10.13.60
DESCRIPTION
Fall River, Mass., Thursday,Oci'ober 13,'1960 ,.or PRICE IOc $4.00perYear Second Class Mail Priyileges·Authorized at Fall Riyer, Mass. the'pa:;tandpresentjoin tocelebrateits diamond jubilee. Under direction of Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, pastor, and Rev. Erlward J. Burns, cur- at~, the obser"ance will in- © 1960 TheAnchor AnAnchor 0/ th6Soul,Sureand F'irm-ST.PAUL rard', D.D., V.G:, Auxiliary tare Dei Awards, highest eyo officer~ will beinstalledat MISSIONER TO PERU: Rev. John J. Lawler, M.MTRANSCRIPT
Spain." Pcru did not gam itsindependence untiJ 1824. "Thenfewer Spanish priests came tothe country and there were fewnative clergy."
Father Lawler has completeda tremendous building projectand now hopes "to start a nativesisterhood in Lima. dedicat.ed t.oteaching in the parochialschools." He said many students enrolled ill' his St'. Rose ofLima School have show~ greatinterest in a nativesist~rhood.
In the nine short years sinceMaryknoll assigned Father Lawler· to a poor section of Lima,here is what the "priest and hisparishioners have accomplished:BuUding of a six-year primaryschool,· a three-year secondaryschool, an auditorium, churcb,rectory, and convent.
The school is staffed by 11Maryknoll nuns -and four Mary., Turn to Page Eighteen
New Bedford Priest ~IansNative Sisterhood in Lima
. The founder of the first parochial school in the countryof Peru says that recent world-wide interest in the politicaland spiritual trends in South America has had an attendant"and most welcome" upsurge in migration of Catholicforeign clergy to thosecountries. DiscuRsing currentreligious and social patternsin South America, especiallythose in his home parish inLima, Peru. was the Rev. John'J. Lawler M.M., who has justmade a flying, surprise visit tohis former New Bedford home.
Father Lawler, hrother ofNew Bedford Mayor Francis J.Lawler, accompanied a critically ill priest by air from LimaFriday en route to Maryknoll,New York. Father Lawler visited New Bedford for two days'before returning to Maryknoll.His last trip home was in 1955and he is due to return' for avacation next April.
"Today the church in LatinAmerica is placing its emphasison the building up of the nativeclergy," Father Lawler said."The Spanish conquistadorsbrought their own clergy from
MISSIONER TO PERU: Rev. John J. Lawler, M.Mshows souvenir'booklet from his Peruvian parish of St. Rosflof Lima to his sister-in-law, Mrs. Francis:J. Lawler. .
Youth of DioceseTo Join NationalCatholic Program
. J?ining seven million young people throughout thenation in observing National Catholic Youth Week from'Oct. 30 to Nov. 6, boys and girls in the Fall River Diocesewill participate in programs and ceremonies on parish and
. area levels, Rev. Walter A.Ad A~tare Dei Sullivan, Diocesan CYO Dir
ector; said today. All areas
S:coutMeda~s will participate in National(' )~munion Sunday for Youth
F 68 B on Oct. 30" also the Feast of,.or oys chi'ist the King. Programsthrougout the week wil: imple
, Sixty-eight Boy Scouts ment this year's theme: Responand Explorer Scouts of the sible Youth-Americ's Strength.Diocese will receive Ad Al- In Fall Rive' , urea and parishtare Dei Awards, highest eyo officer~ will be installed at
c 'emonics scheduled . . 7 Sun_recognition in Catholic Scouting, Cathedral. AI'ea officers includefrom His Excelency, the Most Michel Methot, Blessed SacraReverend James J. Gerrard, at Cathedral. Aear ,officers includeceremonies Sunday. Oct. 30 in meilt par'ish, president; Rita CasSt.,.Lawrence Churc.h, New Bed- tanho, Sal'to Christo, vi resford. ident; . ·'lter Nichipor 't. Jos-
The award recognizes out- eph, treasurer; Florence Soares,standing service to the Church St. -l'{och, secretary.rendered by boys through the Following the Cathedral cere-Scout program. mony" ol.tgoing officers will be
Girls of the Diocese will re- recognized at a program plannedceive the Marian Award at the 'for' the Anawan Street CYO atsame ceremony. The Marian 8 o'clock.'Award, 'similar in requirements . Week-Long Programto the Ad Altare Dei, is offered During Youth Week, Fallto members of the, Girl Scouts, River area CYO activities willCampfire Girls, Daughters of include a semi-formal danceIsabella, Catholic Daughters and from 8 to 12 Friday night, Nov. 4,
,similar yo..i.th organizations. open to all CYO members, andNames of recipients ,will be an- an .awards night at which par-nou'nced shortly. ishes and individual clergy and
Turn 10 Page Fourteen : Turn to Page Thirteen
Consider Closi~g
Canadian ShrineTo Guided Tours
MONTREAL (NC) - Aspokesman for St. Joseph'sOratory has warned thatthe world famous shrinemay be put off limits to secularguided tours.
Father Henry Bernard, C.S.C.,has complained in The Oratory,monthly publication of theShrine, about tourists who"approach these hallowed surroundings with a preconditioning no different from that withwhich 'they visit Niagara Falls."
Father Bernard said sccularguided tours "often distractfrom the reverence and prayer.'ful attitude" pro'per in theshrine. S·t. .Joseph's 'Oratory isvisited, by more than a millionpilgrims and tourists each year.
Auxiliary' BishopTo Be CelebrantOf White Masses
Most Rev.: James J. Gerrard', D.D., V.G:, AuxiliaryBishop of the Diocese, willbe, celebrant and preacherat the fifth annual "White Mass"at: 8 next Wednesday morningin St. Lawrence Church, NewBedford, and at a similar Massin St. Anne's Hospital Chapelat 8 A.M. Saturday, Oct. 22.
The Masses will be sponsoredby St. Luke's Physician's Guildof the two cities. Catholic physicians, dentists, nurses andothers in the health field havebeen invited to attend.
Adopted by the 75 guilds ofCatholic doctors comprising the
Turn to Page Eighteen;
MONSIGNOR DOLAN
Taunton PrelateMarks 25 YearsAt St. Mary's
Rt. Rev. Msgr. James J.Dolan has observed his silver jubilee as pastor of St.Mary's Church, Taunton,with a Mass attended by thepupils of'St. Mary's Grammarand High Schools.
Msgr. Dolan spoke briefly tothe student body and to theadults, during Mass, thankingthem for Masses and Communions which had been offeredfor. him that day. FollowingMass, ,he was presented with aspiritual bouquet from St.Mary's students.
Created a Monsignor Sept. 6,1952, the St. Mary's pastor was
Turn to Page Eighteen
FATHER BOUCHARD
tion for it, and today fond mem. ories linger on."
Father Walsh will be celebrant at the jubilee Mass, with'Rev. James A. Benson, S.J. ofFairfield University as deaconand Rev. John P. Cronin, St.Patrick's Church, Fall River, assubdeacon. Father Burns will be
, master of ceremonies andpreachel·. Both Father Bensonand Father Cronin are from St.Louis parish. '
The afternoon program, withthe theme of "Memories," willfeature a skit by the schoolchildren re-creating scenes fromthe past of the parish. Sister
Turn to Page Twenty
© 1960 The AnchorPRICE IOc
$4.00 per Year
Second Class Mail Priyileges· Authorized at Fall Riyer, Mass.
South Attleboro Mi~sion~r
Reports Fan of Lac~ TownVIENTIANE (NC)-A U.S. missiol)ary has arrived here
with the first eyewitness report of the fall of a Laotianprovincial capital to pro-Red troops. Father Lucien Bouchard, O.M.!., of South Attleboro, left Sam Neua in northern
Laos only twp hours before Father Bouchard said that theit was captured by the com- position of the, pro-WestemmuniHt-hid Pathet Lao guer- Turn to Page Eighteenrilla fighters. He led 'fiveother missioners and six Laotianshel'e aIter a five-day march ofmore than 100 miles in monsoonrains across mountains andthrough dense jungles. Thegroup h'aveled the last miles byjeep and plane.
The fall of Sam Neua was' partof this ,southeast Asian nation'sthree-sided civil war. Contending forces ani the neutralistgovernment that took power inAugust, the Pathet Lao movement which gives it qualifiedsupport, and pro-Western rebelswho oppose it.
Sam Neua - capital of theprovince of the same name,which is the country's mostflourishing Catholic area-hadbeen occupied by pro-Westerlttorc:es before its fall.
V~I. 4, No. 41
Memories of 75 years will cluster around St. LouisChurch, Fall River, on Sunday, Oct: 23, as parishioners ofthe' pa:;t and present join to celebrate its diamond jubilee.Under direction of Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, pastor, andRev. Erlward J. Burns, curat~, the obser"ance will inchide a Solerim High Mass ofThankRg"iving at 10 :30 Sunday moming, followed at 2 0'
c1~ck by a reunion program inthe ChUl'ch hall.
All former parishioners areimdted to attend the day of jubilee, said Father W~lsh. "II St.Louis Church carries your nameon its book of Baptisms or FirstCommunion, or Confirmation. orMa1Tia~es, or in the School files,or in the census cards of fOI'merpai'ishioners, we are interestedin ,you," he emphasized.
"No one ever left this parishwithout a deep feeling of affec-
Parish in Fall RiverMarks 75th Jubilee
TheANCHOR
Fall River, Mass., Thursday,Oci'ober 13,'1960
An Anchor 0/ th6 Soul, Sure and F'irm-ST. PAUL
Asserts u.s. Must PreserveTraditions to Win Cold War
WASHINGTON (NC)-A miRsion expert warns the.United States risks 'defeat in the cold war by fai1il~g toDive up to its democratic traditions. Fath~r Frederick A.McGuire, C.M., has told the 33rd annual conference of the
Catholic Association for In- fiber while millions of fellowternational Peace: "In the men went hungry and illintereRts of political exped- clothed. We have not prepal'ed. h t . d t f t o,ur people to understalld theJency we ave rle 0 ,or~e ' cultural difference between our-
, the high principles embodied in s~lves, our Latin' Americanour own freedom documents. Wehave assisted dictators to ,re- neighbors, the bulging popula-
tion of Asia and the awakeningmain in power. We have beensilelH in the face of colonial des- peoples of Africa.potism. "History has called us and our
"We have thrown up barriers allies to speak courageouslyagainst the entrance of immi- against the tyrannical theoriesgrants from certain countries of modern materialism. We haveand ccrtain races to such an ex- again and again defied materialtent one would think we be- progress.lieved,in the Aryan race theory "We have to a great extent re-of Hillel'. . mained, at least in our thinking,
"We have stored our food and Turn to Page Twelve
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Indict ,PublisherOn Libel Charge
PITTSBURGH (NC)-A grandjury has indicted the Rev. W. L.King, editor and- publisher ofthe Voice of the Nazarene, Elizabeth, Pa., on a charge of crim-inal libel. , .
The Rev. Mr. King is accusedof .pri~ting and distributing Ii.false oath he attributed to thefourth degree· of the Knights ofColumbus. . .
Previously, the minister wasordered to stop distributing thebogus oath; Judge John T. Duffof the Allegheny County Courtof· Common Pleas issued a preliminary injunction.
ThE! K. oft. national office·sought 'the' injunction. Witnessesfrom Kansas, Indiana and Ohiotestified-they had received copies of the oath in the mai~ froma post office box which the Rev.Mr. King advertises as his address.
Asks HomesFor Students
Beginning its 11th year ~
sponso·· 'lip of the Internatio~al
High School Student Pro ~ram,
the National Cath9lic WelflUleConference is appealin:: for host
. families to share their homes forone :'ear with a - 3 year old boyor girl fro:-.'l Europe or LaUaArne·"c;!.
"Students are carefully selectedby our own committeesoverseas," 'says Rt. Rev. Msgr.Joseph E. Schieder, Director ofthe Youth Department of theNCWC. "They are good Catholics top-flight students, welladj~sted personalities from goodCatholic homes. They have agood command of English bas~
NEW ASSIGNMENTS: 'Rev. Richard J. Callaghan, upon at least three. years ~. study. All students giv~ evidence;
O.F.M., left, formerly' stationed at St. Anthony's Shrine, of a potential for leadsrship inBoston and in the Mexican mission field, has reported to their native lands.Our L;dy's Chapel, New Bedford. Rev. Roger A. McQuarrie, "Parents are ~sked to accept
. d Ct· students, not as guests in theO.F.M., recently discharged from active uty as a ap am strict sense, but-more as tempo_iJ.l the Marine Corps is now assigned to the New Bedford rary members of their ownChapel. ' families. To take a stUdent is to
do something big for the good of
Food Production Outstrips, ~~,~~~l~n~U~~a~~~r~~~above.. ."This is a truly effective wEq·0·r.-ent Popu1at.-on Grow'th to develop frienqship between
~ people in different parts of· WeROME (NC)-The Far East, the world's most critical world." ,
area in the fight against hunger, last year saw an increase Many students _who partid-. pated in the NCWC's first pro-of food production over the rate of population growth. This gram in 1951-52 still keep ita
fact is highlighted in the annQal ·r~port of the United touch with their host families.Nations Food. and Agricul- In its· chapter on "world re-.· noted Msgr. Schieder, stressiriIJ
that families find it a "richlyture Organization. The re- view and outlook," the report rewarding ·experience" to sharePort covering the fiscal year 'further notes ~at.of ~,48 their home with a foreign stu-'
.' '. countries for which It publIshesendmg last June 30, cites the indices of agricultural produc- delit.Far East as "one of the most. tion only 15 are .estimated· to Further information' about theencouraging areas in agricult- hav~ failed to keep up with program can be had from the,ural productio~." • . population growth. NCWC Youth Department, 1311
The worldWIde study 1l1!!U~ Relative Lag in U.S. Massachusetts Ave.,. N.W., Wash-at FAO headquarters ?er~ mdI- One of these is the United'· irigton 5,' D. C.cates a ~wo-.per centrI~ m food States. The report notes that' H M'productll;)O m the course o~•.the the relative lag in production onor onsignoryear. ThIS,. says the report, IS a there was due chiefly to the Albert.L. Champoux, membe~ : .little less than th~ a,:erage for Americi'- g(ernment's attempts ship chairman of Council 86, Fallrecent years,. but It slIghtly ex- to restrain product'Jn to check River Knights of Columbus, ancee~s the estImated annual pop:, the accumulation of surplus nounces that the next class of '.ulabon growth of 1.6 per cent. to k . candidates for major degreess c s. .
Greater cause for concern is will be named in honor of theseen in Italy, Latin America and late Msgr. Francisco C. BettenAfrica. Per capita La'tin Ameri- court, a' member of the order.can production fell back sharply·in 1959-60 in comparison withthe previous year, according tothe F AO report. At the sametime, it said, Africa's food production decreased by about oneper cent.' ' ..
The ·report forecasts a-ccoqtinued worldwide increase liD.most commodities during the"current 'year, barring the' uri- .'
,foreseeable possibility of majOradverse weather changes.
Bishop's Requiem·Next Tuesday
BALTIMORE (NC).. ,RequiemMass will be offered here Tuesday· for ,Auxiliary Bishop Jerot:DeD. ,Sebastian of ·Baltimore who·died last Tuesday in St. Joseph'llHospital. He was 64.. The Mass will be . said in the
new Cathedral of Mary Our,Queen' for the pastor of St.Elizabeth's church who becameTitular Bishop of Baris in Hellesponte and ~uxiliary to Arch-.bishop Francis' P. Keough ofBaltimore in February, 1954.
A native of ,Washing·ton, D,.C... Bishop Sebastian studied at St.
Patrick's Academy there, at St.Charles College, Catonsville,Md.. 'and at St. ~ary~s ~minary, alsoin Baltimore. .
He was ordained to the priestho'od on May 25; 1922, and 'untilh'is death was associated"with St;Elizabeth parish, firs~ as curate,then as pastor.
Mass OrdoFRIDAY-St. Callistus I, Pope
and Martyr. Doubie. Red. MassProper; Gloria; Common Pref-ace. \.' . "
SATURDAY-St. Teresa, Virgin.Double: White. Mass Proper;Gloria; Commoil Preface.
SUNDAY-XIX Sunday,· 'AfterPentecost. Double. Green. MassProper; Gloria; Second CollectSt. Hedwig, Widow; Creed;Preface of Trinity. ,
MONDAY-St. Margaret MaryAlacoque, Virgin. D 0 ubI e •White. Mass .Proper; Gloria;Common Preface.
TUESDAY-St. Luke, Evangelist. Double of II Class. ,Red.Mass 'Proper; Gloria; Creed;Preface of Apostles.
WEDNESDAY-St. Peter of AI, cantara, Confessor. no ubI e.
White. Mass Proper; Gloria;Common Preface.
THURSDAY-St. John Cantius,Confessor. Double. White~
Mass Proper; Gloria; Common'Preface.
THE ,',i :Cl-iOl:1-Diocese .of Fall River~Thurs., Oct. 13, 19602
FORTY HOURSDEVOTION
Oct. 16-St. John of God,. Somerset.
Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, Taunton. '
Oct. 17-LaSalette, E a s tBrewster.
Oct.23-St. Peter, Provincetown.
St. Hedwig, New Bedford.Oct. 30-St. M i c :1 a e 1, Fall
River.St. Patrick, Somerset.
,Nov. 6-St. -Thomas More,Somerset.
Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs.St. Stanislaus, Fall River.
THE ANCHORSecond-class :nail privilegeS authorized
.,. Fall River. Mass, Published everyThursday at 410 Highland Avenue, FallRiver, Maas•• by the Catholie ~ress of theDioeese of Fall River. SubseMption pricehy mall. postpaid $4.00 per Yea&'o .
Schedule· ' Cana,Pre-'Cana Talks
The Family Life Bureau ofthe Diocese announces the following schedule of Cana andPre':'Cana Conferences: Cana II,St. John Baptist, New B~dford,7:45 .Wedne~day night, Oct. 19;Caml III, St. Patrick's, Falmouth 7:30 Tuesday night, Oct.25' Cana IV, St. Patrick's,W~reham, 7:30 'Sunday night,Oct. 30. ..
Cana I, Sacred Heart, Fall,River, 8 Tuesday night, Nov. 15;Cana I Our Lady of Fatima,Swanse~ 8· Wednesday night,Nov. 30; Cana II, St. Mary's,North Attleboro, 7:30 Tuesdaynight, Dec. 6. .
Pre-Cana Conferences arescheduled for the·Taunton area.Sunday, Nov. 13; for the F~ll
River and New Be<iford areas,Oct. 16, Nov. 13"and Dec. 4, allSundays; and for the Cape Codarea; Sunday, Oct,,23 at Hyannis.
.Legion of De~~~~y ,The following films are to be
added to the, lisq; in theirl'e-spective 'classific'!tions,: " ' ,
Unobjectiomible for generalpatronage: Mighty Crus.a~~rs;Swiss Family Robinson (thIS fIlmis, recommended to -the eiiUre·family as superior entertain-ment). ,
Objectionable in part for aD:,~uad Car (low moral tone).
Necrology.THE ' ANCHOR lists the aD
ni-versary dates of priests whoserved tbeFall·River Diocesesiilce its formation in 1904witb the intention that 'thefaithful' will give them 'Ilprayerful remembranc~
; OCTOBER 14Rev. Dennis ·M. Lowney, 1918,
Assistant, Sacred Heart,.Taunton." OCTOBER 19,Rev. Manuel A. Silvja, 1928,
Pastor, Santo Christo, Fall River.
On~y ~~g Cor~~Eratfi~Hrn~ Pay,ObligGt~o~s' t@ ~dM(©lif8@~
FORT WORTH (NC)-A Catholic university 'Presidentsaid here that communities owe financial sQpport to universities "as a payment for value received." Fat~er P.aulC. Reinert, S.J., president of St. Louis (Mo.) UmversIty,said that among all the nity owes support .to ~exasgroups in society, only big Christian, as a payment forcorporations by and' large value received," he said.
f If'II' "th' bl'ga Understandingare U I mg· elr 0 I - F ther Reinert commended• t~on~, towards higher educa- larg~ corporations for their
tion. "rather far-seeing understand-The J~suit educa~or spoke l!:t ing" of their duty to support
'ceremomes celebratmg the go!d- universities.en anniversary of ~o?peratIon "But this same sense of re-bet~een Texas Ch~IstIan Uni- sponsibility has not penetrated .verSIty and the CIty of Fort to many other important seg-Worth. ' ments of society-medium sized
Community Support and smaller business firms, lab-He 'stressed that today "no or organizations, professional
university, neither. ~he . ta~_. groups who have funds at theirsupported nor .the p'nvat~ n:sti- disposal, many individual ciUtution, can achie':e Its obJectIves zens of means," he said.if the cost of the process must He declared that "today, withbe ·~orne by the, individual stu-, the demands every communitydent alone." places on its universities, with
He said communities "must the dependence of every 'citizensupport particularly private edu- on the work which only univercation, not from a motive. of sities can carryon, there is nocharity . • . but because the one who can rightfully shrug,offuniversity's functions of teac.h- a personal duty to do what heing and ,research are essential can' to keep that universityto 'the life and welfare of each strong vigorous and free."and every citizen." Father Reinert said that "the
"In a true sense, this commu- urban university in America isnot only a good neighbor, ,b~an essential partner hi civic progress on all levels."
Company GivesGift to CYO
INDIANAPOLIS (NC) -TheInland . Container ' CorporationFoundation of Indianapolis donated$15,000 to· the CatholicYouth Organization of the Arch-diocese of Indianapolis. . .
The grant will be applied to·the .building program at' CampChristina, newly acquired archdiocesan youth camp for girlsthat's located 45 miles: fromIndianapolis.
Herman C. Krannert, corporaiion president, a non-Catholic,recently secured a- donation of$25,000 from the foundation toassist tpe ·Catholic High Schools.Fund Campaign in Indinapolis.
NEW SERIES FOR SERVICEMEN.: Francis CardinalSpellman, Archbishop of New York, Military Vicar of tli.eArmed Forces, receives a set of the booklets on militarylife from Frank M. Folsom, chairman of the NCCS Executive Committee. NC Photo.
Delinquency RemainsGreatest Problem
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Los Angeles SeesEnrollment Double
LOS ANGELES ,NC)- Parochial school enrollment in theLos Angeles archdiocese hasmore than doubled in the past10 years., The archdiocesan department
of education said that currentenrollment is 159,398. Ten yearaago it was 69,522.
The present number includes32,317 in high schools and 127081in elementary schools, En;ollment is approximately 5,000 students higher than last year.
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Against CatholicSchool DroppingLower Grades
PITTSBURGH (NC'> - Apro po s a I that diocesanschools concentrate on theupper grades in the hope ofgiving all Catholic children atleast some Church-sponsored education has been rejected here.
Msgr. John B. McDowell, superintendent of the 128,000-student Pittsburgh diocesan schoolsystem, opposed the suggestionthat some lower grades bedropped.
He said in the ·55th annual report of the system that it is a"fiction" to think the proposalwould enable all Catholic children to receive some Catholiceducation.
Most of the youngsters attending public schools here, he said,are in parishes where there areno Catholic schools.
Desperate MeasureHe called the proposal a "deg..
perate" measure which threatensto impair the present "fine system" in this diocese, the See withthe nation's tenth largest Catholic population, 879,255.
He said 75 per cent of theCatholic childl'en of grade schoolage here are in Catholic schoolsand 40 pel' cent ,of those of highschool age are in Catholic educational institutions.
The proposal Msgr. McDowendismissed has been discussed bynumerous Catholic educators. Itis based on the knlJwledge thatin some areas of the countryCatholic schools are able to enroll less than half of the Catholicchildren.
THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 13, 1960
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Find DiscriminationAt Queens College
NEW YORK (NC) - A statecommission's conclusion' t hat Catholic teachers get unfairtr,eatment fror.l' officials at taxsupported Queens College willbe argued in' State SupremeComt on Thursday, Oct. 27.
The State Commission AgainstDiscrimination said after a twoyear investigation that administrators at the 6,000':'studentmunicipal college in Irlushingresisted hiring Catholic teacher!l.
It also said they discriminatedagainst Catholics in promotingthose who did get .on the staffof"the college, one o~ four divisions of the College of the City.of New York.
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DIOCESAN NURSES MEET: The presidents conveningat the Coffee Table during their Fall Plenary Meeting areleft to right: Mrs. Stanley J. Koczera, New Bedford; MissCatherine McCarthy, Diocesan leader; Rev. John F. Hogan,New Bedford chaplain; Mrs. Michael F. ~itzgerald, FallRiver; and Mrs. Frank Cabral, Jr., Taun~on.
S.ays Castro, Regime TriesTo Kill Catholic Influence
SANTIAGO (NC)-The Archbishop who saved FidelCastro's life seven years ago has accused the Castro regimeof trying to destroy Catholic influence in Cuba and replaceit with communism. "They are doing this not just step bystep, but in great strides," dio station CMKC he"e, Suchsaid Archbishop Enrique "intervention" is a customaryPerez Sera'ntes of Santiago prelude to confiscation.• Supresses Programs •III a pastoral lett~r. The 76- The government also sup-year-old prelate said that, most pressed' Catholic radio and teleof the men who fought for vision programs in HavanaFidel Ca~tro were Catholics, but leaving Catholics without ef~commulllsts had :o:eaped the effective means of reachiilg thefruits of Castro's victory. largely illiterate Cuban people.'
"Should we meekly and sil- Archbishop Perez Serantesently tolerate it when the com- said: "N'ever did the Cubanmunists are the ones to give our people think that the 'iron handheroes lessons in patriotism?" the loveless hand of communis~
. he asked, would hang threateningly over,Saved Castro's Life our heads. Never did they think
Archbishop Perez Serantes that the lean devotees of Marxsaved Fidel Castro's life in 1953 and Lenin would be the ones towhen Castro, was the hunted snatch from us the well earnedleader of a revolutionary coup crown of victory.that· failed. At that time Arch- "Never did they, think thatbishop PerezSerantes secured those devotees of Marx anda ,promise of a, f!J ll civil trial Leni'n would tell the country'sfO,r Castro, who had expressed heroic volunteers how theythe ,fear he would be shot upon should act, to the point of orcapture, and persuaded Castro dering us to be confined to ourto give himself up. churches and brazenly telling us
Archbishop Perez Serantes how to act while in them ..•"was the first churchman to de-nounce publicly the encroachment of communism UpOJl Cas-,tro's revolutionary government. 'That was in May Olf tl:i5 year,
, His latest pastoral was lead inall churches of the arcndiocese.
The immediate occa,iOn of theArchbishop;s pastor'il letter WllS '
the government's supp -ession offive Catholic radio ~r~'gl'ams inSal)tia,go. They were all terminated 'when the ';0 ,'ernlllentpla'.:ed under, "intervention" ra- .
I .~2f~~iu~)·:,,~ __.-C~.~,_'~~
Scholars to DiscussCo,nc'epts in Bible .'
CONVENT'STATION (NC)Scholar~ 'will discuss foul' keyconcepts in the Bible during astudy. day on Sacred Scriptureat the College of St. ElizabethSaturd"y~ .
The program will be sponsoredby Seton Hall Nniversit~'s Institute of Judaeo-Christian Studiesin Newark.
Msgr. John M, Oesterreicher,institute dit'ector, will discussthe Biblical concept of justice.T"e concept of sin as outlinep.in the Bit" will be discussed byFather Myles Bourke, professorof Sacred Scripture at St. Joseph
I Seminary, Dunwoodie, N. Y.Father Francis M. Mead of
Seton Hall will ta:k on "TheWord." The Biblical concept oflove will be treate, by MotherKathryn JIlivan of Ma"hatlanville Colle~e of the Sacred Heart,Purchase, N. Y.
,University ConfersHonorary Degrees
DALLAS (NC)":""The University of Dallas conferr~" 'honorary degrees' on six men at itsfirst annual Founders' '..... - '.
The four-year-old liberal artscollege, operated by the Dioceseof Dallas-Fort Worth, presenteddez"~es to Bishop Thomas K.Gorman of Dallas-Fort Worth,Edward R. Maher and EdwardConstantin, Jr., all founders ofthe institution and members ofits trustee executive committee.
Also honored were Gen. Douglas MacArthur, former Secretaryof War Patrick J. "IUI:ley andRobel't G. Hill, U, S, Ambassadorto ,Mexico. They were praisedfor exemplifying "the intellectual and -"iritual' qualities theUtliversity strives to inculcate."
Gen. MacArthur was not present. ~e is re,::utlerating frOm anoperation. '
previous generations have, andthat "they have l;ln innate kind.,ness and generosity."
J. Edgar Hoover, director ofthe Federal Bureau of Investigation, told a general meetingof the convention that "since1950, crime has increased 69per cent-four times as fast asour expanding population." "Today," he added, "we find thatwe are confronted with theworst erR of lawlessness in ournation's history,tt
Tragie AspectMr, Hoover said juvenile ar
rests have more than doubledsince 1948, while the juvenilepopulation increased by less,than one half. He called this "atragic aspect" of America's~rime problem.
"The spector of juvenile terrorismand gang-style intimidation hangs menacingly ,overcommunity after community,"he assert"d. "A surging teenageunderworld-one which practices open defiance of the lawand utter contempt for therights and welfare of othershas risen to challenge the forcesof law and order. It casts astigma upon every communitywhere it exists,"
Acts Senseless C
As the police chiefs were gathering ,here, local authoritiespuzzled over a case in which adozen boys, 14 to 17 years 'ofage, from prosperous familiesliving in one of the best residential areas,' apparently hadbeen responsible for some 30cases of car theft and other
, stealing, housebreaking, andvandalism. Many of the actswere described as senseless; theboys were not organized into a \gang, and police said they hadbeen unable to find any reasonwhy the offenses were committed.
Return RemainsAVIGNON (NC)-The remains
of Pope Innocent VI, a Frenchman who ruled the Church fromAvignon in the 14th century,'will be interred in the Palace ofthe Popes here.' T'le remainshave been in Villeneuve-IesAvignon, just across the RhoneRiver, since the Pope died in1362.
WASHINGTON ,(NC) -:' Some experts meeting hereconcluded that juvenile delinquency is the most seriousproblem facing United States communities and their lawenforcement agencies. There wassom~ sentiment in favorof having careless parentsshare the blame for the situation. These things werebrought out in a panel discussion at the meeting here' ofthe International Association ofPolice Chiefs.
Some experts advocated that,in cases where juveniles commit serious crimes, not onlytheir names but also the natnesof the parents should be madepublic, This represents a reversal of the present general atti-_tude, which is t9: withhold thename 'of the offender, when heis below a certain age, Recently,there has been some agitationfor making known the name ofthe pal·ents. It would seem thatthe identity of the offendercould not be shielded, if thenames of the parents were madepUblic.,
Rate DoubledLois L. Higgins, director of
the Illinois Crime PreventionBureau, told the panel that juvenile delinquency has doubledsince 1948. This far exceeds therate of population growth.
Mrs, Higgins also said thatthe top problems facing communities round the world aredrug traffic and addiction, por.nography, gang warfare andriots.
,When Mrs. Higgins speaks sheoommands respeet. The alumnaof Mount Mary College, Milwaukee, knows about the problems of law enforcement bothhel'e and abroad. Several yearsago, as president of the International Association of Policewomen, she made a round-theworld study of these prOblems.She found that other countriesbeside the United States havejuvenile delinquency. In Bangkok, for example, she found thatopium dens were attractingyoung beople as well as "oldaddicts." It has been said fromtime to time that, in at leastsome cases, the increases injuvenile delinquency might beattributed tJ a conspiracy on thepart of communists to undermine young people in variousareas.
Confidence in FutureEven though she found juve
nile delinquency widespread Mr.Higgins expressed confidence inhour expressed confidence inthe future of today's young people. She said they make greateruse of their opportunities than
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4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 13, 1960
.TV- Programs Thre~tening
1r0 D@$frroy P@w~rr @f M;bl1dBy Rev. Andrew M. Greeley
Msgr. George G. Higgins will be in Europe for the nextseveral weeks. During that time Father Greeley will be hisguest columnist. Father Greeley is the autb~r 01 the book TheChurch and the Suburbs (Slieed and Ward, 1959). A secondbook on tbe problems of American young people is scheduled'llor publication in earlY 1961. . ,
If the TV industry learned its lesson from the quizshow scandal, it is not immediately obvious. One need onlylook through the evening programing on any night of thenew season to recognize that "the sight and sound of the
- sixties" is only slightly dif- Americans as did L'affaire Paar.ferent than that of the fif- Indeed few things are moreties. Here and there is to be disg::aceful about. TV than thefound a new public events f:=d that the two pr.esidential
candidates are forced to undergoprogram, a new "special," a newfirst rate drama; but the normal the humiliatio:l of exchangingfare remains the allegedly humorous remarks
with Paar and answering ques"';same: violence tions about their liking for Mex-and com e d y ican cookin£, and the mechanicswith the twoat times hardly of getting laundry done during
the campaign.distinguishable. What Public .!Likes
John Crosby, The ll':-)logists o~ TV claimthe famed TV ..critic, summed =' that they are not really to blame.
They are __lerely giving' ."-it up perfectly lic what i demands-as reflectedin a recent col- in the varir:s rating sur·veys.umn. No one ':Phe public, so the a'rgument goes,w h"l occupies l'kany leadership position in soci- is gettir.g hat it 1 es.
However, as Dwight Macdonety watches TV any more; jour- aId recently pointed 0"" the onlynalists clergy, professors, top argument that can be safelygover~ment personnel, h i g h made is that' the public likesranking business executives-all what it is getting. Whether ithave given it up Ion., ago. might li:~c somethi:lg else' or
The only oneS who watch it, whether the industry has anaccording to Crosby, are the peo- obligati to provide considerpIe. People without their leaders able amounts of somethin' elseare a mob and the TV audience . 'k h tfor those who would 11 etatoday must be reckoned with the Isomething else remain unanvarious networks vying with swered questions. .each other to attract the atten- The networks maintain thattion of the mob. The more vio- if one ~f .them shoulr' attemptlent,. the more sensational the to raise theogeneral level of itsprogram, the better a mob will evening programs, the otlterslike it.' . would put the offending ne~\ ork
'Untouchables' Gory cut of "usiness as endex ratingsOne of the worst manifesta- fell an.: anverti' ~rs fled. In short,
tions of this appeal to lovers ofviolence is an hour of mayhem the argument runs, p.esent
state of TV is an :'1evitable recalled "The Untouchables" which s:.:lt of free en' )rise.b.lres a vague resemblance toprohi"ition days in Chicago. Price Us Trash
One of the favorite indoor There is some reason to doubtsports in America has been toting that U, is ~ "n l ".- freeup the number of bushy browed. enterprise might work in "~
bootleggers disposed of by the TV industry,. but free entersyndicate's tommy guns. If the,' prise is not so sacred that whennumber thus dispatched on -any a given rr .. "tation . of itgiven program is less. than 20 t' reatens the comm, -oOd, itthe program is counted a failure. cannot be regulated or curtailed.
-'lveral Italian-American 01'- If the price of free enterprise.ganizations h.ave t: '~en offense is a com' ation of trash, vioover The Untouchables, claiming lence and drive: (occasionallyit projects an unfair image of T ~'ettied up b•.~ public servicetheir people. The latter-day suc- };:rogram a polit:-::~' 'e"ate),cessors of the syndicate have re-' then let us have l'€ .ulation andmained j" their .alatial subur- the 00nnc the better.ban villas silent, but even they Many Americans get upset by'have reason to claim that they the enacting of deceit or theare being unfairly portrayed. . glorifying of violence and im-
Paar Show Inane morality on TV, These are seri-. More popular even than "The . ous pro"tlems, but far moreUntouchabies" are Jack Paar's serious is the destruction of thenightly inani'.ies. critical facJities and the creative
A stray visitor from outer imaginations of the millions ofspace wandering into America people.last year would "we thought The important question aboutfrom' the press coverag~ that the the Paar program is not whethermost important things 'hich there is an occasional dubioushappen'd in our country during joke, but whether a steady dietthe whole winter were Paar's of i. and similar shows is notfamed joke and his subsequent destroying our abilities to aptearful departure and equally preciate better things.tearful return. . To fetter and enslave the body
Unfortunately, the visitor is a great crime; but is it not a_might ell be right· 'othing worse injustice to weaken andstirred u' the enthusiasm of destroy the powers of the mind.
GREETS ROYAL COUPLE: Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, is introduced to Japan's
'/ Crown Prince Akihito and Princess Michiko, by John D.Rockefeller, III, (luring a reception in New York. Mr. Rockefeller is president of the Japan Society, which gave thereception. NC Photo.
...
RING CEREMONY AT ST. ANTHONY'S: DorisCaron, senior class vice-president of the New Bedford High
, School, receives her ring from Rev. Clarence D'Entremont,school director, with the assistance of Raymond Bouchard.
AS$er~s P~rents'Neglecting.Sex Educ~tgonof Children
KEELE (NC)-British Catholic parents are failing togive their children proper sex education, a bishop said here."The Catholic body as a whole is lamentably lacking in itsresponsibility in the matter of th.e sex education ofchildren," said Auxiliary What' the Catholic mothers'Bishop Thomas B. Pearson group should be doing, he said,of ·Lancaster. "We are un- is driving home the point thattrained and Haphazard in sex training. is and always will
be the duty of the parents them-.the moral training of our young selves.
people especially in regard to "The imparting of knowledgesex." and the warning of danger when
The Bishop, who is. ecclesias- the .onset of puberty has actuallytical adviser to Catho'.ic wom- come is of little. avail if there
. f:n's organizations in Britain, has not .been the steady build.,.up'spoke to the national council of of the practice 'of chastity, in thethe Union of Catholic Mothers. control of the sexual instincts
"There are vast numbers of from the 'very early years," heCatholics," he said, "who by an- declared.answering a question '01' two so Positive Trainingthat their children know the "All kinds of excellent booksfacts of ·life think that the sex exist to aid patents in this workinstruction of their -:hildren is of sex education, which begins·complete. A" certain amount of when the child reaches the usenegative training is given, and of 'reason.'often a false sense of shame put
"There is no need for me toaround the subject."state how sex instruction should
Result Is Sin he imparted. The training hasYoungste~s who receive only to be positive and supernatural
a "purely naturalist" sex train- and there has to .be at some. ing on how to avoid trouble "at time downright straight and unleast have a positive idea of the equivocal talk. And have youprecise danger and the types to ever met a child yet where itdeal with," the Bishop stated. goes in 'at one hellring?
~ "It is for you to decide what"Surely our children have the you are going to do. I only hope
right to something as positive that whatever you launch willfrom the supernatural angle!" be vigorous enough to make anhe continued. "And since when .impact and shake the Catholichas the supernatural bee!! afraid community out of its presentof the natural? But that is what placid leave-it-to-sQmeone-elsetoo often happens, so that there . attitude."is nothing either supernaturalor natural; but only somethingartificial. And the result is misery, fear and sin."
Parents' Duty
Bishop Pearson criticized a.six-point program drawn up bythe Union of Catholic Mothersfor preparing children for life.He said of the' six points: "To bebrutally honest, I think theyare suitable for a pious andsheltered girl passing fromhome life to the novitiate of areligious order without beingexposed to life as it is today."
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Jesuit EducatorDeplores ApathyTo Exce!~ence
WASHINGTON (NC)A Catholic educator has
. criticized American ~tudents
for their failure to desireeducational excellence.. "On a national scale there has
been wanting the desire not onlyto do well, but to do the best ofwhich one is capable," FatherWilliam J. Dunne, S.J., declaredat the annual Mass of the HolyGhost opening the school yearat Georgetown University, a Jesuit school.
If Americar. educational standards are to be raised, ,FatherDunne said, "the first thing is'to eet rid of the bad nationalhabit of contented mediocrity."
"Our young people might conceivably achieve a degree of success without help, but it is notlikely thr.' they will accomplishgreat things unlells we who arein education provide the best,including ou-. expectations, ourdemands, our example," he said.
NleW Bedford LegionLists' Good Books
The Fall edition of WorthwhileBooks issued by the New Bedford Legion of Mary is nowready for distribution. It lists20 current titles and can be obtained at the main and allbranches of the New BedfordFree Public Library. ''Books included are LouiseMarillac; The Vocation of aSingle Woman; Love One Another; Now' and at the Hour;Harvest, 1960; Kneeling in theBea!. Patch; Saints of Russia;St. Philip Ned; The EmeraldWhaler.
Also Monsignor Connelly ofSt. Gregory's Parish; A Trappist Writes Home; The Secret ofDreams; Mary Was H.,r Life; TheLife of Catherine of Siena; Margaret Roper; Bold Encounter;Go to Heaven; The CharigingMind; Peter Claver, Saint 01Slaves; ~laska Bound.
P~aw Central AmericaCatholic University,
M.\NAGUA (NC) - Nicaragua's Congress ltas approvedihe tablishment . the Catholic University of Central America. reo
The first departments of theuniversity-humanities ,,~d business admbistrat' -will openclasses in June, 19. . There willalso be a journalism schoof anda center for studen of pS~'chol
ogy and for teachers in chargeof vocational guidance.
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parents apply for it. In lettersrea~ from every pulpit in France,the bishop pointed out that thedecision to give religious instruction and the frequency withwhich it is. given depend largelyupon parents.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFall River-Thurs., Oct. 13, 1960 5
Twin delight. - these lU;Sciously ~ood Jane-Parker fruit piesl Both With ftaky-hg~t croomand filled-to-thc-brim with tempting fcud;!
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Law Demands Parents' RequestPARIS (NC)-The Bishops of
France have urged Catholic parents to request religious instruction for their children attendingpublic schools.
Under France's new law, suchinstruction is given only if
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What About You?
... a Franciscan Sister!Girl. sixteen·and·ovor are needed
10 lervo God a. Nuno., Laboratoryand X·ray Technicians, Accountants,Dietitian., Soomstreue., Cooks, andin other hospital deportments.
Mother Mary Elizabeth at St. Martof the Angels Convent, Rod< Island,lIIinoi., will send yOtl ......... information on this happy lifo.
Special consideration isgiven to "late" vocations.
Nigeria's people-more than 10million-are pagans.
The Church in Nigeria is organized into three archdioceses,nine dioceses and six apostolicprefectures. One diocese isheaded by a Nigerian bishop,and three other Nigerian bishops.serve - as auxiliaries in otherSees.
Nun Truck-DriversComplete a Job
OTTUMWA (NC) - It wasmoving day for OttumwaHeights College in Iowa. Motorists and pedestrians along busyHighway 149 did double-takesas some of the' trucks rolled by.They were driven by nuns.
The Sisters of Humility ofMar. moved from their temporary quarters at the Ott-umwaAirport to their_ new $2,500,000college on the outskirts of thecity. Nuns drove trucks, stationwagons, school buses and carsto move books, furniture andother equipment to the, newcollege building.
NigerianWelcome
Catholic LeadersIndependence
LAGOS (NC)-Leaders of the Church in Nigeria aregreeting with optimism the coming of independence OR
Saturday, Oct. 1 to Africa's most populous country. 'l1tereis fear here that this former British colony will repeat theexperience of the newly independent Congo, wherehatred for whites and intertribal antagonisms have resulted in continuing strife, including attacks on the Churchand missioners. No violencespurred the granting of independence here and none is expected to follow it. Unlike theCongo-freed without adequatepreparation by Belgium on June30 following widescale riotsNigeria has progressed gradually and peacefully towardfreedom.
Catholie GrowthThe past decade in particular
has. been a· period of steadilyincreasing self-rule. It has alsoooen a time of rapid Catll<llicgrowth. During the past 10 yearsthe country's Catholic population has more than doubled andmission efforts have expande;dapace, especially in education.In fact, considerable credit forNigeria's readiness for independence must go to the country'.Catholic schools. Public education here has taken giant stridesrecently, but as late as 1942, 99~r cent of Nigerian schoolswere run by Catholic andProtestant missionaries. Churchauthorities, who earlier welcomed the coming of self-government, now view the achievement of complete freedom withhope. Archbishop Leo Taylor,S.M.A., of Lagos, the n~w nation's capital, has said that theChurch can look forward to continued swift growth in a fullyindependent Nigeria.
Has Three ArchdiocesesNigeria, a county more than
twice the size of California, islocated on Africa's west coast,and has some 35 million people,more than any other country OR
the continent.The nation's approximately
15 million Moslems - most ofwhom live in the northern part'of the country':'-'are Nigeria's,largest religious group. Protestants number about five million. There are 1,590,781 Catholics and 546,118 persons are taking instructions in Catholicismprior to· baptism. The rest of
Sisters of the Holy Unior1lof the Sacred Hearts
DAMIEN COUNCIL INSTALLATION: Incoming officers of the Mattapoisett K of C are left to right: Thomas A.Clark, grand knight; George M. Thomas, district "deputy;Paul E. pespres, past grand knight; and Rev. ClementKilgoar, SS.CC., chaplain.
Liturgical Christmas CardsORIGINALS DRAWN BY THE
On Sale at all Holy Union Convents
$1.00 per BoxALSO ALL OCCASION' CARDS
..~.AWARD: Explorer scout
Edward Macedo, son of Mr.and Mrs. Ferdinand Macedoof Mt. Carmel Parish, NewBedford, receives the firstStar Scout pin to be earnedby a scout of the parish.
Blackfriars GuildTo Open Season
NEW YORK (NC) - TheBlackfriars' Guild, New York'soldest off-Broadway theater,will open its 20th season tomorrow with the premiere ofa new farce written by a Chicago priest.
Leading off the Blackfriars'season will be "Shepherds on theShelf" a comedy by Father JohnP. O'Donnell, professor at Quigley Prepartory Seminary, Chicago.
Father O'Donnell's play willbe the 50th original script produced by the Blackfriars' Guild,which is dedicated to the production of plays in accord with theCatholic tradition of the, theater.
The New York chapter of theguild was founded in 1940. Besides encouraging new playwrights it has offered early experience for many performerswho later have achieved stardom-among them Eileen Heckert, Geraldine Page, AnthonyFranciosa and Shelly Berman.
Father Thomas F. Carey, O.P.,is moderator of the Blackfriars'Guild.
Lay MissionersNow TotalAlmost 100
LOS ANGELES (NC)Seventeen lay per son spledged here to work forthree years in missions overseas.
Their pledges as members ofthe Lay Missions Helpers Association were made before HisEminence James Francis Cardinal McIntyre, Archbishop ofLos Angeles, in St. Paul's church.
The 17 will bring to 99 thetotal number 'of lay persons whohave gone overseas as Lay Mismon Helpers since 1956.
The 17 include six nurses,three teachers, three accountants,three secretaries and two journalists. There are 3 ~en and 14women in the group.
Africa, JapanSixteen are going to Africa.
the other to Kogashima, Japan.F<lur of the nurses will be sta
tioned at the new 270-bed tuberculosis and general hospital inDriefontein, .S 0 u t h Rhodesia,which wiill eventually be staffedby Lay Mission Helpers. Doctorswill be provided by MD-Mission Doctors, a new associationformed here, which in April willsend Dr. Thomas Baht to jointhe staff.
Three YeanM s gr. Anthony Brouwers,
founder and director of the LayMission Helpers, said the helperspledge themselves to work in themissions for three years at theirspecific occupational skills. Theyreceive room, board, medicalcare and $20 per month.
A new class of 23 volunteershas started year-long training
, here in the Scriptures, theologyand missiology.
