01.09.58

20
v .\t/ .. ,·II ....'.RI'\ ,"1 ; ) ( The ( ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul. Sure and fi'inn-ST. PAUL Fall River, Mass. Thursday, Jan. 9; 1958 Claea Mail Privilege8 PRICE 10. Yol. 2, No.2 at Fan River. Massr $4.00 per Year New Bedford Maryknoller Describes Parish in Father Charles A.'Murray , of churches, but no priests to man them. That's the paradoxical situation existing throughout, Latin Amer- ica, according to Father Charles A. Murray, Maryknoll mis- .ioner currently on leave from his mission assignment in Azangaro, Peru. Father Murray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Murray, 11 Chest- imt Street, New Bedford, d.escribes his parish, Our Lady of the Assumption,) as numbering 30,000' souls and covering an area of hundreds of square T(liles. "It takes three and a half hours to drive from end to end of my parish," he explains, but hastens to add that the travel is fairly slow because there are 810 paved roads. Our Lady of the Assumption, with four Maryknoll priests sta- tioned at it, is considered un- believably fortunate by the parishes surrounding it, not one .t which has a resident priest, although all boast numerous ehurch buildings and chapels. The Spanish conquistadores of Turn to Page Eleven FATHER MURRAY Fam. -Iy L.-fe Bureau Plans 12. Cana Co nferences , A series of Cana Conferences for married cOJ.1ples has ,,'the.practiceof families kneeling been arranged for January and February in,:such. widely' together side by side at theCom-' sp aced areas of the Diocese as South Attleboro and Nan- ,munionrail to receive the , of Our Blessed Lord 'that the wcket Island. . : ' , . " ideals of the, Holy Family of, In all, there will be twelve theIr o.f mar- .: Nazareth 'may permeate all eonferences during these two . nage and to hve to It more ilies.' , th mon S'. Many people are familiar with the Pre-Cana Conferences which give engaged couples a eomplete immediate preparation for marriage. , Now many married couples are calling .lor more and more Cana Conferences which aim to help them understand more com- television film ser,ies on Janu- ary 12. Entitled "The City of Faith," the film is the second in the four-part series coproduced by the National Broadcasting Com- pany the National Council of Catholic Men. ' The film will be shown over the NBC-TV network at 1:30 P. M., EST. Itwill illustrate how the Christian basilicas were built on the ruins of pagan temples and took their form from the classical R01Ran basilica. The "Rome Eternal" series was filmed in Rome by NBC and the t • NCCM after more tlian a year of planning. The final two' films, depicting Renaissance Rome and 20th-Century Rome, will be shown on January 19 and 26, respectively. Meeting Tonight A "development program" for POPE PRAISES UNITY OCTAVE: Personally auto- the coming year will be dis- tf; graphed letter from His Holiness told Atonement Friars of . cussed at an adult advisors' Graymoor, New.York, of the Pontiff's wish that the Chair meeting scheduled for tonight of Unity Octave should spread more widely than ever by members of the New Bedford throughout the world. His Holiness wrote the letter on CYO. Atty. Alfred Gomes and occasion of the golden jubilee of the movement which Mrs. George Rathmyer, secre- fully. ' One of the most 'frequently , heard comments bythepateiltS' Rome Basilicas of those who attend the Pre- ", ' " , . Cana Conferences has ,been: "I, F ,'t' 'd' TV wish we had those' talk's when ea .ure on I was getting Jllarried." Cana NEW YORK (NC) - Ten of Conferences provide the Rome's great ,basilicas, with It is not surprising to find hus- their priceless Middle Age mo- bands' and wives who have been saics and marble work, will be' Turn to Page Nineteen featured on the "Rome Eternal" Bishop Lauds Friendship At Charity Ball Last Night· From every corner of the Diocese hundreds converged last night upon Lincoln Park's Million Dollar Ballroom for the social event of the winter, the third annual Bishop's Charity Ball. Soft lights, tasteful decorations, and the encJ:1anting strains'of Lester Lanin's world-famous orchestra combined to make an unforgettable evening for the formally clad guests, whose evening wear added to the picturesque beauty of the occasion. The Most Reverend Bishop headed a long list of distin- guished guests that included Mayor and Mrs. John M. Arruda of Fall River and and Mrs. Francis J. Lawler of New Bedford. The -Grand March was led ,by, Mr. and Mrs.' Emmett P. Almond of So: :Dartmouth, the Mayors of Fall River and New , Bedford and their wives, Mr. and Mrs. H. Frank Reilly, follo'Yed \ by the area· presidents of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and the Society _ of St. Vincent de Paul. , Turn to Page Twent,. Holy Family Is Model for All ',:Bishop James L. Connolly, D.D: of the, Diocese of Fall River announces the observ- of the' Church's Feast' of the Holy' Family' of Jesus, Mary and Joseph next Sunday. Families in the Diocese are asked 'to receive Holy Communion as family units in their parishes. The veneration and' imitation of the Holy Family of Nazareth is urged for' al,l families on this . great feast anc:t' throughout the year . Family unity is needed since many forces of evil are at work w destroy, family life, the bul- wark of American life. The 'reason for the observance of this feast is. to bring Christ into the home .and thereby de- velop an atmosphere of harmony and peace in family. . Pope Pius XII has pleaded for MOST REVEREND JAMES L. CONNOLLY, B.D. Sis.ter to Conduct Course For Teachers of Religion , On Feb. 1 in Taunton the Most Rev. Bishop is sponsoring a Confraternity of Christian Doctrine Teacher Training Course to prepare laymen and laywomen of the FalhRiver Diocese to assist the Priests and Sisters in the work of teaching , , Christian Doctrine. Classes will be held each Satur':' Bishop Connolly' has in- day afternoon from 2 to 3:51 .. . Ch I P. M. in the auditorium of St. vlted ,SIster MarIe ar es Joseph's School Sheridan Street, of the Mission Helpers of Taunton.' , the Sacred Heart of Boston to Sister Marie Charles who will conduct· the course. It is hoped teach the eourse' has 'had wicte that the parishes will enroll as experience . in ' Confraternit,. 'many as possible of their. teach- work: ,Sister has been a lecturer ,ers of religion and prospective Hi religious education at the teachers in 'the teacher-training Catholic University of America institute. '" for five years as well as in nu- 'The 15-week course in meth- merous teacher-training colleges. ods of teaching religion' will She has also been associated begin at 2 P. M. on Saturday,' with the radio arid TV'aposto- Feb. 1; it' was announced this the Archdioceses of New week by Rev. Joseph L. Powers,' York, Baltimore and WashinlJ- diocesan director of' the Confra-- ton, D. C. ' ternity of,:Christian' Doctrine. Turn to Pace Twenl:r Announce Transfer of Two Priests The Chance'ry Office has an- nounced the transfers of, two priests who begin their duties at their new parishes today. Rev. John A. Rossley has been transferred 'from assistant. at St. James Church, New Bedford, to assistant at Immaculate Concep- tion Church, North Easton. Rev. Colum McSweeney has beeQ transferred from assistant at Sacred Heart Church, Fall River, to assistant at St. Mary's Chureb, Norton. Father Rossley, the oldest of nine children, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor A. Rossley of St. John, New Brunswick. He was educated at St. Joseph's University, New Brunswick, and completed his Philosophical and Theological studies at the Grand Seminary, Montreal. He was Turn to Page Fourteen - \ -', began with Graymoor'a founder, Father Paul, in 1908. tary, will be in charge. FATHER McSWEENEY FATHER ROSSLEY i,FamilyCommunion Sunday Jan.12 J'"e' , .# ., •. i .... .. !t .... n- .

description

eonferences during these two . nage and to hve ~p to It more ilies.' POPE PRAISES UNITY OCTAVE: Personally auto­ to make an unforgettable evening for the formally clad guests, whose evening wear added to the picturesque ',:Bishop James L. Connolly, D.D: of the, Diocese of Fall River announces the observ­ an~e of the' Church's Feast' tf; graphed letter from His Holiness told Atonement Friars of .cussed at an adult advisors' ,ers of religion and prospective Hi religious education at the ,"1 t

Transcript of 01.09.58

Page 1: 01.09.58

v .\t/ .. ,·II ....'.RI'\

,"1 ; )(

The (

ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul. Sure and fi'inn-ST. PAUL

Fall River, Mass. Thursday, Jan. 9; 1958

S~ond Claea Mail Privilege8 PRICE 10.Yol. 2, No.2 ~uthorized at Fan River. Massr $4.00 per Year

New Bedford Maryknoller Describes Parish in ~Peru

Father Charles A.'Murray , ~lenty of churches, but no priests to man them. That's

the paradoxical situation existing throughout, Latin Amer­ica, according to Father Charles A. Murray, Maryknoll mis­.ioner currently on hom~ leave from his mission assignment in Azangaro, Peru. Father Murray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Murray, 11 Chest­imt Street, New Bedford, d.escribes his parish, Our Lady of the Assumption,) as numbering 30,000' souls and covering an area of hundreds of square T(liles.

"It takes three and a half hours to drive from end to end of my parish," he explains, but hastens to add that the travel is fairly slow because there are 810 paved roads.

Our Lady of the Assumption, with four Maryknoll priests sta­tioned at it, is considered un­believably fortunate by the parishes surrounding it, not one .t which has a resident priest, although all boast numerous ehurch buildings and chapels. The Spanish conquistadores of

Turn to Page Eleven FATHER MURRAY

Fam.-Iy L.-fe Bureau Plans 12. Cana Conferences

, A series of Cana Conferences for married cOJ.1ples has ,,'the.practiceof families kneeling

been arranged for January and February in,:such. widely' together side by side at theCom-' spaced areas of the Diocese as South Attleboro and Nan- ,munionrail to receive the gra~es

, • of Our Blessed Lord 'that the wcket Island. . : ' , . " ideals of the, Holy Family of,

In all, there will be twelve p~etely theIr ~ocatlon o.f mar- .:Nazareth 'may permeate all £8m~ eonferences during these two . nage and to hve ~p to It more ilies.' ,

thmon S'. Many people are familiar

with the Pre-Cana Conferences which give engaged couples a eomplete immediate preparation for marriage. ,

Now many married couples are calling .lor more and more Cana Conferences which aim to help them understand more com­

television film ser,ies on Janu­ary 12.

Entitled "The City of Faith," the film is the second in the four-part series coproduced by the National Broadcasting Com­pany an~ the National Council of Catholic Men. '

The film will be shown over the NBC-TV network at 1:30 P. M., EST. Itwill illustrate how the Christian basilicas were built on the ruins of pagan temples and took their form from the classical R01Ran basilica.

The "Rome Eternal" series was filmed in Rome by NBC and thet

• NCCM after more tlian a year of planning. The final two' films, depicting Renaissance Rome and 20th-Century Rome, will be shown on January 19 and 26, respectively.

Meeting Tonight A "development program" for

POPE PRAISES UNITY OCTAVE: Personally auto­ the coming year will be dis­tf; graphed letter from His Holiness told Atonement Friars of . cussed at an adult advisors'

Graymoor, New.York, of the Pontiff's wish that the Chair meeting scheduled for tonight of Unity Octave should spread more widely than ever by members of the New Bedford throughout the world. His Holiness wrote the letter on CYO. Atty. Alfred Gomes and ~he occasion of the golden jubilee of the movement which Mrs. George Rathmyer, secre­

fully. ' One of the most 'frequently ,

heard comments bythepateiltS' Rome Basilicas of those who attend the Pre- ", ' " , . Cana Conferences has ,been: "I, F ,'t' 'd' TV wish we had those' talk's when ea .ure on I was getting Jllarried." Cana NEW YORK (NC) - Ten of Conferences provide the an~wer. Rome's great ,basilicas, with

It is not surprising to find hus- their priceless Middle Age mo­bands' and wives who have been saics and marble work, will be'

Turn to Page Nineteen featured on the "Rome Eternal"

Bishop Lauds Friendship At Charity Ball Last Night·

From every corner of the Diocese hundreds converged last night upon Lincoln Park's Million Dollar Ballroom for the ~utstanding social event of the winter, the third annual Bishop's Charity Ball. Soft lights, tasteful decorations, and the encJ:1anting strains' of Lester Lanin's world-famous orchestra combined to make an unforgettable evening for the formally clad guests, whose evening wear added to the picturesque beauty of the occasion.

The Most Reverend Bishop headed a long list of distin­guished guests that included Mayor and Mrs. John M. Arruda of Fall River and Ma~'or and Mrs. Francis J. Lawler of New Bedford. The -Grand March was led ,by, Mr. and Mrs.' Emmett P. Almond of So: :Dartmouth, the Mayors of Fall River and New

, Bedford and their wives, Mr. and Mrs. H. Frank Reilly, follo'Yed \ by the area· presidents of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and the Society _of St. Vincent de Paul. ,

Turn to Page Twent,.

Holy Family Is Model for All ',:Bishop James L. Connolly, D.D: of the, Diocese of Fall River announces the observ­an~e of the' Church's Feast' of the Holy' Family' of Jesus, Mary and Joseph next Sunday. Families in the Diocese are asked 'to receive Holy Communion as family units in their parishes.

The veneration and' imitation of the Holy Family of Nazareth is urged for' al,l families on this

. great feast anc:t' throughout the year.

Family unity is needed since many forces of evil are at work w destroy, family life, the bul­wark of American life.

The 'reason for the observance

of this feast is. to bring Christinto the home .and thereby de­velop an atmosphere of harmony and peace in t~e family. . Pope Pius XII has pleaded for

MOST REVEREND JAMES L. CONNOLLY, B.D.

Sis.ter to Conduct Course For Teachers of Religion , On Feb. 1 in Taunton the Most Rev. Bishop is sponsoring a

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine Teacher Training Course to prepare laymen and laywomen of the FalhRiver Diocese to assist the Priests and Sisters in the work of teaching ,

,Christian Doctrine. Classes will be held each Satur':' Bishop Connolly' has in- day afternoon from 2 to 3:51 .. . Ch I P. M. in the auditorium of St.

vlted ,SIster MarIe ar es Joseph's School Sheridan Street, of the Mission Helpers of Taunton.' , the Sacred Heart of Boston to Sister Marie Charles who will conduct· the course. It is hoped teach the eourse' has 'had wicte that the parishes will enroll as experience . in ' Confraternit,.

'many as possible of their. teach- work: ,Sister has been a lecturer ,ers of religion and prospective Hi religious education at the teachers in 'the teacher-training Catholic University of America institute. '" for five years as well as in nu­'The 15-week course in meth- merous teacher-training colleges.

ods of teaching religion' will She has also been associated begin at 2 P. M. on Saturday,' with the radio arid TV'aposto­Feb. 1; it' was announced this lateo~ the Archdioceses of New week by Rev. Joseph L. Powers,' York, Baltimore and WashinlJ­diocesan director of' the Confra-- ton, D. C. ' ternity of,:Christian' Doctrine. Turn to Pace Twenl:r

Announce Transfer of Two Priests The Chance'ry Office has an­

nounced the transfers of, two priests who begin their duties at their new parishes today.

Rev. John A. Rossley has been transferred 'from assistant. at St. James Church, New Bedford, to assistant at Immaculate Concep­tion Church, North Easton.

Rev. Colum McSweeney has beeQ transferred from assistant at Sacred Heart Church, Fall River,

to assistant at St. Mary's Chureb, Norton.

Father Rossley, the oldest of nine children, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor A. Rossley of St. John, New Brunswick. He was educated at St. Joseph's University, New Brunswick, and completed his Philosophical and Theological studies at the Grand Seminary, Montreal. He was

Turn to Page Fourteen

-\ -', began with Graymoor'a founder, Father Paul, in 1908. tary, will be in charge. FATHER McSWEENEY FATHER ROSSLEY

i,Family Communion Sunday Jan.12 J'"e' , •

• .# ., •. ~ i....

• .~., .. ·.~l~"· !t .... 1· J;lf""~n­.;~'''.'~. .-.~

Page 2: 01.09.58

I

Judge Mullaney Named Committee Chair,man of Stonehill C~mpaign

Rev. James J. Sheehan, C.S.C., Chairman of the $325,000 Family Division of Stonehill College D eve lop men t Fund which launches its campaign in mid­January, has announced the names of his campaign.chairmen arid their 'committee objectives.

. The $325,000 will be used' to construct, furnish ar-d equip the n'ew' Student Center now being built: '.

Probate court Judge Beatrice Hancock Mullaney .0fFall River is chairman of the Parents' group with the largest quo.ta in thE; campaign, $175,000. Judge Mul­laney's COl1lmittee will seek this sum from' Alumni parents, as well as parents of the current student body to: underwrite the Center's' new kitchen and stu­dents' dining hall. Augusi~s Sullivan of stough­

ton has the next largest goal- JUDGE ~EATRICE MULLANEY and'is seeking $68,875 from col- an estimated cost of $2,000. Dr. lege suppliers. Rev. James V. John j ..Reedy· of North Easton Lowery, C.S.C. is chairman of is in charge of the faculty cam-, the Stonehill Alumni with the paign to raise $2,125 to furnish assignment' of raising $32,000 to the new faculty dining room. provide the students' lounge. A $25,000 project. has .beenun~ Rev.·Ernest P. Royal, C.S.C. will dertaken by the 200 women. eeek $5,000' from relatives and· members of Stonehill' College friends of Stonehill priests and Guild under the chairmanship brothers. Some $i2,000 will come' ot'Mrs. Leo Welsh of Whitman, from college clubs, stu.d~nts and_ Guild ·president. The funds will student activity as a memorial be used to underwrit'e' and stock to deceased college students~ un- the new bookstore. House moth­der the direction of Rev. Wil- ers will seek ,$3,000 to 'provide tam J. Gartland, C:S.C. a coat room with Miss Helen ".: ',. Other' projects' " " Derby of North Easton heac:iing

"Miss ':8: ,Anne Thom,as of Taun- .thE;: solicitation.' , ., . .' ..' ton is chairman' of Sionehill staff TheStonehill College Devel-" membe'rs 'who will underwrite opment Fund is directed by Rev. furnishings :and equipment of an Thomas C. Duffy,. C.S.C. with office and cOllference room at headquartersat·the college. <,

K'nig.h ts of ·the .A~ t~ r:O~ga niZ(it;'i~~ Establ'ished ,in Fall'·River ' P,arish ,,':

\0- • '. " ',',. . ~

'. 'Knights of the Altar pins were blessed and presented·at impres'-' sive ceremonies to 20 altar boys of the Santo Christo Church, Fall River,' by their pastor, Rev. Francisco C. Bettencourt, as­sisted by Dr. RaymondR. Costa and Dr. Joseph' C, Carvalho, members of, the sponsoring Fall River Serra Club. Seated in the sanctuary during the ceremonies were Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, chaplain of the Serra Club. and Rev. Daniel, L. 'Freitas, assistant at the Santo Christo Church. . The, Rev: Anthony M. Gomes.

of 'Santo Christo Churcli, who addres,s~~ the 'boys,. thei~.,fam­ilies, members of the Serr.a <?lub and a large number of parIShlOn­ers arid friends .expl~i.r¢d the

.program, stating that it is the first in Fall Ri¥e,r ..~ponsored by ­'the S,e.rr?-n.s/~~·dth~t.i~:~~P,9p~d all churc;i:les .'Yoill tak~up:th«:-,p,ro­gr~lll,. ;H~ ad~e~.t~at.!~e ~.ntgh~s of the4'lta~: I~~. n.a~.lon,wl~e.'Qr­ganization/,of"b,oys"'wno'serve Our' Blessed Lord af His Altar.'

2 Helps Solve Proble~s . During his. talk. Father Gomes

noted that the program was o~­. gaj1ized in Septeml:>~r, 1938, in re~ponse to' many requests from priests, brothers. and nuns· who felt th'e need of an organization th'at wo'uld' aid them ill solvingU\e many' problems';they en­cdunter from ijme to time in di~ectin#h~~.a'i.iail;>oy: ~ ¥Si!,!ty. He . adc:ied' that ·the.:5erradi:lub oflfal\ 'River: has ~'~-itS 'l?hi~arr '... Gilbert' C. Oliveira purp?se , th~ }<?sterir-gpf'.;~"oCa­tions to .the religious, 'life.. 'Since

. the altar boys "conStitute a nor­mal, pr:imary source .of vocations, the Serrans are sponsoring this prpgram in c,onjunctioI1 with the nationwide Knights of the Altar. ....' ,

FORTY HOURS DEVOT'ON

',' ". '. 'THE. A.HCROR ' ... ·IecOJid':")a" mail privil"lretl autborised

at .Fall River, 'Mass.' Published every'Tl,ursday at 410 'Hiehland'· Avenue,' ,Fall RiM.' Malia., by' tIM. Catholie Pre... 0' 'the DiOee8~ 'of Fall River. Sub8eriptioll- priM.". _il,' _tpaicl ...00 per I'eu.... '.

., . It-ISURANCE'

APPRAISER

" O., .' REA~TOR

.-.' " •

organization. Father Gomes out­lined the, purpose, of the program and the qualifications of the altar boy.

..The initiation of each acolyte consisted in the presentation of the altar pin and the recitation of the Knights of the Altar pledge,

The ceremony terminated with .Benediction of. the Blessed Sac': rament followed by a buffet hincheon in the church' base­ment., 'M~mbers of the newly organ­

ized society include' Raymond' R. Costa Edward Pereira Man-­uel R.Rebello Antone Cabral Frederick C~mpos,. Georg~ Sousa, William Sousa,' Daniel Rua Robert Pacheco and Janu.­ario''Sil~a. .' ") .' • Also Leslie 'Pereira Stephen

Faria .Oiive·riO'Couto 'Bartholo­,n~u M:Oniz,Edw~rd'§alsa, 'K~!'1­neth .Amaral Donald CQsta .An­tonio"Riz~rides, Aires Serp~,imd Michael Olive,ira.

" '.... ' .... '

2 - -THE ANCHOR Thurs;, Jan. 9, 1958'

Knights Sponsor Trappist Film

. Bishop C1)ssidy Council, #3669, Knights of Columbus, Swansea:­

. Somerset, is sponsoring the showing of a film in color on' the Trappists Monks at 2 o'clock next Sunday . afternoon in the

- Council's new home,on. Milford Road, Swansea. '

The film shows many aspects of the' Monks' life never before photographed, including the building of a monastery and a Trappist's burial. The bac~­

ground music is an actual re­cording of the beautiful chanting of the Monks. , .

Vin Andrews has spent' years filming the Monks' life' at his own expen~e. At the end of each showing he takes up a collection

, for'the Monks. All who contrib­ut~ are considered as founders of the new monastery' and ;will share in the p~ayers and good ­works..' ,

. The public is cordially invited.

Mass Ordo .'

SERRA CLUB AT SANTO 'CHRISTO: Rev. Fran~is~o. C.Bettencourt, pastor of Santo Christo Church, Fall River, blesses Knights of the Altar Medals which he then dis.. tributed to altar boys' with the assistance of Dr. Joseph' C; Carvalho and Dr. Raymond R. Costa of the 'Serra Club Alta~ Boy Committee. '

Judge Bench

Thomas F. Monaghan ·Jr..

Treasurer

-142 SECOND STREET

AS~NE:~:.FOR EIGHT' C~Ntui.iIES: '.An: elderly Italian labOrer revently' kisses, the. rig,ht foot of the' statue. of St:P~ter"in Si;;"Peter;s"Basiiica, Vatican City~. Un'told ,millions'ofpHgrj;ps :over eight centtiri.es' haY,e sniootfled the 'foot of·the_QroJ:1~SW~ieby.~his g~sture',of a#~tion: .,The statue is' the obj~t of, .particulardevot.i~n o~the 'feast of the 'Chair o{SCPeter; when 'it is vested"with'a'b!.'Pe of gold-'brocadeand cr~wnedwith a jeweledtiara.·N.CPhoto'- .

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Page 3: 01.09.58

THE ANCHOR­ 3 ihurs., Jan. 9, 1958

Norwegian Dean Confident of U.S.

WASHINGTON (NC) - At a time when not a few people are knocking the United States an experienced diplomat has stepped forward here to give us • pat on the back.

The remarks are notable, not only for their timeliness, but also because they are utterly simple, obviously sincere, and were spoken by a man with nearly a half-century, of experience in diplomacy. '

"Never lose faith in the United States. as \a leader of the free world," said Wilhelm Munthe de Morgenstierne, dean of the dip­lomatic corps here, as he pre­pared to retire in favor of a younger Ambassador for Nor­way.

"I don't think the United States is going to fail the free world-just wait and see," he a(tded.

"I will never forget what America has done for our free world, particularly its wonder­ful contribution to freedom.

"I don't agree with those who claim America's leadership is failing. In the field of missiles, for example, the world doesn't know yet what Anlerica has."

Most diplomats head for home just as soon as they, terminate their careers here. Not Ambas­~dor Morgenstierene. He is moving into an apartment near the embassy in which he repre- ' Sented his country for 28 years. He plans to stay a while, and perhaps start on his memoirs.

"I have spent 28 years of my life in this country and have grown to love it more than any other, after Norway, which al­ways will come first."

At almost the same time, it was announced in Moscow that Soviet Russia was sending Mik­hail A. Menshikov as its new ambassador to the United States lilnd that he is a "tough bar­gainer."

Both before and after Mr. Morgenstierne spoke so pleas­antly of the United States, the press in Moscow indulged in bit ­ter attacks on us.

Soviet ,publications did this despite the fact that Premier Nikolai Bulganin in recent weeks wrote to President Eisen­hower saying: "It is time 'to take measures to discontinue the propaganda in press and radio which evokes distrust, suspicion and ill wilL"

In Russia, as has been the case all along, words and actions still do not match each other. ,It would be a simple matter for the Reds to stop such attacks if they wanted to. The regime, 91' the Communist party, tells the So­yiet press what it shall and shall DOt print.

MEDALIST: Joseph J. Wilson of Seattle has been awarded the VercelIi Medal, highest award for a .layman conferred by the Holy Name .society Of the United States, Named in honor of Blessed John of Vercelli, the annual award is given to a Catholic layman for his outstanding .service to the Holy Name Society. NC Photo.

Schedule of Fast 'and Abstinence, 1958 As Approved for the Diocese of Fall River

WHO ARE OBLIGED?

DAYS OF FAST' Only one full meal; two other light meals without meat. permitted.

All over 21 and under 59 yellrs of age.

DAYS OF COMPLETE ABSTINENCE

NO,meat; no soup orgravy made from meat ,

All over the age of 7

DAYS OF PARTIAL ABSTINENCE

Meat and soups or gravy made from meat permitted only at principai meal

All over the age of 7

JANUARY All Fridays

FEBRUARY Ev~ry Len'ten ,weekday beginning Feb. 19

All Fridays Feb. 19 Ash Wednesday Feb. 26 Ember Wednesday

MARCH Every Lenten weekday All Fridays March 1. Ember Saturday

APRIL Every Lenten' weekday including all day of Holy Saturday

AU Fridays

MAY May .24 Vigil of Pentecost May 28 Ember Wednesday May 31 Ember Saturday

All Fridays except May 30 Dispensation granted for Memorial Day Holiday

May 24 Vigil of Pentecost May 28 Ember Wednesday May 31 Ember Saturday

JUNE All Fridays

JULY All Fridays except July 4 Dispensation granted for Independence Day Holiday

AUGUST ' ,

All Fridays except the 15th of August. Holy Day cancels obligation

-SEPTEMBER

Sept. 17 Ember Wedn~sday , Sept. 19 Ember Friday Sept. 20 Ember Saturday

All Fridays

. Sept. 17. Ember Wednesday Sept. 20 Ember Saturday'

OCTOBER' All Fridays' , NOVEMBER All Fridays ,

DECEMBER Dec. 17 EmberWednesday Dec. 19 Ember Friday Dec. 20 Ember Saturday Dec. 24 Eve of Christmas

AIr Fridays .Dec. 24 Eve of 'Christmas

Dec. 17 Ember Wednesday Dec. 20 Ember Saturday

EXPLANATORY NOTES: a dispensation granted by' con- by our Holy Father. Those who f . or tor nlay eat meat use th1'S d1'spensation are asked to1. Those who are not obliged to essor pas

fast may eat meat several times several times daily. But, if the do some other penance, such as d b f mplete or part1'al an act of charity, an almsgivingin a day. But if that day be a day ay e one 0 co abst1'nence they w1'11 follow the or the offering of special prayersof complete abstinence, they may , .

not eat meat at all; if it be a day rules of No.1 above, unless they for our Holy Father and the of partial abstinence, they may have also been excused or dis- Church. eat meat only at the principal pensed from the law of absti- 6, In 1958, the 15th of August meal. 'nence. will fall on Friday. Since this is

2. Children under the age of 7 4. Those obliged to fast may a holyday of obligation, the usual are not obliged to fast nor to ab- take meat only at the principal Friday abstinence drops out. stain. For these, the law makes meal, not at either of the other 7. 'on Oct. 31 there is neither no restrictions. Parents, how- two permitted light meals. fast nor abstinence. The Vigil of ever, may well introduce their 5. In 1958, since Memorial Day All Saints and these former obli ­children to the laws of the and Independence Day both fall. gations have been cancelled by church at an early age, though on Friday, the Bishop dispenses new regulations in effect in 1957. there is no obligation to do so, from both fast and abstinence on 8. In 1958, there is no fast nor

3. Those who' are excused from those days in virtue of a special abstinence imposed on Dec. 7, fasting by reason of health or by faculty to do so, granted to him since this day falls on Sunday.

