02.23.61

20
The ANCHOR "" An Anohor of the sour, Sur. «mil li'irm-ST. PA.UL Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Feb. Vol. 5, No. 8 © 1961 The Anchor NEW PARISH CENTER PLANNED TO MEET GROWING NEEDS OF ST. MARY'S CHURCH IN NOR1'ON. o NEW DIOCESE: Most Rev. Joseph McShea, former Auxiliary Bishop of Phila-' delphia, lias been named by Pope John to be bishop of the newly formed diocese of Allentown, Pa. NC Photo. Council Insists· On Federal Aid For Higher Education WASHINGTON (NC) - An types of colleges and universities mus'$ ·be aided by the Federal government, the influential American Council on Education has said. This aid must be forthcoming if the essential national goal of providing for future stu- to increase supply of coilege dents is to be met, said the teachers. federation of more than The council also favored con- 1,000 institu- tinuation and expansion of the tiOlv. and 144 program of loans 'to college stu- It proposed' the Federal gov- dents provided by the Defense ernment provide $350 million Education Act and a new pro- each year in loans for dormitory gram of scholarships starting construction and an average of Turn to Page Four one billion dollars in both loans and matching grants for class- rooms, libraries and laborato- ries. It also recommended a broad expansion of fellowship pro- grams under the National Sci- ence Foundation, a government agency encouraging scientific research, and under the 1958 National Defense Education Act Rev. James F. Lyons, Cam- paign (Director, acknowledged the work and the cooperation of the committee and the parish committees which con- High Schools Set Entrance Exams For Ma'rch 11 of High School; in' No. Dartmouth, Msgr. 'Coyle High School in and Holy;'Family High School in' New Bedford have announced that entrance examinations for all th l' e e schools will, be held at the 'schools at 9 o'clock A.M. on Saturday, March 11. The .four girls' Academies in the of raIl River are also holding entrance exams at the same time and on the same'day. Girls desiring to enter the. Acad- emy of the Sacred Hearts, Do- minican Academy, Jesus Mary Academy or Mount St. Mary Academy will take the exams at the school of their choice', Stang High School will hold a registration day on Sunday, March 5 from 2 until 5 P.M. Feehan Registration The Most Reverend Bishop l!las announced that registra- tion for the first Freshman class for the new Bishop Feehan High School in Attle-, boro, .which will open in the . Fall of this year, will take place in St. John's School. Attleboro, on Saturday after- noon, March 11,' from 2 to 4. and in ·St. Mary's School, No. Attleboro, on Sunday after- noon, 'March 12, at the same hours. The total of $1,167,428.39 for the proposed Taunton Area Catholic Memorial High School for girls has been reached as.the last meeting of the 600 men active in the drive at CYO Hall reported additional gifts of $113,400 to bring the amount raised to thwt impressive figure. This is $41,744 above the minimum goal of $1,125,000 set last November at the .................. _ opening of the campaign to tributed to the'SUccess of the build the school. Four more drive. par ish e s-St. Anthony, Dr. Clement Maxwell, lay $117,496.40; Sacred Chairman of the Campaign, in $100,190; Holy Family, $69,620; his remarks stated that "the and St. J 0 se ph, $126,040, climax of this campaign has joined .the ranks of those which written a page in the history of had surpassed their quotas. The the City of Taunton. The school largest single total by will be a boon to all and appre- any parish $231,625 by Saint cia ted as such when open but a Mary's. . , shori time," Dr. Maxwell said. The chairmen of the various groups were seated on the stage with Bishop Connolly and Bishop Gerrard. All expressed their Turn to Three .................... - , was asked to comment on a state- ment that private agencies can- not- guarantee distribution of surplus food to the most needy. This claim, the questioning re- porter said, was made' by Rev. Franklin Clark Fry, president of the World Council 'of Churches and president of the 2.3-million Turn to Page Twelve' NEW ARCHBISHOP: Most Rev. John J. Krol, former Auxiliary Bishop of Vleveland, haft been named by Pope John to be Arch- bishop of Philadelphia. NO Photo. Fail River Residents Laud E'levation of Bishop Krol Members of the Fall River Diocese who participated in the Diocesan pilgrimage to Rome last Fall are' especially happy over the naming of Most Rev. John,J. Krol to the see' of ,Philadelphia. The Archbishop-designate was aboard the' pilgrimage ship da ican COllege in Rome for visiting Vinci, en route to a meeting prelates. in Rome in preparation for Miss Margaret. Lahey, SS. t h f thcoming Ecumenical Peter Paul parIsh, and Mrs. e Catherme Connelly, Holy Name CouncIl. parish, both of Fall River, had He was traveling with Arch- quarters on the Leonardo da, bishop Edward F. Hoban of Vinci near those of the new Cleveland, whose auxiliary he Archbishop. They had the oppor- was at the time. He saw tunity of several conversations Bishop Connolly and was with with him and Miss Lahey noted the Fall. River Ordinary at a that he was particularly intelJ- dinner held at the North Arner- ested in work with retarded ---.--.-.-.-- her especial field of ".. .[ interest. ., . 'She characterized the prelate as "charming,' interesting and humble-a very gracious man." "He played a good game of pingporig, too, and never missed his daily walk around the deck." she added, Bishop Hails Taunton Drive Success President Kennedy Prais'es Overseas Relief , . WASHINGTON (NC)-President Kennedy said pri- wte relief agencies are doing a first-class job of distribu- ting U.S. surplus food overseas and he would be reluctant to curtail their services. The Chief Executive said that eliminating private agencies from acting as distributors would mean overseas gov- ernments would have to eal'l'y on. He said: "We have never felt that this was better than having \t done through voluntary groups." . The President's comments .me at R press conference. He (

description

AnAnohorofthe sour, Sur. «mil li'irm-ST. PA.UL NEW DIOCESE: Most Rev.JosephMcShea,former Auxiliary Bishop of Phila-' delphia, lias beennamedby Pope John to be bishop of thenewlyformeddioceseof Allentown,Pa.NCPhoto. NEW ARCHBISHOP: Most Rev. John J. Krol, former Auxiliary Bishop of Vleveland, haft been named Feehan Registration MembersoftheFallRiverDiocesewhoparticipatedin the Diocesan pilgrimage to Rome last Fall are'especially happyoverthenamingofMostRev.John,J.Krol to thesee' e ~r Photo. ""

Transcript of 02.23.61

Page 1: 02.23.61

TheANCHOR

""An Anohor of the sour, Sur. «mil li'irm-ST. PA.UL

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Feb.

Vol. 5, No. 8 © 1961 The Anchor

NEW PARISH CENTER PLANNED TO MEET GROWING NEEDS OF ST. MARY'S CHURCH IN NOR1'ON.

o

NEW DIOCESE: MostRev. Joseph McShea, formerAuxiliary Bishop of Phila-'delphia, lias been named byPope John to be bishop ofthe newly formed diocese ofAllentown, Pa. NC Photo.

Council Insists· On FederalAid For Higher Education

WASHINGTON (NC) - An types of colleges anduniversities mus'$ ·be aided by the Federal government, theinfluential American Council on Education has said. Thisaid must be forthcoming if the essential national goal ofproviding for future stu- to increase~ supply of coilegedents is to be met, said the teachers.federation of more than The council also favored con­1,000 educatio~al institu- tinuation and expansion of thetiOlv. and 144 organizatiollB~ program of loans 'to college stu-

It proposed' the Federal gov- dents provided by the Defenseernment provide $350 million Education Act and a new pro­each year in loans for dormitory gram of scholarships startingconstruction and an average of Turn to Page Fourone billion dollars in both loansand matching grants for class­rooms, libraries and laborato­ries.

It also recommended a broadexpansion of fellowship pro­grams under the National Sci­ence Foundation, a governmentagency encouraging scientificresearch, and under the 1958National Defense Education Act

Rev. James F. Lyons, Cam­paign (Director, acknowledgedthe work and the cooperation ofthe gen~ral committee and theparish committees which con-

High Schools SetEntrance ExamsFor Ma'rch 11

P~incip~ls of St~ng HighSchool; in' No. Dartmouth,Msgr. 'Coyle High School in~Taunton, and Holy;' FamilyHigh School in' New Bedfordhave announced that entranceexaminations for all t h l' e eschools will, be held at the'schools at 9 o'clock A.M. onSaturday, March 11.

The .four girls' Academies inthe ~ity of raIl River are alsoholding entrance exams at thesame time and on the same'day.Girls desiring to enter the. Acad­emy of the Sacred Hearts, Do­minican Academy, Jesus MaryAcademy or Mount St. MaryAcademy will take the exams atthe school of their choice',

Stang High School will hold aregistration day on Sunday,March 5 from 2 until 5 P.M.

Feehan RegistrationThe Most Reverend Bishop

l!las announced that registra­tion for the first Freshmanclass for the new BishopFeehan High School in Attle-,boro, .which will open in the

. Fall of this year, will takeplace in St. John's School.Attleboro, on Saturday after­noon, March 11,' from 2 to 4.and in ·St. Mary's School, No.Attleboro, on Sunday after­noon, 'March 12, at the samehours.

The total of $1,167,428.39 for the proposed Taunton Area Catholic Memorial HighSchool for girls has been reached as.the last meeting of the 600 men active in the drive atCYO Hall reported additional gifts of $113,400 to bring the amount raised to thwt impressivefigure. This is $41,744 above the minimum goal of $1,125,000 set last November at the.................._ opening of the campaign to tributed to the'SUccess of the

build the school. Four more drive.par ish e s-St. Anthony, Dr. Clement Maxwell, lay$117,496.40; Sacred He~rt, Chairman of the Campaign, in$100,190; Holy Family, $69,620; his remarks stated that "theand St. J 0 s e ph, $126,040, climax of this campaign hasjoined .the ranks of those which written a page in the history ofhad surpassed their quotas. The the City of Taunton. The schoollargest single total reporte~ by will be a boon to all and appre­any parish wa~ $231,625 by Saint ciated as such when open but aMary's. . , shori time," Dr. Maxwell said.

The chairmen of the variousgroups were seated on the stagewith Bishop Connolly and BishopGerrard. All expressed their

Turn to P~ Three

•....................-

, was asked to comment on a state­ment that private agencies can­not- guarantee distribution ofsurplus food to the most needy.

This claim, the questioning re­porter said, was made' by Rev.Franklin Clark Fry, president ofthe World Council 'of Churchesand president of the 2.3-million

Turn to Page Twelve'

NEW ARCHBISHOP:Most Rev. John J. Krol,former Auxiliary Bishop ofVleveland, haft been namedby Pope John to be Arch­bishop of Philadelphia. NOPhoto.

Fail River Residents LaudE'levation of Bishop Krol

Members of the Fall River Diocese who participated inthe Diocesan pilgrimage to Rome last Fall are' especiallyhappy over the naming of Most Rev. John,J. Krol to the see'of ,Philadelphia. The Archbishop-designate was aboard the'pilgrimage ship Leo~a.rdo da ican COllege in Rome for visitingVinci, en route to a meeting prelates.in Rome in preparation for Miss Margaret. Lahey, SS.

th f thcoming Ecumenical Peter ~nd Paul parIsh, and Mrs.e ~r Catherme Connelly, Holy Name

CouncIl. parish, both of Fall River, hadHe was traveling with Arch- quarters on the Leonardo da,

bishop Edward F. Hoban of Vinci near those of the newCleveland, whose auxiliary he Archbishop. They had the oppor­was at the time. He saw m~ch o~ tunity of several conversationsBishop Connolly and was with with him and Miss Lahey notedthe Fall. River Ordinary at a that he was particularly intelJ­dinner held at the North Arner- ested in work with retarded

---.--.-.-.-- ·.......,~.chi1dren, her especial field of".. . [ interest. . ,

. 'She characterized the prelateas "charming,' interesting andhumble-a very gracious man."

"He played a good game ofpingporig, too, and never missedhis daily walk around the deck."she added,

Bishop Hails Taunton Drive SuccessPresident Kennedy Prais'esOverseas Relief Agen~ies, . WASHINGTON (NC)-President Kennedy said pri­wte relief agencies are doing a first-class job of distribu­ting U.S. surplus food overseas and he would be reluctantto curtail their services. The Chief Executive said thateliminating private agenciesfrom acting as distributorswould mean overseas gov­ernments would have toeal'l'y on. He said:

"We have never felt that thiswas better than having \t donethrough voluntary groups.". The President's comments.me at R press conference. He

(

Page 2: 02.23.61

.,: ..•

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'Mission at ~ OtisCloses Tonight'

Rev. William F. Col~ins,C.SS.R., is conducting a missionat Otis Air Force Base. To cloeetonight, it has been in progresesince last Sunday.. A Redemptorist who bea

serVed in Puerto Rico' and .ih.:Oomincan· Republic since· hN~r.dination, an~ has given maD7missions at Air ror<;e. Bases,Father Copins is a native 01Roxbury. His brother, Rev. JOhDA. Collins, C.SS.R., is one of theOtis chaplains.

Swansea K of CMarch activities for Bishop

Cassidy C 0 u n c ii, SwanseaKnights of ColumbUS, will 'in­clude a bloodmobile visit frona12:45 to 6 Friday afternooD,Mar. 3. Irish Nationality Nightwill be held' Friday, Mar. 17. ACommunion breakfast is slatedfollowing 8 o'clock Mass Sundaymorning, Mar. 19 at St. ThomyMore Church, Somerset. Also OaMar. 19, council wives will SPOD­BO!' a Spring. fashion show fea.­turing male and female ~le&All events will be at the councilbome. '\,

Father StanislausMeiSS Monday

Most Reverend James L. COD­nolly, D.D., Bishop of the Dio­cese of Fall River, offered aSolemn Pontifical Mass ofRequiem Monday morning in St.Joseph's Church, Fairhaven, forthe Rev. Stanislaus BernardAlbert, SS.CC., 85, one of thefounders of the American ProV!­ince of the Congregation of thoSacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.Father ,Albert died Thurpday ina New Bedford Hospital.~ong the many members of

the 'clergy seated in the sanctu­ary was Most Rev. James J. Ger­rard, Auxiliary Bishop of thaDiocese.

Father Stanislaus was·chaplamat . Sacred Hearts Academy inFairhaven and served at one timeat the former leper colony OD

~ Penikese Island In BuzzardllBay.

He was one of three priestawho came to this country in 1905at the invitation of the Most Rev.

,William Stang, first bishop of.Fall River, to found the SacredHearts F~thers here.

The, order, composed of mle­aionar!.es, now has 243 priests,brothers and novices and. 4if

.mission bouses in this country.Born 'in .Aller.born, Luxem­

bourg,- he was ordained as asaCred Hearts father in 1902 andserved for three years as a pro­fessor at the Apostolic School .ill.~impleveld, .Belgium, beforecoming. to Fairhaven as Ii prior.

He 'was a chaplain at the lepel'colony during the early 1920'..

. Except for the time he was oathe island, he worked in F~ir­ha:ven since coming to' thitcountry.

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'HOPE' BOOSTS AMERICA ABROAD: One of the most fruitful American programsof people-to-people aid to the medically underprivileged of 'theworld'is project HOPE 8'

hospital ship now serving the 1ndonesian island of Ambon. Nurse Dorothy Rivera l~ft,is demonstrating an autoclave (steam-pressure sterilizing machine)' to '8 group of'Indo-.nesian. visitors. At right, Miss Rivera sees to it that her patient "takes his medicine...·NC Photo. .

Project :People.to~~eopleHelp.For UnderprivilegedSEATTLE (NC) - Pro Je ct· . areas." . No Greater Endeavor

HOPE; an American pl10gram of'·' Privatel'" Financed '''1' nf·· .· . .. . ~ co id~nt that the proj-people-to-people aid to . the Project . HOPE is a privately' ect is illustrative of effectiveworlel's . ~edically. IlDderprivi- financed Anlerican program. de",_ people - to - people program5-

'leged, is a good will ambassador signed to bring the Hitest medical demonstrating to the people offor the nation. knowledge to doctors and nurses the world the strong desire of·

This was reported by Dr. Ber- in underdeveloped nations.' From 'the people of this nation to sharenard J. Goiney of Seattle, who is Indonesia the hospital ship will our tec:hnological advances inserving aboard the S.S. Hope, a go to Vietnam Ceylon Korea' medicine and other fields ofhospital ship now docked at the' Okinawa and Pakistan" at th~ scienc:es with other countries ofIndonesian island of AIDbon. . in~itation ofO' members' of the the world."

Correct NotionS medical profession in thoseDr. Goiney, a member .of Our cou'ntries. .

Lady of the Lake partsb here', . On board the HOPE a formerrep~rted in a message home that Navy'hospital ~ip, are' 60 Ainer­ProJect HOPE (which stands for ican doctors nurs'es and otherHealth Opportunity for People. medical pers~nnelwho have vol...Everywhere) is helping to cor- unteered to serve the projeCt atrect mistaken notions some In-· salaries' many times less .thandonesians have abollt Americans.' they could earn in the United

"Up to' now their impression .States.was that .the Ame.rican thought. President of Project HOPE~ Wonly of hImself," he said.. "This· Dr. William B. Walsh of Wash­project is changing their minds: ington, D.C.Its value is greater than the .President Kennedy recenUyhundreds of millions of dollars hailed the program in a letter tothat have been spent in these. ,Dr. 'Walsh. The President said:

. 'Newark Initiates'$2S Million Drive

NEWARK (NC)-ArchbishopThomas A. Boland of Newark.haS set March 5 as the date for'formal opening of a $25 million,

.. fund drive.The money will be used to de­

fray part of the cost of an arch­diocesanc . construction progl-am '.e~timated to cost more than. $30 :million.. Some 40,000 volunteer work-.

ers in the archdiocese's 242 par-

H·oly· ,Fathei' Urges .Pre.ache'rs Be' ishes are to take part :in ·ihedrive. To be known as" the

C.lear,' Calm, Respectful, Brief ."Archdiocese of Newark Devel-. opment Campaign," it will beVATICAN CITY (NC) - His must cover. all . aspects of the the largest single fund raising

Holiness Pope John XXIII has . spiritual life of Catholics. project in the history of theurged preachers to be clear, calm, Embrac'e All . archdiocese.respectful and brief. "There is "It is obvious that preaching The construction program aims' .an art to winning interest. .. an must not be reduced· to asefies at building seven high schoolsart that adapts itself to the his- of fervent. expressions, nor must" to accommodate 10,500 students;torical and cultural needs of it deal only with the field of four homes for the aged to careevery' epoch," he told a trac!i-' morals or only Iiome aspects of. .. for 432 persons; and a phllos­tional pre-'lenten audience of them. It must embrace everY-· ophy' building at the archdioces­Rome'\!l par ish' p'riests and . thing~faith, mOJ,'als, worship - an seminary in Darlington, N.J.emphasized that preachers must so as to give the faithful soundprepare themselves by reading nourishment, that.they may pass Mark Washington'sthe Gospels and.the Fathers of from convinced knowledge to B' hdthe Church. ' coherent practice. in life 'and Irt,ay in Italy. He further noted that sermons gain,.fervor thro~gh contact with PISA (NC)"'-George Washing-and catechism lessons are not sacramental'life of the Church." ton's birthday was observed bytoo well attended, and attrib- . . Americans and Italians at a cer-uted this to work schedules in Necrology· emony in the shadow of Piss'sthe city, to increased· demands The ANCHOR lists the aD- famed lJeaning Tower, the bellon one's time and to a growing DiyersarYdates" ~ .the deaths .tower .of its cathedral. ,search for recreation. . of priests who have served the Held as a salute to Italo-Amer-

".But one must also say that FaU' .River Di~sesinoe u. ican friendship, the ceremonyf t · ·in ·190,,·th was staged by troops of the U. S"'.

sometimes the form of preach- orma Ion , os WI the. t t;' th t· th . f i'thf I Army's 8.th Logistical Commanding is not apt 'to lltimulate or m en Ion a e' a ul w IIquench the thirst for eierl161 give them' a prayerful remem- stationed in .nearby Leghorn.

· truth. Everything counts: the branee. . :I'he unit's commander, Col. Rob-FEB ...,' ert E. Holman, thanked Church.

languag.e, the way of developing .'. '" ~R J ' h' . authorities for, permitting the

the theme, and Ii measured and .ev· o .osep.N.Hamel, 1956,F d St ·Th observance. on the cathedral.

humble manner. oun eri. .". eresa,. New Bed..~ "Tinsels of a-vague and irrele- ford.·' . ',', ."' . grounds.vant erudition' have lost their '. :. MAL: {' ,..---------....;.--one· time attraction. Everything Rt. R~. 'Peter7 L. D: Robert, .therefore must be said with P.R., PastOr, Notre Dame declarity, with calm, and with re- Lourdes, Fall River. .spect-never with bitter expres-: .. MAR. Zsions . harsh' with ineffectivoe Rev. Antoine· Berube, 1936,polemics." Pastor, St~ Joseph, Attleboro. -/

Brevity Rev: James J. Brady 1941As for brevity, .Pope John Pastor, St. Kilian,' New B'edford:

cited a rule of the Roman Synod . Rev. Tarcisius Dressen, SS.CC.,limiting sermons to a duration 1952, Monastery of the Sacredof 15 minutes. Hearts, Fairhaven.

"How much can I>e said in 15or 20 minute9 without tiringpeople, unless one wanders fromthe subject," he exc1aimed.J

The Pope said that sermons

Mission Movies'LILLE (NC) - Seventy-five

Catholic movie specialists who'met here·in France at a three­- day convention on mission filmshave urged the creation of aninternational organization to

· produce movies emphasizing thebroilierhood of man' and the uni­versality of the Catholic: ChW'ch.

- .. '-::'-'0"-Thurs., Feb. 23, 1961

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION

:reb. 26-8t. Anthony, EastFalmouth.

St. Mary, No. Attleboro.

Mar. 5-Santo Christo, FallRiver. "-

Our Lady of Lourdes,Taunton.

Mar. 12-Holy Family, Taun­. ton.Our Lady's Haven, Fair-

haven. '

Mar. l~St. Mary, Taunton.Our Lady of Perpetual

Help, New Bedford.

2

legion of Decency _The following films are to be

added to the lists in their re­spectiye classificatIons:

Unobjectionable for generalpatronage: The Green Helmet.

Unobjectionable for adults ancfado1t:iscents: The .H 0 0 diu mPriest; Konga;' S~iPe~'s Ridge;Two Way Stretch.

Unobjectionable for adults:One-Eyed Jacks.

Objectionable in part for aD:Terror of the Tongs (excessivebrutality) .

Condemned: Breathless (in­decent and' salacious treatmentmake this film completely unac­ceptable for mas entertainmentmedium).

THE. ANCHORSecond-class mail privileg.., nuthorlaedII. Fnll River. Mass. Published evel7

Thursday n. 410 Highland Avenue. FallRiver. M....s•• by the Catholie Press of theDioeese of Fall River SUbscriptiOD price1m ......u.. Dl>lltnnld u.oo nsr "en&.

Doeley TrB~ute

On TV S(wml@j~wNEW YOR!{ (NC) - A half­

hour tribute to the. late Dr.Thomas" A. Dooley will be pre­sented Sunday on the Lamp· UntoMy Feet television program.

The program will be shown·over the Columbia BroadcastingSystem's television network at10:30 A.M., EST. "Catholic por-

· tions" of the Lamp Unto My Feetseries are produced by the CBSpublic affairs department in co­operation with the NationiUCouncil of Catholic Men.

The program of tribute to Dr.Dooley will consist of a still­photo documentary and narra­tion from audio-tape recordingsmade by the doctor. The doctor'sbrother, Malcolm Dooley, will

·also be on the program. 'Laos .

Dr: Dooley, known for hismedical .work in the jungles ofLaos died Jan. 18 of cancel" Hewas, ~n alUmnus of Notre Dame'·and St. Louis Universities.

The Lamp Unto My Feet pro­gram is carried on a .delayedbasis in some areas. Viewersshould consult their local news­papers for the date and time ofthe program.