-',
I am reading a book that hall .a number of brief treatments ofthe lives of saints. In it, on aflouple of occasions. referenceis made to the saints "maki,ngtheir examen". I think I kno~what it means, because of thesense of the sentence. but willyou please explain it and settlemy question?' /
The EXAMEN, as you probably surmised, is an examination
· of consCience--particular or general-done out of devotion. In
· other words, it is no~ demanded,such as the examination of conscience before confession. The"examen" is made daily or atdefinite intervals, to ,Jrretcfaults in one's life and to a,'vancein virtue.
The PARTICULAR examenconcentrates on some one failingto be avoided, or on some virtue
,to be strengthened; the GENERAL examen is con<;erned with
,keeping track of all 'sins .and,weaknesses.
As was stated in the first par-· agraph, the, examen is not demanded, but aU spiritual writersrecommend this method stronglyfOJ: ·those·interested in advancingin the spiritual life. .
Former Members:AidNewman' Club
WASHINGTON' (NC)'-Three-former Newman Club membershave volunteered to serve a yearassisting in the work of the " ,agency which is charged' with Pope John Resumes
'the spiritual care of Catholics Scheduled Audiences. studying at secular colleges. . VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope'
Ji'ather· Alexander. '0. Sigur of John has' resumed regular~'Lafayette, '1;.a., National Newman scheduled audiences given 10Club chaplain, made the an- top. ranking Vatican officialS.nouncement in a statement is- The audiences had been canceiedsued at Newman headquarters for almost three months.here. , The auaencel!, which are set
The' three ~re Robert Sterkel, down' i" strict listing, :meof Cleveland, whO will serve as granted to cardinals and otheran administrative assistant to . prelates who head the vario..Father Sigur; Richard Strausse, congregations, offices· and com,;.also of Cleveland, who 'will do missions of the Church,
. fund-raising work after his grad_ 'About 40 officials have estab-uation in January from the Uni- }ished weekly or bi-weekly ap.versity of .Ohio; and. James pointments with the Pope. It .IIWalsh, a' City College of .New . during these meetings that tbeYork graduate who will assist Pope is informed of the progr~Father ·Charles W. Albright; ex- pJansor problems of the maJllrecutive secretary of the. New- administrative· sections 0 v ...man Club Ji\edoraUon here. which he, presides.
. ~ -'"56;0IIII...."':.....• lliliiliid..a...··_
Fatima's ;'Chief Secret ~
* * *
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Weekly' CalendarOf Feast Days
TODAY-St. Edward of~land, King-Confessor. Unexpeetedly raised to the throne ofEngland at the age of 40, he rule4for 24 years. During this timethe country prospered, ruinedchurches were rebuilt, the weaklived in security, and for yea.afterward men spoke of the"laws of the good St. Edward."He died in 1066 and his remainawere enshrined in WestminsterAbbey.
TOMORROW-:-St. Callistus'l,Pope-Martyr. A Roman by b!rt1t,
, he suc'ceeded St., Zephyrinus asPope in 217. His five-year po...tificate' was marked by modeJ'ooating rigors of penitential digcl,.pJine; repression of the EmberDay fasts. During an anti-Chris
,,tian riot in 222 he was throwllheadlong from the window of ahigh building and killed. He~ailburied in the catacombs.
SATURDAY - St. Teresa ofAvila, Virgin. As a child of seVeRshe ran away from her home iii
., Avila, Spain, hoping to be m8l',tyred by the Moors, Brought
home, she said: "I :Iant to seeGod and 1 must die before 1 caDsee Him." She became a Carmelite nun and was entrusted withth~ work of reforming the ordei.Witho'ut help, often misundei'stood, she founded 32 convent.and her reform spread all overthe world. She died onOctobe.r ..1582.' ,
, 'SUNDAY-Nineteenth SundaJ'after Pentecost. Generally thi.
. date 'is' the' feast of St. Hedwig: Widow. Daughter of the Duke 01,Dalmatia, she was married to,Henry, Duke of Silesia, to whoill
o she bore six children. By m.utual, consent; they separarted later ..
The editor 0/ the Que.~/io" and An.swer column ·does Ml guarantlfe ,. . life to lead lives of ,greater Pe.-answer anollymou.s queries nor leuers jrom uI,idelltijiablesources. ·In·evlfry·· ,feetion. She spent the remainderinstance the desire jor. anonymity will be respected. To thal f!~d, natrUl.. of ,her life in 'the convent 01are never appended t6 the .questions; but unless the ktter 'u3igned Trebaizt, 'near 'Cracow, wh~rethere,u,lI6 assurance that any consideratiOn will be given it. 0 she liv~:l under '~"e rule ,f 11«
A priest told ,me that it .Wall , be distinguished from. 'apology',. :daughter, Gertrude, who' w.all right to ~ave a cup of coffee which in' common useage has. Abbess. She died' in 1242. 'before Communion. Is it really reference to some' fault.' , MONDAY-St. Margaret Mary.all right for me to do that? * • • ' AlacOQue, Virgin. Know!} as' the
'Apostle of the devotion to the, Sdcr.:ld Heart, she' was' gifted· with visions of Christ and N: vealed to mankind the favors 1ft'store fDr the custom 0 f Ho~
Communion on First Fridays.As a child, she was paralyzed
'for four 'ears and was curedmiraculously through the Blesseci
'Mother. She was a nun of the· Order of the Visitation of· theBlessed Virgin -Mar7. She ·was
·born in l'Hautecour, France, in1647, and died in Paray-Ie-Mn"j"'jal, Franc~, in 1690. She was ca6onized in 1920.
TUESDAY-St. Luke, ~van
gelist. _He was a physician atAntioch in ", L'ia, \\olIO was con.verted to C' ,·-tianity and 'became a fellow-worker of st.
'Paul. In addition to the ThitdGospel, he wrote the Acts ')f the
.Apostles..He preached in SOU"leastern Europe. after the deatb .of St. Paul, and is vp"'e: .ltc I as aMartyr. .\ persistent tradition
,bolds that St: Luke was a skilled.artist. Va"ious ,pictures of theBlessed Mother, venerated illRome and. elsewhere, are. attri';>- .uted to him.
WEDNESDAY - St. Peter ClAlcantara, Confessor. Early ialife he entered the monastery ofthe DisCalced Franciscans. Hero;e to high posts in tl' - ordett,but inspired by a desire f9r peRanre, in 1539 when he was 40yeal old, he foundp'l 'he firS&community • the "SL~ict Obsel-vance." He died in 1562 whilekneeling in prayer.
I have heard that children·are punished for the sins oftheir parents. Is that true?
What is the meaning of theword "apologetics"?
APOLOGETICS is' a word. which comes down to us. from
the .Greek language. This is thescience of defending and explaining the Christian' religion
. l,lnd, in particular, Catholic doc·trine. The word "apologeti.cs",and the associated word "apologia" do not in any.. way ·iJ'nplydefense of a 'system which mustbe 'apologized' for in the' presentday sense of the· word, and must
ANCHOR
THE ANCHO~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 13, 1960, .
@rhe
6MoVie Critic. and Raw Sex
Air For Sale
The influential mo~ie critic of The New York Times,Bosley Crowther, has once again spoken out at "somethingunsavory" that is happening in the' motion-picture realm"that demands the exercise of utmost vigilance and respon,sibilityon the part of those who are truly interested in thefuture of films. This is. the tendency of producers, 'madeevident-in any. number of rece'nt films, to ,go for licentiousstories and/or inject extreme and gross sex -details in theirworks.", '. Mr. Crowther singles out .not only pictures that he calls'
"trifles" but those on a supposedly· higher lev~l which "havebetrayed a concentrated predilection on the part of majorproducers with the abnormal and crass aspects of sex."
In giving a recent example, the critic describes it insuch terms as "shocking," "depressing to the extreme,'""degradtng," "no artistic reason," "no logical reason,""does nothing but startle and embarrass and so pollute theple{lsant play."
"What is so vexing' and depressing about, this business·is that it clearly betrays the proneness of top-flight film·makers to feel they have to needle a respectable drama withraw sex ••• With all due understanding of the wish of
. the boys to make a buck, we can oniy see ultimate disasterfor the quality -and pr~stige of films and, ,as a consequence,for their commerce, if this sort of thing goes on."
But words to the wise go so often unheeded. And thoseat whom they.are directed go on blithely mouthing theeliche, "Movies are better than ever."
There used to be an expression that the only thing thatis free is the air people bre,athe•. Now even that statementhas to be corrected. .
, Recent figures show that some seven million skindivers in the country'spend about one hundred and fiftymillion dollars ~nnually for compressed air.
,.' Many a self-pitying husband 'will· begin easting a mereenary eye at his devoted spouse as she talks away-supported by a I;leerilingly inexhaustible supply of air, and thewill to use it. And the wives themselves can come back withsome snappy answers about 'how~heirhusbands 'could
OFFICIAL' NEWSPAPER OF THE QIOCESE OF FAll RIVERPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall· River
410 Highland· AvenueFall River, Mass. , OSborne 5-n 5l.
PUBLISHERMost Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD.
GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGERR~v. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P•. Driscoll
MANAGING EDITORHugh J. Golden
Colonial Empire: One of the' advantages coming to this country from
the events taking place at the United Nations is concerned.with semantics. The Communists have .a vocabulary useall their own, emplQying words that are charged with emotion and striving to label-or libel-their opponents withsuch tags ·as reactionaries, fascists, colonialists.
And·so there has been an attempt to woe the ~mergingnations of Africa with fierce denunciations' of the UnitedStates ~s a coloniaL power with all the Q"Vertones .that the
, expression .carries with it. Unfortunately for the communistposition, this str:;ltegy has backfired. . . \
The attention of the delegates' was called, to themeiming of the:phrase "colonial power". and then the.factswere unrolled,for them to make up their Own minds. ;
. The facts-:"'in this cas~are the names of those coun.tries-once independent---.:.that have 'been drawn' by forceand fear into the Soviet ,colonial empire-Poland, East ,Everyone may take liquids up,Germany, 'Hungary, Czech.oslovakia, Rumania, Albania, to one hcur. before Communion,
and certain circumstances couldBulgaria, Outer Mongolia, North Korea: The facts are the eliminate even this time limit,'many millions of persons living under' the shadow of the . with permissio'n of a priest;hammer an'd sickle who are non-Russian by. race and tradi- ' The priest to whom you refertions and culture-peoples like the Ukrainians and Lithu- ,knows all the circumstances reanians and Estonians and Latvians and Armenian's and l~ting to your J?articular con~i,.,
. .. A' ... . tion. If he has given you permIS-Byelorusslans, GeorgIans, zerbaIJams, Uzbeks, Turkmen, ,sion to take a cup of coffee be-Kirgiz, Tadzkiks, Kazakhs, Tartars, Yakuts, Buryats. fore Communion, there is' no
These names sound, in many instances, remote and need, ~o~ you to "shop a~ound"
fanciful but they represent millions of human beings 'who fo~ .~pI~lOns. You have hiS per-I·· . th . f th S . t . t' I· '. mISSIon, you may do as he says.are Ivmg m e prIson 0 e oVle empIre en Ire y agamst
their wills. That is colonialism on a grand scale and it iswell for the world that this has been c~Jled to the attentionof all. Perhaps little' can be done to bring. about the releaseof thes~ peoples and lands from the Soviet grip. But therecord. has been m:;lde clear that when it is a question ofcolonial power and empire, Russia's rank is "first.
',j
o
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Miami DioceseAids RefugeesFrom Cuba
MIAMI (NC)-The Miamtdiocese is working on twofronts to assist thousands ofSpanish-speaking p e 0 pIewho fled from Cuba to Florida.
Activities started by the diocese in the past year have beenspeeded up to provide .for thespiritual and material 'welfareof an estimated 70,000 LatinAmericans. Bishop Coleman F.Carroll of Miami is directing therelief efforts.
He joined a community projectto provide immediate reliefmeasures and to inaugurate along-term program of resettlement and rehabilitation bolstered by local, state and federalassistance. A fund set up by alay committee of Centro HispanoCatolico, diocesan Spanish center founded by the Diocese ofMiami and staffed by Dominicanpriests and Sisters, received ac~ntribution of $5,000 from tlYldiocese. .
THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 13, '1960
Need EmploymentBishop CarrOll, in presenting
the donation, urged members ofthe center to help find employment for the Spanish-speakingrefugees, to teach English toCuban children and to providefunds for needy families.
At a meeting sponsored by theMiami Herald, daily newspaperBishop Carroll explained th~Catholic program to civic andreligious leaders. He said the
. plight of the Spanish-speakingis not exclusively a Catholicproblem, nor solely a religiousone. The community as a Whole.must help, he said.
The Rev. Harold Buell, Methodist minister who serves aschairman of the Miami LatinCenter, .cited the relief workbeing done by his organizationand said the problem of caringfor the Latins is "already morethan the churches can handle."
ClOJSTERED CARMELITE FUNDc/o Fr. Bellarmine Wilson, Q. Carm.
29th North .l$roc:Jdway, .Joliet, III.
CO'ME IN - SEE - and 'DRIVE
THE 16~ FORDS
WY 7-9:-"6
BAR-B-Q CHICKENS
...............A FAMILY TREAT
ROSELAWNFARMS'
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Watch for 'Signs,While out for :1 Drive'
Stop at ·this Delightful Spot·...............--.
Also in 1953; Father Laruearranged for the· high school,classes in Christian Doctrine bythe Sisters of the school.
Although he is in poor health,Father Larue still serves aspastor of .Sacred Heart Parish.He is assisted by Rev. EdmundDickinson who has been curatein the North Attleboro parishsince 1943 and who organizedthe Holy Name Society there in1956; and Rev. Roger LeDuc who
. came to North Attleboro follow_ing his ordination last April.
Presentl,r the approximately600 families in the. parish areplanning the golden jubilee anniversary of the pastor's ordination, which w:ill be observednext month.
Trinitarian'Fath.~,rs
Write to:p, O. Box 5742
.. Iqltimo... · 8. Md~ .',' .'.' . . ,..
SACRED HEART CHURCH, NORTH ATTL;EBORO
.BOYS WANTED for thePriesthood and Brotherhood.Lack of funds NO Impediment.·
on that edifice. In June, 1929, thechurch was completed for thenow 490 families which com-.prised the parish.
Before his death in April of1935, Father Dequoy also dedi'cated the property of CounseilDuvernay, -and founded The'Friends of the Graduates of.Sacred Heart School.
French Studies .The third pastor, Rev. Victor
Masse, came to North AttleboroMay 7; 1935, and tw:o years laterorganized a parish Society ofSt. Vincent de Paul. The following year, recognizing the needfor the study of French in theparish, he designated the schoolas the center of French studiesunder 'the direction of the nunsthere.
After serving in North Attleboro for four years, Father Massewas named pastor of St. Anthony's, New Bedford, and Rev.Alfred J. E. Bonneau, a formercurate, replaced him.
During his pastorate, FatherBonneau did a great deal ofwork for those serving in thearmed forces. He also started avocation club, called the Junior
. League, in the eighth grade topromote interest in religiouslife.
The. next, and present, pastorwas Rev. Joseph S. Larue, whobecame pastor of Sacred· Heartparish Jan. 9, 1947. Since then,units 'have been established ofBoy Scouts, Cub S c'o u til,Explorers, Girl Scouts' andBrownies. '
He was also responsible forthe union of the women's societies. in the' parish under theN.C.C.W., , .
In September o:f 1953, a drivewas inaugurated for a new convent,. which would be situatedon land .purchased on RichardsAvenue. .This convent. was com-·pleted and dedicated in' November, 1956.
Ccudinal to PresideAt Regional Dinner
CHICAGO (NC)-Albert Cardinal Jlii:lyer, Archbisho;:> of Chicago, will preside at the banC;lietduring the Midwest regionalme- ~ir'': of the Catholic PressAssociation next Thursday in theCo'nrad Hilton Hotel here.
IVi<iyor Richard· J. Daley of,Chici\·go will be among the -:uestsof honor at the banquet. OthergU'ests will. include Auxiliary'Archbishops William D. O'Brienand Bernard J. Sheil of Chicagoand Auxiliary Bishop RaymondP. Hillinger of Chicago.
The New Wor:d, archt"''''''esenews'paper, will' e host to the·meeting. Speakers will i;.~lude
Father Alber~ J. Nevins, M.¥"CPA president, and James A..Doy'le, CPA executi~e secretarr.
Sees Red· Power Sacred Heart, North Attleboro, Shows· SteadyGrab in Latin G h S· FAmerican State ' rowt "tnee ounding in 1904
SEATTLE (NC) _ Inde-.i By Marion Unsworth .pendence for British Guiana'" The 1904 establishmen.t of Sacred Heart Parish, North Attleboro, was due originanyunder its present leadership to the effort~ of the Conseil Duvernay de L' Union St. Jean-Baptiste d'Amerique, whichcan .mean the British crown':: started. workmg f~r ~ Fre~ch pa~ish in ~901.Subsequent gatherings of the group reeolony's transformation, into 8i suIted m a subscnpbon drive whIch hrought$2,500, the creation of a parish committeecommunist stronghold. ..,. and the appointment of ,- ,th:iC~r~~iS~e~=~ ~~~i:;' =:~~a~~~~~~a~sr: r-~~--- ~ . ~~....-;""..,_ ....<,,,~"O'- ....,.,~
Post,has sounded this warning, Bishop Stang. The' Bishopabout the future of the litUe.British enclave in northeast said that a parish would he ere- ..
South America, which is bord., ~e;3~~~~;u~~p~e~~:~~~e::'ered by Brazil, Venezuela and \ was accomplished. The previousSurinam.
"There is a great fear of the month, Rev. D. D. Villandre hadInroads of communism in Brit- l'~:!n appointed first pastor ofish Guiana at the moment, es,_. Sacred Heart, a parish composing
162 famili~s.pecialy since the leader of our:, Residing in a'· house on East.gov~rnment, Dr. Cheddi Jagan, Street, Father ·'illandre celebas been shaking hands withFidel Castro," declared Mr..De- brated the first parish Mass inCorum, who is now touring the Memorial Hall on S~""· 11. Only
week later, he organized cateU.S. under the State Depart- chism classes for the children ofment's foreign leader exchange the parish.
program. Red Ties The following month the new, pastor purchased W:amsutta Hall,
If· Dr. Jagan, leader of the. where Mass and religious serveolony's People's Progressive, ices were held until the erectivnParty, should be in control of of the church.. Soon, also, a choirthe government when independ- was forr- .d, and in .·a,nuary theehce comes, "I don't· like. to first retreat was conducted, folthink about· what will happen,"·, lowed ';y the establishment ofMr. DeCorum said. the League of the Sacred Heart.
Britain has agreed to grant Other organizations promotedfull internal self-government to .. by Father Villandrejncluded'thethe colony following gen'erai .
C"llgre.;a:ion of the Lafies bf·elections in August, 1961. It has Ste. Ann in October, 1904, laterindicated that independence. will reorganized with a social probe' gra'nted within two years af- . grat.l in April" 19'47,' the Childrenter that.
Because of the British prom- of Mary in July, 1906, reorgan-ise ' of independence, said Mr, ' ized in 1944; the Denier 'f S.Decorum, Dr. Jagan .feels he . Pierre in 1906; and the SS.
Anges and. les, Cadets,· dunow I is safe in proclaiming a·' Sacre-Coeui- in'May, '1907.link· with communists he hadhitherto concealed. . . .Many Ae,tivities
, . '.' Horrible ProSpeet •:: Man~ parish <ivities . were~or example, Dr. Jagan has .. planned. during' ·the succeeding·.
unconstitutionally negotiated a .. years! m pre~ar~tion f~r theloan with Castro for five mil-' erectIOn of parIsh properties. Bylion dollars, and one of the con- . 1~05, Father Villandre, w:as ableditlons is that Cuba will send t6 purchase. a largp.. plece fus 'technicians.' This despite the proper~y .at Rlchard Avenue,.andfact we can get the best tech- .... the eXlstmg house was ~palrednicians we need from Britain- or. and renovated to serve as thefrom the United States." rectory.Mr~ DeCorum, a Catholic and Land '. for the churcb was
a graduate of the Jesuits' St. bought In 1907 .and or Jan. 21,Stanislaus College in George- 1909, construc.tion was undertown, the colony's. capital city, . way. The. basem~nt c~urch was.said: "We're a 'democraUc coun- '. c\lmpletel r 1d ..he fU'st Masstry. We have always upheld ,celebrated in August of thatAmerica and Britain as bastions . year. .of democracy. But now it seems A larg: bell was mstalled in. f d ith th h rr'ble . Octol' 'r, _911.
we are ace w . e "0 1 ' The first pastor remained inprospect of commUnIsm. . North Attleboro for 17 years,
Danger Signal 'leav~ng June 5, 1921. His suc-Dr. Jagan's "every action and ceS:'lr. Rev. Louis A. Dequoy;
utterance have been communis- who arrived that October, immetic," said Mr. Decorum. "But diately set about providing for~he majority of our people don't a parish school. His plans were!:tnow what communism is." . . approved in January, 1923, and
"Unemployment is widespread that· Spring work began.J!aJ. British Guiana," he added. In the ::'all, 211 p'lpil~ entered"And w~ all know the se~s of the five existing grades, wl:;chcommumsm c~n spread qUickly were taught by Sisters of thewhere there IS unemployment Holy Union of the Sa~_.dHearts,and poverty." who lived in a convent· ...djacent
to the school. A new grade was, added each year until 1926, when
the first class was graduated.The school presently includes
. eight grades, a kindergarten and
. a special ' ass. '.Meanwhile, . Father Dequoy
also reorganized a school orches'. tra which had been started in: 1910, .and founded a library.
With the· school well estab. lished, the second pastor concentrated on the upper church· andin 1928 c~nstruction was begun
. UmOW®Il'$olty t@ ~w@r~
M~<dl@~ If@ P~f$Od$frWASHINGTON (NC) - The
alumni association of .the Catl)olic University of _'..merica ha~
chosen Karl F. Herzfeld, head 9fthe university physics department, to receive the GibbonsMedal, its highest award.
Five. Pri~sts, Leave The Il).edal, to be presented to .Mr, Herzfeld Satl,lrday, Nov. ·12
.Canada for Brazil .at a banquet during the alilmniOTTAWA (NC) -Archbishop association's homecomin'g re
Marie Joseph Lemieux, O.P., of" 'union, is' given by the· assoCiation .Ottawa presided at a departure' to a: person who is judged' toceremony in Ottawa cathedra.... ,. have made "an Qutstimding confor five' diocesan priests who will ." tribution to the United States'of .work in Brazil. America, the Catholic. Church,
Resaid that the Church's ap- or the Catholic University ofpeal for foreign priests in Latin' . America."America is not a missionary cru- Mr. Herzfeld, a member of thesade, because Latin America hail . 'Catholic University faculty sincelong since been evangelized. The· 1936, is a native. of Vienna, Hesending of priests to Latin Amer-'" taught at the Universities oflca: is· an act of brother!)' . Munich and Vienna before com..solida,rity, he stated. ' .. ,., 'ing to the U. S. in: 1926'.
o
Fan,' Rivet Oub,To Hold 'Teo
The Fall River Catholie Wom-,en's Club will hold its annullireception and tea for new, members at its clubhouse, 410 Highland Avenue, from,'3 to :; thkSunday !lfternoon.
:, Officers and members of theexecutive board will assist Mrs.,Michael J. McMahon, president,in welcoming new members. 'Mrs. James F. Wilcox and MissMary V. Harrington are illcharge 01. the afternoon's pro-gram. .
Mrs. James O'Brien Jr., chail>man, of the club's literary department, announces that thedepartment's yearly series ofbook reviews will be inaugurated Sunday afternoon, Nov. 20, atthe clubhouse by Rev. Paul R.Francis of the Boston Archdiocese. Subsequent reviews,willbe given in January and Marchwith speakers and dates to be,announced.
