03.16.61

20
Joseph E. Fernandes 0/ Norton to Serve As Diocesan Charities Appeal Chairman faU River, Mass., Thursday, March 16, 1961 © 1961 The Anchor PRICE tOe $4.00 por Yoar Socond Class Mail Prlvilegos Authorlud at Fait Rlv'or, Mass. Yolo 5, No. 11 The ANCHOR An Anohor of the Soul, S'Uh'8 and FiNn-ST. PAUL SISTER MARY URBAN. R.SM. ... -. ... -- .... - ......... - ..-1"'. .". ':" ' : !. uate of Saint Xavier's Academy. Providence; received her A.B. from Providence and' her M.S. from Catholic Uni- versity, Wasliington, D.C, Sister tOok further' courses in Guid- ance Counseling at Fordham . Uriiversity, New York. She has Rhode Island State certification in . Engli:sh, guidance, and lIb- . Sister Mary Ul"ban holds mem- bership in the Catholic Library . Association, American Library Association, New England Asso- cia.tion of Teachers of 'English. American Guidance and Per- sonnel Association, and Rhode Island School Library Associa- tio'n, ROOde Island Guidance and Personnel Association. Always interested in reading. Sister has organized Develop- ment Reading at Bay View. She was instrumental in establishing the La,rge Group Instructio4 program. in English and Ameri- can literature there. The excel- lently equipped library at . Turn to Page Eighteen for admissiOft to the private diocesan and parochial high schools in the diocese far outnumber the places. available for students seeking. Catholic secondary edu- cation. . A spot check today-following the recent entrance examinations -brought a unanimous report from the principals in the many high schools that more boys 'and giris are; applying for admi$siOR than there are places avai1l1ble. . the reason for 'en- trance. examinations we' are giv- ing," said the principal of one of the high schools.'"We would be delighted if we could' accept every boy and girl but we just Turn 0 Eighteen Ap plic·a .. n·ts Outnumber F a.cilities Cardinal Desires Congress Be Fair In School Aid NEW YORK (NC) Francis Cardinal Spellman - said here that since "equitable alternatives" are available to Congress to aid private education, a program that overlooks nonpublic sch 00 Is would be "a grave injustice." The Archbishop of New York stressed ,that t.he choice of a specific program is for the dis- cretion. of Congress. . But he' said that a program of .Federal aid that would give benefits to children in private and church-related schools equal to those. for ,children in public schools without Violating .the Constitution "would seem to be· Turn to Page Seventeen. ANNIVERSARY YEAR: A "Patrician Year" will be.- gin tomorrow to mark the 15th centenary of the death of the great bishop and saint who first saw Ireland as a slave and returned to ' win' it for Christ. He died in 461. NC Photo. . Dispensation The Most Reverend Bishop . has granted a dispensation from faSt and abstinence for tomor- row, March 11, Patrick'lJ' . .Vocation Masses The Most Reverend Bishop will celebrate Pontifical High Masses for Vocations at 10 A.. M;onMonday in Notre Dame Church, Fall River: on Tues- daT in St. Anthony of Padua Church, New Bedford; and on Wednesday in Mary's Church, Taunton. Most Reverend J. p.D., Bishop of Fan River and this 'year's Episcopal Chairman of theamiual' Catholic Charities Appeal, announced today · that Joseph E. Fernandes of St. Mary's parish, Nortori, general' manager of the eight- stor-e· Fernandes Super Market Chain, will be this lay chairman Of the appeal. which will be held in May . '.' Sisters.. · of' Mercy Name niversary in the episcopate. ... 'I· Alb . Mr. Fernandes, who"attended rrlllCllia In tt e oro Norton schools and graduated r from Boston University College t M U b R SM' the 1 . too' of' Business Administration:.in 18 er ary. ran, ..; 18 new y appom · 1947, 'opened his .first super principal of Bishop Feehan High School; Attleboro, it was 'market the same year in Norton. announced today by Mother Mary Helena, R.S.M., Mother He is a pioneer in. the construc- Provincial of the Sisters of Mercy of tM of · tion of super markets in rural Providence. Sister is at pres- 'Norton man;s' eight mar- ent librarian at Saint Mary's ketS do an annual business of 23 Academy, Bay View. Highly million dollats.· Additionally, qualified, Sister is a grad- through Fernandes Realty Cor-' · poration, he has been 'responsible .for the develop1Uent of shopping : centers adjacent to his marketS in .Brockton, Walpole and Ran- dolph. The 'Charities chairman hi Turn to .Page Twelve . CHARITIES APPEAL CHAIRMAN AND FAMILY: Joseph E. Fernandes· of Norton · will·be lay chairman of the 1961 Charities Appeal. The bus'inessmall is (left to right), Joseph WOf Mrs. l\1arcia Fernandes, and Donna. I '-1 i I i i I . '" i ./.. .•. l. I I . .. ... . .ATHER MOREAU Grant Charter.' fo Holy Union . . Mother Mary William, g.U.S.C.,- Provincial Of' the Religious of the' Holy Union of the' Sacred that the Board of .. has granted the former Sacred Hearts School of in FaH a the college was' granted at charter, empowenng'last meeting' of' the Board 'of to confer the degrees of Collegiate Authority. machelor of Arts and Bach- The approval is 'the first step (Iior of Science in Education. . . full . l'he new college will known of the Sister Formation .' the College of the' Sacred : of the Hearts. While it is exclusively ohc EducatIOnal AssoclatIon .. Thls ... Religious and primariii for .. looks to the members of the Holy Union com- of_relIgious, cultural and pro- .unity, it will contlnl,le to accept of Sisters. Members of all religious com- The former School 'of Educa-' lDunities in the area 'as Iltudents. tion was established in 1934 by 'rhe institution was recently . the Holy Uriion community. \lbtted by an inspection team . Since its inception it has been frOm the State, including Profes- affiliated with the Catholic Uni- IIOl' G. Linwood Chase, professor 'versity of America.': ell Education at Boston Univer- The College of the. Sacred elt)' Graduate School and Dr. Hearts will be the second insti- b.-Justin McCarthy, Director of tute of higher education"in the the Division of State Colleges for Diocese. Stonehill College, North Commonwealth. Approval to Easton, is the other.·' 'Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard Sings Fr. Moreau Requiem H'l'he youth of the Diocese has lost a great benefactor", md. Rev. J. Orner Lussier of Dodgeville in his eulogy at the JJ.ontifical Mass of Requiem for Rev. Aurelien L. Moreau, pastor of St. Mathieu Church in Fall River,' J. Gerrard. the consistency Father Mor- BIShop of the eau's life with the sublimity of Diocese, celebrated the Mass the priesthood. Every character- for the former Navy Chap- istic of of the. lain of World War U and the life was exemphfied in the .. hfe )l'ean conflict.· of the 56 year old. l!ether Lussier demonstrated. pastor. '. "However," the Dodgeville eulogist addlid, "Father Moreau stood out in the vast' corps of the priesthood· in his devotion towards the youth-not only of the Diocese but of the nation. In peace time, he was devoted to the young of every parish he was assigned to; in win, he heard the call to expand and serve the youth of the nation away from home. His piety and patriotism were outstanding." The officers of the Mass were: Bishop Gerrard,. celebrant; Rt . Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, as- sistant priest; Rt. Rev. Alfred J. , Bonneau, deacon; Rt. ReY. Ray- mOl'ld T. Considine, subdeacon. Rev. Roland Boule and Rev. William A. Galvin, acolytes; Rev. Leo J. Duart, thurifer; Rev. John P. Cronin, book bearer; Rev: John F. Moore, candle bearer; Rev. Maurice R. Jeffrey, mitre bearer; Rev. Kenneth J. Delano, gremiale bearer. Rev. John H. Hackett and Rev. Thomas E. Morrissey, masters of ceremonies, and Rev. 1. Omer d. Lussier, eulogist. Chanters at the Office of the Dead on Tuesday were: TUm ·to Page Elglueen "w,••

description

. Mother Mary William, g.U.S.C.,- Provincial Of' the Religious of the'Holy Union of the'Sacred ~eartst h~ ~i1lol,mced that the M~ssachu~etts Board of.. Collegia~e ~~thority hasgrantedtheformerSacredHeartsSchoolof . '" i ANNIVERSARY YEAR: ~lege charter, empowenng'last meeting'of'the Board 'of gin tomorrow to mark the 15thcentenaryofthedeath of the great bishop and saint who first saw Ireland JJ.ontifical Mass of Requiem for Rev. Aurelien L. Moreau, as a slave and returned to' .ATHERMOREAU I U b

Transcript of 03.16.61

Page 1: 03.16.61

Joseph E. Fernandes 0/ Norton to ServeAs Diocesan Charities Appeal Chairman

faU River, Mass., Thursday, March 16, 1961

© 1961 The Anchor PRICE tOe$4.00 por Yoar

Socond Class Mail Prlvilegos Authorlud at Fait Rlv'or, Mass.

Yolo 5, No. 11

TheANCHORAn Anohor of the Soul, S'Uh'8 and FiNn-ST. PAUL

SISTER MARY URBAN. R.SM.

r;':-~...-.J··~~f_--...--....-.........- ..-1"'..". -'~~\ ':" '

: !.

uate of Saint Xavier's Academy.Providence; received her A.B.from Providence Colle~ and'her M.S. from Catholic Uni­versity, Wasliington, D.C, SistertOok further' courses in Guid­ance Counseling at Fordham .Uriiversity, New York. She hasRhode Island State certificationin . Engli:sh, guidance, and lIb­~y. .

Sister Mary Ul"ban holds mem­bership in the Catholic Library

. Association, American LibraryAssociation, New England Asso­cia.tion of Teachers of 'English.American Guidance and Per­sonnel Association, and Rhode •Island School Library Associa­tio'n, ROOde Island Guidance andPersonnel Association.

Always interested in reading.Sister has organized Develop­ment Reading at Bay View. Shewas instrumental in establishingthe La,rge Group Instructio4program. in English and Ameri­can literature there. The excel­lently equipped library at ~. Turn to Page Eighteen

Applic~tionsfor admissiOftto the private diocesan andparochial high schools in thediocese far outnumber theplaces. available for studentsseeking. Catholic secondary edu-cation. .

A spot check today-followingthe recent entrance examinations-brought a unanimous reportfrom the principals in the manyhigh schools that more boys 'andgiris are; applying for admi$siORthan there are places avai1l1ble.. "That'~ the reason for th~ 'en­

trance. examinations we'are giv­ing," said the principal of one ofthe high schools.' "We would bedelighted if we could' acceptevery boy and girl but we just

Turn 0 P~ Eighteen

Ap plic·a..n·tsOutnumberFa.cilities

Cardinal DesiresCongress Be FairIn School Aid

NEW YORK (NC)Francis Cardinal Spellman

- said here that since sev~ral"equitable alternatives" areavailable to Congress to aidprivate education, a program thatoverlooks nonpublic s c h 0 0 Iswould be "a grave injustice."

The Archbishop of New Yorkstressed ,that t.he choice of aspecific program is for the dis­cretion. of Congress. .

But he' said that a programof .Federal aid that would givebenefits to children in privateand church-related schools equalto those. for ,children in publicschools without Violating .theConstitution "would seem to be·

Turn to Page Seventeen.

ANNIVERSARY YEAR:A "Patrician Year" will be.­gin tomorrow to mark the15th centenary of the deathof the great bishop andsaint who first saw Irelandas a slave and returned to 'win' it for Christ. He died in461. NC Photo.

. DispensationThe Most Reverend Bishop

. has granted a dispensation fromfaSt and abstinence for tomor­row, March 11, S~ Patrick'lJ'D~,.. .

.Vocation MassesThe Most Reverend Bishop

will celebrate Pontifical HighMasses for Vocations at 10A..M;onMonday in Notre DameChurch, Fall River: on Tues­daT in St. Anthony of PaduaChurch, New Bedford; and onWednesday in S~ Mary'sChurch, Taunton.

• Most Reverend Jam~s J. Gerrar~, p.D., A~xi1ia'ry Bishop of Fan River and this'year's Episcopal Chairman of theamiual' Catholic Charities Appeal, announced today

· that Joseph E. Fernandes of St. Mary's parish, Nortori, general' manager of the eight­stor-e· Fernandes Super Market Chain, will be this year~s lay chairman Of the appeal.which will be held in May . '.'

~~:h:;a~~~no~f;'st~~~ea:~ Sisters..·of' Mercy Nameniversary in the episcopate. n· ... 'I· Alb. Mr. Fernandes, who"attended rrlllCllia In tt e oroNorton schools and graduated rfrom Boston University College S· t M U b R SM' the 1 . too'of' Business Administration:.in 18 er ary. ran, ..; 18 new y appom

· 1947, 'opened his .first super principal of Bishop Feehan High School; Attleboro, it was'market the same year in Norton. announced today by Mother Mary Helena, R.S.M., MotherHe is a pioneer in. the construc- Provincial of the Sisters of Mercy of tM Provi~ of

· tion of super markets in rural Providence. Sister is at pres-

ar~~s; 'Norton man;s' eight mar- ent librarian at Saint Mary'sketS do an annual business of 23 Academy, Bay View. Highlymillion dollats.· Additionally, qualified, Sister is a grad­through Fernandes Realty Cor-'

· poration, he has been 'responsible.for the develop1Uent of shopping :centers adjacent to his marketSin .Brockton, Walpole and Ran­dolph.

The 'Charities chairman hiTurn to .Page Twelve.

CHARITIES APPEAL CHAIRMAN AND FAMILY: Joseph E. Fernandes· of Norton· will·be lay chairman of the 1961 Charities Appeal. The well~known bus'inessmall is wit~

(left to right), Joseph WOf Mrs. l\1arcia Fernandes, ~nnabelle and Donna. I

'-1iIi

'~.; i~ I

. '" i

./...•. l. I I. ",,~

..~... ~,.~ '~

.ATHER MOREAU

Grant C~llege Charter.'fo Holy Union N~.ns. .

. Mother Mary William, g.U.S.C.,- Provincial Of' theReligious of the' Holy Union of the'Sacred ~eartst h~~i1lol,mced that the M~ssachu~etts Board of ..Collegia~e~~thority has granted the former Sacred Hearts School of

E~ucation in FaH Rive~ a the college was' granted at ·th~~lege charter, empowenng'last meeting' of' the Board 'of~ to confer the degrees of Collegiate Authority.machelor of Arts and Bach- The approval is 'the first step(Iior of Science in Education. . . ~~ards adoptin~ th~ full p~o-

. l'he new college will b~ known gr~1I) of the Sister Formation.' the College of the' Sacred : C~nJ'erenc,,: of the Nat~~n.al C.at~­Hearts. While it is exclusively ohc EducatIOnal AssoclatIon..Thls... Religious and primariii for .. pr~gra.m looks to the fu~thering

members of the Holy Union com- of_relIgious, cultural and pro­.unity, it will contlnl,le to accept fe~sional fQrmat~on of Sisters.Members of all religious com- The former School 'of Educa-'lDunities in the area 'as Iltudents. tion was established in 1934 by

'rhe institution was recently . the Holy Uriion community.\lbtted by an inspection team . Since its inception it has beenfrOm the State, including Profes- affiliated with the Catholic Uni­IIOl' G. Linwood Chase, professor 'versity of America.':ell Education at Boston Univer- The College of the. Sacredelt)' Graduate School and Dr. Hearts will be the second insti­b.-Justin McCarthy, Director of tute of higher education"in thethe Division of State Colleges for Diocese. Stonehill College, North~ Commonwealth. Approval to Easton, is the other.·'

'Auxiliary Bishop GerrardSings Fr. Moreau Requiem

H'l'he youth of the Diocese has lost a great benefactor",md. Rev. J. Orner Lussier of Dodgeville in his eulogy at theJJ.ontifical Mass of Requiem for Rev. Aurelien L. Moreau,pastor of St. Mathieu Church in Fall River,' yest~rday.

!40&~ ~ev. Ja~es J. Gerrard. the consistency ~f Father Mor­~X:lhary BIShop of the eau's life with the sublimity ofDiocese, celebrated the Mass the priesthood. Every character­for the former Navy Chap- istic of greatnes~ of the. pries~lylain of World War U and the life was exemphfied in the ..hfe• )l'ean conflict.· of the 56 year old. F~l1 RI~e~

l!ether Lussier demonstrated. pastor. '."However," the Dodgeville

eulogist addlid, "Father Moreaustood out in the vast' corps of thepriesthood· in his devotiontowards the youth-not only ofthe Diocese but of the nation. Inpeace time, he was devoted tothe young of every parish he wasassigned to; in win, he heard thecall to expand and serve theyouth of the nation away fromhome. His piety and patriotismwere outstanding."

The officers of the Mass were:Bishop Gerrard,. celebrant; Rt.Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, as­sistant priest; Rt. Rev. Alfred J.

, Bonneau, deacon; Rt. ReY. Ray­mOl'ld T. Considine, subdeacon.

Rev. Roland Boule and Rev.William A. Galvin, acolytes; Rev.Leo J. Duart, thurifer; Rev. JohnP. Cronin, book bearer; Rev:John F. Moore, candle bearer;Rev. Maurice R. Jeffrey, mitrebearer; Rev. Kenneth J. Delano,gremiale bearer.

Rev. John H. Hackett and Rev.Thomas E. Morrissey, masters ofceremonies, and Rev. 1. Omer

d.• Lussier, eulogist.Chanters at the Office of the

Dead on Tuesday were: Re~

TUm ·to Page Elglueen"w,••

Page 2: 03.16.61

Electric'aI.Contracton

WIlIM SlQ(NESS STlUKft '."$ lJlUlORTANT TO Sft~Ull OOCTOR. AND WHit'..tiD. GIVElC "IOU APRESCIUPT!ON. rB"MPORTANT 'RJ GETIT FlLLfD Af

TOUHEY'SPHARMACY

.S,EGUIN':'•.'Truck Bod Builden. 'Y'" .,;<"

A1umlD~ • Steel.·944 County St.·

NEW BEDFORD; MASS:·WY 2-6618 .-', ,..'."

:--~--------~"!'!""-.....

Elect Tauntonia.As"Legion Hea:d

James H. Lamb, St. Paul'sp~ish, Taunton,' is new Dioces_)president of the Legion Cl'f Ma:r3\liucceeding Mortimer Kenne_Jrecentliy deCeased.

"Praesidia of St. Mary's pa~Taunton and St. Mary's, Faip.,haven, reported at the lOOtllmeeting of, the Diocesan CUJr~

held at St. Vincent's Home, Fallniver.

The Taunton unit, with erfhlmembers, made 412 visits in. theparish over a 10 m<lnth period.'l'he parish has 575 auxi~

I.egionaries.St. Mary's Fairhaven, madli

213 parish visits and distribute4366 pieces of literature, 'The pa~ish has nine active and 84 auxilooinry members.

Curia representatives will vi.praesidia at St~ John of God, pal"­ish, Somerset and Our Lady ~Lourdes, Taunton.

.Tohn Schondek and Thom.Allen have been nominated U.the"post of Curia"treasurer.

TRAPPIST HEAn VISITS u.s.: The Abbot General of All active and' auxil~the Cistereians' of the Strict Observance (Trappists), ::bom ,Legionaries are .expe!=ted: .'

attend the annual Acies cere­1'4. Gabriel Sortais of Rome, right, visiting monasteries of ',: mony to be held at St: Mary"his order 'ili the U.S., is greeted' by Archbishop Leo' Binz ot Cathedral, Fall River, at 2:30'ibM 'Dubuque, Iowa. NC Photo. Sunday afternoon.

'~ .

Necrology,The ANCHOR lists ~ .....

niversary dates ~ the deathsof, prieSts who'uve served theFall .J,r.jv.er Di~ sjn~: itsfol'lD8tion ill 1904 with the

,I intention .that ,.the· falthful.wlll;,gj~ them. a ,prayel1ui remem­~ee.'

~-"'.~l .__ .

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFalt River-Thurs. Mar. '1;6, 19tH

'OITY HOURSDEVOYION

2

: Mar. 19-5t. Mary, Taunton.Our Lady of pei-petilaI

Help, New B~dford.

Mar. 26.-:-st. J~ph": North. .Dighton~ '. 'i: .. .. ~.~,

0,' ':',:EsPiriio SantO, FaD·:aiver.. _.~, ~:,,, ,,: ~.. ,..L ...: ", : .". '~"f-;; :~f':'·.:!C,1: '~,Ap1'~;:~t.':;B~;:;New

~ >;~,i:.t,:j~~~~:f~~~~ ,)~ ..::.., Apr., g.::.;,.st.,,:-Ft~~,·Xavier,,,:: ,. "AcUsiJnW ," ," " ;,'': , :"st>.TosePh, ~~~:~~~:t

St. James,Taunton.

t· ••

'MAR. 19 ";'~ev. 'John .T. ,McQuaide, ',1905,

Assistant, St, MatY,' .1'auli'ton.MAR¥:zo,~,.':':. :~.,.::

"Rev. Francis" A::c":MrozInski,'J' '-_----------... 1951. Pastor, St. ·Hedwig,"New

THE l'NCBOB. ' B~ord. , ' ..,Second-eJasa ""ill privileges lluthoriBed MAR. Z!,

at Fall River. MIUl8. ,Publisbed evel7. ; 'Re" . J" h A'" Martin" 1940Tbuflldlly at 410 HigbJand Avenue.' Fall ".~ .V. I .osep ':". S, ,River. Miuia., by tbe CstbOlIePreas of the· 'AsSistant, St. John Baptist, NewDiocese of FilII River, Subscription price Bedfo.....by man, 'Postpaid 84.00"per lieu. ' . ' .. ," AYe

Legion of DecencyThe following' are to be added

to the lists in their respectiveclaSsifications: .

, Unobjectionable for' , 'general,:; patronage: Days of Thrills and'

I '~Laughter; The Police. Dog Story;Tll,ere Was a. Crooked. ,Man;Wings of Chance. "

Unobjectionable for. adults and .adolescents: A Raisin in th~ S~

Report Says Cuban Children'Sent for Red Training

MIAMI (NC) -Cuban children as young as four yearsold are being shipped to the Soviet Union for indoctrinationin communist beliefs and- techniques, according to rePortsreaGhing here. The purpose is to train the children as elite

'''shock troops" to be re- Professional Careersturned as adultS to Cuba and Cargo boats, they said, areother ,Latin American coun- also transporting the sons andtries for infiltration and su~ daughterS of the campesinos,

Cuban farmers who work on co­version. operative farms, who have been

According to travelers arriv- led' to believe that their childrenIng here, children are being sent will receive education to pre­to Russia under the direction of pare them for professional car-Doctora Miret, Cuban minister eers. .of social assistance' and wife of Cuban Premier Fidel CastrOPedro' Miret, minister of, agri- was recently quoted as sayingculture. that Cuba and the Soviet Union

Eye - witnesseS said' large will exchange a thousand child­groups of children are det>arking ren who will ,engage in, agricul­'from Saqua laGrande ,in the tural work and study. A source"orthern· part o~ Santa Clara. Said many of the Cuban child­province and from Puerto de reD involved in this program ;

'Caselda, a south coast seaport. will be trained as communiStIncluded among the boys and agents.'girls, who range in age from four sPalllish Warto 12 years are orphans formerly 'The same soUrce said fhatcored' for by the Sisters of Char- during. the Spanish Civllwar

. 'ity at Beneficencia, government- more than 4,000 Spanish child­operated Havana orphanage, as ren were sent to Russia' forwell as children from a home atfor. dependent children locllted ~~:g'~~~';~ssi~n~: Gov~rnment Rebuff$ Bishop'5' TII1'V University. Wi,nsat Marianao, a section of the ch 51 ak" t hn" and • ICuban capital. ;;~~e:; o;esent~ ~=g to To Effect Greater Press Freedom·,' Debate Tourney

','" "Mass Ordo Cuba are these s~e children;., MADRID (NC)"'::"'The Spanish·' tiar)" 30>The three bishops oD. WASHINGTON (NC) - n... . , ,now grown to be adults. 'government, following Church' the' commission-Bishops "Angel' University of Notre Dame team'FRIDAY_Friday of IV Week In - , A prison and concentration :refusal to support its proposed Herrera Oria of Malaga;' Ju~'''WQP the fourth annual Capitcll '

Lent. III Class, Viole,t.Mass ' eamp for men 'sihi'ated on' the ~ew press ,law which ~akes JK) Hervas, Prelate Nullius of 'Ciu- , , Bin.-' peb~te 'To~ent; sPo­. I "Proper; No Gloria; S~cond, . Is1eof PmesprestmtS a"piCtUre" provisionf9rgreat~press,free- dad ,Real, .and Antonio .Ona,:·.__ sored.b~. ~ ,.uDlver,~.ty,. et'.': Collect St. Patric~, Bishop and . of inhuman and .barbaric treat.. 'dom; has .indefin.itelypostpCin~d,. A~ostolic Admini~atc!...of ~'I'~"UY~~' ,", ." .,:,. " 'ConfesSor;' rio Creed';' Preface", rtJent it was saId. Wivescbild-' further dIscussion of' theL legu;- DIOcese 01 Lugo-deelined to Ai'gwng the negative ~I' of Lent. .. ,'" : " ten ~d ia~ilies9i iIie 'prison-: ,liltion.: . ' ( . , .' atW~d. Instead,' they, sen:t· a: J10te Notre .Dame· d~eated the. pm.­,:. 'SATURDAV~Satu~~ay ~ . .IV,' ers j~edfor ,oP~i.~i~~ ~ the. • rheMinis1;ry.of IJ;lfQrmation with,. a priest~delegate-",fathu versity of Vermont on the SUb­..... , Week 'o~ Lent (SltIen,~es~, III government of FIdel Castro" notified members', of the Com~ Antonio' Montero director of ject: "Resolved: that the United

__ , Cla~, ~lole~, Ma~s Pro~er; No·;,'traveJ. 'by "filthy'" baats"to the'::missiOJlfor :brafting"ib:~jlasic . EccJ.esia, wecltiY. ~agll-?:iP~.(ssued States GOvernment SholildPJ'Oa.': ,Glo~la; Second Co.u;e~. St" .island,where they are forced' tc . Law,oUb,e Pres'S'short1ibefore bySpcinish Catholic '.ACtiQn~ In:" v,ide, compulsory health:~

, .:' ',Cyril ofJerusal~m,.,,B,IS:hop" stand'ovefnight.in lines'without' ':their schecitiled MarcQ6,meeting' thitno~~,U\~~biShops,sta{~'they,,.a,!l¢e:,". ," _,' '. . """', Coi1fe~~or .and Do~toref°~. the

ffood· or water.···' ;,',' ""that'th'e'meeting waspost~ned~',' dis~eeawith parts o{the,drait,., ~. lI4'embers of the- Senate' ana

'\' 'Church' no Creed'Pr ace 0 ,., ,,', ,..' .. ,. .' ,,'. """.r """Lent. ' '." ',. .. Pd~ns..,. N(J. .further date was ,announced. . law and regretted. the omission House of Representatives judgecl

.."SUNDAY-I Sunday of Passion- A .Slmtla,r, J?r18on for ~om~tl"". Censorship . of some of 'their recommenda,. the final in the Senate caucuatide.. I Class; Violet. Mass is ~oca~d at,V,lvacde Mantilla 10, , The 'Spanish press' ~as' been. .' tions. S~veral,'months.:~a-!-,lie!'. room. Preliminaries were heJel

P . N Gl i' Creed' OrIente ~ro,:mce and ~o~er '. under tight government censor_Bi~op "P~o, Canten)", of. at the University of Maryland.roper, 0 or,a, , .' 'for men 18 Situated a n'~ana'Jay .,', . ... Htielva had made a similar "'lea ~... dditi' to'th' d ba' -Preface of the Holy Cross. .' st tsid' H ~ "ShIp' ever SlDce the Natloalist ".' " .' '" ".... ,. , w a on . ee :te_

S·' f' JU ou e avana,· 't' f . G . al'Si' fo~ ~e~ter_ p,ess freef=lpm~h~e. ' col-leges and WuvOrsities bact·:MONDAY-St. J~se~h, pouse 0 . Armed militia 'guardI.... Cath- .,gove~en ',0, ..ene.r l.slmo. acUlress'"" ,.the,. JO,ur".nal.lS1D, .' Insti-,.,' _ ~eJlre'sentativ'e's m', the p·."er'sua",_l~

the Blessed VlrglO Mary and I' h h ta d' t"'b ' '. FranCISCO Franco came to 'power ~ M ~ ....

. . Patron of. the' Universal', 0 ~c c :c ~~.: ~~ lU' ances after the civil war of 1936-39,,' tute of 0Ilu~ Del's.new. umveJ'- . speaking contest"whicb was woaChUrch Confessorr. I' Class. 'widen

One· ass 0 eralel'''d·sou.r.~es.-, In addition, the ,Ministr.y of In- sity.in Pamplona. by MiChael O'Pake' of sa. .