Mass O'rdoFRIDAY-St, Matthias, Apostle.. II Class. Red. 'Mass Proper;

Gloria; Second Collect Fridayof I Week' of Lent; Creed;Preface of AposUes.

SATURDAY - Saturday of I'Week of Lent. II Class. Violet..Mass Proper; No Gloria orCreed; Preface of Lent. Thecelebrant may omit the 2nd,3rd, 4th, and 5th lesso!1s withtheir versicles and prayers ap­pointed for this day. The firstlesson' and .the Epistle must,however, be said.

BUNDAY-II Sunday of Lent. IClass. Violet. Mass Proper; NoGloria; Creed; Preface of· Lent.

MONDAY-Monday of'lI Weekof Lent. III Class. Violet. Mass·Proper; No Gloria; Second,Collect St. ,Gabriel. of Our

. Sorrowful Mother, Confessor;No Creed; Preface of Lent.

TUESDAY-Tuesday of II Weekof Lent. III' Class. Violet. MassProper; No Gloria or Creed;'Preface of Lent.

WEDNESDAY-Wednesday.of IIWeek of Lent, III Class. Violet..Mass Proper; No. Gloria. orCreed; Preface of Lent.

THURSDAY - Thursday of IIWeek of Lent. III Class. Violet.Mass Proper;' No Gloria 01'

Creed; Preface of Lent.

...,

Page 3: 02.23.61

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WASHINGTON (NC)u.s. Catholic college stu­dents have been given theopportunity to join in a.drive to help build a Catholieuniversity in Formosa. .

Richard Cardinal Cushing,Archbishop of Boston, called onthe students to contribute towardconstruetion of the proposed uni­versity's library.

Cardinal Cushing is directorof a $900,000 fund drive under­way in this country on behalfof the university.· At his request the National

Federation of Catholic CollegeStudents is conducting a driveamong students to raise funds forthe library.

Msgr. Joseph E. Schieder,national director of the NFCCS,expressed the hope here that thecampaign will 'be "the greatestsingle driye ever staged by theCatholic college students ofAmerica In the cause of Chris­tian love for their fellow stu­dents."

Drive Under WayThe drive now under way Oil

Catholic campuses throughoutthe country began Feb. 1 andwill end Match 7.

NFCCS planners have urgedthat it be conducted in twophases: in the first phase, fundsraised by social, cultul'al andathletic activities would be

'turned over to the drive; in thesecond, each student would beurged to donate one dollar ormore.

The drive among individualstudents began yesterday andwill close March 7.

The NFCCS, in a statementannoun.cing the campaign, said,that 300,000 of Formosa's 10million people are Catholics. Ofthe 30,000 students graduatedfrom high school there each year,

, only 10,000 can be accommodatedby presen~FOl'mosan universities.

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Holy Father GreetsFrench Churchmen

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopeJohn joined French prelates,priests and seminarians at ashrine of Our Lady of Lourdesthat stands in' the VaticanGardens. .

The special audience was inrecognition of the gift of thealtar which stood in the Grottoof the Apparitions at Lourdes forhalf a century and which re­cently was sent 'to the Pope byBi~hop Pierre Marie Theas ofLourdes. The shrine in theVatican Gardens is a replica ofthegcotto.

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N. E. Newman ClubsSet Convention

Newman Clubs of the NewEngland Province will hold a,convention the weekend of April14 through 16 in Portland, Me.The meeting's theme is "God,Law and You."

Highlights of the, three dayprogl'am will include' a keynote!jession with Most Rev. Daniel J.FeeneY, Bishop of Portland, pre­siding, and semi,nars on thenatural law and modern dayproblems and the positive law.

A banquet, dance and Com­munion breakfast are also on thesched\W>

Parish School PupilsWin Oratory Prizes,

ST. ALBANS (NC)-Parochialschool students won the three topplaces in the State OratoricalContest sponsored by \the Amer­ican Legion.

Robert O'Connell, 16, a juniorat St. Mary's High School, St.Albans, was awarded first prize;second prize went to PatriciaHinds of St. Michael's' HighSchool, Brattleboro, and' thirdprize was won by Bart Costelloof Mount St. Joseph Academy,Rutland.

The winners received savingsbonds as prizes: $100, first; $75,second; and $25, third. YoungO'Connell will now enter theNew England Regional Orator­ical Contest, and if successful,has a chan~e for national c~mpe­tition.

Paper ,Urges InquiryInto Lumumba Death

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The~ai1y newspaper L'OsservatoreRomano expressed shock at theslaying of, former CongolesePremier Patrice Lumumba andasked that the United Nations bepermitted to make a full investi­gation of it.

Alluding to the initial refusalby authorities of the Congo'sseparatist province of Katangato allow any outside investiga­tion, the Vatican City paper ex­pressed hope that "the United.Nations be permitted to conductthe intel'l1ational inquest inKatanga which it was impededfrom conducting in Hungary fol­lowing the bloody repression ofthe Hungfll'ians' (1956) insurrec­tion by the Soviets."

The newspaper said that "thedeclarations made following theannouncement (of Lumumba'smurder) by the Minister of theInterior of Katanga were all in­spired by the strongest condem­nation of violence." L'Osserva­tore took' excep,tion only to"those who used the sad eventsevidently and exclusively fortheir own particular interests."

Success of Taunton School Drive Pleases BishopCont'inued from Page One success in spite of the inclement 'cess of' the campaign was as-

gratitude for the cooperation and weather in its latter stages. Bured." He concluded: "Thisthe accomplishments attained by Th,rough the help of God, with shows a solicitude of the priest.lithe 13 parishes of the Taunton the good will and generosity of, and the people for the ambitionsarea. the people, and the spirit of ded- of the bishop for the good of all.

Bishop Connolly, in officially ication by the workers the sue- It, represents the zeal and desireclosing the campaign, had this for better things for the wholeto say: "This is a memorable 'Germany's Catholics community."event. The campaign is a great Aid Malaria Fund

NEW DELHI (NC)-The HolySee's Observer at the Assemblyof the World Health Organiza­tion has' announced that theCa tholics of Germany haveraised $100,00 for WHO's malariaeradication campaign.,

Father Henri ,de Riedmatten,O.P., also told the 14th WorldHealth Assembly that the HolySee itself is repeating its annualsymbolic contribution of $1,000to the anti-'malaria program ofthe UN-:affiliated organizatiolL

, He said the contribution byPope John is not just "a symbolof the approval of the malariaeradication program," but rather"an indication to the Christiancommunity throughout the worldthat the Holy Father wishes all

. Christians, individually and col­lectively, to participate gener­ously in this campaign. '

BANNER PARISH: Very Rev. Gallistus Szpara, O.F.M.Conv., pastor of Holy RosaryChurch, Taunton, points out over-the-top figures of his area-leading parish in MemorialHigh School campaign to Bishop Connolly and Sylvester Sowiecki; parish lay chairman[or drive. ' .'

Asks Federal AidProgram fo.. AllSchoo~ Children

OGDENSBURG (NC)­Any progl~am of, Federal aidto education should benefitall American children, in­cluding those in pri\ate schools.,Bishop James 'J. Navagh of Og­densburg declared in a radioaddress here.

The Bishop stated that chil­dren in Catholic schools are en­titled to "every privilege whichthe Constitution of the UnitedStates sanctions and which isenjoyed by other American bOYiand girls." '

"The Government of the UnitedStates is apparently about tolaunch a massive Federal aidprogram to benefit education inthe United States," the Bishopsaid in a talk broadcast from St.Mary's cathedral.

Financed by Taxes"This can be set up so .it ben­

efits every American boy a'ndgirl, both those in public schoolaand private schools. Since this isto be giyen out of taxes allAnlericans, including ourselves,will pay, we want it for Catholicchildren and every child nomatter what schools they attend."

Bishop Navagh said that Gov.Nelson ,A. Rockefeller of NewYork has proposed a measure toassist financially students attend­ing private colleges in NewYork state. "The Governor saysthis: is a constitutional measureand' he is an honorable gentle­man: We want that aid for everystUdent no matter what collegebe attends."

"The law makes a distInctionbetween service to the' Churchand service to the child," he con­tinued. "We recognize this andaccept it.

"We expect for our children,Including those attending ourCatholic schools, every service,evel'y help, every privilege thatis enjoyed by any other Amer­ican .boy or girl.

"This includes bus transporta­tion, school lunches, health serv­ice and everyt~ing else whichthe Constitutions of the UnitedStates and the State of NewYork allow."

Solon Lauds CourageOf Cardinal Stepinac,

WASHINGTON (NC).,- Car­dinal Alojzije Stepinac waslauded in the U. S. Senate on thefirst 811iliversal'y of his death forhis courage in opposing hazi­communist tyranny.

Sen. Frank J. Lausche of Ohiopaid tribute to the Archbishopof Zagreb, Yugoslavia, who diedlast February in his native viL­Isge of Krasic.

The Yugoslav communistregime sentenced Cardinal Step­inac in 1946 to 16 years at forcedlabor. In 1951 he was, condi­tionally released from pl'ison. Hespent the last nine years of hi5life under confinement in Krasic.Sen. Lausche described CardinalStepinac as "a hero" who "be­lieved in the truth."

Announce SpringStonehill Classes

Registration for Institute ofAdult Education courses' atStonehill College will be held at7 Tuesday evenings Feb. 28 andMar. 7 for Tuesday classes and 3Friday afternoons Mar. 3 and 10for Friday classes.

Offerings will include, onTuesday evenings, classes on theMass, the English novel, French,creative writing, sociology, for­eign policy, public speaking andeontemporal'y philosophy,

Also on Tues'day will be busi';ness courses in salesmanship,real estate, law, insurance, eco­nomics, and labor. Art depart­ment classes will include draw­ing and painting, interior deco­ration and social graces.

Friday's program inciudes psy­chology, French, stock mal'kettrading, drawing and painting,journalism and a charm course.

In New BedfordTo be offcred at Holy Fa~i1y

High School, New Bedford, is anintroductory course in SCl'iptureon Tuesda'y evenings from 7:30to 9:30, beginning Feb. :28. In­structor will be Rev. Thomas G.Brennan. '

Page 4: 02.23.61

!"',·T':~'. ~'..~ :',.: ., '

SIRLOIN TIP1ST 2 RI85 LI 79C

grams of all parts of the admm­istrative offices of. the Holy See.The body responsible lor semiD­ary projects is the Sacred Ccm­gregation- of Universities lmdSeminaries. '

The report said the congre~tion is preparing a program 'ofstudy which will 'provide sociol­ogy courses in all seminaries toprepare seminarians the betterfor their .work as priests.

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, VATICAN .CITY (NC) - TheHoly See is considering plans tomake sociology compulsory inall seminaries and to requireseminarianS to' study foreign,languages during their vacations.

,These projects are reported inthe newly released, ','Ttie 1960Activities of the Holy See," anannual Vat i can pti'blicationwhich reviews thework and pro-

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Apple Ring Salad .slices in pineapple j!!ice or lemon

TUESDAY, MARCH 7lFast '

- \

."

SandwichArrange stalks of hot seasoned asparagus on

buttered toast. Place slice of tomatoes oh aspar­agus and cover with slices of American Cheese.Garnsh with paprika. Broil in oven on a bakingsheet until c~eese melts.

1. Dip applejuice.

2. Arrange cored apple rings lh" thick on lettuceleaves.

3. Fill centers with mixture of chopped dates aridnuts moistened with small amount of· fruitjuice.

4. Garnish with mayonnaise dressing.

Meringue Crust Chiffon PiePie Shell: I

• 2 _egg ,whites, 1/8 t cream 'of tarter, ~ cupgranulated sugar.1. Beat egg whftes until foamy. Add cream oftarter and beat until whites form peak.2. Add sugar very gradually while' continuing to

beat. , .3. Spread on greased 8" pie plate, hollowing the

center a little. ,4. Bake in slow oven (300°>' 45 minutes or until

crisp to the touch .. Cool thoroughly.Filling:

'Eggs Florentine

2 pkgs. frozen chopped ~pinachcooked and drained

6 eggssalt .lh lb. American cheese1 taU can evaporated milk2 cups buttered bread 'crumb's

1. Place cooked hot spinach :in buttered shal.low.baking dish. ,

2. Make 6 small wells in spinach, and drop anegg bito each, season with salt.

3. Prepare a cheese sauce by heating the cheesea~d milk over boiling' water until c,heese is'-melted. ,

4. Pour hot sauce over eggs and spinach.5. Sprinkle with bread crumbs and bake in a

moderate oven (350°) until brown~about 25minutes.

2 t plain gelatin% cup cold water4 egg yolksIf.s cup sugar

,It grated lemon rind1 t grated orange rind1h cup lemon juice .¥4 cup orange juice% cup granulated sugar

1. Soak gelatin 'in cold water. .2. Beat egg yolks with a fork then add %'cup'

sugar and the salt. Add rinds and fruit juices.3. Cook -over very hot bu t not boiling' water until

mixture thickens and coats spoon.4. Remove from heat and add gelatin and stir

until dissolved: .5. Chill 'until mixture becomes thick ,'enough to,

mound slightly when dropped from spoon.6. Beat egg whites stiff, then add ¥4 'cup sugar

while continuing to beat. Fold into gelatinmixture. ,Then turn into cooled pie shell. Letstand overnight in refrigerator. Serve withwhipped cream or whipped toppin/J. Q

WEDNESDAV, MARCH 8" Fast

Breakfast: Apple JUice, ,Shredded Wheat Bis-cuit, Beverage. '

Lunch: Pineapple and Banana Salad, - HotCheese Biscuits,* Beverage.

Dinner: Tomato Juice, Golden Bake Chicken,Orange and Cranberry Relish, Bake StuffedPotato, Glazed Carrot Sticks, 'Peas and Onions,.Meringue Crust Chiffon Pie.

Hot Cheese BiscuitsAdd If.z cup grated cheese, to dry ingredients

for baking powder biscuit mixture.

Breakfast: St~wed' Prunes, Wh!lle WheatToast, Apricot Jam,' Beverage.

lLunch: Eggs Florentine,* Apple Ring Salad,·Jello, Oatmeal Cookies. "

IDinner: Beef Stew with Dumplings, Tomatoand Cucumber Salad, French Dressing, Apricot-Prune Pie. "

Shepherd's lPiet T Fat2 cups fluffy hot mas~~d potatoes

seasoned2 cups cubed left ove'r meat1 lh cup meat gravy

Grease shallow 'baking dish or '4' individual"baking dishes. Spread lh inch thick with'mashedpotato. Fill with cubed meat and gravy. Garnishtop with large spoonfuls of mashed potatoes.Bake at 375° for 20 minutes. '

, J

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Feb. 23, 1961co

MelJ7UUlS, Re~ipes for ThirdTHURSDAY, MARCH 2,

- FastBreakfast: Cornflakes with sliced bananas,

Bran muffins, Beverage.lLunch: Macaroni 'and cheese casserole,

Celery, Carrot and Pickle Salad, Sliced Pine­apple, Toll House Cookies.

Dinner: Veal Cutlet, Tomato Sauce, Pan F,riedpotatoes, Italian Beans, Waldorf Salad, CoconutCustard Pie.

SATURDAY, MARCH". Fast ..

" Breakfast:... Half Grapefruit,. Protein cereal,Danish Pastry, Beverage. "

Lunch: Cheese Omelet,* Tomato and Cucum­ber Salad, Apple, Beverage.

Dinner: Broiled Hamburg, Scalloped Potato,Peas, Mexican Corq, Fried Egg Salad,· FrenchBread or rolls, Raisin Pie. '

Cheese Omelet(3 or 4 servings)

1. Separate 4 eggs.2. Beat whites until frothy.3. Add 2 T water, lh t salt, and beat "until stiff

but not dry. '4. Add 2 .T flour, dash of pepper to yolks, and

beat until thick and lemon colored.5. Fold yolk mixture into egg whites,6. Heat 1 T -butter, margarine or cooking fat in'

:a 10" skillet. When fat is just hot enough tomake a drop of water sizzle pour in omeletmixture, level it gently and leave a' littlehigher around edges.

'1. Cook over low heat until ,pUffy and slightlybrowned on bottom, about 5 minutes. Liftedges to' check browning. ,

8. Finish cooking in slow oven (300°) 8· to 10minutes. Omelet is done- when knife insertedin center comes out clean.

D. Make a' cut at 'right angles' t() halldle justabove center. Fold. Pour sauce b~tween layersand over top. Garnish with pimento strips.

Cheese Sauee: To 1 cup medium. white sauce add1 cup grated American' cheese. Stir untilmelted. Makes l Ih cups.

Omelet may be doubled for 6 to 8 'servings,cooked in two skillets. Don't fold. Sauce can bepoured between layers.

" Fried Egg Salad1. Spread pineapple slices with softened cr'eam

sauce.2. Place apricot half over center of pineapple.3. At side place two strips of dates beside pine-

-apple, ' ' '4. Use' fruit salad dressing-mayonnaise thinned

with fruit juice.

MONDAY, MARCH G·Fast

Breakfast: Fruit Juice, High Protein Cereal,Toasted Corn Muffin, Beverage. ,

Lunch: Broiled Aspar;Igus, Tomato and CheeseSandwich,* cookies, Purple plums, Beverage.

Dinner: She'pherd;s Pie,* Green peas andonions, Buttered carrots, Tossed Green Salad,Roquefort Dressing, Butterscotch Custard Pie.

FRIDAY, ~ARCH 3Fast and Abstinence

Breakfast: Stewed Prunes, Cream 'of Wheat,Raisin Bread Toast, Beverage. '

Lunch: Tomato Surprise,* Potato Chips, PickleStix Chocolate Bread Polka Dot Pudding (add 1cup 'small marshmallows to pudding before bak-ing). '

IDinner: Broiled' Swordfish, French FriedPotatoes, carrots, Brocoli, au gratin, Apricot LimeMolded Salad. ,

Tomato Surprise Salad '1-7 oz: can tunaJh cup celery2' sour pickles (chopped)1 hard cooked egg (chopped)2 T French dressing4 tomatoessaltIf.J cup margarine

1. Flake tuna and combine with celery, pickleand egg.

2. Marinate in French dressing and chill.3. Peel tomatoes* and scoop out centers. Sprinkle

with salt, invert and chill,4. Combine chopped center of tomato with tuna

mixture and mayonnaise. Stuff tomatoes withmixture. Garnish with quartered hard cookedeggs and ripe olives.*Tomatoes blanched are easier to peel.Place tomatoes in boling water two minutes,then into cold water. Skin will be removed

'easily without spoiling fruit. Chill beforeremoving centers.

Apricot Lime Molded Salad1 pkg. lime jello1 cup apricot juice% cup boiling water2 T lemon juice

1. Add boiling water to dissolve gelatin.2. Add apricot and lemon juices. ' '3. Pour into molds. When partially set press

apricot half into gelatin.Note: Dietetic gelatin and dietetic apricot juiceare good for weight watchers.

4

Education' Council Urges fe~eral' Aid' for All .Colleg'es,Continued from' Page One the essential national goal of to church-related institutions. '

with $25 million the first year providing for future students is T?e council said it anticipatesand rising to $100 million by to be met. an Increase of two million stu-the fourth year. "Hence, the American Council dents in U.S. colleges and uni-

h t t t b th' '}. on Education, representing high- versities by 1970. It' called theT e s ~ e~en h' y ~l c~un~~ , er education as a whole, does next decade one of "crisis" for'

_" wh?se mem, ers 1p re ec ~ . e not ask for general assistance higher education., ' "v~ne~y of ~r~.a~ an~PU~~lC 1':'- from t.he Federal government in' "All major studie'sshow that

ItItutlOn~t°d Slgt

ter e uc,~ 10~t~n payin rl faculty salaries. after traditional sour,ces of in-.the Un! e a es, .sal e" . .' . come, including student tuitionexisting system ?f hIgher e~u- Nor does It ask dIrect aSS1St-, and fees, ha~e been stretched toeati,on ~~ggests Important l1m- ance ~rom th.e Federal govern- the limit; there will still be aitatlOns. ~ent m,meet:?g general operat- ,large gap that can be filll~d only

"More than half the colleges lllg expenses. by greater support from the Fed.and universities, enrolling near- The COl/neil's statement did eral 'government/' it said.ly 45 p~r c~nt of the stud"ents, not go into ~etail on why money At present, Father Robert J:

~'. are privately supported, it for these two expenses was· not Slavin, O.P., president of .Provi-::,., Said. requested. A possible explana- dence College, is a' member of

"AU types of 1nstitutions must tion lies in the question of the the council's executive commi~

be expanded and improved if ,constitutionality of direct and te<>,

--. .

; .~.... ~ ....... - ..... ~. e,. >. ;..< /' ,

Page 5: 02.23.61

THE ANCttOR-Diocj)se of Fa"" River-Thurs. Feb. 23, 1961 5

VATICAN RADIO MARKS 30TH YEAR OF WORLDWIDE BROAD­CASTING: Upper center, .Pope" John delivers one of his more than 50messages since his pontifical reign began two ,years ago. At upper left,are shown the inner facilitieg of the modern transmitting station at SantaMaria di Galeria outside ROQ1e. Upper right, St. Peter's dome forms thebackground for the main antenna of the broadcasting center in the Vatican.At bottom, from the left, are shown the headquarters of the Vatican

Radio Station behind the Vatican gardens; a statue of the ArchangelGabriel, pastron of communications, stands watch "before the transmission.station; an aerial view of the Sant'a Maria di Galeria station with its mazeof antemiae; and the cross-antenna of the station, symbolic of RadioVatican's broadcasting signature-Laudetur Jesus Christus (May JesuaChrist Be Praised). NC Photos.

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Jesuit Gains GrantFor Cl1ilean Work

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Fr.Joseph H. Fichter, S.J., national.­ly known sociologist and chail'­man of Loyola University's de­partment of sociology, has beeDawarded a U. S. State Depart­ment teaching and researcbgrant for a ;rear's work in SaDo­tiago, Chile.

The Jesujt educator will teacbone course in sociology at theUnive:rsity of Santiago.

H WILLIAM STREET

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Vatic'an Radio, Now 30, Years OICl, HasOne of Europe's Most Powerful Stations

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Vatican Radio is just 30 years old, but it is among themost powerful station's in Europe and not even the communists have succeededcompletely in jamming its programs. The station celebrated its 30th anniversary onFeb. 12. His Holiness Pope John XXIII· received its Jesuit-directed staff of 200 broad-casters and technicians in .and a half hours a day, seven York under Noble-prize-winnerspecial audience on the an- days a week. More than half of Victor Hess.niversary date. Thirty years the entire pro~am~ of Vatican In the two years that Popeis a short time in the history '. Radio today is aimed at people John has been pope, Vatican

.of the Church. But' for Radio behind the "Iron Curtain. Ac- Radio has carried 50 of his radioVatican it has been a period of cording to officials at the station, messages as well as more thanimmense growth. all communist natio~s except 30 general discourses. The pres-

It's first equipment was in- P~land and Yu.gOSlavia system- ent Pope has used the stationstalled by radio's inventor, atIcally try to Jam these broad- with great frequepcy, particu­Guglielmo Marconi. The single casts. However, thanks to the larly to reach the new nationsand, by"today's standards, weak mos.t modern an~ powerful of Africa.transmitter was put in use by eqUipment, the maJor part of In addition to the station onPope Pius on February 12, 1931. these broadcasts, are l:J.eard. Vatican Hill, Vati~an Radio has

Program Penetrates Vatican Radio's biggest ex- a large piece of property aboutThirty years ago the statiOll pansion came after World War 10 miles outside of Rome at

could barely make itself heard II. Catholics the world over Santa Maria where the station'sthroughout Europe. Today its contributed money to increase powerful transmitters are 10­programs penetrate the heart of the power and effectiveness of cated.

