12.12.57

Page 1

Charity Ball" Jan. 8

For Needy Children

An Al1r.hor of the Soul. Sure rmdF'irm-ST.

Fall River, Mass. Vol. 1, No. 36

PAUL

Thursday, Dec. 12, 1951

Se.ond (;Ia•• Mail Privilell'es Authorized at ~'all River, Ma••.

PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year

The 1958 Bishop's Charity Ball .to be held on Wednesday, Jan. 8, in Lincoln Park's MillionDQllar Ballroom will be under the auspices of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and the ~ociety of St. Vincent de Paul. Mrs. Mary Almond of New Bedford and H. Frank Reilly of Fall Rivet, presidents of the~r repectivegroups, are co-chairmen of the affair which is 'held annually for the benefit of the under­ .privileged children of the Diocese and the St. Vincent de Paul Health Camp. The Charity Ball will feature one of the rare appearances of Lester Lanin and his orchestra whose playing engagements read like a Who's Who of America listing. This past year Lanin played at the Tiffany Ball ~n Newport which was given nationwide publicity through a picture story in Life Magazine. His orchestra was also retained to play for the Monte Carlo Ball held in honor of Prince Rainier and Princess Grace (Kelly). Turn to Page Four

Crash Program Could Endanger American Ideals WASHINGTON (NC)­ Congress will be back at work after the. start of the new year and once again ed­ FIFTY YEARS AS PASTOR: Rt. Rev. Msgr.AntoniQ P. Vieira gives thanks for the portrait of himself presented 1;0 hIm' at Lincoln Park Sunday evening at a testimonial banquet celebrating his Golden Jubilee as pastor of Our Lady of Moun't Carmel Church, New Bedford. To his left are the Most Reverend Bishop and Antone B. Santos, general iay chairman of the affair.

Thousands of' Visitors See Briliiant'LaSalette Shrine Once again all the pageantry of Christmas is. open to the thousands of visitors who annually wend their way to the Shrine of Our Lady of La Salette at Attleboro in eager anticipation to behold this wonderful panorama dedicated to the Prince of Peace. Christmas, that thousands of visFor the fifth year the itors may bow down in humble 30,000 multi-colored bulbs . adoration at the Crib of their set in various designs are illuminated to. symbolize the Light of the World who came to illuminate the darkness of man's world and to point out the true path along which he is to' walk. The purpose of the Christmas lights at the La Salette SN-ine is to commemorate the Birthday of .Jesus Christ, that great event which marked the beginning of a new era in the history of man, an era of freedom, of love and of peace. Dedicated to this ideal, the La Salette Fathers and Brothers at the Shrine in Attleboro each year expend their time and ef­ fort to put on this beautiful Christmas display so that the true meaning of Christmas may be brought home to all, that Christ may be put back into

ucation is' a major issue to be faced.' . . This time, however; there will 'be a new twist. There will be not only' the qu-estion of Federal aid to education, and what form it should take. ,There will also be the question of what Amer­ ican education itself should be like in ·the years just ahead. The international competiti0!l in the launching of ~arth satel­ lites and missiles has brought a demand in this country for'more science courses in our curricula. As a general proposition <this cail Turn to Page Five

Renew Decency.

Pledge Sunday

The following Legion of De­ cency Pledge will be renewed 'by _ Catholics of the Diocese on S~n­ God and learn therefr.oni ~he day: IN THE NAME OF THE message of pe?ce and lov.e ~hlch FATHER AND OF THE SpN ,He came to give us.. ThiS IS the AND OF THEHOLY GHOST. Turn to Page EIghteen AMEN.' . I condemn indecent and im­ moral motion pictures, and those which glorify c'rime or criminals. I promise to do all that I can to strengthen public opinion CHICAGO (NC)-In dis­ against the production' of. inde­ tributing ~ts list: of publica­ and immoral films, and to . tions deemed objectionable cent unite with all who protest for youth, the National Of­ against them. fice for Decent Literature is I acknowledge my obligation . endeavoring to arouse public to form a right conscience about opinion against printed smut, pictures that are dangerous to NOD L's executive secretary my moral life. As a member of said. the Legion of Decency, I pledge Msgr. Thomas J. Fitzgerald in myself to remain away from a statement released at the of­ them. I promise, further to stay fice's headquarters here said that away altogether from piac~s of the organization sponsored by amusement which show them.as Turn to Page Eleven a. matter of policy.

Seek to Protect Sacred R;ghts

~

MRS. MARY ALMOND'

. H. FRANK REILLY

Pope's Address Sane Guide ,On Artificial Respiration The autho1' of the following article is a p1'ofesso1' of 1Itoml theology in the School of Sam'ed Theology at the Catholic Univel'sity of A?lter­ ica. He 1'eti1'ed 1'ece1ttly as dean of that school and now, in addit·io1t t. h·is teaching d:uties, is dean for 1'eligious co1ltmu.nities at the unive1'sity.

By ~ev. Francis i. Connell, C.SS.R. His Holiness. Pqpe Pius XII has provided a sane and moderate guide for those faced with 'an increasingly com­ mon, problem-,-the use of artificial means to prolong the life of a person who is' surely dying. The Pontiff's recent state- would allo~ ~. person s~ffering ment on reanimation to the from a hopeless ailment to. be put· International Congress' of to death by some direct means .. .. and the theory that every posAnesthetIst~ Is ..a stnkl!1 g sible means must be used to keep ~xample of hiS abI1l~y and wIllmgness to cope With modern scien~ific problems. and to give a defimte response m accordance wit~ .tradition~l principles of. ChrIstian te.achl~g.. . .The most m~erestmg portIo~ of hiS addre.ss IS. the declaration tha~ one IS oblIged to use onI! o.rdm!lry means to prolong hiS lIfe. I He said that even when life could be preserved a li~tl~ longer b~ s~ch mea~s as artifiCIal res~)lratlOn, one IS not bound to use ~t, but may allow nature to run ItS course and death to ensue. This· is the teaching of the Catholic Church as now proclaimed by the Vicar of Christ. It is a middle course between the pagan theory of euthanasia that

a person alive, even when death would be a relief. This latter theory is actually unchristian for it exaggerates the importance of earthly life. ChristiBns should always re­ member that the principal pur­ pose of life on earth is to prepare for eternity. When one has used all ordinary means to preserve his health and life and has made use of the sacraments established by Jesus Christ to insure eternal salvation, there is no reason why he may not abstain from further efforts to lengthen his term of life on earth and calmly accept death with the glad hope of life eternal. The Sovereign Pontiff was answering three questions pro­ ;I'urn to Page Twent,.

Franciscan Sisters Labor of Love

How Holy Communion Hosts Are Made

By Pat.ricia McGowan You receive Holy Com­ !nunion once a month,. once a week, possibly daily? You know that what you receive is the Real Presence of Our . Lord, !.mder the appearance of bread. But do you ever wonder about the process by which the thin wafer which the priest places on your tongue is pre­ pared for its wondrous role? It is fitting and usually the ease that communities of Sisters are entrusted with the task of preparing the bread that is to become Christ. One such com­ munity· is that of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary at St. An­ thony's(:onvent, 621 Second Street, Fall River. In a tiny room on the third 800r Qf the 1l4-~ear old building, Mother

Mary Vincent d'Aquila has for­ 18 years lovingly performed the task of supplying hosts to churches and institutions of the Fall River area. In that time she estimates she has baked some nine million. hosts and nearly half a million large hosts of the sort consumed by the priest at Mass and used for Benediction and Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament. "To think that I have contri­ buted to half a million Masses makes me very happy," says Mother Mary Vincent in her lilting French accent. "I work at making hosts for two days 'a week, about seven hours each day," she continued. ~'Of course, we are not the only suppliers in the dioc~se, but at varying times we provide hosts to from 29' to as many as 40 churches and'insti­ tutions. one of our largest 'cua-

tomers' being St. Mary's Cathe­ dral." The Franciscan Missionaries of Mary follow an ancient tradi- . tion in supplying altar. breads. St. Francis himself, Mother Mary Vincent told us, .baked hosts for Mass, using the primitive equip­ ment of his time, two heavy pieces of iron heated nearly red hot, then pressed together like a present-day waffle iron, with the thin dough for the hosts be­ tween them. Now, of course, the method of baking hosts has been streamlined, but the spirit of St. Francis, is still strong in the little convent. on Second Street, and Mother tends her electric baker with all the devo­ tion of her illustrious predeces­

sor. Proudly. she showed us her immaCUlate equipm.ent, starting Turn. to Page Ten

THANKS FOR LIBERATION FROM DACHAU: This painting of Our Lady of Czestochowa· was given to West Point Military Academy by Edward Chmurzynski in appre­ ciation for 'the U. S. Army's liberating him in 1945 during a death march to Dachau concentration camp. It will hang in Most Holy Trinity Chapel.


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THE ANCHOR, .... . Thu;'s,;De~oo 1:2. T95~'

Bishop Receives

SercLT'an BU!l'se ,

The Serra Club of, Fall River presented a Seminary Burse to Most Rev. James L. Connolly at its annual Bishop's Night at the ,Hotel Mellen.' In its aims to , further vocations and 'cooperate with the Bishop .in the ed4cation of young men for the priesthood, Dr. Raymond R. Cosfa, fir'st vice­ , president, made the presentation in the name ,of the club. In' accepting the burse, the Bishop designated the' Serra Club as an Sighth Sacrament be- \ cause its members are always endeavoring to bring grace to BISHOP'S NIGHT AT SERRA: The Most Reverend other people. Bishop Connolly FORMER STUDENTS OF BISHOP CONNOLLY:

Bishop speaks to Dr. Raymond R. Costa, first vice-president further stated that the Serran's Bishop-elect. Leonard P. Cowley, left, has bee'n named

of the Fall River Serra Club, and Mrs. Costa as the group ideals can be a grea't contribu­ Auxiliary Bishop to Archbishop Brady of St. Paul. Bishop.

ting force to the development, elect Alphonse SchladweiJer, right, has been appointed first observes its 'Annual Bishop's Night ,at the Hotel Mellen~ of spiritual ideals' that are so Bishop of the new Diocese of New VIm, Mimi. Both Bishops­ \ necessary, in this age of groping for higher values. . elect were students under .~hop ConnoIiy in the ,St. Paul Absolutism is too' prevalent in Seminary. ~C Photo. , t h i s age, and rivals'the era of ancient Rome when 80 to 90 per .The thousands of fragments of Dead Sea Scrolls now cent of the people were slav~s, being studied in Jerusalem by international committee of He cautioned all present that scholars may yield more'infoI'lll:ation than' the first .seven passions take freedom away and scrolls of the find, according' to Rt. Rev. Matthew P. Staple- . the less freedom we have, the Rev, Neil. G. McCluskey, S.J., S,C.N,; Sister Therese Anna, D S S L ' t less liberty we possess., education editor of America, adS.U.S~C.,assistant principal at t ·on, S'T . . ., . ', ., Vice-rec or th e Soli ' Sl:ml'lar to the The meetl'ng w·as c~osed wI'th ' " S ' cr s IS dressed the general meeting of St. Mary's High School, Taunton;, S John s emmary" Greek translation of the Old Tes- the recitation of the Prayer for representatives' from colleges Sister' Mary "Carmelita, R.S,M." of ,t. Brighton. tament;· in other places; 'it re:J:' Vocations. and secondary schools at 'the Holy Family High, New Bedford; . The' lecture on the' pearl sembles the traditional Hebrew During the evening, entertainmorning session of tlie third 'a'nSister Ignatius; O.P., prip.cipal of· Sea Scrolls was giveri at Stone-' '. text" .... ~': ...-"."> • menf ~was' :pre~el1.ted· by ~pupils' . Dual' meeting of the' NCEA Re Dominfcan Acadetny, Fa"!l Rive~~ hill Cbllege 'under the sponsor.:.·" The first seven scrolls in Jhe of the Anthony ,Im.briglio Studio ,.gionat'Unit held at Boston"Col": ' and Brothel," Rich'ard" O'Brieh, I , " ship 'Of the SaxoriSocie'ty,' the." Dead Sea find ,.were )IM~ht,'bY : oihd Sym~honic Band. The mu-' lege last Saturday. ' , " 'C:S.C;,' took-\·the 'platform 'and ," HOfi(>( Slitiety; .of 'the"'c~liege: ·}~ra.el, and ~epose in the. Israel~ ., si~~l portion <;,f.the progr~m, w~s. Referring to the de.tailed ques- '. ,e~ch 'gave 'a te.~um~'of~the.·high ' ",' Edward E-oster of Taunto!l;'pres~~ . sector 'of '.Terusalem. ,The (r~?-: ,: cl~sed by c~a~slcal se~ectlOns by' " tionnairE! which colleges arid'uni- ' , points- 'of tIieir. respective' di's-' , I', , dent served as chairman:' ::", ments how und,er study 'are m'; MISS NatalIe C~sta,. mezzo-so- ,v~rsities'must answer wlien ap'; 'cussi6ns, '" .. "', "": MdffsignorStapieton; 'profes~. the. Joraani seCtor of tile city; " pr,~no;llcc~lTlpamed'b~' Mrs: AI- ... 'plying for a Chapter of Phi Beta .. The m~etihg closeo with a' Vote' .:' sor of"Sci-ipture a.i'the di<;>cesan '." "ThoseBibli~ill scholar!,! of all \., b'ert Petit.· " " ':', " . , . ,:Kappa~ sch61astic horior society , 'Jf thatiks 'to 'the" (j'utgoing of- ";,, Semirt~rYandcbnstiltanff6r'the.' )aitl~s ·and. 'nationalities dedicat.,. , F.:ather 'McClilSkeY"phoia(Il!d"fo;', 'fleers, Brother Leo and Sister'" "~I Catholic Biblical 'Association of '}'ng themselves' to the: difficult" g.r~:s mote 'conscientious 'effort John'Elizabeth, S';U.s.C:, prir\cr':' America," said" the' explorin~ . t~sk of explaining the whole e ' . the part of Catholic edu6at6r~'to~' pal Of' Sacred Heart Academy, scho,~a.h.,~dp·e? t~e.'sc,~olls ~o~ld qllesti6nof the,Dead:,S~~ Sci'QI~s':':,. rat~ t'l0rlS, " ~eet' 'th'e' ~igh 'lev~~-, of, r'riteil~c-',." "Fall ,~i,~er,. .f0~, th.eir.. ~~r~·' in ,,':::' throw)~f:~t on~ome of the ob-,.1,eserve our,trl~ute, ttie, Mon-, "The, fo}19wing'~eleg;ram"w!ls,,tural achleve~ent, and to set ,," preparmg, ~n: l,nte~,,:sbn.g ~nd, ,,1' scure l>omts of the Old Testa-, .,s~gnor declared. , ,,' .... 'received'by theRt. Rev,Msgroo . such ",a: goa}.,.'.for"studentsand' .. ~rofi~b1e p.rog~am~" '"." ' , ment. .. "... The majoritY-of sCholars" Antonio'P. Vieira on 'the occa:.. faculty.' ',' :. . . , ' . ',' "T~.e·t~x't?~ ~he'Old Testament ',(Mon~igrior. Stapleton among sion of hisG~i?e!l JUbilee.aspas~', 'Msgr.. O~Leary follOwed: the' \ . • n ... y :'" . ., of the ,BIble IS ':lot ,100 per cent them} accept the Scrolls as tor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel same ,tram of thought and made" . 1,<?~AWA (NC) ~ ~c.hblshop , , perfectly. "preserved," he. 00ancient but a few hold to "the 'ChurcbNew Bedford: , . , ' , a strong plea for more arid bet- ,PhllipF. Pocock of''Ymmpeg'has'",''' served. "So~eof the language in belief they are medieval ' I t is' a' pr\vilage to 'join the ',ter.coursesin.high school to meet been.' ~eelec.ted preSIdent' of . the ,.' ,"'~' . , _' member 'of your 'parish and all the needs of ·the gifted students. ,admmlstrabve board of the Can- ' '" AnCient Sect. " s,', ' . . ,adianCatholic C f t the" • ' .','. " • your friends. in New Bedford as He ,proposed a pOSSible Saturday. , . on ere~ce, a· . FRIDAY-St. Lucy, Virgin and' The, Dead. Sea Scrolls which·' th' ... tr'b t t ., .ny program for ,the exceptionally' ,annua~ hierarchy meetmg. Two' '" Martyr., Double. Red. Mass have taken powerful hold on the, ' .ey p~y l:U ~ '~hyo~r bright· chosen by examination "cardinals and 66 of Cana'da's 81 . S econ,d C 0 11ec t public an ..ou yeatrtas°d·servlf:e 0 . em' bY' college', ,archbishops and ,bisho.ps at" . al·n 'w·l'th c'lasses taught . . Gl0I:la; P roper; ' . imagination, concern . s n mg Igure m . . ' .

t h e ~e 1of the Sunday; Third' Collect ,anclen~s.ectamo?gthe JllwS who ·gious ahd civ,ic life of New Bed- professors. ~end~d the sessIOns.

fori Rai~;".No .€ree~; '90m~Qn f~lt :I~~al JU.d~Isn;"i:ta~;l~t~re-." ford, yoti have: won ihe respect ,Referring. to the emphasis ;-;;-;;-;;;. ....;"",;,;;.;.:.,;,;.:;,,;,;==:;;."',-'" Prdace. " 0 = " ' t ';h~Plr.. ~ t.e dt ~andaffectionofawidecomiJiun..:,pl~ced toda.y''';~n.the nee,d ~bt' " '. " '" ,": SATURDAY-Mass of' P~~vious dent,: 'h IS .~et c .' redlre, 0 I.e" , ity: By. faith 'arid woi"k:You haye' scIence and math, Msgr; O'Leary ., .. ". " ,," l S un ~d eser. ,were, 't 1 ,Ive a re ' 1-' ,'st"'· " "'d .til e· '1'Ives ... '0 f :many .' was emphatic ,in . demandipg a <. ' .• " ,kr ay, S·'Imp l' e. 'V'M I e t, "M ass g'o d .. gasthtl . reng• tit ene . . " , ,',: Proper; No Gloria': or Creed; .~ us c?m~um y urm . ~,me:':~hd your exampleQf extraorcli- s,trong program of class!~s 'and '~rM.wj" ' C ' f"' ,. 'I .;< of Christ m an area qUIte close" ' . . ' 1 ' ., '.. "languages " " , . , . . ",' , ' S ec:.0nd · 9,Hect" Or ~~ ~a ~.; ", tb Bethlehem, and Jer.usalem:",nary .ch~rlty wIl, ~eve~ ce.ase to' . :";. ' ';' ,,~,', Th~~d Col,l~,ct. fo~ Pt;l\c~; Cp~~ ... :"",, ".., ' " ,', .~~ tlie. ~ource of 'msPIratIo~'.,to . .' .iUtern.oo~ Sessl~D,. , .,: . " · .....t m~!1 Preface; :" ,. _ "f' Tho~g~. w_e, do not, behc"e y,our' neIghbors; Congratulations "At the aftern~n ses.slon of, the '. ;"., ~. , .;, I.. . ~. ere SUNDAY• .,.--, Gaudete . ,Sunday. • th~y , ~he Es~e~es, ano~h,e~, ,and ,oestwishes, ' " ,,-.' Seconda1?".School U mt;' ~rother, Dou,ble.: of. J Class" Rose. or. "r~liglous' co~mumty, ~,hey' ~e~e, ,', DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER ,Leo as,~lia~r?,an se~ the ~att~rri' , ' / V'ol t M p ' . N Gl ,.v~ry much hke,them, SaId the "., .'forthe ',mdlvldualdlsctisslOnsby 'If •.,.L • .\ ct.·d7~~·:°.pf7r"f:To··r (Monsignor. "H'ls believed by! " ',havirlgthe".grouP' divided' into' W",.,·:· .", A' ," :".'",' ". <;'"" rtai l ee, ,re~~e 0 nm~. some .that'John' the Baptist in"":"" . . . . . _ ,', '. , , .. five ~ctions. " "" ,omen,s. ppare, , "', MO~?AY'~'JMass'o~"PreyiMs h!s ye'ars'in'the desert'might"i::"Th~,.:AIlo,stolic Delegate in "Concluding"the program"'in""'" '.... ," .... ' . 1'. 'i", Supday:. 'SImple. ylol,et. NlaS~f h~ve ~had' ,contact with them~" ~ash,ingt?n, Most" Re~: .JUnI~to '" ,general session, the discussioii '::' 262" Union St.' New Bedfo;d Proper, No GlOria or Cr~ed, Years after Christ's death, the' . Clcognam, -D.D" ye~terday, ,an:-" lead~rs, ,.Sister," Hugh Francis,"

Fragments of'l;)ead Sea Scrolls Clarify Obscure ,8ible Points

Diocesan Representatives Attend Armll1ualConference at Boston

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TUESDAY - Mass of Previous Acts of the Apostles.'" General, Secretary to the N. Coo

Sur~day. Simpie. y,iolet. Mass In the light of the publicity W. C., now Bishop of' Altoona­ Proper; No. G,lona o~ Cre~d; ~ttending the discovery of. t~e Johnstown, Penn.; Idost . Rt;v. Sec,ond Collect' for Ram; Third· Scrolls, however, ·the Monsignor ~laren~e G,., ..I,sse~m~n?, :,-uxIl-:, Coi(~ect ,f9r Peace;. COffilllon saw a danger" that-other.equally ~~y BI~hop "m Cmcmnat~! w,~s Prf.'face., \. ; .'. ' , ' , " impC)rtilnt discoveries,might be ¥,anferred to C?I~t:Jlbus, Op~C), ,WEDNESDAY-Mass of Ember overlooked. One'such discov.e&, ~~' the new Or:dma~y; R,t:, .Rev. We9nesday in,A.dvent.SimIlle. ,he.said, was a manuscript going V;lctor J .. ~e~9., Re~tor Qf ,the Violet. 'Mass Proper; No Glo~ . back to 200 A.D. which contains ~,?-C.atQ.edral, r~lsa,~.as· been ria or Creed; Second Collect the first 14 chapters of St: John's _a~P!?ll'1ted Au:uhary. BI:;l1o p to for Rain; Third :'Colle~t ,"for GO~t ··~Th..athasI!.'t been pubBIshop Mc~uInness, Tulsa and Peace; Common 'pref!lc,~: _.' :' -licIied ~ml!<;h"'" he pointedout. :Oklahoma CltY,Okla. THURSDAY.~Mass':ol Prevlou's', . ',~. ',' ..' , . " :. Suriday. Simple. Violet'. Mass'" ~-;· "'~~~~~!ll!IIl.

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St. Vincent de Paul Report"" Lists" Works of Mercy

Asks' Americans To Understand Indian Policy

The Eighth Annual Report of the Diocesan Central' Council of the St. Vincent de Paul Society h~s been released. The report covers the period from Oct. 1,' 195f?, to Sept. 30, 1957 and includes reports of the five Particular, or regional, Councils: Fall River, New . During the last year'the Most Bedford, Taunton, the Cape Reverend Bishop ,appointed the and Islands, and' Attleboro. Rev. William D, Thomson of St. The 90 parish Conferences Mary:s Parish, Norton to be Dicome : under ,these Councils.

Particular

't Easy It Isn To Go to lNp.Otal Mass In Red Cu

NEW YORK (NC)­ Father Jerome'D'Souza, S.J., a United Nations delegate from lnaia. told students of Fordham University that the political policy of India has been "misunderstood in many instances by the people of the

United States,"

ocesa~

Spiritual Director, succeeding the Rev, Thomas H.

