07.28.60

20
Catholics in America Page Eighteen Coyle Staff HasChanges Brother Ephrem O'Dwyer, C.S.C., provincial of the E ast ern :{)rovince of The Brothers of Holy Cross, has announced changes affecting five members of the Coyle High School faculty, Taunton. Brother Richard MacDonald, senior English teachCl' and direc- tor of Studies for the past four years, has been assigned to the Brothers of Holy Cross Junior- ate at Valatie, N. Y. While at Coyle, he was moderator of the Coyle Student Theater and orig. ina tor of the Coyle Honor Night. Brother John Kuchenbrod of the Science and Mechanical Drawing department, will teach . at the Notre Dame International School, Rome, Italy. Brother' Armel Latterell has been appointed principal of the primary grades at the Pius XII Turn to Page Seven Bishop of Fall River Thirty new aspirants for the Diocesan Priesthood will this Fall join diocesan seminarians already in major and minor seminaries, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Diocese, announced today. The new group includes 16 who will study in minor Gomes, 65 Swift Street, Mount seminaries and 14 major Carmel, New Bedford. seminary students. In addi- Leonard J. Masse, 64 Basswood tion three other major'sem-' Avenue, Sacred Heart, North inarians .have been re-assigned 'Attleboro; Edward M. Pereira, to seminaries by the Bishop. 299·. Mulberry Street, Santo Christo, Fall River; Edmund P. Assigned by His Excellency Talbot, 63 Pelham Street, St were the following:' William, Fall River; Kevin F. MINOR SEMINARY Tripp, 116 Cottage Street, St. Lawrence, New Bedford. St Thomas Seminary, Our Lady of Providence Bloomfield, Conn. Warwick Neck, R.I. Johtl J. Conforti, 83 Way Street, St. Anthony of Padua, Fall Rivet'; David R Faria, 669 Grinnell Street, Our Lady of Health, Fall River; William F. Kelleher, Montgomery Turn to Page Robert J. Carter, 17 Street, Holy Name Parish, New Bedford; Robert F. Chase, May- .. flower Lane, St. Pius X, South Yarmouth; Edward E. Correira, 98 Lexington Avenue, St. George, North Dartmouth; John A. Faithful Aid Pope in Work Through Peter's Pence Dearly Beloved in Christ: - The world in which we live grows daily more confused mentally, morally, socially and spiritually. . Much of this is due to agitators who play on the needs . and weakness of society, and who have no other goal but that of world domination. Standing against all this confusion at home and abroad is the Catholic faith constantly preaching fidelity to Christian ideals, always exemplifying in deed as we" ''1 word what our Divine Savior stood for and perpetuates, through charity and brotherhood. Our Holy Father, Pope John XXIII, is a living example of our Christian tradition,-big in heart and human interest -his solicitude reaches out to all'in need. We have read and heard of his walking the streets of Rome seeking to carry out his duty and minister to all his flock. This is but one phase of a dedicated soul guiding and directing men of all kinds and conditions along the:way to true peate. We should feel happy and privileged to lend every bit of aid we can spare in devoted admiration and filial affection for our Holy Father. We should all find joy in helping him extend the reach of Christian charity to those who yearn for it and certai.nly need it. The Fall River Diocese has always done extremely wen in proving loyalty and devotion to our Holy Father. This is a truly Catholic Diocese with a heart responsive to every human need. Your Bishop is mORt grateful for what was recently done to help victimR of disaster in Chile. We move now to give traditional proof' of loyalty and devotion to our Holy Father, Pope John XXIII. The' annual Peter's Pence collection will be taken up at all Masses on Sunday, Aug-ust ·7th. We urge all, clergy, religious and laity, to be constant in their charity. Ordinary Assigns 33 to Seminaries on N'azareth Operation B'undage Helps South Pacific Lepers . As Diocesan Women Crochet .and [(nit .Over 100 women in Fall River, New Bedford and Taunton are participating in a new project under sponsorship of the piocesan Society for the o! They are knitting and crocheting bandages for lepers cared for by CatholIc mISSIOnarIes on the islands of the South Pacific. Residents at the Catholic Memorial Home and student nurses at St. Anne's Hospital are (Star) Puritan. Bedspread .. . ton, four ply, IS recommended. among those partIc!patmg Instructions: Cast on 30 in the work. Use of cro- stitches and knit each row, cheted or knitted bandages . slipping first stitch of each row. for lepers is a Use entire ball. new technique, according to For crocheted bandages, a Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, Number 4 crochet should Propagation director. Whereas be . used. Make ordinary bandages fall apart if cham of 21 stItches, turn and they are sterilized and re-used, cr?ehet ne:,t row. Repeat the new type can be sterilized untIl .entIre IS used. . . and re-used indefinitely; thus Women wlshmg to partIcipate their use represents a saving in in the project, but unable to storage space and expense to supp.ly . their own cotton, nursing missionaries. obt.alll It from the Pr<;,pagatIon All women of the Diocese are offIce at 368 North Mam Street, invited to participate in Opera- Fall River. tion Bandage which has been Completed bandages' should under way for two months. be sent to. the for Directions for manufacture are ment overseas, saId MonSignor simple. Considine. . .' For knitted bandages, Num- Til e PropagatI?n dll'eetor bel' 3 steel or aluminum needles learned of OperatIon Bandage are used, with steel preferred. from . workers in Boston One 250-yard ball of crochet where It is also cotton is used. American Thread ONE IN 3,000,000 bemg carrIed tW Fall River, Mass. Thursday, July 28, 1960 . PRICE tOe ·Vol. 4, No. 30 © 1960 The Anchor $4.00 per Year Second Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River. Mass. An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and li'irm-ST. PAUL The ANCHOR u. S. Catholic Publications Circulation Over 2S Million NEW YORK (NC)-Circulation of Catholic newspapers and magazines published itl the United States has passed the'25 million mark for the first time. The total; 25,932,461, was disclosed in circulation statistics released today in the 1960 edition of the Catholic . increase was 1,607;861. annual reference . The 1959 increase represented published by the a gain more than -twice as great Catholic Press Association as the gain in 1958, when the here. circulation increased by 697,- According to Father Albert J. Nevins said 'that "this Nevins, M.M., president of the CPA and editor of Maryknoll great. increase in circulation magazine, the total circulation dramatically demonstrates the of Catholic publications in the vitality of the Catholic press." U.S. and Canada increased by "American's Catholic publica- more than 1.5 million to a rec- tions have room for divergence ord high of 27,190,631. The exact Turn to Page Eighteen Four 'Sisters. to Staff Cape Sister Mary Joel, R.S.M., a member of the facuIty of Na('.areth Hall in Fall River since its opening in September, 1957, has been appointed Superior of Nazareth on the Cape in Hyannis. The second Diocesan school for exceptional. or mentally retarded children will be opened September, with accommodations for 32 children. Sisters of Mercy 'named to the faculty, in addi- tion .. to the Superior, are Sister Mary Rosarii, RS.M., Sister Mary Jamesita, R.S.M. and Sister Maria Bernadetta, RS.M. They will take ,up residence at the school in mid-August, ready to . receive applications and regis- ter :students for this newspe- cialized school. Nazareth will be a day school. It will not provide boarding fa- cilities for children. Transporta- tion' to and from the school will be by means of car pools, and for the present, at least, regis- tration will be limited to those children who can take adequate cat'e of themselves. The school has been esta b- lished with the assistance of the l ..... .. .....-' .., Turn to' Page Eighteen SISTER MARY JOEL, R.S.M. Liturgists Ask Non-Catholics To Attend WASHINGTON (NC)-A leader in the Catholic litur- gical movement has invited "interested Protestants and Eastem Rite Christians" to the ann.ual North American Litur- gical Week. Father Shawn Sheehan of Boston issued the invitation to non-Catholics to attend the meeting, which will be held August 22 to 25 in Pittsburgh. Father Sheehan pointed out that the theme of the meeting will be "Liturgy and Unity in Christ." He emphasized that the Liturgical Week "is an open meeting" and added: "All are welcome-clergy and laity, Ro- man Catholic or not-to join in our daily program of worship and study." The convention sessions "will give our visitors an insight into our un del's tan din g of the Church and its liturgy, and the relationship between the two," Father Sheehan said in a state- ment issued today. Some 4,000 !!>ersons arc expected to attend the conference. Cape Mass Schedule lP,age Fourteen 37th Eucharistic Congress Opens Next Sunday MUNICH (NC)-The37th international Eucharistic will open Sunday with Pontifical High Mags and cel'emonies of Supplication in all parishes of the Munich archdioc;ese. The Papal Legate, Carainal Testa is expected to be welcomed at a ceremony in the afternoon. On Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, High Mass will bec;el- ebrated in the pal'ish churches. Women will spend the first night in noctumal adoration of the Holy Eucharist, and men will do the same on the next night. On Wednesday evening Car- dinal Testa will preside at a vast "aHal' island" in the Theresien- wiese. The ceremony will be called a "statio urbis," or gath- ering of the entire Catholic wodd. The phrase literally means "station of the world," and is a play on the time-honored ·term "statio orbis," or "station of the' city" which was a gathering of Romans at some appointed ehul'ch during each of the days I!.ent. On Thursday 90 deacons fl'om various religious orders will be ordained in churches of the city; There will be "Agapes" or Turn to Page Eighteen ··St.. George"s Parish Plans New Rev. Lorenzo H. MoraiR, paRtor of St. George's C h-u rc h, Westport, an- nounced today the purchaRe of land on Route 177 in West- port between Beeden Road and Forge Road for construction of parish school. St. George's has had a paro- chial sc;hool since 1956, using the fac;ilities of the Westpol·t Factory School on a one dollar year lease from the Town of Westport. Orle gl'ade has been added each year to the origiilal fit'st three and a seventh grade will . be added in September. The enrollment for six grades as of ,June was 260 pupils. Grades One and Two meet in the parish hall on Highland Avenue, Dartmouth, and the upper five grades in the West- port Factory School. It is ex- pected that construction of the new building will begin in the near future ..

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CatholicsinAmerica PageEighteen ·Vol.4, No.30 © 1960 TheAnchor AccordingtoFatherAlbertJ. 59~ather Nevins said'that "this Montgomery Turn to Page Twel~ . PRICE tOe Dir~ctory, annual reference . The1959increaserepresented the'25millionmarkforthefirsttime.Thetotal;25,932,461, was disclosedin circulation statistics releasedtoday inthe 1960 edition ofthe Catholic . increase was 1,607;861. ~ $4.00perYear Second Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River. Mass. Ch-u rch, Westport, an-

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Page 1: 07.28.60

Catholics in AmericaPage Eighteen

Coyle StaffHasChanges

Brother Ephrem O'Dwyer,C.S.C., provincial of theE a s t ern :{)rovince of TheBrothers of Holy Cross, hasannounced changes affectingfive members of the Coyle HighSchool faculty, Taunton.

Brother Richard MacDonald,senior English teachCl' and direc­tor of Studies for the past fouryears, has been assigned to theBrothers of Holy Cross Junior­ate at Valatie, N. Y. While atCoyle, he was moderator of theCoyle Student Theater and orig.inator of the Coyle Honor Night.

Brother John Kuchenbrod ofthe Science and MechanicalDrawing department, will teach .at the Notre Dame InternationalSchool, Rome, Italy.

Brother' Armel Latterell hasbeen appointed principal of theprimary grades at the Pius XII

Turn to Page Seven

~~/'6?~~Bishop of Fall River

Thirty new aspirants for the Diocesan Priesthood willthis Fall join diocesan seminarians already in major andminor seminaries, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishopof the Diocese, announced today. The new group includes

16 who will study in minor Gomes, 65 Swift Street, Mountseminaries and 14 major Carmel, New Bedford.seminary students. In addi- Leonard J. Masse, 64 Basswoodtion three other major'sem-' Avenue, Sacred Heart, Northinarians .have been re-assigned 'Attleboro; Edward M. Pereira,to seminaries by the Bishop. 299·. Mulberry Street, Santo

Christo, Fall River; Edmund P.Assigned by His Excellency Talbot, 63 Pelham Street, St•

were the following:' William, Fall River; Kevin F.MINOR SEMINARY Tripp, 116 Cottage Street, St.

Lawrence, New Bedford.St Thomas Seminary, Our Lady of ProvidenceBloomfield, Conn. ~em.inary, Warwick Neck, R.I.

Johtl J. Conforti, 83 WayStreet, St. Anthony of Padua,Fall Rivet'; David R Faria, 669Grinnell Street, Our Lady ofHealth, Fall River; William F.Kelleher, ~ Montgomery

Turn to Page Twel~

Robert J. Carter, 17 S~_d1ey

Street, Holy Name Parish, NewBedford; Robert F. Chase, May- ..flower Lane, St. Pius X, SouthYarmouth; Edward E. Correira,98 Lexington Avenue, St. George,North Dartmouth; John A.

Faithful Aid Pope in WorkThrough Peter's Pence

Dearly Beloved in Christ:- The world in which we live grows daily more confused

mentally, morally, socially and spiritually. .Much of this is due to agitators who play on the needs

.and weakness of society, and who have no other goal butthat of world domination.

Standing against all this confusion at home and abroadis the Catholic faith constantly preaching fidelity toChristian ideals, always exemplifying in deed as we" ''1

word what our Divine Savior stood for and perpetuates,through charity and brotherhood.

Our Holy Father, Pope John XXIII, is a living exampleof our Christian tradition,-big in heart and human interest-his solicitude reaches out to all'in need. We have readand heard of his walking the streets of Rome seeking tocarry out his duty and minister to all his flock. This is butone phase of a dedicated soul guiding and directing men ofall kinds and conditions along the:way to true peate.

We should feel happy and privileged to lend every bitof aid we can spare in devoted admiration and filial affectionfor our Holy Father. We should all find joy in helping himextend the reach of Christian charity to those who yearnfor it and certai.nly need it.

The Fall River Diocese has always done extremely wenin proving loyalty and devotion to our Holy Father. This isa truly Catholic Diocese with a heart responsive to everyhuman need.

Your Bishop is mORt grateful for what was recentlydone to help victimR of disaster in Chile. We move now togive traditional proof' of loyalty and devotion to our HolyFather, Pope John XXIII. The' annual Peter's Pencecollection will be taken up at all Masses on Sunday, Aug-ust·7th. We urge all, clergy, religious and laity, to be constantin their charity.

Ordinary Assigns33 to Seminaries

onN'azareth

Operation B'undage Helps South Pacific Lepers. As Diocesan Women Crochet .and [(nit

.Over 100 women in Fall River, New Bedford and Taunton are participating in a newproject under sponsorship of the piocesan Society for the Propagat~ono! t~e F~ith. Theyare knitting and crocheting bandages for lepers cared for by CatholIc mISSIOnarIes on theislands of the South Pacific. Residents at the Catholic Memorial Home and student nursesat St. Anne's Hospital are (Star) Puritan. Bedspread Cot~

.. . ton, four ply, IS recommended.among those partIc!patmg Instructions: Cast on 30in the work. Use of cro- stitches and knit each row,cheted or knitted bandages . slipping first stitch of each row.for lepers is a comparativ~ly Use entire ball.new technique, according to For crocheted bandages, aMsgr. Raymond T. Considine, Number 4 crochet ~ook shouldPropagation director. Whereas be . used. Ins~ructIons: Makeordinary bandages fall apart if cham of 21 stItches, turn andthey are sterilized and re-used, sin~le cr?ehet ne:,t row. Repeatthe new type can be sterilized untIl .entIre .ba~l IS used. . .and re-used indefinitely; thus Women wlshmg to partIcipatetheir use represents a saving in in the project, but unable tostorage space and expense to supp.ly .their own cotton, ~ay

nursing missionaries. obt.alll It from the Pr<;,pagatIonAll women of the Diocese are offIce at 368 North Mam Street,

invited to participate in Opera- Fall River.tion Bandage which has been Completed bandages' shouldunder way he~e for two months. be sent to. the of~ice for ~hip-Directions for manufacture are ment overseas, saId MonSignorsimple. Considine. . .'

For knitted bandages, Num- Til e PropagatI?n dll'eetorbel' 3 steel or aluminum needles learned of OperatIon Bandageare used, with steel preferred. from .workers in t~e. BostonOne 250-yard ball of crochet Ar~hdlOces.e,. where It is alsocotton is used. American Thread ONE IN 3,000,000 bemg carrIed tW

Fall River, Mass. Thursday, July 28, 1960. PRICE tOe·Vol. 4, No. 30 © 1960 The Anchor $4.00 per Year

Second Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River. Mass.

An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and li'irm-ST. PAUL

TheANCHOR

u. S. Catholic PublicationsCirculation Over 2S Million

NEW YORK (NC)-Circulation of Catholic newspapersand magazines published itl the United States has passedthe'25 million mark for the first time. The total; 25,932,461,was disclosed in circulation statistics released today in the1960 edition of the Catholic .

increase was 1,607;861.Dir~ctory, annual reference . The 1959 increase representedvoll!l)1~ published by the a gain more than -twice as greatCatholic Press Association as the gain in 1958, when thehere. circulation increased by 697,-

According to Father Albert J. 59~ather Nevins said 'that "thisNevins, M.M., president of theCPA and editor of Maryknoll great. increase in circulationmagazine, the total circulation dramatically demonstrates theof Catholic publications in the vitality of the Catholic press."U.S. and Canada increased by "American's Catholic publica­more than 1.5 million to a rec- tions have room for divergenceord high of 27,190,631. The exact Turn to Page Eighteen

Four 'Sisters. to StaffCape

Sister Mary Joel, R.S.M., a member of the facuIty ofNa('.areth Hall in Fall River since its opening in September,1957, has been appointed Superior of Nazareth on the Capein Hyannis. The second Diocesan school for exceptional. ormentally retarded childrenwill be opened i~ September,with accommodations for 32children. Sisters of Mercy'named to the faculty, in addi­tion.. to the Superior, are SisterMary Rosarii, RS.M., SisterMary Jamesita, R.S.M. and SisterMaria Bernadetta, RS.M. Theywill take ,up residence at theschool in mid-August, ready to

.receive applications and regis-ter :students for this newspe­cialized school.

Nazareth will be a day school.It will not provide boarding fa­cilities for children. Transporta­tion' to and from the school willbe by means of car pools, andfor the present, at least, regis­tration will be limited to thosechildren who can take adequatecat'e of themselves.

The school has been estab-lished with the assistance of the l..... .......-'..,

Turn to' Page Eighteen SISTER MARY JOEL, R.S.M.

Liturgists AskNon-CatholicsTo Attend

WASHINGTON (NC)-Aleader in the Catholic litur­gical movement has invited"interested Protestants andEastem Rite Christians" to theann.ual North American Litur­gical Week.

Father Shawn Sheehan ofBoston issued the invitation tonon-Catholics to attend themeeting, which will be heldAugust 22 to 25 in Pittsburgh.

Father Sheehan pointed outthat the theme of the meetingwill be "Liturgy and Unity inChrist." He emphasized that theLiturgical Week "is an openmeeting" and added: "All arewelcome-clergy and laity, Ro­man Catholic or not-to join inour daily program of worshipand study."

The convention sessions "willgive our visitors an insight intoour un del's tan din g of theChurch and its liturgy, and therelationship between the two,"Father Sheehan said in a state­ment issued today. Some 4,000!!>ersons arc expected to attendthe conference.

Cape Mass SchedulelP,age Fourteen

37th EucharisticCongress OpensNext Sunday

MUNICH (NC)-The37thinternational EucharisticCOIigre~s will open Sundaywith Pontifical High Magsand cel'emonies of Supplicationin all parishes of the Municharchdioc;ese. The Papal Legate,Carainal Testa is expected to bewelcomed at a ceremony in theafternoon.

On Tuesday and Wednesdayevenings, High Mass will bec;el­ebrated in the pal'ish churches.Women will spend the first nightin noctumal adoration of theHoly Eucharist, and men will dothe same on the next night.

On Wednesday evening Car­dinal Testa will preside at a vast"aHal' island" in the Theresien­wiese. The ceremony will becalled a "statio urbis," or gath­ering of the entire Catholicwodd.

The phrase literally means"station of the world," and is aplay on the time-honored ·term"statio orbis," or "station of the'city" which was a gathering ofRomans at some appointedehul'ch during each of the days9£ I!.ent.

On Thursday 90 deacons fl'omvarious religious orders will beordained in churches of the city;There will be "Agapes" or

Turn to Page Eighteen

··St.. George"sParish PlansNew S~hool

Rev. Lorenzo H. MoraiR,paRtor of St. George'sC h-u r c h, Westport, an­nounced today the purchaReof land on Route 177 in West­port between Beeden Road andForge Road for construction of• parish school.

St. George's has had a paro­chial sc;hool since 1956, usingthe fac;ilities of the Westpol·tFactory School on a one dollar• year lease from the Town ofWestport.

Orle gl'ade has been addedeach year to the origiilal fit'stthree and a seventh grade will .be added in September. Theenrollment for six grades as of,June was 260 pupils.

Grades One and Two meet inthe parish hall on HighlandAvenue, Dartmouth, and theupper five grades in the West­port Factory School. It is ex­pected that construction of thenew building will begin in thenear future ..

Page 2: 07.28.60

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legion of DecencyThe following {ilD1s are to be

added to the' lists in their re­spective classifications:

Unobjectionable ,for general'patronage: The'Lost World.

Unobjectionable' ."for adultsand adol~scents:'The Bellboy;Village of the Damned.

Unobjectirinabie 'for 'adults:Let No Man Write My Epitaph.

Objectionable in' part for all:Hiroshima, Mon Amour (themeoliscures a questionable conclu­sion; namely, a philosophy of.nihilism and despair. Further­more, certain sections are mor­ally unacceptable in a mass en­tertainment mediUm); Sex Kit­tens Go to (:ollege (suggestivecostuming, dialogue and situa­tions).

Prelate DefermdlsTeachers' RDght .To Organize

SAN ANTONIO (NC)­Archbishop Robert E. Luceyof San Antonio has defendedthe right of public sch~

teachers to join unions.In a statement issued to the

press, the Archbishop declaredthat teachers have a "constitu­tional . right" to belong to un­ions.

"If a litUegroup of willful_men d~lay their contracts for"that reason, they are guilty eli .tyranny," he said.

Archbishop Lucey did notsingle out any instance in whichpublic s<;hool teachers havebeen subjected to penalties £03'union activity.

. But he noted that it is rllP

mared to be risky.for. a SamAn:tonio pubiic. school' teacher .to ...

.'J '" ,be ~,ctive..~n the American Fe,d~,.

,.. , .....". ,..... ;.~.,~~j . - eratio.n of. Teacllers,. .(\.FL-CIO•. ',"'';1· 'and· ,that there have been, .. ,.' .. J, .charges that school boards ha:ve' ,

CHAINS OF ST. PETER : EnGlosed ina' handsome. refused. contracts t~ ,teachen. . Ch' f 'St P' t . R ' wh~ ~e,long to, ~e UnIon.. . .. .