-Africa and are heard as clearly the station. Today there are Many of the rooms in thein Tokyo as in Moscow. three transmitters and 29 direc- Pope's apartments can be turned

During the war. the ;tatiOI1 tional antennae in operation. into temporary studios when thebecame an important part of the Another transmitter, the gift of need arises and another set ofHoly See's program to aid mili- ~e peopl.e of the Cologne. arch- broadcasting studios have beentary and civilian war victims. dIocese In Germany, wIll be set up near St. Peter's to accom­It devoted more than 12000 installed this year to provid~ modate the. expanding languagebroadcasting hours to tran~it more effective progra~s for broadcasts. "240,728 messages and appeals "for central and southern AfrICa. r------------_information from war prisoners, Headquarters of the station isdispersed families and refugees. in an ancient but remodeled

In 1948 Vatican Radio broad- tower on the top of Vatican Hill.cast in 19 languages. rroday it Its' studios are spacious andhas stepped up its programming handsomely fitted out. In oneto 29 lilllguages~ including" more studio there is a master Controlthan a dozen languages of J..- panel designed 10 that whentions behind the Iron Curtain. there is a special ceremony in

, Bl'Oadcasts are made eaCh St. Peter'. basilica, broadcast­week in Albanian, Amharic ers of nine languages can work(Ethiopian), Arabic Bulgarial1, simultaneously witb other.-. illChinese, Croat, Czech, Dutch, St. Peter's to bring tlie funetionEnglish, French, German, Hun- te milliolYl in their own laD­garian, Italian, Japanese, LatiB, guages.Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Por- White-coated technicians withtuguese, Rumanian, Russian, "VR" embroidered on theirSlovak, Slovene, Spanish, Swe- breast pockets work closely anddish, Danish, Norwegian, Ukra- quietly "with the 24 Jesuit priestsnian and White Russian. who direct and broadcast radio

There are daily broadcasts inCzech, English, French, Ger- programs.man, Hungarian, Italian, Latin Father Antonio Stefanizzi, S.J.,(the Rosary is recited daily in • 43-year-old physicist, headsLatin), Lithuanian, Polish, Por- -the operation. A graduate of thetuguese, Russian, Slovak and University of Naples, Father ~

Spanish. Stefanizzi did postgraduate work @!Broadcasts are tranamitted 23 at Focdham Universit, in New ~IiiIi!IiYiHi!IilIi!iilIi!llii!IIii!Ii!li!li!!liill~~!lii!Iii!i1liiiilli!lliIi!!ilIife!1li!Ji~i!!li!Ji~~!li!!Ji!!1C!1ii!M1

Urge Canada-RomeDiplomatic Relations

OTTAWA (NC)-A nationwidelabor organization has reCom­mended that the Canadian Gov­ernment establish relations witbtbe Holy See.

The' recommendation was for­warded to Prime Minister JohnG. Diefen1;>aker and meml;>ers ofbis cabinet by Roger Mathieu,president of the Confederationof National Trade Unions, whichformerly was known as theCanadian and Catholic LaborFederation.

Mr. Mathieu said that the100,000 members of his organiza­tion favored the diplomatic tiea.

Pa~ents ShouldPick Programs

OTTAWA (NC)-The role. ofparents in' selecting radio andtelevision programs for theirchildren is stressed in a revisedeade of ethics of the CanadianAssociation of Broadcasters.

The code has been adopted byllOfTIe 126 of 168 privately ownedradio stations a"nd by 36 of 48privately owped television 'sta­tions in Canada. The publiclyOWned Canadian BroadcastingCorporation has comparable pol­iey statements governing its sta­tions.

The code amends one ad­opted in 1943. The principle01. self discipline is basic to theeode. Regarding children's pr~

grams," the code says "It shall bethe responsibility of memberlItations to provide the closestpossible supervision in the ge­lection and control of material,characterizations and plot."

Best for Children"The member stations should

encourage parents to select fromthe richness of broadcasting farethe best programs to be broughtto the attention of their child­ren," the code states.

The code also calls upon theIndividual stations, "to makeavailable to the community ade­quate opportunity for presen­tation of religious messages" andto assist "in" all ways open thefurtherance of religious activ­tties."

Page 6: 02.23.61

/WEDNESDAY OF THE SEC­

OND WEEK ,IN LENT-Serv­ice, again, is the theme of theGospel. Jesus himself was in theworld in -order to serve, estab­lishing a pattern of giving, ofcare, of responsibility for all ~members, popes, bishops, priest-.Religious and larmen.

IE M BE It SATURDAY INSPRHNG-The several readingsin today's ordination Mass re­view the covenant which Godhas established with mankin~the praise due him for this gift,the moral response of man to hiscovenant-election, and the trans­figuration preview of Christ'striumph. It is the promise ~

resurrection which gives mean­ing to the repentance and laborof Lent.

SECOND SUNDAY HN lLlENT..-The Gospel today, the same atiJ

that of Ember Saturday, de­scribes the transfiguration ofJesus, the sign by which Hemanifested to three of His apos­ties His coming resurrection.The Epistle, as usual, is the moral .application: holiness, continence,justice, a pattern of life.

So the readings of this Maneontinue the short course iaChristian faith which Lent sup­

.plies. The Liturgy of the Wordprepares the comrpunity for thesacrificial meal. The Bible, then,is the focal point of the service~f God',s Word, or rather, the liv­ing proclamation of the Bibleto the, listening - congregation,just as the altar-table becomesthe center once the- Word bubeen proclaimed:

TOMORROW~ Ember Fridayin Spring. - ST. MATTHIASAPOSTLE. Lent is interrupted tocelebrate the feast of the 'apostiecalled to take the place of Judas.It is the Apostolic College' (andthe sacrament of Holy Orders ofwhich they were the first min­isters) which makes it possiblefor the Christian community tocelebrate a hierarchial worshipin which every Christian has hi.active and vocal part, a trueeommon prayer and communitTaction. .'

~. hnOu.q.h i:h£ W~£1t'With th£ ChWtch.

~ ·'_By - _. -.-

REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA.Catholic University

TODAY - Thursday of theFirst Week in Lent-Man, then,needs on earth a special time orpenance; a time for praying thepity of the Lord. Today's firstlesson is a stern reminder thatman is jud·ged, not on the basisof the corporate guilt of the rac~

nor on human solidarity in sin,but rather on' the basis of m.deeds and intentions. - '

Artd the Gospel says the samething in a different way. TheCanaanite woman is not rejectedbecause she is not of Israel, notof the chosen people; Again cor­porate guilt is not the test., It illrather the persopal response offaith.

MONDAY OF THE SECONDWEEK IN LENT - A' questionand an answer are given in to­day's lessons. The question is theburden of Lent: sin, man's con­sciousness of his need for God'.mercy. And the Gospel's answeris Jesus' utter confidence. Hispurpose is not to add to theproblem but to offer its solution. 'Visibly and tangibly, He is thatmercy which-man seeks. Faith m,Him assures aforgiveness other­wise beyond man's reach.

TUESDAY OF TIllE SECONDWEEK IN LENT-The widow'.faith in God's promise encour­ages the Christian in His Lentenrenewal of faith: Faith neitherdiminishes nor rejects natureand natural goods but complete.and directs and illumines.

The fraternal message C1I. theGospel makes it clear that theChristians' fundamental dignity,is his Baptism. Whatever otherfunctions or offices he accept.within the Church, they canno&be compared with that passagefrom death to life, from slavery

, to freedom. All are brothers JaHis grace, servants one of an-other. ' 0

St. Louis UniversityBoosts Faculty Pay

ST. LOUIS (NC) - 8t. LouisUniversity has announced a hikein salarie:; for professors aridassociate professors in five un­dergraduate schools.

Father Jerome J. Marchetti,S.J., the university's executivevice-president, said that effectiveSept. 1 there will be a scale ofmiIlimum salaries for 12-monthprofessors ranging from $10,000to $12,000, depending on yearsof service. In addition, these pro­fessors will be granted· Summersabbatical leave every secondyear.

,And Whose Are YOU?

'" .

Labor-Managem'ent CouncilPropo!)al Merits fair Trial

By Msgr. George G. piggins . lDirector. NCWC Social Action Department

On several occasions during the past few years See­retary of Labor Arthur Goldberg has 'proposed that thegovernment establish a National Councii of Labor-Manage­ment Advisers drawn from business, un50ns and the public.Such a Council, as envisaged 'price decisions t9 the require-by Mr. Goldberg, would not ments of the common good.have any politicaJ or legisla- Cites Oppositiontive functions .nor would it It is only fair to note, in pass-interfere with established meth- ing, that at least a few observers

'ods of collective bargaining or of the labor-management ,sceneinfringe an the are opposed to the establishmentfun c t ion s of a National Council. The· Wallof either labor Street Journal, for example,or management, says that Mr. Goldberg's pro-The Co un c i I posal is outmoded and "misseswould recom- the point of labor's real interestsmend programs in today's economic world."to' encourage An occasional critic has ·evene con 0 m i c gone 'so far as to say-rathergrowth, would cyn'ically, it· seems 'to me-thatconsider the Mr. Goldberg, in advocating theproblems aris- establishment of a Nationaling from auto- Council, is merely trying to bailmation, and the labor movement out, so towould assist in speak. 0-

'defining the roles of manage- The reason behind this minor-ment, labor and government in ity point of view is that the

. bringing...·about full production· membership of the proposedand full employment. / Council would allegedly, be

The last time Mr. Goldoerg weighted in favor of the unionsand therefore could be countedmade this proposal was in a

speech delivered on Dec. 7, 1960, upon to promote labor's interestat the annual Congress of Amer- at the expense of management

and the public. 'ican Industry sponsored by the·National Association of Manu- Predicts Success ,facturihs. At that time he was By and large, however, publie .still spea'king as a private citi- reaction to Mr. Goldberg's pro­zen; posal has 'been rathe.r favorable,

Within a 'matter oj days, how- and at least one prominentspokesman for American man­ever, he was appointed to the

Cabinet. Immediately thereafter \ agement-Mr; C. R. Cox, presi-he told the press tliat he, would dent of the Kennecott Copperformally 'recomm~hd to Presi- Company-has stated that the

proposal "has merit and, alongdent Kennedy that a NationalCouncil of Labor-Management with, others, should be givenAdvisors be established. careful consideration."

I would like to think that Mr.Cox represents the majoritypoint of view in American in­dustry. If ·50, the Council pro­posed by Mr. Goldberg will atleast be given a fair trial, andthat's all that anyone can rea­sonably expect.. If the Council doesn't pan out,

, we can aJways try another ap­proach. I would anticipate, how­ever, that the Council, if it isgiven half a chance to 'proveitself, will be a great su.~cess..

ANCHOR

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs: Feb. 23, 1961

®The

6

Executive OrderSubsequently the President

announced, in his St~te of theUnion message, that this wouldbe done by' an Executive orderwithin the very near future. Thechances are that this Executiveorder will have' been issuedbefore this column appears inprint.

The President's prompt 'deci­sion to implement SecretaryGoldberg's proposal represents asignificant step forward in the

'field of labor-management rela-,tions. A National Council 01

II Labor-Management Advisors IS

not, of course, a panacea. It willnot and should not even be ex­pected to ~olve all of our labor-

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER., -management problems. _Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River On the other hand, there is

reason to hope that such a, 410 Highland Avenue Council might succeed, over.8

Fall River, Moss. OSborne ,5-7151. period of time, in creating 8PUBLISHER better atmosphere in the field of

Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD. ' labor-management relations; ,GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER At the very least it would

make it possible for labor andRev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John p. Driscoll management to look at their

MANAGING EDITOR problems in broader perspectiveHugh J. Golden and to relate their wage, an"

Washington's' BirthdayWashington's birthday yesterday brought forth a flood

of old-fashioned oratory. For which, praises be! _There was a period in which Americ,a became rather

cynical about its national heroe,s, a time when it was theultimate of sophistication to debunk the founding fathersand look with all the techniques, of scientific research forchinks in their armor. '

Fortunateiy" those days have passed ':and a sincereappraisal of the men who laid the foundatipns of the republicis once mor,e in fashion.. \

Cynicism is a poor substitute for patriotism. Indeed, itis the very reverse of that virtue. For the cynic is usually'more intent on displaying his own wit and peculiar .brandof languid sarcasm than in'evaluating the country and thosewho have helped make it great. The cynic, the debunker, isa man of words that tear down, while the patriot is a mannot afraid to match sentiment with sacrifice.

It is good to keep before the eyes of Americans thecharacters and sacrifices of those who first· embarked onthe "great American dream."

Men are moved to action by ideas and ideals, andespecially ideas an~ ideals as set forth ~n the lives of othermen.

The national heroes indeed serve a serious purpos~. Andthese peroes, with the characteristic outstanding in themall - integrity'- are in sharp and blessed contrast to theslick and shallow "manufactured men" who live theirshadowy lives on the movie or television screen or in thedollar-studded world of business.

Charity storyOne of the gre'at charity stories of the year'is the

tremendous work being done in Miami to assist the Cubanrefugees. Parochial schools and diocesan agencies of welfareand' charity are taxed to the limit to show those fleeingfrom dictatorship what can be done for them in a.democracyand by fellow Catholics.

There,.J!.re ,those who have expressed the hope thatfederal fuhds will be forthcoming to aid the private schoolsystem that is being such a strong right a.rm of thegovernment in sheltering the victims of communist coloni­zation.

And some of these suggestions, indeed, the strongestof them, come not from Church authorities but froIij. non­Catholics who cannot see the justice of giving federal fundsto assist 'public schools to care for the Cuban children andof withholding these funds from parochial schools who areshouldering an almost equal. burden in numbers helpedand services provided.

At any' rate, the Diocese of Miami and the NCWCdeserve much credit for their truly charitable endeavors.

Contemplative: AttitudeA Notre Dame .professor, Francis J. O'Malley, has

urged ,th~t teachers in today's hectic world "revive ... thecontemplative' attitude" both in themselves and in thei;'students.

That is a "still small voice" whose admonition shouldnot be lost in the feverish activity of today's life, a' hecticenvironment that has even invaded the academic world,traditionally the locus of ivy-covered walls and murmuringstreams, and ivory-tower peace and dons delighting in the

·f'leisurely pursuit of truth. ' -' ,

It is unfortunate that the assembly line technique hasentered the campus with ,all its culCof efficiency in doin~

the job, and horror of waste time and motion. For that isnot the way of the academic life. ,

The academic life, on every level - secondary as wellas 'college and university -,needs time for assimilation, forevaluation, for investigation, and for mulling over of thetruths thus acquired.

And it is the role of the teacher to resist the temptationto' grind out degree recipients or to bring the school yearto a' close with a maximum of pages covered and information'dispensed., The teacher must impart the love of truth, thedesire for knowledge, the joy of discovery in things of thespirit. .

" The teacher must surround himself with the "con-templative attitude" that en'courages such intellectualpursuits within himse}f and that can .impart itself to ,hiSstudents. " ' \ .

An oasis of peace and vital"mental activity and time to,contemplat'e the truth - that, is the modern's world needand the teachers gift to hold forth. -

Page 7: 02.23.61

./

.-

ntE ANCHOR-Diocese of FollllivC9'-Thurs. Feb. 23, 196~ 7

."10UIN .WANTS 10INOW"

4th ANNUAL:. .

LENTEN FORUMS

.. For CatholicYouth"

This M.essage is Sponsored BtThe. Following J"dividuaband Business ·Concer.ns;nGreafer Fall River:

Ann Da'leProducts, 'Inc.. BradyE~edric Suppiy -Co. Cascade Drug Coo

Enterpr,ise Brewing C~ GlObe ,Manufacturing Coo Go'id Medal Bread 'Hutchinson Oil Co.,

Intemational Ladies Garmenff Workers UI1IDOrril ,Mason :Fur,niture Showrcom~ MacKenzie & Winslow, Inr...

Gerald Eo McNally, Contrector GeorgeR. Montie, Plumber Plymouth. Pr:intEng C@oo Hnc",

$obiloR ,Bro1hhers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Stafford Fuel COog Inc. .I

Textile Worrkers Union of America, AFL-CIO Yellow Cab Company,, .

Page 8: 02.23.61

THREE INDUSTRIAL PLANTS

MEMBERSHIP in the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFAREASSOCIATION means much to the Missions and to our Mis­sionaries, and brings Imany spiritual benefits to every mcmber.Will you become a member or, If you already are one, wUl youtrY to interest someone else in joining our Association?Perpetual Membership: Annual Membership:Family ...••••••••.. $100.00 Family $5.00Individual •••••••.•• 20.00 Individual...... • • • • .. 1.00

In &he village of ASOKAPURAM i4 INDIA have made Ulis towDODe of the fanest growing in the area. As the factories expand

the,. are in constant need of maa­power; wiU1 ~e pl-ospect of stead,.work many men are moving theirfamilies to ASOKAPURAM. Three'hundred CathoUc familie!, are Uvingthere now and with each new groupof· arrivals there are always a fewCatholics. At present a small inade-"''qua~ " building serves lIS the parisll

. Chutch.: The pastor, Father JosepbChackiath, writes to teD as that a

7Jt U.1.. Fathtrt /tfiJ.siotI AJ4 benefactor has given a piece of land"WJ un which to build a new Church aDd

for tht~Chmril . . that his parishioners have pledged tellper-cent of their salaries every month to see the Church be­come a reaUt,.. The wage scale Is so low, however, that eveawith this monthly ten per-cent of aD the parishioners' wages IIwould take many years to accumulate suftlclent money to build.$3,000 is the amount needp.d. Calt you help us to raise this?

. \

TO BE ANOTHER CHRIST-this is the holT desire of eveqboy studying for the priesthood. To become another Christ re­quires years of preparation in the seminary,years of prayer and study In anticipation ofthe great day when a bishop, by the inlpos­Ing of his hands, floods the soul of tbe boywith the Holy Spirit and marks him foreveras a priest of Jesus Christ. Money is neededto conduct the seminaries where boys pre­pare for the priesthood. In seminaries in theMission territories under the jurisdiction of the Sacred OrientalCongregation the cost of educating an individual boy is $600.Couid yoU pay for the education of CYRIAC KOTTAYARIKIL : .or ANTONY KURICHIPARAMBII, who are students at SAINT.JOSEPH'S SEMINARY. In INDIA?

NATIVE SISTERHOODS are among tJle greatest assets of ourholy Church in teaching 'children in Mission territories the

truths necessary for salvation. The ANTONI­AN SISTERS of LEBANON are a group ofSisters whose native language is Arabic andwho do untold good in the schools they con­duct. SISTER EMILIE and SISTER GER­ARD are novices in this Community. They'are Lebanesll girls who will dedicate theirlives to the teaching of Arabic-speaking chil-

dren. It will cost $300 for the training of each of them. Could '.jou pay for the traln!ng of either of these girls?

MONEY SAVED BY LENTEN SACRIFICEflnds a variety of good uses. If, by personal sacrifice, you aresaving some money this Lent, will yoa consider helping us tofurnish Churches in Mission lands by donating one or more 01the following:Mass Kit : ... ,$100 Ciborium .•.. ,$40 Picture '.' ' $15Altar ......•• 75 Statue 30 Sanc'y Lamp 15 ,.Vestments ...• 50 Tabernacle .••. 25 Altar Linens 1', ..ConfesSlonsl"~ 50 ·Cruclflx. ...... 2~ Pyx .. ,........ l~ ,Monstrancl, . . 40 Stations ..• ~ • :. 25 AI~ Stone ~... 10Chalice .....• 40 Censer .••.... 20 Sanc'i' BeD .•. : .1..

·iti'J1earSst01issions~'. FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pr••ld....

.... Jo", T. Rjaa.Nai'I Sec"J, .". Seedall~..: •CATHOlIC. NEAR EAS' WaFARE ASSOCIATION

48qLexIngtOn AYe. Of 46th SI. New York 17;". 't.'

Performs Splendid Service as Catechism TeacherMINNEAPOLIS (NC)-Twen- Sne then contacts the parents such cases has helped many •

ty years ago ·Mrs.. Joseph Lang to offer to help.' arrange for couple validate their marriage.answered a plea for Jay persons to Baptism. Frequently such a call Through her efforts 118 childreateach a released-time catechism turns up an invalid marriage. have been baptized and 35 mUJl>elass for public school children. Mr~. Lang's tact and charity in riages blessed.

Today she's still on the job­with a record of hundreds ofyoungsters educated in the fun­damentals of their Faith.

In addition: scores of young­sters have been baptized andmany parents brought back tothe sacraments through her ei­forts.

Children Love HerSa i d Father Raymond A:

Lucker, archdiocesan dir!lctor ~the Confraternity' of ChristianDoctrine:' "She's performing' ~wonderful tservtce. She's 'hel'p~bring many families. back m~

the Church. The. cl!lldren loveher." .,

Mrs. Lang began. her released-;­time teaching wh,en . she retiredfrom work. She turned her base­ment into a classroom. Over theyears she has taught an averageof 18 boys. and' girls each weekfrom the fourth through sixthgrades at the Irving PublieSchooL

A daily communicant, she saidshe has three rules for theyoungsters. "I tell the childrenthey must say their morning andevening prayers, receive thesacraments frequently and keepgood company."

When Mrs. Lang receives anew pupil, she checks to see ifhe has been baptized. Manychildren referred to her haveDot.

Missioner lecturesNEW ORLEANS (NC)-Elvia

Bordelon of Simmsport, La., islecturing at Catholic colleges andschools of nursing here on herthree years of work as a laymissionary in Sao Paula,- Brazil.

~~

New England's Playground

Plan Your Dance'PartyFashion Shows and

"Banquets, at Lincoln Pcii'k~•.

MILLlON'i'DOLLARBALLROOM " ,

Call ROLAND GAMACHE·WYma.. 9-6984"

Home'madeCANDIES

CHOCOLATES

150 VarietieS

ROUTE 6 near

Fairhaven Auto Theatre

FAIRHAVEN, MASS.

Dorothy Cox

TEACH RELIGION: Two ~ew faculty members in the State University of Iowa Schoolof religion chat with Professor' Robert Michaelsen, left, director of the schoo•. RabbiAbraham Heschel, center, is not~ for studies on Jewish philosophy and Father DavjdM. Stanley, S.J., is an expert on the New Testament. NC Photo•.

"make-up." A shelf, towel rack,and mirror will do the trick. Oh,and hang" a box of tissues there,too!

You should have a table andgood reading light near the bedor sofa, but if· there is no plugthat can be used, provide yourguest with a small flashlight.Waking up in a strange roomand not being' able to see is ahorrible feeling.' .

Another thoughtful thing isto place a small pad and. pencilon the night table for notes.Have stationery on the desk andif there' are historical spots inyour city, you might also have'some postcards of them. SuchlitUe touches wili make peopleremember )'OU ItS a· thoughtfulhostess.

Appoints College HeadProvincial Superior

NOTRE DAME (NC)-MotherM. Verda Clare, president ofthe Cardinal Cushing College,Brookline, since 1954, has beenappointed Midwest ProVlincllalSuperior of the Sisters of theHoly Cross. The appointmentwas made here by Mother Kath­ryn Marie, C.S.C., Superior Gen­eral.

Mother Verda Clare succeedsMother Mary Clare, who died.late in January, and will assumeher new duties" about March 1,at the Sisters' Provincial Housein So~th Bend, Ind..

Holy Union NunOn Committee. Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.C..Principal at Sacred Hearts Acad­emy attended the meeting of thenewiy formed Sub-Committeefor the Evaluation of Independ­ent Secondary Scpools of theNew England Association of Col­leges and Secondary Schoolsheld at the Harvard Club 011

Tuesday, Feb. 21. .The purpose of this meeting

was to discuss possible adapta­tions and ch~nges in the Evalu­ative Criteria and: to appointVisiting Committees to inspectschools applying for admissionor for continued' membership inAssociation. Mr. Walter Sheehan,H e a d m a sit e r of CanterburySchool, Milford, Conn., presidedas chairman of ,the seVeR mem-ber committee. '

The other members are Mr.Wiliam W.. Dunn, Headmaster,Kents Hill School; Mr. HerbertB. Moore, Headmaster TiltonSchool; Monsignor Timothy F.'O'Leary, Superintendenfof Dioc­esan Schools for the Archdioceseof Boston; Rev. James A. Con­nelly, Assistant Superintendentof Schools, Archdiocese of Hart­ford; Sister Hugh Francis, SCN..Principal, . Archbishop WilliamsHigh School, Braintree.