CLIP THIS SCHEDULE 'AND HANG'IT NEAR YOUR CALENDAR YOUR CALENDAR MAY NOT BE ACCURATE

Hymnal PublishedCatholic Schools Must Find High In ,Indian Dialect

GROUARD (NC) - Father Alexandre Costa, O.M,I., has

CQliber Teachers Among Laity MILWAUKEE-Acute as the "Obviously," the author writes, published an illustrated book ofproblem of adequate school fa- "it is impossible to expect lay Catholic, hymns and Gregorian'cilities has become, Catholic teachers to live as religious who chant translated into an Indianschools have a more basic prob­ at least can live In common and dialect.lem in the need to find high pool their resources." . . Father Costa's hymnal won thecaliber teachers in large num­ Linked to the need for salary, praise of Bishop Henri Routhier,

be'rs. the survey brought out a need Vicar Apostolic of 'Grouard,This is brought out by a'n edu­ for other security provisions, 'and whose imprimatur it bears. This

cator who approaches the prob­ tile opportunity to adva'nce to is the second publication pre­lem in an article for the winter supervisory or administrative pared by Father Costa especiallyissue of Catholic Management work. Then, too, lhe crowded for the Indians of the Hay Lakes Journal, a new quarterly on classrooms constituted another region near here. The first was management problems published important drawback. a catechism adapted for their by Bruce' Publishing Company. Finally, many turned to public use. It was published about two

According to the educator, school teaching after failing to years ago. Sister Elizabeth Ann, I.H.M., be "accepted by parents and re­associate professor. of educa­ ligious" even though their teach- ' tion 'administration, Immaculate ing records were entirelY,satis­Heart College, Los Angeles, pas­ factory. SAVE MONEY ON tor and superior have to face Much can be done to changethe unalterable fact that, across these' conditions, according to'· YOUR Oil HEAT!the country elementary school the author, that will'make pri ­enrollments are growing almost vate schools more attractive for four times as fast as the number the lay teachers. But it will '~ coIl ~~~:2n of Sisters. mean that the financial needs of

The obvious, she continues, is geographic areas will have to be CHARLES F. VARGASto look to the, laity' for the teach­ 'studied as well as the financial 254 ROCKDALE AVENUEing staff. But unfortunately, the ability of people in the· area. to NEW BEDFORD, MASS.iow salary scales in the Catholic support Catholic educatiQn. To

school system have discouraged solve the problem there must the very people we would turn be mutual understanding, com­to in staffing our schools.. munication and close co-ordina­

Over 90 per cent of the gradu­ tion, of effort between school per­ates of a certain Catholic college sonnel and the whole Catholic surveyed over the past 15 years, popula~ion. she reports, taught three years or more in public schools while only 16 per cent had served in 'Our Ladyls Chapelprivate schools at any time.

Cites Thre-e Factors FRANCISCAN FATHERS . Reason for, the' rejection of 572 Pleasant St., N~w Bedford careers in Catholic schools cam~ Francisca!l M~ss League forquickdeliveryofdown to three main factors: low Perpetual Remembra:,n,cesalaries, few social benefits, at ­ In Daily Mass ­titudes of religious and parents The Living'and Deceased ' to lay teachers. But the predom-. ; may' be enrolled. ;' .<!~S~i'nanting factor by far was the ,Illumih3:ted ce.rt,if!c~te,saiary 'scale which doesn't per" for' each MeJ;Dber epr.9Iled. mit the lay teacher the just 'ENROLLM'E'NT' $"5:00 ' I H~ATING Oll

. claim of a, living wage.

Crucifix in New' American Chapel Wins. Attention

BERLIN (NC)-A crucifix in the Blessed Sacrament sanctuary of the newly dedicated American Community chapel here has at ­tracted considerable attention among worshipers of all faiths.

The chapel; built to serve the Berlin command,is the 16th such structure to be built in Europe this year and the 253rd for use by U. 'S. Armed Forces personnel in Europe.

Prominent U. S. and German officials and leaders of the Cath­olic, Protestant and Jewish faiths attended the dedication services. Highlight of the program was the reading of a telegram from President Eisenhower by Brig. Gen. George T. Duncan, com­manding general of the Berlin Command.

Chaplain (Col.) Harold H. Schulz, Chief of Chaplains, European Command, said that the American government, in opening the chapel, "is once more telling its people and its friends and all the world that 'In God We Trust.'''

He said that one out of every four Americans in Europe is now attending religious services at 'least once a week. He con­

, cluded by saying that American and German Catholics, Protest­ants and Jews should find the new chapel a place of common worship, regardless of their J1a- . tional origin. "

Impressive Crucifix Sculptor Erich Reuter, a pro­

fessor at Berlin's Technical Uni­versity, e,xecuted the bronze, copper and tin corpus on the Blessed Sacrament chapel's cru­cifix. The figure of Christ is, al ­most six feet tall and is impres­sive in its simplicity. Mounted on an elmwood cross the crucifix is attached to a rough brick wall.

The 'chapel proper has a seat­ing capacity of 440 in the nave and gallery. Adjoining the main chapel is a transept containing the Blessed Sacrament chapel, chaplains' offices, a sacristy, and a sitting room, An 82-foot cam­panile rises over the structure to the left of the main entrance. A 1,000-pound, electronically con­trolled bronze bell is 'suspended in the tower and can be oper.,. ated by a switch in the transept.

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Page 4: 01.09.58

-4. -THE ANCHOR

Thurs., Jan. 9, 1958

Italian Priest RLllns 'School In Prison·

ALESSANDRIA, (NC) -' The State ,Prison of Alessandria, in the Piedmont region of north Italy has a flourishing school and workshop, thanks to the 'efforts of a local priest.

Father Amiclare Soria' passed through the main gate, of the prison for the first time in the summer of '1924. ,For 33 years since that time he. has travelled the road from his house to the prison twice daily. He continues to do so today, although he is 71 years old and is now almost totally blin~.. . ,

MOTHERS-SUPERIOR IN AUDIENCE: ~eceived in In 1924 Father Soria saw the tragedy of imprisonment as pureprivate audience by His lIoliness Pope Pius XII were the.'

national executive officers of the Conference of Major Reli ­gious.-Superiors,of Women's Institutes of,the U. S. Shown with His Holiriess from left are Mothel"'M. Benedicta, O.P., Sinsinawa, Wise., national executi.ve secretary-tre~suler; Mother M. Alcuin, O.S.F.;'iRochester, Minn., national execu­tive chairman; Mother M. Maurice, RS.M., W'ashington, D.C., national executive vice-chairman. The three officers were in ,Rome to attend the Second General Congress of the states of Pertection in the Modern World. ' NC Photo.

The Family Clinic

Advises 'QuickShowdown With HeSitating, Fredclie '

By Rev. John L. Tho~as,S.J. , r'

St. Louis University

How long 'should a girl wait for apropo~al to marry? '

I realize this sounds as if I were, desperate. W~ll, I'm,not.

1 just w0l!der "whether Fred' and I, are getting any pl~ce.

We've been dating for about the past six years. Every time

the subject of' m~rriage comes up, he has some ex­

euse. Should I drop him? l wonder if you realize,

Ellen, that your Freddie 'boy is not an uncommon type. You're quite right in asking whether six years iSJl't long enough for ,him to make up his mind.

They ·tell me that in times ~bS~ fathers 'used to have an effective way of handling s u c h situations. After a y'oung ma~

had s t a l' ted calling' steadily at the house, for a time, father, made' it' a point to meethim and ask whether his

,intentions were serious. ,This generally se'parated the

men ~rOln the boys because if marriage didn't fo1l9W after a reasonable time, father' had to be reckoned with. This seems a ' liitle unromantic, but it appar­ently worked out all right. Great­grandmother go.t married, ,didn't she? '

Times hc>:ve changed, and now we have to deal with Freddie.

'There 'are several reasons' why some men' coi1tinue to dat~ a: girl', for'years \Vithout proposing mar-'

. riige. Let"s see if we can' dis­'flover What' may be tying"Fred:' die~s tongue~ ," "

.l\(ama's ,Boy

.~.

, First, some m~11 are. so a~-

. -{ached to' their mothers or both their p:::rents that" they never think seriously.', of separating from them, They date for"the sake of entertainment 'or as 'a mat~er of course, yet they have no serious intentions. Some parents, r,articularly if they 'are fina'nc:ally dependent' on their sons, :::re (iuite proficient i'n keep­

lack normal masculine drives, but we must take them as they are. Like those in the first class, they use dating for selfish pur­poses. ,They are exploiters. ,

Third, some men find it diffi ­cult to make up their 'minds. When faced with a major deci­sion, they see 'so many pros and cons that they escape by finding

. excuses for avoiding the issue. They are drifters, hoping others will make their decisions for them, yet usually ,accepting' the consequences . once they are mad~

Stop l\'asting Time

Does our boy Freddie fall into one of these classes? If he's "mom's" boy, give him back to' "mom" at once. You'll never really get himfrom heranY"l'ay.

,If' he's a dodger, let him, keep his freedom. He.won't stay tied for long even if you r,nan'aged to ,catch him. .If he's the l:J.esitant type and you want him, make up his mind for him. Maybe that's all he's waiting for. "

At any nite, don't waste any more time on Freddie;', Either he ~ets the' date or drop him. Even though you have no other prosoects in mind, you will gain nothing by continuing to date him.' 'Jr1" fact, as, long as you asso-\ ciate ,with him, there is likely ,to be, no other, prospect. Come to think of it, wouldn't it have been': better if six years' ago somebody had made Freddie de­clare, his intentions?': -,

)0.

,"-~----~---------~---.~,. ' :. WH EATON~S : , ,

. ­' , ", '~·AMOUS ,', ' S'EvrnAGES ' ; p:;; r'll,' :", , , "it's a whale 0. a drink" , ' , : 17 DELICIOUS FLAVORS' :. ' ,

oing marri'age out of the"pic'ture ': _, ' rBf,:ST SINEE ·1853 : by. playing~ul? this attach9~ent. ' :_/, WE DELIVER'- ": Even ,when there.is no question'of , " finaj-L~ial~u:ppor.t; s~rrie "morl1s;" ': '.: _<:;AI.,L, ';:

'refuse to cut their soilS 'loose; , , ~ wy '9"6264.' and tJ'ley have peen. kpowh" ~o: '-and 9-6265 i:

,suffer suddel1; hearvatt?c~s ';if : .' , ". •. i ::, ~:

,sonny threat~hs to them~leave , H.·rftm, ~Alheato " for another woman. ' , IV ,Ii:' . n" \. ~.\ " '\'" ~.,

1E:'·~}'o.iter Type : and Sons, Inc.: Second, some men are afraid " ,

of respon~:bjJity. They like their: 45 ~n..f"'Ot cT~. : freedom and are never quite ,: At So. First St. ': ready to as~u;'~c' th" .o"I;'~at::JI1s' NEVl ,~I:~-()RD ' of marriage. Obvio'usly," they" ~:" .... _...... __ .:.. ..:_ ... _... __ .. ~~.

penalty, without hope or purpose for the inmates, and began a course of conferences for the prisoners. Eight years later, in 1932, he had succeeded in 01' ­

,ganizing fr:ee classes' in elemen­,tary education "which w.ere taught by six teache~s.,

Advanced Courses Now, ....·25 years later, he has

seen his small beginnings grow into -a fully developed educa­tional institution. There are in­structions in c()mmercial and technical skills and advanced courses in academic studies. The classes are attended by 108 'of

,the 320 inmates.'. ..' . ;, F9r many of the prisoners, a diploma on completion of the courses can mean, at the comple­tion' 'of' their" prison term, a means of earning an honest liv­ing. For others,' who have no immediate hope of leaving the prison, the school is a means of satisfying the natural desire 'for

, im increase of knowledge,and of giving variety to what' would

-,otherwise be a purposeless exist ­ence.' '

There was, for example, the case of a young Piedmontese, condemned to five years impris­onment, who refused an oppor­'tunity to have his sentence ap­pealed so that he might complete his studies toward earning a diploma. It was an opportunity he had, never had when he was free. '

Another was a 57-year-old illiterate who was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He learned to 'read and write so that he could, correspond with his rela­tives.

Unpaid Faculty

The teachers arld professors in Father'Soria's school give all their services without pay. 'Doc­tors, lawyers and engineers lec­ture on su~h topics as sociology, medicine, art, literature, history and geography. The books for the classes are bought out 'of the in­mates own earnings from doing various jobs in the prison.

According to Father Soria, the greatest benefit is not so much learning but an improvement in

,moniie. The 'inmates, he says, no longer feel hated and con­'demned.

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C~ltu2"e in Homes Seen Essential To Progress of Catholic Colleges

WASHINGTON (NC) - A comes only through habits of prominent Catholic educator has hard work, of serious' reading called for "a: renaissance of re- developed very early in the spect for culture and scholar- child." ship" in Catholic homes. "Today," the speaker declared,

He said it is essential if Cath- "boys are considered eccentric olic colleges and universities if they do not spend most of are to make swift progress to- their time curled up 'before a ward the positio,. of leadership television set,' if they 00 not that is th~ Catholic tradition shrink in fear of mental hernia throughout the ages. when they are required to study

Holy Cross Father John J. a few hours a day. Cavanaugh, forQler president of "Homes are 'places in which the University of Notre Dame love of science and love of the who is now director of the Notre arts, as well as love of sanctity, Dame Foundation, made this call must begin. ' in an address to the John Car-The level of Catholic higher roll Society, an organization of laymen in this city.

Father Cavanaugh prefaced his appeal by' citing the "humil­iating evidence" of studies which show a lack of Catholic repre­sentation in scholarship, science, arts, business and fields "where culture and intellectual achieve­ment are' concerned."

He noted that "not a single Catholic institution" rated among the 10 top schools in four cate­gories· (universities, co-educa­tiona1 institutions, men's col­leges and women's' colleges) in a recent survey conducted by a metropofitan new,spaper.

He add.ed, however, that ad-, . and' engineering will place "ex­

education, he c~mtinued, will be improved only by raising the quality of ,faculty members who "must receive salaries that are commensurate with their extra­ordinary abilities and the impor­tance of the' teaching career."

The quality of students must also be improved, he maintained. "Admission standards must open up opportunity only for the boy of intelligence and character who is disposed to exchange hard, constant work ... for the development of his mind."

Pressure Needed - Father Cavanaugh noted that recent Soviet strides in science

ministrators and faculty mem­bers in many Catholic colleges "are working night and day' to prqduce a sharp' turn ,in events with,in the next ,10 years."

Spread Too Thin, "It is because· we have-'spread

ourselves too thin" opened up colleges' and ev~n universities without :Sufficient" first-rate teaching personnel?" he asked. "Is it because our: tea'ching methods are too didactic,' ca­techetical; that without'.adequate re~~arch programs, we do not stimulate in students the spirit of critical study and excite them to lifelong adventures of im­aginative work in the sciences and arts?"

Father Cavanaugh, a me)Tlber of the Ford Foundation's adult education board, also revealed that "not a single Catholic pro­gram of, liberal adult .education has, so far as I can reme!Uber,'re­ceived a dime" of the $29,000,000 dispensed for adult education by the FOUlidation in the last six years.

"This has been due," he said, "not to bigotry,but to th~ fact that'there has not been one re­quest made which meets the reasonable conditions' that the (Ford) Fund lays down."

"Educational' institutions can do only part of the job," Father Cavanaugh stated. "We need in the homes a renaissance .of re­spect for culture and SchoIllr ­ship.

Parents' Obligations "Fathers and mothers have to

recognize'the terms upon which excellence is developed, that it

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Bishop' of Foil River , .

Members will visit Lourdes during ,

TheYear of J!Jbilee-"roclaimed by

the, Holy Fother to commemorate

treme pressure" upon all Amer­ican education. .

"Pressure for the next 20 years should be cQiefly,upon the Cath­~lic l;!ducational, system," he de­c1an~d., i'l hope the preSSl,lre, is great. .Wemeed pressure... , , ,I

"Catholic tradition is one of leadership throughout the ages; Catholic education is a long. way off and it must move fast in al ­most a Sputnik ascent to its proper place at the top." . Father Cavanaugh maintained

that "there is.a tremendous reS-­ervoir,of leadership in the 2,500,­000 alumnae and alumni of our Catholic institutions of higher learnfng."

If this potential can be ac­tivated, he declared, if a respect for culture and scholarship is engendered in the homes if Catholic schools and coll~ges achieve excellence, then a Cath­olic triumph in scholarship and leadership, "will give us' some­thing ,to cheer about" 10 or 15 years from now.

This talk, given in mid-De.­cember, has eV,oked much com­menta.ry and some controversy in Catholic educational circles.

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Page 5: 01.09.58

THE ANCHOR- 5 Thurs., Jan. 9, 1958

St.' John's Parish ,

Observes Jubilee St. John's Church, Attleboro,

was filled to capacity at a sol­emn high mass which was cel­ebrated at 11 o'clock last Sunday morning in observance of the 75th Diamond Jubile of the par­ish.

The Most' Reverend Bishop presided and spoke during the mass of Thanksgiving which was celebrated by Very Rev~ John J. Shay, pastor, assisted by Rev. James F. McCarthy as dea­con and Rev. Edward A. Rausch as sub-deacon.

In his sermon Bishop Connolly stated that "Jubilees" are great for memories giving us all good reason for coming together.' "They remind us of much to be grateful for and for all these rea­sons, as bishop of the diocese, I am happy to participate at these significant ceremonies."

PARTICIPATING IN THE LITTLE PAGEANT: St. "St. John's is one of the finest in the Fall River Diocese," theJohn's Parish, Attleboro-left to right, Robert Cummings, Bishop noted and added thatSister Mary Dolorine, Rita Boyle, Deborah Powers and homage was due to all who have

Gene Lapointe prepare for one of the scenes in the play. taken part in the founding and growth of the parish.

Tribute was paid by theProgram at Jesus Mary Academy' Bishop to all the deceased pas­tors including the founder, Rev.Tq Honor Congregation Foundress John O'Connell, better known

The month of Janual'y has as Father John by his parishion­been dedicated by the fa<!Ulty ers, highlighting the tasks and 'and members of the student body zeal of each' administrator. at Jesus Mary Academy. Fall, Father Shay, the present pastor, River, to the foundress 'of the was also congratulated by the Religious of Jesus and Mary, Bishop in his tal!, for his aggres­,Mother Mary St. Ignatius. siveness and for having the

privilege of bringing the parishA program of activities will be to full,maturity.'conducted by the English and

Among the' clergy presentFrench classes with various es­were the following priests fromsays, skits and original exposi­the parish.tions to encourage the student

Rev. Amrobse E. Bowen of St.body to participate in making Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis;the foundress better known and Rev. Edwin J, Loew of St. Mary'sloved, thereby stimulating others

to follow in her footsteps. The Church, North Attleboro; Rev. progl'3m scheduled for Jan. 27 Joseph F. O'Donnell of St. Paul's in the auditorium will include Church, Taunton, and Rev. the a~arding of special prizes Thomas H. McBrien, O.P., of and honors to those who have Providence College. succeeded in literary achieve,. Chaplains to the Bishop were ments. -Very Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher,

pastor of St. James Church, NewClaudine Thevenet pioneered Bedford, and Rev. Joseph Larue,

in the field of education in the pastor of Sacred Heart Church,town of Lyons, France in 1816. MOTHER MARY ST. IGNATIUS North Attleboro. Very Rev.Inspired by her director, Father Congregation of Jesus and Mary Humberto S.·Medeiros was mas­Coindre, and her motto, "To is international in nature as the ter of ceremonies.form souls for heaven by a truly small mustard seed which was christian education", she launch­ planted in the soil of France Archbishop Bradyed her program of teaching God's branched off rapidly unto distant

With undaunted countries: India, Spain, Canada, Starts Campaignchildren. an Spirit of courage, Mother M. St. England, United States, Swhzer­ ST. PAUL (NC)-A campaignIgnatius pushed forward beyond land, Italy, Mexico, Ireland, the to raise $10,000,000 for highthe boundaries of France. Argentine Republic, Germany, school facilities' in the Minne­

It may be truly said 'that the the Antilles and Africa. apolis-St. Paul area has 'been launched by Archbishop William O. Brady of St. Paul. , 'Benedictine Father Says Capacity

Quotas have been assigned to each of the 116 parishes in theOf Grade Pupils Underestimated area and the campaign will be.

ST. LOUIS (NC) - Catholic, rect the flaws which exist in the spread over five years, the Arch­educators are underestimating educational system,", he con­ bishop explained. Plans call for the intellectual capacity of the tinued. "It might be well to weed building additions to four exist ­grade school youngster, the out and prune away the less im­ ing high schools, completing one Oxford-educated prior of St. portant subjects so that we can high school now under construc­Louis Priory School charged get down to the matter of basic tion and building five additional here. learning. high schools in thl~ future, it was

Father Columba Cary-Elwes, "The basic subjects, such as announced. O.S.B., former prior of the Bene­ reading, writing, languages and Archbishop Brady said .that dictine Boys Schoo' in Ample­ mathematics, must once again 1958 and 1959 will see the ex­forth, England, and author of take their rightful place in ele­ pansion realized, while 1960 and &everal books, said: "In the past mentary education." 1961 "should see other' new we have tried to please the stu­ And . mathematics should be schools ready for opening." dent rather than teach him. As taught seriously, rather than as The goal is the largest in a a result we have failed to get a sort of a game, he' added. "The school fund drive in tile history down to the basic elemental sub­ student needs to learn mathe­ of the ~rchdiocese.

jects." matics, 'rather than hear imagi­He admitted students would native talks on rOckets and satel­

consider many basic subjects lites," he sa'd. liME PELLETIER"dulL" He declared that the basic ele­

"But whether they are dull or ments of both languages and ELECTRICAL not isn't tl),e question," he stated: mathematics could. be learned CONTRACTORS "It is whether the subjects. are much mtire easily in the fifth and"

Ileside';tial - Commereialimportant or not that really sixth grades' than in the ninth, Industrialmatters." and urged both ,parents: and He said the challenge posed teachers to have more faith in 633 Broadway. Fall River

by recent Soviet scientific ad­ the learning abilitY' of grade OS 3-1691 vances could be met by the school' p,upils. '. ~~ United States, but only if new emphasis was placed on mathe­ ._....._-----------------------~---------matics in the elementary school.

He pointed out that ~he key to 8Cientific advance lay in training ATTLEBOROUGH high school students in the essentials of science long before SAVINGS & LOANthey reach the university .evet

''This 'country is so far from Mressing the scientific side of ASSOCIATION education that there is really little immediate danger that ad­ 27 PARK STREET ATTLEBOROditional science courses will un­ - , dermine the humanities," he 292 UNION STREET NEW BEDFORDuid.

'"The real problem is to 001'- '--....;----------_..._.-._._._._._._----.;..-.-.-.-.--.-.....

BISHOP CONNOI~LY CONGRATUI~ATES THE VERY REV. .TOHN .T. SHAY, Pastor, before the Jubilee Mass at St. John's -Church, Attleboro.

Chinese Government Announces Jail Sentence for Aged Bishop

HONG KONG (NC)-The Chi­ two other priests were convicted nese communist government has of helping other so-called "coun­announced that an aged Chinese ter-revolutionaries" in their bishop and two native priests work. It said: who are acting as heads of di­ "A number of counter-re.olu­oceses have been sentenced to tionaries who had hidden among prison terms ranging from 10 to the Chinese Catholics in variou. 20 years. localities along the Chekiang

According to a Red Chinese (province) coast were recently broadcast originating' in' Hang­ sentenced to prison by the Wen­chow, 76-year-old Bishop Joseph chow and other people's courts. Hu, C.M.,. of Taichow, who was "Under the cloaks of Catholic consecrated by Pope Pius XI in bishops, acting bishops, auxiliary 1926, was one of, a group of bishops and priests, these con... "counter - revolutionaries" given viets had been carrying out long­jail terms "recently" by Chinese range counter-revolutionary ac­"people's courts." tivities' in Wenchow, Ningpo,

The broadcast said that Father Taichow and other localities." Paul Su, Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Yungkia since Legion of Decency 1951, was one of three clergymen The following films are to be sentenced. The broadcast identi ­ added to the list in their respec­fied Father Su as "auxiliary tive classifications: bishop" of the Wenchow (Yung­ Unobjectionable for Generalkia), diocese. The name of the Patronage-Crash Landing, Re­third priest was given as Father turn to Warbow.John Wang, who was identified

Unobjectionable for Adults­as "acting bishop of the Ningpo Girl in the Woods.diocese."

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R. A. WILCOX CO. 22 BEDFORD ST.

FALL RIVER 5-7838

R. A. WILCOX CO. OFFICE FURNITURE

OS 8·5286 ARMS ..A .Qualm; .Atifk

Pocohontas was, known as Lady Rebecca in England.

FALL RIVER. MAC;S.

e'

KNOW your AMERICA

WI-IAT FAMOUS-'

AMERICAN WOMAN WAS KNOWN IN ENGLAND AS 'LADY REBE.CCA

(The identity of Father Wang was not immediately ascertained here. The Bishop of' Ningpo, French-born Bishop Andre De­febvre, C.M., was .expelled from China in 1954 after a long period in jail. His Vicar General, Msgr. Maurice Delafosse, was likewise expelled. While the current Vatican yearbook does not list Father John Wang's name, it was believed here that he might well be the legitimate administr'ator of the Ningpo d'iocese.)

The Hangchow broadcast indi­cated that Bishop Hu and the

Page 6: 01.09.58

6 -THE ANCHOR Thurs., Jan. 9, 1958

,Weekly, Calendar®rbeANCHOR Of Feast Days

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RiVER I TODAY-SS. Julian,Basilissa

Published Weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River and companions, Martyrs. Ss. Julian and Basilissa were mar':'410 Highland Avenue ried and lived by mutual consent in chastity. Mter his wife'.

Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 '" PUBLISHER

death, St. Julian made his horneMost Rev. James L Connolly, D.D., Ph.D. a refuge for Christmas tormented

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER by severe persecution. At the order of the governor, Marcian, he was tortured i~ many ways

Rev. D,aniel F. Shalloo,M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR

before being executed. With himAttorney Hugh J. Golden. died St. Anthony, a priest; St. Anastasius, a convert; St. Celus,

. a boy; St. Marcionilla, hisThe Gift of Time mother, and seven other of her children, and many other Chris­, One of India's leading educators has advised parents tians.to give their children not presents but the "gift of time."

TOMQRROW - St. Nicanor,Mrs. Monaroma Hensman is a member of India's dele­Deacon. He was a Jew by birth

gation to the General Assembly of the United Nations. and one of the seven deacons She has had thirty years experience in the field of social chosen' by the Apostles. as re­welfare. She has served for a number of years in the counted in Acts VI, 5. The tradi­

tion is that he eventually wentUpper House of the Indian Parliament. She is principal to Cyprus where, years after­of a women's college in Madras. wards; he was martyred during

Mrs. Hensman believes that parents should devote the reign of Vespasian. more time to their youngsters and how they spend their'

SATURDAY - St. Hyginus,leisure hours. She feels, that too m~ny parents offer their Pope-Martyr. He was an-Athe­ehildren presents or spending money instead of their own nian and succeeded St. Teles­

phorus as Pope in H 4. The strug­time. " , Th Yd' kIt is common, of course, for parents to provide their e or she gles of the Church in his time

were chiefly with the Gnostieehildren with a house to live in, clothes to wear, food to AS',sociation of Educator~ heretics, He excommunicated eat, and then to give them spending money and feel that ~ Credo and others of their lead­the job has been done. All these things take effort and B d de' U · ers: He was martyred in '58 worry and planning on the part of the parents. Surveying ran, e ompany nlon during, the reign of Emperor these efforts on their children's behalf the parents can ' By Msgr~ George G. Higgins Antoninus Pius and was buried

near the body of St. Peter.aay that they have done -more than their share. Director NCWC Social' Action Dept. But these are things. And much as the children ne~d The expulsion of the Te~mste\s Rnd two other unions SUNDAY-Feast of the Holy'

these things they need their parents more. They nee,d was the big news, naturally, at the recent, AFL-CIQ con­ Family, honoring.' the Child , Jesus, His mother Mary and Hi.persons. They need persons who care. They need perSODS. vention in Atlantic City. Almost everything else-'Vith the

foster-father, Josepn,' was insti ­who will direCt them and ,correct them, persons who will exception of the resolution on pending labor legislation and tuted by Pope Leo XIII in 1893

punish them, even, for then they would know' that some- ,the resolution on wages and certainly~ust prevent unionism arid' extended to the whole one truly cares. prices~w~s given very mi- of teachers." Church in 1921. Generally thi.·

, Many parents are so occupied with making a house nor billing in the daily press. l Very Embarrassing' date is 'the feast ,of St. Tatiana, Martyr. According to the Romanfor their children that they fail to provide a home. : They' , Therewere,-however, sev- , The chairman of, the resolu-Martyrology, she was a Roman are so busy with the economic side of raising their children eral less spectacular but rather tions subcommittee tried unsuc­ woman 'who was put to death forthat they miss much of the pleasure that should go with important developments. An cessfully' to defend the substi ­ her Faith in a persecution under

that duty. How often are parents heard to lament that interesting case ' tute resolution. He and his col- Alexander Sever'us about" 230. their children have grown up too quickly,- that they have in point was, leagues on the subcommittee, he On this day the Greeks alsothe prolonged said, were in complete sympathy

honor a St. Tatiana along withnot ',had a chance to enjoy them. but rather vig- with the AF of T - but they two other martyrs, Euthasia andThe fact is that the things parents try to give their orous discus- didn!t think it would be prudent Mertios.ehildren are the least that the children need from them. sion from' the to recognize "at this particular

MONDAY-Commemoration of'Let the parents die and the Church or the city ,or state floor of the time" that the NEA, is a cQm­convention on a pany union. Why not? Here is the Baptism of Our Lord by St.

would provide adequate housing and food and clothes. What resolution di- the chairman's answer in his own John the Baptist. Generally this is uniquely· the parents to give is the gift of themselves" rected against words: "There is and will be dat~ is the, feast of St. Popitus, their interest in their children, their time. the National again ,iJnportan~ legislation pre-. Martyr. He is said to have been

Parents should take time with their children. Time "Education, As- sented'to the next Congress, and 'a native of Sardinia who as a _ This a part of our re- boy was converted to Christian­not to be "pals" with their childr~n the children neither' "soc~ation, ' which will b,e . h 'b' debate was un- port later on, that will not only , ity and succeeded in converting

want nor expect nor appreCIate suc a;n approach -;- ut." rehearsed 'and pla,c~;'lhe legislative representa- his father. It is said that Em-' time to know their children, time to' show an interest in "completely unexpected. tives of the AF~-.cIQ in' a pecu- , peror Marcus Aurelius person­them as individ,uals, time to give them at(ention. There; The America'ii Federati'on of liar positio!l of cooperating with ally conducted the trial of the ,is no substitute for time. But there are many rewards. "Teachers, a bona fjrie union. rep- representatives of a so-called boy for rejecting the gods' of

, resenting classro~n teachers, company !.Inion, but it is going to Rome. He is said to have beeD had submitted a routine'resolu- . be very embarrassing, to good martyred about 166.A Newspaper PrIen'cI-pl'e tion which 'explicitly character- trade unionists to be forced todo that." , , . ' " TUESDAY-St. Hilary, Bishop-'