Fatima Court'Peggy Connors will serve l::::J
chief ranger of Our Lady of Fat-- 'ima Court, Massachusetts Cat};)..olic 'Order, of' Foresters, for thecoming year. The Fall Riveii'group chose Joanne, Davis ~
vice chief ranger; Judith Tayolor, . secretary; James O'Briera.tl'easurer.
Ur:g~s ,Prayer RoomsIA Moderr:ot Homes
CINCINNATI (NC) - Modemhomes often have rumpus rooms,billiard rooms and bars, butfew have "prayer rooms," a pastor complained here.
Father Joseph V. Urbain <IiSt. Columban's parish, Loveland,urged parents to "provide, aRatmosphere of prayer," as a vitalpart of their children's education.He told a parish group here that"our religious activity in thehome is too much childoriented."
"We're anxious to get our chi!dren to pray," he said, "but itwon't stick unless they see usdo it." Assigning leadership inprayer to one of the little children in the' family "may looknice, sentimentally," he added,'"but it is the father who oughtto be the leader."
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GOLDEN JUBILARIANS: Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J.Weldon of the Sacr,ed Heart Parish, No. Attleboro, receivethe congratulations of Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson, parishcurate, following a Mass of Thanksgiving for their 50 yearso~ happiness. '
dren's sport gear, that muddy,football and wet sneakers, is touse a vegetable bin' (providedyou have room in your closet).The vents in the bin will letair through to dry rubbers orsports equipment. '
Personally, however, I like toput this receptacle: in a backhallway and train the childrento enter the rear door when'they come in from outdoor playing.
Another, door arrangementthat some people like is one that.is easily installed. It's a goodmirror attached from top of doorto about the middle with amake-up shelf below. If you boxthis shelf with sides and front,anything placed on it is secure.
Make use of the bottom haltof the door by installing a rackfor umbrellas, the bottom support being a waterpr09f trougheffect to protect the floor if awet umbrella is put there.
New Bedford NursesThe Catholic Nurses' Guild of '
Greater'New Bedford will' hold, itS annual Autumn Daze dance .at the N,ew Bedf,ord Country.Club from 9 to 1 Friday night, 'Oct. 21. Gilly 'Ferro's Qrchestra " ,
'will play and dress wiil be 'lno:' .,fqrmal. "Mis~ ,GraceReg~n'is .chairman.
two Uganda Nuns Begin StudiesBit of Glamour With Scholarships at Seattle U. "
Some people like t~ add a bit SEATTLE (NC)-Two mem- ' -Accompanying theQ'l to theof glamour to a closet with wall bers of an all-African commun- United States to study at the Jespape,r. Your best bet in closet ity of nuns have begun studies uit school here was an Anglicanwallpaper is a small allover pat- at Seattle University under lay woman, Salome -Manyantern which will make your cloe- scholarships established for, 'genda. She also is' stUdying
.et seem bigger and brighter. African students by the school. English. ,Speaking of,light, don't forget The two nuns Sister Teresa Arrangements for the students'
to include a closet light, 'one of Avila and Sist~r Maria Leon- schola~ships were m~de through. that is regulated by opening and sia, are from Uganda',' a British Benedl,cto K. M. Klwanu~a, a
elos,ing the' door. Protectorate in East Africa. ' Cathohc lawyer and pohtical". ' leader iii Uganda.
Eve,ry homemaker, agrees ti,lat " ~eyare. members of the, , Mr. Kiwanuka, president gen-,the ordinary clothes ,clo~et ju~ Daughters of Mary, a comrpun- .eral'of the Democratic party ofisn't large enough to lend itself,' ity founded in 1910 b~' Mother, Uganda, visited the 'u. S. lastto helter-skelter arrangement. Mathilda, a German White Sis- year under State DepartmentAdopting, the suggestions 'just tel'. There are 549 Sisters-all of' sponsorship. At that time he apmade, ,it is evident that if y,ou tpem 'Africans-in t~e commun-. ' p'ealea to Seatile' Universityorga~ize your ,closet well, you'll ity, which is: esta~lishe4 only officiali:l for sch()larship fo~ stu-'find' it is really a lot, roomier, in Uganda. ' dents from Uganda. .that it looks. " . : Sister Terell3 is studying' Eng- ' Assisting the' u~iversity in
The thing that will help yoa, Ush at the university and Sister sponsoring the first Uganda stuis to take advantage of um~sed Maria is studying ri!athematics. 'qents are the Sisters of Charityspace on the door' and, wall as, They' will teach in, Catholic of Providence, who conduct awell as thel'egular clotl).es- schools when they. return to Sister Formation program at tqehanging area. There's no better' ¥ganda. schooLway to stretch space than to use
"racks, built-ins, and other 'hel~to packing' the most stOrage into' ,small places. '
Shoe Rack : While we've been consideringThere is s'till r~om"Delow this a hail or'vestlbule,'closet, theSe. " .
towel rack to hang a metal shoe same ideas can be incorporatedrack 'about, a foot above' the into bedrooms: Also,; one often'baseboard to hold rubbers. ' • has '8, jutting corner and you:d
be surprised how you can pht acloset into that wasted space.
BACK WHERE SHE STARTED: Faye Brand reflects'about the then and now in Chaminade 'College; Honolulu,where she is attending class in the room in which she wasborn, formerly a maternity ward of the emE!,rgency 147thArmy General Hospital, established while smoke', still rosefrom the bombing of Pearl Harbor.NC Photo.
"When installing these racks,be sure to drive screws into thewall studs, which you can loc:ate by tapping on the wall.) .
A solution for storing tt~e chil~
8' ,'THr:: /~~ :,:11'OR7::"Diocese,:of Fall, River":"'~hlJrs;,'Od: .l3,'l.9~P
Sim'ple' ,Tr.icks Create' Spa'ceIn': Helter-Skelter. Closets,
By Alice Bough CahillDo your closets spill Qver? That is, do Father's hats,
Junior's jackets, and your own handbags crowd your vesti-, bule' closet 'so that so~etimes you fear something is lost?Most of us like' to keep our entry hall closet for, the wrapsof ' guests, so perhaps the'first step in straighteningout this closet' 'is to clear itof extra coats' and sportsgear that could be stored inanother part of the house. Thisis a challengeto help you tobetter fro n t'hall s tor ageand the easiestway I know isto resort to inexpensiveready - madeholders andshelves t hatany handymancan' install.
First, give abit cif thought to the ki~d andnumber of articles YO,u'll jleed tokeep in this closet and thenplan every inch of' space to fityour needs.
I like a mirror on the backof £he closet door, but if you'already have, a sizeable mirrorin the hall, you may prefer tohave an umbrella rack, 'hat'holder and scarf rods on thedoor. Don't forget the childreI!'sneeds. Install a clothes rod highenough to leave space for aswinging rod at a height Juniorcan reach.
In the department stores, youcan find metal racks which holdDad's hats. On the lower ,hook,Mother can hang her, handbags.A convenient, way, to organizethis, hall closet, provided it hasenough depth, .is to ' ,hang aclothes, rod the depth ,of thecloset, with a' swinging onebelow'for small fry. , ". Above the clothes, rack, builG,
shelves for Mother's hats. Thisleaves the length of the racksthemselves for Dad's hats andbags. 'Since these racks will be,bsed by, adults, you can hangthem reasonably high; leavingspace below for, a good toweirack, which is, wonderful forholding scarves. Simply fold,your scarf 'and hang' it over'therack. '
,,' Cadet Do~ce , , "A Cadet Dance, for seventh,
eighth and ninth grade students,will be held from 7:30 to 10 tomorrow night at the Catholic,C9mmunity" Center, Franklin:'street, Fall River. '. ,
9THE ANCHOR.c..Thurs., Oct. 13, 1960
Made Rite ChipsAsk fOll'Them Today
'A Delicious
Treat
Plan CCD PanelsFor Guilds
Open meetings explaining thework of the Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine are beingplanned by the five districts ofthe Diocesan Council of CatholicWomen following a gathering ofrepresentatives from all areasof the Diocese at Bishop StangHigh School to hear a talk onthe subject by Rev. Joseph L.Powers, Diocesan CCD Director.
Meetings will be scheduled inFall River, New Bedford, Taunton, Attleboro and the Cape andIslands districts by their respective district presidents. They willfeature panel discussions on therole of the laity in CCD work,with particular emphasis on opportunities open to DCCW,affiliates.
The Fall River district meetingwill be, held in February at 11time and pl,ace to be announced,,said Miss Helen Chace, districtpresident. Other areas will announce,their plans shortly.
Father Powers stressed to representatives attending the planning meeting that it is the wishof Bishop Connolly that theCCD be active in every parish.He noted that interested laityshould try to attend Saturdaysessions of the CCD RegionalCongreE3 to be hel:, in Providence ,Saturday, Oct. 15, andalso emphasized the value ofteacher training courses to startin Fall River Saturday, Oct. 22and in Hyannis Tuesday, Oct. 25.
Officers and cha!: -nen of theFall River district will be registrars .for the Fall River course,it was noted.
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to assist married couples in defining their respective roles,Msgr. DeBlanc offered five specific suggestions.
1) A premarriage instructionprogram for all preparing formarriage. Such instruction "maybe the most important 'phase ofmarriage itself," he said.
2) Cana Conferences and similar programs for married couples to help spiritualize and,strengtl1en family life.
3) Mr. and Mrs. Clubs andsimilar groups which j"stress theacquisition of knowledge . • •in building a better husbandwife, parent-child relationship."
4) Retreats for couples,"stressing the lay apostolate."
5) Social action groups "In.which couples together will,work to influenee society."
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LEGION OF MARY RETREAT: Legionnaires makingthe annual C.uria Retreat are left to right: Daniel B.Foster of Fall River; Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, DiocesanDirector of the Legion of Mary; Miss Barb&ra McMann,Taunton; and Arthur Macedo, New Bedford.
Junior 0 of IPatricia Scotti will be presi
dent -of ,the Junior Circle, NewBedford Daughters of Isabella,for the coming year, assisted byJoyce, Strong, vice president;Patricia Roza, recording secretary; Francis Muldoon, linancialseci~tary; Susan Sweeney, treas-.
'urer; "
Suggests, Organized Help toModern Woman in Dual Role
OMAHA (NC) - A Catholicfamily expert has called for"organized help" to assist modern woman in fulfilling hertraditional feminine role as wifeand mother.
Today, Msgr. Irving A. DeBlanc declared, "there is a greatdeal of confusion concerning the .role of woman ... Woman onceseemed to have had a surersense of her purpose .•. Nowmany are confused."
Msgr; DeBlanc, director of,theFamily Life Bureau, NationalCatholic Welfare Conference,gave his views at the annualconvention of the Omaha archdiocesan Council . of CatholicWomen. '
Out of the modern confusionover woman's role, "many fatherly mothers and motherly fathers have been oeveloped," Magr.DeBlanc said.
First Interest"Woman's career 'ill to be ll,
mother-,physically, spiritually,or both-not mainly to, be a success in the outside world. Even'
,when she d)-ooses a 'profession"in the purely masculinE; senseof the term she should exercisea form of spiritual maternity,"
,- he said. "in' the hierarchy ofher 'interests-in the home orout of it-'motherliness' must'have priority· if she is to 'followher natural vocation.'
In calling for "organized help""
D ofFete
Taunton ElectionTaunton' Queen's Daughters
will have Mrs. William, R. Powars as president for the comingseason. Mrs. Thomas Unsworthis vice president; Mrs. JamesBlOunt, treasurer; Mrs. FrancisSaracco, financial secretary;Mrs. Stuart Pl!lce, recording secretary; "Mrs. James' Downing;:corresponding secretary.
BenedictSets Fall
welcomed for their warmth,their very covering quality inlands overseas.
Need Men's ClothesWe notice that, more and
more, there is an appeal formen's clothing and wonder ifperhaps the same psychologicalblock occurs in other Americanhomes against getting rid ofDad's duds?
Came the questiof!. of severalpairs of trousers and a few oddcoats--and I do mean "odd."
"That's' the one I wear whenit's raining and I've got to goto the mail box. I wear this onesitting around watching TV.Looks dressed up when the girls'dates come and the boys don'tnotice that the elbows are out."
One such disreputable coat,. we figure will do for both TV
and impressing dates. Other oddcoat into the Bishops' Box. '
On to the trousers: four pairwith a scuffed-cuff appearance.
"But those are' my paIntingpants!" comes the plaintive plea."You wouldn't want me to weargood duds while I'm pa\nting?"
What painting? For years, thatcloset has sheltered ''paintingpants" in all stages of- disrepute.Also, there has been' no painting. :
Had those "painting pants"been utilized,15th century'Michelangelo would have had tol?Ok . to his lau.re~s. On a more'literal level, our house couldhave been painted from top tobottom, outside and in.
As the organization urge gainsmomentum, we find courage topitch three pairs of "paintingpants" into the ,Bishops' Box.
Let the painter moan.
,Says Canada's: Working.,Women Are Exploit~d
MONTREAL (NC) - Canada'sworking women are being exploited "shamefully," a womanlabor official charged here.
Jeanne Duval; vice-presidentof the Confederation of NationalUlllions, said that women, working in Canada's manufacturingindustries average $39.29 perweek,' half of the average pay.for men. She said 'women makeup a quarter of Canada's workingforce, and they are working because they have' to.
Jud R I CI ' t d She suggested that the con-ge u as OIS ere federation should have a section
Nuns Votes Are Valid solely for WOmen -members.MILWAUKEE (NC)':"- Circuit Women are reluctant to join with.
~dge Myron L. Gordon has re- men in labor movemen~, shefused to throw out 29 challenged. ,stated, and their lot would beabsentee baUotBcast by cIois- iniprove~f by a: union of theirCered nuns 'in a primary election: "'own. The convention 'appointed
Result of the decision was to 'a,' committee '-to study Missreaffirm the viCtory of Wayne Duval's propos~~l. 'Whittow in the Democraticpri- , 'mary contest for the 16th dis.iet's Assembly seat. -Mr.· Whittow bested Jerome Finn by three~tes, '74 to 1,471.
Mr. Finn challenged the legality of absentee ballots cast bySisters of the Good Shepherd atthe House of the Good Shepherdhere. He contended that votingprocedures 'for 'the nWlli violated .tile secret ballot.
;:".Bish'ops· Clothing' Collecti~nPries ,Dad from Old Clothes
, By Mary Tinley Daly'''Organization, that's what this house needs," we
8Olemnly-and annually-announce. With school started,routine established, we decide that Fall cleaning, for once,Will be thorough. We'll be "organized" from attic to basement. Goodness knows, wewon't start with the attic,though. That's a job for ac9mbined antiquarian, archIvist, librarian, and a stonyhearted one who can pitch outeverything 0 fno immediateuse.
Beginning? Inthe immediateuse area withfirst point ofattack, our ownbedroom closet. Eve r y thing out, but'. v e r ything,piled on bed,dresser, dressI·n g ta b ~ e,chairs. The bare closet gets Itssemi-annual bath.
Summer clothes, up to theattic; Fall and Winter ones, outof their bags and onto the racks.That's easy.
Then the once-a-year's. Fromthe topmost shelf comes the bagof dried palms ,stashed awaysince Holy Week when newpalms were distributed. Thesemust be properly disposed of byburning.
Next shelf down, the Amerl0QIl flag minus two new stars;• bottle of champagne retilted"~ keep its cork damp as it awaitssome special occasion. '
Come the ProblemsThen, the problems: foremost,
-the Wedding Garment" wornby the Head of the House many,Many years ago and only once'since, to a special diplomatic reeeption.
"Must it be brushed, aired, deIl\othed and still kept?" we ask,u we have asked annually.
"Well ..." for the first timeIz1 umpteen' years, the Head ofthe House hesitated. "I, hadthought that Johnny might wearit to his weddlng.i '
"But Johnny got married y~al'lil: ,Benedict' C~rcle,' North AttIe-"ago, and in a Navy unifo~," bOro Daughters 'of Isabella, ,willcomes the reiteration. "Besides, hold an autumn festival from 10a doesn't fit Johnny! Moreover, to 6, Thursday, Oct, 27 at, Hotel,It ..." Hixon. Free coffee will be feat-
"'I know," the Head of the Ured and there will be boothsRouse shakes his head. "It : for aprons, foodrjewelr.y;, p.ovel~doesn't fit me'any more. All your " ties; parcel 'post items 'and 'white'good cooking has had its effect." "elephants., "
With a flattery-will-get-you-' ", " The ~it'l! installation ban':'IlOwhere' stare, we ,stand ada-' qu,et is set for 6:30,Sunday evemantly 'holding - the Wedding- ning; Nov. Gat, Brook Manor.Garment, knowing fun well that' Mrs. Charlotte' Charon is inthe result will be 88 usual.' charge .of arrl.u1gements and Mrs.
"Somehow, I like that suit," Josephine Dowd will be installthe Head of the House admits, ing officer." , ,again. "Maybe Sean, or little A regular meeting is set forTony could weal' it to get mar-· Tuesday, Nov; 1., Octo'ber elec-Died in?" ' tions. returned Mrs. Linwood J.'
And they sav that mea aren't Stone to office as regent for her,lentimental. seeond ter~
Once more, the W~ddlng Garment makes its annual. trip tothe backyard for, llru!'hing, .demothing; and storage, though wedoubt very' much .that ourgrandsons will be the size or theshape or in the mood to wear itlIOme 20 years hence.
Back it goes into the closet.Compared to ~e problems of
masculine clothing, disposal off;eminine apparel Is a breeze.Things get old-fashioned, out!They go automatically into abox awaiting the Bishops'Thanksgiving Clothing Collection next month. They will be
/'
Red Officicil, AttacksRole of Missi'onaries
BERLIN (NC)-The a~tivities'of Christian missioners were attacked by it Soviet officiai during
, a meetin:: of history professors'in Moscow, according to a report:received 'here.i Mark Mitin, a ,director of anti,religious propaganda 'in the,SOViet Union, declared' that the.:"exploitation" of native 'peoples'by Catholic and Protestant missioners must' be "unmasked" ifthe battle against'religion is tosucceed. ' , ,
He said these missioners work,in direct collaboration with'''imperialist'' goverriments andi seek tv inculCate -in :their coniverts a deep,. sense of' obedience: toward tb~ir·c91oniaJJ:~ler6•• "
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NEW YORK (NC)-"TheCatholic Church in AmeI'-ica,''' accordin~ to the Rev.,':John Courtney Murray, S.J.,:one f America's foremost theologians" is committed "by the'to'tality of, her experience i~ ,American history" to the religionclauses in the First Amendment. :
'''As far as I know" Father'Murray asserts in a forthcoming;book "We Hold These Truths;Cath~lic Reflections on t~e :American Proposition" (Sheed & 'Ward), "the only ones who doubtthe firmness, the depth, thc prin- ,cipled nature of this commitment are not Catholics. They'speak without knowledge and:without authority; and the credence they command has its'origins in emotion." '
"The American Catholic is 'en-'.tirely pr~pared to accept our:constitutional concept of freedomof religion and the policy of noestablishement," the Jesuit theologian continues.
"The American thesis is that:government is not juridicallyomnipotent. Its powers a.re limited and one of the principlesof l'imitation is' the' distinciioo'between 'state and church."
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iliary Bishop Robert E. Tracy ofLafayette, La., preached ilt theeighth,~annual Red Mass lastMonday i,n S1. Louis cathedrals'ponsored by the Archdiocese ofNew Orleans and the Dioceses ofLafayette and Alexandria, La.Archbishop Joseph F. Rummel'o~ New 'Orleans presided.
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Not ,ExpediencyTo speak of the Americl\m
NOTRE DAME (NG) "- Notre tive' effectiveness and financial largest in the university's his- Catholic attitude on Church-and--:.:Dame Univ~rsitywill get' a $6 's~pport." ' " , tory, is i'an answer to our deep- St'ateas ,"expediency," Fathermillion grant ,from the Ford The ,'five' schools 'were select:'" est hopes." 'Murray claims, "is altogether to"Foundation providing' the, In- ed." he said, ,because they had' ,mist.:"" ':',and the "'"Ioral.nature:
. " Gift Requirement Idiana institution raises $12 mil-' "already" embarked' on future ,,'of the community and its co lee-lion during the next three years~' develop'!lent programs' com- The president lis~ed five "top . tive moral ,obligation toward itll.
The'lIoly,' Cross,' Fath~~' ,in-' mensurate. in '~c?pe, imagination' priority" projects in a three-' own' common good. The originsstitution :is ,one ,o(five privately'. and practlcablhty .to the vast' year $18 million fund~raising: of our fundamental' law are in,supported American universities, needs of 'American soCiety;" effort.' The projects are a lib-: mOl'al principle; the obligations
, ,," 'rary costl'n'g $8 m'1'lll'on" t' 0 it imposes are moral obligation",chosen by the Foundation to get " At Notre Dame, Fa,ther T,heo-' , w ..,, $" gi'aduate- resl'dence 'h lIs 0 tl' g binding in conscience. One may
,unrestricted' grants in' a 46 mil- dore M. Hesburg, C.S.C., presi- , a , c s n ,lion "spec~al pJ:',ogram in educa- dent, said the Ford grant, the $4 million,'increased faculty sal-' not, without moral fault, acttion." , aries' ,arid endowed professor- a'gainst these articles of peace... '
U' , U f 'L· ships, 'costing $3.5 million; fel-: Father Murray describes the, The other schools and their rges se 0 attn: lowships, scholarships and stu-'American pluralistic sOciety as,grants are: Stanford University, As World ~a"guage dent· loan's, costing $2' million, a"turning pOint in the long and'$25 'million;, Johns Hopkins Uni- - ,and administrative steps,.for complicated history of church-'versity, $6 million.' University of VATICAN CITY (NC) - The h' h $ 00
Ch h'. . , VV lC ,5 ,000 a.re ,allocated. , state relations."
Denver, $5 million' and Vander';' urc 's most noted Latinist,bilt University" $4' rrtillion. 'Antonio' Cardinal Bacci, 'hopes" . Under the terms' of the Ford' , "ReligiOJ:l" itself, and not least
- " that Latin, will once again be-,' grant, aU, universities' ,except 'the Catholi~Church," he sta·tes.,Selection·Jte~n, " c "c6me' the common language, Of Stanford, must raise two dol..- "has benefited'by our'free insti."
Henry ,T.:H~?!d'J,founda.ti~)ft: 'the world's intellectuals. - , ' lars from' private s(Jurces ,for tutions, by,the maintenance,' evea'president, said the objective 'of' Cardinal' Bacci, bef~re being" e'ach dollar of the gi:ant" within' in exaggerated' form, of the dis-,the philanthfopic' orgailiz:t'tion's three years. Stanford must raise: tinction ,"between chuI'ch and,"s'pedal program", is 'to assist iri- created a cardinal, was the 'papal, three-for-one. "state."
, ' ' Secretary o.f Latin, Briefs tostitutions 'in dift;ereilt', parts of Princes. He wl'ote in L'Osserva- Under American conditions, .he'the country ,"to reach and sus- ~~e Romal~; yatican City, Daily" _ 'Marian Cong ress,' conCludes, "any 'other course buttain a wholly miw level of aca- th h " freedom of relig'ion and separa-', at e hopes the world willdemic ,excellence, administra- adopt Latiil as the internati~na'I' ,:WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr. tion of church' arid state would'
language. ,William J. McDonald, rector of ,have been disruptive, imprUdent"the Catholic University of Amer- unpractical, indeed impossible."
Following the example of the ica, has been chosen to head the.Church, the world might adopt American section at the fourthLatin as an '''universal instru-, International Mariological Conment of communication among gress, to be held in Ottawa inthe learned," he said. August, 1962.