This is the first time that theCatholic schools holding mem­bership in the Association havebeen app.ointed to representationon the Standing Committees.

These appointments were alll­nounced at the annual meetingof the Association last December..Sacred Hearts Academy has beena member school since 1941 andwas re-evaluated for continued.membership in 1951.

8 .THEANCHOR'-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs:'F~: 23~J;?61.

Does ·your Guest~ Room InviteReturn Visits From Friends? .

By Alice Bough Cahill '.Most housewives like to try out a new recipe before

serving it to guests, but hav.e you ever thought of trying. out your guest room? It's only natural we should want tohave guests, that we should want to m;;tke them welcomeand comfortable, but manyan invited guest never re­turns for another night in aguest room. Maybe yours isa beautiful guest room, but is ita case of "beauty is as beautydoes"? Yourguest roomshould be asfunctional a sany room usedday in and dayout. True, weiC8n't all afforda separateroom, re,servedsolely for theonce in a yearvisit of a fa­vorite relative,110 many of us have a conibina­~ion study and guest room. Let'sjust check the things you put atthe disposal of your guest.

Is the bed comfortable? A loveseat may be very comfortablefor a small child, but wpat abouta six-foot gent? The height ofreal hospitality is a comfortElb1ebed and. without that you areDot'prepared to invite people 10Iltay overnight.

No WhimsYDon't be carried away with

some bit of whismy that you'dlike' to use as a chest In yourguest room. Some of these "dar­ling" chests are just too cutefor the contents. It would be.....ise to measure drawers to seeIf they are a' conveni('ot 'lize. Agentleman guest WO'l't want tofold a clean shirt 110 that it •unwearable:

Because your room serves adual purpose, has it a conven­ient closet, or is the one you askyour guest to use free of impedi­menta, much of whioh slwuldhave been thrown away longago. When one examines Ii roomwith the eye of a visitor, it issurprising how cluttered it mayappear. .

Maybe you don't like to readin bed, but many guec;ts do. Acute, low, fat lamp on a nighttable makes a cute, low puddleof light and no one can readwith it. If we use 15-100 wattlamps tlN'oughout the house,

. why not provide our guest roomwith good reading light?

If you have small childrenwho steal in to see if a friendis still asleep, perhaps it wouldbe best if your guest room hada lock.

This brings us to guest roOl1\suggestions. Make the room aspretty as possible, but don't aac­rifice comfort. Organdy bed­spreads or pillow shams arebeautiful, but when they areremoved at night, be sure theleis a place to I1ut them. A 3traightchair, which can be used dur­ing the day at a desk or dress­ing table can hold these frip­peries.

Other AccessoriesTwo other accessories we"cl

suggest, and they are inexpen­sive, are a towel rack, overwhich the spread could be put,and a folding luggage rack, onwh:ch to place a guest's suit­case. I use an old-fashionedtowel rack at the end of the bedto hold an extra blanket, so ifthe weather changes in ·thenight, one can quickly pull upanother cover. The luggage rackfolds and can be stored in acloset when not in use. ""-

If you must use a study as a Plan Catholic Women's. guest room, in which room you College in New' Delhiwould not have a dressing table, . NEW DELHI (NC)- The wayuse the back Of a closet door as has been' cleared for the estab­II. place where a guest can lishment of the first Catholic

... "women's college In New Delh!.North Easton D of I Delhi University has accept~North Easton Circle' 564, tie' offer of the Society of ·the

Daughters of Isabella, will hold Congregation of Jesus.and Mary.•. joint style show.and a .joint . to set up the' college. In India€ommuni6n .breakfast with Im- a co,llege must be affiliated with.~aculate Conception Women's. a university' to have its courses (:Guild, also North Easton. Dates recognized, and the degrees are~ior both activities are to be an:.. granted by ',the university itself,Dounced. Mrs. Jean Kent heads not the college..~ subscription committee for The The eongregatloD 1'1 oe!lOU""Isabellari, 'new B of I ·national log for land oawhicll to~r~~'~v.-~"'~l:.~"J"I,>.~~-'-;.::~~'··.::;:":'~~:::';;.:;~~<......~.:;~.:> ....:":": -..~~. :::.-.:.

Page 9: 02.23.61

9

Role

501 COUNTY ST.NEW BEDFORD

WY 3-1751

HATHAWAY·O~l (@c INCa

INDUSTRIA~ OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

Oil BURNERS

Sales & Service

hOllpital operated apa~t from. theleper colony.

, Working at the mission hospi­tal in Likuni are Mary Finan ofWashington, D. C., and LouisaCoffman of Cumberland, Md.Besides usual nursing duties,they teach classen of Africannursing students.' .

)~: {S~c;J'liiJt NEW BEDFORD======= MASSACHUS&TTS

4 DAY SALEW~DNESDAY,·THURSDAYFRIDAY and ··SATURDAY

Feb. 22-23-24-25YGuilD' Find Outstanding

Bargains I.. AU Departments

. -

The Greatest SaIe of Winter!CENTER

Legislature ConsidersObscenity Measure

INDIANAPOLIS (NC) - Aproposed new state obscenitylaw went to the House here afterpassing the Senate, 40-to-4.

The old law, which dated backto 1905, recently was declaredunconstitutional by the IndianaSupreme Court.

Sen. John C. RuckelshaWl ofIndianapolis, sponsor of the newmeasure, said it will overcomeSupreme Court objections, byproviding for convictions for anyone who "knowingly" deals inobscene literature or articles.

pital (for lepers only)," she'iVrote.

"All of these buildings arespread around the colony, whichis composed of many acres. Weteach sewing and knitting onTuesdays, and on other daysca techism; we manage Brownies,Boy Scouts and Girl Guides forleper children: You can imaginehow busy we are."

.Other Volunteel'flBesides Miss DeCaire, a native

of Ontario, Canada, the WVA isrepresented at Mua by MonicaSchumacher of St. Louis. Aformer public health nurse, sheassists a White Sister and fiveAfrican nurses at a maternity

":t~IANCHPR""Qi~ese.of..Fa"RiYer-:Jhurs. Feb. 23, 1961

1M Allen 8~. New BedfordWYmaa 7-936t

• Televlaiolll • Furniture• ApplianClU .• Groeerv

CORREIA & SONSONE STOP

SHOPPING C~NTER

Taunton 0 of ICardinal Gibbons Circle, Taun­

ton Daughters of Isabella, willhold a St. Patrick's Day supperMonday, March Idl. Mary V.Moran is chairman.

JI..eft in ,1J'uneA licensed practical nurse who

served·.at the Washington Hos­pital Center during her trainingwith the volunteers association,Miss DeCaire and three othernurse-members of the WVA leftthe U. S. last June for service inAfrica.

The four nurses are now staff­ing hospitals at, the missions ofMua and Likuni, Nayasaland,under the direction of the White:F(athers and White Sisters ofAfrica. The leprosarium at Mushas more. than 700 inpatients andsome 1,000 outpatients.

• More Than NursingIn a letter to WVA headquar­

fters here, Miss DeCaire reportedthat there is "more than justplain nursing to be done in aleprosarium." .

"At the colony we have achurch, school, mill, laboratory,dispensary and a maternity hoa-

,

Youth Work With -Leper .Children Missioner'sWASHINGTON· (NC) -Even

in Africa there's nothing unusualabout Brownies, Boy Scouts andGirl Guides. But iIi Mua, Nyasa­land,' Ws a di.fferent stqrY.

There the members ot theBeyoungsters' ,organizations a r I!

lepers.. Youth work a~ong the leperc:hildren is only one .part of ~he

apostolate of Bernadette De'­Caire, a member of the lay mis­sionary Women Volunteers As­sociation (WVA).

LENTEN FORUMS: Fall River and Attleboro youth participate in first of series ofLenten forums, to be held in respective cities at 7 each Sunday night of Lent. Left, Rev.John P. Driscoll,. Fall River speaker, with Marguerite V,enancio, St. Michael's parish andArthur Ferrance,. St. Mary's. Right, Loonard Silvia and Ann De Costa, president' andspiritual chairman of AttleborG area. CYO, with Margaret McCaffrey, CYO spiritual chair­man of St. Mary's parish, Norton.

v~ 2-2282

.... lleeCItItJ OIls ..... ,.:...... ...- ..

IIASON 01 (OMPAIY

Mt. St. Mary's AcademyPlans Open House

Mount St. Mary's Academy,Fall River, will hold an OpenHouse on Sunday afternoon from1:00 to 4:00 for all prospectivefreshmen and their parents.There will' be a guided tour ofelassroom, laboratories, gymna­aium, cafeteria, auditorium, ~d'Ubrary. .

Sister Carmela, R.S.M., baarequested that the Whipple St.entrance be used:

Guidance personnel .wm beavailable for consultation, an.dwill assist students and parentswit h curriculum planning,courses and general informationpertinent to entrance in Septem­ber.

Registration for entrance and!scholarship-placement may bemade at the Open House or bymail. Early registration 11 ad­vised.

W<;>men PrepareFor Pqpal Work

LOVELAND (NC) - Twowomen from the West Indies areamong' those . taking' a .specialcourse here in 'Ohio preparingthem for work. as Papal Volun­teers in Latin America.

Dorothy Thomas arid AdalynFrancis of Roseau, West Indies,ax:e' taking' Q four-month cpurseat the Movement headquarters.The movement prepares youngwomen to be lay apostolicleaders in mission countries.

Two U. S. women are also tak­ing the course: Norma Greer ofAkron, Ohio, a former economicsteacher, and ~lizabeth Foote ofBoston, a nurse. They are sched­uled to work in the PrelatureNullius of Sicuani, Peru.

Miss Thomas and Miss Franciaare expected to join the staff ofthe CatholieSocial Center iJllRoseau.

but no poser fer Mrs. Gift Wrap."It's for the 80th birthday of

n lady who loves candy," thecustomer explained. osAD forthe dollar, I finally found oneminted the year she was born,1881. Can you wrap it so thatshe won't throw out the dol­lar? She's getting a bit absentminded."

"Let's see," the wrapperpaused. "Cherry candy. Silver­gray paper tied with jolly cher­ry red ribbon? And a box theexact size of your silver dollar.Let's glorify it with a bunch ofcherries, tie it into the bow. Shecouldn't possibly throw it outthat way. I'd love to see thesurprise on your friend's facewhen she sees the· date on thatdollar!"

Deft fingers fashioned anotherwork of art and of heart.

Those who come to this sec­tion of this store arrive with thedesire to give. Wise the storewhich employs in this depart­ment patient, sympathetic per­sons whQ understand not onlyhow to wrap presents, but t~emeaning of a gift, no matterwhat its monetary value..For~erly, we used to meet

family or friends in the furni­ture department. "Y:oti can al­ways find" people in those vastspaces."

We've changed locale, "Meetyou in the Gift Wrap-lose afew tensionll while you' wait."

Catholic DaughtersMark Anniversary

WASHINGTON (NC) - Thelunior Catholic Daughters otAmerica are celebrating the 35thanniversary of their foundingwith a "Junior Week" beginningSunday, Feb. 19.

During the nationawide ob­.ervance, an "Outstandine Jun­'or" in each ot the society's 418courts will be selected. ~ spir­itual bouquet from the 40,000members will be sent the Hol:r'"ther.

. The society, ma~e up of girlsbetween the ages 01. 8 and 18,Jl8Cently became an affiliate attile Youth Department of tbe.ational Catholic Welfare Coo- .terence. Msgr. Joseph E. Scheid­er, director of Ute departmeai"lias promised to carry its pro­iram "to every ,.oung girl ill thelarge cities and' amillltowna overtbe :length aDd breadth OIl uu.IOUIi~~" :.' . ;'•. ,' .. ; •. " . - ...--_..._ ....__.......__.....~"'IP'I!''"~'''Il!'l!!~~~~~~

_~~. ~_~.;.;:.;:..Lwl.~.!.-.f..~, .~.~

:WriterFinds liffWithHer·Gift, '

In Store Wrapping DepartmentBy Mary Tinley Daly

There's a doctor who prescribes a visit to a localJ'lardware store for male patients suffering from tension.~Get into the feel of doing something constructive," is histheory. "The people you find in a hardware store are acheerful lot, making thingswith their hands, fixingthings up!" Counterpart forthe distaff side might wellbe a visit to the gitt-wrappingsection of a department store.We discoveredtbis bavenquite by acci­dent. For themost part, our~fternoon shop­ping had beendull - sheets.nd pilloweases, ao iron­~g board coverand the like.Then, came thejoy of finding aperfect bil'th­day gift for a friend. "GUit wraparound the corner," ~rom thelaconic saleswoman, jerking hc:rbead to the right. "Here, take~ur sales sUp with you~"

Wearily we located "GiftWrap," prepared for' frustra­tions of a long wait, grouchy~eption and more pushingabout. (That's the reason weusually wrap gifts at home.)

Long Wal*'!'here was a long wait, tbat'.

true, but' a wait that was ac­tually refreshing, talking withothers who, too, had found theperfect gift, watching the deftfingers of the gift wrappers.

All were middle-aged, prob­ably housewives working ~time, becomingly dressed, hairnea~)y arranged, hands and nail8immaculate.

Best of ,all, these womenIIIwwed .a friendly interest ineach' custo~er, enkindling acamaraderie by making, giftspretty, not. merely selling, thatcreated a little Qasis of happi­ness in that .busy.store.

Every customer responded. Inkind, feeling that she was get­ting a preview of the joy hergift would bring its recipient. .

"What beautiful towels!" oneof the wrappers exclaimed."'Blue, and such a pretty blue.Would you like the box wrappedin blue, or maybe with a con­trast, like rose? We have lots oflovely paper."

The customer made her slowend studied decision, confiding,"'They're for my maiden aunt,for her new apartment. Aun­tie's never really had any house­hold things just for herself. Youlee, all her life she's taken careof her parents. Now they're bothlOne."

She left with not only towelSfbr Auntie, but a gaily wrappedpresent that said, "I love you."

Next, a young man with atiny wrist watch. "Isn't this ahoney?·' he asked admiringly."'You'll do a bang-up job wrap­ping this for my girl? Give itthe works, will you? Got lIllY'.ed roses you could stick in!"

Final result was Uke a flor­wt'll delight, wllth a rainbow fortood measure. ., Next customer produced a box01. candy and a silver dollar.

'1'his is a poser, we thought,

Page 10: 02.23.61

I

, \.

. .I lt1<E Ie1MO MlLPFUl

INSTEAD OF MElPLE~~

THE WAY I.WAS 8£FOR£WE RENTED ntl'

WHEEL CHAIR F1tOM

TOUHEY'S'PHARMACY

202. ROCK STREET

FALL RIVER, MASS.

"I~mbi,;g .;.' Heating.' Over 35 Yearsof $qtiifiee:f, Servi~ ,

.106 NO. MAIN STREETfoil' River ..OS 5-1.497

ARTHUR .t. DOUCET

FAlL·RIVER,'M~SS.

",.,

FRIGIDAmEREFRIGERATION

APPLIANCESAIR CONDITIONING

D &. D 'Sales and Servic~,DfC~

FRANCIS J. I,)EVINE.

363 SECQN D ST.

GRACIA BROS.ExcavatingContractors

· 'CROSS· 5T., FAIRHAVENWYman 2-4862

Honor Dr. 'Dooley'· BUtFALO (NC) - The St.

Peter Canisius Medal of the«;:.anisius Gollege Alumni Asso­cia~i~~ will. be awarded Post-.humously to Dr. Thomas A.Dooley, jilngle doctor of LaOs,o~ Simday; "March 12' ift the

. ,~tatler Hiiton Hotel her.e:·' Dr:Pooley, an aiumnus of, Notre

.Dame and St. Louis universities,died of cancer Jan. 18. :" <.. ,

~ .t A FAMILY TREAT

fB~~S~~~:;S.. .' FARMS .

i+145waShiQgton St., Fairhaven

. . Just off Route 6 .'

WY 7-9336: Watch for Signs

C' While out for a Drive,

· Stop at this Delightful. Spot.............~

VICTOR. .

FLEURENT

Building.Contractor

Masonry

7 JEANETTE STREET

FAIRHAVEN WY 4-1321

Quebec' Commission .Examines EClucation '­. QUEBEC (NC)-"-The' Qu~beeprovincial' goverpment has setup a 'royal oommission to exAm­ine all phases of education... The commission has until Dec.31 1962, to make its final report.This means .that ,any legislation'arising from. the report would

. not be submitted to the Legisla­.ture before the second half 01.the 1962-63 session.. The government is not obligedto take any action in the com­mission's recommendations.

NYOUR BANK"

'SLAD'E'S .FERRY TRUST CO.SOMERSET, MASS• .,..,. Next to Stop & ~p,

. "0 ~'invit~ .your pa~ticipation' in .'the '. growth of. a new Banking Institution

. '. COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS SERVICE• MORTGAGES .... AUT() and APPLIANCE LOANS

. Accounts. Insured Up To $10,000Me~ber Fed~raJ Deposit Insurance Co•.

Harold J. R~gan, Presiden1

Grants Priest LeaveTo Serve in Bolivia

LA CROSSE (NC) - FatherEmmet N. Faber of Holy Trinity.parish here. will leave in Junefor a three-year mission assign­ment in ·Bolivia..

Bishop John P. Treacy of LaCrosse granted him a leave C1I.absence to serve as assistant pas.,.tor of Holy Cross parish in Santa:Cruz, Bolivia. La Crosse diocesanpriests staff the parish;

Father Faber, .who was 01'­dained in May, 1955, will spendseveral months at the Maryknoll,Society's language school inCochamba before starting work'at the Bolivian parish.

'.\_--------~---------:'---

Bishop Burke, LaudsCbtholic Daughters'

BUFFALO (NC) -:- BishopJoseph A. Burke 'of Buffalolauded the Catholic Daughters,of America ot New York Statefor contributing $247,000 for theaid of ileedy seminarians duringthe last 10 years.

The Bishop is state chaplain' ,of 'the organization. He said thatthe· 33,000 CDA members hadgiven the aid to seminarians iAtile state's eight Sees. . .

· Vincentians' MassA requiem Mass 'for all de-'

· eeased members of the St. Vin­cent .de Paul Society 'will beoffered Saturday morning at 6o'clock in St.' Vinc~nt'll Home

·Chapel, Fall River.

10 ,. THE'ANCHOR-Dioce~e'ofFall: R.iv,er"":Thui's>Feb:.23, 1961'

Trujillo Promises to~Eas,eAnti.CatholicOampa~g." .:

MEXICO CITY (NC) - The Bishops of the ,DominicanRepublic have told Generalissimo. Rafael Trujillq that theresponsibility for "the current ap.ti~Catholiccampaign" ,is athis doorstep. Discussing the "deterioration" in ChUrch-staterelations, the Bisho~s in speak to our people *• *It h~s,their letter referred to mter- never been our intent ,to inciteference in ecclesiastical af:- rebellion or encourage. anybody'fairs, '''slander,'' measures to ..rebel. .. , .

. t I" educatl'on and We have not concealedagams re 19lOUS. . d f d d th . d• Catholic schools," and barring crlm.es or e en e e m e-

. d R li ious from en- fensible. We have asked forprIests an e g mercy within the law tIle sametering the country. . f I 'f th

Th B' h' 'letter was pre- a~ we ask or c eme~cy or . ee IS ops, .. "II smner from God, who whIle

sented to'Generahsslmo TruJl 0,. " ; f' . I'h . t' d his tight bemg most Just IS also m mIte y

who as mam am.e merciful.'rule over the nabon for ov~r U C t·

'three decades. The six Bishops .. rge ooper,\ Iontold the dictator that "because 'III~ all f p~rts t Of the wOr~d

. d' t ble authority mi lOns 0 SIgna ures are ga -of your m lSpU a ered requesting clemency foryou ar the only one who can ..

e t 'gn ag'ainst CrImmals sentenced to death. Itend the curren ,campal _. is . then not a crime for the

· the Church. . . . .'" '.. .' ., The Bishops' letter was lat~r bIShops to '.do the, .~ame 1!1...the

h . T .ilIo-controlled case of, theIr sheep.. . ,read over t e ru!. . " Before making their plea to

· 'Radio Voz Dommicana, WhICh G T ;'il 'to . t t t th'• • I h db n a major fac- " en. rUJl o. Pl,l a's op 0 .e

.. pre,:lOus y a ee . . '.' campaign again·st'· th~ . Church,10r 10 the propagilnda campaIgn tho B' h 'tat d that· the'y'

. t th Ch h The fact that e IS .ops s. e .agams ,e ';lr~. '. would again 'remind their priesti '. _La Voz DOminICana. broac1

cast.. tcqtaY,out of politics' and' to c~-- _. : TOP.. FOSTE,RPARENTS: A Seattle couple who have been 'foster parents to 53,

.::::iJ:::~~ 7::t s~~~. h;;~ji~~Oa~.~per7.~e wi~ht~~ eiv.i.1 a~thl)r.~:: child17eri: in th~ past 2,3:years' wer~ to~ aw~rd.'lVi.~ners a.t a ~tjmo~i~l ~~nqliet for: s~)J",·a..c'tually seeking. an amicable~es~llev~ry war.~at us poa 400 foster parents servmg the- Catholic ChI1drens· SerVIces. The ~9rIvert couple,. ~how..,'. • ".. . Sible and rIght", . , . . . . .' .. . .' , ,_...J

... ",.::~~':~~to.~e' ~~s~u~ !,i~ .:th~ ,.; .. '.... ;·,_.·:.·~!!Jd.f.:·~~_.,.f~~:).';:'~:'" ,~~~eA~~~ ~i~~~:~-~~' ~~~; one of fiv!l foster c~,ldren wit" them now, .~eMr. aJ~... ' The· -Dominican radiO station,. . They alll6 .saI~l.tl1ey .. would: . '. . .. '. ,':" . _.,.' . "

~;~r~:~~~~n:'~:~~~i~~~~:tt~~~~ ~~~~~::h~tC::~d~;:ti:~cit:;· ·.·:Rev.·.ew~Chi"'a's Attempts ·to .GcJin Admission .to' ;V.. N•.tile~ishQPJ.l.,'signe~: by. both.qe~ .... the .governm~nt a.n~lltlJ.?Y t~~~, . 'oWASHINGTON ·(NC).:....A re~ teineSS 'and'sOme f€ar.'~ll stePs " . Mr. Sih· said ·th~e' hav~· b~.

,:. Trujillo, and .Presi~ent -'1'?a,q.ul~ very ,cart:fu.lJ~, 'p~rtl~ularly, w~t~, ' view by' ail, authority' on ,the Far indicate that'l,n her psychologi- .. djs~utes betv.:een· .com~um~'Balaguer n!>ting .that thll BIshops reference to rehglO~s cer~~0I}:e8 . East, of, the 10: year' effort. to eal.orientation.Indiaha~ moved, «;:hIfl1l and Sov~et Umon, Just H\l~tter was delive.r.e~ "~~ the .sol-. reque~~ted':bY the. aU~horlhe~.. ; ga~n admission of Red China in a ..step closer to the West.'! there ar~. disputes betw,eellemn audience WhICh It was a . They w111 c~~tmue,theY.S&ld, .the Uriited Nations has been Mr.. Sih said there is no reasOn ~reat .Britam: and· the Umted·

."particular pleasure ~~r ,us' 10 ·~·cooperating. WIth ~ll_our .h~art·published here. . . 'f~ complacency. He observed Sta~es.. He ~Id it would· be _.,rant you pn J.~n .. ;10: "'. m a~l the wor~~."for edu~ahon, . It.is the work of. PaulK. T. that .the margin of victory.for serIOUS error,· ~ conclude be-, Entr~ ~~.tr.u:lt.lon8.. :'. c?ar~ty an~ sp11'1t~al and ·m.a~e: Sih, professor of' Far Eastern the ,W:~st in blocking the adllli~ c~use .~ ..tile ~lSPlJ.t~ that· the

'.J,'be TruJIllo-Balaguer. let~e~ ~lal Jm~ro:vem~~t o~ the Domm'history and director of the Insti- sion has become narrower each SIOO-SoVl~ allIance IS about ~'does not refer to the BISh~ps lcan peopl~, Wlt~, the valuable tute 'of' As~an' Studies at St. year. He said, that "the voting collapse.