Taylor of.I~macul~te Conception

Father D'Souza, a member of India's advisory committee to the UN speaking on "The Role of India in the United Nations," noted that the differences in for­ the gratitude of'all the 816 mem'eign policy between the United bers of the Society to Father States and India have caused Taylor for his guidance through much . distress among India's EAST friends in this country. The dlf· ST. M LOUI~ . M (NC)- the past years. Edwarc~ J. Lyons, treasurer of ferences in policy, he declared, A tten d mg ass moscow is not the easiest thing in the the Central Council; gives the, exist "in the problems of alll­ world. financial statement of the 'Cenance, 'disarmament and regional Rep. Melvin E. Price of East tral Council, and Regional and pacts." St. Louis made this observation Parish financial statements are Foreign Assistance after returning from a four-week also included.' ' Father D'Souza said that India trip puring which he visited It is interesting to note that in VINCENTIANS MEET AT' NOTRE DAME-: Members today is a synthesis of old and atomic power installations in the Diocese 1746 families and f th e Fa 11 R'lyer Particular Council of the St. Vincent de new" both on th,e political and d' , 0 ' England, Sw:eden, Denmark and 5707 10 IVlduals were assisted by social plain. "We have lived in the Soviet Union. the"Society during the year cov- Paul Society held their Annual Communion Breakfast Sundivergency for centuries," the Relating his impressions, Mr, ered. There are 397 families on day at Notre Dame, Church. Speaking with the Most Jesuit de~lared. This divergency Price said that a visitor to Mos- the rolls at present, and 6406 vis- Reverend Bishop are, from left to right, Jerome D. Foley, still exists in the prevalent old cow leaves with no doubts as to its to families and institutions president of the Particular Council, Albert Petit, president socialist form of government and the status of religion there. ' in the process of helping people. f h the challenging new democratic o t e Notre Danie Conference, Rev. Gerard Boisvert He ,told how he and Rep, Spiritual Works " ' form, ,he observed. He main­ .James'T. Patterson of ConnectiSince the Society aims at not spiritual director of the Notre Dame Conference.' , tained that India, formerly a colony, is weary of foreign aseut, had set about finding'a Cath- only corporal but spiritual works olic church where they could at- of mercy, the report lists the sistance for fear of domination. tend Sunday Mass. number of the marriages valiFrom his countJ:Y'S point of A clerk at the Intourist bureau, dated" baptisms' arranged, chilview, Father D'.Souza said, "the assured them that there was :4ren induced to attend parochial , American way of life cannot be Mass at St. Peter's Church. An ' schools, and catechism classes' The followi:ng a,:ticle 'Was written by the Re'v. F'ranci8 X.'Wallace' accepted in totality because of embassy car took them the~e" persons induced to return t~ 'a p,'icllt of the Diocese of Fall River, now a Captlfinin' the Chap{ai,: India's sochilist background." , ~s_they approached the building, religious duties, prayer' books Corps 'of the' Armiy·stat'ioned at Fort Benning, Ga. Father Wallace "India's determination is to Mr. Price related, it seemed and religio'us' material distrib':' 8erved for three yeal'B in Corpu.s Ch1'l.8ti PiLl'ish, Sandwich, and has' achieve disarmament among na­ abandoned.' uted, and converts. Thisis'some been' a Chaplain since,1950. This artiCle appearcd in The, Bayonet, tions," Father D'Souza empha­ , "We felt this was the wrong pf the in.;>st Satisfying work done a' wecklJI"newsp'ape,' pnblished /'0'1' the military and civ'ilianp'e'r80nnel sized, noting: that the more place. It was d~serted. A higq. 'by the members and work that 'of Fort Bcmling. . , people who ,possess weapons, the fel'ice surrounded it and the en- is not always realized by those " 'The ,!'ppearal1ce 'of sputnik on gained wealth and' fame bu't we harder 'it' is to' control them. He ~rance gates were closed by a o!-ltside the Society. ' th~' American' scene ~as SUe,:, • have lost the:fervor'of the early asserted. thEir-e'must be an end to chain looped around ,8 post and , 'The report cc:imments on the ceeded in startling the nation:, ,American faith in God. The great all atomic and hydrogen explo­ fastened with a padlock," he BishQp's Charity, Ball"th'e St. Thrilling possibilities of vast American sPirit of 'independence' sions. Vincent de Paul Retreat and the' 'riew' areaS 'of human ~ndeavor .. came' from ,Ii 'deep 'sense Of de., ,India' adopted such a resolu­ Said. ' . "Just as we were 'about to 'Health Camp., Four 'hundred" have explode,d,with dramatic,im-, pendence on God. Can it"be that' , ,tion, he said. but it was recently leave, w:e noticed an elderly' boys from all parts of the'Diocese pact on the American imagina~ "the iesson' ,of sputnik is. that we defeated' l>Y:, members of the Russian woman approach the enjoyed thirteel1-day stays at tiO:n. Accomp~nying this impac~, have transferred our trust in the Ul}ited N,!~ion,s. However, he gate, which stood ajar just t,h~ ·yamp. An. integrated pro:'" casting, ,il, sinister shadow, over" Creator to' faith in 'false 'gods ~f., added, India 'will cOntinue its enough to permit a person to sli~ gram of spiritual and r.ecrea·':' ,this historic vent\lre'into space; wealth"h.lxury' and success? Has ,. efforts to attain world disarma­ through.'" tiona I activ~ties under'the direc-, 'is the disquieting realization, that sputl'lik'shown us up for what we merit. ' .. , The Congressme'n took this as tion of seminarian counselors . a potential- enemy: has pioneered' have become? ',.. " . " , '~;;';::~'~~"~~~';:;::::;;::~;: an, indication that they had come made, the. camp season an' out:- ,the proj~ct... ' ,: .. 'American 'Spirit· , f####-~####"'#####-;'#######to' the riglll place and alSo, ~tanding one. To the man .in the street sput" " Dependence 'on God is esSeri­ L alipped through the gate: nik, seems more Ii fearfUl chal': tiar. to the:true American, spirit:, , THE ALL NEW CAR Inside, a Russian priest offered lenge than ai>ossibl~ .bli~ssing, . Realization, 'of· God and acting an 8:30 A. M. Mass, according to National confidence from coast to accordingly is true religion, If, FOR 1958 Mr. Price. The Intourist reprecoast ,has received it jolt. 'We can ,we I,tnow Ood, realize our total " See and Drive It

sentative had told the Anterican ' no' :longei ,alford the luxury of dependence on His divine Prov­ ' t

legislators "that the Russian .comphicency. idence, then the orily htanly, AL' ,,-:w

priest was merely "mUng in'~ For Years, unconsdouslyper- right, and logical. choice for BERT E. SMITH until an Ameri~an priest arrive~ : INDIANAPO~IS (NC-),-Father haps,: we have taken excessive :America 'is to ,do S,omething about 54-56 Court Street at the U. S. embassy, J:ames ~, Galvin, Indianapolill"" comfort and solace in material it. Human action pased on such ,Taunton, Mass. "We were astounded to see Ind." ~rchdiocesan superinten., streng~h, size, 'wealth; numbers; dependence.is t~etrue practice ########_##############.,.#_~ that the' congregation was ~ot" ~ent, :of schopls, has 0 warned, 'production. Sputnik and its im- of religion. , only small. but was' composed al.., ag~~nst possible over-emphasi~ plied possibilities have nullified All of us vVear a religious pref­ most entirely of women ,- old ,o( ,mathematics and, ,sCience in these mater'ial' sources of secur-' 'erence stam'ped 'on' the dog tag. The L~1rgest Display of women," said Mr. Price, "There view of the current sputnik ,ity'., In the ,resulting' confusion What are you doing' about it? RELIGIOUS CHRISTMAS were three men in church who, "~ysteria." . Ameii'ca dr'oppedits guard. For' Is"no~, the, hand.writing plain on " ,CARDS Ilppeared, to be Russian." He said it would be a grave a moment a Goliath,' stung, the wall? With the spirit of de­ in New Bedford , The Congressman said he was mistake, to over-accentuate the ,stunned, blinded, staggering, pendence on God, in our- hearts struck by, the absence of children science subjects to the neglect !l,.ound,ering was America. " " and. the true' prac'tice of r~ligion ' imd young people at the Mass. ' of l,iberal arts. in our lives, annihilation is' imFuture, Precarious 498-502 Pleasant Street "There wasn't one young per"Science is for man's service," . ,On.ce 'again, thank~ to' sputnik, possible. U,nless we recapture lIOn who could have been a Rus- Father Ga'vin said. "It is just as we are on' th~ frontier. The ,this spirit and practice, anything Ne",i Bedford sian. There were a few of other is,possible. nationalitie's who came from va- impo~tant that we know why American future is as precarious iii~ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij rious embassies with their par- we are building a rocket or satel- as it was the winter at Valley I ents," he added. lite as it is to know how to '.;Forge. Short on rations the leadHe 'estimated there were 110 l:)Uild it. Learning 'why' comes ers and men at Valley Forge women present. Practically all through liberal' arts." tapped their' spiritual resources. the worshipers went to ConfesFather Galyin said that he was ·faith in God, obsessive spirit of The Only Catholic College in the Diocese 'of Fall River sion "~nd received Holy Coin- opposed to the "purely prag- ,Independence, sel)se of destiny, , matic approach" a,dopted by willingness to sacrifice, saw mUnJop.. ' Af~~rward the two Congresssome education circles with re- .f,\,:"e~ica through that crucial men inquired about Protestant gard' to. the academic science, WlOter. " program. :: . Since Valley Forge" we have Sundkiy services. They were told that members of all denomina­ tions at the U. S. Embassy at­ tendea a Baptist church in Mos­ When it's time cow. , Mr. Price said he had the im­ to retire • • • Buy pression that these were the only churchell open in Moscow and that ,they were permitted 'to operate simply to give,some sub­ ~ NEW BEDFORD ~ stance to the Soviet claim of reli­ gious, tolerance. Parish, Taunton, H. Frank Reilly, president of the Central Council, 'expresses in the report

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·Invocation Expres$esW~11 To PUt' HOMse" ·in Order

Says' Communists '~e'ady to~tart' ~ew Camt?a6g~

l\fsgr.G~~rge G. Higgins .'. Director NCWC Social Action Dept.

By

. Higgi1is delivered the' inlJolicttio;l .at t.'te opening session of the national.APlrCIO eonvention·i." Atlanhe C~t1/, ~. J. Th~ text of his lnvoeation, relJri1/ted below, is anappropnute 'I1I.t·/,ocl:ltetwn to' a. acries of several columns h~ will write on the procecchngs of the cQ'/tvention.-Ed. . "He that loveth gold shall no~ be justified; and he that followeth after c'orniption shall be filled with it.'Gold' is a stumbling block to them that sacrifice to it; woe to. them that eagerly follow after it.'~ Ecclesiasticus, C~apter 31.

M~gr.

.THE ANCHOR ­

'. . Thurs;, Dec. 12, 1957

, WASHINGTON (NC) ~ Congress has 'been warned by one of its committees th'at' a drive is about to be made to cripple its anti-subver­ sive program. , Members of the House and Senate have been told that they, and officials in the administra­ tive branch of the government, God, the father' of all 'represent will be incapable of will be su15fected to 'a "barrage men who inspired the sacred fulfilling its purpose in society. of letters and petitions." writ~r thus to condemn the It is our humble c~mviction, One Big Plan sin of avarice-the root of confirmed by the teachll1~of our The House Committee on Un­ 11 vilas the Apostle St. Paul religious leaders, t~at, the labor American Activities, which is­ a e s'. . . movement has an II1d1spensabie described 1t ce~tunes later-gIVe role to. play in establishing social sued the warning, said it will be o'he target of the drive, and that us t~e strtng~ " justice and str:engthening the of c a~~cder 0 bonds of human brotherhood a~ effort be made to dis­ . CHRISTMAS CAROL CONCERT: These senior n~em-.,; credit the Federal Bureau of In­ be ~Ul e. ac, among all ~ur fellow-citizens, eordmgly m th~ . whatever tli'eir occupation or ,bers of the Glee Club at.Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall RIV~r, . vestigation and its director, J. performan~e tOd profession, and regardless of are preparing for. their concert in Sacre~ Heart S~h09'. Edgar Hoover. our appOln e . ' . d While the program will be car'" . the their race, color, or ·cree . d t' • auditorium on Sunday evening at 8. They are, left to right;.. u 1es 1nmove­ Two years ago, tied on by "front" groups, it lab 0 r . ' when. our . Patricia Sousa,' DEmise Jeunesse, Kathleen Stevens, Agnes "dovetails" with "a vast pro­ united "labor movement was.es­ t H e I p us men. . I gram" of the ~omn:\-,nist pa~ty~ to . understand, tablished, we p!edged OU!se ves . Crombie and . Sheila Cronan. the committee said. in the' 'of familiar out f1dellty t~lS .noble 'Close upon this warning, the' wo~ds Y O U l w i tto'carry h perfect as ~urpose an .exSenate Internal Security Sub­ D i v i n e Son. pressi?n of the hop~s and asplra­ Continued from Page One . M~s. Sewall L. Pattangall Jr., .committee made public the testi-. that .not man can" tions of the tleople L'anl'n l'S equally at home at a Ladl'es Guild of St. Mary's, He­ mony of several' witnesses it had , America." 'Today, In the face of of he~rd including Dr. Vladimir serve wo .we mas,.,.. . lavish Park Av.enue wedding rebronville;' Miss: Cecile Brais, .cann.ot serve both many. unexpected probllems an d ters that ceptioiJ or at a B.eacon Hill Sacred Heart, NorthAt~leboro;. Pore~skY, head of NTS; a ~us­ God and Mammon. we solemn y, ·renew cotillion.. He knows the per'M·r.' Roland Fregault; 'Sacred sjan anti-communis~ or~~mza­ ' 0 . , d ed a noble calling th1S pledge. We do .so very.. . Attl bo iion which has been In eXistence . urs 1S In e . d t t. W'e are humbly, fully conscious, ,in the sonal tastes ,o~ alr~lOst.• e~ery ~ig- ,' .. Heart Church. Nprth e ... ,r~; nee '1930. He rEiside~ in Frank':' and a very sacre .rus ". of words of the' ~salmist, Ulat "un­ ure·· in' the' mternatJonal Blue.' Mr. Arthur Pe1litier, St. Joseph s the elected .representatlves h less the Lord b'ilild·'.the house Book and is rated tJ:le number, Church, Attleboro.. fort Germany, 'and, arrived i~ th~.'United' S~t.es just two 'days w .0 •• . 'f. ,: , one. band . leader of hfgn society." miJ.lions of. men t and I women. f"r efficient they labor In vall1 w h' o·b UJ,'Id 1 '11 be t .• ' Mr. 'Pati-ickWalsh~St: Mary's befo~ he .,appeared before. ~~ look to us no O? y . 0 , toO but confident, too, that God will . Bishop Connolly .W1 gues Church, Hebronville; Mr. Manuel ., , ,;~rvice but for 1nsIPlratflopn~rfe"t . not be outdone in' g.enerosity; of honor arid many people promi- O. Castro, Holy Gho~t. Attle1?ro; subc&mmittee. ,,'. These' weresom.e of his ,!>,!?ser,;, and for e ounsel­ .. . ilerit in natiofial,. state arid com':" M'r. Bena'rd "Byrnes, S.t. M.ary's. 't an dexamp completely that he will never . d eny. b"I~ , . .. , . . ,.. ~~~~gdn,y t~n to the cause of J'us­ divine assistance to t1!..ose, who. munity life' will be in. attendance: :Church,"'North Attieboro; '.'Mr: vations: He strongly .believes. ther!'! ~~~l ~. evo lOn ','. k f . T "Ask d' " Mrs. Almond and lV):r.. Reil'y. 'Heru')' ,.Benoit, .St." Theresa!s tice and can' human brotherhood. ~s .or "d,you :an s.,h~olul have' requested that. the names Church, South Attleboro.. ,~ a!lo~jler rising or t'Yo a~o~g .T'h'ere be no ·doubles.ta. n~,. .'. smcerely sh.a,ll receive, ~eeIk ··an. a., communist",doniinated peqplt'!s .m oral ity no conflict ·of fmd,. knoc k an d It s d f . members h 'h 'in' t' th h 11 Dea (jf 'all , c'omniittee the Mr. Sp·.encer Kelly, St. Mary-'s th,e "very .ne~r futIJre," QJ.!t. b~ e'd ar 0 m , t , , " " . Cities. and towns t roug ou' e, Church Mansfield; Mr. 'Frank interests in 'our lives: yve a~e ~,?; ope.n un 0 you.. '. D1'ocese be for'warded to them 'as ' ,. . " , 'Ch' h wouldn't specify whetJ'Jer. th~y, 1 Teixeira, 51. Marys urc, longer private citizens; we are soon as possible.. • The 'complete Norton. would be in Russia itself or in public servants' pledged to serve Attleboro committee follows: satellite countries. pur members and. our ~fellow­ Rev. ,Edmund L. Dickensen, . While the Daily Worker .is re:'. citizens above and' bc~ond the .~ee ~piritual director; garded "as a paper 'of no impor~ eall of ordinary duty. NEW YORK (NC)-'::The abil­ Co-chairmen _ Mr. Myles 'F. iance" in the United State's, it .. . Men .Fear God lty 'to develop basic ,',creat,ive :paly, St: de 'Paul;' Mrs. serVes the' communists in good Adenaue~1 'We humbly acknowledge be­ ideas in science and philosophy Ralph V. Patunoff, president stead to' quote it in the 'Soviet . LQUVAIN (NC)-':"Two leaders 'fore God and man that the move­ .. will determine the outcome of District "~' National .Council of Uriion and in' satellite countries. in. 'European integration plans ment which we areprivile~ed to the technological and' ideological Catholic .Women. "Referring'to the Daily ~6rK~i' and prime movers of the Euro­ represent is far fr,om perfect, ·We . race between the United. States . Secretary-Mrs. George Bauza, means, to the 'public (in tho~ pean Coal and ,Steel Community have our faults and imperfec­ and R u s S i a : ' Clapp Street, Norton. . areas), referring to the ' publ~c tion~ all of us, leaders and mem- • This was. stated her~ by Ed­ ;. Treasurer_Mr,. Joseph Bi~n­ will be honored by the Catholic opinion in the United States."· '.. Universityof·Lc;>uvain. bers alike. There·.i~·widesprea9-,. ward T.' 'Diddl1son 'New- York v~nue 165 Phillips Str.eet, He.,. .',. "The" corrirrii'1I1ists have' "'8 Germ~'ny's Chancellor 'Konrad glc:ib'al'doctrih~ ane." they: ate apathy and indifference in our State C~mmissione'r of Combrom~jlle.,.· ',' Adenauer "and former 'French ranks and a inlfusure of corru~­ metce' at a dinner sponsored b y ,.. ,', .Parish,Co"phairmen, systematically'· p.ursuing· ·their premier'Robert Schuman will I)e tioo:iri· high piaces:We' are firmly' Cthelco~stri.Jctio~hindustryon' be-Mrs.Ro\:le,rt Otterson, . presi­ : oals:'" '50 .' 'while 'the·"United g .. ' resolved, with the help of Thy half of Fordharri' University. dent'"of Catholic .Women'sClub 'giveri"ilononiry doctorates in p'o­ States may not'be 'a spot where Htical'and social science!; here on divine assistan,ce, to elim!nate Mr. Dickinson ~aiathat Soviet' of, -Attleboro.; 'Ml'S~ Alfred. Mc:" jri'tilthi tion' is-producirig vf!''';y iri,i­ these faults and imperfections.', advances ed~c;atiorlfnow make Nally,. Daughters of: Isabella; Europ'e'Day, Jan. 10,' in recogni- 'portant results' at the p'resent Hon of th~ir work. ' ....•..,. We 'are determined to put our it possible for,· the. Russians to Mrs. Albert Mousseau. St. Jeanne 'Ume"the "situation can chan'ge:" . .... ' . ~. .. ~. . I' .,.. house .in order and to do so as compete favorably with the', D'Arc of 5t. Joseph's,. Attlel;>oro; , ' ~ ~ rapidly as p·ossible.· .We don.ot: ,Urlited'/?tates in economic fields Mrs. Vincent" McHugh, ,Holy'

'0 want it said about ,ou'rselve&;-:as. as weU'.a's in industr.y: '.. Ghost Mothers Club. '

was said 'by th~. Prophet ~Is~las '.: He _sta'ted'" t~at. America.:.:,has • Mrs. Raymond Byers, ,S~.

about the unfaithful rul~r~. of 'grow'h. great on. borrowed ideas John's' Church; Attleboro; Mrs.,

.. his own people-that '~the. very. 'a~d,'a: wealth-of . natural'. re-. Juliette Goudreau; St. Joseph's ,

Church, Attleboro; .Mr!l. John . shepherds h~ve forgotten their". 'sOurces, b~i-has failed to mak"e as craft," that "all have turned . great a corltributiQn' to basic 'Rogers, St.. Stephen's Church, aside into their own .way, eve~y' science and philosophy as Dodgeville; Mrs. 'Robert Lovely, , " one (seeki~g) after hiS own. gal?, Europe: Mansfield' Catholic' Women's from the first even to the last. , He called for the establishment Club. It is our sincere and consta?t of '''an environment in whi~,h M'iss Ann Murppy, St. Mary's prayer that it may rather be said basic creative ideas can be gen­ Church, North Attleboro; Mrs. of us that we have followed ~e era ted and encouraged)" \ Gerald Bernier, Norton Catholic counsel addressed to ~oses. m "Only sacrifices, .tolerance, Women's' Club; Miss Winifred the Book of Exodus to provide. understanding and the end of rKelly, . Catholic' WOJlien's Club,' out of all. the. peop,le 1'l:lf!n,',S\Jc,h . complacency can create the en­ ~INorth Attleboro; Mrs. Charlotte as fear God, 111 whom ~here..IS.. vironm'ent necessary. to, preserve ::Charron Daughters of Isabella, , I··. . truth, and that ha"te avarice, and this nation 'as a great power." ·~otth Attleboro. . J . ab.olu. .~ Ibe be.1 :..... appoint of them rulers of thou­ . ~;;;'~;;;;;;';;;:;;;;;;;:;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~ Food, • •rvlc•. and Alono.ph• • • sands, and of hundreds, and of. ~ _ ~

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I

tHE ANCHOR ­ Thurs., Dec. 12,1957

5

First Christmas Creche Planned 'By St. Francis Assisi in. Italy

: Crash frog ram Conti~ut;d

from PaKe ODe · has widespread support. But when it goes so far as to ask . for a "crash" program in science 'to match that of Soviet Russia, .

· there is great and importan~ op­

position. A "crash" program, it is felt,

: would concentrate on science to the exclusic;m or neglect. of other <subjects. This .runs counter to · the American tradition of a well­ · rounded education. What Reds Want One argument advanced for a ·crash" program in science edu­ cation is that we need it to pro­ · tect our freedoms. Level heads point out, however, that the reckless and unconsidered adop­ · tion of such a program would of · itself greatly endanger our free-' doms. By' such a course, we' could move strongly and swiftly · toward drastic changes in our national habits, tastes, outlooks · and perhaps eventually our form · of government. We might ac-. complish Quickly for the Soviets whai they could not accomplish' A"TE~D. WEEKDAY. MASS: Rev. Dennis Spykers, · for themselves, even with re­ SS.CC., pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes .Churcl), Wellfleet, course to strife. congratulates officers of the' Junior Guild for their plan to Our tradi tional system of edu­ have each member assist at daily Mass for a week at a ,time · cation, combining the a!"ts and sciences, tends' to educate the to promote better daily Mass attendance. ,Officers are, left whole man, to encourage him to to right, Dorothy Rose, treasurer; Ann Gauthier, president; think for himself, to dare to be and Barbara Cormiei',secr~tary. · diffcrent, to pick his own way · of life. To change drastically · from this would certainly be ~s · wrench to our wa'y of IUe, our . · tastes, our outlooks. To enforce such a change by governmentYATICAN CITY (NC)-The case of Bishop Pietro <intervention, direct or indirect; in our' system of education. Fiordelli of Prato;, who. has: been brought. to court for W9~ld certainly involve a change publiCly censuring the civil marriage of two baptized Cath-. · In our form of government. olics "involves the freedom of the Church and the exercise That this thr~at is not to be of her jurisdiction'. in her own ' '.. only. a civil marriage are to. be Ignored J•s J' n dl' ca ted by the serl' e)[eh~sive field."~ ous opposition that has been ex. This is the opinion set forth in considered as public sinners and pl"essed to it. ~"'. ~rticle by L'Osservat9re Ro';' . 'living in .public concubinage. On Soviet Terms 'mano Vatican City daily. .. . EP~s~opalri~,y A ~oted Catholic educator has ~ommu'nlst Stronghold . "Tbe case. of Prato. must. be • aid tha~ "Many sensitive think-: ' . '. considered in the light of .these

· en are.pointing out that it would In' August; Bishop .Fiordelli . priri'dples. The Church' has her : be .tragic for mankind if we as ··wrote· a"letter to the parish of 'juridicorder, her own'laws, and .• people sought to imitate or a Catholic :g.id who 'had ,con..' her members 'hav~ corresponding : compete with Soviet education tracted a, CIVIl .marriage With a '. obligations...When·. there has OR Soviet terms." MagI', 'Fred- . communist who. had been. bap- .. 'been a. ·wilful . and deliberate edck G: Hochwalt, director of '..tized a Catholic. Tbe.lett~l" de.- . : ·'¥iolation ·of ·her laws and of her · the' Department of 'Education dared that. tt,etwo people we~e . discipline ·the .ec·clesiastical au­ : National Catholic W~lfare Con~' .not, i~ ~act, marrie~ ~~nce a civ!1 ·..thority has.the right testate and . : ferenc~, and secretary geriera'l Of . marciag.e .ceremony IS' n~t S~J- • m:a.ke ·known the' position' o.f the '. the Natiomll Catholic; Education-· c;ient for two' baptized .Cathb~lcs. 'responsjble parties. . .' Whea As. a result, four. person.s '. public scandal has been created · .1 Association, 'also told:. St. · Louis ~udience that .IWe..would brought charges. of libel against \' and .when there. is'a danger·that · be foolish to ign'ore any' threat t~·Bishop. Prato has.long .been scandal w:ould'bring about harm­ to our freedom especially the . a center of communism, with ful consequences' if· it were not · fac;:t that Russi~ns seem to be 17,~ communists· among the - denounced; the Church not only · putting more emphasis 'on their town's tobll popu.la~i01~ of~·40.000. can but must intervene to warn education. for their'·' purposes, Id its editorial on. the matter, the guilty parties and call them · than we are putt~ng on our edu- .L'Osseryatore said that .it had to order; to inform and protect · cation for our purposes; waited to comment on' the inci,,; the other faithful, to reestablish Dr. Maurice Jacobs, chairmap dent' ulltil the clamor, which it the discipline that has been · of the vocational' ser:vice 'of ~'na~ claimed had b~en intentionally publicly violated. B'l"ith, told an annual meetstirred, died down~ "Declaration's such as the one · ing of that Jewish service organThe article stated:. made by .he Bishop of Prato are ization recently held here that "One cannot deny the fact· fundamentally nothing . more it "would be a costly m~stake" that, since the matter of a sacrathan declaratory sentences pro­ to adopt a "policy of wholesale ment is involved, it pertains ennounced by the competent au­ persuasion" to get highschool tirely to the 'Chur<:h to regulate thority. Is a judge guilty of students' to study science. He the marriages' of Catholics; t':'...t slander when he pronounces and l18id it would be folly to puSh a for the Chur,ch the only valid publi~hes a sentence declaring )'outh, into a specified field of marriage between Catholics is that a person is guilty of .a atqdy without .first determining marriage contractei according Cl"ime!" whether he has the aptitude, to the rules of Canon Law; that ability and personality to be ... ' a 'civil' marriage between Cath­ · auccess in' it. • . olics is not a marriage; that two Electrical After all, the basic issues of Catholics who' have contracted mankind in our time are in the . . . Conrracrors idoolo'gical, not the technical, field. That is true in Soviet Russia and no less so in our own land.

o

a

p aper . Bac k s B· · 0 en'ounclng · . h'op In Civil·Marriage of Catholics .