The fi:t;:st anniversary e!lition of the Ghristian Science;' ized theNEA as a""company ; , Doctor. He did not embrace the Monitor made this editorial statement: "It is not' to be' union.'" This resolution,as re- • Incidentally AFL-CIO presi- Faith until near middle age, andported to the convention 'by a dent,George Meany later in­

received Holy Orders. He was,understood that the Monitor has stooped to a censorship subcommittee of the resolutions formed the delegates, that, to the chosen Bishop of his native Poi­so narrow or opinionated as to render its ,s,ervice inadequate, ,committee, was' substantially best of his knowledge, the NEA tiers in 353. His vigorous oppo­inefficient or incomplete. Far from it. ·Whatever is of watered down. In the revised or, doesn't have any labor contacis siti,on to the Arian heresy in sev­- br' rt ff t th bl' If th h substitute resolution the NEA in Washington. This was anpU IC ImpO ance or a ec s e pu IC we are, even oug h'onest and Sl'ncere statement on eral Gallic councils led Emperor

't be 'f h t . d' 'l k d . d' was accused of being "dominatedI news 0 w a IS or marl y rec one 'as crIme or Isas-, h Mr. M'eany's part, but the record Constantius to banish him to , ' by sc 001 administrators," but :phrygia. In exile he composedter, is printed in the Monitor in completeness sufficient for it was not condemned in so many will probably show that'repre­

his great work on the Trinity. ­information, but without'u;nnecessary embelishment 'orsen~ words 'as a "cQmpany union." sentat~ves of the AFL-CIO and After a personal triumph at thesational display., The' emphasis, however, is reserved for ~ 'Prevent Unionism" the NEA do cooperate from time Council of Seleucia, he was al ­the helpful,. the constructive, the encoqragiJlg, not for their to time on legitimate matters of lowed to return to Gaul, whereNo' Sooner had the chairman of 'mutual interest. opposites.," .. I,', th 1 t' .. ' f' ' he died in 368. Pope Piu's IX",,: e, reso u IOns ,coJTI,mlttee in- The convention supported the.

named him a Doctor of theIt'is notour'purpdse to comment on the Christian '" ished reading the watered 'down' ,AF of T when "the vote was Church.Science Monitor as it observes its fiftieth year of publica- version of ~he AF of T's original finally taken. The resolution, as

WEDNESDAY-St. Paul,tion. Published in Boston it enjoys a world-WIde circula-:' , co~demn~tIOn ~f the, NEA than amended and lldopted, explicitly the · P bl' h d b th Ch" S· . the preSIdent of the AF of T, condemned the National Educa-, First Hermit, Confessor. He was

t Ion. . ubl IS eye rIshan Clence Church' It holds Carl Megel, p'roposed an amend t"IOn AssoCla. t'IOn as a company an Egyptian and was well edu­..: ­an enVIa e poslhon m the newspaper world for its wide ment from the floor.-It was not union. ' cated. As a youth he fled 'to the appeal and accuracy of reporting. satisfactory to the AF of T,'he, Vietory Deserved desert country near Thel?es to'

escape a raging per,secution, De­Wha.t w~, do wish to comIfole~d is th~t p,hras~ of its ;:~~ n:~re~i~ogc~~;~~~~; t~; There was a certain irony in lighted by the solitary life of n~ws polIcy, completeness suffICIent for mformatIOn, but school administrators. It should this unexpected development. prayer and penance, he remained 'WIthout unnecessary embelishment or sensatioanl display." be explicitly condemned, he said, The resolutions subcommittee, in in the desert until his death atan effort to soft-pedal the fact

Somet,imes hew,s stories are guilty of the very thI'ng as a "company un.,ion." that the NEA is a company the age of 90 in, 342.

they condemn.' Newspapers cO,mmit the very actions they' In the course, of the resulting union, actually effected the op­deplore. Sto!"ies of a sordid nature are printed with every lengthy debate, M:. Megel .and, posite result. If the original legitimate role to play in Amer­

'l h f ff' . . several other submItted convmc- re 1 t· '1 d" th AF f' d t' Wh th te 301 o.wever unnecessry or a su IClent 'understandmg " 'd th t th NEA" so u IOn -'-Inc u Ing e 0 !Can e uca IOn. e er or nod t f th f t mg eVI ence a e IS, m T's expl~cit reference to the NEA or to what extent it is satisfac­,0 e ac s. "fact, a com'pany union-i.e., one as a company unl'on-had been on y carryIng' ou... l't'l ·-th·IS ro e IS no.•

This does not mean that newspapers should censor that is dominated and completely presented to the convention, it for us to say. All that we are the news. " It does not mean that they should omit facts controlled.by school administra-' probably would have been competent to write about is the It does mean that the facts can be' presented in an objectiv~,: ttorsthand tlsbl~dhamenttlYfoPPbosed adopted in a perfunctory manner NEA's record in the field of trade

d It f h' .th t " "0 e es a IS men 0 a ona and't/:Je story of NEA's persistent unionism. That record, in our a u as .1On, WI ou ,resort to cheap sen~ationalism, with- fide or legitimate union, for opposition to legitimate .trade' judgment, is a discredit to an out drawmg detailed and, at times, disgusting word pic- classroom teachers. Mr. Megel unionism in the teaching profes- organization which prides itself tures. Such stor,ies smack not of smart reporting but,::' called attention to the following sion ,wouldn't have been spread so vocally on its devotion to the adolescent behind-the-barn talk.' " excerpt from a letter which was over the -record in such emOar-' principles of democracy and ma­

:" A ' . ".. ',' ,sent by the NEA to school super- rassing detail. jority,rule. For that reason we . newsp.aper IS a resp?nslble element ma commumty.' intendents: "We are asking you In any event, Mr. Megel and are happy that the AFL-CIO

Wh.de r.e~ortm~ the news It must do npthing to harm the, to select the 'finest young teach- his, associates had the better of convention overruled the sub­SOCIety ~t IS ?edlCated to serve. That must bea first principle ers and put them on. committees tbe, argument and deserved the co~mittee.....on resolutions and underlymg l~ work or it is not fulfilling its announced, to.formul.ate our polIcy. We are victory, which they finally' adopted the AF ofT's resolution function. ' ',' domg thIS beca~se, the' unions achieved. The:,NEA,' as, a 'pro-, condemning the NEA in so maD7

have made great mroads .nd we' fessional organization" has a . words as ,a company union.

Page 7: 01.09.58

.' ;' Exams on Schedule

Spotlighting Our Schools MOUNT ST. MARY ACADEMY,: mains in Ostia and Pompei.' Ot FALL RIVER special interest to the;Virgildass

,Chderlel;}ders will sponsor' It were slides of places. ira' tlte cake'sale at McWhirr's tomor· Naples area' that are meqt,ioned row. ,The proceeds will be used' in the Aeneid, whiCh :they are for' the benefit of the Athletic reading. ' Association and its varied activ- SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY, ities. ' '. a FALL RIVER

Frances Moson, '60, met:ited The senior class will journey the highest. award i? honors.for to New York City tomorrow on the second markmg pe~lOd.. a United Nations trip in connec­Frallces scored 25 honor pomts, , tion with their study. of cUl1rent the .highest in ~he entire scho~l.· events. They will see ·the U.N. Louise Boulay, 60, and An? MiS, in action. '60, attained the secon.d highest Freshmen who have been ap­hono~ awar?s for thiS seco~d pointed members 'of the Glee' markmg period. A.nn and Louise Club include' Judith Campbell, won 24 ~onor pomts each, t.he Carol Flynn,' Corinne Hambly, second highest among the entire Karen. Kolokowski, Kathleen .tudent body. . Ledo Emily Milan Nancy Ra­.~ister M~py Carmela, RS,M., 'P elSalvo' Rose Marie

AM .. I rded a gold posa, am a , ... ,. prmclpa , awa 'Souza Maureen Silvia and Lor­

hono;r pin ~o Frances Mos~n,and raine Sullivan. steI;~lpg Silver honor p.InS ~ A successful cake sale was Loy,ls~ and Ann. for their out.,. held at McWhirr's.for tlie bene­atal1dmg scholastic recor~s.. fit of' the orchestra club by the. ~~mb~rs o~ the LiturgICal 'mothers, of the orchestra mem­

ChOir wIll agaIn present a pro-, b gram of liturgical music and iec~' eJrs. 'll prove to be a.'n t " d th' d' t'on of anuary WI ~res, un er e Irec I active month for the Debrabant

SIster Mary Verona, ,~.s.M.,· DebMors with debates scheduled A.M., at the January meetmg of 'th N Bedford High Mount the Christian Mothers, St. Louis' WStI Mewy, Academy' RogersP . h t S d '. th . ar s ,. arIS ,nex . un ay In ~ par- High School and St. Raphael'lIIsh hall. ThiS program Will be H' h given at the special request of Ifh~ junior English class pre­the Rev. Thomas walsh,. pastor., . sented a dramatization of Thorn-

The bask~tball team Will play. ,ton Wilder's modern drama, Som'erset High at Somerset gym-' "0 r Town" na!l'ium' next Monday. On Jan. u . 15, the Mount players will play . HOLY FAMILY mGB. Jesus-Mary Academy on the NEW BEDFORD Mo'llnt' St. Mary Academy gym-, Lois Mahon,' Carol. Comeau, naSium.two seniors, and Mar'le~e Toletti,

Sodalists of the Junior ClaSSes, a sophomore, .hav.e ,received wiJi present a three-act come4Y, many compliments for' the very dra'ma, "Oh, Father," on ,Thurs- fine' representations· of' the day; ·Feb. 6, in ihe auditorium'. Nativity scenes which adorned Directed by Sister Mary Mercy, the' entrance .to ~,~e. Kennedy RS.M., ·B.Ed., these budding Memorial Youth 'Center during th17~pians include Marguerite., the' holidays.: ' Williamson, Barbara Faris, Juctit!l Rodriques, M.ary ButIer~ Maureen Sheehan, Georgia Joseph, E:eien Silvia, Judith Mc­Kn'ight, Carol Lord: There~ Silva. Proceeds of this I?rojec! will be used for the sodalists' e~,.. penses at the annual Summer School of Catholic Action held each summer for six days in sev­eraI farge cities.

SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY,FAiRHAVEN il'

To stimulate interest ,in cur­rent affairs, members of the American History class are par­ticipa.ting in a series of, panel disc,ussions and debates. The topic for the first debate was "Science Education Should Be. Compulsory in Schoolll·": Up­holding the affirmative were Lu­cille Pothier, Joanne Viera, and

The Forty Hours' . Devotion was held at St. Lawrence Church during the' past week. Instead of the usual religious 'instruction given in thechurc.h on Monday by Monsignor Gerrard, the stu­dent body this week participated in a special program of public adoration of the Blessed Sacra­ment. Monsignor spoke on the Holy Eucharist,' and the student body united in' prayers, and.' hymns offered to 'Our Euchar'is­tic Lord.

, .

Roseanne Thomas and Patri ­cia Oliveria were Holy 'Family's senior representative/! in the league debate against Rogen High, while the junior repre­sentatives were Catherine Kelle­her and Mary Jane W~lker..

Seven delegates from Holy Family attended' the Sodality Union meeting held at Mount

Anile Fitzgerald'substituting for" "St. Mary Academy, ·Fall River. Catherine Norris who was m. Taking 'the negative position were Gene Callaghan, Margaret Duggan, and Ann Farley. Joanne Craig was chairman.

The Latin classes have been viewing colored slides of fa­mous sites in Italy taken by Miss Louise Mahoney, Latin teacher, on her' trip to Italy last summer. In cOnnection with their reading of Roman history the freshmen and sophomores have seen slides of the important mOnuments in Rome and the archeologicalre-

Sister Mary NolascO, RS.M., 'sodality moderator, an<f, Sister Mary Anglecia, RS.M:, will at ­tend a sodality moderator's meeting to be held at Boston College High School. ...

Four sodality members, Cath­erine Carney, Ruthanne Carter, Julia Allen and Mary Ja~e Walker are teaching Christiaft Doctrine chisses at St. FranCis of Assisi Church; . Jeannette Benoit is instruding ,the First Communion Class at St. Francis ,Xavier's.

JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS:' Directing'the activities o~ the Junior class at .1Eisus.).V,[ary .Academy,..F~II; Rfver; are.

THE ANCHOR..,.. .• ' r ' 7Thurs., Jan; 9,' 1958.

DOMINICAN ACADEMY, FALL RIV'ER" '"

The Sodality will spol'!!?or Family ComJ1lumon: Sunday, Jan. 12, joil1i~g :in the. nation­wide' crusade toprom6te closer family ties by uniting the family at the Communion table. ' " Louise Lamontagne, art editor

'of the' 1958 yearbook" and her associates; Madeleine St. Laurent and Madeleine' Gariepy,· have submitted to the printer their original designs for the f~rst. sec­tion of the book, featuring the theme "It's American, It's Maria~' It's Dominican." The students printed the color pages by silk screen in the art room of the school. In honor. of the Lourdes Centenary, the 'yearbook is dedicated to. Our 'Lady of Lourdes, as"a rock of faith)n a century of comp,iexities."!

Dominican debater~ Jeannine Barrette 'and Elaine ;Maltais .will uphold the negative of the Narr)t League ,topic, : Foreign 'Aid,

again,~t' Attleboro High School next Wednesday. at Attleboro.

School president Claire Reillyand Sodality Prefect Claire

Sinotte served as usherettes at the Bishop's Ball at Lincoln Park last night. !

Dominican Alumnae bowed to the Varsity hasketball team at the annual Homecoming game by a final score 33-23. Jackie Pou": lin, '57, of the Alumnae was high scorer 'with 14 points. Han­nah ,Sullivan a!1d Madeleine Gariepy each· contributed 12points for the victors. Varsity, and Ja' yv'ees' w·illme'et Durfee' 'this aftei'noon at DA. They will I the generalIty of CatholIc peo- , also play Case' High School next "pIe·! within the,.v~rious nations, Monday. at Swansea. '. however" p~c;>greSS1Ve they ~y:

· . otherwise be ... too frequently · ST. ,MARY'S HIGH; 'lag behind the Holy See, con-TAUNTON

January is' the month for in­tensive studying on' the'. part of the seniors who .are readying themselves for the tests which will,be coming d~ring ,the month. College Boar.Q E~ams w~ll take place next. Saturday, With the.,Nursing Examina~ions following on Jan. 18. The entire student body will also' have" to prepare for the Mid-Year Exams from'

Jan. 20. to 24.' 'The 'tests willmarkt~e end of the first semes­

te~he Dramatic cl'ass has decided to present three one-act ,plays in

the 'near future. Elise Cayer andPatricia Cooper were chosen as · co-directors 'with Miss Mary Benson heading. the activities.

The b~lletin boards through.., , out the 'School have caused fa":' vorable comment among the stu., dents this month. The mllin bul­letin board has outlined in pic-. ture rorIll all the sig~ificant reli ­gious .eventsof January: the Epiphany, the Holy. Family, the Holy Name of Jesus, and the Chair of Unity Octave.

Each class has chosen one topic and built·' up that particular thought in various ways through­

, out the room. The seniors have used St.

Paul's quotation:, "Lord, what wilt Thou have me do?" and pic­tured .the three major vocations with these thought-provoking

'words: . The Holy Name of Jesus has

been treated with great effect by 'the junior class who feel that thil topic needs greater emphasis.

In the. sophomore room the motto of the Congregation of'the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts and. of the school: Ad Jesum Per Mariam, is. in bold, letters with 'accompanying pictures Of Jesus and Mary.

CONTRACTORS and'

BUILDERS

John ·8.

NOW A BRIDE OF CHRIST: Sister Anna shows her father the ring she received when she m"ade her per~etual vows. The ceremony took .place at the Novitiate o( Our Lady of Kilimanjaro, Tanganyika, .Africa, where; 121 African Sisters have already been professed.

Ma'ny Catholic,S .LCJg Be,hind Hol'y See's Social Teachings

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop John J. Wright of Worcester said here that many Catholic lPeople lag behind the Holy See's social teachings and in the United States this is shown in the field of international movements.

The. prelate told the 19th an­nual convention of the American Catholic Sociological Society which met at Trinity College:".

"I,t is' curi.ous,' but, a f.ac.t" tltat

servaHve though it is supposed to be, in social questions."

The Massachusetts Bishop said that "this moral and cultural lag, to state it' charitably is due to various reasons; partl~ historical, partly 'soCiological, partly psy­chological partly cussed."

, . : ' . ' In thiS country,. he contInued,

" ou~cIergy and I al ty h~ve Iagged be~md the Holy See. In under­

d · th l't d th

ture of':"the international: com­munity', as well as the ne¢essity for itS worldwide organization."

This lag shows itself, he .tated, by the small number of Catho­lics identified with programs for the study of peace, worldl order and international Organizr~io~

Refening to the December, 1956, message of H~ H9linessPope Pius XII in lVliich th~Pon­

" . ,tiff called fOr the strengt~.emng of the United Nations'to secure, peace, Bishop Wright saidj

"Many <;levout ~at\1olic~ one fears would hesitate to utter the' kind'of endorsement p'op¢ Piu8 XII gave the United 'Nations ..• less·they be suspected of ~inki­ness' or 'fellow-travelirigness" an general patriotic degen~racy."

Howev'er, he said that t~ere ill "enheartening evidence I of • change in the younger genera": tion':"':'college men and wome~~ who seem to be far mote en­thusiastically on the side of papal teachings than were their fathers."

:LEBEL " anci'Sons,' Inc.

r , J~st Below PieaJnt

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.' h B' k' I • Plan ACoin an. .. '.o :

•• 'ANSWER·•• No, it is locally owned, locally managed, locally dir~cted. ~t is' Q member of the America1n Ban k e r s, Association" Tl1e Consumer Bank~rs Associ~­tion of America, and the New England Consumer Bankers AssociQtion, all of which a~e voluntary bal:1king associq­tions. "

IT PAYS YOU TO !DO 'BUSINESS WITH

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. . NEW BEDFORD, OSTERVillE • '" " ~ 1," . 'lef:t to right, Jean~tte. G~.mache, ..vi~e-pr.e.sident ;,' Colette,· . Air .C:onditioned""':SounCl Conditioned'-"-Color 'Conditioned .Roberts treasurer; Clair ,Ha.rrison;,·~secretary and;"Pauiine'"

Gagnon;'president.· ". '.:."".' ,.", '•.·:·'1. " '.~.\';,;0· .. ··'·· ,d,:, '~:,;:·;?~~~~~;,B::.~~~~ "::'~~"" ''''lli~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' '§''~'~.~/

Page 8: 01.09.58

,.At,·Our..HoUJse' '. ".':. "',:' .">.,, .', ,'. .

MaiJ inWindow~EnvelopesSign ;'Of.·Returns tq ',Normal Routine

By Mary Tinley Daly "The Twelfth Day of Ch'ristmas" has come and gone

and within those 12 days has occurred perhaps the greatest ehange-of-pace most families experience during the' entire year. , . At pome, the; Christmas

tree dismantled, ornaments wrapped ,and packed away, erib figures sfored ~arefully for Christmas 1958, holly off the lampshades, also the dried, mistletoe be­tween 'the liv­

, ing a'nd 'dining rooms ..;... leav­ing nothing but the. memories 8f ,the' kisSes it inspired. " , ; Pre~ents have been put to use -and;' i1s' usual,

· lIl'o xes "saved, . thQug ~ we .... '. ·.to:~:. ~~~ te:: ..1:;;

·would not, Sav~ boxes!' "."F-ire laazards" the Head of the Hous~ ealls them and ·we· agree, ·in theory. .

. Nevertheless, they· are .s~ch prettY' boxes'~and"you n~ver k'now when you might want one just that size.. : Usu~lly by the time we find it, the lid has been lost or a corner bashed' in.

, The thank:..you notes ha'le beenwritten and we have resqlved, as have our c9rrespondents, that 'we'll ~'keep in touch" more often during tlie. year 1958. ..•... .

Real Penance The vohime_of mail, and. its

character, 'have chan'ged ·com., pletely. "Nowadays, all the'l,et ­tel'S' 'come in 'window envelopes:

, ... in thoselarge',ones ,that go .. . through' the . chai'ge~customer

metering syste!'Jl 'in the depart­. lIlent stores. .We ,are reminded laere of' a self.;.imposed penance'

·auggested by one of. the priests in = .ur parish; Father E;.Carl Lyon... ~Everybody;.,likes::.. toreceive 'and ·Re~.• ·Ant~oriy. 'M\,'Go~~ mail,"-Father Lyorl.told the chil;' spoke' briefly.... ' ". .ben in Ginny's cias~I".Aj;.a littl~ , - :Mrs: Mary Medeiros was chair­

'. penance, how abo~t. ~etti'ng:,you!" ma'nof the~affairandMts;"Arine mail wait ,an bOl~~ before you-Faria'" 'wali 'mistreSli . of cere-" .pen it?". .' . ,

This, to us was a new thoughtand we tried it-a real penancebefore Christmas.' We rathe~ imagine, though, that the pen­ance on those January bills' is opening . them at once. Theo­logically O.K., Fatper Lyon?

There are changes in hours .and activities at home too: no inore staying up' until all hours. The long dull days of January. bring us back 'fo reality with 8 thud. Fancy clothes, the glamor models, 'gradually find tJiem­llelves pushed to the back of the' closets as the workaday skirts

· and blouses, th~'. plain 'wool dresses, the'. year-before-Ias( ~ Our Lady ·of Ang~ls Parish.'.. auits' take precedence on the' "The color bearers included doset pole. '. Agnes Rezende~ and Emily Old­

. rid. }l4r5. Emily Borges acted· as . \ Ji~t Dogs Return' _ conductress and, ThereSa Basinet Even. in the: kitchen simple, ' 'as pHlrtist. -', '.." .. ' •

JloJrishing. beef and lamb stews, '. ,'" " . .' :,meatloave~,and'hot' dogs have ,S~c'ot.d;~".'Me":'bers

'. SUpplanted tile turkey 'and ·hams. ..,.... . '. .. . . . · Family members come in hungry '·To'Conduct:.Wlt;st : 1,ol. a six·o'Clock diriner, nc> mat;.·

. . ter .what is'on'the menu, rather ~n' with the er:stwhile: jaded,"Oh, I've been to a :party-ate a

. 'Jof' of stuff." Going to another .. . . Gile.. ·."·And the gelatin desserts, the .gingerbread with whippedeream,' even the humble apple betty have eager fans, following a plethora of fruit cake, plum

pudding, mince pie ancr rich · cookies.

At school: with-freshly cleaned up'f ...... rTVls. • ,..\-1':1,.;).,."':')"1. c:lih"rnl_.

. lCiously want ,the nine.;.to-three rOU'H'~, tHOU;;;'l tn",,)' would never admit it. "Sister" has a

. hard time with her charges, during these days. It means re­view of the first semester's work,

- a lot of it' driven out of the' heads of. the children. by ·the holi\:tays. There' are sniffles, symptom$ of the dreaded flu, and' Sister' has to use Solomon-like judgment to decide who is gold­bricking. ,Comes the imminent prospect of the formidable mid­year exams. --: .

Latent Vo'cation .. The world 'at large: news­

" papers· .report ,·star.tling·,,~events

: ., ~uJ.ti~ .iD,back-on:"your~heelll -.; . ..,. .- .•... ..... -. ..' -..' , .' .. -. '. -".' ~

. ". , "... ,.', '!. .... . '. :The ,Sucordium' Club of'· the f)acr~d: H:eajts;--,AcademY:6fFait

-Ri"er ::wiUcoi!duet a militaryh'st t'S" . ,

"WI .,a.. next'WednesdaY,nightin the ,converithall on ProspectStreet: ." D.oor 'prizes will 'be awarded and refreshments' will

'. . . be ..se~ved; , I

Mrs.- Francis !:"IMcGuiian is head of the committee for the affair assisted by Mr.s. Arthur

' . .Marcha,!1d, Mrs. Samuel Taylor,Mrs. Erne.st J. D'Ambrosio, Mr.s. ~imfol'd M. Lancashire, Mrs, Ray­mond Granger, Mrs. Arthur Pel.,. 1 etier, Mrs. William McGnidy,

Mrs, Francis Medeiros and· Mrs: Stanley "J.' Bocnenek.' . '. The public, is invited. TiCkets may be obtained at the,door. "

MURRAY'S CURTAINS [)RAPES .'~"

·RUGS ' .. L1NOLEIJM

. . 1636 AcushiIe.· Avenue

"New': Bedford.~. MaSs. ' , ,,~.wy '4:03861"'" '

.""'jooo!;:.~';o.-~·";""_·iii·'"-''''o!i·'~'~·'"!c ..,~,'''''''........,ij; ',., '., ':....... ..... '-;.'.',;;;;. •.~............... _ .'.'. ...•. .:. ..,'.

reaction from most of us, The hysteria of "making a scientist out of your child" has subsided somewhat. Fortunately, out of

, this has come the sobering thought that each of your chil ­dren, and each of ours, should have the opporunity to develop

'to the ultimate his natural gifts. Rather thaiI un'cover a potential 'scientist, we wo'nderrealistically . if it might be better to .discover·

. a late'nt religious vocation':"--and thus combat foreigr1 ideologies?

At church: .Theunrest-in· ·the . worid continues; but the Ghu-rch has for us the liturgical -.year teachings, "We" find. that the

. Epiphany, '~ecently '~elebrated . .recalls that this is the manifes­

tation of burLo~d's glory.. And on.the Suriday coming up,

Feast of the Holy Family, just take a look. at the Gradual prayer in the. mass: "One thIng I have 'asked 'of the Loid: thili wilf I seek after:' to dwell in the houseof'the 'Lord ailthe days-of my life." , ' ..

S'iNn'.to' ChrIS·to U

C".O·unc,·' .Holds ," II .

. nsta' ation.·

monies."···· _ '.' The 'slate of officers iriducted'

"includes the following:' Presi,:: dent, Mrs. Aguiar; Vice-presi­dent, Mrs. Mary" Mendon'ca; Re­cording Sec.!'C'tary', Mrs'. Hild'a ,Mart,iri; Corl'espondin'g Secre­

. tary, Mrs. Marg'aret,Dyl', Treas­

urer, Mrs. Medeiros; Board of Directors, Mrs.•Mary Fontes, Mrs. Mary Raposa and Mrs. Mary Manuel; Publicity Chairman, Mrs. Faria. , '

·Mrs. Alma Vi'6eiros' who has held the 'office of recording sec­retary;was·the;only outgoing of-. ficer. She' is now··8 member 01.

Mrs; Palmira Aguiar,:president "of the Council of Catholic Women Of ~anto,C~ristoChurch; Fall River; since its origin, intro­iiufedthe pastor, Rev: FranCisco C. Bettencourt wno gave' the Councilprayer·,attbe opening of the instaliation. ceremonicil ·in· Hotel Mellen.' State Senator . Mary . L: Fonseeikwas. imitahing officer' and guest speaker. . ..- , ' - Father"Bettencoutt' and hill' as:.. sistarits;' Rev.' Daniel. L;' Freitas

· at : Manhattanville College and, garet M.·Tansey and Miss Patri ­continued her studies at the cia 'Richards. . . ' . Phidelah 'Rice School of the" Theatre' and the University of .T.WOo Postul.ants·. Mexico..Her."acting care~r began while· she was still in school R·"··· .' H b.'

·when at 15 s.hewas the youngest ece,ve a ,tS:· player in the summer. stock com- The Christmas ~ason, one' al-'"

· panyat the Rice piayhouse at. ,. . , .' . .. . .. ." Martha's Vineyard. As an actress, . !"ays . of. d.eep .splrItual JOY .at she has playe'/:f roles·froin· classic Villa.Fatima, Taunton,' the Novi.,. to· comic and has appeared on Uate o! the· Sisters of St, Dor~.

· radio, and' telev'ision as well. as . othy,-had an added note of glad- ., ~espite the .fact· that specia~istll on the stage. ... .. ness this year; On Saturday\Dec: t~nd to ~o.ok at .tp.en in ~iffere!1t

.Tl)e 'hQspitality committee for'., .., ~ . .., . -.. lights whIch tend to· play down the meeting will be headed by 28, .the .F~ast ,of t~e Holr, I~no~ . !nan,. esi>~iaily .with the a~r,iva.i ~ ) . . . ~nts;.. ~o .~f the Postulants,. of push.-button warfare . each' .

C::::~~g TV Ser~es' . Mary, i;>atric~ . 0(. Ca~bridge, man ·i~·still.the "ct;~ter.of'a mtl~' . ., Mass. and Dolores Cervi of world"and:infhie,n~~sitone ",!ay

·Offers <Probleni's ····Queen's.Village, N.·Y., received or another:, "~Iqs~ow weinf\u~ , WASHINGTON, (NC)~Cam-eramen turned' acrobats. to film some' of the art treasures of the

· Sistine Chapel. and. St. Peter's Basilica which will be featured on a nationally-televised series on Rome:

The, films, "Rome Eternal," ·will bring the grandeur I)f Rome and the Vaticim to television for the first time. It will be shown in 'four parts on The Catholic _ Hour, NBC:'TV network, on Jan. 5, 12; 19 and 26. .

'. "Rpme F;tern~l" was c~-pro~ duced by the National Council of Catholic Men and the' National Broadcasti'ng C6mpany. . The script for the series was written by Pulitzer Prize-winner Paul Horgan. .

Camera crews had tooyercome' ~. number. of, problems in shoot-' lng Vatican art treasures for the :\~~~llld·T.o~ti ()f·'+.~un;ton,. ;semi: documentary serieL. . ". ., papan, at St. Mary's, Baltimore, ... ~ichelangelo's s..c.~ Ip ~ Ur e - Md. lri'·.thcdanchiary'.were'Rev.

,"Moses" had'to be fil.med, I.·n Bento Fraga 'of St. John of Goel'',P~rt,_f.rop1a.re~~inirig: p0ltiJi~n, ¢hu~ch, '-'~o~erset, a~d \l~v; ,and his "Pieta" .from a2Q-foot ..Da,vld CummIskey, S.J., of Bos- {'., · scaffold.in St. :Peter's; His'sis~tpn College: ,

tine~C~ape)ceiiingwi1s'shot'~rOiri : .·~ister Dolores "Cervi,' 'one': of· a : crouching positioiJ.~. using 'a " the newly clothed Novices is the': ~ecially rigged camera a~gled _&econdcilaughter of Mr. and Mrs;' upward. Anthony. Cervi 'to joi!l the Doro-'

Major prQblem confronting the ~th~~;;a;n;s;.;;;;;.";;;;;.~•.; ..;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~==~~~~::===~ . producers . of "Rome Eternal'! I

was to' capture the historical sig­nificance and' beauty of Rome in only t)Vo hours of proadcast time, More than a year in the planning, the film was made in six weeks ·last summer.

