10.06.60

19
the congl'ess. They will deal with Parish Executive Boards, Parent Educators and Discussion Clubs. Each' coul'se wil: be given on Saturday in three two-hour sessions. Certificates will be awarded participants in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral following a Pon- tifical Mass to be celebrated Sun- day by Most Reverend Russell J. McVinney, Bishop of Providence, and cOnvention host. Bishop Gerrard will presid.e at a Saturday morning sessiolll . Turn to Page Eighteen Surgeon Leaves . Practice to Help Mission Hospital ST. LOUIS (NC) - A 47- surgeon has deCided to relinquish his extensive practice .and comfortable suburban home here to dedicate his talents, perhaps for the rest of his life, to serving a Catholic mission hospital in New Delhi, India. Dr. Harry K. Purcell with his wife and five children will sail from New York next Thursday for the post half-way around the .world. He will serve as surgeon at Holy Family Hospital, a mod- ern, 200-bed institution built by the Medical Missionary Sisters in New Delhi. The surgeon had an extensive practice and served on the staffs of three hosp'';als here. Be already has sold his luxurio\Y Turn io Page Eighteen Religious -Diocese 0 Regional CCI) Providence Urges Seminary Heads to Seek ,Accreditation CHICAGO (NC) - Ac- creditation of seminaries whenever possible has been advocated by the president of the Franciscan Educational Conference. Father Pius J. Barth, O.F.M., former Provincial of .the Francis- cans' St. Louis-Chicago Province of the Sacred Heart, says theo- logical seminaries under the same board of control as·a liberal arts college should seek semin- ary accredi.fation just as dili- gently as it would for the col- lege's professional school. Speaking at a meeting of col- .lege departments of seminaries 'in the North Central area, Father Barth said increasing numbers of priests who teach in accredited Turn io Page WELCOME TO NEW BEDFORD: Mother Angelus, R.A.D., greets Sister Annunciscion, R.A.D., senior member of the group, on her arrival at the New Bedford Convent of the Religious of the Love of God. PI'ans Congress' : His Excellency, the Most Rev.' James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of Fan River and Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diqcesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Poe- trine, will be among outstanding participants in the 14th 'New Englalld Regional Con- . gress of the CCD, to take' place . in the. Providence Diocese next Friday, Satur- day and Sunday, Oct. 14 through 16. Sessions, to be held at various schools in Providence, with at the Sheraton Biltmore Hotel and Veterans Memorial Auditorium, will be open to all interested Catholics, said Father Powers, He noted that three training courses leading to CCD certifi- cation will be offered during ! c'i i .. G. K. JOSEPH ROSS K of C Honors Cape V.erdean Joseph Rose of Marion Road, Wareham, installed by District De put y George Thomas as Grand Knight,of Father Callahan C 0 unc iI, Knights. of· Columbus, is the first' native Cape Verdean ever to attain the "ffice in any:> 'n- cil of the Order. A '1lember of St. Patrick's' Parish, Grand Knight Rose is active in his parish Holy Name' Society and -in the ;onfraternity of Christian Doctrine. He is also one of the lay commentators of Ute Dialogue Mass. Mrs. Rose is the former Mabel Monteiro. Diocesan Priest To Give Sermon At Cumberland Rev. Lester L. Hull, Ad- ministrator of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, Seekonk, will preach at the ceremo- nies of the 15th annual pilgrim- age honoring Our Lady of Fatima Sunday afternoon at 2:30 at Mount St. Rita Convent, Delegations from educational institutions conducted by the of 'lercy in this area will participate, including girls from Mount St. Mary Academy, Fall River. Religious of the convent, Fourth Degree Knights· of Colu:nbus, and many priests and monsignori will also take part in it procession from ''1e convent to a shrine honoring Our Lady of Fatima: . The pilgrimage is made for the intention of world peace. nuns, .formerly teachers for six years in Cuba', have arrived,in New Bedford from to learn English in for their next assignments. The sisters, who are Spamsh, are members of the order of the Sisters of the Love of God founded in Spain, by Father·Jeronimo MarianoUsera. The visttors, who will not say if' they expect to return to their mother 'r . house in Havana,are stay- i, . .. :t Bed'o.... The;r h"'e,. Mothe. _ [:' .••....... lishment two years ago, expects ,f...· to be here !1;,:.· .• ",l. ' A Cuban nun,' Sister Teresita, ., ., who is a member of the original .'0.1 New Bedford band of nuns, re- i,' t ported her family is still in Cuba. She heard from them "last week" and they report "all is welL" Mother Angeles said she her- self heard from the chapter house in Havana on Tuesday and "things are fine." (It was clear the nuns would not discuss the national situation in Cuba, nor would they talk about the current United Nations Turn to Page Eig'hteen torium of St. Francis Xavier' Church from 7:30 to 9:30 Tues- day evenings, beghming Oct. 25. The courses are intended par- ticularly for present and pros- . pective lay teachers of Christian Doctrine, said Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. Turn to Page Eighteen © 1960 The Anchor PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year Second Class Mail Privilegel Authorized at Fall River, Mass. A.ft AMMr of the Soul, Sur, (lInd li'irm-ST. PAUL The -ANCHOR Declares Distributors Must Share Blame for Increase in Smut NEW YORK (NC) - A Protestant clergyman says distributors must accept their share of the blame for the increase of obscene publications on the nation's newsstands. "The public holds the distributors responsible, rightly or wrongly," said the Rev, Mr. Pedodical Distributors Dan M. Potter, of the said that a good sign is that Protestant CouncIl of New the distributors were concerned York and a member of the enough about the problem to Mayor's Committee of Religioull place it on the agenda. Leaders, However, the clergyman de- "The public image of the dis- elared ultimate responsibility for tributor is that he is primarily' the material that appears on interested in making a buck," newsstands rests with the the Rev. Mr. Potter said in a churches, homes, schools and panel discussion on the subject mass communications media Ilt the first annual international that set the moral tone of the conference of the Council f(r community. CCD INSTRUCTORS: Sister James, O.L.V.M., left, and Sister Dolores, O.L.V.M. right, of Our Lady of Victory Convent, West Harwich, will be )n charge of the courses to be'given in Fall River ,arid Hyannis for members of the CCD of the Diocese. Fall River, Mass., Thursday, October 6,1960 New Bedford Convent Receives Love of God Nuns From Cuba Spanish Speaking Now to Work in Vol. 4, No. 40 Schedule CCD·Classes In Fall Cape With a view to improving parochial religion classes for high school students, two lay teacher· training courses On the high school level will be offered in the Diocese this Fall, one in Fall River, and one in The courses, to last 12 weeks, will be con- duded by Sister Dolores and Sister James of Our Lady of VictOl'.Y Missionary Sisters, stationed at West Harwich. The Fall course will be held in the auditorium of St- Louis Church, Bradford Avenue, from 2 to 4 Saturday afternoons, beginning Oct. 22. The Hyannis cOUl'se will be held in the audi-

description

Dan M. Potter, h~ad ofthe tiO~:. saidthatagoodsignisthat ~~ele:~~st::;~;~tn to behere !1;,:.·.• ",l.' WELCOME TO NEW BEDFORD: Mother Angelus, R.A.D.,greetsSisterAnnunciscion,R.A.D.,seniormember ofthegroup,onherarrivalat the NewBedfordConvent oftheReligiousoftheLoveofGod. CCDINSTRUCTORS:SisterJames,O.L.V.M.,left,and Sister Dolores, O.L.V.M. right, of Our Lady of Victory Convent, WestHarwich, will be )n charge ofthecourses tobe'giveninFallRiver,aridHyannisformembersofthe CCDoftheDiocese. i

Transcript of 10.06.60

Page 1: 10.06.60

the congl'ess. They will deal withParish Executive Boards, ParentEducators and Discussion Clubs.Each' coul'se wil: be given onSaturday in three two-hoursessions.

Certificates will be awardedparticipants in SS. Peter andPaul Cathedral following a Pon­tifical Mass to be celebrated Sun­day by Most Reverend Russell J.McVinney, Bishop of Providence,and cOnvention host.

Bishop Gerrard will presid.eat a Saturday morning sessiolll

. Turn to Page Eighteen

Surgeon Leaves. Practice to HelpMission Hospital

ST. LOUIS (NC) - A 47­y~ar-old surgeon has deCidedto relinquish his extensivepractice .and comfortablesuburban home here to dedicatehis talents, perhaps for the restof his life, to serving a Catholicmission hospital in New Delhi,India.

Dr. Harry K. Purcell with hiswife and five children will sailfrom New York next Thursdayfor the post half-way around the.world. He will serve as surgeonat Holy Family Hospital, a mod­ern, 200-bed institution built bythe Medical Missionary Sisters inNew Delhi. The surgeon had anextensive practice and served onthe staffs of three hosp'';als here.Be already has sold his luxurio\Y

Turn io Page Eighteen

Religious-Diocese 0

Regional CCI)Providence

Urges SeminaryHeads to Seek,Accreditation

CHICAGO (NC) - Ac­creditation of seminarieswhenever possible has beenadvocated by the presidentof the Franciscan EducationalConference.

Father Pius J. Barth, O.F.M.,former Provincial of .the Francis­cans' St. Louis-Chicago Provinceof the Sacred Heart, says theo­logical seminaries under thesame board of control as·a liberalarts college should seek semin­ary accredi.fation just as dili­gently as it would for the col­lege's professional school.

Speaking at a meeting of col­.lege departments of seminaries'in the North Central area, FatherBarth said increasing numbersof priests who teach in accredited

Turn io Page S~ell

WELCOME TO NEW BEDFORD: Mother Angelus,R.A.D., greets Sister Annunciscion, R.A.D., senior memberof the group, on her arrival at the New Bedford Conventof the Religious of the Love of God.

PI'ansCongress'

: His Excellency, the Most Rev.' James J. Gerrard,Auxiliary Bishop of Fan River and Rev. Joseph L. Powers,Diqcesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Poe­trine, will be among outstanding participants in the 14th'New Englalld Regional Con-

. gress of the CCD, to take'place . in the. ProvidenceDiocese next Friday, Satur­day and Sunday, Oct. 14 through16.

Sessions, to be held at variousschools in Providence, withheadquart~rs at the SheratonBiltmore Hotel and VeteransMemorial Auditorium, will beopen to all interested Catholics,said Father Powers,

He noted that three trainingcourses leading to CCD certifi­cation will be offered during

!c'ii

.._.~

G. K. JOSEPH ROSS

K of C HonorsCape V.erdean

Joseph Rose of MarionRoad, Wareham, installed byDistrict D e put y GeorgeThomas as Grand Knight,ofFather Callahan C 0 u n c iI,Knights. of· Columbus, is thefirst' native Cape Verdean everto attain the "ffice in any:> 'n­cil of the Order.

A '1lember of St. Patrick's'Parish, Grand Knight Rose isactive in his parish Holy Name'Society and -in the ;onfraternityof Christian Doctrine. He is alsoone of the lay commentators ofUte Dialogue Mass.

Mrs. Rose is the former MabelMonteiro.

Diocesan PriestTo Give SermonAt Cumberland

Rev. Lester L. Hull, Ad­ministrator of Our Lady ofMt. Carmel Church, Seekonk,will preach at the ceremo­nies of the 15th annual pilgrim­age honoring Our Lady ofFatima Sunday afternoon at 2:30at Mount St. Rita Convent,Cumberlan~.

Delegations from educationalinstitutions conducted by the'~isters of 'lercy in this area willparticipate, including girls fromMount St. Mary Academy, FallRiver.

Religious of the convent,Fourth Degree Knights· ofColu:nbus, and many priests andmonsignori will also take part init procession from ''1e conventto a shrine honoring Our Ladyof Fatima: .

The pilgrimage is made for theintention of world peace.

Seve~ nuns, .formerly teachers for six years in Cuba', have arrived,in New Bedfordfrom Sp~m to learn English in preparat~on for their next assignments. The sisters, whoare Spamsh, are members of the order of the Sisters of the Love of God founded inSpain, by Father·Jeronimo MarianoUsera. The visttors, who will not say if' they expectto return to their mother 'r .house in Havana,are stay- i, .

~~:: t~~~~rd~~~::t,us~:; ~.. :tBed'o.... The;r h"'e,. Mothe. _

~:::~:~, ~~~:~iO~n~: i~ees~ae;..· [:' • \~: .••.......lishment two years ago, expects ,f...·~~ele:~~st::;~;~tnto be here !1;,:.·.• ",l. '

A Cuban nun,' Sister Teresita, . , .,who is a member of the original .'0.1

New Bedford band of nuns, re- i,' tported her family is still in Cuba.She heard from them "last week"and they report "all is welL"

Mother Angeles said she her­self heard from the chapterhouse in Havana on Tuesday and"things are fine."

(It was clear the nuns wouldnot discuss the national situationin Cuba, nor would they talkabout the current United Nations

Turn to Page Eig'hteen

torium of St. Francis Xavier'Church from 7:30 to 9:30 Tues­day evenings, beghming Oct. 25.

The courses are intended par­ticularly for present and pros­

.pective lay teachers of ChristianDoctrine, said Rev. Joseph L.Powers, Diocesan Director ofthe Confraternity of ChristianDoctrine.

Turn to Page Eighteen

© 1960 The Anchor PRICE lOe$4.00 per Year

Second Class Mail Privilegel Authorized at Fall River, Mass.

A.ft AMMr of the Soul, Sur, (lInd li'irm-ST. PAUL

The-ANCHOR

Declares Distributors Must ShareBlame for Increase in Smut

NEW YORK (NC) - A Protestant clergyman saysdistributors must accept their share of the blame for theincrease of obscene publications on the nation's newsstands."The public holds the distributors responsible, rightly orwrongly," said the Rev, Mr. Pedodical Distributors Associa~

Dan M. Potter, h~ad of the tiO~:.said that a good sign is thatProtestant CouncIl of New the distributors were concernedYork and a member of the enough about the problem toMayor's Committee of Religioull place it on the agenda.Leaders, However, the clergyman de-

"The public image of the dis- elared ultimate responsibility fortributor is that he is primarily' the material that appears oninterested in making a buck," newsstands rests with thethe Rev. Mr. Potter said in a churches, homes, schools andpanel discussion on the subject mass communications mediaIlt the first annual international that set the moral tone of theconference of the Council f(r community.

CCD INSTRUCTORS: Sister James, O.L.V.M., left, andSister Dolores, O.L.V.M. right, of Our Lady of VictoryConvent, West Harwich, will be )n charge of the coursesto be' given in Fall River ,arid Hyannis for members of theCCD of the Diocese.

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, October 6,1960

New Bedford Convent ReceivesLove of God Nuns From Cuba

Spanish SpeakingNow to Work in

Vol. 4, No. 40

Schedule CCD·ClassesIn Fall ~iver, Cape

With a view to improving parochial religion classesfor high school students, two lay teacher· training coursesOn the high school level will be offered in the Diocese thisFall, one in Fall River, and one in Hya~nis. The courses, tolast 12 weeks, will be con­duded by Sister Dolores andSister James of Our Lady ofVictOl'.Y Missionary Sisters,stationed at West Harwich.

The Fall ~iver course will beheld in the auditorium of St­Louis Church, Bradford Avenue,from 2 to 4 Saturday afternoons,beginning Oct. 22. The HyanniscOUl'se will be held in the audi-

Page 2: 10.06.60

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Convert Is NewChief MinisterOf Tanganyika, DAR-ES-SALAAM (NC)--.;A Catholic was sworn- in asChief Minister of Tangan­yika as this African statebecame self-governing.

He is Julius Nyerere, founderand leader of the TanganyikaAlrican National Union politi­cal party which won 70 of the71 seats in the Legislative Coun­cil which was elected in August.A convert, he gave up a teach­ing post in a Holy Ghost Fath­ers' secondary school to enterpolitics.

A German colony befol'GWorld War I, Tanganyika hailbeen a United Nations trust ter­ritory under British admirustra­tion. It is a predominantly agr'"cultural country located on Af­frica's east coast. Its area i:3equal' in size to California andOregon combined.

In his first address as Chte1fMinister, Mr. Nyerere o;aid that"our aim is to achieve completeindependence within the (Brit.­ish) Commonwealth next ~·ear."

Tanganyika has about 23,000whites and 112,000 Asians in atotal population of abo'.lt ninemillion people. Most !>f the pop­ulation is pagan, but there aNabOut 500,000 Protestants, 1,350,­000 Catholics and two millioaMoslems.

In the, new governmen t Jilem;.bers of all three races have bee.elected to the Legislative Cvun­cif and have. received ministe»­ial Posts:Bishops Understand'Problem's of Youth

'FRIBOU:lG (NC)-The Bish­ops'of Switzerland hav'" declared·that ,the difficulties of youth",are more serious than they ,everhave been."

In a joint pastoral letter theBishops said: "We ''''derstandthe confusion of t"le young, and'acertain discouragemer L amongtheir educators."

.The Ie" ~r said: "Although Wl()

teach that it is a' .. ty to defendr ·"s country _against ",just 'ag­gression,' we think that youngpeople are right whe:l they 1how,DO enthusiasm. for the men -wooread'Iy resort to the use ,ofweapons s the ir'only means·01salvation." . " .

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IPAPER BOYS: Paper boys for a good cause are (leftto right) Gregory, Ward, Ronnie Martin, Paul Courville.St. Dominic's Swansea, held the drive and boys were partof, crew manning 14, collection trucks. '

Fat'her of 11 Figures BillsFor Five "Years' Education.

TOLEDO (NC)-What are the costs of supportingCatholic education for the father of a large family whosechildren are spread over elementary, secondary and collegelevels at one time! An architect here who is father. of 11children, nine of whom 'are ,.' .

the real estate tax of 25.00 millsstill in school, figures that However, the school tax ratein the past five years. he increases to 16.2 mills next yearhas rUJl up bills totaling, and voters are to be asked this$14;900. " ' hNovember to approve an even'

This total, he reported, breaks igher rate of 19.2 for the fol-down into $12,500 for. children lowing ye·ar.in Catholic colleges, $2000 for At present, however, the tax­tuition and books for those who payer pays $1.47 of each $100 ofhave ,attended Catholic high the evaluation of his real esta'teschools l!nd $200 ,for books for taxes to support public schoolS.his youngsters in grade school. ' lPoor Position

There is no tuition charge at The Toledo school board, whiChthe parochiai. grade school. Ita oays the school tax rate here i6operation is financed as part of the 'lowest amohg the eight larg;the. general supp<;>rt of the parish. est cities in Ohio, has argueQ.

• Fund Drive. that "it is in a poor competitiveWhen the parish school needed p~Sition 'or attracting andhoip~ ,

to be expanded, it was financed ing teachers. 'by a fl,lnd-raising' drive which There are ~ther public schoolalso sought funds for three high assessments, but the individualschools and a seminary. In five taxpayer's contribution, is e)l:-.

'years, *e'father has given $2,200 'tremely difficult to calculate•.to the campa'jgn. 'However, they do add, to the

As for pUblic schools,' the burden..,architect cannot calculate his They: are ,found in the levy for'exact contribution; but there ic the municipal University ofno doubt it 'is far lower than his Toledo; the one ·per cent ToledoCatholic school costs, because the income tax, of which $575,000. isentire community helps meet"'the earmarked for city schools, andcost' of schoois. the state taxes, which finance

Taxes about $537 million in state schoo!.He estimates he has spent at Ilid.

least $150 a year in city income'and real estate taxes. The schooltax rate has been 14.'7 mills 01.

Meals for PoorDUBLIN (NC) - Just under

2,380,OC meals were distributedto the pOor of Dublin by theCatholic :: :>cial Serviee Confer­ence ,of 'the Dublin ar~hdiocese

. during the year ending last June30.

·legion of .D~cency·The following films are to be

added ,to the· lists in their re­specti.ve classifications.

Unobjectionab~e for generalpatronage: Alamo; Santa Claus;Three Worlds of Gulliver.

Unobjectionable for adul~

End of Innocence.Objectionable, in: part for al1~

Breath of Scandal (suggestivecostuming and situations); Desire­in the Dust (low moral tone, sug­gestive situations arid subjectmatter). '

Note: Studs Lonigan - the"morally 'objectionable in partfor' all' classification given thisfilm in July is applicable onlyto prints shown in ,continentalU.S.A. '

Mass OrdoFRIDAY-Most Holy Rosary 01.'

the Blessed Virgin Mary. Dou­ble of-II Class. White. MassProper; Gloria; Second CollectSt. Mark, Pope imd Confessor;Creed; Preface of Blessed Vir­gin. Votive Mass in i.onor 01.the Sacred Heart of JeSus per­mitted.

SATURDAY-St. Brigid, Widow.Double. White. Mass Proper;Gloria; Common Preface.

SUNDAY--:XVIII Sunday Aftet'Pentecost. Double. Green.Mass Proper; Gloria; SecondCollect St. John Leonard, Con- 'fessor; Creed; Preface ofTrinity. ' .

MONDAY-St. Francis Borgia,Confessor. Simple. White. MassProper; Gloria; Common Pref­ace.

TUESDAY-The Maternity 01.the Blessed Virgin Mary. Dou­ble of II Class. White. MassProper; Gloria; Creed; Pref­ace of Blessed Virgin.

WEDNESDAY-Mass of pnw~ous Sunday. Simple. Greeo.Mass Proper; No Gloria; Com­mon .Preface.

