. Dr. John P. Luhr of Buffalo, •.Y., brought with him modern equipmen't for the clinic, which • staffed by Missionary Sisters 01. Mary and situated at Anua, ia Uyo. Dr. Luhr first learned of the IIIlission three years ago through three Missionary Sisters of Mary who came to his office for treatment. He journeyed to Anua at .... own expense and helped ,set lIP the eye clinic. Upon his return to America he continued to heJ,p ltIrnish the clinic through leot.oe8 and appeak
Oed icate Hospit~ OKLAHOMA (He) - An $8.8 .nllon hospital financed by • eontributlon from W. K. Warren, • local oilman, was formally dedicated here by Francis Card....1 Spellman, Archbishop of Jrew York. The 300-bed St. Pranela Hospital will be con.dllcted ~ Sisteall oi the P1'.eaou. IIiQQL
Essays by 22 students of Sacred. Hearts Academy,Fall River will be included in an annuai anthology, "Young· Am e l' i c Ill' Speaks," published this month by the National Essay Association.
PHARMACY
May the holy, hoppy spirit of the fint Chr~a5 abundantly bi~s yotJ and yours
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.Hospo'~aIEYe'Bank B~comes
Visit Churches In Missouri
Top· Asset ··for· Seattle
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WEST PLAINES (NC) _ Several thousand non-Cath~ lics visited Catholic churches in this Missouri area, where
SEATTLE (NC) - The three-year-old eye. bank of Providence Hospital here, -conducted by the Sisters of Charity of Providence,' has grown into one of the city's best known community assets and a beacon light for those threate ned with blindness. receive a good cornea from The eye bank serves, as a another's eye. There are certain h 0 use through conditions which govern the 1 .' C earmg .. b possibility of success in each whicn a person may e- case.
thousands of pieces of antiCatholic literature were handed out in the presidential election campaign.'
. They were drawn by "OP-. eration .Understanding,". sponsored by Bishop Charles IL Helmsing of the Springfield_ Cape Girardeau diocese. The program's purpose was to have non _ Catholics visit Catholie . churches and inquire. about Catholicism. . ' .
queath the corneas' of his eyes . . Donor' for medical use after death and' ' t d A cornea to be useful" must through which a person a ffl.lC e be removed within four hours with ey'e disease may receive a and transplanted within 48 cornea replacement for the d amhours of the death of the donor. aged part of the eye. .....he medical practice of 'takWithin this period, the top name .~ h on the eye. bank's list of thos~.· iog. the good cornea 'fro~ t e waiting for.a transplant is noti;. : Scores of persons visited aI-' eye of a. deceased person,,. soo~ fied. '. .) . most everyone of the 87 rural' " lfUer'death., and tran~~~r~ng It Today the' work of the·ProviGathQlic churches'in the diocese,; ., "', to, the.eye ,of ·an. ~f~hct~ trP,e~.., ' 'dence' e;e bank is sO'~ei1 know'n " . which:'.ooi-ders the Bihle .bf;lt,:..:..;· .;. ,?' . lIOn . is ~called a" ·~cor.n~a. .ans", , in' th~ Northwest 'that 'more thiui. . ..' ," : .' . . . .". ': ,..,-..:.,. ~'" : ···the filridament3Hst:' Protesta..t· ::'t " ''':' , piant." . '. ,.. . ... ; ... ,:'. . " 30~0'00 ;' persS>,ns :.hav.e.' ; . signed'~ ,'. . "KING 'rAND I::: Coyle' High<School"stu~ent~; ·Taunton,: 8~tel;', i!.':',' ." ; ' , : ': .: '" . '" , ' . Transplant. - .. . ' . . .. .' _. ' . ., ':,.' '.' .A:".:cor.nea,; 'tra·n.s.plant .• is: ". ~ot· ...!orm8·d9n~,ting'~11~Jr.,eY~~9, .the" present ."The.. Ringa ..nd' :L~f.t;to.right~ ,in Ie"~dii~~~)'9~~'~;; ';: .. > .::, .~Y~~t!ons.'..:.: :.' '.:'.:: bankafterlieatb.,· " . . 'ary M O'H. earn,'·. St Mary ' S H 19.h. . SchI" t .'Maurlc~. . ': M.e~ b.e.rs . 0f ' . th e '. di ~ce~, ", ' revoiutionary.. suc~::or>erat I«;Inll' _.eye Sister' Gene'vievei'the hospi.00 .S t U den·;, .. were' being ,pedormed mo~e tal's' administratoi,; .. said· pubF~' Botelho St., Josep'h~s. parish,' Taunton; Joseph ·FQley;.< Rt,) S9~1I~<;I.~ ~!?f ~Catl}qJlc~ !nen dllttr:I~: ,te·han'c:ne.'nffoOw' ·~YI~Sa~~:.~:·g;e:~ '1;:~e:.'-.f.' re'sponseto.. the l>rogr:ifu~i~" uri:: Thom~; Soin~r'~et:;·:\ 'i' ;' . , . . :.~ - ; " : ' .'': ." . '... '"" •. "~::t~~ ih:tf;i;~:;rs to :~~~ii;~F~:;: paralleled any oUier p~ase of , t~e h05,pital's. activiti~s.. . . . ... s'uccess for such surgery. PhY.Simonth,' " cians credit this success t? ma~or. . .. ' . Father Wallace G. ~llingel'., advances in surgical eqUIpment.· '. "It is a source of great. inf' who sent letiers to .3,000 people' The cornea.is the outermost. spiration and ·en..couragenient to,'. ~n.ng ~ me~.c:a in' Caruthersville on election' tissue of the eye. It is lik~ned all of: us at: thehospit~lt sh~ : . NEW YORK .(NC)-;-The Cath':" Latin American Catholic. jOl,lr-. d'ay ,(Npv. 8); got ,::!26 visitors' to the crystal on a wrist\Vatc?, s.aid, "to kl)ow what peop~e will olic ,Press . Asso~iation of the .nalists as well- as .th~ ... Lat.in, the next. Sunday. They included' When' the crystal is soiled it 16 respond with su~h ·genu!n.e un:. . 'United States and'Canacla has, Amer.ican hierarchy, 'th~.~ Vata'.Methoqtst minister and a Pree-' . t 11 th'e tl'me' yet selfl'shness when the' ·ne.ed '·is . difficult to e '. . accepted the invitation of Latin. ican's Pontifical Commission for, ~yterian one. he watch may still be in sound. clearly made .known.': .. d t ' d th Laf ' Th r " American journalists to con uc . Latin AmerI~a, ~n '. ,e: ... m, 'FaUier' Ellinger' said in :;.. t and in good condition. . e.co -. .' .' J·oint· ,pOrograms' on behalf or' American..B.u.reau of the Na,tional. , letter' that· the 'invitations were . ..".'..... n'ea l"n some. eye.s. det.e.r.lO.r.a.te,s,' .:-: . ." : . chur'ch. activities,·!n. the m.a,ss,· Catholic Welfare Conf.e.l~eIi.ce i~; 1 " · "to ~ " . . ,' ',', The eye I'S good for ,vlS.IO.n ·but, ' ...., ...., . de ayed mten lOnally. media; ," . . Wa'shington, D. C. :;. the afflicted· person cannot ,see. U . , " "These are cooperative. pro-,' .. R~ligious'Motiv~. . film T'he CPA amlounced it will . ' f; because of an 'obstrllc t Ive.: . .: WASHINGTON ·cNC)":::"'Ar:c'q:.. grams: betwe~n. Catholic press '. "We did this so that no one Ji.'" crc:.'t-·' by the damaged cornea. bishop Leo Binz' of ·pubuQ4e, . .Spon·sor sedes"of"region?lptess 'leaders in the United.States and- . could conclude we had anything ;,~,:.. Many, but not all,. people can h b . th f' tub" seminars in Latin AmEmca and thbir cou,nt.erparts' in ..Latin:· ·other than religious .motives," ;!:-'. Io~a~ as· ecome e Ir!l_.s .. o~fer on-job' training 'for Latin sCrIbmg member: of the Natlol}a~"'A ; ..... ·th US' Catholic' America," the CPA said. ,: he .stated. "The invitatio'ns·were· (Ne,.,man Foundation; .an WI ., . Invitation sent thte, resul*-, -'. ·seeking. funds to expand' ·:New-'. . . , . . . .' . . .. , , . '. were' nown 0 anyone: ' ~Ie.w man Club w.or.k; . ',:,. , " .' Plans for these programs we~e th·~"It is .solelYt~hle dPU1'P~set of. ,-;-;;\ I~ . develo ed in cooperation with'" ese progr:a~!l·.0 en ~ss1.s. ance . :.:-,. HAZLETOWN (NC).'-:' hTh~. The 'p~elate, 'retirin'g eplsco-, p. .. where such assistance. IS so.ught,. '. first man to reachtl~e priest ,00 pal cliairrrian', of the Yolitp De~' . " I' . to do so in conjurictionwhh the ,. '.' 'SPI;NCER' ',., while a member of a.~r?~p of partmerit o~ the. National,Cat.h::, ':oLatin.Americ~·n·hiel'archy,·~ci-: Franciscans who hope some d.ay.,c olic '. Welfare' Confere:nce·;.: co~- . il)g. ,thrpugl). CE.LAM (the I;atin' '. Corsets; (forselettes U to work-in R;ed-r~led East E~[o-. tri!?uted $1,OOO.to··thefounda:,,: , nnU Amet:ican ~ish.ops' Council)o~: . . .;. .,. :an~, lI~as . pean countrIes will, be ordall~ed tion, which is seeking an:'in!ti~l' Th' t" b 'd' of. Coyle' other' delegations,'" the ,press here'in Pennsylvama tomprrow. , . fund of '$125,000' to tie· uSed to" " e. concer . an .. ' '. . association said. . , . , .... Laurence Mancuso . '. . ' . h" "d High. School 'wIll partIcipate m, Th 'CP"A t ted 't h"d ... d ' . "Fitt,ed ·.in· yoor-h~Jlle or .~in. . H e IS . ': set up a national office . ere an. . a festival of bimds to be spon-: e · s .a. ,I . a ';In. er- " HOWLAND. RoAD O.F.¥., a membe~: of,the Byzanto hire a' staff, ~ccording to . the' d' t the Donnell Theater. taken t~~..proJects In re~ppn.s~ .to :. ". tine Rite Francll,scan Custody National·.Newman Club federa!lore a . . y. b' the appeal 'of the PontIfical FAIRHAVEN, MASS•.. ' nce) of St, Mary of the t' . '" . : ,. Boston, at 8 tomorrow mght y. C '..'" f'" L' t· A·-······ . (Provl ·Mary, Cunha. Leonardo, . .' . .. Ion. . , . . .' A' hd" . CYO' '.. ommiSSlOn or a m merIca· Reg. Spencer COl'sf~tiere Angels.. . . '.' the rc lOcesan : .' ' . for "fecimic'ians 'to collahoraie23 Yeu:1"8 ·Experience ~ .. .BishoQ." Nicholas ~.: Elko .of, t~e . In Secular Colleges' Si~·~ ot.her b~nds will b~ on "the - with '"L"atin .American· lead-ers Di!lI.WY.9.6060. OS 3,3026 Byzantine Rite D~oces? of :Plt~SNewman 'Cltibsare ce'nt~rs fOr' . program. The Coyle. group will· the strengthimfng of the c'atholic .. 'For Appointment burgh will ordam him In ~t· ,educational and spiritual work offer the Finale of the, New Faith.'!·' . .' "., L:;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Mary's. Byzantine/ Cat hoi I c for Catholics who attend secular World' Symphony by Dvorak, . church here. Mr. Mancuso is the colleges. The National Associa- and "A Little Bit of Luck" from' ~'1,"~~~,"w~,"_~~,"~~,"_~~,"~~,"_~~,"~ . first man to make his studies .for. tion of Newman Club Chaplains "My Fair Lady." .' the priesthood while a member has reported that 'these Catholics 'In addition, 18 of the 54 Coyle of the Custody. . now outnumber those in Cath- musicians will play in a 100. . The Custody of St. Mary of olic coIleges' by about 500,000 to piece festival band to be con-: the Angels was begun in 1945 about 300,000. . ducted by Dr. Artin Arslanian' .by the .Franciscan Fathers in The National Newman Club of Boston University, School of. response to an. appeal by the late Federation said' the fOllndatiori Music and by Arthur ·Fiedler.of Pope Pius XII for the prepara- will seek funds to establish the Boston Pops Orchestra. tion of priests who would. bte. training programs for Newman . The bands will offer Christmas able to work in the commums chaplains, to errIploy. 1ay pro f'es~ . and other select'I'ons to an aud' 1'''; dominated East European counsors to' aid chaplftins in teaching. ence expected to be over; 3,OQO. tries. . assignments, to' establish. chairs Brother Joseph Roos, C.S.C. is .', Smut Charges Brings of Catholic thought at secular director of the Coyle group. colleges; to' subsidize "lecture Maxil~"u", Penalty tours of Catholic scholars, to . NEW .YORK (NC)'-A maga- provide' courses at Newman cen-'zinedistributor. r~ceived".the ters in basic Catholic subjects,. maximum sentenceo'f a year. in. and to erect ·.Newman . ~enters" . '.-"... jail anci a $2',000 fin~ in Queens . and implement a program for' County.Court for possession of Catholic foreign students: ..~ obscene literature intended for ,distribution: Prelate 'Lauds Value Judge John' F. Scileppi explained the severity of the senOf.· Serra Activity tence by stating that obscene SOUTH ORANCE (NC):'-SerElectrical literature is a major factor in ra Clubs were commended for the alarming rise of juvenile detheir work by Archbishop Cont,actOls linquency,' , Thomas A. Boland of· Newark, Police testified during the who spoke at the third. annual' .' . trial that they found 200 copies district conference of' the c1u~s 180 Liberty St. of a nudist magazine· when they in the, New York-New· Jersey raided thedisti-ibuto/:'s' businel?s area'., ·PAU RIVER establishment, The cOllvicted . The Archbishop sai~ that' Serra man's attorneys said they would "gives to each diocese a platoon appeal the ruling: . . ,OSborne 2-2143 of me;1 who have the virtue of piety and the love of -the priestKn'ights of Colum us hood as a bulwark."
