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·.Advent Wrea-th : : For Christmas VETERANS LEND AID: Leaders in drive for Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro, give advice on techniques to Taunton area leaders now working for Memorial High School in that city. Seated, Rev. James P. Lyons, Taunton director, Robert McGowan, Attleboro general chairman. Standing, Rev. William D. 'rhomson, Attleboro director, Dr. Clement Maxwell, Taunton chairman . Bishops Urge Every Person Accept Own Responsibility WASHINGTON (NC)-The United States is suffering from a breakdown in personal responsibility caused . chiefly by a marked decline in religious convictions, the U.S. Cath- olic' Bishops declared in their 1960 statement. l'he statement, issued at the conclusioR of ·the Bishops' a,nnual meeting here, said the decay ;of personal responsibility is evident in industry, 'ec?- tlie ;'basically , . . "At a time' when so much de- nOmIC hfe m general and In . the various sph'eres of life "and pends upon the soundness of our in:t'erllational affairs.' Pers':': . the of' a .vigorous 'economy a.nd upon 'our ability 'onal. iesponsiphityis 'be'Ing, . seJf$e Qf· .to .to mee.t the needs of sacrificed, the, Bishop dec1!lred, to a rapldly '<ieveIOPI?g world, we by:a tendenc'y ,to .dlliegate too .' .' '..', mUch: .responsil:iilfty to organ-:- .. . signs . o.f truly responslblE! leader- izationS. decline of personal . both on' the part of rna,,"" They said that the. correctioft ity" are ·to . be . found in .. the TurD &0 EigMe'eD ' family," the Bishops stated. "The failure of parents to fulfill their 'responsibilities, as reveaied in the frequency of divorce, deser-' tion and broken' homes, is a na- · tional disgrace. Any delinquen- ·<:y. 'of, parents may well be re- flected in. thE' delinquency 'of' - The custom of the' Adveht - · which. is na$' spread S9, · consIdered our nabonal '1···· th'U 'ted -St t th . t .domestic problem}' , .y In e m, a es· a. The state'nwnt en.. - it . .alr.eady· become. a · titled, "Need' for 'Personai Re-" part of Advent in the · sponsibili'ty,'; said that "e.qualiy;· home." . is the' evidenc.e:qf ' 'The Advent Wreath is a wreatb decline in sense of made of evergreens that is either within our . suspended from the ceiling or organizatiQn and in our general piaced on a table, usually be- ecol}omic life." . fore a family shrine or in some other place of honor in the home. Bishop Requests. Fastened to the wreath are foul' F · ·unds. fo' r CU· ....' candles , standing- upright at equal distance. These candles ,. represent the" four weeks of "The Catholic University . Advent. . is 'the keystone in whole' 0n'th'eFirstSunday of Advent, national education. in the evening, the room Most 'Rev.' James and the first' cimdle ly, BIshop of Fall IUver, empha- is lit. The' candle' shining in the sized' today' as' be announced the ' darkness is a reminder of' the animal offering' for the' world- time when. was "sit- famous institution will be takim ting in darkness and in the up at all Masses in all Diocesan shadow, of. death" when the churches next Sunday: ,. . promise' of the Redeemer came, "From the hallowed walls ,of and' lit up the lives of men witb this institution have come thou- hop'e for Ii Messiah. . sands of leaders in the field of The family says some education, sociology and eccle- prayers usually offered for the siastical administrative work," grace of a good and holy prepa- the Most Reverend Bishop ration· for Christmas. These stressed in a pastoral letter family exercises continue every which was read throughouttllP' evening throughout the first Diocese last Sunday. week with the one candle lit.. Turn &0 Page Twenty Turn ·to· Page Two, Taunton Drive Over $106,600 "You can sense by the attitude and feeling of the Taunton people that they are just as eager for a regional high school as were the residents of Greater New Bedford and Attle- boro," declared Rev. James F. Lyons, priest-director, as he announced today that gifts already received approximate $106,600. "The interest and enthusiasm in the Taunton project mounts every day," said Father Lyons, who also serves as an assistant at the Immaculate Conception par- !' ish in Taunton, ",' "The minimum goal of $1,-' 125,000 seemed like a lot of .:l money at first, but, . I;l0W the people. r.ealize ,that if everyone meets his honest and conscien- tious obligation, we here in Taunton will succeed as they did in New Bedford and Attleboro." "The fast-growing diocesan educational system needs the third regional high school to meet 'the demands being placed upon us," Father. Lyons ob- Turn to Page Two "B " Films Up In Past Year WASHINGTON (NC) - The . National Legion of De¢ency rated as objection- able nearly a quarter of the u. S. films it reviewed last year, compared with about 14 per cent the year before. The 26-year-old Church agency charged with classifying films by their moral content said 24.33 per -cent of the 222 U,S. {\lms it looked at were put in class "B," morally objectionable . in part for all. . Turn to Page Eighteen meditation, It is a weekend with God alone." , I'The LaSalette Fathers' are happy to open' a .. House at the Shrine," .. said, Father Sauve, "because it'will 'bring rich spiritual"bless.ings to . the people of the Attleboro.. ar'eas .. and to the whole' dioce'se .of Fall © 1960 The Anchor' I PRICE lOe $4,00 per Year Se<ond Class Mail Privileges at Fait River, !,,\asi, An Anch.or of th.e SO'Ul, Sur, and Pirm-ST. PAUL The ANCHOR PREVOST. CELEBRATES: Marking the 100th anni- versary of the death .of their founder are Brothers of Prevost High School. Left to seated, Brother Augustus; superior, Brother Robert. Standing, Brother Marcel, Brother Benjamin. All are graduates of, ·Prevost.· . ,Invest Prelates Su l1 day, Dec. 11. . At' Cathe,dral . 'I.'heChancery Office of the .• P'i'oeese . hlUJ .almoqnced. that'the investiture· of Rt.' J. ·Fenton and Rt., J\. .. . 'Domestic Prelates will take River. It will give the oppor- place in St. Mary's Cathedral, Turn &0 Page Two . 'Fail River; on. Sunday evening, Dec. 11, at 7:30 o'clock. . . Off-Color F. -Ims· H u.rt .... ' of t'he new monsignori have been service chaplains for . . . 18 ye'ars and both hold the ra.nk W.est. a ·nd A.-d Re' d'S of Colonel, Msgr. Fenton the Army and Msgr. Hamel in the , Air Force. .. ',- . "HOLLYWOOD (NC)-Decadent' movies' are hurting" : Msgr. Fenton is at present thoe West, an international Ca. ,thoiic film authority said h. 'e .. re Chief of Personnel, in the Office . ot' the ,Chief of ,Chaplains with this' Andrew. Ruszkowski, execqtive staff member ·of· headqu'arters' in the ·Pentagon. the'International Catholic Cil)ema Office (OOlC) in Brus- Msgr: Hamel is .Inspector, Chap- sels, Belgium, said producers '• lain General of the. Air Force and moviegoers must work· Prevost, Brothers- _ .C()IJlf!land . iU)<t . 'MATS wIth headquarters at together for' better motion Mark Centennial'" Scott Air. Base, W. , pictures. "Motion picture . .'.'.. . The elevation of both chap- makers should feel an extra re- A ThanksgIvmg.Eve Mass. lains came' at the request of aponf$ibility at this time when at Notre Dame Church, Fall Francis Cardinal Spellman as the West is struggling with the River has climaxed Military Vicar for the Armed bitter ideological propaganda of alice' by the Brothers of . Forces of the United States ,with communism," Mr. Ruszkowski the approval of the Most Rev said in an interview. Instruction of Prevost erend Bishop - "They must understand that if High School of the 100th The will be preached they present a degenerate pic- versary of the death of theIr by Most Rev. James H. Griffiths, ture of the West, they'll open founder, John Mary Robert D.D., Auxiliary Bishop of New the doors to communist propa- de Lamennais. York. Bishop Griffiths is a eauda. Many people will begin Rt. Rev. Msgr. Alfred J. E. former Chancellor of the Mili- Turn &0 Page Twelve Tun &0 Page Twenty tary Ordinariate. , . V91. 4, ·No. 47 River, Thursday, Nov. 24, '1960 Plan· Ret·rea't Ho.use·.··, At· Attlebo,ro" Sh rin.e:·:· Construction of a 70-rOOm retreat hous'e at the LaSalette Shrine in Attleboro will begin early next . year, Rev. Rene Sauve, M.S., Most Rev. James Ccinnolly, Bishop'ofFaURiver, has granted permission to the LaSalette .Fathers·to build Qur Lady of LaSalette' Re- treat House. The' Retreat House wni be' iocated 'off Park Str'eet on the north end' of the Shl'ine' gl'(>unds:thus assur- ing complete isolation and tran- quility to the is . very important," explained Father Sauve, "because'a closed is a time of prayer and \
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Page 1: 11.24.60

·.Advent Wrea-th:Prep~~esHome':For Christmas

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

Bishops Urge Every PersonAccept Own Responsibility

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

in f~mi~y J~fe, industry, 'ec?- '~{ tlie ;'basically mo~~l'evils;' i~ , . ~ . "At a time' when so much de­nOmIC hfe m general and In . the various sph'eres of life "and pends upon the soundness of ourin:t'erllational affairs.' Pers':': . the .r~storatioil of' a .vigorous 'economy a.nd upon 'our ability

'onal. iesponsiphityis 'be'Ing, . seJf$e Qf· ~ers.~nal JresPoQ~ibility. .to pr~duce .to mee.t the needs ofsacrificed, the, Bishop dec1!lred, bel:o~g ~~ImarllY to t~e flel~.l?f a rapldly '<ieveIOPI?g world, weby:a tendenc'y ,to .dlliegate too r~I'~lOn, .' .' '..', ~ave pe~.~qaced WI~~ a,frequ~nt.

~ mUch: . responsil:iilfty to organ-:- .. I~The'. 'forem~t . signs . o~. th~.la~k o.f truly responslblE! leader-izationS. decline of personal ~espotlsibil- .sh~p" both on' the part of rna,,""

They said that the. correctioft ity" are ·to . be . found in .. the TurD &0 P~e EigMe'eD 'family," the Bishops stated. "Thefailure of parents to fulfill their

'responsibilities, as reveaied inthe frequency of divorce, deser-'tion and broken' homes, is a na-

· tional disgrace. Any delinquen-·<:y. 'of, parents may well be re­flected in. thE' delinquency 'of' - The custom of the' Adveht -

· Y0l;1t~, which. is n~w OO~On~YWreath,na$' spread S9, ~apid-· consIdered our greate~t nabonal '1···· th'U 'ted -St t th . t.domestic problem}' , . y In e m, a es· a.

The Bi~hops" state'nwnt en.. - it .ha...~ .alr.eady· become. a· titled, "Need' for 'Personai Re-" 'ch~rished part of Advent in the· sponsibili'ty,'; said that "e.qualiy;· home.". con~picuous, is the' evidenc.e:qf ' 'The Advent Wreath is a wreatb

decline in t~e sense of resp?~si-: made of evergreens that is eitherbi~ity within our indu~tt:ial . suspended from the ceiling ororganizatiQn and in our general piaced on a table, usually be­ecol}omic life." . fore a family shrine or in some

other place of honor in the home.Bishop Requests. Fastened to the wreath are foul'

F··unds. fo' r CU· ....' candles, standing- upright atequal distance. These candles,. represent the" four weeks of

"The Catholic University . Advent. .is 'the keystone in ot.ll~ whole' 0n'th'eFirstSunday of Advent,national education. system/~usualiyin the evening, the roomMost 'Rev.' James ~L'.' ConnOI~is'darkene~ and the first' cimdlely, BIshop of Fall IUver, empha- is lit. The'candle' shining in thesized' today' as' be announced the ' darkness is a reminder of' theanimal offering' for the' world- time ~ when. h~manity was "sit­famous institution will be takim ting in darkness and in theup at all Masses in all Diocesan shadow, of. death" when thechurches next Sunday: ,. . promise' of the Redeemer came,

"From the hallowed walls ,of and' lit up the lives of men witbthis institution have come thou- hop'e for Ii Messiah. .sands of leaders in the field of The family th~n says someeducation, sociology and eccle- prayers usually offered for thesiastical administrative work," grace of a good and holy prepa­the Most Reverend Bishop ration· for Christmas. Thesestressed in a pastoral letter family exercises continue everywhich was read throughouttllP' evening throughout the firstDiocese last Sunday. week with the one candle lit..

Turn &0 Page Twenty Turn ·to· Page Two,

Taunton DriveOver $106,600

"You can sense by the attitude and feeling of the Taunton people that they are just aseager for a regional high school as were the residents of Greater New Bedford and Attle­boro," declared Rev. James F. Lyons, priest-director, as he announced today that giftsalready received approximate $106,600. "The interest and enthusiasm in the Tauntonproject mounts every day,"said Father Lyons, who alsoserves as an assistant at theImmaculate Conception par- !'ish in Taunton, ",'

"The minimum goal of $1,-'125,000 seemed like a lot of . : lmoney at first, but, .I;l0W thepeople. r.ealize ,that if everyonemeets his honest and conscien­tious obligation, we here inTaunton will succeed as they didin New Bedford and Attleboro."

"The fast-growing diocesaneducational system needs thethird regional high school tomeet 'the demands being placedupon us," Father. Lyons ob-

Turn to Page Two

"B" Films UpIn Past Year

WASHINGTON (NC) ­The . National Legion ofDe¢ency rated as objection­able nearly a quarter of theu. S. films it reviewed last year,compared with about 14 percent the year before.

The 26-year-old C h u r c hagency charged with classifyingfilms by their moral content said24.33 per -cent of the 222 U,S.{\lms it looked at were put inclass "B," morally objectionable

. in part for all.. Turn to Page Eighteen

meditation, It is a weekend withGod alone."

, I'The LaSalette Fathers' are'~ery happy to open' a Retr~at.. House at the Shrine," .. said,Father Sauve, "because it'will'bring rich spiritual"bless.ings to .the people of the Attleboro.. ar'eas

.. and to the whole' dioce'se .of Fall

© 1960 The Anchor'I PRICE lOe

$4,00 per Year

Se<ond Class Mail Privileges A~thorized at Fait River, !,,\asi,

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

TheANCHOR

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

,Invest PrelatesSul1day, Dec. 11..At' Cathe,dral .

'I.'heChancery Office ofthe .• P'i'oeese .hlUJ .almoqnced.that'the investiture· of Rt.''R~v; Ber~a~d J. ·Fenton andRt., ,~~v. 'iIe~ri, J\... .Ha~el a~'

'Domestic Prelates will takeRiver. It will give the oppor- place in St. Mary's Cathedral,

Turn &0 Page Two . 'Fail River; on. Sunday evening,Dec. 11, at 7:30 o'clock. . .

Off-Color F.-Ims· Hu.rt....'~oth of t'he new monsignorihave been service chaplains for

. . . 18 ye'ars and both hold the ra.nk

W.est. a·nd A.-d Re'd'S of Colonel, Msgr. Fenton ~n theArmy and Msgr. Hamel in the, Air Force. .. ',-

. "HOLLYWOOD (NC)-Decadent' movies' are hurting" : Msgr. Fenton is at presentthoe West, an international Ca.,thoiic film authority said h.'e..re Chief of Personnel, in the Office

. ot' the ,Chief of ,Chaplains withthis' we~k. Andrew. Ruszkowski, execqtive staff member ·of· headqu'arters' in the ·Pentagon.the'International Catholic Cil)ema Office (OOlC) in Brus- ~ Msgr: Hamel is .Inspector, Chap­sels, Belgium, said producers ' • lain General of the. Air Forceand moviegoers must work· Prevost, Brothers- _.C()IJlf!land . iU)<t shlf~ Ch~J;llaio:

. 'MATS wIth headquarters attogether for' better motion Mark Centennial'" Scott Air. For~e Base, W. ,pictures. "Motion picture . .'.'.. . The elevation of both chap-makers should feel an extra re- A ThanksgIvmg.Eve Mass. lains came' at the request ofaponf$ibility at this time when at Notre Dame Church, Fall Francis Cardinal Spellman asthe West is struggling with the River has climaxed observ~ Military Vicar for the Armedbitter ideological propaganda of alice' by the Brothers of . Forces of the United States ,withcommunism," Mr. Ruszkowski the approval of the Most Revsaid in an interview. Chr~tian Instruction of Prevost erend Bishop -

"They must understand that if High School of the 100th ann~- The sermo~ will be preachedthey present a degenerate pic- versary of the death of theIr by Most Rev. James H. Griffiths,ture of the West, they'll open founder, Ve~. John Mary Robert D.D., Auxiliary Bishop of Newthe doors to communist propa- de Lamennais. York. Bishop Griffiths is aeauda. Many people will begin Rt. Rev. Msgr. Alfred J. E. former Chancellor of the Mili-

Turn &0 Page Twelve Tun &0 Page Twenty tary Ordinariate.

, .

V91. 4, ·No. 47

f~1I River, Mass.~ Thursday, Nov. 24, '1960

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

Construction of a 70-rOOm retreat hous'e at the LaSaletteShrine in Attleboro will begin early next .year, Rev. ReneSauve, M.S., SUp'erioi",ann:ounc~d,today.Most Rev. James ~.

Ccinnolly, Bishop'ofFaURiver, has granted permission to theLaSalette .Fathers·to buildQur Lady of LaSalette' Re­treat House. The' RetreatHouse wni be' iocated 'offPark Str'eet on the north end' ofthe Shl'ine' gl'(>unds:thus assur­ing complete isolation and tran­quility to the rett:el\tall'~! ~'Thi8is . very important," explainedFather Sauve, "because' a closed~treat is a time of prayer and

\

Page 2: 11.24.60

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';276 Central St., Fall Ii.:','ll • • ".., .: . ~i.

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Advent WreathContinued From Page 01111

The Second Sunday of Ad­vent the second candle is lit an4through that week two candletlgive their light through the faJa,oily devotions.

The Third Week sees three.candles lit unW, on the Fou~'S~day, all four candles. ~lighted to announce throughoulthe 'week the coming of. ~~irthday of the Lord. Thecl!D­dIes are lit for the period qfthedaily family devotions.

This custom of the Adve.Wreath originated in the 'su.­teenth century in Eastern' Ge...many when people began to ta~.

lights from the open, where thevburned as nature symbols,: intotheir homes as religious' sym­bols. The practice quickly spreadamong both Catholics and Prot­estants of many countries.

The wreath, being round, syJIPbolizes the "fullness of time'"when the Messiah was born. IIis also a symbol of glory ,andvictory. The candle is the sign olhope in the coming of Chris*,and is also a symbol of OurBlessed. Lord.. The Advent Wreath is a beae­tUul custom that deserve4.. ,a

:place in the Catholic home~~_~ii~,i~g preparation for Chri...,ma~ \;

Country ~aYes

When It GivesWASHINGTON (NC) - The

United States by giving aWB7',J/--huge stores of surplus .;foods •" feed the needy overseas is sav­

ing millions of dollars for tawAmerican taxpay~r.

This point was made by Au»­iliary Bishop Edward E. Swan­strom of New York, executiV4director of Catholic Relief Se~

vices-National Catholic W~fare Conference.

"In testimony before vario.committees of Congress, repre­sentatives of American volun­tary relief agencies have point­ed to the fact that the ship­ments of surplus agriculturalproducts to the poor of mall¥countries save the Americantaxpayers millions of dollars 111warehouse and storage fees."Bishop Swanstrom said.

"It has been reported thatthere are now more than ninemillion dollars worth of Ameri.­can surplus products in. grana­ries and other storage faciliUelIthroughout the country."

'~"'··-'I.,- . ~'. '. ~ =-~-, ..... .Saw hlI person, or save by mail.~

Postage Paid y()ur maney is insured safe by an a9~Both Ways of the U. S. Government.

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BRISTOL COUN,.y~S LARGESTFEDERAL SAVING'S: ASSOCIATIO·N

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DRAWING POWER: Handy with brush an<\, easel,actress Delores Hart tries her. hand at sketching a statueof St. Francis of Assisi in Rome's Lateran Square. Doloreshas more than a passing interest in St.. Francis. She playsa featured role in a new movie based on the saint's life.Ne Photo. .

American VincentiansStart NewAid Program~ to Mission Lands, ' .

NEW YORK (NC) - A pro- ties. Two years of careful studygram of direct aid to the poor . and planning have gone' intoand suffering in missionary . preparations 'for the new work.countries has been launched by Under the plan, made publicthe superior council of the here .at the superior councilSociety of St. Vincent de Paul. annual meeting, a conference of. Basic to the project is the es- the society in 'this country' will

tl/-blishment of spiritua.l li,nes. of establish conta~t w~th a c.o~~er=contact between AmerIcan Vm- ence of the society m a mISSioncentians and their brothers ary country to bring aid direCtlyabroad. to the poor.

The' program will be super- . Catholic Rt;lief Services-Na-vised by the councWs national tIonal Catholic Welfare Confer­committee on missionary activi- enee and the Maryknoll Fathers

·will assist the program, particu­larly in cases where languagebarriers present pI:oblems.

The new mission program isexpected to have both spiritualand material benefits. The work·will always be kept Vincentianin character, and.is not to inter':'

·fere with or detract in any y.,ayfrom the work now being doneby the society in parishesthroughout the UniteJ. Sta~s.

Help to be sent abroad wiD·come from. suppieinentaloHer­ings slid from surplu~es: of Oleindividual councils. ' " ,. ,

It is believed that the program,il1 'the spiritual field, will greatlystrengthen existing councils here

·and abroad, and that it will leadto the' formation of councils illplaces where they do' not nowexist................i

A FAMILY TIlEAT

BAR-B-Q CHICKENSwy 7-9"S

• ROSELAWN.­. -.•.. " FARMS· .. ··

!.~45 Wash,.·ington St.,Fairhaven

.Just off Route 6r' 'Watch for Signs.• While out fora ,Drive' " ...' Stop' at, this Delightful', Spot.................,

Continued from Page Oneserved. "We have the great de­mand for a girls' high schoolwhich the Most ReverendBishop!s anxious to establish in

.Taun·ton. I know the people OfGreater Taunton will standsqu,arely behind the Ordinary in

. this, the biggest dioeesap under­taking ever in Taunton." .

The' number of .aPJ?licationsfor. admission to Bishop StangHigh in' North Dartino.uth in­'creases annually, Father' ~yopsobserved. Anxiouly, the pepple

"in' Greater. Attleboro are look­,jng,. forward. to" the registration: 9f, '~heir children' at BisJ:lop.' Feehan High in the Fall of 1961.

. "-The ,spirit which has per-. meated the last few workers'meetings here in Taunton indi­cates we will match the 'effortof New Bedford and Attleboro,"

.Father Lyons said confidently.

Legion of Decency'The following films are' to be

'added to the lists in 'their respec­, tive' classifications:. ,'Unobjectionable ;for "adults:The' Angry Silence; 'The Plun-derers. .

Objectionable. in. part for an:LegiQns·:.of, the 'Nile: (~uggesiive

, costumes and dances; excessiveb~utality). .

:'.' .

to the Pope would be viewedas "the simple and c.lear dem­onstration to the world that ourtwo communions· can speak toone another with charity, joyand reciprocal faith."

Father Tucci stated that theimportance of- t he AnglicanPrimate's visit to the Popeshould not be underestimated,but the very definite limitationsof 'the visit \should 'be under­stood. He said that from thevery beginning, the visit hadbeen understood as "an act ofcourtesy ... and therefore of noofficial nature."

Retreat Houa;eContinued from Page One

tunity of making a closed re­treat to more men, women and

. teen-agers."Shut off from the hurry and

bustle of -the world, they will beable to free themselves for awhile from the problems andpressures of daily living and.concentrate on their spiritual·welfare. They will .acquire a'better understanding of theirrelationships to God., to· theirfamilies and to their fellow-men.A closed retreat makes p~ople

better Christians and betterAmericans."

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

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION ..

2

'Necrology,. ,I: THE 'ANCHOR lists the an~'

niversary dates of pries~ who,served,'the Fall Riv,er Dioee~

!. ~ince .i~ fomiat~on in 1~9~i' :with. tJ,te. intenti?n, t~t the

iaitbful will glve them aprayerful remembrance. .,

f' NOV~ 25I Rev. Philias Jalbert, 1946, Ad­'m.iilistbltor, Notre Dame, Fall..River.

Two LanguagesThe RetFeat House at· the

Shrine will have 70 privaterooms with complete bath roombetween each two rooms....Therewill· be a large Chapel, confer­ence rooms, library and all theother facilities needed. for com­fortable and adequate year round,use. The food preparation will"be done by the La .Salette Sis­ters..The retreats will be ~on­

ducted in English and Fre.J.1ch.The construction will begin

early next year. The plans arenow being completed by theRev. Brot!ler Cajetan Baumann,

.O.F.M., the famous Franciscan.Architect who has been workingon ,the Shrine Master, Plan, torthe past three .years..