" bronze, rehquary, are the ams 0 '. e er m ome s "It ld th t b-" S P' . V' I' 'I d th . 440 AD' wou seem a ourpu 'Church of an letro m mco I,p ace ere m . • lie school teachers can be sub-

The Feast of St. Peter's Chains is observed on Aug., 1. NCjected to injustice at the hand..Photo of school' boards without ~.

• much difficulty," he said.

Tour.·st-s, Pilgrims Overlook Chains ,The Archbishop also called OIl.. public school authorities to take_..

In Rome Church of St. Peter ' ::~~~~s.gqarantee job tenure .~.,ROME (NC)':':'-Among, Rome's I ' .

most overlooked relics are the' after so many centuries. The He said: "A teacher's, tenuN, ..Italian Ecclesiastical Dictionary , of office, confirmed by a writ-,Chains of St~ Peter. , '

Althoug'h the, 'Church has set refers to them'as the "presumed" 'tell; ._c~ntraet, is reasonably Be-chains of the Prince of, the' :. cure for op.e year. This is a fra.,.,

aside Aug: 1 as the feast of St. A tl "ile species of security.Peter's 'Chains' and although they pos es; ., .are enclosed in a handsome Under Main Altar "What protection does a pub-reliquary in a' church in Rome NevertheleSs; the history of lie school teacher enjoy against

the chains has been fairly clear 'the hl'ms of a a r' I'OUS schoolnamed for, th~m, the chains are, ' , w , C P IC,often overlooked by tourists and since the fifth century, and they board? ,

have been among Rome's mOst "Discrimination,' persecution,pilgrim~. , ,-

It is a curious trick of history personal memories of St. Peter. and"harassment should have nothat. the chains should be housed The chains are kept under the place in g9vernment."in a church containing a master- main altar, ih a bronze reliquary

,with crystal sides. Formerly, p1ann.·ng Annual Fa,·,piece of Michelangelo. UAt least nine out of 10 visitors they were not exposed to the A V· d H

public except on the feast of St. tr .neyar avenwho make the trip to the ChurchPeter's Chains. In recent years, The fourth annual fair for theof San Pietro in Vincoli are in-

tent on seeing not the chains, however, the reliquary has been benefit of the building fund ofbut the magnificent! statue of exposed frequently because of St. Augustine's Parish,' VineyardMoses that Michelangelo cal'ved the great influx of ~tourists. Haven, will be held Thursday

R d T II and Friday, Aug. 4 and 5, on thein the early 1500s. eco,i' a Y fair grounds'across from the reo-

Two, Sets BOSTON (NC)-This year's . tory on Franklin Street.The church was built on the graduates troin Catholic high Captain Walter Kszystyniak,

site ,of the ancient court of jus- schools in and' around Boston 'general chairman, will be a6-"tice where St. Peter was con- have received the greatest num- sisted .by, Rodney Backus, pres- 'demned. In 440 the :Roman Em- bel' of scholarships' and grants in' ident of the Holy Name Society,.press Eudoxia built a' larger the history of the archdiocese: and ,Mrs. William Carroll, pres-"church to enshrine the chains of Msgr. Timothy O'Leary,' arch.' 'ident of the Women's Guild. II

St. Peter. d i 0 c e san superintendent of' EdD1und Hickey is groundsThere are two separate sets of schools, said that 466 seniors chairman and Mrs. Herbert Me­

chains. One set is reputed to be won 671 scholarships or grants-,' tell,has charge of prizes.. A large,the chains that bound St. Peter in-aid, or both, estimated 'to' committee of, men and womenwhile he was imprisoned in the value $1,370;000. The graduates' will serve at the various- booths.,Mamertine, Prison in Rome. The are from 83: of the 95 secondaryother, believed to' be those that schools in the archdiocese. A'held Peter prisoner in Jerusalem, total of 5,726 students was grad-was given to the Empr,ess-by her uated in June. .

m~~:r'chainhas 23 links, with Scho~arrship,Fu_ndsan iron ring attach,ed; the other increase at Lavalhas 11 links. Absolute certitude QUEBEC (NC) _ A 30 perconcerning the, authenticity of cent"increase in student scholar­the chains' ,origins 'is not possible ship funds at Laval University'

here raised. last· year'S' -totalscholarship expenditure to,$1,604,437.

The riutnber of students bene., ,fiting from the scholarship

,grants was 3,580; an increase· of206 oyer the previo,us year. Thelargest single contributor ofschol;'!rship funds was the Que- ,bec 'government.

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Young ,St~den,ts'End Year's StCIIY

WASHINGTON (NC)-, Twohigh school diplomas will be the 'special mark, of many of, the100 foreign students who studiedin American Catholic' highschools this past year.

The students, most of themseniors, visited here beforE! ,em­barking from New York City fortheir homeiands. They carne tothe United States in July, 1959,under the sponsorship olE theYou t hDepartment, NationalCatholic Welfare Conferenee, inc'ooperation with the U. S. StateDepartment's high school 'ex-change program. .

Many of the students com­pleted their high ..school COursesin the U. S. schools, but wHl berequired to 'graduate from' high'school in their own countr)'. '

According to Father John J.Conniff of the Youth Depart­ment, the program indudE!d 60students from Austria, 'Germany,France, and' Italy, and 40' stu­dents from Bolivia, Chile, andGuatemala. , '

Last .l\:'Ionday and Tuesday, anew group of 146 foreign stu­dents from', the sa'me countriesplus'Panama, Colombia, Luxem­bourg and Switzerland, will ar­rive for' next year's, high sehoolprogram. '

N~'~rology .THE, ANCHOR lists the aD­

lIliversary "daies'of priests whoserved" the' 'Fall River _Di~.eesesineeits"formatioD:jD 19Mwith the" intention that thefaithful 'will' : give- . tbeDIlaprayerful remembraDoe~

'JULY 29Rev. Mathias McCabe, 1913.Rev. Cha'rles P. 'TraIrtor, 1947.

AUGUST ZRev. Mic~ael J. O'Connell,

1938.

"VincentDans to MltJrkSaint's Anniversary'

PHILADELPHIA (NC) -. TheVincentian FatheJ;s,_of the U. S.Eastern province ",will oplierve'the 300th anniversary' of' thedeath of St., Vin~ent,:1)e:.Paul~ith a Pon\ifical M;as~ l!( 85.,Peter and Paul Cathedral' here

.Sept. 27. ." ,Bishop John",A.' O~ShE!a,','C.M.,

of Kanchow,' C,hina,;now. 'in ,~xile

will offer the terceriten'ai-y,Mass.Auxiliary ~isliop FiJlton," J.Sheen of New York will pri!ach:Memb(!rs of the hierarchy, offi­cials of the Federal, state andcity governments" and membersof the diplomatic corps willattend.

Auxiliary. Bishop' Joseph Mc­Shea of Philadelphia' and 'Gov.D'lvid L. Lawrence of Pennsyl­vapia will speak at the banquetfollowing the Mass.

mJ~shcp W~~~~[l,

Pre~atE~

THE ANCHOR....,Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28,19602

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION

July 31-St. Francis of Assisi,~ew Bedford.

Holy Redeemer, Chatham.Aug. 7-St. George, West-,

port.Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven.St. Theresa, So. Attleboro.

Aug. '14-St. Theresa, NewBedford.

Our Lady of Vic'tory,, Centerville.St.Joseph, Woods Hole.

Aug.21-Qur Lady ofLourdes, Wellfleet

Our Lady,. of .Grace,North Westport.

Sacred Heart, New Bed­ford.

THE 'ANCHOR8econd-ellUlllnail prlvl1eges authorized

., Fall 'River, MlUIll, Publisbed evel'llThursday at no Highland Avenue. FallRiver: Mass., bJ tbe Catholic Press of theDiocese of Fall River, Sl1b,.,·iptloa priceb7 man. PGlltpald $40.00 per letlro,

Brofr~<e~ ofTo Visit HerOBC

HONG KONG (NC)-A 70-year-old American will wavegood-bye to his wife next Monday, cross the narrowbridge connecting Hong Kong and Red China, and start avisit to his imprisoned brother, Bishop Jam.es E. Walsh,

M.M. William C. Walsh of State Department to lodige theCumberland, Md., will be the ,strongest possible protest to thefirst American permitted to Red Chinese ~bassador to,

" . ' W I h' . th Poland, Wang Pmg-nan" whoVISIt BIshop a s Sll1ce e had been meeting with th'e U. S.'imprisonment of the prelate, ~he Ambassador to Poland, Jacob.last U. S, missioner on the Chma 'D. Beam to discuss release of,mainland. the Bishdp and other U. S. pris-

Bishop Walsh, 69, a ve.te~an. of 'oners.nearly two decades- of mISSIon Tw~':Week staywork in China, has refused to - The Bishop's brother, a 'formerleave Red China, although the judge .of the Maryland Co,urt of ,communists threatened him, and Appeals and onetime Attorneythen offerei::l. Aim free passage General of Maryiand, left Balti- .out. of the, country. more Sunday, three .week!; after

Th'e Bishop believes his pres- the communists . said in a cableence is an .inspiration to Chinese that he could enter their country.Catholics who are not only re- Accompanied 'by Mrs. Walsh"sistiQ.g" ,the' regime's physical the Bishop's brother arrived,­punishment, which one authority here about 30 houl's later to getsays, has ,pro~u~ed 14,000 mar:- his visa, -good for a two,-,week.tyrs;'hu't also righting Red effo~s 'stay inside Red China. Mrs.to split Catholics from the Holy:, , Walsh will remai'n in Hong KO,ng.See ' by' 'iilicit consecrations of He said'that he 'did not knowbishops of a "national Catholie where he would mee1; hisc:hufch." brother. "I presume he is in

20-Year Sentence 'Shanghai, because that's whereFor ., several years, Bishop the story about his imprisonment

Walsh moved freely in Shang- . and trial came from," he !itated.hal. He was then placed under He said he had not heard, fromhouse arrest and disappeared in· Bishop 'Walsh in more th!lD aOctober 1958. In December, year.1958, the co~munists told theU.S. State Department the Bish­op: had been. arrested and was"thought tQ be" in a Shanghaiprison.

In March, 1960, the Bishop wassentenced to a 20-year prisonsentence on trumped-up chargesof espionage. The act brought\expressions of condemnationfrom around the world.

U. S. Secretary of State Chris­tian A. Herter instructed the

Mass OrdoFRIDAY-St. Martha, Virgin.

Simple. White. Mass Proper;Gloria; Second Collect St.Felix II, Pope, and his Com­panions, ,Martyrs; CommonPreface.

SATURDAY' - Mass of theBlessed Virgin for Saturday.Simple. White.' Mass Proper;Gloria; Second Collect SS.Abdon and Sennen, Martyrs;Preface of Blessed Virgin.

SUNDAY - VIII Sunday AfterPentecost. Double. Green. MassProper; Gloria; Second CollectSt. Ignatius, Confessor; Creed;Preface of Trinity.

MONDAY-St. Peter, Apostle,In Chains. Greater Double.White. Mass Proper;, Gloria;Second Collect·St. Paul Apos­tle; Third Collect Holy Mach­abees; Martyrs; P r ef.a c e ofApostles.

TUESDAY-St. Alphonsus MaryLigouri, Bishop, Confessor andDoctor of the Chuhch. ·DQuble.White. Mass Proper;, Gloria;Second Collect St. Stephen I,Pope and ~artyr; Creed; Com­mon Preface.

WEDNESDAY-Finding of St.Stephen, ProtomartYr. Simple.Red. ' Mass' Proper; Gloria;,ComI)1on PI:eface., ,

THUR5DAY":'-St. Dominic, Con­fessor. Greater Double. White.Mass Proper; GlorIa; Commo'nPreface.

Page 3: 07.28.60

3

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Clerics CompleteTraining CourseAt Health Center

INDEPENDENCE (NC)­Five Catholic priests andtwo seminarians have com­pleted the first residenceprogram in pastoral training forpriests at the Mental Health In­stitute here in Iowa.

The Mental Health Instituteis the fourth hospital in theUnited States to' establish arElsidence program for priestsbeing trained in wm-k with thementally ill.

The five priests and two semi­narians participated in a' six­week -chaplain internship pro­gram. During the t r a i n i n Ifperiod' they lived at the MentalHealth Institute and attendedlectures, st,aff meetings and sem­inars conducted by staff mem-bers. '

The program is intended botlato give priests practical ex­perience in counseling and toenable ~hem to rccognize mentalillness and refer individuals tAlagencies or doctors who callhelp them.

The five priests taking partin the pilot program are Do­minicans; the seminarians we~from the Des Moines Diocese.

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., July 28,19601

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Carmelite ConvertsVfASHINGTON (NC)-The

number of U. S. convents of,Carmelite nuns has increasedfrom four in 1890 to 62 today.----

Vatican' Proposes Plan to ProtectYouth From ,Objectionable Movies

VIENNA (NC)-The Holy See life of degrading -spectacles,has proposed a program to safe- whatever be the public for whichguard young people from the they were produced.harmful effects of objectionable Unsuitable tG Youtb

movies. . . "The second point regardsThe prog~am ~as outhned 10 youth specifically. It concerns

a letter wntten 10 th~ name ~f the measures which one wouldPope John by Domellico Cardl- like to see instituted appliednal Tardini, Vatican Secretary and generalized for th~ purposeof State. . ", . ' of protecting youth against

The Vatican s three-pomt pro:", movies unsuitable to their age.gram calls for: . "There is finally a third point

1). '!he bal:~lllg by. pubbc au- on which one has the right totho~:tI~s of degr.admg speet~- expect the collaboration of thecles legardless of the pubhe public authorities. It is certainlythey were I?roduced for. not enough to protect and de-

2) Effective enforcelJ1ent of fendlaws forbidding youth to attend .movies judged fit only for adults. "The problems of movies, as

3) Production of movies spe- - far asy~ung people ace con-cificallyfor the young. cerned, WIll be ~eally solved, so

The Cardinal acknowledged onl~ when mo.vI~s are I?roduced·that "the' education of youth de- which ~re wIthl.n their, .reachpends primarily on the family a.nd which ta~e Into conslder~­and the Church.'" But; he de- tIOn . ~h~ reqturements of t1~elrdared, "the, civil authority, for senSItiVIty and of all the ele­its part, cannot ignore the spir:.. men~ that the thorough studyitual ,welfare of young people., of chIld and ~dolesce~t psychol-. ~'On the contrary, in view of ogy has" YIelded. III recent

the common good and in har- years.....

mony with the family and the ---F-O-R---R-E--N-T--­Church, it must assure them ofthe protec'tion they need."

The Cardinal said:"'th-e first point' concerns the

cinema in' general. One wouldiike to see the civi' authorityintervene in a more decisive wayfor, the banishment from public

'. NEW CAR: Missionary Servants of the Most BlessedTrinity, Holy Ghost parish, Attleboro, receive a new station,wagon from the .Portuguese-American Club. Fran~ Pimen­tal, club president, presents keys to Rev. John F., Laughlin,pastor, as Sister George Chrysostom' and' Wallace 1. Baketlook on. Mr. Baker is Cubm'aster for Cub Pack 31, which'furnished a platform and exhaust extension 'for the, car. .

Red Regime AttacksEucharistic Congress

MUNICH (NC) '- The Redregime of East Germany has at­tacked the International Euch-ar..istic Congl'ess as an "unholyalliance" against communism.

It is known that East Germanofficials have been instructed todeny exit permits to all wishingto take part in it. It also is be­lieved that officials of othercommunist nations ,have re­ceived the same instructions.

The official daily newspaper'of East Germany:s Communistparty has branded the congressa base device to "foment hatredand revenge." Joscph CardinalWendell Archbishop of Munich,has describcd the congress as asybol of "a world hungry forunity."

Minister, ,HitsFilm. Festival

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)-A Protestant minister herecharged that New York's "Sum­mer festival" of films is repug­nant to high moral and spiritualstandards. ' .

The Rev. Mr. Dan M. Potte'r,director of the Protestant Coun­cil of New York, leveled his'criticism at a' number ofmotion pictures now being,shown in New York's TimesSquare.

He termed the film showings"a festival of motion picturesloaded with vice, crime and sex;br~enly pl"Omoted with luridand suggestive come-on posters,bann~l's, other outdoor adver­tising."

The Rev. Mr. Potter, who iseochairmanof the Mayor's Com­mittee of Religious Leaders andchairman of the group's sub­committee on motion pictures,stated that some of the films be­ing shown criticize religion andthat "nearly a dozen motionpictures 'released in the 'last

.few months undermine thestandards and teachings forwhich Our Lord died and which.our churches strive to exem-'plify."

He warned the motion pictureindustry that "if it is seriousabout receiving editorial sup­port of newspapers and moralsupport of the general public,then Hollywood must be farmore serious in the enforcementof its ow'n standards and code."

Emphasis -"I think we need more empha­

sis in 'these days on the essen­tials, such as reading, writing,arithmetic, spelling and lan­guage,"he added.

'As for public schools, Mr.Kollmorgen ·declared that "theyare necessary in our American 'democratic society."

"But they, are, not the 'answerto parents -who are concernedabout their, children's spiritualwelfare,~" he said.Aske~ if he thought parochial

schools are "divisive," as some _of their enemies have said, Mr.

'Kollmorgen replied: "That's a, lot of tommyrot."

I can't think of one singlechild whose vitality or ambitionor love for life was in any waydamaged by attending ourschool," he added.

Summing up, Mr. Kollmorgensaid: "Education must be a com­plete process, ~upplying the re­quirements of body, mind, andspirit or soul. Neglect of anyoneof these three is an incompleteeducation, which may lead 'todisastrous results." '

ParentsSchool

Students' MeetingATCHISON (NC)-Some 500

persons fl'om seven southwest­ern slates are expected at thefirst ailnual regional study weekof the Young Christian Studentsat St. Benedict's College here inKansas beginning Aug. 9. Mostof those in attendance are ex­pected to be high school studentswho are members of the move­ment, which is patterned on thatof the Young Christian WOl·kecs.

M~.Carmel HoldsBake Saturday ,

Parishioners of Mot. CarmelChurch, New Bedford, will holdtheir third annual clambake andouting this Saturday at Horse­neck ,Fairgrounds, Westport.

Genc"al chairman, is AntoneMathews, assisted by a iargecomn) iltee. Refreshments willinclude Portuguese specialtiesand hot dogs in addition to theclambake. Games and sportsevents will be featured and adoor prizc of a bicycle will beawarded. Rep. Frank Lemos willbe in charge of an auction.

All parish societies are coop­erating in plans for the event.with Boy Scouts handling a firstaid station and parking arrange-'ments. Othcr groups will assistIn the kitchen, dining room andclambake pit.

Free transportation from Mt.Carmel Church to the fairgrounds will be available, withbusses leaving at 10:30 and noon.

LutheranParochial

SupportSystem

CINCINNATI (NC)-"Parochial school" means "Cath­olic school" to most Catholics and to many other Americans.But the 110-year-old Concordia Lutheran School here testi­fies to the belief of other religious groups that educationmust be God-centered, and '

reading, and commentary on thotheir willingness to support reading.a school system of their own The first class session is givellto see that it is. to religion-doctrine, Bible his-

Concordia, a parochial school tory, Church history, and' otherfounded and operated by the subjects. Then follows the usualConcordia Lutheran Church, elementary school day with thehad 112 boys and girls enrolled usual elementary school subjects.in its eight grades during the Mr. Kollmorgen, who has beenpast school year. teaching in Protestant religious

schools in Cincinnati since 1910,-Martin F. Kollmorgen, prin- said: "We don't have classes in

clpal, exph..... led in an interview dancing, or cooking, or driverwhy many Lutheran parents tr'aining."cheerfully pay, the additionalexpense of malntainiilg a par-ochial school.' '

"They know that God wantsliS to dedicate our whole lives toHim and that we can't do thatunless we know about Him and'know His word," he said. "The'Lutheran elementary school op­erates in a Christian setting. ItSleeks God's glory a~d, the chil-­clren's salvation."

Two-ThirdSWith this in mind, about two­

thirds of the members of theConcordia Church send theirchildren to the parochial school.

The Concordia School is farfrom unique. In the MissouriSynod, second largest branch ofthe Lutheran Church in the U. S.and the one to which Concordiabelongs, there are almost 1,300parochial schools, including asmall number of high schools.Their total enrollment is closeto 15,000.

Support of the ConcordiaSchool comes from voluntarycontributions by members of theConcordia Church and frompupils' parents who are notmembers. They are informedthat the operation of the schoolcosts "somewhat in excess of$200 per child per year, or alittle more than $5 a week perchild on the basis of 40 weeks ofschool time per year."

Attendance. Each Monday morning the

children at the school areasked by their teachers whetherthey attended church servicesthe day before. No academiccredit is given or taken away,but the attendance is noted ontheir school record.

Mr. Kollmorgen said that theschool mcets the elementaryschool requirements of the state,and that· its teachers ar:e certi­fied by the state.

