12.15.60

20
Father Considine also dis- closed new details concerning the training of the papal volun- teers. He said they will undergo a fo\}r-month training period at all institute which will soon be es- tablished. The course will in- clude training in Spanish or Portuguese, Latin American cul- tural orielitation, and leadership guidance. Father Considine said that the training, program will be under the direction of Msgr. Ivan Illicb, . former vice rector of the Cath- ' 'to Page Twelve ments of their new rank were blessed and presented to them by Bishop Connolly. Monsignor Fenton holds the rank of Colonel in the Army and is Chief of Personnel in the office of the Chief of Chaplains in the Pentagon. Monsignor Hamel is a Colonel in the Air Force and is Inspector General Turn to Page Three Team to Coordinate Papal Volunteers Program WASHINGTON (NC)-A national secretariat to coord- inate U.S. participation in the Holy See's program of papal 'Volunteers for Latin America has b'een established in Chicago and will begin operations Sunday, Jan. 1. The secretariat will re- cruitment of the' lay volun- teers, help screen applicants, and enlist sp 0 n S0 ring groups, according to Father John J. Considine, M.M., director of the Latin America Bureau, National Catholic Welfare Con- ference. Invest· Two Clmplains A,s Domestic . "This eleventh day of D,ecember with all its joys is far different .from the day ,in the year 1941." With these words Most Rev. James It Griffiths, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop 9f New ,York ana former Chancellor of the Military Ordi. nariate described vividly the even ts of World Wat II as he preached at the" inves- titure ceremony in St. Mary's Cathedral last Sunday of Rt. Rev. Bernard J. Fenton and Rt. Rev. Henri A. Hamel. Both are service chaplains who volunteered in February, 1942,-and who were raised to the rank of Domestic Prelate by Pope John. The gar- Ordain .. Fall River Man for Diocese In Rome Sunday Rev. Mr. Joseph P. Delaney, son of Mr. 'and Mrs. Joseph R. Delaney of Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, will be ordained this Sunday in the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception, North American College, Rome. Ordaining prelate :will be His Excel- ' lency, the Most Reverend H art'urd Prof Martin J. O'Connor, D.D., , titular' archbishop of Lao- Attacks' Reds'", , dicea and Rector of the North American College. L M let Present at the ceremony will OW ora l Y be the ordinand's parents and youngest brother, Thomas, a ' WASHINGTON (NC)-A student at Coyle High School. Harvard University political Another brother; Edmund, is in scientist said here that there his third year of theology at St. can be no morality in inter- John's seminary, Brighton. He will be ordained in 1962. national communism because it denies free choice to the indi- A sister, Sister Joseph Thom- vidual. , as, is a member of the Religious William Y. Elliott, who is also of the Holy Union of the Sacred a State Department consultant, Hearts. Another brother, Dan- sa,id an action is moral when it iel, is a teacher at B.M,C, Durfee "results from conscious choice" ,High School, Fall River. and reflects values "rooted in the Rev. Mr. Delaney attended character of a,person who feels Heart elementary school, a 'sense oj! personal'responsibil- Coyle High School and Cardinal ity." ' O'Conl).eJl' Seminary, . ]3oston., ,Thus freedom is the "prerequi-o- Fi:om to 1957,he was.at the" site" of action, and where :, '-turn to,: Page . '. tq Page Eighteen, ; switched them back to their , more' familiar roles on the All- , Diocesan team. , A' de' : The despite better '> 'ontrQct" , average size has good speed and 'F ' : R t .' m?bility. The offensive, striking' 0' ec ,power must be conceded lethal' 'At'S' y" th' when the' running abilities of 0.', a rmou : Jim Gravel, and and Rev. L: BrOd- : Lyonnais are, compounded with erick, pastor. of. St. Pius 'X ' the passing acumen of Gerrry. Cunniff.-' , Parish inc South Yarmouth, The 1960 season was another and Our' Lady 9f the Hig'Q:- year for Southeast.:. way MissiOll'Chapel,Bass River, , ern 'Mass. football what with 'has the of , Yarmouth annexing the D 'title, the contract for the construction Coyle repeating in C and Dlidee for the n'ew Rectory at South posting an amazing 7-1 record Yarmouth:, , after a disastrous '59 campaign. The new residence will' be As a result, the competition' for next to the 'Church on Station Turn to Page Nineteen ,Turn to Page Eighteen Turn to Page Two Working Mothers Face Problems Says Pontiff VATICAN CITY (NC) Mothers who take jobs out- side the home run into trouble in fulfilling their basic duties even though they gain economic advantages, His Holiness Pope John XXIU told Italian women. family is a gift of God and it implies a vocation which comes from on high," he told representatives of Italian wom- en's centers in an audience in St; Peter's basilica. He spoke of their organization's conference theme for this year: Problems of Women in the Family and on the Job. REV. MR. JOSEPH P. DELANEY Taunton Total Now Exceeds $633,280· " :Very 'Rev. William j. Don'- ' aghy; S: J., dii-ector of the" Anqover Retreat House" will deliver the sermon at" the 'the solerim opening of the third . phase' of 'the new Taunton re- . gional high school fund raising campaign'.' " The native New Bedford Jes:" uit, who is a former president of Holy Cross College in Worcester, • Will address the solicitors atSt .. 'Ma'ry's Church, Taunton, at 8 Tuesday night, Jan. 17. This was announced today by Rev. Ja'mes F. Lyons, priest- director of the girls' regional Turn to Page Seven Kineovy Picks The :A ...chor Diocesan ;111.Star " Gridiron , . ::,' " ' The Anchor's J960 All-Diocesan team has all the physical requisites of a truly 'outstanding eleven. Selected 'with the invaluable coaches' and' officials' in the area, it is, composed of the fInest Catholic players in the Fall River DiOCese. M:on..:' a,nd Somerset. hall signor Coyle High Class" C' size.' The, C .; ,, '", 11 n eaverages State hamplOns for ,the. 192 'pounds' the second" consecutive ,ye' a 'r , backfi'eld' 170.' . '." placed three young men on, the There' are two '" team. The Crimson of New Bed- ;, repeaters on the' " fOrd with ,two nominees, is the club, Bob Lyon-' , only other school among the : riais' 'and :Ron eight represented to gain mul";, , Gentili: Bot h ' tip Ie berths. Also' accorded were 'halfbacks recognition are Attleboro 'and ,'las1.' year. out Durfee, Bristol County eo-cham- ' were converted piohs, Wareham, Tri-County', to 'quarterbacks titlist, North Attleboro, Mans- .this Fall, By poetic license we've procedure now will be to take them under advisement and hand down a decision, probably some_ time in the next few months. Turn to Page Eighteen © 1960 The Anchor PRICE 10c $4.00 per Year Second Class Moil Privileges Authorized at Fall River, Mass. An Anchor of the Soul. Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL The ANCHOR I I I EUCHARISTIC CRUSADERS: Students of St. Michael's School, Ocean Grove, receive medals from Rev. Maurice Parent as they join the Eucharistic Crusade, organization promoting frequent communion for youth. Fat! River, Mass., Thursday, Dec. 15, 1960 Vol. 4, No. 50 Await High Court Decision On Sunday Laws WASHINGTON (NC) - Defenders and opponents of Sunday closing laws clashed for two days before the U. S. Supreme Court in a conflict whose outcome will have an impact wherever such laws are on the books. Supporters of the Sunday laws argued that they are necessary social measures designed to guarantee workers a weekly day of rest and to protect the community against the evils of seven-day-a-week business. But, opponents contended that the laws' real purpose is reli- , gious and that they violate the 11. S; Constitution by protecting the Christian day of worship in preference to that of other reU": ,ions. 'The high court heard argu':' '1Ilents pro and con in four' ' from three ,and land. In the Massachusetts case and One of two cases from Pennsyl- .ailia, Sunday laws 'were chal- lenged by Jewish merchants on of religious discrimina- tion. The second Pennsylvania ease and the one from Maryland were I>ro,ught before the c'ourt by an. east coast ,discount, chain which seeks to do business on Having heard the oral argu- ments in the cases, the court's THINKING OF CHRISTMAS ... e Give A Subscription'to THE ANCHOR Send to !Parents; Relatives and Friends-Daughters at School-Boys in the 'A Weekly Reminder to' Loved Ones of Your Thoughtfulne$s Blank on Page 5

description

:,'-turn to,: Page Eigh~en' .'. ~urn, tq Page Eighteen, : The ,'Un~ despite better tha~ Rev. Chri~topher L:BrOd- Rev.Mr.JosephP.Delaney,sonofMr.'andMrs.Joseph R. Delaney of Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, will be ordained this Sunday in the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception, North American College, Rome. Ordaining prelate :will be His Excel- ' VATICANCITY (NC) Motherswho takejobsout- side the home run into trouble in fulfilling their :Jim Gravel, and 'G~ntili and ' WASHINGTON (NC)-A I I I

Transcript of 12.15.60

Page 1: 12.15.60

Father Considine also dis­closed new details concerningthe training of the papal volun­teers.

He said they will undergo afo\}r-month training period at allinstitute which will soon be es­tablished. The course will in­clude training in Spanish orPortuguese, Latin American cul­tural orielitation, and leadershipguidance.

Father Considine said that thetraining, program will be underthe direction of Msgr. Ivan Illicb, .former vice rector of the Cath- '

TU~~ 'to Page Twelve

ments of their new rank wereblessed and presented to themby Bishop Connolly.

Monsignor Fenton holds therank of Colonel in the Army andis Chief of Personnel in theoffice of the Chief of Chaplainsin the Pentagon. MonsignorHamel is a Colonel in the AirForce and is Inspector General

Turn to Page Three

Team

Secr~tariate to CoordinatePapal Volunteers Program

WASHINGTON (NC)-A national secretariat to coord­inate U.S. participation in the Holy See's program of papal'Volunteers for Latin America has b'een established inChicago and will begin operations Sunday, Jan. 1. Thesecretariat will gu~de re­cruitment of the' lay volun­teers, help screen applicants,and enlist s p 0 n S 0 r i n ggroups, according to FatherJohn J. Considine, M.M., directorof the Latin America Bureau,National Catholic Welfare Con­ference.