. '" . sa. source rec e,'an m--- f . ' . tr 1 II t·.... 'D_' d ""0 eph' oUe'ge' Pl-l1'':'d I b'"WhIte. ~Mass P~oper; Ma~ as . 'cident. when Cubans attendin orm~~,on ;co~,o ~ .,a oca ~o~ "'" ., accommen at~nS.'., :." S S C , ........ e p -on. March 19 10 the Missal.~ M . f edto " .' f g paper'andnewspnnt to pubhsh-", . , The' National Cathollc Press... Ji'pan~, -Gre~e'cofi....,StN·.: !.',~~Gloria; Second Collect Monday'''' . ass. w~J;e?rc -' ..rema~ or ... ,.era.. .""" ".'." :', .,:" -', AssoCiatiOti alsO worked I'out ita eoIreg,:_, Jer~ y '*-

... W k "I:' d·r fwe.·hours m·.:the,·church.. and G ' 'd' 'sf t· .. , ot ' ., ',. . ,.... 'sefZQDd,···· t ,j. ~" ,,"".

of ,pas~lOn, • ~e,;,· .~ree ; - sto ed 'tw bl ks' '. ',r ' . .rOWlDg lSSaSlac 10..,-11 ." 'own 'draft' press law to provide,.." '" '''' '_;" " .Prelace·,of St. Josephi '," 1_ • "~',. :~~:: "then w~re~a: ~:;~:. '.' '~Qly rwithin.journal.istic "circles, for the lifting cif c~nsOrs~~p:' but,',: &',' ." P,of .. 0, .', --,I',

TUESDAY-Tuesday .of .PaSSlon" ' ,ted to le~vein ou· yC:;tbree '.' b~ ..~ ,,'among.: .:mtellectuals,'· very' few of: itsreconu\'lIfqd?-_ions r '. " .r,ea~,e '" ,~, grl_~~,g,.. W~ek.. I.II ClaSS."Vlo~et: '~ass t·. gr ps. :"UDIVel'Slty..people,and",workers---· "were:accepted by' tl1e"stovero- . ~~~,(NC17P.u:.C,I¥'I~"

I.,:"t' ·Proper;., No .Gtoria··· :~cond . at a· Ime. ~ .... ~".' . led the. regime to set up"the'Com~-menteonmiission..- '." ":'\~"J~'.(' .1 {'terDatlon8! Catholic: org~tioa- Collect' 'St: ··Ben~«(ict:.' Abbot;: C.. 'ityCounciIWelc·~~e "w.i~sionto draft,a.~,e~ Pf~~s la,w..... The Ministry ~' w~r .., tlen' for.wf?,rl~,pe,a~,has annoUnee~

, DO' ~,ree,d; Pref!lc:e: o~ the Holy' , ~~lrty ..Jne.mbers of. tht! co1i?~' was preparing a' dra.tt 'la~ n,.,.;, ~t ,J~ hea,dquar:~~rs.he~e, .~hat it. Cross. ',' For Arc'h~ishop;';EI,c.; SIO~ ,~re.,governm~nt .. o~l?als·'cernit1gtne ressonitsow.:.olD, ~i.W. ~nsor a,piIgrir:rlag,~; •

WEDN,ESDAY - Wednesda~ of PHILADELPHIA (NC)~The, ..!hre~ b1s.hops .ant:~ . s~ priests "annotincirig ~aDcellati()~ of' the, BODle.and Assist f.r~ J~y,~ ..>' PassIon Week. I.U Class. ~lolet.· . Philad:lphia City Counell.. in a· ,constitute, th.e eCc;le;Sl~s~~~I, del- . March meeting, it sta:ted"s~pIY J~IY30.

Mass. Proper; No G~o~la or resolution, extended. t~~, eity'lr.. ~~a~es ~o the comrrusslo~,. . that it needed to study proPosals, _---------_~-...Creed; .Preface of_ tlie' Holy ',;welcome to the ,M~st Rev. John -' ",Three Bishops'" ',. by 'various members of the com-'~ross. J, 'Krol, designated a.s. the ~th The commission, began work- missiOJi in preparing a new biD.

"THURSDAY-Thursday of Pas-' Archbishop, of Philadelphia.. ing on a new press law, late, last ' ,sio~ Week, III Class. Violet. The resolution said ":we hereby' year, anl called a meeting to Cohimbian SquiresMass Proper; No Gloria or extend congratulations and best' ciiscuss draft legislation for.Jan-Creed; Preface of the Holy wishes and, the welcome of, the Bishop Feehan Circle,' Colum-Cross. • people of Philadelphia" to the Priest's Fast Action' bian Squires of Fall River, will'

Cleveland-barn'prelate, who has accept' air' new members boys. been serVing as'AuXillary Bishop ,Saves Youths Life 'from 13 to 18, They should' callof Cleveland since 1953. ' CLEVELAND (NC)"':""Through K of C Home in Fall River be- :.

The council ordered an en- prompt use of first aid, Father tween 7:30 and 9 this eV~~ing. . , .grossed-- copy of, the resolutioD -- Michael Ondik, 'pastor of St.' . BaSketball and shuff1~boardprepared.for presentation. to. Philip Neri church here, prob- teams 'h:i\ve' been newly ,organ-" .Archbishop-designate Krol "a8~I:>~y sayed ,the 4f~ of ~ ,Youth. ue~ ~y the group. '~,evfdence of' our high' esteem as. who had severed 'ari- artery. '

aC~:;i~;::~~io'nary·.. :~:;~:'i£!e~k~:~::;~if: '!·:AR·~'O·''.-".ras,A.. ~E~L~;A;~wR.~,~EN;"~;"'S",+'< '..JERUSALEl',L (~C) - The door ,at Nativity of' messed Vir-

labor. wing of the small Ortho-. ,gin Mary parish recreation hall.dox Jewish political movement, The youth staggered to thehas announced it will not join near-by Ondik home where the FARMS "a. new government unless it ia priest was visiting his mother. tassured of tighter restrictions OIl. Father OndiJi: fashioned a tour_t1f5 Washington St., FairhavenChristian missionary activit)' ill niquet from a bath towel whieh • . 'Just off Route , 'Israel. stopped the flow of blood and. WY 7-9336'

then called the police. The youth t Wateh for Signswas ,taken to St. Luke hospital twhere he underwent 'emergency • While out for a Drive .surgery and was given a chance. Stop al this Delightf~ Spottoli~ . ~•••••••••••••

Page 3: 03.16.61

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'hold a. holy. hour at 3 this Sun­day afternoon in St. Hyacinth'.·Church. The public is invited· toattend. .

No. Ireland FindsNo School AidDifficulty

COVINGTON (NC)-Federal aid to' Catholicschools is a well-establishedand smoothly running opera­tion in Northern I~eland, theProtestant-dominated area whichis part of the United Kingdom.

Father Peter McConville, ec­clesiastical inspector of schoolsfor the Diocese of Dromore, saidhere that the Irish Catholicschools receive two-thirds 'of thecosts of building, and mainten­ance, the total cost of teachers'salaries, ang the textbooks theyneed-all from the state.. "It all works very well," saidthe Irish priest, who IS visitingprofessor of sociology at VillaMadonna College, Covington.

No InterferenceDoes state aid to Catholic

schools lead to interference?"Not in the slightest," said FatherMcConville. "In my five yearsas inspector I've never had theslightest difficulty with the Min­istry of Education."

The ministry determines whichtextbooks are to be used for sec­ular subjects, he said, but ifCatholic authorities object to anyparticular text their objectionis taken seriously.

Most of the teachers at the.elementary level in the Catholicsystem are, lay men and women"he said. Religious - nuns andbrothers-receive from the statethe, same salary paid to laypeople.

The hiring of teachers for theCatholic schools is left to 'the

,pastor, who. is by virtue' of thatjob,' also manager o.f the ,schoolin his parish. Secondary schools'in the ,Catholic system are man­aged by a board of pastors.