THURSpAY-,-,-5t. Edward, Kingand Confessor. Simple. ·White.Mass ProPer; Gloria; CODUDOll

. Preface.

Magazines Testtr)!T@wing Power

CARMEL (NC)-"-Nine Catho­lic magazines will test their sell­ing power for a three-monthperiod on racks displayed' at1,000 secular newsstaI:\ds.

The experiment was described. here by Stephan L. Saunders,editor and publisher of the, Cath­olic Preview of Entertainment,a monthly published here inCarmel, N.Y. .

Mr. Saunders said the effortis unique because only a few_Catholic magizines have beenavailable' on secular. newsstandsin the past and they competedwith other types of publicationssingly., "They met with little success,..

he said. "We ,think we will suc­ceed because we offer a varietyof the best of Catholic publish­ing on, one, rack."

In addition to Catholic Pre­view" the magazines are: theVoice of St. Jude, the CatholicWorld, the Sign, Information,the Family Digest, Marriage,Catholic Youth, and TreasureChest.

Consecrate VeteranMiss8ol1ory Today.

BROOKLYN (NC)-A veteranmissionary will be consecrateda titular bishop today at OurJ ady o~ Perpetual Hel~ Churchhere to serve as' Prelate Nulliwsof the Virgin Islands.

He"Is Bishop-designate EdwardJ. Harper, C.S2.R., vice, proviri':'cial of the Redemptorists ie.'Puet:to ,i.ico, Tpe Yirgin Islandsand the Dominican Republic.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 6, 1960, .' ., , ..... :... ' .' '".

FQRTY HOURSDEVOTION

Oct. 9--Our Lady at. theAssumption, New Bed­ford.

St. Roch, Fall River.Oct. 16-St. John of God,

Somerset.Our Lady of the Immacu­

late Conception, Taun­ton.

Oct.17-LaSalette, J: a i tBrewster;

Oct. 23-St. Peter,' ·Province.:., town.

St. Hedwig, New Bedford.Oct; 3G-St. M i c h a e I, Fall

River.St. Patrick, Somerset.

2

TBB ANCHORSeeond-e1aas mail privlles;es authorized

.,Fall Kivu. Mass. Pdbllabecl eve..,Thursday at' 410 Hlghlnnd Avenne. FallRiver. Mass•• by the Cathol'" P....... of theDiocese of Fall River. Snbseriptloa prloeby mall, PCllll;pa1d $4.00 per 1'_ ,

Indiana. Clergy Ask . RepealOf Sta~e Ri~htllltG5JWor-k Law

WASHINGTON (NC)-Repeal of Indiana's 1957 so­called right-to-work law should be given top priority bythe state legislatu're, a group of clergymen, including aCatholic editor, has stated. The churchmen denounced thelaw as a "compulsory open issue in Indiana. The Democniticshop law" that hinders cql- nominee for governor, Matthewlective bargaining between Welsh, has declared he will sup­workers and management. por~ its repeal and the Repub­They also said "that despite lican nominee, Crawford Park-

her, has stated he will veto apromises by supporters of t e repeal measure.law, it has failed to draw newindustry here. The condemna­tion came in a. resolution ado~­te(l unanimously by the Reh­gion and Labor Fellowship ofIndianapolis, according to theNational Council for IndustrialPeace here whicn' made public'thr clergymen's stand. FatherRaymond T. Bosler, editor ofthe Indianapolis archdiocesanCatholic newspaper, was one ofthe sponsors of the resolution.

The National Council for In­dustrial Peace describes itselfas a lon~partisan citizens' com­mittee opposed to right-to-worklaws. It is headed by Mrs. Elean­or Roosevelt and former NewYork' Hebert H. Lehman.

A previous criticism of theIndiana law by a religious bodywas voiced last August when 11Methodist ,ministers .called forrepeal.Th~ law is II major political

Bishop PresidesAt Final Rites

Most Rev. James L. Connolly,Bishop of Fall River; gave thefinal absolution following IIISolemn High Mass of RequiemSaturday morning in St. Mary'sChurch, Taunton, for Mrs. EllenCanty. I

Celebrant of the Mass wasRev. Joseph C. Canty, y'aptainin the U. S. Chaplain Corps andformer assistant at St. John'sChurch, Attleboro, Rev.. John E.Boyd, Diocesan Director of Cath­olic Charities .was deacon andRev. Cornelius J. Keliher, ad­ministrator at St. Mary's Church,Seekonk, subdeacon.

Chaplairts t'o Bishop ,Connollywere Rev. Walter J .. Buckley,~astor of St. Kilian's Church,New Bedford, ,and Rev. John J.Griffin, pastor at St. Paul'sChurch, Taunton. .

Rt. Rev... Jame_ Dolan, pastorat St. Mary's Cht:rch, Taunton,read the final absolution prayersin English.

, For Vocations~ANFRANCISCO (NC)

Diocesan vocation:-' directorsfrom Chicago to Honolulu willmeet 1" -:-e next l',1:onday to ex­chan in "\rmation·on recruitingmen and 'omen for the religiouaWe.

NecrologyTHE ANCHOR lists the aD­

Diversary dates of prieSts who'served the Fall River Diocesesinee iiS·' formatioD' bl 1904with the intention that the

,faithful will give them Ii

prayerful remembraDCle.

OCT. '7!,lev. Caesar Phares, 1951.

OCT. 10Rev. James C. J. Ryan, 1918.

Page 3: 10.06.60

3

=

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A Delicious

Treat

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L... ,~"""",-,,,,",~_.,,~ ..........,_.l-.~.);j". _

FATHER 'SULLIVAN, SS.cc.

ji,"

Names NewHeadOf Enthronement

Father Matthew Sullivan,SS.CC., Superior of SacredHearts Seminary, Washington,D.C., has been named NationalDirector for the work' of theEnthronement. He replacesFather Francis Larkin, SS.CC..of Sacred Hearts Monastery,Fairhaven, who held this posi­tion for 17 years. Father Larkinwill remain associated with theEnthronement Movement, con­ducting retreats for priests andreligious. This appointment wasannounced by Very ReverendWilliam Condon, SS.CC., Pro­vincial of the Congregation ofthe Sacred Hearts, wi th head­quarters in Fairhaven.

The National Center for tileEnthronement <Jf the SacredHeart in the Home is located at4900 Tenth Street, N.E., Wash­ington, D.C. Auxiliary worqalso located there are theLeague of Night Adoration illthe Home and the TarcisiallYouth League..Father MateoCraWley, founder of these world_wide apostolates, died recentlyin Chile. During his visit to theUnited States in 1946, numeroWlcenters were est a b lis h e dthroughout the country. Todayin the United States there are61 centers for promoting thework of the Enthronement.

lH! ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 6, 1960

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CYO plans in the Greater FallRiver area for National CatholicYouth Week starting Sunday,Oct. 30 include installation ofparish and CYO officers on Sun­day at St. Mary's Cathedral, fQI­lowed by a social /lour at CYOHall, Anawan Street.

Awards to parishes outstand­ing for their CYO programs; fol­lOWed by entertainment andrefreshments, will be featured.

Youth will be urged to receiveHoly Communion daily during

. the week for various specialintentions, said Rev. Walter A.Sullivan, Diocesan CYO director.A semi-formal dance will beanother highlight of the week's~ctivities, with proceeds to goto charity.

Ceremonies in each parish willclose the week's observance.Similar programs will be car­ried out in all areas of the Dio­cese.

IN NEW BEDFORDDIAL 3-1431

MAILING

Taunton K of CMonsignor Coyle Council,

Taunton Knights of Columbus,will hold a living rosary cere­mony at 7 Sunday night, Oct. tat Our Lady of Lourdes Churchwith Charles Rocheleau andAnthony Costa as co-chairmen.

)It

NEW BEDFORD CYAO ELECT OFFICERS: Chosenofficers for the coming year are left to right: Rita Guil­mette, vice-president; Martha Daprato, recording secretary;Gertrude Benjamin, corresponding secretary; ManuelBotelho, treasurer; and Leo Brunelle, president.

Public Schools Do Reasonably Wellin Teaching Spiritual yalues. "

CHICAGO (NC)· - Public crack pots 111 the cmmunIty, oneschools are doing as much as can admi.nistrator was quoted as a11-reasonably be expected in teach- swerIng.. . . .ing moral and spiritual values, One OhIO offICIal predicteda majority of school administra- that "the word 'ahou.t' wouldtors have responded in a survey. soon be lost and there could be

Sixty-one per ~ent held this. trouble." . ..view while 38 per cent disagreed The magaZine said Its survey,and ~ne per-cent had no opinion, was ba~ed on a f?ur per centaccording to the Nation's Schools, proportlO.•a! ~ampllllg o~ 16.000a magazin~ for school admins- school admInIstrators, 'wlth a 36trators published here. per cent respol~se.

Asked if there should be aplace in the high school curric- Fallulum for teaching "about" reli­gion, 52 per cent said "yes," 45per cent said "no" and three percent had no opinion, the maga­zine said.

Some of those' who thoughtpublic schools are doing a satis­factory job with moral andspiritual values said the st~ess

on sportsmanship in supervised.activity, dtizenship courses andthe example of good teacherstaught these values, th~ mag­azine said.

'About' ReligionThose who thought high schools

could teach "about" religionurged caution, the magazine said."Every high school studentshould be taught about religion,but God help the teacher whorUllfl afoul of the bigots and

Fr~nciscans PeaceMedal for Hoover

CHICAGO (NC-FBI directorJ. Edgar Hoover has been votedthe 1960 annual Peace Medal ot.the Third Order of St. Franc~.

in North America."''le award is given each year

to a public figure who makeSUbstantia' contributions toworld peace in his daily life. Mr.Hoover is a Presbyterian.

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Honor HaedoNEW YORK (NC)-Eduardo.

Victor Haedo, Uruguay's Presi- ..............11dent-elect has been awarded anhonorary doctor of laws degree IN FALL RIVERby Fordham University. Mr.. DIAL 2-1322 or 5-7620Haedo is in New York as headof his country's delegation at theUnited Nations.

Bible Reading'Bible reading in public school

has been brought to the court'sattention in an appeal from II

ruling of a Federal court whichin September, 1959, upheld thepractice in public schoolso ofAbington Township, Pa. TheUnitarian couple who initiatedthe case-parents of three chil­dren in Abington public. schools-claim that' the law providingfor daily reading from the KingJames Bible in school violatestheir religious rights.

An avowed atheist, Roy A.Torcaso of Wheaton, Md., hasasked the court to review aMaryland Court Of Api>eals rul­ing last June that held it is con­stitutional to require a declara­tion of belief in God as a con­dition for holding public office.Mr. Torcaso was denied a licenseas II notary public because herefused to sign such a declara­tion which is called for underAru'cle 37 of the Maryland Con­stitution.

HEADS ASSEMBLY: Pre­siding over the present

. stormy sessions of the Uni­ted Nations is Frederick H.Boland, the fourth Catholicdiplomat to head the Gen­eral Assembly. NC Photo.

Suprem'. Court Faces'Controversial Cases

WASHINGTON (NC)-The u.s. Supreme Court inthe next few months is expected to hand down significa~t

mlings on Sunday sales, birth control laws, and mOVIeeensorship. In addition, the court has been asked to rule-and may do 130--00 such 'erning film exhibition, movies'bsues as tax exemptions must be approved by the reviewfor .religious groups, obscene board before they ~an b~ shown

B 'bl d' . in Chicago The city thereforeliterature, 1 e rea .mg 111 banned "D~n 'Juan," while thePll,blic schools, free ?US rides for Times corporation branded theprivate school pupils, an~ the film review system unconstitu­requirement of a declar~t~on of tional "prior censorship."belief in God as a condition. of . The court's ruling in the Timel3holding public office. . case may well take a place in

Veteran Supreme .Court ob- a series of precedent-setting rul­servers have a hard tIme recall- irlgs which it has handed downing when so many cases of from 1952, when it first held8pecial significance to religious that movies anyentitled to con­groups were pending as are now stitutional guarantees of free­before ,the court. dom of the press to 1959, when

The high court officially It ruled in the "Lady Chatter­began its fall term Monday In ley's Lover" case that moviesall opening ceremony of tra- may not be banned for the ideasdttlonal pomp. Now, with the they advocate.formalities out of the way, the Besides these Sunday sales,Beal work begins. birth control and' censorship

Controversial Cases cases, which the Court has al-Holdovers from its 1959-'60 ready agreed to rule on, it seems

session al'e the cases involving certain that it. ~ill ~and downSunday sales, birth control laws, important dec)Slo~S 111 at leastand movie censorship, some of the other Issues already

Last April and May the court Illeiltioned.agreed to rule on four cases re- Obscene LiteratureYOlving about the controversial There are, for example, fi~Sunday sales issue. Two are eases before the court involvingfrom Pennsylvania; the others obscene literature and freedomU"e from Maryland and Massa- of speech 'and of the press, alongchusetts. with various subsidiary ques-

The Pennsylvania and Mary- tions. Anyone c;>f these couldland cases are appeals from . "conceivably draw from the court·lower court rulings upholding a further clarification of whatSabbath laws banning unneces- it means by obscenity and whatsary business activity. In the it thinks may constitutionally beMassachusetts ease,· however, done to control indecent ma­the law in question was over- terial.turned by a Federal court, whose In a case involving the taxdecision is. being appealed by exempt status of religiousIbe state. groups, the court has been asked

At issue in the birth control by a Montana Hutterite colonyease are Connecticut's 81-year- organized as a corporation toold laws banning the use of review a ruling holding it liablecontraceptives and making it il-' to a state corporation license tax.legal for doctors to give patientll The Hulterites claim their re-birth control advice. ligion makes it necessary for

The principals in the test c~se them to organize in corporatelIN Dr. C. Lee Buxton, chalr- form and that a corporation taxman of the obstetrics depart- is thus "tantamou'nt to the im­ment of the Yale University position of a fee upon ... reli-'medical school, a married couple gious beliefs." But the State <Jfand a housewife, aU of New Montana maintains that the taxHaven.· They claim their rights. in question is being levied onunder the constitutional guar- the Hutterites' commercial ac-.antee of "due process" of law tivities, not· their religious be-are being violated., lief.

The Connecticut laws havebeen challenged at least seventimes in the past. In the currentcase the state Supreme Courtof En'ors ruled in December,1959 that the laws are "a con­stitu'tional exercise of legislativepower."

Censorship, At stake in the film case is

the issue of so-called "priorcensorship," for years a major.target of anticensor elementsin the movie industry.

The case involves a challengeby the Times Film Corporationto the movie control proceduresof Chicago. The Times corpora­tion a distributing company,refu'sed in 1957 to submit themovie "Don Juan" to the cityfilm review board. .

Under the city ordinance gov-

Page 4: 10.06.60

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Polish PrelateWarns ClergyAgainst Reds

BERLIN (NC)-A Polislabishop has warned hillpriests to shun a "circle at.priests" that is offering fiD-'andal aid to Poland's tax-im­poverished clergy, it is reporteci

·bere.Bishop Ignacy Swirski at

8iedlce implied in a 'letter ..his clergy that the "Circle (J«

Priests with Caritas" is a frontfor agents of Poland's commun­ist government. He said the gov­ernment is attempting "to buyus" with alms given through thecircle.

(Caritas, once the a~ent of thePolish Bishops' charities,' wasseized by the Polish communistregime morE! than a decade age.The present organizatio~ hlll1!lbeen disowned by the Bishops.)

Shortly after Bishop Swirski'.letter was circulated, communistauthorities seized land set asidein Siedlce for construction of •seminary. They also seizedbuilding materials piled up CD

the site.Unjust Taxes

The authorities said they c0n­fiscated- the property becausethe dioceses had failed to payits taxes. Bishop Swirski hadwritten in his letter that theChurch and the clergy "areharassed by unjust taxes, super­taxes and fines, and treated .­second-class citizens, sentencedto slow liquidation. .

"'I learn from an impeccablesource that the secretary of the'Circle of Priests with Caritas'is inviting priests to come tothe secretariat of the 'circle' to-amine their possible financial-.s1iculties and assist them iatheir hardships. .

"Tl1is means that there existsII 'circle of priests,' not approvedby any' bishop, which has thepurpose of extending materialaUt to priests. It also means thatthe 'circle' has at its disposalimportant funds, whose source.unknown to us •••"

Council's 15th YearCHICAGO (NC)-The Inter­

racial Council of C"'icago willc' Jervn its 15th nnicersary withII Mass and Communion break.­fast on Sunday, Oct. 30.

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'.,First Korean SchoolKWANGJU (NC)-A group of

three Marianists has arrivedhere for a two-year study ofKor~an language, culture and'customs preparatory to openingthe society's first school inKorea.

,matter whom he called upon, newas first taken ~ inspect thegardens.

Although happy to visit hisnative land, Father Bouhuysencalls Sacred Heart parish"home," and says it feels good tobe there.

His assignments In the Diocesehave included the pastorate ofHoly Trinity Church, West Har­wich. Previously he was superiorat Sacred Hearts Monastery,Fairhaven.

General chairman' for Sunday'sbanquet is Louis Rogissart,assisted by Joseph Hardman,Elphege Desroches and MauriceHevey. ,\

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Blackfriars GuildFall River Blackfriars Guild

will present "Father of theBride" Tuesday and Wednesday,Nov. 15 and 16 in Sacred HeartS c h 0 0 1 Auditorium, LindenStieet, 'Fall River. Mrs. JamesF. Wilcox will ail'eet ...p,oduetion.

'MY CATHOL~C FAITH': At a private audience in theVatican, Texas-born Bishop LouisL. R. Morrow, who headsthe Dioces_e. of Krishnagar, West Bengal, India, -presentedthe Holy Father with a copy'of his revised volume of MyCatholic Faith, a 429-page illustrated manual of religion,now in its sixth edition, and a favorite with converts. NCPhoto.

WelcomeFollowing Trip

Parishiopers of Sacred HeartsChurch, Fairhaven, plan a wel­come home banquet for theirpa~or, Rev. Thaddeus Bouhuy­sen, SS.CC. this Sunday atGaudette's pavilion.

He has just returned from fourmonths in -his, native city ofUtrecht, Holland, where he hastwo sisters, one a reli'gious, andleveral nieces and nephews. Thehouse w here he was born is stillin the family and he stayed therewhile in Utrecht.

Originally leaving his nativecity in 1913 to ~mter the SacredHearts novitiate, Father Bou­huysen came to the United Statesin 1921. He has returned ~

Utrecht four times.iiis postwar visit in 1946 was

tragic, he recalls. Two closerelatives had been murderedIlnd some 70 members of thefamily were -in concentrationcamps.

His last visit was "the best,"he saYs. "'People have all theywant." -

Papal AudienceA highlight of the trip was an

audience with Pope John. Thepontiff spoke in French andLatin. "He's Ii very simple man,"reports Father Bouhuysen.

PeOple in Holland are veryproud of their land, he notes. No

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couragement and direction, par­ticularly from the persons theylove and admire. '

Regulate Social LifeThird, it follows that parents

must 'prudently r~gulate andcontrol the social life of theirchildren. Many thoughtleSs' orneurotic parents anxiously pro­mote the premature social in­volvement of their children byarranging numerous dances,parties, and other occasions fordating..

This absurd parental activityboth ignores the obvious factsof life and cr.eates an environ­ment little conducive to serioWlstudy.

Los Angeles SchoolsHave 243 Vocations

LOS ANGELES (NC) - .A.survey of Los Angeles archdioc_esan high scho 's 8ftoWII thata"out four per cr-~ or the 1900:'-'lduatel ~ave entered semin-aries 01' DOviQates. '

TI>e tot: " num!x'r wal 243 '\1'0­cations, or one out of every 24graduates in the Catholic schools:The survey did not include thoseentering seminaries (\'. novitiatelfrom public schools, eol1etr~s aDdthe working world.

Check HomeworkFourth, the order and atmos­

phere of the family' should en­courage children to study. Thereshould be a time and place forhomework, under definite par­ental supervision or control.

It should be taken as a mat­ter of course, that is, withoutarguing, that radio, T.V.. andtelephone conversations are ab­osolutely forbidden at this time.

Parents should also" make arapid check' of completed home­work assignments since someyoung people have an amazingability to kill time while pre­tending to 'stu'dy.

Worthwhile InterestsFifth, young people should be

.encouraged to read and to pur­sue inte~lectual hobbies 01' in­terests not necessarily related totheir classwork. Parents can doa great deal to stimulate suchinterests by supplying' suitablebooks and magazines, by dis­cussion and conversation, andparticularly by example.

Children raised by parentiw~ose intellectual diet is sup­plied by T.V., 11 casual readingof the daily paper, and a rehasho.f neighborhood gossip, _are nothkely to develop expanding in­tellectual interests.

Children tend to imitate theirparents, no matter how hardteachers may work to, arousetheir curiosity and stimulate'serious scholastic eiJ'deavor. '

Share ObligationFinally, this obligation must

be shared by both parents.Some fathers evidently feel thatthey must show concern only iftrouble arises: Children need toknow that their fathers also areinterested in their accomplish-

/ ments. B,oys in particular re­quire such paternal encourage­ment.

Furthermore, unless both par­en.~ fe~l equally c'oncerned,their chl1dren will not benefitfrom the balanced guidance anddirection resulting from the div- .inely designed fusion of mascu­line and feminine Personalitieain parenthood.