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b Honor Bishop Walsh.. ,*t~~-telC~lCl€~~~-l'if$«~tg!€t«~~~ TRENTON (NC) - The 147 ~ Music Through The' Years
councils of the Knights of Columbus in New Jersey :will hqld a !irst-degl:ee cerem?ny in J~nuary. as a tnbute to Blsho!?, ;Tames, E. Walsh, M.M., who is a prison", er 6f the Chinese Reds. Harold R. Livingston"state K, of C. membership chairman, recalled that the Knig'hts' Supreme Council this Summer had ad'opted a· resplution condemnil)g the imprisonment of Maryknoll Bishop Walsh on charges of espionage.
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'hit ANCHOR-Diocese of fan Ri~er-Thurs., Dec.
8, lY60
11
Requiem for Prelate Who Ordained M ore Prlests · Th an A ny U.. S S·BS ~ op
WASHINGTON (NC)-Solemn abeth Seton, U. S. foundress of POl1tifical Requiem Mass was the Daughters of Charity. He had offered here for Auxiliary Bish- long been active in promoting op John M. McNamara of Wash- her canonization cause. gram to seize control of private ington, who ordained more At the time of his death Bishop schools violates a pI'e-election priests than any living U. S. McNamara had ordained more pledge and reveals the hidden bishop. than 2,000 young men to the hand of communism. Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle priesthood.. Man~ priests f.rom Cyril E. S. Perera labeled of Washington offered the Re- the Fall RIver DIOcese received Prime Minister Sirimavo Banquiem Mass in St. Matthew's tonsure, minor orders and major daranaike's statement that Cathcathedral. The sermon was orders from Bishop McNamara. olics would be able to vote to preached by Msgr. John K. CartHe was born in Baltimore in keep their schools independent wright, rector of the cathedral. 1878 and studied at Loyola Col"entirely misleading." He pointBishop McNamara was buried lege and St. Mary's Seminary ed out that the government polat St. Joseph's College, Emmitsthere. Ordained a priest in 1902, icy does set up machinery burg, Md., in the same mauso- he served as pastor and assistant whereby Grade I and Grade ,n 1ellm as Venerable Mother Eliz- in several parishes in Baltimore, schools - those conducted in' ' r u r a l Maryland and Washington. English ,-can, relinquish all" 140th Year He was consecrated Atpdliary government aid and become'" .;"" , , , ' . , . " . CHARLESTON (NC)-A, 40_Bishop 'ofBal~imore on Mar.' 29;' tuitiQn:'charging.: Tl\e r~b: he',,=:' , ,FIVE PROUD lJOYS;,Newest winners pf, Parvuli,J)ei' page ljupplement commemorat- ' 1~2S: " " ' , , ' , s.a~d i~ th~t"'Jhe vast cr'ajQrit3!",:' :... award~f9t,.Cub,ScoutB 'are'thes~ ':bo'~s from;i,B,il'lsSedSacra":',,'" i,J,1~,the,,~10th i:uiniver§~rY:of the ,When,' 'tbe"'Archdiocese ol -pf, Ceylon Ii 750 Ca~h()hc schoolB " t" ,.' h':F' 'IF R' ., 'F' 't' I' ft t ' .. "t', 'R' ','" ,establishment of the ,Diocese .of- ' Washington became a resi,dent,ial ,are-Grade III, or:vernacul~r,"' ,we)) , ,p,arl~ :", , ~L • }V~J;\> ):o,n ' row, e ,()"'~lgl" ,! ,,' enryr. 'Charlest6n.'was published by , See : i~ p1~7;' ~ be: was ~Pl?oint~~. schools, :and ,l)~ye' 'no opp,ortu.n",o, ."~b~,euf,~:,,I.t()~,~I~,:, :r~trm .." Ro~ert :'kma,;. te;ilr,' 'P~mI" D~8~, "!'tl:i~"'CathOlic" Barinet ' editiOn, of 'Au'xiliary'to 'Archbishop Patrick ity to avoid seizure:, '" ','i' ,'5, •.J:'~ier!J~ g,e,!:ap:l;·,fa:r¢.' - , ,": ,. ~, .. ' "l>urStinda'y''Visitor,; , A.O'Boyle Of ,Washinglon. ' ,
president of the Catholic Union of Ceylon charged that the government's pro,;',
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~sk Right, """ Mr. Pererl! qa,lleq .Prime.Minister Bandaranai~e's. "insinua- . tion" that the Catholic b\shops were asking for sp'ecial laws and privileges "grouridiess." The Catholics of Ceylon' are" only asking for a "right ,erijoyed in 'every other memper" nation of the BI'itish Commonwealth and., in the United States," he said: "Though the Ainericans have state (school) systel!1,i' he com':' mented, "there is no"bar w,hatsoever for ,them to operate private schools withou,t government aid.", '..'
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BRIGHTON (NC)-The education committee of 'Brighton's town council voted to subsidize scholarships to a Catholic Brothers' school here in England after an Anglican vicar and' a Congregationalist minister backed the proposal. ' '. '",. The Anglican vicar" Canon Keeling, told the jamr!ted committee meeting: " , ".':' "Probably for the "first time in historyR omall ,Catholic Church alld the Free' chtirches- , ' and now myself as, Vica~ of Brighton-stand togetper .in this 'matter. I place myself 'firmly on the side of the Rom'an Catholic Church-no matter what may be ,happening in Rome." '" The Congregationalist minister, the Rev. H. A. Hamilt,on, was applauded when he said Hiat 50 years ago a non-Anglican Prot-· cstant would certainly have opposed the move. But he said he would like"to feel that today '.'we ' are erring on the side of tolerance rather -than on the, side of right." The committee" thereupon voted 16 to 11 in favor of the town's paying the tuition' of. a number of BrightQn students at Xaverian College. The vote ,w!ls then scheduled for confirmation by the full town council.
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The head 'of the Catholic Union stated that last June' 9, a month before' the national elections, the general' secretary of 'the now-ruling":;;ri:' Lanka' Freedom party said, that ,"th'~re ' will be nO bar to allY denom,; .. inationa'i schools.' ,'contiriuing without government '~id, lio, long as they conform to, :rules: laid, down by government." Mr. Perera said 'the stateJTlent made i~ ~'crystal clear" tl!at denom~ , inational schools would be al': lowed to cO'1tin'ue, a~ding: " "The pledge was t~ alIow-}hem,:, to continue, and' that' pledge.... , brought more Catholic votes for the Sri Lanka Freedom party than any other in the Ca~holie areas."