THE ANCHOR- 3Thurs., March 16. 1961 _

~RISTOL .COUNTY'S LARGESTFEDERAL SAVINGS ASSOCIATION

~~~S3~2%on regular, savings accounts.and up to 1% EXTRA on BonusSavings 'Accounts. Inquire.

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FIR-Sl FEDERAL OF FALL RIVER1 N rth M · St B'edford-Open FrI'. 'til 8 P. M.o am., cor.

Federal Aid Debate:OnNationwide TV', . " . .

NEW YORK (NC)-A debateon Federal aid' to education be­tween a Catholic and a Jewish

'spokesman is being-carried "live"oniiationwide television Satur-'day night. ",', The 'debaters ,ilre Father NeilMcCluslq~y, S.J., lIuthor, edu­catorand associate editor of'America magazin'e, and LeoPfeffer, author and generalcounsel of the American JewishCongress' commission on law,and social actIon., Father Mc~luskey is scheduled

to defend the affirmative andMr. Pfeffer the negative on thequestion: "Should Public FundsBe Used foe PUblic and ReligiousSchool Students Alike?" The de­bate is being telecast from 9:30to 10:30 P.M. on the NationalBroadcasting Company's TV se­ries "The Nation's Future."

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CCD CEREMONY: St. Louis de France parish,Swansea, joins parishes with active units of the Confra­ternity of Christian DOCtrine. At inaugural ceremony, leftto right, Rev. Ernest E. Blais, curate; Mrs. VirginiaCarpenter, CCD vice president; Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis,pastor; Charles Carpenter, president. '

.Cardinal Cushing Prec;JcherAt Ceremony in Ireland

ARMAGH (NC) - Two U.S. cardinals are scheduledto take part in ceremonies h~re March 17 commemorating

_ the death of St. Patrick 1,500 years ago. A, Pontifical HighMass in' St: Patrick's 'cathedral ,in Armagh will open the

. ,Patrician Year ceremonies. be.' held in the afternoon,. In theJ 0 h n Cardinal D'Alton, evening a torchlight processionArchbishop of Armagh· and in honor of Sf. Patrick will con­Primate of All Ireland, will clude with Benediction.preside. It was announced that It was announced that severalJames Francis Cardinal Mc- 'large pilgrimages to' shrines inIntyre, Archbishop of Los An- ,'Ireland care planned for the Pa­geles; will ~ present, and that trician year.Richard Cardinal Cushing, Arch_ 'bishop of Boston, will preach atthe Mass. Many other prelatesfrom overseas are scheduled toattend, including William Card­inal Godfrey, Archbishop ofWestminster, England. A sym­

'posium on St. Patrick's life will

Easter Monday BallMcMahon Fourth Degr.ee-As­

sembly, New Bedford Knights ofColumbus, will hold its tradi­tional Easter Monday ball April3 at New Bedford Country Club.Leo J. Telesmanick is chairman.

Name Eight StudentsTo Honor Society

Eight Stonehill College stu­dents from the Fall River Dio­cese are among new membersof Delta Epsilon Sigma, nationalCatholic honor society. .

They are Carole A. Mattimoreand Rochelle H. Olivier, FallRiver; Rochelle Simmons, NorthDartmouth; Muriel Surprenant,Oak' Bluffs; Geraldine Cahill,Somerset; George E. Costa Je.,Taunton; Margaret A. Duggan,New Bedford; and James Elson,North Easton.

BROTHER GEORGE, F.M.SL

Model of'Missile.Surprises MissDoctor Takes PORTLAND '(NC)-A 30-foot

FinaI Vow.s. ' " high Polaris missile model.whichhad appeared in President Ken­

FRAMINGHAM (NC)-A 49- nedy's inaugural parade was de­year-old doctor ~nd fornw'r steel- livered to 15-year old Patriciaworker prono~nced fiilal vows Moreili, Cathedral' High School

, In a youthful U. S.-fQunded mis- sophomore. ,aionary society., She had written tile Sperry

Brother George J. Hunger- Gyroscope Co" for a missileman, F.M.S.I., is the fir.st phys,i- model for the school's. annualcian-member of the. Sons of science fair: "It doesn',t matterMary, Health of the Sick, found- wh'ether it is large" medium or'tid here nine years ago, by the small. I can use it." , , 'late Father Edward'F,'Gllresche; . The: Sperry 'people took her,S.J.,to do me!iical and, ~atectiet':' 'at her word. A full-size model .Maryknoll Sister Hasical work in mission areas. " was delivered to her'at the school Mo'the'r as 'Boss'

He will be a member of the Wednesday. It was erected innew comm~nity's ~ir~t "miS1!i~n front, ·of, Cathedral Guild Hall EVANSTON (NC) - Mary­team, which will operate a social and was 'one of the features of knoll Sister Ann Fidelis, a juniorser'vice center in Lima, Peru. the sCiel~ce fai~:.. __' " ., medical student at St. Louis Yni­Richard Cardinal Cushing, Arch- Working on toe surprise ~or versity, has the same "boss'" to~'bisttop of Boston, will preside at Patricia with the Sperry com- . day she had when she was aa departure ceremony here April pany were the Greater Portland' tod~ler. .11. Chamber of Commerce, Cathe':' Her mother is Mother Mary

Army ServlCfl dral principal 'Sister Mary Fla- Colman, Mother GEmeral of theBrother Hungerman was born via, U.S. Sen. Edmund S. Muskl'e .Maryknoll 'Sisters, a Dominican

In Bridgeport, Ohio, in 1912. He of Maine and 'other close- sisterhood which has its mother-began work in a steel mill in mouthed individuals. ' 'house at Maryknoll, N.Y. Her1932, shortly after graduating father is retired and resides infrom high school. Name Nun to' Post Strawberry Point, Iowa.

Following his discharge ,in A N1946 from the Army; with which t uclear Center Sister Ann Fidelis, who wasbe had served three-and-a-half WEST HARTFORD (NC)"':' Ann, Mary Boland, has beenyears in European combat areas Sister Maria Benigna, biochem- awarded a $1,159 grant to workas a pharmacist, he entered the ist' at St. Joseph College here, for three months this summerfirst class of Steubenville (Ohio) has been named a research sci- at the famous Maryknoll Sisters'College in 1946. To support him- entist in the biology di·vision of clinic in Pusan, Korea.self he worked part-time in a the Oak Ridge (T'enn.) Nat-Steubenville steel mill. ional Laboratory.

Feom the college he went on Sister Bengna will work into the St. Louis university med- radiation research as it 'relatesieal school and internship at St. to the life sciences. Her findingsMary's hospital, St. Louis. In at Oak Ridge' will be applied toSeptember, 1956, at the age of her teaching programs at the

'44 he began his training as a college, which maintains a wellmember of the Sons of Mary, equipped nuclear laboratory.Health of the Sick. Since March, Sister Benigna has previously1958, he has taken annual vows. done research with readioaclive

materials at. the Marine Bio­logical Laboratory, Woods Hole,Mass., m1der grants from theAmerican Physiological society.

.Catholic Officials to ,Discuss'Revolutions in Education

WASHINGTON (NC) - Catholic elementary schoolteachers and principals will talk about some revolutionarysteps in education at t~ir upcoming national meeting' inAtlantic City, N.J. Sessions are scheduled on the Montessorimethod of education, being , ,McCormick Rambush, headmis-pioneered in the U.S. by lay tress of the Whitby School,people; on the non-graded Gr~enwich, Conn.sch'ool, and on dropping re- Mrs. Mambush's school, the

'port cards 'in favor of parent- first permanent U. S. installationteacher conferences. of a school based on the method

This was announced here by of teaching named for the latethe National Catholic Education- Dr. Maria Montessori" is oper­al association, organization of ated in the Bridgeport dioceseCathtllic educators, which will with the permission of Bishopmeet from April 4 to 7 in Atlan- Lawrence J. Shehan of Bridge-tic City's convention,hall. port. Lay' people staff it. .

About 14,000 educators annu- About 150 children are cur-ally attend the convention, held rently enrolled in the schoollast year in Chicago. It is de- which ·is in temporary headquar­scribed as the largest annual ters in Stamford, Conn., but willconvention of a national Catholic move into a new Greenwichorganization. school in 1961. "

The convention will open with A panel discussion of the non-a Pontifical Mass, celebrated by graded school will be held onthe host to the meeting, Arch- April 6. The chairman will bebishop Celestine J. Damiano, Msgr. James T. Curtin, super­Bishop of, Camden. He will intendent of schools of the St.preach at the service in St. Louis archdiocese, where severalNicholas church. schools have, abandoned .grade

Announce Theme rankings for the traditional first,second and third grades.

The opening general session The proposal to drop reportwill feature a keynote address cards will be debated by twoby Bishop John J. Wright of educators in a session on AprilPittsburgh, president general of 7. The debate topic is: "Be itthe association. Resolved that Report Cards be

This year's theme is "The Ob- Abandoned in Favor of Threeje<:.tives of Christian Education' Parent-Teacher Conferences ~n_in Contemporary Society." nually."

A paper on the Montessorimethod of education will be de­livered on April 5 by Mrs~ Nancy

Page 4: 03.16.61

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pcidenttilly, 'it was~.t'lmta .10...27 'i8 police ,code .•s .burglar ·alarm.

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,CHICAGO {NC)-The ,congre­;gation 'paid·rapt attention asMsgr. Francis J. Dolan was fin­ishiQ'g ,a 'sermon in Queen cd .A:1lSaints Church ·here. Then the,speel wasbr.oken .ailOVell' -thepublic 'address 'sy.stema vOic~

:barked:

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at 22nd and Halsted Streets." .

o

'HONOR LABOR LEAD­ER : JamesB. 'Carey, presi­dent .of ,tile Inter¥tionalUnion of Electrical Radio:and Machine 'w:orket:'S, AFL­CiIO; w1~[lleceiv:e the annual'04'Quadril'gesimo AnlloMed­:a1," •named f~rPope' Pius

.Xl's 1931 'encydica[ 'on ·'Re­'COTIBtru.ctingthe Social 'Ord­·er;o' 'and -given each' year toa' Catholic who has dis­tinguished 'himself in theapplicationof·Ca.tho.Jic ,socialpTinci.ples..Ne Photo.

H:ots 'S~teD·s 'Delay·O,RlDBvcn'ce Lew

BOSTON (NC)-'l"he dean ofBosion College's law -school hascrj-ticized ·.delay <of the Massachu­setts Legislature in' passing a'.proposed law !that wou[d :bolsterthe "cooling off' .period indivorce ·cases.

Father R~ber.t t. Dr.inan, S,J.;sa'id in an addresS befGre theMassachuseitS Trial Lawy.er.sAssQciation "it 1s urgent thai.thisbill be enacted.".The bill (5 86) wo u I d

strengthen the mandatory 90:lday<cooTing-off period by 'prov·iding.that ;th~re be advice and assIst­ancek-om 'soda'l wor·kers and

'mar.r.ia'ge. counselors for personsseeking' a· _d~'Voree.

Father Drinan said that .duringa two-hour 'hear'ing on the bill.1t· was '~ent:husiastical!ly en­,dor.sed" byj~.e1?, marriage·oounseJ1orsand othere~ Inmarita'1 pr.eblems.

Bui dlespite tis, he :added, 'a.negative c.l'e,]llort on. iI1he :bllJ wasgiven bY the committee CGnduct-lng the heMing. .

"Why is MassaC:hu~tts relue­';tan,t to adopt S 86?" Failiher.Drinan asked, "The small amount,of money to be expended. under ­1hisbi'l1 w'ill be compensated for.many times ·over by ·the . mar­:riages rtihat al'e saved, and ·thede­crease in wiVlesand'druldren whoare dependent on public'" fundsfor their suppor1."

He declared that '''the aPa.t~yand neglect of our '.lawmakers,concerning the commonwealth's.:mos! serious pI1eb~em - the

_-strengthening of -family. life-u-distressing."

'fIigher l~ea:I'

, 50 :it was..Neal' 'Caen his tankwas.- .b:apped imd :he 'was 'Shotdown .trying to make his escape.rt-was not.a remarkable inCident;few of the men of his 'i)wn 'outfithad :any suspicion '.that they.hadbeen led by ,oneaf 'EngAand'sbravest sOldiers.

"It is.a -far higher ideal J.o leadan ordinarylifein:an. ,extta­',ordinary manner, and' ;to .serve:an ;ideal amid tthe drab andnmn­dnJm .SUil'roUl'l9ngs '.of "e¥erydayille :and, to r.e.tain that 'vision -oftbe common man as the 'shadowof God. i[ arne certain that it willbe far harder to .face bullets thanUte: Gestapo."

Seeds -of 'WarThe copy of Hugh Dormer's

.Diaries which we have had since1947 is the worse for hard usage.It was not "prepared" for <pub­lication but printed ashe left itwith his mother. It shines withthe quiet light of a man 'who fedtwithin himself a high vocation,even to ,the aH.ar., :but who ac""cepted one even higher, 'some­thing very like martyrdom.

For us it is one of the greatbooks of t'he War, npt only forthe story it tel'ls .but for thedepths of contemplation it re­veals. For he saw that t'he warw.(l)uld by no means end with the·co'Hapse ()f the Nazi ,tYTanny, that,its.·,seecls w.el'e so deeply im­p!l.anted !in tlhe mmds of ,men':asto ·make enduring peace a dreamof the ,KJingdGm;

COlJllI'age is 'not much ofamarketable commo~i:ty today,-orat least notco~rag.e with .anyposi~ive contVic.bion Ito back it up.~ubtless it wil!leme:rge froOmits I:illdi.n,g;piaces willen .:tIhe.ca!l'l .sounals, 'hut we '.ail'e incllined tod~cQu'l1t it now as iD1ock~hel'Oies..

... yet j,t ,oll"gM to ,occur <to us ·thatwe witl ~edit even more ur­g,ently: sho.wld the 'frag;i[e .trucebe br£lken than did the ·menof1939-45. .

A V~ctoriim. general oncegave, it as his opinion that 10 per. .cent of men were heroes, 10per cent cowards, and the 'other80 would turn eHher way .ac­·cording to circumstances. F01'the American CatlhoIT'icof todayit is worth pondering where 'heflits in. .

as he saw it, might be necessary,but it involved a hazard fargreater than Hfe, theannihilatiOJl·of honor.

13y its na1ur~ the UI1;der,groundeouid not be .camtl'Olled: its re­cruits were not herces only, butt:hose international adventurers

. andtrou'blemakers who· would. fight for a~ -cause or simply lor

vengeance on human~ty itself. ''He had seen enough of it, both

to amnn-e and to fear.. :At thewar"s climax he 'wou1d fight in·his uniform under the .coiors.

SrjdaJ fashion .ShoW'.Proves Big AttNction. MURORAN '(NG) - Weddingbells do the same thing the 'worldoyer-they.always draw ·crowds.

W.orking£rom <tbJig premise,Father Alfred E. Smith, ·M,M.,oiBrookJytIl" N.Y., ·took asbip­ment of ,oiscarded weddinggowns sent to him from a fash­ionable Fifth A¥enuehouse, 'anddeveloped a fashion show depic- 'POpe J,ehnCNates

. ting different wedding cere- Chaldean Rite Seemonies around the world. The .

, 'Soow was part of an exohibition VATICAN ,CIT'!{ '(NC)-P<ipeillustrating the 'christianview_ John h.ascreated a new di~esepoint on marriage:. .:lmd .appr.oved ,the :appointment of

The fashion show was :held in itwo new bishops for Catholics of',the 'Catholic Center in Muroran the Chaldean Rite -in Iraq.a city of 250;000 peop1e 'located Chal4r.ean Rite Catholics, whoon, Japan's nort'hern .island of ~se Old Syriac iii ·their 1i:1Jurgy,Hokkaido. Girls from the .mis- are ·descendantsof heretical Nes­sion modeled the gowns, while torian Christians who returnedth~ young men worked. long .aJ:ld . ·to the ,Church fourc~nturiesago.hard painting appropriate scenic' Today they number more thanbackgrounds. The sewen-day ex- 275,000, including about 1,000 inhibition proved' an immed.iate the U. S. The great majority. ofsuccess, drawing several hun- them live in the Middle East,dr-edappreciiative .Japanese at . mainly Iraq, where they are gov­earih ailtel"i.DOOIl and'-evening per- erned thr.ou,gh 1'7 Sees, includingformance. . . . ihe DeW A'lqoshdioe:ese.

THE ANCHOR....,Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 16, 19614

Hospital ExpansionPATERSON (NC)-A $3.,619.­

500 expansion program at St..'Joseph's FIospitalhere has been.announced by Bishop James A.McNulty of Paterson and SisterAnne Jean, aam.inistra.tor .of thestate's largest private hOllPital.

'Urg~$ AMerucan .CGtho,~i-c's

Pender reff$On~~ COOOl'ftU1.~<eBy .Most Rev. Robert J..Dwyer, RD.

,Bishop of 'Reno"We fight today not against ignorant heathens,or.

, Vandals. who .kJnow not the value of what they desti'Qy" :butagainst conscious andca:lculating anarchists, who strike atnational eu[ture and religion,preciselybeeause they knowthat cathedrals and schoolsare the nerve eeriters of thatspirit which they aim com­pletely and forever to·des­.•troy."

. It is 17 years since Hugh Dor­

.mer wrote ·that sentence in. hisdiary, that 'Spring c7f- 19~4

when his divi­mOD ~f the IrishG.u.ards wasmaking Li na 1preparations forthe Normandy·jnv.asion. Thesiender boo kpublished after'his death, a fewmonths later,reveals a pro­file in courage hardly equalled

. in ~ gaHery of President K~­nedy. Facing dea:tJh with ·calmprescience ("No man ever wentoOUt to -meet bis fate more joy­fully than 1"', this ~ion of the-old Catholic aristoeracy of 'ETlg­landach~evedan intuition of theessenti.al conflict 'Of moder.n :manwhich is of enduring validity.

,Career Cut Short' "His fami'ly, almost 'phlegmat­

leaHy, had kept the Faith.'Through centuries of penal 'per~secution,with the might of offi­eal tyranny crushing it on thenether millstone, it had heldunwavering'!y to its 'Catholicloyalty.

In later generations, after'Emancipation, it was someiiinesreported that certain of the oldCatholics were drifting 'frq,mtheir ancient fervor. If that weretrue of some, as the acid pen ofEvelyn Waugh has. described, itwas not true of the stock whichproduced Hugh Dormer.'

But in his case what might'have 'been the ·geniia'l-career of afortunate young man, trained 'at .AmpleJ'orth and Odor.d, with. agenuine 'poetic gift and a singu­lar flair for friendship,' was'brought up short by the eveuts·of 1939.

FirSt MissionDoubtless it was the spirit of

adventure, distaste for the Dore­dom of camp life, wtcich lln,pelle~

him to volunteer for special dutyas a paratroop-saboteur in 1942.His first mission mLo tlle heartof occupied France, witb the ob­jective of blewing up the mineat Le Creuso!, near Autun, was a.failure, but his experience andhis hair-bread.llh escape ·ov~r thePyrene~s made a man out of a.boy.

In his diary ·of that -escapadeone begins to feel the gravity oflife takJing manesuc shape, thegaiety of youth merg;ng. intoma.turity, the casual skepticism,of a modern turning into thequiet .oonviction ·of a Ohr·istian.

Grea.t StorYA yeal' later and it waslihe

same mission, though' he 'wasnow recognized as one of theablest .in his perHolls pr.ofession.This time it succeeded, and thedamage done to the Nazi war.effort was a staggering blow.

How he escaped, with thebloodhounds yappIng athishee1s,is (Il<1e, of the great adventur~

stories. Qfall time, :strangely un­lmown today in this aftermathof indifference to anything whichrecalls the Second W~.

The DSO awaited him and athird commission to prepare ·theUnderground for the impendinginvasion. If ne had SUT\rh'ed thishe wtluld unq\!lesHonably helvebeen fue ber.a ,of :tihe century.

.Re~1'DS to Po.stInstead, he chose to l'e:turn to'

his subaltern's post in 'hisregi­ment. The role 'of the saboteur,

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Catholic AgencyTops AU Others

WASIDNGTON (NC)-CathOoolie Relief Services-N a t ion a 1Catholic Welfare Conference ac­counted for more than half of therenef activity of U.S. voluntaITagencies covered in a govern­ment repClJl"t for the fiscal yearending July 1, 1959.

The dollar value of relief sup­plies sent abroad by the Catholicagency was $70,927,7.13.53 out of.a total of $136,614,384,52 worth of.supplies distributed by 27 voluo,.,taJry agendes.

The CRS-NCWC suppliesweighed a total of 906,473,440p01:mds.'The 27 agencies togetherseM overseas 1,734,102,832pounds of relief supplies in fiscal1959.

Itepol't Jast Issued

. The' report on tne 1959 fiscalyear has just now lbeen issued bythe acNisory committee on vol­untary foreign aid of the Inter­national Cooperation Admini9-tration. .

It covers' only relief shipmenblmade by voluntary agencies tocountries partidpating in theICA's' overseas freight subsidyprogram, under which the gov­ernment agency pays oceaafreight charges on relief supplie8distributed by voluntary groups.

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., March 16, 1961

'61' Ford has ttUt ClnsicStraigI'tt-li.inc Styling.1

See> how t~o new concave grille ~1tt8r81·

See Ilow the. massive burnpel! sweepsback·'into tho, classic Ford straight~lno

atylilltill Comll' ill' and admlro tho '61, Fo~[p. our showroomt.

DEALERFORD

'61 f'ofd has· theeTltunderbird's. Roofline'TodlI:J's QnRIt.~ i$. Tl\uAde;birhroofli'na, I~ net onIJ· ltl& most imltatedlstyr. there Ie.. if-a P!'acJ~ Plenlr ....hats.on head' room, fnmt and' rear.

LOCAL

PR01JECTS, ITS OWN' Bomt All'vital underbody; parIS are specia:li'yprocessed to resist rust and- ccnrosiorr,even to. g;ll'vanizing body panelsBeneatfr doors.

T.t\KESlCARE.OIi' ITSOWN FINISIFf:New Diamond Lustre Finish neverneedS. wax,.

./

"HOODLUM PRIEST": Father Dismas ClaJrk. S.J.,walk& mto:theatre with :friend and associate Jewish atotrneyMorris Shenker to view premier-e 0{ movie, ''']'he' HoodlumPriest," based on work both have done to :rehabHiWeconvie-ts. NG Photo. ~

SEE

THE ClASSIC FORD lOOKFOR BI BRINGS YOU

THE BEST OFEVERYfHING!

GUARDS mOWN-MUFFLER', Pbrd

~D1USTS ITS OWN BR'AlKE.~ NewTmcll:' Size- brakes adjuSll tnemselvesautom:r.tically_

CtEANS EES: OWN' On. You:!! go4,.QooJ mile9. between changes.

HERIrS: Iif(l)W 'tHE- '61' F0RD' 1iAK~,CARE Otr· ITSELFI

,LUBlUCA.'IBS' ITSELF. You'U II(X.- muflieN. om:maltY llist ,rhRe. times. II'mallY m" 30,000 'miler wit60~ AI Imtg ~ ordfRUy' muffiers.chas9s11\t!'riatioc,

'S1i Ford' haSt Fontr. CIa&stC·Rear.-End Styling I

SIIlooth and, s'" with, the saIa· and'friendly bro. 1'OtInd' tlIilHghts> mat flOwsmootftl,. into' til_ classiCI' sculPturiillr of·the· '&11 Ford! rear emt:.,

shin,y inspection s:ticlcer' ()ll . t!iewindShield:.

But how about your soul?' Isyour spiritual life in need. of •little repair? Or' maybe a majoroverhaul? And!,. like a lot of us,are you passing up hund'red's' ofchances to' stop, at a "servIeestation" because you figure onhaving everytl',.;ng. straightened'out and in first class> conditiolljust before. the offIcial tnspee..tiondeadlineT

Dlm.'t want tq miss any of th1!'fUll: along the road and countingon the "spot check" to catch theother guy?

Remember, that· Inspectiondeadline comes up: any time it.catcbes up with you - and pra,yIt WOIll.'t happen some time wl:--~

all the "service stations" ; '"waJ! behind, you, with none atall ahead. We, never can. be, sw::ethat deadli'ne won't be waitingaround: the next curve, We never'know, do we?

& give. the matter so~ ser­Ious thougfit. And consider. tnesobering fact tha:t the inspec­tion, spot check or not" win~qutte· literally. the deadline.

Deadline on Soul Inspection CanCome Any Time-Best' Be Ready

B)V Russen· CollingeSuppose- you knew' some guy wno drove a. ear' which

was. in terrible condition. No rear view mirror, bum tires,no hom, no) lights" no brakes. And suppose' this. guy neverbothered about any of these things.. Wouldn't stop at agarage or service station":'"not even the station w.herethe' manager knevil him realwell. And suppose:tha1l when­evel' you, or' anYOlll/!. else ­particularly the manager of theservice station - suggeste<tthat' what he: was' doing waspretty dangerous and' could getbim into rear trouble with therow, and that he should havesomething done about the con­dition of his car, why this g~y

wc:ntrd ju-st laugh it· off."Look," he'd S8¥, "all r got to

worry about is the State Offi­cial Inspection,. and. that won'tcome up untiI October. Ie I havethe car fixed now,. I. won't beable- to use it for maybe a week,and L sure hate to miss the funelf driving.

"Another thing" if' r have theear all prettied' UI1 rc:r probablyatart tG 'take care of' it lind getfussy about. traffic, rules. As. itill, I don't give it. 8> thDught. Andwit~ no brakes at. all" I iust letbar rip. Because r. couldn't stopanywaY', even. if: I was· goingelow. .

"SO don't ~. about. me.Znd; of" september,. iust beioreiltSl,'lection is due" ru stop illIIOmewl'lere' and' have everythinllput. in A-I condi'tion. Mean­wbile, watch my dust!"

Unexpected (ilJiecb .

Andi suppoSe' yoU' wamed' tlri1JCUI' tllat the stare didn't wait1m' that October d'eadlfue, batpurred unexpected, spot- checks'along the- ro::rd1 And suppose hefioId Y'Ou. tJhat; sure, he knew'about. the- spot cl1e<:ks, and,. sure,.the]!' caught; quite It lot of cars·aut way. But: not liim.· "YOUJDatice- tlieyr mlWayS' catch someether guy. Not.me, bud'."

And suppose,. after all this..ene bright August day. this gUSeomes whizzing aroUlUf a curveand right into the aans of one-of'those unannounced and unex­pected spot checks.

You might feel sorr)" for what!happened to the guy - the' law·being very, vellY clear aboutlree@ing. yow: car in, good. cowU­UoCl and very, very tough. wHht!j:ose that didn't. But wouldn'll

· J'ou also feel that, this,~ battbeen asking for it?

He knew the law and· he knew· what. would bal1pen; to him ·if

be gy>t. caught.. Certainly" enougttpeople: had. tried. tn have him.tilt bis; car. And he'ci beeR,warned and knew about. the

· III)Ot. checks. lIe. iUst: took It: big,pmbIe: on. tnat. October dead·1Ine- and kast.

So· ~O\rd figure: he g9t whatwas- coming: to him.. A. nice gUT.but not very blight.. Just nutaabout d'riving' and: having. a goodtime. Too bad he g.ot caught" ioa way,. seeing, as' llow he ill­tend'ed to have everything fixed;up beIore October. And right u.pto ti'te time it happened to him.the spot checks had: always. gotthe other guy. wen" you neverknow.. d'o you?

No. You' never' do_Sound's' a' little siHy about. tihe

&uy and his car - no one woul'c:l'·~ be that big II dope;

How AboIIt ¥oa'!HOWl abou:ll. yow:seU? CDJl... rwe

JOIJI" C'al:. That's. probaI.)lr, 1111peuedl and. oi:Ied with- II DiQe.

WOIlkers Scmt New'Schoof From' Ffood

GAnSEN (NC),-TheJ:eWlJS;;r.tO· IMk. in the dike. a:ftet w;arken

et: all faiths> pitched, in to saveDeW St. James SchooL here' fromthe rampaging, waters at theCooSa River.

A11teu a fiYe:-~ rainstorm.the usually placid riv;er over­flowed its banks,.' and the sur.g.­mg' waters. sw.ept, toward the St.lames school and' convent.

Father James' Wathen, schooladministrator, quickly. issued .an"SOS" asking workers to savejtbe. ~150,000 building. Volun­teers; from. all. parts of Gads­dcn" which is situated 60 milesIWrtheast of. Birmingham, cametit the rescue.

Page 6: 03.16.61

!'Thnou9hthe WeekiWith the: ChWtch~ ' ~.,;;-_ By _-_" "

REV. ROBERT W. HOVDACatholic University

,TODAY - Thursday, FourthWellk in :J,ent. Resurrection fromthe dead by the power of God isthe message of both lessons. Lentprepares Christians for EasterBaptism and for the renewal of 'baptismal promises. And it is inBaptism that man dies and risesagain in Christ. ,

TOMORROW-Friday, FourthWeek in Lent. This lesson ofChristian discipleship as a gift'oflife is so' important that it is thesubject of today's Mass also. Andthe source" of this new life' inChrist, of its nourishment andinspiration, is above all the pub­lic worship of the Church, hercelebration of the saving ac~' of

,God. That it why Sunday Mass, isbeginning to undergo such a're­newal and revival in the p!eseDtday. ,

SATURDAY, Fourth Week ,iiiLen~.God's Revelation to Hispeople, His covenant with thein,His care. for them is the bas~s 'offaith. The first reading assuretlmen of this covenant and care"in' ,the days pt:eparatory to, C;:hris~"eoming. In the Gospel, Jesu.,

M d' f p.' 'speaks of its fulfillment. .

Sava'g'e ur er 0 r'Iest' 'Christianity is never obscUl'-, , ,,', ' - ,':' , antist. A false sense of' myste~y, '

Po' rt 0'f Pl'a'nned At,tack. ' any hint,of magic, is alien to :it.,Its faith is a response to' God'., , bo .' action in history, that salvation­

'USUMBURA '(NC) - Reports from the neigh nng history which the Biblical les-'Congo state that'the murder of a Belgian priest in Bukavu ' son~ of the Lenten 'Masses revie~.

, was not the result of a chance encounter as first reported, FIRST SUNDAY OF THEbut of a ,well-planned attack on his niissi9n. The attack waS ' PASSION. The Church begihs

II . ht the final two weeks of prepaia-planned at an ,a -mg ses- tion for the celebration of thesion of a Lumumbist youth 'central events of faith by look-organization attended by the ing to the sacrifice of the CrossLumumbist Minister of So- and to Christ the Highpriest.

, cial Affairs and Youth of Kivu 'The Gospel shows how He is theProvince, Albert Kisongo. This one Priest, the one mediator, b~-.,was reported by eyew~'tnesses. Cause He is both God and'm'alL'

Repeated phone calls for help And the Epistle describes thefrom the besieged mission to work He did as mankind's Priest,United Nations headquarters in a ....work of atonement, of recon-Kivu got, the' answer. "Some- ciliaUon, reuniting man withbody's coming." But no U. N. God. One Priest and one Sacri-troops arrived. fice.

The new information shows So, when Christians speak- ofthat Father Rene DeVos, W.F., the priesthood of the faithful ordied in a courageous attempt to the priesthood of the hierarchicalsave his fellow-pries,ts by facing ministry, they refer to the waysthe armed attackers alone. He in which men participate,was killed, and his body mutil- through Baptism and Confirma-ated. tion and Holy Orders, in, that one

Divert Troops, Priesthood of Christ. And whenThe attacking party consisted they speak of the Mass- as His

of about 50 Lumumbist youths sacrifice, they mean only thatthrough the sacrament of the

armed with, clubs and spears, and Eucharist; Christ makes His one;local policemen in plain clothes. sacrifice present in time' and,

,They brought 50 gallons of gaso- 'space under the signs of bread,line with them, a fact regarded and' wine. ' ,as further confirmation of gov- M 0 N DAY OF PASSIO'N;ernment complicity in the as- WEIEK. 'ST. JOSEPH. The 'feastsault. Gasoline can be obtained of the foster father and. guardian'

, in Bukavu only through the gov~ of the' Messia~ takes precedenceernment. FATHER DeVOS over the Lenten Mass of today,

Before caryying out their at- "" Silent and strong, Joseph guar-tack; the Lumumbists diverted for help when he found the at- antees the humanness of thetroops loyal to the central Con- tackers could not be persuaded to conditions of Jesus' youth. Notgolese government by a 'telephone leave. His African curate was only will the incarnate Lordruse. The telephone call said that also able to escape. know ordinary family life, butBelgian paratroops were attack- The three White Fathers re- He will follow a trade and working Kivu province from the treated still further into the as men work. He is like us in allnearby Belgian trust territory immense mission house, barrI- things except sin. 'Only so canof' Ruanda-Urundi.' The loyal cading doors as they' went: As He be our Mediator with thetroops rushed off to investigate, the attacker!! 1:?roke down doors Father.and were miles from the scene and barricades, the priests re- T U E S DAY OF PASSIONwhen the Lumumbists attacked. treated again.' WEE:K. Today's lesson fore-'