Mayor Resigns OfficeTo' Enter Seminary

PARIS (NC)-The mayor 01.the village of Sebourg in north­ern France. has resigned to enterthe seminary. '

Eloi Legrand, who is 35 yeanold and at the time of his elec­tion in 1948 was the youngestmayor in France, hopes uponordination to work in LatillAmerica. He holds university de­Irees in literature and law..

4 ' THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 6, 1960

'~rer1l~@~ SM~~@[fU' ',~~~®~i'~~~

In Education o~ 'Chi~d!renBy Father' John L. Thomas, S.J.

Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. Louis llJniversity

H Another vacation period has come and gone, so _theehildren are back at school once again. We have five, twoin high school and three in the grades. Lately there hasbeen so much writing and talk about ,the need for bettereducation that· some of usparents are worried. Whatcan we do to help our chil­dren in their studies? Nat­urally' we want the best for our,children." Do I detect a sigh ofrelief in youropening line?As the sayingg 0 e s, "Schooldays are thehappiest daysof your life - .provided all ofyou r childrenare old enough

. to be in school."It's quite under­standable thatamong Ameri­ican mothers,Labor Day has acquired aIlYmbolic'si'gnificance not in­eluded in the thought· of, itsfounders--the barbarian inva­sion will be stemmed for anothernine months as weary home-·makers hurry to confide theirseemingly tireless charges ~

the care of education experts.Of course once the excitement

and confusion normally associ­ated with getting started haveBUbsided, serious parents arebound to ask the questions you.raise.

Recognizing the importance fII..c)und education for the future­welfare of their children, .theywillingly support good teachersand scpools, but they are alsoBUfficiently realistic and prac­tical minded to realize that noschool system can' accomplishthis complex task without paren­tal support. What can parents do!

Primary OblilgationWithout pretending to be ex­

haustive, perhaps the followingpoints will call attention to themajor aspects' of their neededcontribution. Fir s t, parentsMould analyze their own atti­tudes toward education.

Before God, the education 01.their children remains theirprimary obligation. .A formaleducational system becomes anecessary means under modernc:onditions, yet parents have theprimary 'responsibility for seeingto it that their children haveadequate opportunities for learn­

, ing· and make use of them.In the practical order this

. means that parents do not .fulfilltheir obligations merely by con­fiding' tJ1eir children to goodteachers. Not only is the educa­tional process not confined tothe school, but the school itselfcannot accomplish its purposesalone.

The child's world forms awhole, of which school, .family,and society are different aspects.If they are mutual".' confusing,contradictory, or non-suppor:"tive, the 'child will not receive abalanced formation.

Home EnvironmentSecond, because parents have,

direct authority over their chil­dren, it is up to them Ut maketheir social and familial environ­ment conducive to serious stud1and self-dt:velopment.

This is particularly trUe durin,'the grade and high schoolperiods, since. most children atthese stages lack the experienceand motivation required tlotackle the difficult job of acquir­ing an education efficient'ly.

As the Ancients noted, "Learn­Ing maketh a bloody entrance,"IlO we cannot expectchildren'~,take to the process without en-

Page 5: 10.06.60

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DETROIT (NC)-Father Cel­estm J. Steiner, S.J., retiringpresident of the, University ofDetroit, was honored by theSecretary of the Air Force andthe wUversity's Air FOirce ROTCill a military review.

r 1lfE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Oct. 6, 1960 5

u. S. Air Force Lauds University President

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Asserts Catholics StaunchDefenders of U.S. Ideals

CINCINNATI. (NC) - Archbishop Karl J. Alter ofCincinnati, 50 years a priest and 10 years an archbishop,used the pubIlc celebration of his golden jubilee as anoccasion to celebrate "the indivisible priesthood of JesusChrist." He also assured his '

Mass of Thanksgiving in the re-fellow Americans outside stored U5-year-old Cathedral ofthe Catholic Church that st. Peter in Chains. It was filled"America is as safe now in with more than 1,500 people-'its liberties as it ev~r was-and including all five American car­no more stauncq defenders of its dinals, 15 archbishops, 60 bish­ideals will be found than those ops, leaders of religious com­in the ranks of the Catholice munitielJ, lay leaders, papalChurch." knights and government officials.

Climax of the jubilee was the Francis Cardinal Spellman,Archbishop's Solemn Pontifical Archbishop of New York, pre­

sided at the Mass. At a banquetafterwards he called the event"most inspiring," and said it wasa "privilege'" to congratulate theArchbishop "in the name of mybrother-bishops."

Preaching the' serm.')n at thejubilee Mass, Richard CardinalCushing, Archbishop of Boston,lauded Archbishop Alter for hisleadership in activitiea of. theChurch.

Spiritual Bouqu~Auxiliary Bishop Paul Y. Lei­

bold of Cincinnati presented theArchbishop, who is chairman ofthe National Catholic WelfareConference administrative board,with a 'spiritual bouquet fromthe priests, Religious, laity andschool children of the archdio­cese.

In acknowledging the tribut.eapaid him at the banquet, Arch- ,bishop Alter cited, three bless­ings for which he ia especiaU7iratefuL

"Foremost among these bl~ings," he said, "ia the extraord­inary privilege ol . aving beeItborn of Catholic pueo.ts fa •land with a Christian traditioa;secondly, 01. living in thi. laDdof liberty and equal opporiUD­ity; and thirdly, o£ living in _age .which has witnessed a mar­velous development of theChurch such all has been \I.Qo­

known in previous history."

FIRST FALL MEETING: At first Fall meeting ofDistrict One officers, Diocesan Council of Catholic Women,attendants heard remarks by Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, Dioc­esan CCW Director (left) and Rev. Walter A. Sullivan,Diocesan, CYO Director. With priests are Mrs. Edgar'Jeunesse, Blessed Sacrament parish (left) and Mrs. ThomasTache, St. Jean Baptiste.

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Capuchins PlanLaurentian Day

WASHINGTON (NC) - Thelargest group of Capuchins everto assemble at one place iaNorth America is expected at nday-long event here next Tues­day honoring the memory of onoof the order's heroes, St. Law­rence of Brindisi.

More than 400 of the l,46Zbearded, barefooted and brown­robed Capuchin priests, clerictiand Brothers in North Americaare expected, accoI:ding to offi­cials of the "Laurentian Day"observance at the Catholic Uni-'versity of America.

St. Lawrence of Brindisi isfamed as a pioneer of the Ca­puchin Order in Germany, forhis writings against the Prot­estant Reformation and hiswritings and batUes againstMoslems. The observance heremarks a victOry of 18,000 Chria­tians led by the saint over 80,­000 Turks in 1601.

Pope John proclaimed St.Lawrence a Doctor of the Uni­versal Church in May, 1950.

MISSION DIARIST: Bro­ther Venard Blais, S.D.S.,formerly of St. Mathieu'iparish, Fall River, issues amonthly Mission Diary, ~lating activities of his Tan­ganyika mission. Copies maybe had from him at Box: 43,

· Masasi, Tanganyika. EastAfrica.

Worcester CI~ricSees So. KoreaForging Ahead

WORCESTER (NC)South Korea may be on theverge of a "rebirth, econ­omically and politically" ­but the communist-menaced na­tion still has a rocky road totravel to achieve stability.

This is the opinion of FatherGeorges A. Bissonnette, AA..director of the School of For­eign Affairs at Assumption Col­liege here.

Father Bissonnette, formerehaplain to Americans in Mos­eow who was expelled from theSoviet Union in 1955 and whorecently returned from a fact­finding tour of Korea andJapan, sait! the new Koreangovernment of Premier JohnChang is in a shaky position dueeo a factional split wlthin hisown Democratic party.

Japan to HelpHe predicted, however, that

the Korean economy will bebolstered when present plans toexpand the silk Indllstry are outInto practice. With economicgrowth, the nation's politicalstability should incl'ease, he ·said.

Father Bissonnette touredKorea and Japan in the com­pany of New York businessmanPaolino Gerli, described as theworld's leading silk indWltrial­1st.

According to the priest, Mr.Cerli is helping to finance aprogram whereby Korean peas­ants will be encouraged to cul­tivate mulberry trees and silk-­worms. He said the industrialisthas received commitments fromJapanese manufacturers to im­port increased quantities ofKorean silk.

Farmer CooperationKorea was for many years

• leading silk producer, but all• result of war and its after­math production in recent yearsball fallen off to one-fifth o( itsforme'r volume.

Father Bissonnette observedUte Chang government Is sup­porting the new silk productionplan enthusiastically. The maj­or hurdle is persuading thefarmers to cooperate. ba a&­serted.

Praises GenerosityOf Cardinal Stritch

BARD! (NC)-A top Vaticanefficial paid tribute to the lateCardinal Samuel Stritch ofChicago at the opening of an oldpeople's home here.

Archbishop Antonio Samore,Secretary for Extraor ~inlll'T Ec­clesiastical AHairs of the VaticanSecretariat of .State, lauded theCardinal for his generosity.Archbishop Samore, who wasborn in this town in north cen­tral Italy 55 years ago, inaugu­rated the new home and out­.patient clinic here.

The Vatican official attributedtile institution's construction tothe generosity of CardinalStritch, the Italian government,Mel other benefacton in Ital,.ead abroad.

Page 6: 10.06.60

Actions Speak' Louder Weekly CalendarOf Feast Days-

ronAY-St. Bruno, ConfeSSOLThe founder of the CarthusiaDtiwas born in Cologne about· 10Mand stUdied in Paris. He WaBmade canon of Cologne aDdlater held the same office litRheims. Together with six com­panions determined to forsa_the world, he retired to GrandeChartreuse. There they were wel­comed by St. Hug:'1, Bishop GIlGrenoble. Later St. Bruno we.ealled to Rome by a former die­ciple,· Pope Urban II. The bustleof the city disturbed him. He re­tired to the 'mountains of C~abria, where he founded a sec­ond Charterhouse. He died about1101 and was canonized 500 YeaNlater.

TOMORROW-Feast of theMost Holy Rosary. 1'his feast alsocommemorates St. Mary of Vic­tory, a day which Pope· Pius Vinstituted in 1571 to be' kepteach year in memory of the vic­tory granted to' the ChristiaMin a naval batttle against theTurks after invoking the helpof the' Mother of God. .

SATURDAY-St. Bridget ofSweden, Widow. She. was amember of the Swedish royalfamily born in 1034. She marrieclPrince Ulpho of Sweden and!.they had eight children. MaDJ'years later she and her' husbandseparated by mutual consent. Hejoined the Cistercians .And she

. founded the community of St.Saviour in the Abbey of Wasteilll,

SUNDAY-Eighteenth Sun~afte!' Pentecost. Generally th.date is the feast o~ St. JohaLeonard, Confessor. The founderof the Congregation of ClerkllRegular of the' Mother of God.he was born in the 16th centuJ7in Luni, Tuscany. He cooperatedwith St. Philip Neri, St. JosephCalasanctius and other famoueholy men d the time in restorincChurch discipline and conven­ing sinners. He is looked upon _II founder of the Urban collegeia Rome for seminarians from.mission areas. He died at the ageof 60 in 1609, and was canonizedin the twentieth century.,

MONDAY-St. Francis Borgia,Confessor. Son of the Duke 01.Gandia, a Grandee of Spain, _was born in 1510. While servi~

at the court of Emperor CharleeV, he determined upon a reli­gious voc!ition and entered tileSociety of Jesus. He. declined aeardinalate and became the thirdGeneral of the Jesuits. He 'died atFerrara In 1572, fatigued fromII mission he had been sent 011by the Pope to enlist aid citChristian princes when the Turamenaced Christendom. He w..eanonized in 1671.

TUESDAY-Maternity of theBlessed Virgin Mary. This feastcommemorates ,the' divine moth­erhood of Mary, her dignity ..Mother of God, and her spiritualmotherhood of men. It was ob­served first in Portugal, Braziland Algeria. It is the patronaifeast of the· Trinitarians. Polanclcelebrates the day as the Feastof Mary, Queen of Poland.

WEDNESDAY-SS. EvagriMt,Priscian and Companions, Ma.....tyrs. The date of their marty...dom is unknown, but they prob­ably were put to death in Syria"

Living matter may be broughtinto being, with what ultimateresults none can fully visualb.for man's temporal welfare _.self-destruction, but the eternalverities stand serene.

Foresees DamageThis is not to say, howev~

that much damage may not tJ.done in the minds of the unin.­structed and t4eunprepared. ~we listened to the eminent scie~tist who started us on this lineof thinking; it seemed to _(though we may do him an iD­justice) that there was a note 01.exultation in his voice, as thouglahe wer~ rejoicing ill the imm~ate prospect of the overthrowof .all this religious nonsense.

Certainly the militant atheist.will make a field-day of it, aDCifrom the dialectic materiali.we will h~.ar shouts of triumpla.

It will be excellent pro~

ganda material to I used on tbeunwise ~nJ unwary, the igno....and the pseudo-intellectuals.

It is a time for us to keep ...balance and to use our head&.

Verities Stand SereneSo life may be produced in III

test-tube from non-living ele­ments. Does this dispose of God·as the creator of all being? Tothe contrary, it does no morethan push back the frontier ofdivine intervention, a frontierwhich was not placed there byGod but only by our previouslack of knowledge..

It in no way approaches thedistinction between the physicaland the spiritual, nor touches thecardinal question 0:" that breathof divine life which is man's im­mortal soul. The dualism of bodyand soul remains intact, actuallyuncontested.

Science-Religion ConfliCltSome weeks ago in this col:­

umn we wrote of. the woefulconfusion which resulted, a cen­tury ago, from the impact. ofDarwinian evolutionism. Thefault lay equally divided be­tween . an agnostie or frankly'atheistic scientisrn which tendedto regard theology as a myth,and a blindly conservative theo­logism which refused to distin-

. guish between facts !lnd prejQ­dice.

For the latter the concept 01.man's. physical evolution fromlower forms 'of life was whollyincompatible with a narrow andliteral interpretation of the Sac- .red Scriptures, and was therefore

. to be condemned without refer- .ence to the evidence:

But as the evidence mountedthe impression gained currencythat there could be no commonground between science andreligion.

Reconciled in GodThis was foolishness, but the

harm was done. The magnificentstatement of the Vatican Coun­cil that between true science~nd revelation there could be noreal disagreement, since in God,th~ author of truth, all truth is

.reconciled, opened t".e way to acreative meeting of minds, butthe tragic break has been' slowhealing.

There is a type of scientificmind which· still .eyeS religionas a vestige of primitive ignor­ance, just as there is a type of .religious mind which vaguelylooks at science as a rattlesnakecoiled ~ strike at the vitals offaith.

Eternal. Trutl1s UndisturbedBy Scientific Discoveries

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.Bishop of Reno

Wil1life be produced in a laboratory? If it is, what winit mean in terms of the theology of divine creation? Theseare questions which may have infinitely greater bearingon our .whole future than the political issaes which soexclusively preoccupy us at tured on the coilViction that lifethe moment. For if life, jn in any form can only b~ the re­its simplest forms can ,be sult of the direct action ofdemonstrated in a test-tube divine power. This h811 neverthere is no'reason to suppose that been a dogma of faith, but it haascience will be content to let been rooted firmly in the reli­the matter rest gious background of millions 01.

Christians.at that point.The prospect is

.as dizzying as itis dazzling.

In the higher'drcles of bio­ehemistry thereill widespreadconfidence thatthe thing willbe done. And

. this not as a.fluke' or apseudo-scientific sleight of hand,but as a' fully controlled andtested demonstration. '

We listened, the other day, asone of the nation's foremost sci­entists, a man who by no con­eeivable license would risk hisreputation on' 'a spurious 01'.

doubtful venture, spoke of pre-. paring the demonstration for the

World's Fair planned for Flush-ing Meadows in 1964. '

He was enthusiastic and su­premely confident. It. is possible,of course, that his confidence ispremature, but it is hardly p'os­sible that he was talkingthrough his hat.

SUOOe&8 AssuredTo satisfy our curiosity in the

matter we checked with others,among them Catholic scientistsof sober judgement. While fullyaware of the problems involved,problems certainly as great orgreater than those raised by thefissure of the atom, they sharethe conviction that its successfuldemonstration' is. practically as­sured.·

Soaring above our extremelyexiguous ,fund of chemicalknowledge, they spoke ot theextraor ~inary work now beingdone in the field of amino acids,as actually resulting in the pro­duction of living substances fromDOn-living matter.

Problem for Average ManThis, then,·.is mere!y a lay­

man's report. Our personal opin­ion is obviously worthless; butit.is of enormous importance thatChristian a.nd Catho'~c thinkingbe prepared to cope with a pos­sibility which may, almost anyday now,. become an eventuality.

It is not a problem for thetraimid theologian or philoso­pher who is able to see it in i.tsfull context and to make theDeeessary distinction,;.

But . it is II problem for the~e JDaA who baa heeD DWO_

6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Oct. 6, 1960

Government Neutral?There is a spreading' doctrine that the government

should remain neutral in religious matters, and this iaeahas been recently scored by the Dean of the Boston CollegeSchool of Law, Jesuit Father Robert F. Drinan.·

As Father Drinan pointed out at a Red Mass held inBangor, "our law is committed to fostering religion as the80urce and wellspring of our private and public morality."

This does not mean that the government should becomeIeCtarian and partisan, granting advantages -to .one parti­eular group against others. But it does mean that it is inboth the tradition and to' the advantage of government topromote spiritual ideals and to encourage the role ofreligion. .

Unfortunately, there is agtowing movement'that wouldeall .upon government to be completely neutral, or-evenworse-committed against religion: "The very articulateand aggressive spokesmen of this novel and strange doctrinein 'our law will make provision for the practices-even thefdeosyncracie~of individual religious zealots,but, on theother hand, teach that .our law and our schools may n<?tencourage religion even if such encouragement is done onlybecause religious faith is the principal source of our publicmorality." .

The United States is committed in its Constitution tospiritual ideas: As Mr. Justice William O. Douglas of theSupreme Court has said, "We are a religious people whose,institutions presuppose a Supreme being ... We ,cannotread into the Bill of' Rights a philosophy of hostility toreligion. The first amendment does not say that in everyand all respects there shall be a separation of church andstate. '.' Otherwise the state and religion would be aliensto each other-hostile, suspicious and even unfriendly .•.Municipalities would not be permitted to render police andfire protection to religious groups. A fastidious atheist oragnostic could even object to the supplication with whichthe Supreme Court opens each session: 'God save the UnitedStates and this honorable court.' ,,' .

These words of this distinguished justice were written,It is well to note, in the majority decision in the Zorachease. They are given as an interpretation by the majorityof the justices of the Constitution of the United States.

While the government allows an atheist or agnostic toDve in freedom in this country, the fact still remains thatthe country as a country was founded upon religious prin-'eiples. The dean emeritus of the Yale Divinity School,' Dr.Luther Allen Pringle, has said, "The separation of churchand state is a sound principle. But it is terribly misunder­.tood and mauled about. It does 'Dot. mean separation of.tate and God."

And as the American Bishops have said in their annualatatement of twelve years ago: "We feel with deep convic­tion that for the sake of both goOd citizenship and religion,there should be a reaffirming of our original Americantradition of free cooperation between government andreligious bod!eS-Cj)Operation- involving no special privilegeto any group and no restrction on the religious liberty ofany citizen." .

Father Drinan has urged the bench and bar to taket1J.ese three steps: "Recognize the fact f that our civil Jawpresupposes and relies on. the existence of a moral law·known to all men; affirm the truth that this moral lawhas its origin both in reason and in the teachings of religion;and affirm, therefore, that our government maY.and shouldencourage religion since it' is the ultimate and strongestsource of all our moral convictions...·

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER'Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fan River

410 Highland Avenuefall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7U~

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

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGERRev. Daniel F. ShollOo. M.A. Rev. .10M P. Driscoll

MANAGING EDITORHugh J. GoldeR

Sin and SicknessThere are persons who get discouraged over religion

because they expect it to do what it is not supposed to do.And so because a man or Woman is not cured of a me9:talillness after praying or making a novena, religion is dis..counted.'

A priest-psychologist, Reverend George Hagmaier, haswarned that "will power, grace, prayer and 'positive think­ing'" can not "by themselves cure sick minds."

A distinction must be made between sin and sicknes~

and sometimes a psychiatrist rather than a priest is theonly one competent to help a person solve his problems. TGexpect a solution in such a ease from .religion is' to "toascribe to religion and the. supernatural life powers Godnever intended them to have." .

Clergy and lay people would do weD to keep these factaIn mind.

Page 7: 10.06.60

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The NAB also sponsors thetelevision industry's voluntaIycode. About 80 per cent of U. Sotelevision stations are memberll"

Broadcasters SelectCode Program Head

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheNational Association of. Broad­casters has announced appoin~

ment of a veteran broadcaster teprepare enforcement provisiou.for the new Radio Code. .

He is Charles M. Stone, wbehas 26 years ·broadcasting expe­rience and most recently haabeen a partner in a Jacksonville,Fla., advertising firm. He willassume his post on Nov. 1.

The Radio Code, the industry'ltvoluntary gUic;le, supersedes th.association's Standards of GoodPractice for Radio Broadcastera.

" The new code opens participa­'-:- tion to non-members of the NAB. and also replaced the old guide'.

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Demarais early in 1954. UnderFather Deneault, the parish hasgrown to include 1760 people.'The llChool now has an enroll­ment of 328 pupils in eightgrades and kindergarten.