American Serra,nsVisit Club in Italy
GENOA (NC)-Fifty' Amer-'ican members of Serra clubs, ledby Bishop John J. Wright ofPittsburgh, visited Europe's onlySerra club here.
The American S~rra pilgrimage, before coming to "lis n0l'thItalian seaport, visited the Mediterranean island of Majorca,where Father Junipero Serraw born. The dubs, named ',fterthe 18th,-century Franciscan mis-·sioner to California,' weI' efounded to 'foster vocations tothe priesthood: ~n ",' to.' ,as -.'ct in"the education of' young men 'orthe priesthood.
In Genoa; members of the pilgrimage lsisted at Mass -"J:
brated in the cathedral by Bishop Wright. They alsO weI' en:'tertaih'ed 'at a luncheon given byGenoa's ,serra Club; with Giu;.seppe 'Cllrdi~al Siri, Archbishopof. Genoa, presiding and expressj ,- ~ his', gratitude that'; his city,should 'be the fir~t in Europe tohave 11 Serr ft Club. Later the
'pilg'rimage visite~ :Rome and' was'rc~eived in audience by PopeJohn.
REPRESENT WORLD'S CATHOLIC MISSIONS: Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheenof New YorJ<, National Director.'of the Socie ty .for the Propagation of the Faith, greets'visiting bishops at the 11th anilUalmeeting of the Mission-Sending Societies in WasJ1iilg-'ton. Left to right: Texas-born Bishop Louis La Ravoire Morrow, S.D.B., of Krishnagar,
, W~st ,Bengal, India; Bishop Sheen, Bishop Cornelius Chitsulo of' Dedza, Nyasaland, Af-,rica and Abbot Sylvester, M. ,KilIeen,O. Pr aem., ' of, St. :Norbert Abby, West D~ 'Pere,
,Wis. NC Photo. '. .. . /:"". .- .
,Ford Foundation Gives Six-Million to Notre Dame
THE .\: :("1 :OR:"-Thurs., Oct. 13, 196010
Papal VolunteersReady to leaveBy Spring, " '
WASHINGTON (NC)'A top coordinator of U. S.Catholic programs for LatinAmerica said the first U. S.teams of lay "papal volunteers"may be in Latin Americl\ by theend of 1961.
Fafher John J, Considine,M.M., director of the LatinAmerica Bureau will have prepared a detailed plan and willbe able to provide informationfor interested sponsoring groupsand individual volunteers. I
By the summer of 1961 the'training of the first U.S. "papalvolunteers" will begin.
By the end of the 'ur thefirst teams of lay apostles willbegin arriving in Latin Amer.icato'take up their work of ;:1'a Ill
ing lay leaders there.
No PicnicFather Considine emphasized
in an interview that the "j:lapalvolunteers" program will be "II')
picnic.'~ .'. "This is serious busmess that
will require hard work i.n. pre';laration and ,great sacnflce In
the field," he said. "It will tal{e,Grade-A Catholic' men' and,women.'" "
, According to the plan, the :ay"olunteers will be organi~ed,into teams of 3 to 10 members.. ,They will receive', intensive,training' in the language andeulture of Latin America ani'inanswer to invitations frond:,atlnAmerica countries, 'will be se1'!tthere to serve from ,two ,0 liveyears, with, the option of 'remaining longer. !'
Single and Marriec1lBoth single ,men and wom~n
and, married coupies will' be eli-'gible., Purpose of the plan is tooffer technical training to potential lay leaders in LatinAmerica, which is' suffering,from a serious priest shortage.'
Father' Considineemphasize'dthat not ali details for imple-,mentation of the plan in thiscountry have· yet' been ~prkedout. However, he freely 'dis'-:c~s~~d present' indicatiom; , ()f:bow 'it will develop. .' ',~
'He said an individual who be-'liev,es he wants to s,erve ,as' it'"papal voluritee~" ',sho~ld'con~ ,tact Catholic" organiz~,i JOS inhis area to sound 'them out' on'their willingnes~' t(l' sponsr)r' agroup of volunteers. "
Sponsors Key'He' eTl)phasized that the "key",
to the' movement' in NorthAmerica rests with, "responsibleCatholic ,organizations and in-,stitutions," which will sponsorthe teams of volunteers and- pay"their training and travel expenses., Catholic agencies in theLatin ,'American countries areexpected to pay the living ~osts
of the volunteers while ~hey arein the field.
"Present indicatioris' are thatCatholic colleges and universi
'ties promise to be the fir;;t torespond," he said, He 'lIsa saidthat there are indication's thatorganizations of Catholic men'and women, Catholic societies,"and "groups of parish sodalitiesin a given community" will act.as sponsors., Father' Considine said theLatin America Bureau' expectsto be able to provide a list ofsponsoring organizati ,>n~ toi!1~
terested parties by early spring.
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THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. J3, 1960
Urges ,CeylonesePractice EveryCivic Virtue
COLOMBO (NC) - Thehead of the Cat h 0 1i eChurch's worldwide mission-'ary endeavor urged theCatholics of Ceylon to "practice every civic virtue whichwill enhance the life of yourcommunity,"
Gregorio Pietro XV CardinalAgagianian, Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, said his
i1\' three-day visit to this island na
tion would leave '''an indelible"1 impression" on him.: Meets Prime Minister
.. The Cardinal's visit came as~'I the Ceylonese Hierarchy was
standing fast in its opposition tothe new government's announced program which wouldnationalize about 600 of the nation's 750 Catholic schools.
While here in the capital,, Cardinal Agagianian conferred
with Mrs, Sirimavo Bandaranaike, Ceylon's new Prime Minister. The secular press gaveprominent coverage to the f.actof the meeting, but there waslittle indication of the nature
. of the discussion,Several. weeks prior to Cardi
nal Agagianian's visit, a communist member of the House ofRepresentatives had suggestedthat the projected visit was re,. .
. lated to Catholic opposition tothe govel'nment's school nationalization policy.
A junior goverruilent minister, in reply, said that the reasons . for the Cardinal's visitwould' be investigated before hewould be given an entry visa. ,
Throngs Line Streets,.On arriving here ,from India,
Cardinal Agagianian was greeted by high ecclesiastical andIllY, leaders, Throngs of persons-many of them school children waving papal flags-Ii'nedthe streets from the airport 'toColombo. Among the weicom:'
, ing party were Archbishop Tho-mas Cooray, O.M.I., of Colombo,a.nd Sir Edward Jayatilleke, aleading· Catholic layman and Jlformer Ch'iefJustice' of. Ceylon..
At one reception in 'his honor,tt,le Cardinal told CeylonesE'Catholics:""Preserve your family life,
your devotion to your childrenand their education,· and practice every civic· virtue whichwill 'enhance the life of yourcommunfty."
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Instead, he urged the councilto undertake a long-range program ,of promoting worthwhilereadin-g, especially in schools. •
Distribute "genuinely good"reading material 'at the neighborhood level, he suggested."Make sure that at least onethird of each rack is stocked'with, these 'publications.'"
:Restore Confidence''CorlCeding that at the start
niilhy of the publications will·sell ~lowly and others not at all,th~ . Monsignor insisted that"gradually you will develop an.entirely new reading public.". From a practical standpoint,
he argued, such a policy "is aninsurance of your continued economic success, for it will restorepublic confidence .and buying!power in communities whereracks are now being avoidedby the average family."
$eoSts.'Tel. MY 81
•SouthHyonnis
ATWOODOIL COM~ANY
SHELLHEATING OILS
Ho nor :, MemoryOf Heroic Priest
NEWARK (NC)-A Catholicchaplain' who died a hero'sdeath in World War II is memorialized in a ] 3~foot statue here.
The statue, dedicated ·by Archbishop. Thomas A. Boland ofNewark, commemorates FatherJohn P. Wa$hington, who diedwhen the troopship Dorchesterwas torpedoed on Feb. 3, 1943,in the North Atlantic. The priestand three other chaplains-twoProtestants and a Jew - gavetheir lifebelts to others whenthe ship was hit.
City Gives PlotThe monument here was
erected by the people of St. Roseof Lima parish, where FatherWashington was born, attendedschool and offered his first Solemn Mass 25 years ag,o. Itstands on :i plot of land givento the city of Newark by theLackawanna Railroad for the'purpose of memorializing Fath-'er Washington..The city has accepted the gift of the monumentby the parish. .. Congress recently voted that aspecial citation be given posth!I-'mously to Father Washingtonand the other chaplains. .
The statue is the. second mem':"orial to Father Washington in'the Newark archdiocese, Aplaque in his honor is at St.Stephen's Parish, Kearny, wherehe once served.
Inquirer s Visit, Bc>othAt County Fair'
OKLAHOMA CITY (NO) More than 6,000 pieces of Catholic literature were distributed tosome 2,200 persons who visitedthe Catholic information booth"at the Oklahoma State Fair here,
Sylvester Farrell of. St. Patrick's parish, who sponsored thebooth, said it was manned by,60 volunteer workers from Oklahoma City parishes, The eightday fair drew a record attendance of 455,671 people.· Mr, Farrell said many persons werereferred to inquiry classes afterexpressing an interest in Catholicism.
Crop Blessing Opens'Sugar Cane Festival
NEW IBERIA (NC) - Msgr.Warren L. Boudreaux, VicarGeneral of the Lafayette, La.diocese, officiated at a blessingof the crops ceremony whichformally opens the LouisianaSugar Cane Festival here.
The ceremony followed theallnual Solemn Mass of Thanksgiving. The festival is the lirstof a series of south Louisianaharvest festivals. Each is openedtraditionally with a Mass of
.Thanksgiving aod' crop Qlessiftg.,
Outlines RequisitesFor Good Teacher, SPOKANE (NC) - F 0 u rrequisites of a good teacher wereI>utlined by a priest-educator at,the 11 th Regional Congl'esS ofthe Confraternily of· Chl'istian.Doctrine here by Fat!ler AloysiusrHeeg, S.J.~ of St. Louis Univer_sity, ~ho t01d the delegates that;fl teacher should krow .':how to,tell a story, show:. a picture, ask a'question and ~¥ a piece' ofchalk." He said that is true lromkindergarten to c~ilege.. The Jesuit priest, who haswri tten various ca techetica1works, observed that "the wholecatechism can be put into a fewwords." He said it' "is made upof things to believe," as shownin the Apostles' Creed; "things todo," as expressed in the Commandments; "and of' things to'use to get to heaven," the sacraments." Mrs. Edward Morgan .of Stan- ,
'ford, Mont., a convert, said thatquestions asked by her Protest,ant friends both anger andamuse her. She said a number of:Protestants believe Catholics'''are but sheep whQ Iollow abellwether."
oRecord EnrollmentA record number of 651 stu
dents are enrolled at Stonehili,College lor this academic year,: the registrar announces. Eleven'states and lour foreign 'countriesare repre::.:--.' •
Prelate Charges 1-·.. ··......·..· ......_...Rulers in PolandBreak Promises
BERLIN (NC) -TheCardinal Primate of Polandhas accused its communist'government . 0 f breakingpromises r~.. "ding the building·of new churches, it has beenreported hel'e.
Reports state that His EminenceStefan Cardinal Wyszynski saidin a sermon 'n Warsaw q",t theb r 0 ken promies concernedChuI'ches in Nowa Huta, Warsaw and other places,
The government's revocationof its permit for the constructionof a church in the Reds' "modeltown" of Nowa Huta near Cracow led to rioting thel'e earlierthis year.
Cardinal Wyszynski's sel'monwas delivered a week aitel' thegovernment told him to withdmw a pastoral letter condemning it for attacking the Church.The Cardinal had to withdrawthe letter because the communistregime feared it would embarrass Poland's Red chief, Wladyslaw Gomulka, while he attendedthe meeting of the United Nations General Assembly in NewYork,
About 2,000 persons took partin the demonstration over the M b f h D' C'l f C th l'Nowa Huta church last April. WOMEN STUDY CCD: . em ers o. ~ e lOces~n onnCl 0 a 0 I~ Women. study
GranUi Permission" '-. the. set-up of the ,Confratermty of ChrIstian Doctrme pJ;epqratory to mtroductIon toNowaHuU; nowa city of mor·"· parish guilds. Left to right with Rev. Joseph L. Powers,Diocesan CCD Director, Mrs.
than 100,000 people, is a'Planne~ Timothy Neville, St. Joseph's parish, Taunton; Mrs. Rose Mullaney, St. John, Attleboro;community built since the end of Mrs. Gilbert No?nan, St. ~at~ick, Falmouth.the war by the Polish govern- 'ment around the Lenin Steel- S : ,p - t D- t -b t F t - IlL M- d IIworks, the countt'y's largest steel aysrln I,S rlU ors OS erlng: azy .,In Smill. When the city was planned, NEW YORK (NC)-'-Distrib- borhood ': racks in increasing '~Actually, this might not beno provision was made for a', utors of paperbound books have n4rrbers. " . hard to do, for with this materialchurch. been told they' are! fostering "These publications are l;reat~ there is a conditioning period,"
Repeated requests for a church "lazy minds" which make. read- -'g a new mark,et. They are b0r.1i he said, "First ,ther,e is sh·")('k;from wOI'Ji:ers at the steelworks' ers susceptible- -to pllblications pushing your innocuous books then tolerance; finally there iswere turned down by the Stalin.;. featuring the bizarre, the ·sadis- off the racks and also estabJis:l- a rationalized acceptance whichistl'egime then ill pow'er, and the tic, the perverse and the, brutal. ing a taste in a, large segment of m'akes it easy to become a Join-city's Catholics had to attend Msgr. Thomas J.lfitzgerald, the reading public for ,he hlz-' er."Mass in churches in nearby vil- executive secretary of the Na- arre, the sadistic" the perverselages. tional Office for Decent Litera- and the brutal," he· commented.
When the Gomulka regime ture, urged a convention of'dis- Noting that the council hascame to power after the 1956 tributors to undel·take a long- protested distribution of publi-riots, government permission to range program to develop a, cations which violate commlill-build a church was granted. public appreciation of wOl'th- ity standards,Msgr. Fitzgerald
Violent Outbreaks while literature. nevertheless indicated that heThe April 27 demonstration Lazy Minds' . thought the pressure of inereas-
repol'tedly began when work-, ing sales of these pl' i:>lications.Msgr. Fitzgei:ald said many. '11 b t t t' f' th d"men started t,o dig up th'e 'Cl'O_;: WI e aemp a Ion· or e lS-
- fine, books seem to be. kept riff " t···' I'that. had be.e,n pl,'lce'" on ,the ' tl'lbutors 0 Jom:m hand mg"- retail outlet racks . becaus.e of. th' .
ChUI'C,h site. The "demonstr"to,rs 'em:... an established--policy to provide.
:~;::~dlea~~~;iCf~~:·t::l'~~ t~ ?~~~c~~:;n7~c~~~s:~;~i=:~,t,h:the city hall, whic> was later, diet for lazy minds," .he :lecbre1set on fire. ., mentioning mysteries, westerns,
"When police arrived they used "frothy fiction" and Ij~ht tr~at:'c'lubs 'and teargas bombs to dis-' ments of eUl'l'ent subjeds.perse the crowd. A pitched bat";' He charged the dis',ributorstie followed before calm was with, not only appealing to tilerestored. Demonstl'ators hul'1ed. lazy mind, "but encouraging itstOlles at the police and tried tothrow the bombs back at them by refusing to challenge intel
lectual curiosity at the localbefore they exploded. neighborhood level."
The No\":a Huta demonstrationwas but one of' a number of vio_ Distributor T,emptationlent outbreaks that have ·taken "This lazy mind, conditionedplace in Poland in r~cent years. by your policy, is now becoming
more and more susceptible to'the publications which 'youwould not publish or distributeyourselves, but which are finding their way onto the neigh-
,.
FAIRHAVEN, MASS.
.-.. "
. ,NEW, BEDFORD, MASS.
, .>. ~.
at
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DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUl ."'vito ,o~" girts 114-231 ~ labor ..
. Chri.t'. va.t 'w-eycird 01. _ Apoatk of ....Edlti_.: Pr.... Ro~iO. Moviol aiMI' TeteoIiai_.. Wltll theM MOdom _. .._
WUio.-y Silten brhIg Chris". Doctrine10 all. regaNli_H of ....ce. color M crMd.for" iafa,mcitiaw wriie' tal ..
'1l£V. MOTHER SUPERIORSO Sf. PAUL'S AV£. BOSTON 30. MASS.
'.-.--'
By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. D.D.
'New Bedford.·& AcushDet'~~rati~eBanks
"Save' With SafetyH
UNtON WHARf
Sacrifice" for .Afri~'
God Love You
.115 .•WILLIAM ST•.
For everyone hundred conversions ·we make, 81 are In Africa.11 are in Asia, 8 are In Ooeania.This is .an'· Indication 01 howrapidly Alrica is embracing the Faith. Presently .-there are 25'milliion Cathollcs.in that continent.' This represents about 10% ofthe total population. Bnt much Is yet 'to be done, for 40% of 'Alrica is Moslilm aod 39% is pagan.
This probleni of aiding Africa is not yours now. unless y~u
have a deep Catholic sense; but it .will be yours in " few decades,whether you have the Faith or not. Help us In 'the name of Godto bring the message of Christ to these poor peopl__not with agift. but with a Sacrifice. Let what you give represent an set ofself-denial on your part--and thus an act of .love for those not'so fortunate as yourself. 'Send whatever your sacrifice represents'to the Holy 'Father through' his S~let,. for the Propagation ofthe Faith.·
,An aunuity is a wise and generous Investment. WriCie ~. usand find out how an amiuit,. with the Society for the Propagationof the Faith helps you and the millions of poor and sufferingthroughout the world. Send your request for our pamphlet on.annuit~es to Most. Rev. FUlton I. Sheen. 366 Flftb Avenue, New¥ork 1, New York.' ...
Within a hundred years from now Africawill be industrially and financially what theUnited States is today. It is extremelyimportant for the future of the world that itenter the political scene fortified with Chris-' "i>
tian principles. I)Communism is seeking to possess AI. If
rica. Its tactics toward the presently poor iTp.,peoples of the world are those of Satan k\In the Garden of Eden. It begins with a promise ''You will belike unto God"-promises of unending prosperity; freedom andplenty. Then comes the second stage after the Fall: "And theyperceiVed that they weft naked." Communism strips the· victimsof everything.
Cut out this column, pin your. sacrifice to .it ,and mail it to theMost Rev. Fulton J. Sheen; National Director of the Society forthePr6pagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, N~w York 1, N. Y.,or your' Diocesan Director,RT. REV. RAYMOND T., CONS~DINE.368.North Main Street, Fall River, M,ass.
. Just suppose that aU the money the Catholics of the UnitedStates ·gave to the Holy Father for ALL the missions of the worldwas given to Africa alone. How much wouldeach Catholic in Africa have received tobuild schools, churches, leper colonies, hospitals and to pay teachers and catechists?About' 41c each! .
GOD LOVE YOU to M. and H.D. for $50. "As a gesture ofgratitude for all. of our. blessings, we decided'that instead of spending the money ,for our twenty-ninth wedding anniversary, wewould send it to 'you for the Missions· where it will do a lot moregood." ••• to Mrs, M. L. for $5 "This represents what I promisedif my. prayers were answered." •.. to G.D. "Last summer I wasfortunate in having a very well paying job. I would like this $100to go to the support of .those working' to spread the Kingdom 01.God.": ,
. In the building of the Tower of Babel, the workers were con-·founded in tongue and ear, so that .they neither heard, nor understood their fellow workers. Our confuSion couid be blindness aswe .build our Tower of Babel, for not 'Seeing the. evil at our doorsor the doors of Africa.
". :.
75 Years a Jesuit: FatherLouis Taelman, S.J., of St.Ignatius Mission, Montana,for'many years a missionaryamong the American Indians, has observed the 75thyear of his entry into theSociety of Jesus. NC Photo~
THE ANG:C ': :bcese of F~" Ri,v;r-Th'Jrs., Oct. 13, 196012
Infantof PragueGuildFall activities of the Infant of
r~ague Guild of St. Mary's Home,New Bedford, will include a beansupper Saturday, Oct. 29 and aeake sale at the Star StoreFriday, Nov. 4.
Praises ~"~e~®n Iswols.ky'sHistory of· Russian Church
- . By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kenne~J.y
Helen' Iswolsky sets out to summarize' "the history,,traditic;m, and life of the Russian Church" ,in her new bookChrist in Russia (Bruce,. $3.95). The subject:~s one which
'lias always interested this reader. But practically everything on the' subject has
the State, but kept a grip on theproved' unsatisfying, even Church to use it for administra-annoying, The subject"' is tive functions.complex. To present its ele- He may be Said to have tiedments clearly and connectedly down the Church, almost to havetakes more doing than most au- paralyzed 't, And in the ninethors.are equal to. Moreov~I:, not teenth century we see the fruitsa few who tac- of this when Pobyedonostzev be-kle it are both came procurator of the Holympturous and' Synod, He was, of course, a secu-vaporous about lar official charged with super-the s p e cia 1 ' visin;; the .Church, and he im-
posed a religious absolutismqualW~s re- . matching the political absolut-Iigion in Russia,failing to com- ism. Gains New Vigormunicate theseintelligEmtly. It Here, in brief, is conveyed thatis pie a sin g , relationship, almost coincidence,therefore, to re- of State and Church which re-port that Miss sulted in the fact that when, inIswolsky has the present century, there camedone an admirable pi~ce o.f work. the overthrow of the government
There are legends to the ~ffect by revolution, the Church, too,'that St.. Andrew the Apostle suffered ;everely.·carried the Gospel to the shores It is '.nss Iswolsky's contenof t3e :'-lack Sea, ,d that St. tion however, that the RussianCleme:1t, third successor to St. Chu'rch began to gain new vigor
, Peter, also preached in that area. in the fires of,. revolu~ion andBut historically the Christian be- I!ersecution. ,ginnings in Russia were in 988, The U.S.S.R. is officially athe-when, :s Miss Iswolsky writes, . istic; atheisti·c '. propagandilis .Prince Vladimir "brought Chris- more or less intensively carried ..'tianity to his people from Byzan- on; religious freedom is narrowly M sssiolTDlExpert ,tium, and h'" them baptized in circumscribed.