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Mena~,~/ Cir~~~~ation
, In the year 1613 the. Sacred Heart reveakd Himself 'te 8t. Margaret Mary saying: ''My DiviDe Heart so' ardently, loves', men.. ·th3t It is unable to contain within Itself any longer the, flames
By Rev. PelN .J. Rahill. Ph.D. The speedy triumph of the United.States in the 'War·' with Spain diverted attention from everything else. However, no distraction was needed t-o insure the total 'col- . lapse of the American Protective Association. Bigotry and hatred the Church had "The Roman Catholic P'erarchy: already palled the taste of The Deadliest' M')!\ace . . . " almost all Americans. Once Catholic bishops and the conagain in religion the United., fessional were his ~lternate
of its burntDg love ••.• My heart contains graces of goodness
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punching bags for the next sevStates was truly "the land of eral years.' the ·free." A distinct improve/ Elected Senator merit in the Two Catholics in political life position of . were Watson's personal targets. the fai thful Edward ·D. White was elevated was apparto Chief Justice of the Supreme eat to the . NONAGENARIAN: Bro-' Court and Joseph P. Tumulty observant in ther Denis Edward, fo~nder followed Woodrow Wilson from 1898's brief of the Christian Brothers ·'the governor's office in New conflict with Jers'ey to the White House as' Educational' Assoc~ation,and It Catholic private secretary., nation. Hisformer. president Of La SalWatson's.· caricature of Tum-, le College, Philadelphia, and torians genulty striving to adjust his halo erally attribthe University of Scranton, was the least offensive of. his me the resort recently celebrated his 90th cartoons. Three times the DetID hostilities z the insistent headlines of partment of Justice sought to birthday' at Ammendate have his journal barred from mme segments of the press. Normal'Institute, Beltsville, .... Intent though they were on the mails. Watson's innate poMd. NC. Photo building circulation, Hearst and litical knack was borne out Pulitzer newspapers did not, when he was elected United seek to arouse animosity toward States Senator in 1920. the Spanish because they were 'The Menaee' catholics. Unlike.in the War That Watson's Magazine truly with Mexico 50 years before, the . lived up to its claim of a nacfmrches of-Cuba were not held tional circulation' may be doubt,;, forth as places to be pillaged in ed. But there could be no the . event of victory. Nor did WASHINGTON (NC) questioning the tremendous dis. members of the Faith have to· tribution of a weekly which Mutual aid 'between the tQ' preachings "~1tnst the. gushed forth from the town of' United States and Latin Church, as was true for Catholic Aurora in the Ozarks of Mis- America must be inspired by soldiers in 1846. souri. In November, 1911,the Minor Incidents Archbishops of New York and religious motives,. a bishop said Some' have contended that Boston were named to join at the 51st annual Pan Ameri_ can Mass here. froni'lhedownfall of the A.P.A. James Gibbons in the College of mntil' after World War I the Cardinals. . Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. It y d' ra of anti - Catholicism The following month Wilbur Hannon of Washington declared f . scarcely took a deep breath in· F. Phelps took over the aban- that mutual assistance given these United States. If the actual doned opera house of Aurora without religious motives caR incidents w·ere .. ·comparatively for publication of The Menace. make 'only accomplices, not minor, their relation to postwar The first issues were broadcast friends. outbreaks should not be overfree, but that was not necessary Bishop Hannan said that Latill looked. . tor long. Within a year the subThe Kansas fanner who drills scribers had 'mounted to 120,000, America's . exa~ple of indepen.IUs wheat in: the Fall may use thIrty times the population of dence and moral responsibility some of it for pasturage. The Aurora, counting from the pat- have been the inspiration of the llUCcess of his crop, however, riarchs to babies at the breast. newer nations of the world. will not' be determined by a Three years later this figur-e Latin A,merican nations in tIMt particularly .verchmt stand beseemed insignificant when a United Nations, he said, have fore the snows come. The million copies It week were voted as a group ('In the side of kernels in the heads waving in loaded on every train out of. thia God and not of human passions tfle golden fieldS late in June southwestern Missouri town." whenever 81 principle was at·. will give the answer; Steam engines coming in' did stake. Our Lord spoke, of bad fruit not pull so much bulk but a load as well as good fruit, and an of more value. Envelopes not Side With God abundant harvest was to be only brought the price of new . "Latin America is to be COIlgathered from the weeds which subscriptions, but payments for were sowed before and during the host of anti-Catholic books gratulated for its contributions which were advertised profusely to the welfare of tM world not World War I. in The Menace. because they have sided with Watson's Pnnclrlng Bags us, but because they have sided Envy is so· dissatisfying a sin Church is Target with the cause of God. We rein that it benefits, in no way. Unlike other so-called "pat,. joice not ~imply b.ecause they Yet the green-eyed monster had riotic': publica.tions, this Goliath 'were with us but because the a ready champion. in: Thomas E. ot anti-CatholIc newspapers had . , y were with God 'and we ,WeN Watson of Georgia. His own no target save the Church. Ex-. proud to. be .wi,th them." ,..., emotionalism having made him panded circulation· was reflected successful as a trial lawyer, he The prelate said. citizeM in the broadening of the vOlleYIi became nationally known as a leveled against her. Early in and Latin·AmericaIW also rePopulist in the 1890's. 1913 a headline screeched joice tha.t this country "has-inWatson's Magazine dwindled .dicated its willingness, even ita "RomlmJsts Run St. Louis." in circulation with the disinteLate in 1914,' when the sale duty, to be of' greater' material gration of this political party. . of the paper had ballooned to assistance to its closest friendG His trumpet caE! for new subalmost 1,500,000 the Vatican was and nearest n~ighJ:lorSl." . scribers was an editorial headed so often the topic it would ap"The j iultificatiOB of O\lli" DS'IJpear that The Menace had a tern," he said, "'IS our good! Urges Paren,ts' Pay staff of correspondents in Rome. Of course not even 'the price of stewardship of the b 0 u n t y School Bins .Happily a cablegram was wasted, for wrung from resources givelil to MONT J.OL! .(NC) -;- Archus by p-od. Social justi-ee. must myths were more easily fabribishop C. E. Parent of Rimouski have the first claim Oil our cated when undisturbed by told parents here to "be'proud of wealth if that wealth is to be truth. being able to pay your share in Next Week: "The Menace" ill deserved and serve lIl!l 11 blessthe education' of your children." ing." extinguished. "Do not hope for the day when .you no longer will have a cent Vatican Radio Plans - . ';0 pay, bec.ause then, you will not :13ve a word to· sayan the sub- Australia Broadcasts ject,." -he said at the opening of SYDNEY, (NC) - Vatican . . :1 new school i.n ·the Quebec town. Radio ·plans to broadcast weekly "It goes without saying that to Australia soon, the radio's diin doing this you have to make rector of English broadcasts said certain sacrifices,. but reflect on on his arrival in Sydney., aU the money that is' spent useThe director, Father T. ~. lessly on alcoholic beverages. O'Donnell, S..J., said the program The money spent on alcohol in will be on the air as soon as some one year could payoff the debts problems of ,transmission are Thomaeir.·,~ Jr. 01. a number of school commis-· settled. The. program will conTNCHUNf' sions," he said. . . sist of news originating at the 'Vatican, Catholic news from vaRed Scientists rious parts of the world, and 142 SECOND STIER SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-Setoft commentaries OIl news of gea,.. , ., Hall University has announced eral interest.. OSborM 5-7856 , . it will conduct an 18-month The move to have VaticaR study of Red ChiDa's engineers Radio broadcast to Australia was and scientists with a $31,600 initiated early in 1959 by NorFAU RIYEI grant from the National Science man Thomas Cardinal Gilro,." FoundauQIlo JVebbishop of s,~
U'ges Rei igious Motive I nspi re Aid to Others
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MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE CORPi
of loss . • . It is the ingratitude of men .which hurts Me more than .all the sUfferings I underwent during My Passion." Then speaking directly to Margaret Mary, He said: "Will yon, at least, give Me the eonsolation of atoning for their ingratitude as far as it lies within you?" . So we pass oli this appeal to you. The Sacred Heart died for the millions in Mission lands. Many of these souls have a desire for, the love of the Sacred Heart without knowing it. Some of them, like the Prodigal . son, are feeding -,:In mere husks, which is wrong, but they do this because they are hungry. How can salvation and peace be brought to them except by our missionarie~? And how can we send missionaries ,unless we respect the Sacred Heart's love for Africa and Asia? In the United States there ought to be at least 1000 ·faithful who have been blessed by G'od with money, and who love His Sacred Heart enough in return to give the Holy Father a minimum ,sacrifice of $2500 to build a chapel in the Mission lands-leaving it to the Holy Father to decide where It will be built. Secondly, there ought to be a milllon who have very little of the world's goods, but so much love of the Sacred Heart that they will buy ten cents worth less food a day, or smoke ten cen. less cigarettes, or do without ten cents worth of somethiq until Christmas. Then at the end of the month thel' will send their sacrifices to the Holy Father throlll'h his Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Remember that we want to help you as well as the missions and the world. The Sacred Heart will teach you forgetfulness of self, for that is the only way that you can enter into His love. Your gift alone will buy bricks for a chapel, but it will not save souls unless you make it in the name of Christ and His love for men. Please ·let us hear from you-in the name of the Sacred Heartthat we may overcome the ingratit~,ide of men, increase love in the world, and bring the world to peace. GOD LOVE YOU to A.D. for $5 "This is for the loved of God" ••. to W.D.D. "I have just spent $40 foolishly; I have resolved to spend the same amount for something positive." •.. to a grateful eonvert for $1 "Please accept this small amount of money.. I will try to do better in the future." . . . to Mrs. RW. for $2 "I earoed this for typing a paper. Use it in your work.'" It's Christmas shopping time. Let the Missions benefit by your Christmas giving as well as your dear friends who will be thrilled by any one 01 four styles of the GOD LOVE YOU MEDAL. Small Sterling Silver $ 3 'Large Sterling. Silver $ 5 Small 10k Gold Filled $ S Larlre 10k Gold Filled $18 When )'0. send as your request and your saerlflce-offerin£ think of the Christmas joy that you wl1l be giving to your friends. ,.ourself and tile people of' Mission lands. Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and maD it to the MoSt Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N. Y., or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. '
DAUGHTERS OF Sf: PAUl. Invlts roune girb (14-23) to labor .. Christ'o valt vinoyard ao an ApOstle of the Editions: Preu, Radio, Moviel and rele";Iioft. Wlttt thelO mode", meani,' th_ ~islionary Silters bring Chrisr, Doctrl86 to all, regardless of ra~, color or " ..... Far information write to. REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR SO i'll. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30. MAn.
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Ask Government Education Grants For Parents ST. LOUIS (NC)-President-elect K: e nne d y was urged by a parents' group here to recommend Federal
Dolls Will Tell Christmas Story Tonight
1'HE ANCHORT-hurs., Dec. 8, 1960
For Notre Dame Council, Fall River
13
'~oject
Stresses leUgiouas Aspect Of Christmas
By Patricia McGowan . D?ns will te~ the Christmas story tonight at the annual Yule party of Notre Dame Co~ncll of Cathohc ~omen, Fall River. With. the aid of Irish, Italian and Portuguese pr!ests of the Fall RIver ~rea, French and German friends, and some book research, M.ISS Hel~n ~. Chace, preSIdent of Notre Dame Council and also president of the Fall RIver DIstrIct of the Diocesan of Catholic Women, will narrate Christmas customs of seven countries.