Invest· Two ClmplainsA,s Domestic :Pr~lates

. "This eleventh day of D,ecember with all its joys is fardifferent .from the sam~ day ,in the year 1941." With thesewords Most Rev. James It Griffiths, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop9f New ,York ana former Chancellor of the Military Ordi.nariate described vividly theeven ts of World Wat II ashe preached at the" inves­titure ceremony in St. Mary'sCathedral last Sunday of Rt. Rev.Bernard J. Fenton and Rt. Rev.Henri A. Hamel. Both are servicechaplains who volunteered inFebruary, 1942,-and who wereraised to the rank of DomesticPrelate by Pope John. The gar-

Ordain .. Fall RiverMan for DioceseIn Rome Sunday

Rev. Mr. Joseph P. Delaney, son of Mr. 'and Mrs. JosephR. Delaney of Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, will beordained this Sunday in the Chapel of the ImmaculateConception, North American College, Rome. Ordainingprelate :will be His Excel- 'lency, the Most Reverend Hart'urd ProfMartin J. O'Connor, D.D., ,titular' archbishop of Lao- Attacks'Reds'", ,dicea and Rector of the NorthAmerican College. L M let

Present at the ceremony will OW ora l Ybe the ordinand's parents andyoungest brother, Thomas, a ' WASHINGTON (NC)-Astudent at Coyle High School. Harvard University politicalAnother brother; Edmund, is in scientist said here that therehis third year of theology at St. can be no morality in inter­John's seminary, Brighton. Hewill be ordained in 1962. national communism because it

denies free choice to the indi­A sister, Sister Joseph Thom- vidual.

, as, is a member of the Religious William Y. Elliott, who is alsoof the Holy Union of the Sacred a State Department consultant,Hearts. Another brother, Dan- sa,id an action is moral when itiel, is a teacher at B.M,C, Durfee "results from conscious choice",High School, Fall River. and reflects values "rooted in the

Rev. Mr. Delaney attended character of a,person who feelsSl\~red Heart elementary school, a 'sense oj! personal'responsibil-Coyle High School and Cardinal ity." 'O'Conl).eJl' Seminary, . ]3oston., ,Thus freedom is the "prerequi-o­Fi:om 195~ to 1957,he was.at the" site" of rrior~l action, and where

:, '-turn to,: Page Eigh~en' . '. ~urn, tq Page Eighteen,

; switched them back to their, more' familiar roles on the All-, Diocesan team. , A ' de': The ,'Un~ despite better tha~ wa~ '> 'ontrQct", average size has good speed and 'F ' : R t

.' m?bility. The offensive, striking' 0' ~~. ec ~ry,,power must be conceded lethal' 'At'S' y" th'

when the' running abilities of 0.', a rmou: Jim Gravel, and 'G~ntili and Rev. Chri~topher L: BrOd-: Lyonnais are, compounded with erick, pastor. of. St. Pius 'X

' the passing acumen of Gerrry.Cunniff.-' , Parish inc South Yarmouth,

The 1960 season was another and Our' Lady 9f the Hig'Q:­'~ trem~ndous year for Southeast.:. way MissiOll'Chapel,Bass River,

, ern 'Mass. football what with 'has announc~d the ~warding'of, Yarmouth annexing the D 'title, the contract for the construction

Coyle repeating in C and Dlidee for the n'ew Rectory at Southposting an amazing 7-1 record Yarmouth:, ,after a disastrous '59 campaign. The new residence will' beAs a result, the competition' for next to the 'Church on Station

Turn to Page Nineteen ,Turn to Page Eighteen

Turn to Page Two

Working MothersFace ProblemsSays Pontiff

VATICAN CITY (NC)Mothers who take jobs out­side the home run intotrouble in fulfilling theirbasic duties even though theygain economic advantages, HisHoliness Pope John XXIU toldItalian women.

~'The family is a gift of Godand it implies a vocation whichcomes from on high," he toldrepresentatives of Italian wom­en's centers in an audience inSt; Peter's basilica. He spoke oftheir organization's conferencetheme for this year: Problems ofWomen in the Family and on theJob.

REV. MR. JOSEPH P. DELANEY

Taunton TotalNow Exceeds$633,280·

" :Very 'Rev. William j. Don'- 'aghy; S: J., dii-ector of the"Anqover Retreat House" willdeliver the sermon at" the'the solerim opening of the third

. phase' of 'the new Taunton re­. gional high school fund raising

campaign'.'" The native New Bedford Jes:"uit, who is a former president ofHoly Cross College in Worcester,

• Will address the solicitors atSt..'Ma'ry's Church, Taunton, at 8

Tuesday night, Jan. 17.This was announced today by

Rev. Ja'mes F. Lyons, priest­director of the girls' regional

Turn to Page Seven

Kineovy Picks The :A...chor

Diocesan ;111.Star "Gridiron, . '.~Y, J~ck K~neav,Yi ::,' " '

The Anchor's J960 All-Diocesan team has all the physicalrequisites of a truly 'outstanding eleven. Selected 'with theinvaluable assistari~e o~, coaches' and' officials' in the area,it is, composed of the fInest Catholic footbal~ players in theFall River DiOCese. M:on..:' fiej~ a,nd Somerset. T~e t~,a~ hallsignor Coyle High Class" C' g~pd size.' The,

C.; , , '", 11 n eaverages

State hamplOns for ,the. 192 'pounds' thesecond" consecutive ,ye' a 'r , backfi'eld'170.'

• . '." .~ x«

placed three young men on, the There' are two '"team. The Crimson of New Bed- ;, repeaters on the' "fOrd with ,two nominees, is the club, Bob Lyon-' ,only other school among the : riais' 'and :Roneight represented to gain mul";, , Gentili: Bot h 'tipIe berths. Also' accorded were 'halfbacksrecognition are Attleboro 'and ,'las1.' year. outDurfee, Bristol County eo-cham- ' were convertedpiohs, Wareham, Tri-County', to 'quarterbackstitlist, North Attleboro, Mans- .this Fall, By poetic license we've

procedure now will be to takethem under advisement and handdown a decision, probably some_time in the next few months.

Turn to Page Eighteen

© 1960 The Anchor PRICE 10c$4.00 per Year

Second Class Moil Privileges Authorized at Fall River, Mass.

An Anchor of the Soul. Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL

TheANCHOR

III

EUCHARISTIC CRUSADERS: Students of St. Michael'sSchool, Ocean Grove, receive medals from Rev. MauriceParent as they join the Eucharistic Crusade, organizationpromoting frequent communion for youth.

Fat! River, Mass., Thursday, Dec. 15, 1960

Vol. 4, No. 50

Await High Court DecisionOn Sunday C~osing Laws

WASHINGTON (NC) - Defenders and opponents ofSunday closing laws clashed for two days before the U. S.Supreme Court in a conflict whose outcome will have animpact wherever such laws are on the books. Supporters ofthe Sunday laws arguedthat they are necessarysocial measures designed toguarantee workers a weeklyday of rest and to protect thecommunity against the evils ofseven-day-a-week business.

But, opponents contended thatthe laws' real purpose is reli-

, gious and that they violate the11. S; Constitution by protectingthe Christian day of worship inpreference to that of other reU":,ions.

'The high court heard argu':''1Ilents pro and con in four' ~ases 'from three state~Ma~achu­~tts, Pennsyl~ania ,and Mary~

land.In the Massachusetts case and

One of two cases from Pennsyl­.ailia, Sunday laws 'were chal­lenged by Jewish merchants on~ounds of religious discrimina­tion. The second Pennsylvaniaease and the one from Marylandwere I>ro,ught before the c'ourt byan. east coast ,discount, chainwhich seeks to do business on~unday.

Having heard the oral argu­ments in the cases, the court's

THINKING OF CHRISTMAS ... e

Give A Subscription'to THE ANCHORSend to !Parents; Relatives and Friends-Daughters at School-Boys in the Se~ice

'A Weekly Reminder to' Loved Ones of Your Thoughtfulne$s Suliscrip~ion Blank on Page 5

Page 2: 12.15.60

-

iN NEW BEDFORD,DGAn., 3-1<!i31

DONNELLYPAINTINGSERVICE

IN IFAIl.A. CUVIER ,- DUAL 2- i 322 or 5-7620

Aid UlnlnecessaryFor S<&:lhools

CLAREMONT (NC) Tin.growth of nonpublic schools W8'lllcited here in California as evt.­dence that Federal ~id to educa­tion is not necessary.

Roger A. Freeman, author antlllecturer on school financing whois widely known for his opposi­don to Federal aid, said thegrowth shows what local andprivate initiative can do.

"Private schools," Mr. Free­man said in an interview, "haveexpanded at three tin1es ~rate of public schools."

Pub I i c school enrollmentclimbed,42 per cent in the past20 years and private and pal<'­ochial school enrollment went IlP147 per cent, he said.

Court RulingsAs' for Federal aid to nonpuh­

lic schools, Mr. Freeman main.­tained that "it is quite clear thatunder present Supreme Coui'trulings, private schools cann~

get either teachers': pay or~struction funds.",

For this reason, he charg~

the campaign for Federal aid hlll.llbeen geared, to these two fielda.

In the past session of Congress,an effort was made to ,adoptlegislation which would lendmoney, with interest, to privateand parochial schools for con-:.struction purposes. The propos&!was voted down in the Senatoand ruled as out of order in tt:eHouse. '

'Cat'h~!ic (:ollegnReceo'V'e Grants:

WASHINGTON (NC) - ThWoteen Catholic colleges and um..versities have received $978,100of the $22.7 million granted bl7the National Science Foundatiolllto 260 institutions which willconduct SUn1n1er institutes fcI'teachers.

An estimated ,20,000 higilschool and college teachers cfscience, mathen1atics and ell\­gineering will attend the inst'~tutes, according to the goverll:>­mental agency. '

The teachers' tuition and feesare paid for them by the foun­dation, as are the expenses" mzthe college which, conducts th~

institute. In addition, eachteacher enrolled gets a $75 [l

week stipend, travel allowancesand allotments for dependentsup, to four in nUn1b'er. Studentoare selected by the college C()D;o

ducting the institute'. 'Am 0 n g Catholic collegrcs

which will hold institutes, anc1the amount of their grants, aJ'eCatholic University of Americo,Washington, $92,900;.and Bosto:lCollege, $81,800.