The first 10 minutes of themorning school session consistof "devotional exercises." Theseinclude prayer, hymns, Scripture

Page 4: 07.28.60

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fat! River-Thurs., July 28, 1960

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-41

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IlffllicltdeOrery j~f

~~~HEATI,NG,· OIL

Reelect ProvindalGRANBY (NC) ~. Father

Geerge M. RoskwHalski, O.F.M. ­Conv., has been re-elected min_ister provincial of the st. An­thony province of the Order ofFriars 'Minor Conventual.. Theprovince has 274 members in 50establishments.

There is also a moral disci­pline involved: the en(:ourage­ment of regular saviings' incredit union shares develops. thecharacter of a man and sets agood example for the young.

Finally there is the "quality ofmercy" in credit unions. ,Thecredit union member who serves _

,on a committee or merely addshis shares for the use of hisfellow member is doing a mer­ciful thing.

lit is important to note, in Con­clusion, that there should be aheavy emphasis on .educationin the credit union movement.Unfortunately this emphasis issadly lacking in' a number ofcredit unions in the' UnitedStates. '

Some are established on thewrong lines. They are organized.from the top dGwn witJh. littleprel!minal'y . education. on thespirit and techniques of eooper­ation, while the actual' control isretained at the top.

Mutual Self-HelpThe succeSsful credit union is

democratic. It is essential thatthe organization start with theindivid'ual member and that thecentrol be retained by the, mem­bers as a group. Unless the mem_bers be educated in. the spirit ofmutual self-help the creditunion will fail in its objedive.

Selfish individualism is the'chief barrier to overcome' inestablishing succ.essful creditunions. The individualist whoioins· the credit unions solely orprimarily 'to get something forhimself will cooperate only sofar as he thinks it is in h:is own,interest to cooperate.

His desire wfu be· to get with­out.giving. He lacks the loyaltyespecially essentia.l in times' otstress, 'and uitless there al't~· im­mediate returns to him bedeserts· the eallse,

I . SA~VE' MONEY tONYOUR Oll.RfJ~'!SIt ttlll ~;:;'

. . In some cases, the mov'e to bet- .ter neighborhoods, the increasedability to provide, education re­sulting from credit union earn­ings or loans--even the knowl­edge that funds are there in anemergency-all of thes,e thingscan help to prevent immoralitystemmlng from discouragementor .despair, dire financial need,poor environment, etc..

'Q!tIlanity of Merc]r'

.._-----------'

Credit Unions Appmy T:el1etsOf CGtholic Social Teac~ln9

By Msgr. George G. HigginsDirector. NCWC Social Action Dep3lrtment

Catholic organizations lead all other church groupswith a total of 826 credit unions serving their members,according to the Credit Union National· Assoeiation whichhas its headquarters in Madison, Wis. Figures compiled foreUNA's 1960 yearbook showthat more than six per centof the 19,825 credit unionsin the United States havebeen organized to serve mem­bers of religious groups. Prot­estant organiz­ations h II V eform e d 328credit unionswhile Jewish'groups .h a v efOl'med 25, creditunions.

The growing'.r n tel' est ofCatholic par­ishes and or­ganizations inthe credit unionmovement isnot to be wondered at, for creditunions are design~d to foster ina practical way, the applicationof many of the basic principresof Catholic social teaching..

Aims of MovementThe credit union m(}vement

does not look upon the materialgoods of this world as an end inthemseLves to which human lifeand action must be subordinated.

It does not aim at a maximumprofit of the few at tne expenseof outsideL"s, since the movementis not a closed ·system, but isopen to all who fan into anyoneof dozens' of fields of member­ship.

The movement aims, at a de-·cent livelihood for all; it aims atthe maximum distribution ofgoods among all' men.

We may say tha,t the creditunion movement keeps beforeits members the ideal of mutuaLhelp and mutual service. Itsprimary purpose, in the' words ofone of its early American pio­neers, Edward. Filene, "is toprove the practicality of thebrotherhood' of man. Man is hisbrother's keeper - we. believethat-we just don't ta,lk aboutit. We' do it.

"We don't talk about institu­tions of, for, and by the people.We make institutions: of, for,. andby.: the peopre." Indeed it- wouldprobably be fair to ga,y that fewother non-refigJ,ous institutions­are so fuUy dedicated to' the all­impartant task of promotinghuman brothel!hood.

ThuS' far I have been talkingallout the moral and spilTitualaspects of credit unions in rathergeneral and impersonal terms.·Let me now tlTY to bring. the dis- .eussion down to, eaI1th by Listiragsome· of the day-to-day moralbenefits of active participatioIl­in credit unions.

Raise MoraleSince credit unions improv~

the economic condition of theindividual, they can, if properlymanag,ed, b'e a means to his per­sonal moral and spiritual d'e­velopment.

They can raise his morale andhis, spirit of self-conl!idence,mak'e it possible for him to ac­quire neede~l goods and services

.and to improve his standard ofliving.

Pope Blesses family.Of leukem·i'o Victim

VATICAN CITY (NC)-F'opeJohn, who waived aside' prot!lcoland intel11"upted his heavy sched­ule to spend 40 minutes with,Catherine Hudson of Okla'homaCity last Holy Week" sent hisblessing and his condolences totne seven-year-old: girl's familyan ner death.

The child died of leukemia in .tne hospiCal of, the 9 ltfahomaMedical Research Foundation inOklahoma City. She' had receivedthe last rites several times, and

.was given the sacrament ofConfirmation the day she died.

Cathy Hudson knew about her"bad blood" and begged nerwidowed mother to, take he." tosee tne Pope last Spring. Mrs.Marlene Hudson, a convert, soldher automobile and furniture' todo so.,

Page 5: 07.28.60

rHE ANCHOR-Oioeese ofFa'n River-Thurs., July 28, 1960 5

OPERATION BANDAGE BRINGS COMFORT TO THE LEPERS:Left photo, Sister Ascension of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, instructs.tudl....t nurses, Madeline Frado of St. J~hn of God Parish, Somerset, l~ft,

and Danielle Desautels of St. Peter's Parish, Dighton, in the art ofcrocheting. Center photo, CelenireBlanchette and Louisa Sullivan of the

Catholic Memorial Home, Fan River, realize that there :is no such thingas a long day when you are w@rking to bring solace t{) the victims ofHansen's Disease. Right photo, Fan Riverites Mary Holland, St. Patrick's,Jane Haran, St. Joseph's, and Mary Noon, St. Patricks, prepare. to packfinished bandages for shipping.

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Poll Shows Junior High School BoysLead Girls As Religious Aspirants

DAYTON (NC) - A nation- from girls, wel'e compiled.wide survey among parochial The career preferences amongjunior high school students dis- the boys ware: engineer, 17.3closed that a greater number per cent; priest, 16.5 per cent;of boys aspire to the priesthood doctor, 11.3 per cent, and scien­than girls do toward religious tist, 10.5 per cent. Among girlslife. the preferences were: teacher,

The survey shQwed that the 25.8 per cent; nurse, 20.3 perpriesthood was ranked second cent; .secretary, 13.8 per cent,as a career among boys, while and SlSter, 9.7 per cent.the religious life was the fourth Nearly 78 per cent of the boyspreference among girls. and 64.5 per cent of tbe girls

Survey results were reported sai~ they t;xpect to contiJ1UQin the Youth Market Survey theIr educatIon through college.issued by Young Catholic Mes~ A prefe·ence for a militarysenger weekly current affairs career was expressed by 5.1lmagazine used as a supplemen- per. cent of the boys. It Tanked!tary text in a large number of behmd lawYc.r, with 7.6 perthe nation's parochial schools. cent, as the SIxth most popularIt is published by George A. career.Pflaum, PUblisher, Inc., here. The survey ~lso showed that

bome ownershIp among parent3Thesurv~y w~s made among of parochial school students is

boys and girls lD tbe 11 to 15 7~ per cent, compared with thea~e b~acket. Some ~,ooo ques- national average of sa per cant.bonnalres were mailed out 103,000 schools. ·The first 3,000 re­plies, 1,500 from boys and 1,500

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P.eople of CongoNeedChristianityFor Stability

BOSTON (NC)-A mis­sionary priest from EHsa­bethville, capital @f theCongo's secessionist Katan­ga province, said here thatChristianity is "the only force"that can restore the new nation'sstability.

But the priest, Father Martinde Wilde d'Estmael, O.S.B.,Vicar General of the Arch­d i 0 c e s e of Elisabethviile,warned that tribal rivalry, com­munist influence and lack oftrained native administratoroare tremendous threats to thecountry.

Father d'Estmael declared in.an interview that "there areconstructive forces in the Congowhich can overcome the c1e­Gtructive-ones."

However, disruptive socia!Dnd political conditions in theformer Belgian colony place itastability on a perilous balance,he said.

ReaSon for Joy, Father d'Estmael was in thiscountry seeking support for theCenter for Community Develop­ment, an agency of the Elisa­bethville archdiocese w h i c hseeks to promote research,·teaching and social action forthe development of the territory.

Father d'Estmael, a Benedic­tine missionary from Bruges,Belgium, who has spent 13 yearsin the Congo, said that Congo­lese independence "struck & re­sponsive chord among all thepeoples of the world.". "It was a reason for joy {-of'

those who took it for a victoryof what they think to be a right-the people's right of self­deterniination," he said.

However, he added, just asindividuals makil good use oftheir freedom "only when thetrace really. grown up," _ "anation, a people. can only existwhen sufficienUy solid· ties Uokthe citizens together." Recitedspiritual values as a soHd tie..

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Cape Coffee Hourst. Pius X Women's Guild,

South Yarmouth, will hold apublic coffee' hour between 10and 12 Tuesday morning, Aug.2 at the home· of Mrs. William][1'. MacDonald, Nauhaught andWood Road. Proceeds will bene­fit preparations for a spaghettisupper the J:uild plans forThursday, Aug. 18 at St. Pius XChurch Hall, Station Avenue.

Bishop HiUingerOffers Prayer

CHICAGO (NC) - DelegateSto the Republican national con­vention heard a plea for Divineaid in the nation's search foir'peace as they opened their se5.­sions here Monday.

Auxiliary Bisho(J Raymond P.Billinger of Chicago prayed toGod for "help in our search foir'peace ... tranquility of orderamong nations and among our­!lClves."

The 56-year-old prelate whoformerly served as Bishop ofRockford, TIl., delivered the in­vocation at the convention short­ly after Thruston B. Morton,chairman of the RepublicanNational Committee, opened thefirst session.

Bishop Hillinger also pleadedthat Americans may be givenGod's wisdom and counsel tolive in a manner acceptable toHis will, "made known to us i.Illthe Ten Commandments."

ABM®ililB @f !LOtllJV~aG'll

E~~«:fl" N®w OHgC&Jli'5CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr.

30hn J. Kenny, pastor of SlBrendan's Church, Riverside,&. I., was named president ofthe American Alumni Associa­tion of the Catholic Universityol. Louvain (Belgium) at thelP'OUp's meeting here.

Bishop Charles A. Busweit ofPueblo, Colo., is the new vice­preJident, and Father JOhR J.Kelliher of St. Patrick's Church,Whitinsville, Mass., was nained.ecretary..

Archbishop Edward F. Hoban.Bishop of Cleveland, addressedtile Ul archbishops and bishopseDCI 75 priests who attended the-.anual meeting held at St.Charles Borromeo SeminaJ7.Archbishop ·Henry 3. O'BrieB C)f

Bartford, Conn., was the pri8­eipal speaker at the alumni bao.­.-et.

I Heads ProvinceHUBERTUS (NC) - Father

ehristopher Latimer, O.CD..prior of the Discalced CarmeliteFather's novitiate at Brookline,Mass., has been named head ofUbe orders Province of the ~-.culate Heart of Ma17.

French Priest Urges Laity LoseInhibitions About Participation

LOVELAND (NC)-A French to a full participation in the lifetbeologian has urged Amedcan of the Church, but it also "makesCatholics to relax their "inhibi_ them realize the significance 01.tIons" about vocal participation their membership in the My&-·in the Mass. tical Body of Christ," he said.

Father Louis Bouyer, C.O., In Father Bouyer's opinion,professor of theology at the every lay person should beCatholic Institute of Paris, said "very much interested" in tbelID an interview that "there it! liturgical movement and shouldDO reason why your parish con- try to develop a fuller under­lJll'egations shouldn't sing the standing of his role in liturgicalOrdinary of the Mass."· worship.

Father Bouyer is in this coun- He said that study clubs illiltry as a visiting professor at which the Sunday Mass is dis­Notre Dame University's grad- cussed are "a great belp in the'/late school of liturgy. The Ora- development of an adequatetoll'ian priest, a convert from knowledge of the liturgy."Lutheranism, was here to lec­wre at Grailville CommunityCollege.

'Something Protestant'Father Bouyer said during the

mterview:"Many Catholics in the United

States have got the notion thatlICtive participation in the litur­gy is something Protestant, be-,cause the only ones they have .known to sing in church haVQbeen Protestants."

"'As a matter of fact," he·added, "there is something veryCatholic about singing." He de­lIC4"ibed the current liturgical.ll'evival as the rediseovery b.,.many Christians that the liturgyCDncerns them and is somethingto. which they are asked to takeIl!ll active part.

Not only does it lead the lait)"

Page 6: 07.28.60

Passion for Cre~tin«

Weekly.Calendar«)f Feast Days

TODAY-SS. Nazarius, Cets.And Victor, Martyrs. St. Naza­rius, who lived in the first ceD­

wry, was the son of a pagaaRoman army officer and ~braced the Christian faith 01. ..

· mother, Perpetua. With St. C•IIUS, his youthful companion, bewas beheaded' under Nero ...'Milan. St. 'Victor, an Africaa.8Ucceeded St. Eleutherius ..-Pope in 189 and ruled .until 1-'

. roMORRbw~st. MartlMi' ..'Bethany,' Virgin. She' was ',theiliilter. of St.. Mary Magdalene a,rieiSt. Lazarus. They' entertainedOur Lord in their home. She' illsaid to have' attended Christ illHis Passion and rejoiced withhim after the. Resurrection~; •is said that with her brother and

· sister she went to Marseilles' andaided in the, intro'duction cjC~ristianity in France.

SATURDAY-SS. Abdon 'aooSennen, Martyrs. They werePersian nobles who lived in thethird century and were broughtto Rome as captives of Deciu&.They devotea themselves to theflervice of Christians and to

·reverent burial of martyrs.When Decius became emperor.they were scourged with lead­tipped whips, subjected to othertortures, and finally thrown towild beasts in the amphitheateL

I •

MONDAY - 8t. Peter iaChains. This feast commemo­rates the miraculous delivery ofSt. Peter from a prison in whichhe had been placed by the orderof Herod.

sign and pushed it so far forwardthat, even though he died beforeits completion, completed it waL

SUNDAY-Eighth Sunday aft­er Pentecost. Generally this da,.is observed .as the feast of St.Ignatius of Loyola, Confessor.He was a native of Spain and

. served as courtier' and soldieruntil his 30th year, when he re­nounced the world. Later found­ed the Society of Jesus. He WOIll

many others to the service Of,God. He died in 1556.

Not that he was entirely indifooferent to mone~.·When he' died;among his possessions was astout chest containing a goodljnumber of ducats. But he 'had nOpassion for·money; his dominantpassion was for creating in' themedia c,>f which he had superJ&.:tive com":land.·

What he bequeathed to pc»­teritYinot only in the form ofachievements but also in the. wqof standards and inspiration, illincalculable. His work touche.with greatness each succeedinCage into which it survives.

WEDNESDAY-Finding of theBody .of St.' Stephen the firstMartyr. This feast commem~

rates the finding of the bodies ofSt. St~phen and SS. Nicodemus.Gamaliel and Abibo early in thefifth century through a divine

.revelation .made to Lucian, a·priest, 'during the reign of Em..'peror Honorius.

His .work on St. Peter's ind-. dentally, was without fee' he

tOok the position of architect-in­chief only on the understandin,that he shou.ld receive no r~

muneration.

,Orientation

YOVZl NEED THIS/

V

Biography of Mic;helangelo'Graceful Recital of Facts

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kenne~yCharles H. Morga~ has set a modest scope to his book

The Life of Michelangelo (Reyna!.' $6). The blurb-writercalls this a "major biography," but it is nothing of the sort.There are fewer than 250 pages of text. When one considersthat the prodigious gf)nius '.lived to be 89, and that a Michelangelo's turning ~o sculp-

ture...,was1:>rompted by the fact,six-volume study of him is that his nurse was the daughter.even now being rounded out, and wife of stonecutters. At anyit is easily seen that Mr. Morgan rate, the youngstelf began tohas not attempted to be exhaus- ,tag. after the art apprenticestive. That is who abQunded in Florence,probably all to watching their efforts and avid_the good, so far ly listening to their exuberantas the general talk.r~ader is' con!" His father sternly opposedcerned. such an interest. The boy's every

Here, then, is / attempt to be allowed to learna' skeletonized the techniques of drawing andace 0 u n t of stonecutting was h a rs h I y TUESDAY - St. AlphonsUliMichelangelo's thwarted. Ligouri, Bishop-Confessor-Doc_

career, a grace- A friend who was an appren": tor. He was a native of Naples"ful recital of tice to Ghirlandaio surreptitious- scion of a noble family, and be-the principal ly secured for him some of that gan his public career as a lawyell.facts. These are artist's drawings to copy, and He renounced prospects of •smoothly .articulated, .so that thus the resolution in him was legal career and became a mis-·one can take in the story from kept alive. sionary priest. At Benevento hestart to finish. Wisely, ,too, the Pieta at.23 founded the Congregation of theauthor attempts nothing like Final1y his father 'capitulated. Most Holy Redeemer (Redemp-:psychoanalysis of the' subject. At 13, Michelangelo was ap~ren- toriosts). Pope Clement XIIIFie has an opinion on those things ticed to Ghirlandaio, who;' if named him Bishop of Santain the master7artist's lif~ whi<:h lacking ..in inspiration, insisted Agata dei Gota. He became ahave been the subject of fer.vidon the best materials and their ·model of pastoral virtue. He re­and even fantastic sPeculation; 'honest use, as well 'as 'technical signed his See because of ishis opinion. he states' briefly and perfection. ' health a~d. devoted the remain_firmly. After a year in that studio, del' ot"his life to theological. . .' Astonishing Mystery Michelangelo was accepted for .. and ascetical works. He' died' iJa

Nor does he try to explain the the new academy founded by the' 1787 at the .age of 90, was can­asfonishing mystery of this giant.. M;e~l.ici; had' instructio~ . from.. .onized in 1839, and proclaimedin sculpture,.painting. and archi,,:, Bertoldo, then, at 15, moved into 11 Doctor' in '187f.·" '.tecture. He' simply says that the MediCi pal~ce as a ·retainer."there was nothing -iil his hered- . 'Fhe latter arrangement .allowedity and less than nothing in his him some contact with men whohome to foster his amazing were leaders in politics, :thQught,mind.". . art.

La tel', when speaking of There followed another stay atMichelangelo at the, zenith. of home, and a year in Bologna,.his powers, he' reminds us that. where what was to prove hishis "total formal training in all first major work began in afields of the arts' consis(ed' of small way. At 19, he was inone year in Ghirlandaio;s atelier Rome and had the invaluableand some less formal months assistance .of a moneyed patron.studying sculpture with Ber- The Pieta which now draws thetoldo." attention of thousands daily in

Mr. Morgan analyzes some of St. Peter's, was produced whenthe principal works in marble he was 23. The arrival of a greatand in paint. His descriptions are talent was recognized.straightforward and without ex-Architect of Basllicacess of technical terms, and are Now began. ~5 tumultuousabetted by .a series of photo- years. They were tumultuous forgraphs at thebac:k of the ~ook Europe (Mr. Morgan gives abut with references in the text. generally sound and admirably

His comments are sensible and succinct account of the .principalcomprehensible; and trace de-' events, especially' as they borevelopments from productions in on his subjects' fortunes); theyon~ period to' those in other were also tumultuous for Michel-periods: ' .. . . angelo.

Father Opposes He .was 72 whe!1 he was· ap-:Michelangelo Bunoarroti was' poin'ted chief architect of si.

born March 6, 1475 in Caprese, Peter's basilica. This, of. course,a small town' in central Italy. was the present church, whichLess than a month later his fam- then had been many years in theily returned to·, their' native building. The original .... planFlorence. called for a structure 100 feet. ·It was in this city, with its high, surmounted by a shallowmarvelous cathedral, it profusion dome. ·Michelangelo planned a.

. of art treasures, and its lively dome to rise more than 300 feetpopular preoccupation with the above the roof. .arts a~d with artists, that the He was laughed to scorn, theboy grew up. conception was stubbor'nly re-

It has been surmised that listed, but he effected the de-.

THE ANCHOR-D.iocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 19606

World Clinic

'@rhe ANCHOR·OFFICIAL N~WSPAPER .OF· THE· DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

'''blished weekly by The Catholic Press of: the Diocese of Feill River

~10 Highland Avenue.Fall River, Mas,; ".OSborne 5-71'51

~UBLISHER . " .MOlt ·'Rev; James L Connolly, D.O., PhD.

GENERAL MANAGER .. ASST.' GENERAL 'MANAGI:RRev.- Daniel F. Sholloo. M.A~ Rev. John P. Driscoll

~NAGINGEDITOR . . ... Hugh J. Gol.den

-----_.:...-_--....;..--.;......-...;------;,...-

Agains~ a Bill . '.Our Lord said, "The poor you have always with you.­This is a fact of life that some politicians and sociolo-

gists ~re loath to accept. . ' .While these worthies are committed to the elimination

of poverty and evil and attendant ills, they must also> facethe fact that human nature being what it is the job is neverdone. So there must be work without ceasing and strivingwithout despair and conscientiousness without desperation.