GRECCIO (NC)-The heart of. the Cathoiic wo'rld is attracted during the days 1?efore Christmas toward a little Jiermitage in the valley of Rieti in' Italy where the first Christmas' creche the world ever knew blossomed like a winter flower 734 years ago. he ~cited his part before a de­ On Christmas Eve in 1223 vo'ut audience in the torch-lit Greccio became the "Bethle- silence.

hem of Italy." From a tiny Thenrst -creche of Greccio monastery perched like an .constituted one of the most mov­ eagle's ne~t on .the rocky top of ing pages ilOt only in the life a mountain here, tfie pastoral of St. Francis but in the history poetry of the Christmas creche of Christianity. A contemporary was to spread throughout the writer has called it "the second ·world. birth of Christianity." Its "inventor," St. Francis of Scenes Pictured Assisi, had longed all his life to Today in the back of the cave make a pilgrimage to the counhere one finds a fresco, painted try of Jesus. After organizing his by an anonymous artist of the company of the Little Friars. he school of Giotto. Two scenes are wanted all the more to go there depicted: one of Bethlehem and and leave some of his followers the other 'of the first creche of in the Holy Land as a gu~rd of St. Francis.· The saint is pic­ honor. . tured· wearing a white dalmatic, His ambition was realized, and He kneels before the Infan~ while visiting' Bethlehem and Jesus who smiles up at him from saying his devout prayers in the the manger. A. group of friars,. grotto of the Nativity, he conamong whom is the nobleman ceived an original plan that Giovanni Vellita, stands behind would speak with force and'drahim, while close by a priest ceb matic power to men of all times ebrates·Mass. and places. He decided that men The othel' painting pictures should see with their bodily the Blessed Virgin sitting on • eyes "the want which the SOn of- kind of mattress while she holds GOd suffered, through the lack of the Infant Jesus to her breast. all things. necessary to a newIn one corner a shepherd plays born, and the manner in which a bagpipe similar to those seen he was placed in a manger and today in Italy. 'In the other St. lay on hay between the ox and. Joseph' is depicted in a pensiye the donkey." attitude. Simple and Poor. The' best comment on tile He later' 'chose the, place for "Bethlehem at Greccio" is con­ his 'scheme with great intuition ·tained in the words of Tommaso and aceuracy. Near' the hermide Celano, St. Francis' first biog­ · tage of Greccio 'there was a cave rapher, who wrote: carved in the rock of the moun"Simplicity. is honored here, .tainside that gave the Sai~t the poverty is praised, and Grcccw exact impression of the. grotto is almost turned into a 'new of- Bethlehem. The' inhabitants' . Bethlehem," of the Valley ~f Rieti at the foot of the hill, joined by their Lord · Giovanni Vellita, were enthusi­ · astic in preparing everything ac· OOl"ding to ~t. Francis' instruc­ tions: the 'manger, the animals,

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' Weekly. Calendar', ':Of :Fe~st' -Days

. 'TODAY bur L'ady ef Guadaiupe. This feast commem:.. '/ "orates the' apparition . of' the 'OFFICIAL 'NEWSPAPE~ OF DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. '. Blessed Mother to the humble Indian, Juan' Diego, in 1531 on Publis'hed Weekly by TheCoth~Iii:Pressof ttle Diocese 6t ~oll River Tepeyac hill near Mexico City. 410 Highlon.d Avenue . .' . The great Basilica of Our Lady " Fall River, Moss. OSborne' ,5-715l . of Guadalupe now stands on the spot of the apparition. Pope . PUBLISHER... Benedict XV· decreed Our Lady " Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Ph.D.'. . . '.' of Guadalupe as Patroness' of 'GENERAl MANAGER ASSj, GENERAL MANAGER' Mexico. . Rev,'Doniel F. Sllolloo;' M.A. . Rev••;JohnP. Dris~oll -.:.. St.. Lu~y· or 'TOMORROW . ' . ,MA~AGINOEDITOR" . Syracuse, Virgin..'Martyr.. Stle Attorney 'l1ugh J.Golden . was a Sicilian and one of the . most' famOus of the martyrs put ····0 to'death under Dioc1etian about 304: She is commemorated daily .' . " ' . in the Canon of the Mass. While It has been said that the greatest struggle of' the last Christians were being sought out, eentury was to. prove that all" mert are' equal. .N.ow·· the she distributed her wealth to the

,greatest strug.gleof;this· century is to :prove that . they 'poor and was denounced 'by a

· are not. "o'.... . . ... . '. '., .. .. ' . . " ':, . '., . young noble to whom her mother

. I Other' ages had·.the neCessity of showing' that all,m.eli .wished to give her in .marriage~ . . She endured tortures at Syracuse ~are equal In that they are all'creatures of,the sam~ Gpd, , and was put to death when a'

'all entitled to a personal dignity as· m.embers. of th~, h!l.rna~ . sword was driven thr~ugh her

-race; all' with' inalien.able rightS that' are not trims.fer,able,:',. . throat. .

:'that ca.nnot lawfully· be' taken.: from. them. One ~ay .. be· . SATURDAY-St. Nicasius and

~master, one' servant, .but the relati6nship-'.,is purelY':acei,. "'Companions, Martyrs.' st. ·Nica..,

'(dental' .not touching the.' inner m.an and' 'his rjghts ~and sius was Bishop of Rheims. With

. . ' . • . ' . i. .. . his' sister, St. ·Europia,. and a (worth as a m::!:n. . . . . .''; ., . number of the clergy and faithBut thereisnowsome.confusion in:the pr~sentpic"':Sage and S b n d . , f u l , he wasput to death forttie -ture. There are those.who.have niade this equality synony-. Faith by barbarians who inva'ded ~':mous with conformity.' They 'see 'the w~rld as a nightmare . In' I,n', 'lfl'C'S" Gaul ~bout 407.­ · -'caricature, Of. suburbia,:with.' men: alike 'r~turning' to , . . SUNDAY - ' St. Irenaeus' and

• 'houses all alike 'on streets all· alike and.l>eing greeted by .. yo" Companions. They were a 'group ;;wiv~s" and :children aU ·alike. :'And woe be to the one who . _ of twenty-two martyrs who were .; , , .., " " 1 " ' tr· . By"Most Rev:.. ·Robert.J.~wyerr, D ..n~: put to death for the faith <jbo1Jt .; ::d~res.. break the pattern'of:s~men~ss,~y panting. ~. ee' . . Bishop of ReDO' . ' . 258 in' the Valerian persecutio~ , ,.... '.' ", ::; , . "Man'wasnofmade for the State.. The,State.was made Included in the. i'lliinbers .were . . .'::di.ffe:r~nt :rr?m.~i~"~eigh.:~.r'~! .~ <~ .... ' "The"si~~ati~n is.'no.t,hel.n.ed :J>y>,SO~¢: e.duca~jo:pal~l"~::-!,for'man.". ,An admirable summarY, th-at, of'OhrisfianpOlit- SS. Anthony; 'Theoqore, Saturn::" ~ti~ei:!.' ·Some .educatois"try"tQ ...giye ·allchildren·Ah~:~ame'·~icalphilosophy; from, the lips of .Great Britain~'s prime ius lmd V~c.tor~,:·,~ ,.". .' . "~·~edtlcation. : They' try' ·to bririg,aJldowntQ the same c.ojnmon . 'minister Mr.' Harold' Macmillan; It' would be 'heartening ~ONDAY~St. Eu~el?iu.s, Bi~~­ ;:denotninator'~"Any'attEmiptto differenti!'lte 1je~~e¢ri {go9d .to'·bea~sure'd tha't . ali. the"" . . . . . , .. :: . . . ' " oP'~n4 Martyr.:~cion 9£ a, ~ob~e i\" ' ' ' ' .' d' :. ..... l.'·"··k "d' ,.., -: f'· ' ... ' th ..... ,..; ., .. , ".' "..... ';- ..' .... So if· the maJority wants, more famtly of SardmJa, He was taken .:',etudents. an poo~ . I~. ?~,.e ?~:, a~,·av~o~!J.lg :., ~ 9n~·. ~roup, ~~e~p~;msI~Ie· ,l~ad~rs'of . t~e gove:rmnent co~tr'ol it h~s a:'p,kr'-: . Jo Rome by"his' mother, where he ::and puttmg a socl~l :~tIglJl.~"()P.~h~. ()the~... .:.... :::'. .:.~:".; ..J., ;'Free.·Worldwere. in g~nuine . 'fect right to it 'and oo'rtlorefooI- ,'~as ordained. He served . the · E :' The tl'uth:ls th'~t :men' al:e·equa,I::i.n tb'at'they: ~r~, chil-:' agreeni'entWith: It;. Reduced . .ish . question~, please,·' at>:out " Church at 'Vercelli and was ihe ";dren' of:God~ .T-hey,···are not ·equal in .. many 'othe~ ~w·ays., ,thus "to .lapidary . formula, . it " whether this is Statism or· pC?t.·· choice of clergy and Iait~ wh.~n .' l,They are unequa.l' in 'natural talents, ijI capahi}jties;,:oppor-. ',wo·uld. be. har4 to re)ec~ it openI~. .' If . ttle rn~j.ority wants, ~.~ke the Episcopa.1;Chair became va­ "t 't" .. d' , t ,". . . .' on'm . t· Th'er'e "mu'st .'.l:.";', ..-th·e 'But we' have all l~arned that It away,the rights of ~he.mll1orlty, .' cant.. He :fought courageously " thmg .' .for: , a .pohtIclan· '. '" . to tha t's more. democracy; " . . no t .more. a gams .. t th,e A' · unl les,'. a van .ages, enVIr ' . : en . . f'th' 'd'ff',~" .. ' '. . . '.' is one· rJan h ere t·lCS, 'h W 0 · re~ogmt.IOn of thIS upequahty among men, 0 e 1 erenc~s. utter an aphorism and quite an- ,Statism,' And ·if· democracy. . had him' banished from Syria, : in, men, and.a development of· each pel,"son's talents:,:· , other for him to mean exactly should decide t6 destroy .itself, . where he underwent many hcird­ ~ This means some will ·be .more successful than others. what he says.' . spurning' its basic principles. of ships" He .returned to Vercelli , It means that there will be differences in success. '~It Wean!!! . Few politicians or statesmen. ind~~idual?uman rights ,in~er- 'under Julian in 370. He is ..' d f '1 . e It means those who win" an'Othose would admit to avowed ·sup-port ent 10 man s nature, th.at s real revered as a martyr because. of · e.uccels~ an. ,al ur.. '. d' f I ,., ..··t . . ,', :';'.' ';.'. . ,:of Statism I They' ~.i-e .allfor Ma. it . democratic actI.·on. ". . ,the' hardshipS'h«;! suffer.ed. . who ose. It 'means a won er u· varle y ~mong<men - a ' . " " ...., ";'.. . ..: . ' . , ' . '.' '. . t ,', il·t···· .' f .' ... ' '. h' " ' f '1' . whether' of the .common or fuWe Arpencans are.partIcularly TUESDAY-St. Lazarus Blsh­ · vane y. m ~ersona l,leS, I~ pro esslon~, m r.lC ne~!;l,o .. IVes 'turistic variety: They would ap- . resentful of the suggestion that' ·op-confessor. He was thed'isciple ,and educatIOns. .L~t liS encourage·these dIfference~)':": '!>Iaud Mr. Macmilian's formyla. S~atism is taking over the Re- - and. friend ·of·Christ, who was . . " . .', ' .... '. :', " j4st as· in Am.erica they are'in pub,lic,. We ar~ firml~.c.onvin.ced ';.: raised from the dead by Our' sFailur~ ,the habit of quoting the. Found-. tl:Jat we have preserved mcorrl;lp~ , Lord. It is believed the' with . .,...... . '. " .... . ' . ' ,in~~athers.._~n every possi?Ie... the Spirit of '76 with .no~r«:.his' si!'ters;Mary. 3{!Q ,I.VIarth!l, ~:'rhe fallur,e. ~f the:Vmted States·t9 ~e.t,a satelhte"mto .:~cooslon andmevery' conceJ\:-,' th,~n a.few harmI~.s~ .cpncess,ons . he,iourneyed into Gaul and was ..:; the earth's orbit is not only a ·failure in technical ability; able contex. But on: the adrOit t? mcreased populatIon and"traf- .the fir~t, Apostle of; South~rn .~. ii-'is' a failure' in propaganda teChnique's "as ·well. 'For surely'· principI«;! of· not letting "the ri1ht .' flc c~ntrQl. If a~yolW v~n,,:tures,' Fral)ce,'" becoming Bishop.. ~f 'f' ". , ' "" " - , ., . . h '1 . hand know what the left hand .. to p(l!nt,out that 10 ct;rta~r .oon- MarSeilles/He 'is: the 'Patton: or .;: the common ,sense ~pproa~h was to. achlev~ . t .e;.~~a ... a~d .. " il!' ~9i~g,: ~tle ~,cour&«: of .western s!'icuous areas, such ~ as ed~ca- ... tha,~ city. ; :-~ ...., .... ' " "" ttIen ·to talk .~bout It; T.hI~ count~y sho~lQ! .1laye, taK~ a~ ...P~l}tifu;; f',lIi.a'J,very long bme now, tioD,',sociaI "Yel~are, a'1d gOY\'7t:n- .' ,': .'....,' .,.; ". ~ '\ reSSOn fiom,,'the 'Russians 'on that score." ' . ' -.: '" -' -.", .·:h;ls ·been "steadily set ,.for Ule _.JD~ntal .bur~~ucracy. ~e' pa:ve ...' ~~DN.ES~~Y-:Ss. ~lIf?s a:n u ..'Y: .•.••. . , .. :' ~ .. '.' '." '. . ' ' , '. , .'. .,' 'establishment" of 'Statism all ·tbe .. 'come· sO cloSe to ~tatis~:. all to '\ ;Zos~m.u~i . '4ar~yrs: ~h~y" ,~e~ .~, ", . ''1l~~~e: ~re. ·!J1a~y .... ~n~~nces, :"Vhere ' ~)U~., pr~p~~n.?a. '\lJDwrftten' .philosPhY 'of govern- .:., ~·difip.ense·-.wiih. q'iIitjbu;)g, 'we 'get ·~martyrs "of the ~'early Ghur~h, ~efforts:,Hav~ faIl~:, ThIS country ·has many ..opport~mtIes: ,ment. ; .... ,', . . . , } . : .r~"in:,the·face and' accuse·the :!suff~ri.ng"-'abOut 109°at'Philippi ~~:'show up CO~~1un~sm:b~f?re the' -1"0rI~~ :.:: ~nd.'.~h~ ~~tt.1~ '0; ..\,~~ 0ll'ic"£is .~\ 'foolish as;to .&e:.. .~.cri.t~er .~f a~o~t~d,. ~t.~ple~;. th~j~ast ,. 'in" ~aceaoQ~a: ,. '!'he.ir · m·a~tY.r: ~: wIth,CommuDlsm', wII}: l)e won· on·..:~ar.th lD the':,mmds .of···.fend 'Statism candoidly,! .Even. Jh.e .,of.~hlcb -Ul.h1de-9oun!l cons~rva- .' d,o~.Js. w;e!l~I",>n~a .,bY, St.. '!"? ~~" . ,. ,. ' ....',. ' . '. . ' . ' " tism The ad t g f 1 'ng ·ca.p 10 hiS Epistle lO the . '" men' and not -:-:-' at . least for the ';'[)resent -;-';':' m: the- c.old· .Com!'iJumsts· . h<jve... : rephrased ..... r;' ,"""~ " .~~n,.ii .;~.Q. .':a.~1 .,'pliiIl'p"p'ia"ns'" . . ,: .. i." " ,;~.,reac . h' es'.'0f." ou"t'er '.space. '" ." .'.:.. ".,'. :,. '," '.' ..,... "....,' \.....:. ,:, ..,., th~'r'p"r"'o'pa'ga'nda' so··as·.·..; ·.... .:6.SS '.'$ta.tJsm undefmed. IS admJrab.ly . ". .. . .' . ~. ., "..,~. .« . . . " , . ' : -. ,,:.' -, , _ .', .. :( Throug"'h'o'ut'the Commlinist'~orldHo*ar.dFasthas::lbn.. ~}iow~~c~ ~he.Yf~~~is~.~re~di>riI ·:.~e.w~~s,~rat.ed.. ~~ ;t~ese.' ~n&.~'.lfe.s.·,,· ,".·M· .. ,1·.la~·lc. ,;'M" . '~$'.~,'·.o.­ ......, . ..' . .',," '." ' •...; , ' 6 andhowtheyyearn'for.theday ". ·.,Rigll~.tOEd'.1cate,. ."., .:~. ~.~ ~ .. t bt;en depIcted as. the ~utstan..qm¥: !l'y~~gt...P1~rI~a~. ,!~Iter •. iWhen 'tlieState will ~ither. ;l~ay . .-T~k~ ·forr:.e~aJ!lple .education. ,,' MILAN,..Italy (NC)-'Two car:- , ·f HIS books andplay,$, dIscounted m ,thlscountry,because.·of..:and-perishofitsown superfll\lty. '. Is ;t ·n~t·:trtie "that. many jf not '; dinals w~re'.am,ong,the.preacherll. :,: hisComtnunist position, were,:jmsheil".by Communist propa.;. . Iii thir','ineanwhile,'of courst;r. ·it .. 'mosl: ~~ric~n.s ,3,.<; ce l1t wit~out .' of;the "Great Mission"'whicb has ~ '~'i ganda a:s .. the·-worl{'~ :oL~n~.~!eDlightened Amer:icah~',behold:,: ;;i~:~~fi!$AAry.:to h~stt:n . th«;!pro~ss .... )Iues~~~m ..,~h~'prin~!.~l~.,~h~t~··the . just.,~een cOJ)c)uded. here. :•. : . i\. i.': h' . d'" "," "f" . h'~'\""C" . ," .,.... . '." f' . ;'f' '".' , ... ... "b:Y"'exercisiri,g; ever.'oo,:gently, a.. State alon~ has the t::eal ri'g;llt to· "t' . . " . ., ' " . ,,,,' : . .m~ t e WIS ,PJ!l....Q , , t,.e,!,.}>Q'l'!1 ums.t .waI_.~ ....,lt ~":-~~~.'. 'ri..' 'J',. ~ ·little~Qral.su,asion. No, Stai'sm '~< eiJycate?, They..may not ~e>vill..,.lI'.' }~!~, El?~nence .C;!~~~ppe,,9~r­ '}f ,.' .Howaz:.d ,Fast,after,~n' agomzmg ::s~x,: Ir.\ontllt!l. of::~ql- .. iil'fdefinit~Iy~;riof,a popular,iix:;", '4! ingto go tne full length'ttf"Ul'eir ,:\.d~n~~ Si':l~ Arc?~lsti?P ~f G.e~9a, .. :f~' 8e~rchi~~a~~ ~~lf.-que~tioning! brokEr with,. CO'~niunisin ,trine. ,For·'.a ~ statesman to :)Iet.~·.:~, ~li.~f.'?r :·to·. d,eny :,'«1 ,~i~~r!~i~s ";~:':~~~~~:~~r~%~I::ti!:f~~~a~iianrid :$ ov.~r; Khr:u&hclJ:e:v~ . ~pe~h tearmg d()wn:the Stahn. Illyth:.' up ·on '. a' p!atform .and say r~~ht ,,~~. prmlegt; of..havm~,.. ~lielr "'''His',l!:minance"Giacomo Cardlhal 'Ji, He' has writteil"a" WQk, ~~.Tlle Naked God," "explaiIiinK.e~01:., .. out thatman was.~.~de fo~ ,the •.~. ch~ldren. educatE;~. IJ?-. o.the~ j~~n ':Lercaro"AI'chbi h f B '1" , 'n h" ';"t' bl" d\: '.' to C . . ' h" '.~', "', o.',State would be .pohtlcal SUicide.. State schools, but thatretJce1'lce, ".'_, r " s .op p oogna, . 'Jt,,' t"IQn~.y ... 1S ·pas ' .. m. ~ess. . om~umsm, .. I~. pr~se~~.:·,j~u·t he understands. 'that sol~ng often enougil, is merely, tHe .re_, ~8.P0l,t'~~.~~. a'gr~up..?f Io~'~1 ~~.~t~ry, ¥ rea!lzabon ()f what freedom m:AmerIca means; a' freedom as he pays'lip-servi~e~'to in~i'::. .fleCtion of their kindly spidt and ':, :()r!ie~ . ~nd'~~, ~. ~e~t!~g", of

.. :,%:, wl:ll~h ;tIe co~ld abuse by.. h~'Vkmg,·.Comniunist 'wares;->', '. I :., ;yidual free40m ~·can·Jriane1JY~r ,.n~~g~bor!y, il1}puJses. y:e~ ·.the .. ,? ur~ah~ts an~"~~I~erS~,,. ,

~:' ... ,. ·The story that Fast tens is an embarrassing:one' .it is .<:ashe;"wa~ts.. ~.,: :'l,' 'thesis that.. St:ate. ~s. th,esole .., : During. th.e. ~GreatMissic;>n'?" ~I­ ,; .;: a·frightening one;' too, wllenorie'sees'~how~:ddeal'.:·even\~·:·$tatisili";~~01aspreCise defiili- ...rig.h.ttu~. e.duca!?r ~ StatisJ:!!- ~n..~J!lultaneo~s ': mi~~ion . serv,ice!,

,. ',:" ' . . . . . . . ti n "pla'g' It ,w~u. . Id ;ac.~",:! 't Its most absolute dan'.w~re carnedon.m every church ,,,,1a,wrong.one·~.,can.make.aman-.a.sel'Vantattheexpense"o,.as~ .• ue" ...ot:\e·of "':;';"""'" ".-' and .:".~" '.. ""., ' .. '." ....., .. , .... "ro' .' •• ' -. ' . • '. aUy""prefer" to "remain' anony';' ·_.,g~rol,ls ..fo~s,.. ·.:I;t pas ins.lI:lU~ted ",.of ..4he•.Archdiocese" of: Milan, Ceven of. hIS ,I>rlde. : ' . : ' . -,. ..• .- ;..... ~.~ .~'~".'" '.J!lous:'~YoU' a!e.·'nev~';Stip~ed .itse,~,in,~o~~~?1~ri.£a.n".J\i!l~~Y.;f;ach mission preacher fC!ll.owed .. .-;::: ThIs' country ·has not .tilken.advantageof 'Fa~.t,s defec.:. . to intimate"that'theSta'te'is4he ,the. subtle prc,>cess of. caI.hng It- ".~ ~r1IJ01!' ~pe~ule, so ,that ,the tion,'"It took' M9~COW six months to -~Vmoun~e·'ijis~t~Y.at~oniYj,~ing:;:th~t"''i'ealqy:mati~rs,."~lf ~~riloc:racr. iI!' n.othing of ..same, '!?Ubj~t wa~, t,reated, ill