Commercial • IndustrialInstitutional

Paintl,ng and Decorating,

] 35 Franklin Street'Fall ~iver . ,OSborne 2-19V~

EVERYONE CAN AFFOIItDA CRIB FROM

F. A. Forest Co.

~A CRIB, INEVERY HOME"

society!"'"WOn1an is called," he stated,

"to a greater task than man, ,if'one 'considers under several as­pects her natural fragility andthe fact that more is asked ofher. It is she who in every ageand in all circumstances mustknow how to find resources toconfront with serene wisdom the,duties of mother and wife, 'howto n1~ke her house a place· of.welcon1e and tranquility afterthe fatigues of daily labor. Shemust not abdicate (her position)in the face of the responsibilitieswhich the rearing of childrenentails."

,206 SO. MAIN ST.FAll RIVER, MAss.

rtmzwmmmn:mrrrcrrrmzrzrrnwvttosc tin......

K of C PartyMsgr. Coyle Council, Taunton

Knights of Columbus, will holdits annual Christmas party at 8Saturday night, Dec. 17 at Mt..Hope Hall, North Dighton.-Damon Magazu and John Correia'are 'co-'chajrn1en.

TRI..CITYOFFICE, EQUIP.

BUSINESS ANDDUPLICATING MACHINESSecond and Morgan SIs.

FALL RIVERWY 2-0682' OS 9-6712

E. ~: McGINN, Prop.

BLESS MADONNA TOWER: Following the Blessingof the 38 foot high Madonna Tower at the Creed RosaryCo., of No. Attleboro, Bishop Connolly addresses theempl,oyees in the, presence of John Creed, who erected the'tower as a token of gratitude to the Mother of God.

~@p®' Cofre$ M@th<eIfSDlProlb~®mrt1s

Continued lFrom Page OnePope, John said:

"It is necessary to face up tothe reality' of facts that shbw'there will be' an ever largermOVen1Emt of women towardsjobs and employment ... whichcan make then1 economically in-dependeftt and free of need. '

"But if the economic inde­pendence of women has advan;"tages, how n1any problems ariseto confront wOn1an's basic mis­'Sion" which is the molding ofnew creatures!"

The Pope declared that despiteadvantages offered by economicsecurity, a WOn1an must notneglect "fulfiing these reli­gious duties which alone rendedfruitful the education,al role ofa mother." He stressed woman'srole as· wife, and the need for,her in the home when' the hus­band returns fron1 "long hours of,absen~e" _seeking' "recompense

,'for the barren.ness a'nd monotony''surrounding hin1."

" Women' have 'a, "voice 'in the,"house to _which ,all' listen whenit makes i,~Ed;f heardand~~waysresp~cted," the Pope continued.'"It is the watchful and pr,udeQtvoice of the woman, wife an4mother ...Oh, only God knowsthe good brought about, by thisvoice andtlle usefulness it hashad 'for the Church 'arid human

:Il=!l@~y [l=lI@MIi'The December Holy, Hour,

sponsored by Serra Club 'of New:Bedford, will be held, Sunday:afternoon at Our Lady of As­sUn1ption Church, So. SixthStrelilt, New ~edford, at 3 0'clock:

shows they attend, but they can­not protect them from morally

'offensive posters or advertise­ments.

'The' new' law' is 'aimed pri­n1arily at n10vie posters andnewspap'er advertisements. Inearly 1958 Pope Pius XII madea special point of lamenting thedisfiguration 'of the city, ofROn1e by scandalous posters andmorally offensive advertising.

Text of LawThe text of the new law

reters to "any, organizationwhich introduces, affixes ordisplays in public places orplaces' open to the public, d~signs, images,' photographs orfigurative objects meant in anyway for publicity which offendmodesty or public decency, withspecial r~gard to the sensitivityof minors under 18 years of ageand, the 'requiren1ents of theirmoral education."

The law n1akes clear that itapplies also to displays that"represent acts of violencewhich offend morality'andnormal order." , ",

Legu@n cflOe«:elTil~YThe following films are to be

added to the lists in their re­spect-ive 'classifications:

Unobjectionable for adults andadolescents: Goliath and theDragon.

Unobjectionable for' generalpatronage: Cimarron; SerengetiShall Not Die.

Unobjectionable for ,adults:Exodus; Heroes Die Youhg;Grass Is Greener;, Facts of Life;The You'ng On,e.'" ,.Objeeti~nab1Ez)n part for, a,ll:

Esther and The King (anY,Bibli...'cal values ·are.nuUified 1:Iy ex':';cessive .sensuali~y ,in',qllncing,,costumes arid' situations): .' , ', Objectionable' 'in part for 'all:'The Entertainer (although themeis seriously inten'ded; there aresuggestive elements that areobjectionable) •., '

TV ,to feature,Art Pieces

NEW YORK (NC) ,- Master­pieces of world art win be usedto illustrate the life of Christona nationwide television programDec. 21.

Featured will be works bysuch masters as Bellini, Botti­celli, Michelangelo, Caravaggio,EI Greco, Raphael, Titian, Vel­asquez and others.

The art works will be seen on"The Coming Of Chris~," a spe­cial Christmas season presenta­tion of the "Project 20" program.

A production team photo­graphed the masterpieces inItaly, Gern1any, France, Ireland,Austria, Belgiun1, Holland, Spainand the United States, whereihey are loca,ted in museums, li­braries, churches ,and privatecollections.. I •

The full-color program will betelecast from 8:30 to 9 P.M.(EST) over the National Broad-,

, casting Company television net-work. ' ,," ",

1l@tY!Ii'$: A$o<OJBRUSSELS (NC)' - :Father

Dominique Pire, O.P., who wonthe 1958 Nobel ,Peace Prize forhis assistance to European refu­gees, has left here to make an

, inspection 'toUr 'of refugee campsin Asia. He will visit Jordan, theU-Hed'J\l'ab Republic, Pakistan,India and 'Japan at the invitationof their governments.

Holy Constable 'LUANDA (NC)-Two weeks

of ceren10nies are being heldhere in Portuguese West Africa

, to mark the sixth centenary ofthe birth of Blessed Nuno AlvesPereira, Holy Constable of Por­tugal, who' drove the Spanish

, out of his country and later be­came Ii earmelite ,Brother., .,' :

~., _ - , •.... ···c"~.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 15, 19602

lFO~'ii'Y Il=il©ll»~$

101EV'1Ol'il'~ON 'Dec. lS-:-St. Bernard, Assonet.

St. Mary's Home, NewBedford.

Dec. 25-c-St. Helena's' Con-, vent, Fall River.

St. Anthony's Convent,Fall River. '

Jan. l-C at he,d r a 1 of St.St. Mary of the Assump':tion; Fall River.

"Ito'ly B~trn$' 'I ndecceJlfi}t A@$,Despcte 'R~d O[p)fP)@~ot~@1rn

ROME (NC)-The Italian Senate has overriddericommunist and other leftwing opposition to 'pass into a

'law a bill banning indecent ads. The law forbids posters,advertisements or other public displays that offend modesty,particularly of the young.It also outlaws any publicdisplay depicting acts of vio­lence that offend morality.Offenders ',are ' liable to jail'tern1s of three n10nths to threeyears and fines up to $130., The ~ew la~ was 'previously

approved by the lower house ofthe legislature, the' Chan1ber ofDeptities.

Left Wing,Passage in the Senate was

marked by lengthy debate andstrong opposition fron1 commun­ist and extreme leftwing social­ists. Debate followed a month­long argun1ent over a general 'tightening of censorship of n10V­ies and plays in Italy. The cen­sorship was designed to c~eck

an upsurge of portrayals ofviolence and sexual ab!:,orn1al-itY.

'During Senate debat,e overthe new ,law, Christian Den1o­cr'atic leaders pointed' out, toleftwing opponents that the lefthad not opposed the bill duringdebate in the lower house. '

Leftwingers replied that thesituation had changed since .thebill was debated in the Chamberof Deputies this SUn1mer. Policehave been stopping the exhibi­tion of movies until offending'scenes have been cut, they said.

Offensive PostersThe Christian Democrats ar­

gued that parents have somecontrol over what publicationtheir youngsters read and what

THE ANCHORSecond-class mail privileges ..utborlsed

0& Fall River. Mass. Published eve..,Thursday a& 410 Highland Avenue. FaDRiver. MaS8., by the Catholic Press of theDioeese of Fall River. Subscription price~,~~ ppstpa.1d $4.0!l.~,~ , ' .."

IDEC. 20Rev. Manuel S. Travassos,

~953, Pastor, Espirito Santo, FallRi.ver.

MCIIS$ ©rrdl<~FRIDAY-Mass of Ember Friday

of Advent. Sin1ple. Violet.,Mass Proper; No Gloria; Sec­ond ColleCt St. Eusebius,Bishop and Martyr; CommqnPreface.

SATURDAY - Mass of EmberSaturday in Advent. Simple.Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo­ria; Common Preface.

SUNDAY-IV Sunday of Advent.Double of I Class" Violet. 'MassProper; No Gloria; Creed;Preface of Trinity. .'

MONDAY - Mass of previous, Sunday. Simple. Violet. Mass

Proper; ,No Gloria; CommonPreface. ,

TUESDAy- Mass of previous, Sunday. Simple. V,iolet. Mass

Proper; No Gloria; CommonPreface.

WEDNESDAY - St. Tho n1 a s,Apostle. Double of II Class.Red. :Mass Proper; Gloria;Second ,Collect of Sunday;Creed; Preface of Apostles.

THURSDAY-St. Frances XavierCabrinf, Virgin. Double of IIClass:, White: Mass Proper;Gloria; Second Collect of theS':lnciay; COn1mon Preface...,

,.:;Necrolo9Y~ ", ~Tim ~NCHOR listS' the ail-

,; niver,sary. dates of priests wh'o"setved the '!Fall Rive- Diocese '"s~nc!l' its formation in 1904',with the intention ,that the" faiii-ful will give them a',prayerful' remembrance. -' "

Page 3: 12.15.60

INVESTITURE CEREMONY: At solemn ceremony ofinvestiture newly,..created monsignori-both service chap­lains-stand with presiding bishops. Left to right, Rt. Rev.

3

What About You?

... a Franciscan Sister!Girl. sixteen-a~d-over are needed

to serve God a' Nurses. laborator,and X-ra, Technicians, Accountanll,Dietitians, S~amst~elSes, Cooks. andin other hospital departments.

Mother Mar, Elizabeth at St. Mar,of the Angels Convent. Rock Island.lIIinoi.. will send you more infor­mation on this happy life.