Expand Facilities .'" .The Retreat House is only one

'of' the' many structures" to be'erected at the Shrine in '1961.'~'Weare now entering intO· thesecond' phase 'of 'th~ .",ShrineDevelopment Pro.p-am",: de­

.cIated 'Father Sauve. This' phase

.includes a . large .~afeterbl . andhall,:' a new religious' articlesstore, a monastery for the fathers

, ~.' .. NOV. Mand brothers with adequate c0ll.;-Rev. James· R.· Burns, P.R.,. sultation rooms for the pilgrims

.. ]945, 'Pastor, Sacred Heart, Fall and '8.' Novitiate House for .the. River. La,' Salette Sisters. The third

.':,:{";-. , - - NOV. Z'J . . ..• ';-,"phase of ·the "SArine' Develop;':· Rt. Rev. Patrick E. Mcqee, ment Program" will compri~

~i9~8, Pastor, St. Mary, No. Attle- the Sm:inE: Church and the.pil-";i~OfO;~. ',< .' '.: .'... grUn's .guel!thouse.. ...,;.: . NOV. 28 .' _' ,"

:'.~ Rey. Adrien A. Gaut~er, 1959, _." '. "... ,Mass Ordo " !; .~'ra,st~~" St: R~~~.f.:ll Ri\!~r..·. ~ :.FRIDA.y--':S:t: ~?therine of:Ale]r-;.~, Re Ph'll' R 1958 Chap- andria, VlI'gm and Martyr.'.. v. I lpe oss" . 'D-aA 'M P •~;lain, Sacred Heart Home, NeW' D~u~le.,., t"'f"" . ass, rop~r,,.Bedford:· " GlorIa; Common Preface. "

... ............ '·,SATURDAY-St. Sylvester, Ab-• bot and Confessor. Double.

White.. Mass Proper; Gloria;Second Collect St. Peter of.Mexanqria, Bi:;;h,op and Mat-tYr, Common Preface. i •

SUNDAY--:-I Sunday of Advent.· Nov. 27-0ur Lady of the Im- . bouble' of i'Class.Violet. Mass, 'maculate Conception;" -, .. Proper; 'No' Gloria;· Creed;

. New Bedford. Preface 9f Trinity. .St. 'MargalOt," Buzzards" '. MONDAY':'-':Mass ;of' pteviou8

Bay. " Sunday. Simple. Violet. ~aSs. ..',. .'::," ,"..;.:' :: • 'l'.'·' c'" ;.!·~q"ptoper,' .. No'..·Gloria;.. Common

, D.ec. 4-St. Ant1:lony of Padua, ,. Preface.. . .. . ..... '., Fall River. ',' .

, '. h . ;- TUESDAY-Mass'of, prevIOUSS.~ Mary, FaIr aven. .' S'd'" S'im'" '1 . '..;tv.',' I 't"·· M'. '. un ay. p e." .10 e . ass

Dec. 11-0ur Lady of Health, Proper; No Gloria; SecondFall River.' Collect St. Saturninu8, MartYr;

St. Louis, Fall River.. Common Preface., . .' .' WEDNESDAY - St. Andrew,

Dec. 18-8t. Bernard, Assonet. Apostle. ,Double of n Class., St:' Mary's' Home, 'New Red. .MasS : Proper;' Gloria;

Bedford. ' Second Collect of .previousSunday; Creed; Preface ofApootles. .

THURSDAY-:-Mass of previ9usSunday, S~ple. Violet. MailsProper; No Gloria; CommoDPreface. ..

THE ANCHOR· Second-class mail privileges authorized

. ·at Fall River. Mass, Published every

. : Thursday at 410 Highland. Avenue. Fall '.:River. Mass.. ,by the Cathohe Press of the; Diocese of Fall River:' Subscription price

'.:~.,~iL ~tJ!aid $'.~ ~ Feu..,

Page 3: 11.24.60

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THE ANCHOR- 3Thurs., Nov. 24, 1960

CourtUpholds BirthControl Laws

HARTFORD (NC)--~e

Supreme Court of Errorsagain has· upheld the con­stitutionality of Connecti­cut's 81-year-old laws agamm;birth control.

The state's high court unani­mously reaffirmed. three earlierdecisions supporting the laws,which prohibit the use of con­traceptive devices and forbidpersons, including physicians,from counseling on their use.

The court upheld a New HavenSuperior COUl·t decision which

. rejected a complaint brought byMr. and Mrs. David M. Trubek,both students at the Yale LawSchool.

The Trubeks alleged that foreconomic and psychological rea­sons they were unprepared tohave c~iIdren.

Reject ArgumentThey said they were being

denied the opportunity to getinformation and advice on con­traceptive measures they werebeing denied rights under the14th Amendment to the Consti-~tioo. .

However, the five-membercourt's decision, . writfen byJustice Samuel Mellitz, rejectedthis argument. The court said theplaintiffs failed to raise anyquestions of law that wouldchange its December, 1959, de­cision that the laws were consti­tutional.

The court's 1959 decision halJbeen appealed to the U. S. Su­preme Court and oral argument.are due next year.

The complaint by Mr. and Mrs.Trubek was one of a flurry oftest cases initiated inConnecti­cut in the past two years. Othenwere begun by a physician, threemarried couples and three min­isters.

Monday, Nov. 28, 5-~0 P.M.

Tuesday, NoV. 29, 2:30-6:00' P.M~

~ St. Patrick !!t". . .

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$pecial Raffle-Tran,s;stor Radio, Bicycle, Polyanna Doll.

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:Fall River Guild.The November m.eeting of the

Fall River Catholic Guild forthe Blind will be held next Sun­day. afternoon in Sacred ·HeartSchool,' preceded by services inthe church' beginning at 2:15.

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New Hospital Wing'DENVILLE (NC) - ~ishop'

James A: McNulty of Paterson,N. J., will· dedicate St. ClareHospital's new wing next Mon­day. The addition provides. a'convent for the Sisters of. theSorrowful Mother, 27 additionalhospital beds and enl~rged ma­ternity facilities.

Hungarian Nuns AskPublicly for Vocation

VIENNA (NC)-A public ap­peal for vocations has been madeby a congregation of Sisters inHungal'y, where the communistgovernment 10 years ago ordered

. the dissolution of 53 orders andthe return of 10,000 men andwomen Religious· to civilian Jjfe.. The Poor Teaching Sisters ofOur Lady issued a calI to girls"who want to devote their livesto the glory of God in teachingHungal'ian youth orin doinghousework" to tr~r the religiouslife.

The Annuario Pontificio,Church yearbook issued at theVatican, lists the Hungary's PoorTea~hing Sisters of Our Lady ofKalocsa as hav.in~ 934 members-a gain of 300 in the past 10years. /

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

Urges U.S. Catholics to Help Latin AmericaLAS VEGAS (NC)-A Latin Father Considine declared next five years. .

American expert warned' here that "any community of zealous Among the special problemsthat "the Catholic Church in Catholics may supply papal of the Church in Latin AInp.ric:\Latin America today is in deep volunteers." the Maryknoll priest listed thetrouble," Appeals to Women condition of· the agricultural

Father John J. Consid~ne, . "Any U.S. parish may band wor~ers and t?e industrial prol-M,M., New Bedford native, together with other parishes and etanat, the Inroads made bycalled for "dedicated coopera- provide a team. The Holy See co~~unism, a~d the shortago!' oftion" by U.S. Catholics with the hopes that many Catholic col- reJrglOus vocations.Holy See's program for the leges and universities ..,'I1 01'- He pointed out that 60 perChurch in Latin America. ganize a team, supplying re- cent of the 190 million people in

Father Considine addressing placements as team members Latin America live in ruralthe National Counc'il of Catho.,. complete their overseas term. areas and that the "largest singlelic Women, urged U. S. Catholic The papal call will be, heard, bloc" among" these a.re t~,e fieldorganizations to be generous in ~e are sure, by many diOcesan workers or campesInos..supporting the Holy See's plan a!)d parochial ,¥roups of w';men ~raditionaIly: ~e said, the ma-for papal volunteers to seN'e in of the NCCW. tenal and splntual needs ofLatin America. Among other. programs unde~- these workers were cared for by .

U d th " 1 t '" 1 taken by the U.S, Church to aId the owners of the big estates un-n er e vo un eel'S pan, C th 1" • L t' A . h '

C h I, 1 '11 . t· L· f a 0 IClsm In a In menca e der at system of SOCIal patel'na-at 0 IC aymen "':1 go 0 .\ 11\ listed' providing 400 scholar- r

America to aid lay leaders there . h'" L' t· A" .' Ism.. . .. . k b h If f s IpS to a. In mencan seml-. However with the outbreak ofIn apostoJrc wor on e a 0 . d' 1960 61' f" . ..,

'the Church.. n~nans t~rmf -'. man- class struggle,' the campesin'}s. .'. '.cmg voca lOna programs In poor . have become aware of 'injustices

.Father Consldme, dIrector of dioceses' paying 60 per cent of , th· t t t h . 'dthe, Latin America Bureau, ·Na- ·the con~truction cost o{ a. new 10 ell' rea men, e sal .

.' tional Catholic Welfare Confer- regional seminary planned for,,~q,::e, said recently that .tl.~ ',lr$t "northeast Brazil; establishing 50U.~. volunteers are expected ,to new' high schools and colIegesbe in Latin America by the end in Latin America during the·of 1961. . 1960's; and Sending 1,000 priesLs

Teams of Volunteers and ·Religious to ~he are':l In the

In his talk to the women's'council convention, he' pointedout that the Holy See's plancalIs for the volunteers to. beorganized into teams under the

. sponsorship of Catholic organi­zatiOilS, padshes and schools..

He said the sponsoring groupsare to assume personal J;esponsi­hili'ty .for each volunteer, payfor his training and travel ex­penses; and keep in. touch with

o him during his period of service.The volunteers wilI serve fromtwo to five years, with an op­tion of serving longe~ if they"wish, he s~id.

Prelate to KeynoteEducators' Meeting

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop.John J. Wright of Pittsburgh,president general of the NationalCatholic Educational Associa­t 'on, will give the keynotespeech at the NCEA's 1961 con­vention in Atlantic City, N. J.

NCEA headquarters here an­nounced that the April 4-7 con­vention, the association's 58thannual one, will have as itstheme "The Objectives of Chris­tian Education in Contempol'arySociety."

N.Y. CommitteeAsks State AidFor Education. NEW YORK (NC) - A

plan that would give stateaid to private colleges anduniversities, inc Iud i n gchurch-related institutions, waspresented to Gov. Nelson Rocke­feller by a three-man committeehere.

The proposal is part of a multi­miUion dollar, long-range pro­gram for the reform of highereducation in New York State.

It calls for direct grants by themate to private and church­related institutions.

If such aid should be given, itwill mark an innovation in therelationship between states and~ h u l' Ch - l' e 1ate d institu­tions which traditionally dependfor support on revenue fromstUdents, investments and con­tributions, educators said.

Little Value'. Some states, and the Federal

government, have made scholar­ships available to high schoolstudel~ts who were permitted toattend the college of their choice,but these generally are of littleor no' aid to colleges becauseeach scholarship seldom coversthe school's cost in educating thestudent.

As to the amount to be pro­vided, the report said it "shouldbe no gl'eater than a small frac­tion of the total cost of educat­ing each student" and that thesum should vary with the levelof the degree being sought.

Payments"The payments should not be

so large," said the report, "as tochange the character of privateinstitutions-particularly so as tomake them too heavily depend­ent on the state for their futurefinancing.

"We believe that lin aggregatepayment not in excess of 10 percent of teaching expenditures inprivate colleges and universitiesIn the state would satisfy theserequirements."

Sudanese Oppos~

Relocation PlanKHARTOUM (NC) - Recent

demonstrations in Khartoumand Wadi HaIfa, Nile river townnear the United Arab· Republic(Egyptian) border, were directE!dprimarily against the Sudanesegovernment's plan to relocatethe inhabitant$ of Wadi HaIfa

I (12,000)' and' surrounding coun­tryside. (from 27,000 to 40,000).

The area is to be flooded,·I forming a vast lake to make: Egypt's High 'Dam project pos-o aib.le. .

Wadi HaIfa is in the region ofNubia, where Christianity' once

I flourished. Now the vast major­it)' of Wadi HaIfa people areMoslems. The territory is rich inruins of gl'eat interest, includingremains of Christian churchesand monasteries dating from thelOth to the l,2th cen~uries.

'Peacefully Dispersed' :. According to a 'Khartou~, newspaper, the people were ir!­, vited to choose their new home

from among five places. Theplace that got no votes, Khas!11

1 EI Girba, southeast of -Khartoum,was the one that the governmentdecided "was the best for ihem,"according to the paper. .

Four cabinet ministers, threeof them army. generals, went to .Wadi Haifa toaQnounce thedecision, which was receivedwith strong resentment, accord­ing to repol·ts. "Some trouble­makers created a disturbance,"the official statement saiC!. "Theywere gently and peacefully dis­persed by the police."

Page 4: 11.24.60

~'.

Property Return.JERUSALEM (NC)-Proper­

ties belonging to two Catholicreligious orders on Mt. Zion herehave been returned by Israelimilitary authorities.

Supreme CourtTo Hear SchoolTuition Appeal

MONTPELIER (NC)Arguments in Vermont Su­preme Court on whetherparochial school tuition canbe paid with tax funds have beenscheduled for next Tuesday.

The South Burlington SchoolDistrict is appealing to the courtfrom a ruling by ChittendenCounty Chancellor William C.Hill. He held that the school dis­trict, which has no high school,cannot pay tuition for studentswho elect to attend a parochialhigh school.

Attorneys for the school dis­trict had sought a continuanceof the case until the Januaryterm, but Chief Justice Benja­min F. Hurlburd set the Nov. 29date.

If Chancellor Hill's judgmentis upheld, several school dis­tricts that have to send studentsoutside their boundaries to at­'tend high school will be affected.Many students choose to 'attendCatholic secondary schools.

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

...,

Reb e Is Release~upils Unharmed

MANAGUA (NC) - Some 200students of the Christian Broth­ers' school at nearby Diriambawere released unharmed whenthe· revolutionaries who heldthem as hostages for three dayssurrendered to· g 0 vel' n men ttroops.

The 14 rebels who were holedup in the school gave up afterthe successful mediation ofBishopOctavio Calderon ofMatagalpa. Bishop Calderonpromised to, serve as guarantorof Nicaragua President LuisSomoza's promise- that the rebelswould be conducted safely to Iimilitary prison and- would re­ceive a fair trial.

The 56-year-old Bishop ae­companied the revolutionaries inthe military bus that broughtthem the 20-odd miles fromDiriamJl:' to the prison here inthe ;.capital.

The 14 rebels were part of alarger revolutionary force thathad captured Diriamba. ·Whennational guardsmen retook thetown, the small band seized ,the'Brothers' school and its pupils.

Repeating our Special

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B;oadcast CatholicProgram Statewide

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - A I

Catholic radio program designedto reach listeners throughout-Arkansas was inaugurated onthree stations Sunday.

The interview-type program,called "Ask A- Priest," is pro­duced by the radio-televisiondepartment of the Archdioc~ol St. Louis. It features RichardD Hatton, Jr., St. Louis attorney,and nine St. Louis priests whowill take turns on the program.

ed in this approach should joinCitizens for Educational Free­d0m (3109 S. Grand Blvd., St.Louis 18, Mo.)

Position :os Clear,But the greatest emotional re­

action was aroused by my sug­gestion that "young couplesmight give the need for Catholiceducation serious thought inregulating the size of their fam­ilies."

My position is clear. Follow­ing traditional Catholic doctrineas expressed in canon law, I takeit that the primary purpose ofmarriage is the procreation andeducation of offspring.

Since the maintenance of ours0ciety requires an ever in­creasing period of formal edu­cation, and public schools arereligiously neutral or negative,Catholic parents have the rightand obligation to plan. for thereligious education of theirchildren.

The added economic burdenthis currently involves shouldconsequently be taken into con­sideration in regulating familysize.

Name St. Louis PriestTo Educa.tion Post

WASHINGTON (NC)-FatherE. H. Behrmann, organizer ofthe St. Louis archdiocese's· de­partment of· special education,has been named associate secre­tary of the same department ofthe National Catholic Educa­tional Association here.

The S1. Louis priest has de­voted' 10 years to educational·work among· exceptional chil­dren, ranging from the gifted' tothe physically or mentally re-tarded child. .

In St. Louis, his departmentoffers a program that includesday classes for the retarded, aremedial reading clinic, a· ·speechclinic, child guidance, and areS'idential school for handi­capped children..Tbe school baal~~~!?~~:c~,..~:' _,' __ ' ~ ~-'

Unlike ~irth ControlReaders who are shocked by

the term regulation should pon­der the words of Pius XII (Mol':"ality and Marriage, Nov. 26,1951), '~the Church knows howto consider with sympathy andunderstanding the real diffi­culties of the married state inour· day. Therefore, in Our lastallocution on conjugal moral­ity, We affirmed' the legitimacyand, at the same time, the limits""::::in truth very wide-of a reg­ulation of offspring which, un­like so-called 'birth control,' iscompatible ,with the law of God.One may even.hope (but in thismatter the Church naturallyleaves the judgment to medicalscience) that scienCe will suc­ceed in providing this licitmethod with. a sufficiently se­cure basis. The most recent in­formation seems to confirm sucha hope."

Disturbed' by VenomSome correspondents insisted

that periodic continence (rhy­thm) is· either ineffective or im­possible. Reliable studies showthat this is simply contrary tofact.

Others maintained that ayoung couple couldn't knowwhat their future economic po­sition might be. Are we to be­l~eve that they are incapable ofmaking a reasonable judgment, ,so that if they marry young andhave several children in rapidsuccession, they cannot foreseethe possible need to start spac­ing pregnancies?

Finally, I was particularlyd.isturbed by the bitter venomof some respondents~ They im­plied that they had their child­ren only because they wereobliged to do so. People whodo not regard parenthood andthe service of new life as an<")ble privilege sbould not choosethe vocation of marriage 88

their way of serving God.

Mass for AmericansOn Thanksgiving Day

SYDNEY (NC) - CatholicDlembers of the American com­munity here will attend an ev­ening Mass in St. Mary's Cath­eCral on American Thanksgiving·Day.

Protestants will attend theircustomary service in St. Step­h€.n's Presbyterian church. Mem­bers 'of the American Societylater :will attend the traditional'Jhan~sgiving .dinner, at. theAmeJiican National Club....-"': .......

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

Restates Views on CatholicEducation·· Size of F~m~my

By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University

"In your article,on family incomes and education I wascompletely astounded to read that you would tell a motherto, take a job so her children could receive a Catholic educa­tion. And just what did you mean by that last sentenceabo u t regulating familysize? I couldn't believe myeyes! Is this a new doctrine? .We have seven children, andafter two miscarriages last yearwhen I asked the priest aboutregulation, hesaid 'God takescare of you.'Don't youagree'?"

The article·yo u mentionbrought ·a floodof letters fromBorne sectionsof the country-as I assumedit would. Thereactions variedfrom mild pro­test to indignant anger and evenCJ'Ude scorn. I was told that Iwas ignorant of Catholic doc­trine and the facts of. life, thatmy statements were "close toblasphemy," "ludicrous," "don'tsound like ~a' priest," "not inkeeping with church's dictatesthat you have a large familyand populate the world." "a ser­ious blow to family life," and"make us ashamed of our Cath­olic heritage and traditions."

In general the letters were in­teresting and revealing. It ap­pears this writer would. do welltee. "absent himself from thelofty walls of security, calm andserenity in the university" andmeet some "idealistic Catholicswho face problems far-removedborn the very secure FatherThomas." Evidently, I don'tget around much, or travel withthe wrong people when I do! ,

Uncharitable, UnjustOne aspect of the reaction dis­

tFesses me as a Christian. Manyor the respondents assumed thatbecause they differed with me,they were not bound by theusual norms of charity and jus­tice. Frankly, I am puzzled bythe tone of some of the letters.

Now let US turn to the sourcef'f ,your shock and astonishment.First, there is my answer to thequestion whether' a mothelmight take a job in order tosend her children to a CatholicIIChool. Most of the protests ton;y solution 'insisted that thechildren should be sent to apublic school.

This is not the' issue. If youread the letter, you will dis­~ver that this mother wantsher children to get a Catholiceducation. Her question is, mayshe get a job to make this pos­sible.

Worthy ObjectiveIf you read my answer, you

will find that I spelled out rath­ell' carefully the conditions underwhich she may take a job. Ifthe conditions can be met, sheIs free to make her choice.

Securing a Catholic educationfor her children is a worthyfamily objective, and she mayfeel less optimistic than somereaders about the long rangeeffects of a secular education.

.AlIso, if you read the article,you will find that I urged parentgroups ;lond teachers to avoidthe unnecessary, costly practicesnow current in some schools. Afew readers sent itemized ac­C(Junts oj such extra costs.

Some suggested tackling theunjust double tax burden carried

. by supporters of a religiousllC~hool system. Readers interest-

,f

Page 5: 11.24.60

C@ndlemns M@vieNEW YORK (NC)-The Na­

tional Legion of Decency hasplaced in its condemned classthe movie "Port of Desire." "Thenegative elements of this film(suicide, perversion, adultery.exhibitionism)," the legion said."are seriously offensive to tra­ditional standards of moralityand decency."

Veterans HonorSociety f~nD[J1l.der'

NEWARK (NC) -Howard E.Crouch, founder of a society thataids Hansen's disease (leprosy)victims, has received the high­est award of the Catholic WarVeterans.

He received the Celtic CrossCitation Award for his workwith the Damien Dutton Society.which he founded and directs.The society assists lepers inmission areas.

Mr. Crouch, who comes fromNew Brunswick, N. J., receivedthe ~ward from James W. Fay.CWV commander, at a banquetsponsored by the CWV's NewJersey branch.

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

THE ANCHOR- 5Thurs., Nov. 24, 1960

enjoying the benefits of faith will help .JIB." This was the lastlentence in a letter of appeal received from a pastor in KATHI­

PARA in INDIA. Three years ago this priestbegan his Missionary work there among tenCatholic families. He has had phenomonalsuccess in hill ministry. During his first yearhe baptized 42 new Catholics and there are

'-"~'~"'l' now 380 people desirous of entering the___ "Church. Whatever suitable shelter he hall

~==~::"'--"E.Il been able to find has had to serve for thecelebration of Mass; convert and catechetical instructions havehad to be given In the open air. Having neither church not'school he asks if we could help him raise $4,000 to erect thesetwo buildings which are now essential. Could you help hImwHIliI a donation?

HUNGRY AT CHRISTMAS!Many Palestinian Refugees will be hungry at Christmas-tim.

unless we raise sufficient money to continue helping them.Will you send a Christmao donation of $10.00 to these Refu­gees? Why not send the money as II Christmas Gift in honOi"of a relative or friend who "has everything'''' We will send thQrelative or friend,. in whose nama you give the money, a bealb­tiful Christmas Gift Card.

~'l2earfistOlissions~'FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President I

Mltr. P.t.r P. Tuohy, Nat'l Sec',Send all communication. to:

CATHOUC NEAl EAST WElfARE ASSOCIATION480 ILexlngton Ave. ,at 46th St. New York 17, N. Y.

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

or friend manifests both love' of God and love of the one inwhose name tile gift is made. We will send {l beautiful GiftCard to the person or persons whom you might favor with oneur more of the following:

I. A Mass or a Novena of Masses.

2. Perpetual Membership ($20.00) or Annual Membership($1.00) in the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSO­CIATION.

3. A donation for the care of the Aged, Orphans, LepeTlloRefugees.• ,

4. A "Stringless Gift" enabling the fulfillment of an urgentMission need.

5. An "adopted" son or daughter in Christ, if you have themeans to pay for tile education of a seminarian or 11 nov­ice. The cost of this education ($600 for II seminarian, $3~for a novice) may be paid all at once or in installmentLJ.

3. A Sacred Article for a Church in Mission Lands:Mass Kit $100 Chalice ..•... $40 StatiolUl ..••... S2~Altar 75 Ciborium ••••. 40 Censer . . . .. 2eDVestmentll ..• 50 Statue ...••••. 30 Sanc'y Lamp .. Hil

Confessional . 50 Tabernaclo • .. 25 Altar Lineno .. Hi!

Monstrancl'l .. ~O Crucifix 25 Sanc'y Bell III

"I HOPE SOME GOOD PEOPLE

snx lHlUNDlRlEIIli DOLLARS supports a bo£, during ble smyears of training for the priesthood. 'll'HREE HUNDRED DOlL-LAlRS supports a girl during her two years - (/%/of training for the sisterhood. Broken down ~

blio monthly or yearly !Jayments it would ~Dot 00 too difficult for some of WI to fi-~Dance the education of 0 seminarian or a ~~1I1ovice. NnCBOLAS AN'll'HlllKAD and PAULKAlRiATTY are students at SAINT JO­SEPH'S SEMINARY In INDIA. SISTERKITA and SISTER DOROTHY are novicesof the MEDICAL SISTERS OF SAINT JOSEPH, also in INDIA.If you could finance the training of one of them you woul~

lharo IJm the merits of their worl:l for God.

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

!MIlllJge WBtnl<d!@WSOUTH BEND (NC)-A42 by

22-foot stained glass windoW"will cover more than half th~

front area of the new St.Matthew cocathedral, which willbe built here at a cost of $750,­000. .

Ma rkCompletionOf Cathedral

ALTOONA, (NC)-The com­pleted Cathedral of the BlessedSacrament was opened formallywith the offering of a SolemnPontifical Mass by ArchbishopEgidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Dele­gate to the United States.

The Cathedral's completioRunder the administration ofBishop J. Carroll McCormick ofAltoona-Johnstown climaxed a36-year building project.