'~~ of the Com,inunist cause' in its" newspa:Per's~· ;'N'o-effbrt'· h~8 ' .6I'. tl1at'i'Q4'~viduakrigh~ a!1!i lib~ :' '~~.SO~~f c;ou:rse;. it i~ tyranny. .~v~ry.c;hurc,J;t.. .;~ :;'..J

.~;. ,been ma4;le~"1;)y; :d~mocra:cy to· point up thein1p(,rtanc~'6f.; ·erties:have',ne}t~er '~ea~ing ~or !",' .' ~~~~.·:~e, Same"i~pre~si~:m.,.:.... '.' . . ' ... ,' , i ;

i'r.!· this man's turni11'i frl)mCQmmunism~'. And/yet this'.. ,eQ~I(L~~!ent'sa"e.~s.th~ S.tat~d~,?r;~.~~~ .. ~;pr~vaJ1B.}~ .~t~~.:.fi~Id'. of, SOClal·.,o~~Y u~~~fl.n~it }'la~"(Q~t~red '~h . " . .. .' ... '.. ,'. . . .' '." , . '~".'; . -•.. _".oI.,¥,O\l. are never to.quoteHeg~! if h·.we~are:. It IS .wldely. ~1>1??sed, 'a< confUSion m tHe' Amencan 'ft." !01 C""" ave ..a< strong"lOfluence th.e y'o.u ·can "'-and. acCepted'. . d w'h'ich IS . on I'" .. , , . ";>, o 'Ollj . those' mdhons...m.s.Ide ," . . . ""...Iron _.....'. . ' find another a.uthority .', . 'wifhout "'m'uch .. . '··'·m· In y now.".In t"Ime t~: urtam w~o l. .~~kea on Fa~ as theenhghtened citizen 'of ~. :ca~littl~ -less honest o.J;.Iess git-en ' "m':lrmui'i~,: that we~fare·.js·t~e . of crisis, demoll!itratin'g ~tir teSta) .~ theWest"·'··'t'.~< ! , . . . . ,'.,. :,.. topI~I~··statement: .In tact';itpe .. ~~~te's busme.~s b! ~.lght,.a~d If~:dependence·j.tponuri~'nown'~nd '~'.' During the rhirties it was fashionable to tum to COm- less. saId about ,Statism the ,~~~ ;;p~~a.U; ~age~~I~ lI1.SI.~~,P~ 'clpH; even nameless ageriHes;' opei:at­ .~ munis'iri a' solution to. th~ economic and.. .social ills' of.the" :: ',~,r, so long as ever.~body fa))s 111:, t¢.~~ :up ~~f:are~ ..tr~~! ~~~ do . ~ ,iog for. ui'lk~'1C>.w~,!\in'c1. nai'n'e~es8 <1';' .:';."·".1 ' . '.. . Im~, (. sO•. mdeed,.as.a pomt.of pr'lvII~ge, c .. purposes. We were a democracy S·, world", 11hIS''Y~s;,.cons1derep:a worthy phdo~ophyfor the .. Will'of Majority <".' by the. 'g.ra<;iQ~s tolerance of~the>~with"""hil" .. h'" f- k"'" . ~1. wi~e, th~"sop~isti~ated,. tht rebuild~rs "Of': the ·losf,world. ~" 'Much lhe:best' way ~f handi:tng '; s.~te,,!.>!J~:didi~it~If·:not ~s e~er-~ rights aari~ 'h~~~/~o~ernM~~~ }" ThIs. decade I8~.wItnessmg·a' revulsIon·.:from: ·that, foolish .' the problem'is to confuse Statiilm" clslng,a ·rlght, 'Her~ agam, S;~t- "~ now' we begin'to"s'uspec't th'at we ,'::' i>Osrt1o~Ji~";''1IoWa-Hi';'11'a~i(tJ:'abbtit:fa~eis''b'i1e':>'ijf''tJi'~"greata;st '.'\. lwith"""''deiri'<>erjicy;L. "EverYb6dy.':' :i~;iD"th.~,~guise ~f ~em9cJ'ac)'. .ax::e .being transform:ed' j nio'the !;i defeats CommuniSm could suffer in ·this arena. It. is" knowS"'(or thinks he. knows) It'is p.robably'futile .to dwell servlle State..It is.an ~venmore ,/ abOut 'time lh'iscountiy d'd 'so" thO . .' "th 'f' <- "'t" ". ~~at dempcracy is, and of co~rse oyermuc~ on bureau~racy ~ a' imporant consider'atitin than"our ,~!: .. ' .. ' , .", .. , 1 me .mg~l 1.S ammlln.~.Ion.·the·impor~~nt thing about it)• . symptom of·~tatism.. because~:bY:llCientific'Ilig·or llninchfng'i-oca­ ,,,. ,,~,~~<~I~tu~~,O~~,.l?-;t~l1~~~~~:,w~~ ~!eJl~~~\'S~~'~~.'!~~~t.::: ;Jh~tit,~~t.h~W:ill~~f tbe~ajority. ··,the very fact of'leavi"nl: it ~.~~t.o.."~ ·.tli'to the~oODo . '.. '" '''' < '·'.r

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'CATHOLIC THEATRE GUILD RADIO PRESENTA­ Gjft-A-Rama Now, i.n,Full·Swi~g.ForC0t:lpon .' TION: "Tne ChristmasSh'ipwreck,". the ~t6ry'of the sinking. .'9f .Christopher Columbu~' flagship ~anta· Ma.ria on Christ- . ..Fr~~· any Me~chant Displaying fmblem-P,r:izes Aw~rdedChristmas Eve' Eve, .was presellted~unday ev~ning.:bY.. membe~ ,of. .. ,the New Bedford Catholic Theatre Guild. Shown in the . ill"l~lIIIlClClIC!~llEllPt~. 'picture are~ 'leftto right, M~ss Dorothy 9ibbs, who. p6~trayeq: , , ..:-1" ' GET'yOUR , Queen Isabella ;C~ri~top'her Best, director' of. the play-;··. ;.~rs .. Timoth.y .. Ke~,ting, narrator, -and 'Manuel ' A1mad,~~;. • Ch~is.;mas Holiday' ; author of the original radio play and'Guild member, ..'. . " I '.

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.' MiSs Helen V. Gannon, a ·.senior at the.Aeaclemy of the Sacred Hearts, Fall· River,

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.' &hip competition., as lllUloun~ ·, this week to the Principal: in :the ,.official report from the Natio~al .' Merit SchOlarship Corporation, .J' ,EYa~ton,. Ill. S.he is the daugh­ ter 0'£ Mr: and Mrs. Daniel. E. Gapnon of 202 West Canonicus "Str~et,·.North Tiverton, ~. I. ,. 'The local student is li~ted · ~~on~tthe 7,SOO .high ~orers on .. he:',,:.:,"":',;;";; : the Scholarship Qualify.ing .Test, · ii nation~ide college aptitude · examination given in 14,OOOhigb , ,schools on Oct. 22. These semi­ .finalists 'outscored 300;000 fellow .,' seniors, and thus moved a st.ep "closer to the four million' dollars "hl' Merit Scholarships to' be ,I __ warded in 1958, . MISS HELEN V.GANN9N

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.. Ai ()'ur'Hous~'i; Usual Christmas Shopp'ing'

Fall River Native.

Outstanding Nius'e

DespiteS·tockpile . 'of Gifts By Mary Tinley Daly ."All ready for Christma~?,,­ It's the greeting this time of year, as. common to the season as July's "Hot enough for you?" Somewhat smugly we've been admitting, for.' the first' time in many a mid-Decem­ chilly attic. Give this to .some.:. ' ber, that we're just about body at Christmas? Ugh! Gifts for Everybody ready. Oh, a few last-min­ ~te j;hings, but a pretty good ~inally .. the mor~ recently ac­

Chosen· as "Woman of the Week," Miss Margaret Hession, 'director of nurses at Lemuel Shattuck ,Hospital, J:amaica Plain, states that there are many interesting phases of nursing, one of the most satisfying careers for a woman. During her many years in the nursing professic;m, she also re­ lates .that 'one of the many re­ warding aspects is helping others learn to help themselves. Serving 27 years in the nurs­ ing profession, incluqing duty as an Army nurse in Australia and New Guinea, Miss Hession a' na­ tive of Fall River, isa "gr~<;luate of the Fall' River General Hos-' pita!.

start. qU,~re,d, the bazaar Items: , We were lulled into this sense Gifts for everybody on your ef .complacency list" the sign h~d' said, and we by a firm re­ ' had bought, all ill.a good fause. solve after the, There were' earrmgs, with a late a~d hurried j . stone .missing; pot holders; a rack for paper napkins; dish s hop pin g of ..

Christmas 1956

towels marked Sund1;ly/~onday, that C h r i s t~

'Tuesday, etc. (W,ho 'do we know mas 1957 would

scrupulous enough to aclhere to see a stockpile

this?); a bl;\by swea.ter .already. of g i f t s lei-

.too small for .chubby .Maura.. , I surely accumu-. We separated the piles: a few lated through usable ChristrrIas gifts,'some ;that winter, .spring, ,.}}t. would <1:0 for Easter, the. em·er­ • u m mer and ·~tt. gency pile-and the Argyles: . fall. IK"·""',,,,,,· Sans complacency, we scan,the Today though we met our evening newspaper ad; layout Waterlo~.' our walking shoes, set the alarm clock...

Delightful T a s k , Shopping, anyone? .

Triumphantly we brought down the so-called "stockpile" Widow and Da4ghter from the attic. Like a child emptying .his Christmas stock­ nter Convent ing, 'we dumped the whole thing : SPRINGFIELD; '(NC) ',,-' A out onto a bed, propped our list­ widowed mother and· her '41~ of-people by the bedside lamp year-old daughter will leave and set about the' delightful task here to enter the Congregation' ; of assigning those gifts. of the Humility of Mary .a t · Ot- C. .' SOLEMN MOMENT' 'FOR M.IKE: Be,in, blessedb. y Reeking of mothballs were tumwa, Iowa, on Januar)' 4. " 1 Argyle s'ocks, made painstakingly . They are Mrs. Tomme MyreIie Father' E. Carl Lyon, is' Mike,: winner of first prize as the .i by one of the Three Middles Morris and her daughter, Miss best trick dog In' a pet and. hobby' show swnsored by. the '.; Christmas-before-last for a boy Grace Morris.. Both were 'emCatholic Youth Organiz~tion,of Elessed Sacrament Scho.ol, ., . friend no longer on the scene, ployed by the State' of Illinois. . Following graduation at 'the' WaShl'ngton ..... , . ' M'k 1 e b . eIo,ngs ..to:'.;M.ary· 'B eth Shit' c u elS, p~eand size 12! Almost subcon­ They resigned from their jobs 't d" h h sciously, every time .a. new date .... in -November to comple.te· dis~ . .Fall River Hospital, Miss.•HesstPn ':'. ure WIt er, pe~.. " . .:.:' I :, arrives at. our house we .find position of their personal affairs. 'join.ed the staff of "Pej'er "Bent, .' . ourselves gla.ndng at his.feet:.. . In a.long search before settling ~dgham .Hospital .;:where·, she ;, B' Then .those terrific bargains on their unusual course, the becillne head nurse. :Aiter a fivee 0 Ie· U we'd picked up' last year on the . two women considered various year stint at the New ·.England .< day-after Christmas, half-price orders for about eight months.

0 eales: stationery-pink; handker­ . They contacted 12 before'decid­ . ­ chiefs, . examined 11 % months in,g on the one at Ottumwa. Mrs: ens asa Second.Lieutenant and ,,' The Catholic' Wome'n's Club 'of . Hebert; musical accompaniment later and found cut on the b'ias; Morris; who. has been :,Widowed ,was ,discharged as Lieutenant l'lew Bedford, with Mrs. Leo J. is under the. 'direction of Mrs. bargain scarves _ misprinted, ·since her daughter .was two and Colonel.· She is also an alumnus . ';l'elesmanick 'presiding, Will pre~. Frank Mahon.··./ i.; roses overlapping leaves; ·two one~half· years old, said' she of Boston' College. sent at their meeting tOf.l~g~(~~n : Mrs. , Joseph' C. Duggan and left gloves.. :Into the emergency longed for many' years to enter • ' . • ... C?rigi?al . presentation' ba!;e.d ':,on Mrs. Pemberton Nye will be.an box they g6i?ecause any scarf a convent.' .'.' EIghth Grader- Views .th~. theme t~at Christmas'is:a' charge of costumes. Miss Mary will do when it's rairiing, same . • • Poster' Contest mixture of childhood !antasYllnd Louise Phelan is scenic designer. with a 'hanky, relatives don't' Mothers of Pnests . the true stories that pare~ts, t~ll Following the presentation m~nd ~ink .stati?riery -and we Honored Medal' ; .. DES :MO"INES,(NC) An their children about the :Bir.th{of there will be a short business 'mlght lose two right gloves. . ..' eighth' grade student from Yank­ Christ. It was written a/ld:'!:'c:U- ,meeting .and refreshments " . ' .At t~e request of'a newly- 'ton, S.D., has been named grand rected by Mrs: Perry J ..Coh'ol'ii'n.· ..... . ., . For Aun.t Agnes ordain~d 'p~iest wishing to honor prize winner in the National The cast includes Melahi'il.. On to the' spring purchases:. it ...hi!! moth~,r'srole in' the ftoweringCatholic Rural Life Conference's reira Kaharl, Kathleeh""C6mis­ ."'~ .1 pocketbook in a bizarre'shade·.of of the'priesthood a 'medal has 1957 poster contest. . key, Edmund Butler, E'rhU·M.oh­ '·,i green "but awfully gooc;l qual- -' 'been designed by Carl Link, New . She is Jean Tamisiea of Sac:;rec:i. ~ils, K;atherine Coholltti/')Rob­ itY,"and meant to go 'with Aunt York artist, depicthlg the signi-' J~eartS~hool in~Y,~nktQP'~hose 'ert LaWler, Ambrose Ft!itl,~J.!~ir. Agnes'tan suit.. Unfortunately' ficance of the Sacrament of Holy 'diawing on', the ··contest' tpeine, and Joseph C. Duggan·Jt:.:.cT~e . .. ,1 Aunt Agnes gave her tan suit to Orders. "An Outdoor Shrine-;-A Sign. of. children will be Mark and \tuiia

the Thanksgiving clothing col­ ' The medal shows.a mitre sig- God," ·was selected as. the best CohoIan. .~ '",.",~g

1\ le<;tion arid everything" she 'is . nitying 'the bishoP'whO"c~li~'>:aoi 250 entries. 'jHer .prize·1s ',,;Lighting ~nd staging"wiil~~

weari!1g this winter is lavender­ man to the 'priesthood and im- $200 under' the direction of ViCtof"R

.' ish. We're still trYI'ng to. thtnk' ..parts, to·,. hl'm ,a· sharl'n'g·. I'n" ,·,th·e " 1 ' Jeail'sdrawing'llhows . .,1).:.~ .

• a'famil y ~ . ...... of somebody' who might. be Priesthood of Christ. The .two . putting the finishing touches on ~:.~~-'~_":-"':':;;.-~:f-:a boathCkery.ard shrine tp Our Blesst!!i yearning for a green bag,' priestly hands are shown D~ing . M 'CORREIA &' 50,".5;.:", Now, ",.here was all that lin­ anointed with oil~these hands' .~ " gerie bought last spring? Oh, now. being consecrated to the ONE STOP};;'" .... '. .yes ... we remembered all the service of God and set aside to ~ . ' . SHOPPING CENTER'... ·:·' " 'times during the year' that the bless and absolve and minister 52 Varieties - Hand Cui' .. . Bto~kpile had been a godsend for . to men in the name of Christ.· .' BUZZARDS BAY birthdays and showers and the Encircling the mitre and handl '. Opp, B B 'i'he~tre·· 'like.. . .:, .. is a ban~ of. wheata~d.·grl,lPe8",·.: "Love God a.ll. . ·,n:' mid~pile, :we. ~ame ·acr()Ss. si~ilifyi,~g tl,:ie. ,prie~:s <'m-jlli!t.~h,thy life/and : . DENNIS~ORT .,' ,~~mmer purchases: apa~~.,of.; .w<?rk-:-:-t9 chaQg~. br~ad:a~'~~m~ . upoitIi.n..?*' ',t . . The Old" p'ost Office , , j ' ~rrmgs of . Cape May diamondl"~~int~)" the J~()~y,·;~1I~4 .. J;l1~;,1,4!!f " '. ..' . . . ',' .. . "". (~:-:~ctly.: r~gh~ f9r t~e·.persoQ"l~-'\-:~~r-~.st. '." ,~:; ~':';'l' ,0':: ~,: ';'". ..Eect 13.11';>::'. ... .~t#d.ed,). ·bracelets of', ~~e ..~e,'·' , At tl\e·,'~tt~:,,~.'~~ 'I,,"~~.' . " " ::.' .."., . . .tbor,~Ughly 'sa~isfactory; i: .:.<;. " are ~~ .. ~ords ":0:, '~",~"e~~A~;·~ . "" ' . ' . ,': ". Rather.' exultall\, .we'ehecked,. Aetep~um:~; :'A., ~r~~sr.~ore.y~r,7-:··. ~ ... .. ,~.;~ ,~I~'U~S; s.e.t aside '.~.:' .~l~~ougb,~ th9~~t~~:-.,.:~', .' :'" ,;", ' , ' i o o ' . , :.. '/~:, ,riftli for:wrapping.'1!u~ ttIis '... ·.f"'. ,orm~ ;,m'?tli~...... ~f .,;~I~""'~~l··; . .Jf~Eto~t£IO~,~,;...' i··~·".....,,..,. O-:A, bflsket ·p6ck~tb~k complete . fo~e~"st~,~,~~!,!~~e~~9~,~:~~,. [. ': _,~,,~.o~o:':""io..:;:' '.--:'.'!O.. 'iiiii:~~;;J . with shells glued' toilS stop?' '. me.dal~.~h.!:,"~;a ~~a~ be,~~:. cliuc'ifrXES~:::'ARtictEsClfDEVC>ooN ". . :"It's' bro:wn; ·you. ·.notice":· the by. otliers\- . ". .-: . c.' . , ,'" • . .

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their Jive ,month' stay in ·the·

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:~)ston College Graduate Is First Navy·' N rse to be Promoted to Captaincy

Capt., Houghton is the tlrst to have been seleCted from a num­ ber' of eligible candida~s who were nominated on the basis of their outstim·ding records. She was selected by a board com­ posed of senior officers of the U. S; Navy Medical Department that convened in· Washington in september. . Capt. Houghton is now chief of· nursing services at the naval hospital. She was graduated

~THEsnA, Md., (NC) - A· . Naval Hospital, National Naval

an who received her. nursing education at Boston College .is ~e first U. S. Navy nurse to be lected for the rank of captai . . ,qllpt. Ruth ~. Houghton, who wa~ born in Methuen, Mass., recei ed her appointment in ceremo ies held here at the. U. ,S. 1'1

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from the school of nursing at St. .John's Hospital Lowell, Mass., and started her' naval career in .June, 1935. She received her bachelor of science degree in nursingedu­ cation from Boston College, and is now completing graduate work at the Catholic University of America in· Washington for her master of science degree in nursing'. Capt. Houghton has had over-

_.~----

THEANCHOR­ Thurs., Dec. 12, 1957

9

seas service in Australia, New Guinea and Hawaii. She has had duty in several cities· in the United States, including a term of service at the Bureau of Medi­ cine and Surgery. . Her permanent home address is in Andover, Mass., where her parents reside.

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Christmas Socials CO'ntinue

Franciscan 'Slster s Labor, ··of' .Love" .

',­ . Contin~'~~ fro~.pageODe"\clin~~o.the:hos~:", io~,:~e:~a~e<Old"'Catholic ·Sect.. ParJf~ :':'Pa~;~de .:Wlth the large mlxmg.bowl and: ,reaso, s~e'ls caret:\ll.t0: keep. the::.: '5' ,'. ,.' .•.. .'. . ;. '," ..' , .. , .. 8Poon with' which; she.·.prepiir~S:}'neta~~box·i.n;.\fhi:h; c:c>lUplete:d>. eeks :Reunlon. ,.,1 '>: ,ilMMACULATECONCEPTION' F tai ~ LeCo the flour- 8?d waterp.uxtu~e f~r .:.,hos~, are storeq '.~lg!J.tly~.~l~se~; '. ',::!-O.NDON·(NC). ~ The "$mall.. '';'FALlhtlVER'' ".' ...•: .....'.' D~~i ::e, . :ean mte, C)ai~v the host 4R~gh. The process I.S ,~n.~ t~~. ?oor to her..bilkery s;bl,l~';" group": .0f.'·Old . C:atholic" clergy,,' " . , .",.. : : . ..- 'i ";' .," "':Su g.a~l DOl:es . Gaudr~au, familiar t~. ~ny . housewife' as jit. all . tlll~es ... ';'., '~.' ., ." ,E~glish members: of a. her:etical ...; ,S~Il~~en. of .. the par ,sh fr?m 1 ~n ex,. ~r,y .. FatermD,

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· that used. tor making. .]ump-freeAn inter«;sting, sideligh~.~ ,the ~t vrhich broke, a~ay. from the .}~e. ~~e-~rlmar! thr()~~~ third . ~~re Ouellette and Susan Kul­ eream. sauce, .,Ve.ry slowly, . J!lanufacture ,of ,hosts~'concel'ns . Gh~rch~!nthe.:lat~.19thcentury; gra~e~lll. be. en~er,tamea at a y . :':. . . " ,; .:'. . . . ',,',

Mother adds -water t,o flour until: their. ~~ickness.· .You may have '.are seeking'reuni.on with Rome, ..ChrlStmaS p.~rt~. s,?onsored· by. . Co~prlsmg the prize' c?~m.~t~

it . has re.llched .the' right,. very noticed' .that '.u~(m ,occasion the : i~ has b~e~ __reported.here. . the. W~~e~.s ~ulld. from 2 t~ 4. tee are. ~?!ores .~~udr~a~, MI:-:

Uun .conslste.ncy. . Host yo~.,:reCeive.is J!ap~l' AIin, .... ,'. rwo priests' ot:' the Old Cath~und~!.. afternoon~ l',l :t~e, parl~h '. Le~?mte, and Mlss'Fontame. -: .

. We were interested to, Jear~' at.~tp'~r 'tiin~s. relativel:r thic.k. . oii~,Ch1,lrchin .England, W. '·G.· " na.ll, ,WIth '·M~s.. ~eorgeCh~r-' .: ~~ice~S:'of,' the , S<.>dali~Y . ~ . ;

that although, sacramental' wine .. '~r.hlC,If.17r hOsts have .usually' been .•. Hingston ,and George Saints.· bOl1~e~u, Cat~ol~c Yputh ~halr-.. Pre~ldeQt pol,ores' Pinsonnault,

must be· use"d at Mass, there, , shJpJ?~<l .f!Om . dista.nt:' ~ poiritS; "'bury~'.n~ve,"alreaqy ~een: re- .. man".~s hos~ss... . , . ,~. ' 'Vice-pres~?eilt' ~~aiL Le<;;olllte; .. , is no presc~!bed "sacramen,illl., ~o~...:, the ~ontempla~ive ·.coni':·ceived into the'Chui:ch,:there-' .~t;~?a~~r~ .of t~~, pa,rlsh, will.:: Secreta~. J:oan' Fontaine a~

floUr;" Any good grade. of aH- . ~.~mt.l,es ·whlch sl.!.pply t~ousand~ ports say. and. the' group's bishop' . be ~~en, on. Ii VISIt to t~ LaTr~asurer. SU!!8n, KultYka.'