DAVENPORT (NC)
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aid to education that would incivic project to keep Christ clude grants to parents. in Christmas has enlisted Citizens for Educational Freethe help of some 900 faJlli., dom said in a convention resolies to decorate their neighbo.... lution that parents then would hood this year according to the be free to finance the education Party guests will take an religious nature of the holiday. of their children at schools of imaginary journey to an Ireland their choice. The families all live within • where all doors' stand open at The non-sectarian citizens' neighborhood one mile square. group said past proposals to give Christmastide; to Italy, where Theirs is the third neighborhood originated the Christmas crib;, Federal funds only to public to be contacted in the last three school districts· discriminates to Portugal, where the Infant of years in connection with the against 6,800,000 children the Prague is specialiy honored at Christmas decoration project ~ Christmas; to France where group reported as attending the Davenport· Christmas Civte "Pere Noel" holds sway and to private, in d e pen den t and Project. church-related grade and high Merry England with its holly Mem~ers of a committe of 60 and ivy. Germany and the United schools. women vil?ited all families in the States will also be included OR Freedom of Choloe neighborhood chosen this year Citizens for Educational Free-- the "tour." to urge them to participate. The Many people cooperated in the dom was organized about one personal visit 'was followed ~ year ago "to secure parents' civil planning of the unusual Christa letter urging the families to mas program, says Miss Chace. rights in education, and thus display outdoor Christmas decoShe went to Rev. John J. Delfreedom of choice in education ration!! with a religious theme. aney of St. Patrick's parish, Fan without penalty for choice of an River, for information about an Priest Direotor independent, nonpublic school." CEF supports a suggestion of Irish Christmas; to Rev. Joseph The Christmas Civic Projeee Father Virgil Blum, S.J., of R. Pannoni, pastor of Holy Roswas begun in 1951. Its general ary Church, for Italy; and to Marquette University, Milwaucommitte is made up of women kee, who advocates grants from Rev. Joao C. Martins, St. An~ representing Davenport churehe~ government directly to par- thony of Padua, for Portugal. and is directed by Father Ed-Sisters of St. Joseph from ents. His theory is detailed in ward L. Lew of St. Ambrose hi" book, "Freedom of Choice Blessed Sac ra men t parish College. dressed Miss Chace's dolls in cosin Education." During the past nine year, ~ While founded by Catholic tumes typical of. the seven councommittee has carried out lIUclll X?lty, CEF also numbers as tries and. Mrs. Albert Petit and Christmas projects as a purade members parents of children iii Mrs. George· Poirier will accomof floats with religious themes; pany the narra~ion with ChristProtestant and Jewish schools, a a campaign for the exchaIl$ oi mas Carols and other seasonal spokesman said. religious greeting cards; eIl.tOOur.., music. Mrs. Louis E.. Bellenoit There are chapters of the aSo> will play the piano. .. aging business and indus~ te sociation In Illinois, KentuckY,' LITTLE GIRL'S DREAM: Seven lovely dolls in cos- incorporate the religious ijtr-me . Delightful Custom Michigan, Mlsouri, Iowa, New Miss Chace will tell 01. the tume-what. more could a little girl desire? That's what in their decorations; sponsuing York, Texas and Wiscon~in, Mrs. 50 outdoor billboards depie:ting Mae Duggan secretary, reported. delightful Irish custom of un- Denise Petit seems to be saying to Miss Helen C. Chace, the . Nativity scene annuelly; lockirig . all outside doors on Distorted Ideas who will use the dolls in a ChristmaS travelogue to be pre- distributing pamphlets on the Members, holding their first Christmas Eve and leaving food sented tonight for members of Notre Dame Council of rea~ meaning of Christmas; ~ODoo national convention, were urged on the table in case "Mary and sormg handicraft and essay eonCatholic Women, Fall River. Joseph would be journeying to take steps to correct distorted tests among school children; a~d and wish to stop. In that event, ideas some Americans were said near the fireplace and' they are donating a Christmas criIiP .~ 'no home would wish to bar en- · liCarce and expensive delicacy. to have about Catholic schools. filled by "Pere Noel," Ol' Father the city. Christmas gifts are distributed Dale Francis, a former Meth- trance to these special guests." Christmas. The .motto of the civic pmjee.t On Christmas Eve businesses on Christmas Eve from a tr~ odist preacher who is now ediMerry England trimmed with real candles. close at 4:30, she notes, and carol is "Christmas is Christ's' B:!rtl:!la tor of the Lone Star Catholic, "There is no fear of fire," says Father Christmas holds the day-Come Let Us Adore mm..Ii> newspaper of the Austin, Tex., singing is heard in all streets. Miss Chace, "since most houses Gtage in England, too, and traMembers of the Society of St. diocese, and columnist for the are constructed of stone C1" Our Sunday Visitor system of Vincent de Paul lead illI. this brick." It is a longstanding cus- ditional holiday observances include children's pantomimes and Catholic newspapers, spoke' to €hristmas ·custom. In Italy, the observance is tom to stand before the tree and plays. Roast goose, roast pig and delegates: . sing "0 Tannenbaum" before Christmas pudding are tradi.featuring "Religious schools have long primarily religious, with much presents are opened. tional fare and carol singing iD emphasis laid on the Christmas ''irD1le Gaslight ~@(i)mml been considered a side issue in .In Portugal, the narrator will very popular. education in America, like the crib, originated by St. Francis of Ideal for Communion Break- i child who went off to one side Assisl. Germans observe the explain, observance is entirely fasts, Organization Banqueto . custom of the Advent wreath, Heads Southern Unit religious. There are no lights or of the room to nurse his grudge," 386 Acushnet Ave. and also celebrate the feast of Christmas trees. Families exMr. Francis said. . MEMPHIS (NC) - Brother St. Nicholas. German children New Bedford change gifts and gather together Part of Picture Raymond Fleck, president of St. Call WYman 2·1703 "t think too few Americans especially enjoy the gift' of and -there are special devotions Edwa:d's University, Austin, realize that private Protestant oranges OR Dec. 8 and on · to the Infant of Prague. Tex., lB the new chairman of the and Catholic schools provide a Christmas day, .since they. are a ~ ~ There are few Christmas lights . southern regional unit of the part of the whole picture of edutn France either, and Christma. National Catholic Educational A FAMI.LY. TIEAT . cation in America. They are not Bishops iii: '~eriTiany trees have been in use only Since Association. off to one side, bUt standing Oppose Su~day Work · 1940. Children leave sUPpa's BAR-B-Q CHICKENS beside the public schools as a BONN (NC) ~ GermllR ChanWY '7-9~':l8. BEFORE YOU part of the whole picture' of cellor Konrad Adenauer coneducation. BUY - TRY ferred with Joseph· Cardinal "This is an image we should Frings on pending. legislation project to the nation, and it Ie which would curtail Sunday FARMS an image that is not. being pro- work. 145 Washington St., Fairhaven jected today" he said. The Cardirial-Archbishop of .rust off Route (I Mr. Francis warned 01. two Cologne was received iD. hia Watch for Signs OLDSMOBILE extremes: of the private school capacity as' chairman of the Gerproponents who work against man Bishops' Conference. Oldsmobile. Peugot • Renalt While out for a Drive the public schools and of the 87 Middle Street, Fairhaven Stop a1; this Delightful Spot The Bishops of Germany ai~ public school suppOrters who luded to moves on the part of attempt to limit all educational industry to convince public opinbenefits to stat~ _ Bupported ion that work on Sunday is necschools. tOME IN - SEE - and DRIVE essary. "The Sunday holiday for all, for the family and the social Cuba n Editors Donate life of our people, .may DOt be Electrical endangere~," they said.. Award to Refugees "'The World'. Most ~autifully Proportioned CarsMIAMI (NC) - Four editors Contractors at from Cuba have donated a $500 press award to aid Cuban refu.-· To live we must conquer UDgees. certainty, and we must" have The editors received the Mer-:. the. courage to be happy. !~, <C~M~ANY genthaler award in the "name of .. ':! the' free press of Cuba" at the FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS REYNOLDS-DEW~LT Inter-American Press' Association's general assembly in Bo1~44.86 Purchase St.NISW ~ford, Ma~s. William & Seeond~ 944 County S~ 7"~ . gota, Colombia. They gave·the New Bedford New Bedford ~. W2'34 money to Centro Hispano Cato. " lico, the Miami diocese's Spanish' IIPremi~mll.·He@ting center, which will use it to assist Cuban refugees. ' famous Reading HARD CO~l . :~'n·"'.1"~ The editors and their· neweo:::: '. NEW . EN~LAND COKE ~~jV CO~ papers are: Jose Ignacio Rivero. /. DADSON OIL BURNERS ~~
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14
Loyola Supplies Many Docton
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs."Dec. 8, 19.6~
,PrQJ~S~~
Bed@y@'re/~
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CHICAGO (NC) - TwentJ!three per cent of Chicago's physicians and 48 per cent of itlil dentists are graduates of Loy,ola University of ChicllgQ, the university reported. The statistics were releaSed tD im ·annoi.mcement that the Jesuit ,institiJtion, now enrolling'nearly 10,000 'students, will celebrate its 90th anniversary 'on De~ bet . 12 with, a Fouilders'Dq program. '. '" '·.Elev~n' per cent 'of the city'. }awyer$are Loyola graduates, 'it said: .'Thirty-five of ,the area'i &octal workers received all., or p~rt '9f their ,trahp:ng at LOiola, it annoUIl.ced. ' ,, ." The university was begun J.iP. , 1870 as St. Ignatius College., lD.. 1901, it.!J, name was changed. a has more than 30,000 alwnnl."
;BE@~~@WJrmW @~ S,tfo' Ifff@rru~i~ ,
By Rt. !Rev.
Ms~r. J~hn
S. 'Kennedy
,
One of: the mosfatt,ractive and illuminating of the' saints is Francis de Sales. Strangely, there has been lacking a really good biography ,of him in English. While Excellent 'works a'bout St. Ignatius'Loyola, for example, or St. Francis ,Of "'Assisi 'or St;Therese. of ser~on 'than indozen.s of yoUm t'i'sieux , abound, ' the gr~a:t Now you are making preach"doctor o~ the .phtirch who, is ' ing sU:~h ~ common. thing ~hat :t,h tit rival as an ap,peal- no one thmks. anythmg of I t WI 0 . • . . and no one looks up to you 88, .lng and ,~ffechveSPlrlt~al'gulde, theyshould." '~' , has been neglected. MIChael de ,in' Demand , EveryWber.e ]a Bedoyereh~s' The old man' was : wrong. .~ught to' ~IllFrancis's sermons strock, home '~e 'gap .WIth to ,the people and changed their hIS ~ranco~s de lives. He was soon in demand ;Saies (Ha~pe~. everywhere.' ',~k !l?dI.t IS His intelligence and efficiency B,ll: a t 1 f y.: n g in handling Churc! affairs seltG, .r,eport , ·that cured for him the respect and 1lescored :an confidence of his, bishop. But 11 n q ue s - h e burned to undertake a task PITTSBURGH' (NC) - Dui~Oriablesuccess. sO .forbidding as to seem impo.quesne UnWersity will con-truct , , .~ tho.se f~-: sible. . _ a $600,000, three-story addition miliar WIth his 'This was the conversion of the to its library, it was 'announced. o t.~ e r books. " peOple of the Chablais, thecoun-ENDS FAMILY CRUSADE : President Jorge Alessan~ The library addition. expected ~ow, M~ .. de ,la .Be~oyere ~, ~ try around the Lake of Geneva. dria of Chili ,bids good-bye to Father Patrick P,eyton,C.S.C., to be completed within the next coolly ,cntical wrIter, an 'ob]ec'- There Calvinism had triumphed year; will house 250,000 volumes. ti~e ;stude~,t ,of. ~e ,record. All coinpletely; the old Faith was and thanks him profusely for hia 15 months, of intense D'uquesne is a coeducational iD'f:b~ ,more lMJ?ressIve,therefon;. proscribed and all itsmonu- labor to help, the families' of Chili by means' of the d3ily stitution' conducted by the Hol7 iii the~thuslasm for !,he char- Mentll bad been destroyed. Family Rosary. ~C Photo. " , Ghost Fathers. ' eoter, w~dom, andachiev~t ~ Secured permission • .-f .st.Francis de Sales whic~ enter this hostile realm, and be 'e , . , ~~s these p~es. ,That it IS labored there for four year.. Life ThreateDe4 justIfied, the plaID fa~ta amp17 ju'ove..., ,At first he had no success. Be .. ' :Dechnes Marriage " with enmity, his life was BROOKLYN (Ne) - PariSh In SOUTH 'INDIA. tile In*e.rfolo waDI of &be CatboUe CIluell .. Francis de Sales was 'born in urreatened and he was denied conferences of the St. Vincent &be rill... 01 KALAYAP1J'&AM becoma wakr-soalwl and ~, 1567 into .a noble household of the least 'security or comfort. de-Paul Socie.t,. are being asked 5 t I'h maba tIlat f . ~, mOlltll&., • Ia ~S~v.oie, then ,a princedom b?rNone the less he persisted. to "adopt" overseas units of the "L~.