Fifteen bishops, scores ofpriests and nuns and hundredsof laity assisted at the afternoolllMass in the Pennsylvania city.

Bishop John J. Wright of Pitts­burgh, who preached the ser­mon, paid tribute to the lateBishop Howard J. Carroll, fourthhead of the diocese, for under­taking the "titanic task" of com­pleting the cathedral.

Living Temples"A cathedral is a major meanl

to ,the sanctification of souls; atemple of the living God, it wthe center of the mighty work ofmaking men into living templeaof God," Bishop Wright said.

"But the generosity and faithwhich have built this cathedralare proofs that such living tem- .pIes already thrive among you,or else the virtues which havemade this day possible wouldnever have been operative inyour midst to produce so superba monument to the piety, unitY"and generosity of a whole dio­cese."

SYMBOL: This new sym­bol has been adopted by theNational Catholic Apostle­ship of the Sea Conference.It was submitted by FatherGeorge C. Magee,porl chap­lain' in Brooklyn. NC :PhotA.

t{l@~ors Thecft@gsanWASHINGTON (NC)-Francis

Cardinal Spellman, Archbishopof New' York, made his annualaward for distinguished achieve:­ment in sacred theology at theRedemptorists' House here yes­terday. The recipient, FatherJohn Quasten of the CatholicUniversity of America faculty,is now in Rome. The medal wasreceived in his name by FatherEdmond D. Benarci of the un!­

·versity faculty.

Find 'lost" Cafrho~ic~

h)] Cerrosys C«ll6'ii'il[~)(QjBS'JtillVANCOUvER (NC)-They al­

ready have found 35,000 "lost'"Catholics in the Vancouver arch­diocese and the figure 'may 80higher.

The discovery came throughthe Good Shepherd Crusade cen­sus, which was inaugurated lastJune at the request of Arch­bishop William M. Duke of Van­

·cover, who was anxious to findan estimated 40,000 "lost'" Cath­olics disclosed by Federal cen­sus figures.

Father James Carney, censusdirector, said the census takenalready have listed 95,791 Cath­olics in the archdiocese, 35,000more than 'were listed in previ­ous chancery office statistics.The final census figure mayshow there are about 103,000Catholics in the archdiocese, thepriest said.'

Difference In LawsThe law in Canada as well lUI

In the United States confers ex­clusive bargaining rights on anyuni0n which can d,,~n~~trate inn supervised election that itrepresents the majority of theworkers in a given unit. A unionwhich is so certified has notonly the right but the duty tobargain for aU of the workers inthe unit, including, those whobelong to other unions or to nounion at all.,

Under European labor rela­tions law different unions canrepresent their own members inone and the same company orfirm. The European system fav­ors the development of separateideological or confessional un­ions, whereas the North Ameri­can system militates against itand makes it difficult, if notimpossible, for a confessionalorganization like the CTCC tosurvive.

The CTCC, in deciding todrop the word Catholic from itstitle and to eliminate from itaconstitution any specific refer­ence to the social teaching ofthe Church, was simply facingup realistically to the facts oflife in contemporary Canada. Itwas not changing its basic phi­losophy, nor was it going backon its commitment to Catholicsocial teaching.

It remains to be seen, of.course, whether or not the de­cision made at the Montreal con­vention in September will en­able the old CTCC (now theCNTU) to expand its member­ship and extend its influence. Ithink it will. But whether itdoes or not, it was worth a try.

was, in the contemporary settingof French Canada, a serious ob­stacle to the expansion of theorganization.

North American SystemMany non-catholic workers

in French Canada would notjoin the CTCC so long as it wasregarded as a strictly Catholicorganization, and many English­speaking workers would refuseto join so long as it was re­g a I' d e d a san exclusively"French" Canada organization.

Morever, it was felt by theauthors of the report and by themajority of the delegates attend­ing the Montreal conventionthat the CTCC could no longeroperate effectively as an ideo­logical or "confessional" organi­zation under the North Ameri­can system of labor relatioWllaw.

Canadian FoundationAsks Higher Grants

OTTAWA (NC)-The Canad­taill Universities Foundation ,hasasked Prime Minister' J 0 h Ill.

Diefenbaker to increase federaleducational grants.

A delegation, led by' FatherBenri Legare, OMI, rector ofthe Catholic University of Ot­tawa and chairman of the CUF,and including the heads of mostof the universities of Canada,presented the request.

·The delegation pointed outthat the current grant-which isbased on a ratio between stu­dents and total population ­meant approximately $289 perpupil to a university; with theiDcrease in enrollment next year... would be down to $2111.

Canadian Catholic WorkersAdopt 'Neutral' Unionism

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

In September of this year the name of the Confedera­tion of Catholic Workers of Canada (CTCC) was officiallychanged to the Confederation of National Trade Unions(CNTU). The change was made following a vote by thedelegates attending the laborfederation's annual conven­t.ion in ·Montreal. I was inEurope when this decisionwas announced, and I got theimpression that over there iteame as a sur­prise, if not adisappointment,

'to some Catho-'lies, particular­Iv in tho s ecountries which1UlI.ve Catholico 11" Christian'l1lnions. Evenm the UnitedStates, wherewe have neverbad and havenever wantedseparate Catholic or Christianunions, there may be some whowonder why the CTCC decidedlI10t only to drop the word Cath­olic from its title but to elim­inate from its constitution anyexplicit reference to the socialteaching of the Church.

Special ReportThe answer is spelled out in

considerable detail in a specialreport prepared in advance ofthe Montreal convention by theexecutive committee of thecreC. This report will undoubt­edly have repercussions in LatinAmerica and other parts of theworld where the problem of so­called "confessional" versus"'neutral" unionism is currentlyunder review.

The first thing to bear m,mind, the authors of the Mo~treal Report say, is that thequestion as to whether or notthe CTCC should "deconfession­nlize" has been under discussionfor many years.

It is pointed out that the dis­cussion of this question withinthe CTCC started long beforethere was any talk about a pos­alble merger between the CTCCllnd the neutral Canadian Con­gress of Labor (the Canadianequiyalent of the AFL-CIO).

In other words, the decisionAn September was not simply 11

tactical maneuver designed tosolve the merger problem.Rather it was a carefully con­sidered move designed to ex­pand the membership of theCTCC and to extend its in­fluence.

Faithful to PrinciplesSecondly, the authors of the

report are at pains to emphasizethat a decision to "deconfes£l­ionalize" the CTCC is no indica­~iOlll that the organization illchanging its basic philosophy orwithdrawing its long standingcommitment to Christian socialprinciples.

"It is not a question of trea­oon," the report says, "but, onthe contrary, of fidelity toChristian social principles" anda desire to implement the~

principles more effectively.The authors of the report and

the majority of the delegates atthe Montreal convention be­lieved that to achieve this ob­jective it was necessary for theCTCC to deconfessionalize.

The facts demonstrate, the re­port points out, that the confes­sional character of the CTCC

Page 6: 11.24.60

..

Weekly Calendar,Of Feast Days

Communists ForceSeminary Closings- SAIGON (NC)-The commu­nist government of North Vi~nam has forced two Catholieseminaries in Hanoi to close.

The seminar:ies were asked toinclude a comunist-sla"ted "cul­tural" program in their curric­ulum and, would have beensubject to control by state iA­spectors. .

When these conditions weremade known to the rector of the'seminaries, he decided not ..reopen them for the fall ten:a.

Clothing the World's Needy

It is not a matter of obligationto repeat past sins every timethat you go to confession, but itis very strongly recommended.

There are several good rea­sons for this recomme!1dation.Let's name a few. This practicehelps us' to renew our sorrowfor past sins. It enables us also,to renew our resolve to avoid

Cardinal ProtectorVATICAN CITY (NC)-Aloi­

sius Cardinal Muench has beenappointed protector of the SchoolSisters of Notre Dame by PopeJohn.

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

God iJrn the NatioRllal Scene

i®The ANCHOROFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVERPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

. 410 Highland AvenueFall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHERMost Rev: James 'L Connolly, D.O., PhD.

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGERRev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll

MANAGING EDITORHugh J. Golden

A ·Lutheran minister and two Lutheran ,laymen "in .Germany have founded the League for Reunion of Protes-tants and Catholics. "'

The program of the League calls for a brotherly unionbased on a properly organized spiritual life; a bindingorder of prayer; a new order of worship combining Biblical

· tradition with traditions of the Protestant worship, andelements of the Catholic Mass; and a'Protestant catechismthat would be acceptable to· the Catholic Church.

The league is seeking members principally amongProtestant ministers arid laymen. It hopes that the time

· will come when contact can be mad~ with the authoritiesof the Catholic Church and at that time the Protestantsmust be in a position to show the biblical and' religiousvalues that they hold and which are acceptable to all andwhich they would not want to giye up.

This is a serious desire for unity and for a seeking outof what can unite and what specifically divides. More and'more non-Catholics are searching their own consciencesand examining their own religious values. And they arefinding that once prejudice has been' removed and charityreigns, they can come to see that there are many thingsthat Catholics and Protestants hold in common. And theyare then led to draw up some clear views on what keepsthem apart from Catholics.

Although Thanksgiving Day had been celebrated TODAY-St. Clement I fJJloccasionally in America since early Colonial days - and .Rome. Pope-Martyr. A first ceo-especially here in Massachusetts-it remained for Abraham tury convert, he was the thirdL · I . . 1863 th f' t t' I I Th k successor to St. Peter, who hadmco n to sIgn, m ,e Irs na lOna annua an s- consecrated him a bishop. Hu.giving Proclamation. famous epistle to the Corinthianal

The text of that Proclamation gives much food for restored order in the Church inthought, and especially' to those who inveigh against the Corinth. He governed the Church"new arid bold attempts" to push God into the national as Pope for about 10 years and

. died as an exile and martywscene and who invoke the "traditional" exclusion of the under Trajan about 100.

Almighty. . TOMORROW-St. John of theIn part, the text says: "Now, therefore, I, Abraham Cross, Confessor-Do...tor. He was

Lincoln, President of the United States, do hereby appoint born near Avila, Spain, in 1542and set apart the last Thursday of November, as a day and·was ordained a priest in thewhich I desire to be observed by all my fellow citizens Carmelite Order in 1567. Influ-

enced by St. Teresa of Avila,wherever they may be, asa day of thanksgiving ap.d praise he founded the Discalced Car-to Almighty God, the beneficent Creator and Rule~ of the melites, and his work was for-,Universe. I , mally approved by Pope Gregory

"And I do further recommend to my fellow .citizens XIII in 1580. He underwent. many trials, was persecuted and

aforesaid, that on occasion they do reverently humble them- imprisoned. He died in 1605. Heselves in the dust and from thence offer up penitent and was canonized by Pope Benedictfervent prayers and supplications to the Great Disposer XIII in 1726, and named a Doctorof events, for a return of the inestimable blessings of peace, of the Church by Pope Pius XI

in 1926.union and harmony throughout the land, which .it has

I d FRIDAY - St. Catherine ofpleased Him to assign as a dwelling place for ourse ves an Alexandria, Virgin-Martyr. Shefor our posterity throughout all generations." was put to death by means of aD.

On this Thanksgiving Day no different ideas need be engine fitted with a spikedintroduced. Lincoln's words say all and~ say it well. And wheel, about the year 310 iathey establish quite firmly the true traditional American .Alexandria, 'during the reign ol

Maximunus Daza. According toattitude toward God and His place in the national scene. legend, .before her martyrdom

M· . d S b b she met and vanquished 50USIC an U ur S pagans in arguments on philo&-

The Church's role as traditional patron of the arts has ophy and for this reason is coo-'not simply remained in the field of aesthetics but has passed sidered the patroness of philo..

ophers.over ·into the field of finance and sociology ip. the Arch- SATURDAY _ St. Sylveste.,diocese of Paris. Abbot. He founded the Silvea-

The other evening the Cardinal Archbish~p attended a trine Congregation of Benedic-'program of sacred music given in an early fifteenth century The editor 01 the Question and Answer column does not guarantee ta tines, sacrificing a brilliantchurch near the Louvre.. These concerts were first organized answer anonymous queries lIor letters fro,!1 unidentifiable sources, In every ecclesiastical' career to do so.

. instance the desire lor anollymity will be respected. To that .end, names He overcame many difficultieaby the late Cardinal Verdier in nineteen, hundred and are never appended to the questions, but unless the leUer is signed in establishing his institute, and'thirty-two, and since that time they:have raised more than there is no assurance that any consideration will be given it. . died at the age of 90 in 1267.

ten million dollars to build one hundred and fifty churches I~ this day and age, my this sin and all sin for the future. . . SUNDAY _ First Sunday ofin the suburban areas of the Archdiocese of Paris. question must seem ridiculous, It aids us, too"in cultivating the Advent. Generally this date '.

Half of the six million citizens of metropolitan Paris but the topic came.up in a con- virtue of humility. the feast of St. Virgil, BiShop-versation with one of, 'the While .repetition, of past sins is C nf 'H h . .

live I'n the suburbs. And a survey has shown that while 0 essor. e was an Iris saintgirls'. She claimed that it is recommended, it should not be of noble birth who played aeighty-seven per cent of those born in the Paris area are sinful to use cosmetics; I has- overdone. It is' sufficient to men- prominent part in the'apostolatebaptized as Catholics, only about twelve per .cent of them ten to add that I don't agree tion one or two past sins to of Germany. He' was aided •

Practice their religion' with a degree of' regularity. The with her. Perhaps if she sees accomplish the good effects men-' his ",,:ork by King Pepin and the. . ,it in print she will be con- tion.ed in the. preceding. para- K" h b' E ..

'. purp'ose of these mus.icprograms, is ,to ral.·se money .to. b.uild mg s !lon, w 0 ecame mpel'OI',vinced. It' isn'~ sinful is i,t? , ~r~ph: ,. " Charlemagne. ~e served as Bisb-.' churChes so' that there would be. a·churc:hno more than , In ordinary' circumstances, in' .' . ': ..•.•. • . . " op of Salzb1.!rg and died in 78fo.'. iwo th~usand.feet away fromevery':r:esident ol.the fast- ,certainly is not. 'sinful to use·' .lsn'Ht just·as .s.inful for per- .'., 'He wascailonized in 1232~ "'

growing suburban housing developmen~.: .... '. . '. cosmetics. '.Intention, however," .~:~ toh~;v~r-in~Ulgent w~t.. " : MONDAY-St. Sosthens, M"';', .And' so. these· music eoncerts,h;lV~maintained. the can make: it ,sinful; thi~ is true: .elr e. eA"as It w.ould.~ : . tyro In.th.e first century'he_~

'Church in 'Pa~is as a patron of fine music and,all the while,··~of ,almost any: ~OOdd" tthh~ng. t~at., ~:~n~em ~ negl~ct. ~he ehil- .. the ruler of the ..synagogue vi', . l' I" ' "'1' . I . d I'" "you can name--goQ II1gs can·t, ./:-, "Corinth and bec'ame a dl's'cI'ple ~. they ,have been h.e pmg so.' yea soc~o ogl.ca . an ,re.. lglou8 be put to.ba·d..use... · '. '.' .. ,., , '.' .'. . . '. . ", ' , .-

Th t d ff lt th 1 i I S~~' Paul. He probably is the'problem brought 'about by the rapid .growth 01 population. If makeup is used to arou~ ..... , .. t Ill,~' I .!Cu .. " eo o~ ca' "Sosthens, our brother," ·meD.,;., in all the suburbs. And.....:...a happy situation~the financial impure passions in ,oth,ers, it. is,•. qt'h~!;ls J~.l1 ~'danf·~w,..etr.A~dactua.IlYh· tionedi~ t~e ,introduction of taW'-, . ' -'. h t lly a ser~ous matter' if ere IS no e ml e answer whlc .. ,

advantage does not seem to have :been obtamed att e Da .udra 't' f . 1 't" dt ' 'wlluld ·apply.to every case sinc'e fir~ E~lstle of St. Paul to ~:. h . f . .. I" '. . . ~se ou 0' rea vam y an. o. h' . ,. ' " ; Cormthlans. Some contend' that

expenlle elt er 0, mUSIC or re Igl0ll.'. deceive, it may be 'venially . t, ~re. are',varymg degrees. of. i Ii ft . d' b' 'b' ' ,, . , . ' . neglect and overindulgence. . .e a erwar s ecame a lma.·Another In''S·tanc'e .•mfuI. Most women ,are not ex- ". ,.' " .. ' ,.,,' . and· went to a martyr's death. .. cessive in their use of cosmetics; ,~n gen~ral.there IS a prll1Clple ", .' , . .,'

but use them to be nea't attrac- th~t states that 'virtue stands in . TUESDAY - SS. Saturninuiltive and more presentable or to pl,e middle'. The vi~tue in this 'and' ,Sisinius, Martyrs.. Satwi-.conceai some defect.· If this is ca~e is, the proper care 'of the . ninus,' said to be a CarthiginiaBso the question of sin doesn't child, If the parent slides to t~e by birth,. was a priest in Rome.a~ply at all. negative; side he is guilty of Sisinius .. was his deacon. The,-

The question is one that has neglect; If the tendency is too were sentenced :lS Christians toarisen in ages past, with per':' fa~ to the positive side, he is hard labor and ·subsequently.haps more justification. It was· gUIlty of excess. ' ., about· 209, were martyred. The,.once asked of St. Francis de Both of these parental atti- were buried in the cemetery ~Sales. The good saint was not tudes can· be seriously sinful, St. Thraso.devoid of a sense ,of humor; he but to ~ete~mine which ,is. the . WEDNESDAY _ St. Andrew.answered:" "Some persons may more gUIlty IS abnost as diffIcult Apostle. A native of Bethsaida iD.object to it; others may see ,no as to choose between th~ unfor-, Galilee, he was the elder brotherharm in it; but since you ,ask my tunat~ly too fre~uen~ product of of St. Peter and also was a 'fish­advice, I shall take a middle of the .smners: .whlch IS the. more, erman. A disciple of St. JaMthe road course by allowiq.,g you (or. less) deSirable result m .our the Baptist, he was the first 01.to rouge one' cheek." It IS not ~ocla! .structur~-the sPOl~ed . the Apostles to be called bydifficult to imagine the twinkle brat or the reJected. neurotIc? Christ. There is no certainty ofin his .eye when he gave this It depends O? the Individual lIis mission labors after t'heanswer. case. But deflmtely, both sys- Ascension but 't . IIterns are . I '. ,I IS genera ,.So, while use of cosmetics may ,serIOUS y wrong. agreed that he worked in Greecebe sinful because of ulterior ti • • and the Balkan countries: Trad~mo~iv~s of the 'use~, the va,st In a' church booklet, there. has it that he was imprisoned;maJorIty of .wo~ankm~ may I,n was a picture of a "sacrarium". scourged and crucified on aD.good conscIence retam theIr It looks 'like' a Sil1k to me. X-shaped cross at Patras' icmembership in the ladies' auxil- What is it for? Achaia. It also is recounted thatiary of the painter's union. he remained hanging on the

• • • The SACRARIUM is used for cross for two days,' pr.eachingWhy do we have to repeat disposing of. the ashes of sacred to all who came near and en-

sins that We have already con- ·things, used or. unusable holy treating them not to hinder ~fessed every time we gO to . water, water used in washing the .agony.eonfession? ' sacred line1!s and similar' things. ---.__

It differs from the ordinary sinkin that its pipe leads directly tothe ground rather than into asewage' system.

Au~tri~rn JOMrnClllist~Deplore Prooaganda

SALZBURG (NC) - Catholicjournalists have asked the gov­ernment to ban books that subt­ly glorify nazism while pretend­ing to condemn it,

The Working Group of Aust­rian Catholic journalists urgedthe ministry of.. the interior iii.the same petition to stem arising tide of obscene literature.

Page 7: 11.24.60

7

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Nov. 24, 1960

Students Mis$ionCrusade FounderTo Aid Lepers

vvABAG (NC)-A veterallAmerican missioner whofounded the Catholic' Stu­dents' Missjon Crusade whilestill a seminarian is on his wayhere to New Guinea to care forvictims of Hansen's disease (lep­rosy).

The missionary, Father Clif­ford King, S.V.D., volunteeredfor his new post in the moun­tains of New Guinea at the agttof 72.

He joined the Divine Wordmissioners at the 'age of 2LWhile at their seminary in Tech­ny, 111., he founded the CatholieStudents' Mission C r usa de,which today has a million mem­bers and is represented in 3,100schools in 50 American dioceses.The crusade keeps Catholiestudents informed of the goalDand problems of the Church'smissionary effort.

Father King, a native of Mine­ville, N. Y., went to China as aseminarian, and was ordainedthere in 1920. He served as a

. missioner in China until 1941.His next mission assignment WlUlthe Philippines. , '

Escapes ..JapaneseHe escaped by submarine from

the Japanese invasion of the'Philippines, and later became

personal secretary to ThomasCardinal Tien, S.V.D., Arch­bishop of Peking, who residedat the Divine Word Seminary inTechny after the Red takeoverin China. When Cardinal TieDwent to Formosa early this yearas Apostolic Administrator ofTaipei, Father King volunteeredfor his new post in New Guinea.

As chaplain at the leprosariumat Yampu near here, FatherKing wiill serve the 500 patientsand 1,000 outpatients now caredfor by two Holy Ghost Mission­ary Sisters and 14 native orde.r-

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several feet to the west of thechurch prop'erty and now servesas a rectory.

Many ActivitiesThere are many parish' activ­

ities. 'Among them is the _veryactive Our Lady of the Assump­tion Club, which donated themain altar of the new c!turch.

Other activities are the' HolyName Society, Boy Scouts, GirlScouts, Cub Scnuts, Girls' Choirand Association of the SacredHearts.

Three years ago the church lli::­quired another old New Bedfordhome for use as a convent. SevenSisters of the Order of the Loveof God, . whose mother house isin Spain 'came to the parish.After learning English they as­sumed the teaching, of kinder-,garten, pre-primary' a'nd ca'te-'chism 'classes for Our Lady -of'AsStim'ption children. They', teach .. 0 .R '" "similar classes at,St. Mary's in' ppose e IglOftFairhaven. Five other. membern , ' ,ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-Ap~ ;the~rder came~e.r~.rece~tiy " resolution .stating, ~!tat. re.ligioUsfrom' Spain to learn Eriglish·.," progra~s l~ public schools areThey' formerly' were' Wi~h' 'the '~unconstItutIonal'and shoUld,' be·order: in Cuba, '",'" \ ',,- '. < ,banne~ was adopted by the wom-

~A$se'rts.R'e~rS'i~y~'ry'"'o' .~-,: '~~h~~,~i~~~W~:h·t~~n~~~~':16:::... .." " .. ...,. ,-,-" of AmerIca. Delegates to- theChallenges "Freedom" .' l'brancb convention represented

CHICAGO (NC)-Freedomda .so~e 500 synalWgue sisterboocbthe U. S. is being challenged by in the U. S. and Canada. 'communist slavery, the formerchief of the Army ordnance mia­,sile, .command" warned here.; , .. ~o meet this challenge of thecommunists we must have edu­cation," retired Maj. Gen. JohnB. Medaris 'told 1,000 'People lit,.tending a fund-raising dinnerfor the De Paul University schoL..,arship fund.

"We no longer have the choicebetween surrender and death, asin past conflicts," Gen. Medarissaid. "With the challenge ofRussia and the Ghinese commu­nists, we, are deprived of achoice. We' must condition our­selves to the certainly that thecommunists • • • can never betrusted."

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Our Lady of Assumption Parish, New BedfordServes Catholics of Cape Ver~an Extraction

By Avis RobertsThe only parish in the United States for Catholics of Cape Verdean extraction, Our

Lady of the Assumption, was founded in 1905 in New Bedford. The new church, built in1957 at Cherry and South Sixth Streets, has a great attraction for Catholics throughoutthe city-it is the only church which has a noontime Sunday Mass. Formerly located at368 South VVater Street, theoriginal Assumption Church C-, .had a colorful past. It form­erly served from the 1840'sas a seamen's chapel, a Jewishsynagogue, a kindergarten and asupply store for needy residents.

Bishop Stang bought thebuilding from a New Bedfordbusinessman Aug. l!i, 1905, forthe Fathers of the Congregationof the Sacred Hearts of Belgium.The· parish was dedicated byBishop Stang on Nov. 26, 1906and the first pastor was tbe Rev.Stanislaus Bernard, SS.CC., whocame to this country from Lux­embourg. He lived at the monas­tery of the Fathers of the SacredHearts in Fairhaven.