Fat her Deneault believes ,that each parish can be com- r-----------lpared ~ the entire Church. I 1-n today's"Each carries on the same noble Iwork; uses the same means; en- I Icounters obstacles similar in IsmaItest Ikind if not degree; and has the I .glorious result of. th~ salvation I home s Iof souls." I . . . IL _

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Father Jalbert made severalimprovements in the church, In­cluding the Way of the Cross, astatue of Ste. Anne, new pewcovering and' side altar, andpaving the school yard. When heleft in October of. 1937, he wasreplaced by Rev. Albert Masse,the fifth pastor, who wa~ facedwith a debt of. $89,000. By 1945,this was reduced to $40,000, anda fund. drive in the parisherased. the entire debt and furn­ished funds to make numerousimprovements, in the parish'proper,ties.· on Jan. 29, 1950.Father Jalbert suffered a heartattack while celebrating Maaand died several hours later.

Sixth Pastor

Appointed sixth pastor wasRev. A.Qatole Desmarais. Hisprojects included painting theparish buildings and renovatingthe convent. He was also respon­sible for the establishment of. •kindergarten class at St. Joseph'.School .

Rev. UbaIde '.1. Deneault, thepresent pastor, succeeded Father

Parish Miniature of Entire Church, SaysPastor of St. Joseph's, Attleboro

By Marion UnswortbIn the history of New England, it is notable that whenever groups of French-Can- .

adians immigrated ,to this section, one of their first concerns was to provide for schoolsand churches for their people. French Catholics who settled in the Attleboro area wereno exception. Having come to New England at the end of. the 19th. century, FrenchCatholics numbered approxi­mately 180 families shortlyafter the turn of the cen­tury. By 1904, a unit ofL'Union St. Jean Baptiste d'­Amerique was formed in Attle.­boro, and ·two members weresent to Bishop William Stang ofthe new Diocese of Fall River,to request a French-languageparish. Bishop Stang grantedpermission and plans were for­mulated for the new parish.

On September 19, 1905, Rey.Napoleon Messier was namedfirst pastor of St. Joseph's par­ish. Faced with the necessity offounding a church, rectory,school and convent, Father Mes­sieJ:' rented the old Second Con­gregational Church in the cen­ter of Vte village of Attleboro,and there celebrated the first

. Mass of the new parish Oct. l"1905.

He then purchased a home andproperty at the corner 'of SouthMain and Maple Streets for usaas 2l rectory, with the thoughtof building the remaining parishbuilding,s on the same site. BySpring of 1906, plalUl had beendrawn up for the basement of.the future church, and in Aprilof the following year it Wag'completed and in use.

French Sehool

The next consideration wasfor a French school FatherMessier made preliminary ar­rangements for it by invitinng aFrench community of nuns, theDames de l'Education Chre­.tienne, to establish a convent inAttleboro.

Having already desired toform a novitiate in the area, theSisters had purchased propertywhich included a large buildingand a small house; on Maple St.These buildings were convertedinto a convent-school by· 1909.

When Father Messier becamem in the Fall of. 1910, Rev. Ar­ttiur Savoie was named to suo­ceed }lim lis pastor of. St. .10lJ­

eph's. Remaining slighUy· overtwo years, Father Savoie man­aged to reduce the parish debtby $3,000 before being trans­ferred to St. Hyacinth, New Bed.­jord, in February, 1913.

The third pastor, Rev. AntoineBerube, served the Attleboroparish for the following Z8years. At the beginning of hispastorate, the size 01. St. Jos­eph's had more thaD doubledsince 1906. c

Turning his attention first tothe school, Father Berube ar­ranged with the nuns, whowished to leave Attleboro, tobuy the school property, and en­gaged the Sisters of the HolyCross and Seven Dolors to staff.it. This order began teachingthere September, 1915.

Father Berube also reorg'an­ized the parish' societies andsucceeded in eliminating theparish debt by 1924. Further ex­penses were incurred in 1925.when a fire damaged the rec­tory and extensive repairs werenecessary.

Fire Damalre.

By 1926, work was begun Olll

the upper cliurch. During itBconstruction, fire destroyed IIlarge building' in the rear .of therectory, and a new garage anddriveways were erected in thatlocation.

On Oct. 13, 1929, the newchurch was dedicated. Duringhis pastorship, Father Berubereactivated or established thoChildren of Mary, Ladles of Ste,~e, League of. the SacredHeart, and a unit of l'Union SL.lean Baptiste d'Amerique.

With all these projects, ant!the hardships of. the depression.,Father Berube became ill andretired.. HiD succeaor, Rev. Phil­las Jalbert, who was to remainthere four years, had· previouslyserved In 'the parish l:lB a eurat:lunder Father Beruba.

Hong Kong CatholicIncrease is 12,137

HONG KONG (NC)-Convel'­sions, immigration and birthshave swelled Hong Kong's Cath­'oUc population to 158,601. ThatIs 12,137 over the previous year.

The annual diocesan censussaid that between July 1. 1959and June 30, 1960, 3,749 babiesand 10,352 pagans were baptized.108 Protesants became Catholics,and 4,295 Catholics from abroadtook up residence in Hong Kong.·There were 1,104 Catholic deaths,while 5,261 Catholics left HongKong to live elsewhere.

Hong Kong's 156 CathoUc-.:hools had 28,758 Catholic stu­dents and' 55,874 non-Catholklstudents. There were 13,882 eato=­chwnens under instruction.

Urges Simple' EnglishFor Liturgy Prayers .

LONDON (NC)-Simple, clearEnglish should be used' in litur­gical prayers ill. England tAtenable the' people to becomefamiliar with them, ArchbishopFrancis J. Grimshaw of Bir­mingham said here.~You must use the common

language of the ordinary people,nothing remotely Uke slang butstill nothing that is not the sim­ple everyday manner of. express­b1g an idea," the Archbishopsaid in a 'national radio broad­cast. "Besides that you have totake care to preserve the doc­trinal content intact."

The Archbishop pointed outthat the Holy See recently gavep~rmission to the Church inEngland to use Engl:sh .in partsof the rites of Baptism, ExtremeUnction and Matrimony. It maynot be used for the burial serviceas it appears in the Roman Rit­UQl But permission is grantedfor the use of English prayerswhen the strictly liturgicalservice is ended. "It is a begin­ning, and clearly intended to beexperimental," the prelate added.

Bishop StressesChurch Is TrueMother of All·

ALTOONA (NC) - TheChurch has a "reaJ. moth­erly interest in each one of'U8" and is concerned vitallywith the salvation of aU men,Bishop J. Carroll McCormick as­serted here, speaking on "OurHoly Mother, the Church" at hiDenthronement as the fifth Bishopof Altoona-Johnstown in theCathedral of the Blessed Sacr-a­men ..

In the presence of 25 arch­bishops and bishops and a cap­acity congregation, F l' a n c i II

Cardinal Spellman, Archbishopof New York, officiated at theenthronement rites. Bishop'Mc­Cormick succeeds Bishop How­ard J.' Carroll, ---ho died lastMarch 21.

"-t is no mere fig' Ire of speechto refer to the Church as 'OurMother,' " Bishop McCormicksaid.

"She is indeed our Mother, thisSpouse of the Son of God. Sheit was who gave us life in thesupernatural order, through thesacrament of Baptism. That samesupernatural, spiritual life shenurtures and maintains in usthrough the sevenfold sacramen­tal system, through the Sac­rifice of the Mass, through herprayers, her teachings and' herJaws.

On Supernatual Level-Comparing our Holy Mother,

the "::hurch, to our own naturalmother, we find that the Churchill to each of us ~ the super­natural level all that our earthlymothers have been to us on thonatural level, and more."

"Sometimes we may wonderat her caution," Bishop McCorm­1ck continued. "Sometimes wd

. may even question her severity.Her decrees and laws 8fe oftenattacked by tho:: ~ who fail torealize that she must' at timestake measures that seem hardbecause she is a good Mother,and as such she is looking only

. to our future happiness. ."There "re times when we'

tend to become lax in our dutiesto God, 'and then she must prodas to the fulfillment of. ourobligations, and even punish usIf- we should seriously offend."

Page 8: 10.06.60

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st. Mathieu's Church, Fall River.,will speak at the annual Com­munion breakfast of the JesueMary Academy Alumnae Asso­ciation, scheduled to follow 8:38'Mass Sunday morning, Oct. 16.Mass will be celebrated in theJesus Mary Convent chapel, FallRiver..

Breakfast tickets are availablefrom Mrs. Florence Brodeur andMrs. Gertrude Gendreau, chair­men, and from their committeemembers•.

Set Junior-Senior RiteAt SHA, Fall River

Seniors of Sacred HeartsAcademy, Fall River, will holdtheir traditional ring ceremonyin the school chapel at 7:15 Mon­day evening, Oct. 10. The schoolchaplain .will bless rings,...whichwill then be presented to juniorclass n' "!mbers.

Senior mothers will be host­esses to junior class parents at afollowing coffee hour. The ex­ecutive board of the SucordiumClub, mothers' auxiliary, wincomprise the committee kacharge of arrangements.

Irish Bell in AfricaDUBLIN (NC)-Abell frOM

the Irish midlands will soon c811People to p~aYe~ in West AfriCa. .The 2OO-y~ar-old.bell fr~m theMoo~ . esta~ of. RathcabbiD,~ai' 'BIrr, bas 'been presented t.i

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Mix Nonpartisan PoliticsWith Apostolic Work .. '

WALLINGTON (NC)-Non­partisan 'politics were mixedwith .apostolic 'work by theParent Teacher Association 01.Sacred Heart Grammar Schoolin this New JerseY·community.

At a fair and 'auction the PTAauctioned gift packages donated ..by the wives of political figures.

Donors included - ~rs. DwightD. Eisenhower; Mrs.·RicbardNixon, Mrs., Henry Cabot Lodge,Mrs. John Kennedy, Mrs: Lyn­don Johnson, Mrs. Cliffo.rd ".Case, wife of the Senator fromNew Jersey, and Mrs. Robe""Meyner, wife of-the state's'go~ernor.' .. ' .. ,

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.BetChHdren's·Room·S·till.Mess.y :'.~Despite Expert Assistan·ce·

By Alice Bough Cahill ..A' short time ago I called on the mother of two pre­

school children. She called me to come up to the children'sroom on the second. floor. There were toys, toys everywhereand Jl9t a place to walk in this lovely large,' high-ceilingedroom.. My. friend pleaded: by one' of the children and a"Please help me to. make puzZle fell all over the floor. Wesome order out of this chaos. solved this b~ attaching. to theThis morning I've had an- upright supports bands of trans-thO b t ith the children parent.acetate to hold books and

o er. au w . . ~ boxe$ 18 place.about the everlastmg ·clutter and Now, what to do with the dolls.t h'e c ray 0 n. These children have some lovelymar~s I found dolls brought to them from far-~n the ~alls. I away places. If you've loved toJust .can t keep . collect dolls, you know how dollsnaggmg at the love to collect dust;children; it gets We built glass-enclosed cab-Dle nowhere; I inets above 'and on each sidemust do some.- of a door into the hall. Fluores-thing sensi~le cent' tubes light the cabinets,abo u t t hIS showing off the dolls and alsomess." making a charming frame forr

We sat down the door. .for a coffee For the time being, these pre-break and anal- schoolchildren do not need.8 HONOR SISTER AT TEA: St. Patrick's Guild, Fal-.yzed 1" -:. problem, not unusual desk (since they can write on the mouth, gave a Silver Tea in honor Of Sister Helen Marie,with active children. We agreed wall) but eventually the parents M.S.B.T. ,Left .to right: Mrs. Gilbert J. Noon, president of·that the room needed to be re- 'will build desk space across orie District No.5,. Fall River Diocesan Council of Catholi~painted first. . . ,end'of" the ro()m to accommodate· Here's a report of what we did. 'two children;' Women, pourer; Mrs. Winthrop Lumbert" chairman; Mrs.'1'8 overcome the probleDl of On the' wall above the' desk Frederick A. English, corresponding secretary of Fall Riverscribbling, op. the ne\\, VI'aIls, w.e, will be • :bulletin 'board (fa~ . 'Council; and Sister Helen.,·., . :. .,' '.

· decided to use a dado effe.ct.~. tened tIO ·the wan with • ·safety , " ..... .'arourid the walls "Neput a 4-foot hasP). it will fold aown over the C: t L "1·' A t···' D" M

.wainscoting, painted ,.green.to . desk to beComes .1arge:plaY ate. .; 'anOle. cion enounces- oveJn~:~:t~:~t~ca~~~~a~ q ~:'~ ::~~s~~:,e:itaa.:ill':=.' To' Bring Divorc'e to Phil ippines '.eI. the board by 4-foot chams ~nd a wonderfultr,aio ~~le)·•.' ',:, ':M.ANILA.(NC)-eatholic Ae- . God, to the traditiollB ol.theboxes to, hold chalk wer~ pal~ed tlonists in Manila have declared people and to publie policy.

·beside t.hem. Can y~u Imagme, South African Convert ~eir .opposition to .~roposal The Catholic Women's League· the thrill these Chlld~~n .. are ..Becomes' Cqp.uch,i.. , .to . introduce divorce into ~ of the Philippines also pledged'~vi}'lg~TbeY .and th~lr ~ttle CAPE .,TOWN, (NC) "~ One . P~Hi~p'~~es a~diO spread. ~ uol- that it will resist' any attempt to

",fJ:le~dsdrawand ~laY'f~th':" ~ember, ,of.'. fami17 ~ eig~t, _ ~rm~vo~lawthro~IJ.l:Iout the enact a l~w'aut!tori~i~g .absolute· th~, hour. (Once • ~ee . am' se~e~ of,whom.. ~,converts M:... w.orld:·.. , . . dlv~rcem th~ P.h111ppmes. At, ~lP~S off UH:~rdswit~ ad ,P Catholicism. "was c-ordained •..<The 'eentral coinmi~' of present the law .lft th,~ Philip-'JIa~.), ,. '. iD_,·pap~.,~ " ..... 'priest .b~~e·by ~r~h: ish~.~~ ,Cathol.ic Action hi. the Manila. pines recognizes only,. le~

: , . CIa .. .; . • . _. McCa~of.Cape. Town. , ' Ar~hdlOC~se strongly. p~otested separlltion.Above' thiS 'c~alkb,oar~ .we" . ,He is Fathi!!: 'Ter~nCe Hinri~against ~e proposal, w:hlcbwas .

1If!ed a. bright,chi~tzy flgU~ed ·.aeJi,O~F.r&;Cap." ,YhoiS the firSt ' ...~~~~~Ved,atthe. ~nvention of, ' Third Order'"Sale' .'paper which came wlth,matchl~.gr···ita Mriccinol. mvreG. race' to ttle. International ,;Federation 01. A rummage' sale today andeloth; A valance of,this'materlal ~~e a Capuc}-" priest. 'se 'W~man La:wyers. '.' '. tomorrow at 1078 South Waterwas made 'tohgoa~r~ss t~e :~s ' was ord~inedin'ach~~chiiI sub- ' "Local Catholie A:eUOIl organ-Stree.t,'Ne~Bedford,· 'wiil bene-

· of. the v~n.~tia~ bli~ds. .. e, .ethes ' "urban Athlo":e; 'where ·th.e. Cap~.' tZatiollB registered :their protestare. covel;'ed WIth spreads ,of , chin Fathers from Irelimd' serve; . in' thei'esolution of the central 'ftt Our Ladyis'Cbapel'and win

· _me material. , . The new: priest· was 'trained ill' committee condemning the pro- 'be sponsored by the ThirdI might add that th,: beds are Irel::,'1d. I posalM contrary to the law of Order of St. Francia.'

high. enough to pe~mlt st~rage More than half Of the, 55,000 .space beneath. them,so we Catholics of 'the Cape Town arch- ~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;tackled ourprobleJ\" of scattered diocese are colored people. 'toys by building .toy-sto~age

boxes in the ,shape of btUewagons on free-roll'ng casters. '

At each end of the boxes areopen slits for a hand-grip, thus 'the little ones have no handlingdifficulty, and picking ul> toysbecomes fun. There was room forthree under each bed.

Of course, one could paintthese wagons with circus animal'pictures and us'e rope handles, orthe child's name could be on eachbox, so each would be respon­sible for his own j .·S.

Next, we had to find a placefor games of' unwieldy sizes.We built a game-storage chestwith a drop-leaf shelf. This pro-

· vides -work' space, then folds up·to· hide clutter." There' are more,· shelves above 'his chest. Slat''doors can be 'closed to hide theentire unit. .

Besides the storage chest, weput up a revo~ving rack ,which

. , makes it easy to' reach books,games' and 'puzzles. Supporting·

· uprights were staggered to,maket,uming.easy, but a .quick t~~

'- C~'lleCt tr~¥~.g .. Stamps'To Furnish College" .

· .' OGDENSBURG' (NC) - Trad­ing .stamps were responsible formuch of the furnishings of. the'new mother house 'and collegeof the Sisters of St. Joseph here.

Through personal contacts andby publicity in the North Coun­try Catholic, diocese newspaper,the Sisters made the appeal forthe stamps: The response camefrom as far away as Florida andOregon, as well as from the dio­cese itself. In a few .months theSisters had accumulated suffi­cient stamps to obtain furnish­ings for bedrooms and thekitchen.

The million dollar Mater DeiCollege and nO"itiate openedwith a community of 50 novices rand Sisters. Mother Immaculata,the Mother General of the com­munity said the college will beopened for lay students as soonas possIble.' , , '

Page 9: 10.06.60

D & D Sales and Service•DfG.

mIGIOAffiEREFRIGERATION

APPLIANCESAIR CONDITIONING

FAIRHAVEN, MASS.

Dorothy CoxHome made

CANDIESCHOCOLATES

150 Varieties

ROUTE 6 near

fairhaven Auto Theem.

fAIRHAVEN. MASS.

Insurance Agency'TB.. Myrtle '-1231

54 PlEASANT STREETNORTH AnLEBORO

ProtectWlttJt Yoti HaYe

McGOWAN

Alumni Sty~e' ShowHoly Family High School

Alumni Association, New Bed­ford, will sponsor a style showto .:.benefit its scholarship fundat 8 Tuesday night, Oct.·25 illKeith Junior High 'School audi­torhim. Mrs. Arthur Leclair andMrs. Herve Berube, chairmenof the ticket eommittee aNassisted by a large group.

Cardinal PraisesCharity Ladies

NEW YORK (NC) - Th.Ladies of Charity, who have juslformed a national organizatioDhere, were told by a cardinalthat their name is "refreshing,"one that "restores to its rightfulplace the 'divinity of charity'­iD itl meaning of true and con­stant a.ldsacrificing love ofGod."- .

Speaking at a Communiol1breakfast which was a highlightof the organization's first na­tional assembly, James FrancisCardinal McIntyre, Archbishopof Los Angeles, told how, 40years ago, as a curate in a NewYork parish, he was assigned toestablish a branch of the Ladiesof Charity in his parish.

"The name 'Ladies of Charity'always entranced me," CardinalMcIntyre said. "Its· dignity, itslovableness, its genuine spirit ofholiness, commanded attention­commanded 'respect.

"Apart from, and entirely be­yond the social significance ofthe name, Lady to you and to meit signifies a relationship with'Our Lady, the Mother of God.'

"It is elevating, it is stimulat­ing and it connotes a super­natural affection for all of thecharm and the graces personifiedin Our Lady. These are impulsesnot usually motivated so evi­dently in the name of a group,as well as in its ambitions and ittaccomplishments; ,

THE ANCHOR­T1lurs;~' Oct. 6, 1960

AITHUI I. DOUCIrFALL- RIVER, MASS.

PLENTY OF FRESH GENUINECAPE 'BAY SCALLOPS

ON SALE AT

MacLEAN'S SEA FOODS

PIAHCIf J. I)fiVM

363 SECOND ST.

R. A. WILCOX CO.OFFICE FURNITURE

.. 8teeIr fw I••ediace ()e,"~

• DESKS • CHAIRSFILING CAIINErS

• FIRE FILES • SAFESFOLDING TAIlES'AND CHAIRS

R. A. WILCOX CO.22 IEDFORD ST.

'AU RIVER 5-7131

6,000 ConvertsLONDON (NC)-The Catholie

Inquiry Center here has brought1,000 people into the Church illits sev.. years of existence. Thecenter, which advertises freemail courses of instruction illCatholicism through r ~ secularpress, is now sending its prelim­inary outline of Cathol; doctrine'- 14,000 people a year.

Cards

A. D. McMULLEN'1M. -.

MOV EI SSERVING

FaI River,' New leclfordCape CodA....

A~e.';

AERO MAYFLOW£RTRANSIT CO. INC.Nation-wide MoYeN

WYm.... 3-0904.. IemPloD St.'New"''' '

DIOCESAN WOMEN ON RE'rREAT: Preparing toenter Chapel at Cathedral Camp for a spiritual conferenceare left to right: Mrs. Francis Quinn, New Bedford; Mrs.Francis Stelter, Attleboro; Mrs. Albert K. Sylvia, Jr.,Edgartown; and Mrs. Lawrence J. Scanlon of East Taunton.

French Prelate WarnsAgainst Modern Dances

CAMBRAI (NC)-ArchbishopEmile Guerry of Cambrai haswarned against the dangers ofsome trodern danc~l.

His criticisms have been pub­lished in several dioceses illFrance.