~urpose wheat flour may be ... ()f., ~hJ1rch~s,· .fo~ . j'nstance; . a~d.; . ,.~n~ ftve. other .' clergymen. still ,~Sall~tte Shrme. n~~t Thursday· ..... . " ' ; .

employed; but Mother cautioned, . ~eY .. !l,re made<thicker to guard, remain' ·to. be ,reconciled with . und~r, the supervls.lOn .of' Mrs; . "AI_umnci~ Ass'oci~'tion

.that too~reshly milled flour,. al\lat9st ~r,eaka~e·in ~,an~pori. the.Holy See.,-Arrangem~J:ltsare.,' Ch~~bonn~l;lu,;Buses wll.l'l~ave . . . . •

makes poor .dough. she;.. . Reminiscent.. '. Lord's" being?1ade to arrange .' th.e1 ..grounds at arei Marks Anniversary

gets a batch of fresh ,flour, Sh~:l C9mmand to,hlS disciples,· "Gath-' ' Ior ...thelr.receptIon. and that of ,WI l~,eturn to. the chur~h .},lan.. '. ' ., .. '

puts it asipe to age for ',[ er up. the fragmei!.ts their, laity,. the reports add. , . . ' . Will be The 50th year of its or'ganiza- '".

months.before using it. Weather; .. ;lest .ttiey--be lost'.' is the' use the :". The,.Old,Catholic Church .be- serv~~.: .' .tiOJ~ ... was, ',celebrated by the.

too,' makesoOa .difference to,the,.'l Sisters of the: sel'"aps 'that . g a l1,dn',G!:ll'many.when a,group Sacred Heal'ts .Academy Alum­ pr,?ce .8 ,fact verified Ilre,left .of· .Ca:'tholie clergymen refused, NEW·.BEDFORD ' . ' . ' '. .,:nae' Association, ,Fall River,.oft

m home Iptchens. ' " .' . the',rect"angular'sheetS. '; the' doctrine:of papal" . 'A, sponsored .'the. .

"Fair weather is better. for Mother MaryViilce~t told.·us of infallibility,·defined by the Vat~ byniembers oHhe Couples Club .. ' .

.baking, . but damp :weather' is a woman, dying, of. can<;er;. ""ho ican Council in 1870.. '. . w,ill be conducted at 7 ,SundayS«;nioJ,'S' of . better fol' cutting the completed for a year before her death could A hierarchy:. was. established night in St. Anne's Hall; Davis·..A;ll;l.n;mae partI.clpated m t~e tr~- .,

hosts,'" says Mother Mary Vin-· .. retain no solid food ,other than ,in .the Old,.Catholic Church by Street, with Mr... and Mrs. John . dltlC~n~1 Offermg the Lilli~.

eent. She moved. to her shining 'those particles' of bread' moist::- ··~e.· episcopal cons~cration of ·Pimental as chairmen.Christ'- .', and r~ne~a~ of the Act of Con~ .. ,

electric baker and opened it to ene~ with milk' or ,water. They some of ilis, clergy by Jansenist mas gifts will be exchanged fol- : ...secration to the Blessed VirgiJn

show 1,11; its gleaming interior. ar.e al;;o giyen to poor~amilies bishops of~tlleNetherlands.. . lowed by enterta.inmentand· re- . Mal')T. . ". . ,;: " .

. . It..iook~ like a waffle iron but who use 'them 'as"a cracker for , Through" the 'years'since" its' " freshinents~ .' . ,,, Rt.· ~~".' .M,:sgr. ,Edmund ,j,' oO

.• Instead of the familiar ~affle babies or . eX,tenders. to make '~rganizatioil; theO~d' Catholi'c ,The' assisting committee inWar~,. ~ f()rmer' chaplajn'of 'Pl~ ,'eorrugatio.ns, .its plates are' soup more. fiJling; . ;",' ...... ; chur:ch has modifiecfand'dTc>pped eludes Mr.' and' Mrs. Jaciritho . Academy,. preside.d at· Benedic.., '8JDooth except for symbolic Lik.e· other" liuppm~rs; Motlier.· :variQus doctrines'· and practices' Fernandes· ·Mr. and 'Mrs. Arthur 'Him· entof the Most Blessed, Sacra:' · signs on doe plate that are trans~ has he,r'busy seasons; wheh'.the' :~f .. traditional CatHolic belie!. ·-'Machado 'Mr. and. Mrs~ Vietot ;::'ll1 . Rt:.Re:v. ~sgr. ,James.i. • ferred to. one side of the hosts. demand' for hosts is extraordi:., .;·.·.~,h~;r~sul~ i~;'that; tOday in' most , )te~el.io:. ~nd.Mr;:and Mrs:'Joseph ,.~'Gerrar~, y:y·, .. another :#;rlll.~r',

The other.plate prints the other naiily ]:a,~ge....Christmas,:.. o:C :Old; Cath61'ic'~h(irches/the lit~ Barboza.' . - ;" ,.... chaplam preached at the.cere'­

side and bears a Y-shaped en-:- course, is.~~e'9fthe~~~ime~, as' :~r!O".!s 'd~lebrated' 'in ihe"ver-'·, . Mr".and·Mrs.Frank S. 'Abreu' mony. Also present were ano.ther

graving. ::This, transferred to the are L~nt,' Eastet;;' and~ll 'the '. n~curar, and such tliings 'as the Will. preside at the m'eeting'pre.:.· former ,ch~pl~in: .R~v.' Raymond

host, enables the ~riest to break, major: feasts 'of the"Churcn. The ~ar~iJlge of th~ clergy'and··con-.· 'ceding the .·social·with Rev. ,T. Cc;>?~idine, ,~n<! ,the present

it' smoothly :a'nd lessens the dan- . beginning ot.-.Lent)s "especiany fessi,?n as'an 'optio'ri'al part of the' drubal G. Branco pastor offer-" , chapl~lln, :' V~ry ~ev., J;l;umbertO

ger of str,ay crumbs of the Holy'· busy; :M~ther noted; becaus'e·"~o·. S3~ra1'nerit:.of 'Penance~ 'are ad:.. . 'ing' the opehing p~ayer; ',,; ","'" . S:~edei!o~. ~ ',' .

""-' . Eucharist dropping to the altar. many; ch~rches, hold.missio~s;~~ " ~e~e4.to,' " " '. SAC~ED HEART; :," The Alumnae, incommemora...

. ,When the baker is at the right·, that tJ,me,: " ....:- ., '5" , G" I . . . • . : NOR'rH ATTLEBORO. " mg.itsqolden Jubilee, has been

temperat,ure, de~er~ined by a " . Bu:~:at~he se~son·ofChristmas>. .. ' ay~· sE,~Is.te.nce ,.' .,': .... '~h~ Chiidren of Mar; Sodality'.' :conduct~ng.a fund-raising.ap~an.

thermom,eter set m ~ts cover, one. one. 1J;~~oJuntanly,dr~ws a com- . DwarfsAtomlc Energy.., ,is spQ,risoring a Christmas whist·· to ~ontrlbute to the redecoratl!lg

spoonfuL of ~he ,thm .flo~r and p~rl~or ~.et.wee~ the lowly~ be- ._ WASHINGTON ." .:..:....: I : ·ai'8. o'clock .tonight in the' arish. '" of ~he conoventchapeL. Co-~h8lr-:­ ,:"

water batter IS spr.ead m Its cen-' ,gmmf:lgs,~f.~e bread destmed., . . . . . '., (N9 . A.am. hall. ,A . .. , !! . .... men of the appeal, and pourers' ter, and' the pla~es: are. locked for glor~,.o!1.,oill' ~l~ars~nd.the.,~,~~t L.~ .~~.auss, chaum.an.: a~atded ..: : : ~f ~~::s. :r:)~ I b1 '.,at-the tea, following .the chapel " • I together for abo~t a minute and unassl;lmlng c~~in~ o~, earth of ?d ~~ c . nergy Co~mlsslon,. 'luncheon: ...will 00' ,:' p d ..ceremonies,' are Miss'" Leonora

,a half. Operatmg them, inci- the Kmg. of Kmgs:.-.': ,-' a't ISC?V~ry<>more Important fudge and " d .';11 :rveld dan.. . Donovan and Mrs. Veronica Hey.;.

· dentallY~ is a heavy job. Mother'. To make h~searthlY cradi; '. " "'w~:~,~oml~ en~r~: tv.:~Gsod,made . ing the ,w~i~t.~ so''- ,!r~ ,wood Du~, ,'. Mary Vmcent let us open and' H h 1 Good . an. oun .a . ex.." elose them' and .we ~ealized. t A ehc osbel" °t·uh~ on l~'k" , i s ! e d ' 'and. controlled the uni- . The .. committee .~~ charge of . .' , . a urn e.. J,ng I e straw, verse." . .. food· mcludes Cehne· LeBlanc

. :

once that a seven-hour' stint of . A simple' thing' like wood .' c :, . '. "..' ., host baking is no mean test of . .. . "At?ml~pe~~rgy ·is not. new," •. hene ,Lacasse. Mal'le ~ourn.ier,

e endurance, quite .apart from the And for HisdaU'" . ,Il. said, It has, us . An!1e lJerCONTRACTORS

fact .t t",tl1ere!s·, no -part of, the: " .He 1 h : t o / 7d' . . I;.. "smc~,.C;to<l cre~.ted. the .UnIverse. . g~ro";, Phy:\h~ St,. Pierre!·.-F:lora . . . . . , " .'.... .. .,' . ha .job that can be 'done -:'sittinl: " A 'hc~ .. thIPa .el·.'kIv:me d' L':'J'~hat:;ls: new .)sm~n'~ 'applica-··· Rmg~,ette;"JoanJet~e, ~Imonne . " , l ' " , ; ,.,."!;},." '\: ", ,down.. ,'., . . . ':' ., A 1 '.!ion ;pf ;... ,.. • _,t· .' '... ' . , ,:" . s,~p,.e .mg I :.e wm!:. . ~~.' <;hallenge'for 'good'Ol' evil B 1;'·' """'S" h'· ,." '1':1':":"'" "":'~' " ."" BUIL·DE·R·S·:.' '.' After . Mo~her 'hali baked a . : .... .,.. '.. .', .' .. that :g~es with' it." , .. ' " . ,e.,.glan, . C . 00 ·...()a.n . ...., ,;.. .,. '., ,.,'.,. , '.,:,

batch Of, thm. shee.ts ~f h~s~-,- . i'" /l.'VGC~ncles:;"'. ~·":"·AdJn;Strau!is:was'a,participant,:··,:~~PN.'~S, .. Belgium ,(~C)"':'" , ' .

bread, sh~ p~ages the~~!l a damp' VATICA!'i CITY: (N:Cr:-":Th~r ' in 'a ;panel discussicm of "Reli':' ,Ar~ang~m~llts..f.or a .loan of .., cloth to ~~,Isten. sU~lclently f!>r ,,; "death, ofHisEmfnen~eAdeodate '. 'gion' .and Power'." at·, George $~,200,00Q.:to;_Catliolicschools.in " " . :Sy cuttmg.. ,First },a,rge hos~s, GiOV31)ni Cardinal ;Piaz:Za: 7S;' V{ashmgton.University here.' , hiS arc.hdlOcese ha:v~ been .made·· , '.' en sm~1l one,s ar.~ cut ~ro~' "1?~cr~tl;lry of; ~li~ ·'Sat'reG,Consis'~'. ' " . : .... .' ': .... by His}:niinence Ernest Cardinal . "," e~chsheet ofbread,:.~nd ~ald m ,torial:Congregatio'n; 'redu~'es to~. ;""""~-~"":--""""~~"".""""""~""""""".""",; van~o~y;,Archl>ishopof Malines. '.: '. "1 pIles· beneat~ 8 p're~: until they 57' the memb.ers' of. the. sacred' _ A Dehc.tous _ . .The Cardinal . announced his arid So~s, Inc. :~~rch~~~ed for s~lpment to <:ollege 'of Cardillals:: ;rile trad.i':" . ~ Treat ~ ?eci.sion to raise the fU~ds by

OST.ERVILLE

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for m!le througQout ness ,Pope, ·Pius. XU: brought . Fall R.lver, .~ehvery of hosts t.o college. up to . full' 'strength . in' ..: ~ . !hem IS a Simple matter, as It January 1953 .. ,. ~s also to St. Mary's, Cathedral,' '.' only a few blocks distant. 'Hosts ~ destined for other cities in the dio:ese are. sel1~ by first. class .. ~ mall, and thiS raises Ule problem Fine selection of .- of mailing boxes. Mother 'showed Ch,' ·,·stmas G,·'ts· ~ us her storage closet, packed to t?e ceiling with boxes. of all . for 'every m·emb.e~1 .~ sizes and shapes, saved 'for her :by friends in variou~ department ",of the fam~ly.·· . : . , stores. ,O"':n' net')" enn;n•.' DR'tii Chri~tlll';'" - . But there are p'recautions~ hich m,utst bebtaken.ev.~n.here. -:w 'K.'.E.A... ..T . e can use oxes which' have . _. held candy," ~othl!r -exblained,' 5,62 County Street: .. . - ,'. .. " ';., "nor' those ~lued tbgethl!r with Opposite St.J,awrim.,e Church .. ~: M·ade.: ~ite·..Chips certain types of sulphur p~ste; '~ New Bedford: Mass':' '.\.,. :;,/'. '/4. Ie" F' . he .' '.. might... ,: . . ..' ' \ . , ' .• ,

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Stamping Out Large Hosts~.

Stamping Gut Small Hosts

Glee Club of Sacred Hea.rts Aca.,demy .

To P~esentChri.stmas·, ·C,·" n'c:er..t· S.'u'n'.da·.y'

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11

you must not read this or you Legion of Decency and the N8­ cannot' read this." tional Office for Decent Litera­ '0' i.... ; Msgr. Fitzgerald's statement ture is carried on. The rights said that ~fforts such as the these agenciesse,ek to protect Sacredi Hearts Academy Glee ~'The Ligllt of'I1awninlf," by'the ,:. ,NOLD's to, arouse public opinion· are among tp,.e most important Club win present a Christmas club; "Rose 'and'the Lily/' Miss' ,.... , .. ,., . :..... :' ' . ' have been :.'specificallY requested.·' and. s~cred - - the right of pa­ concert Sunday night at 8 o'clock ·.'Boland; ....The .,Holy 'Ciiy," :~glee . " <;.~AtlDued .Fro.m I.'age One . by such noted. authorities as Mr. ren~ ~o bring up,.th~r·children in Sacred Heart .School audito- . club;' "Gesu Bambino," Miss" the "U; 'S•. Bishops,umerelY··.sug- . J., Ellgar Hoover, and the Nation- .,in ~n atqlosphere,r.t:3so·nably free rium, FalLRiver, under' the di- Orombie; .','C).., HolY. :Nigh~/, ,g,lee:.~' ~es~ a program and ·offers a list· a1 Council ,of Juvenile COllrt,· from. defilement, . the i-ight of rection of A. ·Edmund Furgiuele... club:·.··· . ' ,'., .. ". r; . i, ,:,. of 'pocket-'size books and· maga- Judges." :, . childr~n .t~. 'be pr'otected from The pr~gram will include ch~ . . "Silent Nig~it;' 'and '''Adeste'' . ~i!l~s.~objectionable tor youth ,to· ,"J?espite ~e ·expr.essed 'fears grave and if\Sidious moral dan-' ral selections by the club"solos '. Fide~esi":', "glee' .club; "W~ite·. mdlvl~u~ls and groups who re.,.,' of critics ..who . recommend' this ger, the right' 'of all not to be by Mary E. Boland, Agnes Crom- . Christmas" .Miss Cronan" the quest. It.. ..'. . .. : r t r a s h . be allowed to remain on' assailed ,at every tutn by a dis-' . hie, Shei.la Cronan and Phoebe tableau; i:Christopher Ilobin Is '" The. NODL recently wascriti- sale for child.re~ because .'pre~-· p!~y of indecency. . . . Cham~ux, and a, tableau with, Saying His Prayers," Miss Cham:' .cized by Bennett Ced,' head of' sure groups~ are liable to go ~oo' "The function of'these agencies CathermeJ~o\Var~as the Ble~sed p o u x . · ,R,~ndomHouse Publishing Com-·far, .NODL reaffirms its confi-' is .rel~ted in character. Each Mother, Pauline, Gallimd and The Ii 1 g',. f 'I 't' . p'any; New, York ·City, 'on "The dence·in the traditional common' evaluates and' offerS the evalua­ b' g' h d"'; na " roup 0 se ec Ions 'wa II'ace',' ' TV'',n I terVlew " ",'.. sense Arne' " peo~e, : '1"" tion to • .·ose· in·terested. Each N"~,re B ar b ara .... a .as s,h' eP.}lr s by' the cltIb"will:include'~;',Let It.'. M'k I .e·: ." of the' :V., rIcan. the Monsignor sal'd seeks to enlist in a proper and' rogra m 0 e th ABC TV and solOISts . t ' f 11'. . Snow,".. ··Jin~e. ,:Beli~,". "Mr.. ' p . k .. ,v r ,e -. ne-... '. lawful manner the cooperation Th e prog ram JS as 0 ows. Santa" and ."The·' 'S' I. • ,wor.. ' . ' , , .. ,... , P·liblic.Opinion. "s·mg L ou, d S· Lo" d '.' re sa· ong In , J • of those who can curb the ·evil'. 109 w· an the' Air;"'" ',' .' ' . Mr. Ced exp.I'essed his view ""It ili"the'·firm conviction of . • . . . '. that· e orsh" ." . f tIle NODL," he continued, "that the ,Each hwites the help of all peo,­ Accompanists, :will' be, TCath-' '. c ns Ip .IS.. on.e. O' .' p.le in the support of its obJ'ee­ · SHA G ra,dua t es W I n , StevenS' Elizabeth' "'''~ . most dangerous "·thmgs m Amer- . court 'of public' opin,ion w,ill ulti­ - 'leen Cetola· tives, Each endeavors through Scholarship ·Honors and Winifr~dWelCh.'. '. .., " . icatod~y;'r" He" said.he th.ou!tht mately decide' the. issue.. justly positive action to form habits of .. ,.. ., . . ,.' ,d, .',. tbat '~as'far as book"pubhshmg arid fairly -.,. our children will artistic taste .which will move' !'Irs. Jean Mon~r~h O·Br~e.n. c·, . .'. is. ~oQcerned, they are closer' to ,protected' and our· freedom. 'people to Se.ek out and 'patronize ea ' M ISS M ary,·L ou' C anm ff ,and MISS,' " ppreclatlon .. the line of' decency and' what preserved.~'. Gene.vie.ve:.Robe.rts". ine.mbe,rll'of' "G.·l·,.;'en··.Is· 'a''be'II'as" . ' '.' '. pe.o·ple should' be reading than.' M,sgr.Fitzg·erald's . statement 'reft'ect 'the. good. work fthey v the m'In .their 1t 'h' th ' . , , the Jumor:.class at Brl.dgewater. ':. ,: , . : - , . - . ; . :~any other"kind of ,publisher or ora eac lOgo e State Teachers' College, alltrree .' ~I). apprecI~tlOn tea. was gIven· any'other purvey'or of enter~in-' also iilcluqed th~ follo,wing quo­ Church. Neither agency exer:" . graduates. "of Sacred Hearts In, honor of. the committee 111em- ment." ,.,' . tations from' the 1957 statement cises censorship in any true sense Academy, F.all River, have been' bers ~f the Fall ~azaar ,b;r me~- ' . . of the U. ·S. hierarchy adopted" of the word;" . d uc t e d 10 ,. t th',e E PSI . "1 I 0 ta bers . of the Assumption, Circle'" He tmade bl' It clear refer­ at its· November. meeting at the r~============i In . . ,.' .' . h ' hef was h db Ch t f ' K0 D it on 'p' th Daughters of ISl\bella of Fall rmg 0 pu IS ers 0 ar ack' Catholic University of America, 1 N ~.P e\ °C"ll appaHe a 8 ,. t e' . River, in the C~tholic' Commun ' bOoks~ A moment later, Mr. Washington, D~C. ' . . . ' .. - .. Wallace br.ought out- ·the fact' '. "The right to speak out in . a ~dna '1,0. ege on?r QCl: y itY·C~nter. Th In uca~lOn. e ImpreSSIVe " : that NODL does not· deal with '. ceremony. was conducted by the Regent !'Irs.. George T~urg.ee,.. , ,' . " ,. .: favor ,of gooq m~rals can hardly' 'd t f" th C 11 D who was m 'charge of "arrange~ .!!ueh volumes, bU,t. rather WIth be ma democrac,,y Funeral Home P resl en 0 e 0 ege r. .. " .' b k' b 'ks ' ....challenged , .. Clement Maxwell.' . ' ll)e.rits, ·announces· the, foUo'wing, . paper. ac . . 00 ;' . . ~I}.G~ ~l' ,o~rs.' It isa long-stand­ The candidates were chosen me~bers.. who" were' ,honored: . " ...:·cerf's Charges. .' i~g~radition of this country: that 571 Second St. from amoJ:ig their'fellow students ,Mrs. A\ex.:Ra~mond;·Mrs. Mi,,' :Mr.·:.(:~i-f ',,said: that. "self-ap-, g~oupS, large: and smal~, have Fall River; Mass. on the basis' bf their 'high"scho-' cha~· Leary,~t:s: R.o,?eO.Cl'!a:.. poil)ted . snoophoundsH , h a v e. glve~ exp~e~slo? of t~~lr. con­ lasUc reeorii," their profe;:;siortal ,'rest,' Mrs:, (;er~ld. pl0':lt~er,. ~r~.. ,~'tak~: upon themlielves to~ll~~rn,over.'~nJustI.ce,pohhcaI, llO­ 95',9-6072 attitude, tlieir' personal qlialifi'ca- :. Th0m.as Mann~n~,· Mrs: WIlham evetybody\ else what, they should .. ,clal .and ~conomlc. '... tions, and 'their potential'for iri.,· O'Nel!, Mrli·.plar a Mendes. Mrs.. read; whattJ'ley.should see and . . ~'.It.is iri'fullaccord with this . ~.~"~~.,~.~~~~~~~.,~~~~ teUectual' "growth' and advance­ Ceceha Klill~~l'\er, :Mrs, Edward, what.they, shoul<{ think." . .. tra<iition :that the work of the' ment in ihe 'e'dttclltional fleld, . Berube,.M,~s .• If_rank .~.·,S~.1y'a"..'i-ie,i;ai<i;" "the'-.motive ~., the.,. r;;=';'=:=';';;;';;' .," ," Mrs. Jean 'Monarch O'Brien: is' Mrs.,. Alex.;,tmter . Vezm,a, ·¥rs .. NODI" is .a thoroughly: laudab'e the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. MarY'Henne~seyand Mil?!. Mayre.~~e (becaulle) il\. the,ir eyes they "@":NICKERSON' Edward Monarch, 561 President Clarke. are j>l:otecting the morals of the '., :. " " ... , FUNERAL'" Avenue. ,Her husband, Mr. John E' "'1 . S" 'American public". O'Brien, Iis·a· teacher in the 'Case· , ' pSI OIJ oronty: .. Blit he contended the'NODLis Fountain ·Pen High . Sc~ooI.. . Miss ~ary· Lou To' onight .~' making a mistake' and' "over­ ' . .• . ' and Canmff IS the daughter' of Mr... '., r : , . ' . , . . . , . . 's~epping the bounds of American ,." , " . ' . and Mrs. Joseph T. Canniff, 1'45 ,. ~Ep.l!ilon'Sorority.of.:Fall:Rive~ .:. ·;liberty." He said Americans '" Monumen.t Services.

Hanover IStreet. Miss Genevieve wIll ,lTleet at 7:30 tomght m .the .~ tQd'ay'are..intelligent enough' to , ',Servrng' the Cape and,

• SCHAEFFER " • PARKER Roberts is the daughter of Mr, Ca.tlwlic ". Community Center;:d~cidetorthemselves what they . SU'rroundingCommunities

.' • 'ESTERBROOK and Mrs. Michael Roberts 426' ~residlilnt·MaureenMcGough all- "want' to'" reac;I "without being . CAPE COD. MASS.

told... by self-appointed people, Robeson Street. All· are 'resi':' ~C?4nces: dents of Fall River: ; Tne organization's member- ". .. . .' " , ship is composed of 98 sopho- . ." . ', , Gifts New Bedford Guild, more, junior and senior Catholic" 'M.i~hael C.' Austin That Will Be Appreciated girls whoattendB,M.C. Durfee •. ft' Pla'ns, Open Hous'e High School. 'Rev. Robert· L.