At times the desperation seeps through in the proposalof desperate methods to eliminate the poor--or at least tosweep them under the public <;arpet. ,

This is seen in a bill under consideration in thisCommonwealth at the prese~t time, seeking to exclude frompublic assistance eligibility· transients-those who are notnat.ives of the Commonwealth or those'who have notbeel)in continuous residence in the Commonwealth.for one. year.

The·purpose of the bilUs.a worthy one-to. U5e th4~ taxmoney of the Commonwealth for those with some SOlrt ofelal~ upon the public welfare: But this bill'~ not an an5~erto the few abuses that are·'ineVftable.: . : ., :

Actually, So-called transients. never"exceed .two~l·cent

.f the total welfare cases handled by·. the State. Further­more, the passage of such a·bill'·wouIa nOt· solv.e' a.prolblembut ignore it-hardly an en}ightt;!ped social ·approach.. Andon humanitarial) grounds-what d,efense.is there, in denyingburial or in refusing food and sheltertp. childre".l>e.cause.parents-however worthy or unwort~y-:"'are exercising'their right to travel. where they. will and frqm .State toState.········

It might be further pointed out, that the passage of thisbill would simply throw more of a burden on private welfare

.'agencies which are already strainediri their persohnel andfunds. .

Perhaps the strongest argument against the pasllage.f this bill is the opposition to it on the part of he Massa­ehusetts Public Welfare Administrators Association. Theseare the men and women who' deal with the indigent' withinthe State. Their stand should not be overlooked.

The bill should be reje~ted.

Events of the ·last few weeks have turned. worldattention once more to the United Nations in New York.Although not the geographical nor political center' of theworld, this organization is standing all the more ·38 themoral capital of the world.

. : It is a healthy and wholesome sign that in the, midst'.. ,of ·outraged cries replete with charges and.counterl~liarges

: .Ii an international· plane;' there is still the rush. to 'be first'at the United Nations to' present a storybefor~ the.c(Jluntriea'of the.worid.·· .', .•. '''".:<' .'. :::~: r:: ,:~. .' .",". This alhiIidic.ates that",there;i88bll~in eac~.~ountry':"';";'·.

lome desire for the decen(respeCt,of all mankind~~, ;', . This indicates that .each country-;:whil~pi.u~suingits·

own aims and '~oals-recognizes that it carr,never· remain,. :isola.ted from the rest oithe 'world., '\: .... \ .

. This indicates, too, that the most reckl~ss of ,~ational

"programs still feels a need for an intern~tionalorsupra­

national organization to give approval or to caution new'tactics or to resolve seemingly hopeless' de~dlocks amongnations.

There is, unhappily, still a strong feeling of distrusttoward the U.N. in the minds .of many Americans, Catholicsamong them. There is still the feeling that to g~ve appq:>valof his body'is to yield nation~l sover.ei~nty or to co'mp:romisepatriotism. There is the feeling that the United Nationsbudget (actually less than the City of New York spent onits street department last year) is a waste. of money.

And yet the. United Nations-while a rallying pointat times for propagandists who would use it as a world'sounding board-is yet a rallying point for those seekingjustice and those working for-peace. This alone justifies its.existence and worthiness of support. . .

If men all over the world look to the United Nations inits fifteenth year as a place where they will be received '~sequals and listened to with respect by representatives fromevery corner of the globe, then Americans would do . w'ellto re-examine their own view·· of it. While not a panaceafor 'all the ills of the world, the U.N. is a clinic deserviing ofinterest and approval.' . " '.

..

:.;,

.<i,.::

Page 7: 07.28.60

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THE, ANCHOR­Thurs.• JiJly 28, 1960

Rest of NationTo feel EffectOf Migration

NE W YORK (NC)Fewer than half the PuertoRicans who will migrate tothe United States in thenext few years will settle !nNew York ,City.,

The prediction was ..made iftthe final report of the FourthPuerto Rican Migration Confer­ence.

, The five-day meeting broughttogether, representatives froIJlPuerto Rican and New York Cityagencies in the fields of educa­tion, ,health and welfare, crime.housing and labor. The reportreviewed progress made sincethe last conference in 1958 in theassimilation of Puerto' RicaD3into the life of the city.

DeclineAccording to the report, the

proportion o£ New York-boundmigrants has declined fro'" 0'1per cent in 1948 to a current 60per cent. It is expecied to 1;;0

below the 50 per cent mark inthe near future.

It was noted that more than, half the present yearly increaso

of the Puerto Rican populationof the city is natural growth. Aaa result, the report said, the sit­uation of the Puerto Ricans hereis losing much of its specialcharacter and is becoming ab­sorbed into the general prob­lems of the city.

Large ShiftsMayor Robert F. Wagnel

called for Federal assistance toareas in which migration haabroughL..large shifts in popula­tion. He noted that,Puerto Ricanmigration is only a small partof the total migration picture.He cited the movement of South­,earn mountain people into Cin­cinnati and Chicago, of Negrosharecroppers to Cleveland andDetroit, and of Spanish-speakingmigrants from the Southwest toLos Angeles and Denver.

The Mayor said estimate.tplace annual migration at 5,000,­000. He added: "Since migrationis a national phenomenon, weneed a national policy and pro­gram to deal with it." He asked~'the special attention of Con­gress" to provide increased hous­ing and schooling f-or areas'swollen b,y migration, and 16encourage new growth in areasthat migrants ?ave vacated.

Bishop of 150 WivesDies in Australia

SYDNEY (NC)-Bishop Fran­cis_ Xavier Gsell, M.S.C., formerBishop of Darwin known as the"Bishop with 150 wIves," diedin retirement at the age of 87.

Bishop Gsell was born inAlsace Lorraine and entered theMissioners of the' Sacred Heartat the age ofl8. It was as amissioner on Bathurst Island offthe coast of Australia's North­ern Territory that he acquiredhis "wives." To save youngaboriginal girls from the servi­tude involved in marriage totribal elders, he went throughtribal marriage ceremonies in­volving gifts of flour, sugar,'axes,' tobacco and clotIi; The'girls later married young inen

'of their choice at the missionehurch.'In 1906 Bishop Gsell was

made Apostolic Administrator ofterritory embracing the North­ern Territory and adjacent is­lands. He was named the firstBishop of Darwin in 1938 andretired 10 years later. He diedin a hospital in Randwick wherehe had spent his last years.

center and gives aid thro11"'l,­out the Malayan peninsula. Hedistributes food packages andgives other aid maue pv____ _ J

,Catholics of the United Statesto thousands of aged, infirm,widows, unemployed and or­phans.

Jeanne Wolf is the' grand­daughter of former Mayor Kayof Fall River. H~r parents, Mr.and Mrs. Harold B. Kay, for­merly of this city, now live ,inSt. Petersburg:

is located, thus ensuring a worldoutlook for little ~ernard.

George Wolf makes frequentfield trips to the 150 welfare

MISSIONARY FAMILY: leanne and George Wolf,members of the Association for International Development,lay 'mis~ionary prganizatiop., gaze proudly at a very new layapostle, baby son Bernard" born in Kuala Lumpur, Malaya.Jeanne Wolf is a native of Fall River.

Fall River Native Joins Lay MissionariesWorld Service in God

Coyle Chang~~Continued from Page One

School for Boys at Chester, N. Y.Brother Francis Leary, a naitve

of Fall River and junior Englishteacher for the past year, hasbeen assigned to teach at Vin­centian Institute, Albany.'Brother Maurice Healy/in­

structor in Mathematics, will~come a member of' the facultyat the BishOp Hendr'icken HighSchool, Warwick, R. I. ,

Assigned by the provincial toCoyle High School for the com­ing 'year are: Brother StefanClark from Notre Dame High,New Haven; Brother RichardO'Brien and" Brother PatrickOliver from the Bishop Hendric­ken High' School, Warwick., Also appOinted ,'to the Tauntonschool are Brother James -Rothfrom Holy CrosS High, Flushing,N.'Y.; -Brother Joseph 'Hoganfrom St. Edward's' University.Austin Texas; and Brother Ed­ward Burgie from St. Joseph'.J'uniorate. Valatie,N. Y;

Requiem l in Hirosh;~Q "C'athedralOn Anniversary of Holocaust

HIRO§HIMA , (NC) - The seemed small compared to th<:lBishop of Hiroshima will cele- over-all, destruction in the city.brate' Mass on Sunday, Aug. 6 Th~ Catholic I;oinmunity thenf()r the 78,000 persons who died consisted of not more than 150here 15 years before In' the persons, many of whom 'lostworld's first atomic holocaust.' their lives in the bombing. To-

Bishop DominicusNogucli~will day, in the area of the' ruins ofsing the Requiem 'in ~he Peace t~e single chapl;!l where theyMemorial Cathedral that towers worshipped, there are' a greatabove the rest of the recon- Cathedral and eight other parishstrueted city; The cathedral, districtS, six of 'which have newdedicated to the Assumption of churches with resident' pastornthe Blessed Virgin, replaces a and schools.tiny _wooden chapel of the As.:. Two new high schools havesumption that disintegrated in • also been constructed in the lastthe atomic blast~ '15 years, the Notre Dame 'High

Among those crowding into School for girls' and the Jesuitthe majestic nave of the ca- High School for boys. 'thedral will be some who re- The School of the Helpers ofmember that morning 15 years the Holy Souls iuid the, Jesuitago when the first atomic bomb House of Studies have beenexploded over this city 'of 400,Q cOmpletely rebuilt' or expanded;000. Finally" Hiroshima, in the year

The disaster that overtook that marks the 15th anniversaryHiroshima's Catholic community of' the bombing,-has been' raised

-', the status "of a diocese. 'Remark'ableRebirth

The symbol of this remark­able rebirth from disaster thatseemed to be .the end of every­thing 1s the Peace MemoriaiCathedral, where the anniver­sary services will be held.' It isperhaps more a 'symbol of futuregrowth than of actual achieve­ment, for Catholicism in Hiro­shima is still in its infancy; de­spite its progress and, influence:

Those who were Chiefly re­sponsible for tlie erection 'of thecathedral intended that it should'point to the future. Chief amongthese was Father Hugo La Salle,S.J., pastor of the tiny niission'chapel at the time of the bomb­in& and now Vicar General Of',the Diocese of HiroShima. '

That the Cathedral became a'reality is due in large measUreto an anonymous' Americanbenefactor. He gave the moneywhich made' possible the ca~

thedral in its 'present dimen­sions. He has contributed 'sub-:stantially eVer'since."

Aiming ,to Gi,v~,By patricia MeGowaa.

A former ,Fall Riverite, together ~ith'herhusband, is a member of one of the newestmissionary organizations in the Church. Sh~)8 Jeanne Kay Wolf who, with her husband,George, belongs to the' ASsociation for International Development"a group which,~rnit8,

and trains,lar ~issionarie8.A graduate of"S~ Hearts Academy, F'all .River~ J:eanneWoli. worked for Catholic ' , " "\" . 'Relief Services iII· Viet Nambefore her marnage. Withher husband, also:,~ eRSworker, she is now st8t~oned illKuala Lumpur, Malaya~', .

The Wolfs'8l'e among scores ofCatholic laymen serVing theChurch in mission areas., In­cluded in AlD's membership areengineers, ,,' builders,' teachers,yolith workers;' nurses,socialworkers and agricultural ex­perts. They are active in manyparts of the world in: line withthe organization's motto, "WorldService in God."

As workers for Catholic ReliefServices, the Wolf's occupationis in line with AID's objectives.They formally joined the mis­sionary organization, which hasits headquarters in Paterson,N. J., on a horne visit this Spring.They are now back in KualaLumpur.

Open HouseJeanne Wolf describes the

CRS work in Malaya as fasci­nating. She and her husbandhold perpetual open house forCatholics passing through thecity or in residence for briefperiods. They 'have entertainedpriests and religious from aUparts of the world as well asnotable members of the lay apos­tolate.

George Wolf is in charge ofadministering CRS services inthe Malayan area. His wife as­sists with office work and 'any­thing that can be combined withcaring for their baby son, Ber­.nard, who had the: honor ofbeing the first baby baptized inthe new Franciscan Missionariesof ,Mary Hospital in KualaLumpur.

The Wolfs' home and officeare combined for reasons ofpracticality and economy. Fam­ilies of all, nationalities sharethe apartment buildin,g where it

Marquette Buys HotelMILWAUKEE' (Nt) ---' Mar­

quette University has purchasedthe··16-story ·Tower Hotel herefor use as a residence hall for:women students. The' buildingbas' 188 rooms and sale 'pricel'eportedl,y was $1;000,000. "

ObscenityArresttRi se Sharply:'During Ye~r: "

, Arrests for alleged ViO\il­tions of postal antiobscenitylaws increased almost 25 per'eent' during 'the 12 monthsending June 30. " ,,", Convictions of deal~rs 'in m;il

order obscenity increased' ,12.5~~ ~ent during the saD;\e ,per~~.

, ,These figures were disclOsedby the Post Office DepartmentIn a report on theactiv~ties of

, 'its 'postal inspec'iion serVice. ,I" , '. , •

T,he department said, it re­eeived more than 70,000 com-'plaints about delivery" of, ob­scene material froll)"parents and~ther citizens.. Especially notable cases in­volving smut distributors, in-.dude an operation in New York

,where a four-and-a-halftonmail truck was required to cartaway confiscated material fromthe dealer's studio.,In another New York, raid,

the department said, the value,of confiscated material was es­timated at $800,000.

DevelopmentsOther developments relating

to obscenity and free speecbwcluded the follo,wing:

1) In Minneapolis, Minn., theLutheran Laymen's Lea g u eadopted a resolution at its 43rdClOnual convention urging Con­gress to call a citizens' confer­ence to deal with the obscenityproblem.

The resolution said: "Decentcitizens of the United States andCanada are becoming inereas­Inglydisturbed by the preva­lence of immorality, violenceand bad taste in publications,motion pictures, television andradio programs, and in the masscommunications media general-I,y.

"The fundamental values' ofrespect for God, for human life.for marriage, home and family,for 'property, for virtue, for goodname and reputation are beingdegraded and eroded by theseunwholesome influences andmaterials."

Druggists2) In Steubenville, Ohio, the

Ohio State Pharmaceutical' As­Gociation began distribution to'druggists of posters urging pa.:.trons to call objectionable pub~

llications in their stores to the'ottention of the management.

The, posters read: "We want'to 'sell only acceptable readingmaterial. If a magazine seems'objectionable to ,you .. '. please"call it to the attention of the'management." ,

, ,The Steubenville Register,newspaper of the Steubenvillediocese, said that about 25 percent of the, druggists whom itcontacted in a' telephone surveystated that they are displayingthe posters in their stores.Others said they had takenSteps on their own to keep ob­jecr~,ionable publications off~4i'i~ newsstands.

Says Education ActViolates Separation.. ~EW YORK (NC)-A mem-,ber 'of the National COl11lcil, of,Churches' committee on religionand ,public 'education' chargedb,ere that the National P.efen~

Education Act violates thepriri­eiple of separation of Cp\Uchond State. '

,The Rev. G. Emanuel CarlsOn,a Baptist member of the com­mittee, said that loans madeunder the act to sectarian insti­tutions amounted to support ofthe institution's program, notthe government's.

The 1958 act, which will be upf,Qr, renewal next year, prov.i~es

Cll~~t~l to colleges and univerlli..."ti.~, w,hich tpey in turn nwy,lend'tQ students of superior, aca.. ,dem'ic attainment who plan to,1?e,come teachers or to study sci-"en~e, mathematics, engineeringor:a,JTlodern foreign langul,lg~. ,:

Page 8: 07.28.60

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Summer PlansAt Sandwich'

Summer activities at Corpu,s· Christi parish, Sandwich, and

its missions in Pocasset and Sag­amore, will include a penny saleand a silver tea.

Corpus Christi-St. TheresaCatholic Ladies' Guild held ape\lny sale this month in Sand­wich and the newly-formed St.'John's Catholic Women's Guildof Pocasset will hold a similaraffair in August.

A silver tea under the auspicesof "St. Theresa's 'Church, Saga­more will be held at the homeof Mrs. Clement Ferreti, .Com:"monwealth -Avenue, Sagamorefrom 2 to 5 Wednesday, after­noon, Aug. 3. All members of theeommunity, including Summer,visitors, and ,year-round resi­dents are. invited to attend.

'Pldri 'County FairTo Aid Sewing,

The New Bedford, AssociRteFamily of the Holy Cross

· .Fathers will hold ita 12th annualcountry fair and charity bazaartomorrow and Saturday nightsat the Holy Cross Fathers' houseon Tucker Road, North Dart­mouth.

The United States Army bandfrom Fort Devens will appearboth evenings in its first per:­formances in the New Bedfordarea. A chicken supper will bea feature of Saturday night'sprogram, with servings from 8o'clock on.

" Free bus transportation fromNew Bedford terminal to the'fair grounds will be available'and there will be special enter:"tainment for children., Proceeds· of the event will'benefit the Holy Cross seminary'in North Easton. James L. Gib­lin is president of the Associate'Family in New Bedford.

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'Bam~ ShelfIn lieu of such a cupboard, a

bamboo 'shelf, filled withprett1"pottery dishes, flankeqb:y brack­ets holding 'trailing ivy, would"be most effective. A beautifulserwng tray makes a nice walldecoration,',or black-iron holdersfilled with English ivy plantsmake a good arrangementagainst a wall to give height;

Here's an appealing bit ofwhimsy-if you· have an oldbird cage, paint it ,white (oragainst it white wall; you couldpaint it' dark green or black)and fill it' ,with greens growingin water.

You will find that sms,ll fold­ing tables are a quick and himdyway to serve snacks or iced tea _.in Summer; or hot chocolate inwinter. Another good idea-a'shelf that drops flat agaiinst' thewall whe'1.)lot in use inakes •snack' tab&,a convenient: place LIFE·S~ZED: Debora Ann Terra ,ullveiied this life-to set (hit ,frosty drinks. " ' " sized' statue9f the SaC~ed Hea~t at Vilia Fatima, Taunton: ·Paint revives •. JiE:glected in.' Su.·ilday ceremo.ny. ' '. . ,Porch.' When'you stop tlJ· think., 'of it; there are ,so many .. things, U IS· , V"that can·'be imprOVed with paint nvei .. ttJtue at ilia Fati rna~e:ven' .blinds . and rug.· can be:' '.. A hand-carved, life~sized sta- .SisterS' of St. Dorothy: at Villasprayed . to· match, wood and" tue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Fatima, 'Taunfu.n.·wrou.ght;..iron furniture. • wall·unveiled Sunday on the Rev. Joseph Oliveira, assistant

One porch 'we· saw was gay .rounds of the Novitiate of the· at St. Anthony's Church; offi:"with·· ,wiCker furniture,all of ' _ciated. pebora Ann Terra un-.which the owner had sprayed .St. Elizabeth, Fall River, veiled the statue..with ·,white enamel,and· cush-ioned' in green. ·She told 'liS that The ceremony was. preceded.when the sun sizzles; her 'family. To Hold August Sale by'aprocession of children, led·head for the. porch. It feels eOo1- , St. Elizabeth's Church Wom- by two dressed as angel!,!, and

er, because l't looks cooler.' , G 'ld F II R' , '11 h Id the altar boys of St. Anthony'.en s UI , a . lver, ,WI 0 parish: .

• Summer sale next month, withMrs. ,Donald A.· Berube as· gen':' The statue was obtainederal chairman. Booths will in- through Benedini and Bonattielude, handwork, food; white Statuary Company. of Quincyelephant, religious articles, grabs from Carrara,' Italy. The Sistersand refreshments; expressed their gratitude for

the many offerings which madethe, shrine possible, .and ' to.Councilman Joseph Terra' and,other friends· who· prepared thesite for its erection.

Ne'w· Bedford 0 c.f· ~

Name· DelegateHyacinth Circle ':71, New Bed­

ford· Daughters of Isabella, will ..send Miss· Natalie F, Ferr,eira .. '

, ,delegate' 'to the organiz!ltion~',national convention Aug. 'l~,to 12in Kansas, .. City. Other eire1emembers will also attend.

The circle will hold' aw.1~lcom.tea ,for. its new chaplain,. Rev.JohnJ.~ayes,in Sep,.tember.,'_

Students, .Nuns Mo,king·.Summer Trip to -Poland

LODI' (NC) -A two-week'.visiL behi~d;' the Iron" C:Urtain

-to Poiand willbighlili:ht- •.·E'uropean: ,to'.if, by', six student.·and. two Felician Sisters' from·Immaculate . Conception Hip

, ~SchoolheJ;ein New,.jerSey., ,, The 'students arid' :nuns ' lire~akiilg the trip in eonjuJrlctioDwith the FeliClan Sisters" Euro,­pean Summer Seminar, ., b'avelprogram sponsored 01" the Feii:-

_eians. ' .

New Superior GeneralCLINTON (NC)-Sister Mary

Leona Griffin, a teacher atMount St. Clare College ·here inIowa for 12 years, has, beenelected superior general· of the

,'Sisters of"St. Francis whosemother house is here. She suc- EXtetereeeds Mother Regis Cleary, who Dennisport·. ' 8-2~Z91

'. served the maximum of two MAIN ST. 8-2:Z92"six-year terms, , .. " '., _..\L;''';'''';'.';''.';'''""••;,;.;,,;',,;,.•,;, ;,;'' -..:.~.;,;;-,,;,-.;'•.,;;;/,;..;.• .I

8.· .TH~,AN.~HO~-+;f)i~ese,Of Fat'RIV.~T~ur?;;Ju'y:~~, ,1'68·, '" '. . .. ',.,' '.. '.' ",

Porche'an'Be 'Family'Ro9IT1:..r~Q,AdmitWinterSun" Sunim'e'l~Air

, 'By, Alice Bough ,Cahill 'This is, p~annjng time-time to plan your. po~hfor

full-time use. During the swnmer months, you pJ;",actic:iJIylive on your porch. Relaxed, informal living is as ,much apart of the American scene as a· favorite TV.· program. If'you turn your porch into a 'things that will pretty this newfamily room, you'll see how room. Surely there w,lll be atit takes the pressure off least one wall which you canyour living room. Suppose decorate and, depending on the70U could use this extra space ,scheme you intend to use, youevery day, all year long. Think have several choices 01. wallwhat' it would treatments. . ' ,

,mean to your ' We like to sugge~t one piecefamily. You'd of highfurpiture for every liv-have that extra ing r'?Om and if you could have'room' yOll need a Dutch cupboard" with .open -"for television, shelves to display pretty dishesfor hobbies.' Or or bric-a-brac, and cupboards'this can be a below for, disheS, thill 'wouldj. 0 0 m ,where give· you a high piece of furni-the children· ture.ean study orpractice music,Illay or enter-,tain:their gu.ests· . . .when Mother· and Dad are usmgthe living room.