,; I'

.•1

.. ~

, "~ ~

Women's Apparel. .• ­

,262 .U.ni~St,:",~w:Bed'or~f

"

Fall:R'iver Catho#;c:.WomOn'$ Clu·b.'1 . . Pr()gram to Featu~e Monologist

Mrs."Amla Cronin wi'n present Miss Jani~e Hurley and Miss her entertaihing ni~nologue pr-o:.. Maureen E. O'Rourke as' co­gram, ."Characters and Carica- chairmen' and will include the tures,".for membets of the Cath- 'following club members: .Miss olic Woman's' Club' of Fall River Marie Hurley, .Mql. John' J. Nei­at the next . club meeting at Sian,' Mrs. William Ward, Mrs. next Tuesday night in the Sacred MichaelJ. McMahon, Miss Eliz-Heart Auditorium. abeth A. Neilan, Miss Eleanor R. . Mrs. Cronin received her B.A.' Shea, Miss Mary T. Hurley, Mrs.

degree in Literature and Art Ja~es A. O'Brien, Jr., Miss Mar­

",

'..\ 'I' R_A_N_D_O_L_PH_··_...:I ::·(-.;.;N_O_RT...;,H_,_EA_S_T_O_N--:'I , . ./

I ~I__N_O_RT_O"",!N ~LII-_E_._B_RI_D_G_E_W_A_T_ER---:I . : <. ,.,.. '" .:"

: '"

~.: "~'.':: ., '.' : '\:.: ­;-.. . ... 'J; ! '1 ' . .:~ ~

·the Holy Habit of the Order.. e!1ce those about us t~at coul1ts,'! '(Rev. EdwardA. Oliveirao! Our he a:~~d. F~~h:~~iSCOI~. ~lso

aLady of' Lourdes Church', Taun- u~ge " ~ ·g~tsl If' ~ d . ~dlghtl ton, interrogated the .two Brides v~ew. .0 I e as m IVI ua of Christ concerning. their de- members. . sires, and then blessed-their Holy In . brief. ceremonies Mrs. Habits. In his exhortation at the Jamelson RIsser took, over as

. High Mass which followed the president of the organization. Ceremony, the celebrant showed "The Buzzards Bay. woman suc­the appropriateness' of the Holy c.~~ds Mrs. John J. Bulens, of Innocents Feast to this cere- Pomt Ind.ependence, Onset.' Mrs. mony.I, . . -" ' Bulens was awarded a Hummel

iI.erod in h's ~nd -" t k' "Flower Madonna for her term of . I eavor o. eep office ' , power, destroyed' the little' .. . ba~ies hoping in this way to be Rev. David O'Brien, pastor of rid of the newborn' Christchild. St. 'Margare~'s Church, was also These 'young ladies in their en- . present. The organization is a deavor to come. closer to the' comparati~ely new one in the Infan't ·~&.sus, lovingly' put away Upper Cape a~ea. more entirely the garb of, the world by' donning the Religiou$' Habit, father Oliveira said. .: .. Assisting at the High Mass was

' Addressing some 25, ~embers of SS. Margaret and Mary Guild 'of Buzz~rds Bay and Onset dur­ing the· annual Communion breakfast, held in St. Margaret's School, Rev. John P. Driscoll of SS. Peter and Paul Church, Fall River, guest speaker, reminded those in attendance that "We in this day of science when indi­viduals seem to lose their i1)1por­tance :must never take the. atti ­tude 'I don't co'unt.'· Man is still

..the' center' of God's creation.'~ 'During the c~urse .. of hill

'speech, Father Driscoll quoted Winston·Churchill when he said, ,"The ~ist,ory of ~a~comesback; n~t U!.• t~!~gS, but, to men. Long

. term. survival ..depends on the character of men." . _. ,.'The sPeaker' aiso stated· .that

'..IJt. . .Elect.rica. r~ ~0 Cont'ractors

.:~:' "' .. '. ~~ .

., -: ~:".:,.!.~..'.'.'.'.:.,:.. (.i.:.oIIlIlI..I.7.AZ2f#' .... y~ . ' ., " .'

.9.44' CO.URtv.· 5"t. ."Ab.~.~! , ''I'

..... ., New Be~for~

.'

.. SIJ.per Markets

• • • Friendly

Page 9: 01.09.58

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Cleric to Ledure

The Parish Parade ST. PATRICK'S, }'ALL RIVER

"The Church in the East" is the subject chosen by Rev, Kevin Harrison, O.F.M.Cap., wh~ will speak before members of the parish ,and friends at 8 next Tuesday night in the school au­d.'torl'um.

Father Harrl'son, who has served as retreat master to the clergy and who has spoken be­

fore several. outstanding groups, is well known throughout the "'I'ocese, ­..

His talk will warrant the broadelll'ng of our religious out­look and appreciation for our faith. Tickets may be obtained

at the door. HOLY REDEEMER CHATUAM " .

A Catholic Youth Organization has been founded ~t this parish.The" new members" 'were 'ad~ dresser' by the Diocesan Director of CYO, Rev. Leo, T. Sullivan,

t f H I Nassistant .pas Qr 0', 0 y ame Parish, New Bedford. The cere­mOllY was conducted.'by the CYO.Moderator, Rev. Augustine Whe­lan, SS,CC., and the pastor, Rev.

Theadore J,. Brennan. After the installation a for­

mal meeting was held. Carl D'Entremont, president; John Rodericks, vice-president; Jean Brennan,' recording secretary; Sharon Skipper, corresponding secretary; and Peter Smith, treasurer, had charge of the meeting. Plans were formed and committees set up lor' activities in the new year. " ", I

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL; -FALL RIVER

The:first monthly gathering, of the year will be held by mem-' bers. of, the ·Women's ~uild' on'

'. Monday, Feb. '3, in the' school ... hall,. The January meeting'will

be eliminated. ' Members of the. Discussion

Group met Tuesday in the school for. their first meeting of -the year. NOTRE DAME, }'ALL RIVER .•

Rev.' ·Raymond A. Boisvert, moderator, gave the invocation

. at the breakfast of the Women's Guild held last Sunday' in '~the school hall following the cor­porate ·Communion. ·Rev.'·Ray­mond M Fiche OP' a Domini­, '. "" can mISSIOnary, wa_ the guest

. speaker. .. The, SpIrItual Developme,nt. together and worship and pray

COmlTIlttee, headed'. b~,' M.lss l'n cOffilnunl'ty, He elnphasl'zed He.len C" Chace and a. sSlsted by., repeatedly the I'mp'ortance of ,the .Mlss CecIle Masse, MISS Therese Cadl"in and M.rs., Norman Le­

.vesque were In ~harge"of the IT ' ., '

' ,a' all;'. . . Syrian Archbishop. Dean of Hierarchy

VATICAN CITY (NC) - The

dean of the' world's Catholi, bishops is an archbishop of the Oriental Rite who has been a member of the hierarchy for 5'1 years.

He is Archbishop Clemente Michele Bakhache, Vicar Patii ­arch of Antioch Q'f the ·Syrians. Born 92 years ago·' in Alepliio, Archbishop Bakhache was raisedtl)e ''t>riest . ~S'~r1 :anti~Q,~~..not ""converf'thah a'n olderotle'who ,.;; Maureen Canfield, .Geraldine to the episcOpacy by Pope Leo XIII on September 24, 1900, as Titular Archbishop of Calcedonia of the Syrians. ,

Second in the ~wnPe'r oCi.years as a bishop is Archbishop James Duhig of Brisbane,: A!Jst~alia, who was named Bishop of Rock­hampton by Pope St. Pius X on September 16, 1905. He was born in Limerick, Ireland, in 1871..

Third in line is Bishop Antonio Augusto de Assis of Jaboticabal, Brazil. St. Pius X made him a. bishop late in 1907, On Decem­ber 5 this year, Bishop de Assis celebrated his 94th birthday and his 50th year as a bishop,

Another bishop named by St. Pius X, Archbishop Daniel Mannix of Melbourne, Australia, has lived 45 years of his life as a bishop. Next March the Arch­bishop will be 94 years old.

Tile last living bishop to be nominated by St. Pius X, Bishop Leopoldo Eijo y Garay of Mad­rid, recently arrived here for hia ad limina visit to His Holiness Pope Pius XII. The SO-year-old prelate was consecrated a bishop in 1914 the last year of Pius X'.rei"n. ' . ': .

."Chrl'stl'an comlnunl'ty" findl'ng 'l'tS expressl'on I'n' the' partl'cl'pa­tl'on of the faithful in the Mass.

l" ,;I:Ie revealed that in the Arch­diocese of Bologna the Commun­ity Mass is celebrated in everychurch on every Sunday at the

.Parochial Mass by episcopal de­

~~:e'en~~et~eon~~~~~~~tYre~~:: the responses' of the Mass, the Creed and the Gloria: .

Asked if the Community Mass was an. effective a1'!tidote against 'c0n:tmunist infl!Jence, he sQl,i1edand answered:. ,.' ,,'" to . Persevere"'" in' the" Chu'i'~l,t," ·Brickhill,. Valerie GeSner, .The­

I ',"The Community ,Mass ;, ~ ,t.he Father Nienaber declared·..."Who resa.Corr~ira, Nancie Fox and 'faitpftii .praying lh.e' 'Ma~ ~.i'th -;:Is' better filted to help theV' n.~w Eleanor Black: ' " " '

6nly. againSt cOrnmllnism, Qut:· has'oeen througn t~e';:iiHfiCdl­'agai'rist Cati'Ioii'c' "~g?is,~~ ,. ,.. J3Y " 'ues!" '. ,.,," j ' ..,' ,.', ".,'"

Catholic egoism I 'mean that, '.' ratJ:ler" )ii~~a~~:·.'.i,siIued·,)~ "'splfit found' am'ong"sOme' Clitho- ,., reminder'" to . cOlriCide,' with the .. lics which' is·, opposed to·,..·the Christmas Seaso~ when; he said,

ST. JAMES. NEW BEDFORD

Ladies of the Monsignor Noon Circle are slated to meet at 7:45 next Wednesday night, Jan. 15, in the lower church hall. Mrs. Catherine F. Clark will preside over the business session. Mrs. Margaret Kinniery, chairman, and Mrs, Grace Lardner, co­h' , h f

c aIrman, are In c arge 0 a social which will follow. ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER

The Catholic Women's Guild will hold its first meeting of the

' hyear next Monday nig t in the church basement.

Prelate Asserts 'had been some confusion overLitur9Y' Is Life

Of Church,'" ". .

BOLOGNA, : (NC)...,.-"The lit ­urgy of the Church.' It is the instrument for conquest."This was the dominant theme

of an interview which' ~is Em­inence Giacomo Cardimil Lerca-'

ro, Archbishop of Bologna, granted to the N,C.W.C, NewsService. It has also been the dominant theme in the work of this great churchman, ,a leader in liturgical thought arid one

; who has made not a few con­quests, intl)is capital city of

. Italian communism. ' . .. The Cardinal was asked what

changes had been brought about 'in his own archdio~ese as a re­suIt of the Interriationa1 Litur­gical Congress held in Assisi, Italy, a year ago,' .

He, replied that every realating all th~films reveiwed'arid liturgical change must, of coursj:l; . classified' by the' Legion" since orighiate' with th'e competent .1936." : .~ ..... , ".' cO,t;JfP'egatiol'\S C?f.:*~~, :ll~~.y See. ..' -Under the' new 'C1~ssmcation '·PaJ'ish:Hal1.· . Barbar;J. Nikinas, . Pastoral' practIce, w?ich td~s,. to,· system of the" Natioriall,egio~.of

"'assist the 'faithful 'in' drawing the greatest profit from partidpa­tion in the liturgy, is quite an­.other thing, hesai~, ..

Bishops and pries~~, accordi.ng to the Cardinal, develop pastoral 'practice 'i~ their ,own, diocese. But.as.far as:t?~LlturgICalCon­gr~ss ~n Ass~sl IS .concerneq, .~~ saId, ItS greatest, value lay., I

,the impetus that .It gave to. the s~ude';lts .l\~d. WrIters. of ,t1P:1?gshtu~gICalM: Ie' t r . ; :

, ass' s en.. ~. Returmng to the lIturgy on a . diocesan scale, the Cardinal said

that it must c~nter' on the Mass, . for here all the faithful come

Christian community spirit.. It "many parishes will be receiv­is introversion, is materi~l in- ing converts." stead of spiritual and is not· in keeping with the sense of the Church."

On the problem of commu­nism itself, Cardinal Lercaro said that the Italian Communist party is.making an all-out effort to preserve its' capital in Bolog­nat It has a very' strong eco­nomic base here' and maintains its strength through 'a highly developed program of' social works. ,"Italians are communists," he

'l8id~ "not by conversion bl;lt by perversion._ They ,become ~om­munists only through a' material outlook on life after they have I

abandoned' their' spiritual out­look. In my opinion, emly a small part of Italian communism can be explained by anticleric­alism. If there is any exaggera- " , NEW BEDFORD " ted antic1ericalism these days,.; . '. .- ,,' " .' '., '" ... ', ". ,'. '.• it is primarily due to the curre,Pt •. " W.t,+3~42 - 'pre"'~lectiod propaemda..'- ___

THE ANCHOR­ 9Thurs., Jan. 9,1958

Decency Legion Rating System Is Clarified

NEW YORK (NC)-All films rated morally unobjectionable for adults under the old classifi ­

cation ,system of the National Legion of Decency have been placed in the Legion's new A-2 classification, morally unobjec­

tionable for adults and adoles­cents.

This was announced by Msgr. Thomas F, Little, executive sec­retary of the organization, in a memorandum distributed to the Legion's diocesan directors.

Msgr. Little noted that there

Decency, institu'ted on Dee;"'12, there are five filin classifications: A-I, morally unobjectionable for general patronag'e; A"2, morally unobjectionable for adults and ·adolescents; A-3, morally lInob­,jectionable for adults;'B; morally

I objectionable in part for al1 and C, condemned.

The Legion, ~as ann!>unced that there' will be no re-evalua­

. tion of 'films":previl!lusly' classi ­fied.·· , ., .,' .. " '.,Veteran 'Co'n'v'·.J..rts',~

,. '. " .','Can HelpOthe.rs:

LEXINGTON (NC) '_ \reter­. ....

an converts 'should' lie used to'.help those who are about to'be baptized adjust to parish life, ac-

I" . cording to, the' dii'ect,or 'of a na­.

classification of films' rated morally . unobjectionab~e. for '. ,I .',

adults. (A-2) under ~l,1e Legion's LITURGICAL C,HOIR: . Students of Mount St~ Mar:y'.old system. He'suid that some of '" . the old A-2fillns "were'being Academy,' Fall· River who will appear before the' Confra­listed by Catholic. publications ternity of Christian ,Mothers. of .st. Louis Paris~ inc!~de.

- in. the Legion's new A-3, I'lassifi- seated,' An'n'e Marl'e POI·sson.' and· standI'ng,' left to rIght,'f

' cation, which is a,lso,designated '·Mauree·n Canfield:,. Dianne Turcotte, Val"rie Gesner' andII b t bl f ..,.as mora .y uno Jec IOna e· or .. Sandra BrI;ckhI'll adults,

'H ' . M L'ttl 'd SUChowfl~lvmeSr'a'reSgtor'b-elplaecesadII'n'

the new A-2 classifiliation ­morally unobjectionable for adults and adolescents. "It' can be safely said," 'he"stahid,: "that the vast majority' of the fibns which had been previously rated

. A-2, for adults; were also ·in. fact . acceptable for adolescents.'j· If

there be some exceptions to this rule, they are minimal in num­ber. and do not ·justify. the mbr­ally impossible task of re-evalu-

Michael C. Austin' Inc.

FUNERAL SERVICE

549 COUNTY ST.

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

'The

DANIEL F. DWYER Feneer.1 Roate

127. CHESTNUt ST.

. tionaI organization" 'of" convert

I clubs. - ,. ' .. : .' A veteran convert shouid be

assigned to each prospective n~"~"'

convert, answer his questionsd ' t d h' t . h an In ro uce lm 0 parIS so­cieties, stated Father Leonard B. Nienaber, national' director of the Guilds of St. Paul. Members of the vocal group

''This simple but personal at- include Marion Garant, Sylvia tention-will reduC;e the average Houle, Diane Turcotte, Elizabeth of' one iit· six con'vertS 'faillng Bento, Charlotte Nowak, Sandra

• I Ch . m·"ount ·St. m·"ary Li,turg.ca , o.r T E • C f t .t

0 nterta.n on ra ern. Y The 46-voice Liturgical Choir . Donovan, Claire Gleeson, Teresa

of Mount St. Mary Academy, . 'Silva,NatalieBrennan, J.anice Fall River, which participated in Magill, Jeannette Costa .anel the Forty llours devotions at St. Carolyn Drewniak. Thomas More Church; Somerset, .' Margaret Kanauss, Judith Per­and which has given perform-, ,reira,' Valerie Polka, pe.nise ances before various Catholic Rounds, Frances Thomas, Elaine organizations throughout the Turcotte, Virginia Garc\a, Con-Diocese is scheduled to' ehter- stance Roy.tai~ me'mbers of the Co'nfrater- Carol McTague, Kattwrine nity of Chr'istian Mothers of St. Magdby...~lairye Urban, Je~~,ne

'Louis 'Parish at· 2 o'clock hext BYfOl1, Patri.cia Rc~gan~ ~~Ulse Sunday afternoon iri St.' Louis: ,Bou~ay, ,Fran~es, M()so.n ~mel

'., ~Under the' direction of Sister" . Mary Verona, R.S:M., A,M.'; the

Liturgical Choir ioUows the ex­hortation of Pope Pius X who encouraged all "to restore all things in Christ." The academy singers strive to do this in' the. field of church music, emphasiz­ing its rare beauty as'a signifi ­cant part of the Divine worship of God. , .

Liturgical or·.church musIc IS that which clothes the sacred

"text with stiitable 'melody, that is rnusic' which has holiness, b~auty 'and goodness of form. .This becomes very apparent when the singers present such works as the "Sanctus" and "Benedietus", from the Grego­

. hrian Mass, "Cum Jubilo;" t eh "0 E . "Credo" by McGrat; . Sca

'b I d thViatorum'· y saac an eh f th t d HoIc ants rom e res ore y

Week services. " The choir aims to' show the faithful just what is the type of

" th H I F th havemusIc e 0 y a ers decreed. for church services and . "ts to help the laity to assume 1

own role in the restored Holy Week services. .

Porada, ' . Pierrette,' '.Levesque, .. Anne Marie poisson, Elizabeth . ,:Perreira, ,Nan Price, Nona'Coyne,

R9salina Magane, Virginia How­arth and Elaine Connors.

. Patricia Carey; Carol Thorn­ton, Georgia Joseph, Kathleen

NICKE~SO~

FUNERAL

and

Monument Services Serving the Cope and

Surrounding Communities CAPE COD. MASS.

JEFFREY E~ SULLIVAN

F"..eral ROMe $50 Locust: St.

Fa!! .River. Mal!IJ.. . 'OS 2-2391

Rose E. Sullivan Jeffrey E .. Sullivan

. Mrs, 'Fred~riek O'Neil ;"'m be in c'h'arge of refre'shments.

Prayer for Docfors , By Father Keller·

NEW YORK (NC)-A special prayer for doctors has been 'c'om­posed. by Father James Keller, M,M" director of The Chris'to­phers. ,

It was prepared at tht; reg~est .o~ A/lbot,t. ~a\Jora~ori~s of· Chi­cago for the Christmas issu~, of their publication, "What's New."

The pra~er consists of 13 short paragraphs. Two 1)f them follow:

"Thank 'you, 0 Lord, for' the privilege of being a doctor~for

.Jetting me serve as Your instru­ment in ministering to the sick and afflicted. . '

"Grant that I may continually bring 'to : 'my work the saine soothing compassion which You

. so generousiy displayed centu­ries ago in healing the sick of Galilee."

The Christopher Movement, with headquarters in New York, seeks to promote action by Cath­olics and non-Catholics for the

.restoration of Chrstian principle. in various spheres of life.

' .:

,'" '. 'Flltteral: • J • .. ~ • •

.' D.areetor. '. ' "

,; .'

469 Locust St.. Fall Iliy.· -

. OS 2-3381

::·D~·; D~ .,Sulliv·oo:" &, Soris '. "-":.

t '", •. ;. • ~'.

_c. P.' HARRINGTON FUNERAL HOME

986 Plymouth Ave. Fall River

OS 3-2272

MICHAEL E. O'ROURKE Funeral Home

571 Second St. Fall River" Moss., '

OS 9-6'072 -'•• f

Page 10: 01.09.58

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

"lanCing the Book$ . '.

Ch~istianity.Sole'Answer To ~ommunistChallenge

:~ By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. ,Kennedy Today 'all over the world there is a struggle, now cold,

BOW hot.. , between communism, arid what we loosely' call, the . forces Of freedom.. In this struggle communism has made ed is Faking dismaying headway. The chief reason for ibis is not that communism truths and noble new' ethical eommabds the best brains or' values, .all bound up in a sin,gle, . d th b t . It 't sure faIth. ~ro uces e es re~u S; 1 Thirdly, it promises perfect r~ lS not that commUnIsm can conciliation of man and the use any means, even the vilest, '. forces of nature, a scientific or­whereas we· must forego evil der -in which there will be no means. It is that the' full dimen- mysteries or puzzles' and noI

sions of com- threat to man from nature. munism are not Fourthly, in addition to prom­el~arly recog- ising all the answers, it lays nized, and the down a clear-cut course of action on 1 y effective to be followed. It plainly tells principle and people what to do. eourse of oppo- Fifthly, in the name of human­sition ~re not ity and for the sake of the flaw­l'esortedto. The less' future it imposes a disci­one adequate pline and ~xacts sacrifice. It is answer 1;10 the it .says, going toineetall th~ 'eommun;lst chal-needs, settle all difficulties, pro­

ill developed by'.Father Martm' .."

Jenge. IS: .a~- duce an>earthly paradise. Here tbent!c 9prlst,l:­ . ,is a greatcause to which to dedi­anity. T~'is idea ". .' . cate oneself, however costly.

.. . . D'Arcy, 'S.J.. in his new book, • End JustIfIes Means Communism and. Christianity·· ~ , It IS, easy to. demons.trate th?t .Devin-Adair. $4). .~hat has happ~ned m RU~SIa. 'Father D'Arcyhas searche~ s~nce +917,and mthe'satelhtes

through much history ana opiri- ' smce .World ~ar' II,: h~s .been . ion, has sought'to gr~pple ~ith' an~th}ng ~ut ·bene.~clal' t~ ~~e' other techniCians'. The prelate.' 1'95'7 Att d t' A~ F" ':Ilind8m'eritals and·.ultimates, and": ,~ple.. T~e ~':lSPQ~,lsm"t~e p~tI-, said there aresoine 600 lay . ' . enance air orce

'has worked out a tellin-g.i>iece,.less.,e).:pl~!t?tI9n;t~e extmctIon teachers ,in the 200 Catholic.' ~..", I'; '.•. ,:", ..•• ,,:, ,," ,. , , .:'

'Of argurnentatitm: Buf there is . of the ,md~vldual.. the pl!rges and' •

.. :

sChools ··o{.the 'diocese and he is~eli.gi,pus,S~rV;ice., .. s1'.•.• ,1"~pS -: 7:'. Min,ion ' eonsideiable repetition a!ld not slave labor camps. a.nd all the res~ planning' t'o'use Catholic action":' enough' crystalline order in his -the~e ar~ .notorlou~. istsand Legion of Mary groups bOok. It' CQuid have been 'great..:, " ...Buq~~r:lq~~,~ns'Y.e~s.,tha~ this',. 'to assist thecatecheticaI: instruc;') 1;' improved bystricter·arr~,nge'" 'IS ~eces,s.lt~,~~,4;;anq,wIII b~ ~0l'e" '~~on,,,,.;,,: .. ,_;·' ,J

Mento ,R.is .often demanding .thall ' comp«:nsated.fo~, by the,. ,'. .,.,:' :reading:, 'b~t it ,hahdsomeiy re- .finalachieveriient;thilt it is no·' le~~ 'o':HhE;~world and the·Chtis.l' Pays th~ 'efforh'equired'w chew :'JJ)ore than the ,throes of tecon-.·· ·tian solutions, ready ,to labor a~:, 1hrough 'it: ". ~ucting,a tho·n)ughly,rotten, so~': thEl ~PUg1)" te,diOQs, ,;unrerp.ittingC'I """

Complete Philosophy cletYi that ~e ~uaranteed mar- task. of transforming society in :We commonly lump together' velo~se,~dJ~st~,~es..,.~J,chm.~a,?s,.. th~,.bght (If ~?,e (tospet

~m'm'unl'sm, na'z'I'sm,' an'd f'as'cI's"m' :""th·lt. IS e.a..s,y'ttoOt.~·.·tohP",I,ck,.:Marxl.st, ..".. , '·M,ass a',n'd' M·q'.rals ..:,..v ' "j

ail so many.forms of'one and the, ,eory t~ar"';t ~,~" 0r"~tsd f~,l~e." "An apt preparationforSund~Y' .,

.Sl;lld thCl;t,total attendance !o,r, al~ same thing-totalitarianism. But' a~sumlhIOnsit'1\ga:s, fan . es~e:- .. Mass' 'or an equally 'apt help to' d~nominations totaled 12,156,100 tile latte.r two' are rude and rudi- ~lat'Yfi. t~ u fer ac 0 obJectIve. re'col'lectl'o'n durl'ng Sun'day I'S the fourth year it h . . d/'

'd th" fi t JUS 1 ca Ion or acceptance of the '. . -:- . . as ~asse ,nentary. a1ongsl e e rs . . f .. f th·· . "t "b' 'l't ." d' .afforded by My Sunday Readmg the ten mIlhon mark: . Communism professes to be no lon, 0 e:· meVla 1,1 y an b F h .",..' A h . . .,. perfection of the classless so- y at er KevIn' 0 SullIvan, ' c aplains" office spokesman ~~mg less th~n a co~plete ciety.· ., ·~,F.lI4. (Bruce. $5). . said, in elaborating on Chaplain pbdosopp)" of bemg, ~n? to an~. , . Marxism Is' Faiih. ,This book provides ,a rela..;· C.arpenter's announcement, that flWer every on~ of· lIfe s prob- ',But the Poirit is that'Marxism tively sh~t commentary on the' 5,602;62.7 was the attendance fig­lems ami questIOns, down to the is il faith. And you cannot meet: Epistle and the Gospel appointed . ure· for Catholic chapel services. last. . . \. a faith 'with. notiliIig. You can for each Sunday'of the year. The. conducted by Air Force .chap-

It beheve~ that It al~ne .c~r- meet. it;<inly, with another faith &ripturalt~xt'isgiven, followed lains, and 1,403,891 was the total l'ectly explams~a~, socIety, hlS- .' ,that is b~tter.~SuchisChri~tian~ by an' e,xplar~tion,~mdan apPI1; for' chapel service conducted by to~y, andtha,twl.. thabsC?lute cer-.. . .' .... ",. "., .ca.t.ion. ','the e.x.,phma,ti.on be.·gf·ns ··"'civilian priests 'acting ils' au5iil­::~~~ ~,. ~nows' an<t.owns: the ,~r~ Z;j'~i~~~:i:i~~~,:j~~;:~~i~:~:. Wit~ a#~nli!ral S\lmrn~I;y;',tb~n ,:' iary chaplains: ,,, '/. ,., ,'i '''Ma~j('meant' his view td' bes~stems ,f,ail}tly ti~ged .with,.,or ' dea s ~~9,1.~ey,~,~l:.ds,\phr~s~s,.:'rhe total attendanceof,all'de"-'

the cori'1pleteanswer'to life·'and,.""rt;!motely re~ated toi.ChristianitYi i.~.n~~n~~~" .esp~CIa!ly""tho~~.,~oipinationsinCluded 10,517',300 to its problems,'" says Father' not. economIc and social reform" mar. e ' . .Yo S?me..?,bs~urlty. ,!:,ll~. D'Arcy',; '''to be. ,a philosophy .' owmg somev.ague .inspiration to a.,?~hcat~Pll/s , Alghly., .pr~ctll7~1 which~as complete in its truth .. qll:,istianity., But' ,the genuine. , .~.~ .. apP,eillng... The, .. ,work, . IS,

. . .' t' 1 '. tid' sound clear and most useful"and the·.·fulcrum·to·change the" ,~~,~ce,megra an complete.. ' h:' ,....,.,. .•.•. ,.', world...His 'dialectic of history,' Father. D:Arcy ,contrastsau-.' , t e volu1Jil~ 15:3 a~mIrable,exam-

.,' . . ..'" ,...... . pIe of book mak gis meant to be both p.hilosophic- .... !l1e,nbc<::ll.f1stianity witl1. Mar.x- ... -y r-' ,111. '.'1., ally and. scientifically, cert:;lin;, and all. ,that happens pl'oceeds :" inevitably from the ground truth that matter is in motion and obeys a' dialectical principle."

Economics ~.he Key. It is sheerly materialistic: mat­

tel' alone exists and bothconsti ­tlites' and accounts for every-' thing. It defines man as a tool­'bearing animal. It sees the key'

. to all history as lying in econom­les, specifically in the forces 'f,f production. ILexplainsever.Y­thing that has' happened, ftoi'n primitive socH~ty: down, u,>, th~ pr.esen~, b~. the' r~gidlY deter-,

,·mIned.:andmescapable progres­sion o~ 'stages in .control of the forces ;pf p~oduetion. ' It"confi'"" dentl!, pred,l,cts.. and undertak~s, to brmg about,the final stage m Wh.ich the proletariat.controls the forces of production and there evolves the classless so­c.iety wherein all- will be perfec­tion. . , . T . d A I

remen ous ppea ~t. is u?deniable that there is

. erltIc~1 d~sorder, and consequent \ despaIr,. In. the. modern world.