Special consideration isgiven to "late" 'vocations.

prayerfulness; their piety, notthe gloomy, round-shoulderedtype, . but the cheerful, hopefulkind, have marked them as menof God."

Attending the investiture cer­emony were many monsignoriand priests of the Diocese, chap­lains from both the Army andAir Force, and many of the faith­ful. There were large groupsfrom both St. Anthony of Paduaparish in New Bedford, whereMsgr. Hamel served before en­tering the service, and CorpusChristi parish, Sandwich, and St.Paul's parish, Taunton, whereMsgr. Fenton formerly servecL

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"We rejoice because we haveseen two of our friends singledout for special honors by theVicar of Christ at the recom­mendation of their bishop.Whether we have known Msgr.Fenton or Msgr. Hamel a shortor a long period of time-and Ihave known them both longyears-we have with Christianintuition found them to be gen­erous, frank, dutiful, honorable,wholesome and loyal. On thissplendid natural foundation, Godhas reared a stalwart, sacerdotaledifice. They have led men andthe priests whom they supervise-not merely by words but moreeffectively by example. Theyhave radiated deep, simple, abid­ing faith. Their tender but manly

, Msgr. Henri A. Hamel, U.S.A.F., Bishop Connolly, BishopJames H. Griffiths, Auxiliary Bishop of New York, andRt. Rev. Msgr. Bernard J. Fenton, U.S.A.

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American eagle; when belea­guered Corregidor caused bravemen and wise to wonder. Ber­nard Fenton and Henri Hamel,together with other priests oftheir diocese, left the securityand conveniences of their par­ochial assignments in this Com­monwealth which had witnessedthe first battle for the freedomand independence of this nationto stand beside, to strengthenthousands of men not merelyfrom the Bay State but fromevery State' and dependencywhich made up this miraclewhich is America. If their menhad to go, their priests wouldgo with them-even into theValley of Death.

Legions of Priests

"Bernard Fenton and HenriHamel were symbols of thelegions of priests who answeredthe call of God and country.And when the document of sur­render was signed in Tokyo Bayin 1945, they continued on ...They knew that there still wouldbe a vast priestly task to do ...In the nearly 19 years of theirpriesthood which they havegiven to their apostolate, theyhave literally girdled the globeand criss-crossed the world intheir priestly peregrinations ina manner which might make thattireless, travelling missioner­Paul of Tarsus-just a trifle en­vious if there be such a thing asholy envy in heaven.

Bishop Griffiths

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Miss Giardullo is majoring Inmusic at Emmanuel College,where she is studying on a par­tial scholarship. She is presidentof the senior class and a mem­ber of the dean's list.

1960 Thanksgiving ClothingCollection. The total amount ofclothing collected may exceedlast year's total of almost 15miliion pounds.

. Continued from' Page OneChaplain of the Air Force Com­mand and Staff Chaplain atScott Air Force Base in Illinois.

Priests-ChaplainsBishop Griffiths described elo­

quently the tragic events of thewar which saw a total of 11,000,­000 American men and womenin the armed services with theirspiritual needs attended to by3,048 Catholic priests-chaplainsand another 2,100 priests asauxiliary chaplains. Of this num­bel', 67 were killed in action.

As the Bishop said, "TheMacedonian cry, 'Come over andhelp us!' was heard in S1. Paul'srectory in Taunton and in St.Anthony's parish in New Bed­ford, by two young priests of theFall River Diocese even .be'fore,the first great draft of February,1942. The Call came at a timewhen the fortunes of this coun­try were at their lowest; whendaily disasters made up theheadlines; when defeat and re­treat momentarily muted the

lOSS G1ARDULLO

Select Emmanuel College SeniorAs Outstanding Catholic Youth

WASHINGTON (NC) - Anita Giardullo "exemplifies manyLouise Giardullo of Boston, vice th.ousands of Catholic youthpresident of the National Coun- across the, country who liveeil of Catholic Youth, is the Out- their daily lives honoring Godstanding Catholic Youth of the and practicing loyalty to their,Year. country." Presentation of the

An honor student at Emman- youth award will be made inuel College, Boston, Miss Giar- Boston next February.dullo has been active in Catholicorganizations both in and outof school. .

Msgr. Schieder said Miss

Clothing DriveGoes Over Top

BRONX (NC) - More than:[our million pounds of clothingand bedding donated by U. S.Catholics have been receivedhere at the warehouse of Na­tional Catholic Relief Services­National Catholic Welfare Con­ference.

Tom Caffrey, warehouse su­perintendent, said that 900,000pounds of clothing, shoes, blan­kets and bedding were receivedhere recently. He said that 3,­250,000 pounds had been re­ceived previously.

The clothing and other sup­plies were donated by U. S.Catholics to the U. S. Bishops

·CamelotU OwesSome CreditTo Loras

,n U B U QUE (NC)'"Camelot," a musical of thedays when knighthood wasin flower, opened on NewYork's famed Broadway to theraves of critics and predictionsof a long run... The first night audience "oh­

ed" and "ah-ed" over the breath­taking costumes, especially thearmor, shields, swords and othertrappings of the knights.. But folks liere at Loras College

can attest that old truc:k springs,.saucer-like children's sleds, evena.: discarded brass bed, went into'the making of the armor, swords,daggers and other props.

It all came about when FatherKarl Schroeder, head of theLoras College drama department,visited New York last Summer.He dropped in at the studio. ofHelene Pons, who had been re­tained to make the costumes for"Camelot." She had turned outthe costumes for several Lorasshows and she told FatherSchroeder she was having diffi­culty getting authentic adorn­ments for the production.

"Why we've made armor forour own Shakespearean play,"the priest replied. "We'll be gladto help."

Back home Father Shroederonlisted the aid of Bob Bahl,college senior from Jessup, Iowa,who had served as technician forLoras productions, and FatherKenneth Dowling, Latin andGreek teacher, as technical ad­visers.

Together they fashioned theblades for swords and daggersout of old truck springs. YoungBahl transformed the saucer-likesleds into shields, covered withcaribou skin or horsehide. Thediscarded brass bed went formaking decorations for thearmor, shields and other trap­pings.

Page 4: 12.15.60

Vincentians PlanCharity' Schoo~

LOS ANGELES (NC)-TheSt. Vincent de Paul Society willopen the Ozanam School ofCharity here in January.

Through a course of nine night.classes for men it will reviewprinciples of charity and trainnew members of the St. Vincentde Paul Society.

Auxiliary Bishop Tim 0 t h',.Manning of Los Angeles toldthe society's annual meetingthat this school could be oneof the biggest steps forward inthe past 25 years in the fieldof charity.

Carefully selected and trainedVincentians will form theschool's staff.

Parallels CCDBishop Manning pointed to II

parallel in the training givenby the Confraternity of Chris­tian Doctrine, which now con­ducts a two-year course here forcatechists. It has an enrollmentof 2,600 adults.

Bishop Manning' encouragedVincentians to attract the youngmen of their parishes to attendthe school and receive the train­ing and stimulation for the workof charity.

Superior Court Judge J. How­ard Ziemann was re-electedsociety president at the meet­ing.

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things considered, this was thenecessary and the proper thingto do. .

It is just possible, however,that in the years that lie 'aheadthe Catholic social action move­ment, while' continuing to takean active interest in the above­mentioned problems, wilL haveto give "equal time" to a num­ber of 'other problems whichwere not ioo acute even 25 yearsago but are now clamoring forimmediate attention.

If Professfor Abell's recentbook, in addition to 'providingus with an accurate survey ofour past accomplishments in thefield of Catholic social. action,also serves as a stimulus tocreative thought and_ effectiveaction in these new problemareas, it will be well worth theenormous amount of time andenergy which must have goneinto its preparation.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec.15,19~O4

In view of the fact that Pro­fessor Abell attaches special im­portance to the work of theNCWC Social Action Depart­ment I am reluctant to commenton his optimistic assessment orevaluation of the past accomp­lishments of the American Cath­olic social movement. .

I would prefer to raise a fewquestions about the future ofCatholic social action in thiscountry-questions which cameto my mind as I was reading theprofessor's book.

The first and perhaps the mostimportant question is whetheror not American Catholics, nowthat they have begun to climbup the economic ladder and aremoving into the so-called"better" suburbs in ever-in­creasing numbers, will be as in­terested in social reform as atleast a significant minority 'oftheir immigrant forebears were.

A second question is whetheror not the social action pro­grams and techniques of the pastare adequate for the present andthe future.

During the period covered by ,Professor Abell's book, andparticularly during the latterhalf of that period" the Ameri­can Catholic social action move­ment concentrated for the mostpart on the labor p~oblem andCD, social welf~ leglslation..AIl'

laud~. A@[(cn Ab~n'$ Study"O~ Cai'~@~8·~ SO(:D~~ A(tQO~

By Msgr. 'George G. HigginsDirector, NCWC Social Action Department

As a general rule, I try not to encroach upon the'territory of regular book reviewers by reviewing currentbooks in this column, but whenever I come across a particu­larly noteworthy volume in the specialized field of Catholicsocial action or Catholicsocial teaching I feel justi­fied in making an exceptionto this rule. This happenedlast week with the publicationof a new book by Aaron I. Abellentitled Ameri­can Catholicismand SocialAction (Hano­ver House,New York,$4.95). I shouldlike to recom­mend ProfessorAbell's "c 0 m ­pre hen ­sive study ofthe Catholicsocial m 0 v e ­ment in theUnited States from 1865 to1950." To the best of my kno~l­edge, it is the only book '~f, itskind on the market, ,and it s avery good book indeed.

Double ProblemDuring the period 1865~195?,

Profesor Abell points out ill hiSpreface, the Church in theUnited States was presentedwith a double problem: "how,on the one hand, to championthe cause of the poor withoutendangering the public interestor the common good, and, onthe other how to oppose social­ism with~ut negating or ignor­ing the claims of social reform."

Profesor Abell concludes thatthe record of the Church inmeeting this two-edge(i' chal­lenge has been impressive.

"In recent years, particularlysince 1933," he says, "Catholicsocial action has been extensiveand richly varied, a ..responsechiefly to the irresistable de­mands of the people in an eraof depression and war for agreater measure of economicsecurity, social justice anddemocratic rights,

Impressive Record"Yet from its formative years

American Catholicism had par­ticipated in reform movements:in the humanitarian crusade forurban welfare following theCivil War, in the labor crisis ofthe 1880's and 1890's, in thesocialist-social reform battles ofthe Progressive era, and in theorganized social service of theWorld War I period.