· eharges concerning the anti- contri,?u~i~nof 3.11 our clergy and John's University, Jamaica, N.Y. change does' not mean that we He acknowldeged that exclUd-· Catholic. campaign but ra~her l~ymen.'· , It has been published in pamph- of' the West ha've been losirig· iog communist China from the', cites the Bishops' statement that Chi. let fOl,"m' by th'e Publications Of- ground." . UN "denies representation' iii

their pastora~ of. January: 1960, Expla ins O't 0 Ie' fice, National Catholic Welfare He recalled that Ireland "vot- thi.s world bOdy to 600,600,000.eeking metcy for I?ersons ae::, . I G I Conference' under the title "Red eel against us not because. they mainland Chinese." But, he a~eused of ~edition, had been dis-. Uni'yersitys oa s .China and~the United Nations:. ar~ '~n f~vor of Red China'~ad.. · ded, "the rulers of. Peiping de'to,::t~dly reported~ '.' MILWAUKEE (NC)-Catholie The question of. survival." Il)ISSlonmto the UN but because not .represent.ihe·ChineSe"~'· ,!,he civil leaders' lette.r .~s and secular critics alike: sonie- Mr. Sih said that a new situa-' ther wish to~e the. issue .out·on··ple.... .... rpromise a let-~p of the. e~tryre- times misunderstand.a C~tholie tion has arisen in ttW! attempt ~e agenda and debated.".~tr.ictr()I1s agamst .:~lrlests ~~~ university's twofold ooncern for . to· admit Red China to the,UN.

;, Religi~us and t~he :~g~\agaiIlS\ '. the intellectual and moral life of Each' year, I',1dia generally made'· ~at~ohc ~duca IOn. s a ea.. : " its students Marquette Univer-the admission proposal, but the

: Education Interference " liity'~ prellid~nt said he~e. . '. situationcha.nge!i', in. 1960 wh~n, ,.''The 'necessary m~as~~es ~In . Father Edward J. O'D,9Imell, ti;le move w~ ~ade by SOVI~be. t,aken ~..thl\t:t~elm.mlgratl().n. S j.' iOicf tne~bers of the Mil- Russia.. ,

, ~uthoritie.s 'Y!ll faci~itate the. E;n-.: ~aUkee. S~rra' Club ~hat' :80me ',Change' of Opini~B.'": v:y;.. under .the. law! 0If ~r~es~ c~iti~Lthink. ~" Cath.~Hcu~iv~r,:; ~I~di~'s feeling' towardcom-., and monks l~tQ the ooul,1tly an sity·is,t.~,r:nuch conc~~neel Wlt~ munist.China has:changed;'" Mr.

all goverJ?ment servants s~a:l e:Iih~r .. t~e: inJell~·c.tUlil.: or the. Sih wrote. "In ·.plaCe of friend:"proceed WIth thebr0ll:destt'. Spl"~.t. mOI:al.developme!1t~f students . ship there is now suspiCion, bit-

· of harmony and .coopera Ion ~ to the exclusion·.of the other..their r~lations,Wl~" the, eccle~.-: . The truth is th~t theCatholie

, 8stical aut~orities., , ." university ne g 1e c t.i n~ither,"The government wIll do aU Father O'Doimell ,'said, but car- .

in its power to, maintain, with- . ries oli. its authentic' .work .of .out impairing the. freedom of. teaching, 'res~arch and commun­worship guaranteed by our con- ity service, in an ,environmentstitution, the teaching of Cathol.,.· and cOntext that give the intel­icism in educational institutions lectual work its real Christiandependent on· the state, and see perspe~tive.· . , .to the fulfillment of contracts . "We do not claim that we are

.pending with religious founda:- g'raduating saints,'" he said, "but·tions." we hope that we' are graduating

The Bishops' memorandum scholars whO want to 'be saints."had congratulated Gen. Trujillo011 "the. man'y good works'" hehas done. Then, implicitly re­calling the months~long radi~

campaign against them, theysaid:

"While there may hav:e beenshortcomings, we haVe not sown

_ discord, no matter how muchthe cont!'ary is insisted upon'byunderhanded enemies of God andHis Church. All of us havesPoken as we thought accordingto our consciences that we should

Page 11: 02.23.61

'11

COLLEGE

(PIea.e Make Chacks Payable> to Stonehlll College.)

, ,......................................................................................__ .

Please regi..... with:. Director of Adult Eclueatloe

Stonehill C'oIiegeNo,th EastH, MalSSClch.....ttII

STONEHILL

NAME _•••_••_._ _ _ : _ __..__ - .

ADDRESS

HOLY FANULY HIGH SCHOOL. NEW BEDFORDTUESDAY EVENINGS 7 :30 to 9 :30 (Registration at 7 P.M.

AN INTRODUCTION TO HOLY SCRIJ;'TURE - Rev. TholftllD G. Brennan(Stonehill) •

TIPS TOWARD SUCCESS (For Women) - Ada Dewson, lIIonologuist.($10. - G class !flcctings: :Mar. 3, 10, 24. April 7. 21. May 6.) (Non-credit)

HOW TO TRADE 1M 'lHE STOCK MARKET - Mr. AvtfrF L. Williams,Jr., Lecturer.

FACULTY ADVISORS' WORKSHOP IN .JOURNALISM - Professor AltonL. Caldwell. Jr., Lecturer .and Journali.t (Stonehill).

DRAWING AND PAINTING - M... Charlee Kc;ins, Portrait Painter (Stone-hill). .

FRIDAY A.'T1-:RNOONSEDUCATIONM. PSYCHOI,OGGY - Jl<rv. Richard lII. Gorman. C,S.C.(Stollchill).CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH - Prol_ Mary Lee Ev...... Kimball (Ston"",hill). .

"ZIP" IS THE WORD IN SAUilSMANSHIP - Mr. Hen..,. W. Palmer,Lecturer.REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL ~ Mr. Panl A. Glrou][. Realtor.A LAW SEMINAR ON PERSONAL INJURY - Leading Attomeys froma' Nfttional IJegal A.sociation,INSURANCE - Broker. lUld Allents JD.",inedoa R....1ew Ceane - Mr.Abraham Brooks. Lecturer (Stonehill).ECONOMICS ISBUBS OF TODAY - Prof_or Jameo L. WI1ell (Stonehill). 'COI,LECTIVE BARGAINING -' It" Saee_ Or Fallare - Attorney Edwin:J. J. Dwyer. 'BUSINFAlS AND COMMERCIAL LAW - AttornflY GEOrge P. ConnollY.

DRAWING AND PAINTING - Mr. CharI"" Kerins. Portrait P~lnter (~ne­hill).THE. FINE ART 011' INTERIOR DBCORATING - lIIi811 AcnED Fennelly.Lecturer.SOCIAL GRACES - John Robert Powe... School - lIIl'lI. Ronald Enstrom,Miss Massachusetts. 1967.($10: - 6 ela88 meetlnl!ll: Feb. 28, Mar. 7. 21. April 4. 18, May 2.) (Non­credit).

,COURSE

Co-educationalINSTITUTE OF ADULT EDUCAliON­

Tuesday'evenings, 7:30'to,9:30, February 28 to May 18. Regis­tration· by maH or at7 P.M. February 28 and March 7 in HolyCross Hall. 'Friday afternoons, 3:30 to 5:30, March 3 to May 19. Registratioltby mail or at 3 P.M. March 3 and March 10 in Holy Cross Hall.,No prerequisites. Min\mum registration per class ,is 12. CreditC9urses. Fee $~5. payable at registratiol1. '

, ' ,TUESDAY IoiVENINGB ,""8 YOUR MASS roo - ReT. Willi"... P. Keegan. 6.S.0. (8tonehill)

THE' NOVEL APPROACB '1'0 'LITEIlATURB - Rev. Roberi P. Griffin.'C.g.C:, (Stonehill). , ' , ,

CONVERSATIONAL PRENCR - Prol.eoor Marguerite' Antoine (Stonehm)CREATIVE WRITING - Prof""sor BrwU Flbgflrald (Stoneblll)

AN ,INTRODUCTION '10 SOCIOI..oGGY - Prot_,JoeephVel'llll8e (Ston.,.hill). .", ,

THE 'SHAPING or PORBfGIif POLl(,'Y - Profe&80r J,,_ I. Kenneally(St,onehill).

EFF.:CTivE SPEAKING AND'THB ,CONDUCT OF MBBTIMG8 - Pro­f""sor Herbert A. W""sling (Stoneilill).

CONTEMPORARY PRILQSOII'HY - lProleeeor La~r_ II. 8tepelevicb(Stonflhill).

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan, River-Thurs. Feb. 23, 1961

Complete

BANKINGSERVICE

THE BANK ON,

TAUNTON GREEN

Member of Federal Depoe"~5urance Corpor.itoD

for Bristol County

Bristol County,Trust Company

TAUNTON, MASS.

LaYl11an~s Mi$$io~'Is S~cular World, COVIN.GTON(NC)~The·'

:secular 'world is "the "'ni,is­sion t~rritory ,ol the layGhristian," Rep. FrankW.Burke of, Kentucky has told theCovington" Diocesan Council ofCatheli~ Men. .

"It will be penetrated, recon­structed, restored in the light ofChrist's teachings only if we do "it," he' said.' .'Rep. Burke noted .that th~

Church too often YI thought ofas "the' world ot .the clergyrather than the coopC!'ative en­terprise of both elergy andleity."

M'issiohary Only Foreign Professional Beggor'CHANGSONG (NC)-A u.s. This has taken the form of. made a deal. He would give

missionary here says he is Kor- beggars' trade union, recognized·" them, help if society memberSee's only foreign"professional by law. Membership cards with . ,would keep' order when reliefbeggar ·and ,haS a membership a photo of the bearel", are issued. goods were being distributed.Card in the beggars' union to by the various pol~ce 'stations. The agreement worked o'ut'satis::':prove it. ' . fllctorily, and Father Woods wu,This is how,Father Francis Has Membership: Carel given 'a membership card.

S S C b Father' Woods" parish ofCha- Father' Woods says ,that' heWoods, .. '., ccame a mem- ngsong' is a distributing point '

, ber of the. union, called the,' .Hea- prizes that membership C\lrd1,. . i 0 r Cl;\tholic-donated rei i e f

venly vi,s~tors" Society. .' goods. Orie day a man came to' highly as a sign of his friend-~ After the Korean: war refugees him; told him he was the head' ,sh~p with the destitute of Korea.

from communist North Korea of the beggars' society and asked "Several of my destitute friendsand: Koreans retlirning borne 'ttle priest for help. are now exemplary Catholicli,Iffrom other parts of Asia had to T Ii e Coiumban missionary the missioner said.depend on various relief organ-'izations for their livelihoods.. To better th,eir lot and ensure

a fair distribution 'of reliefgoods, a .group of :refugees or­ganized the Chung Sa Whey, theHeavenly Visitors' ~ociety.

ASHLEY FORD SALES

COME IN - SEE - and DRIVE

THE 161 FORDS.,.be World'~ Most leautif"Hy 'Pl'opo.ti~necI Co...•

at

formerly Motor ,Sales Company

FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS

13~86 Purchase St. New 8edford l Mass.

COADJUTOR:' Most Rev.LeO Byrne, former AUXIl­iary ,Bishop of St. Louis, hasbeen appointed by Pope Johnto be Coadjutor Bishop withthe right of succession toBishop Mark Carron «) fWichita" Kana. NC Photo.

German Cardinal Asks More,Workers 'Share in Industry'

COLOGNE (NC) - Germany's senior cardinal hasgiven ,vigorous backing to the government program aimed atgiving workers a greater chance of owning land and becom­ing share holders in industry. In a Lenten pastoral. letterdevoted. mostly to social and ' Concerning t1)e need'fo~ moreeconomIC matters, Joseph widespread property distribu­Cardinal Frings said that tion, Cardinal Frings urged'more widespread distribu- people to buy only ~he con~umertion of ownership would not only' goods, they ,n~ed, and. to m~estraise the living standard of the part of. their mcome m savmgsless well-off, but strengthen the banks, stocks" mutual ~~nds, or ,

S a whole other productIve securItIes.economy a " "S h b d d' t 'b t'

Cardinal Frings, Archbishop of uc a "r~a .er IS rI U IOnCologne and president of the ~f .prop~rt~,. saId the prelate,German Bishops' Conference, Will .Slgmficantly strength~nurged' workers to take advantage the SOCial order, assl;lre. economIC'of Germany's present prosperity ~evelopment, ~nd aId m elevat­by putting part of their 'earnings mg theworkmg .class and .theinto investments. ~ess well-o~f sectIons of socI~ty

The pastoral touched on many m the SOCial .structure a~d m-topics. Among them: tegrate t~em 1nto t~e,nation as

Youth CorPs a. whole. \ The nation and re--The need for a youth co,-:ps . ~lOnal and. l~cal ,governments

to aid underdeveloped nations,' shoul~ do their best.~ enc~ur,­"Wo~ld it not be 'wise 'for young ag~ ~IS ~evelopment, Cardmalpeople of various occupations to Frmgs said. .

go abroad t~,th~ u~der~evelC!ped- p"r.e·es't·s '~,I 'OW F.reecountries for a few years 'to help I~

In the construction of new instal- F M;" e '.lations? Without ,such personal. or .sSlons "aid, the great wo~k Of, helpiilg '., Aij6s (:NC)LA sp~cial ind"ultthe underdeveloped eouf\tries:,' permits priests Of the ,Amos diO-:tannot really get, gOi~g." . cese in Quebe~ PrQvin~, Can­:' -The, ,ne~d for,:, :~lSI;10PS "'and' ,. ada, to offer two'Masseil:each daypastors to recogni~, that they of the year.' ,

,cannot ~ct autocratically. "Even Bishop Albert' Sanschagrin,the bishop cannot and should no~, O.M.t administtator of the (fio­govern his diocese' in a pui'ely cese,s~idHis HblinesspopeJoh~patriarchal and absolute man.,. " XXIII had gra'nted' the indult' toncr. The cathedral chapter and meet the· diocese's .desireto sendthe administrative council hav! . priests to the Latin- At:nericanbeen established to· advis~ 'him, mission fields,' 'and he iilrequired to obtain;1heir ' . The . indult"will be' applIed inagreement in the case of"any' cases' where the 'are two smallimportant decision...· parishes' close together and

WorkiDl' Motbers ' " where it will'be possible for one"'-'The "difficult and unhealth); priest to meet their· needs, the

situation" created bY' working 'Bishop said. ThiJs Mass ~ait be. mothers. "Cardinal Frings, urged offered in one parish in the,)n'creased ~'benefits by the Ger- morning and an afternoon ],\rassman family allowance system, in the other parish, he added.

;'",hich now provides about 10 Bishop Sanschagrin said hedollars a I)'lonth for every child hopes that' it wUl be possible to,beginning :with the ~hird, but send .several young priests to, themakes no provision for the first Latin American mission ,field'!two ch~ldren; b,' next September.

SOme Producers', Fail to S'ubmitFilms for Classificotion'

NEW YORK (NC)-The Na- . of-Decency rating,is.b)'that verytiona1 ~gion of pecency .haa fact unworthy. of the.' patronagewarned Catholics against foreign of '~e faithful," ~sgr. Thomasor independentlY, produc~d' ,F:. Little,'. exec~tive seeretary 01.

,movies which are not submitted' ,the agency, said. ,', ,either to the·. Motion Picture : .Ms'gr.. Little's . eommEln~ wasCode' Administration or thele";. ~ntained.in a memorandum io.lion.' "cUocesan legion, directors; He

"For the practical moral guiei- ll8id the memo' was prompted byance of our people, any:film "continued inquiries about 'Wi";which does not carry. a Legion rated fil~s'!"

. '. Bisbops' WarDin« ",He, ,cited the November 30,

1960, statement of ·the U. S.,Bishops' Committee for MotionPictures, Radio and Television.The committee, discussing for­eign :films and those indepen­dently produced in this country~said:

"These films are rarely sub­mitted for ,moral appraisaleither to the Production Code orthe Legion of Decency or to anyorganization and are very oftenof a salacious and seriouslyobjectionable nature.

"The· very, fact that such filmsignore aliy reasonable control 01'

(criticism is clear evidence ofmoral and social irresponsibilityand we urge Catholic people' notto give them the support of theirpatronage."

The legion is an agency toprovide moral evaluations 01.films. The Motion Picture CodeAdministration is a cooperativeagency of the 'Hollywood filmindustry designed to ·maintainstandards of decency on a volun-tary basis. .

Page 12: 02.23.61

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God Love YouBv Most Rev. Fulton J. ~heen, D.O. " .'

Although the Christmas Season has pa'ssed, the follo~i~g. ia .•description of how one missiona'ry sPent his Christmas Day:"

.---"I heard confessions behind a piano .in ·the hall. Then we

declared war on the ants, because no one could sit or meet Kero­sene was poured around the floor where I had set up the altarand we set fire to the ants. Then Mass was said peacefully, andeveryone went to Communio!1, eleven in all. T,he colleCtionamounted to $1.60.

GOD LOVE YOU to A.W. for $85 "My sister and I are sendingyou this check for the Holy Father's Missions' to use as he seesfit. We are getting older and' we want to. do something for Godand His Poor before we die." ... to A.K. for $103.15 "In accorda!1ce •with the plea that the Vicar of Christ be 'First and principallyaided,' please accept my first pay check of 1961." ... to E.H. for $5"This is in thanksgiving for my successful operation last December.".', • to B.G. for $1 "Please use this to help the poor of the world."

, Now what are you.g~i~g to dot TUrn' the page and 'fo~get allabout this?' Or in your true .Christian charity will you Send a',little something, regardless of how small it Is, for our goodmissionaries? Ther.e are approximately 200;000 of them, you know,under the Society· for the Propagation of the Faith. And they areall unsalaried workers whose purpose it is to' bring the Faith tothe nearly 2 billion pagans in the world and to establish tneChurch in heretofore "barren land." 1If you yourself are unableto pack,8 bag and go on the missions, won't you perform a smallact of self-denial and offer mlms mnd sacrifices for those who arealready there?

"Then I went off to the desert to my third Mass, which was.celebrated In a small hall. I heard confessions on Ute stage, andfifteen received Our Dear Lord M this Masa. The time of theMass was now mid-day' Christmas, and the temperature was 117degrees. I preached despite' the'.warmday. My oollectlon amountedto $2.00.

"ll left this mission at. two o'clock inthe morning in my Volkswagen and sleptin the deserl. It was so hot ]I did not needa sleeping bag. At 4:30 in the morning!visited with a few aboriginals, aoci thenset out for' a railroad siding for my· secondMass. While I, was on the way to therailroad siding, the people there wereholding a Christmas party. which lasted until 3:00 in the morning.][ arrived at '7 :00 and called all the faithful by. knocking on' eachdoor at the small railway siding. I set up the altar in the' hall

.and was amazed at the thousands. of ants who raced around thefloor en.loying the remnants of too. ,sweet things from the Christ­mas party.

."I then drove back over the desert several hundred miles, andarrived back at my'stading point at 3:30 p.m. without breaking myfast. All'I had was a cup of black tea and it .dry biscuit, and thenoff to bed. It has been 90 many years since I have h,ad a Christmasdinner. that I have really forgottep what it is like, and, I .missnothing."

Cut out this column, pin 3"Our sacrifice to it and mail it to theMost Rev.. Fulton J. Sheen; National DiI'ector of' the Society forthe Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y.01' your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T.·CONSIDINE,368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.

"I lett the confessionai at fifteen minutes to midnight OIl

Christmas Eve. The temperature ~as 93 degrees and it remainedthe same all through Mass. I preached asermon, . even though my' vestments werewet thr'ough, because most of the congrega­tion were the 'hardy annual' typ~, so wethought that a few kind words about theinfinite Love of God would help the material-ists. . . •

FINALIST: Getorge J.Tyson, senior at Coyle HighSchool, Taunton, and son ofMr: and Mrs. George Tyson,also Tauntori, .has· bee nnamed a finalist'in the Na­tional Merit Scholarship pro­gram and 'has received acertificate of merit, makinghim eligible for a scholar­ship. He is an A student anda member ·of the school band.

Overseas Relief, Cotillnued from Page One

member United Lutheran ChurchiJ;l America.. In addition to some nonsecta­

rian overseas relief agencies, .allmajor denominations' sponsorsuch organizatio·ns. \

The Catholic agency is Catho­lic ReI ie f Services-NationalCatholic' Welfare . Conference.Auxiliary Bishop Edward" E.Swanstrom of New York, execu­tive director, reported in Decem­ber 1960 that CRS'':NCWC hasdistributed' surplus food" thatyear valued at more than $64million.' . '

The American ,Catholic reliefagency, whose supplies are given.to persons regardless of creed.,will conduct its 15th annual ap­peal for funds from Mar. 5 to 12•.

President. Kennedy, in-_hiscomment on the Lutheranleader's suggestion, noted thatsome surplus food is distributed.by the government. He added:

"And then we have relied uponprivate agencies, and I· wouldbe yery reluctant - to .abandonprivate agencies, because theyhave done a first-class job inassisting us to get this food out."

Saying he would. be glad to--see Rev. Mi..Fry's comments, theChief Executive noted thatGeorge McGovern, director of~

the U:S. "Food for Peace" pro­gram' is now tOl.lring LatilllAmerica and may have SOmEIproposals upon .his return.

Habitually IIIThose who, in her first days,

said that' Fr:ances Cabrini wouldnever be robust, were all tooright. She. was . habitually ill,never free of leaden fatigue. Yet Chines.e Orphans Findshe drove herself without res-.pite. New Homes in U.S.

Her principle was that h~r io- NEW YORK (NC)-Mrs. Paulstitute must always keep moving LaJ;Il was well escorted when sheahead, that unless there waa ex- left Hong Kong by ,plane, but inpansion there would inevitably . San Francisco, she said goodbyebe ooterioration. . to Hang Yee Lui, 9, who is find-

This is an amazing story. It is. ing it new home with Mr.' andregrettable that Mr. Di Donato Mrs. Gary Murphy of Oakland,has not' handled it more felici- Calif.tously. In particular, one finds In Chicago, farewells were saidit hard to see why many inexact ,to Wai Hung Lau, 10, and hiea,nd awkward words and phrasea sister, Mary Lin Lau, 8, whowere not weeded out of the have been adopted by Mr. andmanuscript. What, for example, Mrs. Yate Huey Wong there. Andis "the sacred congregation gov- at Idlewild ~irport here, Mr&!.ernil1g rules and prelates?" Lam bade farewell to Kun SunWhat· is "an overjoyed Mass," Lui, 14, who has been 'a(lo"tnrl"a .severe cardinalite expres- by Mr. and Mrs. Soo POOR Lee ofsion?" . this city. . .

Mrs. Lam, wife en. a HongKong physician who is in .chargeof medical services fgr CatholicRelief Services--National Catho­lic 'Welfare Conference amongrefugees there, is president ofthe Hong Kong Chinese CatholicClub and a leader iD .the refugee

. assistance program. The orphanilshe brought to this eOuou.,.found new homes thrQugh theCatholicCommit~eforReful~.

_... Ask. Holiday. WASHINGTON (NC) ~ Rep.