Venerable Father Bernard,chaplain of Sacred Hearts Acad­emy in Fairhaven, is now 84years of age and in his58th year in the priesthood. Heserved all pastor of St Joseph'sChurch, Fairhaven, until his re­tirement in 1944. ' Special collection~ and parties" Father Bernard' served As- found a warm response from the

sumption Church until 1917. He parishioners and by Septemberwas succeeded by the Rev. Arn- 1956 enough money was on )i'andold Derycke, SS.CC. The Rev. ' ' to start construction of the"newStephen Couturiaux, SS.CC., was .$200,00"1 ~l:lurch.pastor in 1924 and he was suc- ' The last Mass was sung at theceeded by the Rev. Egbert Steen- old'church by Father'Bernard onbeeck in 1935. The Rev. Hubert Sept. 1, 1957. The following dayVlasselaer was pastor from 1945 the first Mass was celebrated byto 1947 when the present pastor, Father, Couturiaux, now, inthe Rev. 'John Godelaer, SS.CC., Washington. Bisho~ Connollywail appointed., blessed the cornerstone June 23,

The first assistant pastor of 1957, and the new church' onthe parish was appointed in 1948. Sept. 2, 1957. 'He was the Rev. Edmund G. The church, of modern Roman

architecture, and seating 490, wasFrancis, SS.CC., now pastor ofSt: Mary's Church, North Fair- completed.in less than a year. IttJ,aveil.. Father' Francis was one has a solid bronze. tabernacleof the first Portuguese-American- with hand-carved figures.priests to be ordained into the A large two-story home ,wanAmerican Province ,:, of the ,acquir.ed with the new church

property. It was formerly theFathers of the Sa-:red Hearts and parsonage '.of the ,First Congre-he was the first Portuguese- gational (Unitarian) Society ofAmerican priest to serve at Our New Bedford.Lady of the ·Assumption Churcl!.. "The building was moved back'11he ·second assistant pastol",' the , .. ,'" " ", , ',-' '" :, " .. ,. ,Rev. Raphael Flammia,'was'ap- S'· h' "'d'l' CI' ,pointed .in July 1950. '.-; ,,:, ,C' e' U: ,e~. ergy;

Lash~d by H~~icanes . 'Training·'"Cou,rses~'" N, the parish ',grew ~t becameapparEmt that, the ,low-lying "':"WASHINGTON(NC),-- COn­church" on Water '.Street, was too 'fraternity ,of Christian Doctrine's~afi. :it" \1(as lasl!.,' 'by ,hurd- :training '''courses" w.ill 'be ,held,caries in 1938, and 19'44' and during 1961 for prie~s of' Brazil'~tro~ swimmers' ,br~~t,ed ,tb,~and' Argentina~ , . " ""tides to rescue, sacred, vest- Archbishop RobertE. LuCey 'Ofmenta. ' . ,'" San' 'AntOnio', Tex.,' episcopal'" , chairman' of inter-Americah "r~·..·Teacher Roundup' lations for th~ Confratenritj' ijf,,' OKLAHOMA ,CITY (NC).:-, Christian 'Dodrine, 'said 'two.lfour priests froIr., Oklahoma courses will' be conducted forhave left for the Midwest and Brazilian priests and one forEal!t, to recruit women graduates Argentine priests.and students of Catholic collegeS! The courses will be given byto assist in this diocese's state- three U. S. priests'- Fatherwide lay catechetical program. James McNiff, M.M., director of

CCD work at the Bogota', cO­lombia, headquarters of Ule LatinArrierican Bishops' Conference,and two priests of'the San Anto-nio archdiocese. .

Archbishop Lucey also s~i:dthat' Bishop Alberto Deane of

'Villa Maria, Argenti'na, has re­quested a special course in CCi>teaching methods 'for nuns andlay catechists of his diocese., Atraining course 'for clergy is'ten­tatively schediJied in Lima, PerU,for January, 1962, he. added.

" 'f>(j'@y~r$ f@[j' ~Mlli>©J .SAO PAULO (NC) -Carlos

Cardinal de Vasconcelos Mota,Archbishop of Sao Paulo, Brazil.,and president of the Crusade fora WorlClwide Thanksgiving bay,has called for Thanksgiving Dayprayers for the' Church in Cuba,now suffeting persecution.

TO LA';l'IN AMERICAN MISSIONS: These three priestsfrom Ireland discuss their future missionary life with Rich­ard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston. They are,from the left, Father Gerard M. Stanley of County Meath,Father John P. McKean of County Armagh, and FatherMichael K. Lynn of County Meath. They will work underthe direction of the Columban Fathers in Lima, Peru. NOPhoto.

Profe'sso', RecejV'esTheology Award ,

WASHINGTON" (N'C)- TheEraocis\: Cardinal . Spellman,award. for outstand'ing-work"Jn;theology was presented by, theCardinal to Msgr. John, QiJasteftof; the Catholic Universfty ,6fAnMlrica: ' , ,"" . ....,.,.iJThe.Cardinal ... Archbishop'dlNew. J York; who' .was' here' fo'r,;the annulil, meeting of the U~ S.~atholic Bishops, made the pres!­entation to ·a priest representing~sg!,., Quasten, whQ was calledW RO)lle to assist in prepratiQPSfor the ecumenical council.. '1yIsgr. Edmond' D. Benard,dean of the school of sacred the­ology a't the university, acceptedthe"a·ward for Msgr. Quasten illit brief ceremony at Holy Re­deemer College, house of studiesfor Redemptorist Fathers.

Reports SpreadOn ConciliationIn Yugoslavia

ROME (NC)-Five Yugo­slav bishops now in Romewill not comment on reports

. that their nation's commu­nist government has offered toregularize Church-state rela­tions.

The Yugoslav prelates arehere officially to take part inmeetings of preparatory com­missions for the corning ecu­menical council.

Vatican of£iciaIs have also re­fused to comment on the concil­iatory move reportedly made bythe.' regime of Marshal Tito,which has persecuted theChurch since it came to powerafter World War II.

Latest reports from Belgradesaid the offer of the YugoslavFederal Executive Council toregularize Church-State af£airswas made in reply to a memo­randum from the YugoslavBishops, who met in Zagreb inSeptember.

The Bishops' memorandumreportedly pledged the loyaltyof 6,000,000 Catholics to Yugo­slavia's government and consti'­tutiori. The Bishops are alSo saidto have stated that they nowview the 1953 law on religiousllffaits, which they opposed atthe time it was passed, as com­petent· to "assure' the normaidevelopment of relations' be­tween the Church and. state."

At the same time, .reportsiltated, the Bishops demandedmore freedom for religious edu­cation, the right to publish andcirculate Catholic literature therestitution of certain nati~nal­ized ,Church properties and thereturn of parishes' civil recordstaken by the government.

They also called for Church­state contact through ·the Bish­ops . or their representativesrath.er than through priests' as­sociations sponsored by t~egov­

ernment itself.• • • I

Page 8: 11.24.60

.': :.-'

Y~a,s

"

The-Present-

·'Ghristmas COmeS EarlyTo Children of Per"

roLl (NC)-ehristmas came~arly this 'year for 1200 need~children in this sky-high Aftao

"dean city, and Santa Claus camein the red_ robes of Msgr. Ed­ward L. Fedders, M,M" head of

'the independent prelature ofJuli.

· . Tickets were distributed mthe public schools to the 1,,200neediest children. Each childthen "cashed" his ticket at theMaryknoll mission where Msgr"Fedders presented him with a

·bundle of second-hand clothingsent to Peru by U,S. Catholics.

There were bundles for boy-aand girls. Although Msgr. Fed­ders worked hard to get theminto the right hands, a few boyswound up with skirts and acouple of girls got Roy Roger&!'Levi's.

r

Through

Holy U.nion Sisters

. Mus.ic.

~~ECTRlCBLAN KET

70 VOICE CHORUS - 32 PIECE ORCHESTRA

. Kf;'ith Junior High Auditorium

'. Sunday Afternoon-Nov. 27th at 2;00.New Bedford

, .:ENJOY WARM RESTFUL :SLEEP ALL WINTER '.. . ,

WITH THIS BEAUTIF:LJL

Tickets obtainable atPat McKenna's' LaFrance, Jewelers, Gollis Apparel, 'Keatings ­Bowen's Furniture Store, Center Jewelers, Duclos Pharmacy

New Bedford Institute of Technology , ,

.ASSORTED COLORSTWIN or DOUBLE BED SIZEWASHABLE NON-ALLERGICTWO YEAR GUARANTEE·

.S~.E~P ,:i\LL ~~GHT under. th~ wonderful. warmth. of',a corppJetey aut6matic' eleetric' blanket. Just 9ne IighL,blanket'keeps you cozy': ~ • ito 'more mountains' of "b~ covers to weight you down. You'll sleep better-feel better.... '

':0" •. ,

,:,,'fALLRIVER ..ELECTRIC' .LIGHT (O~

,:"::.-,'DOLAN'Funeral Home. 123Broci~w9YTAU.NTO~ ,,,

VA 4-SOOQ .

Polish RulingBERLIN (NC)-Poland's Par":

liament has ruled that the 'feastsof thE( Epiphany (Jan. 65' andth.e, ASsumption (Aug. 1~)are,nolonger '~egal:'holjdays," -' :.

., . .. • I •

•Nun - CommuterFI ies ··Weekly .,',. NEW ORLEANS (lITC) - Sis­ter Mary Magdalen is probably

,the nation's leading iong-dist.'ance commuter. . . , .

. Every'Friday afternoon Sister:Magdalen boards. a' jet in' New.OrIeans and flies to New· York.Ev~ry .Sunday:sh~ .boards ~ jetin New York and ,flies back to

. NewGOrleans in time to meet her

. Monday ~ classes ;it. DominicallHigh School, where she teaches

.Spanish. '. . ','. Her commuting, which, will

. continue throughout the .school·"year, makes it poss~ble for herto .attend' the weekly meetingsin New York of the consultantsto the Modem Language Ma­terials Development Center.

The center was set up underthe National Defense EducationAct to develop high school lan­guage programs and materialsin French,. German, Italian,Spanish and Russian.

Sister Magdalen is the onlynun on the IS-member panel of·consultants. Her traveling ex­penses and those of other mem­bers' who come from many partsof the country-are paid for bythe government.

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

:! DIOCESAN PRESIDENT AT CONVENTION: Mrs:John: J; Mullaney: of' 'Attleboro, Diocesan" president of:NCCW, second left, joins Mrs. Mark A. Theissen, left,pas(National President, a.nd Mrs. Arthur J ..Zepf;,newly elected ..~~tionalpresident, in the welcome ex.t~nded QY,host Wsliop,':~9~.t,,~·~8";.~9P:::i·~;'.J., .P~Y~J;~_~t.Llw::,.Y::~gas,i~nven.~9~-"~,,',~

:':8,,· .' " ... T,.",.:.,, .

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

By Alice Bough CahillIf you haven't been looking at the calendar, all you

have to do is' to walk into' any store and you'll see signs of.Christmas. This week one of the department ~tores washanging Christmas decorations; the d!me store had alltheir cards and fancy wrap-. A tre~ decorat~ with ginger­ping paper on display, and bread cookies (made by thethe artificial trees have family on a day when it is tooadded one made of aluminum cold to play outdoors) will alsofoil. All these harbingers re- delight a child. A small treemind us that we must begin our decorated with toys is ~deal forown plans for a shut-in child, for he can notthe holidays, only see it, but play with it.for Christmas Want to decorate your hall?is what you Again, you might get a smallmake it. Maybe tree for a hall table and trim itpart of it is the with artificial red carnations.green wreath (Or use the flowers you wore in Bible Reading Rulingon the front your hair last summer, or if youdoor, or a tree have a flower-laden hat you CAPE LEADER IN WEST: Mrs. Gilbert J. Noonan of Binds Public Schoolsdecoration that don't want, salvage this for dec- Falmouth, President of District 5, entering the conference BALTIMORE (NC)-A rullIlfla six-year old orations.) . . hall at the NCCW convention in Las Vegas with Mrs. Roland favoring Bible reading in pub";

,made in school Also, you can cheer hail and lie schools is binding on all Ofun d e r the stair walls at Christmas time, E. McSweeney, National vice-president from Brattleboro, Maryland's school system, ThO..guidance of his and display cards at the same Vt., and Miss Margaret Mealy, executive director of the mas G. PUllen,state superinteD-Sister. Begin planning now - time. Stripe your walls with NCC\y-. dent of schools said.you can have a whole month Of .Christmas cards! Run bands of Mr. Pullen has mailed out

:~~inJa~aY:n~n~h~oZ~o~vne~\~;: red ribbon from ceiling to base- Financial Difficulties Force Closing .~~~~;: 1~t:~:e;u~~~er~ ~a~f:helping to ttirninexpensive dec- . board, securing with "matching C I C II f W :24 school superintendents in th,oorations into part of your fam- thumbtacks or cellulose tape. Of . atho ic 0 ege or omen state•. The ruling holds th.~t·ily tradl·tl·on.· Pin the cards along the ribbon .. . TULSA (NC) - Benedictine' two-year junior college for men, Bible reading in opening schoo!

Chrismas began with a fam- strip at in.terv~ls, al~~wtihng., thhe Heights College, Oklahoma's is the only other Catholic insti- exercises is constitutional' butI'ly, that's why, as 'Catho.lics, it colored' band to pee... roug . t t· f h' hI' . h thO'a't pup'l'ls who obJ'ect to l't m;·:...·. h d four-year college, will close ltS- , U l~n o. 19 er earmng 10 t e ..-has such a hold on th'e heart, . between eac car. . .

doors in May, .1961, because of state. be excused.why it's important to endow our Children's Rooms financial difficulties. . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"Schildren 'with . memories of If your children are' gaining The closing of the 44-year-oldhome, of stories of the, ii,rst a consciousness. about the ap- institution conducted by Bene­

'Christmas and the little prayers pearance of their own rooms, dictine Sisters, was announced. a child can learn. '. . you might plan to give them' by Bishop Victor J. Reed of

The rea son we consider . gifts for their rooms and watch Oklahoma City and Tulsa. 'Christmas worthy of so much their eyes light up on Christmas , He said the diocese will pui'-

· effort at 'home is 'be~ause it be-morning. Gifts· which make, 'chase the 'college' property for·gan with St. Joseph, our ,LadY hQme a., place. where. your. about $1.5 million, and indicatedand the Christ Child· in astable, daughter can. entert~in,. o~ Your it may be converted into a Cath­a place that, howeve'r alien and son pursue ·hls 'hobbles, wll~ not olic junior high school in thehumble, was for a little while only' make-- the holiday .season 'Fall of 1961. .their home. . . more f!ilstive, but will last, wh~~ . Bishop Reed's' announcement

Do It Yourself bought with car.e ~nd thought, came after members of the boardYou can start right now mak,. throughout the whol~ year.. 'of control,w;hich he appointed

'lng 'decorations for 'your home, '. A girl,· would appreciate a: 'earlier this year to study the col-·with everyone having a part in matching" bedroom ensemble -: lege's financial.. condition; m~t·the project. Get some papier- drapes,' bed covering, .dressing ·with the Benedictine Sisters.mache Santas in the"dime stQre; table .skirt, vanity;I,amps and '.8 "B,ened~ctine ~~ights Collegewhitewash them and fill their floppy-eared dog .on her· pillow. 'was establiShed i~ Guthrie,packs with' holly'. T~ese, can. be 'Something. else she!d like' woul!! Okla., where tht!' Sisters had'a decoration for man~~l.or,boo.k-..be a gay floral'chi~tz c~air ~ founded a 'motherhouse in 1889.case top. Junior, c~n :take, one .of .curl up in al).d read. :-.. .. " ' ..' The college ,was tr.ansferred to

·these to a shut-in peighbor to . ,For brother,- a plastic leather... Tulsa. in 1955~ Last year itextend the season's· blessings. , c:overed chair is practically boy- granted 18 degrees..

Another dime-store. invest- proof, washable and resistant to '. St. Gregory's 'of Shawnee; IIinent is a red dust ;pan. Put a scratches. You might get him ~nail hole in the. center of the desk with open shelves at l1~deback, so you. ·can h~ng, it; then to hold radio and books, or a'fill it. with holly. Or use ,ever.,' globe, or knick,knack shelvesgreens from the 1>~ck. yard and 'to hold his hobby c:ollection..those pine cones, the children'. ;c ..

brough(' ho~e 'from' .~amp this "Cardboard College"summer.. WIth red ol1cloth or . _ .' .florists's paraffined ribbon tie , PHILADELPHIA (NC) , "':-abig;"perk'y bow on:the ha~dle. ."Cardboar~ college,", nickna~\eYou can hang this alone, or in a of Barbelin' Annex; ,.a two-storygrouping of three or more if tempor.ary structure built at St.you have the wall space. 'Joseph's College ·13 ,years ag~) t~

Even with a big '.tree in. the provide classrooms for. Veteransliving rooin.· for the familY: to -of World War II, has been razedenjoy, you might- ad~ o~her by students ,and alumni after.trees in the children's rooms. A :Bishop ,Joseph McShea, adminis­youngster would love a small . trator· of the Philadelphia arch­tree with. small cars,~planes, etc...diocese,· d~dicated the college's:""or if he is still a toddler, use .new $1,100,000 Bellarmine class­small toy animals.' . . -room builc;lilJ-g.- .

Page 9: 11.24.60

PRINTERS

.....11111.........

..............IOSTON

OCEANPORf, ... '"'AWTUCKII', L L

.. 1-.......... ""-

NO.IOS TOO lie

NONE TOO SMM.

SULLIVAN BROS.

Prelate to BlessShrine Windows

WASHINGTON (NC) - The. rose windows donated to theNational Shrine of the Immacllcolate Conception by the Interna­tional Federation of CatholieAlumnae, will be blessed Satur­day.

Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle.of Washington will bless thewindows and will offer a MaSIiJof Thanksgiving for IFCA mem­bers and friends at the MaryMemorial Altar in the Shrinecrypt.

The altar, also a gift of IFCAowas presented on Nov. 19, 1927.and dedicated on Dec. 8, 1928,by the late Bishop Thomas J.Shahan, rector of the CatholieUniversity and the first honor­ary president of IFCA.

The huge rose windows, dom­inating both ends of the shrinetransept, were given by thou­sands of IFCA members in thiscountry and Mexico as a memo­rial to two late directors of thefederation - Bishop Patrick J.McCormick and MagI'. EdwardB. Jordan, former rector andvice rector of the Catholic Uni­versity; the late co-founders.Clara Douglas Sheeran and Sis­ter Mary de Paul Cogan; andliving and deceased membero <d,the IFCA.

Canadian SulpicionsTo Direct Seminary

, MONTREAL (NC)-SulpicianlJof the Canadian province willtake over direction of the maiAseminary in Bogota, Colombia.in February, 1961.

They were requested to do lI@

by Archbishop Luis Concha Cor­doba of Bogota and ArchbishopGiuseppe Paupini, Apostolic:Nuncio to Colombia.

The Canadian Sulpicians havebeen in Colombia since October,1949, directing the minOl' andmajor seminaries of the Arch­diocese of Manizales. There arefour Canadian Sulpicians andseven Colombian SulpiciaM iathe archdiocese.

"TTh~e ANNCHOR

2-4

1960 ,9urs., av. ,

NEW BEDFORD======= MASSACHUSETTS

>: <.;S/iUt

Jwt "' ti",. for Winter Needs CIftCf Christmas GIving

This Big Storewide Sale bri.... JO" great vat...... aI departtwents

" 0..- .. t '.M.PrIcIay, s'atwday CIftCf MOIICfaF

SHOP 'NOW AND SAVE MOllE AT 11fI STAll STOll

3 DAY SALE -DON'T MISS IT!

FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY

;, ,Prevost Alumni"The' Alumni Association Of

PrevOlrt High School, Fall River,will bold" its 'eighth annualfashion 'show at iI Tuesday night,Nov. 29 at' White's restaurant.Rogel' Gendreau and AndrePlante are co-chairmen and an­nounce thilt proceeds will pro­vide a four year scholarship toPrevost High School and a col­lege grant to a high school grad­uate.

).ife-serving the patients of the,Dioc'ese's only Catholic hospital.

Now working in the operatingroom, as she has for the past 40

'years, Sister spent the first 11years of her religious life as anurse in the wards of St. Anne's.

'Born in Canada in 1884, herfamily moved to Fall River, fromwhere' she' entered the com­niunity May 4, 1907. Professioncame in 1910 and she has spenther entire religious life at St.Anne's with the exception of 10months at the community'amotherhouse in Tours, France.

"She Spoils Us"In ,addition to her hospital

duties, Sister is infirmarian forthe nuns on St. Anne's staff."She spoils us," said one ofthem. "Nothing is too good fora sick Sister."

Rejoicing with Sister MarieElizal;le~ ,on her jubilee daywas '11 younger blood sister,Sister Venaide, also at St. Anne's.Milny nephews, nieces and otherrelatives liVing - in Fall Riverjoined 10 the festivities, as the'jubiliarianmade a solemn 'N­newalOt her vows. '

UPHOLSTERING.EXPERT REUPHOlSTERINGDONE ON. OUR PREMISES

RIOUX

Distributed by ,

Rodman Club,',Beverage Co.

311 ..... Rd•• New .......WYmer" 7-:-9937

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

Furniture Co.384-394 Bay St., TauntOfl

.VA 4 ..8707

MARKS JUBILEE: Sister Marie Elizabeth of St. Anne'sHospital, Fall River, marks golden jubilee with "businessas usual" as she distributes operating room garb to studentnurses Madeline Manha (left) and Annette Williams.

Faithful to AidN,uns"'in ,India

WILMINGTON (NC)-A sis­terhood in India w~ll be helpedby Catholics of the Wilmingtondiocese.

'The "Mother Theresa LeperFund" drive was opened here tosupply two ambulances for thework of Mother M. Theresa,founder and superior of the Cal­cutta - Delhi - Ranchi communityof the Missionaries of Charity.

,While visiting wilmi~tOOMother Theresa had a reunionVvitli Francis ,X. Norton, wli~spent two ,years 'in India work':'lng ;"';'ithCathoiic Relief Serv'ices-, National Catholic WelfareConference. Mr.' Norton is nowexecutive secretary of the Dela­ware Council'for Industri81Peace. "":Nearly ,13 years' ago, 'alter 20years of 'teaching as a member'of the Institute 'of the VirglDMary; Mother' Theresa received.Permission to minister to Cal­cutta's poor, including 200,000lepers and several hundred leperchildren.

A native 'of Yugoslavia, shebecame an Indian citizen to iden­tify herself with those she servesand founded the Missionaries ofCh\uity, who now number ,119.~tive wqmen:, '

','," 'Attleb()ro" Dist'riCt '"Affiliates'of the, Attleboro Dis­

trict of the Diocesan Council ofCatholic' Women will hold anopen meeting iIiSt. John's par....ish hall, Attleboro ,on Feb. 1.

,Monday was the golden jubileeof Sister Marie Elizabeth of St.Anne's Hospital, 'Fall River.There was a special Mass andrelatives gathered to congratu­late the jubilarian.

But apart from that Sisterspent ,the day as she has theother 18,000 odd of her religio\W

Radio Drowns' OutVoice of America,

MONTREAL (NC) --'~oscowRadio often drowns out Voice ofAmerica broadcasts in Canada'~Arctic region, according toFather Joseph' Meeus, O.M,I..who has spent eight years. -in theArctic,' ' '" '

The missionary, who has afive-month furlough, 'has beenstationed at Ivuyivik, 1,500 milesnorth of Montreal. He said heplans to visit his mother, Mri.Madeleine Meeus, ill Brusllela,Be14:.i 4ffi. ,

CHARTER NIGHT: Youth groups of'Sacred Heartparish, Fall River, celebrate joint Charter Night. Left tonght, Cub Scout Robert Guilmette of Pack is; ExplolWRoger Pizio, Patrol 6; Campfire GirlJ~aiuwt,DesmODd;~~t J&¥ Hoyle. '

...;,......."."z• •~" , •....• \ .\:' .. ".\..,,~ .., ,,~\, ~ ;, \ • <• ..: ~:"'."~'_.:,.~.'~.: ••,. .....:.'::..... ,;"'.... .:. •.

Tee,nage,r~"..Ca:n·tt:~He,~r:'Alarm;: "~\

,B,ut' Aleit 'to Phone' TinkleBy Mary Tinley Daly

It is amazing that one who doesn't budge when aftatarm clOCk jingles raucously only six inches from pillow at

, 6 :30 a.m. can detect the slightest jingle of a phone bell at, ':30 p.m. If you have teenagers at your house, you knowwhat I mean. The auditory ,

read assignment to the absentee.nerve, it's a wonderful thing. Well, according to the letterand so adaptable to moods. of the law, we have enforced the"But, Mom, I didn't even rule of "no disturbance withhear that alarm clock!" from a homework."frantic teenager, taking rollers "At the Mail Box'"out of her hair, As to the bell-ringing duringstruggling into the dinner, there' are ruleeu n i for m. about that also-and just ~bout"Never mInd, as silly, )

·I'll make it." When the phone rings duringShe doe s, grace before dinner, everybody

though it means looks up and the one saying thea quick drink prayer gets it over in a hurry.of orange juice, The Head of the House desig-• piece of toast nates First Answerer.clenched in her "IT it's for me, tell 'em I'vetee t h as she gone to the mailbox," he shouta.picks up her "C;h-h, Daddy," from First An-books, I u n c h swerer.bag and takes From then on, the game reallyoff. to catch the 7:25 bus. begins. With a no-phone-after-

Curfew Time seven curfew, before-seven callilIn the evening, it's another are frequent. Frequent? They

Mory. Though deep in homework are incessant.If the call is for First Answer­

after dinner, with bedroom door er, it will be her turn to answerelosed, when the phone rings'downstairs, that upstairs door next time. If it is for somebodyOpens as though with an electric else, that somebody else answersbeam. Comes sotto voce: "For the following call. It's a jumpingme? Please, let me take it this jack game but people Seem totime~" , , enjoy it. "Now, if that's for

It's always "this time," though your mother," the Head of thetltere is a rule at our house that House now and then interjects,~body, but nobody doing home- "tell 'em she's gone to the mail-

box." Why the "mailbox" rou­work is to take phone calls from, onward. tine? It's his way of saying, "not.: Enforcement of this rule is not at home for the present!'lIS easy as it sounds. Often it'in- The gone-to-the':mailbox wallvolves us as a link-in commun- picked up somewhere along theicat~~n resembling trans-Altantic line - perhaps 'SubconsciouslyDews. dating back to the time he had

"I wasn't at school today," gone to the mailbox to pay aneomes a soft voice over the oV,er-due phone bill just as thephone, "and I just wonder what telephone company called.the religion lesson is? I got the Only good thing we can saymath and I got the history, but about' our evening telephonecould you find out for me what rule is that it certainly keeps thethe religious issue--I mean, the calls short. Those of us-and I'meeligion questions--are?" the worst offender-who like to: We promise. Tiptoeing up- chat on and on to friends must,

!'tairs, we enter the sanctum perforce, keep conversation toanctorum of the homeworker. elementals with a whillpering

"Who was that on the phone?" chorus in the background: "Iffrom homeworker. I'A boy?" you don't get offi how's anybody

"No," we answer succinctly. going to get through?"SOmehow, by keeping down the Well, after seven o'clock, theDumber of words-as in the tel- phone is ours!egram-we think we are undis-­turblng our homeworker. Pick­ing up the assignment book, we'~ek today's rellgion assignment.Math, English, history, Latin.l'rench. Here it is. No, that'.testerday's assignment.