f But, she asserts,·'''there are 35 Continued from Page On~the river Dnieper, at the foot 0the hills 'of Kiev, his ·capjta!." to 50 million practicing Russian- isolationists. We fail to see that
Orthodox in the Soviet Union, we are no less. loyal .citizens ofLinked With East . .distributed among 73 dioceses, the United States when we lOIDThus from the first Christian. with 33,000 priests, 5,000 reli- with other nations in a realistic
Itt' in Russia was linke!;l with the .' gious (including·· monks and attempt to grant freedom fromEast, although the~e was in·.the . nuns). ' tyranny, 'freedom' from' want,West se ,le missionary -work from "There are three seminaries;' freedom from' fear to all thecenters of the Latin Church, the most important one located in peoples of the' world." ,
And the link with' the East the abbey of St. Sergius and the Reds' Pe&ce Ideameant that, when the schism be- T"ty h bo t 200 tud ts"
r~D1. as au. s en. Father McGuire', ' executivetween West 'and East occurred in .the twelfth century, the Church . Common People " sectetary of 'the Mission Secre-in Russia would go with. the .The reason for sQrvival ,and teriat, believes "there will be nolatter. revival is to be found,. first of all, peace for. generations to come
In the thirteenth· century there it goes without saying, ill· the because of political and eco~came the Mongol 'invasion .and providence of God. nomic theories of communism."conquest. The Mongol ascend- But the author shows that, de- He' said this is because com-ancy was to last for. some, 200 spite the bond between the high. munists understand "'peace" toyears. The people took .to ,the .erChurch officials and the gov- mean the worldwide triumph' ofwoods, and there they keptintact' ernment of the tsars,.the monks "cominunlsm 'over .capitalism, 'antheir Christiim way of life, hold- and' ordinary parish clergy.had, attitude which makes true peacelug fast. to the faith' which \vas . in' the l!!ain, always been on .the :imposslble' U!1til either.' the.their one ir~as~re". ,'.. best 'of terms with the common . Western democracies or the
In the same period there was people, sympathetic to their Soviet' 'bloc . nations have preinvasion from the West, by the grievances, and ·rocal in demand- vailed.Teutonic Knights, whose mil- ing justice for them. . , In this situation, the Vincen-itary aggression was rationalized Besides, there was the devo- tian priest emphasized, it is the 'as zeal to convert the people' of \ tional practice which was inter-. so-called "uncommitted" na-Russia to the Latin Church. twined with the existence of the tions which control the world
I people. Th,: liturgy, fOF example, /balance of power. He noted it isThus w~:~~~u:~e seed ~f :is one which calls lor popuillt' these countries that "the grind
something which has marked participat.i~n.·. . .: ing poverty under which. theRussian history ever since: on . The, splrltuality 18 ch.ar~cter- masses of the people have livedthe one hand, a deep-seated fear lZed by a s~rong and. mhmate for generations bodes ill for po-
love of Christ and His blessed 'litieal independence."of invasion and, on the other, a M th Th' h 1o er. e Icon as a ways Pilot ~distrust of the Latin Church as -. 1 . th· h ., r mary ere...had Its pace.m, e orne.. M ' f th . I " d dfronting for would-be conquer- . . any 0 e' new 'Y 10 epen -
ors of Russia. . Soviet Assaults ' ent ri'ations' 'are "almost devoid'It was in., the. ,ion'g 'years of This sketch does not.ev.en al- of adlninistrativ'e personnel." he
Mongol ,occupation ,that Moscow lude ~o mllny othe~ viclssltudes, pointed out, citing the' ,examplebegan to grow in importance. as me?tIoned by MISS, Iswolsky" of the :Congo, "where .less than '.~ecapital' ofRussilil:'lt ~~pre- which beset.the RUl,lSl~~,PI;tho:-: 20 Congole'sehold university desented the' 'real Russia: .and ',itsd()x Ch.urc,~.ln_~e:centurlesbe-gree.s and !1lmostnone: had carsovereignty,asagainsf"alieri rl.le. ,- tween:lts establIshment ~nd the tied true. responsibility in gov- '
And in Moscow".the Russian ~ceptlOn of. the Revolu~lOn:: ~he ernment ·offices." .'princes and chief men of the mternal .strl~e, ..the. probf~ra~lon .Father McGuire stressed thatChurch worked closely, together of fanahcal sects, the, develo~- - . economic betteiment is the priin fostering resistance and pre- ~ent of l:Dovements und~r .the mary interest of all the' new naserving Russian identity and influence of the 'Reformahon,. tions. He continued: '/They wantways. etc., more food. 'They' want better
Ecclesiasticai Bureaucrae,. If, says the'author, the Church housing. Tliey want relief' fromWhen, fin,al~y, the Mongols weathe~ed al:! those, as~ weU as the debilitating diseases such as
W· ere defe'ated-, ,the civil g'overn- the maJor. CrIses stemmmg from . malaria yaws and perniciousthe prob'acted union of Church,'. .' ..' .' , , ,
ment preserved: much of the anemla.spirit and pattern of the Mongol and State, why should one de- . "Understandably they are en-bureaucracy. The Church, too, .sPO~d a?out ~e assaults ~f the . vious of the.Vnited States.hardened, in the sense of its lead- ~ovlets ~n the ast.4O y~ars, where"the per capita income isers becoming more concerned ,~hat IS a short sp~n .m a lo?g, more than $2,000 a. year while
serlO.usly .troubled hlstory which: t'h' . .:', -'t .. is &._ .,with building UP. an ecclesias- d d . ' ,..', elr ·per· ·capl a Income ..,.,-has ~ot succee e .lD .s mpmg.'., ..:.~. ,',' $1'00" d ·$200 r
tical bureaucracy rather than in out Christianity. in !tussia. -.' ~~._ ~w,een. ._ an ,a. ye~ .the spiritual life of the people. .', "Democratic Traditions
It was then but a short step.. Prelate-Prescribes ' "They are 'not :philosopbers .to the es~blishment of a ,theoc. '.nor .specialists in' political econ- _ ...........-----------.:----------------.racy, with the tsar a religious For Peace'of" Soul .omy.They have been told by .•~~~~a:_-_a_aa;u~~~~~~~~~~~'Jfigure and the government con. JOLIET (NC)-A: prescription' . intelligent··: propagandists ~hat :., ." '.'
trolling the Church and using it for peace of soul was given by , the Sov~et Uni()n free~ itself . LIVE C'H''.'C":KE''..... LOBSTE·R'.Sfor its own purposes. . Bishop Mar,tin D. McNamara 'of from the tyranny of the Czars ~
In the' seventeenth century, Joliet. . '. arid in a short span of 40 yearsPeter the Great made radical The BishOp addressed an esti- has come to be recognized as the lb'.' 59' c'·reforms in Russia,' aimed at maLd '15,000 people at a dioc- second ~reatest power in .thewesternization. He secularized esanwide Holy Hour sponsored ,world. They want not only aeon-
by the Holy Name Society in omic' improvement,· but they 0..... 'SA'LE &ER·EJoliet MemoriaiStadium·. ' want it today." . .~ n
"When a man knows that he Father McGuire called, on theis serving' Christ, .that he is ful- United States to live up to its MocLEAN'S.SEA .FOODS:,filling, his duty to his family, to traditions 'of democracy and re-his country and to his Church, spect for the rights of man in itshe has a peace of soul that no dealings with the newty bide-"one else has," the Bishop said. pe~dent nations. " ~~~~~~~~"'I':',,'~',,"~:·~·I':·~·..Si···~~~~~~u~~~~~.sU~{I
13
GOLDSTAR
AWARDRANGESCompany
Telephone OSborne 5·7811
THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 13, 1960
Pontiff, Cardinal'Ask ParticipationIn Youth Week
WASHINGTON (NC)Pope John has urged American Catholic youth to takepart in this year's NationalCatholic Youth Week, Oct. 30to Nov. 6.
A message sent in th ~ Pope'Bbehalf asked wholehearted participation in the r~lig~ous activities of the week, whose themewill be: "Responsible .YouthAmerica's Strength."
The Pope's words were relayed by Domenico Cardinal Tar- .dini, Vatican Secretary of State,in a cable receive' by rchbishop Leo Binz of Dubuque,Episcopal Chairman of the YouthDep:.rtment of the NationalCatholic Welfare Conference.
In another message made public here by Msgr. Joseph E.Schieder, director of the NCWCYouth Department, the week'fltheme was praised by AlbertCardinal Meyer, Archbishop O:fChicago.
.Personan ResponsibilityTh )lritual leader of An1er
ica's largest archdiocec" said ofthe :heme: "No topic could iremor~ timely, in vie\" of the manyfactors which in modern life aretending' undermine personalresponsibility."
Such responsibility, he said,"is the key to our religious, social, educational, economic andpolitical duties."
"Through the exercise of persona: resonsi'. r :ty the individualachieves self-control in his per- .sonal life, the maximum usefulness according to his vocation in'his soci J life and the measure.of that happiness which it i8
. possible for us to have her~
below," he ~ .~.
"More importantly," he said,"the exercise of personal responsibility in conformity to the holywill of G<>d is the condition andmeasure of our future happinessin eternity."
Information and materials hJrthe week .nay be secured frl'lm·the National Council of CathoUeYouth, Washington 5: D. C.
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. GREETS TRAINEES FOR MISSIONS: Arecurrent back ailment and spinal surgerydoes not seem to dampen the missionary zeal of Betty L. Behrend, director of WomenVolunteers Association (WVA), as she greets five new arrivals for the current .trainingprogram in Washington. Left to right: Alba Camargo, Colombia, nurse; Joanne Fitzgerald, Beaumont, Texas, pharmacist; Loretta Stutz, Long Island, nurse; ConstanceKenney, Milwaukee, nurse; Kay Huberlach, Portland, Ore., teacher. WVA was originally
.founded by the White Sisters of Africa. NC Photo.
German Cathol·ics Give Massive HelpIn Ch·arity at Home and Abroad
BONN (NC) - When earth- . .quakes, tidal waves and floods capacity of more· than 170,000 care of some 380,000 children ofravaged Chile this year,. Germ- beds. Patients are cared for by preschool age. Another 10,000an Catholics went to the stric- 23,000 nursing sisters and almost Sisters go into homes to care forken nation's aid with gifts 40,000 lay nurses. the sick.amounting to more than $125,- Hospitals . Many Workers.000. . In more than 1,000 Catholic Altogether 76,000 .SIsters, 1,-
This represents only a· sman orphanages and YCluth villages,· 200 men Religious and more thanpart of the help given yearly by sheltering 115,000 children and 60,000 lay:personnel are workingGerman Catholic charities. The adolescents, the· association em- In Catholic charitable Instituhelping hand is· extended at ploys 12,000 Religious and 10,000 tions in ·Germany. They are !lS-
. home and· abroad to victims of lay peOple.. The more than 1,000 sisted by a small army of volun-natural and political upheavals, Catholic homes for the aged teerS. .to the poor, the sick and the have·a capacity of 67,000 persons . The German Charities Assooutcast. . and are staffed by 7,000 Reli- dation trains 'its personnel in
German generosity has been gious ana. .about the· same num- 162 schools of nursing, 32 schoolsspurred by the memory of the ber of lay employees. . for kindergarten teachers, ';Indhelp given this country by its . About 5,000 Catholic klnder- 18 schools for other social work.former enemies when it lay gartens staffed by 5,009 Religious These training schools have ahelpless in defeat. . and 6,000 lay 'personnel take tOtal enrollment of 7,000.
Special SaeriflceAt their 1958 conference in
Fulda, the Bishops· o( Germanyasked German Catholics'to makea special sacrifice each year forundernourished and under privileged people throughout theworld. The first fund-raIsing ....campaign for internation.al aidbrought in $8,500,000. This year'scontributions were. expected tobe still higher. .
German Catholics are alsosending young men and womento help these. countries. TheBishops are upderwriting . thetraining of specialists and tech.nieians to help underdevelopednations learn the techn.iques ·thatcan raise producVon ,.and living·standards. They have aske<;l· formore volunteers to. go abr~ad.
RefugeesPerhaps the greatest problem
challenging the resources ofCatholic charities in German.y
P J h P • since the war is the mass ofope 0 n raises refugees. One of every five per- .Thailand Catholics sons living in West Germany is a
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope refugee.John during ·an audience with 'More than 14 million Germanthe King and Queen of Thailand people were expelled from ·terpraised the zeal of the Catholic ritories east to the· Oder andclergy and laity of their country Neisse rivers (now' under Polishand thanked the: sovereigns for administration)" from Rumania,the liberty Catholics enjoy there. Poland, Hungary and Czechos-
In his formal address, the Pope lovakia. Of these, two millionpraised the people and govern- died before rt;achfn.g any sort ofment .of .Thailand· who; .he· said; .. 'havem ·The· rest settled in Germ- I.
"are worthy of praise, above aU any: eight million in the Westin the 'social field and in the field . and four' million in the commu-of public insb·uction!'· .. .. . .... nist· East. .
He added that: "Our Catholic . But that is not an. Since ~949children, priests, Religious and two and one-half million perlaity, ·are ready· to· make' their" sOns have fled from East Germcontribution to these efforts and any' to West Germany. Althoughthrough the means of numerous . most of the refugees have nowand flourishing works which been absorbed by the Gerrrtanthey have founded and sustain- economy, Catholic charities ·areschools, hospitals and dispensa- still active. in helping themries-to show themselves anllj- with housing and other probious to develop these also, as lems.loyal subjects, for the progress The German Charities Assoand ~osperit¥ oi their fathel'- ciation has provided more thanlando" l,5OO Catholic hoapitala with •
·Youth ProgramContinued from .Page One
lay r~ople·will be recognized loroutstandingcontributioRB to theCYO. \
Area members will distributeposters advertising CYO Week.and Communion Sunday to allparishes and schools. A radioskit will be carried on localstations and Mayor John M.Arruda of Fall River is scheduled to make an official proclamation of the week.. Father Sullivan said 16 par
ishes were represented ilt thelast area CYO meeting, at whichit was announced that l.teitceforward parishes not participatingin all parts of the area programwould not be permitted to tak~
part in the sports division.Plans for the annual CYO
penny sale were made by pariShes represented. It will be held·Tuesday through Thursday, Nov.15 to 17, at the Anawan Streetbuilding. Proceeds will go toparticipating parish organizations.
Attleboro AreaRev. Bernard F. Sullivan, as
sistant at St. Mary's Parish, andCYO Dirc"tor for th'! Attleboroarea, has announced preliminaryplans for Youth Week iR thatdeanery.
On the afternoon of the Feastof Christ the King, all youths ofthe area, from the first communicimts 1'0 the young adults,will make a pilgr' :age to theLaSalette Shrine, Attleboro. Fol-
,lowing the processio::, scheduledto start at 3 o'clock, the programincludes the recitation of theRosary, a brief sermon, and Benediction ": the Blessed Sacrament.
On the evening of Nov. 4, theFirst Frir'1Y of the month, Rt.r.ev. John J. Shay, pastor of St.John's ""al"ish, wil offer a specialMass for the youth of the districtin St. John's Church.
Following the Mass, a danc~
will be conducted from 8 to 11in St. John's School Hall, Attleboro.
. New Bedford ProgramCYO District Director, Rev.
Edward C. Duffy of St. James'Church, New Bedford, has announced that installation· of oUi_cers of the area will be theopening event of CYO Week onthe feast of Christ the King.
There will be a dance conducted during the week at adate b be announced '. nextweek's issue of The Anchor.
The New Bedford CYO mem_bers will close Nationai YouthWeek on .'ov. 6 with a ·oikshopon the four-fold . rogram of theC -" program. Women of theDistrict COl"cll of' Cat·holicWomen . ill be gu ~sts at thisproject.
Taunton ActivitiesThe youth of the Taunton area
will recf'ive Holy Communion intheir arish Churches on th~
. morning of the feast of Christ theKing r..• 01 then proceed to theCYO Hall for their annualCommunion Breakfast.
.Rev. Francis B. Connors, Director of t.he Taunton CYO District, also annour -' . that installation of officers wi'~ take placein the evening of this opening .day of CYO Week.
A . special social event willalso be conducted on one of theevenings during this specialweek~ .'
, •• '.' .', .,'.'.' #' , •.••• ""', • ' ...... '.' " d.'
"
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Defense, effectiv:y broke th&morale of 'tie Huks and reducedtheir power to a minimum.' '.
After ,~hat, it was generallyassumed that the c )mmunists hadput aside the idea' 0': armed ac-':'tivity in the' Philippin~s, and,had declded to, concentrate onwhat has been termed "the legal'and parliamentary struggle."
Strike Swittl7 .Now, however, as many thous
ands of Cen~al Luzon' inhabi-'ta.... ~:; are suffering from the destructive floods which inundatedthe regil during the month' of.' ' gust, the Huks have chosen toact again. Striking with silentswiftness, they -have instilledfear into' local residents byt· -:-eatening to' liquidate, thosewho remain hosti:. to "1e com-·munist movement.
The exact number of Hultsactive in .hese armed raid_ is not·known. Intelliger - - reports statethat many former Huks are mi',:;sing ':rom 'their' homes, but it isnot certain if these have gone torejoin the dissident movement.
At present, a Philippine constabulary force of· 2,000 men iscovering the Mount Aray··; areain the province of Pampagna inan effort to capture the "liql'id: .tion squad" which' is 'terr'J.·izingthe region. ,
•.°00 •• 0'0.0 ••. ~,•••• 0. •• 00 ••.•••••• J.o. 0 .0 o. 4&
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ADDRESS
It·,-
CAN tou DONATE A. SACRED ARTICLE' FOR A' MISSIONCHAPEL?
VOO~VAlLEY O~"T~EK~N~S~a~ lL~Oi'In' .u,~per'Egypi. 'draws t~uri~tD from 'all,. over. tbeworld. Ce~tunes before the tiJt;Ie of .Christ, the. rulers of Egypt
. . st I'h " 'were burred .here .In tombs of mag~$ .! . 'i.uJ,.'· nifioent splendor., The· ..visitor Is,
.r.. ~ .' ~~d at. tJ,te :evidence. he sees of artfl ~. - clvIhzatio~, which existe.d thousands
QI 0 of years bef9re the Christian .era., He . I.
,f;' :s iii also apJl.aUed at ~hethougM of the.. ·+ .fA slave labor Involved In. bringing .these, ...
• monUlDen&s Into belJIg: appalling,.too. .is the poverty of. thousands ofpeople living In this area of formerpuan greatness. . ,
:n, HoI, Pathrrt MisshI AMI .In. • the 'vUlage' of .ARMANT EL, &...L, "-..:_••, ,.' BElT. just a fewD;1iles .from Luxor,
r I« vrJmIIII C'.htmIJ there are. ~49 Egy~ian Cathollcs oftho, Cop~Rite. Besides tbeir pastor, tbese people bave fivePrancisean Sistera ministering to tbe~ In a S~I;lOQI. an Orphanape a.nd. a DlspeDBarJ': their ministrations are for all tb8 people. no~ for Catholics alone. Of the 147 childreo In the SCbooi.8'1 are CatboUc.
The pr~sen* little .Cburch iii. made' of dried mud ;"'d Is IseoD8tantn~d.of being .reinforced. The pastor fee~ that the elvUautbo~es. for re880D8 01 safety. may sOOn forbid Its use. He'aPlleais ..for aid In erecting a newCburch. Could you belp tobuild a small CbUrch here sO. it would be appilreilt that Cath·ollcs !rive the- best they possibly can to the King of Kinpf'4,000 Is needed to eonstruct the' Church. .
'~~r'GstOlissions-'tl. FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, P,esJden~ •
Mlgr. ' •.1.' ,. TuOhy. Nat'l Soc.,/ .SIIftd an cOmmurilcationi tol' ,
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST. WELFARE ASSOCIAnON.480 Lexington Ave•.at 46th St. ,New York '17., N. Y.
AN INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF VOCATIONS IN IN•DIA i8 el~~r evidenee that the relativelY minute,CatboUc pop.,uiatiom of that· country .truly has the will to . .perpetuate t~~. faith In their own land .andto draw otheni' to our boly Church. Amongthe boys and girlS of India preparing for the
· priesthood,. and sisterhood are JOSEPHCRAKKALAKAL and GEORGE MADAMANA. . studen&s at 'SAINT JOSEPH'SSEMINARY,and,SISTER:TERESA and SISTER SILVIA, novi~s, of the' CLARIST SISTERS. Sinoe thoCatholics of' India are too poor to support seminaries and novitiates, tbese Institutions. are a~le. to functioti only througb
· the !reneroslty of· Catholics fro~. other lands. The oost· of edueating a priest Is $600 ($100 a y~ar for six y~ars);' the cost of
· training a siste.r Is $300. ($150 a y,ear for two years)....Could you· pay fo~ the educatioB'_of a .lIriest·or sister In Mission territory?
ARE' YOU' A: ,MEMBER"Membership In the CAT~OLIC'NE;AREAST WELFARE AS
SOCIATION ,helps our Holy Father give aid to t1le Missiomfln'the Near and Middle East. Why not .u~6- the following' forni. toe~roll or renew membership? Che<:k' :th~. type of membership, .clIp the fo~m froqI the paper and send It. to us today. ' .' .Dear CardInal Spellman: '; " , .
I wish to enroll (renew my memb~~stIlp)':i~ the ~CATHbiic-.NEAR E~ST.WELFARE ASSOCIATION.. i .enclose, a 'check(mone~ order)' for $1.00 as Annuai Mem\)ership' Du.es, ... '; , ,; ',.
I WIsh to enroll. (renew membersbip for) \11y 'famlly;' Len-,'close a check (money order) for $5.00 as Annual MembershipDues. ' .. , ,';'
S'ays ..' Philippine ,Slayings IndicateRed Shift to Armed Rebellion
MANILA (NC) - Philippineauthorities are expressing concern at what appears to be a .resurgence of armed communistactivity less than 101) miles fromManila, says Father John Marley,S.S.C.
A rash of killinlls has centeredin the central L~n _lrovisces ofTarlac .anJ Pampanga, home ofthe Hukbalahap movemeat. ~t
has been assessed by Pltilippinearmed forces authorities as anin'dication that the communistmovem" n' may be turning againfrom the "parliamentary" struggle to arm~d rebellion.
The victims of the recent assassinations were landowners or, . '
former Huks who ha" defectedfrom the movement.
Guerilla ForcesThe Hukbal~lt,:~ were com
munist-led guerilla forces whichoperatel against the Japanese.duting the occupation' of thePllilippines in World CWar II.After the war, the Huks returnedto their guerrilla activities, thistime against the Philippine government.
In 1951 they came very close totaking control of - ~ani' ~ and thenation. At that time, however,the skillful and " :'namic 1. ldership'onlieiate President RamonMagsaysay, then. Secretary of
AD ALTARE DEI MEDAL
·Scout Award
A«Jh?@~@fr~ffi ..M~ffe~@[(fr ,<ellu@!p>~@BffT:l$,_SEATTLE (NC)·..:.... An arch";
bishop advocated tliat plore portchaplains: bea1?signed to fulitime work for the U.S.' Apostleship of tbe Sea and he also 'urgedthe.use ()f laymen. to as'~~t' cha~ 01
plains in their work: 'Archbishop Thomas A:: Con
nolly of 'Seattle says ·,."theapostleship. is' .an ~mportantphase of Catholic activity" inthis country. '. "
"A port chaplain must.,kno~and like, people," Afi:hbishopConnolly said. "Knowing 'peopleand getting to be knoWn areamong his chief duties:' He cannot be a desk 'man. His; job requires legwork and good publiC
. .relationS." .. .:. ': .: . , .. ' In suggesting the use' of laymen to assist the port chaplauilhe Archbishop said that thelaymen can serve both aboardIhip and ashore.
. MEM~ER OF LAY' APOSTOLATE BOARD:: Mart'inWor}{, executive of the National Council of Cathoiic Menreceives notice of his ap{)ojn,tmimt by Pope John XXIII- ~the 'board· of the Apostolate ;of the Laity, from BishopBabcock, <.left? of Grand Rapids, Episcopal Chairman ofLay OrgamzatIons, N.C.W.C., in the presence of ArchbishopKarl J. Alter of Cincinnati. NC Photo.