"In affiliation with thesemovements, Catholic social ac­tion was prepared for its cul­mination in the impressiverecord of the last two decades."

Page 5: 12.15.60

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Canadian BishopsPlan SeminaryIn Honduras

OTTAWA (NC) - TheCanadian Hierarchy willbuild, staff and maintain aninterdiocesan major semi­nary at Tegucigalpa, Honduras.

Four Canadian priests arethere inaugurating the work:Msgr. Gerard Cambron, formerhead of the Sherbrooke missionin Brazil, who will be rector ofthe seminary; Father ArmandLeBlanc of the Moncton diocese,Father Laurent Gagnon of theSt. Anne de la Pocatiere dioceseand Father Real Villemure of theThree Rivers diocese.

Construction of the seminarywill begin in February. Planscall for classes to begin in Feb­ruary, 1962, according to FatherFrancis T. O'Grady, S.F.M.,director of the Canadian CatholicOffice for Latin America.

"This initiative of the Cana­dian Hierarachy is the first of itskind for Canada and is of greatimportance," the priest said. "Itindicates a new awareness of adiocesan obligation toward theneeds of the Universal Church.For the first time our Hierarchy,directly and as a whole, under­takes not only the construction,but the staffing and maintenanceof a project of major importancein a desperately needy area."

THe ANCHOR-Thurs., Dec. 15, 1960

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Christlfi11l«!lS MQl$$VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope

John will offer Christmas Mid­night Mass in the Pauline cha­pel at the Vatican for diplomats

pressed in an esasy that said accredited to the Holy See."T.... Q Pope is always happy and .simple. He does not want peopler~==--~~~=~~=lto go to Hell, but to Paradise." ~ in today's I

Some Annoyance i ~

Paolino Righi, however, I smartest .1showed some annoyance. The Iyoungster complained that the ISwiss Guards stopped the Pope I home s . . . Ifrom visiting his school play in I . iwhich he was the star. L _

Another child, whose father isin prison, wrote: "I see the Pope --,----,.-·111comforting my father. I knowthat one day he visited the pris- _--4----,- j

.oners. I see the Pope full of lovelike Jesus. I am disobedient, butyesterday I was good, this iswhy I am also happy."

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his home to the Pope's privatestudy. The idea was, he said, tosurprise the Pope.

Other pupils, while lackingthe scope and daring of thetunnel approach, showed orig­inality and the' poetrY of thechildish soul.

Six-year-old Patrizia Prior­eschi said she loved the Popebut had never seen him andtherefore "I do not knowwhether he is in good health orbad."

Most of the children sharedthe vision of the Pope as ex-

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Amii'y Assocnation Honors Bishops,Pries~s as Benefactors of Japan

TOKYO (NC) - Two bishops Bishop Byrne, a missionary inand two priests are among 298 Japan from 1934 until he wasAmericans honored here as ben- appointed Apostr"-:: Delegate toefactors of Japan. Korea in 1947, was cited for his

They are Bishop Raymond A. contributions to the moderationLane, M.M., of Lawrence, Mass.; of U.S. occupation policy inthe late Bishop Patrick J. postwar Japan and for helpingByrne, M.M., of Washington, to promote social welfare workD.C.; and Fathers Leopold H. in prewar Japan.Tibesar, M.M.; of Quincy, Ill., Father Steinbach, now work­and Leo J. Steinbach, M.M., of ing in the Kyoto diocese, wasChariton, Iowa. comme'nded for his efforts to

The benefactors were honored obtain food and clothing fromfor their contributions to the the U. S. and other countries forprogress of Japan during the needy Japanese.past century by the Japan-U.S. Father Tibesar, also stationedAmity and Trade Centennial in Kyoto, was praised for hisAssociation. Among those com- w 0 r k for Japanese nationsmended were Commodore Mat- placed in relocation camps inthew Perry, who opened Japan the U.S. during the war, andto trade with the West in 1853, for nis postwar social work in'and Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Japan.who commanded Allied occupa-tion forces in Japan after WorldWar II.

Aids RepatriationBishop Lane, former superior

g e n era 1 of the MaryknollFathers and former Vicar Apos­tolic of Fushun, Manchuria, waspraised for sending a delegationto Tokyo after World War IIthat opened the way for therepatriation of a million Japan­ese nationals from Manchuria.That area, now a part of China,was controlled by Japan beforethe war.

ROME (NC) - His HolinessPope John XXIII may not knowit, but there is a plot to dig atunnel under the Vatican's wallsas part of a surprise visit.

Details of the plot were un­covered during a contest amongRome's grade school childrenwho were asked to write on thesubject "How I See the Pope."

Surprise for PopeOne youngster, whose name

has been withheld, took thecontest theme literally and a.n­nounced he intended to see thePope by digging a passage from

FQrmer 'Fall River Teacher Writes HistoriesOf Notre Dame de Namur FoundressesA sister of Notre Dame de Namur who taught English and Latin at Durfee High

School, Fall River, before her entrance in religion has. become the chronicler of thefoundresses of her congregation. Sister Mary Fidelis, S.N.D., the former Maude E.McManama, published "As Gold in the Furnace," the biography of Blessed Julie Billiartin 1956. "Treasure in a '

for her books, but she notes thatField," the life of Venerable they are "entirely factual saveMother St. Joseph, co-foun- where readability or artisticdress of the community, was effect demanded details: In suchreleased recently by the Bruce instances the details were madePublishing Company. to concur with truth or inevita-

Together, the books tell the bility."exciting story of the early years Both biographies should haveof the Notre Dame community, wide readership among studentswhich "rode out the storm of the of Notre Dame schools and allFrench Revolution and the op- others appreciative of the strug-pression of William of Orange." gles a community cradled in war

Blessed Julie was of humble and persecution endured to sur-origin, and fell prey to crippling vive and become great.illness early in life, but wasmiraculously restored to health I;;ister, editor of the "Notreand thereafter worked diligenUy .Dame Quarterly" of the Massa-in the foundation of her com- chusetts Province of the Sistersmunity. of Notre Dame, recalls that

Working with her and sharing Father Bradley was rector of St.her devotion was Mother St. Mary's Cathedral when sheJoseph, a woman of noble birth taught at Durfee High School inwho consecrated her fortune to the early 1920's. Rev. Francisthe work of the Sisters of Notre McKeon, now pastor of SacredDame. She succeeded Blessed Heart Church, Taunton, was aJulie as superior-general of the curate at the Cathedral.congregation, serving in that Father McKeon was then incapacity for 22 years until her charge of Cathedral Camp, whiledeath in 1838. Sister Fidelis was director of

Throughout World Notre Dame Camp at Bristol.The Sisters of Notre Dame She also remembers that Father

now staff schools throughout the Donovan was in charge of St.world. The community numbers Vincent's Home and the futuresome 5,000 members in about 500 Bishop Cassidy was pastor ofhouses. The Sisters came to the St. Patrick's Church.Fall River Diocese in 1959 with SlISTlER lFIlIJilElLlIS, S.N.lIJi. A graduate of Boston Acad-the opening of Bishop Stang mey of Notre Dame and BostonHigh School in North Dart- Sister Mary Fidelishas chosen University, Sister is now atmouth. the romanticized biography form Notre Dame Academy, Roxbury.

BeginBrief

Seminarian's lF~t~er

Takes First VowsWESTMONT (NC) - A 44­

year-old man whose son isstudying for the priesthoodmade his first profession ofvows as a Franciscan Brother.

The former Frank A. Tinney,Sr., of Spring Grove, Ill., tookthe name in religion of BrotherGale, O.F.M., in the ceremonyat St. Paschal's Friary here. Hewas formerly an employee ofthe Chicago fire department.

Mr. Tinney's wife died 20years ago, and he raised theirtwo children by himself. Hisdaughter is married and his son,Frank, Jr., is studying for thepriesthood at the SalvatorianFathers' seminary in St. Nazianz,Wis.

PAPAL HONORS: Jeffer­son Caffery, a retired U.S.ambasador and convert tothe Catholic Church, hasbecome the first U.S. citizenin the reign of Pope Johnto receive the papal decora­tion of the Grand Cross ofthe Order of Pius. NC Photo.

Work toOn Serra

WASHINGTON (NC)-Workwill begin next summer on theformal brief to the Holy Seeproposing the beatification causeof Fat her Junipero serra,O.F.M., famed California mis-aioner. .

This was reported here byFather Noel F. Moholy, O.F.M.,vice postulator for the cause ofthe Franciscan who established astring of 21 missions in SpanishCalifornia. He died in 1784.

DocumentsTen thousand pages of histor­

ical documents have been puttogether as a result of 20 yearsof investigation, said FatherMoholy, who rece.ntly returnedfrom Rome.

CIA historian who will work.on . the formal brief to be pre­sented to the Sacred Congrega­tion of Rites will go to Rome bythe end of next Summer," hesaid.

VenerableIf the brief is approved by

the Vatican, Father Serra maywell be declared Venerable, hesaid.

Father Serra, who is one ofCalifornia's two representativesin the National Statuary Hall inthe U. S. Capital, is also thepatron of the Serra Internationalorganization of business and pro­fessional men devoted to en­couraging religious vocations.

Liberties U~5@1Tll Hats'Sunday Sa~e~ laws

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheAmerican Civil Liberties Unionhas challenged the constitution­ality of Sunday sales laws intwo states in briefs submittedto the U.S. Supreme Court.

The ACLU, speaking throughamicus curiae (friend of thecourt) briefs, assailed the val­idity of laws banning unneces­sary Sunday business activity inMassachusetts and Pensylvania.

The civil liberties g r 0 u pclaims the laws violate the con­stitutional guarantees of reli­gious freedom and freedomfrom state interference withindividual liberties.

Page 6: 12.15.60

Weekly Calendar:0,.. -Feast D~ys, TODAY---St. Ireriaeus ;II ft'.,Companions, Ma~yrs. They we..a group' of 22 martyrs who weN

,put to 'death for the Faith abotli,2~ in the Valerian persecutioa.