Into thIS sItuation there steps~ .. t h'l h 'tharXIS p 1 DSOp Y, WI athe M

". political apparatus and, in our time, political power in one of, the vastest countries on ·earth. So.armed and so based, this phil ­osophy makes a tremendous ap­peal. ;' '

First, it conjures up a visio:J?­of a society in which exact jus­tice will prevail; in which there will be no exploitation, no ine­quality, no misery; in which all· goods .will belong to the people and all power will be in their

..band,S.. " , . , >. .•.•

, 'Secondly, it offers what are ~ppOSed:. to ~ be' '. iitantic ~new

,WW. He ~pells out the authentic" .', ea li,: ago,~ard~nal. Spel~man <?hristian, concepts, of man, 'of,. tra?slat~dt1'J.e.IJ:l:edlta~lOns; ~m tl:~e, Ii.fe, of personal worth, of.society '.' S~ndaY,,Go~pel~ ?y Fr.~lU,clS ~ar,:,,;

.and social: mQr,alitY,of history,' d~al BOl'gongml-Duca enbtlt;!.d of hUl11an destiny. He is espe- T e Wprd. ~f Go~. T~e book IS. cially impressive in;-.comp~ring, no~. repubhshed In an Illustrated the Marxist ideal of the classless ;e?ltI.on . (Cra~ley .. $3.9~). TIle.

,~ociety ,and th~ Christian reality medltatIon~ ~redls~ernmg and of the .Mystical Body of Christ. . ~rayerful, .a ready..al~ to reflec­

Surely· ,here is the answer to tion. . ' the pull of Communism. Between' , Father DOJ!linic M. Prummer's the two there is stark antithesis. Han<lboo.k of Moral Theolo~y They' cannOt be 'awalgamatedas has be";!} i>rRHght, 1JI?~to:-d.atean~r some suppose. Nor ca~ Ch~is_a~llPte~.for, "A1JiI~rica~, usagf,l, ',,' New iJeClford'8.Leadin~' ,·1.' ',',~ ,~EDF~RD I tianity .be adapte'd here and there. .(N'e:WJm\I,l·::~4).• :Il'l;,c!ol}ci~~ !o~~, , " ., Plumber".: "., .: ' to the Marxist pattern.. No more ,It .covers the whole,com.Jl\e,x~el~...c;"I· . I c~n. Ch~i,sti~n~,ty .be~oJD~1Derely .of ,~o~a~,...~he,o~~~y, an~ .,?e~~r ,

';~clal.:niessulnism'.··It'must"re.. l .su.ccmc..tly, af;ld. .• a':lt~~r~t~t~velYii;.·· S E''G' U'I' N" '; '" main itself, inits ~fullness~ ,'. '. WIth t~~,,~Yr~!,dq~eshonscom- .' .•. '.' " ' .,.'

'Task h T,o~gh,. .... . ~~nlY, ~al~edth~relJ1" /', ... ~ , .'. . 'Truck'ody. Builderi.q

As such it 1applies to every- . -:..~-,-~ .._ ..~~_.-.:_.:-., thing 'which Marxism professes l' . '. '1- Aluminum or Steel to take up and, solve,It has all ICORREIA &. SONS . 944 County St. the answers,far more profound'. ."ONE STOP NEW .BEDFORD, MASS.0 •

realistic and workable th -' .. ' I' WY '2-6618 what Marxism propound Bant" SHOPPING CENTER • .". s. u 0 ..'

t~ese have to be put mtQ prac- •• Television • Furniture .0bce . , • ',' " 00'. •

That. they m'ay be,. there is ! - A)lphances - ~roeery , need of .full-fledged Christians, ! 10~ Allen St.: New B.edford i men and women matured' " WY7-9354,Ch' t' .. ' f . In., ,man. •

0

rIS, In ormed as to the prob- .....lI_C~II_II_CJ_lI_U~lI_II_II_I.-t. <,.

IJ-B"'--j .1 LUMBER. CO. I I. .So. Dartmouth ;,I a~d Hyannis. . I .. ri So~ Dar.tmouth f I . .WY ,7-9.3.84,:. , 'f'

. , '~Hyannis'2921: ': " ..• " .......'~..............~....~-~i-_··-.O '"

, ...... ' .,...THE ANCHOR ThurS;,'Jan. 9, ~958

.~ath\~c~~mD?::':: ~A~AY~TTE (NC) ~ Catho­

licism is growing rapidly in' the Diocese of Nyeri, Kenya, Africa,where the vicious Mau-Mau ter­ror, raged a few. years ago, ac­cording to Bishop Charles M. Cavallera of Nyeri, avisftor

. here." There have been '22,000 oap­

. tized in the Faith this year, Bishop Cavallera reported, and 52,000 are under instruction. Tlie Catholic, population of the dio­cese is 84,000. He has' 80 priests, of whom' 12 are native Kikuyus, and 637 catechists working in his diocese. Brothers of. the Sacred Heart of the New Or­leans' province conduct high schools.

Approximately 10<f Consolata Sisters work in the diocese along with the Con'solata priests 'and Brothers, he said. The Mary Immaculata nativeSisters, a FALL RIVER SISTER HELPS START NEW HOME: community, has 'about 100 mem- _. $ister'Mary Brian of' 81:.' 'J9seph (Aim Marie Hol~and),bers and there are about 30 .extrein~ right, daughter.,()f,Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. HollandBrothers of St. ,Joseph, also a native community, he stated. ()f 161 Snell St., Fall River, ,.joined fburother Carmeli'te . "The future of the missions Sisters in starting the'new'Carroll ~anor home for the aged

depends on the arrio\mt of .work in Washington, D.C. Carmelite Sisters are in' charge of thewhich can be taken over 'by lay people," Bishop Cavallera said.. Catholic Memorial. Home and Our Lady~ Haven in this He s'aidhisdiocese needs teach­ Diocese. e~s, agriculturalists, .nurses and

<{ssj) . OIL' BURNERS

Also' complete .B6iler~Bu~n'er or . Furnace' Units. Efficient low cost heating. Burner 'and

.fuel oll sales and service. .

Stanley Oil Co.,lnc. , ~80 Mt. Pleasallt:Street :, ,,'

,NewBedford'·'+.

WY • 3-%667

.. • ". • .. J..;: ,~

a~', :;er,vices' conducted :by chap..: lains .and 1,638,000' at: services

,c0ll,ducted· in ,'Air Force chapelsby cI'vI'I'a' I g Ch l'

,c. " n cer ymen;' . apam' CaI;penter'announced. 'd'",

H 1 .'e a so 'said that' Catholic' .~f'7achihg .,missions, peld by ,~iyilian priests' in the United ~tatesa'nd by two Air 'Force

'. ' ,',.0 LIVIER :"' .. ' : . :

Plumbing - Heating :;

.HATHAWAY : ;

915 Acushnet Ave. ~ IAt Weld Square ~ . OIL CO INC I

~ . .,. • ~ . ,New Bedford ' .~' ,. ,

.. , EYERETT ,MOTORS, Inc. . '."

. 880 SOUTH MA,N ST. - FALL RIVER'

OLDSMOB.ILE'-- CADILLAC

So~et'y.-.Tested .Used Cars ··.Teleph~fN!.OSborne 8-5236 .' ; .

.' . "". :., ~ .. t . '. : ., .

. .. , WASHINGTON (NC) "~'f!tie'; chaplains" ~verJea's; numbered.'

t!>tal -,attEmdance .figu'tefor . all" 2;559 with'228 021 "pe~sons at­.~atholic;reIigiousservices in 'Air' ·tending:'.: .' , .. :',", , ' ,Fi>rce crapel~durin,g fi~c~l, yea~ .' ,'."i'he ';chiei~f ~h~pl~ins, said'. 19.57 wa~ .shghtly,,m~r~ ., than" ',th~t Prl)t~stap~ )preac~ing mis;'''

.seven .*":llIO?, the .A.Il .F.0r.ce:'sions COI)d1,l.cted by gu'est clergy, ' cllaplales.· ?fflc~ heJ;e mdl¢a;te~;" : .pe.n at Air Forc~insta)IatiOllsin .

An an~ouricemelltlly,Chap}airi . t,hil! country and Qverseas. totaled' ,(~~j.' g~n.) C.harl~s~;, ~ar~e.,~": . 2;3~4 "with ,110,95.1< attending. ter chIef fA F h 1." '.. 0" IT C?rce c.aJ:! .~~nll, ,

,.,.:'". ~.DUSr~I~L~~LS :: "~"" ~ . ~.., HEAtiNG' OILS : :

: 't; ~IM~E~": ~" q'",' , . •

: OIL BURNERS ~

.: ~. Sales & Service ~ •

~ . ,501.COUNTY ST.:

~ : NEW BEDFORD ~ WY 3~ 1751 ~ , ...-'" _ _,~ _

.' ,~re ,w.ere, .Th . 81 ,. J,eWISh ",Torah. . ,convocations held, with 2,201, present, ·he added.

Chaplain Carpenter said· that 'Air Force' ch~pbiins conducted 6,993 marriages, 2,401 funerals

,and more than' 17,700 baptisms.

I

1

" .,

No denominational breakdown wal' made in regard 10 theSe activities.' -:i:::;::::::~~::::::::::;::::::; r

,',':1

.HATtlAWAyi'S' :~.~UNDRY,~·lnc.

"fi~est ~inCe' 1877" ,';-.1

Same' day 'service '! if 'desi':~dl

VfY. ~-5528 • CAMPBEll ST. ;NEW ,BED~o.~D

~ :

: ~ ~ •

~ .: ~ : ~ ~ ...r

, .I

,.

.: .. :

, ',' .1'1

;' I,'

I

Page 11: 01.09.58

Tomb in Basilica Contains Relics Of Wise Men

MILAN (NC) - There is a tomb in this city which explains why the feast of the Epiphany is celebrated by the Milanese with more solemnity than the other feasts of the Christmas Beason.

The Basilica of St. Eustorgius,rich in historical monuments and art treasures, holds the tomb where relics of the three Wise Men are to be found.

Tradition has it that the re­mains of the Wise Men were brought to Milan from Constan­tinople around the year 330 byBishop Eustorgius I of Milan, through the special courtesy of his friend the Emperor Constan­tine. The sacred remains were taken to Germany as war prizes in 1161 by Emperor Frederic Barbarossa and were placed in the cathedral of Cologne.

For almost eight centuries the people of Milan tried to get their precious relics back. But, 1l,~ter the fruitless efforts of such an illustrious' personality as St. Charles Borromeo, Cardinal An-

THE ANCHOR­ 11Thurs., Jan. 9, 1958

Maryknoller Continued fro~ Page One

for the churches, says Father Murray, but the priests serving them were Spaniards, and when Spain's dominion over Latin America ceased, there was no native clergy to take over eccles­iastical administration.

Catholic influence has re­

mained, however, to the extent that almost all Peruvians are baptized and are eager for fur­ther instruction in the faith. "It's really a paradise for mis­sionaries," says Father Murray,"for the people, far from being

antagonistic to the Church, are pathetically anxious to learn more about it."

To compensate for the short­age of priests, the Maryknollers have inaugurated a system of instruction by catechists. Led by a few full time lay workers, an army of five hundred cate­

,chists conducts instructions in Our Lady of the Assumption parish. " ,,"It's considered a great oonor

'to be' a catechist, and there's

pIe to attend instructiC:lns. We've known groups of Indians to stay , ;

, t up until one and two in ,the morning, watching film' strips and slides explaining points of Christi;m doctrine."

The doctrinal ignorance of the people" nowever, leads!~ SQme, ;, ,.

',J. itproblems. Chief among these, . ;.:,l1;lYS FatMr Murray" is the cus:, ,

:, tom of: ,: "trial ,m.ar:fiage..", ' It's, " " ' ' "" , '"., " '),I' , ,

drea Ferrari· succeeded .in ob.., , never a problem of getting peo­taining part of the remains from the Archbishop of Cologne in 1904. The relics consisted in an arm a tibia and a vertebra that are believed to have belonged to the body of the youngest of ~e

three Wise Men. Solemn Procession'

The procession which, on Jan.' G, 1904;" lICcpmp.ani~,~ ,thf; .s,acr!';~, reli~s to. th~, I'Baslilca Reg~1ll; (BasilicaoftheKings).--.asthe, ,,'coQsidered ..a"great,~~ial dis- 6.MILLIONTOI,.OURDES, il958:" Celebrating the eenteimial o:(·the Shr.ine, of OQr ;" basilica"of s~. EustorglUs .1S ~lso "grace ~,get ~arri~d without an", Lady of Lourdes, an estimatedi"6-millioh pilgrims fr'om all'p'arts of the world will- take,,, known ~ - had an exceptIOnally,' 'accomp~nying,fiesta, .to which al~ 'part in marking the anniversary, of Our Lady's' apparitions to"St. Bernad(jtte Soubirous. ,,;., solemn character,~om~arable.. ,fri~nds"~Jla,relatives llre invited; ,Playing an important role for American pilgrims; .the Catholic T,ravElf ;League of N:ewY~rk only to the' processIOn durh'lg but rnaflY young couplell, haven'twhich,'before they were taken" 'su'fficiEmt money to celebrate on' away by Frederic' Barbarossa, ' '~lavish 's:cale; Hence' it'sai'l ac­the bodies of the Wise Men were 'ceptedi>dctice for" coiIples to earried to the cathedral on' tbe "live to~ether for two or' three' feast of the Epiphany. "y'eilrs while' saving diligently:for

The devotion shown by the Milanese for .the Wise Metinmneevt~er lessened durmg all the relics were in Germany. It be­came the custom to sh~w tbe faithful ~n t~e day of ~plphany' a coin bearmg the, Image· of Emperor Zen 0, fi.fth-century Roman Emperor, which was be-Heved to have been ma~e from the gold offered by the Wise Men to the ,Christ Child. "

t ofReenactments of the' s ory.the Wis.e.Men' wereh~,ld outside,

14ththe basllica from the. cen­tury on and, up ,until th(! ~.~~

ionscentury, spectacular process in which three n<;,blemen played the part of the Wl~e Men we,aved the.ir W,ay through the streets, of

th f tMllan eve.ry year on e eas:i The, rehcs brought bac~ from

Germany were placed I~, t~e same c0t:t'in where t~e bOq,l~S of the Magi had formerly lam. It is an enormous. and unadorned s~rcophagus datmg back to ~he time of the later Roman Empire. Believed to have been ordered by Constantine forhis own tomb,

their 'wedding feast. "It's quite common," says Fa­

ther "for a man and woman to com~ into the rectory to arrange for marriage, accompanied by one or two toddlers. They aren't impressed with the gravity of this, and it's a hard job to get'the teaching of the Church across to them in this respect."

" .,', ' ' ,AI~i~ude Tr~~~le.

Since ordination, Father Mur-' ray has, ,.been assigned, ,to, the alti'plano',region of 'Peru, at an altitude of,I3,000 feet. "It takes, some getting, 'used ,to," he ex-. plains. ",'When you first go there, YOli find you must walk slowly, ' sleep more, and also cut down, on food,.since the"digestive sys­tern needs some time to adjust to the altitude." Ql,li.te, the op­posite sit.uation 'eXists, though, for the' Indians born on the heights., They' are physiologi­cally adjusted to their moun­tains and suffer intensely if they move to lower parts of the coun­try

it was pulled by oxen with the' .' bodies in it all the way from Constantinople to Milan, accord­ing to tradition.

The, tomb, whi<;b be~rs :~he simple ,inscription "Sepulcrum Trium'Magorum" (Sepulcher of the Three Magi)"lies in the.tig~t,

, " , T Th ' , translept of 'fthe t~aSl lcfa· ' e~

t fOpopu ar mam es a Ions 0 "rIY!,.' '1' . d t" th'tlme~ are t~ay Imlte o. e offermg of Incense to ·the .f31th­ful who visit the basilica on the d of the Epiphany ." ,

ay .

Bureau Head Seeks Positive Approach

WILMINGTON (NC)-Father John E. Kelly, director of the Information Bureau, National Catholic Welfare Conference, Washington, has called for a more positive approacb to Cath­olic relations with the radio and television industry.

Speaking to the Cat,holic Broadcasters Association, I Fr. Kelly said more work is in store for the organization if it is to put into effect the suggestions of Pope Pius XII's recent en­cyclical "Miranda Prorsus."

He told the group that an at ­tempt must be made to contact key personnel in the communi­cations media in order to assist them in the work. "They rarely hear from us," said Father Kelly, "except when we Me qain. .IOIDethinlo"

. The Quec~ua Indians of Fa­ther l'4urray s area are descen­dh~~ts of the In~aStr' adn~t' prealservrte

lIncestor~tell,' a 1 Ion a of pot~c::ry m.f~~ll~', bll~, th~:av~,'I' lost their .sk~ 1 as maSI)DS., ere as the 'bUlldl,ngls left,bY the Inch~s are the marve of modern arc 1­tects the Quechuas liv~ in low

'd' h ts' 'th' tr ' f d mu u el er saw-roo e ,or igIdo-shaped. "The ,floors are

'd t 'd th' 'd' " , :Omu 11 °th , anIle t ~rs a;e : sma at amos " a,ve 0 pulled inside when l make home visits," laughs Father Murray, whose broad shoulders and height make him a giant beside the small-statured 'Indians.

The mud huts, however, are no laughing matter, for they af­ford small protection against the bitterly cold winter nights of Peru. infant mortality is about 50%, and it's common practice for the Maryknollers to take a hypodermic needle of penicillin along on sick calls. "So many

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peOple almost die'of imeumonia ;b~Ys, and; what must be, unique, '" or infections, and the reaction 'of the inmates of the loCal jail! th'e Indians, to penicillin is so' Father 'Murray is chaplain for good, that we've saved many a the latter' group, and he reports life with that 'shot in time'." The that their chief project is the priests' are careful to explain, teaching of catechism to fellow though, that the needle jab is prisoners. not an integral part of the sacra­ Father Lawler ment of Extreme Unction!

Another priest from the FallTypical Day River diocese who is assigned to

A typical day at Our Lady of the Peruvian mission field, and the Assumption starts with Mass of whom Father Murray brought in the breathtakingly beautiful news, is Rev. John Lawler, bro­parish church, 334 'years old and ther of Mayor Francis 'Lawler of 'itn,own 'as the "Temple of Gold" ,"" " ,. ' , . ~ew Bedford. Father Lawler' because of itsgold":decoratedin-' ,is, pastot of' St; Rose of' Lima 'terior adorned with ancient Church 'in Lima. His' latest ac~'

paihtings. Mass is 'said, too, in complishment is the opening of 'the vacant parishes neighboring' the first' 'parochial school in Our Lady' of the Assumption; Lima. In April he will add first

'catechetical instructions are giv- ' year high school to his educa­'eri,and the sacramentsadminis- tio,nal facilities. ' teredo The 'priests are looking "Since 'his August arrival' in the 'forward to the arrival of Mary­ , .United 'States; Father Murrayknoll Sisters in'the parish. The has been 'assisting Rev. Arthur Sisters 'will open dispensaries to Considine at St. 'Mary's ,~hurch, ciue for the' physical needs of ,South Dartmouth. Next week the Indians. he leaves' by boat from' New

Already working as parish York City for the return trip aides are the members of a new­ to Peru. ly-founded native sisterhood, "Are you anxious to get back,the Sisters of Jesus the Worker. , Father?" we asked. His broadAnd the time when a native smile answered for him, and heclergy will take over responsi­ didn't need to put into wordsbility for the area is not too far what seems to be the feeling ofdistant, emphasizes Father Mur­ , every 'missionary, from Alaska ray. In the six',years since ~, ,to. Africa, 'from "China to Chile,.has been at Azangaro al0l'le, the'

~'My heart's 'in' the missions;" " parish ,has, sent '2Q youths to the',' " r,

. diocesan seminary.', ' .. , ,. ' ,',' . '

An ~Ctive parish ,6rga,nizatlon :White's Farm Dairy"'is the Legion of· Mary, with" , " " praesidia .forme~, m~ong the "SPECIAL MILK ' women of the parish; hIgh school

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. NEW YORK (NC)-Fordham University has received a $15,000 grant to aid an experimental program for training liberal arts graduates to be high school­teachers. 'The grant was made to the Jesuit institution by the Fund for the Advam:ement of Educa­tion.

The- project .is the initial phase; of' the university's plan to con­ /.

duct experimentation and eval~­:Won for the purpose of rede­signing, its ,teacher-edl.l~ation"

program ,within. the cO!'!text of . the liberal arts tradition. " The program, leading to the degree ,of master of'science in (!ducation, 'integrates intensive I.,

'training in professional educa­, tiOD. with continuing study in -the s'elected teaching fields at the graduate school of arts and sci-' ences. ' ..

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Page 12: 01.09.58

:....ollywood in F~cus

',Asserts Objection~b!e Film' 'Outrages Human Dignity

,/ By William H. Mooring One is not surprised that the National Legion of

Decency, in placing David O. 'Selznick's "A Farewell to Arms" on -its "B" list, registers strong objection to two major situations conjured from Ernest Hemingway's novel

of World War 1. One Holly­wood trade paper interprets the Legion's comment as a 'sign that Catholics are to be pressed more strongly to stay' away from "morally objection­able in part" filpls. "A Fare­well to Arms," ,while techni­cally excellent in parts, strikes

·me as a good \JJ;io~i~ to', stay;~way 'fror,n. '1":, " i\'~ 'btl .the: guise' " ' ~ctors"and -Deco~UoDS., ' .can 'City-Post Office 'has is­':9f~ dr·am.t'i c' '" ;: ,:: ·It ,has always' been a ~olly': '" sued' a new seri~lf of :postage ~rea'lism:," 'says"'ilie 'Legion;;"this'wood theo~y th3twomen patrons stamps. marking ~he 800th .Ffi~. ~rtisen~, ,inaterial. in "such ' ?';It tIleb.ut~r',onth~ir.bread and,',anniver~ary,',of the' foun<hi­:;~psatIo~?I<an:d excessr~ernan::- '. .if 'm.en; ?rovide ·the Jam, they do .;, tion-:, of ..the .shrine of Our .~~e!,;tha~.lt"lS.Judged '0)CnnOr7 '. so only' ,bec.a,us~. women force \' .' . 11 ' ~al~y'.; unstiJta1?le:':for, en~el:tain- ,::~h~~<,tcHt, In !he;lnnual poll of, cLady at. ~a~la~~ " A,u~~rla•. ' \ni~~t purpQ.ses." '. '" . .' AmEl.ridu'l theatt;rS,'.taken for':the' 'Fo~r denommatIons. m . two -' 'This objection applies to end-past 26 years. by Quigley Publi- deSIgns show the mam altar le~sly long,' clinically detailed ,cations' "Motion Picture Herald;" of' the shrine where the an.d utterly.nauseating scenes of 'agonizing and abortive labor . . 'followed by unsuccessful Caesa­rian surgery. These are.a clear

::an'd certai!l violation 'of 'Holly-' "wood's voluntaJ;'y code, _',,,,hich iiules that "surgical' operations ta~d c.hi~dbir~li·ri1Ust be.;treated .:\VI~i'?- dIscretIon. restram,~ ~nd 'within careful limits of, good :t8ste:", ) _ ; . ",,~ '" 'Gr~ExceSs;';" ".

" '. . . . . . ~~~::Sh~';~?g'~~~,d ::re·,:f~~';'d,i~Og' 'Catholi'c Ad'tllt, -Progro.m, " ,$10 "A small amount in exchange.for.the m\lltipl.e blessings I have... .

.",' , received.' .-:-.. to AnoncfolC$5 "May' yoti get' ma{iymariy more, for

~:,~n~i~l;t~;~~~~ds~o~~~~~nnao~i~:~:'·.Ne~.~r.~·c,;JVen>c C"J ,::,.the"Missi~,ns,:· . ," .... ,~;':c ;:~. ,,!,.' ,~: tOo.:: ':.':' :': ....,f9,r d, ',H,elp' ,­ ,'J••

':~: ~~i~~~~~::o,~~~s~:e~~o~~.se.r;:1 more than 10 minutes'his film blatantl la s u on the mount­

. ,." ,y p I ,~. "b t't ~:~l ag:~\:ss ~o~aavne.... u pI.e­. y. I? .,' .Many secular crit~cs .<lep1.ore

h1S· "ross excess "Hal'rIson's ... , '", b.. ',:. . '.

Trade Reports,', privately C1rcu­; I' t d t tli . , .'.,"a. : ' 0 eater~wners, ?e­scnbes these scenes as "at once

'·pa'.!nful arid 'fascinating to wa'tch:'" Th'e ma·. fascinate

". 'd" ." ' ',I, ,y "'1'1' ":f..;. : ,.,., .'. sa 1StS. They W1 more, hkely "sicken o'raisgbstmo'~t n~'rrAal ,. peopie 'who have paid Mr.:·Selz­'nick's' high fdm/ssion i?:ri~~sh,op-ing to be entertained. . .

Dangerous and unnecessary dread of childbirth may be con­veyed to many an inexperienced young w'ife~' Even those' wh~ through unfortunate", personalexperience, may acknowledge' these scenes'as "true to life":in

,the .' exceptional. .case, will not likely, agree :t.hat any .wom.,il,n, jn s!tch· circumsti!hces, ..should be m.ad~ a pu~l!c, 'spectacle for gap­ing, gasping morons. , ..Insults PubJie , .. " .

, ,1.:he l!'i<;!dent .of bIrth .is a glo­rlOUS one ln WhI~t.. woman m~kes

'. her"noble~t sacrIfl~e ~or love of God: an? man" The.re.Is no. valid, d~amat~c~,.~~~Oll .V'(~y:-;~~~ Selz-

What I saw In .1e PIC ure was"'n' ·t "h' h th '.

1 1Cl sex, w 1C e ~O.Vle

Code says "shan not be exphcltlytreated, nor justified, nor made

.to seem right anci permissibie."

Involves Audience , Selznick's filin does not merely. report upon illicit rela­tionship. ,It frequently, by action and dialogue, .involves· the audi­ence in occasions. 'It .sanctions

... ! illicit .relations as the inevitable consequ~nce:'01 a' great 'lo~e, al­- -, though what actually goes on,is

'; unbridled gratification of sex in­fatuation'bew.:eeit"an army mlm

are too selfish to give their un'­born child a decent name be­cause to do so they would have to expose their own guilt. ,

If the Hollywood Code Ad­ministration is ~going' to okay

•material such as Selznick gets away with in '''A' Farewell to Arms," the movie busine'ss may soon bid farewell to its ~system of self-regulation. And after that compulsory' film censorship, by public demand, cannot be

12

, too far off. ' MARK, 800 YEARS:' Vati ­:'., ,." "

actors usuallY,-llave fig';1red more miraculous wooden statue of largely than actresses m the top th BI d V' . M ."10" ,.' e esse Irgm ary IS· . ' ' . . money-spmners. .. Faith. We are helping you to purchase an increase of joy, as we

This year; for the first time, preserve~, ,Bott?m stamp 'bring increase of faith to the pagans. Everyone_wants to be happy. everyone .of the -top 10 is a man. : shows. general vIew of the Are you? Begin tomorrow by making a tiny little .act' of self-denial. In 'this' '~rder they. ate: .Rock' :.shrine .chutch. ''''The' shrine 'amounting to maybe only a few cents a't a time.' Do it aaiiy' and Hudson, 'Johh Wayne, Pat Boone, has become' a devotional cen- at the end 'of the month send it to· the' Holy ·Father. S'ee hoW much Elvis PiesleY.'Omd note. he. is "ter'for',the.Au&trian people holier and happier you are!' .... :',.,.. ~.' ' beaten by Boone!),. Frank. SIna- dill t t' th"· ' .'d' .' ' '''''', ,>,'. tra, Gary Cooper William Hol- ,an ' e, s.a ue· ,erem IS sal GOD LOVE YOU to H,'& P. D, for $10 \,'My brother and I den, James:Stewa~t, Jerry Lewis to date to the 12th century. 'have 'been dropping' our"pennies' ,into a 'jar ~md we .have saved and Yul Bt~rllier.." • ::,NC ·Fhoto.i' . ,., them to send to you... ·.:' .. to H: P .. f~r $25 "A ye.ar,'~, suppl;V',of

" ". cigarettes in thanksgiving ·for a' great favor.:' .. '. to. C. T. R. for

I :~HIC':'-G<> (IJ~)" .-:A itPP ...9f ­..f1c1al, .0'1: :th~., ~atholic·pr.o~r~m

of adult educatIon here sa1~ ~hat such programs are not elIgiple to receiye gnints'frorri the Fund for Adult Education of the Ford Foundation. . .,', .,.The.statement released here byP t F·t· t' . 1. ch' ,., f ter of policy"e er 1 zpa riC...,. . alrJTlan .0, . the board ot" directors' of Adult

. .' .. ' .' ... 'B.· h . F' ' '1' I d'Educab.on C.enters, m'!de ref«:;r- .S. QP,. ~om' ce a~

ence,tq',a mld,..Dec,ember .~pe.ech Describes'Challe",geby Holy. ·Cr~ss Father ,John J ...c' ,L"O'S:'A'N'O'EL'·E,S.· (',NC') _.. I'c'e­.'... - ' ,.. .., '-" .. , '-. Cavana,ugh, .former presldel1t oflandisfiist 'Bhih6j; since ibe'Re­

.th~ U/101verslty oU'l'qtre D..<!me. " Father Cavanaugh; now direc­

tor of. the' Notre Dame FO,unda­tion, told' a: .Washington, .D,· .c.,

d' th t h b au Ience a' e was a, mem er of the. foundation~s ,board, oLdi­

,-rectors and that no ,Catholic ,ad.ulteducation program had ,~e-celved any of the. $29;000,000 dIS­'pensed.by the fund.