'4 'THE ANCHOR.....:Diocese ofFall River-Thurs., Oct: 'l3~ 1960
The Catholic in America
Fighting 69th DemonstratesTruth of Writer's Tribute
By Rev., P~ter ... J.Rahill, Ph.D•.:Jncreased atte'ntion'h~ubbeen given recently to Alexis
De Tocqueville. After his visit to the United States in tlie .lS30'sthis Frenchman wrote so p'enetr~tingly of democracyin America that the exaggetated adulation ofHenry Adamscould not rob his writings of . .nent historian has criticiied thetheir worth.. Within acouple Boston Irish for refusing to takeof. y~ars after the death' of jobs distant from "the minisq-at his scholarly' statesman .tions of their priests."further demonstration had come Oppressed for their religionof his declaration: "Th~ Catho- in Erin, the spiritual sons of St.lies of. the Patrick encountered similar op-U nit e d position when searching forStates' are work in Boston by signs whichat the same read: "No Irish Need Apply."time the most Unflinching Loyaltyfaithful be- . These placards were hurriedlylievers i n removed .because of the un-God and the flinching loyalty of the Irishmost zealous Catholics to their newly adoptedcitizens 0 f country. General Burnside erredthe Repub- grievously in attacking Lee's CO!.1tinued·. from Page Onelie." impregnable position at Fred- R~cipients· of the Ad Altare
T h'e first ericksburg.. But for the Gaelic Dei award are:o p p 0 r _ members of the Irish Brigade From Fall Rivertunity for Catholics to establish "their's not· to' reason' why, From Fall River,Troop. il,
._ their loyalty' to America had 'their's but to do and die." . Sacred Heart parish: John Halli-come' during the Revolution A' correspondent for, the Lon- gan, Jeremiah . McGrath, Johnfrom 'England; already we have don Times marveled at the "un- Silva, John Springer; Jay Hoyle.seen .how splendidly that test daunted courage displayed by 'Troop 50, St. Anne's: Ronaldwas met. the Sons of Erin" as they made Richards,. Ronald St.· Georges,
Best ,of Citizens ..seven' 'successive stormings of Richard St. pierre.The' .passage of almost "four- the invincible position from' Troop 54, St. William's: Chris-
score,' and seven' years" -had which the confederates poured topher 13eissel. Troop 100: Rondimmed for some the' remem:-! forth shot and shell. , .' ,.' . aId and DO!1ald Fon'tai!1e~ Troopbranceof the .glorious record of Two-thirds of General Thom- 2: James Charrette. Troop 19, St.Cathciiics during the American as. Meagher's Brigade never Patrick's: Robert Floyd.Revolution __ Nativists had c'ome' ,'agam answered roll 'call. They Troop 20, Blessed· Sacrament:not Q~IY to question' their loy- _ h~d not d.ied in vain.,No nati- Rene St. Laurent, 1\:'Iaurice Lus-'aUy b.ut their very eligibility to V.Ist back m Boston d~red ques- ~ier, Armand. Valerianna, Gerald.become true citizens. . ..." ,t •. t~on the lov~ of the IrIsh Catho-. : Goulet, Normand B )ru~e, Ray':"
Not, by words but by deedS:77. "j lIcs for theIr new-found home-: mond <orin,'. Leonard Adrian;,this time "in a great Civil War"' land. , . .Raymond Beland, Louis E. Des--Catholics vindicated De Toc~:";:'O . Rep~sents BoUt Sides ,.,.... chen~... f' . .
quev~lle's judgment of their HIghly lIDp?rtant to the Union Troop 4, St..John Baptist: Johnbein,g the best of citizens. ~as preventmg .Europ~an na- A. Maitoza,' Robert St. Pierre,
Three days after the first shot bons from ally..~g WIth the Donald MelansOn, Donald Banwas fired at Fort Sumter Presi- South or r~cogmzIng the Con- ·ville, Leon St. Laurent.dent Lincoln called for, 75,000 federacy as Independent.., .' Troop 30: Thom~) Souza. ~voluriteers. New York's Sixty- In October, 1861, Archbishop ward Tavares. 'Ninth Regiment was the first to ~o~n Hughes of ~ew York was From New Bedfordrespond. Within 48 hours these InVI~ ~o.Washington.. ~ere . Troop 1, St. Lawrence: Tim-soldiers, mostly Irish Catholic' P~Ident Lincoln comm~s~noned Hayes, John McQUillan, Davidladdies were on their way to hIm to present the POSition of Kennedy,;Jeffr~y Sope1, Dennisthe fro~t. ' . . the .uni~n to the Catholic Em- Prefontaine, John Finni, John
Five y'ears of potato famine in peror of France, N~poleo~ In. Whelan. Explorer Post· 1. St.Ireland and heartless eviction .After he had dIsembarked at Whelan. Explorer Post 1, Stby. E. n g 1ish landlords had" L~ve~ool .the ~rchbishop stated Lawrenc;e: Richard A. Mosley,broug~t thousands of impover";' hIS ~ten~lon 1D a letter to a Frank Como, William Barter.ished .Irish immigrants to the ~~~dInal In Rome: Thomas Hebert. .United States in the decade pre- I .made .known to the Prest- Troop 19, St. James: Davidceding the Civil War. Due to the dent tha~ if I should come to Camillo, William Battey, Robertdifference in the size of the Cities' Eur~pe, It .....ould not be as a Best, James. Quinn, Stepheath influx of the sons of Erin had partisan of the North more than Castellina, Daniel C. Kennedy,been even more noticeable' iIi. of ·the Sou~h; that I shquld rep- John A..Maguire, Joseph Green-Boston than in New York resent the mterests of the South an, Dennis W. Perry, Kenneth,: .' . as well as the North-in short, Torres.No IrIS~ Need Apply' the interests of all the United Troop'U, Our I ldy of Mt. Car-
. Often !andmg absolutely des- States, just the same as if they mel: Paul Macedo, Richard J.titute, Insh lads and even lassies had never been distracted by So'uza, Victor J. Sylvia, Edwardhad eagerly accepted ,any sort· of ,the presence of a war." N. Couto, Robert Couto, .Richardwork. The' 50,000 and more in On Christmas Eve at the Tuil- Costa.the Hub City had crowded into eries Archbishop Hughes had a Troop 3: Ray Pease. Troop Ilkthe ~orth End and Fort Hil~. long conversation with Napol- Richard Leary.~ "Soon ~t became almost a proverb eon and the Empress Eugenie. As 'to say that a good workman did a consequence France neither in-' Tauntonas m~c~ as CIJl ~rishman. tervened in the struggle nor ac- From Taunton, Troop 6, rm-~otwithstandmg, the Puritan corded official recognition to the maculate Conception: William
socIa.l: and financial. aristoc~acy Confederacy. Lecuyer, Robert Yelle,~, ':"mdespIs~ these newcomers. Un:', Next Week: Catholic Patriot_Jones, Richar~' Paulson, Jobiaable :to understa~~ their <l~P ... ism Wins Frien~ During Civil Gorszyca., .loyal~~ to CatholICIsm, an emI- War.., .• AttlebOro Deanery' .'
.From Mansfield, Troop 14, st.MarT's: Lawrence Connor, WU':'liam Connor.
.From Dodgeville, Troop 16~
RobertStarzah, James Cunha, .Kenneth Cunpa. : .. ,.." : :
1S
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CELLOPKG
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Potatoesu.s. No.1 - 2'/4" and up ·2.
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Apples Deliclous'Cooking 5B~~ 49c
GOOD FROM OCT. 13 to OCT. 22
30c19c45c11c
PtNTBOT
(~~oz37c RICHMOND - Cub & Tips
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Crisp and Crunchy - FuR of Vitamin A
lP~~;Z 39c Carrots 2 ~~~~ 29cButternut o'r Red Turban
. I LB 8.>z. (AN
4~_. . ONE (11 FR"
~;Fr6'eI: . 9 oz. MILK GLASS"•. 'when you buy !wo (2) e
9 oz. Milk Glasses _. • ~",:;;;t Our spec:iol'19¢ retail
LIMIT ONE COUPON TO AN ADULT CUSTOMER
Frencli or Reg eli 5Green .eans ',9 oz' FORWax Beans 90% 51.Corn WhoI.-Kernei 10 0% Save Up
To 13c
Brussels $prouts 10 0%
4Peas 10 OlE
Peas .Big Femily SizQ HS Peas & Carrot. 'to in 6Crinkle Cut Crinkle Cut
French Fries U.B FOR French Fries 90% FORSliced Freestone 51 Pure. Concord 51Peaches us Grape Juice 60z .~
Cantaloupe & Honey D_ Cloverdale
Melon Balls 120zSave Up Orange Juice 60z
Save UpN. W. Whole Berries
Raspberries. to en To 2.4c SquashCoolred . UB To 17c
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct~ 13, 1960
San. Lo,,", Self-Service Pricos In AU Stores In This Vicin!ly - (We Reserve tfie Right to limit Quantities)
LEAN - HEARTY -~OUTH-WATERING Bone-In LI39c
Chuck ·Roast Boneless LB 57c. CANNED :'
ARMOUR' HAM' ~ '2_99
lone-In - Ch9ice Grade - Lean, flavorful Heavy Steei-~
CItU.CI(~ STEAK_Large ,Thick Piec~s of Tender Beef-
STEW: BEEF.,FINASl - CQUntry Style
SAUSAGE "MEAT
Apricot '& Orange
Be CocktaHs.:::s~~~~
Fall Housecleaning Savings !We have everything you need for your lail housecleaning and at regular First National low prices.
Bellview Reg. Size $1.19
B 1IIS ·k. Siz~ $1.09roo . LightWeIght ..
Floor Wax 10c oH QT CAN 7ge
Simoniz. ;:I.~~ $1.39
Glass Polish
Windex----(Grocery Specials!--
QT BOT 55eWesson Oil
LGE PKG 40eQuaker' Oals
IEEF STEW
Dinty MooreHUDSON - TABLE
Napkins
IN STATE 50: Our Ladywears a lei in Hawaii. This.statue, in Chapel 2 of theWheeler Air Force Base, isadorned with a garland ofnative flowers, and keptfresh and lovely by the lad-
. iea in charge of the altar.NC Photo.
Dismisses Suit AimedAt Medical School
JERSEY CITY (NC) - TheAppellate Division of SuperiorCourt here rejected amove todelay construction of' laboratories at a medical center inwhich a Catholic medical schoolis located.
The suit was brought by' tileJersey City Association for Separation of Church and State,which asked for an injunctionagainst construction on thegrounds that the laboratories atthe Jersey City Medical Centerwere intended for use of Seton
. Hall University's school ofmedicine.
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Prelate AssertsSoc ia I JusticeWorkers' Goal
FATIMA (NC)-The Patriarch of Lisbon told YoungChristian Workers that thegoal of workers' CatholicAction is to spread the Church'smessage of social justice, andonly indirectly to better the lotof workers.
Cardinal Goncalves Cerejeirain an address to a YCW studyweek here said that the Churchin her social teaching "does nomore than teach the demandsof the Gospel in relation to thelife of man in society."
"The Young Christian Workershave as their mission to take themessage of the Church to theirfellow workers-neither morenor less than this," the Cardinalstated. In this connection, headded, it is a "mistake" to seeworkers' Catholic Action as"action to promote the economic
. and political status of the worker."
After referrihg to the loss ofthe workers by the Church as thegreat scandal of our time, theCardinal-Patria=ch said: "Theonly human revolution which istruly effacious is the re-creationof man in the grace of Christ,the man renewed by truth andlove."
"This is not the place to analyze the causes of the sufferingsof the working class," CardinalCerejeira continued. "Amongthem there are obviously. theactions and omissions of theother classes. It is the love ofthis world, of power, of pleasureand of money which has createdinjustice and slavery. Can thesame ills, aggravated by deepresentments and jealousy; createa world free of them?" .
The world of the worker, 80often confined to earthly values,cries for the teaching of theChurch, the Cardinal said.
"It is in Christ our Redeemerthat man knows himself, his dignity, his destiny, his mission, hisrights and his duties ... Everything should lead to the salvatiollof man and the glory of God..
Daily Evening MassLUANDA (NC) - Evening
Mass will be offered dally in thechurch C" Our Lady of MountCarmel in this African town, itwas announced.
'..;,;.o
NEW BEDFORD
501 COUNTY ST.NEW BEDfORD
WY,3-1751
Painting, DecoratingPaperhanging
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INDUSTRIAL OilS
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Aluminum or Steel .944 County St.
NEW BEDfORD. MASS.WY 2-6618
\ '
Canadian PrelateAsks IndustrialPeace Program
TROIS RIVIERES (NC)Paul Emile Cardinal Leger.Archbishop of Montreal, hascalled for concrete actiontoward the goal of industrialpeace.
Speaking at'the Social Weekconference of Religious and !aTleaders studying social matters,Cardinal Leger recalled that theCatholic Bishops of C~nada, forBome time, have advocated formation of an organization representative of owners, workersand governments designed" tobring about mutual harmony andprogress.
Mutual Respe~
If th.is is not possible underexisting conditions, the Cardinalsaid, at least. owners and workers should set up their "inter-
· professional" organization atonce to consider their respectiveeconomic problems.
"Christians must organize toa~ist each other, to stud7 andseek solutioris for their problems," th.e Cardinal declared. In
· th.eir discussions th.ere should bemutual respect for th.eir respeotive views, a recognition of factll
· as they really exist and a readiness to concede or conciliatewbere necessary, he addecL,
COYNEINDUSTRIAL LAU~DRY
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SHOP TOWELSAlso Reclaim Industrial Gloves
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331 Nash Rd., New BedfordWYman 7-9937'
Visitor
Paraguay MissionHOLLIPAYSBURG (NC) -'
The Franciscan .Fathers of the'Immaculate Conception Provinceof the Third Or~er Regularwill open a foreign mission inParaguay this Fall. They willhave headquarters at CoronelOviedo, in the south.ern part ofthe country. '
WORLD'S YOUNGEST BISHOP: Guest of honor ofchildren in Holland is Bishop Maurice' Otunga, Kenya's firstAfrican bishop. Born in 1923 of pagan parents, he was educated by the Mill Hill Fathers and ordained in Rome in 1950.NC Photo.
ConditionsIn Com,munist Hungary
NEWARK-Property owners in Hungary are forced tosign over their holdings to the communist state under theguise of voluntary donations. The disclosure was made hereby a woman who returned ~ecently from visiting relativesin' Hungary. She d.id not you have to buy from the marwant her name published. ke~, or the neighbors have toDuring her visit to the smalI h~lp you meet .the quota. And il
shU you can't meet the quotatown where she was born, the communists come and takeshe' said :'~50 communists from everything-house, cows, pigs,nearby cItIes came and went land-everything." , ,from do?r to door, g~tting peo-. Economic conditions are" terPtolethto sign over tt~eU' property rible, she, continued. 'She said
e governm{en . ." she bought for one of her rela-~~~y want everyt~mg" ~he tives a suit that cost, more than
said. And the people must sign $200 in Amerl'can mo b t', '11' I ' 1ft th' ney, uWI mg y. !I ac, e stllte- was not worth more than $20
ment they sign says that they· •are signing it willingly," p~paganda. "Willingly" The woman also told of com-
She told of a friend in' the munist propaganda. At one1 ,town wh.o had a business' with meeting, sne said, the women
seve~al hundred employes. The of the town were told th.at incommunists' asked him to sign America there "is only one pairover. his business to the gov- of pants for every seven men."ernment "willingly.'" He re- One woman in the audience
,fused: . objected to this statement she"They put him and his wife in said, and stood up and said in
prison for eight months" the a loud voice: "If any of you havewoman said. "They 'beat' them. not received clothing or foodAfter eight months, he signed- from America, stand up!" No'willingly.' .And now he takes one stood up.care of the village cows." . Another time, the woman said,
Other fri,ends,' she said, once ~he was asked by a stranger: "Iahad 300 acres of good land. Now It true that the United States isthey have only a few acres. Yet, under the communists now!she 'added, it would be enough to That is what they tell us."live. on, if the communists would Those who work for the gov-let them ~lone-but they don't. ernment, the woman reported"
Everything ,Goes are not allowed to go to church."They set a quota that you If they: do, she said, th.ey lose
have to meet," she explained. even their jobs."If you don't meet the quota, Sometimes, she sa'id, neople
meet in their cellars to read theBible and to pray.
Religion fer RetGlIl'dedNEWARK (NC)-The Mount
Carmel Guild Apostolate for th.eMentally Retarded in the Newark archdiocese will conduct 16centers for religious instructionfor retarded youngsters this year.More than 100 volllnteera wiDparticipate,. __.. ~.. • ~
SS. PETER AND PAUL,FALL RIVER "
The Women's Club will hold aHalloween party Monday, Oct. 17and a Christmas party Monday,Dec. 5. Other October events willbe a rummage sale ·Friday, the21st and a whist party Mondaythe 31stST. JOSEPH,FALL RIVER
The Women's Guild will servea supper tonight at 6:45. in theParish lIall.on Brightman Street.
The supper will be followedby a frozen food demonstration.The business meeting. will start'at 8 o'clock.ST. LOUIS,F~LL RIVER
The Women's Guild will holda rummage sale Wednesday andThursday, Oct. 19 and 20. AChristmas sale and supper are.scheduled for Wednesday, Nov.30.OUR LADY OF HEALTHFALL RIVER
Holy Name Society officers are.John Perry,' president; AntonePacheco, vice president; LouisSoares, secretary-treasurer. Theunit has taken on the project ofsetting up a fund to aid seminarystudents from the parish.ST. CASIMIR,NEW BEDFORD
St. Casimir Circle will sponsor a rummage sale at the church.hall 'Saturday, Oct. 22. MissStella Gonet will be chairman.Next regular meeting is set for
. Monday, Oct. 31.IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,FALL ~IVER'
Members of the Women's Guildwill save cancelled stamps forthe benefit of the Jesuit missionsTentative plans call for a day ofrecollection during Advent. ACake sale is set for Sunday, Nov.'6. •ST. WILLIAM,FALL RIVER
The Women's' Guild will meetat the 'Fall River Gas CompanyWednesday, Oct. 19 for a cooking'demonstration.ST. BERNARD,ASSONET,Mrs. Thomas Lynch will
head the Women's Guild for thecoming year, aided by Mrs. Nor-man, Lafleur, vice president;Mrs. Henry Nadeau, secretary;
, Mrs. Pierre La Bonte, Jr., treasurer.
Mrs. Benoit Charland and MissGertrude Gould are on the boardof directors.HOLY TRINITY.WEST HARWllJtI
Members of the Association ofthe Sacred Hearts of Je1;us andMary will have their first meeting fol' this season at 8 Thursdaynight, Oct. 20. Benediction andinduction of new members willprecede the regular meeting. Allladies of the parish are invited toattend. -ST. PATRICK,FALL RIVER
The Womein's Guild will hold'a rummage sale at the school thisSaturday. Mrs. Margaret Bubais in charge of arrangements. Acake sale ,is planned for SU'1day,Oct. 30. and a turkey bridge' a'ndwhist Thursday, Nov. 17.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,CENTRAL VILLAGE
The Ladies' Guild will hold itsregular meeting combined with.~ Halloween party at 8 tonightm the parish. hall. Members notin costume will, be fined. Mrs.Joseph, PerrY,-Mrs. Alston Potterand Mrs. Lynwood Potter are in .charge of refreshments.
The unit will hold. its membership tea at 2 Sunday af~rnoon
Oct. 16, also in the parish h.all:Mrs. John J. Mullaney, presidentof the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, will speak. Mrs.Casimire Bartkiewicz is chairman of the event, aided by Mrs.Terrence Mcqlyn and Mrs.Tobias .Flemming.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River':""Thurs., Oct. '13, 196016
"-' ,.
ST. ROCJ:,!FALL RIVER
The Women's Guild will holda turkey whist Saturday, Nov. 19,with proceeds to benefit the convent building fund. Mrs. ManuelJ. Soares is chairman.ST. LAWRENC~,NIEW BEDFORD
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lachapelle will be president coupleof the Couples Club for the com.ing year, aided by Mr. and ·Mrs.Francis Sheehan, vice-presidentcQuple; Mr. and Mrs. RichardEnos, treasurer couple; Mr. andMrs. Thomas Kelly Jr., recording secretary couple; Mr. andMrs. George Ponte, corresponding secretary couple.
Mr. artd Mrs. Domlld Sciscentoare chairmen for a Halloweendance planned for 8 Saturdaynight, Oct. 29 at WestportGrange.ST. MARY'S,NORTON
The Catholic Women's Clubwill meet at the high schoolMonday, Oct. 17 to hear an address by John F. Toomey of theFBI. A turkey whist is scheduledf9r November and the club's executive board will meet at II,Monday. Nov. 7.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,NEW' BEDFORD
New officers for the CouplesClub include Mr. and Mrs. V.Manuel Camara, 'presidents; Mr.and Mrs. Walter Espinola, vicepresidents; Mr. and Mrs. EdwardDuarte, treasurers; ·Mr. and Mrs..Joseph T. Ferreira, recordingsecretaries; Mr. and Mrs. JosephDarmofal, corresponding secretaries. The organization is starting its 10th year.ST. JOHN EVANGELlIS'll'.ATTLEBORO
The Mo ers' Club, with 250members, will hold.a cake sale'following Masses Sunday" Oct.30. A supper-dance 'will be heldlater iii the year.
It is announced that parents'may visit teachers any day at3:30 or the Sisters will receivetelephone calls after 6:30 anyevening.
Volunteers are neederf to assistthe work of the transportationcommittee. They may' contact.Mrs. Russell Dennen.SACRED HEART,NORTH ATTLEBORO
Plans are underway for thecelebration of the golden jubileeof Rf:v. Joseph S. ~arue, pastor,Sunday, Nov. 13. A general committee is formed of officers ofparish organizations, includingUnio:. St. Jean Baptis'te, Ste.Anne Sodality, Holy Nome Society, St. Vincent de P:ml Society,CYO, Junior Lellgue, Brownies,Cubs, -irl and Boy Scouts.ST. JOSEPH,ATILEBORO
Rev. Johri 'Berube, a La Salette missionary home from Madagascar will speak at the nextmeeting of the Holy Name Society scheduled for Sunday, Nov.13.
'Adelard Pelletier heads thecommittee that is formulatingplans for a testimonial for Rev.Henri Canuel, former assistantat the parish, and now administrator at St. Hyacinth's ChUl'ch,New Bedford.ST. MARY'S,NORTH ATTLEBORO
Mrs. Fred A. Thorpe is newlY-elected president of the Parish.Guild. Serving with her .will beMrs. George Glaiel, vice president; Mrs. Gerard Donnelly, sec-retary; Mrs. Edward Lavery,treasurer.
Next regular meeting will beat 8 Tuesday night, Oct. 18 inthe school cafeteria. Mrs. Eugene 'Fournier will be 'chairman forthe evening.ST. JAMES,NEW BEDFORD
Msgr. Noon Circle will meetWednesday night, Oct. 19 at St.James Church Hall, with Mrs.Leo J. Telesmanick presiding.Members may bring guests andentertainment will be provid~d
by the DeRossi Symphonic 01'erestra with Aldo DeRossi.
Mrs. John J. Connor and Mrs.Louis H. Cohoian will be ineh.arge of the social 'h.ollr. .aided.\))' a large committee.
ITurkey Bridge
The Parish Parade
"
o
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Holy See "UrgesLiturgy Tr~ining
For MigrantsvATICAN CITY (NC)
A Vatican letter has recommended special training forparticipation in the liturgy~o protect the faith and moralsof migr~nts.
The letter was written byDomenico Cardinal Tardini,Vatican Secretary of Siate" onbehalf of Pope John. It was addressed to Giuseppe CardinalSiri, Archbishop of Genoa and'president of the 33rd ItalianSocial Week meeting'in ReggioCalabria. The meeting's themewas "Internal and International
, Migration in Today's World."
Cardinal Tardini !1aid thatwhen a man leaves his nativeland for a strange country withstrange religious and social customs, he is often deprived of thereligious traditions which mightcomfort and protect him.
The Cardinal also said themigrant should try to adapthimself to his new environment.One of the best ways' to do thisis through the parish, the Cardinal added.
"In this sense the encounterin the liturgical action will acquire no little value if the migrant has been educated beforehand to know and live the authentic values of. the, religiouslife, individually and collectively," he wrote.
Cardinal Tardini said thatthere is an urgent need to bringup to date information /on theactual conditions of populationin dioceses and pariShes particularly subject to migration.This is needed, he said, to "define the adequate forms ofspiritual assistance .both for thepopulations of new pel'manentresidents and for seasonal andmigrant wo·rkers."
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W~LCOMEHOME: Rev. Thaddeus Bouhuysen, SS.CC.,center, pastor of the Sacred Hearts' Church, Fairhaven,home from a four-month visit to his native Holland, receivesa token of welcome from Maurice R. Hevey, committeetreasurer, in the presence of' Louis Rogissart, banquetchairman.