The assault party arriv~d at Sees Mutilation shadows the Cross and all inno-St. Francis Xavier mission about At one point Father De Vos cent suffering consecrated by10:30 A.M. At the mission were went down the hall alone to Jesus in His passion and death.'six priests: the African pastor, force the attackers back and re- Daniel in Old Testament and thehis African assistants, two White barricade the door. He was'taken 'Priest-Messiah in the New. BothFathers who also served there and dragged out of the house. are signs of contradiction. In':-as assistants and two other White The first ,the ,two White difference is not a normal humanFathers who. had come from the Fathers inside the house knew of reaction to such a man. Let himmission .of St. Theresa to bear f t.his murder was rom, shouts 0 appear and immediately thereeonfessions. " the Lumumbists: "Bring the are lines drawn; groups formed,

Priests In Reetory body over here. Now try to say ,~nd the apPearance of both loveFive of the priests were taking, your Mass. Alleluia, Alleluia. In and hate: His life is a challenge

• coffee break in the rectory the pame of, the Father ...!t" to other men. This is the fear­from an all-morning session of But Father Van Noten saw the some thing about" holiness; Ithearing confessions in prepara-.. mutilation' of' "Father De Vos' promises resurrection, but it aleotion for a confirmation visit from. body ,from his hiding place in the 'irivolves"a cross. J _

the Archbishop two days later. churcb tower. WEDNESDAY OF PASSIONThe sixth priest, Father Joseph An autopsy indicated that" WEE~. The Christian religion is'

Van Noten, W.F., remained in Father DeVos was dead before a religion of the Word. The Wordthe confessional. 'He took refuge the butchery began. of God penetrating the 'greatestin the church tower when 'the Father Van Noten said thou.,. sound barrier of all and comiDlJattackers arrived.. , sands of Congole'se stood, by to man in the world and in time.'"

The priests who were in the terr.orstricken while the priest - Christians, ,then, are' hearer~rectory came onto the veranda was murdered~and his body torn ., listeners.. First of all in the Itt.;when they heard the shouts of apart., Many of, those who. urgy, in that Service of hthe arriving assault party. They watched were Catholics who had Word which is the first majorwere first attacked by frenzied come for confession. part of 'every Mass. But alsO illmen whose heads were decor- ' 'the heart of man, that heartaeed with leaves. They retreated April Conclave whic,h by t~e gifts of the Hoqinto the rectory and tried to talk ST. LOUIS (NC)-The 37th· Spirit has been endowed with ato the attackers. ' annual conference of the Cath- sensitivity to his guidance. Rest,

,TDe African pastor, Father olic Library Association ~ill be' relaxation, quiet are the condi-Alhonae Runiga, left the missiOD held here from A,pril'3 to 7. tiODS of good"reception.

ANCHOROFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER'ublishe,d weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Feill Rivet'

410 Highland AvenueFall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151

, PUBLISHERMost Rev. James L Connolly, D~D., PhD.

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

MANAGING EDITORHugh J. Golden

6"' ~THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar; 16; 1961

A New CollegeThe Sisters of. the Holy' trnion of the Sacred Hearts

have every reason to be proud of their new achievement­th~ obtaining of a charter from the Massachusetts Boardof Collegiate Authority to confer the degrees of Bachelor'of Arts and Bachelor of Science in Education. '

And so their well known Sacred Hearts School ofEducation, which has been doing such 'splendid work fortheir own community and other religious of the area,becomes the College of 'the Sacred Hearts. It joins StonehillCollege as the second institution of higher learning in theDiocese. .

On this occasion, then, the entire Diocese salutes theSisters for their unflagging efforts throughout the Diocesein the cause of education. And all wish the new College ofthe Sacred Hearts the same kind of success and blessingsin the future as have bless~ its predecessor in the past"twenty-seven years.

Parents ,and Prayer"For what does it profit a man, if he gain the whole

world but suffer the loss of his own souLH

No matter how much parents and others charged withthe care of the young strive and sacrifice to, bring their ,youngsters to physical and emotio~aiand mental maturity,in the final analysis it will be spiritual maturity thatcounts. If the ,person has this, he has all; if he ~as all ,butthis,· he, has lost everything. ' ,/

, That is why the spiritual mus~ ahyays be param~u,nt

in the guidance of the y()~ng. The ultimate goal is nothing,'else than sanctity. . ,

, And sanctity' ,is more easily' achieved if a person goesinto a calling in life consonant with his abilities andinclinations.

God has undoubtedly given many young men andwomen the talents, natural' and supernatural, to serve Himexclusively and directly as priests and brothers,and sisters.He wills that they attain sanctity in life by serving theChurch, the extension in time and place of His Divine Son.

Parents, thEm, would do well to enter with full 'spiritinto the Vocation Novena that begins today. It would beasad thing for them to expend their time and efforts makingtheir children good citizens of earth and forget that theyare first and foremost intended to be citizens of heaven.They must pray God to help them direct their children intothe pathway that leads to holiness. And if God is calling ason or daughter to His service, then .parents Ineed all ofGod's help to nurture this vocation that is a sign of Hisfavor and a blessing to be grateful for.

But whether God be asking young men and women toserve Him as priests or brothers or sis'ters;or whether He

,asks upon them to do His work in some oth.~r calling orprofession, parents dare not shirk their responsibility togive g,ood advice and to keep the spiritual first in their livesand before the eyes of their children.

Double Key,At a recent Family Life forum in the Archdiocese ot

Washington, parents arrived at 'the conclusion that atti­tudes are more important than information.

It was discovered that too many parents were lookingfor capsule solutions in br.inging up children. All too oftenthe question seems to be, "What do I tell him at what ageto insure his peak performance in the fields of religion ormorality ?'~ ; , .

, The conclusion was that parents are indeed competentto answer the questions of their children, to provide fortheir needs. But this is accomplished by attitudes through­out every age of growth and development. And an abso­lutely necessary condition is communication. '

If parents are always aware of their children, as muchwhen the child is three as when he is thirteen;' if they talk

-constantly with their children, about mud pies at three andcowboys at six and baseball at nine and cars at twelve,then the bond of' communication is strong during thefollowirig years when more serious topics are brought up.

And if 'in all the conversation there is' a wholesomeattitude, if their own ideas are religious and. moral, if God

,is the tapestry against which they live .their own lives,then they will communicate to their children what they(mngsters need. And they will find their children comingto them when more s~ific infonriation is sought. ,

Keep, open the avenues of communication and formattitudes at every age: this is our double key for sucCessfulparenthood. ' .

Page 7: 03.16.61

\

; ../.,.

THE ANCHOR- -'W'7Thurs., March 16, 1961

Accen'ts PotentialSpiritual ImpactOf Peace CortJ)s

WEST DE PERE, (I'W)~The spiritual impact of theproposed Peace Corps couldoutweigh its material andIntellectual effects, according roa Catholic editor.

Father Benjamin L. Massa,8.J., said Peace Corps members,by the practice of their religion."may by their example do moragood for the souls of orientalyouth than they hope to do fo:rtheir minds and bodies."

Father Masse, an associate ed-­itor of the Jesuit weekly maga­zine America, spoke at St. Nor­bert college here in Wisconsin.

Citing the student-led antl­American riots in Japan lastyear, he said the basic problemof Japanese youth is "rootless­ness."

''The old ideals of. obedienceand respect for authority wereweakened by the war and theoccupation," he said.

"The heart of Japanese youthis sound but its mind is con­fused~" he stated. "It is searchingvainly for a new set of values.Nowhere in the Orient is a reli­gious revival 90 needed. No­where 'would' it· promise richerresults." . •

Father Masse was one of 2SU.S. priests and laymen whotoured the Far East last Springunder the auspices of CatholicRelief Services-National CaUl­'olic Welfare Conference, ·theU. S. Catholic overseas reliefagency.. He said it is to the credit 01the Eisenhower and Kennedyadministrations that, despite fbopresent unfavorable U. S. bal­

. anlle of payments situation,there has been no reduction ofU. S. commitments under theMutual Security program.

"In military terms, the onl,.barrier to Red Chinese conquestof the Far East and South Asiais U. S. power in the Pacific,"Father Masse said. "In economleterms, the only barrier to com­munist penetration and subver­sion out there is the miracle ofAmerican production joined titthe moral force of Christiancharity."

, . ,

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.The fifth and present pastor isRev'. George E'. Sullivan, who hascharge of approximately' 1200souls in Swansea and part ofRehoboth. Father Sullivan hasrenovated the sanctuary and therectory during his four years. atSt. Dominic's, as well as direct­ing many min'or improvements.He is assisted each weekend byRev. Adalbert Szklanny of St.Vincent's Home and Rev. ReneChabot of' LaSalette Seminary,Attleboro.

In 1958, St. Dominlc's wasdivided again with the forma­tion of Our LadY of FatimaParish.

Active societies in the parishinclude the Women's Guild, theC.Y.O. and the eight-membershipConference of the St. Vincent dePaul Society. Seven nuns fromMount St. Mary's Academy comeeach week to teach the almost300 children in the parishChristian Doctrine.

ST. DOMINIC'S CHURCH, SWANSEA

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FAll 'RIVER 5':'7838

CarPool HelpsDa"ily Mass

NILES (NC)-Some 150 teen­agers assist at Mass and receiveHoly Communion every weekdaymorning at St. Stephen Churchin this Ohio community as a re­sult of'a car pool-bus-breakfa&tplan.. Parishioners organized car

pools to bring the youngsters toMass. After Mass, they get freebreakfast in the church hall.

On a typical day the Commun­ion rail filled up six times-andtee nag e r s predominated. Atbreakfast they ate 15 dozendonuts and rolls, and consumedtwo and a half gallons of hotchocolate, 48 glasses of milk andseveral clips of coffee.

After breakfast,' the' young­sters are delivered to publicschools by the parish school bus.

of the parish's history, about 23years. His first major project'wasto construct a rectory nextto the church. It was. completedin 1930 and' he took up bis res-idence there. .

By this time both St. Michael'sof Ocean Grove and St.Louis ofFrance ~ad been establishedfrom. St.. Dominic's, and the par­ish continued ·to grow underFather Ponte, par~cullilrlyduringand following the war years. .

In the Fall of 1951, FatherPonte was assigned to Fall niver,and Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, thenpastor at St. Joseph's, North

,Dighton, was na,med third pastorof St. Dominic's, Swansea. FatherWalsh made many improvementsin the church property, includinga parking lot, which kept carsoff the busy highway.

Rev. James A. Dury becamepastor in the Swansea parish inOctober of 1954, where he re­mained until named pastor ofCorpus . Christi Church, Sand­wich, in 1957.

History of Church in' Swansea BeginsWith St. DominiC's, Mother .Parish

By Marion Unsworth ,The history of the Church in Swansea begins with that of St. Dominic's parish,

although that, in turn, was originally part of St., Patrick's parish, Somerset. Severaltowns are involved in this evolution of the parishes now existing, including Somerse~

Swansea, Seekonk, Rehoboth. and Ocean Grove. Shortly after the tum of the century.the faithful, feeling thatthere was 'a sufficient num­ber of Catholics in Swanseato justify a separate parish,sent a delegation tQ BishopFeeha'n.

As 'a .result, in early 1911Bishop Feehan designated Rev.Bernard Percot, a French Domin­ican stationed atSt. Anne's, FallRiver, to' attend the people inthe Swansea area. This was ahappy· choice, since Father Per­cot was a linguist, who spokeEnglish;' French, Italian andPortuguese.

North Swansea MissionFather Percot came each

weekend to celebrate Mass and. administer the sacraments. Whenhe arri;"ed, there. already was a,mission established in. .. NorthSwansea, . St. ,Francis'·' Xavier,which remained under the juris­diction of St. Dominic's until the1938 hurricane, when the build­ing was so badly damaged. thatit was subsequently torn down.It had originally been a Protest­ant church, and had been boughtin 1911 by a Mr. Barney whodonated it to the Diocese. '.", Since there was neither ree­toO': nor church in, Swan~a ,when Father Percot started hisministrations, he stayeciand cel­ebrated Mass at the home ofNorbert P. Berard' for approx­'imately . six months,. one .Masseach week being held there andthe other at St. Francis Xavier.

By the end of 1911, through .theefforts . of parishioners andFather Percot, the constructionof a church was begun. Land forthe church had been donated byAlexander Boulay, and thebuilding was completed by Feb."ruary of 1912, despite, the diffi-.culties of finance, transportationand. distance facing Catholics inthe area., .

For 16 years, St. Dominic's re­mained more a mission ,than .aparish, with Father Percot com­ing weekends and staying 'over­night at a home across the streetfrom the Church. The first res­ide'nt pastor 'was Rev. (nowMonsignor) Louis Prevost, whoarrived in Swansea in Decemberof 1927. Father Prevost, residingin the house across from' thechurch, remained, at St.Dom­inic's less than a year, leavingiii October, 1928 to establish anational French church, St. Louisof France, in another section ofSwansea.

Father PonteHis successor was Rev. An­

thony O. Ponte,' whose pastorateaccounts for almost fifty per cent

Sees Discrimination .in HousingSpecial Challenge for Catholics'

CHICAGO (NC) - Racial Catholics must press thedtscrimination in housing poses claims of men for justice, It slud.a special challenge for Catholics "The stark injustice involved inbecause they are America's the denial of shelter to ~ellowalngle largest group of city resi- men because of skin ~Ql0r or ac­dents. cident ()f birth is sltrely evident

'This opinion comes from John to: aur reasonable man."McDermott, chairman of the ", Claims for Justice ..housing commission of the Na-' It maintained that too manytionai, Catholic Conference for persons have -lost faith that aIntcrncial Justice, which has' solution can be found to theheadquarters here. complex' problem." "Too many

"Catholic leadership," he said, have had their resolution to act"will be an indispensable factor justly thwarte4 by opposItioDif we 'are ever to finallyliclt uu. and recrimination.problem." "But God does not' forsaket' I. '. ThreatensU~ " His '." children," it "'eont~llued,. Residential discrimination bas "even amid t~ problems ofabecome a problem 'of natiOIl~ complex. contradictory mass ~p~ppt:tions, according ~ the ciety. '.' :conference. "It threatens the sta- ·· ..Jealous of the'digntty of' His,~i~itY, peace' and.unity of~ children, the Fathei' of all: inet;i'ez,ican civic life." . . will lead them' to· uriity. In this,">O1l\~" organi~~tion ~rt'eci u~ the-'logic 'of' the Gospel' 'canl1C)t

~ !llore than 40 U.S. Cat;hol~ ;be:co:m::p:ro:mi:s:e:d~...~__~~_;._=::z==~~:::=~==~:;~terracial Councils and groups

with 'similar objectives toesta~ DA'UGHTERS 6. 'st" PAUL "~ 'permanent committee. OQ .. , .,' .... . .

~ Imrite';'~a .girls (14;4.3) Ie labor. ..r-t,lsing. .. .Christ'a vast viaeyard "a, em ~Ite .. tho

"Housing segrega,·ti9n has p~ Editionl: p..... RCJdia, Movi~ .and Tel.e'eeded apace, actually increas- orhi_. with the.. ",adem. _.. th_mg, in scope and acceptance, Wasi_" sii,.,. bring Chmra Dactriaewhile progress in other phases o.f to all,' regardteu 'of rae., color or .....~-v:U rights have r~sulted from For Infonnatioo write to. ' ..-;.; ".!ega},. changes and popular . ,. "·.REV, 'MOTHER .SUPERIOI ..movements," t h'o ,conf~r~c:e ' .10 1T..P.AU1:S 'A~805J,ON; 30. MASI..aaid. '-

Bishop.;ChairmanExplains DecencyLegion Pledge

NEW YORK (NC) - Thethinking behind the NationalLegion of Decency's pledge.is to ask Catholics' vohiit:'tarily to give up attendIng cer­tain films in order to raise thegeneral moral tone of movies.

This summary is given byBishop James A. McNulty ofPaterson, N. J., chairman !>f theU. S. Bish9PS' Committee ~~

Motion Pictures, RadIo and Tel­evision. His explanation is madein an article In America, 0weekly Catholic review.

"All too many Catholics areonder the impression they arebeng 'pressured' when they areasked to subscribe to the prom­Ises which the legion proposesto them in its pledge," he wrot~~

But the spirit .behind th~

legion's pledge asking Catholicsto remain away from picturesdangerous to moral life, he cC?J;l­tinued, can be paraphrased ;thi~

:way:

Pupils To GetMore Religio,n

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-Sum-,lDer vacation will be short for~me Catholic public schooi stu­dentS here. In more than a dozenparishes they'll spend five daysCl week, three hours a day, learn­ing religion.

The first religious vacation8ehool in the diocese, organizedby Auxiliary Bishop James W.Malone, will triple the amountof religious instruction time stu­dents now receive in Confra­ternity of Christian Doctrineclasses.

Involved are grade schoolyoungsters in nine parishes, andhigh school students in Portageeounty. The classes begin in sixcenters June 12 and extend untilJuly 8.

Ban '75 Annually, "'There are about 200 pIctures• year that can be seen withoutrunning the slightest danger ofmoral infection or indifferentism.

'1'here are, on' the other hand,. some 75 films a year that are, tosay· the least, unworthy of view.,..lng, by, anyone wbo professesChristian Ideals of thought andconduct.~Are you willing.. then, freely:

~ give up those 75 films so thatthe Catholic body In the UnitedStates may present a solid frontand proclaim with a concerted9Oice, as it were, that it will not~ satisfied until the generallitoral tone of the films is worthyCIi the American people?"

Bishop McNulty expressed con­fidence that if the legion's pledgewould be proposed this way,"'there are few Catholics indeedwho would not be generousenough to respond .•."

Page 8: 03.16.61

"

,; COYNEINDUSTRIAL LAUNDRY

NEW BEDFORD

HATHAWAYOIL (0. INt,·

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales & Service

501 COUNTY ST.NEW BEDFORD

WY 3·1751

Spring Rummage, ,The Sucordium Club of Sacred

Hearts Academy, Fall River, willhold its Spring rummage. SaJefrom II to 8 tomorrow night lia,the convent hall. Mrs. ManuetMedeiros, chairman, will be a&­

, sisted by a group of club motheQin addition to all room mothers.Donations may 'be left at tIteacademy or will be picked up •request to Mrs. Medeiros.

,108 Nuns Volunteer~ i

For Mission Posts' .TOLEDO (NC) - A total CIIf

108 Sisters of Notre Dame ofthe Toledo province volunteered,but only four will be selected toserve in the community's firstforeign mission, field in theSouth Pacific. , ,

Mother Mary Antonelle, pr~, vincial superior, said the four"

will be selected on the bases ofhealth and age, and that a col­lege degree will be required.She said the four nuns will leavein July for the Vicariate 01Mount Hagen, which was estab­lished in New Guinea in 1951"

, and is administered by the Soci­ety of the Divine Word.

She said that there now aNonly a half dozen Holy Ghost·Sisters assisting 21 Divine Wordpriests and three Brothers in thevicariate.

<;:ontest 'Winner.For University

'MILWAUKEE (NC)-A Mi1­waukee nun's review of thenovel,' "Dr. Zhivago,'" won firstplace for Marquette universitJ'in the 1961 Midwest Jesuit InteJ:-

,collegiate English contest.Marquette entries placed first.

-thiTCi and sixth for a total of 28points. Sister Peter Damian, of

') the Sisters of the Divine Savi~ ,who was graduated from Ma~

quette in February, was the firstplace winner. She is stationedat the Divine Savior Sisters' newMilwaukee prep school for as­pirants.

,]~he University of Detroit tooksecond place, and Xavier Uni­versity, Cincinnati, placed third.Nine Jesuit schools competedwith three entries each.

The Marquette winners m­eluded James M. Leaver, Yuma,

'Ariz., third, and Michael J..Ash, Milwaukee, sixth. SisterPeter Damian placed first, MJl.Leaver second and Mr. Ash reo.,ceived honorable mention 1ftMarquette's own competition, theCramer essa-y contest.

• ATTENTION 41

INDUSTRIALc~~~~~ S~RVJ(~Wlty Buy - We Slippl,

. , ,COMPlElf

R~NTAt WOR« UNIFORMS

'" SHOP TOWELSAlso Reclaim Industrial Gloves

New England's Playground

Plan Your Dance PartyFa~hion Shows and

Banquetsat Lincoln Park's,MILLlON-DOLl.AR

BALLROOMCall ROLAND GAMACHE

WYman '9-6984

, Successor to,New (England Overall & Svpply Co. '"

20 Howard Ave., New BedfordPhoDe WV 7-0781 or WY 7-0788...._-----_....._--_..;:,

·STYLE SHOW: Members of Hyacinth Circle 71, New.Bedford, Daughters of ,Isabella, model at show to b~nefit

White'Sisters. Left to right: Mrs. Harold K. Herlihy, scribe,", and Mrs. Antone J. Morris, vice-regent.,

, Junior 0 of I, Junior Circle 71, New Bedford

! Daughters of. Isabella, wil re­ceive corporate Communion at9 o'clock Mass Sunday morning,

'March 19 and attend breakfast'at New 'Bedford Hotel at 10:15.

, New members will be initiatedat Holy Name Hall SUndB¥.

,April ~.

JEAN~S",STEAK "HOUSEFeiH River· New Bedford' Highway~No. Westpod

JUICY! 'TENDERI SIZZLINGISUAKS • CHOPS • ROASTS

Visit Our NewBANQUET ROOM

For Wedding Recept;ons-lvndleoaDinner Meetm9s-Banquetlll

For ReservationsPhone OSborne 2-9186

Assumption 0 of I:Assumption Circle, Fall River

Daughters of Isabella, will hold.a Communion breakfast Sunday.,May 7. '

THE ANCHOR.,..Q.iocesepf Foil River-Thurs. Mar. 1-6, 196'1,..... .. . ~".' , .. , . .. , .

St. Patrick's ShowOur Lady of Fatima Court,

Massachusetts Catholic Order ofForesters, will present a St. Pat­rick's show at 7:30 Friday night,March 17 at the Catholic Com-'munity Center, Franklin Street,'Fall River. ,,' , "

Mariy Ways to Achieve ComfortIn Every R0901 of House,'

, By Alice Bough CahillIf you glance through a few newspapers advertising

household equipment, or furniture, notice~how many times,the word "comfort" is used - relax in comfort, sleep in 'comfort, work in comfort.: How much comfon does yoUI'home provide? How does one sunny corner 'window or u'y aachieve comfort in a home? counter with stools or a drop­The dictionary defines coJl1- leaf table against a wallfort as a "state of serene- Weigh Advantageswell-being," but when you feel Of course, if you have the'cramped for space" when, the space, a regular table and chairschairs seem to ' will be more comfortable thansag, when you built-ins. Counter arrangementsstand with a are clever space-savers, but theypackage in your aren't very chummy for informalhand and real- family meals. You will want toize there isn't a weigh the advantage of each set-place to put it up before you decide which youin the room prefer. Then, consider how wellw-h ere y~u'll your nook will serve for extra-need it, out the curricular activities, such as play'window g 0 e s space on rainy days, meal-plan-that fee lin g ning, laundry sorting, etc.of "serene com-' No~, let's g{) upstairs. How:fort." , comfortable is the master bed-

Many families find a way to room? Is there a place where yoube more comfortable by making can' sit and read a few passageseach room do double duty. If you from the New Testament, orcan make such a plan for your other spiritual reading for Lent?home, the whole family will feel You'll be surprised how a none­rewarded. If you have a small too-ample bedroom can also behouse and a growing family, a sitting room.there are two solutions to con- Light-finished furniture winsider - expansion through re- give the impression of space, andmodeling, or, when that is im;' if you add a small-scaled love­possible, making each room do seat, table, reading lamp and adouble duty. ' small arm chair, upholstered per-

Assuming that you must adopt, haps in stylish gold-and-white,the latter, our suggestion is to you can have' a sitting room incater to comfort. You know how which to relax in comfort.much easier your work seems Don't overlook what you maywhen you are doing it in pleasant do with an unused attic to addsurroundings. comfort to your home. An attic

Study Room with a skylight can be turnedLet's start with a study room, into a "charmer"-a room which

keeping the comfort angle in will delight your, most specialmind-a room for working or, guest. Yellow and green could be 'lounging, a room perfectly or- 'used in such a room. Paint the Prelate Tells Women Communityganized for both. Such planning wall directly under the skypghtcalls for a comfortable chair and a soft dafiodilyellow, the ceiling 'Dec~ncy Personal Respon,sibil itysofa (ode that converts into a and other walls white. ' ,bed) and an efiicientdesk. Place - a day-bed 'or sofa-bed' DETROIT (NC)-Like charity, decency." '

We like a large desk with lots under the skylight against the ~ommunityde~ency begins at ' He singled out also theof elbow room. Have a pulldown yellow wall, coyering' ,it- 'with a home, Milwaukee's Archbishop Council for Independent Distri­'lamp which will give good light green spr.ead and" Dolstei-s cil 'William E. Cousins stressed here. bution" which represents 800for Close work and will push tip yellow-whit~-greeii'plaid. A The prelate, who is episcopal reputable magazine "and paper­for general illumination. Make 'yellow: nylon, Of" yell~w and, . moderator of the National Office back book distribu~rs. He saidwalls work for you 'too. green braided rug .will brighteli .fOr Decent Literature, said the lIhecouncil is making its mem- ,

Are you' tired of shuffling the floor. Cover'the'chairs in tee" battle against smut never ends bers aware ofpubli~ resentmentthrough stacks of magazines? A material-yOu, use for boiSters.'· 'and those Who join the fight against printed'~mut., 'slanting rack on a' wall below . ~ highch~st against' one ~aD ,mustbegin b~ closely ex~mining The council, he declared, is'bookshelves will hold current and a, comfortable desk,. easy literature w~lch comes mto the seeking to clean up the magazine!ssues,_ keeping them in' sight chair, desk ,lamp, and. reading. borne .bY. matI. and paperback book industry inand within easy reach. Add some lamp at the end of the. bed wiU , "Th1S 1S not just a community the same way it cracked down awall brackets, which any handy provide, your guest (if sOmeone' probl~~<'he said. "It is the re- few years ago on objectionableman can install. These are won- in the family hasn't' ,claimed it ' ,spons1b1ht.y ,of each individ~al. ,comic books. The Archbishopderful to' hold newspapers, the for his very Qwn) with a:-most . Thus eachg~ouP of peop~~ are said it is "absolutely false" thatchildren's ,homework projects,' comfortable nook 'fora very' _able ~ contr~~ute somethmg to retailers are forced to take ob­and unanswered mail. A bracket pleasant visit., ',,' ;~ ~~mum~y awareness by jectionable books and magazinesclose by the telephone can'holdexerc1smg the1r personal respon- in tie-in "package deals" iJ:lthe phone book. Sale of Fishing Lures sibility." order oflo obtain good material.

I'd suggest wallpapering one Speaking before more than .wall with' a world map. Besides NetsNuns$7,OOO '900 women at the banquet of the'being decorative, it's a great help CANTON (NC)-The "fishing'" ann u a 1 Detroit Archdiocesanin unraveling the day's news. It has been good for II conimunty Council of Catholic' Women con­does a good job of pushing the of cloistered Franciscan' nuns . vention, the Archbishop namedwall back to make the room look here in Ohio. . . names in singling out firnuIlarger than it is. Besides, a ,color- When the SisteI'S 'at Saficta' 'which 'are combatting smut.ful map is a good starting point Clara monastery are not spe'nd- Lauds Publishersfor a study-guest room's color ' ing hours in adoration :before , He cited Ameriean Book Pub-scheme. the Blessed Sacrament, ,they em- Ushers Council, which prints

Eating in the kitchen is a good ploy their sp~re time byassem- more than 90 per cent of popularold -Alnerican custom. As a busy bling fishing lures which they .hard cover books. The Arch­housewife, 'you can probably get sell .by maik .', .bishop "said: "While they crymore comfort if you join the They inaugurated, the project 'out against infringement of thetrend to having breakfasts, quick a yea~" 'ago and have 'realized !reedom of the press, they alsolunches, Sunday ... suppers, and $7,000 from the sale of lures. As .were among the f,irst to policeparty snacks in your kitchen. a result, the Sisters now plan. to· Aheir own organization. They

A breakfast corner can be open a new foundation in Bir- expelled, those publishers whoworked into many kitchens in a . mingham, Ala., late this year. 'have no regard for standards Ofnook or alcove handy to the Mother M. Veronica, and. Sistersink and stove, yet out of reg- ~gelica of. the community haveular kitchen traffic. Set a work left here for Birmingham, seek­counter at- right angles to the ing a suitable site for a 35-roomwall to make a nook where none monastery'­exists. Put your table beneath a

North Attleboro 0 of IBenedict Circle 61, North At­

tleboro Daughters of Isabella,will participate in a retreat to'be held at Brighton Cenacle Con­vent the last weekend in May.A silver tea is planned for April,with Mrs. Robert V. McGowanas chairman. Mrs. Jean Cavan­augh is in charge of arrange­ments for the May meeting.

..... ,

Page 9: 03.16.61

TWO FRESH IDEAs FOBLEN"'r,. EACH A MEAL IN· ITSELF!

LAFAYETTE (NC) -BishopMaurice- Schexnayder of Lafay­ette has organized a diocesans e'c u I a r institute for singlewomen, known as the Bishop'lJHelpers.

Bishop Schexnayder describedthe institute as "the possiblesolution of our personnel prob­lem in such difficult areas asschools, hospitals, social workand parochial apostoyc works."

The first members include a.school teacher, parish secretaries,a reporter, store clerks and arectory housekeeper.

Msgr. Warren L. Boudreaux,diocesan vicar general, has beenappointed by the Bishop to rep.­resent him on the institute's ad­visory council.

Msgr. Boudreaux said 'mem­bers will be required to take atemporary vow of chastity, tobe renewed every year; a pledgeof relative poverty (leoo strictthan the ~aditional vow); and apledge of obedience to the Blsho.pof the diocese, similar to thattaken by diocesan priests at theirordination.