The Archbishop pointed outthat dancing can be "a work ofart and \-.oeauty" and a "legiti­mate expression of human emo­tion and joy," but he declaredthat modern dances had be­come. dangerous because someof them try to imitate or evokeactl of sexuality and because ofe i r c II nit a n C ell accompany­ing them, such as the drinking ofalcohol. dim light. and lat4ihours.

Urges Support for Bishopls BallTo Take Place January J 1 Next·

Wednesday, Jan. 11, 1961 was every effort in support of thellJ;lnounced to officers of Fall event, in 'view' of the fact thatRiver District One of the Dioces- Nazareth-on-the-Cape has beenan,·Council of Catholic Women added to charities benefiting.as, the date for the annual Miss Margaret Lahe,. is chair­Bishop's Ball, to be held at Li_ man of district arrangements fOrcoIn P-ark. " the ball, ..aided by Mrs. Thorn..

Women were urged by Rey. Cail-ill, treasurer. ,.Thomas F. Walsh,Diocesa. 1R other business, officersDirector of the Counell, to malc.e beard an outline of activitielS for

~atholic Youth Week from Rev.Walt~ .A.· Sullivan, DiocesallCYO Director. Mi88 Helen Chacedistrict president, appointed• tandinc cotmni1teeiior theyear.

ChristmasORIGtNAlS DRAWN IY THE

"

Liturgical

Sist...s of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts

0.. Sale at ... Holy uniot, Conv..-

$1.00 per BoxALSO AU. OCCASfOH CARDS'

Enters CambridgeCAMBRIDGE (NC) ---,- Het'b

Elliott, 22-year-old AustralianCatholic who starred ill theOlympic Game. in Rome, hasenrolled at Cambridge Univer­lit,. here i1I England.

Chinese Nuns Exiled by RedsBuild Novitiate on Formosa

TAlCHUNG , (NC)-A congre- Most m~~rs of the conlJ~gation of Chinese nans driveR ration fled from the Manchuria.from the mainland .b,. Chinese· .communistl has built a novitiate dloceae of Mukden" Where, theyhere as a symbol of the commu.... had been established in 1948.ity'; rebirth; The,. reached Formo.. ill two

The novitiate of the Sisters of groups itt. 1949, and this yearthe Sacred Heart of Mary was were re-established by the Holyblessed by Msgr. Giuseppe See as a diocesan congregatiol1Caprio, Apostolic Internuncio 1lO attached to the Apostolic Pre-China. fecture of Taichung.

Six novices and six Postulantlare housed in the new building.There are 73 Sisters of theSacred Heart of Mary in For­mosa, and another 60 remainuilheard from on the Red-dom­inated :nainland of China.

Stewardess BaptizesDying Baby on Flight

PAR I "l (NC) - An airlinestewardess baptized a two-monthold baby shortly before hisdeath on a flight from Vietnamto Paris.

The child's mother, wife of aFrench career soldier who hadresigned his post with the La­otian government and was re­turning with his famil,. toFrance, by way of Vietnam,asked the stewardess to baptizethe ,cbild.

The child became ill before theplane landed at Karachi, but adoctor ,at the., airport said he wasfit to travel. ShotUy before the

, plane reached Athens the child/RIddenly grew worse, ·and themother asked the stewardesa '­bIlptize him. '

Hewark Plans SheltersFor Unwed Mothers. )fll:' "ARK (NC) - Catholic.....ities of the Newark arch­.i"ceee il planning a series of"'Iters tor unwed mother••

JIeeh shelter win accommodate \10 to 15 girls and will be 10­_tied near hospitals where girla't.biell wi'1 be delivered.

Beside. providing for confine­-.at of the unwed mothers, theacency said, the plan will assuretbat their babies, if made avail­_Ie for adoption will be placedtbrough Catholic Charities. Cath­.. Charities also announcedplana to establish regional offh~s• -all eountiell oi the archcljApeee

House, Adjusts t():~~~I'"'fry':':As Grandchildren Visit /

By Mary Tinley Daly"Over the mountaina and through the toone., '"To

Crandfather's house we go." This might be the 1960 parody.. the well-known Thanksgiving song of early America.days. It's not yet Thanksgiving. but when one of the youngfamilies arrives for a visit. b f 1tltat's Thanksgiving _ wh&- rae rom ow tables, to Bee. t.bat

, ., the POt handles were alwaystber It s January, February, turned inward. We learned alsoJune or July, Such was the to look down before we walked"'Thanksgiving" in late Septem- e~pecia~.y on stairs, and to ste~bel- as Eileen and Tony and theil' high, over and around toys. WeaIR all pigeon- f?un~, too, that, though we're notpair a r r i v e d lingUISts, understanding babylate of a stormy talk came back easily.night after a 12- Goodness knows, t.aby visitorshour drive from are not unique to a set of grand-TenneSsee. parents who have eight grand-

Came a joyful children under the ~ge of seven.Runion wit h However, most of the visits are'• clamations of. from youngsters who live in our• How she'. town. They come, sleep, eat, play,.ownl" "How and g~ home.be's grown!"and Havmg two babies "live in,".uck bedding- 80 to speak, is different and40wn of the utterly delightful. The days takeMePY young- on ~ rhythm: ~eals, baths, naps,Mel'll, little Mary Daly Brennal1 outmg~, playtime, bedtime. AndtIDd IS-month old Tony Junior. there IS the never-ending sur­'!'hen the too-late stay-up as we ~rise of not knOWing what's com­aught up on news of what has mg next!llappened at their house and at Only Magoo is not entirely.... happy with the arrangement.

Warm. Mome.... She likes the babies and they'l'bese are the close, war.. like her, pulling her tail and

-.omenta for ..grandparents, shar~ pushing her around, but theiBg adutexperienceS with adult green-eyed monster evidenceseiifldrEm. . Talk ranged from itself when one of us shows toofinanCial arrangements 'for the much affection for Mary or Tlmy.ae" home ofEi" ~n and Ton,., Magoo will come up and tryto decorating same.,. then onto- to snuggle against our legs,other family matters with fre- brown eyes begging for a pat andflUent interjections of "Don't yoU. reassurance that she's "a good.emember: ..1" and "What iii. doggie."the world did you used' to do We'll be l'Orry when the littlewben ...1" Then the' conversa.. car with its precious cargo headstioa drifted .on to international once more "Over the mountainatluestions and the inevitab~ and through the tunnels."discussion of national politics. AU but·l'4agoo, that .....

Hands of the clock crept in­e&Ol"ably onward but nobodyDOticed. Came final yawnin,Itood-nights (really good-morn­lags) and everybody turned i•.

At dawn, for the first time i.what seemed ages,we heard theIIQ1;hmic rocking of. a crib.~-bang; bang-bang. Re­

peated over and over, it creptWo the subconsciou..

Baby. Morning. "It's the baby!""-..e through the fog like abeacon. "He-she-i11 wet, cold,IMangry. Get going!"

Like a circus horse retired to~. stu r e, I instinctively re­aponded to the crib-banging.

_ the half-light of dawn,~ping toward the 'crib of littleTony, I found that built-in alarmeIocks in women diminish withace. Eile.en had preceded me b,.a quarter hour. The baby waSsettled down, dry and warm,with its comforting bottle, to last...til normal waking time.

During succeeding days, ourhouse became as it used to be­leared to the needs of smallehildren. The play pen becamea permanent fixture on the sideporch or in the livinl; room; thehigh chair, in the kitchen; thebaby carriage outside the backdoor; bottles, the third shelf oftile refrigerator

If anybody wanted. to look up• telephone number, there werethe two fat phone books on thebreakfast alcove bench, reserved... boosting little Mary higheaough to r~cb tile table.

Daly Wuhinc ''!'be washing machine went

.... daily; 8Omet~\"[\estwiee­

_ily, action and in the back­JVd. once more "the Dal,. flags,H

.. our neighbors used to calltHalhrs, flapped and fluttered ill.e breeze.

W. learned to NIiaoft brie-..

Page 10: 10.06.60

~-IO THE, ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.; ~. 6, 1960

\

TKf ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thor!., Oct, 6, 1960 11

Diocesan Pilgrims Are .Now on High Seas Enroute to Eternal City·and Shrines of Europe

r'

Page 11: 10.06.60

...... 'l'IMt&ntile ......CaD Olfte

.~--

HOLY CROSS FATHERSNorttI &astoR, Massach.......

ItllllllUr ..

.......... Overall & hppIy Co.......... Aft.. New Bedfod......1fT '1-"'" .. 1fT '-t711

,. ....WltiOM

......05 S.71.

•. ATTENTION t-m1~~BSSERYla

WIIr .., - w. _ppl,~

Ittft'M WOK lINIPOttMS

SHOP TOWELS.... 1ee181 Iftdu...... Gtow.

COYNEIIIDUSTRIAi. LAUNDRY

FOUR WAYS TO SERVE CHRISTAS A HOlY caoss FATH.

Priest-Teac..... 'lome Mitsio.....-=on.. MissioRlIrY Parish Prielt'- inf-,*, about ..

Holy Cross Fathers orhthon, w.-ite toe

WHITFS family Restaurant.. 6 .. n. ....'ow.......... w........

Ito 7CHl have aDr 014 ..01.' Or aD,. old "Vel" ..,.be .......hiel.ea awa,. ia the aUleor fa a draw... 01 7'" barea.; a siac"

,earrin&", a brokea riDa". a IJI:aeeW oat of .yle. a brooell'witb ...,et,. eatcll missin&". a tea set. au edcl apoM Huh. JIt Madri4perhaps a ~old kaife with ••11 edcell, a watelt witb tile mafa­......... brokea. a rial' you would jaM .. 800Il 1.l'd. a tUamoa4ria&" fa perfect ... imperfM ClOIIellt.... a ,. e.......... _........ rub,.. or ..ehl coi... 7- loqo4K J" .....

We caa use all of thelle. The Society for the Propagation of theFaith runa a '~smelting plant" by which you call turn theee iIltiemerit. By a mysterious alchemy we convertgold. into aid for Africa, Asia, Oceania andLatin America. Remember the word8 of ourLord: "Blind fools; which ia greater, the goldor~ 'temple that consecrates the gold? .••Which ia greater. the gilt. Ol" the altar thatconsecrates the gift?" Obviously only whea.,your gold is offered to the Church does itbecome holy. In your attic, in your pockets,in your- bureaus, it is yourll; when given tothe Holy Father, through his Society for thePropagation of the Faith. it becomes God',. ~"

Ilemember how St. Ja_ ia hia _laUe. tDspirecl .. foe take a DiviDe CHlUeok .. e... ......: "SuppOse &bat a maa co_ .. 7CHl : ..wearlac a ..eld ring: ,SUPpO!le that a poor .... comes te 708 iHelacl. WiD JO. pay atteatlea. te tbe well tlrell8ed maa (aacl ..riac 01 ..olel) a~d bid him take IIOIIle place Of hoaor: will Y08 tell

'the pOOl' maa, Sta.d where tho. ari'! •.• ListeD to me••,. dearbrethren, h.. aot Gocl ehosea. tile mea wbe.... pOOl' Ia ..worlel's eyes to be rich in laith • • .!'"

Gold for God

God Love YouBy MoM ~. Fultoa J. Sheen. D.O.

. .

. Those ~ithout mllteri~ gOI.d have fIhe spiritual gold f>f faith. By~vmg to. t.he poor in the Missiona yov make theD1Your intercessorsID the KIngdom o! H~aven. We do not ask 7OUto give all yourgold, Ol" ev!n most·of It; we just Want you 'wgive a'tiny bit of it­a broken bIt-that you may taste the sweetness of serving the poorthrough the Society 10l" the Propagation of the Faittt; .

GOD LOVE YOU to A.....R. lor $M "I oller ,It fro.. __reDtal Ai m,. summer home te. help the pOOl' of the world.H • • •

te Mr. an•.MrtII. u;s.n..Ior 'Sf "Thla Is .. Tbaabcivlac 1« ....,.~ botb splrltUl &bd, iemJMWal." ••• to')[;)I. Iei' $H "I re­_Ted three lICh.larshlps, which made It PoesIble lot _ to eli....."'I...~ tilt. ,.n. Please aeeel!t tllla ill crate,.. appreetaUoR.... •.. K.G. 1_ $!lt "This .. 'or a ..........,. .. IMlPIda pow w..IM'e IIlto a paC-ail ...1." ".S.G. 'or $I Is Is doWII ","-

=a::etbeta=~ ,.. ..~ _~ .. fer U.

'. Cut oat this eolUnUl. pia. ',our .erifkle to It and mail It to the110M Rev: FultOll J. SheeR, National Direetol" 01. the Society fortIM Propagation 01 ~ Fai.th, 386 Fifth Avenue, New York 1. N. Y..eI' your Diocesan DIreetor, RT. REl'. RAYIIOND T. CONSIDINE... Mor1b Main Street, hll Riv.... II...

.....I!-

JOt eowtrf ••NEW IIDIfOMa-

WY S-17ft

JUBILARIAN: Sister The­rese Marguerite. SS.CC. ofthe Sacred Heart Academy,Fairhaven, has completed 60years a a professed religious.Fifty years have been spentteaching, art, French and:penmanship at the Fair-,haven Academy.

NMlSfttw. auNEA1W8OU

...tIN

a.-••Sa'- & Sew..

RAlHAWif -

01'·(0..';11(..'.'.

High School UnitAdds DimensionTo Program

CINCINNATI (NC) ·-'-A, high school unit of the Cath­

olic Students' Mission crU­sade here has added anotherdimension to its program 'ofprayer, study and sacrifice forthe missions.

'The fourth dimension < is peI"­

~nal e~perience, ~ained b~ vis­itlngmlssion areaa within ddY­ing distance and pitehiDg in.when possible; to help'the mis­sionaries.

During the ))alit Summereight Crusa~, from m-:High Scqool here and their IOOCi­erator. Father Stanley Luebr­man, made a 8,OOO':'mi~ trip ...Mexico _ broadea. thek, mY-BOIl knowledge and see at ftrtlth~ the Deeds 01. !.ada Amer­ica.

Sal.........The material needs 01. ..

people lOuth of the border weredramatized in a MexiCllll villa..where the group, traveling iatwo cars, Mpped to attend anuptial Mass.

I<After the wedding," reeaHecIone of the studenw, "we sawpeople get down on their knee.~ the street and scrape up thenee that had beetl thro_ at1he couple • • ."

A highlight 01. the trip WMthe celebration q( the fea. olthe Assumptioa. at the Shri_01 Our Lad,. of Gaudalupe.

, ~ ~

NfWENGlANOCLAMBAICE

Ev«y Sunday - $2.95indudtntl - Au.... ........

11tICASA BLANCA

CoggshaM Bridge. Fairhawft

tt

one solemn. with celebrantdeacon, subdeacon, other min~ister, choir and participatingcongregation; the other chantedwith celebrant. lector and othe~servers, choir and participatingcongregation. -

In the second category wouldbe low or spoken Masses. Thesewould be of two types, the sec­ond with a subtype.

The two principal types wouldbe: a recited Mass, with cele­brant, commentator, servers,and fully participating congre­gation; and a low Mass without~rticip~tion. in the subtypewlthout a congregation.

Several Pan.Father Reinhold goes into de­

tail concerning reform in theseveral parts of the Mass: thefore Mass, the Sacrifice properthe Communion Service. •

Thus, the present prayers atthe foot of the altar would insung or recited Masses be ~idin the sacristy~ The cel~brant, incope arid' acCompanied by his as­sistants, would proceed to theJJapti~tery, for the Asperges,then to tl:1.e sanctuary. Duringthis procession, choir and People'would sing an Introit antiphonand psalm. .

Comparable changes are sug- ,g~t~d for the Mass proper, be­gmnmg with the Offertory. Tosummari~ them here would re­quire more space than is avail­able; But they are according. tothe principles exemplified illour erude resume of ·what icproposed for the earli« par........ ,-SWdT

Wh_ one begins readiftc thisbook, one may think 01. it ..radical in the .ose of advocat­ing extreme changes. But aa onegoes on reading. one pereeiYeIIthat it i. radical in the sense IIIgetting to tbe root of the mat;.ter.

The refol'lM it present. would·indeed briDe the M_ to thepeople, and bring out plainlyand effectively the structure andmeaning of the Mass. That thet'would deprive the Mass of 1111sacred mystery, we dOUbt.

Surely one must admire theauthor's inaight, indUlltry andintrepidity. He haa put ~ ourhands matter for our stUdy.Such study, interesting and evenexhilarating in itself. will pre­pare us for developments in theLiturgy which are. ill·~measure, going to come.

Undertake UnusualHome Assignment

PORTLAND (NC)-An expel'­iment ill the Christiaa ParoiiyMovement ill th _ Por+'anc' areaof Oregoi1 began saturday wbell­a young couple peellRW.!full-timelay missionariell right at' home.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. smith,Jr., will work full time 6x" 'DOe

lear in the CFM of the Portlandfederation. It will be the fir.:time that • eouple luis. under-·taken Nell lUl endeay« ia theCFM,a nationwide fami~ apoa­tolate started 15' YeM"S ... illChic:lg(). .

Primary pul'po8e 01. tIM~the SmitU said. ic not to roeeruitnew CFM members, but to auiKapostolic deYelopment III eJd.tincCFM members in thu ar•. The,.hope to Ntablish betW coM­municatioos withia. the federa­tion, provide leadenbip traininc.set lIP aD indoctrinatioa procraM__ prospecuve DeW _beNand vranee 'WOl'bbopc fot- ....eb_ge Ol ideM.

THEANCHO~-D;oceseof Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 6, 1960,._'" _. " • l. _.~ , . ,,,,%,~-,.- '" ~-:,;.~:;.'12

Via TelevisionYILLANOVA (NC) - Villa­

DOya University will pre.IeDt aeollegecredit televi8ed coune iaCatholicism during the comingacademic year. Father John A.Klekotka. O.S.A., the uniyer­liQ"s president has annouocecL

.Father. Reinhold Propose~

Mass 'Reform, AdaptationsBy Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedv

Father H. A. Reinhold's book Bringing the 'Mass to thePeople (Helicon Press. $2.95) takes its title from somewords which Pope Pius XII once addressed to a group ofliturgists. The Holy Fathersa,id that much had been donetlo bring the people to 'theMasS; Now, he went on, itwas necessary "to bring theMass to the people by refonrlMld adaptation." Father Rein­bold proposes·in these pages re­form s a·nd• d apt a ­tions whichwould servetbat end.

The proposedehanges are notol his inven­tion. He hassimply a.s­sembled and(MIt in succinct,popular stylethe fruits ofreeearch by the topmost scholarsia the field and the carefullysifted recommendations M of­ficlill liturgical meetings overthe years. Also. he has adheredtAt, and carried to their logicalconclusions, the reforms alreadymade in the Liturgy of HolyWeek and the principles of theIDstruction on Sacred Music andtla8Sacred Liturgy which PiuaXII ordered promulgated ia.UM;8.

Prompts DilIeU88i-Jlather Reinhold repeatedly

sb:esses the key fact that nochanges can be made until andlJilless the Holy See authorizesthem. in a footnote, he lists in­IIOvations made in some plac.without authorization, hence re­probated, and W1U'ns againat -­don without proper sanction.

But the Holy See encourag.MbilIhops, pastor.. and scholars topnsent to it suggestions .and No­

quests. These will not be forth­~ing in the absence ~ d...eulNIion throughout the Church.It is to prompt diScussion of the.n that Father Reinhold 11Mproduced in his book.

A glance at history 1h0Wll thMthere have been changes in theMass in the put. The _nee... not altered, M cour•. ButtIae Liturgy is.not dead or static.It changes, and the change mlUtit8eIf be a living thing: that is,a development in accord witlavital principles.

Liturgical development, Fath­er Frederic R. McManus point.<JUt in his Introduction, has atwo-fold purpose. as expreaedt»y Pius XII. One is "the increa..ar honor to Jesus Christ and theaugust Trinity"; the other is "theinstruction and salutary stimula­tion of the Christian people."

Father Reinhold declarell thatthe reforms which he NggellWare "for the purpose of enablingthe intrinsic"energies of thelIa8s to actually reach; iofor'lll,ilYpire, strengthen and b:aM­form the worshiping chriati.a!JI. today." .

S~ol"'"The retenn.· which ratbel'

Reinhold sketehell are meant tobring out clearly the structureol . the Mass. Its outlines, hemaintains, have become hiddoeftt»y gradualac:eretWos;man,. ofwhich are meaniDcless to peopletoday.

The main points ~ em....mould stand forth lIftmistak­"bly, as should the :maia eli...3ions of the Mass.

Also, as much participaUoa brthe people as is possible shouldIJe provided 101'. Not only shouldthey have their exactly definedl*"t to. perform, but the put.oi. celebrant and alSistine minis­ten should be dearly .......... without repetitioll.

NewC....,......A new classifieatioD of ......

ill envisioned. lD the flnt cate­1«1' would be 8UDC .......'l'heee would be 01. t_ tnM-:

Page 12: 10.06.60

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, 2082 Robeion St. .Pall River OS 5-7104

IMass for Hunters

OMA:::iA (NC) -/to. special 4I A.M. Mass for hunters and other

early risers in this area will beoffered at Holy Ghost Churchhere on every Sunday from Oct.e to Jan. 8, 1961.