. 'lJicluded in ,th~numbers were,SS. Ant1}.ony, Theodore, Satu~

nius and' Victor. :

TOMORROW - St. Eusebi~'Bishop-Martyr. He 'was the scion

, of a rioble family of Sardinia. Hewas taken to Rome by his"mother, where- he was ordained.'He served the <:::hurch at VercelHand was the choice 'of clergy andlaity when the episcopal chah­became vacant. He fought cour­ageously against the- Arian her~

etics, who' had him banished to'Syria,where he ,underwent many'hardships. He returned to Ver­celli under the reign of Julian in370.',He is revered as a martyrbecause of the hardships besuffered.

SATURDAY - St. Lazarus,Bishop-Confessor. He was thedisciple and friend of Christ,and was raised from the dead byOur Lord. It is believed thatwith his sisters, Mary andMartha, he journeyed into Gailiand was the first Apostle ofsouthern France, becoming Bisb­,op of Marseilles. He is the patroDsaint of that city.

SUNDAY-Fourth Sunday in,Advent. Generally this date isthe feast of SS. Rufus and Zosi­mus, Martyrs. They were mal'-

, tyJ;'s, of the early Church, suIfer~ ,,ing about 109 at Philippi inMacedo'nia. Their martyrdom ismentioned by St. Polycarp in hisEpistle to the Philippians.

MONDAY-St. Timothy, Dea­con-Martyr. Little is known ofhim except that he lived inMorocco, Africa, and that in de;­fense of his Faith was burned'to death at the stake.

TUESDAY-SS. Liberatus andBajulus, Martyrs. Little is cer­tain of the dates when they livedor where they suffered martyr­dom, although it is believedthat they suffered in the East.Their relics are venerated inRome.

WEDNESDAY - St. Thomas,of Galilee was a fisherman andApostle. He was one of thosecalled by Our Lord to be oneof His Apostles. After the Res­urrection he would not believethe report that Christ had arisen.At the actual sight of the pierceahands, feet and side and thegentle rebuke of the Saviour, heuttered the joyous words: "M~

Lord and My God." After theAscension, he preached in Par­thia and it is generally acceptedtradition that he preachedibIndia, where he suffered martyr­dom.

"','fheCenstis .,':' ...'

Urges SQund UnderstandingOf Church's Uniqueness

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

Someone, manifestly a low and suspicious character,has described football as an. athletic contest played bytwenty-two men, after which 50,000 spectators troop outof one side of the stadium shouting "We won!" America,

now slowly recuperating group which would not hesitatefrom its quadrennial politi- to embarrass the main body bycal football game, has the claiming the spoils on Inaugura­comfort of knowing that tion Day. ,there were at least 50,001 rooters Useless to pretend that such a'for' the winning team as against group does not exist. But as aa paltry 49,999 matter of practical judgmentfor 'the' van- most American Catholics with aquished. ~ u t grain of common sense realizeaside from the clearly that in many ways aastonishing ma- Catholic President must ofthematics of the necessity bend over backwards

to reassure his critics that he iscase, the com-mentators ' are not a Vatican pawn.well occupied Actually, in some areas of.in extracting concern, notably that of justicecautionary les- for our Catholic educationalsons from the system, it is arguable that acampaign and Catholic as President is a handi-its harvest of cap rat~r than a benefit.fresh precedents in American Sees Warninghistory. But the real question goes

This seems like' a harmless deeper. Writing in, Christianityenough pastime, and ,for the and Crisis, a clear-thinking and'most part it is.' A Catholic as hard-hittil1g liberal ProtestantPr~-' ~_ent is bound to furnish .journal, Professor Roger - L.almost unlimited, cop y for ' Shinn of Union Theologicaljournalists who specialize in Seminary 'makes a point whichdetails of protocol and domestic should shock us into awareness.intimacy. We shall certainly ''The campaign of 1960"; he

.hear much of where the Ken- remarks, "may well mark anedy family worshipped last· step in the transition of Ameri­Sunday, what the First Lady can Catholicism into the status alleged a certain min' resi..wore, how the children behaved, of one more denomination. due of persecution, sufficient, atand how much was dropped into Contrasting the Catholic dog- least, to lend a sociological andthe collection plate. matic claim to infallibility in political coloring to a Catholie

This is all part of the penalty faith and morals with its socio- distinctiveness i n Americanpaid by those who seek office logical and political acceptance pluralism.or have it thrust upon them. of pluralism, he questions whe- Now that distinctiveness, for­America has an enormous and ther these propositions are not mally, is no longer valid. Theinsatiable appetite for prying "culturally and p~y:'l"-.fogically sole distinctiveness, left is ourinto the private lives of those irreconcilable in the American theological belief in the unique-it exalts. future." , ness of the Church, the One True

Effect on Segments Tender Spot Church existing in this ')luralOf considerably greater im- Now neither Dr. Shinn nor society on terms of eq'iJality

portance is the effect a Catholic ourselves can speak with confi- with other religious gro1.!O)S,in the White House will have dence in regard to the cultural Danger of Compromiseon the two major religious seg- and psychological future of The temptation, doubtless un-ments of the nation, the Prot- America. But let us be honest conscious but none the lessestant majority and the Catholic enough to admit that he has put real, for American Catholics tominority. \ his finger on a very tender spot. settle for compromise with plur-

Some time ago, while the There is danger, perhaps the alism even in this remainingcampaign was in progress, we gravest we have experienced as area is somehow heightened bFused the word "trauma" to American Catholics, of accept- this election of 1960.describe a fairly, widespread ing for ourselves a merely de- For one thing, it has forced.Protestant reaction to the im- nominational status. It may not popularization of a "theology ofpending loss of. its paramount' be altogether, fair to cite Mr. pluralism" before the theolo­national symbol, the PresidencY-Kennedy's campaign "theologiz- gians themselves (let alone theas its own exclusive birthright ing"as evidence of a'trend ,in Catholic laity) have fully E~lI-

,and, preserve. , this direction, but it is a point plored its possibilities and pi~And while the - immediate ,'well,taken that his emphasis on falls.' '

aftermath is a tribute to the religion' as a purely personal For another, it has induced •sound judgment and restraint of' matter,' without public interest, readiness to consign religion toresponsible Americans, it is - could lead to some strange, con- _an ,exclusively private realmhardly conceivable that good· clusions~' where it can only be stifled. Itluck should hold to the extent Lose Distinction •' need not suggest regret for' whatof' keeping anger and prejudice Pluralism'is a' fact with which has happened if we say that theunder wraps during the, whole we' have to liv'e, and for which price may be heavier than ...time ahead. - , I we are, striving to formulate a'·· had reckoned. ,

Catholic ReaeUoD theology consistent with the eli- The need is urgent throughoutOur interest here, however, is sential current of historic Cath- the Catholic' body for a c1E~8I'

the reaction of the Catholie olic thought. But so long as it 'definition and a sound undeF­segment. We are not thinking so eould be said,that the American" standintt'o£ the uniqueness 01.much of ,the. Catholic lunatic: . Catholic was still disbarred, e~- " the Church in this existentialfringe, that foolish but some- fectively, fr<,>m the highest ~- 'pluralism. For this timely war-D­time. exceedingly vociferoua fice in the land, there could be ing we thank you, Dr. ShinD-

A beatnik story has two characters passing a localchurch and seeing the by-now familiar sign, "Put Christback into Christmas." And one of the individuals'commentsto his friend, "Look at that. They are trying to put religioninto everything these days."

It is strangEl how even the very word "Christmas" has,by its very repitition, lost- so much of its significance, evenits derivation. It is the old story of familiarity breedingnot contempt but lack of awareness. A whole host of con­notations has built up around the idea of Christmas, mostof them promoted by commercial interests. Speak ofChristmas and people think of presents, cards, red-suitedand bell-ringing Santa Clauses multiplying themselves onevery street corner, tinsel and trees, tired feet and,demanding children, pretty cribs and artistic Holy Familygrouns.

There has been a growing and successful attempt inrecent years to emphasize the religious aspect of Christmas,to feature the crib over the reindeer, and Bethlehem overtoyland. But so much of that can be external and visual.The real change must be effected in the hearts of men, ina deeper awareness that this is Christ's daY,the day ofthe Prince of Peace, the Redeemer of mankind, the lightand splendor of the Father, the ICing whose name is eternal.

A new appreciation of Christmas, a deeper awarenessof the fact, even fresh language in speaking of it - allthese are needed to really put not Christ back intoChristmas but to put men back into tHe Christmas scene.

OFF.ICIAl ..NEWSPAPER ,OF ..THE DIOCESE OF FALL, RIVER,Published weekly by The Catholic Press ,of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Av'enue 'Fall River, Mass., OSborne' 5-7151 .

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

GENERAL MANAGER ' ASST..GENERAl MANAGERRev. Daniel F. Shalloo,M.A. ,Rev. J,ohn P. DriscoH

MANAGING EDITORHugh J.Golden

~ .....

..Wfhe..·ANCHOR

6.:Smartly TaiIored~C~os's:" . . .'

.A jewelry store ad in bmi.of the St,mday newspapers'featured'. several- types of ,"Cross of Dhlll).onds." -One. typeoffered'for sal~ was described as ('14 full cut diamonds insmartly, tailored'cross.'-' -- ' "

, "The-in~v'itable thought followed the, reading of .the ad-.that the's'e words can'be'taken out ,of context and applIed

, ' -'quite . 'appropriately, :to tlie area: 'of, human values 'arid, activity.' ' . -, , _

The idea o( a cross :..:-, any kind of sacrifice or mortifi-: cation' or struggl~has become repi.tgnant~to a modern

society and - sadly --: to this American culture which wasborn in revolution but now waxes fat with the world'shighest standard of lIving. And what has all this luxurybrought about? "

Soldiers in,]{orea are confused about the reasons for, a police action and betray thefr own ~omrades. A 'survey of

physical, fitness is made in several countries, arid Amer-i~an

, youths rate In the last place for physical strength andendurance. Parents give their children all that money canbuy and the country's delinquency rate rises alarmingly

, every year. Successful busines's men beat a path from their: offices and board rooms to the, psychiatrist's couch. The

greatest inducement for self-denial is, a dietary one- get- thin and 'win ~ spouse" live longer to enjoy the, good th~~is,of life. '.