Meeting TonightPresidents of affiliates oI.·the

Fall River District, DiocesanCouncil of Catholic Women, areinvited to attend a meeting at7:45 tonight at Our Lady ofAngels Hall, Tuttle Street. lVIis::IHelen' Chace, district president,will discuss plans for an O,PeIldistrict meeting at St. Mathieu'sChurch Wednesday night, April26 and, the annual diocesall coa-vention 'in May. .. .

Hyannis 0 of IFather McSwiney Circle 513,

Hyannis, Daughters of Isabella,will meet Tuesday, March 28at K of C Home, BarnstablBRoad. Plans will be discussedfor a rummage, sale and sUPPe1;both scheduled for April. Mem- .bera ,will attend a Communionbre~kfast at the New Bedford.Hotel this Sunday, sponsored byHyacinth Cacle of New Bed­iord.

Secular InstituteIn Louisiana

'THE ANCHOR- 9'Thurs., March 16, 1961

, 0

ROOD GABD",8ALAD CO'l'.TAGE OIUBs••,•• a tasty 'aU ofcmcldy carrots, crunchy celery,sweet red pep~ wad onioDa,fresh greenpeppers&Wirloo. through

, Hood Cottage Cheeee. Spoonit on aplate'aDd enjoy u. A meal iD itB8l£

~ FR£SHERflAYOR..~ COnAGE CHEESE........1I:iQ8IaII4·.Ko.lBenSeU..

J'EEE Cottage 01_ R~ BookletWrite: H. P. Hood. Bos A6J.

SOOB~ A.... Char~M..

She wrote that the serie3 men­«oneIl an anti-Catholic ,whosponsored legiSlation to makethe wearing of religious garb inOhio a violation of the law.The woman said the anti-Cath~otic 'W,8S her husband'Bgrand­fa,ther. The, woman.'.w now .,Catholic.

BOOD COT'I'AGJII CBJllJ!.SB WlTBPINEAP..PLE ••• arefreshing blend

. of juicy chunks of tal't-sweet pin&- "_apple_ and Cl'eamy Hood CottageCheese. SpOon it on lettuce, .ormound it on a plate. It'. a 'winDerfor lunoh or diDner,

'W"CMlvrs AlIYE WITH flaVOl mot• • , and try the l\9W 2 lb. FllDIiIy

SIze of &gular Mood 'Cottap CIaee5t.

fAMILY 1"V FUM! "'THE 11M IAClUSSJlOll'" I '

EVERI THURSDAY J.1:30 ill '

SPRING FASHIONS: Wives of,Bishop Cassidy.Council3669, Swansea Knights of COlumbus, meet to plan a SpringFestival of Fashions at 8 this Sunday night at the CouncilHome, Swansea., Left to right, Mrs. Lawrence Veloza, St.·,John, ,of God parish, co-chairman; Mrs. John DeSantis,

,St. Patriek's, Somerset, chairman; Mrs. Thomas Simmons,Santo Christo, Fall Ri~er, ticket chairman. '

Reports Nigerians SeekJoReossvreFor-eigners

CINCINNATI (NC)'-:The peo­p'le of new~y-.independent Ni,.geria are going out of their way'to show foreigners, that chaoslike. that in the Congo won't hap-,pen in Nigeria... ,

:80 re'p'ort~d Kathleen G!U'dner,a~'9,60 ,graduate ,of ,Our Lady af ,Clp.ciJ:!Il!.\tiCoIIege, who teaChesin' the Cornelia Connelly .See.-: 'onll1iu-Y' ,S~hoo.l" ,UYO,' Niger~copductec:i by the· Sisters of, theHoly Child of Jesus., '.

·Ever· since the green and "white,stripes of ,the. new nationre- ''placed tpe Bdtish UnIOn. Jack,last October '1,. th,e ' NigeriBm!,bave been "especially nice toforeigners, ms if to show them-­they have nothing to fear-thatthe violence of the' Congo couldnot hnppen in such, an advancednation, as Nigeria," she reporteddna letter home.

'Girl', 6, ReceiVes First .Communion' in 'Hospital

·CHICAGO (NCJ-:-,The .gown,wasbraqitional, the seenewas'not. ., Ther~e Ann Spllivan, 6, "wore 'the familiar whIte dress as she :'received her first Ho~y Commull­ion in a Resurrection l;1ospitalroom here. A leukemia victim, thegirl was hospitalized . and itlooked fora time as if shewouldn't receive her first Com­munion.

Her pastor,lratherlohn Flall­,aganof St. John Brebeuf ch~rCb"

Niles, Lll., arranged the hospitalceremony.. The hqspital staH',tZ'eated the girl'to 1l fanllily dec­orated cake for~ 0Cl~~;ne '

, girl is the daughter, of Mr." andntIni. ',F-rnnk SUllivan 1lf Nile·s.

Taurlton .Ball .Taunton'Queeni.ii:Dalightem

will hold their third 'annua[eharity ball MoDdaY night, April,8 at ,the Cotillion. Mn. WlliamP. MacLean heads a large aI'­nngementscommittee.

Spring BridgeINQI'Ith AttlebOl'O Catholic WBm­

,eWa Crlub will .hold its :annulil;8prdng luncheon bridge satur­day. A,pri1 29, at LafayetteHouse, !lI'oxboro. ,M':ra. 1lobertmeGo.wan na Chaiiman.

unity and grow together, what­,ever our backgrounds. Americais our country, no matter whencewe sprang.

Heritage ReeaJledNow and then, though, seems

to me, it is a healthful idea togo back, perhaps fancifully andeven nostalgically, and recallthose backgrounds.

For the traditionally Irish, it~ht be well on the 17th ofMarch to remeInber our heritage:to think of St. Patrick and hisglGrious wqrk in Ireland. Wemight,· too,pass on to our chil­dren what we have heard offamily lore dating· back to theirgr.andpnrents--no matter howmany "greats" precede this--1hemore the better.

,Ourchildren'B roots, ours,those of our parents, are deeplyimbedded in a foreign :soil Thoseroots took the transplant, haveestablished roots in AIperica.Nevertheless, we carry withinourselves the traits of ,our nat­ural origin, even. into tbetrans­pJaDt.

The "look-backs" should notoccur too often, of course, but

. now and 'then they are healthful,fun,and carrying on of tradition..

So as an Irish family, all atour house wish all at your house,the ,top 0' the morDin',and re-

¥.::yth:h;ri:a~ra:I~YSrise to Priest's H·istory Series 'I n Book Formmeet you aa, you walk, ST.' LOUIS (NC).-A series of Father Rahill said the letters

11\11' th·oo 'be t ,articles called "The Catholic in, which piled in as aresult of the....ay e WI .. ever' a your, ' .bach:;' , America" which was syndicated series varied from expressions oi

May your 'heart be I1ll warm: aa '. to the Catholic press last year by, high praise to "atheistic dia-your hearth, the N.C.W.C. Feature - Service tl'iben." He said he specially

And may the Good Lord always .and published weekly in 'J;he pr.!zed one letter which camekeep you in the hollow of His Anchor, brought bushel baskets from. an Ohio woman.hand." ,of fan mail here to the author.

One result of the many letterswas a decision by' Father PeterJ. Rahill to publish the series ina book, which also,is titled "TheCatholic in America" and is be­ing 'published by the FranciscanHerald Press ,in ,Chicago. Thebo<>'It has- a', forew{,rd by Coad­j~:tor Bishgp Leo C. ~yrne ofWichita" Kan. '

St~' P~·trick-s' 'Day Occas~onTo Recall :Diverse Roots

By Mary Tinley Daly"St. Patrick's, Day in the morning!" The phrase brings

• smile to the lips, a lift to the h~ of everybody evenremotely connected with Ireland. On the 17th of March,all nationalities join in a "Topo' the mornin',!" Althoughthose who really know Ire­land say that green is notworn as a symbol ,on theEmerald Isle, the U.S.A. isrife with green on that day, O.K..it's not lluthentic, but it is tra­4itional here.

Let's just callJt "St. Patrick'sDay," fleetingtMlt lovely.

"Hyphennted­Americans"havelong since lostGleironce ree­~nizedplace in••r Americanway of life.

!Perhaps W!l1'Seif.ied our peo­Ple. when regi­ments were made up of ·German­Americans, Italian - Americans,IIIiSh-Americans, French-Ameri­cans and the others, al:1 fighting... a common country.

More probably itia the matur­agof the peoples ·01 this DIltd.on,file iliving with oneano'bher andtlnd1nJJ common interests.

AU are, Americans.Tihe sameblendingia notiee­

able within the framew411rk oftheCathollc 'Church !in theUnited St:ltes. Poopie seek a'Catholic 'church, in its meaning.: universal '

With thilJ blendiIig of culturewith culture, "Americanizing"as• ,were, influences of,the 'OldWorld tend to diminish and al­mo!rt fade out completely in ,cer­tain sectors of our country.

'Ttlke a group of Americansanywhere: desultolY conversa­tion has as its dommant themetile state 01 the locality, the'~gion, the country, the world.fiational backgrounds are for­cotten, or overlooked.

It in onlyoccaSionally-on St. .Patrick's Day for the IriSh., Bas­tille Day for the Frenc'h, Colum­'bUs Day fOr' tbeltaUans, High!Holidays for the' Jews - thatIaackgroundlB we "1'elD.embered. '

A bit cif statistical study .showsffhnt,had your forebears !been..ith Columbus· in '1492, ,;youwotilii be about 2311d· generation,American; had they"conie' with 'the .Jamestown Expedition inW[)I7. first permanentEOgnshcettlement, you would ,be. 17thgeneration. If you count', fore- 'bears as recent as the "American 'Revolution, 1776, you would bebut the' 9th generation. (This 'iscounting a generation as the tra­,di,tional 20 years.)

Goodness knows, onJ,y theAmerican Indians are natives.

[n an amalgamated societyach as ours, a "mcltillg ,pot;"4Bl'tainly we must maintain oW'

,;Expresses' ConcernO¥erFamily Life

!NEW Y-QRK(NC) -ConnemOlVer the present state of 'the'American family was 'Voicedlhere by Msgr. George H. Guil- 'foyle, executive eirector o:f New,York Critholic Charities.

, In the organization's 1961 an- .iDWll -report, the Monsignor notedthe continued incidence ,of di­IYorce, separation, desertion,il-'legitimacy and other forms offamily disintegration whiCh con­.itute ,a grave danger to thecountry' from within. 'He calledIIor renewed eUorts to 'preserveend 'strengthen fa.m.Uy life.

Oharacterizing the famiJ.yasdemocracy's oldest tront.ier '8Dd.America's first line',of defense.f<[sgr. Gu1lfoyw Stressed the~cessity for eeh, efforts b1 •I¥llf - slave" .~:\f- free wOl"ld.here family sOlidarltyoften .istreated as a threat if:D the author- '... <01. a totalitftnaa ltate.

lacr-ed Hearts Alumnae:sacred BeartiAcademy Alum­

II8e ..Associatlon"J'.aithaVlm, wmbo14 • ham aDd :bean suP,Perattile academy 1rom5:30toV:30Saturday \11i8b411ar.cih25. M5.J"l'&n1l: ROgeD ...baimumaud,-.ounces that 'PI'DCeedswi11beDe!i& tat ~'iI ..bo1u*ip6iDd. '

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'.'·IDenies .ChargesAgainst Expelled:Haiti PrrelQtes

ROME (NC) - Haitiallgovernment explanations e!fthe events surrounding iif8expulsion of two bishops inrecent months are false, acco,r~

ing to an article in Civilta C~tolica.

Writing on the religous situa­tion in Haiti iri the Rome JesuMlreview, Father Giovanni Caprile.·S.J., comments on the expulsionof Archbishop Francois Poiri.of Port-au-Prince on Nov. Hand of Auxiliary Bishop Rell'l7'Augustin, S.M.M., of Port-au.Prince on Jan. 10•

Following the expulsion of 1DilFrench-born Archbishop a nod I

tile Haitian Bishop by the gov­'ernment of President FranciilDuvalier, the Holy See declared

·that all who had anything to dowith thei~ ousting were excOm;.municated. ',' . ., Bishop Augustin, now in b

U. S., has said that he does n~'. know why he' was expelled.'Archbishop Poirier, now •France, stated at· the- time _was forced out of his See.~his expulsion was part of a lo~standing· , goveriilMflt a n w;.Church campaign. .

Father Caprile notes that .•., go:vernment. accu~ Ar.chbish09.

Poirier of encouraging a stude~

· strike against the governm~

'·and of giving $7,000 to a cOJlllllmunist youth group.

"The enormity of such an jQ,o

sinuation," he writes, "is clear.when one considers the Arce­bishop's frequent efforts to warD

,.his faithful against the commun.­ist danger, which he had oneoagain denounced 'barely a monthbefore' his expulsion in an ene&ogetic pastoral letter.

"Let us add, besicli!s, that alaN'Ov. 18 he had forbidden theCatholic uniVersity. student ~ganization to. join in any we;whatsoever with communist st"

· dents, and that he did not perm-.:the Cat~ol1c daily La Plialan~to publish a letter of protest theorganiza,tion had prepared·~

. :the president of the·.republic.~ :

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Build Chapel, SchoolPALMA DE·MALLORCA (NC)

'Catholics of Establimentsparish.he~e in Spain hi"ve complet~dthe chapel, school and dispensarythey have been building for thepast year' during their sparetime.

. ORDAINS AMERICAN,PRiES'fS:The ordination of thr~ ·American: priests of t~Montfort Fathers by Bishop Remy Augustin, S.M.M., exiled apo8toli.~. a,dministratffi".ofPort~ari-Prince; Haiti; marked the first time a Negro Catholic' bishop had ordained a·whit.e man in the. U.S. The three priests (shown kneeling) are Father Everett.M. Brown,'-S.M.M·.,gf c.e~tral.Fal)s,R.,L; Father Donald, A,. J,-eClerc,· S.M.M., of.· Claremont, N.H.;.and Father M. Joseph MinstermaIi, S.M.M., of Scottsdale, Fa. The cer!'lmony. took 'Place".in St. Anth9ny's Ch.~rch, Litchfield, Conn. NC·Photo. .

Indian' Bi'shops QUQte Ghand,i ·inBero·tingGoYerB1mentB~ e;'rth .Co~trc)1 C~mpaignBOMBAY (NC) - The archbishops of Bombay and_ Calcutta have hotly contested

the government's birth control. campaign. Both Valerian Cardinal Gracias, Archbishop ofBombay, and. Archbishop Vivian Dyer of Calcutta quoted Mahatma Ghandi in support Qftheir contention that the contraception campaign of the government is immoral. Ghandi,

'whose. 'ef~ort8 brou/?ht ab~ut Such people, he said, would: traceptives at the rural healththe creatIOn of an mdepend-:, -Solve India's food problem center of Nalagarh, near Newent India, was' a tenacious noi. by increasing the amount of Delhi. .opponent of artificial birth food but by decreasing the num- If the system is successful,control.: ber of peo-ple. fr~ cont~aceptives w!ll be. ~is-. Both prelates spoke out m -Solve problems of poor liv- tnbuted 10 select :vIllages a~

Lenten pastorals. '. 'ing conditions not by improving over .t~~~un~y. .' . . .Archbisltop:. Dyer quoted a these conditions but again by . It 16 estImated. that 1,840,090

'statement Gbandi' made in 01926: 'reduchig the size'of fllrniHeB.: out rof India's 'approximately~'''A societ3.f that has already: be- .-Solv,e.unemploytnent pr<l'b- ' million., people .' have received·'come .enervatea 'through'8 'va- ' .Je~ .,.not by" cha~lOe~ing labor. 'eontraceptive instruction 'fromr.iety of " causes. 'becomes "~in into productive work but.by de- 'government a·gehciE!fi. ., .. ' "'!

.'futtlierenery~tM' by the"'·adop.- " "ereasi,llg the ;num~r ~ workers. .,. ., SteriUzatIOll.·. .,"~~.ofar~ifi~alJt:i~t,ho'ds;.': ::" ,:·-Solve problems,of. di~ase ,. I~ is al~, e~ti~ated'ihat a· total

11 h;~seh~n". theref~re, :~ ,by reducing the ,number of, peo- ,;Of .108,000 men and 'Women"have. 'g. ~ .ea . y, ',are. a. v.oca ~g pie who ~an .fall ill. ,been 9~eri~ized under the' go¥­,artifiCial m~th?'ds c,~mno.t,do ~et- . -,-,DeprIve the poor Ol. theernment's plan. A man.who sub­..~ shthanta s~ar. t~e~SUbJect rIght to parenthood but refuse ;mits to sterilization receives a"a. r~ " s ,y "uel~ lDJur ous .a~- . to assume. its .burdens th;em-b<iunty 01.. $5.25 A . ..

tIvlty' and, popullU'lze' BraChma- . '-selVes.' ." .' . .... wo.maa.:rte-char.ya~selrcontrOlfOr the mar- ,'.' ArchbiShop , Attipetty'! 'a 1so' c:t:¥ves a ,.bounty of $3.15. .,

'ried"and unmarried.' That'·js the 'i'eondemned the' goverriJrient's ";~~~~~~~~~~;;~;:~~~~~~~~~~~rJonly noble' 'arid .stnight methOd eoritraception:' campaign 'in": a It

'01. birti!- control." Lenten'" pastoral. '. He warned. Groeatest Disservice ·:'Cathol.ics to have nothing to 'do

Cardinal Gracias quoted • with it.statement Ghandi macli! a dec- Archbishop Benedict Mal' Gre­ade' later: "The gi'eatest disser..' gorios (Thangldathil) of Trivan­vice the protagonists' of contra- drum said in a statement to theceptives are doing to the youth. press that governrnent-spon­of India is to fill their minda sored contraception was "cor­with 'what appears to me Wl'ODgtupting family life" and open­ideology." ing a "flood-gate of social evils"

Prime. .Minister Jawaharlal in the sta~ of Kerala: ..~ehru,'whO~:~ a favori~ dis- '., Meanwhile, the Central,Fa~elpl~ of Ghandl, ~841 t>;e~'.pro- ,i1y Planning 'Board of India h~motmg con~ra~ep~lon In. ;,India. : begUB free distribution of COfl-Indian and' American doctors are ' , . ,carrying out the. i goverAment's;10-year birth control program,which is jointly' sponsored: bythe Rockefeller Foundation: and'Harvard University. PUrpoSe Off

E bl· h F d· the 10-year plan, which has runsta IS oun ahon 'half its course, is to cut Ind~'sOf Spanish Women birth rate of 40 per thousand.

Misguided Campaign 0

MIAMI (NC)-The first foun- Cardinal Gracias noted thatdation of a religio'\Is group OIl lbe.govemment is pouring iIl­Spanish women whO' wear no creasing amounts Of moneyintc;lspecial uniform has been eetab- . , __" . ... ....M

Jished in the Diocese' of Miami. this "wrong. _.... mlsgw........campaign.

The Institute of St. Teres~, . He said ,that people whG aci­a secular inst~tute for women euse· €atbolics of approaching,whose motherllouse iS,in }dadrid,·· ··lndi~'s popula.tion' with religiousSpain; will ~edicate..i~elf to'the, prejudices·are themilelves vic- 'Catholic education of girls,' and time of ·material';'stic 'prejudiee& i

young women in South 'Florid~ ';', ~ . .' . .:The group was invited to work- Aid Cuban Students iIn the dioceSe by Bishop,Colem8ll BATON ROUGE (NC)-Eighty:F Carroll.' c: u ban s attending Louisiana:

· The institute's'members, known State University w~_ aid~d bF ;as "Tereslans,,, wear a medal'of '. a· collection taken up in€atho- :the transfixed heart of, St. Te- lIc churches; in Baton Rouge. .'resa 'of Avila as their badge of :The financial pligh~ of~(;l,stu,..membership. Members take dents was brought oufby Fatherperpetual vows of.poverty, chas.. W. D. Bordes, chapl~in of. the .tity and obedience and are re- Catholic student center ,at thequired to follow some course. university.···. .': .of secular study in order to ob- A. $20,000 civie. ckive·. .,tain a university degree or' other , progress to' help the students·par ,professional qualUicatioia.·· .'. '~ii'tu:itioQ.MOm &ad baud. '

.• • ~.... A- • ., .- ,_, J ..... ,i " ,-, .~ .. ' ':'I ~~.....",.!'!"."""''''-'''''''''IP!'!~!''!!"'_'!!'!''-'''rIf1!!!I

:10 .THE ANCHOR-'Thurs., March 16, ,1961

Asks AII·LaymenJOD" .in P·lTcyerFor CcYnci~

WASHINGTON (NC)·The National Council ofCatholic Men ,president hasappealed to all U.S. Catholic.laymen to join in continuousprayer and sacrifice .for the suc­cess of the forthcoming Vatican'ecumenical council. .

John Cornelius Hayes, NCCM '.presidentand Chicago educator,rem 1"ded that Pope John "has'requested all the faithful of the.world to pray unceasingly fQt"the success of the co·uncil."

Mr. Hayes said the theme ofthe 1961 NCCM convention to

. 'be held in Pittsburgh from May· 4 to 7 is "The:Apostolic CathOlit;:

'. 'Layman - New' RespOnsibilities'in'Chri"stian Unity." .. ' .

"Thisth~ine wks chosen pre­:cisely to put, the convention in

; .iclose accord .with the 'spirit of'. the' ecu~enical counciL and. of .•~e World Congress.of the Lay'Apostolate which will f.ollow i4; .in Rome," Mr. Hayes said.'·, The' NCCM convention, Mr..Bayes said, has been dedicated·to Pope John and "therefore, itis most appropriate that we 'n~w .

, respond'with'special vigor to his··appeal." . . ."'Headded: "We aNi" askihg

every Catholic layman in.' the, United States to implement the.convention dedication by iriclud­ing prayers for this papal inten­·tion in his every Mass and in hisdaily . offerings of sUfferings,penances and good works fromDOW until the council adjourns."

,! .Praises Ca'tholi~: Education Gains

, WASHINGTON (NC) ~ Themagnitude of Catholic eQ.uca­tional achievements was laudedon the House floor by Rep.·Roland V"Libonati of Illinois.

He pointed' out that "Catholk!. school enrollments in the period

1930-1950 increased' by 600,000while. public l!chools ~ecreased

"

'560,000 . aI)d' higher e~ucati~.nI kept right 111 step wIth this! 'trend'" , '. ,',. '.: .! "T~e 'r~gionaland 'nati~~al In,:"\ erease of Cathol~c.higl1er .educ~­

I tion," Mr. "Libonati .stat.ed; "hasI created several problems. Sincei 1909, college and' university en­! rollments· .,have jumped from, 16,040 to 200,578. N6thwithstan1-

ing this 1,700 per cent (increase,Catholic institutibns": . now edu-

·eate only two-fifths of all Amer­ican Catholics' 'who go ~011 tohigher education." .

Critical Challeng~

Be added that the rising tideof college enrollments poses acritical challenge to Catholiehigher edl\cation.

Rep. Libonatl said that in 1909"one in every 887 Catholics at­tended Catholic institutions ofhigher education; 'in 195~ ,ther~tio is one in every 123.'" '..' "But this shining accomplish­

ment," he continued, "Is 'dip\pledby another fact: 60 per, cerit" atthe Catholics who go i;m tol;ligh­er education are in non-Catholic·institutions." .' '

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Men's CollegePlans C~asses

For W@menCANTON (NC) - Walsh

College, established in thisOhio city four months agofor men, will open its doorsto women on June 19.

The new program wiU permUtraining of teachers to relieve the"acute" shortage of instructorsin Stark eo u n t y parochialschools, it was announced.

Under the lay teacher SUbsidyprogram, parishes will pay thetuition for two years to worthyteacher candidates. In return. thestudent must agree to teach iaparish schools for two years.Previously, girls interested, issuch a program had to travel,toKent State University, 27 mi~et1

from here., College Co-InstitutionalUrsuline Sisters will teach.the

classes; Lay teacher recruits wiDbe able to earn ~56 credits fromJune, 1961 to September, 1963,These credits will enable the re­cruit to apply for tempora~

state certification as cadet teacb­ers in parish schools.

The change will make WalslaCollege co-institutional.' Thewomen recruits. and the men en­rolled at Walsh will go to classElllat different hout's and on diffe....ent days.

The Brothers 4)f ChristiuInstruction, who operate the lib­eral arts college, wili continuGlto teach classes for men only, aarequired by their rule.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 16, 1961

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at home, in such matters as help­ing brothers and sisters with'homework. It was' noted that so­daUsts are not confined toschools, but may be organized ia.professions and among busine6llpeople. .'

Forty...;twO eaaonized saintswere sOCialists, saidSi&ter :RoseAngela'. ' " " "",: '~ong practical IIOdality. pro­;jeetB 'W8ll' ment~on~ . that, 01.,}leeping high school students in­~fOrmed of Legion ,of De,cene)'ratings of motion pictures. Taun-

.Wn, students said that t~ey .aNworking on the. hopor system~rough sodality influ~nce andalso t1~at the sodality has arrang­,edmonthly First Friday ~asses:iIol' the ~ntire student body.

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in schools, but membes at>e "tilecream of the crop."

Girls at the Holy Vnion meet­ing discussed "daily duty cards"given til sodalists. These listMass, Holy Communion, eveningand morning prayers performeddaily by members. ~ost agreedthat the card formed '. e<>nveJl­'lent check-up and encOUi'qM'lI6dalists.', ' ' , '!' " .

.. Priinary apostolie: W()rk:,' :fWhigh school sodalists was oonsid­ered!to 'be found· in -school 8ad

'Hollywood AdY,ises> ,"DiciiA Saint, "

.. HOLLYWOOD , (NC)"';~w,:for the. first ,time, youeaa.diala .saint in Hollywood. Just ~HQllywood HI393... ' . : .:,

" The call will bring you a 96­'second tape recorded - rn.es~on the life and virtues of a saint.day 01' night:

The Service already exists m30 cities. This is the first timein California. The program isthe property and brainchild of35-year-old Robert W. Ward, a~rmer radio executive, a Chi­eago Catholic..

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Name High ·School :For First Bishop .

SANTA BARBARA (NC)James Francis Cardinal McIntyrededicated .Bishop Garcia DiegoHigh School here, named :forCalifornia's first Bishop.

The new school is built on 25acres along El Camino real be­tween Mission Santa Barbara,where Bishop Garcia Diego isburied, and Mission Santa Ines,where he established California1sfirst seminary.

The arehdiocesan high schoo'J,built ~ the Youth Educatic>nFund, has 520 studen~, and'isstaffed by Franciscan and Jesuit

"'Fathers and Sisters of Charity01. the Blessed Virgift MlK'Y. ' I. . . ',' .

EXPLAIN SODALITY: Sodalists at Holy Union schools and postulants and novicesof the commun'ity pQ91 experiences at meetingexplaining aims and I operation of Sodality'of Our Lady. Left to right, Mary Shields, postulant; Lorraine Sullivan, Sacred HeartsAcademy, Fall River; Sister Ann James and Sister Paul David, novices; Irene Megan,St. Mary's High School, Taunton; Mary Sullivan, Sacred Hearts AcadeJn!T..

I

Holy Union Sisters, Students Discuss' NetvAspects of Sodality o{ Our Lady ,

"It's possible, but it's hard.HThat was how. a Sodalist summed up the Sodality way'. of. life at an explanatory meeting at Debrabant Library of the Religious of the Holy

Union, Rock Street,Fall River. Organized by Sister Rose Angela, SUSC, of the SacredHearts Academy, Fall River, the meeting aimed to e-xplain the Sodality of Our Ladyto non-Sodalists and to givepast members an idea ofchanges that have recentlytaken place in the organiza­tion.

Representatives ckf SacredHearts' Academy, St. Mary'sHighSchool, Taunton, and the

J~:q\y. V.nioJ??r~pa~atoi'y.~hool,Novitiate and,P~tu~ate,parii~i-

pated. , , , 'Outlining' the' hlstor.y of the

'Sodality, ,Sister ,Rose Angela'noted that it was founded hi 1563by, the Society of JesuS. Until1'761 it was solely a men's 'organ-

- ization, and it has always 'beenunder Jesuit direction: It ",yorksunder the Bishop of' the DioceSein which it is active, and fre­quently bishops assign sodali~

'specific duties.. BtS . Saeeulawt

Sodalities used to be "cateh­a)1s" for all students and manymembers were not clear as totheir obligations. In 1948, how­ever, Pope Pius XII issued anApostolic Constitution, "Bis Sae­culari," calling upon' sodal\ties,to "change and become realItYdedicated to Our Lady." : }

Now sodality emphasis·' is Iup..on quality, not quantity. Sodal­isis are relatively few in number

, FmST: Na'YY Vet andionner TV entertainer Fr.Santo Garzarelli wiD be firstAmerican ordained in. thePontifical Institute' fur Mis­eion Extension, a missionATOUP founded J;OO ;yeaN~ NC POOiQ.

Orders CatholicEducation RetainClear Aims

LOS ANGELES (NC)The stewardship of Catholic

. eollege educators demandstheir aims remain clear inthe face of secularism, Arthur M.Murphy, president of St. Ma,ry'sCollege, Xavier, Kan., told 400educators here.

He urged members' of thesouthwest regional unit of theNational Catholic EducationalAssociation to reflect on theirprimary aim as teacher;;.

Catholic colleges, he said, maynot "put up with snobbery orpride or luxury. We may notcater to social strata. We believeis honest work. We are notsophisticated. .

"We do not aim to make mil­lionaires but to teach the stew­ardship of wealth and tlie habitof charity," he asserted.

"We are integrated," Mr. Mur­phy told the convention dinnerat Loyola University. "Our

'buildings are tools, not ends in'themselves.·Our students. are

treasures." 'Mr. Murphy said hazy philos­

ophy, goals and methods will J;lotproduce the. mature, couJ;'ageousgraduates "who are humblegiants of Catholic influence onth~ Park Avenues and the MainStreets of all the world."

The college head spoke also'offinance. "There is an ideal: offinance which Catholic schoolsought to know. It is that if 'youare really doing the work of theLord, within the limits of yourcapacity, you need never fear forthe condition of your temporaltreasury. It is to your spiritualtreasury that you must look," hesaid.

Telephone Ca II'~

Brings AdviceSYRACUSE (NC) - Fort y

thousand calls a week are placedto a local telephone number forspiritual advice and comfort.,

\ Callers who dial GRanite4-4261 hear a recorded messageprovided by the FranciscanApostolate of the Telephone atthe headquarters of the Conven-tual Franciscan 'Fathers. ;

The tel~phone apostot'ate hasoperated on a 24-hour scheduiesince last October.' It uses eight

; telephone lines.

Daily ChangesThe recorded messages are

, changed daily. They range wide­I ly in topic and treatment from

serious themes to light humor.,Father Dunstan McDermott,

'Q,F.M. Conv., said the peakloads come at 7 ,A,M. and '1\\'P.M. The fewest calls are placedon Monday. .

As a result of the success of thelocal project, he said, similartelephone apostolates are con­ducted at five other ConventualFranciscan houses in othercities.

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,Oh.ar.coCit IBr,iquets,

lBagCbol '-. 'Ch'brcodf

'GlEN~COA[~:&,'Oll eOa, 'Inc~I" ':' :s'~~~c,s~o~s:to DAVID OU.FF ,fr 'SON

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640 ,~.asant ,Sf,,",

$'HE'l'L lip · 1,1 H" '·0·'1',,' " . I. ,:,e,mtl,um, ,atln;9, ,I,S

Lobste!r:, 'Boat·s.. . -. "":" .:

,!li,'te' ,:, .',":'," ~d'" ." ,

~'La;rr~e ,',"!I<:i'ng,:'Sj~, " ,"iQB,ST'~iRS:, '

,;Famous ,Reading ,KARD 00AL" . 'NEW 'IENGl~ND 'COKIE" ,,~ADSO~ 1"'Of.l;BU~NERS '

24~tlI'oIlrQiI' '8u.rner'Serv.~ ,

. , , Y01Il, who,arelnterested In the activ1ties .of .misslonariesdl,over ,t~e world w:iII want to read MISSION. MISSION iisabl­monthly ,publication eontainlng pjc~ 'stories and lIetails 'Ofour Boly -Father'<sMissions. :Send a request io ·be :PUt ,on ourmailing .list along w.ith your ,sacrUleo.

.Who with ail 01 tbepressure of ~ersonal ,80rrowBwe1ghingupon him wrote: "Nothing must make yon anxious. in every nee4make your request 'knoWn to Godprayin8'and beseeching .Himand giving Himthanks as well"? It was Paul, a prisonerin 'a .Roma.n jail ata time when the Eagle,ofRame had fixed its claws mto lila body.Like a bird, he learned to sing whenbJscaf:e was darkened.

Whenyouaretroubled, therefore, gonot to someone perChed upon a safe hill. who,Shouts to tbestrugglers in 1!le field ,below;but go to a man who is in .the thick of thefight and who alone can sound the trumpetea11to those engaged in ba~eo

Send your sacrifices to the, Hoi,. Father illhrou.gh 'hJs ;SocletyfQrtilePropagationoftbe'P'aithand be will distribute1:hem to ifIheneedy O'.f the world.

. GODLOVE YOU ,to C.O. for$5-"i am85~ears old and on ,~'pension, but save~ this amount to help :in the wonderful work youar,e -doimg." ..~ . toE.O.for $54 «z am ~closi.ng three w.ys pay I

for the 'P09r .of ~he,woz:ld .¥t loving grati~de.to the.belovedSaintswho 'heard my prayei'sarid inteJ;j:eded for,me;" ... to' C.S~ for $1"1 am' el~ven years' old aDd,hQpeto be a missionary. ThiS ,is myaac.rifi~ for .theMisSions.H

UNION WHARF . f.FAlRHAVEN, ,MAss. _•

G~"'.i:y~:- "~l, " ,By ,iMost Rev~:FultoG J. ·Sheen. D;O., ",::( ','It is easy forprosperpus people who nave !!i~titmig''-to-trottble .

them to,giv:e advice to SU#errn,g :,hearts, but sudi' advice is' o:ftenasfUtile as it is easy. If ever you want advice and counsel" never go'

, to anyone whohasnotsuHered ei'therphysically or spirituaUy. !Ifyou can, find a missionary' who has suffered in Chi~a -or' Korea orVietnam. -or who, has spent some of his 'life' in the hardships az J1be,Amazon..

PIONEER: Mother AnnaDengel, founder of the Melli-cal Missionary Sisters,over- ' - JfIH) one ever DOmes 10 you tor counsel,