~ -,. ~'J,. aD appeal to _ r... fiDaDeial II&IUI(o. the paatw of ILtLAYAP1IBAM 4eredbY ,~rance. Italy, and speaking, writing tracts for diEt- societ,. and help their relief iSwitzerland. He was the oldest tribution, visiting. His amitJ' aDcI work. ~ ~, telIa . . OW tile cUrt Boor of tile ef !l3 children, ,and his .father kindness won grudgmg regard. The DeW program to assist so, QI 0 ChurcJt. built • a aemporU'J ....... ~' :S' &un .. I~ becomes a Yerita.... !laad worldlY amQitiona for him. His message was given a hear- eie~ units in underdevelo~ ~ • mud-p~ at tidal' time· eacIa ,..... 'The boy thought ()f ,the priest- 4lg. Conversions began. ID. time, and pov~rty-stricken areas wu .,. t writes "It is IDeoDYUfen& f . IIIf' 'Iaood, but knew that his father's he won back the people; two- announced by John J. Lyneb. people to worsbip hi tills damp ...... COlUIent could only~ gradually thirds of them came intO tbe . chairman of the society's new tun ~ tlte:v are kIleenDg III mad.." and laboriously won. Hence ,be Church. uational 'committee on missionlila use 01 the word "IneoDvenfeDt'" ,agreed to ,the plan that he study He was now nominated coacI- ary activities. at the Uruversity of Paris, then jutor to the bishop. But he was Mr. Lynch, president of the DrHa& &.t:6ri MismrJI AitJ .. indeed an understatement. lllttheUlliversity of Padua, at not consecrated until after the society's Brooklyn diocesan ceaI:- tilt 0rilIIttJ Land bas beeD acquired 011 whf~ r Chltrdl to build a new Church iD KALAYA· 'eaCh of which he was awared a incumbenfs death. Meanwhile tral council, stressed that the ~ctorateo " h e had visited Rome and Paris, adoption plan is a voluntary one PUBAM but $3,000 .. Deeded to bUJ' the Deeessal'J' materlab to !His father chose a lady for and in both cities he became not intended to cut into each oonstruri IL Could )'Ou help thia &"004 priest provide a place of ~cis to matTy, but the young cellbrated in short order. American conference's activities worship for bls people, that would be a UUJe more "convenleDt" iIIl8IJ. ,de~e~ and ..informed his His holines~, his zeal, lUll ~ ~ of the poor. fOl' tbeJr devoUooa. ~ther of hiS mtention ofbecom:-genius as a churchman, thooloBelp from Canada lag a, priest. ,gian, master of the ,spiritual life, - GREGORIAM MASSES • Mr. Lynch said his new eomA. WONDERFUL CHRISTMAS REMEMBRANCB ,Second in Diocese director of souls, and preacher mittee- has already received . FOil YOUll DECEASED. " This was a blow, but it w.as w.ere' recognized. ,It waS taken ~ftehed by tbe'.factJhat Fran,e,is for,g11lpted that he would be offers to help' from Canada and 15 states. MANY CATHOLIC PABE.NTS; wblle their children are p O " \i!ecuredpIIeferment in, tb~ promoted to some great see ~ Overseu conferences to, be Churchev,en .before receiving wear the red hat.' , .fug,uP, ba~bor &he hope that God will ealI a boJ' or aid of theln .mi.nororder.s.The' hUnily' In Humblest Reaehes contacted through, the new ,to the. priesthood or reUP~ Ufe.J'or·lOme was in the dioce'se of Geneva. But neither' of these honors' committee by, those ,units Which ,&he hope Is, realized but for others It Is Dot be" 'l'he Calvinists"however, were in ever came' to him. He took up have offe,red, to jqin the pro". "cause in God's. Providence Ule .. maJori~ of gran,. : are , located' Austria, .' pec.p)~ are. ~~lled'to the.~'ec1 If iour' control of the 'see, s:ity, and it was ,the duties of bishop of Geneva- BOINia, Ghile, Germany; Hong .,.1, impossible, for.· > <the, >bishop;to ,Annecy, and ' discharged them ' ., l'IoUl~r and t;~thtlr ~nce: ~ drellJD8 of )'ou :ftSide >there;;' .. ' ., ".:" , untifdeath. His was-a,diocese in Kong" Italy, Lebanon,' Mexico; " ...i)ecoming ,a prt~~t. or, ~e,~~ anCI'GOd' d~ Acicoi1diIiigli~;.~·episcopal :seatrugged. country with: many prob- Paragu;lY, ,p'e~U" U'rtlguaY, Man':' ,~ot.c;al' '~~!I t:o, Ulis,.r.ou C8n,:suu.". ~' way. was at~~ee.Y:::lE.tanciD was of- lema. ,. ' ' : ~ , ," , ,llnd 'Trieste, h.~ sa~~:. '., _~e,thelr ,dreaM! c;o~,u;ue. "ryoa~ c a D , ' :, feted the'" proyostShip of the ' ·'.He, '-traveled. the, lerigth and' ;, Archbish~p, Patrick ~ ,O'BoyIe ~~glve" them I priest 'or 'a 'nun' as a "sOD" • ,"daughte.r»' b,. paYing ,for' the edlJCatfollll ttl' Gene,,:a-;;·~.~cy:""..4iocese,an breadth, heights and depths of it ' of, Washington isspirituai dir'eoa, seinipartan or' a Dorice",in a ;MlssioD8l"J' office second only to that oftbe on foot or in the saddle. Not con- tor of the new committee 'of the C~UD&ry. I r,.e coSt of educating a priest ..' ~ishop. He was then 25 and. a _ .tent with administering it- from society" of Catholic .1aym!S$600, the, ~ost of training a sister 1.$3oe. ;layman.. : ',.' - , ": -: I the~ city,.he-performed 'aU the SISTER ",UCY and SISTER MARY PLAI Since an ecClesia'stical- career ,. dutje; ':Of the ·priesthood; as w~n CID. Dovices of the CLARIST SISTERS ia 'at the highest 'level was ,'thw' 'as those, of the 'episcopate, in ita !+.~~~~I~IND,IA.'~d THOMASMUNDAKKAL and ~pened ,to 'him, it ~as"rjghtiy , farthest arid humblest reacheii.' XAVIER MUNDATTUCHUNDA, ,semiuarillDS at SAINT JoHis, universal and ~ undying &!illumed that his father' woukl,' SEPJrS SEMINARY .. INDIA, wouid welcome an "adopted-' D?,t be intransigent in opposition." fame .rests ,upon his,. writings. Mother or Father. One of'these bo)'!'l or girls would be a .«80 lIn If ,Short 'space,' F1rancis be- ; Although his ,days were filled lI8rtid ChrIstmaa "GlR'" to ~ur MoUler or Fatbft.. ~me.a 'Cler~c,go.t n.rinor orderS. ' ,~ith :dutiesand.trave1, he 'made .major, ·orders, and 'W~ ordained ' the time _to, compose ..thousands ~.1Priest. lInmediately .he ,sho!",ed of' letters. Most of. these .had to FROM THE HOLY LAND 'his qualit;,-. :ffe plun,ged into the c:ioi ,wltJispi,J:1tuaidirection. ,,: . If you could send us a donation' of $10.00 for the poor of the apostolate,preaching in thetowDS :"_,~, ~ .. Great Friendshipa 'land of Christ's birth 'we· will send you I tokeD of our appr.. and countI:~'S'ide;'"bringmg his " -mil is n life of great friend- . , . elation in the, form of aD Olive Wood Rosary from tfIlssaered ministry to the, ;poor ,..,and ·.,r.ich ;. :shiPa. The 'Closest was ,that ,with :', JaneL Please. help us to care .for the"poor Palestinian exiles. alike, engaging iP;il·~J1,irlw'ilid.of;,"~~,Jean.wa c:ie ':Chail";" " ,"with 0 I'! !, activities. :' ,,~?om he fouilc:led~e ~i;tatiOlll: 'rlsto~/ . SOMETHING UNUSUAL From ,'the first,he was a ·order.Others.;were S1. Vmcent . ba.fOO way of' a ChristmaS Gift WGald"beo·m.embershIDfu . ' . markable preacher. He 'did ~t:i' de Paul, Ble'ssEid. Mart Of the T~$t",Comp~ny "Of'oDir Mlssiolli"Cluoo: .' ' I " ,. , " '" " tickle the ears of his listen~i' /Incarnation (:i:i~be: Ac~i-I~)~ S t . ' : ' . . ',' , , ' 'BaaIllilml-Clllb ; .·..·.••••• ~·•• '~o... oo~. to 'buUd MisSion SchOO":' .. but,penetrated to their hearts; Robert Bellafhiine,' ,Piefre de 'll'AIIJIi\'I1rOINl,.MASs.. Chn7BOlltom Club ; .• ~ '~~'•• ~.':._ ;','. : :. &0 'support senilnari-.: he hag the gift ot reachiI\g peo- Berulle, Jean,::Jl;Icques0liet-. 0iJ, DoDnIelil Leillsr Club .~ •• o. to mali:ltatD r.eperHospltBI.. pIe ~ip tiheir ,hmer 'bEling, causing ,each ,of these heha4.itppaCt. : ,: ........;" "'A'N'.,'0"'" MlIlr)"e Bank '. .. ; ... ;'..'. : :. : : •• .'. :. ::',: to BUDIIOr6 nO:ridate..· .. them to refle'ctand to change. Mr. de la B!'ldoyere has told 81. IInU:: D .. I'll 'HOmeD Guild" :."; to pl'OVllh vestmeDts for Mission Churches.,· Again, he ,preached' ,often .and &ands!. .. story clearlly and; TAUNtON GR_ " , . OrPHan's' Bread Club ; ... ::. :'. . . • • . • • .... to eare for Orphans. simply. His father comuplained forc~, articulating .its prm',_' to care for the Aged. . Palaeo of Gold 'Club': : .. : : that 'he preached too frequent!v cipal 'events and, especially, 1W0000beii',cll Fedel/'all lDepO!d& , Membership' Dues In each at oar Mission Clubs are $1.00 'a ' . 'end 'too 'Plainly. "catching and expressing well Wi IDOntli!. A 'memberShip'. riveD &0 relative or II friend wiU brin«, • '~I '. . , Ilmsure.noo CorporBtioa tha$ Jloved-olUl &he benefltil of mo)' praYllrs. Why Dot give a . omy day things were dif~sp~~:lr~l~t~a~~~d~.m~:~a~n'I;·n;g~'!Ji!!I1!!ffi!Jii!!ffi!l~ffi!ffi!rn!Jf;" ;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ferent," the .oldman ,g1'Um.bled. years membership ($12.001 IIll II Christmas Gift, It would truly "Sermons were rare events--but ,. ' ,. lie D "different" gift We will send a bel!utiful Christmas Gift what events! ',They were learned ON CAPE COD Ca!'IlI &0 t~e persolB )'oa remember In this manner. and well. :thought ,out. We ,h~,ard ! " marvels. Why, ithere was more ! PLEASE 'REMEMBER GOD. AND His MISSIONS IN YOUR Latin and ,Gre'ekin any' ,cjii.o , LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. ,' I,
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Library Addition
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THE ANCHORStresses Justice Veteran Missi,oner, .Visiting Taunton Home, Thurs., 1S Dec. 8, 1960 Of Aiding Private Reports on ExplfJsive African Situation Decrees Masses School Children By. Marion Unsworth ]! Hours Apart CINCINNATI (NC) Rec~nt uprising~ .in the African nations have had repercussions not only politically
Catholic laymen must persuade the general community that their arguments for
and SOCially, but relIgIOusly, according to Sister Claire Imelda, S.U.S.C., who has returned home to Taunton for a six-month vacation. A veteran of 31 years service in Africa Sister last visited the United States six years ago. Religiously, the unrest has caused th~ Catholic population in Came' . ' '. . . . . roon to morfi! than triple in . less than a . year~ . while Sisters and priests remain
public assistance in sending 'their children to Catholic schools are just, according to Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati. . "We don't want any direct~ IJUbsidy to Church or school," he said, "but we don't object to yery scarce. "Where we are is more or less parents' receiving aid to the extent of the cost' of educating the safe because military headquar.ters is situated in ,Nkongsamba. , ehildren in public schciols." . "Why shouldn't the' school There are'patrols day and n~ght," board give the money to the . Sister explained. ':W:e are always parents to pay to' the school Qt. . ,on the " alert, expecting an attack at any tfme." . their choice?" he asked. There have been raids within "The justice, equity and practicability of such a plan must be seven miles of her mission. "The demonstrated," Archbishop Alter population has doubled in that told 850 delegates to the biennial tiine," she said. '"It is now about convention of the. Cincinnati 50,000, and' people are living Archdiocesan Council of Catb-' 25 and 30 in one small house." Until January of 1960, the olic ~en. Cameroons were ·8 French colUp to .Laity He added that it is "up to ,the ony. Six 'months before' they laity" to "educate the commun- were to attain iheir independity to the justice of this position." ence Commu'nists started to The Archbishop stressed that work their way into the villages, U. S. Catholics support the pub- spreading propaganda. "Many of the rebels who raid lic school system. If the public schools didn't exist, "we'd have and kill and loot are mere boys, who has been doped, bribed to create them," he said. In order to correct misunder- and thre' tenet: by t,e' Commun- ' standings about th,e Cpurch and ists," Sister said. "They don't achieve effective public. rela- realize until the drugs have worn tions, Catholic laymen "must off what they have done." carry more weight in civic No Work community activities," he said. "The Communists promise "We must carry our share 01. them they won't have to work, eommunity responsibility in pro- that they won't be ruled by the grams of relief and charity and white people, that they will have social welfare," he stated. "We a lot of money with no hard lI:annot be living in an exclusive work. Of course this appeals to enclave of our own." them. Then, too, all the families were taxed by the Communists Government to Aid to get money for their cause. Those that didn't pay were killed Catholic Colleges OTTAWA (NC) - Thirty-nine or imprisoned. With their propacenters of higher learning can ganda and terrorism, they have borrow from a total of $50,000,- created panic among the people." The situation has caused crises GOO in government loans to assist in construction of dormitories everywhere, including the 250 because of legislation approved bed hospital, in which Sister is by the House of Commons. head of the maternity section. Catholic institutions are in- "Many fathers, whose wives have been killed by terrorists cluded. The list of universities and brought their children to us so colleges eligible for the loans that they would be cared for and was compiled by the National safe. But soon we had to send Conference of Canadian Univer- them back because we did not sities and Colleges. They must have enougl\ food or room for them." . be institutions holding status by There are more' than 2000 provincial statue or royal charter and having power' to confer de- births in, the main hospital yea'rly. This year there has been an grees. The 39 mentioned in the bill average of 200 each' month. The 'hospital has 12 outstations, include: "maternity Clinics in the bush, St. Dunstan's UniversitY, Charlottetown, P,E.!.; St. Fran':' which Sisters ,visits regularly, eis Xavier University and Mount, giving ·expectant. mothers check~ St. Vincent College, Al1tigonisb, ups, and taking .case!! which need N. S.; Laval University, Queb1lc; hospital care to Nkongsamba. These days, these visits are Assumption University at WindlOr, Ont., and St. Michael's' Col':' undertaken in an ambulance, which the missionary obtained lege, Toronto. ' during her last visit here, as well as an incubator. Previously, she High Court Upsets used the doctor's car, Bishop'. 