We turn pages; 'the silence ia"oken· and we hav~ to, aSk,"Where's your religion?", ....ustifiable giggle, as teenager

eepeats, "Where'. my religionr.. me, I hope!". In stern pare D t role, we

point to the assignment book.III pantomime, teenager finck"e assignment. '

We chomp down the stain aDd

Page 10: 11.24.60

This' Year',Give the'TreasuredLifetimeGift

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'Maynards .are finding the"same''. response true of their new rec­ord. "We have received lettersfrom mi!lsionaries in Africa,' a

.. hospita~ in - the west, a shut-in:iiI ·the south.".. Records can be obtained fromthe Cathi..lic· Listc-.1ers Libraryat'P.O:. Box 4, Taunton. . .

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Taunton 'VetsInstallation of officers of

i Father. 'John P. Washington Post11799 Catholic War Veterans of.~. Taunton wiil be held at 7:30· Saturday 'night, Dec. 3, at Our

\" Lady of Lourdes' Church :Hall.j Committees are in charge oft: entertaim;nent, . invitations, r~~] freshments, 'hall and publicity. 1,

. PROJECT FQR .BLIND: Three:.of )5 blind students, n~w :e~gaged 'in: 'iI: :~'Y0 ';y'ear, 'course· for: the' translation.:of'8J?bk~n'· .Russi~n '}r~f .~ecordings·.. in~.' :writte~ ~?gl~?,~.emonstrate :thel~ ,.:worK .~~ Geo!~~t.o.wn.Unrverslty 'J; InWashiligt<m.- F~ther:Ed~~rd'~.BuUn,·S;J.:·looks' ov-er'the.

'.' ~~~l'di.l!g.e.q~ipI11~!lt;:,NC·£hp..t~~;,:~.,:·~t;';:~,\,:'·i~~i':~'~··· . '::{~Jf~>.

" .. ''::.'j.' C1,O,.. ··THE.~N~t1()R?,.;;}"" .. ,· :".,~.;I:~:'Q.<.':,';.!'·D·e· c·..·o·'···r·:d·':"'~"o' ,t.,. 'St'a··~b'"~n·~·'r.s···"·JLif· . :.:C.."AS'··..:o'··:'.·:.4·..~:a··~:·l,a-·..'I..lb,'1 ':;'0'nt,lItH· ·... ~o··u·..tl··O.... .."< .' '.. T.hurs:;"'Nov>24,J960",:.··J:;JT:~",:J)_ ...,· '. _ ... '~\:~ ,';,.:,:."" '." ,.' t;U7, \1·.,·:V;,,{j,'~VI ," '#.1;1 'Ii" (} ~.' --;. :",.'.':. )!';~ .. :... ;~.

:e:American.. Je~uit.:; <··.:FfQm>..C.:·tit~Qli,.c ;Listeuier.· .Library..,:." Taunt'on' oReliRg~o~IS.' HeadsD

. . " .,. , . , '" . .n· IVa' ryI , .lrectsForl11-~,$a. _ '.' ." ... ' '.. . )~y,.l~farion. Uns~ort~· .', . . : , . " .. '

,. St. d t···.U' ,; .:._',:,~: .. ~. ';.' .·~q,rthf:l}i~st.·t~me, ~,lol1g:~~ay:ing COinmm~rci~lreco~dji1g:of·the StatiOl's of.,th~·;Cro88 .•..' 'yA'J,'IG~1':{~ITY .(NC~~'. , .\1 e~:.... ~IQ.~f, ';'" .1.S ·:a,:aIl~bl~. to,~he· d,l ~~d s!1ft~rIng· and·othE!rs .1,1qable to pra,ctice. ,the devotion in: a ·church. " HIS, . Holmess' Pop~... J.ohlt '.: '.. TAl~~~,(N~)+Mot:el;th·an: ., !],'his has been .made. possil;>'e~hr.ough.the Catholic ListenE!f:Library, "establ,ished.,:last· .., f',XI.~~ <.has ..~rg~d< ,.:n~hgI~_~~, "~,~~OO~.,u~!yersIty· ,a.~~.,~Qnege .~ug~st at:,the. 'h~meof Mr:and Mrs~ MerrilL Maynard;. Taunton...Sjghtless. themselves, . ':'8!1~e~I9,~s_ . '~::~~Qp'er.at~' :)~ . , .•. ~t.4de.'},ts .. ,~tFe.n~ed"a:~a~.s tp.e Maynards longag~.rea.,. . . . '~.' ..~t~e~.r, a~o~,tol~.c~ork. an_d .not.'~.here markmg the reorgam- l' d th d' f .' 1 ,rivalry hamp~J,' the gpO<!" of t~. ,., '. . :., _ ,Ize, '. e nee 0 speCIa '. Church: .. ..'. ,~ .' -

,·zabo~ o~ _the Catholic Students . spiritual facilities for the .' . ,; ..: ... :." ." '. ., 'Ass6clahon:' • '. ~".., .'; The poP~. sP9ke at an au.dlen~; A~:l{iliary ,Bish~p PauLCheng " handIcapped. To thIS end, ,g,r3:h~e~ to '~uper~o!s'of·.'Itali~n ... ~hih-ku:ifig. of ,taipei celel:irat~d for the past three :.y,ea~s they . ~elIg.lOus. co~mun~tIes. :wh~·. we!~· the' Mass at'. Intern'atiohat House. have. been most actIve m fur- :. holdmg ,their. :natlOnal congr~811· The assoCiation's neW-director . nishing tapes of religious inter- in Rome: .Father EdWard Murphy, S.J., of est tot~ose. with access to tape .lIe' said that, ~it'. tl)e·past 4t

, San' Frantisc.ci, said the large recorders. However, they felt years tne, popes have given 11U1'r\-

· attendance' af. the' Mass '. was. that a greater number of people erous indicatiol)s they ·favor. 'a: "proof 0.£ tne zeal' of olir spiritual woul~ be able to use· a record coordinated 8postolate that .~· directors.and the"entliusiasm of player. . not "exposed.~,!!seless and dam-'. th~ student group iead.erl;;"·· - They ,contacte~ Father Mat- a~ing delay ',because 'of lack .~

Construction of a large student t~ew" O,.F.M.~ Director. of the :agreement, because of claims to-~eriter is about to begin: it .will . FranCiscan Aposto~ate ~f the exclusivene.ss o~ work, or,G~

: be' staffled by Jes'uit "Fathers Way:.of the Cross, and natIOnally forbid, because .of a certain kind:'and' 'will have a' large' cnaplH known retreat J?aster. With of'intolerance toward the work;'3n 'auditoriumconferei1ce ~oom~ Father Miller giving the medita- -also precious-::-cairied out ..J)y'!and a residen~e for priests:'. ", . tion .ancl application,. and the I ~others in the same field of the~" The new 'center wiUreplace . )Maynards: ~he r~spo.nses, a re~~ Lord.'":'twQ s!TIall student centers op- ord of t~e.StatIons wa.~ cut ~n . . .'~rated by the Jesuits near: Na- ihe studIOS of Taunton s radiO . Bishop's .Supervision:tional TghyanUniverslty ari'd the ,station WPE~,withJOt,II: ~cCar- Pope John recalled that ia: Normal. University, Taipei's two th~ .as engmee~ and ~hchard 1957, when he was Patriarch of· major universities. Ank13n as techmcal adVisor. Venice, he made the same point.

. Proportion Increases :The. record was then produced He noted also that the RomanAbout l' 500 of the 20000 uni- by RCA and is being distributed. Synod last January.. resulted in

· versity an'd college students in by the Catholic Listener Library, . , the requirel!1ent that Religiousi,1P~ Taipei area are Catholics. with Mr. May.nard as ~o.ordinator. and diocesan priests work to-,That is 7,5 per cent of the stu- . SpeCial CrUCifiX . ·.gether under the Bishop's su-.:~ent popl!lation. There are about The Mayni:lrds ~xplain, "Most pervision and not in oppositioB.\80,000 Catholics on Formosa, ~:8 of those. who r:celve th~. re<;,o.rd Pope John said cooperation re-pel' cent Qf the total population .make. so~e k,md .. of f.manClglof 1.0,000,000,. contnbutIon,..covermg the. thr~e . ,·sults. in good' works. "On the

d 1l t f . d other hand," he added, "oneThe proportion of Catholics in - o. ,.~r ,c?S 0, .preparmg ~n, . knows from bitter experience

:..~e student body has incr.easedmal1~l1~ It, but some are bemg that 'fragmentation of energy is; .by, . half within the past·, two . ,Provl?ed . ~,E?r those. una~le .' to a notable and dangerous obstacle;,)lears. To cope with th.e ,increased . contnbute. .,~ ~~ecla~ly md~~- . , . ' to liberty itself,' 'to the sacrect,,»uJ1lber of Catholic students,:a ..gence~ ,.~r~clfl~ ..IS .glven with.. WAY OF !HE ~ROSS,: ~r. and Mrs. MerrIll Maynard, 'ministry, and to the apostolate.';

, '.eo~mitteeof ~r~~sts .U,?dt;r Tai-:- .....ea~hr~C?r~ ... :" . . , •. Taunton, show how the blind or others of the handicapped;!pel'll new ,Auxdiary Blshop,has,H .~ls.proJec~.pr:oves.se,I~-,. can make'the"Way' of the Cross at 'home' by ineans of a.. reorganized the Catholic.: Stu- . sup-,~prtmg, . we expect to:- cut .· dents' Association. " .! • riJ?rerecordsiillhe future,'f Mr. l\e~ly-produced LP record. a.-nd.~pecially.blessed crucifix.". 'E:~ther Murphy,' ihe':assoCia- ..Mayn~rd 'said~'''We ~~e .alrea.dY . WIth the Maynards are theIr Seemg Eye dogs, Fawn (left)

· -tlon's new director,. 'has'been plannll1~ a .recorded, !JIls!lal, wlt.h. and Hildy. - ". :·working.among students>he';e the ord~nary of th~ lV"-;'s on one

· since '1952.' He is 'a'proj:e~sor'at. , r~cord, and the pI:operof the nards' work through their mem_· Nation'aJ. :Tai~an .' Uriiversity. '. ~entEm seas~n. on .~nother. It.is . bership In the. Catholic Tape·.Fifteen of his fellow-Jesuits 'now .hoped',that, thiS might be ·pre-. Recorders' of' America, Intei'na':',·~re teach)n'g at :'yar'iouli seCular,: pared•.for Llmt of 1.961'." . tional; the Gatholic Tape Guild,'universities 'and col~~ges in 'arid" ~ .,The, tapes .pro~lde~ .:b~~he and' the Catholic Union of.around Taipei. .,.. .' .' . .LI~~ar.y. are ~·dlf~er~nt·proJl- ~ Suffering in America.' , .

. .... ,., OSitIOn from the' record;' 'since"E.'n'g' lis.h. Cathol."c·s· __ ". -they .are borr'owedrather than Full Length Books·. . '.' . . .Some tapes are 'of full .length

5 . d' M.11 0 • ,'. ~ ,1" pur~h~sed; T,~~s. is . ~easibl.e ,bt;- .books;, including '-"Imitation ,of.

"

P,en ••ons ... , I .' ,:c.. ause".of ·the,lr·'subJect 'm.. atte.r.. ·, . Christ," "Problems of Pain;":'''' LOND.ON (N.C) -7 The: 'thre,e. .·SiI;lC~·'they.copsist 0·' books se-~ an.d a half.-rid I,li~il' Cathol.ic~'.i~.·. :.l,eeted,';' CathOlic, :'progrllms ''\in'd . 'fWby· ,Must I- Suffer,''' :~Theology.... l ' ',and Sanity,." '$eed's -of Contem­-""ng and. and' Wales will, ha;il:e ·.devotional material borroWers '

'provided' $84 riliUioil ·f~t'. CiltH..... lrieed' to :hear them' 6rily once.. .plation"" and, others.' There are· olic education' ",vhen' tne p'reserit ..On .the 'other hand- . the' records also: musical tapes; primarily: of" , .Gregorian ..' chant .arid '. ot11er(buHding program· is completed will ,contain· material' that the ',church music. .

Ii. in 1963, ..' ., ~(flic~ed.:wilJwant,~o' use, over a -., "Altogether, tne. Catholic ,List-

They. will haye. bjlilt 7.3.7. Jpng.p.eriod of.-t,ime. '.. h . ten~r Library 'has' 'over, .300maJor.s.c ?ols since t~~;?verha~l ',: ·Rev. Mariol.1.:~oessler, a l\.iichi- tapes," said Mr, Maynard'.,Since

lof the natIOnal educatIOn system ..·g;ifi r:riest who,·publishesrecords 11 d' .I was started in 1944, Costs will tp distril:~te·to-tl::' cp':onically, a Istnbutjon is through him-. t 11 ttl $196 ' . ',!!e,lf, he ha.. conVerted 'part of ,the .j ac. u~ Y'. 0 a. .mIl~i,on, $112 ,ill, asked ~r."Mily.nard to dis- .'ff' ' . ' .J millIon' IS bemg proVided by . tribute tapes of Scripture read- .:1>, ~c~coh~ected to his h?IlJ.e 'into;. national or local authoritie!l. ing, !<ve Maria 'P'· 'r'ams,' 'Hou'r a. fIlmg space' for tapes and rec-'ords. He has two tape recordc·ts

.of St: Francis, and other broad:" which allow him to copy' tapescasts of " special .. interest' to .as requests dictate. . .

. Catholics.. A secon'd source oitapes 'is Dr. With requests for tapes 'comihg .

.Alfred . Berger of the National in from all over' the world, theCouncil .of Catholic Men,. who'provides liturgical subject lec­turesarid Catholic' Family. tapes.

In addition to' these, the' e ar~individl~al' contributions .from.people acquainted 'with the May:"

• ,~' ... I " .• .,. l

If

Page 11: 11.24.60

'"

. ,

, FALL RIVER

MONAGHANACCEPTAN(E

(ORP•

142 SECOND STREET 1

OSborne 5-7856

. ,

Thomas F.' Monaghan Jr)

Treasurer

"This has had an adverse ef­fect on the employment andwages of citizen agricultur1alworkers. The bracero programhas developed into a ghastly In­ternational racket."

"Under the 'provisions of Pub­.lie Law 78," Archbishop Luc~y

· stated, growers'. association and,corporation farm owners' hi:l~e'been able to import nea~ly500,000 braceros from Mexico for~upposedly seasonal labor inAmerican agriculture. On fOl,lroccasions since 1951 the law has

· been given a two-year extensiOB·by the Congress, even when un­,employment was a major prob­lem in our c0l!ntry.

Survey OpportunitiesThe Archbishop said in .hit!

'report that" the regional office' of· the Bishops Committee for' the·Spani'sh-speaking was able 'tobring'17 priellts from Mexico'te

· ;work' ;among· Spanish-speakingmigrants.

He als~ said that the regio;(~·office is' "making a one-year'survey of employment oppor­t~ilities for Spanish-speaking

-migrants .with funds provided bJ"a charitable !foundation."

The Archbishop stated thatmost Spanisp-speaking migl'anUi

·would prefer-for theh-. OWIlll­

_sakes and out of consideratio}'1for tHeir wives and children-=­

otowork the year-round at hom'e,,"in~tead.. of seeking. a fl'ai!ile

-:and un"c.ertain livelihood f~lIp,!_

· :,il}g Se':1S9rtal crops with all. t~,e

~il~a.rds; ,anii tragedies il1vo~v,4l,d:m the hfe of a wanderer.". ;

'Sixteen selections sung' by theNovices and Postulants of theReli!!io1/.s 01 Jesus and Mat·y.

• The perfect gift for young.and old alike.

• Hours of joyful singing avail·able In stereo and Hi-Fi J,P.

h11he Happy.Wanderer," Hfj'he WOJl1aD; In the Shoe," HJ.Jft:

Thine ]~yes," .u1'he f"IUte 1lrummer Do)''' and man)' more.Featuring:

Here's the Solution to Your ChristmasShopping Problems • ~ •

A heartwarming record albumthe whole family will enjoy.'Yhen you .hear it, you'll love it!

'PArrERNS IN SONG'

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Please sead Me copy (1ft) of your 12 .In.l'. record ,.al!*lII. "PatterM ill Song." Enc.loBed a.' D·3.9~ HHI· ;

PleGie'pr!IIt:O' 4.95 Stereo. :

j' !l/AMI: •• ; •••.••••••••••• ; •• : ••••••'•••••••.••• : ••••••••• '

: .. STREET:" '•••" CiTY: ,'STATE: TA- - ,ijlilJ__Ni·j-lii-ij-ij-ij-ilj-..-iti-JIII/l......"ii--.-ii--ii-.-..--iji-jiJ-iJ-tJdiiilidtullJilll...

'944 County St.New Bedford

MarquettePlansIiug~')E~p(j,nsi()n Program';.Mlr.,WAUKEE (NC) -A 10­year,$45-million development':prog~amhas been announced for.Marquette University.. Father Edward J. O'Donnell,S.J., president of the ·university

'said 'that Marquette will need to:raise' $30·million· while another'$15 million is anticipated in re­search grants and loans.

CITIES SERVICE.JISTRIBUTOR5

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For promp. delivery& Day &. ",ight Service .

Rural Bottled Gas: Se;Y~ :

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;Attleboro ,+ No. Attleboro. " -, .: ~!~"u,~t.on . _ j::.' '; .

W.H.RILEY.& SO'N, Inc.

, . G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS

many schoOls ·in· and around~Los Angeles. ._Sister Blanche Marie's last visit

-People Ashamed-Of Book Okay . :

LONDON (NC)-Most Englillh_people·.areashamed of the courtdecision allowingptiblic 'sale of~he unexpurgated edition of D.H. Lawrence's "Lady Chatferly's

·:Lover,". a Catholic bishop. said"here: . .'I ". Auxiliary .Bishop Thomas B.7Pearsonof ·Lancaster· said that-the 'decision,' following a test'case of Britain's new "obscenepublications' law," 'resulted' in

-allowing "something to take.place that is against its very in­tention of the prote~ting of pub,:

.:J.ic andp'rivate morals." ,Moral Law

"'.' Billhop Pearson, writing 'infu:e'C':1th9lic Uerald, national wee.kly.newspaper., . asserted that "th~e

'legal decision does not affectthe moral law and conscience,lind the Church's teachings are'our guide in this." .. "Out of this trial one thing has'emerged,'~ he said, "and that lSthat most people are ashame~

,of the decision because it ha's'highlighted the indifference of:the past years ·to the ever-risii1:g'tide of corrupting' books and:pictures which exploit 'tll.e-spending power of moder'it:youth."

TRANSPLANTED FALV 'RIVERITE: Sister BlancheMarie, LH.M., Fall River native, now a religious in Cali­

..foro.ia, chats with (left) Mrs. Joseph T. Drury, niece and'Mr~~ Lillian Martin, sisterOin law, as she visits hOl\le tOWn.

) . .-to. Fall River_was five years ago.On this trip· she saw her niece,

·Mrs. Joseph T. Drury of OurL~dy ~f. F.atima parish, Somer­

.set. and' her sister-in-law, Mrs...LiIlian Martin, also of Somerset.

Anoth~r' sistei-in,:law, Mrs.John C. Martin, is a luember of

-·Holy Name :parish, FallR~ver,

and her brother, Raymond' H.'Martin; is still a member of St.,Joseph's

Holy :Se~ St,udy,ing:Cause ·of American..

, VATICAN CITY (NC) -'-Theipreparatory wod~ !or.th(l beatifi.,.

. cation: Of KateriTekakwitha,117th-centurYAm~'ricari India'n: womali, may be completed with_i in the':next year. '"; Sacred Congregation of Rite!!Iofficials !'tav¢ revealed the beati­i,fication'" 'pl'ocedure 'has been:speeded-up -by beginning anrexamin~tlon o£ a·second possible: miracle said to have been:granted through her intercession.If the miracle is approved, itcould take .less than a year toclear the way for declaring her"Blessed.". .

Approval of two miracles isrequired before the steps lead­ing to beatification can be com­pleted. One miracle pel'formed

i through· the' intercession of;Kateri Tekakwitl'1a ~as exam;­i,ined and' approved seve'l;al years;,ago. .

Trading Stamp DriveEarns School ~us ,

ERLANGER (NC) - Threemillion trading stamps collectedby students and friends of MaryQueen of Heaven school in thisKentucky COmmunity providedthe school with a new bus.

Father Paul Ciangetti, pastorof Mary Queen of Heaven par­ish, arranged in September, 1959for the trading stamp companyto provide the b.us for 2,500

Medical Center Now books of stamps rept'esentingpurchases of $375,000.

:Affiliate of, Cath. U. Disc jockeys helped' to plug· OTTAWA (NC) -The eight- the drive. In mid-October themillion-dollar National Defense school was still some 500 books

:lVIedical Center will be an af- S11Y of the 'goal, but Father Cian­:filiated hospital of the Catholic getti posted the cash difference·University of Ottawa. and obtained the bus. ;; . It will be used as one of the . The.priest said the school still·~niversity's medical faculty is accepting trading stamps, b~­i teaching facilities. . cause "in another year or so" The new 350-bed Army, Navy . we're going to need anothE!rand Air Force Hospital is ex-. bus."pected to be ready next May.

· The affiliation agr~ement was SOU rce of ,SuccessI$igned by Father Hen'ri F. Le'-': UIJOUNGBU ,(NG) - Korea's:kare, OMI, rector of. t~e univer.,.· Catholic Prime ,Minister, JohnI~ity, . and Rear AdmIral T.. B. .M. Chang, ·told; U.S. troops her.e1~cLean, surgeon ge~~ral of .P1~ .that prayer Is the source of llis~f:~~dian Ar~~ F9r<:es; success. '.' ,;., .' '

Asserts'. P-N'Se'"t TeachiniT: .Sister ~ 'Jrom..'··St~ losep''h?-s£ Fall~'River' "~'''TThl'iE '~~NC::HO'~2-:- ;"'19'60". 0'" ..' , , urs., ov....,

Propitious Time Instructs Movieland' Children' in, ,California 'Catholic PrelateFor Unity Steps / By 'PatriCia McGowcU. Asserts Bracero

·Ti::O~:-ri~~~Nw~~~N~L~y "" ,. Movie· stars are 'run', of·' the' mill' to Siste r 'BlancheMarie;·l.H.M.~i native'of St.Joseph's.· Pr.09.'aIn .Ra..cket:',is·.~t "a propitious moment" parish, ,Fall River, 'who's 'spent' 32 years as an Immacliiate Heart Sister iri Califimiia.

'She's· taugh' inanY'children Of screen luminaries and says the:mairi lliffere'nce'''between . WASHINGTON (NC) -,Aor, the reestablishment, of 40Th b;religious unity, according' to them and otherS is that you see their 'maids and chauffeurs: far more .frequently 'thim';' e racero program haa,".Archbishop KarlJ.Alter'of ·Cin- . you.-do·~theiF·parents;. ".P-ar- .. '. " .: .,. developed into a.ghastly fu.... cinnatl. .: ents come to school affairs ternational racket," the U.S.

Archbishop A.lter noted that . when possible, but so often ·.·Catholic Bishops were told bythere is current today "a wide- . Archbishop Robert E. Lucey l>fspread desire for the reestab- they're on location," she 'San Antonio, ex~cutive chairmanlishmerit of unity among all who sighed, . with obviously regret- of the Bishops' committee forclaim the name of Christian." ful thoughts of the movieland· the Spanish..;speakint,;, in his re-

"The strong ecumenical move- children so often without their . port' to U. S. Hierarchy.ment of our separated brethren" parents. .