h 600 kill d eJCUDine yourconseienee. Have yOBever:sees~?re t· an '., '~" e· felt the sting of self-denial' Bave you ew:er made' an act ofteehmclans working ill 16 ,self.,.denial for 'so dayS in order to feed a leper? Your 'heari&hospitals and 20 .smaHer Uketwo mill stones: If tMlte Is DDt ,something .bebv.eenthem.medical centers ,on f-ourcon- ihey will destr~y one another. Jt the love of ChrJst ;andJlist' nts NC Photo ' VhUl'Cbin the' ,entire world b nollm your hear.i,then it wiD, me . . • wear itse1f out with the stony materiaJJsmol, your interest. we

have never met an nnhappy me who has made saerillces 'tor'the Boly Father ,morder .that Christ~BName ,be )N'OClaimed an4'looved .' ., ,

,Ca,rdinal Asb Homes, ;:For,C~,ba;n. a:,fugees . I

NEW' YORK {NC).,....Francig" :.'Cardini'llSp~~de an.ap- ' :peal t<{,the' ",charity,and under- .standinif"o1.b1s-,p~QPle in the' ,.New :York archdiocese to find : I .,ihome and jollopportUn1ties forCuban re£ugees who have cometo this country.

TheCardiri81 .reminded in III'pastoral letter ;.r~ad in allchurches of the archdiocese that:more than' 60,000 "Cubans fled,

, 'to' the Miami area ':since '~com­

'munist tyranny ,has establishedits hold" in ·Cuba.

Sjnce 1948,. more th,an 2'1.,000'refugees,!b.a:v:e'be~ :seWed mtheiNe~(cYorJt"a:~C)idioce3ethrtough(1the'efforts of the Bishops' Reset-:,tlement 9omml~, ,tb'eC8rdina:1;said. ,/ ,,,, ". ",

Urges Moyie \Goers';0 $ee Ques,t.jon7

;NEW YORK' .(NC'--"ilbe·Sa-',tl6nal, Legion .of Deeeucy,-stronglyrecommeDdB to every.ovie-goer" the motion pIdttlre-Question' 7" produced by Louiacae Rochement. ,Associates In' ,co­o~ration with .theLnthe1'llilI'ilm Associates.

The Le.gion callsita 'i>owedu1aotion picture" based on actualincidents 1n East Germa~ iia­~lving :an 'Evrm,gelica1 pastOl"and his teenage .sonand ·drama­tu;ing the threat ·of "atheiStic~":l"n'i~<"" '" I • '.

Says Latest ,Frankau 'NovelSeems Ar.b'itrary, Forced

By Rt. Revo Msgr. JJC)ImS.Kennedy,Do you believe that.a young ,man of 19, losing the sense

of his own identity and temporarily deprived "of;,his , own"memory, 'can assume' his father's memory of ~vents of 30years 'earlier? Do' you believe that this could ,happen evenill Ireland, at its most 00-' .

Tom committed suicide, drIvenwitching? You will have to to desperation by his masterful,believe so if you are to make' interfering wi f e . Geraldineanything of" Pamela Frank- stayed on with their small sonau's novel Road through, the Godfrey. 'Woods (Poubleday. $3.95). As Then she met Carus Black, onfor your ,re- a visit from EIigland. Attracted,'iewer he was to her, he looked illto the Cath-willing to credit olic religion at her insistence,the - trick, but and his inve~ation led him tofound the story accept the Faith. He became firm

and ardent in belief.bardly w 0 r t h Bilt Geraldine's mania forthe concesSion, spiritual management repelled.lIS well as not 'up' to the best then infuriated him, and, when

" work which ' 'it came to the moment ,of ex-M: i !I s Frankau changing the marriage vows, he

,said. "No," and stalked out ofhas done.Daniel Black chechul'ch.

,M the 19-year- , Confrontationeld: A LOndoner; he is on a ~ik- Not only did 'he leave thetng expedition in County Lim- church in Drumnair, he also lefterick when 'the psychological ao- ihe Church sometime later. Back

'cident befalls' him. He has, been in England he got involved in.repeatedly told that he ~ most business, was quickly,successful,fortunate to' have fourparent~. 10rged steadily ahead".eventuallyBis' father and mother ,ar~(il- became vel'Y rich.. aM very ,DriveChair,man~ced and each has remarried. worldly. Happiness eluded hilJl,

'Ris father Carns, and bissee- although he thought tha\, d1ssi- COntinued fl'omPage One'end wife, a~d'his mother, Jen- pation might provide'it;., active' asa 'speciai consuitallt ltoflifer and her second husband- There is a dramatic comronta- the International.Basic EconotD,Yen a~e interested in Daniel and tion scene when' Carus returns, Corporation, a' private agency1I1an elaborately for his well 30 years after his rejection of whiqh operates markets andbeing. 'The first-named pair want Geraldine; to take, care of ih~othertypesof""usinessesin Latin '.im to enter his father's flourish- son whom ev'eryone but Antoma American ,and European' coun­mg' business;, the: second-nameti,tnmks 'to, be somehow deranged. tries, seeking 'to raIse living,pair want him to ,go to Oxford. He will bring .Daniel home to standards by lowering produc-'During his holiday in Irelan,d he London,' and there the young tion and' distribution' ,costs Of.. to make up liiS ,mind. " " man will announce his decision food and other: commodities. .

I,' ,. . Meets 'Luke ' as to his ,future. , '" , " ,~ ,But in' the towil' of Drumnair; But thatdeclsion is announced ' .,' Raise' Liviilg Standards

til'at necessity Slips away from in .Drumnair. ,Although Daniel ' .Hehas traveled extensively Itohim and he begins to feel thathes been brought up without any countries where IBEe is active'!ae has been in this place before, , ,religion, and has been' subjected and has developed a trainingrecognizes roads, bits of land- ,to a carppaign on Jennifer's part program' for future corporation ',acape, buildings; to make religion, and especially ,executives ,:wliich prorides ~eld

In the'loca!'tnnhe sees an :old the Catholic religion"look idiotiQ, experience in Fernandes markets.maR whose' nanie', he easily 'he is now strongly drawn to the Mr.. Fernandes is a founder andeomes up with-Luke ·Courtney. ,Church. The gift which the il'easurer of Staff:SuperMarketThe old mail 'calls him by h1s father rejected is conferred:OIll Associates, a group of small 'andfather's name,Carus. ,And :soJbe- ,the son.' , ,medium sized lndependently

';8ins the adventure. , . " V.iolates Plaosiblity owned supermirket,CP.ains: The old man owns a demesne B'd D . 1 " to sta . ""'anded ,together .for operatin.,,.' g~ which are located the ruins of .eSI es,. ame means " y. 'U

- ,Oft in Druninair, work as a sort, efficiency. The organization rep-• 'ancient ,friary. The -demesne ,of han'dym~on ,the."demesne,: resents 240:super,markets,<contains, too;' arambting' old "and. m.arry' AntO"l~.All the older '., A' .,,' "'t" aff ., . . ..... " ; ctive In commun•.y,' aIrs,tloUse, where Luke livesw1~hlS 1 thi' , . . b f;]idowed daugbter.,.in,"law'Ger- .peop e pr~:lDounce', s prepos-;, Mr. Fernandes IS a mem er 0

, . ,ter.ous, but Daniel and Antonia; Norton~s Lions'. Club. his pariShaldineand her adopted da4ghter , m~I_~ '.gAod the"'lp:m'tentl·on. Thus," S . t' A-<-tl b' " . .. """'".u H;oly Name ocle y; ,. 'e oro,An,tonia, aged.17., ',the ,na't'tern' wh'ich was destroyed'" D" t . t 's' Cl b 'Wh to ', ,... ,IS rIC . erra . u:;" ' ea n :

F&!!lIlillar Ground " three decadeS-earlier, is restor~cL College Council anli ,the ,Anawan .The demesne is familillir' "Miss. Frankau". writes'neatly -', Boy SC<lut Council. He has Ibeen

ground to Danie'(who has ,never 'and .deftly.' But ,every~ here: ,on' the "local school committeebeen herebefoie:"'He begms to see~sarbitrary and -forced.' She:, and'school: planning ,bol1l'd forexplore the .friarY ruins.as ,if' weaves her narrative, expertly, ~y,years.lc)oking for'somethirig---:he knows' working toge'ther' the' strands of , He,:waschairman.of ,the Mem­DOt what: . - 'present and ,past;' giving Us ,orial Gift Committee 'which

'He is discovered by Geraldine, glimpses into several lives which, raised $1,500,000for iBish~middleaged but fighting °fiercely . though alien to one another, are Feehan High 'School, Attleboro.to retaain a semblance of the yet related.beauty of her youth. She is But the effort and the.skill do 'The newly appointed Charitiesshoek€d' by his looks; evidently not produce, a livip,g, 'engrossing ,Chairman !lives in Norton ,withshe at first takes him for some- novel:' Plausibility is violated, his wife, Annebelle.Theyhaveone else; then she curtly orders' and the characters,never take Oil 1hree children, JosephW" five,;~off the property. ' 'perSonal, intensity. ,Every 80 Marcia, .three; and Donna, one.·~But he stays on surr'eptitiously, ' ofte1'l: there' is,·a speech with a

~lfIlted by a conviction of ~t '·touch, Of wit or a jewel "of;wlS­associations. He meets Antonia, dom'Vi 1t but .this· does nof sUf-'w~o is downhearted because fice tQ, ~ve ~~he .bb,ok;nor doesGeraldine has decided that ,the the n6veL'fea1ure'o£>.anover-If.,l has a vocation to ilJie reli- weight heroine. ... , 'gi,ous life and must enter a con- 'v~t at once. Despite the fact Catholic AgeB'ilcyAidsthat Antonia -is a fat girl., Daniel C.• ,;IL...,.....!" Flond. JO'bsf81ls in love with her. ""Qu...

Uncovers Past l\IfIAMI (NC)-The WorldwideIn the course of a ,couple at 'relief agency maintained' by 11.S.

days, 'the past is uncovered.Ger- Catholics has found new .homealdine came here decades ago.as ,and job opportunities for halfthe bride of Tom Cour:t.ney. She I~ the Cuban.refugees resettledwas a convert'to 'Catholicism m various sectIons of :the country.and, domineering by nature, 'she /" H~ McCl~ne,Catholic. Relieffreely meddled, in the ,lij>iritual 'Serylces-National Catholic Wel­Ufe of anyone' w met. ~e Conference' representative

at :Miami's Cuban refugee emer;',gency center, 'said that 750 ofthe refugees have ,been '1'elocatedwithin the Archdiocese-of,DetroitNe!w'York,: Philad'elpbla;'Denverand ~ortland:-in~Oregon ~nd -in

,~~~~~~c:~;S., ~.~~~:;, .:'C:;.CoUe,ge Gets 'J,.OOftand Syracuse, N;Y. WASHINGTON· (.NC),- A

,,' 'Mr. McClone is a!loO-year vet- "565;000 !l.oanto Marlan Col1E!ge."eran with the world's greatest ' P,~gbkeepsie, N.. Y., 'Ito build_perBOn-to"'personrelief ,or.gan- dormitory for 120 students waSlization. He aided 'in the resettle- :announced by Commissionerment of liung8rian :l'efu&ees at - :SidneyH.W:oo!ner ,of the Com- 'the Camp Kilmer,N.3'" .center _ munity Facilities AdmiilistratiGlL , 'after they had:fled their home- "The liberal arts ·c:oUt1ge ,for men'.!land followiugtbe ,abOrtive ,a'" ,with an' ,enrollment 'Of :5111 is ~

,tempt to over.throw their <CQIR- ,conducted ',bF Jtbe :.a-ride,:~un'ist, ~lordldavl95G.:, :,lIrQtbers." ,."'-,, ~ ...

~.

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Page 13: 03.16.61

Boys from' Blessed Sacrament, St. An.ne',Are Senior Class Steermen at Prevost .

f:.

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Seeks Postage StampHonoring Dr. Dooley

WASHINGTON (NC) - Con­gress has been asked to authorizea special postage stamp honoringthe late Dr. Thomas A. Dooley.

Issuance of the stamp would! .be provided under a bill (H.R.4887) introduced in the House byRep. Frank J. Becker of NewYork.

A graduate of the universitiesof Notre Dame and st. Louis, the34-year-old physician was inter­nationally known for his workamong refugees in Laos ~elsewhere in southeast Asia. .

Program CountsMany MillionRadio Hearers

SPRINGFIELD (NC)More than ten million pep.sons listen via 500 radiostations each week to a showproduced in Our Lady of So~

rows Passionist monastery here.. The show is "The Hour of theCrucified," part of the Pas.sionistFathers' effort to use all ~odei'nmeans to relate the message oJZChrist Crucified.

According to Father Louis J.McCue, C.P., of Westfield, N. J ..assistant director, more than anhour of work goes into eachminute of aid time on the 3()"minute program.

Father Fidelis Rice, C.P., pro­gram director, established "The .Hour of the Crucified" on Marcllr4, 1954. He started with a home­type tape recorder, a commit­ment for a Lenten series ove!'a Holyoke, Mass., station' arid (j\

personal background of radioand TV experience.

The initial offering was so suCocessful that station WREB askedFather Rice to continue 'on aregular basis. Other stations fol­lowerd suit, professional equiP.ment was installed in the monas..tery here and "The Hour of theCrucified" took its place as IIIleader in religious programminll\.

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., March 16, 1961

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ington; while Paul, who'll con­. centrate on biology, is interestedin either Prowdence College orBoston College.

In high school, Mike's favoritesubject is, again, French, whilePaul elects American history andphysics.

Mike is the son of Mr. and Mrs.Lucien G. Methot. He has twosisters and two brothers. Paul,

, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander,Raymond, hu two brothe~ and.a sister•.

. OPEN FRIDAY .NIGHTS til 9

MICHEL METHOT (left) and PAUL RAYMOND

.BEFORE· YOUBUY - TRY

PARKMOTORSOLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile - Peugot • Renah67 Middle Street, Fairhaven

Fall River Scholarship Commit­tee youth branch.,

Mike, who wants to major inFrench at college, hopes to enterGeorgetown University, Wash-

Credits LegionSPRINGFIELD (NC) - '!'he

. Legion of Mary was instrumen­o tal in 65 conversions and 74-baptisms last year in the sparse--Iy-settled southern third of Mis-souri, Bishop Charles H. Helms­ing of Springfield-Cape Girard­eau reports. Members of. the Ie-

'gion made 10,228 eaUs dUl'inC- 1960, he said.

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WHAT EVERYBODY. SHOULD KNOW

By Patricia McGowanTwo neatly crewcut young men are the "top brass" at Prevost High School, Fan River.

They're Michel Methot, president of Senior Class A and Paul Raymond, president ofSenior B. There's no difference between the two groups, say the boys; it just makesfor better organization.to have two senior homerooms. Senior year's a whirl, Mike andPaul agree. Both are up totheir ears in school organi­zations, plus the extra dutiesthey have as steersmen oftheir class.

Mike is president of the Na­tional Honor Society, a sodalitymember, co-editor of the year­book and editor of the weeklyschool bulletin. Outside schoolhe's president of the Fall RiverArea Catholic Youth Organiza­tion, a junior assistant Scout­master at Blessed Sacrament'sparish troop and. a member ofthe youth branch of the FallRiver Scholarship Committee.The latter is the youngsters'auxiliary of the famous "Dollarsfor Scholars" plan that hasbrought Fall River national at­tention.

Paul is president' of Pre­vost's debate club, business man­ager of the yearbook, and amember of the campus basket­ball and baseball teams. He'svice president of Anawan StreetSocial Committee (a sort of Sen­ior CYO), a member of the HolyName Society of St. Anne's par­ish, and vice president of the

Teach GeometryIn ~irst Grade

DETROIT (NC) -A Catholtcelementary school here is teach-

,ing first grade pupils simplesteps in plane geometry in anexperiment to test the learningability of young children.

Beginners at St. John Berch­mOans' school are learning todraw basic geometric designs.Sister Mary de Lourdes, mathe­matics' consultant for the DetroitArchdiocese, said St. John'.successfully has' taught geometryto third graders for two y~ars.

Beeause of the program's sue­,cess, she explained, the experi­ment was begun this year in the;first and second grades. She

o stressed that no attempt is madeto teach the youngsters the prin-' .~iples of geome~y. . .

- Sister de Lourdes 'said first· graders begin' by drawing lines.o 'This teaches them how to handlepencilllnd ruler. Later t.hey draw

"lines between 'connecting points" to form triangles and squares.· "Skill and understanding m.· any subject is the result of con­"tinuous growth," the nun ex-· plained. "We feel that geometry'will have a greater meaning inhigh school if children approachit gradually."

Ohio Diocese to CareFor Chronically HI

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)­A $75,000 home for chronicallyill persons who ca'nnot· affordnursing homes will be built hereby Catholic Charities and tlieSt. Vincent de Paul Society.

Father Joseph Koch, charitiesdirector, said the home 'will haveno set rates, but will accept onlythose who cannot afford a nurs­ing home's usual rates.' I 0

Ground will be broken March25 for a 10-bedroom brick andconcrete structure. A muchlarger plant,· now on the drawingboards, will be built at a 'laterdate.

Chicago InvitesMothers Back .To School

CHICAGO (NC) - Motheris going back to school ­this time as a teacher.Mothers between the agesof 40 and 50, eollege graduateswhose families have been reared,are being recruited for the firsttime in the eity's history to fill250 openings for lay teachers inthe Chicago Catholic archdioceseelementary schools, which havean enrollment of 332,000.

Previously, such teachers havebeen younger, single women. .

The program was announcedby Msgr. William E. McManus,superintendent of the Catholicschool board.

Expect QuotaLetters to the major women's

Catholic colleges in the Chicagoarea have already brought re­sponses from 70 alumnae and thequota of 250 is expected to befilled well before the Septemberterm, Msgr. McManus said.

Most of the 70 volunteers havehad a little teaching experience,and some had taken a fewteaching courses in college.

The 70 begim 'a six-weektraining course Monday at Sienahigh school.

Training CourseThe first week includes gen­

eral orientation, lectures anddiscussions under the directionof elementary school supervisors.

Throughout the course the 70women will study the psychologyof child development, classroommanagement, and lesson plan­ning.

During the final three days ofthe orientation, the mothers willget an over-all view of the entireelementary school curriculum.Reading, arithmetic and socialstudies will be the main subjectsto be reviewed.

Classroom."The heart 01. the whole pro­

gram," Msgr. McManus said,"lies in the latter five weeks dur­ing which each woman will beassigned to a classroom."

. "There she will be under theguidance of an expert tel!cher.

. She will sit in the classrom andobserve.

,iThe recruit will be guidedby the teacher as she gradespapers, prepares records andworks with individual pupils.She also will, engage in a lot ofpractice teaching under the di­rection of the regular teacher."

This course will terminate inmid-April and another' coursewill be ·eonducted during theSummer, Msgr. McManUs said.

Lay Teachel'6The archdiocese ha~ 1,937laJ'

teachers in its elementaryschools, but in the last six yearsthe tremendous expansion of theschool system has resulted in a'teacher shortage.

Manitoba ConsidersPrivate Schooi Aid

WINNIPEG (NC)-:-The Mani­toba government is still seekinga policy on government aid toparochial schools and other pri­vate schools, Premier Duff Rob­lin told the provinciallegislature.

The Premier's statement wasthe first by the government onpublic aid to private schoolssince a royal commission recom­mended such aid in a report is­sued in November, 1959. He saidhe knew of no easy ·solution tothe problem, and added that itmust be viewed calMly and ina non-political way. .

Manitoba and British Colum­bia are the only Canadian prov­inces that require universal sup­port of public schOOls withoutany financial concessions to par­ents who wish their ehildren toattend other schools.

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" One, M~rgaret Clark, Presby­terian head of an engineeringplant, in Scotland, .organized .•fund which quickly collected$17,000. Now Miss Clark has or­gariized a new appeal for FatherBorelli's work and is receivinghelp from people of all denomin-'ations. They include ArchbishopJohn Heenan of Liverpool.

She has brought Father Borelll. to England for his televisoion

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B. C. AlumniWASHINGTON (NC) -Fifty

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- '.:,' . -.... :

Convert .' Warns·Reds Dedic:atedTo Revolution

SEA'ITLE' '(NC) ....:. Tnu· average commuIlist,' has a· one-track mind, .but it isstrong and' dedicated to theprinciple of world' revolutionsaccording to the party line~; . ,

The valuatio.it was given. ~y' aman who escaped from com-

· munist tyranny in Russia, wasconverted to the Catholic Faithand now is a Jesuit priest of the'Russian Byzantine Rite-Father

- Andrei Urusov, S.J., director ofthe Catholic Russian Center iASan Francisco.

It is a critical mistake to be­lieve that communists are bent'on anything less th~n world rev­olution,Father Urusov, scion ofold Russian nobility, told a lec­ture aud'ience of 1,500 persons ia

· Blanchet .High SChOol audito­rium here.

He said the average commun";· ist "is a professional man," who

deals in the basic wants of man";kind. The communist "under­stands his' goals' 'and his prqb-.lems and he approaches tnese'with level":headed' thinking," theRussian Jesuit said. Everythingis secondary to 'the foremost goal

. IRISHM.'E·N ALL·. Young' members 'of Our..Lady. of of world' revoiution with thecommunist, he' added.

Fatima Court,. Fall· River Fo~st.ers, prepare for St. Pat- Father Urusov, said the ~...rick's day show. Front, William Tansey, St: 'William'~'" mu~ist's"bible is the party line."Parish; Christine' Sulliv~LHoly Name; rear, Michaelene • He said that even Russia' Is

. D M D ld, Sac d H r:t. not'hirig more thaq a to:o~ .to i)eLeary, ~t. Anne's; ann)", c ~na re ea. uSed by the coniinimists~ Patr:!-

Naples Slum Priest.Removed Cassock .':~~~i:SU:: :;:;~~:r~h~To Win Confidence of Abandonedfi~e;t':':a:l~~h~~

LONDON' (NC)-Nine million . He did riot speak about religion, derstand and we make mistakesBritish television viewers heard moraIS or citizenship. Carefully about them. Herein lie. theirFather'Mario Borelli, hero of'the hiding his -identity,' he won their . strength," he continued.Naples slums,' appeal for heip eo~den~'as' one of themselves, Communism .:can ,be defeatedfor the thousands of neglected as.one facmg the same problems, b7 those who are willing toyouths he is trying to save. of survival in a selfish society. - .study, read and learn about it,

It 'is reporte~ to have stirred Finally he persuaded • group Father Urusov said. He added:up such a wave 'of goodwill and of them to join him in setting up . "Learn that it .is not a childishgenerosity throughout the couii- ··his "'House of Urchins," a parUY'game or of little. import to thetry that Father Borelli may ulti- bombed-out church offered him average .American. !tis notmately be able to clean up coni- by· the Cardinal. Three years ago enough' to have a vague notionpletely one of .the most disgrace- an Australian Catholic author, that communism is 'bad' _ weful social problems of Western Morris West, wrote a book about must know why 'it is bad. We

, Europe. .' them entitled. "Children of the must choose leaders who are. 'The first part of. the telecast Sun," which inspired some 700 men of vision, ideals and' realwas a 12.,minute docUmentary . people frori,l. this country to write tenacity."showing the priest's life among to Father Borelli offering to help.the abandoned children of theItalian port. Then Father Borelliappeared in a live interview. Hehas devoted 'his life to the "scug­nizzi"-"spinning tops"'--as hischildren are called: They' sleepin the streets, live on vice andcrime, completely uneducatedand un-Christian but FatherBorelli, helped by an Englishpriest, Father Bruno Scott James,has so far led 500 of them to his"House of Urchins" to· turn theminto useful citizens..

Won ConfidenceTen years ago Father Borelli

obtained the permission of hisArchbishop, Alessio Cardinal

.Ascalesi, to take off his cassock,put on the rags of a "scugnizzo"and join them'on the waterfront.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar;·16;.)961

,Asserts .Friendship 'Implies,'Equality, Mutuql ~~$P~~~'

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

" '''My first yeal" in college and 'away fr~in hOJ!le ·findsme with a' problem.. In the normal process of'·give',and takeit seems I'm', always the 'giver, ·and now I feel that myclassmates are t~kjng'me for granted. I'm. 'a fine. friendwhen they wantsomethirig. ities because this might·, givebut that's all.. I've always them an "in" with the rightbe'en easy going'':- jnaybe· people; to the popular girl ·be­because I've always' been cause she can' promote their

. social . standing and help themoverweight. I lov~'~ p~.ople and'h H get dates.

doing what I can fot.t em. ow;. This procedure may be quitecan I 'find a confusing if you're still thinkinghappy medium of friendship in 'terms of~an im-and stop being mature high school group. Al-the' giver all the most without reflecting, manytime?" : older girls tend to :use whoever. 'If I can inter- may be available-in class, atpret your letter . work, in social life. If· you arecorrectly,Millie, .. easy going, they will take ad-much of your vantage of you, probably arguingdifficulty con- that you should know better.sists in lear.ning Advises Self-Examinationto survive in an· What can you do'?Weli, Millie,adult, {lol1}peti- . I think 'you should begin 'withti.ve society. Ii little self-examination:' To beS'6011Eir or leiter, .

easy going, generous" and coop­in one form or another,' each of erativemay be good traits if theyUS. encounters this problem· as, ..'lire" also' assoc.iated with strong~e. movl;l fro~ childhood towar,d. character and a realistic view ofmaturity: It. is a. real pr?ble~l . life. ,bec~use It presents somethmg of But they also may be sigils of• dIlemma., a tendency to take the path of. ·On the one hand,: in the· true least resistance of • failure to

Christian family we'are taught develop adequate autonomy and~ trust oth.eFs and cooperate. We. lindividuality based on clearlygive fl'eely.. what we ,can, know- defined personal aspirations"andlog thilt .o~he~s w,ill do the .sa,me. . 'goals;' " ., ,.'Rea~ Jove IS.' not calculahng.· 'Indeed, they may even indicateCh.rIst.la,n . charity . seemsto...r~ . "an' attempt to avoid the rugged

.- Clulr~,:.~h.l.s .,appro~ch and ,t.h.e·. 'challenge of adulthood by cling­~usting mtimacy of ~he f~mIly, , ing"to the more: .pri>tected, rela­e~r~le ~ormally fosters it without '.' tiveiy aimless' view.Madole.-glvmg It ~ second thoug~t. . ·'cence.. . " ~

We ,e~Joy .doingthmgs f~r . Is it possible tliatY!Ml are COIl­ethers, ,i bearmg. on~.. another s ' sciously refus~ng to·grow. up, toburdens , as the ScrIpture says,. aCquire adult goalS' and aspira-because we have po· fear that the tio' , .members of our family will take I~~ve a reas()n for asking thisadvantage of us. question. You stated "I've always

Have Ulterior Purpose been overweight." AlthoughOn ·the other hand, as we move there' may. be m.any reasons why

out of the intimacy of the home an ·~dole~ceQt. is ove.rweight, Iand start experiencing more im..; . think most girls tackle this prob­persorial relationships. with - a lem with consid!,!rable serious­wide circle' of others, we soon ness once they discover -it.discover . that people can <be interferes with their socialthoughtless, self-centered, even interests. .scheming and selfish. They seem Poorl, PrePared,to regaf(~ us as t~lings rather..., .Hence I con~lude' that if youthan pe,rsons; .that lB, they l~~e didn't regard ,overweight·; as aus tf~r wh~t ~e ha~e :o~ can g1V~", serious problem in high school, itno or w a we a e. probably means that you did

We sense they want. to use u~; '. little dating and found sufficientEven when they're frIendly, we '"feel they have an ulterior pu"r- .Ic~mpamonshIp WIth a group of

th h th t I.':" ·glrls among whom your over-pose oug ey may no OJ<: • ht kfully conscious of it. As you put welg was 13: e~ for. granted.It, "I'm a fine friend' when they' Whether .thIS situatIon r.esultedwant something but that's all." fr?m lack. of opportumty for

How does one practice Chris-.:. Wider ~Ialc~ntacts or fromtian charity and yet avoid ex- .unconsclOus deSIre to esca~ theploitation? That is the dilemma. challenge they offered, It leftYou are facing the problem so ..you. poorly .prepared for ·tWa'squarely now because your past .present.seems to have been somewhat Little in Commonsheltered. Friendship implies ba'sic equal-

This is to say, .you probably ity and mutual respect. 'If yourgrew up with a more or less' self- classmates use you"without .. shar­sufficient, mutually trusting ing friendship, it's probably' be­group of friends who were rela- cause you have few wider inter­tively 'non-competitive because ests and aims in common.your limited adolescent aims and 'Hence either' enter theiractivities could be 'easily satisfied Hworld" or develop a more' self­within and through the group. sufficient philsophy 01. 'lifeen-

Fit~ldsof Interest "abUng you to, "go' 'it" alone.At . co1lege you moved intO 'a . ' Then your givirig will stem~from

more adult world. The aims and personal strength rather thail.'un­activitiesoi your classmates now ' 'cons~i?us need: tor others.extend.' well.: beyond the re- .strieted scope of high ·schoof or Asserts Most . Private

allA~ir:h~r~~~:id o~ your c~s" Colieges.·Need Aid'mates' expands; they lend '{o' CHICAGO (NC)'-An eduea­divide..their various fields"of In-' tor has. es~mated'80 per cent 01.terest . irito separate segments-:- . the ,nahons private COll~geswillclasswork, school activities, d~ '.' be forced to ·.·close their. d~rsing and "social life. ., ,. ',' .' uQ1ess .new m;ans of~uppOrt are

Hente,' they may' be frie~dJt -, ·found Imm~dl?tel~.· '. ".to the" "greasy' grind'" ill ciass .' Father VIrgIl C. J:U.um,.~f- .because they need her' help;' to"· ate professor of ·p~hhc~l·scIen~the talented girl in. school' activ- at MarquetteUmversIty, MII-

, ',: '". ' " '. : " I,' '. waukee, '.' warned.. at- the 16thHonor Publications.,;,an.n~a~.Gonf!,!rJm~e:o? Higher

. ' .• , .,.•..... ' ',. . .... '"E~ucabon.•at:the. MorcJson·hotelFor Mass,.o.., iW'or.k. ... ,," b~1'!e, that. there.·isa .financialCINq,Nr-rAT~,(N<::,h'7NinestU':.,.. l,imit bey~md' which church're­

dent publications will receive ..-;:·JI!-ted·. colleges. ,. c.annot.,' continuethe Student Press Paladin award to subsidize not only. their stu­of the .Catholic Students~Mission' ,. dents, but"American society:"Crusaci~;. presehted ·aiullially· to ';i .; iii' view o~ the significant T;olepUblica'tio'ris m-aKing 'the "best which' chur~h . related colle'gespresentation of the mission apas!.,' . play in American higher educa­tolate." The award will go to the ··..tion, Father Blum said, the d~­following: " . . . ','- :'i:'~(ge~'of' "financial.c<!llap~ is ~

College group' the .PelIcan.; , .. acceptable:· totliose who, valueCollege; of St.' Elizabeth, . ·Oon";:·,': 'the' presetvatioil. 'of'-:democraHcvent, N~,J. .. ';'v '.;" _.;;:. _ - .'••..:.:. •• • ·~J.deals..~". . .. ",

....

Page 15: 03.16.61

Menus, Recipes for Passion, Holy WeeksBy Getrude Lynch

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 16, 1961 15

r

_.

...I

MISSIONARIES AND MASSES......,. MblsIooa1'7 priest. depend almost solely tor their ma::.

I tertal RPport on Mua stipends. U you are going to remembe• deee_d Boved-one .. BalCer time, by havlnA' Masses eel~',Ied. we mil be happy to ·reeeive the offerings and send tileD._ .. priests m the Near aBd Middle East.

·12earSStOlissioDS--..fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pr••ld..

... T. a;.. ...., Sec'r'SeN _. lu"_ tol

CATHOLIC NEAl lAST WlLfARE ASSOCIAnON410 Lexington Ave~at 46th St. New York 17; N. Y.