We know alamily who havelet a porch double as a guestroom, and a lovely guest roomit 'is. Dr~peries· of natural­colored monk's cloth draw across.'the' windows for privacy whenthis family room-porch servesas a guest room.

·If you are considering drapes,,be'sure to make them sill-.length,.0 as not to interfere wlth thearrangement of 'furniture al.ongthe walls. A sofa can make mto.; double .bed. '

" Double~GlaS6 Windows. In· t~rning your porch into afamily room, sunny in· winterand preeze-cooled. in: Summer.,you ,should install'double:-gl~ss

"windows' interchangeable wlth''Summer screens. A flip'"top .tabl~"ihat can be used for games and:study' can aiso serve as" a dining'table because' it doubles in size,. '

" .AI~ng one end of the' .waU·ar­,tange :,storage cabinets to hol~

" ~xtra card tables, hobby equ,ip:",,'ment andspor~ gear. tnstead­of a· flip-top table, you. mightiike a long trestle table. This is'useful because it can accommo­;dite a number· of guests and is'also wonderful for study or for·'a general work table. '···Maybe you'd like a bench'along one wall, which will seatguests· at on~ side of the.' tab~e.If this, and whatever side chairsyou'·11 use; are cushioned with agay gingham or chintz, the effect.is very inviting. Your couch-day,:,bed can have the same covering;thus tying in your color scheme.

Does your porch have a fire-'place, or would it be possible toinstall one, if you could use the

.same wall on which your living·room fireplace is built? Som~­how, a fireplace on' a porch (now,converted to your family room)encourages the barbecue artists.

Build a cache at one.,end forextra logsj' and inc;:iude a cup­

,board to hold'dishes;··With tableand chairs you have 'an area forinformal entertainment.

Having settled on· the ~ssen,:,· ti,als, for family' r~m comfort,"let's give a little: th?ughtto

,:' ;St. Jo'seph's, Fciirhaven·, Plans Annual Feast .

· St. Joseph's Church, Fair­haven, will hold its annual

,Feast 'n' Frolic· tomorrow and.: Saturday nights on· the ·chuI:ch

grounds. .Joseph A: Saladino is chair­

man, of the steering committeeplanning 'the event,which wiilinclude an auction at 6 tomor-row night and a chicken supperat 6 Saturday night.,' ,

Other attractions will be cakesales and .various booths, includ­

'ing trinkets, white elephant,~ country. store and children's

gifts.

-, .:.

Page 9: 07.28.60

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i D of I ConventionAt Kansas City

Delegates from all parts ofthe Diocese will attend theBiennial Convention of theDaughters of Isabella of theUnited States, Canada and thePhilippines, scheduled fromAug. 9 to 12 at Kansas City.

Convention events will includea solemn pontifical Mass withMost Rev. John P. Cody, Bishopof Kansas City and St. Joseph,as celebrant; a pilgrimage to St.Benedicts Abbey, Atchison,Kansas; a national banquet andparade of States; election of of­ficers; and departmental discus­sions of spiritual development,youth, rural life, social action.,cultural 'activities and publicity.

The Daughters of Isabella arein their 63rd year. Founded aoan auxiliary to New HavenKnights of Columbus, they arenow an international organiza_tion.

Outstanding accomplishmentshave included establishment ofthe Queen Isabella Foundationat the Catholic University ofAmerica to provide fellowshipsto members attending the schoolof social service.

Other sc'holarships and burseSlfor seminarians and Sisters havebeen given, in addition to aidto foreign stUdents, correspon­dence courses in religion, andassistance to sick and infirm.priests.

The organization's spiritualprogram inclUdes retreats, cor­porate Communions and daYILof recollectio-ll.

New Bedford FashionsThe Catholic Woman's Club

of New Bedford will present afashion show Sept. 13 at Ken­nedy Center. Proceeds will ben_efit the club's scholarship fund.

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PRAYERS FOR CAPTIVE NATIONS: Typical ofobservances throughout the United States, prayers in thelanguage of captive nations were, said in Catholic churchesthroughout the country. Here in St. Dominic's Church,Washington, Mrs. Claire Chenault leads the rosary, assistedby Miss Birute Babrskas, a Lithuanian.

Parish School for Baby Sitte~s

D~velops Efficiency, SpiritualityCLEVELAND (NC)-A West velopment, elementary first aid,

Side Cleveland 'parish has or- procedure in the parish, nursery,ganized a school for baby sitters games and crafts for ·pre­that may well revolutionize schoolers.America's most popular part- In addition, Instructors ex-time occupation. . plain how the Apostleship of

At Our Lady of Good Counsel Prayer program can make evenParish, more than 100 teen-age such tasks as a babysitting spir­girls have been graduated ~n the itually' meritorious.past two ·years. and another l)8 Graduation Ceremon,.are in training programs. Theschool even has its own uniforms For those who complete theand even a capping ceremony" course, . there's a graduationfor graduates. ceremony in the church and. a

Called the Guardian Angel six-month probation, period.'Guild Training Course, it is 'During that time, the girls mustaffiliated with'the parish Wom- attend monthly semInars anden's Guild which supplies the must also baby sit in the parishinstructors. The :Guild ties ,. its DUrSery for at least 12 Sundays.training course in with strict Then 'they are capped in anmembership in the Apostleship nvestiture ceremony in theof Prayer. The result is a te~n- church and their names placed .agel' who truly "baby sits with on the parish register. TheseGod.'" names are perJodically published

'Angel Room' 'n the parish bulletin for theThe program's first objective convenience of parishioners.

'was' .to provide baby sitters for'the parish nursery, "the Angel

'RoQm," operated. for the con­venience of parents of smallchildren attending SundayMass. But it ,also has developeda corps of responsible youngsterswho baby sit in private homes.

Moreover, its sponsors believethe program provides an excel­lent means of spiritually form- . 'ing young girls and preparjngthem for marriage and, mother-hood: '

Mrs: Marian Geschke,' one' ofthe instn~ctors, explained howthe program' works.

Girls from the' seventh gr~de . '.through high' school are eligible.Each, applicant must attend 10weekly: lectures by' adult in­structors on child car'e and de-

french Socialists VowToF.ight School Aid

PARIS (NC)-'-France's Social­ist party will .fight against theFrench law gl'anting state aidto private' schools.

'The party'. members. votedunanimously at their annualcoilVention to work for abroga­tion of the law, which was passedlate last year by the NationalAssembly and the Senate. .

The Party's resolution alsostated that since the privateschools in question, includingCatholic schools, receive stateaid, they !?hould ,be expropriatedand administered by the st:ate.

Prelate. CriticizesImmodest Attire

GENOA (NC)-Genoa's Car­dinal-Archbishop has 'warnedeonfessors in his archdiocesethat women who wear tight­fitting slacks present a "grave"problem.

Giuseppe Cardinal Siri ac­knowledged a need for "prac­tical clothes for women who ridemotor bikes or who take part in

, certain sports or wOl'k. But hecriticized on three counts thewearing of slacks by women.

"Men's clothes ',as used pywomen t~nd to affe'ct the psy-'chology of women," he. ,said,"Slacks tend to burt the relation­ship between women and tn~ op­posite sex,and. they easily: harmmaternal dignity in the eyes' ofchildren." .

He censured the :wearing I>f.slacks to t~e confessional.

Cardinal Siri said modernpeople cannot dress like theirgrandparents, but that "intelli­gence, good sense and goodtaste" can find a proper solutionto problems of dress.

anything about my repressment.I was sure, of. course, that the,.had noticed, were full of sym­pathy, but too polite to comment.

Came dinner time, "No, thankyou" from me when corn-on­the-cob was passed. Same withthe steak. (A bowl of soup inthe ki tchen prior to dinner hadsatisfied me.)

"Mom:s just not hungry to­night," the Head of ·the Housepassed off the situation.

Next day was a bit moredifficult: a few young peoplehad been invited for a buffet

"supper. 0, well, I consoledmyself, nobody pays much atten­tion to. what anybody else ea,taand I could snatch a few nib­bUngs in the kitchen. And re­member not to smile. Let 'emtUnk you're a sourpuss-butdon't smile!

But then, when the story tell­ing began ... Have you ever, forself-discipline or vanity's saketried to keep "close-mouthed"when a side-splitting story wastold? It's a penance, believe me,and I just couldn't do it. Justhad to laugh, snaggle-toothedlybut heartily. '

Oh, well, the secret was out .••First' Smile

Came the count-down fromthe beginning of those 47 hoursand for the·first time in my life,I ran, not walked to, a dentist'soffice.

MOl'e grinding .•. ugh ..•. Finally the welcome, "That's

it!" from Dr, Salloom as he pro­'ferred a mirror and I saw the'gratifying result. .

First smile for Dr. Salloom,.next for the bus driver, then forthe cashier at the store, forfriends and acquaintances • . •FUlally for the family! I ate corn

~, and steak; I smiled and smiled;awaiting comment.

No comment."Where'd you go ,today,

Mom?" fromq.inllY."To the dentist.""Really? What forf Mom, bow

can I switch.those skirts andblouses around so people won'tnotice they're the same oldones?"

Mom's, Just· Invisibfe~·-·;Woma:n·: ..:·"·WWhen It Comes' to Te~th .. ··ll

By IHary Tinley Daly . ~ ,~"What'll I ~ear?" Ginny asked, replacing the ph~M .

m its cradle after having accepted an invitation. "It's ablouse-'n'-skirt party." "Blue skirt,. white blouse?" cameour first response. We were watching a good show on TV."But I wore that last time!""Khaki skirt, tan blouse-r­"I've worn that over andover. Everybody remembersme in that." "Well," in exasper­ation, we rejumbled the combin.­ations: "How'sabout the khakiskirt and whiteblouse?" "Youskirt and tanblouse? B I u edon't under­stand," , Ginnysat on the edgeof her seat, ob­atructing, thevie w of TV."People willthink I've gotonly two skirtsand two blouses for informalparties."

"They'd be perfectly' right,"%be Head of the House inter­jected "And what would itmatte~ even .if they noticed!Want to move out of view of thatTV screen?" ,

. "Of course they'd notice."&i~ny moved back from theIJCreen. "I guess it doesn't reallymatter, but they'd sure notice-­Pist like' I notice things!"

D DayNext day was D Day for, the

,mothel' of this family-"DentalDay" that is.

"It's going to be a session, Mm.Daly/' said Dr. Salloom: "Firstof all, this near-front tooth, 1.trequires treatment,"

Treatment meant that. ' thealmost-central front chopper,"lateral" in dental phraseology,wOuld need a grinding job, then• wait.

Look in the mirror was devSlt­tating ... Hag-in-a-bag was all .I[eould think of-a spectre whoeould make a good living bybaunting nouses.

"Well, Doctor," I sighed, "I'llDever smile again-to quote the/ilOng-until I smile ,at -you, afteryou've finished this job."

"Your family will under­ltand," Dr. Salloom said kindly."'That's what families are for.See you Wednesday, nine A.M.?"

Forty-seven hours! In grim­faced, pinch-mouthed manner, Jrnodded to acquaintances on thebus, stopped by the s~re. un­.-nilingly paid the cashIer,

The same mien was evidentwith the family as they camebome for dinner. Nobody said

,Urges Catholics Demond:Public Aid for Schools

OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) ­II 0 m e Catholic elementaryIIIChools here may drop theirearly gl'ades unless they get taxaid, the superintendent of Okla­homa Catho.lie schools said here.

Father Ernest A, Flusche, su­perintendent of schoo~ in theOklahoma and Tulsa diocese,_id in an int.erview that Cath­olics should demand from thesovernment "what is rigbtlulI, ,eurs. tt

Tax assistance, he said, wouldl'equil'e only a change in inter­pretation of the Federal Consti­lion, rather than a change in theConstitution itself, pointing outthat "equitable tax arrange­ments for schools have beeRmade in England, Scotland andeome provinces of Canada.

Sisters of St. JosephGet College Charter, OGDENSBURG (NC) - The

· New York State Board of Re-· gents has granted the Sisters of.

St. Joseph here a five-year pro­, Yisional ,charter for their "new; Mater Dei College; which will

'.' open in September., , The college will be dedicated. : b,- Francis Cardinal Spellman,

Al'chbishop of New York, on· Thursday, Aug. 25. Bishop James·'S. Navagh of Ogdensburg, is, chancellor" of the college. ",The

" college board announced that for~ the pl'esent the college will beopen to novices and postulants of

, the St. Joseph sisterhood.

Page 10: 07.28.60

''\

FOR•

Library. TransferFinishes ChurchState Fight

SAN FRANCISCO - The$2.5 million Sutro Librarywill be moved to new quar­ters o~ the University, ofSan Francisco campus nextJ;I1.onth, ending a controvel'sy i~

which . the Church-State issuewas raised. '., 'Opponents of plans to tra I}sfer.the rare book collection to a sitel!t the Jesuit-operated universil.y;had asserted that housing stateproperty on a Catholic campus',violated separation of Churchand State.

But Superior Court JudgeGerald M. Desmond ruled inSacramento last month that thetransfer is' entirely legal.

Judge Desmond held that theterms of the lease under which'the Sutro library will be locatedat the university "completelycontradict" charges that Church­State separation would be vio­lated.

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Heads, Prov.ince,MONTREAL (NC\ - Father'

Ger~'td Roy, ·.C,S,SP"vicar geriSeral of Conak~y, GUin~a,Afric;Il" .". . - '. - ..has' been flamed, pr:ovincial· Slil-

'petiotofthe' Holy Gho.st Fathers:in Canada. P,L native of Camid;l,the ;".ew, pro~i'nci~'~ ~~p~ri~r:, lit!one' of four.· brothers who ,are:pi'iesta.··· ", . .." ..:.. .. '

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., July 28, '19601C>

Movie Appr~cl(1tion .­'JERSEY CITY (NC) - The '

Young' Catholic Leaders 'Inst!,;,tute of 'the Newark :'archdiocesewill sponsor a study "conferenceon "Standards of Motion' Pic­ture Appreciation" i;lt tile, Aca:' ,demy of St~ Aloysius.h~re Aug"

. ust ~ 22-23. '. .. . ". ' ..

Castro Followers,Bl'ock Teaching.Of Religion

MIAMI (NC) "":"'Priestswho attempt, to organizereligious instruction classesin Cuba's outlying a~as areobstructed by supporters, ofFidel Castro, a Cuban priest said

',here,"Mocking .. and jeering, are,

common and iii. areas where theCommu~ist party is strong, mat­ters are worse," said the priestwho insisted his safety dependsupon anonymity, '

In his own parish outsideHavana, he said, the local dij:ec-' 'tor of the juvenile militia holdsdrill practice on Sundays whenthe children; aged eight yearsand ,ove'r,normally would attendMass..

In Havana itself, he said"th~'gove'rnment posted notices ban­ning the use of church-owned Long Lease,buses on Sundays, This was donebefore the present scare of an The university will provideoil shortage, he said. GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME: Students at Catholic Univei'sity of America don't lead, 13,000 square feet of space in its

National Chm'ch a lazy life" even in Summer, according to these Sisters from the Fall River Diocese. Gleeson Library. It will payThe' pI"I'est sal'd the recent re- . h S" M R' h d SUS C St M ' h I' $100,000 cost of fitting out theLeft to rIg t, are, llster . ary IC ar, ...., . ' ary s grammar sc 00,. l··t ff f thport that the regime has urged space, sea rng I 0 rom e

priests in the provinces to organ':' Tauilton; Sister Denis ;~Iizabeth, S.U,S.C., Sacred Heart School, Fall River; Sister PallI rest of the building and provid-'ize a national church is "no fairy Raymond; C.S.C., St. Anthony's High, New Bedford; Sister. Mary Laurita, R.S.M., St. ing,a separate entrance, The state,tale." He said priests are de- Joseph's Schbol, Fall River. ' " will pay one dollar per year onscribed in other printed matter a 20-year lease.of the regime's as '.'incapable of R Z- · . .' i " D· , E·" S' h' l t'· L ./' Aboard of professional libra-understanding'the revolution." e ,."g"OUS ,rom ~ocese· Ii/Oy C 0 as lC ,l e' rians, appointed in May, 1959,

The priest also, said that , ' by Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown, '/' ," W . h'· , .. D .-t' 'H : ,.. 'H k'" of California, to evaluate pro-''~:~h~~i~~~s~~fs, ~~c~ars~~~~:~, ' .' n·, , U:S' lng.ton. ,",eSp" e e,at, ( ,l?mewo.r, ',' posed sites for the Sutro Libral'Y,", . ,. 'agreed' unanimously that the, traditionally a par,t of the :com- ',' St.tmmer: students, at the Catholic University of America are l<ept hopping, accor.ding,,'p'illlY towns";occupied by sugar "'. . "'F II R' 'D U'h" d b I" University' of' San, Fl'ancisco'llmi'lt' workers.' The' schooi"s 'YJE!re' 'to 'attendants' from the. a, lVer iocese; "'.L ' ey .expect 'you to tea ,a oak' in ha ran' . offer was the most suitable.sUpported b!.. the.,'su~.a~ ..;conl~:" ho~rr,~~m"m~n~~d ,Sister"PauJ R~y~?nd,' C.S~C.; tea<\her, of- ·bus.iness . subjects at· st.· Irreplaeeable Itemspanies;he said, .bun'ilat anange- Antnony's' Hign School, New Bedford. tnterv'je~e.d on ·the Cath6lic Univer~i,ty. campu8~, ';'. /Tne' sutro Library \vas 00).,

. ment- ha.s now been' ehd~~;\>y,~;th~'in:'WaShingt6il' 'Sfster. 'ita~~ ,- . . ., ' ',': . ,Jected- between 1870 ',and, 1890 'by·, , regime and many schools: ;have' ;,,~ ..~. ',.;"';' ; .:--1:',,' '. t, ';';' ": sity offerS·a delightful Scholastic Adolph'Sutro, a--millionaire whO'

heed"forced to' close:'~'<' ;:~.\:p1Qnc;l.,,~~IP..,l~ .W~8.' ~er .tlrst ' ' atmosphere" They, 'are enjoying:' acquired 'his' 'wealth' dealin,f'iil..-Coo 'Learn Propaganda' . "y" ·ye.ar,'atdhe ,mstItutIon. She theirsix·.weeks of, study. 'and~' silver' from' Nevada's Comstock'

A young 'Cuban social worker 'is' studying 'for' a master's' look . forward , to returning .,in, Lode. It' includes 13th-century..and 'former teacher in Havana, ' degree 'iri 'business subjects: future' Summers. Final examin- .Hebrew manuscripts, one of twoadded to the. priest's charges. I She is not the only relig:ious ations at the university will end. extant copies of the New World's'She said all lay teachers for. from' the Diocese in Washington' Friday, Aug. 5 and students will first book of laws 'and otherboth public and religious schools this Summer. There are at l.east be. free to make ,preparations irreplaceable items. .are now selected by the govern- three other Sistel's and a Brother for resuming their positiQns on. The collection was presentedment and have to take Summer who have been keeping busy the other side of the' tea'cher's. to the State of California in 1913courses to learn the regime's with ciasswork, despite Wash- desk. by Mr. Sutro's heirs. Over the'propaganda. ingtoh's heat and humidity. At Georgetown years some 12,000 genealogical

II} addition, she said, large ed- Sisters are free to use Catholic Also in Washington for Sum- volumes have been added to theucational centers are planned University's swimming pool mer classes ·is Brother Alban" library.where youth can be trained as from 7 to 9 every evening, but F,I.C., principal ,of Prevost Highthe regime sees fit, ;away from Sister Mary Richard, S.U.s.C" School, Fall River, He .is study- ~ JAN,SON'Sthe influence of their parents. says no one has time to take. ad- ing German and Spanish atOne reportedly is operating, in vantage of the privilege. Sister . Georgetown University's School Phthe Bierra Maestra, she said. Richal'd, who teaches first grade of For.eign Service and is wOI'k. a rmacy

T,hree' newspaper editors who at St. Mary's' grammar school, ing toward' a degree 'in modern Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm.also did not want, to be identi-' Taunton, is studying for a 'degree languages, 'DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM

'fied; ha.ve charged that Fidel in Education. . , Upon' . earning' his degl'ee, " SUPPLIES" (:a~tro is. a tool, ,~sed to, ,furth:er , History' Degree ',. Brother Albini' expects ,to" be' ~04 ASHLEY BOULEVAAD, the:Jgoals of knO~1'b-commul1lst The';'Religious of.' the Holy, Brother Alban, principal of stationed at WaishCollegej E:an- New' BedfordCh~j ,Gueyara, ht\a9- of ,the Union' are represented, by '8till, Prevost High SchoQI, ',Fall ton, 0", where 'he will head the' , ,~a~lOnal' B~n~,,"Qf., QI.!~~,; .;a~ul ,~notherSister who is' working . ' , language departrrient:He will' ,r WY.3-8045

. C,~.s~~?; leftist. br?ther . of the 'towar:lis adegree in history. :;he 'R,iv!'!r" who 'il'!:stuQying il~, r~turn to PreVl?st this Sep'tember~.:· ~""'--'-"-""i-",!,""""--"""!,",,,,!,,_JJ. ,J?r~I]IIe!,;, and ,a , committee. f!I.; is "Sister' 'Denis, 'Eliiabt!th, Georgetown' University. howevet:. ' ': "'.'<: ~o,mm~~ls~ lea~~~s.. ',' ' s.lFS,C.;! 'W/:lo .:te:a~he~ ,eighth . ,

C' .,,', I .' '. grade at Sacred Heart' grilml1l1ar FallRi'ver~ is working toward a' ~-_""'_---------",'a;din~ . Urges: SchoOl"FallRiver. . 'degree in speech and drama. CORREIA & SONSY·.' ." t''. ' D '. ' Sister Mary'. Laurita, ~.S,M" All Sisters hear.tHy agreed,, ,oca Ions rive who' teaches seventh: grade' at . however, that' in :;;pite of heat. . ONE STOP

MONTREAL (NC) ~'paul' St.' Joseph's· grammar :School, and homew,ork, Catholic Univer-' SHOPPING C:lNTER, II .

~:;~~; ~far~~~~re~~g~~s ~arl~:d Tutors· Cla.ssmClltes· tc) Earn" Mone.yfor an extensive campaign here. S hieto' pl'O\n6te vocations to the For Summer 4C 00 ' 'oursespriesthood. ", CLEVELAND (NC)-Her~:s a "

Cardinal Leger made the plea students a: chance to mov~ alleadfollowing the publicati'on of a lad who is. skipping a grade and faster.det'ailed report of the r~cent getting paid for it. " Joe atten'ds classes in the"Great Mission" conduCted in Of course 12-year-old J'oe morning, and teaches i? theevery church of the archdiocese. DeBlasio of Holy Rosary' school afternoon. So far, none of hisThe mission was held in observ- is doing a little work for his pay pupils have missed, a day of?"-~ ~r q",! pn ...... l')letion of 10 -but he doesn't seem to mind, class.years of the Cardinal's reign' as To pay the tuition lor Summer . Joe said he may be a teacher

, vi ",WI1Ll'eaI. s c h 0 0 l' s accelerated courses, later on,' too. It seems like a·The Montreal Prelate said which will enable him to skip ,pretty good life to him-now.

that thollsands of active workers the seventh' grade, Joe is 'teach-':""'clergy, Religious and laity- ing arithmetic to nine sixthwho helped to make the Great graders who find the "numbersMission a success would"be game" ,a bit rugged.called upon again' to share in 'the work of the ne'w appeal for 'He charges two' dollars pervocations ,iIi the Fall. . . pupil, just enough to cover his