The very idea of a cross is looked upon as a medievalanachronism - a religious fossil. And so the cross isreduced to the status of a decoration - but a glamorous

, decoration, one that is attractive and appealing., ' _Those sincere persons who appreciate that there must 1

be some sort of cross in life' can also find that, they arelooking for a "smartly tailored cross," one tailored ·to thedimensions of ,self-will and self-choice...The spirit on any

,age can even invade the souls' of \hose who are trying ~live lives of dedication to God.

- So men and women who are trying to do God's Will by"living out the duties of their 'state in life must frequently- check' on their acceptance of trials and crosses - mustmake sure that they are accepting what comes froJ1l, theHand of God as a cross, rather than tailoring one to theirown specifications and asking God to approve this as theircross and His Will. '

Indeed, there has been a complete about-face in thefield of, psychology regarding trials and tensions andcrosses. Once these were considered ~he enemy of thehuman spirit and all efforts were expanded to remove themcompletely from life. Then it was discovered that withoutdifficulties the human person turns into a vegetable withnothing to serve as a spur for endeavor and an incentive fortrue human activity. It was then decided that even on ahuman level, man needs some opposition.

'Yes, the cross must stay-and as a cross, as something.hard and uncomfortable and uncompromising. The human

. spirit requires it. And salvation demands it.

Lack of .A.wareness

',' i

, ,. ,

Page 7: 12.15.60

7

Treat

A Delicious,

Made Rite Chsp$Ask fer Them Today

Cash .Prizes

Cash prizes will be awardedto winning students in each ofthe divisions. Duplicate prizeswill be awarded to the teachersof the winning students.

In addition, winning posterswill be offered to publicationmembers of the catholic PressAssociation for reproduction.

Each participating school wiDhold its own local Catholic Pre9llMonth contest-and then wiDsubmit the winning poster to thenational contest, Mr. Doyle said.

Winners will be selectedby a three-man judging commit­tee of professional artists worlrr­ing in the Catholic press.

,Students Become.Whale-Watchers

PALOS VERDES (NC)-FirStit was goldfish with collegians"now it's whales. No swallowing

,this time, of course. Actually.thingS have become a bit morElscientific.

The "Whale Watching Society'"of Marymount College-a non­profit, unincorporated and care­free organization, has beeDformed to observe the migratioraof California gray whales tosouthern waters.

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LITERATURE EXPERT: Miss Margaret Martignoni,children's literature expert, autographs book for SandraSaleeba, St. Joseph's parish, and Alan Amaral, Holy Nameparish, both Fall River.

;' <!1"S",~~~o,,:,,':.: ,""'" ,.,.;~ .. I,G . "

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" ": ;,.••' ,.~ . ... """;".;,'" ',... '1.

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Urge American Sisterhoods to Aid'In Education, of Fo~eign Nuns .

WASHINGTQN (NC) - All education and living needs isU. S.. sisterhoods that conduct borne by 'the U. S. community,colleges have been invited to she said.join in ~ pioneer project wh!ch Under the plan as begun by~ay brmg ~undreds of forelg,n the Mercy Sisters, Sisters fromSisters to thiS country for thelI" several communities in Keralacollege education. have been' brought to these

The purpose is to enable young schools: St. Xavier College, Chi­Sisters from needy areas to re- . cago; Mt. St. Agnes, Baltimore;turn homEi' equipped with special Salve Regina College, Newport,skills to help their communities R. I.; Our Lady of Cincinnatiand the lay 'people they serve. College; and Mount Mercy Col-

'. .' 1 ,lege, Cedar Rapids, Iowa.F?urteen S~sters .from Ker.a a, In addition, St. Mary's College,

India, a~tendlllg SIX accredl:ed Notre Dame, Ind., conducted bycollege.s III the U. S., are t?e pIlot the Holy Cross Sisters, has en­group In th~ pro~ram which was . rolled two Indian Sisters.launched last· year by the U. S.communities' of' the Sisters Of ·Need Is KnownMercy'" . , "The great need for college-

More' are expected, including trained Sisters ha~.been knownsome from Africa and Latin to U. S. commumtIes, but few'America. Expansion of the pro-' could spare the personnel to gogram was urged by the Sister to. thes~ areas ~o teach, so weFormation Conference a move- are trymg to brmg the studentsment among U. S. sis~rhoods to here," Sister Annette said.better the spiritual, academic The program, she said, willand technical training of young train the nuns to be technicians,nuns. ' teachers, musicians, artists, med-

Urged to .Join ical technologists, nurses, socialSister Annette 'Walters, execu- workers, home economists and

tive secretary of the conference, scientists.which has heaquarters here, said ,...-------------..a committee headed by SisterMary' Josetta, president of St.Xavier College, has asked com­munities conducting accreditedcolleges to join the project.

, "We can't say at this earlytime how many foreign Sisterswill be involved, but it could behundreds," said Sister Annette, amember of the Sisters of' St.Joseph of Caroridelet, Mo.

The cost of bringing each Sis­ter here and providing for her

. .':

,;. ~ "

I "

'.: .:: ...... ·Write lot

~; P.. '0: Box ,51:42Baltimore. 8, Md.

."::Trinitarian.'"">. "'Fathers, ,BOYS WANTED for thePrieSthob~and Brotherhood.Lack of fund6 NO' Impedi­ment; ..

OP~fl11 Hoste~LONDON (NC)-The English

Jesuits have opened II hostel·for Catholics from mission areaswho come here to get acquaintedwith'England. Most of the guestsare expected to come from mis­sions conducted by the White'Fathers in Africa.

Contest for StudentsOf Catholic Colleges

CHICAGO (NC) - A contestfor the best short story by astudent attending a Catholiccollege is, being sponsoredjointly by the Thomas More As­sociation of Chicago and theMcGeary Foundation of Miami,Fla.

The winner will receive a$1,000 cash award and the col­lege in which he is enrolled willbe awarded· the McGeary Foun­dation Gold Medal, designed bysculptor Ivan Mestrovic.

Stories entered must be theoriginal, not previously pub­lished works of undergraduatestudents currently enrolled in aCatholic college or university inthe U.S. All manuscripts mustbe typed and received on or be­fore April 1, 1961, by Short StoryContest Editor, The ThomasMore Association, 210. WestMadison Street, Chicago 6, Ill.All manuscripts should be ac­companied by a self-a~idressed.stamped return envelope.

Bus,. ScheduleThe only specialist in chil­

dren's books on the universityfaculty,. Miss Martignoni is keptextremely busy filling requestsfor book lists and informationin her field. One recent requestfor Ii list of character-buildingbooks for young people camefrom Vice President Nixon.

Miss Martignoni is also much. in demand as a speaker in the

Washington' area and fartherafield. She says that she receivesan especially large number ofrequests to address groups inter­ested in forming parish libraries,and she is very pleased to notethe interest in Catholic booksindicated by this. .

In Fall River she spoke to an,audience of students and par­·ents on the importance of fam­ily reading sessions, suggestingseveral titles that would hold theinterest of all members of thefamily. She concluded her ad­dress by telling "The Legend ofthe Christmas Rose" by SelmaLagerlof.

6,780

5,600 .

St., Peter.Raynham.

St. Ann.... T~~n~

HQIy Family ", 33,64Q,Holy Rosary . 25,200 ,,'Jnup.aculate ,~onception 46,420O~'LadY I;lf t.QUrdes 38,200;.,~~p~ed Heart, , . 45,690",S~ Anthon~;,r 'I:' I 58,4,?6$,. ,J41cques. 30,1~

&.: ;Jo,seph, I" ; 53,49lD" "Sltt-.. Mary. " I ,'.1 ,,', 153,292 ",Si. Paul 42,920 ,

"Membership Up ,ROME OiC).~Italy's CathoHe~ ,

~ti<)D . QriIani,~ation ~s ~,.:~~~d that ,i~.~em'bersblp'".fnel:ellsed by 30,934 during thepa£t'.Y.t:ar, to .a,t~W of.3,303~:;

Tuiti~.n<:P~y~,nt\;' Leading Expert ;8", Children's Books; Visits')' ,,' Tt;tE ~,~CHOR- ,QuestionReaches , F II R- T 'll' "'f"H' .. C ,... ,';_... ,. ,.Thurs., ,Dec. 15, 1.960.~S..p[(e·~eCqurt.. " ,~9·:·:.: lVer":~~",,,~: ...~..,/!~ :"... e~,\ o~'~erswn" I" :.' Coth'olie"Press:

MONTPELIER (NC). " '., :" . '; t ••, By Pat~Jel~ ~cGowalill ': '. "Plens Student$'The legal argument wh~th;' , C!ne .~(t~.~ .~,hHted Stat~s:.1ea~in~ au~~,?r.$~ie~.'. on '~~·i.':drenPs ~ite~t~re, Miss '~arg~ret. PO$ier COIrili'~~fi'a "town without a "public;: ~ MartIg,?-,om" W~8, ~ ~re~ent ~ISl~r ~Q" F~ll)}~~~:r.f~~:~f~,~tur.ed sp~aker at. a bo?~ faIr s~on-hign: schqQf c{)Jl pay tuitiQI\~.; sored ~r.: ~9r.~On-, ,~~mor HI?~;,.§c~~<>p~;:·~hm 'anl,~?,~~,~s~o~.:en, MI~s M~rt!?n?m I~ ,the ,~dltor NEW YORK (NC) -.:.. The' 'for,shldents Who, choose ~o .,at- .. of many~ a~~h~!og;le~:.?f chdetry~~ ,:l~~e~atur.~, ·:a,H~~f.~.}"f-; an authorItatIve artIcle on the second<annual students' pos-tend a Catholic high sohool hali." subject f6;G~oiie~.. ~neycih- ;r," '".' /. "',:;"".': ,":,.:t, ter . contest, for Catholicreached the Vermont Suprem~ ed" d'" t." , t Press Month will be held illlCou·rt. ,p la, an IS' a . presen connection with the February.