RENAULT - PEUGEOTParts - Sales - Service

10 E. Main St.HYANNIS

WESLEYMOTOR SALES

ST. PIUS X,SO. YARMOUTH

Fall activities of the Women'sGuild include a travel cake saleunder the chairmanship of Mrs.Philip Dempsey and' a publicwhist party in the 'Church hall,Oct. 24, with Mrs. Thomas Con- 'way, chairman.

Following the 8 o'clock Massin St. Pius' Church on Sundaymorning, Oct. 16, a Communionbreakfast will be served in Hy-annis,Inn. ''. New members· are utged ' toattend the first Fall meeting ofthe Guild to be held Tu.esdaynight at 8 o'clock in the· churchhall on Station Ave.BLESSED SACRAMENT,FALL !!IVER

Boy Scout Troop 20 will holela parents' night-at 8 Tuesday'nigl1t, Oct. 11 .in the schoolbasement.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,CENTRAL VILLAGE

The Ladies' Guild will hold awhist party this Saturday nightat 8 in the parish . hall. Mrs.Henry Shelter and Mrs.' JamesHasson are co-chairmen.

CUBAN SISTERS THRILLED AT OPPORTUNITY' TO LEARN'of St. Mar.y'. Church, Fairhaven, rejoices with Sister Mary, over the growthENGLISH: Left: Sisters Mary Cruz Martinez,-Mary Arigeles Riesco. and of this community of the Religious of the:bove of God inNew Bedford.Mary Invencion Canas offer a prayer of .~hanksgiving for their .safe., " Right: Sisters M:ary Julita Prieto and Mary- Raquel Elcano admire'thejourney to New Bedford..Center:: Father Edmund F~anci~~ SS.CC., pastor . .accommodations of. their new home... -

Coyle Senior Attains Newark Auxiliary CommendsNational Semi-finals Mother f.or ..C-hild· Training' ,George J. Tyson, Jr., son of.Mr. and Mrs. George J.' Tyson, BLOOMFIELD (NC) =-:-:- She her on, "her fine training of herSr., of 23'( -Winthrop Street,· had been' told never 'to accePt' child hi a very impejrtimt mat-.Taunton, .and a', senior at Coyle 'rides from a stranger.. : , ... ····ter.": " ", .'.High School, has been named So a ki~dergarten .student. 'OJ: told her she :ouglit to com­a semi-finalist in the 1960 missed a day at Sacred '·Heart. pUment' 'her little girl," theNational Merit Scholarship Com- School here in New Jersey even .Bish'Op' Said. . .petition. . though she was offer'ed a ride ~~_~. ~....

Mr. TYson is one 01. the seled by a' Bishop. ."10,000 students ·throughout the Auxiliary Bishop' WalterW.United States who will be re- Curtis of Newark; pastor atexamined. on Dec. 5, 1960 by the Sacred Heart, and two of' hisColl4:!ge . Entrance Examination curates were dri~ing pupil's toBoard to determine the list of. the parish school because onefinalists who will be awarded' of. the parish's two sChool busesscholarships to the·colleges of. was not operating.their choice according to their The project was. m 0 v I n gfinancial needs. smoothly until the Bishop met

Being named a semi'-finalist the determined lass 'who re­in the National Merit Scholar- membered her mother's admoni­ship Competiti9n is ,itself 'un- tion. And she wasn't reassuredqualified recommendation to any by this "stranger's" black cloth­college to which the student ap- ing.plies, as these 10,000 students rep- Later, the Bishop phoned theresent a fraction of the top one girl's mother. He congratulatedper cent of all students who tookthe examination last March.

Home for Jubilee .FARGO (NC) -Aloisius Car­

dinal Muench, former Bishop ofFargo, will return to NorthDakota to celebrate the 25thanniversary of his episcopalconsecration. Cardinal Muenchnow serves in Rome as a memberof the Vatican's headquartersstaff.

Reports Catholic Gain Is' DoubleGrowth .in .General. Population ,

NEW YORK (NC)-the U.S. . ters," the sociologist reports. "ItCatholicpopulatlon 11 growing' is growing almost ,twice as .lasttwice as fast 8fl the general pop- as priests and almost four timesulation; as fast ae parish~.' "

Donald N. Barrett of Notre "Apf;larently, it lay .peo~le ~Dame University saye his fig- . unwilhng to enter semmarlesures indicate the U.S. Catholic and th~ sisterhoods,. th~y. mustpopulation may reach 86 million be utihzed'ln grl;!ater..numbe~ .in less than 30 years·it toe cur- ,and more effectively, ~n an ex-,rent rate of growth' continueS.' ~anding scope .of Church, fune-

. . hons"It is now about 43 million. In .his analysis of .population

''The population is' growing growth; Dr. Barrett noted th~

almost three times as fast the number of Catholics increasednumber of seminarians and Sis- by 10,180,000 or 35.8 per cent

between 1950 and 1959. In con­trast, he said, the general p'opu- 'lation increased only by 16.6 percent during the same period.

Among reasons for the largerCatholic increase, he cited high';'er birth and lower death rates,a rise in adult baptisms and thearrival in the U.S. of PuertoRicans, Mexicans and displacedpersons.

I;;:;P:;~h ParadeOUR LADY OF VICTORY,CENTERVILLE

Our Lady of Victory Guildwill hold a Christmas bazaarSaturday, Nov. 19 at the churchhall. Mrs. Harold Bragle andMrs. Stephen B, O'Brien will bechairmen.' A sewing groupmeeting every Tuesday from 10to 2, also at the. ch~rch hall, ispreparing items for the bazaar.OUR :.:..ADY OF GR-!\,CE, ,NORTH WESTPORTt .

The Women's Guild will spon­sor a rummage sal~ tomQrrowand Saturday at 1497 Pleasant~'-ect, Fall River.;"1:rs. RoseBorden is chairman, aided by alarge committee.ST. GE')RGE,WESTPORT

The Women's Guild wilt co­operate with the Holy Name,Society at a spaghetti supperSaturday night, Oct. '15~ A cakesale' plann~d tor· -unday, Oct.9 at t...~ church hall.ST. JOHN BAPTIST. .NEW BEDFORD

The '.," pIes Ciub will hold aHalloween costum' party Wed­nesday, Oct. 26 with Mr. andMrs. Ernest Perry heading thearrangements committee.ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI,NEW BEDFORD

Fall and Winter actitivies ofthe League of St. Francis ofAssisi will include a demonstra­tion of beauty care Thursday,Oct. 27, a games party Monday,Nov. 21, a Christmas party Dec.19, a January cooking demon­stration; a February travelogueand a March pot-luck suppa-.

Page 13: 10.06.60

.• j Plan' ~ Dedicate.~ Outdoor Basilica:J To Sacred HeartIi QUEBEC (NC)-An oat­

. ~ door repository dedicated tiei the Sacred Heart, with ~~: eommodations for 25,000I"~ persons, has heeD approved few~ the Montmartre shrine in subwo­tl ban Sillery., " The "open-air basilica" will be

erected by the AugustiniaaFathers of the Assumption. Theplans have been approved bTArchbishop Maurice Roy of Que­bec, Primate of Canada, and !Uscanonical' chapter.

The shrine will be availab"for large religious ceremonieeand dispense with the necesSitTof erecting outdoor' altars: 'forsuch even~ ,

Below there will be a dozeaconfessionals, a small oratot'Tfor the Blessed Sacrament, quill'­ters for the sick, and rooDYwhere participants in ceremonu.may vest. .,

The sanctuary will be 79 feetin diameter. Rising above It wiRbe eight massive 72-foot stonecolumns that will be joined at aheight of 65 feet. The groundswill have paved aisles. Ther.will be kneelers and benches fieaccommodate a large congre­gation.

THE FIRST MASS,

REMEMBER THE SOULS IN ·PURGATORY.Requests for Masses, sent to us now, will b8 fuUllled bJ oar,

,Missionary priest. during the month of .November,. the monthdedicated to the Poor SOUIL Never' forget to pray for your d.,eeasedloved ones at any 'time; remember them with additional 'prayers during November. ., ,

.. ocBEHOLD TIlE HANDMAID OF TO LORD, be It'done nne. ,me according to th:r word~" Two Arab drls. SISTER AZBLIABJUI SIST,a LAURENT, have reciolintzed "'-~1& • God'. wID that the:r decUca&e their~lives to Him 88 ReIl4rloua. They are nov-~

,Ioes of the ROSARY SISTERS In JERU· ~SALEM. At~nillq Mass on the Feast of 'It,he Holy Rosary, and readlnll' again Mal7'sinspired words Of submission to the will ofGod. they wiD oonUnue theIr novitiatewith renewed fe"OI'~ Could you pay for thetraining of one ot these novices who wiD. through devotion tober'Rosary, &each Uttle children about the divine love of Mary'.'Son for all of lISf The cost Is $300 and It ID8)' be, paid all atenee or In Installments.

"THEY THAT EXPLAIN ME SHALL HAVE LIFE EVE&­LASTING." These prophetic words of the Old Testament refer

to Our Blessed Lady. ,FRANCIS KARIKAM­PALLY and JACOB KAVALAKATT are twoboys In SAINT JOSEPH'S SEMINARY IIIINDIA. who wish, 811 ordained priests, to"explain Mary." In so doing they will beworking for thelr own salvation and the sal­vation of aU thc>so who benefit by their min­Istry. Tho cost of educating '8 seminarian It!

$600 and this amount may be paid aU at once or In installments.Could you pay for the education of a seminarian who will make .known In pagan lands the beautiful doctrine of the Divinel .Maternity' . ,.'

SACRED ARTICLES are- alwa,-a needed lD MIssion Churehes.:IfI you would care to donate one In honor 01 a relative or afriend we will seDd a Gift Card, telling of your gift.Altar , '.... ,$11 OhilUee ' .••. ,$40 Sanc':r Lamp •.. flllMass VeStm'ts . 50 Ctborlum ..•.. 48 AltlR' LlneDi ••• 111CrucUlx •••••• II Tabemaele. . •. 211 SIlDCl':r BeU ••• • I

PLEASE REMEMBER GUD AND BIS MISSIONS IN YOU!, LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT.

~~r5st(Djssionsj~)-fRANaS CARDiNAl SPELLMAN, Prealdent,

Magr. Peter'. Tuoby, ~at'l Sec'y/Send all COtIIIItVnlCGtlcns to! ,

CATHOLIC NEAll EAST WrelJFARE ASSOOAnON'400 Le~fngtonAvo. cat 46~ St. ' N0W York 17, N. Y.

celebrated In the village of POTHlAKARA In SOUTHERN IN­1OIA. was -offered on August 16, 1959. Previous to th!s data.

, 'st I"h the CathoUes of Pothiakara had &0~1> .. "J,.' . travel to another viUage for Masa

.t.. . d'~. and the reception of the Sacraments.'ttl .,. Two thingS had made U of the utmost

. ClJ ' 0 Importance' &0 Institute a parish with .~ ~ a .resident lIriest In this villago-the

estabUshment of a non· CathoUe+' + school there, which fa attrac~ Cath-,oUe children; and the foundlq of a

"Students Federation," an orll'aniza.·tion of a Communist. nature III which'

;n, Hoi] Pathtrt MiJ1im AitI the Communists arg aotlve In mak·

fior tht Orittttta/ ChtmIJ ~ IIlembershlp vel7' entlclq to, .Catholle youth. Father James ParaU

hu been charged b:r tile Bishop with the splrUuBl care of thefaithful of Pothlakara and he pleacla' for' firtanclM ,help to build .an adequa~ Church, botb for the dally celebration ,of Mass and

... other de.votlons, and alse for use III the Catechetlcal Instruct­Uona !lecessar;r &0 neutraUze the pagan Influence of tile ,noa­Cathol~ sChool Tile dally presenCle of a 'priest III this villap

,lis trul:r' essenUal for safe-guard1nc the, faith of the Catholle,'(Communlt:r, particularly the faith of the youq people. $a,oot

" .ul,bul~d till!' CburclL. Can yoo help In ~Isurgent appMaf. "

_J

NOT 'ONE OF CASTRO'S MEN?: No. It's MaryknollBrother Diamas Harness of Houston, on a mission trip upthe dangerous Beni River, in the "Green Hell" area ofnortheastern Bolivia. Ne Photo. '- '

L IE M -I ma.rx, IPWMW....G A.HEATING, INC.\' fol'~

I ' ~, IndWitrid, , Saleil, all'lI1

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tiG3 ACUSHNlCIi' AWl.NlEW IElDfOU

Nun to Serve Crippled ChildrenAfter 37 Years' With Lepers

LOS ANGELES (NC)-There's the· members of the white race:a simple reason why the Daugb- . .ters of Charity of St. Vincent '"Not one SIster a.t C~llle,de Paul staff the U.S. lepro- DOl' any member of Its medicalsarium as Carville, La.-DO one staff,.. has ever contracted lep-else wanted the job. rosy, she said. >-

Sister Hilary Ross, who watJ ----------------------------stationed at the institution' for37 years, said that was thereason back in 1896 when thoSisters first. took over at Car­ville.

At that time, New OrleaDilwas isolating' lepers in a run.­down house. Louisiana moved.them, to an abandoned planta­tion. Then the Federal govern.­ment took over the leprosarium.Sister Hilary said. and theDaughters of Charity were re­tained on the ,staff because noneelse ",",ould take the job. TodaTthere are 21 Sisters caring ft1Itpatients a~ Carville.

~Ing to Japaa

Sister. Hilary stopped off heNenroute to Japan. With SisterCarmel Curie,' a registerednurse, she will supervise theopening of. loo-bed hospitalfor crippled children in Waka­yama City.

Sister Hilary travels llght, batbel- baggage includes America'sgratitude for her years spent ..research arid treatment of, lep­rosy. A few weeks ago In Wash­Ington she was presented'~a citation by U.S. Surgeon Gen­enl Leroy ,A. Burney for hercontribution to the fight aga1n8tleprosy (Hansen's dlseue).

Sister Hilary eomes from aSan Francisco family of seVeD.ehildren.. She became, a convertto Catholicism in 1914. at theage of 20 and 'joined the Daugh­ten of Charity two yean latec.

Longest SerViceA registered pharmacist ..

a biochemist with a degree fromLouisiana State University, SI&­ter Hilary had the longest teD­ure of any of the staff at CaP­ville. She was historian ot tileInstitution, which Is ,-ad~ini&­tei-ed by the U.s. Public HealtlaService.

"Leprosy,- explained SisterHIl~, "is endemic in Lou1&­lana; Florida and Texas. Pa­tients at Carville number' be­tween 270 and 300.

"Why leprosy should be e&­

demic in these areas we don'tDOW,': she continued. "True,~Is hot country. But t~ere is stiD.leprosy in 'Iceland. At one timeIn the 1860's there were 3,000caseS of leprosy in Bergen, N__way. Now it is extinct there.

. Staff Uilaffeeted"To date," she said. "the org;m­

lam that causes leprosy has DOtbeen successfully cultivated.~have any anlmala been suscep­tible to the disease." '

In this country, Sister HIlarysaid. leprosy affects prlriclpally

THE ANCHOR-::Diocese,~ Fall R~ver...,.Thurs.,Oct.c$, 1960

The Catholic in America

14

SpreQldong FaithQUEBEC (NC) - More thaD

1,000 Canadian missionaries aroworking in Latin America.

Nation and Church Survive'Test of K'"qw·Nothing~$m

By Rev. Peter J. Rahill, Ph.D.Order of the Star Spangled Banner is a name' which

would imply profession of the virtues of patriotism andjustice. Still it. was from_this nativist organization that a,powerful political assault against Catholicism was made.At first the new political Fillmore, who had, pre~iouslyparty bore no name,hadD.4? occupied this supreme executivevisible organization, 'and ;itS position after Zachary Taylor'emblem was not ent~red ,on' died in office.any ballot. Secrecy enshrouded, At the time of his selectiOlli.it further with the use of pass- ' Fillmore was in Rome seeking amwords, special ., audience with Pope Pius IX.

Though he accepted the nomina-g rip s for 'tion, Fillmore did not personallThan d - participate in the invectivesshakes, mys-terious signs hurled against the Church duringof recognition the campaign.bet wee n Almost 25 per cent of the pop-members, and ular vote was garnered by thisesoteric sig- nativist party, but its electoralnals of dis- vote was limited to the eighttress. ef Maryland.

Years later Roxbury inquisitionin his Mem- The nation's attention wasoirs President being diverted b7 increasingGrant revealed that he had be- tensioD' betweeD North andcome a' member solely ~ leam. South: Actually the very successthe inner secrets. of the Know-Nothing Party was

What was the name? The re- already bringing about its down.­sponse of the members in the fillLearly 1850's was "I know nothing In Massachusetts., where theabout it." From this standard' entire state government was inrepiy evolved the po:1ular desig- its hands, the members of thenation: "Know-Nothings." And legislati.tre were ,~ inept thatKnow-Nothings they remained they 'were unable to pass laWllwhile the membershi? grew against the Church they werefrom an insignificant nativist committed to exterminate. Re­group to Ii multitude which quiring voters t,o pass a literaq'threatened to gain control of tho test was the sole enactment.national as well as state govern.- A "Nunnery Committee" Wat!

ments. appointed and conducted aD

Dominate Massachusetts "inquisition" of"s CatholicOperating through the Amero- school in. Roxbury. After the

lean Party, the Know-Nothings memberi had disrupted theb1 1854 elected nine Governors, school, frightened the children,eight U. S. Senators and almost and boorishly refused to removehalf of the 'membership of tho the~ hats while inspecting theU. S. House of Representatives. chapel. they were forced to re-

Massachusetts is aD example port that nothing eould bitof the Know-Nothing domina- found deserving of criticism.tion of 11 commonwealth. The ExPel CbainDaaGovernor, all state Senators and To climax the day's entertain-executives and all but two mem- ment for the committee. a riotoWlbers of the State Assembly were' dinJl.er was held at which copioWlKnow-Nothings. quantities of champagne were

The Know - Nothings· w'er. c;onsumed at public expense fAhigh~y successful in uliin~fstreet a state in which sale of. the bev­preachers to. liven the glowing erage was illegal These andembers of anti-Catl)olicism. In other unreportable escapades ,of.Providence, Brooklyn, and OR 'the group were so notorious thatInto the Midwest the technique Its chairman was expelled fromproved effective. the Massachusetts AssemblY.

Though Archbishop, Pet e r Meanwhile~, once aRichard Kenrich willingly' al-' lure to the adventurous, becamelowed a church' and St. LoW. ocUous as the'party sought PowerUniversity to be searched for and responsibility'. Thinking cit­alleged arms and ammunition. izens could not long be ereduloWl"the falsity of the charge did DGt of ridiculous charges of 11 "P~quiet the mob. ish" plot to in~ the United

Bloody Mondq States. ' .The Stl Louis Evening News of Once memben bad gloried ..

Aug'. 9, 1854, reported ill par~' the name "Know-Nothing." TheT"For 48 hours the', city has beea shamefully withdrew as pseudo­the scene of one of the most organizations espoused the titlesappalling riots that has ever' of "Owe-Nothing.- aDd! "no­taken place in this country. Men Nothing.-have been butchered like cattle,property destroyed and anarc~ Reject Bate PariFreigns supreme." A scene fa F9Ur years later in the 1860Lo' '11 th f ll' '- electiOlll the Know - Nothings

UISVI e e 0 OWIng year.. were absorbed in, the C.;nstitu-f¥pical. ,

In the Kentucky city George .tiona! Union, Party, which rail'D. Prentice filled his Louisville last in the divided contest of tha&.;Journal with violent editorials momentous year.·supporting the Know-Nothing An abortive attempt to reviveParty in an election of August, the so-called 'American Party in1855. By noon on election day 1880 was completely ineffectuaLuies of "Down with the Dutch In the entire country its totaland Irish!" had been supplanted vote numbered 707!by thugs roving the streets .wifu Once again both tho Unitedclubs. , ' .. . States and the Catholic Church

Six years before the Civil Wai' had survived a test. A political'this border city appeared to bQ party founded on hatred of fel­besieged, as flames shot skyward low Americans had been rejected!in districts inhabited by immi- and exterminated.grants. Next Week: Catho1ie Patriot-

A mother rushed fo~th· from ... Ism WOIl FrieDds, During' ,Civil. the flames that were consuming War.ber husband-but her dash wasin vain. A maniac' murdered iaFranciscan Fathersher arms the child she was car- Schedule Confer.encerying to safety.. At least 20 per- INDIANAPOLIS (NC)':- 0\.sons were killed before "Bloody two-day. meeting c !'~nciscaa114Qnday" ended in Louisville. Idealism and Family T '-:ng'"

Name FillmoJre ' will be held Nov. :!3 and 26 atThe Catholic newspaper of· Our Lady of the Angels mother_

Boston, The Pilot, gloomily, house, -.Vheaton, TIL .feared that a Know-Nothing' Announcement of the Nationaiwould be elected President in Franciscan Sisters Educational1856. The candidate ff.nally, Conference was made, h~ bV,.dlosen by the party was M.tll~. ,Father Pius ~. B~ O.t.M;. ,

president of the Franclsean Edv.­cational Conference.

The keynote address, given bvFather Barth, will ha o:a "Fr;m,­

. c:iscan FamiJ,y Vkwes."