Inc. • , DIC~IONARIES Plans are urider way for an .Stanton,l,lssistant at· Immaculate' " "FUNERAL HOME - , ',:". :,~ GLOftE$. OF..THE WORLD· ';;-' ::.. , ., . . :: • KEM 'PLASTIC ·CARDS·' MarY's ~ome; N,ew,.l~edford by. memDer of the high school facul- , F i' ". , ..:' "t.' 549 ·C·~U·lI1~T'" y',:- ST','.•.. ... , members' of' the : Infant Of ty is'adviset' ." , ., . . . . , r .' :r' aU"R ve!' . , '

'" "

NEW BEDFORD MASS

Prague qUild.. F~rther artange­ Pla~s for ~';joint. semi.,.formal :, .. '

ments wW be formul<\ted. puring danc~ willi the :Berchman~ ClUb,' C" • .3-2272'''.. . j • •.. ' , . . . . . • /,.. ' .' '. Chris.~m-a.s·',Cards

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:THE ANCHOR . . ThuJ:'s., Dec: 12, 1957

Ready for Delivery

D L ecent Iterature·

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MICHAEL E.. O'ROURKE

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R~ ·A.:WILCOX

'Meet'T

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C'~.,.P HADRI'N• 'G'IDN

:~~: ~~~~~::a~,Si;::~~~ai~::' ~:::c~:~~~:::;:~;.;\~~::~~~~~ theD urmg J~mi~ry a gatht~ring. mee 109 ,con d ucted by President Mrs. Pauline Bert­ hold, Siater .Grace Pierre; Su­ perior at the Home, introduced Mother Mary Ev'erilc;la, Provin­ eial, and Sister Bernadette Jo­ seph, School Supervisor;,who are making their annual com­ munity ·visit at St. Mary's. . Mother Everilda addressed the Guild and thanked them for the remarkable work done for the children and the Home. Following the business session Christm~s gifts were exchanged among Guild members and'each sister was, presented a gift. '-~

MARY OLIVER CANDY SHOP" -

Famou8 For Quality --:..

755 Purchase St., New Bedford

THE '~EAL CH'ISTMAS

GiFT

''-"6;.·~ly~~uth:::';~'' q,()s,

an o~ganization. of Catholic who attend. DurIee. will be,·};)oys··. dis-;~";;;~;i=;;;;S=~====~ ., cussed. The dance is to be held' '.', , L . . Monday,"Dec,' 20,: in . Taunton" . . . '. Tne Inn. ': ,

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DANIEL F. DWYER

JEFFREY' E. SU"LLI'VAN'

127. CHESTN~T ST. NEW BED~O~D

~

.

Religious • Family •. Personal. • BOxed Assortments

Leather Goods

Diredors 469

~ust

OS

RETAIL STORE HOURS. MON.-TUES.-WED.- 10 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. . : THURS.-FRI.- 9 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. SAT.- A.M. ~ 5:30 P.M. "", SUN. 1.0 A.M.- to 12:30.P.M.

Electrical Shop.

9

l'J26 ACUSHNET AVE. . .. . NEW BEDFORD'

~inan . 5-?555': ,

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St.; Fall River 2~3381

.STUFFED QUAHOGS

2 for '29 c .

.. .. MacLEA·N'$ SEA . FOODS "

.'UNION' WHARF'

-.. '; ,.;.,.

FAiRHAV-=N, MASS. .' . -"

Brief Cases Buxton Wallets· Zipper Cases

Decorations &

Party Goods

OLD CAP'E COD

COTE'S

El8ctricalContrae:ton

D'.•,''S1i1',IVan 1· ' . . &. Soils

,)7..neral

WY 4-3942

550 Locust St.

Fall River, Mass.'

OS 2'-2391

Rose E. Sullivan

Jeffrey E. Sullivan

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F ..ttera' Honae

F ..nera'Honae '

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• Table Covers • Napkins • Cups • Plates Christmas Candy Boxes .

R. A. WilCOX CO. ..

22 BEDFORD ST. FALL RIVER, MASS.

....


· Balancing the Books

Begins Prison Term

'.

,.;Sister,·of 'Mercy :Writ~s B.iograpby'" of: Foundress

I~M~:::=a;:C)

The Grea.test"Welc~m.' A

God LQve You

_~~~~~~~th~~iCaWj~anie-:o~a:

years ago for refusing to turn her Jewish-born 'ward over to a court-appointed guardian, .has been brought here to serve her sentence. ­ She is Mrs. Gertrude M. Lan­ gendijk, foster mother of ADneke Beekffian, whom she cared for and had.bapti.zed after the child's ­ parents were sent to a Nazi gas chamber during World War~I. many ways superior to its prede­ example, these indicate a sense In a celebrated legal case which cessors, it still falls sh'ort of. the of humor,. a precise but never. dragged on for years, the wom~b. ideal. cenSorious eye fot foibles, a was ordered to surrender Anneke Much w 0 r k .warm-hearted charity and other to a Jewish' guardian. She and has gone into " characteristics whict. ate 'never her sister and the child wen,t into its preparation. sufficiently dwelt upon or drawn hiding, however. Sister Bertrand together into a speaking likeness. Mrs. r.angendijk and her sishas spent· years Adenauer and Germani . . ter, Miss Elizabeth van Moorst, in res ear c h, . The reader who shies away' were subsequently· sentenCed to both in t his from big formidable' words is three ana six montQs' imprison-' .. country and in going to find Edgar Alexander's ment respectively by the Am-" i: I·r e 1 and and

book Adenauer' and the New .sterdam Court of Justice after, ·.England. She

Ge~any (Farrar Straus and being' tried in ab~nt:ia for not · bur rowed ,.

Cudahy. $5.25>',. tough' going. obeying the surrender order. tb r 0 ugh ar­ Thus on page 102 alone be is . Mrs. Langendijk surrendered '. c·h i v e s, read .going' to run up against "ideo- to the' police in her own home­ books, manu. historical," "historicosociologitown: of Maastricht on Nov.. 29, ·~ripts. l~tters. She has ¥en. In dll," '''ideopolitical,'' 'and "socio-.· a'nd has now been brought to c. touch With the pe?ple bes.t m­ biogra'phical," all in the course of . Amsterdam to serve her' sen­ formed on the subJect. She has. 25 lines. . tence. ·visited the scenes blessed by Th" 't b cause Mr At the time she was sentenced Mother McAuley's presence. IS IS ~ p~~, e . . . ' I'n ·the fall of 195", ·the Du"tch' Th t' 1 t h ' d she Alexander IS gIvmg an mClslve, " 'ha' e mahe1rlla ~tga eb~ . eye-opening explanation of AdeCatholic daily De Tijd described' . h' It . t Th s mars a e d In 0 a Ig, or-' . derly book, with 12 pages' of na~er .andth~ new' Germany, er pena y. as JUs. e paper h' h h thl k WhIch IS essentIal to understand- questioned, however, the wisdom ' as a c. . . 1 ft' th of the original cou,rt decision . illus t ra t IOns, w IC · foliage of details. The career of 109 a t prm~p)a a~ o:h m e which made the Jewish' welfare ".other· McAuley' is .fo.llowed presen pOSI Ion an . e .pr~s-, 1ft t f E d board Anneke's . legal guardian.. I I l 'c ro ­ pee s 0 urope an the1 entIre c.ose y, some t'Imes a II b u tm Id Th' t' . 11 d 'th I ty of Western wor. IS exp ana IOn &COplca 1', an WI pen h' d th l··t·· 1 · the goes e po 1 hIca ,. eco­ doc umen t a t'IOn. . I n a dd't' 1 lon, ' . be 111 d ·l·t .HONG KONG (NC) __ The Ireland, and especially the Dub­ nO~lc, an .mI I ary.p enomena· · r fully which the press reports, to deal Red Chinese government's birth Iin, 0 f h er t Ime are care . h' t d . 11 . t e, d so th a t th e.se '. tt'In g with. . ' .IS ory .an . , .especla , . y, · depIC control campaign is bound· to· I" h .. thO l'f . Ideology. meet with strong resistance from wh IC hexp ams muc . In IS 1 e Ad' en;Iuer, accor d'm g' to the \ · .. shown. , .. author,wl)o is. a disting.uished the people, who have a tradition- ., Early. SurrounDinr-'. . German Catholic Writer, has al .respect for a . large family, Born in: 1778, <?atherme. ~c-.. aimed at reconciling and.' inte­ observers here feel. Auley grew up m an }.reland; grating Germany with Europe. bewed down by oppreSSIOn and The accomplishment of' this aim tered was whether the la-w c~e poverty. In contrast, 'her sur-. is vital to both. It involved far into being .by . constitutional . . roundings weremor~ tha~ com­ more than reopening avenues'of means.. tunable, and she lO~e!Ited a communication between the. two. And the famous Enabling Act· OlJI.lSiderable sU~ of mo~er"',~ Indi~perisable to' it has t>een in~ of. 1933"which ga've HitlerfuU' priZed her faIth, w~Ich" WU culcating in the Germans recog­ power,' was perfectly eonstitu-' llespised and under overt Or in­ .nUion 6£ the natural law' as the' tional '. There was, then, n9 legal '. <firect assault by some of .her basis of freedom and'· moralitj saf~guard against depriving peo- . closest associates. Within. her for the person' and the eom­ pIe of. their natural right; quite tnVn family there was consider­ munity, and building t~e new' the reverse ~ that· deprivation,. able -trouble. . .

Germany on that' foundation, oolJId 'be; and indeed was,' ac­ Her father, ~ho died when she which already. underlies Western complished lega:Ily. was a small child was a'stalwart democracy. Adenlwer, th~refore~. had to' Cath?lic and a man of unusual .' To do so meant rep~acjng Nazi strike down' to· the bedrock of cIlarlty. He. loved the poor, W~ll . views and'such a'ssorted errors as .ultimate principle·· .and build," generous to them, and ministerecl Prussian ." militarism Pan-Ger­ from there. His chief collabora­ • them' personally. . Catherine manism, the power'state; anti­ . tor i~' this epochal undertaking look her lead from hIm. Semitism,' and a "German" had been. Theodore Heuss, now As a young woman of ~eans; Christianity.' It also. means a president of the repub.~ic.. &be. turned from the· ,wor:ld . (){ radical departure from the pos­ -.clety to that ,of the needy.. tulates of the Weimar RepUblic She was concerned· to alleviate often thought of as f being IIOt merely their physical want, sciuarely in the Western tradi­ J but their spiritual ~ant as weU.· tion~ To· feed, clothe: shelter the poor . Mr. '. Alexal)der pronounces. it . be<;ame her.daI1~ tas~, ~n.d also nothing of the sort. He poilJ~ • mstruct the~ ill re~gIOn. . out that the leading authority on 591 S~~MER ST. She opened In Dublin a House the Weimar 'Constitution de­ ,New. Bedford WY 3·1346 al Mercy, a kind of Catholic JiG­ clared. it:immaterialunder' that cial service center. Other women constitution whethe~ a law con­ . All BundleS Insured While joined her in the work of con­ tradicted ethics' or morals vio­ in Our POSs~~ion elucting there a,-school and a resi­ lared "such ~alues. as. j~stice, lienee ~or workIng women, an old fairness, and logic," and ·.was a ; ~ ; IJeOp~e s ho~e and an.orphanag.e, complete denial of' the .~aturak _ • _.... ._

By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy To my knowledge there has never been a' thoroughly satisfactory biography' of Mother Catherine McAuley, foundress of the Sisters of Mercy. By satisfactory I 'mean one which makes this remarkable woman live for the reader. . . · A new attempt is at hand,. . portrayin~ her, and the portrait in. Mercy unto Thousarids by in w~rds IS almost as bloodl~ss: . Some of the elements of the liv· Sister M. Bertrand Degnan, ing .woman can ~ detected in R.S.M. (Newma.n. $6.50). In her letters here quoted. For

Red Ch'ina

"He came to what w'as His own, And they who were His own gave Him no welcome But>all those who did welcoine Him . He impowered them to become the children of God, Ail those who belteve in His Name." (John 1: 11-12) Thus Saint John.describes the.rarst Christmas and its effect in ·the world ever .since. Of"What countr7 in the world can it be said that Christ has been given the greatest welcome? In Urundi. . Africa~ In 1923 there w.ere only 15,000 faithful to give Him wel­ come.- Now 34. years later, there afe 1,000.000 Catholics. In other 'words there are almost sixty-seven 'times as. many Catholics as . ,there were' 34 years ago. If DlinoIs, Utah, Kentucky, Tennessee or New York 'showed a similar increase how different would be the spiritual tOBe of the state ·and the nation. The tragedy is there is only one priest for

5,000 ~ouls; in the Uni~ed States ther~

is one priest lor every 750 souls. In Urundl

ther'e are 230;0'60 taking instructions or over

80,000 more' than we had in the entire ynited

States last year. This means that every priest

averages 105 converts per year while in the

'United States the 'average is about three

converts per priest. No wgn~er the Holy

Father said: "The hour for Africa has struck."

ev~ry

-'--.'

The Holy Father· has'. the bu.rden of build~ng schools r"r the 80,000 child!en and of supplying priests, nuns and Brothers for the faithful. 'In remembering your friends : .., with gifts at Christmas, remember him. He receives gifts ~~r the Missions throu~h his Society for the Propagation of the' Faith. Give' welcome Christ, to His Vicar and to Africa-send your sacrifices.

to

.

GOD LOVE YOU to Anon for $1 "Now that I have started I shall 'continue to send what I can whenever I can." : .. to W.J.P. for $50 "From a ·'thirty center' who is ashamed.~' . . . to M.S. for $5.25 "A money order I had to send for some gifts--I don't need this as much as the Missions.". '.' . to H.E.L. for $4"1 have four wonderful little boys and the four dollars is a, thank you to God for them." •.. to M.S. for $5 ~'Often I wanted to eat out but instead went home. and fixed my own hinch and the price difference' goes out-to the Missions." . . I

o

At Christmas time the whole world is aware.of the Madonna and .Child......:.jmd so it should be.. But there' are' many who are .not .consciousol the role' that the BlesSed Motlier anq the Divine. Child play in their r~demption; You can.make yourSelf, your fri~nds and even the pOor. pagans of the world' conscious of Christ and the meaning, of' <;=hristmas by· giving th~ statue of OUR LADY OF TELEVISION as' a gift and sending a sacrifice:-offering of $3 tq 118 'al<»ng .with· your request ·for· the statue. Cuto.ut this column, pin your sa~ifice to it and mail it to the Most Rev.. Fulton J: Sheen, Nat~onal Director of The. Society for the Propagation of the Faith, '366 Fifth· Avenue. New York I, N. 'Y.• or' your DIOCESAN DlJU;CTOR REV. RAYMONDT. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall-. River . , -Mass. - ~

'.

- .

- -QUESTION: In· A tI

',,1

.LAUNDRY

I{lw. The 0llly .U~i~g that.:fl~~,..~.~:t'i:;'"EDDIES She and her ~~i~teSh$d .... ~~~~~, '. , '. 'been living,·:it "kind of religious' :~'-SUPER life in common, and in 1831, '. after a .year~s novitiate' atth~ ... .. rvu:.e . ~,.tatlo~ ·.Prese~t~tion convent, the ~ister~' AMOCO' ~~, East Taunton's. al Mercy were formapy! ,estab-. . . .': _ ... . . . lished with the foundreSs as-·Tune-upsand Brf,lk~ Woa:k_ _.,." d Sh· · .!Uper/or. . '.,.... ." ;(l.01c",~~I~;y,:~I.v.~.;;;~~:~~~#~ . : 'o~, ..... oppmg Only ten yea,rsof..life remained. ". "'Rdl·> Rd,. New 'Bedford", ' .' to Mother Catherine. They were Gilbert J. Costa, Prop. : . CENTER crowded with perplex.ities, dif- : . l • • WY. 6-9276 Q :.. . ' poor

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We Think They'r~ Better, because

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u~reaso~:ulble i~~ii~~iii'i~~ii~i'~~ii~iiiiiiii~ii·."i·'~-"~"'~"'~"i"~"'i"'i"~'"ii"i"i"'i"i~~ii"i"i"i"ii"i"i·"i.·i

'.ficulties·· losses, . 'opposition. However, that .dec-" .ildesaw, the new community firmly ,establish~d, attracting. many vocations, and setting up new houses in different parts of Ireland and in England, with' preliminary plans for establish­ ~ents in the new world. Phenomenal Growth Plainly, the inspiration of God was here, and His favor. In a small and simple way a great work, destiried to grow 'phe­ nomenally and to reach out to far continents, was initiated. The story of the beginnings' of the Sisters of Mercy is faithful~y, even· punctiliously,' told in this OOok,

Are Deposits .' . M'orris ·Plan ·Like .S'JJvings' Bank, ' Deposits?

SUMMER STREET

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Do 'You Work' in a Factory, G M h' Sh . arage, ac me 'op or· . Gasoli~e Station? We pick up and deliver, clean' and repair .overalls. Also. we, have a complete line of Coveralls,' Pants and Shirts for sale. ' We reclaim and wash any oily, dirty or g~t:asy rags.'. Why Buy' When We 'Supply

NEW .E·.NGl·AN,D·

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THE ANCHOR'-

Thurs.~

Dec. 12, 1957·

'13

SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY ALUMNAE MEETING: Former chaplains at the Fall River Academy are shown speaking at the tea following the 50th meeting of the Alumnae As'sociation with the co-chairmen of the Alumnae fund-raising drive. From left to right, Rt. Rev. Msgr. Edmund J. Ward, Miss Leonora Donovan, Mrs. Veronica Heywood Dunn, Rt. Rev. Msgr. James J. Gerrard, V.G.

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Absence of 25-50 Age ~roup Noted VIENNA, (NC)-The "great absence" ftom the churches of the generation now between 25 and 50 years of age is a major characteristic of Austria's pres­ ent religious situation, accord,ing , to a report just isSued here. ,The report, issued by the Austrian branch' of the Inter­ national Catholic Institute for Socii1,1 Research on, the occasion of 'its fifth anniversary, also singled out for comment what it' cal1E!d th~' insufficient and often outdated network of par­ , .. ishes and the"shorti:ige of priests. It said the Vienna archdiocese alone;',with its Catholic popula­ tion of over 2,100,000, needs '1,000 more priests., Among its recommendations, the report called it particularly urgent to organize small groups of capable and willing laymen to devote themsel,ves to mission­ ary work among the people who came to maturity in the de­ pression, war and early postwar ye¥s.,,' "I, It also suggested the founda­ 'Of 'parishes and the readjustment of existing parish CATHOL.IC,STUDENTS' C()UNCIL DA~CE: Enjoy­ ing the d~ncing at the Winter 'Whirl, held ~turday' ~t"the ",boUndaries,' w:ith special regard to population shifts resulting Catholic eomrrtunitY Cei1t'er, ,FaJI River, are; left to right, 'from new industrial develop­ William Norton. 'Sylvia Houle.' :Ch~rles Donnelly. Elaine , ments ,and the growth. of new Maltais. ' ' urban centers.

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THE DAY. YOU MAY WISH TO SEND A FRIEND oa A t.OVED ONE OUR,SPECIAL' AND-LOVELY CIIBIST­ MA:S GIFT CARD, TELLlN~ THEM THAT YOU :OAVK ABRANG};D FOR "Mtl-SS ,TO' BE, OFFERED FOa T~M 'A.T CIIlUSl'M.AS. ' , ' ',' ..' ~:' ,~ Ii, .'

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oft'erin;s 'are: slripgless g-ift8'to,~od for &be Milt­ slons. Livhig ~Dd deceased enrolled ($1 ,)'earl)', $20 perpetuall)'for Individuals; $5' )'earl)' ,and $100 perp~t,uall)' f~r families). Members share in 15.000 Masses yearly by our 'missionaries and iii &be pra)'ers and sacrifices ef thousands' of priests 'and Sisters. ARRANGE NOW FOR GREGORiAN' MASSES 'AFTER DEATIL :,ASK ABOUT OUR SUSPENSE CARD.

EARTHQUAKE RUINS PARISH CHURCH IN LEBANON. .

ID the, village of ROUM, iD the southerD part of LebaDon we have a' parish' ehurch' In ruins, due " " to severe ~arthquakes lD ,&ba1 area. The faithful, II 01 &be Parish are poor farmers and cannot pos­ , I ,I sibl, ,rebDitel the church. b~ themselves. We wiD .. . :. ...1 tl'7 to'raJse'$4.000 for them so'&ha1 the, will onee ," ~ again bave a ehurch ID whieh to AD7 O&tI. gUt w01lld ,be &Teatl, .•pprec~~, , ­

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HUNGRY -AT CHRISTMAS!

, Woo't 10U sacrUice: .'·:Uttle' 'from I Jour Cbrls~ mas dlDner to help Father King. who Is trylDg Ie feed S9,I1!,.,;,9f_~e ~/).~ h~eJ~,,~alesUDe ref­ 'Ugeel.'ta ""Ule'''liolY' Land. 'He bies 'to\ feed, cloth. and provide sebooUng and met'BCa1 care for tbese unfortunate people. $10 wnl bu1 • FOOD PACK­ ,AGE -Rh i,cl1 · wm ~~~~iU~':an.,~~tl~~:-~~~1" fori ·OWLleeJL _ V• ID grati t ud e, we'w "aeuu)'Otl.' ove '1 ' SEED' ROSARY J'llOM,;THE :HOLY LAND.

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Plenty of Pe,'rit But' - ,

Prayer Still More.PowerfutSt.aarthOlomew Than All Russian Sp"u,"tlliks Saints InHenry Crosswords Michael ' ~............_

By Joseph A. Breig . Cleveland Universe Bulletin

...... ?9_R57.....J1'

Responsi'bly U 'd ' A ' rge 'to ct S . I' ' ecu or Press

By

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Now that we have had time to get a bit used to the idea of artifiCial earth satellites, pe:rhaps we can begin to talk calmly and sensibly about the technological new world in which we find ourselves. Apparently a, great many rhymes, were right about all the people were dumbfounded by atte":lpts at 'tyranny and all the sputnik and muttnik. I can hapilY revolutions ,against them, only say that such folks did long before Benson or Wells or

E

ST. AUGUSTINE - The "currupt influence of an ex­ ceedingly voluble wrtion of t h e . secu1ar 'press" .w .a s

scored by Father VincentE. Smith, editor of The Florida Catholic, at the' Southern Re­ not do their science:"fiction Chesterton or the science-fiction '

gional' Convention of ',the Cath­ homework when they were writers eve'r lived.

olic Press Association. youngsters.' Plimty of Peril .

. ''These enemies in 'our midst Thirty years To boil it all down, desp~ir in continue to feed their unsuspect­ ago, I was readface of sputnik or muttnik is ing readers on a daily diet of ing magazines ridiculous. 'Both from fiction misinformation about our na­ in which all the and history, we can learn that tional life and the dangers of stories were dethese things come, and that man­ communism from within our v,oted to the kind indestructibly survives Jand as well as without," the cOming scien- them. . e d i t o r of the 8t. Augustine dio­ tific 'marvelsI do not mean to belittle the cesan weekly said.

tel e vis ion, danger of the breakneck prog­ Corrupting Youth

rocket missiles, reSs, in crea'ting .instruments of man _ made satellites space fantastic destruction, nor of their "These newspapers-and' I do travel. " p o s s e s s i o n by godless men whose not mean all secuJar newspapers; Creative lmaginatioD . fixed minds are prisoners of a Iignore mean orthose whotheconsistently' distort truth and 'You may argue that science fanatical philosophy of world 'undermine morals-have built up.in their readers a false sense fiction was merely the product of conquest.. yivid imagination, It was ntuch There is plenty of peril. But of security at a time when the more, Those story-tellers backed God has not· ceased to, be al­ ACROSS, 116 al I ..."er II, tfo. U A IlJ • 'T rad ..d h .......' . nation should be fearful for its uP their fiction with believable mighty. The divine irony which '. r... rt from' 66 O:lh... . D O W N . , N:~'~:'"" survival. llechnical theories. '. has b·ah.lc,.h_'(I~olalD' 611 'Makes _." Sllow..red' .1'" U Hlrls ' ~ hbrought m'l' t' coun'tless 11' despotisms h ­ ...... ..;; I ·.a.. w .6 'Say "They are corrupting our What the scie~ fiction writ'~ u I 13 109 co ap~ as n9t ' ,10,(:011..", 00 AddU • ,WIlI'..,la. t8 SoU, t!I'S dl'd was to apply creative gone out of busine~s. Prayer has ' 'Ii "II: TItA VfiZ 'COII"r8 ratios' In MaD" ..... youth whc;l feed upon the' im­ not 10 t 't h the' 11:1;11:11 T O ho.,..lr, I R...,.i_ ' a~ J)elrrade morality dished out to them in 'imagination to known facts. In humans so) slpower, as, .' ., 11 III f4.. par." lIS ..R... '.ura.' •J' U" Harry Fall'~h I. d.o.. ,their t dnor d 'd' 1<·.. rl'l., oat....... r. • ih" , ..aad. 'N ,., Sk.. ..d

'great' metropolitan papers. he freedom g 't ' ,W lifo IUod .. ••• 1I,;HK WAS 69,los..d. '

T,hey are unde~mining, our so­ ,effect, they sun'ply argued that ' u sGod oppe eman mg III e a......., t .mce we had made this. and that ave I . 1 'I ' ·ID "all strada.. ' 66,00"" . AN61 Exp..rt

Our Foundin" Father !O II. :C. S'at.. · fill MODt" (abbr.) " n.. cr.... &4 O""ars., ciety by making light of mar­ , . 5' 'Mak.. ,...a", u

ruige " m· bOth their news. and ' , conquest of nature, then logically , " " .. , s< ca m ,1l1 .. Ani..... l f....' 69 Rob I (lU· ,i.. K_-'a .'. h ta ~ Ought to be able to move on y h ad to da' !lZ ·1· 10'.. ' l1:I s. eol4 , ~,..ad a."a.d '61' Brloll..

f BCed up t 0 w the t» such-and-such 'further con.,. in defense of the truth that,aU "r:~n~~nTHE ~~ ~~~~~ar. IO.T':A~~:~~:O ~~ :i'~"~A8""'" counseling ·columns." ~ests. .. men are endowed by their tfURJII;CT OF ",Tldy , TOA­ Father ,Smith emphasized the Creator with certain inalienable HO 8 ..fore ' II "b.. raI'8 ',. AlInoJ"" ..nint that, "ou, I' greatest, weapon The dr d up th· tor' • FolloWH' 81 "l'l WAil III A.... nr 15 Sira of ,.. y­ y esse elr s les rights. The rt!volution they (•• IIb)

KII,I,l'JD 11 W,onl'" .odia.. against the eneiniesof Christ and with beautiful princesses and started for man's' rightful 11·......lI'I Sp..CIl.