He added that the purpose of Summer school tuitioJl• Gradethe vocations', appeal was to skipping.is ,p-ermitted under as t I' eng the n the ,Archdiocese plan. of the Cleveland diocesflnagainst pl'esent-day'materialistic school system that gives talentt!d'pressures, arid to have: it share' ,in th~, work of the :CIWrch'smissions,

Page 11: 07.28.60

11

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Clvtl Marrlas:eIn. matrimony there have been

aifficliities and delays, butorders have now been' issued bythe Ministry of Justice provid­ing fresh facilities for the civilmarl'iage of non-Catholics, thestatement said.

There are in Spain more than118 churches and chapels of thevarious Protestant denomina­tions and this averages "onereligious edifice for every 250Protestants," it said.

Spanish DiplomatDenies ProtestantProblem Exists

LONDON (NC)-SpanishForeign Minister FernandoCastieJlay Maiz told theHouse of Commons that hispountry has no Protestant prob­lem.

In reply to a member of Par­liament's criticism of the h'eat­ment of. Protestants in Spain,Mr. Castiella distributed a state­ment on "Protestantism and Re­ligious Freedom in Spain."

Although Spain is a predom­inantly Catholic country, thestatement said, this does notprevent the exisetnce of legaland practical tolerance of wor­ship. Nevertheless, "an imag­inary Protestant problem" stillengages attention abroad.

Protestantism does not andnever has flourished in' Spain, itsaid. Out of a census return C1f30,000.000 Spaniards, there areonly 15,000 Spanish Protestantswho are foreigners.

Article 6 of the Spanish "har­tel' of 1945 states that "nobodyshall be molested for his reli­gious beliefs nor in the privatepractice of his form of worship,"the statement continued.

In education it is untrue tosay that every Spanish child isobliged to study Catholic doc­tl'ine, it said. Article 53 of the1953 concordat with the HolySee provides that children willbe excused from Catholic in­stl'uction "on the mere requestof the non-Catholic parent." i6noted.'

IHt ANLMVR­

Thurs., July 28, 1960

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Re-ElectProviricialSYRACUSE (':N-C) - Father

William D'Arcy, O.F.M.Conv.,:has been reelected minister pro;'vinciaI of the Conventual Fran­ciscan Province of the Immacu­late Conception. The province,which .runs down the easternseabord from Canada' to NorthCarolina, has about 270 priests.

.~.~

.ei.. ~....:~

.§TWINJ.{L~FINGERED:Fra~ces (left) and Margue­

rite Z~mQo, of St. Mathieu's parish, Fall River,are veteran~ccor~i~n~sts.t~o~lih they"re Olily' ~n th.eir early·te~J1s. Ashelf of trophiel'l,' one of which;.france~,holds, att~st~ totheirskil~. ~They;'il :enter .Sa~red' Hearts Academy in Sen- ~temher.· .. : ".' .' .'. .' .,~,;. . '.:: .... i'" ". .

.... . ., They became Jnterested· inth~.· Mother is an, eager audience..

accordion when a school friend 0' : Dadpy's an important part ofstarted taking -Iessons and they the .girls' ~outine, h~wever. He. . . , . . .' . carnes theIr heavy ll1strumentswere encouraged by thelr ~ather,.. for, them. and is an experiencedwho formerly played hlmself. critic of practice sessions.

Not to be forgotten is Pete,the family parakeet. He tries tohelp play the accordions, saythe girls, and has more thanonce got himself caught in thefi;>lds of the instruments.

Proud of Girls

T'lvinkle-F'ingered flatlSacred Hearts on

Vatican Publishing'. House IssuesMany Books in Varied Language .

VATICAN CITY (NC) - For are expensive to pl'Oduce, theyreaders who want a 50-cent copy are invaluable for missionaries.of the "Imitation of Christ" in A Chinese - Italian dictJonary.Russian or a complete and ex- available at $45 a copy is con­haustive Latin dictionary for sidered a bargain' because of the$175, the Vatican Publishing expense involved in its printing.House is the answer. Among its pther publications.

Headed by Director Carlo are the annual minutes of the. Sbardella, the Vatican Publish- Pontifical Academy of Sciences

ing Hou~ puts out an amazing and the .Acta Apostolicae Sedis, .line. of books on religious sub- the official'. record, of the -.jects in a variety.of languages" Ohurch's activities;' :. ." '.and ,types. .. . Archeologically; . the Vatican.

Over the centu,rres the·' popes .Publishi'ngHouse· has published ..have supported· .t~e printing ~f an $80,' three-vohu:ne· sti,ldy on:books. The Vatlca':l' ...Polyglot· the results of the explorations'Press w:~~fpun~ed ·,n 1587.by uilder' St.' Peter's: Oil the otherPOPe PauI.1I.Today it· is' .still.. end of the ~ale there is avaii-'functioning ~I}der the gu~dance: able·.a488-page·work on Histor­of the Salesian Fathers. ItS type icaland Biblio~raphical Notes:fonts include Chi,nese,' Persian, on Christian Archeology for $2.Greek, ecclesiastic Slovak, Rus­sian Hebrew and a: host of others.

As the Church's missionary ac­tivities extended, so did the fa­cilities of the 'Polyglot Press. In1926 the .Vatican PublishingHouse was separated. froJ:ll thePolyglot Press and given' inde­pendent status;

2,000 ItemsToday' the latter's catalogue,

lists more than 2,000 items rang­ing from pamphlet reprints ofpapaI texts or decl'ees of thevarious Church offices the.three-volume edition of an an-,alysis 'ot the markings found'near the tomb of St. Peter belowthe Basilica of St. Peter's.

Leafing through the supple­ment of the 1956 catalogue one.finds such items as a $20 atlas'of Catholic Missions in Italian'with '44 pages of color maps.Then there is' a Persian-Frenchdictionary with 3,286 pageswhich sells for $60.

Many of the items in both thecatalogue and its supplement aretexts of papal. encyclicals. Forinstance the text of Pope PiusXII's "Miranda' Prorsus," onm~v.ies, radio and. television, isavailable . in French,English,German, Spanish, and Portu­guese for 40 cents. a copy.

Dictionaries ExpensiveDictionaries are among the

special 'projects of. the· VaticanPubHs!ling H9\1~.: Though they·

Protestant' NursesHelp Bishop's Trip

CLEVECAND (NC)-A Bene:­dictine bishop .from Ceylonoffel-cd proof dlll'ing a visither'El that cooperation betweenCatl)olics and Protestants cando :wonderful things.

Bishop Leo Nanayakkara,0,5:,8., ol, Kandy, Ceylon, re-.vealed that ·the cost of his fund­raiiiing trip to the Ullited Statesand Europe was paid for by aProtestant nurse in Ceylon. Thewoman learned of his desire tobuild several hospitals and atrade school in his diocese. SoBhe gave him her life's savings-­abot)t $2;000--·101' the trip•.

Confusion MarksMiami HearingsOn Religion

By Patricia McGowanMIAMI (NC) - Co u r t When school starts this September at Sclcrerd Hearts Academy, Fall River, two

hem'ings on the question ofr e l.i g i 0 U 8 practices in twinkle-fingereq lassies will be additions to the student body. Thelre Frances and Mar-Miami's public schools were guerite Zembo, daug~ters of Mr. and Mrs.Stanley Zembo, 13 Crescent Street, Fall

River, and members of St. Matthieu's parish. Frances, 15, and Marguerite, 14, play accor-~:~~~:: ~r~ht~~a~Ug~fst t~: dians'ahnosf as big as them-c;-,", .... ,.,.,' .... ,....,.,..,...,...,,""._-,.,. '''';'''''''''''''''-'''~'''.'1judge's son-in-law: selves and, have been, d0ing . .,.

Four hectic days of testimony 80 for'five and a half years.and iilcidents marked the open- Their' musicianship' 'earned !ing of the hearings in which them a .scholarship to the Fall iJewish, Unitarian and agnostic . River academy,' where they'll be 1parents challenged the consti- orchestra members. ,.!tutionality of a variety of al- 1

The gil"ls, best friends as wellleged religious practices in theschools. Judge J. Fritz Gordon as sisters, started school togetherof the Dade County Circuit and are both in 10th grade. They

were among the top students atCourt presided. Morton Junior High, from which

Students and parents testified they graduated last month.that they weloe "emotionally dis- Along with maintaining t.opturbed and offended" by the' scholastic ranking, the sisters findreI i g i 0 u s practices. They time to practice their accordiansclaimed the observances violate at least an hour daily in Winter,their religious fl'eedom and longer in Summer. They haveproper relationship of Churchand State. weekly lessons and have I?arti­

cipated in numberless recitals,Crucifixion Pa·geant benefit programs and civic func-

D9nald Crocker, an 18-year- tions. .old student who said he had no For the past two years Francesfaith, was describing for the and Marguerite have traveledcourt the pageant he said he had to New York to compete·in thebeen requil'ed to attend. He accordion world's top event, thestood up to show how the stu- yearly National Championshipdent actor had been stretched Contest of the American Accor­out for the crucifixion. dionists Association. Frances has

At this point, Mrs. Margaret been a third pl'ize winner inVandec31', 43, shouted from the competition with the nation'slast row of the courtroom: "A best players. The girls will pl1;lyman on the cross-I wouldn't together and singly this Novem_want .my little girl to see it." bel' at the event. .Judge. Gordon had a bailiff es- "We like it even if' we don'tcort ,her 'from the COUl'troom. . win," confided Marguerite. "We ,.

Meanwhile, a' 17 -' year - old' .get a trip out of it/' " ..Jewish' student Lois Milman":' The. girls, who 'maintainedwho appeared 'the day befor~ identicaI avel'i1geS .·of ·a31h. at:(Jult, .l9). a,s a w,itness opposi~g ... Mor~0n. ,J.unio.~. Hi~Q,' '.both, li,ke .the .religious practices was.·dis,; algebrl\.: among school sul:>Ject.s..chal;ged from her jo~as ·.iI gro- ·Both. earned .. : ~,oveted. :Morto~",eery store checker and received "M's".for cit!.zenship.. Fr~r-cesthreatening phone calls at her Vr.ould like. to ·.be .a nu.rseandhome, her' father said. ~ar~uerite a secretary:· They.'

The trial drew some 300 spec- aren t .s~re about enten.ng the

t t e h d y mostly wom- accordwn world professwnally.,a ors ac a,. "I" ·t ok t th t " then. Some of them carried Bibles. - I wor s ou a war, ey

Two of the nine intervenors rep:- concluded.resented by attorneys are the'Greater Miami Council ofChul'ches and the Miami Minis­terial Association, both Protes­tant ·groups.

Prayer VigilsSome Presbyterian churches

here have launched 24-hourpl'ayer vigils "that the Bible­reading law will be upheld."Florida law provides for dailyreadings from the Old or NewTestament and for recitation ofthe Lord's Pl'ayer . in publicschools.. ·The Board ot'Trade In­strtictiol1 says the laW also per­mits other religious p,ractices. .

.. '1;'he ch'alle'nge is b~ing madein companion suits. One is bya"n agnostic, HarloweChambei:­lain, who is supported by . theFlorida branch' of the" Amel'icanCivil Liberties UniorC

The other, backed by theAmerican' Jewish Congress ofNew York, was in$tituted byMrs. Elsie Thol'ner, ~ Unital'ian,and Edward llesnick and Mr.and Mrs. Philip Stern, who areJewish.·

The suits together strike atvirtually ~II types of religiouspractices, from Bible readingand prayer recitation to pl'esen­tation' of pageants at Chl'istmas,Easter and Hanukah, a Jewishreligious festival.

The outcome of the trial mayhave an effect on aU U.S. pub­lic schools because attorneys forboth sides have announced theywill appeal to the U.S. SupremeCourt. .

Page 12: 07.28.60

By Most Rev. Fulton J. SheeR. D.O•. ' ... ':,

.The foll~wing ~. taken from a letter received' recently' ftom• Bishop in South Mrica whose school, church' and hall 'Vere seton fire and burned down "by: a rebellious and instigated mob."

..:~; ~;.~ .• '1

.' God Love You

. 'r''' .. ."

.. South ·,.Afri~al1l

"The destruction was fearful. Our Church was the last tosuffer. A number of our Catholics .attempted to take up their stanel·before the Church in order to protect it andto prevent its being burnt down. But thefanatical mob already hungered to see theflames' leaping higher. The. resistance wasimmediately overcome; our Catholics werebeaten down with sticks 'and pushed aside;petrol' flowed inside the Church and in thespace of a few minutes the House of theLord, the Sacristy and the new hall, whichwas not yet completed, went up in ·£lames.Everything which' could feed the fire-floors{iJibenches, altar; doors· and doorposts, con-····..fessiorial, sacristy,' cupboards, pictures, ceil­ing and the whole roof-everything whichthe fire could' consume was completelydestroyed.. The Mission' Church "of the,Immaculate 'Heart of Mary. was one sea of flames!

Educati'o'n.'Families

"'The Lord has given and the"Lord has taken away. Prai$ed bethe Name of the Lord!~ The ways of the Lord are beyond under­standing. Our ~ission and our Church have been destroyed but notour coiJrage nor our confidence. We do not forget the. co,,:enantwhich God made with us on the day of our sacred ordmahon tothe priesthood, namely to show His merc~ to Hi~ people, and toannounce to all His Praise, His Love and H~s Doetrme. The da~a~edone amounts to much. Tomorrow the work begins afresh. In HISName we build ag~in what the hands of devils and men havedestroyed. . .

"Who will help us to rebuild the House' of God, thert~ to giveHim a new home, a new Church iI) 'honor of the Immaculate Heartof Mary, His dear Mother? Who wi!l help us to ~uild a ta.bernaclefor Our Lord Jesus Christ from which He can dispense ,HIS gracesand blessings.to the' hearts of the Africans-...to their families, ~eir .homes, . the. whole village and finally the whole of South AfrIca.He' who cooperates in this is.a Missionary. in th~ t~ue sense. of t~eword-fulfilling thus the commal1d. of th~ Lord, to proclaim 1I~Name throughout the whole world 'from the rising of the sun.tothe going down thereof,'.10 that thel'e m~y soon be but one fold

· and one shepherd.".

. .GOD LOVE YOU. to J.M. for' $3 "Please accept thil.' donatiOIl· for .the 'people of the world who do not know and love God, and

for .the reparation of my. past sins. Also please pray for the voca­tions of my five children." •. , to M.B. for $56.50 "The enclosed

· check has been made up In various ways. Part of it ($35) was made'. by' collecting pop. and· coffee bottles that are left strewn about

where I work. About a year ago three of us started' collecting these· bottles and trad~ng .them.in {oryoil, . with the result that we'are nowcalled 'The Bottle-Snatchers'!" .....'; to J'.P. "Here is five dollars forthe Holy Father's Missiorul. I sacrificed on the price of a week'.entertainment!'

'MacLEAN'S ·SEA FOODS·" .. ~, ..~UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN, MASS.'

. . . .

Cut out this coiumn, pin· your sacrifice to it and mail it to theMost Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National. Director of the Society {orthe Propagation. of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y..

. .01' your. Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. . .

;.- ...., .,,." :'

Also Reclaim Industrial GlovM.

COYNEINDUSTRIAL· LAUNDRY

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Brockton 19. Mass.

COLOMBIAN ART: '!1lis'colonial, painted wood carv-.ing of Saint Agaton, is fromthe collection of Luis AlbertoAcuna, Bogota, Colombia.NC Photo.

Page 13: 07.28.60

"'It

.-

13

DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUl

THE ANCHOR..:.. :Thurs., July 28, 1960

Christian FamilyMovement PlansRegionalMeeting

CHICAGO (NC) ~ Onethousand people from In­diana, Illinois, Wisconsinand Minesota are expectedto attend the Midwest regionalconvention of the ChristianFamily Movement to be heldhere beginning Aug. 26.

Forty seminars and work­shops will deal with such topics

. as 'urban renewal, race relations,population programs, aid tounder-developed nations andhospitality to foreign st~dentsstudying'in the U.S.

Major speakers at the conven_tion wil! be Elizabeth Reid, aleader In the lay .missionarymovement; Father Walter Ong,S.J., author and scholar of St.Louis (Mo.) University' andAuxiliary Bishop Jam;s H.Griffiths of New York, an ob­server for the Holy See at theUnited Nations.

Convention M;asses

Other sp.eakers will includeFather William J. Kenealy,.S.J..law professor at Loyola Univer­sity here; Msgr. John J. Egan,director of the Chicago Arch­diocesan .Conservation Council;Father Stanislaus de Lestapis,S.J., of the Catholic Institute ofParis; and Dr. Russel Barta,director of adult education cen­ters in th'e Chicago archdiocese.

Albert Cardinal Meyer. Arch­bishop of Chicago, will offerMass for the delegates on Aug.27. On the following day theconvention Mass will be offeredin the Byzantine Rite..

. St. Xavier College will be theheadquarters for the· conyen­tion.

la"rOu". vir.. (14:2~1 .. Iaber ..Chril"1 val' vil••yard 1M an ~tIe .. tIMEditiOflI: Pr.... Radio, Moyi., and , ...."i,iOll.Wlth ...... IIIoder" IIIea.... ....lWli..ionary Si,••,. bring Chrilt'l 00....... an. 'e...rd.... ,of roc.. calar Of creM.For information writ. to:

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ST. JOSEPH'S CHURCH, TAUNTON

time the .church 'was completely· pari~h;s . some 3000 people. Ac­renovated, 'Uve 'societies include the Holy. Two years later Father Ward· Name and St. Viricent de .Paul

was appointed t() a Fall ~iver Societiell, Assunipta Guild' andparish;.' and . Rev; Patrick H," Pari~h~ S.Y.9! "

.Hurley became the fourth pastor. I'--.;..-----------.;..--~---....-----,He and his assistan~ atthat time, , 'Rev. Joseph L. P9wers, set llbout .completing the 'sc;hool planswhich Father Ward had pro­moted.

Actual construction' of 'theschool began April 5, 1953, andthe following September a firstgrade was opened In the lowerchurch, preparatory to the open_.ing of the .school. Dedica'tedMay 2, 1954, St. Josep~'s Schoolopened that Fall with 'a kinder_garten and the three first grades.Ellch succe~(Ung. y~ar another.'grade has been added ~ntil this'year the first grad~ation mark~d

a 'milestone ·in·, paris~ histo.ry.Mother· Mary Vii-ginia is' nowIluperior arid principal. at theconvent and school, which hallan enrollment f!f· appro~ima~ly.. i350 pupils. .'

Rev. William H. O'Reilly and .,

Rev. Cornelius' J •. O'Neill now 312. Hillman St. WY 7-9162 .New Bedfordserve as -assfstanta to Father..Hurley in administering _ the '- .

IT'S ALL "IGMT TQ

SHOP AItOUHDFOR.

SOMIt THINGS, BUT'

TOUHEY'SPHARMACY

202-206 Rock StreetFall' River .

IS ~ PLACE I'DGET A PRESCRIPTION

FILLED' !lonaColiege Honor,Cardinal Spellman

NEW ROCHELLE (NC)lona College's new student-fac­.ulty social center building willbe named in honor of FrancisCardinal Spellman, Archbishopof New York, Brother RichardB, Power, president, announced.

Car din a I Spellman Hall,which will cost about $1.6 mil­lion, will be completed by thefall, 1961 term. It 18 part of afive-year, six-million-dollar de­velopment program.

Priest Points OutNeeds of. Deaf

SAN FRANCISCO' (NC)~Apriest active in work for thedeaf said here .there is "vital"need for churches to adopf pro­grams aimed at meeting the reli_gious requirements of deaf per­sons.

Father Michael D. O'Brien ofSt. Joseph's Center for the Deaf,Oakland, told the 11th annualconvention of the InternationalCatholic Deaf Association.

"The plight of being deaf con­stitutes not only a need for socialadjustment, it presents a prob­lem of understanding. And in nosphere is the need for a solutionto this problem more vi~ thanin religion."

Father O'Brien, director of.the San Francisco archdiocese'sprogram for the deaf, pointedout that some three millionAmericans suffer varying de-grees of deafness.' .

"Other than the elderly, mostare deaf as a result of childt}ooddiseases, afflictions that bre­ceded the ability to talk," Msaid. "As a consequence, mostof our deaf, although they havenormal vocal chords, cannotspeak." . ,

The limited vocabulary, 01.many deaf· persons is a majorproblem when persons a~ternpt

to explain to them the truths ofreligion, the spea.ker said.

"How for example,' do youput acr~ss the abstract idea ofgrace in sign language, at best apoor subject for even basic ex-pression?" he asked. '

"As you can see," he continued,"all this presents a tremendoustask for religious education. Andto make it worse, unhappily wehave no Catholic schools for thedeaf West of St. Louis. Conse­quently, not only are we handi­capped in putting across ourideas, we are limited to one-a-week sessions." '

Direcfor of ~.U. "St~ .Joseph·'s';·iTti·un;toh;' 'Ha$.·UnJqite' Beginn~ing"<Sum,,:,~r Session In' Old Nail Factory 'on Myrtle StreetTo Retire Sept. 1 .By Marion Unsworth

WASHINGTON.. (!'I!C) -- Few parisnes can boast of using a nail factory as a, temporary church, but St.,Roy. J: .Deferrarl, director Joseph's, .Taunton, has that distinction. When St. Mary's', the original Taunton parish,for 31 years of the S~mm~r was divided for the .fourth time in 1896, St. Joseph's parish 'was established to providesess.ion at the ~atho~lc U~ll- . for Taunton Catholics living on the west side of the city. Rev. William Curley, firstverslty of America, wIll retire I b t d th f' tSept. 1. . pastor, ce e ra e , e Irs

Mr. Deferrarl, secretary-gen- Mass in St. Charles Hall, a.el'al of the university since 1937 building then opposite St.a~ld a member of .its faculty Mary's Church. Soon, how-smce 1918, will contmue, how- th ld nail factory on

'd' t f th iver ever, e 0e~e~, as Irec or 0 .. e un - Myrtle Street, which was nearerSlty s progr?m of affI.hatl.ng high to the homes of the parishioners,schools, mmo~ s~mI~arleS and became the temporary place ofpost-graduate mstItutlons. h' and was used for over

Msgr. William J. McDonald, wors Ip,. 't t '11 ff a year.umversly rec or, WI 0 er a B th t t'm the old St.

Mass in the National Sh~ine of JOs;ph'S a Ch~r:h . which re­the Immaculate Conceptl~n on sembled an old. New. EnglandWednesday, Aug. 3 for the mten- b b'uilt on Sheridan-andt · f M D f . h h s arn, wasIOns 0 r. e errarl, w 0 . a , Lowell Streets. The present rec-

reached the compulsory. retlre- tor' was constructed on Agri­ment age of 70. A reception will culrural Avenue, now KHmerfollow. . Avenue. In 1908, Father Curley

Born on June 1, 1890 ~ was transferred' to Fall RiverStoneham, Mass., Mr. Deferran d R J W Quirk be-

. d h' b hI' d g an ev. ames .receive IS ac e or s e ree h' cesso'l' remaining inD t th ' 1912 d h' came IS suc ,

from ,ar mou In ,,' an IS the parish for 24 years. Immedi-master s a.nd doctor s .degr~es t I F ther Quirk began plan.from Princeton Umverslty, : e yah hwhere he taught Greek and or a new c urc. .Latin before World War I. Rapid ,Progress

He joined Catholic University The work progressed ra,:,-after serving in the 814th Aero idly; ground was broken In