L. Mendel Rivel"9' of South c.­olina has intrOduced a reaollltiOillit the, ·House Ca~ling ~ desle­nntion,of Good lTidaF •• Ie....public.holi"'.:: ... , .': .~. r::..ir...c:'..::l_i.~f:;;:::-'r~..:r_.L.....fi.:.t="::..':l.._:.:';;~':':":"J:" l-S

Mother Cabrini waS aske"d' toopen· houses here and there; tounder-take schools and orphan­ages. Always she did 'as re­quested.. In ,short order her sis­ters were laboring even in Rome,

Bishop Scalabrini, whose p~r­

ticular concern was .care forItalian emigrants in ·a .new andstrange environment, pleadedthat· some sisters be sent to theUnited states. Encouraged' byLeo XIII, and under the impres­sion that Archbishop Corriganof New York was readying aplace for them,' Mother Cabriniand six of her sisters set out forAmerica in 1889.

Founds Orphanage. 'No one met' them in New

York; ·the much :talked of or­phanage did not exist and hadno prospects of doing so.

In virtually no time she estab­lished an orphanage, and with,infour months she had a school inoperation. She and the _ othersisters went about begging forthe"ir own sustenance. and thesupport of these works,'

After a remarkably short in­,tElrval the community was inpossession of a spacious estate.onthe' Hudson, a salubrious l()caleand atmosphere for the evermore' numerous orphanS in itilcare. There followed the incep­tion of a hospital which wouldspecialize in service to the poor.

,' Career in. America~ Mother Cabrini's career'· In­

America.' SPanned some 28, years.This is not to say that she spentall .her time during that periodin·' the United States. Now shewas journeying 'to Italy, now toSouth·' America, now to' this' orthat country in Europe.

She was on the go almost con­stantly. And almost constantlyshe was launching her commu­nity 6n some fresh enterprise'her'e or elsewhere. Schools, or~'phanage's, hospitals-she inaugu­rated such works in Brooklyn,Newark, Chicago, Seattle, etc.

And each new American foun­dation was matched by'· one inNicaragua or Panama or Paris orLondon.

Within 25 years of the humblestart in Codogno Mother Cabri­ni's institute numbered 1,000members and had more than 50houses. Ten years _later therewere 1,500 religious and 65houses.

. Tii!: ANCHC' - .. ~;.e· of Fall Rj':::hThurs. Feb. 23, '1961,----'_.'., ',.,:' • , ',<,'j1,2

Reader 'R. ,~ ..~og~Ui':'~s. 5·1}j';n·tIn. New c~rr))~~lnli. Jl:,!)~ra,hy

By Rt. Rev. !\l:.;:,:-r..J()hn S. KennedyMother Frances Xavier Cabrini' is the first American

citizen to be. canonized by the Church. Her death occurredonly a little more than 40 years ag9. She is very much ofour own time and, although born in Italy,adapted herselfmarvelously to the characterof our country' and madereally spectacular use of

,American opportunities andmethods..

Hers is a dramatic and aston­ishing. story,which should beof special inter­est to all Amer-ican Catholics.But somehow ithas never beentold to the besteffect.

Now comesanother biogra­phy, ImmigrantSaint (McGraw­Hill, $4.95), bythe well known novelist PietroDi Donato. By including lengthyexcerpts from the letters ofMother Cabrini, Mr. Di Donatoshows one the exceptional faithof' Frances Cabrini, the love ofGod which burnen fiercely inIier and informed everything shedid, 'the truly wonderful and in­Yilriable . supernatural outlookwhich was hers. Yes, says thereader, I can· recognize the saintbere.· . .

Stately utteraneesAs a narrative' of Mother

Cabrini's life, however, the bookis hardly more than adequate.It is hasty: in .man·ner and give~

to devices (such as the presen.:tation of long" ago conversationsverbatim) .which smack of fic-tion:· ,". ', For chapters on end .it seems

IIardly more than a series ofover-staged tableaux, and it hasa weakness for stately utterancewhere something simple prob­ably would be truer and cer­tainly would be more telling.

Devout Borne "When .Fraitces Cabrini was

Itorn in a village in Lombardy in1850, her mother was 52 and had8l!en most of her previous off­spring die. Frances as an infant

. gave little promise' of soundhealth, but she survived.

Hers was a devout home, andshe had an uncle 'a priest. WhilesUll a small child, she expresseda wish and determination-to be­come a missionary to China. Atschool she studied hard and did .well.

In her teens she desired tobecome a nun(the community towhich she applied turned herclown. Twice more she soughtentrance to religious communi­"ties; twice more she was refused.

.Bitter ExperienceIn the town .of Codogno was

an orphanage which was.a scan­dal to 'the people' and a heart­scald to the Church authoritiee.It had been founded by a woman'who proved more eccentric andwillful than sensible. This per­son ran it badly, but refused togive it up. The pastor askedFrances to straighten the placeout. She agreed. '.

It was a bitter experience, forthe queer and malicious foun­dress resented· the intrusion andused all her nasty ti.·icks to driveFrances out. But Frall.ces stayed-for six years. ·It was duringthis stormy period that she andseven other young womenbanded together as religious.

Missionary SistersThen came the founding of the

missionary institute known todayas the Missionary Sisters of the'Sacred Heart.

Name Labor Leader .WiI;ner ,of Award

Sunday TV To Show' JERSEY CITY (NC)-Josepll

RD. Keenan of Washington, D.C..

ouault Paintings .secretary of the InternationalNEW YORK (NC)-The en~ Brotherhood of'Electrica(Work­

gravings of painter GeorgesRou- ers, has been. named to receiveault, .with,a background of prose the 13th lUulUal RerUm Novar­meditation written by a priest- urn Award ofS·t.P·eter's 'C"ollege.poet, will: be featured on the The award 19 cOnferred by theDirectio!ls '61 television p~am Jesuit institution: on a. CatholieSunday at 1 P.M., EST. . . who has. distinguished himself~. Also on.the program wiD be . in . labor-management . relatloDlla discussion of the Montessori acc~rding,t.o..~.~.p.X:iJ;lc::ipleS:ofthe'method of teaching by Mr.. ,.papal social.encyclicals.'Preseo-:~ancy Rambusch, headmisU'ess . tation of the 1961 'awardwUl be'

" '!II. the .:~itby School; Greeo-'1I!-ad~atthe Essex Ho~'BoteI"(wieb, Conn.' Newark, OIl March 19. ',' . :.~~r"';"!~_~~t!.:..>t!.:.,,,:,, :~. _t~·.-,-..£'-:"E..'J· 'l-~ :&'~"I:!:~~.ae:::Ii!:~~!tn.:E~H'"£.:~::E..~~'':..

Page 13: 02.23.61

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Dedicates Hospita'NEWARK (NC) - Archbishop

Thomas A. Boland of Newarkdedicated the new five milliOIldollar St. James Hospital here.

U.5. Lay GroupsLag in MakingSMggestions

WASHINGTON (NC)The latty of the UnitedStates is lagging in makingsuggestions for the SecondVatican Council to consider re­garding the lay apostolate, Mar­tin H. Work, executive directol!'of the National Council of CathPolic Men, said here.

Mr. Work just returned fromRome where he attended a three­day meeting of the Permanen~

Committee for InternationalCongresses of the Lay Apostol­ate. The committee mapped ar­rangements for the third WorldCongress of the Lay ApostolateJwhich will be held shortly afterthe ecumenical council.

"The laity of Europe are muchmore articulate in making sut:!­gestions to the proper ecclesias­tical authorities to be placed be­for the ecumenical council re­garding the lay apostolate," M!J.Work said.

Welcome Suggestions"In our studies and seminaNJ

at the convention," Mr. Worksaid, "we should be able to arrive 'at some findings to be submittecllto the authorities. The lay apas­tolate covers a broad field. It aPapears evident that the councY.authorities would welcome e~

pressions from lay organizeotions.", "We were greatly impressedwhen the Holy Father in his ad­dress to the audience said th&~

the lay apostolate can almost becalled the eighth sacrament,'"Mr. Work said.

Real !Estate loansSavings Bank Life InsuranceChrillt~as and Vacation Clubs,

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Feb. 23, 1961

DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAULInvite young girls (14.23) to labor !Ill

Chris"s vant vineyard as an Apostle of theEditions, PrGsG, Radio, Movies alld rele­vision. With tholO modern means, lh_Missionary Sintors bring Chris"o Doctrine10 all, ,egardloGG of race. colo, or creed.For Info,mation writo to,

REV, MOTHER SUPERIORSO ST. PAUL'S A~. BOSTON 30. MAliS.

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135 Franklin StreetFall River OSborne 2-1911

rare," he stated."It can occur more frequently

among those who are so dis-­turbed as to require institution­alization," he continued. "Butthose vvho are regarded as suf­ficiently normal to live amongtheir fellow men very rarelycan be excused from their mis­demeanors on this score.

"Persons who indulge theb'passions by drunkenness or im­purity ordinarily possess suffi­cient power of free will to lllvoidthese sins if they wish." .

when Mount girls are much hldemand at various club meet­

,i~gs. Right now emnhasis blupon preparation for the acad­emy's annual Sp..I'1g concert.

One attribute of Ca'rol manyan adult would envy. She's notnervous when she gets up infront of those 460 students tolead an assembly peri()d. Luckygirl!

CAROL CHRUPCALA

IN NEW BEDFORDDIAL 3-143.1

MAILING·

PRINTING

IN FAll liVERDIAl 2-1322 or 5·7620

ST. PAUL (NC) - Many per­sons "mold their moral conducton very unstable standards" be­cause they don't know' what aconscience is, a noted theologiansaid here.

A conscience is "a judgmentof the intellect as to the good orevil of a particular act," saidFather Francis J. Connell,C.SS.R., of St. John's University,Brooklyn. But many mistake itas a "feeling" for what is goodor bad, he added.

The Redemptorist priest, aformer dean of the school ofSacred Theology at the CatholicUniversity of America, ad­dressed the second annual insti­tute of the Minnesota Confer­ence of Catholic Charities.

He said that 'in forming a con­science "middle course betweenlaxity' and scrupulosity shouldbe followed.". "When a person has argumentsfor liberty which are at least asstrong as those for the existenceof a law, he may follow thecourse for liberty," FQther Con­nell declared.

He termed as "uniDrtunate" acurrent tendency, "especiallyamong those engaged in psychia-"try, to relieve people of respon­sibility for their actions, and toregard morally evil habits as aform of disease."

Father Connell said "it is truethat sometimes persons can beso overcome by emotions or pas­sion that they are not respon­sible for their misconduct." Butsuch a situation "must be re­garded as extraordinary and

Says Failure to Know ConsciencePuts Many on Shaky Ground"

gina College, but is awaiting re­suIts of College Doard' examsbefore She makes definite plQns.

She's active in her parish CYO.and loves any kind of 'music,possessing the traditional largerecord collection of a teen-ager.In school, sI:te's a glee club mem­ber, and singing activities ac­count for a large segment oftime, p~T)e(""Uy'around holidays

BC ExpansionBOSTON (NC)-Boston Col­

lege has announced it will seek$15 million for expansion by1963 and try to obtain another$25 million by 1970.

The Jesuit university, markingits 100th anniversary in 1963,will use the funds to endowfaculty salaries and scholarshipsand erect a new graduate center,science center, library, Instituteof Human Relations· center andn university auditoriwn, theaterand arts cente~

'. Grant. ~ Loyola:NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A

grant of $7,365 has been awardedby the National Science Founds­tAon to Loyola Univer!!ity, a .les­ait institution,~ undergraduate.-.rea __lei."p~.

Terrorists AttackPriest in Congo

LEOPOLDVILLE (NC) - ABelgian priest was attacked lI!l1dseriously wounded by-machete­wielding terrorists in the heartof this capital three days a·fterthe revelation of Patrice Lu­mumba's murder:

Fr. Joseph Stu~lens, C.I.C.M.,suffered severe gashes in hishead and wrist when he was at­tacked by three men. The inci­dent took place at six o'clock inthe morning, as the priest wascrossing Prince Baudouin aven­ue between the church and therectory of St. Peter's parish.

The street was already crowd­ed with people, and passersbyrushed to the priest's defense.'rhey were able to seize one'assailant. Two were in militaryuniform.

Father Stuelens was hospital­ized and was described as in"serious" condition. A native ofZutendael, in Belgium's Lim­bourg province, he had arrived.as a missionary in the Congo inNovember of 1959.

'Student ':(;overnmenf Head at" Mt• .St. Mary'sFinds It's Full-Time Job Leading 460 Girls

Pretty Carol Ohrupcala, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. Casimir Chrupcala of Holy Grossparish, Fall River, is Student Yovernment President wt Mt. St. Mary's Academy. It'salmost a full-time job for Carol. She rarely gets home before five and is kept con­stantly on the go planning and supervising activities for the Mount's some 460 students.A recent example -was anoutstanding successful Cour­tesy Week, Carol's brain­child. Girls elected the mostcourteous in each homeroom,English classes cooperated bywriting essays on courtesy andthe net result, says Ca·rol, hasbeen an upswing in good man-'ners throughout +t.~ academy.

On the'Spring agenda is a Vo­cation Week, to which rep­resentatives of various profes­sions will be invited to addressthe student body. Then thereare the activities which takeplace every year but which nev­ertheless require much plan­ning. The Snowball Prom is onesuch annual occurrence.

It's a Mount tradition forgraduates to wear identicalwhite gowns at commencementceremonies. These are "pre­viewed" at the Snowb:-'t Prom,which is one of the happiestmemories of high school days,but which also means plenty ofplain hard work in preparation.Ask Carol!

"Just About Everything'"But she's certainly not com­

plaining. "I like just abouteverything about the Mount,"she responded to a query as tofavorite school activities..She'swanted to be ~ student at theacademy since she can remem­ber and she has a sister now insixth grade 'at Holy Cross schoolwho's more than eager tofolalow in her footsteps.

Another school activity is as­sistant editorship of the' ye.ar- ,

'book, "Mereyerest."· Toat ' in"':volveS much ad-getting; saysCarol, in 'addition to editorial'work:. .

Outside lIChool time,. Carolenjoys horseback riding, danc­ing, bowling and swimming.She's hoPeful of a job lUI camp ,counselor this summer and longterm goals' include a career as Iisocial worker specializing tildelinquent children.

The blonde, blue-eyed seniorwould like to attend Salve Re-

Jewish-Catholic BondSymposium Subject

CHICAGO (NC) '- Interestslinking U. S. Jews and Catholicswill be discussed at a symposiumhere Mar. 7 on American life.andletters.

Loyola University and theAnti-Defamation League of B'naiB'rith are sponsoring the sym­posium, 'entitled "The Needs andImages of Man."

Speakers will include Sen.Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota,Bishop John J. Wright of Pitts­burgh and Oscar Handlin, pro­fessor of history at HarvardUniversity. Several priests, au­thors and llterary critics willtake part in the symposiwnsessions.

Urges' .Teq~h,~To Lead .FightAgainst Reds

NEW YORK (NO)Frederick H. BoIand, presi­den.t of the United NationsGeneral Assembly, has urgedCatholic teachers to take theoffensive against communism.

If Christian civilization is tosurvive, he declared, it mustdevelop a spirit no less militantthan that of the communists.

Mr. Boland, who is Ireland'spermanent representative to theU.N., warned more than 1,200teachers from 102 Catholic highschools at the 17th annual Teach-

. ers Institute sponsored by theArchdiocese of New York thatthe fate of western civillzationmight be decided in the next10 years.

If students are to meet thischallenge, he declared, theyshould carry away with themfrom school, in addition to alove of their own country, a"larger patriotism, a wider senseof community, a broader alleg­iance, based upon a sharp real­ization of the common destinyand the common jeopardy" ofthe age.

Greater DedicationHe noted that as the commu­

nist ideology is essentially dy­namic, so too is the attitude ofthe average communist one ofCQmplete dedication to a cause.

"A primary aim of our Cath­olic education today must be toInstill an even greater dedica­tion, an even greater sense ofmission," Mr. Boland stressed.

The UN executive said per­haps the most dangerous Inter­nal weakness of western civil-'ization today "is. that we haveruther too many. opinions andtoo few convictions."

Wisdom of Church"There are thousands of young

intellectuals," he noted "to whORlthe idea of freedom means noth­ing because, having been de­prived by their education of anyidea of God and having no firmconviction to put in its place,freedom for them simply meansexistence without purpose andlife itself has become flat, staleand unprofitable."

Mr. Boland emphasized recentevents proved the wisdom of theChurch in insisting on the im­portance of Catholic education.

"It seems to me," he declared,"a resounding vindication of thetruth of the Church's teachingthat, at this critical jUQ.cture inworld history, Christian., civil­ization has no firmer, no moretrustworthy, no more resolutesafeguard '" '" '" to which toturn than the products of ourCatholic schools."

"Canada See .ReportsCommunion Increase

NORTH BAY (NC)-Attend­ance at Mass and reception ofHoly Communion multiplied toa record number in the SaultSte. Marie. diocese of Ontariolast year when the law of fastduring Lent was dropped, BishopAlexander Carter said in a pas­toral letter.

"The faithful of the diocese re- .sponded magnificently to theappeal to replace the fast byassistance at the Holy Sacrificeof the Mass," the Bishop wrote•.

.He said 'almost 3,500,000 Com­munions were distributed atLenten services. The diocese baaa Catholle population 01. 152,000.Be urged bis people to continuetIM practice~ Lea&.

Page 14: 02.23.61

, ' I

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S~hoo~ Aid ,Main..,T(n~g~.ff. of-.-.PQAU Conference - .PORTLAND (NC) :.- Members to vote against the Catholic ca'n- tax fundB for schools and h03"

of Protestants' and Other Amer.:. didate was the depth 'of 'gross pitals.fcans United for S'eparation, of .-intolerance."· Glenn L. Archer, executive dl­.Church' and 'State met here i!1 ,By contrast with ,1928 when rector of POAU, said the prob­

'Oregon for their 13th national "GOv. Alfred E. Smith' ~f New. lem, boils down to "clericalism", conference and ~pent two day~ York, a ,Catholic seekfn'g the -"the use of religious InfluencG"lambasting Catholics. .presidency "suffered because 'of' for the achievement of political, A princi~al o?ject of their ire . the 'reUg~~us ~issue,"'Presid~nt ends.",was the suggestion that students Kennedy's, cam p a i g n "was Mr. Archer said an effort to

, in Catholic schools have as mu;ch : stren'gthe'ned byexploit{ng that, obtain a share of public tax-paidright to share in tax-paid educa- . issUe," Dr. Haddock said. ' benefits for private institutiolWtion benefits as do children in M' st' f 'h h 'k is a "clerical threat" 'whose im-pUblic schools. 0 0 t e ot er spea ers t . ly._ _

The meeti.'n" - was also en- : concerned themselves withaccu- Pue.susc cothmlets' B~aholn .uvm ......... t· th t C th 'li _. .' a 0 c IS ps.

. livened by references to the: sa IOns a a 0 care _"mg ". . ."r lig" iss"' th' 1960 by'unconstitutional ineanS to get ' It III qUite eVident to US that

e . 10~ ue ...m e the Catholic' drive is part of apreSIdential ra~. M. C ' worldwide pattern." ,he said...It

Charge Exploitation ~ Igration ongi'ess is· the entering wedge in ' aDr. W.Kenneth Haddock, a' SAN JUAN, (NC)~U.S. par- scheme which these leaders quite

Methodist minister from Ports- ish representatives will take part frankly describe to 'tbeiroWilmouth, Va., l;Ieclared that during in a Catholic migration cOngress people. Every tune we pay a dol­the campaingn it was "not big- to' be held at the end of 1961, lar for a Catholic school bus, thatotry for a Roman Catholic voter Father' Thomas' M. 'Gildea, payment is used as an argumentto' support a member of his C.SS.R., general migration direc- for the legality of a furtherchurch, but for any non-Catholic tor for Puerto Rico, announc~, tribute."

Tw@ J@hfll Kim! PlaifQT@ EU'ftter Novitoat@

SEOUL (NC)-Two out cffour young Korean Army veter.:.:ans on their way to a Jesuitnovitiate in the U. S. have thosame name: John Kim.

John Kim from Inchou isknown as Inchon John. John,Kim from Seoul is known asShin Dang Dong John, after the .quarter of Seoill he comes from.The two Johns ,are on their wayto the Wisconsin Province novi- 'tiate i~ 81. Bonifacius, Minn.,'with Thomas Lee of Inchon andAnselm. ~in of Seoul.

Inchon John and Thomas Leeare both from old Catholic fam­ilies. Anselm Min is one of threeCatholics in a large family. ShinDang Dong John and his entirefamily are converts of FatherTheodore Geppert, S.J. TheAmerican 'J,e sui t instructedJohn's father in Japanese;' andMr. Kim then passed"on the in­structions to John 'and the restof, the family iIi Korean.

doesn't answer moral problems.:We must start with definite prin:"ciples and apply them to thesItuation at hand." Touch Foundations

What moral, principles applyhere? The relationships betweenparents and children are the ob­ject'of one of the Ten Command­ments and consequently touchthe very foundations of themoral and social life. '

While they are immature,children owe their parents love,honor, respect and, obedience.Obedience ceases when they aregrown up, but the other quali­ties remain.

The Commandment obviouslyrequires that children supporttheir aged parents if they are -inneed. This obligation, like allthe others, is personal, that is, itcarinot be delegated or pushedoff on one child, although cir­cumstances "may be such that onewill be in a better positioa tohelp than the others.

Personal ObligatiOaHence it should be clear that

your sisters and brothers have aserious obligation to help supportyour mother. The fact that youare unmarried or are living iawith your mother does not re­lieve them of this obligation.

The o15ligation is personal.and although the ,extent to whicheach child may be able to helpmay vary, there is no way ofgetting around the essentialobli­gation. There is a divine com­mandment involved, and eachchild must' answer to GOd forits fulfillrii.ent.

Mistaken ViewThe basic' difficulty in your

case, and in so many others,;seems to stem from the mistakenview that an unmarried personhas no right to a life of her own.Your married sisters and brotherthink you should dedicate yourlife totally to the support of yo!Jf'mother., . .

Why should you give all andthey give nothing? They arguethat they are married. Does thisaffect their essential obligation?Are' they so poor that they a'~e

absolutely unable to make anycontribution for her support?

This does not seem to be thecase. In forcing you to carry thewhole responsibility they 'are

. clearly stating their refusal to, fulfill the Commandment.

. Answer to GodWhat can you do? Perhaps

,very little. They have refusedyour request and further de­mands may so disturb famjly re­lationships that your mother will

.feel unloved and unwanted.You can only appeal to their

consciences, Remind them thatalthough they now have you inkind of "squeeze. play" becauseyou do not wish to hurt yourmother, some day God will ask 'them how they personally"loved their father and mother.'"

By' Father John L. Thomas, S.J~

Ass'tSocioiOn Prof.-St: Lou,is University" ,, "1 was a good sister until ,1 asked' my three married'

sisters and': one marrie,d brother to help me support ourwidowed mother. 1 had to go to work at 14 because myfather drank. Now after 30 years I'm still supPortingmother. The other:s won'thelp. They say, I'm single,'working,' living in, withJIlother, and it's my duty tosupport her., The factory whereI worked has moved South andmy 'new jobdoesn't pay well.What dill I do?", Your letterealls attention

,to a problemthat is perhapsas, old as thefamily itself.There are fewcases that betterIllustrate thetenden cy ofBef'mingly goodpeople to ra­tionalize or justify their basicselfishness. Although each situ-,ation may involve some distinc­tive, incidental characteristics,the essential traits· are similarIn all.

The problem generally arisesas follows. One of the children,frequently one of the older girls,goes to work to help support thefamily. Since her'help seems sonecessary, she postpones thethought of marriage until hersisters and brothers are raised.

By this time her opportunitiesare greatly limited, and at theBame time, her parents may havecome to rely on her support tosuch an extent that her marriagewould threaten their security.She seems to have no choice butto continue working.

Selfish AttitudeMea~while, her sisters and

brothers have started raising1!amilies of their own. They arequite content to take the parentalsituation for granted since it re­lieves them of all concern. Self­ishly forgetting their sister'spast dedication and sacrifice,they now assume that she alonehas the obligation to take care oftheir parents:

Of course, they can give manylreasons why they, can't help.They have their own families tosupport, their sister isn't married,she doesn't have any responsi-bilities, and so on. . . '

Hence they and their partnersare indignant when it is sug­gested that they contribute tothe support of their parents•Their sister has chosen to remainunmarried and to live at home.It's her job to support her par- 'ents. They are married andhave their own responsibilityto ,fulfill.