,NI':AR TRB ' l& Sainl,f.....lal. . ,76 Twl.' our country is truth." • . . I d '11' M ' UC" !8 ..aIlid -l4EA (abbr.) 76 Kan. .. m..... f " 116 Implo... , 'lJ ·w..,u, It' "IS BIRTa.. Thomas B: Logue, city editor lIft'pf'lOclp e VI ams on ars or ties isstill'expanding,~stillstir­ VeilUs. and threw in some inter­ ring 'the multitudes, :: ~~e::'~::~or ~~:~p~~:~,:,,,,,,~: ~::dl~',·~t';!,"II.r~~~~E of the Jacksonville Journal, ad­ . planetary romances for read­ ,'We need oiIiy f;lce up calmly SIJ 11'..,.. 89, .!Jnlt of w..ll'"t ~li A..rif..r ... 8al4 lIS Wild pl• •' mitted· that', large segments of · ability, but essentially they;· were' ,to :our present-day responsibili­ .. ~:;'''da'' pl'Clflloa.· i~ ~"I"dor , lit ~~~AN!I '!"O. the 'secul!J,r' press were '''frivo­ adding twos teeI " . ' hand ' . twos and com -:. t ies, declining to be awed ' by . .. lIS :}b:i::... K' Sll r~':.~r::tl:: OF TOLMAI", lous, mawkishly seiltimental and' "lftgup Wit entirelyreasoRable" sputniks· or' anything of the' kind. " ., aan II" ' ..... IS ~:~~":ID"D ·~~:r~:·, otten put too much emphasis on · leurs. ' .' "'-We have plenty, of allies. ' We ,II K lih. ' M,(~.IDdlnl( .......' :I""Dlti.. iJeam..... 88 'Ship'. , _ . . 'sex; even to the point of pornog'~ P "'d f G III SjHl"~-.Jra~ Ili Ob n... "lllI C_.. oat 90 Rnot." rOVl eneeo ' oil have ,the wor.ld's people'-inClud' li& Sappotred II .;n' _ n,Me." al.... ·(a~hr.), ... ,,'{'aphy," . What I mean is that'there is iflg ,those behind the iron curtaiR III ~ ... tabltr.) IT c., s........... P..... '1111"1... '(:orrect Error . Mtl\ing new -::theh~sts' of ·Heayen, aod the ' 'OlaCiOR" oiaP~,l"e Eil"b.,'teeR ll'te t th ~t abeut, u. " , , ­ " '':'However,'' he' said, ','Catholic ' t'essentiaD7 · ear th sa e I S, exeep a "meo- ,SttlKeme Ruler 'of, aU things.' ,a, , rieslong held and famil"ia£ to They are are aU on our side be- -8ir Lift Brings Hun's' .. had ever been in a tq thl<, __ery scieoee-fic:tion rea~,haye. ",ClWse",we~re.on the ,side 9f tIM; ~"" ~' ·prevlously. ' , .. sec~l.ar press SI;lOUld' "aim at .been translated into reality, elt- " "troths-.tbat-make,men free.'" " " "o"e , ass·", ,"':' now,' at. tht;.. _tly as the" age-old, 'dream of" ' " , FISHERS ,1SLAND ,,(NC)~" ,the, ,two Sisters, depart regularly ,~tlon.a~ ~ whole.: ,T~. au~ of fty~g was made '" into fl:1int:-.PupilsWo'r~'.,to Keep' "Youngsters ofqur Lady, of Grace '".frOM,,' C!,nnecticut mainland', attr~ctlllg goo4, Sathohcs mto -.chines, pariSh on th~lI island i..n ~ng_': e'!ery Monday afternoon .llJ)d re.., 'ne~sp~per work., ~i~l ne."~r be There are two things, however;' Cltrist in',Christmas' Island Sound are getting weekly'" turn to their convent ,in New . achieved by. attackmgthe,press tt.at writers of tales of the'won. INDIANAPqLjS,' (NC) '...::, The religious instruction,.y~!l air lift... London -in time· for, the evening as a ,whole," . clerful tend to leave out, of thejr eighth annual:' Little Christo!Every Monday ·afternoon two' . meal.. They, are thrilled 'with ~~~, Logue. said, the secular ,.tories, perhaps because'the two pilers' campaign to 's~ess the Sisters of Mercy leave the Water':: their ...unusualassignment, 'but press iSBot,opposed to, criticism tttings are ultimately inScrutable. reUgious meaning of Cl!ristmas _ ford, Conn" airport in a single' ,their young c)larges 'here-see of its product if that criticism is One is the ,providence .of God, is being carried oUt during AdeiJg~nemonoplane and make the. nothing strange about it.. ' ,based. on, Ca,tholic philosophy

Ute other the mysterious, Ruman vent in s~ores' of parochial . silt-minute flight out over the '~Afte,r' all", said Sister Mary and ideals.' In fact', he asserted,

,spirit which . cannot ,be, over_sch~ls throughout the Archdio­ Sound to this island 'parish, Geo.:. 'Edwina, "they beloflg ,to,__ a .gen- o,ne impor~nt functi9n of the

..•helmed. cese of Indianapolis: ., . graphically, Fishers Island is Ii." eration Which regards the airCathQli~ pr~ss'is to. correct error,

Terrifying' Fiction ' Hundreds of youngsters are part of ,New York State but the plane as commonplace." "and whe~e .culpable intent can

Authors like Msgr. Robert 'distributing reminde~s of the island's only Catholic parish is 'a be u'1covered, attack that."

Hugh Benson" H. G. Wells,true meaning of Christmas in the" 'part of Norwich (Conn,) diocese;, C~'%:IC~):i'Ctl:~]1[C~;:'(~';"''l:'~'''':·'~~·'''~''''~~~-,i~,.".~"",,,-,,,~

George' Orwell and the like have "form ,of window posters, auto The two instructors, Sisters, '' .' " - ,--"~~~ ='-'.~~ '''''''''''''', =,-"",." ~'"'''''''~>~-"'~

liven us terrifying fiction in bumper stickers and religious Mary Edwina and,.Sister which humanity was enslaved ,leaflets, All of them carry the' Thomasina, are assigned regular-:' e ~ tmder one or another dictator 'familiar slogan of the Little' ly to the' faculty of St. Mary's ~ either by technological militar~, Christopher movement, "Put School,' ~ew London, Co.nn. ,',', " ,' ~'

force or by some kind of psyeho- Christ Bacl~ Int9Christmas." . T.he unusual air lift was· the ,Iegical seduction. The Archdiocesan Council 'Of . Idea of Father William P. Loftus, " It 'is all good reading; but C~tholic Women' is' helping to pa!!tor at Fishers Island, who' S~ us for the BEST, DEAL in a

.. much more realistic was a writer direct the annual campaign. This found after he took over the ii' Ford 'Car'or TrUck

'like G. K. Chesterton, whose' ;w.ork began 'eight years ago. in parish last summer'that he had people-because ,they really did 'a single: parish, St. Philip Nerf no one' other' than himself .to

believe in God and ma,n-always I~diimapolis.·1thas since,~pread teach t!Je- weekly religious' in'';'· . • . ,<

crwerthrew the,',univ.ersal.despots to, dozens of other communitieS struction clasSes; -He found t h e , FORD D.EAlERSFOR OVER'is , contemptuous but gay a n d a,nd', t W6 ·S·IS ters e~t,h ' ' h ' '

I' With ' parishes in, the archdioceii~.,' , uSlastic, though: , " 1344- 86 P urc ~se St.· 'New Bedford, Mass.. ~

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THE ANCHOR ­ Thurs., Dec. 12, 19.57

Advent Activities

'I 7

Spotlbighting Our Schools ST. MARY'S HIGH, TAUNTON The high' school will present its annual Christmas program in the school hall next Tuesday. Franccs Corcoran, president of the senior class will welcome the students. 'rhe high school orchestra, under the direction of Sister Maurice Louise, S.U.­ S.C., will play "A Wreath of. Hol­ ly," an arrangement by Ranger. Under the direction of Sister Mary Chantal, S.U.S.C., the Glee Club will sing a selection of Christmas carols; and the fresh­ men will present incidental mu­ sic. Following this, the seniors will enact their Chri13tmas play­ let, entitled "St. Fra'ncis Brings Christmas tQ Gr~ccio." Elise Cayer will portray the leading part of St. Fr<tncis of Assisi. The program will close with some folk dances by the fresh­ man and sophomore gym classes, directed ~y Mrs. Helen Jackson. Eligible seniors have regis­ tered for the Stonehill Scholar­ ship exam which will take place next Saturday. The results of this exam will decide who will join Sheila Tetlow '57 and Eve­ lyn Rice '55 as scholarship stu­ dents at Stonehill College. At the December meeting of the Mothers' Club three St. Mary's seniors, Nancy G-r:iswol.d; Kathleen Corrigar and c:arolyn Baker, will present a brief pro:­ gram of music. '. The Betty Crocker Search for the Homemaker of Tomor'row ~s~ was, given' to .Saint Mary's seniors. The girl' having the highest score will ,be 'the School Hornein~ker of' Tomorrow and will be eligible for state compe­ tition. A copy' of "Betty Crock~ er's Homemaker Profiler and Guide to Homemakiiig'" was awarded to each girl taking the examination. A Betty Crocket "Homemaker of Tomorrow'" 'lin will be 'awarded to 'the school 'Homemaker of Tomorrow.

~REvosijlIGH, .

F~LL ~IVER

those less fortunate than herself. As in the past few years, there . 'will be no Christmas parties in the high school during Advent; pens for the lettering of the "0 the Student Council sponsors a Antiphons" :whichforetell the special' party on January 6, coming of Christ: Participating Feast of the Epiphany for aU stu­ in this project were ~arol Vin­ , cent, Natalie Foster, Margaret dents. Sophomore Sodality unit, un­ Conlon Nancy Rousseau, Lor­ der the leadership of Agnes Gal­ raine Bastille, Rose~~ry Pettine lagher, will conduct a Jesse Tree and Odelia Amaral. contest at the end of Advent. The Another Advent project which Jesse Tree'is displayed in the was inspired by the missionary, auditorium, with explanations Sister, Helen William, S.U.S.C., of the various symbols it con­ is the making of clothes for the ' tains. Each symbol represents African babies. A group of either an ancestor of Christ freshmen and sophomores has. or a prophecy foretelling His formed a "sewing square" which coming. meets twice a week during the The Advent Wreath cerelTlony Advent season. Eileen Perreault is held every Monday morning at and Kay Dannemann are co­ a special school assembly, which chairmen. features the Advent hymns and . The dress rehearsal for the prayers and the lighting of one annual Glee Club Christmas' additional candle each week. Concert was held yesterday for 'Senior Elaine Maltais was the Religh>us of the diocese. elected by the studt:;nts to rep­ Dr. Moshe Paranov, director of resent Dominican Academy in the Julius' Hartt Musical Foun­ Boston on Good Government dation of Hartford. and a past Day in March, on the day when director of the Massachusetts students from aU, high schools All-State Orchestra, is to con-, in the state take over the govern­ dlict S.H.A.'s orchestra concert ment and perform the duties to be held in March. Rehearsals of the various officials. began the first week of Decem­ JESUS MARY ACADEMY-, ber. FALL RIVER UOMINICAN ACADEMY,

The J .M.A. boarders enter­ FALL RIVER .

tained the religious and mem­ bers of the' faculty with a pro­ With the lighting of the first gram given in honor of the candle of the Advent Wreath by Immaculate Conception' , under school president Claire .'Reiily" the direction of- Mother Mary DA studeritsushered in the .Ad''­ Cleophas, ditectr~ss. ·0 ' vent season; which, tlley. try , to make' a' time o~ prepar;J.tion, for T~e play entlt~ed, ,"I Knew Mary,", brought to, life many in­ Christma;; rather than a·, time of celebr~tion. ' in the' attempt to cide'rits of interest jnthe life history: of Mary. ' A ba'l1litiet was put C;,hrist' in,to; 'Advent; 'so that He may' be' given His, rightful hell,! .on Sunday evehing in the cafeteria of the school. place in CHristmas. every Class The, Varsity Basl$:etball team is working on an Advent project. These projects, encouraged. hy , lost to Durfee Highbya score of the Student:C'oi.ll1cil,replace the 53-54. The J.M.A.' iliam kept ahead until the last quarter"when exc,hange of. ChristmasgiJ;ts, be­ tween" stuaents in the " vaFious, . Durfee ,scored a tie 53-53, Durfee homerooms. , SEiniors and Junior won a foul conversion. , Louise A & Bare prep.aring' i~dividual Gamache, forward, tallied 31 gifts for the 56 ladies and 76 men points while, Annette Hubert at Bayside Home. Junior C. and notched 15 points. eighth graders' are adopting The members of the Student needy families for the holiday Council organized in conjunc­ season. SophOmores and mem­ tion with the sodalists a spiritual bel'S ,of Freshman A are planning advent activity. The project in­ to entertain orphans in their own cludes a Clothes and, Food Drive homes for a da. during Christ­ for the poor and many contribu­ mas vacation, while Freshman B tions to the Mission Fund. is working for a' missionary; aid­ : The 'school's honor roU is 'as ing him fi'nancially in his'chorch follows: repairs" and' carrying on a cru­ Seniors: Doris' Dupont,Cathsade of prayer for·the conversion o,f ,the people ',with whom 'h'e works.' In encouraging si.tchpro- ' jects on a, homeroom basis,it is the' aim of the Student Council to 'help each ,student understand her, obligation'of sharing the joys of the "~hristmas 'season with·

CHRISTMAS PLAY IN F AIRHAVEN: Sister Vita­ Jienne, SS.CC., of the Sacreq Hearts Academy is shown directing "The Christmas Story," a play Hlustrated with , film strips and sung by students of the Academy and a selected group from th.e Glee Club. Soloists in the play, which will be presented Sunday, include, left to right, Joan Ellison, Magdalena Ferro, Joanna Craig, Mary Joan Fer­ nandes and Janet Pauline. .

o

erine Goulet, Florence HeoR, Muriel La Chapelle, Annette Parent, Claudette Caron, Doris Mathieu. . 'jlo'norable Mention-Annette Jussealime, Gertrude Lavoie. Juniors: Claire Delisle. HonorabieMention - Jocelyn tyr, Dolores Larrivee'. Sophomores:' Claudette Bat­ aby, Pauline Beaulieu, Annette Cousinea'u, Vivianne Dj(m, Patri­ Cia' Lafleur, Pauline Le Boeuf, Doris Letendre, Georgette Nunes, Colette Posey, Pauline Roy. ",' Honorable Mention - C13ire ' Durand, Dorothy 'McMillan, Yvette Mercier' Madeleine' Pi­ neauit, Lise Toupin.

Freshmen No. 13: Jacqueline Allard, Darlene Bisceglia, Lor­ raine Mathieu. Honorable Mention - Made­ leine Lacroix, Muriel Levesque. Freshmen No. 15: Pauline Gaulin, Alice Cote, Diane Cote; Muriel ·St. Amand. . 'Honorable Mention - Colette Jusseaume, Diane Ouimet.

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" Students who have, attain~ l;\igh scholastic rating!! during the , second 'semester ,include Se!1iors, Ricfia,rd Pouliot, highest honors; Armand Aubut, Pa~J Briere, ~ictor Delisle, P,aul M'i­ chaud, Norrnand Phenix, Roger Raymortd and Normand St. Lau­ ~erit, high honOl's; Joseph Dra­ peau, Richard Ronald 'Valcourt, honors.' .." : Juhiors, Rfchard" Gendreau, Paul Lambert and Maurice La­ montagne, ;1ighest honors; Rob­ ert Tremblay, 'Julien Goulet, Richard Chretien and Robert St. Laurent high honors; Edgar Be­ rube, M~urice Michaud and Paul Matton, honors. Sophomores A: Raymond Gag­ Jlon, Roger Laferriere, Robert Lanouette, Roland Levesque, Raymond Proulx and Paul St. Amand, highest honors; Ray­ mond Hetu and Robert Phenix, high hoilors; Richard Beland and George Lambert, honors. Sophomores.B: Raymond ,Pou:-, .Jiot,·Paul Martin, Paul Levesque 'and Leonard' Babin,' highest honors; Arthur Turgeon,' Ronald Mongeon and Roger Desautels, high honors; Gerard Vidal,

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Thomas -Ryan, Charles Michaud, : Ronald Dube and Paul Desilets, , honors.. . , : 'Freshmen A: Gerald Lussier , and Francis Trenholme, highest : honors; Homer Depin, Frederick : Ouellette and Ronald Simonin, ,. honors. : Freshmen B: Roland Cardin, , Michel Methot, Paul Payette and : Ronald St. Onge, highest honors; , Jay Lambert and John McNer- : © s-c ' ney, high honors; Robert Bou- , chard, Henry Brodeur, Armand : Lambert Robert Levesque, ' Roger 'Sorel 'and ,Andre \Taillan"': 6 cou~t, hortors. ' :>~Once-A"Day:in

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To open the Advent season, the ; , " student body assembled for the • annual blessing' of the Advent ; Wl·eath. Th~ wreath was.blessed. • by Very Rev. Humberto Medei- • ~ ros, the school chaplain, who : presided over the ceremony. , As ~t;I Advent p-,:"oject the ,: sophomore practicfll art class has : 202made the~r qwn rred.ieval.8tylua

Somerset a~d Swansea at 4:30 P.M.

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HONe; KON6, CHAPLAIN 77U 44VG~ THE n4I1VJH~ OF 5:IIN LEE, FAMED AN71-COMMIIN/BT HElD CAPTIVE BY THE J?EIX, P~M AN AB~/t.AA!r AND tEAllN~ THE ~/~L'pLAN{1 A ~NGlE-HANOC-O

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Hollywood in Focus

1'"

Debating' League Begins

Classifies. PQths of',Glory ' S potlid, h.t,in.g'Our Schools ,Cross Word Solution,' e .,Inglorio...s, F"ilm.' A: bout, W '" ar,' By William H.Mooring , "., ' MOUNT ST. MARY

F ALL RIVER . ..

J ~,dging' by the f,irst mo, vie t,o be l,isted' in.. the, Nationa,l.Legion of Decency's 'new 'category "for adults and, adoles_oeil~", Catholic teeners are not aboilt to .be pampered'-'The title is "Paths of Glory" and a more, inglorious :film about b' ' '.. . , ' war, surely llas never ,ee~, ',give us:a stqrY'of its kind; :fi~- . !Dade: There re I!P~e~" ~?~-. tiona1'.~r, oth~rwi~~,tQsugge~t ,notatIOns to, It, WhIch m,ay corruptIon in, the, Red' . Army explain' why the filmisap-' , CQ!TImand and ·abject. 'fear" of

0

feated DOqIiniciln Academy and 'T he .Case High of Swansea;, 'Jtinior Varsity' defeated 'Case

Academy debaters' Mary Butler, a junior, and Margaret' GrUfin, 'ii, SOphoril~re,deieated'a ,HighJayv~es.,

negative' team from St. Raphael's Marjorie Lima. Mur'iel, Guy.

Academy, paw.tucket, R. I. The Nancy Smith, Gloria St. AmouJ;,

, Mount deba'ters' defended the all of the 'CI~ss of 195\), and. Narragiln~tti.eague topic':"'Re':' cheerleaders for the Girls' Ath­ ,solved that direct United States letic Association at the ~cademy, .. iOJ;'eign: aid to, individual' coun:' 'represented the Academy at the .. tries be liniited to technical as-' cheerleadeJ;, clinic held last Sat­ pI'Q.Jed for, youths~"" d~ath by three atheistic, compiIisfstanc~"and:disaster r~lief." urday at ~t;:,I~e ·Teachers College, . 'S'tl'I'1 'the' Catho'll'c "C·.. h'u'rc'h, ,as' '. nist, sold.iers on the ~oviet side., . . , " " ' Br.idgewater, Mass. Forty-two. ~'.' Frari.<;esMoson ,was chairman " schools were' represenied " represented by. ' I doubt It.. . . ' 0 .0 witla" ! An.t,l-War Films , •. ', .. .an,d· C,a,roJe. Matbmore was tImecheerleader and pep squads. , • F,rench priest,' ' c " , · · p '0" keeper. Judges, ""hose votes, " , < ,"! ' '. ' t '. is as' badly' im;- . , .W,e ,~r,; .!n,f or ~,wav~ '!>,f a?l-, oiltinu,ed frC)m age, De " were two for 'the' Mount. and one ' The purpose .of the clinic was pug ned 'as is. ,war,: ;watr ~I1m~".·;,l'4Qst. peqp~e l!il~nt plea of th~glowing Christ-' ":tie" were Daniel Shea and Sam-' to analyz~,and demonstrate what who ngh ly. detest' warfare may I' hts' Attl b th " . , .", y "" tit e h onor o. f th. e. , consider 'them "timely· althoIigi{, mas k;g ,~n, t the. or~das . , uel P. AttaJ:"of the' Fall Rh(er" can, be done with cheerleading O e ' .nlcdhwarmYI I~ . Fre in ,th-~ tiimint'conflidtbetweeo'" sPk,ar . e agabLns. 'f tCh wldln er ,public: school sytem, and'Thomas,. ' in leading and not merely Per ­ l 0 w 'or ar., " " .... . " . . . , ,',' s y ~ sym OIC e co ness . McCloskey of the Fall River forming.. 'The clinic w'as heid Three Fr~nc~ ~omnlUn~st dIC~at9r~hIPs~n~the. with which . Jhe . ,,,,,arId first· Herald.News. . 'I' from 9 A. M. until 3 P. M., MiSli ': iioldiers, <;~ose'n . Wes!ern DemoHacles , th~, ,~e- ",greete~ '~~e birth. of. Christ. and ' ". . . .. ', ' : ' , : , - . . Jane RiIssell of State Teachers baphazard)Y as feahst effect of s~~~.. rn~v:U!~ .',wnh'whic;h,.()\,lrnio~ernworld all: ' The ,~<;adem~;~~~~p:w~l.uP:- 'College, Bridgewater, is the ath­ "examples." ., . ',- . ought not to be e~~lr~ly o~~,f'::" t~ often' looks upon Christmas.' h,old t~e negatIve II). Its next de- . letic coach, at the,-Mount. a battalionwhlch failed to, .looked.· It· may strIll;e AJ1ler~can . , ' . .'.: - . ' : bate with Holy', Family'" High .' The glee club entertained par­ IItorm " an' impregn~b.l¢ Gerf!la~ youth as nobler t~ build b.ti,d.g~s . ' , ' .:.De.VOt~ODS. .' _' School,' ,~e\V. Bedford. 'Sister ish" guilds at St. Pa~rick Parish lItroilghold, are suriui:llirily court- than t~ blow them ,up but tImeThe~,,IS -no, mterruptlOn of l.?'arY"Flora; ;R.S.~., A.Nf...,- is th,e martlaled, condemned and sn'ot.· an.d clrcu~s~nc.es· alte~, many . devotion~' at, the Shrine' during moderator' of ,the debater's; Atty.' on Sunday,' and th~ St. W~lliam Parish yesterday. The club will The' Fre'n~h' ,Gener'at, (George ttpngs. ~Ill Sov,letRussI,a ~how,_, th~ 'Chn~tmas.Season. Masses' WiHia~ B. Su1liv~ri is the coa<;h. Macready), ;""ho ordered the at,our . a~tI-war fIlms? .A:ga~n, I, wIll bE:' !laId da!ly at '6:30, 7, and 8 The a.cademy, basketball teams' : entertain ~t'the Ros~' Ha:wtl1<:irne tack is_ a: sadistic incompetent: doubt It, That,sorn e of tli~m,are', ~a .. m. excellt on S~ndays. Per- 'w~:m a'doub,le victory this past Lathrop, Cancer Home, next Thursday. . Another'"General(Adolphe'M;en::" ° powerfully welldone,'~ay call' petualNovena praye~s to C?ur ;~,:w~k,:: til.e 'M!>unt Varsity dejou)is,a.cal.ou~bypocrite. Orily fo~. all. the ~ore cautIons and 'La,~y ~f:~ Salett~ ":'Ill be, cO~-" _~_-,.......".,. ---'-'--, ..... ',,' '.. ,. dueted every evemn? a~ 7:lfo fol- . , -:. oo'e officer (Kirk Douglas) raises c~I,~lcal app~alsal. bisvoice in behalf.of these men T~~ B.r~dge on the,. RIver., . lowed by the Be~edl<;hon of~he ,..._.....- - -........-~--e

IIIld "he is quick~ outinaneu'~ Kwal, - «allproved for,,,a}l), al-' Most Blessed Sacrament. On. ',: ·Yered.· '. " ' though.;" ~killfully ~,r.~t-t~11 :,' 'b~ , . Sundays special' devotions, .will . ~ il~' ," C .d '.. Pier:re 'Bouelle" fr.om· ,his ~wn l:?e held at 3 p. m. Confessions· "", M: " n~~f J~~ ,o7\l~h . _ novel· and 'magnificeIltIy' trans- will be heard daily fr~m 6:30 eanw I e, one ~ ,e co.n" lated to the screen;pr~sents one a. m. to 9·p. m. ' , demned soldIers, who has be~n of the world's greatest 'actors', ,...: .... most clearly identified asa ~ath- Alec' Guinriess as aBritishc'om~ Parkmg FacihtJe,~, . " ... ,.olic,~hows th~ ~reatest fe~r ~f manding offic~r so hidebound by: A new: ~arking',area was, ~e­ WHAT

~eath, becomes. m f~ct, a .smvelarmy tradition as to behave'like velope?- thIS year, at the Shrme WAS TJ-IE

~ng coward. ,The prIest (1l~ c1era nincompo~p when imaginatio'ri, to accommodate the thousands of.,. FIRST

leal ga~b) se.nt to h.ear theIi' l~s,t· arid resourcefulness are called visitors.' Park.ing space for 1600 , , POLITICAL.