Page 14: 10.06.60

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THE ANCHOR",-Dlocese of Fa"'RIv~t-Thurs.,Oct. 6,1960 15

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Church Tax EvasionCase Is Dismissed

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Die- .tricl Court Judge bas throwil.out a suit by the Rev. Mr. Harri­lOll Parker charging the Arch­diocese· 01. WashingtoD. withFederal tax evasion.

Mr. Parker, who describetlhimself as chancellor of the Pur­itan Church of America, bas beendesignated by the 'DemocraticNational Committee as one of.four major U. S. distributon Offanti-Catholic material

.1udge Alexander Bolzoff di..missed the suit whicb Mr. Parkerfiled under the 1863 "informer'"statute which allows a citizen to'NCOver part of the funds owedthe government jf the IUit 11successfuL

Dish Used by SaintENGLEWOOD (NC)-A dish

eoce used by St. Therese of.Lisleux, the Little Flower of.Jesus, was presented to the Eas'­ern Shrine 01. St. Therese hereby Fatber Ronald F. Gray,O.Cann., on his retirement asdirector of the shrine. He re­eeived the white dish from theSisters of ~ Cannelite conveDtIn Lisieux .beD be "Wted tbeN1IIeeeAtJ.¥•

French Sem;nariansAid Parish Priests

PARIS (NC)-8even hundred.eminarians served as aides toparish priests and rural mission­ers in France during the Sum­mer vacation.

This experiment was orderedby the Frencb Bishops at theirmeeting last spring, and W81

earried out under the closesupervision of the local Ordin­aries.

The seminarians were sent tofive major regions: the Dioceseof Soissons, which Is about 50miles northeast olE Paris; Nor­mandy; 'the Diocese of LaRochelle on the Atlantic; andthe southern Sees of Toulouseand Avignon.

HELPS THE BLIND: Rev. James W. McFarland of.the Mt. Carmel Guild Apostolate for the Blind, Newark,operates the rapid Braille duplicating machine that hedeveloped. NC Photo.

New Braille Duplicating Machine.Steal, by Priest From Industry ,

NEWARK (NC)-A priest here '.bas developed a Braille dupli- '~r:kmg ~n methods of repro­eating machine which drastically ducmg prmted books in enlargedcuts cost and time involved in type at low cost by meallS ~producing books and texts for photomagnetic drums. T hI'the blind. w~)Uld be of immen.se help to .

those with poor eyesIght.Father James W. McFarland, .

J9 of the Mount Carmel Guild The young prIest bas a naturalA~stolate for the Blind, ex- flair for the manual arts al­plained: "My method is new to thOUg~ .he has ?ever bad a dayBraille, but not entirely new. of trammg. He JS an expert car­It is a steal from industry; tbe penter. and teaches that craft tomethod bas been tried com- the. blInd at the Mount Carmelmercially in connection with GuJld Center here.packing machines."

Plastic: SheetliFather McFarland's machine

duplicates Braille pages on thinplastic sheets, a method triedwitb unsatisfactory results byothers. However, Father Mc­Farland came up with the ideaof heating the plastic while itill suspended above the mold,then dropping the plastic intothe Braille mold and vacuumingthe air out from under the im­pression.

His development, be Aid,makes it possible to reproduce• 1oo-page Braille book in twobours where former methodswould bave taken 200 bours of.typing plus additional hours of.proofreading-a step whicb 11bypassed in the new process.Also, the machine cuts the costof making one duplicate copy01 the book from $50 to $3.85.

Poor EyesightNow Father McFarland ..

Page 15: 10.06.60

ICE CREAM

IWrite to:

P. O. Bo. 5742BaltiMore e, Md.

TrinitarianFathers

LEOB.BERUBE,~.

951 Slade 8t. 'l'eL OS &-1836

BOYS WANTED - for "'.Priesthood and Brotherhood.lad 01 fund. NO impedI­ment.

Chair of UnityOctave ' DatesJan. 18..25

GARRISON (NC)-Abo­lition (J/. the feast of St­Peter'a Chair at Rome OIl

Jan. 18 WIll not change thedates for the annual observanceof the Chair Gl UnitT Octa¥etnlm JaA. 18 to Jan. 25-

Fatbel' Titutl Crall.D7, SA..Dational director of the Chair ofUnity Octave, said "the popeshave approved the Octave as off.lan. 18 to Z5 and it has been setthat waT for so long that I amcerlain these dates will remain."

Tbe Octave, aD eight-dqperiod of prayer for the conveI"­sioa of non-Catholics and a re­turn of Protestants to the Cath­olic fold, in previous Tears hadbeeIl publicized as starting oa.the feast of St. Peter's Chair atRome and ending on the feastof the conversion of St. Paul. TheHo17 See recently abolished thefeast Gl 81. Peter'. Chair atRome.

Father Paul James Francia,SA.. founder of the SocietT ofthe Atonement at GraymOOl"Monastery here, .began the Chair01. UnitT Octave while the societTwas an Anglican communityin Nov., 190'7. Eighteen monthslater the entire communitycame Into the Catholic Churchand the Octave grew ink» IIworldwide observance.

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Architecture ExhibitPARIS iNC) -A month-long

exposition of sacred art will beheld here btlginning tomorrow,featuring models of some of the1,000 churches that are to bebuilt in France within tho next,three years.

MOUNT ST. MARY A~EMY,.FaD liver" MaaachuseIIlIC;:onstruction Ity Gilba... BuildingComPa"YArchitects:-Maginnia and Waisia ClAd Jean I lAw

BUILDINGPROVIDENCE

GILBANE'

•ConstrvdtoR•

TEACHER'S PROJECT: Two youngsters clamber overthe sides.of the Fenian Ram, prototype of "The Holland,·the U.S. Navy's first operational submarine. It was built ill1880 by Irish-born John P. Holland, a iay teacher in.St.John's parochial school in Patersoa. NC Photo.

Research Project"WASHINGTON (NC)-Prcwl­

dence Hospital, hen! wiD under­take a medical researcp. pcojecton ita premises with the aid Gla Public Health Service. JraDtof $45,000. Dr. I{abeeb Bacchuswill investigate the relation. ofvitamin C to the formatiOa andbreakdoWll 01. adrenal hoI"mcmell.

The "visible progrea"' of the.Church in India and its increasedinfluence ia "establishing thediscipline of mores and con.­structing works of cbarity~make

Pope John Asks, People of India·To St~m Threat to Morality

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope the Indian Hierachy'. confereoceJohn has called ~ India's Catb- tirrielT, the Pope said..olies for a total effort to stem Fie praised the Bishopa torthe threat to Christian moralitT giving their primary attention toposed there by "particular CClndi- seminaries and the clerg,.. Hetions, programs and. practices.· also said that it is of the utmost .

The PontiH did not spen oat importance that religious voea­what conditions, programs and, ti~ns be multiplied ~that can­practices he meant, but he waa didatea for' the priesthood begenerally believed here to be '''scrupulously and intensive17referring to the special problema formed. ill intellect and illof pcverty in Iridia and. to the lipirit.•government-supported birth COD­

trol information programa.

The Pope's plea was made Ina letter addressed to ValerianCardinal Gracias, Archbishop ofBombay, and to the entire IndianHierarchy. It was occasioned bTthe quinquennial episcopal con­ference of India, which the Pon-

. tiff said he viewed "wit~ joyfulhope and serene confidence."

Visible PrO(lll'eal

As a sign of this hope and c0n­

fidence, the Pope said.. he sentGregorio Pietro XV Cal:"dinalAgagianian, Prefect of the Sac­red Congregation for' the 'Prop­agation of the Faith, to partid­pate in the meeting.

Site SeI~OR

Begin with Gilbane

BUILDINGfor 'the' Future •••

Ffnancing

Beautiful, functional .•• the new Mount St. M.aryAcademy is a significant achievement in edu­cation by the Religious Sisters of Mercy. It winalso be a perpetuating symbof of the faith andgen«:rosity of al1 those who have helped m~this' n:'odern 'educational facility possible.

The Gilbane Building Company is truly gratifiedta' be a part of this project which enhances theeconomic, educational and spiritual welfare 01

,the community. It represents one of many fieldsof construction. in which our company is demon­strating its ability to build for the future today!

treinely difficult physically tslive' a rational, orderly humanlife' and practically impossibleto expect much in the way ofbeauty.

Problems. of Cit,.There .are many reasons. Cities

are hamstrung by rural domin­ated state legislatures which fearthem as potential rivals. NewYork City, for example, mustget permission from the state tolay new water mains.

City governments are at bestincompetent to deal with theproblems of a regio'- which goesfar beyond the. city's bordenand at worst are run by corruptpoliticians whose views of a·city's problems are not notice­ably different from those of theirpredecessors in 1885.

Within the region many con­flicting authorities compete i.aI.wild chaos (there are over 900local governmental units withinthe Chicago metropolitan re­gion). There is no "city block"in Congress like the Natural Gat!block or the farm block, 'and thefew senators and congressmenwho are concerned with cityproblemli do not hold importantchairmanships.

Major IssueAs-a result the Fedel:"al gov­

ernment spends more money onfish and wild life each year thanit does On slum: clearance. One:!hesitateo to think of how muchcould be done in the big citietl.if the equivalent of the moneyused to store our grain surpluawas made available for cityproblelNl.

Perhaps we should hesitate todip into the Federal till, but itis difficult to see where else tMcities are going to get help.

Progress has been made. At.·least there is some mentioft Gl,urban problems in this cam­paign, but we'must -go a longway l)efore the plight 'of thecity ill recognized lIl8 the major'issue it is.

Pope's HighwayCASTELGANDOLFO (NC)The authorities are still tryingto decide what to call the newsuperhighway that runs fromRome to Castelgandolfo, site ofthe papal Summer villa. But by

. popular consent the highway al­ready hall • name-Strada delPapa-the pope'. road.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-'Thurs., Od. 6, 1960

AccreditationContinued from Page One

high schools are frustrated overthe non-accreditation of theirown scminaries.

This situation, he said.. in noway indicates an 'inferior qualityof seminary education, but "itremains, nonetheless, distressingto all concerned with Catholic.ecoDdary education.'"

16

AS)$-erU'~ Government TendsTo I~trnore Urban Problems

By Rev. Andrew M. GreeleyMsgr. George G. Biggins will be in Europe for the next

several weeks. During that UmeFather Greeley will be hisguest eolumnist. Father Greeley is the aothor of the book TheChurcb and the Soburbs (Sheed and Ward, 1959). A secondbook on the problems' of American young people is scheduledfor publication 1m early 1961. .

If either presidential candidate wants a sure fire elec­tion gimmick, this column is willing to provide'it, free ofcharge. All the candidate need do is purchase spot time onlocal radio stations in aU big cities from 7 :30 to 9 :30 A.M.and 3:30 to 6:30 P.M. dur­ing the last two weeks of theelection campaign (t heywon't need any TV). Thecandidate's voice must then bebeard every five minutes repeat-·lng over and ov• n e : ~ntence,"If T am electedII will abolishthe rush, hour

, traffic jam."This is all

that need beaid. In. fact,explanations of'how this is tobe done mightbarm the"image." However, the harried

. drivers struggling desperately to'aurvive long enough to returnto their anxiously waiting fam­Dies must get the impression thatthe candidate has the vision anddetermination to abolish the rushhour. The result will be an elec-'toral landslide so great that the1936 race will look lik.e a closecontest. -

Poorly Represcnted~ere is more than just fan­

~Sy in this suggestion. FOI:" it isonly in the presidentiarelectionthat the huge urban centers get01 chance to swing much politicalInflUe\lce. They are outvoted instate legislatures by the repre­sentatives of gerrymandered up­state or dowh state districts who!opk on big Cities as gold minesof tax revenue and very littleelse.

They. are represented in theSenate often by men who 'areeither so confident of the back­Jng of the city machines that theyneed not w9rry about' the prob­lems of the metropolitan region

..... so dependent on upstate sup­port that they have no hope ofdenting the opposition's urban

'atrength.Only in the presidenu81 elec­

.ttons can the urban masses ex­pect that their votes will equal

. ill influence that of the ruralpressure groups, but neithel:"party seems anything morethan dimly aware of what theplight of the city really is. '

.Moving BackwardTransportation (and the rush.

bour) are merely one aspect, andperhaps a minor -one, of thepl:"oblem. The truth'of the mattecIs that in public services thecities are moving back.wardrapidly. Fifty years .ago onecould ride across ManhattanIsland on a horse much fasterthan one can in :1 taxi today.

The commuting time from theChicago loop to the South Sideis greater than it was at the turnof the century. Boston will haveto spend several billion dollarsin the next decade simply tokeep its transportation system inas good shape as it is today (and..if one i3 to believe the KingstonTrio, this is none too good).

Transportation is typical of ahost of other problems-housing,slum'. clearance, education. cul-.tural resources, air and water.pollution, recreational facilities,water supply, racial tensions,metropolitan plann~ng; and invirtually all of these areas thecity's ability to deal with suchproblems is rapidly deteriorating;

" In the midst of our. abundancewhole metropolitan regions arebecoming places where it is ex.-

I,

Page 16: 10.06.60

.,

Prayers for CubaBUENOS AIRES (NC)-The

Central council of ArgentineCatholic Action has called OD

all the Catholics of Argentinato pray for "the people of Cuba,our brothers" who are nowunder assault by atheistic com­munism.

THt ANCHOR- 17Thurs.. Oct. ~. 1960

Attorrn~)J$' Gu~~dMarks SO·YearCareer raraUel

W][NONA (NC)-Two at;.,tomeys whose careers haveparalleled remarkably forhalf-a-century were hon­ored by the St. Thoma,," More

'Lawyers Guild of the Winonadiocese.

Saluted at a luncheon on their50th anniversaries as practicinglawyers wet'e Henry M. Galla­gher and Joseph M. Moonan.both of Waseca, Minn.

Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Moon­an entered the Creighton Uni­versity law school, Omaha, Neb..together and both graduated inHHO. They came to Waseca to­gether and opened offices nean'each other.

Early in their careers bothmen served as municipal judges.Mr. Gallagher was county at,..torney later, and Mr. Moonamwas city attorney.

Wfives Are SistersMr. Gallagher was named

chief justice of the State Su­preme Court in ~ 937, a post heheld until 1944, when he resignedto re-enter private practice. Mr.Moonan, one of the state's bestknown trial lawyers, has beenoffered appointments to thejUdiciary, but has declined themin order to continue as a triallawyer.

The parallel between theircareers extends ~ven to theirprivate lives. Mr. Gallagher and

"Mr. Moonan married sisters-­Maude and Ethel Klug, respeeo­tively. The Gallaghers had twochildren - both girls - and theMoonans had five children-aUgirls.

HYANNIS K OF C GOLF HOST: Co-chairmen DickTerrio, left, and Jack Pendergast, Jr., center, presentPende.rgast Trophy to Grand Knight James Hobert of theFather McSwiney Council, Hyannis,' who accepted it 'onbehalf of TOil! Powers, tournament winner.

Priest Devises 'Sociable Socials'To Discourage 'Going Steady'

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A John the Baptist church,Edgard,campaign "for sociable socials" initiated the project.among the younger set here is - "We want to change the men­directed at breaking up the tality of those couple.; who dance"stag line" and discouraging only with each other," Father"going steady." Putnam said. "'We want to get

The campaign started at Jesuit the 'Be sociable - dance withHigh School with a dance spon- everybody' idea across to allIIOred by the High School Young youth groups - CYO, JuniorChristian Students Federation of Newmanites aDd Protestantthe Archdiocese of New Orleans. groups;Attending were 60 representa- "It's not wrong for a girl to asktives from 15 high schools, plus a boy to dance. It's the way sheseven visitors from Mobile, Ala. does it that matters. Who asks

"Be sociable - dance with for the ring? Nine times out ofeverybod:'" is the campaign 10 it's the girl.' Ask any girl who1I10gan. The federation's chaplain, 'goes steady' which one asked toFather Gorham J. Putnam of St. go steady."

British Labor ElectsCatholic to Top Post

DOUGLAS (NC) - GeorgeWoodcock, & Catholic graduateof Oxford University who beganwork as a child in a cotton mill.has been elected to the top exec­utive post Gf Britain'. labormovement

:.Ir. Woodcock was made gen­eral lleCretary of the TradesUnion Congress, ruling body forIHhin'JJ 8,000,000 organizedworkers, at the congress' annualconvention here on the Isle 01.M '.

Mr. Woodcock, 58, beganworking in a Lancashi~e cottonmill at the age of 12. When hewas 24 he won " scholarship toOxford and was graduated withbonors ill philosophy, politicsand economies. :"Ie became re­search officer of th TradesUnion C~ngreSJ in 1936 and as­sistant ~eral seet"e'tary In 1947.

- The Chief Justice noted that. the U. S. Supreme Court has al­ready held, in the Everson case, .that tax-paid bus rides for pri­vate school ehildren. do riotviolate the Federal Constitution.

The notice of appeal to theU. S. Supreme Court states thatthe Federal issues involved inthe case are three in number:

1) Does the law violate theU. S. Constitution "in that it is alaw respecting an· establishmentof religion?"

2) Does it violate constitu­tional guarantees by deprivingthe plaintiffs of property without"due process of law?"

3) ·Does it violate constitution­al guarantees of equal "protectionof the laws by aiding childrenattending p r i vat e nonprofit 'schools while denying aid to­children in private schools nmfor profit?

Need Pr~estsST. JEAN (NC) - Then are

only 70 priests to minister to thespiritual needs of 650,000 people,mostly Catholic, in the Dioeeseof Valparaiso, Chile.

First Step Taken to BringBus Case to Supreme Court

HARTFORD (NC)-Opponents of a state law allowingeommunities to provide bus rides for private school childrenhave taken the first official step to bring their case beforethe U.S. Supreme Court. They have filed a notice of appealto the high court with theConnecticut Supreme Courtof Errors. That tribunal heldin a .( to 1 ruling last Junethat the 1957 law violates neitherthe Federal DO!' state constitu­tions.

The law, enacted three yeanago alter heated controversy,states that bus rides can be pro­vided for children in nonprofitschools alter voteru in a com­munity give their apPFoval byreferendum.

The case fought in state courtsand now about to be broughtbefore the Supreme Court wasinitiated by an organizationknown as i'Citizens for the C0n­necticut Constitution," Inc:.-

Voters ApproveThe group was set up after

'YOters in Newtown, Conn., ap­proved the providing of bus ridesfor pupils attending St. Rose'sGrade School there.

In its decision last June theSupreme Court of Errors, highesttribunal in the state, held thatthe law "aids parents in sendingtheir children to 11 school 01. theirchoice, as is their right.-

Fosters EdneaUonThe decision, written by Chief

Justice Raymond. E. Baldwin,stated that the law "primarilyErves the public health, safetyand welfare, aDd !osten educa­tion."

"In the light of our history andpolicy, it eannot be said to c0m­

pel support of ani church ... Itcomes up to, but does not breach,the 'wall of separation' betWeeD

Church and State,.. Justice Bald­win said.

Another DiocesanContribution To The

Cultural Lifeof Our

Community"

Mount

,\

Saint MaryACADEMY,

BRADY ELECTRICAL CO., INC.

ELECTRICAL CONTRActORS

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LATHING & PLASTERING

754 Branch AvetlUe, Providence, R. I.

w. IRVING PEIRCE & SON, INC.

PAINTING CONTRACTORS

ACME TILE & TERRAZZO CO.

MARBLE & TILE WORK

DiNATALE FLOORS INC.

FLOORING CONTRACTORS

373 New Boston load, Fall Riwr 10 Cross Street, PNYicfenee, I. IL 1100 Wm. T. Morrissey Blvd., Boston, Mass.

THE PARKER COMPANY, INC.

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FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

3 Railroad Avenue, Andover, Mens. Swansea, Mass. 200 South Mailll Street, Providence, I. l

Page 17: 10.06.60

18 THE ANCHOR-Di~" Of. fan Rivet-Thurs:, Od.6,'1960

Salois, Fall River; Elizabeth Chesbro, Arlington, Va.; Jeannine Ouellette,and Mildred Midura, both Fall River. Center, the Bishop during ceremony;right, he chats with Sister Gertrude Marie (left), assistant novice mistress,and Mother Pauline du Sauveur, novice mistress. Both Sisters are fromthe motherhouse in France. ' ,

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College PresidentBELMONT (NC) - Father

,John A. Oetgen, O.S.B., has beenappointed the fifth president ofBelmont Abbey College here illNorth Carolina.

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Surgeon Helps Mission HospitalContinued from Page One Missionary Sisters, whose head.-

home in the affluent Berkshire quarters are in Philadelphia. Hi.. suburban section here. A large . plans at the end of that periodquantity of drugs medicines and are. indefinite, he said, butsurgical instru~entswill.go friends believe his stay in Indiaalong witb. Dr. Purcell-dona- will be a long one, perhaps fOl'tionS from friends and busine. life.acquantances. A native of Madison, Wis., and

"The .generosity of our frienck the son of a doctor of medicine.was terrific," Dr. Purcell said. Dr. Purcell said: "We had"We will need the supplies badlJ" thought about doing this for awhen we get to India." long time,"' he said. "Last JaD>-'

Dr. Purcell was an associate· uary we decided to go ahead.·professor of surgery at St. LouiaUniv:!rsity. In New Del":. he willset up a training· school fOl'native doctors and nurses, in ad-'dition to t.:oing surgical work: atHoly Family Hospital..

In the doctor's pocket is a two­yearc!>ntract with the Medical

JOHN E. COX CO.Ine.

fabricators of .