Specious ReasoningWhat they are really saying is

that their older sister should'have been "smarter," that is,adequately selfish when she wasyounger. If she had used herhead and married as they did"the problem would be different.

She has only herself to blamefor the present situation and:she's going to have to live withit. They're just not in positionto help, while as an unmarriedperson, she has no other obliga- '.lions. In fact, it's her duty.

, This line of reasoning appar-,ently soothes many a conscience.'As one cynic has remarked, theconvenient -thing about being, arational creature is that one. canfind good reasons for doingabout anything one wants to do,

But, such specious reasoning

Police InvestigatingOhio Church Fire. RUSSELLS POINT (NC)-:­

Police and firemen here are, in­vestigating the cause of a $40,000

:-fire which swept St. Mary of theWoods church.

The sanctuary and sacristywere gutted 'and the main altar,three side altars, statues andvestments were damaged. FatherAnthony .Wolf, pastor, said· anattempt apparently was made topry open the tabernacle. '

The church's' original taber­nacle' was ripped from the altaiand stolen in August, 1956.'

Page 15: 02.23.61

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15

Pledges FederalEfforts to AssistCuban Refugees

MIAMI (NC) - Secretaryof Health, Education, andWelfare Abraham A. Ribi­eoff promised here' that theFederal government will seek tostep up its aid to 40,000 Cub!lnrefugees in Florida.

The new HEW Secretary saidhe would '.'cut through red tape"to step up assistance to refugee.from the Fidel Castro regime.

Mr. Ribicoff said he wouldconfer with President KennedYon the matter following his re­turn to Washington.

Use Private ServicesHe was here for a first-hand

study of the refuge situation,including attendance at theNational Resettlement Confer­ence for Cuban Refugees duringwhich he made his remarks.

Earlier the meeting was read21 letter from President Kennedyto Mr. Ribicoff, in ,which thePresident expressed "concernand sympathy" for the refugees.

"We shall seek to expeditetheir voluntary return (to Cuba)

,as soon as conditions there facil­itate that," he said.

The President added that he is"anxious" that "private services"be used to aid the refugees "tothe greatest extent possible."

THE ANCHOR­Thurs.,. Feb. 23, 1961----

OIROURKEFuneral Home

571 Second St.fall River, Mass.

OS 9·6072MICHAEL J. McMAHON

Licensed Funerai D·irectorRegistered Embalmer

AUBERTINEfuneral HomeH'I'en Aubertine Braugh

Owner and Director

Spacious Parking AreaWY 2·2957

129 Allen St. New Bedford

Mrs. Henry Berube was pio­neer president of the group,while Mrs. George Pelletier nowserves in the po"""m, assistedby Mrs. Alexandre Raymond,vice president; Mrs. Gariepy,Mrs. Reed, and Mrs. Lionel,Lauzier, the' latter in charge ofpublicity.

The organization has beenactive since 1959, when SisterVeronica and Sister Mary of theSacred Heart were active in itsfoundation. Mother Hosanna wasfirst moderator, succeeded bySister Mary Agnes.

For several members, the Com­mittee is a family affair. Mrs.John Reed, treasurer, is the sis­ter of Sister Mary Agnes, whileMiss Jeannette Tremblay is thesister of Sister Jeanne d'Arc. Athird sister pair is Mrs. Irene.Leary and Sister Mary Beatrix.

of Mrs. Albina Gariepy, groupsecretary. They've been hard atwork for weeks making cardtables for use at benefit whists.

fOR••

JEFFREY E.SULLIVAN'

Funeral Rome

550 Locust St.Fall River, Mass.

OS 2~2391

Rose E. SullIvanJeffrey E, Sullivan

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

15 IRVINGTON CT.WY 7-7830

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BROOKLAWNfUNERAL HOME, INC.R. Marcel Roy - C. Lorraine Rov

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well-trained teachers interestedin their spiritual as well as in­tellectual welfare. This is wherethe committee comes in.

For a long time the ex,pandingnovitiate of the community hasmade shift with cramped quar­ters. "Novices haven't even ayard where they can get abreath of fresh air," pointed outSister Theresa of Jesus.

Recently a beginning at solv­ing this problem was made whenthe Sisters purchased an oldestate in North Dartmouth forremodeling as a novitiate. Al­though structurally sound, it hasrequired many repairs, whichhave made deep inroads intoavailable funds, and left verylittle money for absolute neces­!!ary furnishings.

Chapel, refectory, kitchen andlaundry equipment is neededand the Fund-Raising Committeeis at present concentrating onprojects that will help in ac­quiring a long list of essentialsthat must be on hand before thenovices can make their eagerly­awaited move to their new home.

Men TooMen in the families of the

determined fwnd-raisers can bepretty sure they'll be calledupon for assistance. Alreadyright in the swing of things a'rethe husband and father-ln-law

"MANNY" SOUZA•SEE

'FAIRHAVEN32 Rotch Street-cor. Washington

German Nuns BringGoods for Missions

VATICAN CITY (NC) -Ger­man nuns have brought two rail­road carloads of mission-boundgoods from Germany to VaticanCity as a gift to Pope John.

The vestments, chalices, patens,eandlesticks and other goods area souvenir of the 1960 Interna­tional Eucharisti<; Congress atMunich. Many of the goods weregiven by German Religious andlaity for use at the congress, andothers were mission offeringsbrought to the congress by rep­resentatives of all the' archdio­ceses of the world.

A pilgrimage from Munich, ledby Auxiliary Bishop JohannesNeuhaeusler of Munich, will pre­sent the gifts to the Pope. Theywill also present documents re­lating to the congress, includingabout 100 photographs of eventsof the congress, recordings of theprincipal speeches and the litur­gical texts of the religiousceremonies.

BUSY FUNDRAISERS: Officers of St. Catherine's Fund Raising Group, with MotherTheresa of Jesus, prioress general, are, left to right, Mrs. juliette Raymond, vice presi­dent; Mrs. Doris Pelletier, president; Mrs. Albina Gariepy, secretary. Right, the group isa family affair for Sister Mary ~gnes, O.P., moderator, and her sister, Mrs. John B. Reed.

Co) PLYMOUTH• CHRYSLER(I VALDA~IT

NEW CARS and a Fine Line of Reconditioned Used CarsCOMPLETE MODERN SERVICE ON ALL MAKES OF CARS

St. Catherine's Fund-Raising Committee ReadyFor Any Project to Benefit Domin~can Nuns

"Never estimate the power of a woman"-still less that of 50 women. Members ofSt. Catherine's Fund-Raising Committee, auxiliary of the Dominican Sisters of ParkStreet, Fall River, who staff St. Anne's School, Dominican Academy and St. John's DayNursery, all Fall River, in addition to St. Francis Xavier School, Acushnet,the 50 arecheerfully ready to do any­thing - at all for theirfavorite nuns. Anything hasincluded very successful ba­zaars, mammoth whist parties,fashion shows, sales and sup­pers. "Sure, we'll do it," is theladies' watchword and at thedrop of a soft word from Sister

• Theresa of Jesus, Prioress Crlln­eral of the Sisters, or SisterMary Agnes, moderator of thegroup, they're off on all sorts O!fprojects.

Maybe .rooms at home needpapering or painting or perhapsMrs. Committee Memb'er couldvery well use the time shespends at meetings iIIl otherways but the Sisters come first-and if there's some. fun to behad along the fund-raising routeby way of a whist or supper, 00

much the better.Icing on Cake

That's icing on the cake, butthe committee's real reason forbeing is'summed up in the wordsof Sister Theresa of Jesus: "Ourmain aim is to save souls oichildren."

Prime need of the children i.e

For Good MoviesROTTENBURG (NC)-Catho­

lies prayed here that moviesmight become a means of edu­cation and inspiration instead ofa path to teJ]lptation. The prayerswere part of a "Good FilmSunday" observance requestedby Bishop Karl Leiprecht ofRottenburg, film, adviser to theGennan Bishops' Conference.

Notlre Denne SistersPI«ll8inhm9 Conference

BALTIMORE' (NC) - SchoolSisters of Notre Dame will holdtheir seventh annual educationconference Aug.' 13 to 15 inBaltimore.

Over 1,000 delegates are ex­pected to attend the conference,the community's publicity de­partment here announced. Themeof the conference,. to be held atthe College of Notre Dame, willbe "Personality' Patterns andReligious Life." •

There are about 14,000 SchoolSisters of Notre Dame servingin 16 countries. More than 6,500of these are in provinces in theU. S. and Canada. The commun­ity has schools in 33 states andfour Canadian provinces. Theseprovide for the education ofnearly 275,000 children andyoung adults.

Indiana 'SupremeCourt DecisionFavors Church

INDIANAPOLIS (NC)The Indiana Supreme Courthas ruled unanimously thatthe Indianapolis archdiocesehas a legal and moral rightto construct parish 'property inthe Town of Meridian Hills.

The Supreme Court ruling,ending more than two years oflitigation, upholds a lower decis­ion which ordered the MeridianHills Zoning Board to lift itsrestriction on the proposed con­struction of St. Luke's parishbuildings within the corporatelimits of the exclusive MarionCounty suburb.

Cites Three PointsThe Supreme Court judges em­

phasized "The purpose of zoninglaws is not to protect private,personal interest, but rather toprotect and promote the generalpublic interest."

The high court noted three im­portant facts brought out inearlier judicial proceedings:

1) That the St. Luke's parishbuildings were to be constructedon a tract acquired by the arch­diocese in 1948, when only oneresidence existed on the perim­eter of the property.

2) That a large sign was erect­ed on the site clearly indi­cating its future use.

3) That zoning permission hadbeen granted for three otherchurches (two Protestant andone Hebrew) when the arch­diocese's petition was rejected.

Alternate SiteThe Meridian Hills' Zoning

Board contended that the arch­diocese had rejected a so-caned"alternate site" some threeblocks away from the originaltract but outside the town's cor­porate limits. The SupremeCourt replied: "A person maynot be excluded from a zone onthe ground he could find just asgood a site outside the area."

It refused to accept the board'sargument that zoning permissionshould be denied on the groundsthat the existence of the pro­posed parish church and schoolmhtht depress the value of nei­ghboring residt:lnces.

Overriding Is..'1ued"The general public interest

In the moral and intellectual ed­ucation of the young," the judgesdeclared, "far outweighs the pri­vate Interest affected by any de­preciation in neighboring pro­perty values."

They alsp rejected the argu­ment that the "alternate site"would have been more suitablefor the parish buildings becauseit is on a more tr:)veled mainhighway.

"Traffic safety, particularlyfor children," the court stated,"is a matter of general concernand outweighs the private Inter­est involved in a quiet neigh­borhood."

(

Page 16: 02.23.61

16 THE ANCHOR-ThtlTS., Feb. 23, 1961

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Schedules YouthGovernment Day

WASHINGTON (NC)-Catho-'lic youth organizations through­out the country' will observeMarch 18 as the tenth an\,ualYouth Government Day.

Msgr. Joseph-E. Schieder, di­rector of-the Youth Department,National Catholic Welfare Con­ference, said the observance isbeing sponsored by the DiOcesanSection of the National Councilof Catholic' Youth.

On Youth Government Daymunicipal officials will relin­quish their' offices to certain.elected and - appointed youngpersons who will assume au­'thority for one day.

Its purpose iato educate andencourage youth in their moraland civic responsibilities "and todisplay confidence in the a&ilityand character of youth by en­tl'usting to them the directionof local government for one 'day.the. Monsignor explained.

WarnlfJ Red PGaot)'1m Uno\hed Stateg;Has Key 'Role

MIAMI (NC) - The Com­munist party in the U.S....isplaying a key role in, com­munism's 'all-out battle torule the world,. a veteran FBIman warned here.

"The party is operating right .In. the background of the cOun­try which stands today as thestrongest, deterrent to furthercommunist aggression," WilliamC. Sullivan told members of .theDade County Bar Association'and Cuban' jurists in exile. '.

Mr. Sullivan, who has been"with the FBI for 19 years, is

ehief inspector of the bureau'sresearch and analysis sectiondealing with communist sub­version, intelligence and espion-

"age activities. He is a member'of St: Ambrose's parish in Wash- . ~

Ington, D.C. -Two Objectives

Inspector Sullivan said thecommunist battle plan has twoobjectives: to mobilize and ma­nipulate social forces to - bringabout a revolution, and to un­dermine ' the noncommunistworld by exploiting every weak­ness in it. '

"The flexibility of this battleplan." he continued, "is evi­denced by the constant switch­ing of the Communist party;U.S.A. Acting in' effect as theagent of the Soviet Union in theU.S., the party offers its un­devifiting allegiance and sup­port to this foreign power. '

"In every respect of its propa­ganda dealing with internation­al relations, the party line haabeen that all Soviet actions re­veal a" sincere desire for worldpeace while American foreignpolicy is deliberately designedto incite world tensions."

Need Positive ProgramMr. Sullivan said the Commu_

nist "party in the U.S. is tryingto expand its influence by play­ing on Americans' natural de­sire for peace. He added thatthe party is attempting to createa public mentality here hostile'to all internal security programsand national defense efforts..

"The menace of communism,looms large," the FBI inspeC­tor warned. "So large that anyreponse to its challenges whichIs based on misinformation, ­alarmism, extremism or vigi­lante action will do more harmthan good."

"The only effective answer,­Mr. Sullivan said, "lies in along-range, positive programbased on a realistic, rational,analytical appraisal of the ,threatwhich'the communist movementpresents."

~,

Page 17: 02.23.61

..

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Feb. 23, 1961 17

II

.,

[~~-~.~~~.'"~-+~~~.,-,-~>,_.~~.,._.~.".: .-."...;...."'... ', ..

LIFiRARY'S A BUSY SPOT: Students at Mt. St. Mary's Academy,Fall River, are appreciative users of their new library. Left, MaryMcCarthy helps Sister ¥ary Mercy, librarian, in workroom. Center,Dorothy Ruggiero (left) and Ann McDonald choose Civil War books from

display rack. Right, Miss Mildred A. Sullivan, on library duty everymorning, helps Joan Majkut (left) and Patricia Murphy, a library aide,with book selection. Students receive instruction in use of the libraryfacilities beginning in the ninth grade.

,,...

••

New Bedford

E.W.GOODHUElumber Co. Inc.

Middleboro Road. Route 18

EAST FREETOWN

O' Please send literature

o Have salesman call at ...obligation.

Name ...

Address : ..

City _

Georgetown U. PlansTo Increase Tuition

WASHINGTON (NC)-A $200­a-year increase in tuition will beput into effect for the nextschool year at Georgetown Uni­versity.

Father Edward B. Bunn, S..1.,president, said the increase willapply to all undergraduateschools in which tuition now is$900 a year. He said the increasewas made necessary by sharplyrising educational costs .

Tel. WY 6-8271640 Ploasant Street

SHELL "Premium" Heating OilsFamous Reading HARD COAL, ~~ne~

NEW ENGLAND COKE =!i:§~V.,v 0.&DADSON OIL BURNERS ~i:!e' ~~

24-Hour Oil Burner Service =~ SHEU 0 ="_.;J,'C Il ~a,-_'Charcoal Briquets ~ ~~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~"'.......,~ _:......,'~

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Fall River, New BedfordCape Cod Area

AceD':AERO MAYFLOWERTRANSIT CO. INC.Nation-wide Moven

WYman 3-0904304 Kempton ·St. New Bedford

and piles of books awaitingprocessing.

. Aides HelpFive library aides chosen from

the student body are a big help r----------~lto Sister and Mis1I c:!'lllivan. They I in today's '1replace books on shelves, do Isome circulation work a,nd as-sist with clerical cl"tqits. I smartest ,