~nfesslOns, Ismore;~old a~dll~for.' .' : cars at one.tiineis now av~ilable. PARTY

dIfferent than the brass. HIs The.,' Christmas Illumination': dialogue and actions 'appear to Heroic Christians '.' Season will continue from the IN THE have been cynically designed~o Honored, by J. eVls: .'. 8th of De'cemberthrough Jan. 12, . UNITED cn;ate an 'impression' of utter Feast' of the Holy Family. The: 'STATES ,impotency. NEW YOR,K (NC)-The model lights will be on every evening He functions so formally as to of a plaque in memory of thris~ ;" from 5 to 10 p. 'IIi.

make his spirftual ministratio'ns tians' who played a heroic,'role

appear farcical; mockery of the in 'saving Jewish persons nom',

idea that the Church has the nazi' persecutiori was unveiled'

slightest consolation to offer in here. . I

the face of the cruel death. CerFather Joseph A. Dun!1e, of St.

tainly this priest rafses no voice John the Evangelist's Church in .

against the injustices of executWhite Plain!!, N. Y., was present

ing these men. Inste'ad he freat the ceremony asa representa­

The American Whigs quently upbraids them for their tive of His Eminence Francis

fears, meanwhile'reading coldly Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop

from, the book while watching of' New York. The finished

carefully to step aside. from those . bronze plaque will be placed in

about to die, well in time to the Wendell Willkie Memorial

escape stray bullets from the Building here.

firing squad!, . --------,-----'---­ . French Our AllJes.

"Paths of Glory". is a power­

ful, grimly ·fascinating war

drama, taken from the !lovel by.

Humphrey Cobb. It is fictional;

we should remember. The

French ~ho were allies in .World ,

War ,I and are' still, our allies in

the durrent nbt-so-cold war, may,

well ·protest. Even the title of

.,.. ..:-, this movie is palpably. cynical

and :1 'can'not, help wondering . \,'

whether ',the \nen' ~ho 'ni~de ,it'

an'd United Artists'\vho are about' .. '.;.

tIo re"cas~': . .it, ,w,ould... , as, '.8.,. readily ••...•; •.-';., '. . ..'

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Sports Cham-r

American Missioners Total Over 50 000

.Red Sox Fail to Obtain Needed HeJp at Meeting

ROME (NC) - There were. more than 5,000 U. S. mission­ aries working in the Church's mission fields in 1956, Fides, the publication of the Pontifical Or­ ganization for. the Preservation of the Faith, reports. . Discussing the large contribu­ tion made by the U. S. m ission­ ers; the article said, "The higb . percentage of this missionary participation clearly indicates· the gep-erosity of the North American Church in' the apos­ tolic field on the one hand, and the constant increase of the clergy on the other." This advance is a recent one, the magazine noted, because the United States was itself consid­ ered a mission area only 50 years ago.

By Jack Kineavy SOlJ1erset High School Coach News 'emantirtg from baseball's winter meeting in Colorado Springs last week proved timely and startling. With sports pages across the nation in the 'tween seasons doldrums, the national pastime basked, but briefly, in the out - of - season limelight Pat Burke, . Michigan ~tate, Items of major importance Dan Currie, Michigan State, concerned the scrapping of' center; Tom Forrestal, Navy; the contro\$rsial bonus rule q~ar~erback; Walt Kowalczy.k, and the passage of an unrestric­ MIchIgan State, and Joe FranCIS, ted four-year draft law. The O~egon. State, halfbacks; and latter legislation is generally NICk Pletrosante, Notre Dame, regarded as an attempt to in­ fUll~ack. . , . vade the vast domain of the JIm GIbbons, Iowa s end, IS Yankee organization which un­ the ~:>nly repeater from ~he Ex­ der the protection of the super­ tensI~n 1956 All-CatholIc, All­ ceded rule was virtually invio­ ~erican t«;!am. Massachusetts ...,....Photo by Calvey, Taunton late. IS well represented on the .squad . .. in the persons of Burke and COYLE' HIGHSCHOOL COACH HONORED: Most The following films are to be Of more ImmedIate mterest, K 1 k P t h'l f f '1 f th owa czy. a al s rom Rev. James L. Connolly is shown with Rev. George Kerr, added to the list in their respec­ however, was the al ure .0 e Lawrence; Walt from' the Pitts­ tive classifications: Red Sox to strengthen their club fi Id M' h' 5t t I e d former All-American guard and principal 'speaker at the for the '58 campaign. Needing' e area. IC Igan a e p ac . Unobjectionable for General testimonial, congratulating Jim Burns, Coach at Coyle for help behind the plate, in the in­ three players on the team; Notre Patronage Bolshoi Balle~ twenty-five years. ' Dame, two. Three of the boys Crooked Circle, Raiders of Old fi e Id ,an d on th e moun d , the Sox l' 1 C' d t dl 1 d f B'll M r­ se ected, Kowa czyk, urrIe an California, Thunder Over Tan­ r~porRay e yang e Gus or ITriandos ~ a Pietrosante received wide recogIIL. gier.. tm, Boone, T" th . t All II mu and 'Don Mossi or Bobby Shanz. ru Ion. IJ;! o. er prommen - . . Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents - CW'se of the Martin was traded but to Detroit,' AmerIcan Circles. not Boston. With a wealth. of' Catholic Colleges . Demon. Unobjectionable for Adults ~ outfield personnel, it was felt The Catholic Digest also pub­ CINCINNATI (NC)-An arch1953 at the Jesuit retreat house that the Sox were in an enviable lished an All-American. team,. bishop, a :U." s. senator and' a . inMilford, Ohio. 'with giving the Darby's Rangers, Peyton Place,. Time Without Pity. bargaining position. But nothing but its' selections were limited' governor head a list of promi- first impetus to his group~ . Objectionable iliPart for All, materialized. to the.ranks of plaYers in Cath-' . , 1," 11 .. . nent citizens who have given Father Nicholas H. Gelin, S.J., .:- Razzia. . It seems inconceivable thafthe 0 IC' eo eges' and' unIverSlbes. . . Sox will enter the 1958 pennant Arthur Daley, New York Times their support to' a" group' here' then director .,of the re.treat race 'without going 'all' 'ouf to ·spo~ts columnist, filtered these.~ fighting.f~r-cle~n,~~tetaru~e. : house, ~hallerig~d Mr. Keating to . trade either Jensen OIl", Piersall '. lecbons made by 11 coaches/, to ';. Lend~l)g' e'ricour~gement to the' , ~o something about the flood o~ ~ ' or both, to ,get, tl\e· infield .l:C?me up'with .the team. 1'hose. ·organ.iZation, Gitizep.s for De:qent . itoIdece~t pUblica~i\>ns. ',I'he 'Cin~ strength they'll need to be.c0:"le . I;\~med 'Ver~ fred Dugil n , .DaY-'t Literatur~; ate 'A:rchbishop Karl' '. ~ ?:InnatI lawyer spent the follow­ ~llIl~~ing .," .. j a prime contender. They have a . ton, an 4CJ,Int .WesteqIey.er , S~. . J: AlteJ,' ~t C.ir.cirin~.ti",U, .~ ..Se,!'!... l~g. year ."just finding out how" .,915,. Acushnet Ave. trio of young ou't'fielders to take· I'.~ Ambt:os~, en~;;; Don LUZZI, Holy, .• Frank 'J•• Lausche of':Ohio" and"· difficult It is .to prove obscen~ . " ~ up tt,I'e sla·ck.· Gene' Stephens, ·Cross, and. E!'Jlil Karas, .Dayton,. Gov. C. ·William. O~Neil~ a'1'llo~;of.· t. ity.", . ; .' I . ,. At' Weld Square used'mostly 'to caddy for Ted 'guilrd1H DIC.k CamI/.bell,: Mar~:" .. ·Ohio..... '. ,t.·,·:.. . .... '.:' .:, .....:.-'.,' Then' he gathered together. '.:-:-.V '. 'New'Bedford Williams, wilt' c(lrtainly wither . quette,. center; Don Allard, 13\?~- 1 • • The ',nucleh~ f~r the ~:DL·.is ~;': several men and theY' worked out . . !, -. e 11e on the vine if he doesn't get .. ton g , quarterback;,Al,lbrey. . group" :6'£"'15 men. 'headed' 'by 1a. plan of speaking to' church and' Ne~ Bedford's' Lea~li:';g Plumber . '. a regular st,Iot soon.' Then; there .~WIS•. Notre Dame,. a':ld ..Al~ . 'Chatles ,lr~'.KeatiDg.Jr..ti'ncln.. . ,,'«;\>mmunity organizations on the' are Marty· Keough' and . Albie'" Miller,. Boston ,College, ,half- '. .na ' t'I a tt'"orney.. .. ' T' h eIl,"··goa: ... '. ,,' 1'; i's·.;,;,;. , "" ~;;:;;:;;~;;:;;=~~==;:==~ .. . '. ..o t' ' Jilemi're of pornoaraphy ... ." _ ~: Pears.on, both of whom enjoyed· backs, and NICk Pletrosa nte ,. alone 'to rid the communityt's' fine seasons with champion San Notr~.oame, fUl~back... ,newsstands of indecent litera­ .Francisco. . . . Not to be. ol;1tdone in ~e mat- ture. The long-range objective Pearson Short ter of selectmg an All team, next of the CDL is to arouse public Pearson'ssize-:or lack of it­ w~e~.'~ edition of The ~nchor opinion to the point where pC():.' INSURANCE has seriously hampered /:1is ulti­ . WIll Include. the All-DIoce~n p~e will refuse to tolerate the' APPR~ISER Third'Order Regular of mate· advancement to the ma­ tl\!am ~mp?sed. of outstandmg. distribution and sale of por~o':' " REALTOR St. Fr.ancis jors. Albie reportedly standsS.,.4 CatholIc hIgh sch?ol football graphic literature;

• and weighs but 140, but he holds players from Provincetowil· to. . "With an annual pornography

Offer to· ¥ oung, Men and Boys the batting'record in the Texas Mansfield. . traffic of three-quarters of a' '..' . OS 2-2000 specild opportunities . to 9 h h A d f' 11 tak th' study: for the Priesthood. Lack League, .378.in 1 55, and e as ... n, lOa y, we . e· . 1S ,'" billion dollars;" Mr.. Keating , ~320 No. Main St. of (1!n~1! nQ·o.bp~ele .. Cand,~ been extremely popular every. opportuni~y:to'j.oinW:itb.a~o~t '. said,"no'child from"com~ge age-: . FALLRIVER ,datesfor the-religious Lay where be has.played. No doubt .ot Well-WIShers In exte n 4ing our down 'w' the 'age 'of five is safe:' Brotherhood also accepted. the Sox have. offered .the. little congratulatitins .r to . Coach:'" Jim' , 'This is volume en,ough.,to,ptirvert .For 'further information, write. , .. fellow in trade, but oth'er clubs,. . Bur~s'o.f Corle ~n the oc~asion' ;l.neI\tir~,generation." " , " ._. '..-..:-.+' t9 .. .' , '. like Boston .have definite physi'of hill 'sIlver anmversary m the' . " "'I-'-~-~ '-'-.~'~"-. , ' ",t' ' , . h'" k . . . ~ . ' . 'Efforts Pay Ofr'" " . . , fATH...... STEPHEN cal specificatiori~ wHic.h'must Qe 'coac m~ ran.. s.. A most capable.' ... ., .. .' . .. " , . I:K. , T' • O' • R., . ,t,: met, and they, too, are reluctant coach, a tho,rough' gentleman 'all . " Th~ 'perslstent ·efforts· of t h e p . O. BOX 289 to take a chance Oh a Smalt man.. ' the wa.y; Jim ha's ca.st' a lertgfhy CDL' to . enlist p~blic opiIi~on ., HOLLIDAYSBURG 12.. PA. How phrt'Rfzzuto BCibb:I/ShaI'it'zshadow in' thistenlue' at 'the have begun to payoff. There 1,;'.' .- _................ .;,.. ~ ,. ,.

and other mighty mites wi)uld . Taunton school'. 'Otirbest for the have been'a string of convictions·

If make their· way to the majors future, Jim. . under, 'City, 'and state anti-smut' .' .f, C· If:' . today would.be interesting, in-. . . 131 ws m the past year;' So. Dartmouth , ., :'

. o~pe e .: . , : .1

legion of Decency

Re·l;,g:.....us ond .C.-VI-. c. 'e'. oders JOI-n I. n. FBgh. t fo.r Cleo.n La.- terature

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. .. 1·· ' t . b b 11 CH CA 0 . '. . . na co m~n 'on ase a , '. I G, (NC>,-iM~re ...thaJl., concerns. the inability '0£ the $250,000 was donated hy about majors to settle the problem of 1,000 guests who attended the the National League vacated eighth annual $2S0:-a-plate "C~r-. New.Yorkterritory. 9riginally, dinal'sCharityDinner."proc~ds the senior loop moguls were will be used to make> up' the going to give the Yankees tl)e. operating deficits of theStritch green light. Tllen the possibility School of Medicine of LoYQla developed that Brooklyn, un­ University, and the Lewis M~mohappy the way things are going rial Maternity HospitaL .'~:: in Los Angeles, m~ght. want to . ,.' • _. . mov~ back in '59. President Wal­ ter O'Malley terms such a re­ M~R~AY'S". ." alignment "possible but not C· URTAIN'S probable." However, the Na­ \. tional League has reserved judg­ ,. DRAPES,., ment on releasing' territorial . RUGS . .• rights to the New Yo'rk area, and' . the matter has been referred to LINOLEUM .. , a joint committee for study.' 1636 Acushnet Avenue Extension All-American New Bedford. Mass. WY 4-3861 In 'keeping with the traditional post-season selections of AIl­

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--


POp~'

Address Sane

Continued from Page One po.sed t~ hiJ;l1 by Dr. Bruno Haid, chief of the anesthesia section at the surgical clinic of the University of Innsbruck, Austria. The procedure to' which the' doctor. referred was artificial respi­ ration, such as is produced by a respirator or an oxygen tent.

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. -Particular'Case To ~understand cOrr~ctly the pronouncements of the Pope one • must clearly yisualize. the par­ ticular case. with 'IotIhich he was 'concerned. 'The Pontiff certainly was not speakil]~ of a case in which arti­ ti.cial respiration offers some chance of restoring a "person to health. In such a case, ~here is surely an obligation to have re­ course to artificial respiration. Furthermore, the Pope added. that even when there seems to be no hope that the patient will s~rvive, the doctor .will~ for. a tlll~e, . attempt reamn:atIon by, at·tlficlal means. Sometimes, .con­ ·trary to .all hope, the afflicted person WIll recover. But it can happen that 'even after artificial respiration has been used· for several days, the patient's condition remains the 'same, and it is evident only the artificial. respiration is' keeping him alive. In fact, he may be !?O debilitated'that one wonders'if he is still alive or if' it is rather the artificial measures that are producing the appearance of life in his body. , This is the case to which the Pope referred. He proposed the question whether, in s~ch. a, situ­ ation, the doctor has' the right and duty to make use of artificial respiration especially 'when the members of the patient's family demand that these measures be· ended and the sick person al'-', lowed to'die in peace. Thre'e Q~estions With this prea!'l1ble, one can perceive the significance of' Dr.' . Haid's three questions, proposed thus b'y the Pope: First, does one have the right, '01' even. the obligation, to make use of mo'dern artificial respira­ tion equipment in all cases, even in those which, in the judgment of the doctor are considered as completely h~peless The Pope also laid down some general principles regarding the sacraments. These means of grace can be conferred only on' it living person, who .wishes to receive them. If there is a doubt whether. or not one is still 'alive or if unconscious, whether or n~t he wishes to receive the sac'­ raments, a priest may give the person the sacrament he needs with the condition,"if you are capable' of receivfng it." Regarding the precise moment of death the Pope state'd that it belongs 'to the doctor primarily to determine this. The usual concept of deat,h is the complete separation of the soul from the body but ill' practice the precise moment will be hard'to deter­ mine. In any event a person is to be given the rights of a living human being until it is certain that he is dead. . Pope's Reply. In reply to three questions, the Pontiff stated: i. When artificial respiration certainly will not help a person to survive but will only keep him alive a little while longer, it need not ordinarily be used. In' that case it is an extr::j.ordinary means of preserving life, which, according to the general princi­ ple enunciated above, -is not obligatory. At the same' time the 'Pope pointed out that the determina­ tion whether or not to use extra­ ordinary means of prolonging life belongs primarily to the per­ son himself and, if he is uncori­ . scious, to the members of his family. They should make the decision in accordance with what they believe the patient himself would wish. The doctor should follow the wishes of 'the patient or of his family. The words of' the Pope on ·this topic should be quoted in full: . '. The rights and the duties' of the family depend, in general,. 'on the presumed will of the un­ coiJscious patient, if he is 'of age and sui juris (llas .attained ·the .' use of 'reason)'.\"As· to the' strict and independe:nt, duty of" '-the· .. . . . •.. " .!'O~·.

o

Gui~e.

20

.THE ANCHOR ­ Thurs., Dec. 12, 1957

famHy, it binds usually to the uSe' of only .or?~nary means. Consequently, If It ~ppe.ars that th.e atte~pt at .reammatIOn con­ stltutes m ~eahty such a. burd~n for th.e famIly th~t ?ne cannot m conSCIence fo~ce .Iton them, they _~for can lawful~y mSIst that the doc­ MUNICH, (NC) For the tor cease. hIS efforts and.the doc:­ first time in. recent years the tor can ,lawfully comply. name of God appeared in two .In such a case there is no direct official Soviet newspapers, Mos­ disPbS~ of the life of the patient' cow's Pravda and Izvestia. or euthanasia ("!:Jlercy killing"), The occasion. was the 80th an­ which would never be lawful. niversary of. OrthOdOX Patriarch Even when it brings about the. Alexis of Moscow, a staunch cessation of the Circulation of the supporter of the comm.unist re­ blood ,the cessation of the at­ girrie since he succeeded Patri­ tempts at reanimation is only the arch Sergi us in 1945. . indirect cause of the cessation of Usi'1g the occasion of the Patri­ life and in this case we must arch's birthday, the Soviet gov­ ap~ly the principle of the do~ble ernment again professed its sol­ effect and that of the volunta­ Idarity with the Orthodox rium in causa (an effort which church. Patriarch Alexis, in re­ follows only as a by-product of ply to. the article', said he would per.missible action' and is not continue "to lend ·his best efforts sought in itself). to the cause of peace . . . with Validity of'Sacraine'nt the help of God." Second, has one the right or . It was in this context that the even the obligation to' remove word G"Od was used. But the use respiratory apparatus when,' of God's name in the official after several days, the state of Soviet press has not lessened the deep unconsciousness does not Commu:list drive toward stamp­ improve; while, if it is r.emoved, ing out religion. the circulation will stop in a few . Atheism is essential to. ad­ minutes What must be done in vancement in the Communist this case if the fa'mily of the party, Nikita Khrushchev re­ patient who has received the)ast cently declared in a copyrighted sacraments urges the docior to interview with William Ran­ remove the appartus? Is Extreme dolph Hearst, Jr. Unction still valid at this tiIlle? The chief of the Communist Third must a patient plunged party in the Soviet Union told . into u~consciousness' through the American newspaper. pub­ central paralysis, but whose life lisher that if' acceptance of re~ .,.....that is to say" the circu!ation ligion is mixed with political ac­ of the blood-is maintained by .use ~of them 'if he' wishes.: But tivity, it works ,against· the .artificial respiration' and. in , there is no, .obligation because party. whom there is no,improyemen,t The ruler of 200 million Rus­ they. would be too diffi~ult' for after several days be considered sians told M.r. Hearst that 'God most. persons;. and, in addition, as dead de f~cto ~r' even de j~re excessive attention to health and is a mask which western diplo­ (actually, or legally)? Must one bodily life and. actlvitywoul!i mats put on to justify. their wait for the blood circulation to draw a p'erson's attention and', pharisaical policies. . cease in' spite of. artilicialrespi­ efforts away' from more impor-' ration before consid~ring him tant spiritual goals. '. dead? ." " 2. Even if .the circuhitiogp( Pope. Pius XII, explicit~y :laid .the· blood. is still continuing, the down a fundame~tal .prmciPle, ' doctor can remove the appar;ltus commonly accepted m moral for artifiCial respiration from the theology-name~y,..that ,every-­ patient who is dying:' one has a~ oblIgatIon to .~ake However, if Extreme Unction ~AJ.'1. ,WYman use of ~rd~nary means to pr~- . has not yet been received a\"'ti­ .~ 3-6592 serve hIS hfe,' but usually he' IS . cial respiration should be em:' not obliged to use extraordinary ployed until'the sacrament .has CHARLES F. VARGAS means. '.. . Deen administered. The validity 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE The first part of thIS prmclple . of Extreme Unction at· the mo­ is based on the. truth. that man ment when circulation ceases, or NE~ BEDFORD, M~SS. has a duty. tow:ar~ ~llmself, to­ shortly afterward, depends on .ward certam mdlvldJ.lals(for whether or not the soul is still example, the. me~bers of his. present in the body-a question. family) to live as long as he rea­ that cannot pe definitely an­ sonably can. swered in eyery instance. The Ordinary Means Church,.' however, in her 'zeal The Pope does. 'not explain in· for souls, allows the sacrament detail what is meant by ordinary to' be given as long as there is means, except by saying that any probability that life remains. Truck Body Builders

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Theologians give as' examples . taining to religion or morals." WY 2-6618

such means' as necessary food, Hence, it. does not belong to the bed-rest and shelter. These must competence of the Church. It be provided for a patient,' no would seem, however, that a per­ matter how hopeless' his case son must be considered as still may be. . alive, as long as vital functions The Pontiff added that the dis­

continue by.. themselves, even' tinction between. ordinary· and though they are aided by arti­ .extraordinary ·means may'· de­ ficial 'means. . pend on circumstanc;es. of per­ sons, places, times and .culture. The span of life expected from the means would be a determin­ ing factor. Thus, several blood transfusions would be an ordi­ nary means of prolonging li!e

GAspee 1~03S9 (and hence obligatory) if they GAspee 1-0358· IProvidence, R.· I. would cure a young person, but they would be extraordinary if they~ would only give a few.days more life to a dying' person, "Never Knowingly Undersold" Usuaily there is no obligation

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