,,' "This chas been due ·:not·: to bigotry:, but to' the fact that there has'tlOt been' one. request made which meets the reasonable con­ditions that the Fund lays d "'d F th C hown, sal,' a er avanaug.. Mr. Fitzpatrick said, in his

statement here that "the truth 0,£ the matter is that, at least up to April 1956 the fundI' as a matter of poiicy D-:ade no grants to pro­grams"operat'ing under religious

!, Dick or :~nl' ;o:~ef,~.r>I~;'lIro~u~er.. auspi~s/, ~ ...,",~ ,;":~ ~,;:". ' Ii should go sofaI:" uld¢scr1bmg .' "ThO l' .. , ,":' t b;":;' 'toI,;the h . 1 t", ," i~, . . IS.pO ICY maY'llo " =.uue,

p. YS1ca :cos. ,. i;:V ), bigotry »~t,it. is ,J'fmc;.h:1o SeeI Ii ThlS mOVIe outrag'es hum"n" ,,;,~ "': .. '.,,".1 '¥.:"';"",~,."i"I' .' 1 di 't d' h' . :- . how It 1s.reasonable.'1~lie;·~tlded.

sar~ to reach the modern mOVIe close to bigotry/' ' " audlence.., Mr. Fitzpatrick added .that "if

,!he LeglOn· o~ D,~cency further Father. Cavan.augh's remarks pomt~, ~~t that.m A Far~~ell to mean .that· the Fund has adopted Arms there IS not suffICIently a more objective evaluation of cledar, m.orahi ~ompe.nll~a~lt·onl· fo;,' church-sponsored education'pro­un ue emp aS1S on 1 ICl ove.' . . t .' t . 'grams, the adult educahon' '

,. . .

h . movement as good reason toreioice." -='=~;;;'=";:'=:::::======;;;;;==-.r

Congratulations to /

ST.JOHN'S PARISH ' On Your

75 th ' '.

' ANNIVERSARY I· • ' . ~ .' -'I.

' THEFIRST NATIONAL

. .. _. '. " . .~:;:: .;,-,~'~~,c~;

A·Favor for You, Too

God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.

The spiritual life of a Christian is not a lon'go level plain; It is more ,like a mou.ntain which demandS constant climbinl:. Every now and then we overcome a difficulty and reach a plateau but the stay is of short duration. More pushing through bram­bles. more pricking with thorns. more trials are necessary &0 reach the next plateau.

Why is it so many remain mediocre and on a dead level, without any growth in Christ or added services to the neighbor? It is be­cause of the fact that when they level off they refuse to make a sacrifice, or to crush the ego, or to chisel off a hunk of selfishness. Hence their'spiritual lives are dull, common­place and uninspiring, The faith appeat:s to them_as a code of 'negations' and prohibitions: .iyou irlay not do this", or "The Church for­b~ds that." Hearts in love never talk that

. way._.

",' :,The curse of mediocrity or ordi~arine!ll\. 'kills all possible joys, .To overcome it.

" there'must be, newerosses shouldered, more time l:iVeD'tO medi­tationon the Christ Who died for' Us. and a ~uUinl: aWaY, of,~me financial "security'" iii o'rd~r to have. ''heavenly security". ,WIleD we ask you to' make a Sacrifice for uie HolY Father's .soeiet7'for the 'PropagatioD' of·1he>Faithw~.do, not only want· to help IIi. missions in Africa and Asia; ~~ ,-,va~t 'to. ~~,p 'Yo·u,. :We.~o.pot 'want 'only to bring '&he: Cross to India; we want &0 make i&take deeper roots)n you. ' ' .

Actually, we are doing you a favor too, when we ask you to do a favor for the Holy Father's Society for the Propagation or,' the

: "~fnot;":hel contitlUed;"then• .L., ,Now' istheUme ,to purchase. ;~n/lncre~e .of: JOY, '~r: .)'~urse,' " .>It: IS" ,~ard to· under:stand how and an increase of faith for. the nagalls .by sending. your, sacrifices

CatholIc: programs, and for that ,to the Holy 'F~ther's Soc~dy for the' Propagation of ihe Faith• matter. any other church-spon­ )Iour Sacrifices can include even old- gold. or worn out diamonds sored program, can'be ,criticized or 'dusty old emeralds which. have a resale value for the missions. for .not ,r,eceiving .grants.,in-aid Y.Ga. 'Can. se'nd your. old gol(1 to tJ;le N.ational, DIr;~c,&Qr or to your

.from the fund since the'y are own ,Diocesan Di~tlc.t()r, ". . .'.,. . t t· 11 1 ddt"au oma 1ca y exc u e. as a ma - '

¥; .­ ~ ,

formation visited here andcie­... scribed the challenge the Church

faces' in thatcoun~ry. '"

Bish6p Johannes Gunnarss~m.Vicar Apost6iic of Iceland,' i~' in the .United/States t6 's'e'ek me'a'ns

. of ilssisting 'the Church bihis . 'native' land. 'He adrninisteri 'an

" " " area the' size of 'Ireland, and iias

.. ! nine priests:who care fot some

Cut .0J.lt.this column,·.pin yOUr s;1crifice to'it and mail it to the Most Rev. Fulto~. J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the ;Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth ","venue, New YOl'k 1, N. Y.• or yourDIOCESAN, ..DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T; C0NSIDINE.

::,368.North.Main.Street.. J!'~U"River,.Mass., )', '.

·.New, Assignment' ." For Father Charest·

The'Rey. Edward E. Charest, son ·of Mr. and Mrs., Armand Cqarest', ,of ·199 South Main Street, Acushnet,. has recently been transferred from Sacred Heart Cathedral, Raleigh,.N. C.•

. to Charlotte, N. C. "

;. < ,j' .··.CANDIES,: ,',i' '·.h,:: t g.D1 ~'. lsrega~ds ..ur~an .rlg~ts " "It·':i's·ciitficiil't' tOUli'dEfrstarid un-,m '"l-300,'c;'when .internal.'··strife II ' , •... ' 'Au'aiiii.'ry P~".. . ",r t~:nd1\.;~~al'pr:l:vaC'y. and II?SU~tS :: less, ,o!,co':!rse; 'it ,is based on tIle- ,and, 1'iI'01:.wegian inroads brQught "", 'j • ....~ '~:-:.. ~ "" •• \ ',:,,,. CHOCOLATES"""';' I. .~y.l;> ~c.,l~y 1}~£eI7r:lqg,th~t J,ts I fear·'that educahonal programs ,.a d~c;Jine,.Qf;faitb. c",. ,! ..". .", ·· ..BOSTON:·' .'. r' .

! Imag.mabo~ ~lls become so Jaded ..sponsored •. by 'religious ~ groups . ',-,:::'=~;;I::::';;;;;==;;;;==;;;;;=~~ " .:' ... ' '150 V~rieties': .. ;.,:.,

... ROUTE" 6 'Near ';"'1 I. OCEANPOrt.T, N. J~I and Its feelmgs so calloused that . . ". '" .." .. ' '. . -th' 'k" d f\'''' "f' "..... can,not glve a. truly lIberal edu- .;-, ; ... , . . 1S m 0 rea 1sm . IS nece~- catiori. Then, - ~hat would 'be_ ,Com',plete PAWTUCKET~;R. I.F9irhaven Auto Theatre

COMPARE ••• then ioin the SW'ITCH'TO

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' " Father: :.Cqares.t has ,aslilumed 700 'Catholics hI a' popula'tion' of the position 'of Administrafor of160,qOO persoris. . . Charlotte Catholic High School.

There are also 46 Sisters, 15 Previous to this appointment he cloistered nuns anci the Legion of had been Master of Ceremonies Mary. The Sisters conduct a to the Most Rev. Bishop .of,.hospital and operate Ii printing Raleigh 'and Assistant at the

. press. Bishop Gunnarsson said Cathedral. he, 'hoped to Elxpand the work Father Charest attended Cath­of the press to 'reach a nation olic University, Washington, . where ·Lutheranism is the state D.C.• , and also Fordham Uni- Main Office ."d PI."t . . ,.. \ ..Ielig~on:. ' ,'., .. ".

'.' .;. LOWELL, MASS•.. ,."politiCallyl, economically'" or' so­d' '-:::Catholics ,.:'are' not' ;hindered .,:..·;Dorothi":Co~",;:,' "TeIMhOfte Lowell' ",ciaHy:, , "the ::Bishop. i stated. ''''c'He

o' : r' ,G~ 1~~3,~~ .~'StLj:!500:":i ":':, 'f1orri~"m;p~~;'·'. ~,:,:::;" • .> • ~ • ~"'."said ,the 'Church;·ftourished.::,un­

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. 'versity, New'Yorkdty, and the . University of Illinois. He is a graduate. of the bitter where'his gradyate studies 'were completed after his ordination to the .Holy Priesthood. As'a parishioner. of

", $~: ~rancil)' Xavier, ~c!-1shnetJ :he had attended the local grammar school and Holy Family High in New Bed:(ord·. ... .

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Page 13: 01.09.58

Dream of Fa'ther Serra Needed To Achieve Present Objectives

DALLAS (NC) - It was a squeeze play by England and Russia which sent famed Fran­ciscan Father Junipero Serra ihto the wilds of upper Califor­nia and eventually along the road to possible' sainthood, Bishop Robert J. Dwyer of Reno declared here.

Addressing the Serra Club of Dallas on "The Dream. of Father Serra," ;Bishop Dwyer said that in 1749 Father Serra volunteered for the missions of New Spain, where he arrived a year later to work among the Indians of the Sierra Gorda, in Texas and in Baja, Cal. He said that for cen­turies Spain had claimed upper California but had done nothing to make good the claim.

"Now, England threatening Spain's Pacific empire, and with Russia stealing down the coast from Alaska, it was. necessary to act at. once," Bishop Dwyer re­ J,PNIPERO SE~RA

lated. Thus it was that· Father the. tutelage of the friars, theSerra was commissioned by his missiori lands proclaimed forfeitsuperior to accompany Captain to the. Crown or: to the MexicanGaspar de Pertola and "open up government, which meant in~he mysterious country to the practice th;tt they were openednorth." .

to seizure by the local cattle Strucgles in California .barons; and. the natives them-·

The Bishop :;>ainted a picture selves were' scattered to the four of the struggles and sufferings winds, soon to be decimated by

·that Father Serra endured while disease, corruption and their own he accomplished t~e founding of utter inability to 'take care of a string of missions' in .California. themselves. . ' He said that the Indians with Little More Timewhom Father Serra worked "We might say, looking at all"were children of the dawn ... the levidence"that Serra was alazy and shiftless beyond be­ fool ever. to have dreamed: hislief." But his .dream was to dream, that he should havegather these Indians about the known it was impractical tomissions and with patience to essay the impossible."teach them the Faith, "the sim­

a tincture Bishop Dwyer said it must bepler arts, give them remembered that had, Fatherof education," the Bishop said. Serra and his friars been givenHe added: "Then later-years,

perhaps generations-:-begiri their a little more time, his dream wou'ld have flowered ·'into. the·training in self-discipline and

self-govem~ent. A,full century most glOrious reality 'of modern' times." .would not be too much time,

especially in California,' where The Bishop praised highly the· human material was so prim­ the movement· through'which itive." . Father Serra may be' declared, . Bishop Dwyer said that Father "even within our life span; ali Serra's dream ·was shattered, and American Beatus, if not raised to that it' vanished almost utterly,. our altars' as a.canonized, saint.'1 in the generation Which followed Bishop Dwyer said it is well to his death in 1784. remember, too;' that the Church

. "Hardly, lndeed,was the chain in America "has no more than" of California missions complete barely begun her m'ission 'in this before the pressure for their country" while the dream of secularization had become too Father Serra is evaluated, strong to be resisted by. their "We need the dream of Father frail guardians," Bishop Dwyer Serra," Bishop Dwyer·said. "We said. "The Indians, hardly more need it, primarily, to achieve than introduced to the ways of the immediate and practical ob­the mission experiment, hardly jectives before us, a vigorous, more than tinctured with the articulate, intelligent American I

Faith, were declared free from Catholic culture."

Late Bishop McGuinness Directed Remarkable Building Campaign

OKLAHOMA CITY (NC)­ no Catholic churches. Now there Requiem .Mass was offered in are only two: There were 33 Our Lady's Ca'thedral here for counties without resident priests the Most Rev. Eugene J. Mc­ in 1945. Today there are only 22. Guinness, third ~ishop of Okla­ Starts Seminary homa City-Tulsa, who died of It had always been the dream • heart attack at the age of 68. of Bishop McGuinness· to have a

He had .served as bishop of the diocesan seminary. diocese sinc¢ Feb, ·1, 1948, when In 1955, golden jubilee year of he' succeeded· the late Bishop the diocese, he spearheaded a Francis Clement Kelley. He'was ,drive to raise funds for. construc­api>oint~d Coadjutor' Bishop to, tion of a l!eminafY for prepara:' 'Bishop Kelley on NQv.: 11, 1944; tOrY students:· He saw the' sem~

Bishop McGuinness had been . inary begun in. 1956. It· is ex"; raised to the hierarchy when His pected to be,completed in i958. Holiness Pope,Pius XI appointed -Eugene J. .MeGuinness;wa~ him second Bishop of Raleigh" ' ordained 'to the prh~sthood oR N. C., on Oct, 16. 193t.· '. Jofay22, 1915;,i~ Phihidelphia...

. EarclyCareerBuUdin&, Pro&,ram . A distinguishing mark of In 1919; the' young"priest was Bishop McGinnuess' tenure in named field secretary of the the Oklahoma City-Tulsa di­ Catholic Church Extension So­ocese was his remarkable record ciety. He held the office ·until of building. 1921, when he was appointed

When he came to Oklahoma in second vice-president and direc­1945 there were 84 parishes, Now tor Q.f the Child Apostles and the there are 127. There were 80 Order of Martha~the children's missions. Now there are 84. and women's auxiliaries of Ex­The number of diocesan priests tension.

," I '

THE ANCHOR- . 13 Thurs., Jan. 9,. 1958

Jesuit Refutes Densal of Faith

CHICAGO (NC) - A Jesuit theologian, at Loyola University here has challenged the state­ment of a University of Michi­gan anthropologist who said that "religious beliefs, by and large, hinder scientific pro~ress."

Father Francis J', Filas;- S.J., , was one of a number of local'

churchmen who refuted the statements by Prof. Leslie A. White in his speech at the Amer­ican Anthropological Association convention here.

Prof. White. told colleagues that re],igion follows the growth ofoculture and undergoes change as civilization changes. "A ,na­fion such as Russia, which can " launch an earth satellite, 'can .dispense with gods entirely," he said. . · Dr. White late~ told-reporters · Of his belief that theology ill western culture is declining·,as

· science advances, _a!ld that '''su:' pernatural religion is on the wane." . "

'. Decladng, that· "I believe in .facts, not faith,'" Dr. White said ,that philosophy will eventually replace religion., '

Father Filas, an associate pro­fessor of theo~ogy at Loyola, said that' Dr. White's statement of belief in "facts, not faith," shoWs that "he doesn't realize that he has wrapped himself up in a "maze of contradictions and bad logic." . C

"Faith means to: accept truth on the word of someone else," he said. "Dr. White live!! everr. ­day on the word of a human being that something is true. Every time he eats dinner ip. a :restaurant he is accepting. the

· word of someone that the food' 'isn't' poisoned';' .the Jesuit said.. , .;

"Since, he is willing to accept In'flue"ce of Ch.urchttie word of .humans, what. is illogical about acecpting :Checks·Government·th~ word of God?" WASHINGTON' (NC) ~ The

"Superstition, not religion, de~ Church in 'Poland,has won' con­.velops with ignorance. .'Dr. cessions from the Red _govern;'; 'White is talking about ~omething ·ment ,of the country because' of of whose existence he doesn't ·the great power the Church ha's know. It is' as logical for hini fo ·to .unite the people against -the decry religion as it 'would be for .gpvernment, a U. S. Senator said 'me to deny the existence of pro­ here. .tons, electrons and ottier tiny Just returned from a European particles because I !lave never trip during which he visited' seen one," Father' Filas said. Poland Germany, Norway and

"It is as if I were to point to a Denma~k, Sen. Willi1!m. Prox­fiasco in a physics laboratory, mire of Wisconsin urged that perpetrated by some ignora.nt the U. S. provide additional aid

to Poland in the form of fooddabbler, and us£ that as an example to 'prove' that scientific loans and perhaps aid for hous­

ing construction.knowledge is on the decline. "I'd like to invite Dr. White to The Senator said that he be­

spend a couple of days in a class lieved Poland would be moderate in its following of the Kremlin'sin theology to learn what scien­

tific,," theology means. It has instructions· if assurance of such · standards far more rigorous than .moderation were mane the nec­

essary requisite for U. S. aid.those which allow him to make His travels through Poland con­such wide, sweeping generalizaJ

vinced rim that· the Poles dis­tions," Father Fi~as said.

NA'tIVE ART PROGRESSES:, "Our Lady of the :Congo," statue is the' work· of artist Rufino Nzila, a piipil of· the Catholic Art School of PauIis; in the Vicariate Apost­

. olic of Niangara; Belgian: Congo. NC.· Photo. ~. '.

has risen from 179 to 257. Most Automatic Coal Stokers striking has been the increase in

c - Bag Coal ~, Woodthe number of seminarians, MA'S Charcoal to 128 in 1955. which jumped from 11 in 1945 Work Out Your

Salvation With In 12 years, the diocese has ,DONUT.Fear and

seen the erection of 102 new HEATING OILS Trembling,'churches, 70 new rectories, 48

schools, 38 convents, 12 parish Phil. 2:12 SHOPS DADSONhalls, six hospitals and f0l;1r hospital additions. 52 Varieties ~ Hand Cut OIL BURNERS

Bishop McGinness built 23 BUZZARDS BAYchurches in places that previ­ JEWELED CROSS 640 PLEASANT ST.OPP, B B 'rheat~eCOMPANYously had, none. Nineteen mis­

MO.....nu IOIO•• .MASs.. . NEW BEDFORD MAHUlACrVIfU'o,- '.sions were raised to the statlH ""DENNISPORT "

CRUCIAXES - AilTIGLES 't' 'DEVOTION,of parishes: 'In 1945 ,there were 'YiY ~82il''-:28~" The' Old POS' Oftl~ ," • \. " • -:~",~ : • •. ',r • .'.••.'.••......-,_c!Leo~~~~'~ Okla~~ma .wl~ ~.~A.~~J:v~~· ..

In this post he succeeded ·Father William D. O'Brien, now James F. 0 1NeillArchbishop and, Auxiliary . of '

. Chicago, who is president of APPRAISER ~ Extension. 'When Archbishop ' " . ,', REA,L :STATE' O'Brien was na~e<l president of

· the Society in' 1925, Father Mc­ . " ·INSURANCEGuinness was name<' first vice­.' president·· and general secretary. , 'WY 3-5762•

:IIc"had been 'executive secr~­ '136 Cornell Sl . 'tary of the American Board' of "~e~, Bed'ord"" 'Catholic' Missions 'since 1923. His'" Holiness Pope Pius XI named him a Domestic Prelate with the' title of Right Reverend DAVID DUFFMonsig~or in 1929.

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'like communism, Sen. Proxmire said, and' a free election would not win ·the~eds one per cent 'of the ·vote. . . .

. .The Polish' gov.emment allows . religious instruction hi schools, he said, and accepts non-com­

. 'munist prof(!Ssors' and makes' other concessions. because . it knows that the Church is '\ pow­erful enough, force among "the traditionally Catholic people to enable them to' unite to over­throw Red domination.

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Page 14: 01.09.58

•••••••••••••••••••••••

•••••••••••••••••••••••

Sage and -Sam;l ':'", ;,,':"". ,':;' ':".:", ,', ".~'":,,.,," ~.::~: 14 :';'J:'h"': '.' '::"'TJHE A9NCIH905SR· I ':':", ". urs., an. "",.

Asserts, God ',1'5 Amerlca·s .",I"Chief Educoti:onalPro6lem 'P~~·;'Brothers ........• ~. By ~ost:Rev.· Robert J. D\yyer, D.D. :"Ma~k'Centennia-1 '>' . ", .. ' Bishop of Reno' :, ' ,'·CINCINNATI (N.C) ---:- Christ ­

" "Gre.at. deb.ate.s" .. have",b... eco.me. an .en.deIIl-iC;.i...ea.J.ur.e. o.f. mas Eve,:'i957"marked the, 100t1l. ~ . ...., '. ".. " "'anniversary"''-of' an' J:order..\" of

our, times'. it is as though the public had. 'resolved itself irito .. , BrothersI' dedic.~ted to helP:ing innUmerable 'debating societies, all furiOl~sly conc,erned with· .tinderpri~eliged . bOys'." settling the affairs of the universe. The difficulty is 'that no ' The Poot:'Brothers'of St. Ffan­

. h" s one' deba'te "b'ee'n ' .• ' . , . . ", " ·ds., whose U.~S,.,headquarte.i-.$.'-.issooner a .: tinies of the· nation' .c.onvinc.ed· -,laun.ched than another claims that histor'y is b.ttnk ~nd' art' and at Mount "Alvern'o School he're,

were' founded.'100 years ago,· inits pfu~e in the forum, ·so, ,literature mere' pap for .adoles- ·a. solemn Christmas' Eve cere­.that the result is ~'stran~~· c.ents. who hilven't bral.ns for 'mori,yin Alx:':la-Chapelle,Ger­c.onfusion and m~ley, not unliKe ,tougher fare. ~h~yare .nght, of 'many.-. . Bob Sawyer's c.elebrated party, c.ourse, though It IS probab~y true According to the order:s of­where all the guests simultane- t~at. the~ exagge:ate thelmm~"ficial 'acc,(nint, Brothe~ John Ously sang the' song .they knew dlate perIls to w.h~c.h t,he human~-

. d A t 11 Hoever,' founder of ,tile· 'Poorbest. ' . ties ar~eJC;pose. c uay, ~~l- . Bro'ther~/ accompanied by three

Above the c.ac.aphony, how- ther SCIence nor the. humamtIes ever, the current debate on edu- have. fared· too well I~ ..our gen­cation manages to be even more' eral system o~ I~duc.abol!. strident Ulan t~e others.! E,,:,erY-lgoore.:Root QuestictD. ·bodY is his own authority on the scho,ol question, and it would be a poor, thin ~ort of colum~ist who: wou~d shIrk frQm dredgmg up a few bedraggled remarks on the .;su.b~ed, in the .foo.lish hope of e~cItIng the admIration of t~e. populac.e and the envy of hIS fellow grubbers.

American educ.ation, it is gen­erally agreed, is in a pretty hope:­less mess and. unworthy of bei~g'compared WIth the extraordl­

· . t f th 'So . tshnary ac levem~n 0 e) VIe " ,Ho~ever late the ho~r, we m~st begm at onc.e, e~en m t~e k.m-. dergarten,' to tr!lm up scIentists· and technicians to right the bal­

' ~d l' ded an~e all sa ve our· woun

And .neither .the 'scientists nor the humanities have probed .the main problem of our educ.ation. Beating the drums for their par­ticular interests they ignore the root question of what education is for. America has yet, to solve its own phi~osophica~approach to educ.ation 'whether it shaU--elect for mate'rialism idealism or , , some form of realism.

If it-is to be materialism al­. ' .

ready heaVIly entrenc.hed, then Itis patently foolish' to go to the bother of c.oniesting' the field with the Russians' since -in that ......' db' t'

case. thel: ,allp~a,n .0 Jeclv~," are IdentIcal WIth our own, and freedom is an illusion, which

.prIdr· . ' . ;might as well be disCarded now

square of the hypotenuse. It . mayl,be that, the child's world'is la~ge~ya.Pi'ojeFtion.of. I, thl7. a~ult

.mm~: WhICh has fa.iled to make the .;.necessary .adJus~~,ntsl~ reahty, but so far as we can 're:­call'our kindergarten days' were happily untroubled by the quan;­tum ,~he?ry, '. . ~e to whom ~e SImplest fr~c-

ti.op~ are to thIS d~,': mysten:s dee~er than the 'JirlRl.ty aJ:\d. t e busmess of ·.c.~s~m~, out, Olnes ~heer pre~t~:lg~~tI~~, =r:~y av~ no1 tVh t1 0 J,e~ 10~ 'h Ide

prop,osa . a. our sc 00 s s outeach more science and' mathe­

" . . . mat~cs. If the rlsmg generationmusfincrease while we decrease,

tists: Even as things are, the total proci~ct. of Am~ric.a in this iirle is ,h~rdlY to', be. despised;'luld' ·it may: ,be suspected that there has been,some fast work witli"stans::' tic.s : to persul,lde· the taxpayer that the Russians generally are as far ahead of us as has been c.1aimed. Even so, the inc.idenc.e of genius, scientific. or other, has never been worked out in a satis­factory ratio with general intel­ligence or training. There simply is no. explanation for the fad that at certain .tiI;J1es, 'in 'c.e~i<lin places, genius or high talent has appeared. We 'may not like i,t that it has manifested itself in contemporary Russia,but in' it ­self it is no refleCtion on our­selves.

Shock 'Needed The real pity of it is that it has

taken this kind of a shoc.k to set. Americ.a thinking about the kind and' quality of her' education. It is like the thunderbolt of c.alam­ity which sets a'n othe~ise irre,. ligious people praying for all they are' worth on the, time,. hon.ored. principle. of "the devil' took sick, the, devil a monk would be." There has been enough seaching critic.ism of American education before this time, whether 'directed' at' its scientific .inefficiencyor at i.ts philosophical blindness, t~ a1E~ii -­any', who would ~iste'n: The dal~-ger ..now is that ,the emphasis on the ,scientific·' lag, may be'· taken as the only criticism worth,con-, sidehng,' :'..':" . ',~,,:,'

Already the defenders of the hUlhanities are. c'rying"th'a(~k'':' c.lusive c.onc~i"l,t,~ation on scieiJ-; " tific preparedness.., may, wen breed a generation Uhfit ~for c.ivj.liz~d. ,r~s~W~,il;>j~i1i~~.:·,'.!hlo!Y'., warn 'against the day when the

,I technicians will c.ontrol the des­

c.ompanions~and Mother Fra~c.es . Schervier;'foundress,of tfi~ Sis­'ters of t~e Poor. of St.. Franc.is, 0

,. visited"the ChrIstmas c.rib· of 'an". old Dominican c.onvent in Aix':la~Chapelle. Mother Fran­ces had: encouraged Brother Hoever to establish the newc.on­

'gregation. . 'Theacc.ount reads: ,"Here in·the" dead of niiiht,

with Mother.. Frances as th~ sole witness, Roever and his" thr~

. t d th'companIOns c.onsec.ra e elr lives to God, to Serve Him hence­forth in the perSon of> poor and ri~glec.ted bOY,s."

Start Scho.ol The Poor Brothers of St: Fran­

cis _lrst came to the United States "in' "1866.--' At the invitiiiion of

Archbishop John, B.Purc.ell: of .Cincinn.ati, they .opened .an in~

!~or~ S~i~nce and Math , as later. ':,. ".' "stitutioQ .for~ negleded bOY,S., . Now this is all very well, . If it is idealism then why'- In a short time the Brothers

thou;gh we· c.onfess· to'''a' "strong ,,' shaulir it concern'·ti:S'ove'rmuch·· ··were·..·'caririg "for''130'yoiJngsters;' .. prejiidice against kindergart~ers 'what,takeS,place in thisreallD of , Aft~i-. occl,lpying several old full:;of cheerful fa<;ts about the , shad()ws,solohg as the spirit buildings' in Cincinnati, the

'f ..' . ,who have come so far.so fast, Brothers of StFrancis as wellnot 0 say run. away 10 a ,paOlc, h ld be t to th t f' . 1 1 ' .' . ,

't ' " . s ou ' a us a ma so u- as their juniorate, postulate andb10 e 1 " 'tion ' . . But the question is., d~per . nOVItiate. ,. .

than: merely turning out a suf- T f ' I I' . The'. Brothe~ ,opera.te the fic.ient. quota of. trained'Scien-ranS ers' Morris Sc.hool for Boys, in

soars untrammeled? If it is real- Brothers in 1871 erected. their ism of 'course then' the balance, 'own school building. on a 106-': mu~t be ~res~rved and th~ \h~'st . ac.re' site· in nearby Delhi Town:'. generous effort made to preserve ship.. They ,named the tract a way of thought and a way of· Mount Alvern~, after the place life that canno't be reconc.iled in Italy 'where St. Francis" of with either extreme. . Assisi rec.eived the stigmata.'

Clearly, the'philosoP,hical issue- Boys at Mount .. Alverno are is too nebulous to satisfy the, 'enrolled'througli Catholic. Char;' commolF man. General Mac.Ar- ities, with .which the school' is thur's dic.tum. that all 'problems affiliated. They are offered both are at bottom theological, cuts to 'a~ademic and vocationa~ train~ , the core of the question: Arner- ing. ica's' chief education~l problem .' The school takes in many boy. is God.' Neither science nor from broken' homes.' .

'humanism can' serve .as surro- ." . '. ','..' ". ".' . In addItion, to bemg a school,

gates. It would ,be a supreme Mount Alverno is also provin­irony of history if the Russians . h' f h . ','. ".clal, eadquarters or. t e. POOl'

Continued from PaA'e One Searcy, Ark. It is named for.-Bishop John B. MorrL .of ~ittle

ordained for the Diocese on Dee. "Roc.k' ~ho . in 1921- invited the 8, 1954, by the Most Rev. Alfred Brothers to establish a school "B, !,everman, ~ishop::ofvSt;oJohn;> "there';:!"""';'!""';""'" ..... ,' New Bruns.wick, in:-~eCathe:- --.......,'''''.,--:...----"'---;r-­dral of St.John.

Father Mc.Sweeney is a na­tive of Spiddal, Galway, Ireland. 'He was educated in St. Mary's College, Galway City, and after:' wards at Mount Mellery Sem­inary, Waterford. He has also studied in Pa'ris at the Catholic I~stitute and the Sorbonne. ,He wa's ordained on June 11, 1939. • Father .McSweeney served as

iii military' c.haplain;first jn the Irish Army· and then, in the English Army. Du'ring World' War II-he was with the 8th Army' in ·Africa and ,alSo With the 5th Armored Division and 8th Army at Anzio in Italy. He .. also served. as c.haplain at St. Mi'chael's Hos­'pital, Aldershot, England. .

At the end of the ·warFather, McS;veeney went· to Mauritius, the Indian Oc.ean, where he .worked with the Prison Depart­ment and was in charge of con­victs. . ,

Father'MacSweeney has been at Sacred Heart parish since. last .sep~elJ!b~r.,_" . .

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HAS GOD HIS PLACE IN YOUR WILL! REMEMBER HIS NEAR EAST. MISSIONS.

YOUR..MEMBERSHIP ,OFFERINGS are &'ifia to belp the' Holy Father meet' mission needs. LivIng 'andl'deceasedare enrolled. 10­dividualS-51 yeariy and $28 PerPetually. Familles-$5annoally and $100 perpetually. They 'sbare in· 15,000 Masses yearly' and in' the praters and 'sacrift~. of tbousnds of Near East missionaries. " '

MASS OFFERINGS ARE. PRECIOUS HELP TO OUR PRIESTS.