Structural Steeland

Miscellaneous Iron753 Davol St., 'Fan River

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Love of God Nuns From CubaContinued from Page One in Cuba, the nuns'. rel)~r'n"'.

meeting, the Cuban revolutiOil There are 14 houSes in Cuba. iii·or Dr. Castro.) least one in every province. '.llie

The seven nuns left Cuba last nuns teach primary and second~May--,-four to visit their familiett ary schools and are continuingin Spain 3ndthree to attend a their classes at the college the,.mother house meeting in Spain. staff' in Havana-our Lady Of

Non-Committal ih~ Pillar, . .Mother-A~geles did say, how-. .The nuns, formerly from Cuba.

ever, that" from nuns' reports now. at' the.mother house in New·from Cuba" they are being allow-· Bedford, are. Sister Mary Garcia.ed to teach' .with ."complete Sister. Annunciscion Prieto, Sis­religious freedom.".:She.was non- tel' RaquelElcano, Sister Inven­committal when asked about the cion Canas, Sister Angeles Piesco,threat.ened closing ofCatholie' SIStet' Julita Prieto .and Sisterchurches in Havana if Commun- Cruz Martinez.ist-dominated . crowds continue .'to stone' churches and jeet' and Diocesa i,. CCi>taunt the pariShioners. . .

Sisters of the Love of God first C!»~Unu~d from Pa«e O.came to New Bedford, in 1958 at "It vrl.ll not be a course illthe request of Father Edmund. religion or doctrine, but one illl

. Francis, SS.CC., pastor of St. the methods and techniques ofMary Church, North Fairhaven. teaching relig'ion on the higb.Two years ago he was assistant school. level," said Father Pow­at Our Lady of AssumptiOilers, adding that a course to. beChurch, New Bedford.' given later will cover doctrine.

The convent, an old New Bed- He' noted' that previous coursesford man.sion, was acquired after in. techniques have been slantedthe nuns' arrival. Afte learning towards elemenF!ry grade teach­English the nuns opened a pre- ers only.primary school at Assumption There will be no tuition feeChurch and· teach Catechism to for the course but there will bea class of 32. . a small charge for textbooks...

St. Mary's . Those successfully completingThree nuns from the order the course will be awarded the

arrived later and live in the New Confraternity of Christian Doc­Bedford convent. The'y teach trine Teacher's Certificate.pre-primary school and kinder- . Father Powers asked thatgarten. There are 80 students ill prospective students notify theirtheir class at St..:Mary's. . .p·astorsbY Saturday, Oct. 15 of

The nuns will start next 'year' their interest.in the course. Pai­teaching' CatechisD:!- at St. An- ors will notify the Diocesan Of- .thony's Church, Mattapoisett. fice of the Confraternity ofThe convent will be'located iR Christian Doctrine.the old St. Anthony Rectory..

Also expected in the' near'future is' another delegation ofnuns from the Love of God Con­gr.egation to work among PuertoRican residents in the Fall RiverDiocese. .

College in CubaSisters of the Love of God con­

tinue to teach without obstacle

Basilica on' 'StampPARIS (NC)-Franc~ has is­

sued a 15-centime· (three-cent)postage stamp portraying theBasilica of Sl Therese inLisieux;

~~.~~~.~~.~•..........•..•....~.

i ANDERSO'N,"&' .OLSEN iDNDIUSTRIAL. and DOMIESTic :

• HlEATING ... P8PING .and :: ANR CO>N1DIYUONI·NG ;t .CONTRACTORS i• 312 Hillman St. WY 7-9162 New Bedford.

~••~•••••••~•••••~••••••••Qo•••t

BLESSES NEW NOVITIATE: Bishop Connolly officiates at blessingof new novitiate of Dominican Sisters of Charity of the Presentation, whostaff St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River. Novitiate' is at 16 Elm Street,Dighton, and is the flcst in the United States for the community. Leftpicture, left to right, entering· postulants Sandra SouZa, Taunton; Claudette

Ch(CJlP>~aDU'l$' Dll'ilstitute. WASHINGTON (NC) - 30

Catholic Air Force chaplains areattending the 'four.th annual AirForce Chaplains Institute onHuman nelations at the CatholicUniversity of America.

New Bedford GwiOdPlans Play Series

The Ne"w Bedford CatholicThe<tter Guild will start its Fallbroadcast series at 8:30 this Sun­day over stationWNBH, NewBedford.

.A 10 play series dealing withSt. Paul the Apostle will beoffered bi-weekly. Wl'itten ~y

Manuel Almada, the playe dram­atize highlights' in the life ofthe saint.

Christopher A. Best will directthe series and Rev. AlbertShovelton, curate at St. JamesChurch, New Bedford, is chap­lain to the guild.

Regional CCDContinued fro~ Page One

Oll Confl'a ternity Manuals andTraining Courses, . 'hile FatherPowers will be chairman of airoup considering an evaluationof CCD texts and will also leaddiscussion on high school texts.

A highlight of Saturday's pro-'gram will be a radio televisionawards luncheon at whichArthur Hull Hayes,. president ofthe Columbia Broadcasting Sys­~m, will speak. Bishop McYin­DeY will present awards.

Sister Maureen,. R.S.M. ofNazareth Hall, Fall River, willparticipate in a"Saturday after­noon discussion of ReligiousInstruction of the ExceptionalChild. She will be a resourceeorisuIta n t.. Especially to be noted bymembers of the Diocesan Coun­ei:l of Catholic Women', saidFather Powers, is a session, alsoon Saturday afternoon, whichwill consider the Natiollal Coun,:"eil." of' Catholic Women as "co­eperal1.ive ally. of the CCD."Affiliates in this Diocese con­lIidering participation in the CCDprogl'am will find the session

. very helpful,' he said.Father Powers will be chair­

man of another Saturday after­noon meeting which will con­sider specialized CCQ units,while Bishop Gerrard will pre­side at a general ~'outh session,also scheduled for Saturday.afternoon, in Veterans MemorialAuditorium.

Father Powers. will also par­ticipate in the closing generalsession of the congreSs on ,Sun­day al't:::l·'1oon. He will be chair­man of. a panel discussing theCCD as a coordinating factor inthe ecumenical approach toChurch unity.

.....

Page 18: 10.06.60

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Oct. 6, 1960

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Thatcher of Dartmouth is about to be brought down 'by Roy Toulan ofStang during the second quarter. Right, John Giasson of. Stang clutchei1the ball in the end zone for the first touchdown in Stang hisi:?ry. '

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Coaeb's Comment

Coach Lynch in appraising hkteam's performance singled outleveral boys for distinction inaddition to Giasson, Perry ,andRebello. Tackle Tom McCabeand end Roy Toulan playedbang-up ball both ways as didthe guard tandem of Bob McCar­thy. and Paul Bisbee. The defen­sive play 01. the afternoon wasturned ia by Bill Aguiar whoeame up fast from his defensivewet}' position to· spill a Dart­mouth ball callTier for a 20 18lrdJoss. ' .

HPoor tackling, especiaBy Jatile open field, hurt us on severaloccasions," observ~~ C 0 a e hL1ncb, many of whose chargeswere playing OIl a regular foot­ball field in • supervised gamefor the first time. "The bo18 Heinexperienced but willing,·added LyD:cll.. "Their ~ ..

By Jack Kineavy

History was made at Bishop Stang last Monday ,when the'school's Sophomore footban team engaged the Darlrmouth High Jayvees on the latter's gridiron. As with m oat beginnings, Stang's first yenture into formal athletiecompetition' was . humble wonderful. We've got a lot of. Barnstable by a comfortable 28-6 fested Foxboro last week, 16-C.though' not without some work' to do but I'm sure we'll margin. Coach Frank Almeida's Ware-real measure of success. improve." Non-League Tilts ham squad, off to a fast startTrailing 0-6 at' the end of Stang Sophomores are at Case with Conference victories over

next Monday The Freshmen The leading non-league game Falmouth and Case, travels tothe first quarter; Coach Carlin . 'of the week is the Saugus-New S. ht S t d ThLYIY:h's neophytes fought, back launch a six-game schedule at \oug on on a ur ay. eto take an 8-6 Case tomorrow. Assisting Lynch Bedford clash at Sargent Field. homeseters have dropped succes-halftime edl1e. are a couple of former Coyle The, Crimson easy victors over sive games to North Quincy and

Q ua r t e ; _ greats,' Chick Connell of Fall Providence Central and Rindge' Coyle. Another first line contestback John Gias- River lind Pete Bartek of Som- Tech figure ,to be extended by shapes up at North :::laston wheN

Son ,_ who erset. Connell handles the line; the North Shore representatives Oliver Ames takes on Mansfiel0,

Bartek the 'backs who have been repeatedly a Eigh. Both teams are undefeated.ealled a fine . Class A power under Coach John"ame, all after:' Key attractiGDS J f Ames edged Case, 8-0, then".. anusas, ormer Boston Collegenoon - went, A number of top-flight aUrae- great. New Bedford won last belted Cohasset, 34-14. Man~·over for 'Stang'S tions are listed on Saturday'a year's game, the first between field, ,defending D champi~'n~:first touchdown schoolboy schedule. ,Undefeated the schools, 16-0. has, defeated Somerset, 16-0 am!!fro m t hr e e Durfee High 'enjoying a grid '"

, d' ' t'" d" '. TI~ maJ'o tt t' th "',ro,nklin, 22-6.yar s ()u an renaissance under the guidance ... r a rac Ion on ehalfback Tom, " 01. Coach Don Montle will at- Cape, will be the Barnstable-· _-..,;.....;.--------..,Perry, another stellar performer, tempt to log'victory No.3 in a Dennis-Yarmouth tilt. Barn­rushed for the extra "points. Bristol County tussle at Dart- stable, O-~ on the season, faces

,Stang 'lost B golden ·opportu-, mouth. The Indians dropped a another tartar in this one fornity to widen this margin in the _ 20-0 decision to Coyle in their Coach Red Wilson's club hallwaning moments ,of the second only outing' to date, while the already rung up one-sided vic­quarter on a 35-yard pass. from' Hilltoppers have downed Attle- tories over Hanovel' and Ayer.Giasson to end Dan Gonsalves. boro and North Attleboro OIl Falmouth after splitting its,firstThe play carried down to the BUccessive Saturdays. two. Conference engagementsDartmouth one-yard line but " tackles Nantucket h1 a non-Stang was detected clipping on Fairhaven, upset by a fired-up league affair. The Islanders de-the run and time for the hllif New Bedford Vocational elevensubsequently expired. Late in last week, will host an improvedthe third period, after Dartmouth Attleboro squad which brokebad registered a second time to into the win column impressively

Sta 11 on Saturday with a 14-0 winmake the score 12-8, ng lu - over Taunton. In the third andback Dick Rebello shook loose

d · final County clash 01. the dayOIl a SO-yard jaunt L) pay In. North Attfeboro, winless in two

. Unfortunately, ,the officials tries, takes on Vocational, 1-1IUled 'that Rebello's forward onttJ,e season. 'progress bad been stopped , There are .two Tri-County tiltsell route and the play waswhistled dead at that spot. Noon tap. Dighton-Rehoboth Re­further scoring ensued and the gional, & definite Conferencegame ended with Dartmouth in threat off an opening day 38-0the van, 12-8. Stang's youngsters, conquest of Barnstable, resumesbowever, had stood up well grid :elations with Case High 01.despite their inexperience, a Swansea, winless in two starts.material factor in the outcome. These schools were perennial

powers in the now defunct Narrycircuit and their rivalry-un­broken In basketball and base-ball-is traditional in stature.

In the only other Conferencegame of the' day lt'n be Bourneat Somerset. Both teams haveidentical 1-1 records. The Capeeleven owns a victory overProvincetown but was low­bridged by Falmouth in a Leagueencounter last week. Somerset,after an initial 16-0 loss to Mans-field, rebounded strongly against

BISHOP STANG HIGH FOOTBALL TEAM ~AUNCHES SPORTSPROGRAM: Lett photo, Coach Carlin Lynch outlines to Capt. Tom McCabestrategy of Stang's opening game against Dartmouth Jayvees. Center, Doug

New College HeadLA CROSSE (NC) - Sister

Mary Justille, history teacherand :leaD af residence at ViterbeCollege sinee 1952, hal!l beeDnamed pPllflklent 01. abe collego.

Veteran BoxersFe t e Priest.

BOSTON (NC) - TheVeteran Boxers Associationhere, composed &f formeramateur and professionalboxers, gave, a testimonial din- 'ner for its first vice president­Father William McManus, O.F.M.

The crew-cut Franciscan wallstationed for a year at St. An­thony'a shrine here. He waatransferred to New Vork on Sept.1. There's' no disposition amongossociation members to acquirean in-town vice president-quitethe contrary.

(()oncrete KI,eJl

Father Hillary Sullivan, Q.F.lVI.,who was Father McManus' supe­rior at the'shrine, is the associa­ton's chaplain. A group led byBilly Meyers, Jewish sCrapperknown as "the Concrete Kid" inthe World War I era, persuadedFather Sullivan to bring backFather McManus for the dinner.Appropriately the festivitietlwere held at Purcell's, partlyowned by Tony DeMarco, ex­welterweight champ.

Fr. McManus faile from Phil­adelphia. He was 4llIl all-aroundathlete in high school and boxedfrequently. After high schoolhe served a hitch in the Navyand became all-Navy middle­weight champ. He also wooGolden Gloves and DiamQDd Beltamateur titles.

He joined the FrliDeiscans in1952 in Philadelphia, where hebecame ~iends'with TommyLoughran, ontime light heavy­weight champion. During hillseminary days he continued to bseminary days he continued tobox and for a time was torn be­tween his love for the ring andfor the priesthood, unUl Lough­ran helped him make lllp hismind.

While attending seminarydasses in Washington, the futurepriest often worked out with theWashington Senators' baseballclub. ,

In Boston, Father McManukept in shape at Johnny Buck­ley's gym. He helped conditionPaul Pender for his two winaover Sugar Ray Robinson for theNew York-Massachusetts versioaof the middleweight crown.

Said Billy Meyen: HHe bada most salutary effect OIl boxersand boxing in the year he spenthere. He p~oved to ';he boys thatone doesn't have *-, act like amugg to be a good fighter.·

Page 19: 10.06.60

20 THE·ANCHOR-Di~.. 'of Fall River-Thurs.; Oct. 6, 1960

._.

TWO DEDICATIONS: At left, Bishop Ger~ard blesses novitiat~ wingof the Sisters of St. Dorothy at Villa Fatima, Taunton. Left to right, hisassistants are Rt. Rev. Humber"to S. Medeiros and Rev. Edward A.

Oliveira. Right, Bishop Connolly officiates at ceremonies dedicating HolyName School, Fall River. Rev. Donald A. Couza is his assistant. To be seenin background is girls' choir from Sacred Hearts Academy.

pioneer of the Capuchin Orderin Germany and for I:ti:; writingsagainst the Moslems' and theProtestant Reformation. PopeJohn proclaimed him s' Doctorof the Universal Church in M.ay,1959.

Th~ ceremonies her" will besponsored by the Capuchins. rheOctober date was chosen to com­memorate an occasion in 1601when St. Laurence led the Aus­trians in a victoriou8 fightagainst Turkish troops.

..........WllUAM 'Ift\.'t.,OIARIIDN msIDN" JA(l{ HAWKINS

HAYA IIARAREET .SIIPIIF.N BOYDJlllGII GIIIFRIlI· /l!ARI1lA saJIT _ fA1lIY 0Il00IU..SAIl JAm

--..~... -.,..........- DBl.1lJNBEUi·~W~ ........

Center, Foil River, NOW!State. New Bedford, starts Oct. 12

THE PERFECT PICTURE FOR:THEATRE GROUPS! .

!t is wO~lh a trip ,to lhe nearest ciry where "Ben.Hur"I~ showJl~g to ~nloy the experience of a lifetime. Spe-CIal ,con5lde~tlon ~.~en r~ grou.!>.'- .

WASHINGTON (NC)-FrancisCardinal Spellman, Archbishopof New York, wili offer SolemnPontifical Mass in the NationalShrine of the Immaculate Con­ception Oct. 11 to honor St.Laurence of Brindisi.

It is the mlk of the nation. Hece, in 11

magnificent production, is the immorml stol)'

beloved by miilions ...of romance, pageantry,?,nllict and ~ faith 'that did ~t die upon checnMS.

CQlfd;'nal Spellman to Offelf MassIn Honow- of Capuc~auu .Sa~n~

A TALE OF THE CHRIST

" ACADEMY AWARDS InClfI<I~"BEST PICTURE"­

,AlDliINiVl.IJW1'K;,4MYBt., .

"Bishop John, J. Wright ofPittsburgh wiiI preach at the8 P.M. Mass honoring St. Lau­rence, who lived from 1559 to1619.

St. Laurence was famed as R

New Bedford

,', ParishCen,tenaryGRAND RONDE (NC) -st.

Michael Archangel parish, eS­tablished here in Oregon at the"request of Indian. chiefs, has ob_served its, 100th anniversary.

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Of C!rolUlll"C:~ He[l'eNEWARK (NC)-"Th~Church'

in America is going fromstrength to strength," BishopEusebius John Crawford, O.P" anative of I'r:eland said here on hisway to his new assignment, theVicariate Apostolic of the West­ern Solomon Islands.

The Dominican was one of 14missionary bishops personallyconsecratea I Pop~ John in St.Peter's basilica last May 8. Hestopped het'e to visit his cousin,Msgr. James F. Looney, Chan­cellor of the Newark archdiocese.

Discussing his' impressions ofthe Church in the U. S., theBishop said American Catholics

'''seem to be strong in theirFaith; they receive a very goodgroundil~ in. thei:- Faith in bothschool and college."

He added that he thought "ittakes more stamina, too, to stand

,- by one's religion in the United, States where the' atmosphere of

the nation is not Catholic theway it is in Ir:eland." -

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at Atlanta;· Bishop Thomas J.McDonough of, Savannah, theGeorgia State Prison, Reidsville,Ga.

Chaplains Plan ServicesAlso, Bishop Thomas K. Gor­

man of Dallas-Fort Worth, theFederal 'Correctional Institution,SeagoviUe, Tex.; Bishop ThomasL. Noa of Mal'qu~tte, Mich., theState House of Correction andBranch Prison, Marquette; Bish­op William R. Arnold, MilitaryDelegate, the New York CityPenitentiary, Riket'S Island, N.Y.

Also Bishop 'JameJ J. Navaghof Ogdensburg, N. Y., ClintonPrison, Dannemora, N. Y.; Bish­op 'Charles A. Buswell of Pueblo,Colo., the Colorado 'State Re­formatory, Buena 'Vista, Colo.;'and Auxiliary Bishop JosephRHodges of Richmond 'Va. ' theVirginia Pen,itentiary, Rlch'rilOnd., Father Engler said. some 400chaplains. have reported theywill conduct special 'services on"Good Thief SUllday."

11 P~ce~atces tbParti~ipate

In 'Good T,hi~f' S~rwicesANAMOSA (NC)-ElevEm archbishops ana bishops of

the United States and Mexico will visit correctional insti­tutions next Sunday, feast of St. Dismas, th~ "good thief."Observance of "Good Thief Sunday" is sponsored by theAmerican Catholic Correc­tional Chaplain's Associa­tion. The observances wereauthorized in 1953 when theSacred Congregation of Rites is­sued a special indult permittingthe Mass of the Good Thief to beoffered in prisons, reformatoriesand correctional institutions onthe SE!cond Sunday in October.

Father Cyril F. Engler, Cath­olic chaplain, at the Iowa StateMen's Reform'atory here and sec­retary-treasurer of the associa­tion, has been notified of theprelates, who will pal'Ucipate in"Good Thief Sunday" rites.

The prelates and the placesthey will visit follow: Arch­bishop William E. Cousins ofMilwaukee, the Wi s con sinSchool for Boys at Wales, Wis.;Archbishop' Edwin V. Byrne otSanta Fe, N. M., the New,Mex­ico Penitentiary at Santa Fe;Archbishop Antonio Guizar Val­encia of Chihuahua, Mexico. theFederal Correctional Institution"Latuna, Tex.

Also Bishop Francis E. Hylandof Atlanta, tile U. S. Penitentiat·y

Seize Smt\lt Intendedfor Col!ege Students

MIAMI (NC)-An estimated'$50,000 worth of obscene litera­ture was ,seized at a'Miami ware­house reported to be a statewidedistribution center for dissem­inatingsmut to college studentsin Florida.

Three men were arrested andbooked at the Dade County jailon charges of possession, anddistribution of obscene litera­ture. State Attorney Richard E.Gerstein and police' confiscated500 cartons of allegedly obscenemagazines, pictures and 'books.

The action was based on aninvestigation prompted by Dan­iel P. Sullivan, director of theGreater Miami Crime Commis- 'sion. His office expressed con­cern about distribution of theliterature to studenis at the Uni­versity of Florida in Gaines­ville and the Florida State Uni­versity in Tallahassee.

Sch@cO !Q)edicationSCHENECTADY (NC)-Fran­

cis Cardinal Spellman, Arch­bishop of New York will dedi­cate the new Notr'" Dame HighSchool ,for Girls here next Mon­day. 'Bishop William A. Scullyand Auxiliary Bishop Edward J.Maginn of Albany will attend.

:-.J

'.