Tile library looks in very I . '1good shape now, but Sister I home s IMary Mercy has ambitious ph'''~ I. ••• .for its future. It will. become an L I"instructional materials cen- --------ter" with the addition of audio- --,. ...,._./11visual' facilities to its books .. "-Iperiodicals; and Sister alsowants to stre,,-~'-~" ",., period- _-~----ricaLs section with the <ldditiO'l1of professional magazines ineach field of study at the acad-emy, as well as the '-''''n of •

~~~~~;. matter .for faculty you'll findAccommodations ~~et librarylIA .~0..

spec.ifications .in that there's a. ~tAw.· r 'seatmg capacity r>f I'll, ample C;"for a ~t'l.nent body of some 460. .Current ''1terests are .. --'~d KIT C HEN.in book displays. At the mom- -Amerlcs'.· most envied kitchen.·ent, Civil War books are in thespotlight, this being the centen­nial year of the conflict.

Serves Mount St. .Mary'sCu.rre~t,Guidance Books

DRY CLEANINGand

FUR STORAGE

DERMODYCLEANERS

~ Electrical~ Contractors

~at~r

34-44Cohannet StreetTaunton VA. 2-6161

944 County St.New Bedford

The room is open from 7:30in the morning until 4:30 in theafternoon, with an additionalsession' from 7 to 8:30 at night,particularly -fCYl' the benefit ofseniors working on researchpapers. .0

Sister Mary Mercy got 3lIl

early start in library work; act­ing as an aide 'in the N~w Bed­ford public library during -highschool days. She ,-~" "~':o'~n

the past few Summers to worktowards a master's degree inlibrary science at MarywoodCollege, Scranton.

Also guidance counselor atMt. St. Mary's, she has a com­plete reference section on' col­lege and career op---'nriitiesavailable to students. She feelsthat guidance and librarywork "dovetail perfectly," andcarries on much of her guidancework in the library itself.

Miss Sullivan" is on libraryduty from 9 to 12 each mo~n;ng,

helping a steady stream of stu­dents in the location of booksand information and also get­tingthrough a mountain of ac­cessioning and proeessin~. Fewlaymen realize .,,~ ~~""'1t ofwork that goes into ·th n ~~("-'ara­

tion of a library book for itsplace on the shel~ and the twoworkrooms at the Mour t librarybear silent witness to this with 'their shelves of materials

Write to:

P O. Box 5742Baltimore 8. Md.

TrinitarianFathers

BOYS WANTED for thePriesthood and Brotherho'oo.Lack ot funds NO impedi­ment.

Itolian Prelates PlanLenten Broadcasts

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Ital­ian bishops and cardinals willtake part in this year's tradi­tional cycle of 46 Lenten broad-,casts over Vatican Radio.

The series' theme is "Chris­tianity in the Doctrine of St.Paul" in honor of the 19th cen­tenary of the Apostle's arrivalin Rome.

The bishops will broadcastdaily throughout Lent with theexception of Holy Week, duringwhich seven cardinals willdeliver sermons that will alsobe carried by the' Italian radionetwork. ~

Beautiful LibraryWith Reference,

By Patricia McGowan"We can hardly recognize our old auditorium!" That's what s,tudents at Mt. St.

Mary's Academy, Fall River, are saying about their beautiful library. It's been remodeledfrom what used to be the assembly hall, since the academy's new wing, opened for usein September, includes an up to date auditorium. The library has a well-stocked refer­ence section, workrooms for'librarians and' aides, shelveswith &, capacity of 10,000books and, & unique touch,an eyrie destined to become aprofessional library for facultymembers. It's been 'remodeledfrom the auditorium balconyand affords a secluded spot fQrteachers, accessible from second'floor doors or by a stairwayfrom the main library floor.

Most important of the library)assets are its energetic. librarian,Sister Mary Mercy, R.S.M., andher invaluable assistant, MissMildred A. Sullivan, veteran ofdecades of experience. in theFall River Public Library, whereshe was at first in the children'sroom and later supervisor of theopen shelf department.

Mount students learn how touse their lO"ely library as soonas they arrive at the academy.Sister Mary Mercy conductsweekly library guidance classesfor ninth graders and this guid­ance continues on ah indiv!-l'Jalbasis throughout high schoolyears.

Refuse to Cut TaxesOf Contemplatives

LONDON (NC) - An attemptIn Parliament to obtain tax re­licf lor cloistcred communitiesof contemplative monks andnuns has failed.

The 50 per cent relief in local~xes was proposed by Majorp'atrick Wall as an amendmentto a propcrty bill already ac­ccpted in gcneral outline by theHousc of Commons. ·Maj. Wall, aCatholic and a member of theruling Consel'vative party, with­drcw thc amendment when it en­countel'cd firm government op­position.

In moving the amendment- hepointed out that since contem­plative ol'del's existeor prayer"they cannot be deemed char­ities or organizations for the ad­vancement of rcligion," since theuse of prayer in such work can­Dot be proved iD law.

German BishopsAsk BackwardNations Help

BONN (NC) - The Bish­ops 'of Germany have sent ajoint appear to the' nation'sCatholics for their thirdannual Lentcn collection forunderdevcloped countries.

Their pastoral letter noted that·our people, the state and theeconomy are constantly takingmore account of the duty to giveunselfish assistance to sufferingnations."

The two previous Lenten col­lections lor the German Bishops'little Point FOUl' Plan brought in• total of $18,750,000.

Great HelpThe Bishops reported that

these funds had built 41 agricul­tUl'al training centers, 26 voca­tional schools, 94 hospitals andmedical stations, 16 nursingschools and 23 schools of domes­tic science, all in underdevel­oped countries. The funds alsowcre used to help thousands ofvictims of Hansen's disease (lep­rosy) in India, Brazil, Africa,Korea, Vietnam and the Philip­pines.

"Despite all these efforts, ourgifts are no lcss urgent for theneed is growing more rapidlythan measures of assistance tomeet it," the- Bishops said.

StarvationH Almost 40 million people are

.till dying every year fromstarvation. Two-thirds of all per­sons born do not live to reachtheir 30th year."

The Bishops said they had re­ceived 1,200 calls for help fromthroughout the world, and that$60 million would be needed toanswer them all.

' .. &.- •.-....a.. .... "'t t l' ~·~E .... '!I.1._.L ,. ..... - •

Page 18: 02.23.61

I

/

17 in the church hall.Members are asked to donate

dish towels for the hall kitchen..Next regular meeting has been

changed to Tuesday, Mar. 21 be­cause the original date wouldconflict with the Yarmouth townmeeting.ESPIRITO SANTO,FALL RliVER

The CYO unit will hold aWhist Party Saturday n-ight at7:30 in the Parish Hall. JoanneLeandro, Inez' Dion, RichardPavao and Robert Lopes are inchar.ge. ,ST. .MARY'S,MANSFIELD

The February meeting of theWomen's Club was highlightedby a two-scene sketch about awinter weekend. Over 100 mem.-bers attended. .OUR LADY OF GRACE,NORTH' WESTPORT

Members. of the Women'.Guild are asked to contributearticles fQr,. a layette to 'be

,'donated to Westport Nurses'Associatio!, and also cannedgoods for a May Basket Whist. .

Next regular meeting is set forI Tuesday night~ March 7. A

, motion picture on the priesthoodwill be shown.

Stop .. Shop gi-.Top Y... SIam".r ' '

,will hold a potluck supper andsilent auction Tuesday, Mar. 21.,Mrs. ,Bella Travossos is supperchairman and ·Mrs. Lilian Laforceis in charge of the auction.

A Communion breakfast willfollow 8 o'clock Mass Sundaymorning, Feb. 26 and parishion­ers will participate in the FortyHours devotion beginning Sun­day, Mar. 5.

Next regular meeting of thewomen's council will be heldTuesday, Mar. 14. Easter basketsfor elde,rly people will be made.

The Children of Mary Sodalitywill hold a skating party at 6:30tomorrow,night at Lincoln Park.Busses will leave from the cor-'ner of Canal and ColumbiaStreets at 6. '

Members will attend the open­ing of 40 Hours devotion at 11o'clock Mass Sunday morning,·Mar..5. Plans are also made toattend a showing of "Pilate's'Daughter" ,and a mother-daugh­ter banquet is scheduled forSunday, lYIay 14:

ST. PIUS X,SOUTH YARMOUTH

Mrs. Bernard Shea and Mrs.Walter Wright are co-chairmenof a St. Patrick's Day' supper to~e,held from 5 to 7 Friday, Mar.

The Parish Parade

••• an extra touch that makesshopping nil!refun at Stop&: Sh,op

Your Recipe-of-the-Weekin ,our m,eat case

, I)reaming up 365 .dinners a year is no cinch - and this year it'.3661 ,So to help,you plan all those'main meal. for your fa~i1y, thefriendly folks at Stop & Shop provide a taste-teasing new Susan-Shaw meat recipe every week,- free! 'Easy to pick' up. and takehome with your meat purchase -' corivenient card-file size 80 'you,can put it away for future use._Look for it in the special holderright on the Stop 85 Shop meatcasel 'Your Susan Shaw meatrecipe-of-the-w~kis "another elf­tra touch that makes shoppingmore fun at Stop 85 S~opl,

'0

Fashoon Show

Opposes Tax' FundsFor Private Schools

AUGUSTA (NC) - The MaineCouncil of Churcl1es (Protestant)has reaffirmed its full supportof use of public funds for publicschools and opposition of use of '"sw:h funds for private schools,

Dean Mervin M, Deems of theBangor Theological Seminarystated the policy at the bienniallegislative meeting of the coun­cil's committee on socialeduca­tion and action, The council rep­resents seven denominat.ionswhich have some' 100,000, mem­bets in Maine.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Feb. 23, 196118

Family CommunionWORCESTER (NC) ~ The

Worcester Diocesan Council ofCatholic Men and 'the' DiocesanGuilds of the Holy FamilyLeague of Charity distributedmore than 180,000 prayer leaf­lets here encouraging <'levotion'to the Holy Family' and regularFamily Comilluniona.

Urg~~ ~pp~icaticn~f EquityTo ~@M~~ta~~ 'Afld QMe~tBCIT1) ST., PATRICK, '

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, p.D. WAREHAM, ' Bishop of Reno Officers of the Rosary and

The Lord Chancellor, in the venerahle tradition of Altar Society for' the comingv year are: Mrs. Robert ,Parece,English jurisprudence, was the "keeper of the King's president; "Mrs. Herman Prada,conscience." Poor St. Thomas More had his work cut out secretary; Mrs. Helen McGrath,for him when it came to keeping the co'nscience of Henry treasurer; and Rev. James W.

. Clark, advisor. The next meetingVIII~ but the case was ad-' For the fact of the matter, not is scheduled, for Monday nightmittedly extreme. The Chan- recognized in existing or pro- at which Father Clark willcellor's task, actually, was to posed legislation on the subject, 'speak on the subject, "Is Ourexercise the principles of the is that the American school sys- Co u n t r'y Becoming Morally

tem is not a monolithic structure Weak." The meeting will closelaw in instances not specificallyincluded in its general formula- ba"sed upon the universality of with a film on Zachaeus entitledtion. the ,public school. ' ''No Greater Power."

Since law, for It'includes the whole congeries The Schola Cantor~m, underall its majesty, of private, and 'church-related ,the direction of Domild LeBlanc.sonly a human sc!lools, established and rriain- is rehearsing each week in prep~instrument, it is tained for good and sufficient aration for Holy Week cere-inevitable that reasons by American citizens. monies and the Easter services.there should be The legal right.of such schools, The executive board of theapplications not to exist and to operate has not......CCD discussed the Encyclical oftouched by its been' successfully challenged, Pope Pius XIl~ "Mystici Cor-explicit pres- though attempts have been made poris."

cr' !·ptl·ons. These in this direction and there areth

' ., . . . The 'Parish .CYO Board ofinvolved the ose who would' willingly re-peat them. '. . ' Directors_ and officers in the,Conscie.nce of company of Father Clark attend-"Le K'l'ng as the It has not yet, however, beenW1 'd I to th . - ed the, Departure ceremony ofsupreme ,lawgiver, for otherwise rna e c ear e mmds of most'rights would be injured and jus- Americans that these' schools ~ ;:;~:~~ ~~rS~:r~~esSocietytice unfulfilled. This is the field function as an integral part, of,known as equity. the general educationatsystem 'SANTO CHRISTO,

Three ccnturiesbefore our era ,of. the country and are entitled FALL RIVERAristotle defined equity as ~'the to those benefits designed to pro- The Colirlcil of Catholic Womellcorrection of the law where it mote the general welfare. ,Theis defective by reason, of .its, law, therefore, sins by omission..universality." This correction is ' '; Eq'uity Is Basisnothing arbitrary; it.corresponds It is upon the basis of equityto thel principles of right and that the effort must be made tojustice -found in the law itself, correct the 'law in order to se­and which only fail, of applica-., cure rights, and justice for thetion because the particular in- millions of American youth whost~nce was not clearly or' spe- are the pupils of these schools.c:ifically forseen by its framers. Injustice' is being done and is

It would be well, certainly, for further contemplated; rights are'the law to envision, all instan:ces denied and there- is clear indi­and all particulars, but in fact cation ofa continued denial ofthi~ is rarely if ever don'e and them.' , ,would make' the law so' bulky The appeal must, be from theand cumbersome as to be' im- conscicnce 'of' America less in':' ,practical. formed or' actually uninformed',, So it is that equity is a ,pe~:.. to an enlightened 'conscience

inari'ent 'and necessary part· ,of alive to 'the realities of the' situa­tlie whole scienc'e of jurispru-' Han and the injustices ·iiwolved.dence, involving 'much more It is not likely that this willthan the tough 'or tender consc-' come overnight'; equity ·i~typio­ience of 'a medieval monarch.' It ally a slo)'l process, whether in.mvolves today, in modern Amer- the conscience, of a' king Ocin.ka for' example,' the conscience the, consci¢nce of' a people. Butof the sovereign 'people, it has a way of catching up witb.. Now this is a dull an,d pedan.:. the, law.tic statement of ,a 'principle of Rcveals' PrejUdicedirect pertinence to the question There is no questio'n but thatof federal or state aid to educa- the law by its omissions reveals'tion. As it is written 'or in pro- a prejUdice. This is based UpOIlcess 'of being writen the law the supposition that aid to pri- ­tends to ignore the rights of' a V!lte or denominational schoolsvery large minority of. the' na- would constitute, in soin~ sense,

'!ion's youth. . an "establishment of religion,"It does, this because it only and thus subvert the Constitu­

specifies as the recipients of this - tion.aid those who are enrolled in It could be argued that the ex­the so~'called"public" schools and clusive assistance 'of public edu­omits reference to those who are cation promotes the effectualnot. establishment of secularism as

This actually carries the threat the American religion, an objec­of a discrimination as dangerous tive equally abhorrent 'to theto ihe welfare of the nation as spirit of that instrument.a' wpole as any other kind of Both arguments, however, missdiscrimination, not excluding the point at issue. For this is thethat which is based upon racial right of all American youth to

. share in benefits designed forpr~judice.

the general welfare;the right ofWorthwhile Objectives parents, who are also taxpayers,

The root purpose of such legis-' to determine the educational~tion in aid of education is the 'framew~rkof their children.bettel:ment of the nation as an Conscience Dormant

. e~tity. It is intended to strength- Once again, it is a question ofen the educational .system in equity. There is notping in allsuch wise as to produce a bet- th' hter informed and more mature ,1st at would subvert the prin-

ciples of the law 'or defeat· itstype of Americ;m citizen for to- real intent. Its specific applica­morrow's needs. tion needs to be' clarified so thatIf it looks to physical improve- it may operate for the benefit of

ment in the way of health serv- ,all" not of a favored part.ices and plant facilities, it has It is our firm faith that thein v.:iew a program ,of matet'ial conscience of America in thiswelfare, .If it looks to curricu- matter is not dead but only dol'o.lum and teaching services, it has manto When it is aroused it willin view a more advanced intel- do justice and render judgn'!ent, -lectual product. as it walks solicitously with itS

These are eminentiy worth- God. ' ' ,,''while objectives so ·far ,as they /'go. But it ought to be maniLe,stthat they can be achieved only

I if they advance the interests ofall Amel'icans, not just a part ofthem. There is a discrepancyher.e between law and equitywhich demands correction.

Page 19: 02.23.61

19

Aaw:ma~Plan.BOSTON

, OCEANPORT, N. J.PAWTUCKET, R. L

PRINTERSMaID 0ffIee aad P....

LOWELL, MASS.

'J.1eIepboue LoweR"

GL '-MIa &tid GL 7-'1.

Casey-Sexton,Inc.

NO .108 100 110 '­

NONE 100 SMAU.

SULLIVAN BROS.

••• CleanseJ:s •••94 TREMONT STREET

TAUNTON, MASS.TeO. VAndyke 2-0621 '

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., feb. 23, 1961

-Father ~ey~on

Ttravels ~W .netAwo"n©! W@(f'~d

LOS ANGELES (NC)Fr. Patrick Peyton, C.S.C.,touched down here, homefrom Chile but enroute toCaracas by way of Manila andHong Kong.

The Holy Cross priest, tele­scoping the delays of time andspace, has geared the timelessmessage of the Rosary to jetspeed.

In both Asia and South Am­erica he is having preliminarytalks with' the Hierarchy forconducting his Fami' , RosaryCrusade which has taken him to20 nations on five continents inthe past 19 years.

In Chile, he reported, attend­ance at the crusade rallies in 23cities totalled 1,300,000-a - fifthof the na1ion's population.'''Chile's beautiful response I

credit to the intervention of theBlessed Mother," he said. ''Icannot, but be optimistic' ~boutLatin America after what I haveseen."

Door-to-Door PledgesThe crusade in Chile, he saId,

was marked by participation ofall social classes. In Santiagoalone 80,000 men were enlistedto solicit Rosary pledges doOO'­to-door.

The crusade took 15 month!of work, inclUding seven monthsof travel to 23 cities from thenorth of Chile to Punta Arenallat the tip of South Americaabove the Strait of Magellan.

Father Peyton said the multi­tudes came in rain and chill.They stQod fast and refused topanic even when the earth vio-

, lently quaked under them -as itdid in Talca on May 2~ at S p.m.

Greatest in History" ,Father, Peyton brought with

him a copy of the internationalSupplement of the ValparaisoUnion which was devoted to re­porting the ~rusade.

The paper' said editoriallythat the Rosary rallies had sur;'passed any previous publicgatherings in the history' ofChile.

"Neither promises nor pro­grams by politicians had drawmsueh numbers as came to hearFather Peyfon, - knowing thathe oflered them nothing ma-terial," the paper said. '

WM. T. MANNING (0.WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

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142 Campbell St. 'New Bedford, MOH.

WYman 9-6792HEADQUARTERS FOR

COLONIAL ANDTRADITIONAL FURNITUIE

Papers to SponsorBasketball Festival

NEW YORK (NC)-A basket­ball festival featuring local CYOand high' school players andnationally known college starswill be held Saturday, April 8at Fordham University' underthe sponsorship of the Tablet andthe Catholic News.

The proceeds will benefit theCatholic Youth Organization andthe foreign missions. The Tabletis the newspaper of the Brooklyn

,diocese and the Catholic Newllserves the New York archdiocese.

Apostolic DelegateTo Ordain Seven

BAY ST. LOUIS (NC)-Arch­bilshop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apos­tolic Delegate to the United

, States, will ordain seven Societyof the Divine Word missionarieshere in Mississippi on May 4.

Five Negroes in the class willmake it the largest group of­Negro priests ordained at thesame time in this country, FatherROQert C. Hunter, S.V.D., thecommunity's provincial said.

R. A. WILCOX CO.OFF.ICE FURNITURE

AID FOR CONGO: Msgr. 'wilson E. Kaiser, permanentrepresentative to Africa for Catholic Relief Services-NCWC,is seeking ways and means of setting up food and healthprograms in both Oriental and Equator provinces, whichcontain th.ousands of starving and diseased tribesmen. NCPhoto.

Sacred CongreggtionExamines W,itings

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Thebeatification process of an Italianwoman who would 'still be in herforties if she were alive has beenmoved a step forward by theSacred Congregation of Rites.

The congregation examinedthe writings of Gabriella _Seg­heddu, who died in 1939 at theage of 25. Active for severalyears in Italian Catholic Action,she had entered a Cistercian con­vent before her death.

American Missioners RestoringOld Colonial Churches in Peru

JULI (NC)-"Are you the pas- phase will be the repair - oftOl' of this pile of rubble?" a pass- altars, Communion rails, bap­ing tourist asked Fatner James tisteries, and finally, the restora­O'Brien, M.M., of Cambridge, tion of religious art.Mass. a few years ago. "To the practical American, it'To~ay the tourisf would be would seem more appropriate at'

amazed to see the four-century- first glance, to erect completelyold "pile of rubble" as it pnce neVI church~s rflther than to re~again regains its original gran- construct dilapidated old ones,deur as St. Peter's cathedral. Father O'Brien said.

"But when you think of theErect~d as a ca~hedral.bY the _ effort that has gone into build~

conquermg Span~ards 1D the ing these monuments to theearly 1500s, th~ church crumbled Christian faith and the richnessinto ruins throug~ neglect and _ of the art work, you realize thatthe absen<;e of priests for cen- these churches are a vital link inturies. To~ay, St..Pete~'s has ~e- the spiritual heritage of Latincome a pilot pr?J~ct In a drl~e Americans."by Maryknoll mISSioners h~r~ In Many of the churches haveP~ru to restore t~e orlgmal been declared national monu­~eau~y of th~ col~mal churches ments and their restoration illIn thiS sky-hlg.h. d~ocese border- being guided by technicians pro-jug on Lake Tltlcaca. vided by the government.

"The project will be a longand expensive one," FatherO'Brien said. "At present there .,are a dozen churches in the'dio­cese undergoing exhaustive ren­o""ation to make them fit placesof worship."

Link in HeritageThe first phase of repair work

consists of providing new roofs, 'floors, windows, and in, somemore advanced projects, the in­stallation of pews. The second

Mass for SkatersWASHINGTON (NC)-A Mass

in memory of the United Statesfigure skating team which waskilled in ,the crash of a Belgianjet airliner near Brussels waaoffered in St. Matthew's Cathe­dral here at th ~ request of Cath­olic members of the WashingtonFigue Skating Club.

WANTED: OTHER SHEPHERDESSESMight not Christ, the Good Shepherd, be calling l'OU to

Bis Th~ViSrsTters Servanta of the Immaculate Beart -0( Maryaerve the divine Shepherd of Bouls in the following tieldB:Teaching, Social Work, NUl'Sing, Foreign Miaslo.... Domestie

Wor~..?e'::n~e~~"u.:rrit;~ovin.lnI.Provincial Bouso ., .,Good Shepherd, Boy View. Saoo, Malne.

Men's Council PlansBiennial Convention

PITrSBURGH (NC) - Ar­rangements for the 1961 bienni­al convention of the NationalCouncil of Ca'tholic' Men beingheld here from May 4 to 7 werecompleted at a dinner meeting.

Theme will be "The ApostolicLaymen: New Responsibilities inChristian Unity." It was selectedbecause of the ecumenical coun­cil and its stress on unity. Con­vention representatives wi 11study what U. S. Catholic lay­men can' do for the cause 01.Christian unity. In Sloe" for Immedlat. D.II9....,

Members of the NCCW exec- • DESKS • CHAIRSutive committee decided on four FILING CABINETS'general subjects as the main.topics for address; panel discus- • FIRE FILE$, ( • SAFESsions and workshops. They are: FOLDING TABLESthe spiritual basis for Christian . AND CHAIRSunity; Christian .unity in' a R A WILCOX COchanging community; the public • _., •image of the Church-a means 22 BEDFORD ST.to Christian unity,and Christian FAll RIVER 5.7838

uni~ and pre~Ud~i:ce:.~__~_~============~

Latin America GetsClergy From Spain

MADRID (NC)-Marcello Car­dinal Mimmi, president, of the'Holy See's commission for Latin.America, ha.s praised Spanishefforts to relieve Latin Amer­ica's shortage of priests~ , '

His letter to Archbishop Casi­miro Morcillo Gonzalez of Sara­gosa, founder and president ofthe Organization for PriestlyCooperation with Latin America,was occasioned by l:I nationwide"Day for PriesUy Vocations toLatin America."

Archbishop Morcillo's organ­Ization has sent more than 400priests to Latin America sinceit was founded 12 years ago. Atpresent Spain maintains fourseminaries which se,rve exclu­sive for the training of priestsfor South America.

Catholic Teams in Tourney;Tech Starts Next Week

By Jack JKillleavy ,High school basketball is set to go once again after having

enjoyed a week's respite from formal competition. Onevital contest remains in Bristol County play, the stormpostponed clash between league leading Fairhaven and the

third place J)urfee Hilltop- in there through adversity'. Suc­pers. Affected by the ou~ cessive defeats brought disap­come will be the current run- pointment, naturally, but desirenerup Attleboro which has was never dulled nor attitude re­concluded its regular season. fracte~. The victory o~er North

The game will be played to- Attleboro. was a long' tIme com-morrow night ing bu.t It couldn't h~ve beenat the Fall River more. tI~ely or .rewardmg.Armory and the ThiS IS a c~uClal week for Bos-SRO sign is ex- ton, College s ice squad. The

ected to go up Eagles ta~kle St. Lawre~ce to-~arlY. A Durfee morrow mght, then shuttle over

i to y will re- to Troy, N. Y. for a Saturdayv ~t ~ a three night date with Rensselaer Poly-~a y n deadlock tech, the East's No: 1 rated team..f BCL honors A sweep would virtually assure;:irhaven of B. C. of an N.C.A.A. berth. Keyc 0 u r s e,' will. game is ~he St. Lawrence setto.take the title it The Larrles are 15-3 on the sea-outright if it can get by Durfee son; B.C. ill 16-3-1.n second time. The Bll\es knocked Easter Tourneythe Hilltoppers from the un- Foremost among the many hoop_beaten ranks last week, 60-41. tourneys that close out theWinter, It was a tQugh week for Coach season is the Annual Easter Di-

, Tom Karam and his Durfee, club ' ocesan CYO Basketball Tourneywhich had despatched seventeen which for the third succeSsivestraight opponents before drop- year will be staged at CYO .Hallping two straight· to Fairhaven on Anawan Street, Fall River.and Attleboro. The latter was a Once again the colorful compe­sudden death affair Charley tition will be sponsored by theGrochmal caging iwo free Catholic Men's Club of St.throws to give the Jewelers a Mary's, Fall River. Paul Bork­61-59 edge. Thus, Durfee, after man who so capably adminsteredleading the parade through the the 56 team program la~t yearinitial six weeks now finds it- will serve as Tourney Director.self the underdog going into the, Invitations to participate havefinal and title-deciding game. been sent out to all parishes of

Holy Family swings into action the ~iocese together wi.tb thetomorrow night in- ClaSs B com- oUiclal rules and regu;latIons ofpetition of the Catholic tourney ~e. ~ourney. The~e Will be t~oat Lawrence, Mass. At,this writ- dlvlslo.ns. The semor group Willing, the pairings in the lower comprIse those 18 years of. ageclasses have not been made since or ~nder as of Jan. 1, 1961, theseveral berths are still pending. Jumors, tho~ 15 or under as ofHost school Lawrence Central, the same date. All pla!ers mustqualified for both the Catholic be from ~he same. parish. T.hoseand Tech tournaments, will de- ~ng~ged. ~ the Diocesan Fmalsfend its A laurels after having are mehglble.made the charmed circle by win- The entry deadline is Sunday,Ding three of its last four games. March 12. Ent~ies should be ad-

Tech QUBlifiers dressed to Director Paul Bork-- man in care of CYO, Anawan

01. little help to Central in Its Street, Fall River. It is antiC!-tourna~ent quest was New Bed- pated that the enrollment in thisford High which took both ends year's tourney will exceed theof a home ~nd home series from record _breaking total of 56 thatthe Parochlals. Coach Stan Gra- took part in the 1960 competi.­biec's Crimson will take a fine tion. On hanl to defend their re­15.-3 record in~ Tech where .they spective titles will be HolyWill join Fa~rhaven, Attleb~ro Name in the Senior division and­and Durfee In. Class A.. ~all- O.L.O.A. in the Junior. Both hailhaven went on to the se~lflnals, from New Bedford.a year ago. Durfee, back In post On the awards side of, theseason play after a o.ne y,ear ab- ledger, there will be trophiesscence, will be making Its 17th galore. Team trophies will beappearance since 1945, awarded to the first and second

Rep reS e n t i nlg So~theast- place teams in each division andern Mass. in Class C of Tech will the members of these teams willbe Narry champion Somerset e a c h receiye an individualand runnerup Holy Family. Per- trophy. In addition there areennial entry Oliver Ames of awards for the Most ValuableNorth Easton, also, has qualified. Player, tbe Most Sportsmanlike,Somerset by the way, completed and the Best Individual Perform­its reguiar season' undefeated, ance in a single game. Players.the first time that has been done selected for All-Star status- willin the school's basketball history. receive.lndividual plaques.Our congratulations to CoachSherm Kinney and his boys fora job well done; ,

A word of commendation, also,to Coach John O'Brien and hisCoyle team for their unflaggingefforts in the frustrating seasonjus t ,concluded. Handicappedfrom the outset by a ,lack ofheight, the Warriors' chances forsuccess were minimal in a leagueof Bristol County's calibre. Yetthe boys and their coach hung

Page 20: 02.23.61

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2'0 THE ANCHOR- St. Anthony' of Padl.lll,,--- Fall Ri'ver, Offshoo.tThurs., Feb. 23, 1961

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA CHURCH

Kennedy AssertsAmerica ReliesO~ Faith in God

WASHINGTON (NC)President Kennedy says noman entering the office heholds "can fa.il to recognizehow every president in our ·his­tory has placed special relianceon faith in God.". "Those who were strongest in­tellectually," he has observed,"were also strongest spiritually."

. The Chief Executive empha-. siaed "the gu~ding principle ofAmerica is now, and has alwaysbeen and shall ever be, 'In God'We Trust'."

The President stressed the im­portance of religious convic­tions in talks to nearly 1,000government o:fficials attendingthe ninth annual "PresidentialPrayer Breakfast."

Source of Wisdom"While our Presidents came

from a wide variety of religious. b~ckgrounds," the Presidentpointed out, "each of them real-'ized his need for guidance andstrength from God.

"Today our nation faces a newtime of trial. And again we mustreach beyond ourselves to thesource of ultimate courage andinfinite wisdom.

"I see no reason· why the ser-,vants of the communist systemshould be marked by a disciplineand a strong conviction of ulti­mate success of their cause.

Recalls Balloting"We believe that our cause is

just, that ultim~tely it, will be ,successful. But it can only besuccessful if we demonstrate ourstrong conviction.....in it."

Vice President Lyndon John..,son reminded the ·group that theUnited States has in recentmonths "reexamined and re-~'affirmed the' principle of sepa­ration of Church and. Stat~.~', '

Commends Kennedy.. "We cherish this principle," h~ "

said, "a'nd it has no stronger de­fender than the man who sitshere with"Us this morning asPresident of the United States.", He 'ai:lded that separation does

not mean "separation' 'of relig­ioUs values from the affairs ofstate." .

German Protest -.. MUNICH (NC)...,...The admiiJ.i9­trator of the Catholic Archdio­cese of Munich has protestedagainst the refusal of East Ber-'lin's communist authorities toallow this year's'· all':'GermanProtestant synod to meet in East,Berlin.

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Bishops o~. Poland HitFilm as B~~$phemous

BERLIN (NC) -A spokesmanfor the Catholic Bishops ofPoland has denounced a govern­ment-approved movie as blas­phemous, antireligious andslanderous, it was reported here. '

The film, entitled "Motherloanna of the Angels," centersaround a priest's attempts toexorcise demons from 'an isolated'community of nuns in medievalFrance. The outcome is that thepriest himself'becomes possessed.The movie opened in Warsaw'$IIlid great publicity.