Squadron in World War I. He November, 1909; the cornerst?nebecame a professor in 1923. laid May 22, 1910, and the first·

As director of the university's Mass was celebra~ed by ~ather

Summer session, Mr. Deferrari Quir~ the followmg Ch;lstmashas pioneered in making a wide mornmg. On New Ye.ar s Day,variety of Summer education . Bishop Feehan, assurted bycourses available to women Reli- Taunton ~lergy, de~i~ated ~he

gious especially o'n the graduate new GothiC style edIfICe whichlevel: has been a landmark in Taunton

Most of the Sisters who attend ever since.the university during the Sum- The parish grew during themer months are Catholic school .following years, through W~rld

teachers during the regular War I and the early depreSSIon,school year. until on May 6, 1932, th~' second

, pastor, Father Quirk, dl~d sud-denly. . .. . St. Joseph's, has been b~essedwith. long pastorates, for the.third to take" over. the, reins Ol'one of Taunton's larger parisheswas Rev. Edmund J. Ward; chan"­cellor of the DioceSe, who serVedWestside .catholics for 19 years.It was Father Wai'd who,' real­izing the necessity' of' providin'gCatholic education for the chil­dren of the parish, began· plan­ning for a: school.

In 1944, a bond drive was heldand in three hours on a Sundayafternoon pledges totaling ap­proximately $50,000 were made,although school conStruction wasdelayed due to war shortllges.However, . Father Ward pur­chased a home on Lowell Streetand had it renovated for use asa convent.

In the beginning of 1949' theSisters of the Holy Union of theSacred Hearts WOk up residencethere, and' on Jan. i5 FatherWard blessed the convent. Thefollowing September St. ,Joseph'snew pre-primary was openedwith an enrollment of 50 pupils.

Busy Year'1949 was a busy year for si.

Joseph's, as at about. the' same .

Jesuit ProvindalNEW YORK ,(NC) -Father

·John J. McGin~y, S.J., pastor'of St. Ignatius Loyola Churchhere, has been named provincialof the New York. province oftheSociety of Jesus. A.. native of.Brooklyn, N. Y .. the 47-year-oldJepuit succeeds' F)ther Th<\ffill&\'E. Henneberry, S.J, "

-.

Page 14: 07.28.60

'TH:E CATHOLIC .PARISH.f VARAN'DRAPPILLY In INDIA covers an area of th~lQ,uan -miles; Included In the parish confines are eight smaUer

villages. Living' In these nine' settle-. men't&- are 1,130 Catholio .familie..

aumberlng about 8,000 persons. The-parish·, chlllrch is located near .the•western lioundary 01 VARANDRAP.·PILLY and 700 families attend Mass

_at. theohurch.. The remaining 860families attend Mass In a cooventehapel which Is about three mileaeast 01 the parish church. The pastorand the people wish 'to build a new

!1Jt Holy Pa!htn MiJrifm Aid ehurch In the eenter 01 town to re-t;,. .1.. ' ••' rL..-L place the old ehurch and the eonven'

"}"' UK Orim_ VJ1mD chapel, both of which are not onI,.inadequate but In a bad state 01 dis-repair. A smaU 0ratolT Iwill be attached to the new church for the benefit ef the S.&ers. If we can raise $4,000 lor them they can go ahead witbthe project. Can .you help us to help' them?

WORLD REFUGEE YEAR e~ded ne~rly a month ago. M~nyfine things were Accomplished during this year and not theleast among them was the focusing 01 the world's attentioD

'on this perplexing question. Until a permanenj.solutioD is foundfor this intricate problem the world's refugees will continue.to need o\lr, help.. Whatever .fj,nancial, aid you send· to us .'for .refugees is .~se.!l .for the relief' of those people' whose homesare' hi ··PalEistine, . . . : .

DEAD LANGUAGE LIVES: Jesuit Father Alphonsu8Co Yurnont uses tape recorders at Georgetown SummerSchool, Washington, to teach Latin to boys entering highschool in tlte Fall. Twenty-t:our teac~ers from 15 statesAnd Can~da 'observed the tech·nique. NC Photo. .

'., f'

ILIKE..1\ ViSIT .FRQM·.MARll.,....when. they". are. Prolessed. NunllO. ':./' SI'S·TE'a :HILDA',' and: SiSTER J-OAN' bope that the people' to

. . whOm' tbey are assigneil on the' MiSsions wUI .see reflected In .them ,some. likeness to. Ou,r· :Blessed !Lady." Presently they are beingtrained IIi the spiritual' lUe 1n the NOVITI~ATE OJ!' THE SISTERS OF THE VISITA·TION In .iNDIA; in order to be~ome like

\'\rn1\t\lI~)2J-Mary they are riow, as they will be for the~~~:::::::t¥YJ.!;!1'.J" rest of-their lives, living according to a rule

fashioned, tQ bring about this likeness. Could you .sponsor one". 01 theSe girls In the novitiate?' .'DEDICATED TO THE TRAINING OF .PRIESTS - there aremany priesIs, both ReligioUs aud Diooesan,_whose life's work

. .... the,iraipwg. of boys .for the ~i~stho.od. . •. They -are' the' priests' teachmg ba' oUr seDrl~

." .: naries,·throUghou&:·the .•0rleL..;' AU :of·.these"'traiuers 01 priests" are conscions 01 the

.'. " ,'. .veat,tJebt .tlley Qweto ~e Ca~~oUc lai*y:"iiO'supply'the ftuaneesDeeeSSary lor 'tbiswork. Priests in Mission countries are par- .:"cularly "grateful that they are not llorgo&- .'ten. GEORGES MAKHOUS and ANTOINE CHAMMA are nowIn II seminary in LEBANON preparing lor the Priesthood.Could you sponsor the edu~ation 01 one of them and earntheir gratitude and the gratitude 01 the priests conducting theseminarY?

"!

.'. Bass River'

OUR LADY OF THE. HIGHWAYMasses:.SundaY-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30. 11:80 A.&

l?ail:r-7:30 A.M.

. East DennisWORDEN HALL STATION

lltIa8ses: Sunday:-8:30, 10:30 A.M.

Vineyard HavenST. AUGUSTINE'S

Masses: Sunday~:30, 8, 10; 11. A.IIL .DailJr-7:30 A:M. .

Beneaicti.on: Sunday-7:30 P.M.

South' Dartmouth, _ ST. MARY'S _.

MasseS: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10,.. l1A.M.Daiiy-7:00 A.M. .

Confessions: Saturday-4-5:30, 7-8:31

West: Wareham. "

. . '.. ... ST. ANTHONY .-llIlasBes: S:unday~:30, 9:30,"10:30 A.M.

Wiellfleet"OUR LADY. OK" LOURDES

Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11 .A.M.Daily-7:30 A.M. i ..

... ' TruroSACREDHEAIlT:­

~s: Sunday-8, 10 A.M.I'rida.y-8 A.M.

::: '~North TruroOUR LADY OF PERPETUAL. HELP

Masses: Sunday-7, 9, 11 A.M.Saturoilay-8:oo A.M. '.

·W«FJli'~IIU1JIl'i'1\l·. ST. PATRICll{. :

llfiasses: Sl,lnday-7, 8, 9, ',10, .11 ::A.M.. JjaH~'':''-:7 an'd' 8 A.M. .

Devotion);: Sunday-7:30 P.M. i:; ':1:,' '

Miraculous Medal' Novena: Monday-'l:30 P.~_

",,' ., ..:Ma'rio~, i~'

_ ST. RITAMasses; ~;unday-7, 8:30; 10 A.M:

'Sandwich -CORPUS CHRISTI

l!4asses: ·81.IOday-7, 8, 9, 10 A.M.Dail;y-7:30 A.M.

SagamoreST. THERESA'S

Masses: Sunday~:30, 8,·9, 10, Jl A.M.

Pocasset. ST. JOHN'S

MAsses: 8unday-6:30, 7:30, 8:30,9:30,'10:30, 11.Dail;r-7:30 A.M. .

South Yarmouth''O.,- ST. PIUSTENTR

Masses: :Sun~ay-:-7, '8, 9, 10, 11 A:JL. Paill'7'".7 .A.M.

P.M.

Schedule for Summler SeasonNorth Eastham

,('HURCH OF THE VISrrATIOMMasses: Sunday-8, 9, 10, 11 .A,M.. .

Confess'ions: Saturday-'l P.M. .

THE ANCHOR-DiOcese ofFal! River-Th~J"iy 21t f~6014

AssonetST. BERNARD~S .

Masses: Sunday-7, 8:30, 10:30 A.M.First Friday~Evening Mass 5:30Holydays-8:30 A.M., 7:30P.M.

Falm@uth Hesght$ .ST. THOMAS

Masses: Sunday-6:15, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.Daily-7:30 A.M.

Benediction: Sunday-8:00 P.M.

tllyali'il~O$ ....ST. lFRANClIS' XAVHIEI& ,

Masses: Sunday-6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M., 12 NoomDaily-7, 8 A.M.

Central :Village. ST. JOH'N TIllE BAPTIST

Masses: Sunday~7:30'A.M•.Daily-7:30 A.M. .. ..First ,Friday-5:30 P.M.,

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST. IlIALLMasses': SundaY~:30, 9:30; 10:30 A.M.

Chatham'HOLY REDEEMER'

Masses: Sunday~:30, 8, 9, 10, 11, NooDDaily-7:30 A.M.

Devotions: Sunday-7:30 P.M.Exposition on .First Frid~y-4.:oo P.M. Mu..

East· Falmouth. ST•. ANTHONY

Masses: SundaY-7, 8;' 9, 10;,11,12 NOOIlDaily-8 ,A.M. (Others' urischeduled)

llosary and Benediction:S~I)~?Y-'lP.M.

.East FreetownCATHEDRAL CAMP

OUR LADY. OF THE ASSUMPTIONMasses: Sunday-7:30, 9, 10, 11Benediction: Sunday-5 .P.M. .Confessions: Saturdays--'l o'clock

YarmollJthportSACRED HEART

Masses: Sunday~:OO, ~:OO A.~. .

NantucketOUR LADY 0lF' THE ][SLII:

Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10; 11 A.M.Daily-7 A.M.

Services: Sunday-7:30 P.M.

Mattapoisett 'ST. ANTHONY'S

Masses: Sunday~, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.Daily-7:30 A.M.First Friday-6:30 9:00 A,M.Tuesday-St. Anthony- Novena and Novena .

! to Queen of' Peac~7:30 PJlI.Conf~ssions: Saturday-4-5, 7:30-8:30

ROUTE 6DAMIEN -COUNCIL K OF C RALlo

;Masses: Sunday-9:30 and 11:30

FalmouthST. PATRICK - .

. Masses: Sunday-7, 9, 10, 11, 12 NooaDaily-7 A.M.

Novena: Monday-Miraculous Medal, 7:30 P.M.Benedic~ion: Sunday-7:30 P.M. .

Osterville. _.. ... Buzzards, BCIIY OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMP'ftO.

ST. MARGARET MaSses: Sunday-6:15, 'l, S. 9, 10,'11 A.M.Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M., 12 Mooa. Daily-7:oo A.M.

Daily'-7:30 A.M. ".,.. . -_ .. ". __Confesiiiclns: SaturdaY~:::f?:3(K·7":8:30. ", P~ppon~ssef. ....',' :~. '.... :·,~~~~~~~i>/.. .... "": ~::>~:.~: sun~::~U8~~~.:i.~NTREMasse§; Sunday-7:30, .8:~0;:9:30, 10:30, 11:30~ :" 'Santuit·

Daily-8 A.M.. .. .: ". ST JUDEConfessions: Saturday...:.4-5:15, 7-8 P.M. .. . . .'. •

Center.ville ~: Sunday:-8, 10 A.M.

OUR LADY OF VICTORY . ~ . . ' 'Proviricfiltown .Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10; 11 A.M. .' '. ST. PETER THE A~OSTLB"

Daily-7:00 A.M. 'Masses:'SundaY-6, 8, 9, 10; 11 A.M.~· .'

W B t 1l...N /riailY~7A.M. , . '. ..est arns aUlla JkVQtiQIlS: ~ullday-7~30'P.M.

ROU'l'.~...6AOUR LADY OF,HOPE

Masses: Sunday-9':30,Hi;3Q :A.M.· .

Oak BluffsOUR LADY STAR OF THE SEA

;Masses: SundaY~:39, 8, 9, 10:00 ~.M.Daily-7:30 A.M.

.Benediction: Sunday-7:30 P.M.

Edgartown, ST. ELIZABETH

;Masses: Sunday~:45, 9:00 A.M.· Daily-7:30A.M.·:.:::..· .. ·.Benediction: Sunday-7:30 P.M.

Orleans'ST. JOAN OF ARC ',:.:"

;lIIIasses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, la, 11 A.M-· Daily-7:30 A,M. :....:.;Rosary and Benediction: Sunday-7:30-P.II.

East Brewster·"· IMMACULATE. :CONC~~~"Masses:. Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.

Confessiops: .Satu~dlily~.7.P.M. .

West HarwichHOLY TRINITY

Masses:,sunday-6:30, 8,.9,10, 11 AM... 11 H~Dail:V·':"'7.A.M. .' :< '.' . -

ConfeSlJions: Saturday-4-5:30, 'l:30-9 P •. .". ..... ( ...

'DennisportUPPER COUNTY ROAD

OUllt < LADY,OF ANNUNCIATION. Masses: Sunday.,-7, 8, 9, 10, 1l.A.M.

• Daily--a A;M. . . . '. . '.-Confessions: Saturday-4-5:30, 'l:30-9 P4

. .. . • . • • '. :"'''' •..•;.~ ),t < :. "'J '.~.

Woods Hole,:,.:' It.'., . ST. JOSEPH

llIIasses: Slllnday-'l, 8:15, 9:30, 11:00Daily--7 A.M. except. Sat..'l:30 ..

Bosary nnd BenedIction:' SU~day-'l:30 P.M. .

Megari'~ett .,.::.. ,.I~ACU~ATE.CONCEJrTlOK

llIasses: S'l1nday-,-7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.. 12 Hoam. Daily.--3:00 A.M. . ,_.. . •.. .. .'.

'WILLED' AS' A .STRINGLESS' (HFT, A BEQUEST TO THBCATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION ENABLES

. THE ASSOCIATION TO. USE IT FOR THE MOST PRESSING" .,.' . NEEDS.

'TO' HELP MISSIONARIES IN THE MIDDLE AND NEAREAST give to children a sound mind In a sound bod,., theCATHOLIC NEAR· EA.sT.. WELFARE ASSOCIATION has two"Clubs" lor the' purpose of secUring SOme' of the neeessary II­nandal aiel - the BASILIANS for building anel ma'lntajningIIChools, the ORPHAN'S BREAD CLUB' to care lor the bodIea01 under-privileged children. We would welcome your mem­bership 'In ODe·Or· "both 01' thea.· Clubs. The' clue. an $1.00 s1IIODth.

"""~rtaStOlissioos~FRANCS CARDINAL SPEUMAN, Presl...... Magr.....r'. Tuohy, Nat'lleq

Send aII_IcatI-s ... -CATHOLIC'NEAR· EAST· WELFARE ASSOOAnON . ..

..~.~)(.fn~A~:-ot~ 51! .. New ,YOlk 17, N."!•

Page 15: 07.28.60

(HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., July 28, 1960 ~ 5L

AUGUST 15th THE LAST DAY, . ,.,' . . ' -

. . . ' ,

TO REGISTER FOR THE 'PILGRIMAGE

Write today for your Free COPT 01. the mustraw 'brochure.

August 1.5 is your last opportunity to make reservations for thefirst official pilgrimage of the Dioceae of Fall River.

Alternate itineraries are available to thOM who 'WOUld prefer tolimit their stay in Europe and who desire to retuna. by air..,

The pilgrimage wi11 be under the lPiritual le8dership 01. HisExcellency, Bishop Connolly and the itinerary will inelude visit8 tothe religious and eultural ~enters' of Westem Europe incl\lding ..Papal Audience and the famous Shrine at Lourdea.

Make Your Reservati'ons Now/ '

For The, First Official Diocesan Pilgrimage toRome, lourdes, Paris, Florence, lucerne, Dublin, Killa~neJ, London'

r-------------~

~ 'MAIL THIS COUPON ~

~ fall River 'DiocelOn Travel Leag~e ~~ P. o. ~x 16~ ~

~ ,Fan River, Massachusetts ~

.,~ Please send me complete details on the Fir$t Official ~~' Pilgrimage of the Diocese of Fall ~iv~ ,._ ' ' ~

.~ ~~ NAM~ , (pi~~~~ ..p~i~t) ; - ~

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. The Pilgrimage ~riee of $1250 eovers tourist aeeommodatiOM emthe Leonardo da Vinci, the luxury liner Rotterdam (on the' retumtrip) plus first-class accommodations and travel. Europe, aeeptcosts of a personal nature.

Thi, Pi'grilfHlge Melsog. Sponsored By The Follo~;ng Individualsalld B~sine,s Concern, in Greater Fall, R.iver:

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Page 16: 07.28.60

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Nearl.y BecameU. S. President

The Republican party's Lin- second place on the tfeket were1- coln centennial convention ill discussed, there was a strong

Chicago recalls that one prom- demand that a military. man beinent Republican, Gen. William selected. The man in a positiollStarke Rosecrans, nearly became to dictate this nomination was' athe first Catholic President of close friend and admirer of GeB.the United States. Rosecrans, Gen. James A. Gar­Thi~ happeneCi in the Spring field of Ohio, who later became

.. of 1863 when a strong faction of president.the Republican party, dissatis- Remembering his old general,fied with the progress of the war Garfield telegraphed him;. "Vice­

" u'nder:'President Lincoln, began Presidency going a-begging. Will• looking for a candidate to suc- you accept? Answer!" Gen. Rose- ._ ceed him. The name of GeB. crans wired his acceptance but

Rosecrans, then the'most popular it was not received by Garheld.,and successful officer in the Later it 'was ascertained tHatUnio.1!. Army, was suggested. ' ..the reply had Deen suppress~d

Horace Greeley dispatched' by Secretary of War Edwin M.James A. Gilmore to the front Stanton. ~ a consequence.lines to interview the General Andrew Johnson received theabout a proposed. plan that nomination; and at Lincoln'.would make Rosecrans the 10g- death succeeded to the presi­ical candidate in 1864. But the dency.General, who became a convert On several 'occasions duringto Catholicism While teaching the war, Secretary Stanton dis­at West Point M~litary Academy played a dislike for Gen. Rose­in 1845, declined to run. crans. In fact, he succeeded ill

He said: "My place is here. having him removed from com­The country gave me my educa- mand.tion, and has a right to my mil-, . U Rosecrans had not incurreditary services." He added that the enmity of the Secretary of.Greeley Was wrong in his esti- War, who controlled the militarymate of Lincoln. telegraph system, and if he had

When the Republican National not become the victim of hisConvention met in Baltimore in spite, he would have been Lin­1864, it nominated Abraham. coIn's running mate ill 1864 anelLincoln for a second presidential his successOr a few months iater,term, despite bitter ·opp'Osition. after the President'. assassina-

When nominations fOl'·the tion.

ALMOST PRESIDENT:General R08ecr~n8' telegramof acceptance' of the nom­ination for the vice-presi­dency under Lincoln in 1863was suppressed' by Secre­tary of War Stanton.

Bavarian CapitalReady t~ Gre'etMillion' Visitors

MUNICH (NC) - This8QO-year-old Bavari;m capi-.tal, one of GermanY'$ threelargest cities, is all set forits greatest event since the war:the 37th International Eucharis­tic Congress.

It will be the· second to beheld on German soil. In 1909 the20th International EucharisticCongress' was held in Cologn~

The Congress comes five yeanafter the last congress, in Rio deJaneiro, and runs from July Jlto Aug. 7.

The for~er royal palace 01'"residenz". is being prepared aBthe residence of the PapalLegate to the congres~, GustavoCardinal Testa, who arriveaSunday.

Tent CityIn contrast to the splendid!

royal palace, which is, never­theless well-equipped for itaguests, a mammoth tent city foryouthful pilgrims is located" onthe Oberwiesenfeld airfield. Atleast 70,000 boys and men areexpected to be quart~red there.

Some 70,000 girls and youngwomen will stay' in quarters onthe Riem racecO\lrse and in va­rious public school buildings..Munich families, ,many of themnon-Catholics, . have 0 pen e d!their homes to pilgrims. A quar­ter of a 'million youths are ex­pected at the congress.

Some estimate that Munich'lllpopulation of one Tnillion willbe doubled by the time the con­gress reaches its climax.

For these million visitors ela­borate and thorough cateringarrangements have been made.Army-style mess te.nts havebeen set up, and the Red Crossand· other organizations arclending about 100 field kitchens.About 1,200· of MuniCh's 3,000restaurants have made speciallarrangements to serve pilgrimSin shifts.

Parking has been provided f(){l'.Close to the great park knownas the .!J'heresienwiese, wheromost of the services will 'be- held,there is parking area for 5,000buses and 30,000 automobiles.'Police in helicopters and in acaptive balloon will survey thetraffic and help break up bottle­necks.

The railways have scheduled..250 special' trains to alleviate

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Pope Praises FaHihlOf Maltese Peop,le

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopeJohn has praised the steadfast'faith of the Maltese people onthe 19th centenary of. St. Paul'sarrival on their island .

The faith of the Maltese' isoutstanding, Pope John said, for"its ,great vitality, which throughthe centuries has remained un-·impaired by many snares and istoday firmer than a reef beatenby the waves."

According to tradition,' St.Paul was shipwrecked on theMediterranean island of Malta­now a British colony-in 60 A.D.while being taken to Rome 'as aprisoner. The island WBIl! con­veded to Christianity cfuringthe saint's three-month. stay.Today 311,000 of Malta's 321,000people are C!ltholics.

volumes, of which two in par­ticular, the late Kenneth Wil­liams' Lincoln Finds a General(Vol V), and. Bruce Catton'sGrant Moves South, ar'~ ratherstrongly critical' of thE' inade-.quacy of Rosecrans under thosupreme test of leadership.

Seek ReappraisalIt was the debacle of Chicka­

mauga that ruined Rosecrans,just as it was the vietory atVicksburg that made Grant'.star blaze with glory.

Yet there are those who argue .eloquently for a reappraisal of,the military reputation of theman who lost. For his Dne un­deniable blunder in 'issuing anorder Hable. to misconstructionon the field, he paid a penaltyperhaps in excess of his fault.

His displacement paved thew!ly for Sherman's assumptionof command, but it is at leastdebatable whether Rosecrans'plan of campaign, proje<:ted be­yond Chickamaug!!, wall not amore brilliant strategic designthan that ultimately followed. '

And if he had been' allowedto conduct it the mition mighthave been spared some of the

,bitterness of Sherman's tactic oftotal devastation, the first prel­ude' to modern warfare.

Strong- FaithFollowing the strugglE', Rose­

crans served for two years asminister to Mexico, a happychoice, for he found the countrycongenial and the people respon­sive. In the 70's he movl~d withhis family to California, settli'ngupon a ranch' at Redondo, nearLos Angeles, and became one ofthe original boosters' of thatarea's celebrated virtues.

From 1881 to 1885 he served asa congressman from California,and later as register o~ theUnited States treasury. It wascharacteristic of his faith thatwhen he received word of theuntimely death of his Paulistson his answering wir,~ read,"Bury him besides his Paulistbrethren to await the greatresurrection day, and God' blessall who have been kind to him."

For the old General deathcame on Marcii 11, 1898, at hisRedondo ranch, and four yearslater a .pompous re-interment atthe National Cemetery, Arling­ton, with President- RooS(~velt asthe speaker. It was something ofan honorable amend.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun:, July :l8, 1960.L6Rosecrans Paid ,Exacti~~1

Penalty for One BlundelrBy Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.

Bishop 01 Reno

"Old Rosy" was the nickname ~iven him by his .adoringtroops. It seemed somehow to fit the burly figure of MajorGeneral William Rosecrans, with h.is shock of white hairand his red face which so often was convulsed with boominglaughter. They might grum­ble at the back-breakingwork he assigned them to

_do, building roads over therough Tennessee' passes and for­

, tifying the carrlps (So needlessly," it seemed) at

the end .of eachday's. mar c h ,but they knewtha t he caredfor them like afather.

His personal,bravery was alegend. Wherethe bullets werethickest, at Iuka,at . Corinth, atStone River, atChickamauga, there was OldRosy, 'swearing like Q demonpossessed. A great strategist, too,it was reported through the

'- army, one of the greatest of histime, though perhaps a trifletoo dedicated to technique torecognize the main chance whenAt came.

And he included several con­tradictions: he was cautious tothe point of exasperating that

. monument of caution, HenryWager Halleck, while at thesame time he was trigger-tem­pered and prone to lose his headunder stress of battle.

Devout Convert .And if he shocked by his pro­

fanity he shocked still more by, his piety, for he was a devout

convert to the Catholic faith.His troops, farm boys for the

most part froll). the upper MiddieWest, might' regard his religionas one of the permissible idio­syncrasies of higher command.Those closer to him knew thathis faith was a deep-seated con­viction, the result of years ofconcentrated study while he wasinstructor in mental philosophyat West Point, back in the mid-

, 40's.Then he had followed with

wrapt attention the progress ofthe Oxford Movement in Eng­land, one of the few Americansof his time who knew what thecontroversy was all about andwhere it was leading. It led him,as inevitably as it led JohnHenry Newman, to the bosom ofthe Catholic Church.

Descendant from SignerHe was American to the mar­