AS.AN EASTER GIFT to a relative or to a friend, why not18 a Sacred Article to a Mission CtIurch In his or her name?~ will send the person so remembered a beautiful Easter GiftmL Another thought 'Is to give a Membership in our Associa-

.iOB CII' • Membership in !lne 01 our Mission Clubs.

- A DONATION .;..- nJa PALESTINE REFUGEES -

CAN YOU SEND ONE?

This phrase aptly describes Uhl four nUDI who, • few yeaq.ago w~n their Dewly-Iounded Community was In Us infancy.

. opened. • convent In KOKKALA inINDIA. Sister Albina, ·the superior 01the Convent which Is named in honorof Saint Augustine, writes to tell usthat u soon as the Sisters were set­tled. In the Convent they opened aDispensary and be'gan the buildingof • Chapel At present the ChapelIs only haU-finished and Is used forIl'lving religious InStructions .to thechillllreD of the district. $3,000 wiD

n, HoI, PaIhcrs Mission Ait/ enable the Sisters to finish the Chap.al, make beUer arrangements for

p the 0ritnkJ Omrrh !reaching religion to the children, andmabie them to do more effective work In their Dispensary. The

dislers of this new Community, known as the Sisters of Charlt)'01 the Diocese of Trichur, India, are truly filled with the spiritor !leU sacrifice lIDd charity. Could you help them In their work?

POO·REST OFTRE POOR

iRELAND AND LEBANONA distinguished P4'iest, who In hiB lifetime did much to aid

the people of the Middle East, frequently referred to MaronitoCathoUcs as the "Irish. of the East.H He used the phrase as 11tribute to the great faith of these Eastern Rite CathoUcs, themajority of whom are Lebanese; being of Irish ancestry andproud of tOO foot that the Irish have beld fast to their faithdespite centuries of persecution, he felt a kinship to the peopleof Lebanon 'rlho have jealously guarded their faith through aamany centUries and as much persecution as the people of Iro­lland. Tho century of Saint Patrick In Ireland. was the same cen­'1lury as that of Saint Maro In Lebanon, from whom the Maron­Mes take their name.

Like the people of Ireland the people of Lebanon have nevel'Mlffered for lack of vocations. There have always been gene~

@us boys rmd girls In Lebanon who haveoll'erecl their !ivCi to God as priests, sisters,.and brothera. At SAINT ANTHONY'S SEM­INARY, near the Cedan of Lebanon, JO­SEPH SALAMEH and JEAN DEBS are

. 'HUdylng eo be priests. Among many Leba­oeseglrls training to be Sisten are.SiSTERrHERESE and SISTER MARIE ANGE, nov­lees of the MARONITE SISTERS OF SAINT THERESE.

Could you l1nance the education of a boy for the l1riesthQOd,·... a lin ~ the' listerhood? According to our standards itreaJl,J doe. llot cost too much to Pll7 for the training of. a priestor ~.r in Mission, territory. Then, too, the whole amount dae.DOt have to be paid aU at once; it may be given In installment.of perioda from three to six years. Pel1taps you could "adopt"OIIe of theahove-mentioned boYI or girls In honor of SaintPatrlck· 01' in honor of Saint Maro. If you could we will bepleaRd to writ. to you about the method of payment,

SING FOR SACRED HEART: During,a recent visAto St. Louis, the three Lennon Sisters of the La .. _-ow';: II elkTV Show took time out to film an Angelus background f.the Sacred Heart Program; Father William K. Schweinher,8.J,:, prouction manager, outlines instructions to the girlLNCPhoto.

1r-'~'-"4 '-'~.~:. _...~_.....__..:....

I ..... v ,~. ~.

'Baked SpamServes 6

1. Arrange tM> cans of spam end to end in bakingdish.

2. Decorate with pineapple slices and maraschinocherries.

3. 'Cover meat and pineapple with mixture of ~cup pineapple juice and :Jh cup brown sugar.

4. Bake at 350· for 25 minutes. Baste at leastonce with pineapple mixture.

Mince Custard Pie:Jh recipe plain pastry1 lb. mincemeat% cup sugar1* cup milk1 t vanilla3 eggs slightly beaten

1. Line pie pan with pastry. .2. Cover bottom with mince meat.3. Add remaining ingredients to eggs and stir

until sugar is dissolved.4. Pour custard gently over mince meal5. Bake in hot oven 5 minutes at 400·. Reduce

heat "to 350·.I. Bake 45 minutes more or until filling is fi·rm.

TUESDAY, MARCH 28. Fast

Bre~kfarw. Stewed Prunes, Wheatena, Toast,Beverage. .

J.unch: Cream Cheese and Lime Salad40, Dateand Nut Bread, Potato Ohips, Honeydew MelClG,Beverage._ Dinner: Pork Chop Casserole·, Green BeamI,Broiled Tomato Slices, Tossed' Green' Salad­French D~ing, Cranberry Chiffon Pie·.

Cream Cheese and Lime SaladServes '8

2 pkgs. cream cheese. 2 pkgs. lime jello2 cups hot water-l No.2 can crushed pineapple1 No. 2 can fruit salad6 T mayonnaisepec,ans .

1. Soften cream cheese in a bowl, add lime ;ie11oand mix. .

2. Pour hot water over alt Add mayonnaise3. Add fruit with the juice, then pecans.4. Pour into mold and set. .

Pork Chop Casserole6 pork chops %" thick6 Potatoes2 onions2 ,T flourlh t saltpepper3 T chopped green pepper .1 t rosemary

1. Pare potatoes and slice 1/8" thick. .2. Slice onions very thin and separate into ringaI. Brown pork chops on frying pan. .4. Arrange the potato on the bottom of the baking

dish. Place layer of onion rings over potatoes.5. Sprinkle with green pepper. Repeat until po-'

tato and onion are used.ell. Mix flour and seasoning llnd sPread over~

tables. .Y. Arrange pork chops on top of potatoes. Bake

at 350· for 1 to 1 ¥.t. hours.

WEDNESDAY,MARCB~

FadBreakfast:' Apple juice, High Proteia~

Raisin Bread Toast, Beverage. ' .Lunch: Eggs in Tomato Cases,· Pineapple­

cottage cheese stuffed prune salad, CaD.nedPlums, Beverage.

Dinner: Fried Chicken, Whipped Potalo, 13nt­tered -Squash, Italian Beans, Hearts of Lettuce­Russian Dressing, Cherry 'Down Side Cakei'-.Whipped cream Ol' topping, Beverage.

Eggs In Tomm.to CasesServes (l

a small tomatoes2 T butterSalt, pepper6 eggs

1. Cut tops from tomatoes.l. In center of each make a iboll~w large enougb.

to hold an egg. .I. Add 1 t butter, season with salt· and pepper

and break an .egg into each t~ato. Arrange _baking dish.

6. Bake in m~erate oven (350·.) until egp lINlirm and tomatoes cooked.

, Cherry Down Side Cakes

I'w·.12 caRes blend ~ cup melted butter, "e'lpbrown sugar. Divide into twelve muffin CUpLArrange pineapple wedges in muffin pans andplace large cherry in center. Add cake mixtUl'eOVel' 1ruit .. .

Cake Mixture%. eu;P. ~ortening2 cups· sifted flour. _.1 cup sugar2 t baking powder% 1. salt% cup milk1 egg1 t vanilla'

1. St~ shortening just to solten.2. Sift in dry ingredients. .a. Add 1h milk and egg~ lIIlix DDW. aD. ..

is dampened.4. Beat vigorously 2 minut~.

I. Add remaining milk and vanillL8. Bea(1 minute.,. Fill pans ~ ·full... Bake 25 to 30 minutes at 31r.

Fish Baked In MilkServes 6

2 T Butter1% l-bs. fish (Halibut, haddock orwhitefish)1 t salt% cup water% cup evaporated milk

1. Melt butter in baking dish.l. Place fish in butter, sprinkle with salt and add

water and milk.I. Bake in moderate oven (350·) about 40 min- .

utes.SATURDAY, MARCH 25

FastBreakfast: Half Grapefruit, Toasted Corn Mu!­

fins, Beverage.Lunch: Cream of Asparagus Soup, Crackers,

Hearts of Lettuce Salad, Roquefort Dressing.Whole apricots, cookies, Beverage.

Dinner: Golden Nugget Meat Pie,·. BakedStuffed Potato, Broccoli with Parmesan Cheese,Shredded Carrot and Peanut-Mayonnaise, BostonCream Pie.

. Golden Nugget Pie6 servings

1 cup soft bread crumbs* cup milk0/4 lb. ground round steak1 egg (beaten)2 T grated onion1 t salt1 T Worcestershire Sauce3 T catsupY4 cup chopped onion2 T butter or margarine1 12 oz. can whole kernel corn(Drained) .1 cup stl'ained tomatoes1. t saltlh t basil

1. Soften bread crumbs in milk.2. Add meat, egg, 2 T onion, seasonh)gs. Mix wen.I. Line bottom and sides of 10" pie pan with meat

mixture.4. Bake in moderate oven 40 minutes.i. Cook ¥.I cup chopped oni~n .in butter UDti1

golden.I. Add corn, tomatoes and seasonings. Simmer It)

minutes.t. Fill meat crust with hot corn mixture. Bake •

minutes. Garnish with parsley.

MONDAY, MARCH 2'7

FaBt

Breakfast: Sliced Orange, Shredded wbeat.Balsin Toast, Beverage.

LaDch: Welsh Rarebit on Toast,· Tossed GreellSalad, Italian Dressing, Snow Pudding, CustardSauce, Beverage.

DIDDer: Baked Spam with Pineapple,· ParsleyPotato, Green Peas, Breaded Cauliflower, SlicedTomato and Lettuce Salad,Mince Custard PIe-.

Welsh Rarebit.1 T butter1 T flo'ur:Ih t mustard:y~ t saltpepper1 cup milk

. % lb. cheese" slices toast

L Make lI8uce of butter, flour, ~ninga eodmilk in double boiler.

S. Add cheese cut in pieces and stir until melted.'1. Pour over toast, jlarDish wi-tb paprika aod

parsle7.

THURSDAY, MARCH 23Fast

Breakfast: Baked Apple, Protein cereal, WholeWheat Toast, Orange marmalade, Beverage.

Lunch: Eggs New Orleans,· Tossed Greensalad, Italian Frenchette Dressing, Hot MilkSponge Cake, Beverage .

Dinner: Swiss Steak, Parsley Potatoes, But­tered Carrots, Asparagus Spears, Jellied FruitSalad, Hot Baking Powder Biscuits, Ice Cream,Cookies, Beverage.

Eggs New OrleansServes 4

2% cups tomatoes·% green pepper chopped1 small onion chopped* cup chopped celery4 eggs1 t sugar1/8 t pepper1 bay leaf% cup bread crumbs% t salt* cup grated American cheese

1. Cook tomatoes, pepper, onions, celery, sugar,and seasonings together for 10 minutes.

2. Remove bay leaf.3. Add bread crumbs and place in casserole.4. Break eggs 011 top, sprinkle with salt and

pepper.5. Cover wit'h grated cheese.6. Bake in moderate oven (350·) untn eggs are

firm and cheese has melted (15 to .20 minutes).

FRIDAY, MARCH 24

Fast and AbstineneeBreakftlst: Prune Juice, Poached Egg On Toast,

:Beverage.Lunch: Fruit Salad, Cr,eam Cheese Date and

Nut Bread Sandwich, Devil's Food Cake, Bever­age.

Dinner: Fish Baked i,n Milk·, Baked Potato,Scalloped Tomato, Green Beans, Tossed Salad,Russian Dressing, Fruited gelatine dessert withice cream.

Page 16: 03.16.61

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11

39t'

8ge15 ocCANS

For, lit New,tnglisAcfBoiled,] Dinner.

Vitamin Packed'­Fresh and Cti5PY.

Mild - Adds Zip,4,

10 YOur MeatS

King'Si_-QUiCland Easy to,C•.

PRODUCf SPECIALS: f

'. "

S. & H. '"- s.a.p. .. AI s-- .. Eastent' Ma........Except .... AttIaIKns.,

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CLAM' CHOWDER' 2,

WHITE tuR~. ,PIE; %

Sa..low SeIf·SeMce Prices In,AII Stores 1lI11li1 Vicinity :­

rNa RallOtv. ,he Right ~ LimllQuantlti.... '

DElICAJESSEN ~ STYE£:' - f.taye a

,Traditional New England Dinner

GROCERY; SPECfAtS'

ClMPBEIJ:S; SUUK 4 ~Ni, SSeSCOTTIES ;::a~ 2' ~~~ 47cHOMEMAKERS: lEANS 4,,' ~~~~ $l·oo~

SPAM LUN(HEONJ MEA-t 2" J~~~. 85:c' 'DINIY MO,ORE' ~~:': 2, '~:.s~ S:SeMY-T-FINE PUDDINGS' ,,~ 35t,

.' VT~ MAID SYIOP' ~':c:,_1 53c'..ENlEN '=: SPECW5't

RIA'" ...~ o-tlIY- AlII_

lVI, to 2 LB Avg. - PlumpJ' ,tender, S~; lasting

Cornish' H'elll's'=~ ~ 4'(;

1. .. ROMt, and Chops' - Here is an, Ex~! Meal Buy

JP'ork ' Combinatioa La 49c

Golden' Ripe;. Mellbw: and~ Sweet)

iBananDs;CillJbap)JCarrols

,

O'nioasISpinach

Young" Ten.. POti> AI] Its. V8f¥ !tesI;

:Pork,loins 'l·Rib (at La, 33c

;CORNEDJ BRISIETt·69Jc

YOu,thl Council MarlCs: National; Radio· MonthWASHING.T0N1 (NC')~ - The to every Catholic Youth Organ­

National Council of Catholic ization' in' the> country throughYouth is-distributing 5,500 bulle- Program Service, bimonth17tins calling attention to the publication ofr.-the NCCY.

,observance' of Mayas' national' The National' Association., of.radio- mQ,nth. Broadcasters prepared and sup-

The> bulletins are. being' sent plied' the bulletins.

~_..._-------_.._-----,----------...

Bonus SlilmpSpecia(sJ'No Newspaper Co~pons Required' on Itetns Listed

Below - Offer. through: March, 181

50 Exira S. & H. ~r••n·S'_""When You· Buy One 6 oz, JI'\R'

51~AST ,INSTANT COFFI.·

S. Extra S;' & H. G're... ,S'c ..'When' YOui BUY-' 0he> 1 l!J PKG,

,orAST SID.LESS FRAN••'

50i btr. S; ~ If. G.....' .........When' You BUy on.,ll· oz, BOX' Two'su.••SE POTATO" CHIPS.

2J5: Eld'~a S~ & H. Gree'" S........', When You· Buy One 8 or PKG' . ,

BROOKSIDE SLICED CaEESE,

2S'Juira S. &. H. Gree.. 5 .........When You Buy -One LOAF of

ICED M~R.~E; CAICE'

j'

1

.,

r ,RARE Boo:K\:' Fathen'Cliffor-dl Car.r.oIIs; S;J.; of GOnzaga

Univ;ensity, SPokane;, holds, recently presented; copy, of one:of)' earliest books: pr.inted;, the' blessed-:Bruno Psalter. NCPhoto~

'Sees MateriaJitsm.In ' Puerto' Ri:co'

PONCE, (iNC,) -BiShopJJame..E. McManus; of Ronce has: saicl,here' that. man:w statesmem seeD,to be- ignoring, God' in, thei:6.effollts; to attaim materiaL g~ISo

The Bishop: stated' in at paso-­tOl'allletter. he,islSODry{to'see' thatl"his w-ise and:necessarY{war.nings-.have. faUeul among( thor.nsi wtuatr,Buffocated; thenu'"

"It seems that many statesmeu.,,and 'some who) calli themselves'Christians andl even. G:atholics..have reached, tlie conclusion: that.the mone God is. ignored~ in: gpv.--,ernment. ·worlr.. the, sooner tlie'

'matellia'1 aim:. is: reached~:" the,Bishop;,said:, , A:sks, for Bray.ers'

Bisliop' MCManus! called< for &1pre-yer cnusad1!) to, remind' mllQ)that aU authmdt}'j' d'erives~ frOID:God.. "':Chose: who> pnetend:, ~,

govern igJ1Orlng', Him, become,'ttue.'anti,.G:hrists;~, he> stated!

Before the-, elections: last,,'Novembelt;, the> Bishops; ofi.PuenfAJ', ,Rico' issued; IrllBtoralt lettel:s: ~-,~nm <l:athOlicsi to: vote~ for' the'Popuiar D'emoeratic: party.- oil:Gov:. LUfS MUnoZ'. M'arim The

'Governor' was reelected~; how-. • ever, and 'hiS pantyr WOOl 5& peR

cent of the, ,",ote,.

Urges. J(~e:.c.ra,tion . 1ftOf €atholi'c'Parents" .

MELBchmNE (NC)-Cathol'ieparents: from' .three Australianstat~s- have 'Urgedl the'creationl ofa naVionwide' federation. oj): stateCatholic parents' ol1ganizatlons;

Delegates from ¥ictoria\ Wcst..ern Australia and TasmaniaJ said.at a meeting; here, that a· singl~

body. is necessar.y to, negutiatewithi tlie' Federal' government OD

behalf of Catholic parents.

THE ,6lN'€HORi-1'6 Thurs." March 16, 1961

Polish, Rexdl$: Map:~ie;w Prcpa:g:ando'i'GIT Ath'e5sm;

BERLIN' (Nee,») -P'oland~s;organized a:tn:eists, h. a: v: emapped: out: 3.\ four~pGint,

planl to discr.edit; tne' Ca-tholicenw:chl and! "aemonstrate the'gtleat- !iuman~values!" of' commw-'nisml in, 196t:., .

, 'lllie' Pblish' communist. montn,.~ M\Yisl Wofua~ outlined· the'

, st'r.ategy in an,editariil1 in which, i~: cnallged that: many, membersof the' Organization af' Atheists,andJ Freethinltel181 "lack a' properappnoach to the; tasks' of' atheis;.,tic' pnopaganda!" Tliere j,ust isn't,enough effort: being' made' to:,rouse' the Rolisll Qeople- from,

,-,' tliein" "religi~U8" slumber./" it'.' said!

'line' editoriiU;, entitH~d, "Timely"!', I!te£lections'" stressed- the- need

for.' a' more'concent'ed: drive' dur-' ,,~ 1961, on, tliese' poin1:5.

'PoPesJ Hostife"

!' :th;~' ~~r;;~~::;~~~\ei:~~i:~,' Ec:,c:lesias,ticall; Deleg,a,tes' -Action),~.l~~~r~~:th~~t~~li~~l::;: D~'lays Press law' P'ubrication'Distrust' -and' sc.epticism snoulii~ MkDRID (NCr - PlIlHication, , , Some' cn1u:ch: delegates,belleve,'tie, the' attitude- towards' the- ac", oil tlle: draft. ofl 1II neW' Spanish. - that' the' present: draft, on whicb?. ti¥ities, of even;tfulliel plliests, who 1 press,la,wl 'wilL be, dela~done they, 'have worked' for' several:,.ppear to b~ socially enHght- month, according to. infoJ7Illed: , months;, and! which will' be~ sub-,

- ened, the periodical. said. Sources here, • mUted to' the government> and• 3'. Stress tlie'idea of "the fer-" Ecclesiastical' d~·n~gates: to the to the Cortes, (parliament), 14. a,vent, patriotiSm, of tlie' atheists!"' commission, wliicro iSI charged; fiction. Therefore,. they; do: not~

In or,der: to erase tlie' people's' with wniting; a, new, press. law" want to ~ompromise:theChur.eb..ooncept of' priestS as the leading refused to take' part ih lr meet-", ,The: regime' of~ Gem Francisco',patuiots, log; caned. t(C discuss a' prepared; Franco: does nott want' to,publim

'H'mitaB' VlIluesf ,dr-af,lt on' Janua~ 301 the draft, law withoutl the- sup•.,' .. Stress'the-positive: ",A;tlieis- , :r~irty members of the co~-' port, of' the Church. CatholiC!

tie propaganda' shoulQl not' reo-'" miSSion aile' government offl- . c1iunctimero and other: lead~'atri<itt itself to· negative' activitY.: cials, The:cler~en'on, the com- have insisted; that, the govern- 'A Mar~ist world' outlook' sl\oulil' mission; include, thllee, bishop. ment! pllesentl legislation' pl'ovia'"be put!, forward' in' opposition' to' and six; priests;.. '., ing greatEw freedom. oft Speecltlthe' religious world outlook. Our' The' three' eplSCopa!, delegates,~ while, at. the same time'retainingpropaganda ,must' demonstrate-' Bishop's, .Angell, H'erliellal ,O~ia of tfle necessary' guarantees of, pub-.the great' human values' of' OUf" Malaga, .Iuan., H'er.vas, of Cludad' ,lie order and' ~orality.,polit'ical' systimr ... PbliSh ath- Real and' An~owo' Oha, A:uxili- During: the Spanish Civil' War.eism1 must fight'witn' the' CathO'- ar.y; of'Lugo, dilL: not ,appear at (1936 to 1939), the NationaliSt'lie Hierarchy, fi:>r:. a' great, and' tlie' conference, government institutetl censor-important cause; for dominion ,Regret; O'missiOnsl ship as an emergency measure.',ovec the soulS, of' the whole na- Instead': iliey, sent a' note with Since then, the Spanish press,liasti II' ,

,011'. '., ' , '. 1II pr:iest,..delegatel Rather. Anton- published editorials dictated' b;p;'1m:m a~ho~ aRP~rent~yrelat~ io> Montero; in which the~ stated' the liovernment; The regime has'

•. tn: ~ysl Wbl~a (J~nuary) they disagreedl with . the, draft also interfered with Catholic,edlto~lal, Pola~d ~ , so,- called andi regretted omission' qi some publications when, thee criW-

, ~cular Sch~l SOCl~~,- ~os~ of' their, Iecommendations~ ci:red the government. 'avowed aim IS to ellmmate reU- '.gious 'instruct~on :from all' theBchobls, - met: in-, Poznan' to

,press, for "secularization'" of'Poland's hospitals: ,Some 200hospital directors, physicians:and nurses were repor.fed' tohave taken part .in .the meeti~

• I

-

( I

Page 17: 03.16.61

-

AIF.FRANCr10al 'PilGRIMAGtPROIllWlINCLUDECJ An MAlOR CATHOLlCSHRIIES_

EVIRH\lI£ll£ IN THE \VORLOI

11th!·pilgnmall£'·

YllU\1t :al\\1agsdrramtd of··making.••

(at aprIce)'Ou can really oBara

THE ANCHOR....,Thurs., March 16, 1961

\{isit ,Rome•. Fatima, Lourdee,LiSieux. S~ Ithe famollsFA~OIIIPLNY .at '~rl. IViSit Assisi, 'ho~of 'St. 'Francis. 'See Notre ,Dame"

\ SacI'll! 'Coeur i'n ·Pari'S. TourpilgrimaEO 'centers in England"

. Ireland ·antl'G~rmany.Visit theHoly Land. ~pend Easter inJerusalem, Christmas in 'Bethle­hem. All pilgrimages under thepersonal leadership and spiritualdirection1of Catholic priests. .~irJ<'rance.dlfet1\piJgrimagcs·frcim

'8 to '54 days'.l:luration with pr.iccautarting at orily 1625 complete{rom New York. You "get. AirFranoeJet Economy Class rou",a­<trip transportation from NewYork, hotel accommodations, ,allmeals, .s+gh.tsecil)g..."..even l\plI.

Several convenient departuJUIbetwcten March '22 and Decem­ber 13. "Fly NO\v-Pay Later'"plan.available. Mail couponibelow.{or ,complete.details.

Plairucm~mJ~ S~nior

W cU'~~rr£i' G~~~dCOVINGTON (NC) - A md

who is iconvin~~d there is Plen~of mileage left In some men awomen after they reach .65 sahere he is· considering forminga nationwide "Catholic ·Senu.'Workers 'Guild~"

J. 'Robert Raneford ,was l~in ~bany ,when he retired UaI!lbusiness in 1957. He stepped •as a vcilunteer and filled a ma~role inproffioting the laymeri/¥.retreat mo:vement ,at the JesuitGlenmont Retreat House newAlbaqy.

He .and ,his wife moved to 'Keu­t~cky last August and now :he JIan ;assistant Ito Father ThomatF. lMiddendod, ,execlitive 'sear.&­

taryof :the National LaYlm6!iWRetreat League.~r. Banliford said too 'DlmQ'

,peqp}e 'who reach netiremeRtage "'i:leterim:ate in .Flol'ida :dCali1ornia, .losing all 'vitality:a1laC1life:" ()

He added: ell believe thereanawrbe :a consiaerable 'number ~retired, :alile ·,bodied ,Cathdlttmen ,and ';women, with incomee'su:£fieient 'far their 'needs,~Iwould 'like to :dona'te ·their ,ti~.talents mna ,enetlgy Ito 'tire ~gr.e&bIf

,glOJlY (cif eGoa ':by doing .spooitie,tasks (of :a .JillysiCliI and mental

. 'Jlature m .and !for 'Catholic~.iBhes ,ani:l iinstitlltionS;"

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The President has proposed toOongr.ess ;a pr{)gram 'of loans to,all ,colleges, public and 'Private,.and .a program 'Of :scholarshipswhose recipientsal'e free to 'sa- '

TOUOH ,'OF ,LOViE : Skillfully .prtWaring' :religioll'S1lta:tuary that will 'someday lenhance ;a home, church ~or

far..;ofi mission, :1Jwlo 'Sis.terstOf the Divine 'Master make:every touch .of the br.ush ;anact of love to :(;{)d. NC Photo.

ST. MARY'S,TAUNTON

The Women's Guild wiU.holdl!l dinner following corporateCommunion at 7:30 Mass Thurs­day night, April 13. Mrs. RalphS.Reckard is chairman.OUR liADY .OF PERPETUAL'HELP, 'NEW BEDFORD

.David 'Tetreault of parishOub'P.ack '41 received the 'P.arvlili,Dei ;award .at3 candlelight cer­,1lmOllY held in the church. Pres­'entation ,was~ade bY Rev.tAdal­,bert ,Sroka, O.F.'M. Conv.,;packllJloderator.Den mother awardswere Dlso made to Mrs. ElsieLarUJevm and :Mrs. Antoinnette,orlowSki.!ST. Pros X,:80.iYAIlMOlJ'Dl

'The 'Women's Gulld will:~;BOr :a .buffet· supper .that <is <qpen'.to (the :public tomorrow -eveniqgJ1rom:5 .o!clo~ to 7 .o:clockin :the=urch .hall (on station lAve. 00­~dhaitm1en:Mrs. 'Bernard 'Shea.and

=~c:a~.=~~t~d~r:':~d,Car"ina~1 ,Asks Cong:ressTo Ie ,Fair:at rthe ,door. Adults, :$1.25;clill- "CentiDaed fioom ,;Poage .0. deet ·their college. d!:ach ,odllege.Cb:en. ,under 12 y.ears~ .age, 'l5c:. 4P1 .attainable ,oQjecti.v:e:" .at .which the :holder 'of;a iF:ede:calft. 111¥~, :He ;also .said -tliat "jt tis mot /for :soholarsb4P ,enrolls ..w.ould Iget aiNEJV BEDF.O:XD .me Ito 'say ,whether :there :ShoUld .$350 "cost-of-education" tgr.ant

At :a rgeneral l11\eettqg <of Ithe ;be.aIlY :F1ederlil;aid to:education." from ,the ;govmmment.·lBdlY lName 'Soeiet,y ,conducted 'mbis ,guestion 'is ;a "lpolltical ,and ~\But;" said the Cardinal, ~the'1»' IRev. UieJll'Y 'R.(Canuel, ;pastor :eoonomic matter ,to 'be ',aeoided .administnltiorl's :proposal :in ,thesod Diocesan 'Director ,Of itbe iby 'OoQgress in .complianoe cmith ~eldo'f .elementary ,and ,seoond­Holy 'Name Society, the follOw-the 'will of the American ,people." ,allY 'schools lis not 'fair :andd1lg ·t9JI\poraw ;officers 'Were'lg)- equitable.!pointed: .Dr. Phi4P .Cbaritier, BuLhe said .that if Federal aid

'1_ 'launched then "he 'leg's! 't' "~It 'would limit ~ederal aid ':"-,president;.Armand Landry~ ,vice- "'" ,... I a Ion '1lU·hould -'fford "eq al ....----t ·pu.blic ·schools' 'and 'thereby ,wi'th-'president; Wilfrid 'Rousseau, sec- .'" .... u ,w;ea...-..

.retary; Leo- Brumillle, .assistant .an~no~diseriIDination." hold benefits 'from niillions ,of'seeretaary;:Alfred .Berthiaume, '''If :for constitutional ;l'easons, children attending private and

church-relate<l. schools."treasurer. ,childrenatteniii:r)g church~e-

AI J ph The administration !bas ~ro-80 named were . 0lMt lated 'schools 'cannot ,be :givenposed a three-year prQgram .of

Souza, marshel; Lucien Gagne, equal benefits by the samepublicity chairman; and Father' methods ,proposed for children' $2.3 billion in grants to 'states

for use either as aid to publicCanuel, llPiritual director. Other ~ .attending .publicschools,:then school ,construction 'or teachers'chairmen will be named at a Congress should weigh .alterna- salaries.future meetill!J. ·;ti\le JIleans, or.a 'combination ':of Cardinal Spellman said .he

. ·ST. ;ROOJl, ,.means, .to provide 'that ·equality. .knows 'Personally, as a graduateFALL BIYER '~Suggestionsmade in ,addition ,of .public elementary and 'sec-

Forthcoming activities 'of 'the :to Jong...term low..,interest-lfste ondary schools, that "the welfare~ounc~ of .Catholic 'Women 'Will loans, includ~ tax benefits to ,of .our nation depends upon the,.mc1~dlng,a ;um:nage ~sa~e ,:and ~a ,parents, tuition subsidies .and strength of our 'public schoolsSpnng . ,whist ~ A~rI1.. tMrs. other forms of help such .as .as- .and the .educationalexcellence,Ernest Gagnon IS .chan:man '.for .'sistance 'for the non-religious of the ·children attending them." '.the :next regular lIDeeting. aspects of these. schools. ''But the welfare .of America;"ST..MlCHAEL'S, "s· 'tabl '.,he .added, "also depends on ,theFALL 1UiV.ER lllC~ equl. e .alternatLves t h

, . . . -areavallable, ·the enactment 'of ,s rengt of our 'Private ,andHoly .Ross:'y 'Sodahty <wlll ,pre- 'a fpl:ogram .of Federal aid 'for \the church-related schools .and the

pare malacao~s ·at ,a penny 'sale children of our .nation.that could . educational excellence of theto be held Fndayand Saturday, exclude those tt di . fie more 'than six million childrenApril 14 end 15 in the 'school ' and h h aelentedllg ,pr

hlv8

lsattending them. .

, d.t . . c urc ...r a ,SC 00,au I orlUm, ,underspon80rSh tP wouldb . . t· "h4! '~Not only would it be unfairof the Holy Union .'Si!itersstaff- 'saia e a grave lllJUS Ice, and discriminatory to deny t.heming the ·school. '. full equality of treatment, lbut. Members,will also serve'break- '''Briefly, I ·am still .opposed .to to ,bypass them would discrim-fast ',to first 'communicants jn any program of Federal :aid 'that inate ;also against the good 'of the..May. ' would penalize a multitude of nation."

In .keeping with the main pur;" ~merica's children 'because theirpose..of'theRosaJ:y'SodalitY,Mrs. parents choose to exercise theirOlive Rego, Miss Evelyn iA1- constitutional right to ,educatemeida, Mrs. Matilda Souza .and them in accordance with their,Mrs.. Gilda rFenreira have 'volun_b~lieIs,"he said.,teered ,to decorate ·.the.altar com- 'The Cardinal added that :Bres-mencing ,Easter ,Sunday.. mhe Ident Kennedy .is ,to be com- ,committee -in charge :o'faltar mended for hispnoposals for :aidlinens will be headed ,.by iMrs. to U. S. higher·edu.cation 'because,Antonia Cardoza and 'Mrs. :'Reis. ,it is ".fair ,and equitable ito ,all

TheOouncil of Catholic 'Women :students, all colleges .and ,all .uni­will hold a potluck 'supper 'for versities."members :and guests Wl!dnesday,April 1,.2 iat the ·school. Members,will aid ,other 'parish ,groups at:a·penny sale ,and 'bazaar ~iday,

April 14.ST. .M.A.'l.'!rHEW,FALL RIVER

Due to the death of FatherMoreau, pastorcif 'St. Matthew'!!,the Fashion Show scheduled for 'Sunday has tbeenpostponed until \a later oate.1I0LY NAME,NEW BEDFORD

The Women's Guild will spon­sor an Itish entertainment 'Fri­day evening at '8 o'clock in :theparish .hall. The program is en­titled "The Dawning of the Day"and .will be staged by 30 lrish­costumed children 'fromSt. Pat­rickls :Parish, Fall River, underthe 'direction 0'£ 'Rev. JohnDelaney.

Thomas :Kelly will be masterof ceremonies and the Girl Scout',Troop .under Mrs. Edward Masonwill be in charge or decorations. \

'Oommunity singing .will form l'part Cif the program and ticketSmay be obtained from any mem­ber of the committtee under thechairmanship of "Mrs. WalterCar.ter.

'Mrs. James Gleason is pro­:gramchairman ,and Mrs. ElmerPaul will be in charge of refresh­ments,

The Parish ParadeParish RetnKlt

NOTRI!: rDAME.FALL RIVER

Mrs. Daniel Shea and Mrs.Robert PhenLx are chairman andco-chairman for a hat ·fashionshow to be featured at the meet­ing of the Council of CatholicWomen at 7:ll5 Monday ·night,March 20 at Jesus Mary Acad­,emyauditorium.,

ST.ELlZABETII!8.FALL BIVER

Mrs. 1\lice Oliveira and Mrs.Mildred Szynkowicz are chair­men of a Communion 'breakfastplanned for Sunday, 1\<larch 19by'the Women's Guild. A varietyshow .willbe held Saturday; 'May20 with Mrs. Lorraine Massa aschairman.

ST. STANISLAUS,FALL RIVER

The Parent-Teacher and Al­umni Association will hold a'Oommunion breakfast 'Sunday,March 26. Reservations must bemade by 'Wednesdqy, ·the ~22nd.

Third grade mothers will behostesses for the next meetingof the unit,set for Wednesday,;April 5.

BOLY 'OROSS,FALL RIVER

The P.T.A. will hold a pennysale Sunday, May '21. CharlesSzulewski is in charge of dona­tions.

ST•..JEAN BAP'1'ISTE,FA'LL RIVER

The CYO will present "TheUpper ·Room," a Lenten plaY,at8 Tuesday night, March 21, in theparish hall. J.lJ.Irs. Roger Caronwill ·direct.

ST. PATRICK,FALl.. 'Rn"ER

The annual St. Patrick~s showwill be presented at '2 SundaYafternoon,March 19 and at !1JMonday ,and Tuesd~y nights,March 20 and 21. Entitled "Tht;Dawning Cil.the Day," the pro­gram will feature parochialschool children in musical anddancing numbers and in ,playlet5.

ST. WILLl:AM,FALL RIVER

Mrs. Grace Flanagan will 'bepresident .of the Women's Guildfor the coming season, ,assistedby Mrs. Antone Costa,vice pres­ident; Mrs. Thomas ,Booth, secre­tary; .Mrs. Norman Gagnon,treasurer.Comi~ activities include pro­

vision of hostesses for the Cath­olic Guid for the Blind meeting,on SundaY,March 26 and a whiteelephant sale and penny sale,both scheduled for April.

BLESSED SACRAMENT,FALL RIYER. Boy Scout Troop 20 will hold a'ham and food basket whist partyat 7:30 Saturday night, March 25in the parish hall. ScoutmasterAlbert Barre is chairman, aidedby Napoleon Lussier, committee­men, and troop mothers.

SACRED HEART,NORTH A1TLEBORO

The annual retreat for rna!'­

ned women and girls over. s21will continue through this 'Sun­day. with Rev. Romeo !:F!illion,OM.I.as preacher. New mem­bers will be received into 'St.Anne's Sodality on the clO8ingday of. the retreat.

.OUR LADY .OF GRACE,1IiORTHWESTROBT

The Women's Guild ·:willhold• parcel post :auction at .anopenmeeting Tuesday, .April '4. ;Re­1reshmerrts will be served andthe public is invited. .Mrs. .Dlin­ton Lawton and Mrs. Edna.Clem­ent are co-chairmeA. They re­guest members to contributeitems for the .altar.

A M~y basket whist Js :set .lor"Wednesday, .May 3 with .Mrs.Clem1mt as ,chairmart.Mrs. <Bea­trice Berube is ,chairman i.or acbreakfast .to ·be 'ser-ved EirstCommunicantsJn .May.

ST. JOSEPJI,.FAlRHAVEN

The .parish ,wiUlIPOnsor .•ceorned ':bee!:and ,c:abb~e:sqpper

~n!ght cforthebene:fit "of :the2leW scboolbuilding fund.1l'ableswill be .decorated .with.an Jrishmotif .and lrish music :andsoQgswill ,be .featured .on .a varietyprogram. Mr. and .Mrs. Jslllti'B.Lanagan are chairmen.

I

Page 18: 03.16.61

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Plan:toCanonizeBlessed' Bertilla

VATICAN CITY (NC)-'n1ecanonization of Blessed BertillaBoscardin, Italian Sister whocontinued nursing the sick forfour years despite the pain ofher own 'malignant tumor, willtake place here on May, 11.

The public and private con­sistories 'leading to her canon­ization took place today.

Born iiJ,the Vicenza diocesein northern Italy.in 1888, BlessedBertilla joined the Sisters of St.Dorothy in 1907. Her devotedcare of the sick, especiallywounded soldiers of World W.arI, became a legend. Her cancerfinally killed her on October 20.1922.

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rr·

"}\

Says labor •ManagementCommittee Creating Worry'

By Msgr. George G. Higgins":.. . Director, NCWC Social Action Department