Today, we must bee for kind benefactonl to belp two 'young seminarians who are studyinc for' the' Pr~estb~. SAMI and OKLAH are at tbe LaUn semmal7 in JOI' ­

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, aDd you will sbare in his priestly future.

,WHAT' YOU PUT IN THE HAND OF OUR HOLY FATHER YOU PUT IN THE HAND OF CHRIST;

OUR SUSPENSE CARD will be a parantee that MaSlleS will be said' for Tour immortal souL Ask us about « tOday.

. • • ,I . •

OUR DOLLA~ A .MONTH MISSION CLUBS help meet the varlollli mission needs of Our Holy Father. DAMIEN 'LEPER FUND helpa

the lepers in India. We have CHRYSOSTOMS to belp ·the seminaries train priests. MARY'S BANK goes for training native missionary sisters, .while ORPHAN'S BREAD feeds and'clothes several thousand" orph8llS. MONICA GUILD adorns and equips' mission chapels. CHApEL OF THE MONTH .dollars build 'a modest mission chapel while our PALACE OF GOLD CLUB helps nuWl who shelter the abandoned old folks.

'GOD REWARDS THE. CHEERFUL GIVER 933,000 refugees in the' Holy Land! These nnfortunate soul. look

to: our Holy Father in 'all'their miseries. Many are' IIeseecbing him for food. $10 will buy a FOOD PACKAGE wbicb will be distributed by our HOLY FATHER'S RELIEF MISSION FOR PALESTIN,R REFUGEES~·· .

~-~---'-_':"'-

GIVE TO SAVE. THE-WORLD FOR CHRIST.

,~'l2ear&stO)js$'ions~ , FRANtIS~ CARDINAL' SPELLMAN, preSide~n

, "Msgr. Peter P; Tuohy, Nat'l Sec'y . ' Send all communications to: , ' . . CATHOLIC· NEAR,·EAST- WELFARE ASSOCIATION ~80 Lexjng~o~.Av~:-".at46th St.:. New Yoi-k 17,'N;'Y.

~;~.'. . .'''' .. ;l-...... .. , • ~ '."t·~ ",

CARDINAL -AND MAGI: His E'minenceGiacomo ,Cardinal Lefcaro, Archbishop of Bologna.,· readily smiled for -this·photograpl,t showing one of the three gift-bearing wise men, during Bologna's annual procession of the Ma·gi. NC Photo. ".

PRAYERS,~' AMID, ,POVERTY! The inost reCellt appeal that 'we ,have received from Rome is for

,the. rillace 01 Maitara ia India. Tbe Parisb Priest bas written to 'Rome at tbe 'request of his Bishop and '&be appeal reads as followS; "I am tho pulsh 'priest 01' this village and tbe pres.­

, eDt Chapel shed is·too 'small to accommo­date tbe faithful. Many have to remain outside' due to· a' laelrr of space. I desire vel')" much to, enlarge tbe tiny chnpeJ. My 'catholics here are very poor and many are witbout' 'work. Hence' I eannot ask tbem to "

.help. If· J' could receive ,$2,500 ·1 'would be able to enlaree the cbapel sbed, construct

. a ,wall around .our eemetal7aBd buy a 11t H6I, E:illhir's MissiWr.AitJ metal tabernacle for tbe aUar." We bope ('

our benefactors will help as 611 this worthy appeal. Any little eitt will be more tha~ precious to this mission. need.

BE GOOD' TO GoD AND GOD WILL BE GOOD TO yoq. . The Sacred Hean Sisters iii Paiai, India, are

prll7incfor'li benefaetor .for eaeb of two novic~

who Just beean tbeir two yean kaininc-8l8­TER M. JEROME aDd SISTER THOMAS 'AQUINAS.' W'on" youbelp' by sendine ODe the $150 Deeded eacb year' 01 her trainiDg. Blessinc.

Page 15: 01.09.58

-Mission l5eminary of the Fathel's

/

Azores Seminary - THE A~~HOR­ lSof the Sacred Hearts here. Thurs.• Jan. 9, 1958ANGRA DO HEROISMO, Azores (NC) - Bishop Manoel The seminary is operated by

is named after Father DamianAfonso de Carvalho of Angra the Portuguese P~ovince of the de Veuster, known as "Damian blessed the new Father Damian Fathers of the Sacred Hearts and the Leper." .

CLASS OF 1961: Freshman class officers at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven are, left to right, Susan Pepler, president, and Sally Mulhern, vice-president.

Bad Family Relationships Chief' Cause of Excessive Drinking' "

IN FOOl) fHOPPlNC:.i& SMART TO §lYE.,

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., savings are of utmost importance, Ahat First National shoppmg, where,

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week-end meal

WASHINGTON (NC) - The family of, an alcoholic often needs help as badly as the alco­holic himself, according to an expert in the field.

Denis McGenty, director of the New York City Alcoholism In­formation Center of the National Council on Alcoholism, con­tended that the chief cause of drinking lies in bad family re­lationships.

"We must counsel the 'alco­holic family' or the 'aJcoh!>lic marriage' - not just the alco­holic," he told members of the American Catholic SOciological Society during their three-day convention at Trinity College here.

Speaking at the same session of the convention-on "The Fam­ily"-were Jesuit Father Lucius Cervantes, head of the depart­ment of Sociology at Regis Col­lege, Denver, and Dominican Father Charles J. D. Corcoran, professor of psychology at the Dominican House of Studies, River Forest, Ill.

Father Cervantes submitted results of a study on elements that go to make up a "success­ful" American family. Father Corcoran called' for husbands and wives to resume their tra" ditional roles as the first step toward restoration of the, family.

Born Normal Mr, McGenty declared "that

"the alcoholic is born an essen­tially normal person. Efforts still being pursued have so far not been able to demonstrate that alcoholism results from some constitutional factor." .

All alcoholics do, however, re­veal one common characteristic, he said, "a deep underlying sense of inadequacy." He attribute4 this to the fact that "very early in life unfortunate family rela­tionships, specifically parent­child relationships, mark the alcoholic with a deep persistent sense of rejectio. , so that ever after he is painfully insecure."

The environment that breeds a potential alcoholic, he deflared, is created by over-protective pr domineering parents, or by the loss of one or both parents.

"Alcohol and alcoholism is to the alcoholic a solution to his problem before it is a cause," he said.

Mr. McGenty contended that an individual's potential alco.:. holism is later "triggered" dur­ing his mature life by further family problems,

He pointed out that "it has been said that the personalities of marriage partners are like lock and key. They complement each other, So it often is in the

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relationship of alcoholic and spouse.

Need to Escape "Why do sons and daughters of

alcoholics, after all they've been through, often marry alcoholics? Why do some women marry one alcoholic after another? One study revealed five wives of al ­coholics whose fathers were alcoholics, as well as five twice married, both tim.es to confirmed alcoholics... What are they per­sistently seeking? The answer to a need of their own."

"Thus," he continued, "while a wife is not responsible' for her husband's alcoholism, she may be one of the reasons for his con­tinued drinking. Family atti ­t\,ldes trigger the need ·to escape."

"The single family attitude most obstructive to recovery," Mr. McGenty declared, "is. the tendency to verbalize an accept­ance and understanding of alco­holism as a disease, while· emo­tionally rejecting the alcoholic as 'weakwilled' and deliberate in his drinking."

Must Counsel Family He said that a frequent reac­

tion of the spouse of an alco'­holic was: "If he really loved me, he'd 'quit." ':Would the same family," he asked, "say to a car-' diac: 'Yes,. John, I know you .have heart, trouble. I know you' must have bed-rest for six weeks.' But, John" :we can't afford for you to 'have heart' trouble. Why don't you just stop? If you really 'loved" me; , you' woultl." ,

Pointing' out that the nation' is faced annually with a "billion' dollar hangover," Mr. M'cGenty stated that "we must counsel the' 'alcoholic family', or the 'alco..: holic marriage' - not just the. alcoholic."

Complete Cou~se , OTTAWA (NC)-Priests and

seminarians of the Oblate Fath­ers' Holy Rosary' Scholasticate here have just completed a course, in pastoral psychiatry, given by one of Canada's leading psychiatrists. ' .

The lectures were presented bt, Dr. Victor Szyrynski, profes­sor at the Univen,ity of Ottawa and the Scnool of Social Wel­fare at St. Patrick's College.

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Page 16: 01.09.58

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

-Grotesque 'Co~~c~clence Priest Explains St. 'John The EvangeDistAdvertisements Symbolize" 'True Meaning'Saints In Crosswords

..... Of UniversityDevotion ~to Self~Comfort By' Henry Michael WINDSOR (NC) - A univer­

Davenport Catholic Messenger By Donald McDonald

sity should be the home of schol­ars, and "colorless, textbook. Last week- I discussed here the Ariny's disturbing· commentators" should be rootedreport of how our American soldiers fell to pieces when out, a priest-theologian said

they were taken: prisoner during the Korean War. Eugene here at the centennial celebra­Kinkead's 20,OOO-word article' on the report and his inter­ tion of Assumption University of views ~ith the key military personnel in Washingtoni

appeared in the Oct. 26 issue of The New Yorker maga­zine.

cent of theThirty-eight per 7,190 American prisoners died in the camps \. because the y could riot and/ or would not "adjust to a primitive situa­ti0I1;" because of the callous­ness and bru­tality of ~er­ican prisoners towards· those who were sick (some of the sick were rolled out of prison huts into fcee7iing tem­peratures to die); and because food. was not shared equitably between the prisoners them­selves. One-third of the prison­ers were guilty of collaboration with the enemy. American "in­formers" in the camps made escape impossible for even the small minority who had the courage to attempt it.

I do not intend to go over, again, all the depressing oetails of this report. But the thought struck me as I read, and re-read, Kinkead's article that the article itself was a'ppearing in a maga­zine that has come' to symbolize all the softness and effeteness and languid aimlessness that the military found in so many of our yC:lUng men in Korea. The testi ­mony reported by Kinkead, to­gether with the advertisements in The New Yorker 'made; .it seemed to me, an un~atable

grotesque combination. New Softness

For example, one of the real American heroes in the prison camps was Major Clarence An­derson, an Army doctor who kept many GIs alive by re-energiiing their will to live, forcing, them to eat, restoring, wherev.er .he could the military discipline that had been abandoned 'when Amer-' icans were captured.

Major Anderson said the breakdown of the American sol­diers was "the result· of some new failure in the childhood and adolescent training of·our young men-a new softness.",

On the 'page preceding Major Anderson's d~vastating Conclu­sion appears an ad by Countess Mara cravats of New York and Florence, Italy. "One Man in a Million," a!firms CountesS Mara, "can own this exclusi~e Countess Mlua Cravat, of which fewer than 150 others exist in the en­tire world. Mara Stripes from our latest· collections, $8.50. Many other equally rare Count­ess Mara orginals in distinctive designs and fabrics, '$7:50 to $ZO.OO and more."

Perfume Pipes In this same issue of The New

Yorker, I found advertisements for Van Cleef & Arpels jewelry (bracelet, $10,000; clip, $'1,000; earclips, $3,300); $12 perfume pipes by Schiaparelli ("toiletries for men")-the "perfume pipes" were advertised on a' page in which Assistant Army Secretary Milton is teUipg reporter Kin­kead that primitive, hardship conditions in prison camps are'

.standards in the Communist half of the world and that "if America is going to survive. Americans

Windsor: - - The "true meanin~' of a uni­

must learn to cope with" these conditions..

I read on. '1 found The New Yorker tell ­

ing its readers through. a Julius Wile liquor advertiser to '''Fin­ish dinner.with a flourish! After, coffee ... enjoy the drier liqueur . . . Band B, Benedictine and Brandy." " Indeed, of the 51 pages it took to publish Kinkead's splendid article, eight-and-a-half pages were devoted to advertising the kind of liquor it is unlikely Com­munist captors have ever served any prisoners: Peter Dawson's. Scotch; Laird's Apple Jack; Gal­liano Liqueur ("with juice of 1,4 lime over shaved ice . . • Marvelous!"); TUborg beer from Denmark and Lowenbrau beer from Munich; Dry Monopole champagne ("A Tribute to Your ACROSS 66 (JUy io Uftll'cta

tiS A MU8eTaste ... Socially Accepted the I Cut8 o. 10 SodinmIi P..r8i.......tWorld Over"). . bicarbonate• BrI8t1.. 1't BaUDer , Kinkead says at one point that IS quill ,lS Do....

"one of the first things that all '1' F.1t1t-81l.pe4 16 n. !'I. StMe (.bbr.)11 .'oeo"..r . five doctors noted in the (prison) 16 AJ:'o

camps was' the reaction of the I' (:uekoo 19 Pnll18 Rus.i..a elty

1I1 Festh.1ZO Climbinl{pl.at !I r.rt of th" eye S6 Broth..r of

average prisoner to the lack of liS ....inter ordinary field and hospital com­ lIZ Italian eoln . .I..,obforts. He seemed lost without a U S.int. femialn.. 1I11 Most r_at

Cabbr.) , 92 AU..ln,bottle of pills and a toilet that . M Be admitted 94 Brotber .. flushed. - K Period 01 time "..,ob

118 Unnteady 96 TH,F.RI!:"In order to survive under lie Trr..nt W.':RJI: ....._..~

prison conditions," says' Kinkead, S! Ruaa..red OTHER ....bide E\'AN­"a. man must: often consume S4 Ele~tri"al ualt (IF:I.ISTR

55 A SI.."le peopl., !/ HF. WASthings that would normally be 51 Mao·s ..ame THF. . r~pellent, s~ch as wormy indig.. ­ 39 .POODUt 01' ZEB':DF.II:

to Hundred_ 98 J·oker stakeenous foods and dirty water; he wel!:,ht 100 I~iqnid me..• needs to rElaiize that he will die U Itep..rted

U !'I..!:" 'm ~:: ::~~... ­a lot sooner from starvation than t8 r ..ddl... 103 ElderlyIlO An ..lyzehe will from ailments that he 104 "~n(':ountel'

105 Withi.might possibly get· as a result of 5z ft:.a~:~IT"~k (eomb. fnrlD) ............ 01" lOG mrd hom.,;eating uppleasant things." .lAM ...!> 101 Nav..1 Air

Grand Marnier 56 nramas St..tion 511 Itows

M~anwhile, New Yorker read­ ~ ~&:~~~~daace "'108 ~~:::~~'. . Bamf' ers, 24 pages earlier in the Kin­ 63 C~~t!J natty 109 "Man'. aame

6G MaD-II name' 110 BMrr"J:'"nkead report, come across a stun­ningly beautiful, mult1-color, Solution on full-page advertisement - for

ItOW N 41l' Kye I H'K IS 41 (~..mlDoa fund

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Z Shcepllke 1{a1I.atry S TroaNera II Rom•• 4 !'Ilambero Jl:mp.....r i KimoDo n.... 54 WfJar .".,. I HE WAS 66 ll.ial{ly

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10 G t I....... .11 Intentiee ..... Il The rth tw n 1_

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0 ..' TH II: 114 DI'l{r...,.. 31 Shimble 115 Arti"l" of f.ltb SS ))orb.... t1e III If. S. !'It..t .. S6 Thr"8h 119 Slnn"d 3lI Cry 90 Appreb..ad to Uried cO~.Dat 91 1'ries

meat 93 l.d It ."nd 6lP.rt of G ..... t 9li tJnr.v.,1 . BrUain 99 Oreek I~t&el'

6l! Peeali ..rliy 101 IJnit of 44 ..•..11 In drops weil:bt

Page Eighteen

Grand Marnier . liqueur a l'orange. Pictured is a meal Plans Are Submitted Support Asked served aboard the Ile de France: At Veterans Meeting For Good Films "Duck a l'orange au Grand Mar­

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the best in motion picture enter­tainment instead of a negative approach to the cin~ma was urged here by Archbishop Rich­ard J. Cushing of Boston.

The Archbishop sp~ke at the­premiere ot' "The Bridge of the River Kwai;' at the Gary Thea­ter. The premiere was a 'benefit showing that brought the Boston' Archdiocesan Charity Fund a total of $25,000~ . .. ArChbishop Cushing Said it is time to get audience support for the best in visual and audio en­tertainment instead of merely singling out the morally bad pro­ductions for criticism. He stressed how important it is for ,

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versity was explained at the cen­tennial dinner by Father Gustave Weigel, S. J., professor of the­ology at Woodstock, (Md.) Col­lege.

The purpose of a university is to be the home of the scholar, both perfect and incipient, Fa~her Weigel said. "Without the perfect scholar," he stated "the university cannot exist, for the incipient scholars need the example of the perfect scholar to bring them to maturity."

Father Weigel urged heads of Catholic schools to "fill their schools with zealous searchers and weed out ruthlessly the col­orless, textbook commentators who are. uninterested in or'ig­norant of their duties as search­ing scholars."

Requisites for Scholars He laid down three requisites

for' an incipient scholar: a do­cility for methodic work, an in­satiable curiosity about the real and its stru'cture, and a will ded­icated to incessant contempla­tion.

"The reflection guiding admis­sions and the keeping of thoSe admitted," he declared, "must always be that the college is the social locus of scholarship ... Those who by tendency of will or slant of intellect are not in­terested in the methodic satis­faction of curiosity do not be­long in college."

Such students may be toler­ated, he continued, "if there are not enough scholarly. candidates for all the vacancies in the stu­dent body," but they should only "be given a certificate. of pres­ence in the college, and no more."

Father Weigel said that "so­ciety will confect some kind of institution" for "the fine young fellows who are nof structured for scholarship." But .their fu.­ture, he added, "is not a burden on the conscience of the ulliver­sity, but of other 'institutions of society." • 0__• -.

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Somewhat late.r, we find an ad for "hobby' cummerbunds" as

. ":conversation pieces." "The man who has everything !tasn't a handsome, needlepoint cummer­.bund designed to show your in­.terest in his favorite 'hobby or sport. If his interests are off the beat,en path we'll create a special design ... around $20.00."

I'm not accusing The New . Yorker of causing, or contribut­ing to, any specific' amount of the . general ftabbiness that showed up in our American sol­diers in Korea. Nor am I accus­ingthe. magazine of ,hypocrisy. ~Th~ ,New'. Yorker pointed' no editorial fingers i at any of our GIs. It, simply published an In­'tere~ting Article which probably'

, furnished readers with conversa­tion ;materiaI for otherwise dull' cocktail parties the week of Oct. 26. .

But it Seems to me· that what The New Yorker symbolizes in

'the American consciousness is what the Army discovered in our soldiers in Korea':"-i.e., a lack of reSolute commitment to any­thing other than self-comfort­and, as I say, I found the coinci­dence of the symbol and .the reality more than' a little gro­tesque. '

headed by First Vice-Comman­der Robert Joy was put into the planning stage during the regu­lar;:nonthly meeting held last Friday night by the Father John. P. Washington Post 1799 Cath­olic War Veterans of Taunton. Plans were also submitted by John, Grant for a "father and SOI'l" night to be held on J.an.• 25.

Communion Sunday was held, for members of the Post and their families with 35. veterans and families in attendance. The National headquarters of the Catholic War Veterans has "set aside four'Sundays each year to which all posts participate in re­ceiving Holy Communion.' The Father John P. W",shington Post wishes to strive toward one of the Aims of the CWV, which is the home, and make these Com­munion Sundays Family affairs.

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Page 17: 01.09.58

I r

Senator Kennedy Among 63 Named To Living Catholic Authors Gallery

WEBSTER GROVES (NC)-A S.J., and Father Frank J. Muel­United States Senator, a former ler. ambassador and an Irish novelist -Authors of biographical stud­are among the 63 persons elected ies include Edward E. Y. Hales, to the Gallery of Living Catholic, Leo V. Jacks, James L. May and Authors, it has been announced. Nesta de Robeck.

Among those named for the Selected for their poetry were honor were Sen. John F. Ken- Father John A. P. Duffy, C.SS.R, nedy of Massachusetts, author of James M~Auley of Australia, the Pulitzer Prize-winning his- John F. Nlms, Father Raymond torical study "Profiles in Cour- Roseliep, Louis J. Sanker, Father age;" Clare Boothe Luce, play- Francis J. Sweeney, S.J.; and wright and former American Amado M. Yixon, a Philippine ambassador to Italy and Walter congressman. Macken Irish no~elist short James F. Powers is known for. story w~iter and dramatist. his short stories, while Maria

The Gallery of Living Catholic Augusta . :rra~p has written the Authors is located at Webster best-selling. T~e Sto~y of the College here, near St. 'Louis. It Trapp Family Smgers. marked its silver jubilee in May There are ~everal nuns among of this year the new Gallery members:

. Mother Louise Callan, RS.C.J., Others named to the Gallery _ Sister M. Bertrande, D.C., Sister

in the 1957 biennial election Maria del Rey, O.P., Sister M; were: Francis, P.C., and Sister M:Wal-

O. A. Battista, Louis Budenz, ler, RS.M. Harold Butcher, Father John L. Continental Authors Callahan, O.P.; Mary Pflaum Con,tinental authors elected to Fischer, Father Frank Gartland, the Gallery are Abbe Gaston C.S.C., Robert Lax and Father Courtois, Father Jean Danielou, Conrad Pepler, a.p., all jour- S.J.; Joseph Louis Folliett and nalists or contributors to periodi- Father Henri de Lubac, S.J., cals; John Pick, authority on the from France, Father Riccardo Jesuit poet Gerard Manley Hop-. Lombardi, S.J., from Italy; and kins, Anne Marie Tansey and Dr. Jose C. Lopez y Jiminez Frances Y. Young. Juan de Contreras, Marques' d~

Historians are Father Colman Lozaya, Father Joaquin Antonio Barry, O.S.B., Father Ernest Penalosa, Dr. Joaquin Ruiz­J. Burrus, S.J., Jose Manuel Gimenez and Msgr. Juan Ben-' Espinosa and J. Herman Schau- goechea Zaragueta, from Spain.

THE ANCHOR­ 17Thurs., Jan. 9, 1958

'Catholic High Pupils 'In Competition

EVANSTON (NC) -About 600 seniors in Catholic high schools are included among the 7,500 semi-finalists in the Na­tional Merit Scholarship Cor­poration competition, a survey of the winners in the first round of the contest indicates.

The 7,500 students outsc'ored some 300,000 fellow seniors from a total of 14,000 public and pri ­vate secondary schools who took the corporation's test on Octo­ber 22.

Merit scholarships are spon­sored by over 60 business and industrial firms a" well as pro­fessional societies, foundations and individuals. About 800 scholarships are awarded to stu­dents who survive a series of tests,and who attain a satis­factory evaluation of· their grades, extracurricular activities, character and leadershipabili ­ties. , Merit scholars make their own choice of college and course of study. The value of the four­year scholarship varies with fi­nancial need. It can range from $100 a year to $2,200 per year, or more. The scholarships pro­gram 'i's in its third year.

HIGHEST AWARD FOR SCOUTS: Catholic scout­ing's highest award, the Ad Altare Dei Award, is conferred on two altar. boys, Patrick Farley, of Aurora, Ill., and Wil:' liam Waterfield, of Chester, N. J., in a single ceremony at the U. S. Army, Europe, chapel in Heidelberg, Germany. Presenting the medals is Msgr. Charles J. Murphy, Deputy Chaplain of the U. S. Army, Europe.' The award was made to the scouts following their pilgrimage to the 827­year old Benedictine Monastery, Stift Neuburg, located

'about five miles from Heidelberg. The boys were also honored at a dinner given by the Heidelberg Serra Club. NC Photo.

inger.

, Educato)'s EJected Among the writers who are

also educators are -Dom Columba Cary-Elwes, O.S.B.,' Father Adolph D.Frenay, O.P., August Mahr and Father Walter J. Ong, S.J.

Writers on philosophical and spiritual topics are Dominican Fathers Yves M. J. Congar and Ceslas Spicq. Father 'GeoTl~e P. Klubertanz, S.J., Msgr. John K. Ryan, Father Thomas J. Higgins,

Latin-American writers are Jesus Guisa Azaveda, Msgr. Oc­taviano Valdes and Dr: Angel' Alcazar Velasco y Velasco, from" Mexico; and Father Aurelio Es­pinosa Polit, S.J., from Ecuador."

Cleofas Calleros, director of the NCWC Department of Immi-' gration office at El Paso and a distinguished writer on Latin­American hsitorical matters, also has been named to the gallery.

Thorhallus Thorgilsson,. frans­lator and fiction writer, was selected from Iceland.

Prelate Urges High School Course To Curb Mixed Marria'ge Rate

WASHINGTON (NC)-A uni­form course in all Catholic high schools on the problems of court­ship and rT1arriage was suggested by a prelate here as a means of cutting down on the large num­ber o( mixed marriages.

At a· group session at the 19th annual meeting of the American Catholic SoCiological Society, Msgr. Louis F. Miltenberger, vo­cational director of the 'Washing­ton Archdiocese, cited statistics on the number of mixed mar­riages and proposed remedies for the problem. '

"The national figures for 1956 show that, out of 324,907 mar­riages, 84,720 were mixed mar­riages," he stated. "This means that one out of every four mar~

riages across the country was of a Catholic with a non-Catholic."

Studies in Michigan, Maryland and Washington, D. C., covering a total of approximately 25,000 families, found that the divorce rate is three times higher in mixed Catholic-Protestant mar­riages than in marriages 'where both parties are of the same faith."

Msgr. Miltenberger said the same study showed "that about sev~n .per cent of the divorces occurred when the father wa's a Protestant and the mother a Catholic." This figure increased to about 21 per cent, he adde,d, when the mother was a Prot­estant.

He said that a study made in the Midwest revealed that ~'when a Catholic married a member of a Protestant denomination, only

34 per cent of the children were practicing members of either re­ligion."

Must Meet Problem To keep the n'umber of mixed

marriages from increasing, Msgr. Miltenberger said, "we must have a uniform course in all our Catholic high schools, on the whole problerr.. of courtship, marriage and their responsibili ­ties."

"My experience from visiting all the girls' high schools of Washington," he continued, "and speaking on the two vocations of marriage and the religious state, shows that it is imperative if we are going to cut, our mixed mar­riage rates."

Among other remedies he sug­gested for the problem of mixed marriages were the following:

-An active mothers', club in the parish to help bring the 'non­Catholic marriage partner into the Church.

-Young, adult clubs for per­sons between the ages of 18 and 30. Msgr. Miltenberger said these are good "shopping centers" for Catholic young men and women, and invariably result in an in­crease in Catholic marriages. '

-A Catholic Youth Orga,niza­tion program in every parish. Msgr. Miltenberger sald such a program should be properly su­pervised and "non-Catholics should not be allowed in."

-Retreats for parents ,of high school students in which a priest would stress the obligations the parents have of looking out for the company their sons or daughters keep.

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Page 18: 01.09.58

I

" " tHE'FIGH'i/'INGCHAPLAIN\

SIIN LEE I FAMED ANTI-COMMIIN/~r CHIIJE~e- lGADE/?, HAC BEEN I/v1PR/~~D gyTH~ RED~. Hlf: D4t15H7,€e ~ DETeRMINED TO FJ?E£ HIM ~/NGtt"­HANDEDtY, >r:JtlNG" tt.J:.NAVAt. ClfAR.AlN

. TIM AHGA/?II IN /lONG KON6, 7.l?/E"{1 t/A/Ct/~E§!ZPt(U ..y 7l) DIggt/ADl3' HE~ AND 'O,-NOW ...."