"But we treat the movie child..; - The Archbishop referred -to t~is a propitious' moment for a'generous approach to a solu- ren just the same as any others," bracero program, under which

. she said briskly. "We make 'no Mexican nationals come to worktion of the pl'oblem," he said.special fuss over them." on farms in the U. S., as aArchbishop Alter spoke at a

Sister, daughter of· the late Mr. "wretched business."Pontifical High Mass marking,the 100th anniversary of the ; and Mrs. Hugh H. Martin, enter':'

. dedication of Fod Wayne's Ca- :ed the California sisterhood"ttiedl'al of the Immaculate Con- :through the 'late Msgr. Francis.··ception. . Conaty, a native of Taunton; who,,',In, his sermon, Archbishop sc'rved in the Los Angeles d'io-JUter referred to "the great cru- ; cese (now archdiocese). - .sode" set in motion by Pope She visited cousins in Cali-John "to stimulate a desire for fnrnia and went to pay her i·e-·Christian unity and to create a speets to the Monsignor. Hefavorable climate for its reali- directed her to the Immaculatezatlon." Heart Sisters - and there she

stayed, graduating from Immac-Desire Among Christians 1 t H t C II g . Lu a e ear 0 e e 111 os

"His convocation of an ecu- Angeles and spending her reli­menical council to be held in glOUS career teaching in gradethe ,near future, is not only a. schools staffed by the cornmun-recognition on the part of the ity. .Church of the growing desire saine As Everamong Christians everywhere to,recover a lost unity, but it is Sister visited her native par-

. ish when in Fall River and re­.a'iso tl'Je prelude for a further :ports that "it's the same old St.<;xploration of the means neces- Jos h's" Th r ...ep. e e WaS no par-/illry to. it," the Archbishop said. oehial school' When' she was a,.,Outlining the necessary" rc- )'oungster, but she recalls mak­

;qu~remellts f;or .Christian t.\nity, lng. her 'first communion' in the'A.~<;h~ishop .Alterdeclared .that fl;t~rch and .bein~ cO\lfirme,d"we will make no progress there by Bishop Harkins 'oftoward·. unity . unless 'we lay Providence. ..... ..a.side all prejudi<;c:'and cUl~i- :'.' ('He only came once every fivevate, i!lstead, th~ spiiW ;~f true years," she noted, "so there wascharity. III will and 'thetevival always a large crowd to be con­of ancient g,rievances will profit firmed."us nothing." .... . .

Sister has taught. all grades"Neither," he COiltinu'ed, "will 'from 1 through :8.. She has -no

\ mere cooperation in' a 'mutual favorites, enjoying all teachingprogram of social welfare serve It:vels. She is at' present at Holyour· purpose. The' unity we seek. Trinity School' in San Diego,.must'be a unity in faith, in sac':' where -she has been stationed.ra.~ents, and in discipline."

~his year.·She has taught inKight Understanding

, Ariother requirement for' theteestabllshmen't' Qf Christian~nity 'i~ ~"a 'l"ight .up~~rstandihgof the nature arid function of the<::hu,cl1,'~,he S~M'i .,:, ,,' ;.

· He said: "The question at'issl,ieis: Which carn~-first-theChUlich01 the Scriptures? Which is ~l)e

bedrock of unity 'llS' 'well. as tilertuthentic source of' ..doctrlrie?HOW.did the.' first (:hristi~H1s;...learn~ Jhe trut~s·ot· their r~li­"ion?,',',: . -..:"...: ', . C.hurch First _ . I

I '''During the firs:t 150 years: ofC'twistianity," he said, "theScriptures of the New Testa­ment were not yet' assembledinto one book or volume, andhence were not avaihible to theindividual faithful as a sourceof instruction. Most,. of theseC h r i s t i ans, moreover, couldneither' read nor write, but weredependent for 'tpelr jnstructl~nt1pon the sPQkeil word. . . 1

, "It was the Church. which se­le'eted frOm the many earlyChristian writings those divinelyinspired, and rejected others as

;apocryphal or non-authentic."The simple and irrefutable

:f'3et is that there would havebeen no New Testament if therehad not been first a 'Church' tosee to its formation, to ensureits authenticity, and to preserveit in accurate reproduction dur­ing the 1,400 years before mostpeople could read or write, andbefore p.ointing was invented."

Page 12: 11.24.60

Day

FAIRHAVEN, MASS.

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Chritr., "ott, vineyard aa; aa Apottle of tIMEd.ition.: PrMl. Radio, Movi.. and r ..."i.iOll, With ....se modem m.a... .."'isaionary Sl.ten bring Christ'. Oodrln.'to all. regardlODO of race. color or _ ....po, lnformaticm writo to:

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,We can put up a chapel for a, minimum 0'- $2500. what a Joyit will, be to know that somewhere on 'this earth, our Lord in theEuchariSt is being 'adored for the ,first time! Not many of ourreaderacan afford $2500, but, we know a thousand c,an. For themillions" we ask only a dime a bY in' the name of tlie SacredHeart. At the end' of 'each month send your offering to the Dol,.Father ~hroughbis Society for'the)"rOpagllotioD of the' Faith.

'CI-OSED

GOD LOVE YOU to A.W.R. for $15 "I consider myself a verylucky girl; I have had twelve years of Catholic education, and amstarting four more. God has also given me many other wonderfulgifts, Please' use ,this money 'that perhaps others may share in mygift of Faith."': ... to Anon fO,r $10 "Now 'my debt is paid." ... toE,M. for $10' "I, made a promise to myself to send something to'the Society for the Propagation of the Faith if I received anyscholarships for' college. I received enougq. to pay for my wholefirst ,yeat."

Cut ,out this column, pin your sacrifice to' it and mail It to theMost ltev. F'ulton J. 'Sheen,National Dii-ector of the SOciety forthe'Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth' Avenue, New York'I, N. Y..or your Diocesan. Director, RT. REV. RAYMONDT. CONSIDINE,368 North Main Str~t" Fall River, Mass. , ' '

By Most Rev. Fulton J. ~heen. D.O.The saintly cure' of An once wrote bbe following to Pauline

Jaricot, who founded the Society for the Propagation of the Faith:"No, one who supports the Society for the Propagation of the Faithwill ever lose the Faith." John XXIII, when he was the National

, Director of the Society for the Propagation of' the Faith in Italy,wrote: "St. 'Margaret Mali" said: 'Blessed are they who die after alifetime of devotion to the Sacred Heart;' but I say tWice blessedare those who in that love of the ,Sacred Heart die after a lifetimeof service to the Society for the Propagation of 'the Faith."

.F~r ,Steps '',I. Good movies can be encour,;,'

ag~4' ~y,g~ving;ithem b.O,xoffice:patronage.c" , '

i G~d',influencesirathe In­dustry should be' supported intheir effortato 'maintain stand-ards., .

3. ,More persons of strong.moral convictions should entel'the movie industry.

4. Audiences should be. edu­eated to givep,reference to betterfilms.

Mr: Ruszkowski advocated theeducation of movie patrons toappreciat.e the cinema as an artform,but he rejected the idea. of :art for art's sake.

• .. "False 'Attitude . , "'''Art for ad's' sake ·is essen';""

tially a·false attitude," the Peru­vian' lawyer'! said.' "We must':kn.ow' ,the' hierarchy of values:There· are ,spiritual values, 'and'even soinehuman' values, thatare superior to artistic values.", Mr, Ruszkowski was careful to

explain that emphasis on soundmoral content does not meanthat poor art forms are ex'cus'­able.

He stated' that the Interna­tional Catholic Cinema Officehad made a worldwide study ofall methods of moral regulationof films. State censorship, headded," is not the most effectiveway of solving the problem., "

" Self-Regulation.Hesaid self-regulation:is best, '

and that if self-regulation 'ap­pears to be ineffective, groupsseeking to strengthen it shouldbe supported.: "Catholics are: not isOlated ill

this," he said, "because manyother groups Me preoccupiedwith the moral trend of films."

He stressed·· that there is llIlobligation to 'have :nora! regu- ,lation. He, did. ~ot, hold, that thepublic had to remain powerless ,J:)'efo~~" claims; of, ~!l:ege4 ,~t OIl!~e part'of'prodliceriL"" ," • " ,

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

Natittnal Pl~~tfg~"Q~~'~;i~~Of SeconC:ory Ir~,or~ance

By, Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.Bishop of Reno

The classic picture of young Edward Gibbon, sitting"amidst the ruins of the Capitol" and. ruminating on ,the'decline and fall of the Roman Empire, is strangely and

, disturbingly contemporary. We have met him ali too freq-uently of late, divested of '

" - O"n, For them, whatever thehis peruke and smallclothes specific details ,of their analysis,and everlasting smirk, and 'Christianity itself is in the latespeaking, not in the orotund Autumn of its career.phraseology of the Augustan Broken Wheels Two basic spiritual ideas are here united: 1) the preservationAge, but in the smartest of up- Gibbon in his day described of our FaiUi; and 2) t~e salvation of our soul. As regards theto - the - min- Rome as having fulfilled her first, how many today are losing or sur-ute journalese. long cycle, long enough, fortu- rendering their Faith, principally throughHI'S cur r e n t nately, to supply him with more d d bid t' rpride eDgen ere Y a secu ar e uca Ion 0theme is the' than abundant material to write through a second and iBvalid marriage!d e C 11' n e and about, In our times we have t f k .. F 'thThe best paran ee 0 eeplDg your alfall 0 f the read men like Spengler and is to give it to others. The best way to giveAmerican em- Toynbee, to mention only the MARIAN SCH,OLAR: A it to others is through our missionaries.

, I d P giant generalizers, propounding an'd the best way to reach them is throughplre, n roo - the same historical philosophy I d' hI' M . 10i n g numbers ea mg sc 0 ar marIO gy, the Holy Father who 'lifter collecting yourbe tells us that of basic pessimism. Father Eamon R. Carroll, alms for the Society for the Propagationour evening is It has been difficult to resist 0'-- Carm., assistant profes- of the Faith, makes the distribution to ~II I:fItalready far ad-' tthhe tempttatio.nth tot dagtrhee with sor of sacred theology at the areas and all missions. . It@vanced. If you em or 0 WI S an e enor- " N,"

have a proph- mous weight. of their erudition. Cat hoI i c University of The words of the Holy Father implY11{etic eye you might even see, Under their'tutelage we have America, was named to re- that this sacrifice for the spreading of then!:pacing through the fallen col- ~re; i~n~~eu~::~t~f ~ef:~: :~~= ceive the 10th annual Mar- Faith in Africa, Asia, and other areas of'" _-umns of the Lincoln Memorial, ianist Award of the Univer- the world should not be sporadic but constant. Because the missions• procession of Zen-Buddhist cession of broken wheels, some happen now to be in grave need; we are asking the Catholics ofmonks chanting their litanies as of' them . interlocking, others sity of Dayton: NC Photo. the United States to construct 1,000 chapels in honor of the Sacredthe sun sinks into the Potomac. standing in isolated abandon- . Hearl in mission lands, There is only one condition: you must allow

"Now this is riot merely a la- ment.IndiVidUaILif~C.YCle· ,.Off-Color Films thi.! Holy Father to decide where these chapels will be built. We, t t' th l'pse of the C t' . d f P '. O' '. know that it is' more satisfying to one's ego to name the place, butmen a IOn on e ec 1 There is, certainly, a kind 'of on mue rom' age ne

t · 1 t'ge that fruity t b I' th t 'f 1 g it is more pleasing to ,Our Lord to humble oneself by allo,wing HisDa IOna pres 1 , . grim satisfaction to be derived. 0 e leve a 1 mora re en-matter of contention between from this cycle theory., It re- eration is not possible they, must 'Vicar on earth to name the place. 'the contestants in th~ late presi- duces history, which we find ex- .turn East.dential campaign. It goes much cessively taxing to understand. Seldom. Immorality,deeper than that, though ob- and intolerably exhausting tAll '''It is noticeable," he. said,riously the prestige factor is study (for' all its incidental fas- "that Soviet ,pictures seldomDOt'to be ignpred as an Indica- ciriation);' t6 something . which ,'" show 'immorality. 'Some whotion of the way things are shap- ,we ,readily assume ,y{e can im.,.' desire hll'mil health IIiayget the'lng' up. m~diately understand and. which. "impression from Soviet movies

'Amedca, so we are told, has, weare never weary of examin- ' that this ,morality, c.omes ..frombad her days; she is finished, io:g, the life cycle '0£ the indi- - 'Soviet' philosophy. ,. ,done for. In brief and rapid vidual himself. ' "Though such films may beIlP8n, at least compared with Man.is born, he matures" he moral,'" Mr. Ruszkowski ob­most other' nations and cultures, declines into senility. He cannot served, "they are 'not Christian.me has had p.er dawn" her help himself. By taking thought This is where the matter of com­morning with the sun rising con- he ,can add no single,cubit to hiD initmEmt comes'- in." ,fidently to its zenith, her bril- stature, nor is, he individually' The ta'u,. s~o\v-speaking Pol­llan.t high noon; but now the respon,sible f~r such phe~omena ish Peruvian, whose appearariceshadows are lengthening and as the lengthening .or shorten-- suggests a professional versionthe night is coming.' ing of the life span. of Gary Cooper, saHi moviegoers'It is as though her experience' So, the ,theory argues, is It 'and critics who wish to improve

were too concentrated, too in- with' cultures, with civilizations, films should riot forget to utilizetense, to endure. Other' powero with nation-states; Their cycle : their strength.' .': 'are succeeding us, other cul"'" is 'no more~than the mammoth 'It is'riot enough to 'seek +egu--tures'are preparing to take over. enlargement of the individual's; 18tlori ofobjectiona'ble' 'movieS,Ilis useless for 'us to complaiIi," Convenient, Theory , Mr. Ruszkowski said.,' H~ sug-.tur more useiess for us to re.;. 'This' is eminently convenient: gested four steps for considera-8isi':We are caught on the'wheel and lucid. It saves tilneanel tion.01. historical determinism. Our sPares' us much' useless worry.'Amei-ican cycle has come full AU we have to do 'is' to discer~,'lIOund. '- through the magnifying glasS of

_ . . Cycle Theo"" history, the pattern as it, is UR-"folded 'in the - Wagnerian GOt-,

That perceptive critic. of mea terdari1.meru'ng. ,.'.' ';.'"and letters, Father,WalterOng, 'Yet 'before we seal our'cOm:"S.J" d.eals masterfully with thil! niitmentto' this theory there;·cycle'theory" of history in the" areatleaStcerlain'questiDns toeurrent issue of the Notre D~me be asked and answers to be sup­Review of Politics. He notes how plied. And it needs to be 1'&­

deep are its roots, not only ia marked, tritely enough, tilatthe thinking of the outright God -alone possesses. the keydeterminists, but in that -jl'per.:. of history and He has not chosenhaps a majority .of Chriatiaa to reveal it to us. It follows that~ial 'philosophers as well. any solution we envisage 'bI DO

For we, have been persuaded. ,more than tentative.fperhaps conditioned isa better Cycle or Evolutionword) fo accept, almost without, Are we permitted, actually, toquestion the universal' validity, transfer individual experience.of this theory ',which condemns I to' universal experience iIi the'each c,ul~ure to repeat, success-: maHer' of history? 'Does man.,. .ively and endlessly, the individ- - kihd as a whole simply repeat"ual pattern of birth, maturity" iri. larger scale and through iri-.and death., cotnparably ,greater lengths, ot.','The sole exception the Chris-. time,ihe' iife~pattern of the jn~

tiari philosopher' would make ia dividual? Is the birth of' a na­in favor of Christianity itself" tion really like the birth of awhich, because of its supernat- child, its maturity like that ofural origin and p1,lrp.ose, is to be a grown man, its decline a repe­exempted from this' inexorable tition of old age!.---Even at therole. most casual glance, the differ..;

The determinists, manifestly, ences are noteworthy and up-have no respect for this excep- setting. .

. And have cultures died withJesuit· College' Deans nightfall and the winter's on-

To, Meet •on SoutlL set? Was Gibbon writing historyIR when he inscribed, ~ome'- obit-

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The' uary, or was he simply too tiredeentral Dean's Conference of to bother?' Is' Spain's colonial',the Jesuit· Educational Associa- empire' a 'memory, or is the mat:tI,on will 'meet at. Loyola Uni- rix out of which is springing\"ersity of the South here Friday now the full vitality ,of tomor-'and Saturday, Nov. 25 and 26. ,row's world? .Educators will come here from Is history, ,to put a period to.

. the Chicago, Detroit, Missouri the questions,,'a .cycle or an evo-'and Wisconsin provinces of the lution, a closed circle hooped,Society of Jesus. with steel rungs or a continuous

Among the subjects to be con- and expan.ding,stream? Father.ldered are theelogy, philos- Ong wonders who was the wiserophy, the junior year abroad to philosopher of history, GibbonJesuit colleges, ROTC, modern ~r Darwin., F~r us the subjectlangu'age "teaching, the Ameri- Is of vastly' greater importance­eao college' teaching pro'{ram than our. immediate prestige­arid a device for improving »tu- status. Is 'winter ahead, or haft·,~tlrwriting. . 'we )'et to'sm'&U'the spriDfa? . "~~o...A\~.t,,~::·:r: ;{J:.,,:': '..." ...." ,., .-.\ '.'\" ... .rT'.~·"'..~ ..Q"(."-.....:-f".~i":-v..'~ ..~\.~\_,,, ..,..:.l...l..:.......,,.:.,~·(~

Page 13: 11.24.60

"

·1WtE~-DioceH 01 Foil River-Thurs, Nov. 24, 1-960 :,3"

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

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

"'-' .

A DeliciousTreat

Made Rite ChipsAsic for Them Today

Returning Home ,WILMINGTON (NC) -Arch­

bishop EdmoJ;ld J. FitzMaurice,whose right leg was amputatedabove 'the knee on May 20, w"illlreturn to Wiimingtonfrom Ir'e~'

land after Christmas. The 79-'"year-old'retired Bishop 01 Wil­mington suffered a blood clot imhis ,leg while visiting Tarbert,County Kerry, his birthplace. .

$60 MiHion Sent.To Assist Arabs

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheCatholic Near East WelfareAssociation has provided goodoand services. valued at $60.11million to Palestine refugeessince its founding in 1948.

The association was organizecllto cooperate with the PontificalMission for Palestine, which 11engaged in relief work for the1,087,000 Arab Fefugees displacedby the war for Palestine.

The association reported thatsince 1948 it has sent 9,700 ton.of' food, 7,200 tons of clothingand 61 tons of medical suppliesto Palestine refugees.

It has sheltered 20,500 refugee~ ,supported 274 social welfarecenters, educated 37,000 refugeechildren; built 344 schools and'had the services of 1,032 priests,Brothers, Sisters and lay personllo..

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Nun Receiv.es AwardFor Therapy Work '.

MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-:'-Sister'M. Rudolpha; director of theSchool of Anesthesia' at" St.John's Hospital in Springfield,Ill., has received Ii special cita­tion from th~ American Asso­ciation of Inhalation Therapists.

The award plaque was pre­sented by Dr. Vincent J. Collins,associate professor of anesthe­siology at the medical school of!Il'ew York University, during theassociation's annual meetinghere.

Inc.

FUNERAL SERVICE

'.: '

;-. .:~. '. ., ..54~COUNT)', ST.

" NEW' B~F~~D;, ~AS~ •.

On' Ecumenicai UnitVATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope

John has named' an AmericanPassionist priest, Father CasparCaulfield, C.P., as Consultor tothe commission he created' toprepare mission topics for dis­cu.ssjOI), at tbe forthcoming ecu­menical council.

Saturday Is Home Economics Day in OrleansFor St. 'Joan of. Arc Seventh Graders

ST. MARY'S, .,NEW BEDFORD

The Women's Guild wiiI holda fashion shoW at 8 Mondaynight, Nov. 28 at Keith JuniorHigh School. Mrs. Joseph Millsis in charge of arrangements. A NCWC Board NamesChristmas party is planned forMonday, Dec. 12. . Assistant SecretarySACRED HEART, ' WASHINGT01'l (NC)-FatherOAK BLUFFS Clarence D. White, a priest of

The Women~s Guild will hold " the Archdiocese of St. Louis, hasa children's Christmas' party in 'been named an assistant general'the parish hall on the afternoon secretary of the National Cath­of the day that schools close for olic Welfare Conference.Christmas vacation. Members The'. appointment was' an-

•will make Christmas wreaths for nounced' following a semiaimualthe church. A delegation' will ' meeting here of the NCWC Ad­attend a meeting and auction ministrative Board, which madesponsored by St. 'Elizahethis the' nomination.Guild, Edgartown oil. Monday, Msgr. Paul F. 'Tanner, a priestNov. 28. . "of' the Archdiocese of Milwau-

Next regular meeting is set kee, is General Secretary 'of thefor Monday, Dec. 12. It will fea- NCWC. Father FranCis T. Hur­ture a covered';dish supper and ley, a priest of the ArchdioceseChristmas party. ·Members will . of San Francisco, is also an as­donate gifts to Rose Hawthorne . sistant general secretary of theHome instead of exchanging NCWC.them among themselves. Father, White, ,who served asST. GEORGE, . an Army chaplain from 1945 toWESTPORT , 1955 and is a reserve chaplain

The Women's Guild will spon- 'with the rank of major, has .beensor a harvest dance at 8 this spiritual moderator of the St.Saturday at Stev.enson's,North Louis 'Archdiocesan Council ofDartmouth. Chairman is Mrs. Catholic Men and the St. LouisRobert Long, aidec" by. James Archdiocesan Council of CatholicJames Sherrington, Mrs. Joseph Women since 1955. He alsoWelch, Mrs. James Handrahan served as spiritual director ofand Mrs. John Francis. Proceeds the Archdiocesan Union of thewill benefit the school fund. Holy Name Society at the sameST. ANNE, time.'NEW BEDFORD

St. Anne Sodality will hold aChristmas party Tuesday, Dec.13 at Copicut Lodge. Gifts willbe exchanged and transportationwill be available, with a busleaving the parish school yardat 6:30 the night of the party.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,

-NEW BEDFORDThe Ladies' Guild ~ill hold a

cake sale after Masses th"is Sun:".day in the church, hall. AChristmas party is planned for . Michael C. Austin7 Wednesday' night, Dec. 21 inthe church .hall. Gifts will be

. ,exchanged., ".' Newly elected officers to be

installed at a J;muary. banquetare .Mrs. Charles W. Duponte,president; Mrs., Guy Caucci,'vice

,president; Mrs. Robert' G. ,Clark,secretary; Mrs. John P. Pateakos, .treasurer. ' '

Harvest Dance

The Parish ParadeOUR, LADY OF ASSUMPTION,OSTERVILLE _

Prizes donated for a parishbazaar to be held Saturday, Dec.3 at Veterans' Hall include ,asiipcover and an automobilelubrication job. Mrs. RobertF ..Sims is chairman of the event.

BLESSED SACRAMENT,FALL RIVER ; .

The Women's Guild will holda Christmas party Sunday, Dec:4:at Red Angus Lodge. A calen­dar party is set for January.,The parish CYO and Boy

Scout troop will co-sponsor. aturkey whist in the church' hallSaturday, Dec. 3.

SANTO CHRISTO,FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenwill hold a children's Christmasparty from 2 to 4 Sunday after­noon Dec. 11 in the lowerchur~h.· Mrs. Florence Reis ischairman. A members' party willbe held at 8 Sunday night, Dec.18 at the Chanticleer, Tiverton.Mrs. Veva Cavaco is chaIrman.New officers will be elected ata meeting set for 7:39 Tuesdaynight, Dec. 13., ' .

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA,FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenwill hold a malacada breakfastand cake sale following allMasses this Sunday. The annualChristmas party is slated for7:30 Sunday night, Dec. 11 in

:the parish hall.

ST. PIUS X,SOUTH YARMOUTH: The annual Christmas bazaaris planned for 3 to 10:30 Monday,Dec. 5 in the church hall. Mrs.John F. Martin and Mrs. DennisJ. O'Connor are co-chairmen.'All parishioners are asked todonate food and other items forsale. '

ST. MARY'S 4'JATHEDRAL,'FALL RIVER: Mrs. 'James A. O'Brien, Sr.and Mrs. Frank Moriarty areco-chairmen 'of the annual

,Christmas sale to be conductedby the Women's Guild, on Fri­aay, Dec. 2 from 2' to 9 P.M. inthe school. Members will donate,to the various, booth/! which In­Clude aprons, fancy work, candy,cakes, dolls' and a mack bar.

Decisions AvailableVATICAN CITY (NC) -The

42nd volume of the decisions ofthe Sacred Roman Rota, highChurch Court, has been pub- Girls at Cape Cod's only Catholic school, St. John of Arc in Orleans, learn not onlylished by the Vatican press. The reading, writing and arithmetic, but cooking and sewing too, thanks to Mrs. Robertjudgments were handed downin 1950. According to Rota prac- Crowell, a parishioner who has set up a home economics course open to all seventh gradetice, full texts of the legal argu- girls as an extra-curricular Saturday afternoon activity. Mrs. Crowell is happy about thement are not made available to . I t oflawyers and scholars until 10, extra - currlCU ar na ure ful feeling to know that each basic sewing sitches and pro-years after, decI isions are made. 'the course. "It's a wonder- child is' there because she cedures."·

•...;. --, Next step will be pattern se-,

wants to be," lihesaid. "They are lection and use. In February thethere to learn and there's no

" discipline problem." , girls will start cooking and thenMeeting from 2:30 to 4 each Orleans mothers .can look for­

Satur,day' afternoon, the girls are ward to· some little helpers intheir kitchens.

at present wrestling with theintricacies 'of skirt· _ making. Mother of Three"They are making a gathered The mother of three childrenskirt as their first project," ex- attending St. Joan of Arc, Mrs.