'Smut' Conviction, car, or an African truck. MIAMI (NC) - The Florida "We teach the mothers how to Supreme Court reversed, the take care of themselves and conviction of a Miami newstheir new babies, and then we stand operator on a charge of keep track of the babies for two selling obscene literature. years, seeing them once a month. The decision of the Florida The tribes· in our Diocese have Supreme Court wall unanimous. big famili ~s, up to 20 children. Justice Stephen O'Connell said Of course, they lose a lot too. the state must prove that a venWhen I went tQ Africa, 60 per dor sold imd distributed a pub- ee.nt of the Lfants died within lication with the knowledge it t~e first year, now it is only was obscene 'and lewd. or 3 per cent. " He declared tl1at .the charge , "Tuberc~~losis is. the most ander which the vendor was prevalent disease, due Jo maln,uconvicted was defective because 'trition;" Sister Claire Imelda it tailed to assert that Cohen continued. "Malari:- and leprosy sold and distributed a magazine are also' widespread. We test "knowing it to be obscene in newborn babies for T.B. three character." days a~ter their 'birth. If their reaction is positive, we treat Rochester Diocese them right away." , Pay Students Devotional Project Speaking of the. school at ROCHESTER (NC) ----: Friday evening Masses, followed by Nkongsamba, Sister said there.
Parking Problem' Statute 78 of the new synodal regulations cites the "great increase" .in the number of Communicants at .. each Mass, :l.nd also notes that. the Church today "urges a' fuller participation of the faithful inthe liturgy or'the ,Mass." .. "This', together with the giving of adequate ~nstruction, ma~es the requirement of a longer time for the Mass inevitable," the statute reads. "Moreover, many parishes are also faced with a problem of parking. III view of these reasons we decree that in all parishes in St. Loui. and St. Louis County each of the last three M"'~"es shall be separated by an interval of at least an hour and a half."
VETERAN MISSIONER: Sister Claire Imelda, S.U.S.C., indicates spot on globe where she has served ChriFlt for 31 years. She will be in United States for six months 011 home leiwe.
1959.
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Parish Opens Mission To Non-Catholics
PEQUANNOK (NC) - Holy Spirit parish here in this New Jersey community invited nonare 11 classes and 870 girls. "Up I hope to get a '''lasher and drier; Catholics to take ~art in a special! to two years ago, we had to pay it would be such a help for the mission given by the Paulililt them to come to school, by giv-. hospital." She explained that Fathers. ing them dresses and trinkets. when she was home the last Top i c s discussed includeck Two Sisters run the school, aided time, getting a washer would by native teachers. They have have done no good, since they "Why Confess to a Priest," "!I!l regular courses and domestic had no electricity. Five years Birth Control Really Wrong," science classes. ago, tht: government put in elec- and "Will Any Religion Do?" Pequannok was the -center cd "Now everybody goes to tricity and running water. school, beginning with children For the next six months, Sis- a school controversy severa! of four years of age, even though ter Claire Imelda will visit her years ago when the parish 10anecll it is not compulsory. They will family, and travel through New several classrooms in its schoo! go to school until they are 20 if England and New York giving to the local board of education we don't put them out to make lectures about West Africa and to alleviate overcrowding in the room for others," the missioner the missions, hoping. to receive public schools. Some residents requested tI1M said. "Some girls who plan to some of the many articles needed get married come with their', ~ d.epera~ely by ~er commun- religious symbols, s u c h _ fiance, who calls them "my lty, :lOclUdl?g clotJ:l,mg,food, and cros~es, be removed. Their efforts· were unsuccessful. ' promise," and want the Sisters household Items. to teach them to cook!" .........- ........- - - - - - ; - . . . . . . ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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"Now each little village 'and '. town has a small sph!>ol, ~hey' are " so ~nxious, for e<;1ucatiQn," Sister " ' added,. '. . . ,"The students at the domestic, IChool do our wa'shing, and must ' ~lean everything 'by hand,~ the . missionary said. "While I'm home '. .. ' . , ' .
CHRIST IS CHRISTMAS
No Sunday ·Work QUEBEC (NC)-Quebec Premier Jean Lesage told a labor group here he is flatly opposed to ~unday work and would permit it only in an "extreme emergency," He said no industry' had yet sought permission.
a
recitation of the new Litany ot U, Precious Blood, have been authorized for all parishes here. The sel'v;ces will be a feature of the third annual diocesanwide devotional project, the "Year of the Precious Blood of Our Saviour Jesus Christ," to be marked during 1961 by designation of Bishop James E. Kearney of Rochester. Past devotional years for the 357,000 Catholics here were the "Sacred Heart Year" in 1960 and the '"Eucharistic Year" lD
ST. LOUIS (NC)-Late Sunday morning. Masses in the St. Louis area must be scheduled! dt'least 90 minutes apart. This was one main provisiOll of the new synodal regulations ·for the Archdiocese of St. Lou", announced by Auxiliary Bishop Leo C. Byrne of St. Louis. The '~ew regulations mentiOft the parish parking lot problem by name, and also call attention to the great increase in Communicants at Sunday Masses since Pope. Pius XII relaxed Eucharistic. fasting . tegulations ia March, 1957.
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~-Oiocese of
Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 8,
1960~
Advises Caution in' Se~king Reconciliation With Spouse By Father John L. Thomas, S.J. Ass't Sociology Prof.-8t. Louis University
"Are there times when a wife not only can,' but should remain separated from her husband? We're married 15 years, have four children, and are'separated the last three years. He's had an affair, a breakdown, and is now back to normal but has lost the had experienced a breakdown faith. We've discussed a re- after his "affair," and·that he ia conciliation, but I doubt his now normal but has a new philposition on birth control and osophy of life.
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fear the effects of his atheism on the children. Yet he'll probably remarry if we . don't come back. What is my responsibility as a wife?" You have raised so me ve r y difficult questions, Alice, but before attempting to anfiWer them, I would like to comm en ton ., 0 u r attitude. Your letter reveals a truly admirable, Christian concern for the welfare of your husband. For i»etter or worse marriage unites • couple for life. Even though they experience the tragedy of aeparation, they remain responGlible for the spiritual welfare of each other to the extent that this is possible. Under no circumstances may Chey simply dismiss concern for each other-just forget about each other-for they are united by a sacramental Bond which f/IOnstitutes them visible signs and instruments of grace to each «her as long as the)' live. Sometimes the incidents lead.tag to separation are so painful, lInumiliating, and destructive of lbuman love that the partners, may feel nothing remains of their marriage, yet they m\lst lIclmowledge that the sacramen.... bond still unites them. They continue, to belOlig only .. each other, and though they . . longer share human fulfilllreOt together, their spiritual IeiPOnsibility endures. . Give Public Witnea Hence by refusing new attachments they render public witDess that the bond continues to sist, while through prayer and IOOd example they hold up their mare of the partnership. Every marital separation is l!l '\human tf< ~edy, yet even in such cases, the sacrament guarantees Che achievement of the supernatural purposes of mariiage if the separated spouses cooperate with the sacramental graceD available in their state of life. Since your attitude concerning ,"our responsibilities is correct, Eet us turn to the question you must anewer in reaching a decision about reconciliation. The first doubt you must reoolve is your husband's present position on birth control. If he Il'ejects Catholic teaching concerning this important point of marriage morals, there seems little us~' in discussing a reconeiliation. However, if he would agree to cooperate in the observance of periodic con.tinence, you would be justified in proceeding on this basis. It's difficult to determine whether he has reatly "lost" his faith or is merely trying to rationalize his previous misbehavior. You mentioned that he
Students Cooperate In Research Project QUINCY (NC)-Quinc,Y. College and the Adams County, IlL, health department are cooperating in a research project that could lead to a major breakthrough in dental health. Four hundred student volunteers from the college are participating in a mass test of a tooth powder containing a material that researchers hope will prevent development of tartar on teeth. For four months the students will use a tooth powder distributed by the county health department. Some will receive ,powder containing the tartar . preventing material. Others ·will ··,·l8tordinary powder.
Such types are often quite fanatical in holding their new ideas because in resolving their own difficulties they feel they have found the __ 1ution to all of the world's· problems. Before attempting a reconciliation, make sure that he's capable of respecting or, at least, tolerating your religious beliefa and practices. . I Negative Example . This brings up the second question you must answer. How will your children be affected by his words and example? It you feel that he will try to indoctrinate them with his new ideas or will be tolerant of their religious training, a reconciliation seems out of the question. Even if he is quite. tolerant, you will still have to contend with his negative example. However, you can probably neutralize its effects satisfactor_ ily since you have had the entire training and confidence of your children these last three years. On the positive side, of course. the children do need a father and you could use the assistance and support that your husband could give you..~fe also needs you and the children if he is able to lead a normal life and avoid the ever_ present danger of an attempted new marriage. The type of decision you face is never easy. You have to try to balance conflicting rights and obligations in a situation that involves many unknowns.Proceed Slowl,. You reco':'1ize your responsibility toward your partner, but you must also protect own values and the religious formation of your children. At the same time, you are dealing with a\ husband who ha:; been unstable In the past and, though he may have found himself, represe·nt8· something of a: question mark still. I would suggest that you proceed slowly., Try to work out a clear agreement 'concerning the moral and religious' questions ~hat have been raised, and if you Judge that he will keep his promises, you may then attempt a reconciliation. With the help of grace and your good example, you may bring him back to the faith.