.tt----t~

~~~~_Jiwli:li~

Confidence in God's Providence

Pope's Message Stresses, Prerequisites for Peace

By Joseph A.Breig Cleveland Universe Bulletin

Pope Pius XII's Christmas message was a strong rebuke. to those who would like to see the free nations eriter into a

.colossal Munich and hand o~er the universe, in the name of "peace," to communist blasphemers and slavers..

There was no comfort. in ening their bonds for the defense the Holy Father's words for of justice. cowardly, dishonest 'or de- Neglect of Humanities c

luded souls. On the other At a time wben many, public hand there ~as magnificent en- officials, publications, writers cour~gement ,for brave people and speakers are afflicted with who refuse to failure of nerve because of sput­surrender God's

· world to organ­ized hellishness. "God's world."

That ,was the' central theme of ·this yery

.great Pope's ad­dress. Time and again he allud': ed to the '~divine law of order and harmony" which God built into creation and instilled in the hearts and the intellects of human beings..

This divine" ordinance, the · Holy Father Said, "strictly im­

poSes on all rulers of nations the obligation to prevent war." 'Fur­ther he considers that 'God im­pose'd a special task upon his J)Onti~cate-thatof '''forging tr~e brotherhood among nations."

Work of Justice 'But true brotherhOod, he

warned, is 'not the "iron' disci­pline of the coiIectives" which the self-styled "comrades" offer. It is "a life of brotherly coopera­

. ,tiol); of. mutual' respect for the. rights of others." , 'Pius XII is as far as possible from being an 'appeaser of evil ­~oers, a pietistic ,martyrdom­fancier, or a fog-brained wishful thinker. From the beginni~g, he has insisted that peace' is the ~ork of justice. No peace 'can be fQurid 'in refusing to combat in­justice.

The Holy Father counselled the leaders of nations not to re­ject "approaches aiming at peace agreements," But he warned

,them not to be fooled by com­munist doubletalk or frightened by commu'nist threats.

He reiterated that a durable peace demands certain prerequi-,. sites. One is the existence of international organizations able. to protect peace. Another 'is 're­duction of' arm~ments-but this under "a system of effective in­

· spection." :Stin a!l,otne,riI)e~c~ necessity !s

this: there must be sufficient j}6wer to "deter' wno'eve'r '\Jould ;;i,m at disturbint,; -the nations Which sincerely, .desire"reduc"f. tion of armaments under effec~ tive inspection. .' .The Holy Father approved of ~he fact that the NATO nations h<;td spgw:n ~Q.at, .':at,,the~fi,r~t;Sign c. , 314' Chtirch"S't.~Ne,* :Bedford"of danger," they were capable of WY 4-0421 WY 3-7342 rallying together and strength­

nik, Pope Pius spoke with calm courage and serene confidence in the providence of God. , He cautioned against the pan­icky tendency to over-concen­trate education upon the produc­tion of scientists and technolo­gists,

Indeed, said Pope Pius, the brutalities in the modern world -the very things we are trying to correct-are largely the result of too much emphasis upon 'ma­terial progress, with accompany­ing neglect of the humanities and the things of the spirit.

The Holy Father reminded us th~t. the Cr~ator gave m~n. d!>­mmlOn over the cosmos~mclud­ing the ,heavenly bodies'-and decreed that we were to cooper­at~.wit~ Hi~ ~n estab~ishing u,nIversal harmony. .

God has not gone back'on His word, said Pope. Pius. "How ca'n a creature despair of the world," he asked, "if God Himself does not despair? ... Man's work on

,earth is not doomed to ciiscord, but is intended to show forth"the eternal harmony of God."

Cooperate With God 'Pop~, Pius flatly rejected ex­

cuses' offer'ed by some Christians for not getting on with the work of making a decent world. He bt:ushed·· aside the "let's crawl back into the ~atacombs" attf ­tude, and the argument that Chris.tian action turns peop~e against the Faith.

Equally, he dismissed the no­tion that it.i!? "contrary to the spirit of Christ" for Christians to seek "the po~er necessary to protect human and divine rights on earth, . Then he uttered what might be called the Magna Charta of good men and women:

"No' field of life, no institution I and no exercise 0_ po'wer can be forbidden to those who cooperate w.ith God to' maintain divine order and harmony' in the world."

TEDDY M.KALISZ,::

AFTER ALL, YOu . NOTHING AA!: AAPPENED HAVE: DE~CRfg&D TO CHANGE MY OPINION MY VCNTU RE At; AgOUT 'Tl-lAT. ~ FAR. VI~TUAL.L.Y CE-ffAIN MY D6AA.. /SLIT FO~ ONg OF FAILUR£.' iJ.lING. I'M HOPING I MAY....~_.r ~rll..l. CONVINCE YOU TO

I'!! CHANGt; YOU~ MIND At;. 'Nt; ~fL. 10 YOUP. DEGtINATION.

-THE ANCHOR.·18 . Thurs., Jan. 9, 1958

Cross Word Solution

OLO MEETIE~OoIN~~~ , ~t~! Arn~1t

L 0 P S o • H S EITIAIP E'~0 A BA E 0 R LAN V I N E R S L I R A S T E ENTE !YEAR E RA~T~ OESP 0 AMPE

, S RB ENOS! OOES "" 0 0 0 P

~ ~Ip R E BROTHERI!!I ~ R BO ERO

ASTOR~'~E~:S L~~g PENNON NAPsli'i

ART STOE~gMGifAE REACHES ESAU T~REE S N ANTE P N E

Makes Proposals To" Aid Science

ST. LOUIS (NC)-A federal program 'to meet the challenge of Soviet technology has been suggested by Father Thurston

'N, Davis, S.J., editor of America, a Catholic weekly review, who, , declared that we must "come alive to the perils of our pre~ent

position vis-a-vis the Russians and, 'if possible, sprint ahead of them into outer space."

But he warned that this "must be done without surrendering the humane values-literary, ar­tistic,spiritual, religious - that alone ma,ke 'Our civilizatiQn, worth saving from the onrushing 'tide of a brutal world socialism.".

Father Davis made two speci­fic proposals. " .

,"I propose,'" he said, "that this nation ought soon 'to decide to, adopt the realistic plan an­nounced by Dr. Isador I. Rabi; .chairman of the President's Sci­ence Advisory Committee. Dr. Rabi ,calls for a $500 scholarship for every high school'senior pass­ing (with a B or B plus) a Fed­eral mathematics test. He pro­poses a second $509 scholarship for every college freshman pass­ing - (with the same grades) a calculus, test at the end of the fr~shman year."

Father Davis' second proposal was "that there be created a new executive department, headed by a secretary of cabinet status." He said such a department "might bear the name of science and technology" and "should be staffed' by both scientists and nonscientists."

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~IF.CONDI.Y. IN OlWER NOT IN IMPORTANceI I t'NOW YOW W/L.l.. CC£TAIIIIl.Y NEED sP!IUfl.!Al.. GUIDANCE AND "'El.P. TI4'; I CAN GIvE YOlA. I lJK€N YOUR: VENTU~E TO iHD~E t.¥>OE BY ll-lE eARLY ~TTL.ER~ IN MY COUNTRY WHO PIONECRED INTO THE LlNI(I.tOWN LAND OF THe wr:f:T.

SCHOOL LEADERS: Senior captains at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, are, left to right, Patricia DeNardo, Marybeth Trainor, Ann Delaney, Joan Morris and Kathleen Amaral.

MQryknolier Finds Wall' Street' Training' Valuab'le in Missions

SANTIAGO (NC) - Wall Bede takes care of the excharige Street can sometimes prove to of U. S. dollars for missionary be a good training field for work use. . in the Church's missions, a Mary- Before coming to Chile, and knoll Brother working here says. before entering Maryknoll in

'Brother Bede Horgan of Jer: sey City,' N. J" has the job of taking care of almost all the ma­terial needs and difficulties con­ne~ted with 'Maryknoll missions in Chile.

If a mi~sioner 'should have to leave Chile suddenly, Brother Bede takes care of all tickets and travel permits.. .' If a new parish is,needed in some area, Brother Bede will arrange for land titles and building permits... If the local money market is fluctuat-, ing more than usually, Brother'

1947, Brother Bede gathered wide experience in the field of international affairs and finance by working in one of the great financial houses on New York's Wall Street. During W'orld War II, he ser~d as .a civilian expert in international money matters. He then joined the U. S. Navy and eventually retired with the rank of lieutenant commander.' .'

"All my' former experience comes in hand~ here," he says, "with the exception of how to man heavy artillery." ,

IN THE STUDY-HALL

GET,ACQUAINTED' WITH YOUR COLLEGE· :.~),,: i'V;;it6,rs Are; Ahoays Welc~me . ," ", ..

"j' :'HELP,'Y6UR COLLEGE TO :GROW \J ,i ~ ....~:...... '. :._,.__~, .._. .f ;.

- ~.~.)- ;-'-: ! .t ,- -' - - - - -:" - ­"".~ .'1.. Rev.' THOMAS C. DUfFY, ·C.S.C..

,. l?~~'ectoT ol)J'!i.:ildmg Fu,nd Sto~tehill Col/cUe '

~" , .. ~t-!0"'E. ~Edclr 8-22~1' •j '. ,•."

NORTH' EASTON, MAS~ACHUSmS

Page 19: 01.09.58

THE ANCHOR­Sports Chatter 19Thurs., Jan; 9,,1958

Taunton Schoolboy Squads Cana Con,ferenceInclude 22 CYO Products

Continued From Page OneBy Jack Kineavy married for many years still-not

Somerset High School Coach conscious of all the. ~mplications It's hard to believe but post-season football extrava­ of their vocation. It is sur'prising

ganzas havey~t to run their gamut. On schedule .for this how many disagreemen~ come about in marriage because a hus­weekend is the Senior Bowl game S'aturday at MobIle, Ala., band or wife lacks a' basicto be followed by the All-Pro contest from the Coast Sunday. knowledge of, the other's per­

Incidentally no less than pate in outside competition sonality or nature. The Cana 0 p aye . play. talks help provide this missing.,01 f the 50 '1 rs selected while engaged in interscholastic

information that can add sOto perform at Mobl1e have Coyle and Taunton are sched­ much happiness ,and holiness toalready been drafted by the uled to meet for the first time the vocation of marriage. ' pros. With the notable exception this year on Jan. 21. Thl;! Joseph

The talks also help parents toof Mississippi's stellar guard,' N. Elias trophy, emblematic of understand their children at theJack Simpson, however, the the city championship, will again various stages of the youngsters'various All-American choices be awarded the' winner of the. development.whom' this agent televiewed in series. Tauntor. already has one

There are five Conferences inaction during the week' were leg on the trophy. the Cana series'. These are givenmost unimpressive. Boys from the Taunton CYO one at a time with several weeks

Alex Karras, Iowa's highly on the ,Coyle roster include Jeff between each Conference. Thustouted tac,kle, had a particularly Wheeler, Sacred Heart; Jack the couples are given an oppor­bad day in the East-West en- Morrissey, .Bob Martin, Ron Des-, tunity to grow with thejr new counter, and Navy's Tom Fer-' rosiers, Dick'Lukas and Ted Mc-, knowledge and to b'y it out in restal showed Rice's King Hill Govern, Immaculate Conception; their own lives and homes.,a few things about the art of Bill Contreras Our Lady of

Conference Subjects ' . quarterbacking at Da~las. For- Lourdes; Bob De~ers and Tom restal is one of several Catholics Unsworth, St' Paul; Mike Fitz- The Conferences are: Hus­on the Middies' superb squad. simmons, Charlie and Bill Hoye, band-Wife Relationship, Parent­

Child Relationship, Talk toBowl Game Gimmicks ,St. Maty; and Bob Kable and Teenagers, Talk to Patents andThe torrid Rose Bowl encoun- Stan Koss, Holy Rosary. Children, and the final talk onter was easily the most thrilling On the. Taunton squ~d are Union of Mind and Heart-Na­of the Ne~ Year's day football Fred CusIck, St. Joseph, Jack tural and Supernatural.spectacles. Mississippi's rout of Cullen and 'Allan Co!leran, The Conferences' are' usuallyTexas rated the mis-match Sacred Heart; ~oh.n Fourmer, St. requested ,by a parish or ano Jacques; Don SIlVIa, Our Lady of organization willing to sponsors~~: C.B.S. sports department, Lourdes; . Bob Rossi"St. Paul; the talks. They are arranged.

Bill MacPhail; director, came up' Gerry TrIpp, St. ~ary; and Joe through the Family pfe'Bureauwith a novel gimmick in the Frates, Holy FamIly. of the Diocese which is directed Orange and Cotton 'Bowl games. Obeck, to Speak by, Rey.'R,aymond W,. l\1:cCarthy.Referees John Donahue and Fall River.'s Tommy Salvo will Father McCarthy·is"aided in the Albie Booth ,were wired for ,receive the nation's most prized presentation of the Conferences sound ~o that televiewers might sportsmanship award Saturday by:. ,a ~board, of ,pri~sts, all ,of listen in on the penalty options night at the Sheraton Plaza, Bos­ whom have',been ,active for'sev­as they were presented. The ,ton. 'The featured speaker of the er~~ years in ~ana' and Pre-Cana general reaction \0 this pro- evening will be Victor, Obeck, work,. ,',cedure was definitely negative. former Springfield College and " Two-Month Schedule , ",.Mr. Paul SwafIield, referee' eme- professional gridder who is rated,

,Thefolh>wihg 'are the Canaritus, commented that he would by Admiral Tom Hamilton :as Con'feren'ces scheduled lor JanU­never have consented to be one of the bravest men ever to aryand Februar'y:, .wired for sound. serve in the U. S. Navy. . Jan. 13-Prevost Alumni, Fall

In the best of competition, His role d~ring World War iI River, First Conference.especially where physical con- remains in the highly classified Jan. 14 - St. Mathieu, Fall tact is present, sulphurous lan- category. Therefore, little is River, First Conference. guage-unwittingly or no-has known of his exploits'other than Jan. 19 - Our Lady of Grace,been known to be used. Cer- he served in the Navy's Q ships. Westport, First Conference. tainly no one would w~nt ,s~ch Salvo the first freshman to Jan. 21 - Our Lady of the Isle, comment to filter into hIS lIVIng ever win the award, was se­ Nantucket, Second' Conference. roo~. Fortunately,. th~re ~ere lected by the Gridiron Club of 'Jan. 27 - St. Theres'a, So. At­no Instances of thIS In either Boston from a ,field of 38 candi­ Ueboro, First Conference. gam.e, but ~'ll wager ~r. M~~= dates. This quick thinking and 'Jan. 28 - St. 'Joseph, Fall ~hall and hiS staff put In a wo innate sense of decency which River, First Conference. rlsome afternoon. prompted him to protect an in- Feb:2-8t. Peter, So. Dighton;'

What's Next'? jured Connecticut phlyer was Second Conference: ' " The satiation of the curiosity adjl!-dged by the Gridiron Selec­ "Fe~. 3 '- Prevost Alumni; Fail

of the American sports public is tion Committee the outstanding River, Second' Conference. , being carried to ridiculous ex': act 9f sportsmanship on the na"7 'Feb. '10- Holy Redeemer, tremes. Listening in on the r~f- tion's collegiate gridirons, this Chatham,' Second 'Cotlference. eree's pre-fight instructions, for past fall. 'Feb, 15 - St. Anthony of Pa­example, serves only to point up dua; Fall River; Second Confer":" the difficulty' some of these hard:­ eoce.Little Rock Cas~working ge'ntle~en have to ex­ 'Feb. 23..:;.. Our Lady of Per:" press themselves corr~~tly. It is Judge H~nored- petual Help; New E1edfora,'First now commonplace to air the pre­ YONKERS,(NC5 ~ Federal Cortference. ' game 'football 'ceremony which J~dge' Ronald" N.' Davies, who Feb. 27 - Somerset Catholic involves nothing more than 'the l?re~id,ed I;It the widely pUj:>li~i~ed Women's Club;--Tliltd Confer­

ence.' " ",'tossing of the coin and the pres­ Little Rock, 'Ark., school segre:­entation of the choice of options, gallon case,' has been' chosen decisions which have been made' "Catholic Man of the Year,", t,>y ,Senate' in' Bolivia' undeniably clear by the sigrial' of' ,th'e CapuchiQ Fathers. ' the referee.' / Repeals'Divorc'e Law

The ,mag~zine s,aid'that, Judge , LA PAZ (NC)---,-By a,one..:.vote' In one game, I don't 'remember D~.vi~s was chosen ~'because pf, margin the, Bolivian Senate' haswhich, a flotilla of queens ac­ his historical legal ,decisions and approved, a blll' to' repeal: thiscompanied the rival captains to theiJ:bearing on ihe ,segregation country's law permitting divorce:the center of the fil~ld for the issue in. America." ' The repeal bilhwas' introduced The magazine has now mad~' by.. Father Leonidas 'Sanchez; a'

pre-ga~e rites. As- one wag put ii, "Next they'll wire the quar­

five annual selections ,-of a member, of. the l'erlate. ",terback for sound so' that the "Catholic Man. of ,the Year.:' "Repeal' or drastic amendmentaudience will know what play is 'Judge Davies is the first Amer-' of the divorce .law; passed incoming up next." ican 'given the honor. The' mag~ I932~c,had been recommended by,CYO Boys Prominent ­ 'azine's other choices wer~:Kon­ Bolivia's'SupremeCol,lrt because

The Taunton eyO is well rep­ rad AdEmatier, the Captive of the 'high divorce 'rate here. resented on the local high school Church, His Holiness POpePiu15 " The ,bill now goes to the House squads. No less tnan 14 products XII, and His Eminence , Jozsef of Representatives. '-Many', per­of the league are currently in Cardinal Mindszenty, Primate of sons have' predicted it will be de­the spangles of the Coy.le. War­ Hungary., feated there. riors; eight others are' w:ith Taunton High, among them Her­ring Co-Captain a'nd playmaker, Don Silvia. Don was tied for Attention Mechanics! the runner-up spot in CVO scor­ing when forced to forego the re­ Do You Wo"k in a Factory, mainder of the schedule because Garage, Machine Shop or of his status at Taunton. Gasoline Station? The same applies to the other 21 inasmuch as the Massachu­ We pick up and deliver, cleal'! setts Headmasters Association and, repair overalls. Also. we hav~ docS not permit'a boy to partici ­ 0' complete line ot" Cove'ralls. Pants

and Shirts for sale. ,!

We reclaim' a~d wash any 'oily, dirty- or 'greasy rags. 'BARDA'tlL'

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, LEADERS AT PREVOST: Senior' class officers at 'Monsignor Prevost High School, Fall River, are, left to right, !?eated: Paul Gosselin, president, and Robert Vince­lette, vice~president; standing, Roger Raymond, secretary, and' Normand Phenix, treasurer., '

Home Life, .,Inadequate Training Cause Laps.ed Catbolic Problem

NOTRE DAME (NC) - In- cent were received from certain adequate religious life in the areas, it said. home and ineffective instruction The magazJm~ proposed a four­in the faith are two major rea:" point program to reduce the sons why Catholics fall away number of lapsed Catholics: from the Church. 1) "More concentrated inves-

This is tJ:1e ..coI?-clusiQn drawn tig1!tion of the problem .... The" from a nationwide survey of the Church has never gathered sys­problem of lapsed Cathol~cs, tematic.ally the facts in this mat­conducted by Ave M;uia maga- ter but now we can ill afford 'iine, Catholic weekly published to 'do ~ithout them." ' here. 2) "Intensifted family pro­

, The first cause of the problem, grams... It is beyond doubt' Ave Maria concluded, is "im- that' children 'of ardent Catholic proper and unhealthy ,home, homes run' much less risk of tr,aining ,in "the essentials of losing their, Faith." Catholic life, and the resulting, 3) "Deeper religious instruc-" bad example to growin'g chil- tion,"at' all levels of both home ' dren and adolescents," and 'school.;

, Almost every reply to its SUr-4) "The, example of Catholic, vey, the magazine declared, at- life." This, 'the magazine ,de­tributed the. primary cause of elared, "is the most important Catholic lapse from the Faith to means, not only of consolidating ,"invalid or mixed marriages" the ranks within the Mystical or to "lukewarm" Catholic Body, but also of bringing back homes. the strayed,"

"The second-and more basic -important reason why Catho­lics leave the Church," the maga-' The Franciscanzine continued, is "lack of ade­quate instruction in their faith. :' .Fa'thers One cannot say that Catholic schools have failed to give their third Ord~r Regular of,'students. an aaequate grasp of , St. Francis the Catholic faith. But many do indeed suspect 'that a sterile, Offer to Young 'Men and Boys catechetical and frequently use­ , ...:.. ,'special opportunities to less approach, to religious truth study for the Priesthood, Lack has not fostered the strong faith of funds no obstacle. Candi-"

d<!tes for, .the religious Laywhich a Catholic needs to live Brotherhood also accepted,in:, toct'ay~s s~ciety." <', For further information. writeto ",,' " ,

ber of falleri' away Catholics, Ave Marla contended, is all but

'Determining the actual num­

FATHER STEPHEN, T.O.R. impossible, since "there are few' " ·P. O.BOX 289 ' lit:iod studies 'of the, problem. HO'LUDJ\ l'SBURG 12, PA ••Estimates of from 10 to 50 per'

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.f!IItlw!r """"'raJ Me"'lw!r """""" DepOllit'lIe_ne S711&eDl haIlW'~ee CoI'p,

IOHorth Main Street, tall River, Mauachusetb .~~: .

Page 20: 01.09.58

THE ANCHOR­Cho:~"~'i-y Ball· Successf,ul 20" Thurs., jan. 9, 1958

Cont;nued from Page One Diocese, the Bishop singled out ,Underlining the reason for the for special'mention the work of

gathering the the 8t. Vincent de Paul Health Loyalty to Pope bri~liant was apeech of the, Most Revererid Camp, which cares for hundreds Bishop, which highlighted the of children each 'summer; and Brings Reward evening's program. Introduced the 'newly opened sch.ool for by Rev. William D. Thomson, exceptional children, Nazareth CASSINE (NC) -'- Each new dioces'an' chaplain of the St. Vin- Hall. In connection with the year this small 'village in the 'lent de Paul So'ciety, the Bishop latter undertaking, he indicated Piedmont region of northern expressed his happiness at meet- that plans are being made for'the Itlfly 'receives a papal blessinging mc::'y new.' and old friends "establishment of a child gliid­ as a result of a special privilegewhose presence at' the 'Ball ance center to be operated in given it by Pius VII. , proved they shared his solicitude 'conjunction with Nazareth Hall. Cassine is so small that it does'for the young and underprivi- Preliminary studies' are also to not appear on many maps. It isleged of the Diocese. be undertaken with a view further plagued by being con­

In his talk, the Bishop said: towards extending the services stantly confused with the larger"It is a wonderful thing to be 'of both the school and the' cen:" and more famous town of Cas­

with friends, old friends, loyal tel' to youth in parts of the dio­ sino, site of the famed Benedic­and true. Such is my happy ex- cese other than the city of Fall tine monastery in southern,Italyperience. tonight. It is hearten- River. destroyed during 'World Wari;ng too to bE; with new friends The Ball, held under the aus­ II. But once a year, on Jan. 1,and to look ahead to, the meet- pices 'of both the Dioce'san Coun­ Cassine receives a special bless-''ings an<;l adventures of the' fu- cn of Catholic Women and the ing which no other place in the ture that will make us get to Society of St.', Vincent dE! Paul, world enjoys. Iknow and like eflch other. Such had as co-chairmen Mrs. Mary

On March 21, 1814, Pope Piusis ;'my pieasurethis' evening, ~ Almond, New Bedford,president VII was being' escorted backwhen I can welcome so many, of the Diocesan Council, 'and H. to ~9me from Fontainbleau,old and new friends, shar.ing.my Frank, Reilly, Fall, River, who Franc~, where hI.. had been .heldsolicitude' for the young and heads the St. Vincent de' Paul, a virtual prisoner by Napoleon.underprivileged in the Diocese. . Society for the, Diocese. Work-Escorted by Napoleon's troops,"Friendship has its degrees.. 'ing under them were committees the Holy Father passed througho T~ere are wa~m friends, and representing Particular Councils

fair weather fnends. There are of the St. Vincent de Paul Soci­ Cassine. hale fello~s we.l~ met, and there ety fro~ all pat:fs of ~he Diocese As the escort made its way are the tned and true who can and the v'arious women'sorgan-' through', the village it was be depended on in time of stress izations forming the Diocesan stopped by Cassine's people and and strain. 'l'here' are friends Council of Catholic Women. their pastor who wanted to greet that tax our patience. Yet we the Pope.' The soldiers pre­

;., ,love them. There are those so ' Lanin Orchestra Plays , vented the people from reaching,one in mind ,and heart that we A significant contribution, to the Pope's carriage and, would seldom ,if ever disagree with the success of theJgala evening not let the Pope join 'the people..tRem. I' ' ,'- was made by the Lester Lanin . \ '.

, , Defines Friendship,' ' , orchestra,' whose previous en- Reward for Devotion ,"I' should' say," he continued, . gagemepts have" included the, The ,Pontiff could do nothing

"that· the surest source of 'true •Monte Carlo Ball, honoring but bless the people from wh~re

friendship is found in the dis:'" Prince Rainier and Princess he sat. He did, however, have position' all of us have to do for ' Grace' (Kelly) and the Tiffany, a: few m'oments to talk to the a brother in need. Whe'n men Ball held recently in Newport. pastor and he gave to him, in and women like ourseives feel Many groups planned pre,Ball reward for the peoples manifes­a sense of responsibility 'for those, festivities. These included a tation ,of devotion, the right to" that cannot help thems171ves, or ,buffet arranged' by a committee repeat his papal blessing every tIo say it even'mQre strongly, for representing the areas- of Attle­ year on the first of January. those that cannot do much, or boro, Norton,. and' Mansfield. For a long time this remained anything, for us; then we ~ome '"Hosts and' hostesses·for the affair a ~ verbal order: only. Although close to realizing the test of were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Patun­ the pastor and' his successors friendship set for us by the good . off and Myles' Daly,. Attleboro; continued to give the blessing on Lord Himself: 'This is my ,com- "MI'. and Mrs. George Bauza and the appointed date, there was no mandment, that you should love Mr. and Mrs. Frank Texeira, written record of the privilege one another as I have loved Norton; and Mr. and Mrs. R0gert on the parish records. you.' Lovely, Mansfield. Answering a request of the

'!This, after all, is the measure . 'Boxh~lders Listed people of the village, Pope Bene­of our loving, of our friendship, ' . • dict XV signed a decree on Dec. yours and mine, to seek and to B?J.Cholders for the Ball, 10 8, 1917, officially recognizing the share the devotion to those in a~~lItlOn to the Most Re~e~end privilege. The document is keptneed shown', by our Changeless BIShop, Mayor and Mrs. Ar~~da today in the archives of St.Friend -whose hand and whose 'and Mayor and Mrs. L?woler 10­ ofCatherine's parish 'church ..heart were ever responsive to cluded, from the Fall ~Iver area: Cassine.the cry of the 'poor and afflicted.' Rev. Arthur C.. dos .ReIs, Mr. and,The. Bishop at· his consecration' ,Mrs. Myel', N:. SobIloff, Dr.: and, .. pledged to take up' this rol,e . Mrs. Raymond· J. COI;100rs. From the Attleboro:;: Rev. Ed­and this -'responsibility. "Will," :Dr. and ,Mrs. ,Raymond R. Cos- ward B.' Booth; Rev. john F. you," he is al?ked, "for'the Lord's ., ta, Mr. and, Mrs., John DeNadal, Laughlin; the Attleboro Particu­iake be kind and merciful to the, ~Mr. and Mrs, Tl).omas F,'. lYIo~a~- lar Council ot"' St. Vincent de pOOr, the hODu!less, "and' to ali' han,. Jr., Mr., and Mrs. Alvm J~ Paul, Mr; 'Donald and Mrs. John that 'are in need?". :And :'he re- "SullIvan, Mr.' and Mrs. Adolf F. Antaya ,and Mr. ,Clayton and Mrs. plies: "I will." Hafft:nr~fler, Jr., Eleanor MacDonald. ' '

Friends in Need' Mr. and Mrs. Norman F. ,Ho- '/ 'St. Theresa's I'arU!,hioners, Mr. «That,' my dear friends, is a ch\;'; Mr; anq ..~rs. Aloysi~ J.' and Mrs. Raymqnd.Brennan, and

promise I made. It'should ac-' Kea,rns, Mr. 'YIlham T. ~?nmng, ,Mr. and Mrs: Russell .Brennan, count for my'willingness to take' and ~r. and Mrs. WIlham T. ' Mr. :and Mrs. 'Bernard Doyle, on new burdens in charity each Mannmg, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John, John P. Creed..: '.. ," year. It should reconcile my E. Brady.· \ Tauilton Area. friends to my' habit of opening , Mr. 'and Mrs. Herve Lagasse, From the Taunton area: Rt. doors and pointing to situations Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. McNally, Rev. Msgr. James J. Dolan, P.R., that we l!hould' all join together Mr. and Mrs. H. ,Frank Reilly, Rev, E. Souza DeMello" Our to remedy.' I do not take the Mr. and' Mrs. Arthur J.' Shea, Lady of Lourdes Conference, St. promise rightly. But I must con- Mr. and Mrs. Michael-J. Regan.' Mary's Conference. '

~' £.ess that it has not nor is it Mr. and Mrs. John T. Farrell , . Nor ton, Rev. William D. likely to, wear me down with and Mr. and Mrs. JOQn T. Far- Thomson; Providence, the P. A. anxieties. For it has brought me rell, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Hector A. Tracey Co:; North Easton, Im­warm friends, loyal friends' Mongeau, Mr. and Mrs. ~rthur maculate Conception Confer­changeless friends, with who~ C. Guimond, Mrs. John L. Clem­, ence; 'Pocasset, Mr. and Mrs. I shared this stern responsibility. mey. Lawrence FitzGerald; Sagamore,Out of our concern for others, New Bedford Area Mr. and, Mrs. John Wilson; the young, the homeless, the From the New Bedford area: Mapsfield, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene underprivileged, we have found Rev. John A. Chippendale, Mr. R. Farrell, Jr. respect and 1ove for one another. and 'Mrs. Joseph J. Duggan, Dr.

~~~~~nOur friendship is laid solidly in and Mrs. Arthur F. Buckley, and deep esteem. We recognize Dr.' and Mrs. Joseph Buckley, Connell, Mrs. James F. Mooney, friends in need who 'are friends George Vigeant. ,Frank B. Silvia, !lnd the South- ' in deed, because friends respon- From Cape Cod and the Is-. ern New England District of the . t 11 f ' k' International Ladies' Garmentslye 0 aca or mdl\ess. ' lands: Hyannis, the Misses Ger­"Let me say again that this trude and Loretta Daley and Mr. Workers-Union.

bond of interest I share with all and Mrs. Edward F. Smith; Mr. i~~@ffi~~ill~~~illiiijiiillE~~ of you makes this evening a and Mrs. Daniel J. Slavin and heart-warming one for me. I Mr. and Mrs. John J. Levine, Sr.; like to be with friends. I love Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Sullivan: SOUTH ENDto have my friends get to know Osterville, Mrs: Margar~t E. and love one another. I am proud Byrn'e; Mrs. James Bowes. South to present you, old friends and Yarmouth, Mr. and Mrs. John ELECTRIC CO. new to one another. I pray that G. Doherty; Mr. and Mrs. Rich­the' happy association we have ard J. Terrio. here may long continue and that Wellfleet, Our Lady of Lourdes the germs of friendship that we Parish; Provincetown, Mr. and recognize here prove contagious Mrs. John Cook, Jr., and Mr. Electrical and infect all our associates and and Mrs. Robert Silva; Buzzards friends with what 'I feel person-' Bay, Mr. and Mrs. A~ Clayson Contractors ally, and what I hope I, share Tucy, and Frank B. Cook'. with all of you, the feeling of Woods Hole, Mr. and, Mrs. being close to God and near' to George West and Mr. and Mrs. 464 S~cond stthe source of true and abiding Norman Benoit; West Denriis, love." Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Norton; FALL RIVERPlans Guidance Center Nantucket, Island Service Co.;·-t·

Spelling out concrete projects, Falmouth, St. Patrick1s CYO. presently in progress or soon to Also the Particular Council of OSborn~ 2-2'143 be undf'rtaken on behalf of the St. Vincent de Paul for the Cape UIlderprivileged youth of the' " and the Islands.

SIST~R 'MARIE CHARL~S,' M.H.S.H,

. 'Teachers Confraternity Course

.€ontinued from Page Oae Teacher's Certificate. , T~e co\.irse 'mee~' agreat 'need , : Brochures,~utliningthe course , in enabling'lay peopl~ who are

an,d further information may beengaged in Confraternity pro­grams in. their respective' par­ obtained by contacting Father -ishes,' to, teach I, religion more Powers at the Diocesan CCD effectively to public school chil- Office, 19 Kilmer Avenue, Taun­

- dren. It is open to all men and ton, Mass. women of the ,Fall River Diocese, as well as high school students, who are assisting or may be will ­ing t9.' assist with Confraternity Wh~n it's timeof Christian Doctrine classes.

All those intel:'ested in teach­ to retir~ '.... 'Buy ing 'religion,' particularly pros­pective t:lew teachers, are invited to take the course on recommen­dation of their pastor. ,Those FISK completIng the course success­

, fully will be entitled to the CCD

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