Higll Court Upsets Ruling CurbingFather's Role as Religious Guide
JACKSON (NC) :- The Mis- Catholicism, that the boys mustsissippi State. Supreme Court attend a Baptist church andunanimousiy has upset a lower must be enrolled in McCombcourt's ruling that a widower public hjgh school. 'wh? be:ame a, Catholic ha~ to. In upsetting this, the state'stram hIS two sons as Baptists, high court held that "the tratheir mother's religion. ditional machinery is adequate
The state's high court satd. to' the task of educating a childChancellor S.D. Hewitt of Pik,e and the court should not interCounty exceeded his authority fere with a parent's right in thisin preventing N.M. Faust of Mc- regard except to correct abuses
. Comb, Miss., from directing his or to protect a minor."sons' .religious discipline 'as he "Generally spe'aking," thesaw fit. court said, "courts have no au-
The 14 and 15 year old sons thority over that part of the'were born during Mr. Faust's child's training which consists infirst .marriage, when bolh' he religious d,iscipline."and his wife' were non-Catho- Family Basislies. His, wife died in 1953 and ' "Religious views," it added,Mr. ~aust becam~ a conve~t, "afford no grounds for deprivmarrymg a Cathohc woman 11\ ing a parent of custody and con1956. . trol. The family is the basis of
Appointed .legal guardian of' our society. .the b~Ys, he pla.nned to en~oll "The agencies of our demothem 1~1 St. StaOlsla~s.boardmg cratic government are obligateds:hool Ill,Bay .St. LO\lIS, a Ca~h~~ to preserve that right (of cushe school... HIS de~eased WIfe s tody by ,a parent) which is notparents obJected. recognized in a totalitarian so- ,
Parent's Right ciety." l
Chancery Judge Hewitt, in Mr. Faust said the two boy~ruling on an accounting of the have not been baptized. Duringyouths' property by Mr. Faust, the time he was ordered 'to sendadded that the' father could not them to a Baptist' church, theydirect his sons' upbringing in attended, Mass with him "on a
number of Sundays" and thenwent to a Baptist church, hesaid.Msgr. Dolan
Continued from Page Onenamed to that' parish in th~ fallof' 1935. Prior to his appointment, he was 'pastor, of Hol,..Family Church;' East Taunton.
'Ordained in'1912, he served as.curate at Sacred 'f!eort Church,Fall River, 'and during World
, War I as cha'piain in the 115thInfantry of the 29th Division,',both here a114 abroad,. Upon hisreturn, Msgr. Dol~n beca!"e 'dir:-
. ector of Bethlehem Home, chap::'lain at Taunton, St~te Hospitaland director of Taunton Catho-lic Cemeteries. ,
During his pastorate at Taun"ton',s mother Church, Msgr.
Dolan has been chaplain of the. ~merican Legion, anq trustee ofthe Taunton Public Library, andhas recently been appoin'ted tomembership in the Board ofDiocesan Consultors..
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Film Dramatic StoryOf IHoodlum Priest l
ST. LOUIS (NC)-The dramatic story of St. Louis' "hoodlum priest" will soon be featuredon the nation's movie screens'.,
A film of that title, starringHollywood actor Don Murray, isnow being shot here on locationfor United Artists release. Ittells the true story of FatherCharles Dismas Clark, S.J., andhis work to rehabilitate the livesand save the souis of convicts.
by the older brother, while theolder brother' rushes economic,aid to Tito and other countrieswhich might become Communist-dominated.
"There is a saying in SouthAmerica that 'One way to solveour economic plight would beto declare war' on the UnitedStates. They'll beat us,' thenthey'll support us.' ..
South Americans also resentthe fact that North Am'ericansseldom 'bother to learn theirlanguage before going to live inSouth American countries.
But notwithstanding the antiAmerican feeling, Father LawleI' said the South Americansare proud of and admire America and the Americans., "Theywere very sad," he explained,"when Russia launched Sput-'nik," the first world satellite.
But many South Americansare angry, the priest said, because much economic aid waSforthcoming from the UnitedStates during World War II andstopped immediately there'lfterin favor of Europe. He thought.there "is ,m over..;emphasis ontechnical aid from the UnitedStates to South America."
Although South America "is atinder box'" at the moment;Father Lawler said hp was surethe' countries would "rallyaround th'e United Stales" illthe event of the war a~ainst
Communism.'
Fall of LaosContinued from Page OM
troops in Sam Neua became untenable two days before its capture, when Pathet Lao forcesmounted artillery on 'a hilltopless than two miles from thetown.
Military targets were shelled,the American priest reported,but no civilian houses were hit.Believing they had, no chanceof help, the pro-Western' commanders then evacuated thetown, the priest said.
Father Bouchard arrived here. with thl'eeother Oblate priests:
Fathers Benjamin Rancoeur,Jacques Brix and Adriel\ Gail-
. lars,. all of France. There werealso two Canadians: BrotherOliver Dallaire, O.M.I., and:Claude Veronneau; a, laymanwho had donated his services asa carpenter to the Sam Neua.mission. Four French Oblatepl'iests remained at the mission.
Father Bouchard noted last'year that Catholics of the SamNeua area have remained steadfast in their Catholic Faith despite years of intensive commun-ist propaganda. ., He said this steadfastnesscould be attributed in part tothe,martyrdom of Father JosephTien, pro"vi[-;eel s only 'nativepriest. Father Tien was, killedby communists in April 1954, hesafd. '
Six Laotians accompanied themission group ,here. Three Filipinos'who'left Sam Neua at thesame time, two' doctors and a'dentist, could not keep up thepace on the march through thejungle and were captured bythe ,Pathet La<>, Father Bouchard
,reported.' "
Plans Sisterhood,
THE ANCHOR-Dio~ese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 13, 1960
Fathetr lawlor18
Whi,te' Masses
From One ParishWARSAW (NC) -Thel'e are
now 50 p iests living who arenati .s of " ~ingle parish insoutheastern Po) :d, ''.:ordingto Tygodnik Pawszechny, Cra- 'cow Catholic weekly. The parishof Zolynia, 'n ',", Diocese ofPrzemysl, has produced a ~arger
num bel' of priests tha11 any otherPolish parish.
Anti-American FeelingPossibly there is as much anti
American feeling as pro-Communist leaning in South America, Father Lawler warned. Hesaid Peruvians and other SouthAmericans "strongly resent" thelack of economic aid from thiscountx:y. "They feel they al'e ourlittle brothers," Father Lawlerdescribed it.. "They feel theyoung brother is being ignored
, Continued from Page OneNational Federation of CatholicPhysicians' Guilds, the ann~alMass to ho'nor their patron iscelebrated iil hospital chapels,parish churches and cathedrals.
Purpose of the guild 'is fulfillment of Catholic aims and idealsas they apply to those in the fieldof medicine. 'l;'he motivating influence is spiritual, supplyingfundamental principles of actionand providing the members withcOl,lnsel and 'moral guidance forth~ daily practice of their profession in the light of Ca1holicteaching.
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Hugh A. 'Gallagher, pastor of St. JamesChurch, is moderator of St.Luke's Guild of New Bedfor:l.Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, ge'neralmanager pf The Anchor, is moderator of the Fall Rive'r guild.
Officers of the New Bedfordguild are Dr. William S. Downey, president;' Dr. Archibald E.Senesac, vice-president; Dr.Robert W. Small, secretary, andDr. Ambrose F. Finnell,. treasurer.
Officers of St. Luke's Guild,Fall River are:' Dr. Francis J.D'Errico, president; Dr. Raymond A-. Dionne, vice president;Dr. Thomas F. Higgins, secretal'y- treasurer.,
Continued from Page One
knoll brothers. Another nun isin charge of parish social service. The school accommodates854 pupils and there will be1,000 when two more classes are'added in the primary grades.But only one-fifth of those children· wishing to attend Peru'sfirst parochial school can be accommodated, Father Lawlersaid.
The one-block area in Limathat houses, St. Rose's projectswas financed 60 per cent by the'20,000 parishioners, Father Lawler noted with pride. Other assistance came from the United
. States, he adged.Since St. Rose of Lima School
was started in 1950, nine other.parochial schools have been
, erected in that city. Priests noware encouraged to start parishbuilding with a school. Fath'erLawler's church was completedonly last June and dedicated byRichard Cardinal Cushing ofBoston oli Aug. 30, feast of St.Rose of I Lima, first canonizedsaint of the western hemisphere.
The great numbers of 'priestsbeing attracted to South American mission' work, the New Bedford priest said, are from theUnited States. Canada; Ireland,France, Sp'ain and Italy. Theircombined efforts, he thought,will encourage more native sonsto heed the call for vocations.About 50 per cent of the priestsnow serving in South Americaare foreign missionaries.
Father Lawler said that Peru,'as 'is the case "in all SouthAmerica," has had its share ofCommunist infiltration. He saidthe Communist' men ace isstronger in neighboiingBoliviawhere he was stationed after hisordination until 1950. He said'Red agents are working throughthe syndicates' (labor unions) 0)'mining, agriculture and sugarworkers and they are infiltrating in the institutions of higherlearning.
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Pontiff PromisesSpecial PrayersFor Para plegies
VATICAN CITY (NC)A group of 350 persons from21'countties so touched PopeJ'ohn that he promised tosay special prayers for them fora week. -
The group was composed ofparaplegics. Victims of paralysisof the lower halves of theirbodies, they had come to Rometo participate in the internationalparaplegic games.
Pope John gave them a specialaudience in the St. Damasus·courtyard of the Vatican. Stand-_ing on a balcony above them,he praised their spirit and theirrefusal to bow in the face oftheir handicaps.
Great ExamplesHe told them:"You have given a great ex
ample of what one can accomplish with an energetic soul notwithstanding impediments of thebody which would appear insUZ'mountable ••• You are aliving demonstration of the marvels that can be accomplishedwith. the virtue of energy, anecessary virtue of man, and allthe more necessary for theChristian."
After giving the assembledgroup his blesssing, the Popereceived a delegation of themled by Father Leo Close, Irish ..priest now attached to the Dun.,edin diocese in Australia andhimself a paraplegic. The Pontiffwas presented with two chalicesand a monstrance by the group.
.Pope John was drawn back tothe balcony by the loud cheers ofthe men in wheelchairs in thecourtyard below. Visibly moved,be spoke again to them andpromised to recite 10 Hail Marysdaily· for a week for their intentions.
TttE ANCHOR- 19Thurs., Oct. 13, 1960 '
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PLAN YOUTH WEEK: "Responsible Youth-America'sStrength," IS the theme of the 1960 American NationalCatholic Youth Week, Oct. 30 to Nov. 6. Taking time outfrom World Series play, Yogi (Lawrence Peter) Berra ofthe New York Yankees discusses plans with William J.Ricard, left, director of Youth Week celebration, andRichard N. Gilbert, director of public relations, YouthDepartment, N.C.W.C. NC Photo.
ORDER OF THE RISING SUN: CrowD. Prince Akihitoof Japan, in a ceremony at the Japanese Embassy in Washington, presents the decoration of the Grand Cordon of theOrder of the Rising Sun to Robert Murphy, a former Ambassador to Japan and former Under Deputy Secretary ofState. NC Photo.
Mighty Syracuse ExtendedBy Valiant Holy Cross
By Jack KineavyHats off to Dlr. Eddie Anderson and his valiant Crus
aders who distinguished themselves against powerfulSyracuse in a manner modestly emulating their illustriouspredecessors of '42 who committed carnage on a BostonCollege eleven that was only urday's tilt should be a close one.rated No.1 in the country. The third Bristol CountySyracuse also is ranked No. skirmish of the day finds North1 and while the similarity Attleboro at Taunton. Bothends there, the fact that so few teams have identical 1-2 seasonal
records and, oddly enough, 'eachwere able to contain SO many has defeated New Bedford Yokefor so long is in .itself remark- by the same 6-0 score. On theable. a six _ basis of comparative records thistouchdown un- would point to an ideal match.derdog, Hoi y In other action involvingCross actually County schools, Fairhaven trav-led the Orange els to Barnstable and Dartmouthat the half 6-0, is at home to Dennis-Yarmouth.n lead that it Again parallel situations face theheld well into respective home clubs, each ofthe third period. which is striving for its first win
The final score of the season. Fairhaven's markmight well have is 1-2 but Dennis-Yarmouth isbeen 7-6 instead of 15-6, if in the unbeaten in three games.final seconds Holy Cross had Making the longest jaunt ofbeen content to play conserva- the day are the Crimson of Newtively. . The second Syracuse Bedford who are scheduled to gotouchdown came with but eleven after win No.4 at West Spring-seconds remaining and·was anti- field. The Walers passed· their ....Iasser GO·vernment Opposes Redsclimatic to say the least. first major test of the current I~
A standout among the Purple campaign by defeating hitherto B tAt C · t H Iheroes was end Bob Hargraves, undefeated Class A Saugus, 12-0. U eeep S ommunls e pformer Durfee three-sport star. Tempering the elation of the CAIRO (NC) - President Aid from U. S.He and Jack Fellin, a junior moment, however, was the news Gamal Abdel Nasser of the "We extended our hand to thefrom the Bronx,N. Y., were that sophomore flash Paul Man- United Arab Republic has no use United States and the Sovietcredited with stopping the deville would be lost to the team for Communism~ He has no use Union and expressed to them ourvaunted Syracuse attack to the for the rest of the season as a for Arab communists. desire for cooperation," he said.outside, thereby limiting the result of a broken right ankle But he does have use for com- "The hand we extended to theOrange to 163 yards on the sustained in the waning minutes munists of other countries and, Soviet Union was received with·ground; they had been averaging of the game. in particular, for the aid that a warm response ... :rhe handover 400. Tri-Conferenee communist governments offer we extended to the Umted States
Coyle-Attleboro A couple of major contests .him. . for cooperation iid not receiveMonsignor Coyle ·High, unde- spice the weekend activity in .. the desired response ... Amer-
feated in three starts, gets back the Tri - County. Conferen·ce. No ~o~mumst party IS a~lowed lean policy in our area foundinto Bristol County competition· Dighton-Rehoboth Regional, tied to eXIst 10 Egypt or SyrIa, the itself at sea, achieving no purat Attleboro on Saturday after with Wareham and Somerset at ~orthern and. Southern Prov- pose beyond its connection withsuccessful forays to Stoughton 2-0 for the league leadership, has I?ces of the ~mted Ar~b Repub- imperialism, Zionism and certainand Warwick, ::to I. on consecu- a chance to dissolve the deadlock bc. (No polItical partIes of any stooges and reactionaries."tive weekends. The meeting at Swansea. The Lions came back ~dnd ex.ist in the~.) No Arab c~t- The United Arab Republic re-
Izen may publIsh communIst. ..brings together the 1959 Class C fast Saturday to overtake Fal- 1't t . thO t celves substantIal aId from thechampions and the host Jewelers, mouth, 20-12, while Case was I era ure 10 IS coun rYe U. S. But it receives far morewho, as runnersup last year, lost breaking into the win column by But the Soviet embassy pub- from the Soviet Union.only one game and that to Coyle, a 14-0 score at Franklin. . Lhes an illustrated propaganda It is a common belief here that12.,;0. Defending champion Somerset journal in Arabic here. Com- if President Nasser's efforts to
Attleboro, victors over Taun- travels to Falmouth for what munist lite~ature ~n English S?d develop a prosperous, contentedton and Fairhaven after ·an initial should be one of the better ball French-pr1Oted 10 the SovIet country fail a communist regimeloss to Durfee, has apparently games of the day. The Raiders Union, China and North Korea- wili follow. 'Therefore success forjelled under new coach Jim, ·eked out an 8-6 victory in .last is displayed on nearly every him according to this view willCassidy and is expected to pro- year's meeting between the newsstand .along the principal. be 'a defeat for commu~ism.vide the Warriors with their schools and it is anticipated that streets. . Hence he is endeavoring, instiffest competition to date. The Saturday's game may be an An advertisement in the gov- effect, to use communist aid toJewelers were the last team to equally close affair. Falmouth. ernment - controlled Egyptian develop a bulwark against comdefeat Coyle, as a matter of fact. must win to stay in' contention; Gazette says: "If you wish to munism.It was in 1958 and the score read Somerset needs the nod to keep know all about life in Korea, theM a n "7 wonder however20.,.14., ,pace. miseries in the south and the whether the Soviet Union and
Durfee High, undefeated In Wareham puts its undefeated atrocities committed by ,the other c~mniunist states will letthree starts, will seek to solidify record on the, line Saturday Americans, read the Korean their cooperation be used toits position atop the Bristol when the Blue 'will be 'at home magazines ... which arrive reg- serve this end.County standings at the expense to Middleboro· in a non-league· ularly .in the U.A,R. On sale atof an in-and-out New Bedford . tussle. Mansfield, defending D all newspaper booths."Vocational team. The Trade was titlist, loser to ,Oliver Ames the The magazines arrive fromupset by North Attleboro last last time out, has a date at Can- .. Pyongyang, communist capital ofSaturday"6-0, its second loss of;". ton, 12-0 victor over Foxboro on North Korea and are sold at lowthe season against one win. : Saturday. The loss was the Hor,. prices that must be much less
The Hilltoppers, meanwhile, nets' first since the 1958 season. than the cost of production andwere manhandling Dartmouth, . Ames, undefeated in three shipment.40-8. Of some consolation to the starts is ·at Ayer on Saturday.Green was the fact that they MaI:tha's Vineyard goes to President Nasser, one of thewere the first to cross the Durfee Provincetown. Apponequet meets leaders in the Afro-Asian group,goalline this year. The 1959 Dur_ . ·Franklin and Nantucket will be has made' it clear thst he vefee-Voke, clash was a one-sided at home to the Tabor Academy hemently dislikes communism.aa..a victol7 for the Trade. Sat-, Jtl7vees. . However, at the opening of the
National Union Congress here,he spoke in warm praise of theSoviet Union and, with a qualified tribute to the American'attitude during the Suez crisis,'in sharp criticism of the Unitedstates. '
20 THE.ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 13', 1960
.....
DIAMOND .JIJHI LEE i St. Louis parish, Fall River, is celebrating itsdiamond jubilee this month under: direction of. Rev.. Thomas F.Walsh(left), past9r arid Rev. Ed..yard J.'Burns,.ctirate:Center, Joseph A ~arks,
parish pioneer; who ,will·recal.l early days at-Jubiiee program to be held'
Sunday, Oct. 23. Right, first graders in St. Louis school are amongyoungest 'members of parish. Sister Mary Brian, R.S.lVi'. is teacher. Sistersof Mercy' have. taught at school since its op~ning in 1905.
. .. ! . .
Memories of·75··Y~'ars to. Highlig~tAnniYersary. Celebration of St, Lou.is Parish, Fall River
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Next year's calendar will feature the last confirmation' clasS',
'said Father Walsh.. Groups active in' ·the' parish,as St. Louis starts its second 75'years, are the Women's Guild,Confraternity of Christian Mothers, Holy Nal11e Society, St. Vincent de Paul, CYO, senior andjunior, choirs. Junior DramaticClub, Altar' Boys' society andDiscussion Club.
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ney. From 1931 to 1941, ,-Rev·..Thomas E.. Trainor guided parish destil:lies, and from 1941 to1956, Rev. Felix S.··Childs, nowpastor of Sacred Heart Church,:Fall River. Father Walsh hasbeen pastor since 1956.
S1. Louis is a hospitable parish. Its hiill- is frequently loanedto outside organizations and toparishes without adequate facilities of their own. It is proudof its history-just now SundayMassgoers are being entranced Franciscan Collegeby a' display ,of photographs in Gets. federal Loanthe church vestibule taken atvarious times 'in the past 75 _ WASHINGTON (NC) -' Theyears and depicting church College of Steubenville, Ohio.groups and activities of yore. has been granted a $900,,000,The photo display will be a. housing loan from the Federal
highlight of the jubilee observ- ' Housing and flome Agency to.ance, said Father Walsh. build two dormitories.
Another 'tradition .dear to The college, which has 426parishioners .is St.Louis' y'early ,students, is operated by the,calendar, featuring a photograph Franciiscans of the Third Orderof a scene or event of parochiaiinterest: Regular. It has a housing short-
One year the c~l(mdar showed age so acute all nonresidents of, ,Steu bellville are being refused
a Wedding, in the church, an-''other a 'First Mass. 'A popular: admission, the, Federal agency
said.'choice w~s a photo of the en-tire stud'ent ,body of St, Louis'school, captioned "The Chris'Han Nursery for St. LouisChurch." This year the photo'graph is of the church itself,simply titled, "Lo, She Stands!Her Diamond Jubilee."
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.McNulty" now of' Providence, ,of people came ,from all dlrec
.first'to be baptized in the parish, tton's early in the afternoon, and·Jtme 1, 1885.' Another "firse' evel'y. Catholic parish in the citywill be Thomas Fallon, a retired 'were presented' (sic), ,all the
.Fall River' policeman. He was :churches havipg postponed theirthe first boy to be baptized in usual afternoon services until
.St. Louis Church itself, after evening to give the people an,parishioners move from a 'opportunity to attend.",thread mill on Division Street ' Further Progresswhere Mass' was celebrated'dur- , May 11, 1890, St. Louis Churching the first years. . was dedicated 'by Bishop Har-
Some 15 residents of the Cath- 'kins of Providence. In 1896oUc Memorial Home will be Father James J. Fogarty suctransported to St. Louis for the ceeded Father Deady, and thisjubilee day, said Father Walsh. 'second pastor bent his 'effortsHe has sent personal invitations toward the erection of a school.to as many additional oldtimers St. Louis school was comple'tedas he has been able to locate. in 1905 and staffed by four Sis\ The story of St. Louis padsh ters of Mercy.
.began ,in 1885 when Bishop One, Sister Mary Gertrude,Hendricken of Providence es- - still survive~ and is now at Mt.tablished it ill what had been St. Mary Convent, where thethe western section of St. Mary's Sisters serving St. Louis schoolCathedral parish.' have always resided.'She is cur-
Rev. Louis J. Deady was first rently engaged in special repastor, servin'g from 1885 until -search on the history ,of the Sis1896. He' gave his name ·to· the 'ters of Mercy in ,the Fall Rivernew church, for which the cor- Diocese. ' '
,nerstone was hiid oct. 18, 1885.' At present. 'said Father Walsh,A newspaper'acco'unt desCribes' there are 288 children in, the
, the cornerstone laying ceremony ·school, which has a' pre-primaryas attracting' nearly' 10,000 section and eight grades.people "the largest crow'd which Social life has always beenever gathered at a sinlilar oC-active at St. Louis and amongcasion in this city ••• Crowds cherished memories 'of veteran
'members is the parish bowling·alley. '
'F.ollowing Father Fogarty, St.Louis was served from '1913 to1931 by Rev. Timothy P. Swee-
ST.LOUIS qluaCH." F~LL,JlIYER·
Continued from Page· OneMary' Gorgirie, R.S.M.' is incharge of the .production. '.' .'~
Theme 9£ "Memories"Also to be highlighted is an
address by Joseph Parks, a' par'ish pioneer.' Now a resident atthe Catholic Memorial Home,Mr. Parks was supervisor ofcatechism classes in ,.", earlydays of St. Louis. So invaluablewas his assistance that he wasknown as "the second curate."
FoUowing Mr. Parks' address,the second section of t!le program will present "Memoirs ofSt. Patrick's Shows." For manyyears, said· Father Walsh, theparish was famous for jts Irishentertainments e a c h March.Old timers will', enjoy the recreation' of those events, to befollowe'd by refreshments and asocial hour.:'
The a'fterno6n will end withceIebrati'on of Solemn Benediction iri.' 'the church by BishopJames J: ,'Gerrard, and the jubilee observance Will close. the,next morning with a Mass for',the rep,ose of the souls of thedeceased of the parish. '
, Pioneers to Come ,. Among special guests at the
observance will be John William