Christmas Signs' PASSAIC (NC) - Christmas signs designed for home door entrances with the legend, "Christmas is Christ's Birthday -Receive Communion," are being distributed by the Truth and Literature Committee of the . Passaic County Holy Name Federation.
W$H.RJLEY &
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Dec. 8, 1960
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You Are Cordwlly Invited To Attend the Seventh An,nual )
BISHOP'S CHARITY BALL for Underprivileged Children Featurin.g
路Art Mooney and 'His MGM Recording Orchestra "
LINCOLN PARK MILLION DOLLAR BAlLROOM WEDNESDAY EVENING, JANUARY II at 8:30 P.M.
Tickets Availahle 'at All Parish, Rectories and From 'Members of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and .the
Society of St. Vincent de Paul
This Timely Message Is Sponsored By The Following Public Spirited Individuals and Business Concerns Located in Greater Fall River Duro Finishing Corp. Enterprise Brewing Co. The Exterminator Co. Fa~1 River Electric light Co. Fan River Trust Co. Globe Manufacturing Co.
Plymct9frh P'1J'onting CO. 6 Inc. Sherry , (@li"fi. SobHoff ~f1'@~hers Sterling laeveroges 6 ~c. Strand Theatre Textile Workers Union of America, AFLaCIO
Kaplan Furniture C@. Korman Water Cc. MacKenzie & WDns~@w, One. Mason furniture' Showrooms Mooney & Co. Inc. Newport Finishin,9 Co.
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THE ANCHO.R-Dioceseof. fall River-Thurs;, Dec. 8, 1960 .
K of C Council Starts Catholic Films Library
Ask Protest. of film Breakdown
Continued from Page Ten theaters. These very often are little short of being borderline movies of "the sensational presCINCINNATI (NC)-The entation of religion as well as' pornography." for its' new-found predilection 4. Exhibitors must limit the Ohio State Council of the for pornographic and, perverted films they show to those which Knights of Columbus has carry t.he seal of approval of the subject matter." inaugurated a Catholi~ Film The committee urged Catholic Hollywood code. Library to promote religious voOthers Critical pastors to explain the Legion of cations, interest in the sacred Decency pledge carefully to parThe prelates, 'n noting that liturlW, and membership in the ishioners, showing that it means others have been critical recently K of C. both support for worthy films of Hollywood's film, fare, said Four films, available without arid lack of support for morally "the increasing emphasis which' charge to schools and organizabad movies. ' films are placing upon unhealthy tions, have been acquired to sex and brutal violence has Legion Listings launch the program, according aroused the deep social concern ' Parents were asked to check to State Deputy Anthony J. legion listings of films. "Parents of religious leaders of all faiths, Brueneman, Jr. must be reminded that they are of public officials and of reThe religious vocation films spected critics and journalists in seriously delinquent in the' fulare From the Rising of the Sun, the secular and religious press." fillment of their parental duties a story of the diocesan priestif they permit their children to hood, and God's Career Women, attend films not approved for' the story of one girl',; realization them," the bishops said. ' . Continued from Page One of her call to GOd's service in They asked Catholics not to of eV,olution."· th~ religious life. support films that fail to seek This process, it said, is toward The film, Noble Heritage, approval of either the Hollywood what the Bishops had called deals with the history of the production code or,' tlie legion. Knights of Columbus and the "adult oriented production!" , FIRST 'INDIAN' STUDE" . ' These films are 'chiefly indepen"T.hat 'evolution, has 'brought, ' ". ., " , ~TS.:· Mother Lapeyre,su- ,aims and activities of the 01'dent, or foreign -. produced a broading in the subject mat- ' , perlO!" of -the Academy of. the Sacred Heart, St. Charles,Mo:; ganization. ' movies. ' tel' of films, a change which was' is shown greeting the :(irst two Indian students ever enrolled Explains Mass ~ . QuaUiy ,Films' . dictated by the American ,audi-' at the 142~year-old school. Father Daniel Tainter, S.J. is' , The. fourth. film is an explanaIt accused Hollywood's "qualence. The~e has,n~t been, howchaplain. 'of'the Pine Ridge reservation in',' South Dakota ,tion of the action and prayers itT films," not just' cheap' ex- ever, a change in .the moral ' , of the Mass, prepared especially ploitation films, of containing standards under which'the sub:' ,where Cleo 'Cli~fora, left,.an~ Colee~ ·Yellow Jiorse, right,· 'for use with Catholic informaobjectionable material: "Far too' ject matter is ,treated ..•" live with the Sioux tribe. NC Photo. " ' tion classE:s, discussion groups, ",any of Hollywood's 1960 qualar - catechetical classes. ity films have not only poisoned The two vocation films are The code which I the entertainment of our public, , planned especially for showing but have slaughtered the inno- the Bishops accused ot'b,eing it:tto children in the eighth grade , ., cence of Ameri,can yquth," ~t effective, has, "m~t effectively or high school. tpe increased problems resulting VATICAN CITY (NC)-One thority in the sanctuary, Msgr. saiq. Mr. Bruerieman said additionof the few men to tell Pope John Dante.is never obtrusive. 'Most The bishops, urged Catholics to '. from the change in subject mat:.. al films will be added to the ' tel'," the association ·contended. what to do is 76:..year~01d Msgr. visitors who see papal ceremonIlUPport a protest "against the It added that' "the spirit" 'of Enrico' D'ante. ., ies do not remember seeing library as funds are made availcontinuing produdion and exhiable. the code continuel'to be' main,. The' slight gray-haired Mon-' Msgr. Dante, although he is albition of films which glamori~e tained. The association expressed ' .. signor is Prefect of the Masters ways at ,the Pope's side. For adultery, which advocate free .. College Dedicated iove, which, qelittle and' debase interest in the legion's annual of Pontifical Ceremonies. In Msgr.· Dante has a kind of gen'CANTON (NC)-Walsh Colreport commenting that' "the this post Msgt. Dante c"'~cts the ius for .being in' the .midst' of the sacred state of matrimony, lege will be dedicated tomorrow rating~ of 'suchorganizations are actions of the ,Pope and all whatever is happening' and yet which ridicule personal integrity by the prelate after 'whom the and which deaden human sensi- useful t9 the industry' and the others taking I>ar~ iIi any .papal is able to blE!nd harmoniously. $1 million liberal arts college is public." ceremony.. . ' into .the pageant that,'surrounds , biiities by submerging them' in named-Bishop Emm~t M. Walsh ,Standards A, newst:nan' summed up the the·Pope. ,.., , ~ broiling sea of brutality and of Youngstown, Ohio." "And we are most gratified:," activities of Msgr. Dan,te ~t the ,. ' , . ' violence." , It is no wonder that he actl'me of the co'ron'at','",' " Pope it continued" "that even' the · John . d thO k k H h . . Code Reform by descrl'bl'ng h'l'm as qUIre IS nac., e as been ff' . l ' d 10 . ponh'f'Ica1 bishops said they are· stringent standards of the legion; · "rl'ngmast'er of the most magni0 lCla y engage' . f 46 . Joining voices with others, some which include religious precepts · ficent ,show' on ear·th." . ce,r~~omes or , years. ill'the industry, who, are calling as well as IVoral considerations, find 'that thr~e of every four During the coronation, Msgr. Pove St. Pius 'X chose Dante Jror reform of the production Hollywood films made in' 1959 Dante directed' the lYtovements' as a papal' master of ceremonies code.. . : were rated acceptable, that two- '0£ more than 50· cardinals, hunoi). Mar~h 25, 19.1,4, ,when he was ~The code can be and shoula thirds of the acceptable films dreds of archbishops and bish30. Pope Jo.hn recently summed be it bastion of strength for the were conside'red suitable for ops and' the whole retinue that up the Monsignor's. long <service industry against morally, and ~o young people and that not one makes up the Renaissance splenby praising his ';'competent and cially· irresponsible producers American film was condemned:" dor of the papal court~ kno~ing ·calm."· ' and exhibitors who,' if un(However, 1960 legion listings. Msgr. Dante is constantly at ~hecked, will feed and pander show that the American-made the Pope's' 'elbow, His long, ,to the baser instincts of the film "Private Property" was ivory-toned fingers move conpublic,". they said, condemned by the legion. It also stantly ,but without haste as he Suggestions' did not receive a seal of approval subtly orders remin'cts parTh!! prelates made four sug- from the Hollywood code. .' . ticipants in ceremonies to stand BUZZARDS BAY gestions to contribute to a return (In addition, another Amer": ' or sit, to put miters on or to GAS COMPANY "to responsible production and ican film, "The Private'Lives of take them off. Hyann'is-Spring 5-1070 exhibition": , Hyannis Ada!TI and Eve,", was condemned At Pope's Side B~zzards Bay-Plaza 9-4704 1.. Fmding a way to protect last year by the Legion. How~ At Pope John's coronation a youth. "A system of self-classifi335 Winter:St. Sp. 5-0079 ever, it was withdrawn from wave' of Msgr. Dante's hand cation of films by the industry general release by its producers transferred 50 visiting monsigncannot be lightly disregarded." and recently reissued. The legion ors from one side of the apse 2. Sincere, intelligent, appliLIGHTHOUSE gave it a "B"rating.) 'to the rear so that there would cation of the code in "adult, Others Critical be room for. the unexpected . GAS COMPANY oriented production." Before the B{shops' statement ,overflow of 'bishops who came armouthport-Forest 2-3898 , 3. A "radical reformation" of was issued, a study commission for the ceremony.. . the excesses lnexploiting films. WILLIAMS PROPANE Despite his unquestioned au"Pilrticularly reprehensible are of' the major federation of U. S: GAS CO., INC. not only many ':If the usual post- Pro t est ant and Orthodox Falmouth -Kimball 8-4515 ers and ads, but also the trailers churches had criticized Holly('coming, attractions') shQwn in wood. Distributed by NELSON L. P. In June, 1960, a commission of GAS CO, INC. the National Council of Churches Hyannis-Spring 5-1190 of Christ charged' that HollyEverything Beverage Co. wood fl'equently presents an Continued from Page One in SUPERIOR fUEL CO. him and ,before long he was back image of man '~often poles apart 331 Nash Rd., New Bedford Photo. Supplies Wareham-Cypress 5-0093 from the Christian understanddabbling in music. WYman 7-9937 245 MAIN ST. For three and a half years ing of m'an and his purpose." Churches were advised by the Mooney conducted the Miami Falmouth Ki 8-1918 Beach Air Corps Band 'vhere commission 'to 'establish reviewhe made a name for himself ing services to assist their con"with .sev:eral hit recordings. His gregations in evaluating films.. big chance came soon after Have your Buby shoeS cov· World War II ended when -he 'Missioner Shows How ered ttl Plastic, In Golll, Copper, or Silver, mounted on accepted, a two week en~age- Church Re,spects AgePedestal 'inehulilll\' Name and ment at New York's Lincoln Inc. Hotel. The engagement lasted LU KU HSAING (NC) - A Date of Birth. $7.00. eight months. Radio, TV and U. S.miss,ioner played host to .. . 'Book Ends $11. FUNERAL' SERVICE Movie contracts soon followed Buddhist and Taoist senior citiHaDtI Th~m Done lor X·MAS and Mooney was well on, his . zens here in Formosa to show . Art Pattern • way to fame and fortune. them" the similarity between 549 CO.UNTY ST. First Appearance Oriental veneration fqr the aged M.odel Eng•• Mfg. Co.· His. engagement" for the, and Catholic teaching on respect N~ BEDfORD, MASS. • 1I6 M~y: st.. os 9·619S Bishop's Charity"Ball will mark for elders. ' hi.s firs~ appearance in this area. Father Richard M. Devoe, And ,because of his many .hit ,. M.M.,· of Lexington, Mass., gave recordings Mooney's orchestra a .tea IJarty for all townspeople is in demand throughout. the over 60. ' , , ' nation. He w~s quick to accept the Charity Ball date however ' b~cause ~t is 'recogJ:\ized as ih~, JOSEPH M.'F, DONAGHY , ~op soc~al event· in Southern' .P.~i~~ ,'an.~ Wallpa~r AND'L()AN ,~SSOCIA.TION .OF . ~TTLF,mORO ,'.. owner/mgr. .. New Englana. ',' ,' .. 142 ':Campbell St. . Proceeds' from the affair are, .. . used; to help support Bishop New, Bedford, Mass. on 'all Scivings Acco'~nts ConnollY's many institutions and , WYm~n 9~6192 services for. underprivileged " ~.-___ ,=.' cOr, Mi~dle St. children, It is sponsored an- ' HEADQUARTERS FOR ,Bonus Savings PARKING n,ually by the Society of St. VinCOLONIAL AND' New Bedford cent de Paul and the Diocesan' . ~A~I:rI~~ALFUR.~IT~Ri! : : Council of CathOlic WomelL .