. pllilined Mrs., Crowell, "and in Crowell deftly intel-weaves careth,e process theY' are learning the of, her own youngsters with

teaching. Her two 'littlest onesattended class'with her, but theirinterest is in the playground fa­cilities rather than the sewingmachines. The eldest Crowell ishappily occupied with a balletclass..

Mrs. Crowell is also part timeteacher of home economics at~rewster Elementary School.She notes that the Joan of Arc,.Girls enjoy all advantages avail-.able' to public school children.'

Page 14: 11.24.60

".

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Page 15: 11.24.60

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs, Nov. 24,1960 15

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

_Jwith. James PontoliIo, Clarence Rich and Beverly Roy. He is author 6f

. life of Christ written especially for teenagers and he travels country givingtalks and reb:eats for youth•.

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BErRA (NC) - The Bishops ofthis Portuguese East Africanprovince have petitioned PopeJohn to beatify the first mission­ary to shed his blood in thesouthern part of Africa, FatherGoncalo da Silv~ira, a Portu­guese Jesuit who was killed inIMozambique in 1561.

Bishop Sebastiao Soares deResende took the petition klRome.

Father Goncalo da Silveirawas born in 1521. He entered theSociety of Jesus and after hisordination gave missions all overPortugal.

He then left for Goa, in Porta..,guese India, where he was ape.pointed provincial of his ord~

First MartyrIn 1559 he went with two othft

Jesuits to Monomotapa, whickcomprised the present Rhodesiaand the Zambezi river basin. T_local chief or king in Mozam­bique had asked to seeChristiaamissionaries. However, after.many had been 'baptized, thechief turned against Fatherda.Silveira and he was martyred jaMarch, 1561. ..

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Education ProgramWASHINGTON (NC)-Father

Edward J. O'Donnell, S.J., presi­dent of Marquette University,Milwaukee, is among 12 edu­cators named to advise the U. S.Office of Education on its newprogram to improve qualifica­tions of high school teacherstraining to be couuselors.

Carmeli,te Priest's Norton 'Teenorama' AttractsHundreds of Attleboro Area Youngsters

By Marion UnsworthMany towns worry about teenagers loitering on street corners or speeding around in

cars, but the problem was small in the' Attleboro area last week. For three evenings morethan 350 enthusiastic boys and girls attended a "Teenorama" at St. Mary's Church,Norton. Each evening's program consisted of a talk, Benediction, and a second half-hour·talk. The attraction for the ."The difference between a psy- Urging the group'to more fre-younger set was Rev. Rich- chiatrist and a priest is that a quent visits to church, and moreard Madden, Q.C.D., a tall,· psychiatrist removes· guilt from frequent Communion, Father·good-looking Car mel i tea person that does not belong in concluded, "One of the bestpriest whom the teenagers were him, while a priest removes ways to make the world bettersoon calling "Father Richard." guilt talat does belong in him." is to bring Christ out into theN t 1 til' h 1 Speakl'ng of the blessl'ng of world with you. Don't complaino on y was, ~ c urch ful,

confessl'on he added "Be honest about the. condition of the worldbut several extra seats had to ' ,be added to accommodate the ,with the priest. Don't give un- unless you're going to do some­overflow. necel!sary details,. but don't be thing about it. Imagine what

Known throughout the country vag1Je. And, never; I beg of you, Christ in you could do in yourfor his talks to youth and his _ ~et shame. or fear cause you to classrooms,' in the stores, in yourwriting, chiefly in yotith maga- .make 'a bad confession. In the homes."zines, Father Madden is as- state 01 mortal sin, the only Fathe.r Madden, who has been,signed to St. Therese's Monas- friend you have, the only one as he terms it, "on the road" fortery, Youngstown, 0., ·but .. he whocan'reli~verouof it, uftheeightyear!l, claims he "just fellspends most of his time ,travel-' priest. " into" his work witb ·teenagers~ing from place to' .place 'Oll' "The tro'uble today .is that we HI just started, ,working, .wi,tbspeaking' engageme'nts. . . ,don't get the whole' picture, 'the. kids, then. staI:ted, writing. for

Most of his traveling is done' reality that· Christ, w·alked this. YOl,lth, ,magazines.'.' .. '. .by plane, since there is usually." earth, and breathed· ~is. air," "Although hill traveling pre':'little .time between appoint-. Father said.' ~ents 'hilll from seeing· in~st ,ofments. Tonight, for instance, he ·"1 ·question whether'yqu really' the results of his work, he keepslsspeaking in Dayton;· '0: "Now believe that 'Christ is present in 'in contact with many youngsters.I'm a member of the 100,000 mile that tabernacle. If you did, 'you The result.,.-"I've become con­club," he said laughing, "you wouldn't act as you do, talking vineed that the91d.principles ofknow, they pin buttons on you and whispering. You wouldn't the Church are right, regardlessand all that! Pretty soon· it will walk in,Jrou'd crawl into church of all this talk about the modern

h d d k " age." .be 200,000 miles." on your an s ·an pees.They're Not Devils - His writing includes two

Cardinal Dedicates - books, "Men in ,Sandals," 1955What does this priest who h' . '.... "'.CWC Add· . w lch IS now published in fivespends most of his time on youth. ..,.ew •.,. Itlon· languages, and "Father Madden'sthink of teenagers? ~'0J;1, sure," WASHINGTON (NC) - His Life of Christ," which came outhe answered,' "I like them. Eminence Francis Cardinal last June; articles for High TimeThey're certainly not angels, but Spellman, Archbishop of New Magazine, a weekly; the monthlynot devils either. They're in York, officiated here at the bless- publication of· the Nationalthere some place in the middle. ing of an addition to the head- Council of Catholic Youth' and 8Every generation measures up quarters of the National Catholic bi-weekly sermonette -put 'out bywhen it's called upon." Welfare Conference. Queen's Syndicate, a short pithy

Father Madden's talks are 'The Cardinal imparted thegeared to the age and interests bl . sermon of 300 words' published

esslllg during the meeting of in many Catholic newspapers.of his audience. "I used to give the NCWC administrative boardparish missions and retreats also, here.but now I concentrate on the The eight - story additionyounger ones," he explained. dou~led the amount of office"You can't do it alL" space for the NCWC headquar-

His success in his field is at-tel's. The former building con­tested to by his audience, which tained 38,000 square feet ofgave him its full attention space. The addition includes awhether he was making a serious private chapel.point, or telling a humorousincident.

"Everyone of you has a des­tiny to be happy," the Carmelitepriest told his Tuesday nightaudience. "That happiness canonly be destroyed by serioussin. Don't try to make any 'deals'with God. You take pretty goodcare of yourselves in other ways,for heaven's sake, provide .foryour soul as well."

Turning to the prominence ofpsychiatry today, he continued,

Carmelite TheologianTo Receive Award

DAYTON (NC) - A leadingscholar of Mariology has beennamed to receive the 10th an­nual Marianist Award of theUniversity of Dayton. '

The award, the university'shighest religious honor~ will beto Father Eamon R. Carroll, O.Carm" assistant professor ofsacred theology at the, CatholicUniversity of America, Washing­ton, D, C.

Father Carroll, a native ofChicago, won the "'lariological'Society's annual award ·last yearin recognition of his Marianscholarship.

University to HonorFormer President '

CINCINNATI (NC) - FatherCelestin J. Steiner, S.J., chan­cellor of the University ofDetroit, will receive the St.Francis Xavier Medal of XavierUniversity here on Sunday,Dec. 4.

Father Steiner, who was presi­dent of Xavier from 1940 to 1949,will be given the medal byFather Paul L. O'Connor, S.J.,Xavier president, at the annualalumni universal CommunionSunday observance. The medalis conferred each year on a per­son who exemplifies "the quali­ties that distinguished St. Fran­cis Xavier."

Father Steiner, a native ofDetroit, presided over ,the periodof Xavier's greatest growth. Heis active in professional educa~

tional organizations and civicaffairs, and has been a pioneer inthe use and development of edu­cational television.

Evening MassesTo Mark Pope's79th Birthday

UTRECHT (NC)-The Bishopsof the Netherlands have orderedthe celebration of evening Massin all the country's churches onthe 79th birthday of Pope John.,tomorrow.

A birthday collection wastaken up on last Sunday,Nov. 20, for the foundation of aninstitute in Rome for the educa­tion of lay missionaries.

The Dutch Bishops thankedGod for Pope John's reign in aletter ordering the Masses andcollection. They said: "Speak­ing in human words, we ·wouldsay that this is the Pope theChurch needs in these times. Heshows great wisdom and he un­derstands the needso four time.

"He knows the world and heloves mankind. He tries ·to findsolutions for the problems Of"today in his great and livelyfaith. He gives himself to every­body he meets, with captivatingsimplicity and with great and'endearing kindness. He neverputs himself in the foreground,but neither does he ever forgetwhat a solemn task has beeD.given to him."

Page 16: 11.24.60

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

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Mora ~ TheologyInstitute PartOf University

ROME (NC)-The HigherInstitute of Moral Theologypconducted by the Redempt­orist Fathers in Rome, hasbeen made a part of the graduatedivision of the Pontifical Lat­eran University.

The institute, called the Alfon­sian Academy in honor of St.Alphonsus Liguori, was begunthree years ago to conductgraduate courses in moral theol­ogy. It' is the first of its kind.

The Academy, which has 52full-time students and 20 part­time ones from various nations,dioceses and religious orders,was established under the au­thority of Father William Gau­dreau, C.SS.R., of Braintree,Mass., Superior General of the

, Redemptorists. Its faculty in­cludes two American Redemp­torists, Fat her s B ern a r ellHaering and Francis X. Murphy.

First in HistoryMsgr. Antonio Piolanti, recto..

of Lateran University ,announcedthe institute's inclusion amongfaculties of the university.

"It is a true and proper Insti':'tue of Moral Theology," he said,"the first of its kind in the wholehistory of the Church. Takingits inspiration from the teach­ing of St. Alphonsus Ligouri itwill enter deeply into all theproblems of moral life in theirnatural and supernatural aspecttJaccording to the need of themodern world, under the guid­ance of the teaching authorityof the Church."

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FIRST CISTERCIAN LAY LEADER: In ceremoniesin St. Ida's Conv~nt Chapel, Prairie du Sac, Wis., RoseTakacs of New York becomes Sister Mary BenedictaS.O.Cist., first American to make profession as a Cistercia~lay Sister, receiving simple vows from Bishop William P.O'Connor of Madison. Left to right are Bishop O'ConnorFather Placid Jordan, O.S.B., Sister Mary Benedicta andSister Roberta, prioress. NC Photo.

Art Students AidThe day after Thanksgiving,

store owners will remove dis­play merchandise 'from theirwindows and turn the windowsover to the Chamber of Com­merce. The chamber is assigninga different decoration team to

Jewish Merchant Brings TrueChristmas Spirit to Main Street

NORTHPORT (NC)-A Jew-' each store. The teams are madeish merc?ant is ?~inging ~e up of students from school arttrue ChrIstmas SPirit to MamStreet in this New York com-- classes and members of artmunity this year. . clubs and similar organizations.

Milton Jacobs a hardware Each team will be given a'store proprietor ;""ho heads the specific subject, with' pictureslocal Chamber of Commerce is and other help supplied by theinducing an ever-growing n~m_ clerical advisory group, and aher of businessmen to display a bu.dget for ~aterials. CashNativity scene in their store prizes are bemg donated bywindows.' local organizations.

Mr. Jacobs admits he was For the first time since mod-doubtful about the project at ern merchandising hit Mainfirst. "Few people realize how Street in Northport, the usualmuch a merchant depends upon Chris.tmas _ display. of toys,Christmas business," he said. clothmg ana luxllries will be re­And to ask him to give up his placed by scenes depicting an­street window display of mer- cient shepherds, the star ofcbandise in his best season- Bethlehem and the Infant Sav­well. I liked the idea but I was iour born in poverty..skeptical."

Mr. Jacobs approached his fel­low businessmen cautiously.When nearly all of them ex­pressed interest in the Christ­mas project, he enlisted the aidof local priests and ministersand talked the board of directorsof the Chamber of Commerceinto sponsoring the plan.

Name Heroic BritishChaplain Coadjutor

LONDON (NC)-Msgr. Thom­as Holland, private secretary toArch~ishop Gerald O'Hara, Ap­o:!'tollc Delegate to Britain hasbeen appointed Coadjutor ofPortsmouth.

Bishop-designate Holland 52won the Distinguished Se;vic~Cross for bravery when he wasa Royal Navy Chaplain duringthe D-Day landings in Norman­dy in 1944.

He . taught philosophy at theEnglish Seminary at ValladolidSpain; was port chaplain atBombay, India, and also workedin Colombo, Ceylon.-He becameArchbishop O'Hara's private sec­retary in 1956. As Coadjutor inPortsmouth, he will assumemuch of the work of ArchbishopJohn H. King, Bishop of Ports­mouth, who is 80 years old.

St. Anselm ProfessorHeads Broadcasters

DURHAM (NC)-Father Greg­ory Kelleher, a faculty memberat St. Anselm's College in Man­chester, ,has been elected presi­dent of the New Hampshire Edu­cational Broadcasting Council.

He was elected by the group atits annual meeting at the Uni­versity of New Hampshire here.

about him is discovered orthreatens to become discovered.He has fought to kill his con­science, to forget his obligations,_even his faith.

EUement of SacrificePerhaps now things will go

better for the pair. The settingis entirely new, remote fromthe past and among strangerswho gradually accept the new­comers as friends.

But Laura has changed. Herbravado is gone, and her cyni­cism. Paradoxically, there is anelement of sacrifice in her lifewhich has been altogether mis­Ding in the past. .

She has been the instrumentof this man's fall; she also playsa major part in his return tograce. How this is worked outis the author's to tell, not th~reviewer's. Suffice it to say ,thatthe development of this part ofthe narrative is credible, as isthe denouement.

Dellcate SubjectThe subject, as has been said,

is delicate, extremely so. Thereare people who would wish itleft untouched. It is not, how­ever, beyond the bounds ofproper discussion or. art i s tictreatment. It has been put toleering or tawdry uses in otherbooks, but not in this one.

The point is that FatherMundy's failure, as it takes himyears and agony to learn is onein love. To his priesth~od hehas brought high and rare gifts,but these are like a fine. settinglacking the jewel for which itwas made, since love is missing.

He is betrayed by passionthen driven to utter dI-sloyalt;by unrecognized pride. It is onlywhen he is beaten flat that theactuality, operation, and disci­pline of love are grasped byhim and he can get up andreturn to his Father's house.

Moves EvenlyMi!l!l Cooper presents this

deftly. She could easily havebotched it, but has somehowavoided every possible falsemove. The story moves evenlywith a d m ira b I y controlled

'forcefulness. The writing issmooth and spare. .

There are' accents reminiscentof Graham Greene, but they donot serve, as does imitation ofGreene by other novelists toremind one how far f~omGreene's mastery is the workin hand.

For a contest to turn up abook of the quality of MissCooper's is very unusual. Itseems that a career _of consid­erable importance has beenlaunched; its advance will beexpected with great interest byreaders of 'No Little Thing.'

New Bedford SerraA holy hour, sponsored by the

Serra Club of New Bedford, willbe held at 3 Sunday afternoon,Nov. 27, at St. John the BaptistChurch. Speaker will be Rt. Rev.Msgr. John A. Silvia. All areinvited to join the Serrans intheir petition for an increase inftligious vocations.

Cooper's 'No Little Thing'Is Catholic Award Winner

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. KennedyElizabeth Ann Cooper's first novel 'No Little Thing'

(Doubleday. $3.95) is the winner of the Doubleday CatholicPrize fiction award for 1960. It is not a great work of art,but it is a genuine one. It treats a delicate subject incisivelyyet tactfully. That it is afirst book and by a youngwoman is surprising, such isthe maturity, even wisdom,which marks it, and such itDtechnical excellence. It is thestory of FatherMichael Mundy,five years or­dained whenwe meet him,the only childof parents withintellec­tual and artis­~ i c interests.His father isdead. His firstappoint­ment was in aWlall town; hefound the pastor there uncon­lIenIal and critical of what heconsidered the curate's intem­perate zeal. Now Father Mundyis station.ed in the city.

Tbe parish is old, run down,poor. The pastor is old, too, butkindly and patient; he appre­dates Father Mundy's excel­lence and sympathizes with hissense of frustration. The seniorcurate, in early middle age, isquietly efficient, not a creatureof moods as Father Mundy is.

Motions of ReligionEverything about the parish

depresses the young man. Thepeople he finds dull and unre­sponsive, going through the mo­tions of religion for a half-hourOIl Sunday, but not living thereality. The parish organizationshe considers monuments of fu­tility.

He is vexed by what he con­alders his own complete inef­fectiveness. He seeks in a prayeran answer to his difficulties andIrtrength for his burdens, butfrom it he gets no satisfaction.

It is so circumstanced that hefirst meets Laura Dunne, 24, aainger in cheap night clubs.Laura, despondent, has attempt­ed suicide; were it not for thepriest's chancing upon her, theattempt would have succeeded.He saves her life, checks onher recovery.

Test CaseShe should be a Catholic, hut

boasts of having given up reli­gion as a fraud. She has had ahard time making a living, huthas greedily enjoyed the life ofthe senses.

The despair which led to hertry at suicide clears away, andabe scornfully informs the priestthat she proposes to go herJOdless way unchanged.

He determines to win her backto the practice of the Faith. HeRes her periodically, but themeetings always become angrydashes. His failure to influenceher sharpens his feeling of fail­ure, and he becomes obsessedwih the idea that this is a testcase for him.

Blind to DangerIt is, but not in the way that

he believes. Although his pas­tor has discerned and feared thedanger in the situation, FatherMundy has been wholly blind toIt. Suddenly he turns to Lauraas a woman, for comfort. Hard­ly has he sinned when remorseburns' and scourges him. Hepledges that he will never seeher again.

But some time later she in­forms him that she is to have achild-his child. He runs awaywith her.

Alter an interval of five1ears, we meet them again, liv­ing as man and wife, and bring­ing up their daughter, in theSouthwest. Theirs has been afugitive existence, sending themfrom place to place as the truth

-

Page 18: 11.24.60

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Continued from Page OneA legion spokesman said con­

cern over the rise in objection­able movie fare has promptedpreparation of a special state­ment. It will be released Novem­ber 30, he said.

The legion said 66 U. S. filmswere family fare, P.-1; 47 weremorally unobjectionable foradults and' adolescents, A-2; 51were morally unobjectionablefor adults, A-3; 3 were con­demned and 1 was separatelyclassified.

Of the 53 foreign films it in­spected, the legion rated 14 asA-I; 8 as A-2; 16 as A-3; 10 as"B"; and 5 as condemned.

Annual ReportThe summary of the legion's

activities was contained in theannual report of the Bishops'Committee on Motion. Pictures,Radio and Television, headed byBishop James J. McNulty ofPaterson, N. J. The report waspresented to the U. S, Bishops attheir annual meeting here.

The term of Bishop John KingMussi of Steubenville as a,mem­ber of the Bishops' Committeeended this year. He has beensucceeded by Auxiliary BishopJohn A. Donovan of Detroit.

Bishop .Donovan will servealso as episcopal moderator 'ofthe Catholic Broadcasters' Asso­ciation, a post held by BishopMussio. .

The committee's report praisedsteps being taken in some Catit:..olic circles toward training infilm' appreciation.

Praise was given "the workwhich has been done in 'theArchdiocese of Chicago by theAdult Education Centers, theSummer Institute for Teachersoil Motion Picture Education atLoyola University of Chicago,and a similar project which wasinstituted during the Summerfor high school students in theArchdiocese of Newark,"

"These initiatives in the studyof the film can in time producegreater Catholic influence bothi':l film making and in filmexhibition," the report stated.

Young RedsNEW ORLEANS (NC) -One

out of every ·three of the chil­dren born today is bound to DeCommunist-bred, Douglas Hyde,former communist, said on theforum of Loyola University ofthe South here.

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Responsibilitythat George Washington warnedthe American people they shouldindulge with caution the sup­position that national moralitycould exist without religion.

·A fresh evocation of the prin­ciple .and practice of personalresponsibility can revivify oursociety and help to stem theseemingly inexorable marchtoward the automation of humanbeings and the steady loss of thatfreedom which is man's distinc­tive attribute," the statementsaid.

Cure InertiaIt will cure the mental Iet~­

argy and inertia :which permitorganizati<;ms to usurp, mainlyby default" the rights of theirmembers. It will stimulate a self­reliance· which will automatical­ly restore the balance betweenfreedom and security. It will re­ject unwarranted pressure fromg~OUPS that seek unjustly toaggrandize their power and willrestrict them to their lawfulends: It will see' in all busi­ness ventures of whatever size amea~s of serving' others as wellas self. It will hav'e an immediateeffect in every sphere or life­'in the home, in the office, aswell as in the 'workshop, in thefactory, 'iri our schools, in ourcultutal groups.". .

.Individual Person. 'The Bishops .said that 3n.effective' 'respOrise to the call forpersonal responsibility need not.~wait ·for. ~ masS moveme!1t, but"belongs to the individual person...They 'added:: "Such a response,'by a 'representative' number,''given 0I1ly in' the silent sanctu­ary of. the, heart; will begin' tohave' its' ,lea'vening eff.ect.' Ourappeal for action is made direct­ly to our Catholic f~llow-ciU­zens, but, it reaches' ouf also, toall American-sA who face the same

.problems as our~elve.s,"".. ,' ..

English ','Minister'VATICAN CITY. (NC)-Brit­

ain's new minister to the' HolySee, ,Sir Peter Scarlett, presentedhis credentiahi 'to" His HolinessPope . John .x*m, L'ike' ~U1predecessor, he, is ProtestanL

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CONGRATULATE CHAMPS,:' At testimonial for St.Patrick's, Fall, River, baseball team, intermediate CYODiocesan champions, are, left to right, Richard Michalewick,captain, Bill Monbouquette of the Boston Red Sox, John"Fus" Kenyon, coach, and Bishop Connolly.

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18

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

the CGtho~oe OlMl America

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By Rev. Peter J. Rahill, Ph.D.. ~ With periodic regularity but with ever lessening ·viru­·lence, a flaming rash of anti-Catholicism has disfigured theusually benign countenance of Uncle Sam. From the out­break of the War between the' States his urbanity hadbeen almost undisturbed. .will -render it necessary to re-Then in the 1890's a splotch move or crowd out the Americanbeca1l!e ever more livid until heretics who are now em­almost all of his face was ployed." In the hard times thisdistorted. Why? In the three- imposture· callously increasedquarters of a century 'which has the fears of those out of work orpassed since in danger of losing their jobs.

, that canker More outlandish - and morereceded from widely believed-was a bogusUncle Sam's encyclical letter of Pope Leoface, an an- XIII, supposedly dated Christ-awer to the mas, 1891. First published byquestion has Traynor in his Detroit Patrioticbeen. sought. American, this false papal let-Catholic suc- ter absolved Catholics from anycess with the 'loyalty to the l,Jnited States andIndians de- instructed them "to exterminate .spite the ob- all heretics" on Sept. 5. Not onlys t a c 1e s of did every A.P.A. newspaper re- A D IGrant's Peace print the forgery, but it was '<l:~®lPt, IIelrsonaPolicy, the III Plenary Council, broadcast even wider by hand- Continued from Page One

'and 'the first Apostolic Delegate, bills and leaflets. agement and labor," the Bishops'to the, United States 'have been The mayor of Toledo bought a said. ''suggested as irritants. 'Winchester rifle to repel the in- Cynical Reaction '

More proximate to the out-· va'sion, but the panic was great- "Among the evident instances:break of the sore was the fourth est among Midwestern farmers cif the breakdown of personalcentennial of the discoVery' of who had never known any of· responsibility most deplorable'America by Columbus. To those the faithful. When the date lias been the widespread cynicalwho had accepted the -laiTh. of a passed with no disturbance of reaction' to the recent revelationeomplete Protestant heritage any kind' by Catholics, the 'of dishonesty, 'waste and mal­

'without ever consulting history, A.P.A. press' lied that it had feasance in industrial relations.":'that Columbus and his sponsor, .been written by a Jesuit in order' Personal responsibility and in-Queen' Isabella, were' Catholics to 'discredit their organization. itiative have been characteristics'was a dismaying shock. 'A.P.A. Belt' of this nation, the Bishops said,

If all this was false, there' wasSeven Founders but "pressures are growing for a .Forweal or woe; organization no question as to the increase constantly greater reliance on

11II necessary. Unfortunately for' in strength of the American the collectivity rather than on·the Church a group was waiting ·Protective Association,' Though the individual." The tendency

large councils were in Boston 'in. the wings of the American and in San Francisco, the A:':P.A. to delegate excessive responsi­stage for its cue. This newcomer, bility to an organization is dis­ihe American Protective Asso- was strongest in the Midwest. cernible in international affairs,c:iation, was spawned in 1887 at In fact, newspapers of the time the Bishops said. Many citizensthe railroad junction of Clinton, called. the' area from Ohio seem to feel that mere adherenceIowa. With six others a 60-year- ,through Kansas and Nebraska to the United Nations absolvesold lawyer named Henry T. "the A.P.A Belt."' the nation from further responsi­Bowers fathered the A.P.A., as In 1895 President Traynor bility in the international order,the organization was familiarly boasted of 2,500,000 members. they added:known throughout its' life. 'Most students of the movement Same Root Cause

'. Of the' seven founders, two believe his claim was highlye gg t d B t f · l' "However varied the abovehad no religion, while the o'the,r xa era e. u no Ina an-S er C n b g' e f r ' mentioned ·evils, ranging fromfive were divided among as w a e IV n, 0 secrecy

; Diany different Protestant sects. was one ,of the inducements for the single act of wrongdoing to. LAn ardent Mason himself, many joining.. the moral laxity of the mass

· , 'BI"sIIO'P' 'McNamara mind, the root caus.e is. the same',Bowers drew heavily on that . .O f th f t tb k -the reJ' ection of person~l re-i order for the regalia and initia-' ne 0 e requen ou rea s

i tion he devised for·the A.P.A. .'brought on by lectures given by sponsibility," the statement said.· alleged ex-priests and nuns oc- personal responsibility re,-i,~oreover.,. the Masons were a ' . "f d l'b t· b .curred in Kansas City, Missouri, qUires ree an de I era eac-Lfertile source of new mem ers in 1894. j, V.·McNamara called ceptance of one's obligation in!'or: Of. alli~;hiSkey Bill' "'liifuself "Bishop". and ~a(r ~'loil'g that position he' oc~upies"":"inI " . ' 'record of involvement in riots "Ule family, in the ch,urch, in,the'! After' siJ!: years of slow growth ., ." . ,Iii as far east as New York . 'corporation, in the labor union,I 'un er Bowers, the A.P.A. ac- As his' wife sold tickets ;fora'· ':"in ~I;te community, i~ the nation,j,quired a new pre~ident in Wil... . Sunday night 'lecture,' a' .pistol· iri-the 'fanlily of nations," the',.liam J. H. 'fray.nor. A former B' h 'd' was prominently dispiayed con IS ops sal . ,1:S!lloon .keeper,. Traynor,' .was. the- table . beside her. \vh'en "As a people. we seem to be: quickly tagged "Whiskey Bill," ,!'and it is true that he did inject "Bishop" McNamara appeared' moving 'more deeply into a .s~n..;!,Dew. spirit in the organiz'ation·. on' the 'platfornl he carried are';' . sate culture," the statementI In Canada and later in Michi- volver and a Winchester rifle. " continued. "There ·is an. exces,.