row of his bones, Six generationsseparated him from Harmon'~endrick Rosenkrans who camefrom Holland to Pennsylvaniain 16.57, and on his mother's sidehe was descended from StephenHopkins, signer of the Declara­tion of Independence.

There was a recollection thatthe founder of tJ;1e family, Brik,

- had been given a rosary by thePope in 1325, and had' added itto his crest. History or fictionanother generation of the hous~learned how to say the rosaryover again.

For William Rosecrans wasnot content to remain a' )solitaryconvert; he did not rest until hisimmediate family including hisorot':1er Sylvester', iater to be­come the first· Bishop of Colum­bus, had joined him in the faith.

Son Beeomes Paul~

Save for the fact that at thetime of his conversion he was.already a married man, it is notqnlikely that he might himselfhave 'aspired to the priesthood.Theology delighted him in a daywhen lay theologians were rarebirds indeed. In later years. theordination of his son Adrian asan early recruit of the PaulistFathers was a joy and a soiace.

The approaching centennialof the outbreak of the Civil Warwith the enormous spate . of.books, dealing with every phaseof that fearful conflict, is bring­ing the name of General Rose­crans into renewed prominence.. The contrast between Grant,ehe man who succeeded, andRosecranS, the man who failed,Is stressed in a' dozen current

....

.~

Page 17: 07.28.60

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Page 18: 07.28.60

18 THE ANCHO~.-:-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28. 1960 Munich CongressContinued 'from Page One

brotherly meals in the parisheeafter morning Mass, and an eve­ning, Mass with responses fromthe congregation at the maiDsite.

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Watch of Atonement

On Friday a chapel in honorof Christ's Agony in the Gardemof Gethsemane will be dedi­cated at the former concentra­tion camp' at. Dachau, near

,Munich. Pilgrims of all nationswill take part in a watch 01.atonement.

On Saturday mornirig FrancisCardinal Spellman, Archbishopof Ne.w York, will offer Ponti­fical High Mass at Munich'.Frauenkirche cathedral. Thatevening a Pontifical High MaSllin' the Byzantine Rite will becelebrated on the' altar island.

--The pilgrim~ will. renew their'baptismal yows while boldin,.lighted candles.

, The coi)gress will close :iNititaPontifical :High ~aS8 Sunday ..morning Aug. ,7,. at the Ther­es'ienwiese, 'a' brqadcastaddreSll'~rom Pope John and,'distributioaof CommuniOl\' to the 'pa·rtici-·.p:mts.

Continued Ir,om Pag~ 0_PiocesanCharity Fund. LikeNazareth Hall in Fall River, itwill be open to children irrespec";tive of color or creed: The FallRiver school, staffed by Sisteraof Mercy has done remarkablework with exceptional children,teaching them according to theircapacities.

Sister Mary Joel has donegraduate work in the exceptionalchild field at Cardinal StritchCollege, Boston, and at St. Col­etta's in Hanover. Sister Mal'7'Jamesita has been teaching at-Nazareth Hall, having preparedat St. Coletta's and CardinalStritch. ( .

Sister Maria Bernadetta who'received her training fo~ theexceptional child' field at St.Coletta's, has been teaching atSt. Vincent's in Fall River. SisterMary Rosarii goes to the newschool from st. John's, Attleboro.

Bishop ,Connolly announced.plans for' the establishment ofthe school at Hyannis last ApriL

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that the three organizations arethe National Co u'l1 C i 1 ofChurches, the National Educa­tio!'1al . ~ssociation, and theAmerican Civil Liberties Union.

These groups a"re so emphat­ically opposed to aid for Catholicschools, Father Drinan stated;that the possibility of aid toCatholic schools in the foresee­able future "seems very dimindeed."

"Every Catholic is familiarwith the many a'rguments which

'are .regulariyc advanced byCatilolic p.ar,ents and educators

. on behalf' of Federal or s'tateaid for Catholic 'schools;" hesaid. "While these arguments

" seem .self-evident to Catholics,virtulllly no non-Catholics findthem convincing." .

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Asserts Three Groups OpposePublic· Aid to Catholic Schools

DETROIT (NC) -' Catholicschools will not receive govern­ment aidin this or the next gen­eration because of the oppositionof three powerful _groups, thedean of Boston. College's lawschool said here.

Father Robert F. Drinan, S.J.,told Detroit's First Friday Club

VENERATION OF RELiC:~ev.Leo M. Limoges, O.P.~blesses Page .Aiui Dil3iasio, Providence, with the relic ofSt. Anne as she squirms in ,her niother!s arl,ns at the closingexercis~s at St. Anne's Church; Fall. River~ on the patroness';feast day, ·Tuesday.. .- " ,. .

Catholic PressContinued from Page One

of opinion," he stated, "and thisis a very healthy situation whichis reflected in this circulation'boom' in 1959."

Steady Growth"Catholic publications are be­

coming more and more profes-'sional as each month passes, anda,re' . thereby 'attracting' morereaders all ,the time... We lookforward to steady growth in New School .for Boyscirculation' ,afld stature of the CLEVELAND, (NC)-A .newCatholic press in 'America over - resident school for homeless andthe next several decades." . dependent boys was opened on

The 378 magazines listed in .a 225-acre farm near Litchfield:,the directory show' an increase . Ohio, in' the Clevela~d diocese.of 1,605,832,' or an average in-',crease of 4,248 'p~r publication.

C'!tholic newspaper circula­tion 'in the U.S. shows an in-'crease of 107,7,42 for 131 publi-cations listed.'· ...

Canadian ci~culation'f~r all'publications· is 1,258,170, it wasrevealed in a special statisticalslJmmary page in;'the directory.'The, 1958 Canadian circulation .·wali 1,308,798;

lie . king, threatened to' i1rlVolve, William Penn in the upheaval.The proprietor hur~.ied hack toEngland to' protect :his interests;he succeeded. After severalyears the, new Protestant regimeconfirmed his title and Penn re-,turned to America.

On the accesSion of Willia~

and' Mary the- British' »arlia- 'ment had proclaimed; thl~ To}.ieration Act of 1689. Thereby re­strictions were removed from

, all dissenters save the _beleag-''uered adherents to the' 'oiriginalChristianity, Catholics. '

The Test Oath exacted fromall officeholders had been con­demned lOng before by .Pope,

,Paul VII in 1607. In his native,'land and in his colon'y Penn re-sisted this inclusion of the denialo'f' Transubstantiation in theMass. To retain his prop;rietor-'ship he eventually had to yield.

Prodded by Parliament hostileto everything Catholic, the lastof the Stuarts, Queen Anne, or­dered incorporation of the TestOath 'in the qualification ofevery officeholder. With. this barto any participation by the faith­ful in the government of thecolony, legal freedom for Cath­olics vanished in' Pennsylvaniauntil f776.

Anti:-Catholicism was p'rese~t

in Pennsylvania during the 18thcentury.. Still the constitutionalban on Catholics was not fash­ioned into a club of religiouspersecution. A' surrepl~itious

manner of operation, however,had the expected consequenceof very sketchy records byCath­olics themselves. .

German and Irish im~igrantsadded to the Catholic population.Then, too, the continued, tolera.,.tion beyond or outside' the lawemboldened the faithful. Thiscontinued after their odgina!­protector, William Penn, haddied in England in 1718. ,

With St. Joseph as its patron, achul'ch was finally opened inPhiladelphia in 1734. As may be'seen today, it was built on' a sidestreet (Willing's Alley). ,Thusattracting little attention, it was·not a source of constant irrita­tion to hostile eyes.

The Treaty of Paris olf 1763removed theproxiinate militarydanger from either· France orSpain. That lessened if it d!id not'eliminate the tension' underwhich Pennsylvania Catholicslived.· ,

.DUl'ing the French and .IndianWar a census of the Catholics-iit·the colony of William' Pennreckoned their number as 1;374.How minute was this l'ittle bandin .. comparison· with p,enn~yl-'vania's total' population of ap-.proximately a 'half-miliion!

That the most rabid anti··Cath­olic would be, concerned withso scanty a m'inority is: difficultto understand' today. Yet thefulminations of the PUl'itans inNew England against '~the

Papists" was at its height in·1687 when a French traveJler re-

,ported finding "eight or tenCatholics" in Boston! .

Outside the LawClearly outside. the law, Cath­

olics in Pennsylvania nonethe­less enjoyed the greatest fl'ee­dom of all·the faithful along theAtlantic seaboard. Though fewindeed they were in number,from them came the leadel's ofthe Church once the new nationwas formed.

Hence it is not to Lord Bal..;·timore alone, but to RogerWilliams and even more toWilliam Penn that Catholics areindebted for having survivedcolonial anti-Catholicism.

Next week: English Revo­lution Intensified Colonial. Anti­Catholicism.

The Catholic in America

Pennsylv'ania Single OasisIn Desert G'f ~rejudice

By Rev. Peter J. Rahill, Ph.D.This is the fourth of a series of articles r'eviewing the PO:sitioD

and experience of the practicing Catholic in the life 011 theAmerican community from Colonial times. The author holds adoctorate in American Church History, has taught in 'variousuniversities, and is presently Archivist and Historian 04: theArchdiocese of St. Louis.

In England penal laws against Catholics were by nomeans abolished after' the death of" Elizabeth I in 1603.Many pulpits in both mother country and colonies joinedthe Anglican divine John Tillotson in invectives against "therestless and black designs ofthat sure and inveterateEnemy of ours; the Churchof Rome." In America theresponse had been legal, pro­aeription ' of 'Catholics save iaMaryland. There the charity ofthe founders'"to those ou t­_ide the Faithl'l 1 tim a't e­IY: costCath­olics ' the i rIt.. in e 'r ~ican . san'ctu-

... • ~y. ,in the col­

onial desertof anti-Cath- .oiicism Penn-

, ;Ylvania cameto be the single oasis where the'green stalk of the Faith couldbe cultivated in, relative free:­dom. Before reviewing the ori­gin and endurance of this liberty• salute is due to a, pioneerAmerica'n apostle of creedalequality. By .no means is hisDame. unknown; he was RogerWilliams. Because his fairness

'had virtually no effect on col­onial Catholics it, would be easyto neglect his contribution.

Williams in Rhode IslandRoger Williams' Puritanism

was not identical with that ofthe leaders in New England. Un­like, them, having ·come. toAmerica for his own religiousfreedom he advocated lifting anyrestrictions on the consciences ofothers.

. Again departing hastily rather'than conforming; Will i a m sfounded Providence in RhodeIsland. There he followed' Cal­'veri in time at least in his grantof religious freedoin to all"Christians. .Probably no Cath­olics were in his colony duringbis lifetime, but the lack ofmention of "Papists" may notbe ascribed to inadvertence Oll

the part of Williams.'In fact, more' credit is due to

him for his charity in that hisprivate letters disclosed his per,;,Bonal hostility to ·the CatholicChurch; Notwithstanding hishatred of a religion he did notknow as it is in truth, Williamsimposed no prohibition to Cath­olic Faith or ceremonies.

.JIItta.: . While today Rhode Islandhas the highest percentage ofCatholics of any state, virtually·none found haven in the colony.,After 1728 Catholics' were coni­pletely, disfranchised by the, As­sembly of Rhode Island and thatdisCrimination continued afterthe American Revolution.

WilHam PennPennsylvania was t'he sole

English colony in -America tobe named after its actual foun­der. Distinguished for manyattributes, William Penn re­sembled Roger Williams in sup­pressing his personal. hostility'in his public utterances relativeto Catholicism. Then, too, hewas like George Calvert.

In the first legislation for hiscolony in 1682 Penn incorpora­ted both civil and religiousequality for all ·as Calvert hadIn Maryland. "On Religion" wasthe title of the initial 'chapterof this "Great Law." Therein itwas stated that all persons "Jiv­ing in this Province ... shallnot in any case be molested orprejudiced for his, or her, con­scientious persuasion or prac­tice."

A few Catholics who came inthe first years found these words

,~ verified by an actual welcome.Despite his fellowship with theQuakers, Penn enjoyed royalfavor in the court of the Stu­arts, Charles II and James II.

The collapse of the' reign ofJames II. England's last Catho-

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O!ympic AQ'hletesROME (NC)-Athletes in

the OIYTlJpic games here willbe able to attend religiousservices of their' choicethrough the efforts of a priestwho has long been active inItalian sports.

Msgr. Nicola Pavoni hasbeen n.a~ed Olympic delegatefor. religiOUS assistance for allathletes in Rome for the 1960games.

'll'h~ young athletic-lookingMonSignor is working with non­Catholic ·religious leaders todraw. up .a full list of servicesand ~?dresses of all religiousdeno:nm.ations. in Rome. It will

.be cI;~cuI~t~4 among the thous­a.n~s o~ athletes who will behVlng m the Olympic Village.,. mung those ,with whoml,V1sg~. Pavoni will wQrk are twoJewI~h groups, leaders of theRUSSian 'and Greek Orthodoxchur~J:1es, and Rome Churches Qfthe ..fol~owing Protestant de-'nomlllahons:

Assemblies of God, Lutheran,Churche~ . of Christ, Methodist,W~ldenslan, Quakers, Adventist, . ,~PIscopal, Anglican, Presbyter­Jan and Baptist..

. ". Papal AUdiences'. In regaI:'d to Catholic provi­

sIOns. during the Olympics,M~gr. Pavoni said that thereWill be two papal audiencesgranted, and that a Mass will becelebrated in Villa Borghesep~rk .on Sept. 4 by Luigi Car.dl.nal Tl'3glia, Pro-Vicar for theCIty of Rome.

.Pope John will receive Olym­pIC contestants on Aug. 24 andm~mbers of the Olympic Com­mittee ?n Aug. 29. Msgr. Pavonialso said it is hoped that PopeJohn will stop at the Olympicplant to bless the installationson his way ,to Castelgandolfo .wthe HItter part of July.

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Pope Sends BlessingTo Floyd Patterson

NEW YORK (NC) - FloydPatterson, the only man ever toregain the world's hea'vyweightboxing championship, receiveda papal blessing at a banquethere in. his honor.

The cabled blessing fromPope John was one of severalmessages of good will receivedby the, heavyweight king.. The Pope's message, sent toMr. Patterson through Msgr.Dante Del Fiorentino, pastor ofSt. Lucy's Church, Brooklyn,stated:

"The Holy Father cordiallyimparts to Mr. Floyd Pattersonin .pledge, of abiding divinegraces and heavenly favor thepaternal apostolic blessing im­plored."

Have PermissionOlympic Gamesevents. He stressed that no defi­nite action. has yet been takenbut that these three events areconsidered "unsuitable" forpriests and Religious.

If officially acted on by thevicariate, the ban against thesethree categories of athletics willapply to all priests and Religiousin Rome, whether they reside inthe city or are .just visiting,Msgr. Pavoni said.

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BAS~ETBALL CO~CH: Carlin Lynch,' left, directorof athle.tIcs at Stang HIgh School, So. 'Dartmouth, makesplans with· the newly appointed basketball coach JackMcCann of Fall River, for the inauguration of the s~ort inthe fall. '

Priests, ReligiousTo-See Summer

ROME (NC)-The Rome vi­cariate will judge what eventsof the 1960 Summer. Olympicsgames will be suitable for priestsand E.eligious to attend.

Msgr. Nicola Pavoni, Olympicdelegate for religious assistance 'during the August-Septembergames, said the full program ofthe games is currently understudy by officials of the vicari­ate.

The constitutions of the RomeSynod of January of this yearforbid attendance of clergy andReligious at public sports events.But the ban was relaxed in re­gard to the Olympic games be­cause of the number of foreignpriests expected to attend.

However, .according to M~qr.

Pavoni, the relaxation probablywill not include permission forpriests and :reiigious to attendswimming, . wrestling or boxing

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Diocese to ObserveeyO Anniversary

PROVIDENCE (NC)-A con­ference for priests, adult leaders

. and youth will be held hereSept. 19 to 20 on ·the 25th anni­versary of the founding of theCatholic Youth Organization inthe diocese. ,

Bishop Russell J. McVinneyann,ounced that., the two-daymeeting wi~ be directed byMsgr. Joseph/E. Schieder, direc­tor of the Youth DepartmentNational Catholic Welfare Con~ference. '

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Urges. SpiritualAction in. Home

JEFFERSON CITY - AMis sou r i committee on,youth has urged parents tomake an all-out effort, toprovide a "truly spiritual" at­mosphere at home for their chil­dren.

The recommendation was~ade in a 250-page report· pub­hshed by the Missouri Commit_tee for the 1960 White HouseConference on Children andYouth. The report said that sdeep sense of mOral values andrespect for authority should becultivated in the home.T~e ~~mmittee, in its report

on spiritual and religious as­pects of the child's environ_ment," further recommendedthat:

1.) Every religious g r,o u pshould admonish parents to re­ap,?raise their home life andattitudes to apply religiousteachings in the home.. 2.) Since many parents maywant to provide religious' em­phasis for their children but donot have the knowledge andskill required, every religiousgroup should "seriously con­sider instituting workshops oradult study groups to convey to

.them the best methods of hometeaching ... "

The committee report criti­c!zed" parents for "too manytunes delegating "to churcha~~ ,school virtually all r(lspon­Slblhty for the training of youngpeople."

The committee agreed thatthe family is the basic unit ofsociety and "the central pointfor the moral and ethical train­ing of the child."

Laity Staff SchoolsNEW ORLEANS (NC)-The

New Orleans archdiocese reportsthat 1,116 lay teachers were inits schools last academic year,an eightfold increase since 1925.Seven schools werecompletelJrstaffed by lay persons.

K of'C Golf TourneyAt ~ocassetSept. 18

Father Callahan Council 4139,K of C, announces its secondannual golf tournament, opento members and guests of theCouncil, will be held Sunday,Sept. 18 beginning at 12:30 P.M.at Pocasset Golf Club.

K of C teams representingvarious Councils will competefor a special trophy which mustbe won three times for perma­nent possession. Canton Councilwas the winner last year.

The tournament is limited to80 players and reservations mustbe made in advance, Dr. JosephMoore, co-chairman, announces.Prizes will be awarded at abuffet supper following thetournament. " ,

McCann Named BasketballCoach at Bishop' Stang

By Jack JKhueavyThe appointment of Jack McCann of Fall River as

coach of basketball at Bishop Stang High was announcedtoday. His selection lends an All-Coyle tinge to theDartmouth parochial athletic staff to which Carlin Lynchwas named last Spring.Lynch will assume the du- ~ranny Rega?, Sacred Hearts'

" . skipper and pilot of the F. R.ties of director of athletics Stars, will undoubtedly openand head coach of football with ace Ray Medeiros, whileand baseball in September. Tony Lacerda, manager of the. McCann brings a solid basket- New Bedford club and Suburbanball background mentor, may go with Somerset'sto Stang. At Jim Bridgeman or anyone ofCoyle .he cap- hi,; three top-notch flingers,tained the 1953 Jack Lowney, Bob Koczwara orteam that an- Rick Medeiros.nexed the Mas- Large Crowdsachusett Cath- A good size crowd is expectedolic title.· Fur- to attend the game. Last week'sther personal f',' Intermediate contest drew andis 1.i n c ti 0 n l•..',. estimated 2500. A like numbercame with hiS"", . atteI)ded last year's All-Star tiltbeing named to.,. >. which saw champion Somersetthe All-Bristol:: ' defeat the best of the rest of theCounty' 'unit.' Jack was 'also 'Il; league by a 9-6 count: Six of thebaseball standout on' 'the '51 '53 loop's arbiters will work theWarrior teams. . game under the direction of

During' his' tenure lit Provi- umpire-in-chlef, Walter White.dence College;. McCann contin- Not often seen is the feat ~­ued to excel as a member of the formed by Sacred Heart's RayFriar Varsity hoop squads. Ath~ Medeiros who hurled his teamIetics, however, were just one to twin victories over Norton at.facet of this young man's colle- Ruggles Park, Fall River, lastgiate life. A good student, he was Sunday. The dimintive right­a member of the R.O.T.C. and hander coasted, to an 'easy 7-2President of the P.C. Undergrad-' win In the nightcap. but. it tookuate Club of Fall River. a last inning homerun-with one

McCann was graduated from .aboa'rd-by manager Fran ReganProvidence College in 1957 with to wrap up the opener, 5-4.a second lieutenant's commission Norton 'has strengthened itsin the Army and subsequently c~~b considerably by the acqui­served a tour of duty in the Far sltIon of shortstop Dave BowenEast; In Korea he served as of Boston College and a trio ofplaying-manager of the Seventh former Coylle stars, Bill Contre­Cavalry Battle Group team. His r~s, ~ob Fioret~i and Jerry Cun­stellar play earned him a berth. mff. These three, together' withon the First' Cavalry Division Norton first baseman, Pete Gaz­team which went on to win the zola, were members of Coyle'sEighth Army title in Okinawa. 1959 Bristol County champions

In addition to his scholastic that came within a whisker ofcollegiate and service basketbali upsetting Belmont and Wilbarexperience, Jack has continued Wood foJ;" the State title.to manifest a close personal in­terest in the game as a memberof several fast amateur clubs Inand around Fall River. He willrema~n at Durfee whei;e he. isa history instructor. and assistantfootball coach. .

. CYO CalendarA brace of extraordinary ath-'

letic events sponsored by C.Y.O.is oP,. this, week's calendar.'Under way today at the Pocas­set Country Club on Cape Codis the annual CYO Diocesan Golf

, Tournament. Participating willbe entrants representing' Attle­boro, Fall River, New Bedfordand Taunton.

The top two players in eachof the three divisions will rep­resent the Fall River· Diocese inthe New England CYO tourney,Aug. 29 at Andover,Mass. Onhand to defend his title will beDick McGrath of Taunton, win­ner of the Marty Higgins Mem­orial Trophy in 1959.

South Park, Fall River, will bethe site of the Suburban CYOAll-Star baseball game nextWednesday night under thelights. The tilt matches the bestof the three Fall River teamsagainst the pick of their Sub­urban contemporaries from NewBedford, Norton, and Somerset.·

Page 20: 07.28.60

20 .THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 1960

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