'Th~ President's new.Advisory Committee on Labor­Management Policy seems to have a certain number of

.; people very worried. The, Committee has yet to hold itsfirst ,meeting, but several observers have already writtenit Off as a creature of the Mr. Meany, in making' this'labor movement or have observation with respect to co-'warned against the possi- management or co-determination,bility, of its being used by was undoubtedly speaking fororganized labor as a means of the overwhelming majority ofinvading' or usurping the rights the officers and members of theof management. . American 1abo r' movement.

There is' no reason to fear, then,We read, 'forexample, in the that American labor will try to Beatified in 1952

• March 10 issue use the President's Advisory A year later a plaque was'.' of the,Washl'ng- ' Committee as a means of achiev- . h' h 'tal' T .

ing anything like the German erected In't e OSPI In revlsoton newsletter, . where she had nursed both chil-Human Eve' nts, type of co-determination. On d did' . "Tren an so lers saymg: 0that "Conserva-. the' other hand, the American . Sister Bertilla Boscardin, a

· tives on' Ca'pI'tol labor movement will continue h 1 f h' dto push for a characteristically, c osen sou 0 erOiC goo ness.

Hill react ad-' who for several years was a truly" ." American type of co-determina-versely to the angelic alleviator:of human suf-

I.•. Ii e Vi Advisory tion or co-management through fering in this place ..."Committee on 'the voluntary process of collec-

'. Labor-MaI1age- tive bargaining. : She was beatified by PopeA ', 1 b . M M Pius XII on June 8, 1952, in'the'. m'ent Poll'cy ap'pointea by the mencan a or, as· r. eany

b d t t d · presence of patients whom sheI Presl'dent" and that "Members 0 serves, oes no wan co- e- ., of Congress warn conserv,ative termination in the sense of union ~:~i~y~rSed and members of her

,: . businessmen against accepting It does, however, want a voice· positions on possible subcommit- representation on boards of di- The Sisters of St.' Dorothy have· tees." In the opinion of these rectors of American companies. a Motherhouse at Taunton and_ Congressmen: and o~ the editors in detei'mining all matter direct- teach at Mount Carmel Schoo~

of'Human Events the cards will ly affecting the interests of the __ . New Besdford., . t workers. This form of co-man- ' .~ .be stacked against managemen. ' BROTHER PRIESTS: F'Our priests from one family Many Ap'p'I,·ca' n'tsLabor's Position' . agement or co-determination (if

, K 11 C S C ' it- can properly be designated by were on the altar at St. Michael's Church in' West St. Paul,Father Edward e er,. ..., Am'" f M . d M" F 'k P Fl' . ., .Con.t.in.ue.d., from Pave ODe .'.. , .t the University of Notre Dame that term) erican labor will . Minn., as the youngest 0 r. l,\n r3. ran . emmmg s '"

is also concerned about the Pres-· . continue to press for thr<~ug~ 'the 10 children 9ffered his first s9lemn high': Mass. ·Father _don't have., facilities for eve~Tident's Committee, but he is. medium of co'nective l>argaining. . Peter, top left, offered the Mass. Father. John,: top right,' . interested student."inuch less pessimistic than th'e . Legitimate Goal ,'served as assistant priest..Betw.e.en. them.' is Fath.ei Francis., . "It certain~y. is the finest e~'editors' of Human Events'. Writ-·. ·Sure,ly. there· can', be no objec"': . dorsement::for .Catholic , educa-'ing'in the January issue of The, tion from the 'point of, view 'of . At bottoni is Father Mark NC Photo.' .,.'. ;" . - : . '.. . tion". is 'the way' another prin-, Homiletic and Pastoral ,Revie.w" '. social ethics to' this kind' of 'co- '. "". " , cipal. explained the increasing

, Father Keller suggests tl)at· the: ':mimagement or' co-determination '. Non.-Ccith,~Iic. Rel.at~s,.: E.xpe,.r.jences, ' number of applicants. "Yes, we,,. 'President's Committee" can' and (or even· to ·the type that' Father too, .have more seeking admis-"~'I will be successful provided it Keller refers- to):'Workers have' As Stretcher;'Bearer ..a't. Lourdes····'··' sion than we can accommodate·...

"'ells out management's rights no 'riatural right' to 'co-milDag~~ SYRACUSE (NC)-":"A teacher " stand{ng~hi~'h' perv~ded . the.· .. '....~\c ti n g:, Sup~rintende~t ~l'and~unctionsand.avoids at.teinpt-- ·~ent.: '. Tliey may,' however,', '. ' , . ,,' '. , pilgrjms.Because: of the '1a<;k' ()l ..~<:.h~l.§~ F~:.· r~trlc.~ ~. 0 !'le~U

· iiig.to bring about co-~anage-'"- through legitimate means seek 'it . , at. an. Episcopal ~choollectur~d . common. 'la'ngua'ge' 'among" the .~Id today It 1B grabfy.mg to see.. merit or', cO-determiriatlon' of,· a:·,. 'as'an !delit'ln the 'past· such· vol- : befoce aOLuther~n student grou.p . piigririi.s; 'the.r~ ,w';'".~ co·mnll.ln-·.· :~ow' t~e,.importa·n~· o.f, Cathoi!c

tipe .~h}ch wou1<!,' -,'I~ive union' ~ untary.· 'ligreements '; .~, granting. . here on. his eXPerie~ces'RB a'vo!-' 'iCation 'by" words 'but· tlie spirit ' ,educatIon; has developed ill ~.· Official~ a' .voice:-.iri ,~h:~' bus,ineSll :'~orkers a shal'e;in D1ari'ageqleil~ -imteer stretChJr' bearer at the .of 'I.9~rd~s, ~~~ :e~er presen't a~d' ; ~~i~y m.i~~."'·, ... T ~.' •

, ',' ~~~~a.iiol}s ' of' a pa.rticul?~".com- '~ave been: proauct.iye, .as ',Pius . Shrine of Our Lady of ~iirdes "in th~' fa~~ ~f'lP-a~y,difficulties, ": H' I" .0' p' . . I'. .pariy or firm. ".:0-' _.' ,. ,xl ,noted, 6f rio small gain..for.,' ill France.· " . ", there:.. w¢r~ po argul11~ntS~' no .. : oste .:In.. ~.rtug~. ','"

.' : This argume~t p're~upposes(a) , ~both ~age: earri~rs -and· .emp!~y;. The iecturer'" Joseph Meuse~ ·grll~ges.,· ' .. ' : .• ,. ', ,COIM:BR~ ·(NC).,-A, new. real-that the 'American labor move- ers. Finally, wher~ thecommoll·. . ". , .', ' ' .. , " :'~()king bl;l<;k,.:I feel,·.that ,~ .. denc~ fQr.l1.t.ud~nts fr9m portu-.ment, is 'interEisted' i~ a~hieving, good .fn·dica~s :the,,:n'~4;"'the:' WM·.. ~~ches,~t. the Manlius .m.lra.culous· healIng: can, ~cu~ : gal'., overseas .territories ' hal

'. ;oo':mariagement:e>rco..;determin- ' . state may lEigitimately pr6vide : sChool, conducted 'b; the Epis':' , ..unless a persoi) 'has given up h~.' ..been opened,')n. thisan~ierit uo1­ation: of the typlf re~efred .. to' , :~ that'- in .. certain enterprises'. 'tile ' ~p'a·lcni.i~ch'· s'p~ke at ihe Luth'- .r~seri'fu.1ent ilnd. has ,mastered the" ,.. versity town" by.. the· Oplia net.tbove .a.nd . (bX :t,hat .~here -,' is, ~or~ers.be given Ii 'VoiCeili.poi~T : era~, St~'den~ ASsOciati6n Hotis~ . art" o~· forgiving.. He must feel, secuJar institute. . 'somethmg mtrmslcally: wrong 'makmg; , , , ' . ' ." '. , . that his suffering is given to .him .. ,

. w'ith this kin'd of co':inanagement .' 'So' much' for. the bare bones or' at Syracuse Umverslty here..~.e '" .. ~""M~""ii~;OP::"'''''~M~""ii.' , ".as t!ie mea,n,s..Q~ sa,Ivation.·:·····M 'co-determinatl'on.·' n .seems the Catholic position on compul- . served for 40 day's'as a volu.n~eer 'A.' W.' M'A'RTI'Nto me that neither of theSe sup- ,sory. ·co-determination.s~retcherbearer and an attend- ." HOpe. f~r Sufferers .positions is valid. If co-determination or co-man- ant at the shrine .pool ,and b~ths -. And a~am,atj'~~u . come 1ft SCRAP, METALS

.The positio.'nof Amei'i~an l~bor agement'is not required by the 'in 19~9."·~;~dntactwithl' theh, Pllghrlms~. atShl ' WASTE PAPER'- RAGS

. . ' ' .. '... '" ,." ' , l' dl you rea Ize t at t eyare e ..with ,regard to co-management Natural Law or commlitative . ~r. Meuser said whenhe yo - '. f"E' . Th' ," th 'j TRUCKS AND TRAILERS FOR'or co-determinatioh >.vas stated justice,' it may,' how.ever, be re-' tinteered, he was accepted by the . poor ..o ur~e. eyfare the, . PAPER DRIVES.' ,as follows' a ,few years ago by quired under ,certain circum- . Hospitality, of Our Lady Of' ~erk ~oort : t ~ometh rom .. e CHURCHES. SCOUTS andMr: G'eorge Meany; president ol. stances' by' the virtue Of social Lourdes,' a men's organization :c

Ls r~e t~ w.e~ t~ ar:f1 ,:,e 'CIVICORGANIZATIONS

the AFL-CIO: l'l can say flatly justice. 'Among those who 'have . which .organizes the stretcher at ou~ ~s l'f eyT~~ er ke m:~n 1080 Shawmut Avenue'~at ·t:oIlectve. bargaining is not defellded this conclusion are the bearers. He added: "The Hospi- . ~ rd~a~d 0

1Ie

f'f

IS ma e!l ft e New Bedford WY 2-7828f k · ..' 11 kG" hIt I·t k 'd" d ·In IVl ua su erer so 0 en ~a means 0' see 109 a vOice m we -: nown' erman sc 0 ar, . a I y as e . no questIOns regar - 1 ted 'b h'· f -

management. We do not want Father Oswald von' Nell-Breun- ·ing my religion. All volunteers ~ ;eg:c 1 the~e~ .y IS ~~n ~m­sa-calle4 'co-determination'-the 'ing;'Canon Brys, General Chap- . were welcomed on the same ~~' ~e ,~ e IS wan e , givesrepresen.tation "of unions on' the lain of the Christian labor move- basis 'and I found many nori- . 1m ,ope. '. . ..board of directors or in the active 'ment in Belgium; and the late Catholics at Lourdes, not only as : Mr..Meuser ~~Id an mt~ereShngmanagement ofa company." . Cardinal Suhard of. Paris. . .volunteers but also as pilgrims." . experIence to 1m. was e, nu~-

, . ber of non-Catholics, Jews, Mos-

:Requiem. Mass' for Fat"~r Moreau Personal Pleas ':~~~~ t~n~hee~~~in:t~~iS;~igr7r::.Continued from' Page One Laura (Belleau) and the late i'. The', .1ectur~r .spoke of the He ~aid the Moslems particularly.

Maur'ice Lamontagne, first' les- .' Ba~thQlomew Moreau, he at- candlelight procession and of the . honor the Virgin Mary and aresOn;·Rev. Henry R. Canuel, sec- ten'ded St;Charle~, Seminary, impressive prayers,offered at, the anxious to help carry the canopy

. . pool and in the baths, "wher.eend lesson; Bishop Gerrard"thJrd 'Sherbrooke, Que., and completed over' her statue in processions.lesson. his ecclesiastical studies at St.; the individual makes his per-

, . '- sonal plea for Intercession di-," Father Moreau 56 died Sun- Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. He . t d t M .. '. , , ' rec eo" ary.

day mo.rning at' the j>i'iests'.. :was ordained June 14, 1928, in1I0stei Fall River after an ill- the Cathedral' of' .the Immacu- ". ','But, beyond all· that to me,"ness of ten weeks." late Conception, Baltimore, ,by he continued, "the real mystery"Born in Fall River son' of the M?st Rev. Jam7s M. Curley, of Lour4es was the atmosphere

, ArchbIshop of BaltImore. Qf consideration, of cooperation,

F h P ·· · II He served as. a curate in the of mut!Jal respect and under-ee an flnelpa. Sacred Heart, St. Hyacinthe's,Continued from Page One '.and St. Anne's parishes of New

View is a tribute to Sister's Bedford, and from' July, 1943,organizational ability. to September, 1946, was a chap-

, Previous to .her years as a lain with the U. S. Navy. In 1948,librarian and English teacher at Father Moreau was recalled toBay View, Sister Mary Urban 'Navy service.taught at Tyler School, Provi- In December, 1953, he wasdence, Immaculate Conception, appointed a 'pastor' a.t St.' Ste-.We'sferly, St. ~dward's, Paw- pheri's ChurC,h' in Dodgeville,~ucket;~·.and St. An~'s, Provi- Mass':, and 'two years later wasdence~" , transferred to the pastorate at

! • St. Hyacinthe's'in New Bedford:Sister,Mary Urban, R.S.M., w.ill ' h M'~~1come the fixs! ~Iass ~,the Fat er oreau 'was named pas­new Bishop Feehan High ~,:hool ,tor of St. Mathieu's Church lastin. September. ' . ·Sept. 20. , - ,

~ ProsPective.' freshmen regis~ '. 0 ' Besides· his.mother, be 1s sur-'tered in the Attleboro area the vived by' two ,brothers, Ernestpast t~o Saturdays. At St. John's'" and 'f.eonidas Moreau, both of iSchool, Attleboro, 103 students . Fall :' ~iver; and four 'sisters,

,registered for the September Mrs... Arinand . Desmarais, Mrs.freshman class,' and 87 were ~.n- Leo" DI.i~ont, Mrs. Armand·rolled in St. Mary's School, 'L'Italien and Miss Eva Moreau.'No. Attleboro. all of Fall River;

'.~

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Page 19: 03.16.61

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·19

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RIOUX

500 AttenCf'DiocesanCongress for .Youtlt

MANCHESTER (NC) - Morethan 500 boys and girls attendedthe first annual "Youth Con­gress" sponsore'd here by theDiocese of Manchester, whichembraces all New Hampshire.

Justice Amos H. Blandin, Jr., .of the state Supreme Court toldthe concluding banquet· that ..modern youth must seek se},f­improvement through clevel~

ment of faith in God. '"In working for a better to­

morrow," Justi.C;~ Blandi!} said,."Ii is necessary to put God backin His proper place. The· onlytGrce an evil faith W\s to fear is• gOOd·~'" _.

CYO EasterTournamentSet;'~~~rs~~:r~hR16;1961N;ew Bedford i,n N.E. Test';r~ .t Priest Condemns

f_~:a~::Ui.~~=e::..~~~ ., ~~::a~:~:Yit was btrt a prelude to the pos~ season extravaganzas yet ": , \ . OMAHA (NC) - A priestto be staged. The leading basketball attraction native to this· eritieized persons who urgearea is the third annual CYO youn'" people with potentialB'aster' TO'~"""''''''ent.Whl·"h. X'"" Class A honors. Thus he ntands b

..... LLCU.I.L "'''' as' the oJIly individual u1 the religious vocations to po~scheduled to get underway history of Tech to have played pone entering the convent •next Sunday, March 19, in on and later coached an Eastern seminary.CYO Hall, Fall River. And on Mass. championship team. This . Father John Vernon, guidaneethe New England scene, New was New. Bedford's third A title .director at Archbishop Rya.Bedford's. Class and one richly deserved. A well High School, told a meeting 01A Tech chwn- done to Coach Stan and his fine the Omaha Archdiocesan Ccnm-.pions will take squad. cil of Catholic Women:the floor tonight Tonight New Bedford begins ''Don't encourage proerastina-in Boston Gar- quest -)f its first N. E. title when tioJ), the old line of 'Wen. illden against de- it opposes defending champion would be ~tter if you waited afending tiUist Wilbur Cross of Connecticut. It's few more years.' It's too bad

, Wilbur Cross o£ hard to visualize but reports young people don't get the sameConnecticut. have it that the Nutmeggers will advice on early dating antJ maJloe •

CYO Tourney actually have a height advantage. riages."·Director Paul over the Crimson despite the .. HELP WEEK: Members of New Bedford Institute of Other ]}ont's:Borkman re- presence of 6-7 Frank Night.. Technology's Nu Beta Tau fraternity paint a wall at St. Other "don'ts" suggested bJ'poited that as . ingale. Leading man iri the Wil- Mary's Horne, New Bedford, as p~ of "Help Week" Father Vernon in dealing witlaof last Sunday some 50 teams had bur Cross camp is 6-6 pivotmsllI: aetivities. Left to right, Albert Carvalho, fraternity me'"" y"ung people's vocations:entered the competition· which· Dave Hicks' who is aided and ...,.. '-"Don't stress sacrifice·with-again will. feature two divisi01lS. abetted by a· 6-5 and. 6-4 :fore- ber; .Gil Araujo and John Haaland, pledges; and Rev. John out stressing opportunity, y~Last year a record number at court tandem. Paired off against F~ Bogan, chaplain at St. Mary's. don't stress dirty dishes, diapeq56 entries vied for parish hoop them will be the Crimson's 6-4 and an alcohoUc mate to new~supremacy and it is anticIpated Mark Stuart and Butch Costa weds."

. that before the· filing deadline who scales 6-3. The Connecticu1 Easte'r ..To·urne'y -"Don't be slow in encourag.thIll total will' be equalled or .backcourtmen; 6-0 and 5-11, re,:" . img potential candidates. Don.exceeded. A listing of the teams spectiveIy, have a decided edge fear you are pushing them. MaDlr

. in their respective divisions will on New Bedford's 5-6 watch- SENIOR DIVISION others will be discouroginlbe fOund elsewhere on this page. charmers, Miranda and Araujo. . Ulem."

ill be d to- This' boy Miranda, however, FALL RlVER--St. Anne, St. Louis, Santo Christo, Cathedral Father Vernon said the wbo1eoo::ma::~~g to n==~rk- oniy a 'sophomore, 'is capable .of . St. Anthony of the Desert, St. Patrick, Holy Name: . !lGme influenca of Catholic:llaDtotman. giving a great account of himself '. ~S. Peter ~ ,Paul, Sacred Heart, St. Mich~l. . , . j}y life is the biggest factor ..

As 01. this. writing nine par- .when. the going is tough. Coach . NEW BEDFORD-St. James, ·St. John, St. Joseph, Holy Neme promoting vocations. It is •tBhes had entered te~s in both Grabiee credits Wendell's th!'ee . ·St, Lawrence;'·O.L.P.'H. '. ': . .,,' tragedy when parents seek ..~or and 'senior di,visions. First' .quick DUllieyes with· putting ,,~OME~SET-St.Patrick;-.: St. IThomas' More; St.John cd God. bar' their children from en:erin,tci., come' I,nto 'the fOld was. St:. Durfee: away f01rkeeps in tbe :, SW.,-\.NSEA-St. Do~ni~,. St.·Michael . the seminaI1" or conv.ent.,,"Mazgaret's of Buzzards Bay. early. t:~urth period. action of the , :I'AUNTON-St. . Ant1l<lny, Sacred 'Heart: " added..

W""~"" also eDJ'ovg the distinction title' contest· last .Saturday. " MANSFmLD....:st Mary. . .. . . '. p' N ' ,oib":ing the m;st distant repre- 'SttarigelY enough,'·t~ ~asthe '. ·ATTLEBORO-St. 'John. 1",." . a:per «itmes Ann'ual

sentlitive 'in· each division. All first meeting of these 16rig.:.starid- DIGHTON-St. ..Joseph.;.;'" '. . '.' An-Catholic nltiritetin" 'vals m· Tech "'our ey 1 y BUZZARDS BAY-St M.......aretB.. .-:sections of the Diocese are num- .. n ... ' n p a . -.. . . . BROOKLYN (NC)-St.. ....0--..- thft;~ lo..n meetl'ng du";"g ."e 'FAIRRA.VEN-St.J.ose."'l... ,.,' . • "" --.' .' bered among the'cont'esting .IlU ...... . -~ . ~~. .... . ,....., ; '.. aventure U.'s Tom Stith' :wall

·teams 'witb', the' gteatest eoncen- 'regular season, the . HilltoP1lU1l NORTH ATTLEBORO-St. M;ary.·, " 'n~med player of the year' ~n'd jgtl'aticm, qUite 'natlirally, coming downed: New Bedford., 56-50. . ~ST GREENWICH, ,~.~UJ; ~y Oif Merq. ~ch, Ed Donovan, coach' 'of'the

" from Fall River itself. New Bed-. In retrospect it was S wonder- '. . JUNIOR D'IV''IS'ION' year on the 12th annual CaUlolie-ford, however, took honon' ful seaSoDfor Coach .Tom Karam CQllege All-American basbet~in both divisions last year, OLOA and his talented sqh:aCi' which , '. teams chosen for The' Tabl.d

.n....n_;..... the J"unior uown.and : will be back intact for' the 1961- PALL JUVEB-St.~hael,C~thedral,$.' Patrick, st. Josep.'ft, . . ~.._0iAU.J6 '64 .• K' . h' f' st '. Sa,n.. to Chr.1.·st.O, S.aered H.e......+. Sa.. Anthonv ......._ Brooklyn .diocese newspaper ~.H-'" Name the· senior- diadem. ~ campaign., ~am, m IS ~ -..., <U. """" 80 eoaches at Catholic CO'l~~...., ..,~- t th .....·-f st, -'-: ))esert, Holy Name, St. An+.I...-..-. of Padua. "'-'-.it used to be axiomatic. that a· .,....... a e u"",: ee po muP-.. ......~ throughout tile nation. .Gnaw Boston team was needed. , pered U1~ Hilltoppers ~ a ~iece,'. .' N.EW BEDFOJID,....();L.O.;A.., &1., J¢m, O.L.P.IL SUn-. .. Tony' Jackson' of .".

. 01 th B •.......1 C +.. d' ·'SOMERSET-St. Jofui i4 God,. St.. Thomas More.... -. .,..in the later stages of the Tecla. e .r"",, oun..... uown an . S . ' John'", Brooklyn, and Da··v·e" '+-,-b n_ to th Cla A WANSEA-Our' ~ady of Fatima, .' .., ~toUrney in. order to ensure a EU sequeno.y e .. '. ss " T . . :BusSCh~e 'of Detroit are repe"'large 'turnou~, 'nUS 'Wils 4is~l1ed. fin~ls. Tom is nostr~nger in . AUNTON-Sacred Heart, Saint Paul•. ". 'era' on 'the All-American··ie::......

.' ',- ' ,_ .··ti T"""h ha..t.." P'layed m' '''ree' ", ,. Jj'AJ:R,J.IAVEN-,-St. MatY.. :. ~ '.' . . ..--with a~llo+ityUl. the e~mpeh 01'1.". ~'" ~-:-. .•. .' ....~ . . .. . . 'which also includes Frank ":B1lftojust concluded VTher~in no' GNat... .to~~t8 ¥d~r. C~ac~ foUke ,.. ' , :~:~RtV~:~~~tg~:l· ,',' .. i!~ of Gonzaga, ·SpO~an~,..~~~ Bostoll teBlq mived the' . Urban and 'having' beeJi' the :re-. "'..," .. ". :,.. ,.. " ,." I" and Don,.Koiis of Marq~qwi:derfirial ~pw1d,'yet' the"1961 :.: ei~ie'nt' 0ethe ' ~veted l;I~.. ~,....~...~~....Mo<II...~~~Mo<II~'""~'"'w~.....~""w~'""~~ Milwaukee. .' , .. ':Tourney drew a record breaking. 1'1 M~~r~y Trophy ~ 1953~., . ': L·." .A . . "1' . WI" ~ ."imi. ~mith of St. Peter'SI :;r...·~3:;=~~~R~:::\nth~:sC: ~ ..:~~~.,~:er~eWna.:·.. cay', :'....posto ~~~ '; ".~r,,~' .. ~on.gl'eS$ :y .~~ty'~bn~s~\~~~~~~were Bristol CGunty teams.; it games of the 'Tourney was the ' To Follow' E·cumen.cal Council . '. N. H., a~e player and coach' ~must be ~ncluded that the peo-' .St: Mart.s (Waltharn)-B~aintree" . vA'heAN "CITY (N:C) ~,The: ':~: )"his .would serve as "a. favor-. the .year on the small cpi~eppIe of thIS area may beeounted., Clasa ~ flOat The ParQ(:hlals.be- ~jrd World, C~n~~ess of t~e Lay: . able opportunity for m~king. All-American. Also named teem to 1>Upport their clubs· at least . ea.~e tile first Gatholic,schQOl to., Apostolate willtake place ~fter k,nown and putting intoeffeet, ..the·team were Jim O'Ke~f~, sa.as well as any in the State. ta~e Cl?ss B laurels. when guard.' t b e forthcoming. ecumenical the prescriptionS and directives EdwaJ1d's, Austin, Tex., Mi_: There were so many outstand- , Joe .DrI~oll,.putpped. ~ 35-,100t coUncil at the express wish oiaf the council concerning the I{wak, King's, Wilkes-'R';"r1fr'rll.,

lng. individual perf~rmers that. set shot through the slri.\'1gs .with· Pope' John.' " . ,. CathoUe laity,". Cardinal Tud-' ~ac~ Nies, St. Mary's, Kan:1"~the Tourney Committee must three seconds left to give Sf.·· 0 f th • .. to i 'f lni's letter said . John' Heagney, LOYOla, Haw.-have had a: difficult time select- Mary's a 50-48 victory. This was . ne ? e maIn p cs or.~ . . . .. .more;Md. . ...ing an All-Star team. The Henry the same team ,that Holy Family sidera:lOn at the Second Va~lcan The date of the congress w~ll'McCarthy Award, however, em- eliminated, 48-42" in the semi- Councll will ?e the role of lay- depend?n that. of the· council. \blematlc of the finest individual finals of the N. E. Catholic Tour-' men in th~ life of the Church. , Meanwhile, ~etails of theme andperformance should by nU right. nament., How that .ball does The council is ~xpeclied ~ .meet program WIll ~ worked,. ~utgo to elongated Frank Nigh~- bounce! . . Eext year. amo~g eeclesia~lca1 aut~orltiesIngale of New BedfMdwho re- On the collegiate scene, Provi- ,Announcemen~ that the .con- and various national ~Odl~S forwrote the record book in leading dence College. w'ill engage gre.ss on l~y actIon would meet the lay apostolate. ThIs :WIll be.the CrimsQQ to·the Class A title. DePaul iJt the initial round of after the ecumenical council done onthe bas!s of 'studles nowBiD 44 point eUort against Som- the National Invitation Tourna-' . came from .the Permanent'Com- . under prepara~on by the Per­erville in ih~ quarterfinal esmb-' ment in Madison Square .Garden· mittee of the International Con- .manent 'ComllU~ of the ~nter­lished a new individulll high for. 'Sa.tu't:qay. at 4' P.M... -:r:his ~s' th~' gresses for the Lay Apostolate. .:tio~~ CongreSfles for the Lawone game and his 110 point over- . rr~s' ~d s~ccessiye appear- Pope's Wish . pas. teoall total also set.& tourney mark. ance in the Garden SpectaCUlar. 'The board received .a 1{!tter:Both shattered the existing rec- Last year they advanced to 'the '~froni D'omenico Cardinall'aidiniords of 40 and 104 made b~ the· finals before bowing to Bradley. Vatican Secretary of Suite, eom-:,.late Pete Houston, of ArchbIshop Both P. C. and DePaul are un- 'municatihg' the Pope's 'encour-Williams in 1954. seeded in the competition. The. agement for its· work ·and·his.

For Coach S~ .Grabiee at Friars defeated DePaul, 81-.77, wi~ that the third ,world con- ...New Bedford the title represents the oJIly time they met during gress take place after' the ecu-the cOmpletion' of a cycle that the regular season, . menical council.))egan in 1940 when as a member· And in Newport the 8 teamof the Cr1m~on ~uintet,he ~1aYed . ESCIT Tourney is set to go witha vital role m his team.s wmning St. Peter's of New Jersey. se-

lected .to round out the ·field. De­fending champIon Bishop Car­roll of Washington,' three timewinner of the title, will not be

. on hand to defend. The 'compe­titioJ:} will open Thursday, March23 and will conclude the follow­ing Satur~~y. This is high schoofbasketball' at its best. .

Page 20: 03.16.61

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,. 20 THfANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs. Mar. 1~, 196'\

IN LAND OF RISING SUN: Missionaries to Japan, :Land of the,L Rising Sun, Sisters Francois d'Assise and St. Louis Bertrand, Presentationnuns, :report on community activities. Left, 160 graduates of a Presentation

school in :Japan participate in a peasa~t dance. Center, t~e' two NorthAttleboro Sisters, Sister St. Louis on left. Right, students take part inmasquerade illustrating event· in Japanese history.

-:StLadents Plan, North Attle'boro. Sisters~ Presentation Nuns· Bell Tolls Knell·Launching I' .J R ', V'· dE· Of Old Church_ FAIRFIELD (NC)-Seventeen n apan" eport. . arte -'. ~pertenl;es . DES MOINES (NC) -Father; undergradllates at Jesuit-cori- Two S' t f th P t t' 1 t 1 . t th' f R hId D " Dominic Weber, c,S,B" knew'ducted Fairfield University here IS ers 0 e resen a lOn, a so na ura SIS ers,' e ormer ac ,e an emse well for whom the bell tolled.,in Connecticut have hopes of Pinsonneault of North Attleboro, now SisterM.Francois d'Assise and Sister M. St. Louis As the 87-year-old pastormaking science history in May•. Bertrand, respectively, are now stationed in Japan, from .where they send .reports of .pulled the rope, the bell tolled

• 'If a project now nearing com- their activities.· Both. teaCh in' Himeji. Sister St. Louis Bertrand writes of the first bazaar ,the death knell of St. Mary's· pletion is succcessful ~hey will held by the' Sisters 'in her ' ' .' 'church here and also" sig~aleil:Jaunch a homemade single stage ' in'g. From 9:30 to ll. was rush' "A six hour bus ride brought ··tlIJ.e ret'irement of Father Weber.:titanium rocket which may set area: "Its, purpose was to hour, At ·2 'I had foUr medals left! uS at iast to beautiful Toya Lake ''.t least two records., ' . raise funds for a new' build~ .Really, the whole bazaar was a .wher,e -We could wash and rest. -" ~ath~r W~~ gu~ded'tJ:'~ d~~·: The;rocketis expected to' at- jng. 'All kinds ,of" c~kes, :great 'succeSs, -'a04' .e~eryone This lIike' is'almost cii'c.ular.~ ,times, of ,St. ~ar~s Pllru:h ,f~r:.in a height of 30' miles, 20 rriiles 'cookies,: doiighnuts'and' candies Iiopes itwih·'beco~e' an annual !Ihape and has a large, w'ooded "nearly. 46 years. TJ:le .hlStO~IChigher than any~amateur'rocket disappeared within two hoursP event.'" , ,island in the center. How restful ' church, built in 1877, shortly ~lll

1 d It 'll 1 t ' Edu'ca~ion-I To~ . it was to contemplate its peace- be demolished to make w~y rO,r. ,has trave e. WI a so cot:! ~In "The pupils made and sol4 • 1M ... I h R' H'lls t' b'. telemetry ""'stem for transm.IS,. many, kl'nds 'of fan'cy artl.cles....· ' 'ful waters:'" from o~ hotel: , t. elver ,1 s,ec Ion ';lr ,an'

UoT d Sis,ter Fra~coiS d'.Nssise de-. . window' .' ,. rene'!"al proJect. The church With~on of data, b!lck to the gro':1D 'but ,the real attr~ction was the scribes a 14--day educational ,tour", "Spa~ does' not allow me' to :. its. Gothic. features long' has beeD ~.~ }'.~a~ vy-hi~h n? a.mateur rocke~,' '. 'big: show' which ~asted all day. she took with cOllege students desci:ibe all the scenic bea'uties a, Des Momes landmark. ",J.tl'0Ject has achIeved; . Sister Claire~u-Saint-Esprit,ar';' under her care: "In order to take . .

Arlll7 Approves rayed in, a Japanese kimono and' all e~press train ,from Os'aga we we admired during. our trip: Like Famil~ Reunion_ Poi~ting out that·a grelitdeal mask, danced aJapanese post\lre, lined up for' two -hours, That crat~r~akes ,seen from', a lofty R wa's like a family' reunion,fit· study and research, has gorie dance, accompanied' by Sister,· train'took us straigh't to Aomori, :~ountal,n, hundreds of pme-ciad when Father Weber offered the:into the project, Father Ring said Paula who sang the story·en~ctedthe first city on 'our island-24 ~s.les,. contoured .by mo~~· boat, 'last Mass in the Church., Men,the 64-inch, long rock~t will b,e by, he~·companion.: "~: ',: ,';.. 'hpurs'by train. Just imagine how :.plctureSque go~ge~, .ravInes, ,the and women from their parishell':~e largest and li~htest ever de- . :'S~lVen ~ u·ri'd.r e:~,: .';/~~J-Iabli , -tir'~d we were ,sitt,ing on 'strai~~t '~:~::~;~~~s~:~~~~:il~ ~~i~:;d:;; ,throughout the city who remem­,.Igned for laun~h~~g ~y under~. prl~e,~ were,raffled·,dur~.h~the.-.?ack b~nches,faclOg"~~oothers, .ihoseafhom'e.but all so new to 'bered the kindly pastor when

. craduate students 10 ,thIS country. day, '~ne bel.·ng lR ne.w ,IJlo,~~I<'.', In a:n,overcrow.ded,trl!m!" 'i,he, . g'ir,ls,' a,n,d',:finallY the large they were children came backTh U S Ar II k it h h I to St. Mary's, with their own

: ; e , ' :', ~y WI ~a,e one ~ ec riC was 109 m~c me. .wa~ ',.,/( four ~our trip brought us :cities laid out, on the Americaft children. ' '~ ItS testll~g ~des avalla?le ,for m c~arge of the"" ~?ly §hop, , to the island of Hokkaido where plan with wide tree-li~ed 0011.... ..

, 'the lauuch~ng. Ar~Y SCIentists where pupil~ and V~Sltof.~ -we~e we 'were, to erijoy; the scenie levar,ds. , ' ..' ' Every pew was fllled, a throng'~e~t ,over, ,bl~epr,lI~ts. of ~he able ..to sat!~y theIr ~I)l~ty. 1ft. beauty of, this northern island. . "We' returned; somewhat tired 'stoOd in the back and, others'_cket,and~avel~,thelr approval. c~ooslOg. th~lr faronte )14;>ly 'We' arrived at Hakodate at 4 in bllt .enriched with new knowl';' "crowded' into the choir loft as.. F~ther, RlI~g CIted, the rocket plctu,res, medals, rosat:y beads,. the morriing. After an hour 01' edge, ofthe.cou,ntry of Japan. We '~Father Weber ascended the steps\~r?Ject as e~l~~nce of the scie~:- , ,statue~ and fraIJles. i , ' ,; 90, we,decided to' try to, find a, ,especially' ,aq.mired how the ',to the altar. After Mass. there~flc ,ca~abl1~t1E~s ~~ Catholic . "An, hoUr,' before the shop . Catholic' church· for Mass to Japanese 'people love, God's were the inevitable reu~l1ons of

:eolle?es 10 ~hlS country. " ,QPet;ted, an eager crew. was'wait-, thank God for ~is'protection. nature."" ' . , .' old school, chums and neighbors... . ...

BROTHERS, ' I

REDEMPTORISTFATHERS .. ANDTHE

I

" '

i ", . , i '

,'need :YOUI19 Americans with a~, spirit:'ofsacrifice: and 't~e

wiil. to dedic~te themsel~es t~ t"-e s~l~ation of, the ".riostabandoned souls!#,

the U.S.A. - in the West.. '

anxIous toI

.or visi,t:_·

Redemptoristi work in

Brazil- in Para'guay.· If you are

about the Redem pt~rists.- write to

TheIndies - inknow more

REV. FRANCISJ. EAGAN~ C.SS.R.,

DIRECTOR OF VOCATIO~S,

THE REDEMPTORIST FATHERSI '

Basilica of 'Our Lady of Perpetual, Help1545 TREMONT STREET---ROXBURY, MASS.,

/'

The Redemptorist Fathers5 East':74th St'reet

New York 21, New Y:~rk

I •"" " , • c ' , - " '" I