I . ' After two hours and more of ': sive pre()ccupa.tio·n' with ma­;gan ,Traynor had' published anti- abuse of the, Church,. and local' .ferial security a,t the expense of

I 'Cat~olic, newspap.ers. PrQbably Cath'olics by 'M~Namara a sto~e" spiritual weU,,:oeing. Uniformity·his experience had much ·to do . . . .. ,

, '. landed on,the·stage. Later it was' of thought and supine loyaltyliwith the increase in' A.P.A. .. h th ·tj;"scaridal sh:eets," which by the charged that a cohort of Mc- "to the 'orgamzat!<:>n, weer 1 .· , Namara· .had· dropped ..the rock 'be' the industrial corporation,i;follq",:ing year numbered at least in order to promote customers the labor union; or the political:,; 'TOF"'als'e .. ,.., -.. -the for 'a second lecture the follow- party; are too often encouraged

,charges against d d d Th ' .', I. Churc,h and her members ha'd ·ing Tuesday. , , . an rewar e. ,e orgamza-

· been .. characteristic . of '.every '. Though the secon<t perform- . :tional man, cloaked in a sort Of, ' , , ,'ancewas 'Dillen "Foi<Men Oniy" anonymity,rather than the re­'American anti-Catholic move- ", . . 1 . d"d I . f ed,men·t. The allegations .often- all ~omen'who had the price of sporislb e In IVI ua, IS' avor.; times were ridiculous; still they admission 'were allowed' in the: and advanced." '· ieerltingly originate(i from lack hall. McNamara la'unciled. an ' Moral Causes,~f 'knowledge rather than.'kno',V·n ,',attack .I!All :ofobsce.nity:ani!, filth' ,'~If '':He ,'~re tq r~~tore man tolies.! " ...' ... :: ':., ~m .the ve~erableBlshqp o.f Kan- :. his sense"of .personal responsi-

No such extenuation could I:)e s~s City and two .pri.~sts, one of: oil,ity an<f tq tile ,acceptance ofmade of the literature of tlte'Vhom succeeded as 9lshop,some .life as a mission,'!' the statement~89Q's. T:wo blatarit' forgeries ,y!'!ars lateI;'.. ,::., ,,;'. . " continued; "we must understandwere propa'gated on a. national'·,The Kansa,s. City .. Star ac- more clearly the moral cauSesscalcaitd for a time ·did 'great, no.w\edged .that M;cNamara's lan.- which have. u'nderrnincd men'sharril to the Church. The United .guage !=oul~ qot be printed. For responsibility.".States being' plagued.' by: -the' the: riot which broke ,out.the , "First among these ·causes has.Panic of 1893, the A.P.A.' 'pub.:. newspaper. headline was ."He been the marked decline in the ..lished : "Instructions to '. Catllo~: b!lrely escape,9' alive.", ,force· of religious convictions,"lics'~' supposedly ,signed by lead~.. Next Week: Catholic Editors, the Bishops said. They recalleding members of the hierarchy. 'Expose AP.A. Membership~ .!""'"_.... ;... ~

This spurious document said.' that jobs were needed, to sup-,!:·port a mythical army, and "this:.

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NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

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Newark eyO HonorsAnti-Smut Worker

JERSEY CITY (NC)-A dOOo>tor active in the campai,.against indecent literature w.given the top award of the New­ark Archdiocesan Council ..Catholic Youth. '

Dr. Matthew C. McCue fIfElizabeth, first chairman of theUnion County Citizens' Coopera­tive for Decent Literature, J'&.­

cei~ed the council's Pro Deo etJuventute (For God and Youtb~

Medal. The medal is awardee!annually to a layman for ou$..standing youth service work.

Church L~§es fPeii'rnroitfor Spedgl M~;~;Irn\fJ "

BURLINGTON (NC) - TheSouth Burlington Church ciChrist has lost its permit to senGlmail at the special low rate f~

non-profit institutions.Postmaster John J. Burns SQid

he revoked the permit because. the church had mailed out mate­rial which was "actually polit­ical" rather than religious. .'

lttE ANCHO~-

Thurs., Nov. 24. 1960

Priest ~o DeliverTalks ~rrn Jews

WEST SPRINGFIELD (NC)­He's known as "Rabbi" Dono­van in some circles, but actuallyhe's a Passionist priest.

The niCkname stems fromdedication to the cause of betterrelations between Catholic andJews possessed by Father VictOl'

. J. Donovap, C.P. Now he'llscheduled for a series of ad­dresses on the Hour of the Cruci­fied radio program on his favor.:.ite topic, "Judaism and theCatholic Church."

Father Donovan's series winbegin November 27. His topicwill be "Pope John XXIII andthe Jews." His other talks arescheduled for December 4, Uand 18.

A native of Randolph, Mass.who was ordained in 1936,Father Donovan was given the1960 Edith Stein Guild AwardOctober 15. The award is madeannually to a person for promot­ing better understanding be­tween Christians and J eWIl.

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The Hilltoppers are 6-1 on theseason; New Bedford has a 4-3record. The Crimson took lastyear's gatr..e handily, 42-0.

In other games around the cir­cuit, Fairhaven will be at Dart­mouth in a BCL encounter; Fox­boro travels to Mansfield andBarnstable will host Falmouthin the Cape's only game of theday. Coach .Ial Conforth's Bluecan pull even on the season witha victory over Dartmouth. TheGreen, however, have taken twoof their last three ball games, thelatest and 18-6 :erdict over NewBedford Vocational.

Foxboro is indeed going intothe Hornet's nest at Mansfield.The 1959 Class D State cham­pions were upset by North Attle­boro the last time out arid Gen­tili and Co. are apt to be in avengeful frame of mind. CoachAI Stuart's Foxboro eleven ex­tended Bill Parson's club lastyear before dropping a 14-6 TESTIMONIAL BANQUET: At testimonal banquet fordecision. Such is the nature of Edward J. Lowney, retiring basketball coach of Holy Familythese traditional games that past High Sch~l, New Bedford; are, left to right, Mr. Lowney,records prove more misleading Atty. Ferdmand B. Sowa, president of New Bedford Touch­than helpful in Ute final analy-sis. down Club, and Rev. John F. Hogan, principal speaker..' We trust that good weather -will set the stage for the SChool Seminary Recto.r Calls for Newspectacles 'which will be at-tended by thousands of partiSa'n Frontier in Fostering Vocationsfans working up an appetite ~Qr' , " NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Par- .the Jsumptuous turkey repast to rector of St. Joseph's Mina!'follow. Everyone can't win. To cnts who discourage their chil- Se.minary in St. Benedict, La.,tbe victors, plaudits; io . the dren from religious vocations saId too many parents opposelosers, there's always next year. are "picketing <!le vineyard elf their son's wishes to enter minor

the Lord," a seminary rector ·seminaries. He spoke before. Holy Cross-B. C. . said here. 1,200 persons at the annual

The final intercollegiate gam- . Father Anthony Tassin, O.S.~., luncheon of the Council of Cath-bit in these environs is set for . olic School Co()perative Clubs.Saturday at Alumni Stadium, Cites Importcuice He said that when parentsChestnut Hill where those two .ask their children to delay theirancient Jesuit rivals, Holy Cross Of Obedience vocation decisions until afterand Boston College, will collide NEW YORK (NC)-"Readi- graduation from high school,head-on. Both enjoyed sUC::cess- ness to obey" is the key to re- the children lose their desireluI outings last Saturday, Holy sponsible adulthood, Catholic for religious life.Cross downing Connecticut, 30-6 young people were told here. Too Many Partiesand Doston College coming An . _ Father Tassin also said thatthrough with a stunning 25-14 d "m the measure that itsupset over highly-touted Clem- youth is lacking in a sense of there are too many popularitr

r'e' 'pons'b'l'ty to th t t t' contests, too many May queensson. The victory was the third in' s 1 11, a ex en III

Am · k d" M J h competing with the Blessed Vir-as many weeks for the Ea'gle's enca wea ene, sgr. 0 n .

P B h .. 1 f C d' I g.in, and too many parties. .. who have lost five and' tied on~. '. re eny, prmClpa 0 ar maSp'ellma' High S h l'd "We have failed to give proper. Sparkl'ng the B. C. team w'a's n c 00, sal .. . , . . challe.nge to Catholic youtb~"soph.o,m.ore ha,lfb.ack Joh!'1' 'Jan,',s He said many qualities' 'help th B d' i\l'ihO rainbled .61 yards with;n make a person mature, "but for "';e n:; ;c~t~o~~i~~~;::~~in~ercepted 'pass' early in the y,oong people especially there' 'is to cry out in the welter of Mardifirst q~~rter,to start the scori~g pne .quality that cuts acrosS most Gras." . . .,P,araq,e.. Before' the half ..was others~ separating the, responsib1e ,He called for. a "new frontie~"o'verthe E~gl~s had rackec:l. UP :from the irresponsible,ancl that ,in the promotion of religious,s" 25-1> l~ad which. they' weJe :is a ~eadiness to obey." ., . vocations among young men andcontent to "'rotect over the 're- ':.': "tJnless we learn to obey,' we .women in: the 1960s, and a sys­Dilli~i,ng distance. Aiding, and •shalf'. never, become responsible ,tematic program of spiritualabet~i~g the strong running ·.,~erspns," he told young people ':formation of Catholic youth ,inJa.nas was' ano'ther sophom"0're, at a ceremony in St. Patrick's th h th til d f"1, cathedral. . '" e . ome a nc u es a~1 y'fullback Harry. Crump, who la'st , " , devotions.

::~s~re the B. U. frontier to Consecration Jan. 4'Starting at left guard for B'. C. DENVER (NC) - Auxiliary

and playing a whale of a game Bishop-designate David M. Ma­until shaken up on a punt return loney of Denver will be conSe";late· in the fourth quarter 'W8scrated here on Wednesday, Jan.Coyle's Dave Yelle. Dave, .All- -4,. by Archbishop Egidio Vag- ),Diocesan in 1957, is another of,nozzi, Apostolic Delegate to theCoach HeHerle's scintillating .United· States. CQconsecratorsSoph~mores ~om.whom .a "r~at ,will, be .Archbishop· ,urban ".j..de~l IS ,expected In the en~mg , ,Vehr of Denver and BiShop ~~­two seasons.' , ' . ,. bed M. Newell. of Cheyenn~.

·."HolYCro~, 5-4 on the' Sea~n:rheceremonywill take place.also .has Ii potent sOphomore 10 the Cathedral of the Immacu,­brigade hearted by quarterback ,late· Conception.Pat McCarthy of Lawrence; fUil- t""'----------..........~back ':(OI~l Hennessey of Brook­line ~d. ,epd,Bob..Hargraves ofFall River..Bobwas a unanimous

, choice on The Anchor's 1958 AII­. Diocesan 'eJeve~; .... / ....

Reds Jn~'h, ForwG.rdAt Ite:-Iy.~~ Polls>

ROME.·(NC).....,;Italy's .Catholic­oriented -: Chr'istiaft-, ''Democraticparty sUffer~(t slight" losses and­the leftist'iP.artiEfs'·tscored small '--------....;,---~gains in nationwide electionsfor local and provincial'offices.

The Christian Democrats, stillthe nation's largest party, won .;.~.3 per . cent 0.£ the' approxi­mately 32 million votes cast in .,the elections.. ~n the 1958 par­liamentary eleCtion they got 41.2per cent of the votes. .

The communists and leftwingsocialists together polled 38.9per cent of the votes, comparedwith 35.9 per cent in 1958. TheCommunist party alone won 24.5per cent of the vote, 2.7 percent more than two years ago.

Capacity l~rong PresentAt Lowney Te$timonial

By Jack KineavyA capacity turnout was on hand last Sunday night at

Gaudette's Pavilion in Acushnet where the popular EdLowney, former Holy Family mentor, was tendered a tes­timonial on the occasion of his retirement from the coachingranks. Featured speaker ofthe evening was AmericanLeague umpire Bob Stewartof Canton. In attendance atthe fete was a host of sportsfigures representing all sectionsof SoutheasternMass. and in­cluding coaches,officials andathletic direc­tors with ·whomthe genial Irish­man had comein contact dur­ing his elevenhighly produc­tive years atthe Holy Fam­ily helm. The affair was underthe sponsorship of the Touch­down Club of New Bedford andwas emceed by AttorneY FredSowa, chairman of the dinnercommittee.

The curtain will be rungon the 1960 schoolboy footballseason today when a host oftraditional games are scheduledto be played throughout the areaand the State. Aside from tbeintense rivalries, a great dealhinges' on .the outcomes of ,sev­eral contests.

State TUleA victory for Coyle over

Taunton will give the Warriorstheir second successive· Class Ctitle, a feat which if not unprec­edented is, fo be sure, uncOm­mon. Attleboro, at home, toNorth, has a shot at a tie withDurfee for Bristol County League~onors if it can get past, theRocketeers. The Hilltoppers,their BCL slate completed, com­piled a fine 6-1 mark in leagueplay.

Wareham can cinch the Tri­County diadem with a holldayvictory over Bourne which has,yet to comE' up with its firstConference victory. Coach FrankAlmt:ida's club will take an un­blemished 5-0 league record intoth~ game which is also expectedto have a bearing on the deter­mination of the Conference;si'ndivlliual s: 0 r i n g' leader.Dighton's Merrill Pidgeon is thecurrent pacesetter with 50 points

'and his season concluded. LenLopes, Wareham's bread andbutter runner, bas 46. .

It would .·.ke a Wareham de­feat and a Somerset victory overCase to boost the, defending

, champion Raiders into a title ~.with' Wareham. The initial-phaseof,' this ' condition is :consideredmost improbable. CaSe, on theother hand, coming· on strongafter a weak start, :can move.into a second piace deadlockwith Somerset if victorious to-

.morrow; . , " ..

Darfee-New Bedford': Prestige lnd persqnal pride'are the factors at stake in ttkDurfee;-New Bedfor4 :game. TheCJlilltoppers. under' Don Montlellave surprised even their moM:ardent at..mirers with the brand.of football they've' shown this.year. New Bedford, on the otherhand, considered a real threa.t

.for Class B honors in pre-season:.analysis, . feU victiM to the1njury jinx in transmitting the

·most ambitious, grid schedule·iltteDlpted by an area school illyears.. Durfee, led by its great half­back Lee Woltman, is reportedto be in fioe. physical shape forUte Crimson who ire' hopeful of'having co-captain Bob Lyonnais,'injured' in th/ Malden Catholic.

· game, back on the firing line.

Physic.ia"s to Hear:Value of Sports, SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-Tbe.value of sports will be diScussed .,by Victor DiFilippo, chairman ofthe physical education depart­'ment at Seton Hall University;

· in two papers at the AmericanMedical Association's nationalconvention in Washington begin­ning November 26. His topicswill be "The Education Aspect 01.Sports," and "The Place of Com-

, bat Sports in the Physical Ed\&­cation Program."

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His Emi'nenceAlbed .Cardinal. Meyer, archbishop of. Chi... ,;'C~go;, offjdates at. co~nerstone cet:emonies '. du.ring~ the·.blessingof .the new' SQcial'denft~r'; iower left; His Eminence ..:Rjchard ,Cardinal .Cushing; ~rchbish9P! ,of:BostOii; '~seji ~:'":trowel and· cement· on the '·~or:nerstoi1e of Conaty Hall; andlowerrighf, Jlis'~Emi:rienceFraricisCardinal Spellman, Arch.::.·bi~hop.ofNew York; blesses' addition to 'CaldYvell Hall.w-her., 'Jhe: b,ishQps' hoid': their· aimual meetings; oNC Photo. . -.-' .

. SUCCESSOR TO.· LOUGHLIN .CHEVROU~T. . . ..- -, ~ .- .. ". '. .,

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Sea Sts.Tel. HY 81

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OIL COMPA'NY

SHELLHEATING OILS

South, •Hyannis

THE:f\NCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-jhur~, Nov. 24, 1960·20'Many Graduate',Degyees Makec. Uo UW"ilD~Me

'WASHINGTON .(NC)~hen four American Card­

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

Ten~chool~

, The university is located on a·140-acre campus 'in the ·.northeast,section of Washington. It 'has 10:different schools, and these havenumerous departments. Its fac­

:ulty of 464 instructs a st.ud~nt

·body of 4,400,. including, 1,050.priests, Brothers and seminar­.ians, 328 Sister:s, 1,758 laymenand 1,264 laywomen. ,

· The university places heavyemphasis on graduate wo~k. The~ration at the June, 1960, com-mencement of more than two­thll'ds graduate and professionaldegrees to less than' one-third'undergraduate degrees is held tobe unique'among all the univer­sities of America."

Eminent AlumniThe school's m~re than 19,000

'living alumni include some 55.members of the Hierarchy in theeontinental U. S.; 150 teachers irt50 major seminaries. and curiae

'throughout the country; 40'presidents of institutions ofhigher learning; hundreds' of

. trained librarians employed invarious types of libraries; morethan .75 directors and assistantdirectors of Catholic charities;

· many L.undreds of priests, Broth-·ers and Sisters staffing patholic..·elementary and· high schools, .. . .. '.colle'ges teacher-training insti'-' . UNIVERSITY BUJLDING8 BLESSED .BY CARD- .tutes, ~tc·,;· and. thousands' of . INALS:· .The 'fo~rCardihaI8: of. the Catholic Church inprie§t~ .. Some 700ed.ucati()mIJ iri- ~ the. United States: indiv:i~~ajlyblessed.four newbuildingg.stitutions throughout thecoun-' '.' on the Catholic ·l:J.iliversity .of' A~erica campus d.uri'ng· try are 'affiiiatedwith the uni";·versity.,-' ..,. .... :the annual Bishops' Meeting in Washington, D.G. Upper

. ' ,New Buildbigs' : left, his: Eminence "James Francis: .CardinaIMclntyre,· ,Ttleir'EminencesFtancis"yar,':' A~chbishop of Los, Angeles,b,lesses a crucIfix in· the·, new

dinal Spellman, Ar:chpishop of <wings .0f... John.K.. Mullen; Me·moria.,.! Library,jupper right,•New York;' James FranCis ·Car-'dinal McIntyre, Archbishop of ..

.'~~:h~;;el:sdh~~~~~dofca~~~~~~ ,O~dina:ry~' ~equests Support' for .C(J~holic University'~r~hb~~ot;Jtof C~~f.df:~,·b~~~:~: . :Continued from p:a~~:'orie " .to Catholic educational· ideals. .leaders in the fields of education,. .. "It .is .good to see thfs .devel':'

,Bishop Co~;;olly's: ,statement '!This is not a mere 'matter of .sociology and ecclesiastical ad- ,opment and' to 'knowthat _w, ~I"espe<;tively: a new south wing ,urging, suppori,~f tQe~ollection, .giving. to . build"a parochial ministrative ~ork. " ... have had some part in sustaininl . ,· to Caldwell Hall, two new wings .' . - ., ., . th t" . ' , . , . . ',. . " r.·,·.

· . f M 'II" L'b· .. C:·, ty' Hal'l' .. for the lllstttutlOn·m eina lOn s.. school or even a high school. The "Just· now ,the University. "is 'it.. " . . ...o· u "n I rary, ona ,,',..,. ' ' . . , ,. . , ' .a' new --dormitory :''£01''· lay~eil:;·· c.apltal, .sa.ld:i >'., ' •.•. ,.',,, ":. 8atholicUniversity· Js the key- .:undergoing a .considerable- pro:' ' ,'''So·, we~ ,urge one and' ali to: .and a'new social ceil.ter~· .... , ',: "Eyery· year, :,throughout· t~e " stone in our whole 'ilational '.gram ,of: expansion .marked ·.this . be· consistent- iJisup'porting: the '., .

, '..These improvements' ,'giye tlie' .whole ,"Ynit~d ~ States, .Cathohc .educationaf system> From:. the year by the dedication of, four' cause' of CaUiolic .education-.oll:univel'liity "a-sheiCca'pilCitf 'for m~~.al1d womell.giv.~ ~ener~usly . ·hal.owed walls Ofthisinstitu:' :new buildings: -, .. .. ;S,undaY; NO\rember ·27th.":', .:

'800,000·' books, expand gre'atly ,~~tipport oUl; C.athohc. trBrver:- ,·tion 'have 'come thousari.ds of 1~~'~"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~~~~~~~the opportunity for. social" f~nc- ,sity. Next Sund~y, the flrs~ ~un-. ~.r~ · .. · · "

,tions for faculty and *ldents, .d~r ,of, A~vent! IS the traditional .. ·Prevost.. ·.Fac~.lt.y. ',. 'IN· N·EW·, B'ED'.'F·O'.'RD -IT·"S·'pr9vide living quarters.for Jrlore day for such gIfts to be collecte~. I'lay students and provide addi- "The Fall River Diocese has an ' Continued From Page One,tional facilities for priest- grad- 'outstanding record over the.past. .·Bonneau, pastor, celebrated Massuate students. . " We trust that there will be a and preached. Congregatiol1al· . continued expression of devotion ,singing was by the student body'K of C Defamer.' GetS , , , . of Prevost High SchooL

..Suspended S~ntence· N~w. Church HC?nor~ Previously the entire faculty, OPELOUSAS (N.C)-'- A 'man' ,VIchms- of- NaZism of the high school,· accompanied'who apologizedpubiicly for cir-", ..BERLIN," (NC)-Julius Car- by' a delegation from the'Prevost~ulating the 'bogus Knr'ghts of ,.' dinal Doepfner·'has laid, the ·cor- Alumn! Association,'· attended

. 'ColOmbus ,oath gotof£h~rewith nei'storie" of' Queen of .Martyrs ,ceremonies marking ·the aimi-· 'a reprimand' from a' Jiidge,···· <.... -···Churcn, "oeinjf built "here-to versary at .theprovincialhouse

. Robert Tyson ·of Ray"ife:; LIt, .' co·m'mer:ii.6riite 'victims of·nazism.· of,thecommunity in' Alfred, Me.pleaded gui,lty to··.a<charge of" ' Thousands,of· persons watched,defaming the K.· of C. by c"ircu- 'as· the· Bishop .of ·Berlin per.:.lating the ·Ollth. But'because \le·formedthe ceremony 'at· a site

. apologized publiCly for 'his ,a<:-', "near Ploetzensee· prison, ·wheretion, District Judge Nolan Mocisa, many of the ,Hitler regime's vic- .suspended a' sentence of a year . tim·s'· were executed. Presentin jail and a $3,000 fine, depen- were Hedwig Klausener; widowdent. upon Tyson's good be- ~ of the first Catholic killed byhavior. nazis in Berlin, and the city's

"It is with great regret that Catholic mayor, Franz Amrehn.I face an AmeriCan citiien, en- The church is being erected inriched with all that this great fulfillment of a vow made byeountry can give him, who has participants in the 1958 Germanthought so little of 'its people, so Catholic Congress here. All Ger-

, as to risk its safety ·and sanity in . man dioceses have ·contributeddefamation.",. Judge Moosa said•. toward its constrl1ctio~,·

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