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All-Diocesan Football Team Announced Next Week
: ANCHOR-
Coa~[)l}@~ !:~O©SfE; Cat81J@~D~ ~@~B@@e
By Jack Kineavy Officially wrapping up the 1960 interscholastic grid season, as far as this corner is concerned, will beo the release of the Anchor's All-Diocesan eleven which will be published in next week's issue. Eight -SChools are represented on the first team and only those pivotman Dick Johnson of players given serious consid- Taunton. Also on the same club eration for front line honors was Mitch Kuliga, New Bedford will be listed as reserves; We High's fine tackle of a year ago. feel that this edition, the fourth Guard Bob Tavares of Somerset . was a starter on the A.I.C. Frosh a~ual All:Dlocesan team. comd f lIb ck Joe DiGiammo had st PCrltsheSlithe ffmet r":~;F;' ..~ :ngre~t se~son at Dean Academy. aoc 00, .. ball talent in 'Banquet CIrCUI~ the area. The banquet season-:-Jocularly At the risk of termed the rubber chIcken loop slighting some -,is already in lull swing. The of the previous Football Officials' affair, held All _ Diocesan . last week at the Copicut Lodge, choices who ~.. ~.;.,~ ~ort~ D~r~outh, was. an early s u b s e - l~\'" Clrcwt highllght. The dmner was quently entered '. attended by a host of coaches coli e g e and who, together with members of continued to e x - · the Fourth Estate and radio, eel on the gridiron, we point were guests of the Southeastern with pride to young men such Board. So much for football for as Bob ABack of the '57 team, the moment. now a junior at Columbia UniBy the time this article versity and a unanimous All-Ivy reaches print the local high tackle nominee for the season school hoop season will have just concluded. Also prominent been launched. Coyle and Preon that first Diocesan club were vost had the honor last Tuesday Dave Yelle B.C.'a standout - night at the Boys Club in Fall guard, Steve Turkalo of B.U. and River. The game was an exhiColumbia's Tony Day. bition affair, the first of many From the '58 contingent come in which teams will engage beBob Hargrayes, one of Dr. Eddie fore moving into their official Anderson's f i v e scintillating league contests during the week Sophomores at ~{oly Cross; Char- of Dec. 18. ley Carey, a starting guard at Durfee's hoop fortunes were Colby and Paul Levesque, a re- shaken last week with the hosserve fullback on the Boston pitalization of star playmaker, College equad. Overlooked that Barry Machado. Barry was year quite inadvertently, was stricken by an appendicities atDick Bonalewicz who has had tack but an operation' was not a terrific year for Colby. Bonnie deemed necessary and the diwas voted Sophomore lineman. minutive guard is now recuperof the week after a stan~~ut ating at home. Coach Tom--Karperformance in the Trlmty 'am, in his first year at the Hillgame. toppers' helm, is putting a vetLast year's stars haven't yet eran squad through their paces made the varsity scene but sev- at the. spacious Fall River eral have been tabbed for future Armory. delivery. One of the most highly Coyle Small regarded is B. U.'s fledgling Look for Coyle High to field a small but fast and aggressive team. Coach John O'Brien reports that the Warriors have no Continued from Page One and Holland as examples of starters over six feet. Jerry Cuneountries where population ex- niff and Dick Brezinski;'the onepansion has stimulated economie two punch of Jim Burns' championship grid squad, are exand political development. offensive picture. "Countries that surmount the Warriors' challenge of population pressure . pected to assume key roles in the emerge with a civilization not Coyle. Coyle split a couple of only wealthier, but also !D0re pre-season scrimmages wit h cultured, more scientific. and Middleboro and Warren, losing better organized politcially than to the latter in a close contest. The situation at Prevost is enthat which went before," he says. He writes that India now faces couraging. The Leafs .have been the same challenge of popula- working out for a month under tion pressures that was success- Coach Angie Stavros and they fully faced earlier by countries appear set for the four game exhibition schedule that will like Great Britain and Japan. "There is no need for pessi- carry them up to their Narry mism' if the Indian rice grower opener with Holy Family on Dec. obtai~ed the same yield for acre 20. In the starting array are as the Japanese, he could feed Jay Lambert, a 6-3 center, fornearly four times as many peo- wards Bernie' Petit and Roger ple as he does now," Mr. Clark Sorel and backcourtmen Ron Berube and Dennis Pontes. continues. The announcement from New "Population pressure is probably the only force strong Haven that a committtee had enough to overcome the intense been appointed to study the reconservatism of the Indian peas- moval of the city's teams from ant. In the unlikely event of that the New England tourney threw pressure's being removed by the a bombshell into the hoop ranks late last week. The expense inwholesale adoption of family limitation most of the stimulus volved, presumably, is at the root to econo~ic development would of the problem. On several occasions it has come about that the be removed with it," two tourney entries which ConFiction Mr. Clark dismisses as fiction necticut is eligible to enter have the claim that two-thirds of the come from New Haven and the fathers believe a re-evalworld's present popUlation is town uation is in order. hungrry. The action of the New England "A considerable proportion" of the world's population exists on Council of Secondary School a rather dull' diet, he concedes, Prin!;ipa~ Association on Saturbut actual hunger "appears to day will. however,' preserve the be confined to comparatively .tourney format through 1961 and isolated areas in Asia and possibly '62. The Council moved Africa, and even in these cases that Ii wttlidrawai. notification hunger is intermittent rather must b!l provid'ed by May I, 1961 and that"such withdrawal would than continuous." Mr. Clark declares that if all not be effective until one' year the world's arable land were from that date. This should incultivated according to Dutch sure the appearance of the talented Nutmegs next March. at farmlDg methods, enough food c:ould be produced to accommo-' least.. date a total population of 28 K. C. billion-10 times the 1960 P9PuST. LOUIS (NC)-The Knights lation-on a diet equal to that of the peoples of the most prosper- of Columbus now has a billiondollar:: insurance business, Suous countries today. And, he adds, if japanese preme Knight Luke E. Hart said. methods of farming ,and stand- He told a Fourth .pegree exemardsof diet were used, the world plification here that K. of C. c:ould provide for "three or foUl' insurance in force climbed $122,- . times as many again." 581,000 during the past ye;yt
BROOKLYN (NC)-University of Detroit coach Jim Miller is coach of the year and Detroit guard Ton~' Asher is player of the year on the Tablet's ninth annual Catholic-college All-American football team. Chosen for the Brooklyn diocesan newspaper by the nation's Catholic college coaches. other players with Asher on thl' major college All-American team are: Ends: Steve Stonebreaker. Detroit, and Jim Mullen, Xavier (Ohio); tackles: Ken Schaffer. Marquette, and Bob DeMarco. Dayton; guard: Myron Pottios. Notre Dame; center: Danny Ferriter, Marquette; backs: Jen:: Gross of Detroit, Ron Costello of Xavier (Ohio), Andy Timur.. of Dayton. and Tom Hennesse;' of Holy Cross.
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Thurs., Dec. 8, 1960'
STANG iJIiDOPSTERS: Members of Bishop Stang High School's basketball team confer with coach Jack McCann. Left to right, Tom Giasson. McCann, John Keroack, Brian McMahon.
Named to the small college All-American are: ends: Gernt' Kramer, St. John's (Minn.), ant:...Larry .Muff, St. Benedict's: tackles: Vic Roos, St. J()seph'~: {Ind.), and Tom O'Reilly, St. John's (Minn.); guards: Charle:: Branda, St. Mary's (Kans.), ane: Frank Walker,. King's (Pa.): center: Bob Taglieri, St. lV1ary'~ (Kans.); backs: Larry Buch, 51 Norbert's, Dick Hemza of 51 Procopius, Ray Ranieri of Carroll (Mont.) and Charles Taylor of St. Mary's (Kans.).
Bishop Stang Quintet at Norton Tom'orrow Night for Opener Bishop Stang High School will side scrimmage against Westport open its first basketball season High School, but a full schedule at 6:30 tomorrow night against faces them from now on with 14 the Norton High School Lancers. games slated for the sophs and The Stang Spartans have been 17 for the frosh. working out for the past two weeks with their new coach, Jack McCann. First practice session found 80 CHICAGO (NC)-Mediocrity boys answering Coach McCann's poses a destructive danger for call. He has now cut· the squad the U.S., Archbishop Bernard to 25. Twelve boys will comprise J. Sheil told 300 business leadthe sophomore unit,13 the freshers at the annual dinner of the man. . Chicago Medical ~-"~oI. Boys showing a great deal of The Archbishop, who is 8ft proinise to date are Tom Giasson, Auxiliary Bishop of Chicago, John Keroack and Ronald Roszsaid the present age can be dekiewicz of New Bedford and scribed as the era of "the suArthur Rebello and Bryan Mc- premacy of mediocrity," Mahon of Fall' River. .Roszkiewicz and Keroack are 6'3" and Giasson is 6'1". Biggest handicap facing Coach McCann is actual ga'me experience, but the boys are working Est: 1897 hard and should improve as the " season progresses. Builders Supplies The Spartans have had one out-
Archbishop Stresses Danger of Mediocrity
SAYE MONEY' 'ON I
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Stonehill College will hold its annual scholarship examination for high school seniors 'at 9:30 this Saturday morning on the college campus. A number of full and half scholarships will be awarded to qualified high school seniors who receive a high mark in the examination, who are in need of aid to make a college education possible, and who show promise of superior 'college performance. Seniors planning to take the examinatio:q are requested to inform the college scholarship committee by postcard.
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Stonehill Sets Annual Scholarship Test
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The Stonehill College Guild will hold its annuual Christmas Party today at the Student Union Building on the. lower college campus. Guests will include Rev. Richard H. Sullivan. C.S.S., president of Stonehill. and Rev. James V. Lowery, C.S.C., Guild chaplain. Miss Margaret C. Murphy of North Easton, Guild president. will speak briefly.
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