The court 'is being asked by working on a 10 volume set 1961 observance, the Catholictlle South Burlington school I of children's ',' classics which Press ,Association announcedbo~rd to upset a decision by 'will appear n~xt Fall. here.'Chittenden County Chancellor But she brushes aside her The 1961 contest will havoW~l~am C. Hill.' who h~ld. the achievements as nothing in three divisions, compared withtuition payments unconstituhon-' comparison to the "wonderful only, two last year, according teDQ1.' " gift of the'l!'aith" which she re- James A. Doyle, CPA executivo

South Burlington, like several 'ceived nearly three years ago secretary.other areas, has no public sec-' when she entered the Catholic An' elementai-y-junior highondary school.' Students' travel Church. school division has been addedto nearby B~rling~on, with. a "It's the most precious thing to the contest, Mr. Doyle said.number attendmg Rice MemOrial in life to me" she' declared ex- for Catholic students of the 7th.,High School and Mount St. . pressing w~ndepnent·at ' the 8th and 9th grades. The contestMary Academy. casual way in which many born will also have the high school

A decision from the Suprem~' Catholics regard their mem- and the' college divisions as inCourt is expected during' its bership in the Church. 1960..January tern:'" Formerly" in 'public library

~Ites Law . work: and a children's book~1"istopher Webber, a school editor for the Knopf publishing

boar~ a.ttorn.ey, defended. ~he company, Miss Ml\rtignoni ac­constitutionalIty. of the twtIon cepted a position in the. librar,~ments..He said they are pro- science d~partment of CatholicYld~ for In a Vermont law that University' soon after her' con­RCI~lres each town to furnish version.RCOndary .education, and if atown has no high school, to pro­yide this education' at a schoolselected by the parents or guard­ianS of the student.

Arguing against this were F.Rat Keyser, governor-elect ofVermont, and Stephen B. Rich­ardson, who said proper Church­State relations are violated bythe use of public funds to pay~tion at parochial schools.

Common BenefitMr. Webber, and another school

board .attorney, Frederick JFayette, said the Vermont lawand. the tuition payments givethe Catholic high school pupil abenefit common ,to all pupils.

"The statute is not in supportof religon, but to aid the parentsof all children in a similar situ­ation, who are under compulsionof the law to send their childrento school." Mr. Fayette told thecourt.

Any benefits receiVed by theCatJ;tolic school, the attorneys.said. are incidental, since tuitionpayments may not exceed the~ls per pupil costs.

Mr. Keyser, opposing the pay­ments, called them "a direct fi­D8Ilcing of a religious group, andinsofar as the sectarian schoolstake the place of public schoolsecondary education, it is ablending of secular and sectarianeducation."

"This is prohibited by the FirstAmendment, to the U. S. Consti­tution," he said..

Taunton DriveContinued from Page One

high school campaign. The Im­maculate Conception parish cur­ate also announced a general.training session for all workersin the l3-parish drive at thePark Theater, Taunton, at 8Tuesday night, Jan. 10.

The special and memorial giftstotal $633,280, Fr. Lyons reportedtoday. "Although meetings forthe special and memorial gifts

. volunteers have ended, never­theless the door is still open foranyone wishing to contributeunder either of these categories,"Fr. Lyons emphasized.

Fr. Lyons revealed the follow­ing parish totals today for thellPecial and memorial phasea ofthe. campaign:

North DightonQ. Joseph $29,84~

Dig~tolil

Page 8: 12.15.60

: ,

~..A' ...'11.1• .-. '...,..~_.. Southern New England!o

&argest Millinery Fashion SIoM134 SOUTH MAIN STREET

FALL RIVER'_o_o_a_a_a_~

Vi,neyard Haven· Early Christmas

Christmas came early thisyedfor Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Kins

•. of St. Augustine's parish, Vine­· yard Haven. Their daugh~

, Sister Dominic Marian, O.Carm.visited them for the first time Iaseven years, following her pee­

, petuai profession as a Carmelite'. Sister for the Aged and Infirm.

~'It was a continual opeahOllse," said. Sister Dominic hap.

'pill'. She held reunions wHlimany of. her 10 brothers aDd

·.sisters, "including her twin, Mn.· Joseph F. Duarte, and heI'· ,b rot her William, Viney_- Haven chief of police.

A graduate of Tisbury Higla· School' and New York Institute: of Dietetics, Sister Dominic ill

chief dietitian at the Mt. Carmel· Home for the Aged in New Yora

City.· FollowIng the perpetual pro­

fession ceremony in German,..town, N. Y., Sister Dominic' re­turned to Vineyard Haven wittlher parents, but the trip was

· not without delay. Bad weatherkept them in. Falmouth ovell­night before they returned birboat·to the Vineyard.

Sister entered the' Carmelitecommunity in 1953 and took her

.' first vows in 1954. The commu"ity .operates the Catholic Mem,..

· orial\Home, Fall River, and OurLady,s Haven, Fairhaven, i~ tbilI

· DioceSe:' , . v'

·Women Figure FootbaO. Competition Too Great

WAYZATA (NC) -The ROSfllBowl football game on Jan. 2 W

· ,too much competition for 6,()()())Minnesota women who were iJF

.vited to tea on the same day.The bowl game between' too

University of Minnesota andthe University of Washingtonwill be televised on schedule, butthe benefit tea for the CenacleRetreat 'House here has beaB.moved up to Dec. 26.

~aU and Telephone Orders Fil~. Open all da.y Salurdat

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NOW Th'rough Thursday, January 5thROUTE 58 - South C~rver, Mass.

TWO OF 50': Mrs. Augustine Keiley of Kenwood, Md.,holds her 49th and 50th grandchildren recently baptized atLittle Flower Church in the Washington, D.C. archdiocese.Mrs. Kelley, whose grandchildren are all under 15 years ofage, was named Catholic Mother of the Year in 1944. NCPhoto.

Dire Nee.There IS always a di~ n~d

for drugs' and medical supplies.The dispensary relies for it.supplies on gifts of samples ,fro~doctors . an«;l pharmaceuticalfirms aild OU:' occasion sm~ll

donations.The ~ission has a resident

doctor 'as w~ll .a~.. :'other larworkers; And· Barbara explainsthat the \votk "is the' teamworkof many people-food is givenby some, medicine by others,and good,~ample !?yall; Butbehind everybody is the loving ..hand of God, watching out forHis neglected qhildren,"

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longer and longer, but toppingthe list for all of us should ·besome spiritual gifts.

Even simple 'gifts can express·your best wishes. It's up to youto select carefully, wrap smartly,and give graciously. When yougive your family or friends aspiritual gift with a part of yourtime and service for Christmas,'you are giving them a .bit ofyourself. That is often one ofthe most appreciated, mostthoughtful ways of saying, "Mer_ry Christmas." It might-be a bed­ridden friend, who needs fewgifts,-oi!. .a gay card make yoUrgift a certain 'number of after­noons when Y9U will come andJ'ead to him;' .

Gifts that GrowGifts that grow are appreci­

ated too. Inexpensive, but sure to· please, are a half-dozen bulbs offi..agrant paperwhite·· .narcissus,

, sent with· bowl 'and potting soiL· (This is an accep~ble' gift to

send a convalescent.) Often one'is stumped to know what tosend a man 'on one's list..

Did you ever think how well ahusky plant suits a man's study?,

I A fiddleleaved rubber tree plantdoesn't require much light and,like the large-leaved philoden­drons, arranged totem-polefasb­ion, fits well in a study.

az~e~~i~~~~t~~:~t;~~~~:al~:::' . Nation's Cathol ic Mother of 1944gestions to· "Keep Christ in IN' Gra"ndmother of SO .Christmas" suggests that people S OW . ,. . . ,breakaway from the habit of WASHINGTON (NC) - The . baptisms of her 49th and 50thgift swapping and ends with the nation's Catholic Mother of 1944 grandchildren.suggestion, "Get down on. your is now a grandmother for the The 49th, Sheila Marie, daugh-knees and thank God you are 50th time. : , ' 'ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Regis

· living in a land· so blessed with. Mrs. Augustine B. Kelley of· : Kelley of Bethesda, Md., was . Christmas Programriches that it is"possible for you this city, widow of a ,U.. S. rep- .bOrn at Providence Hospital here :. The annual Christmas tadllllt

· to be OR the ·giving instead ~ ,resentative from Pennsylvan~a, 'a few weeks ago, two days before "broadcast of the Catholic Th~"the'receiving end.~ bad to move'fast to attend,t~ ··the 50th grandchild, 'G!:'egory .'ter Guild of New Bedford WiD.

· .' .. ,.... .. '. :' ," ' ..•..f' ".' .'", •.. " '.: ' .. Brown'; sixth son of Mr. a.nd Mrs.. feature as guest artists, the St.·Restless Fee". ing. Leads~:A:rtfl\{.:·..N,ur~··.~~enr~ B. Brown, J.r"of ~pri1'!g.." jameS . Catholic' Church c,h~lII'',". ..... . .... '. :.... ' ..' ." .', .1...... ", '. .1Ield,.Md.. was born, at ~e ~e'under the direction of F-atbar,T.··o Mission Work ,Among:' Migront$ .~hOl;pitat· .. '. . ..., ." .. ·:'Aib~rt,Shovelton. ' ..

. . . .... ..' .' ". ,,,,, ': ".' '. ,- ..'.. Dr. George Ellis 01. thehos-· . The . program wiU presedli.PLAINF'IELD ,(~>-Feeling . Now:. her- :da)',\~gi~ .~i~~;·pital staff has deliv~i'e'd 25'01. '''Christmas Songs and' Theil'

· .-estless thesed!lYs?' '. '. M~ss~olloWed..bY:~han~ing ~ ... Mrs~ Kelley's grandchildren..'·., .. Meaning," with F!lther SboYd-:-- Barbara CoggiJis.had.tbe same' the Divine Offlce.in (!9mpany ;.... 49th'" d h'ld _.,,;.;. " .. ton serving'as Narrator. .. .'. .. ., .". .. . .' . , 'th th 1 . 1 t the gran c 1 was uaP-feeling leveralyears ago. Her .WI. 0 er a)' peop e ~.. 'ti· ed' 4- "St J ' ... F' " de· . GueSt organist will bO:MIiJISolution, was to .beCome II iay 'mission, which also mahltains... .' ,?,-..a~ , .. ' ., ane. rance.~ . '.' Florence,"E. Mello.' " .: .. ' .. " 'N -'m" b . lev apostolate training ·schooL·· ;. ~hantal,ehuI:ch: .~ ·su~,urb~l\'mll~S1onary.,~w .' e s so us,. i7.. .' . ..' ' •• Bethesda and. the 50th at Little .r--.-......~-~-~-~- ...tl;1.ere's .DO ti.me. tlo··~ restlesL Then .follows break,fa8t ..~~, ··Flower··· church . iti .liuburban'·· Are You Wearing A

.: . '. ". .. S the day's work of caring tot ..,' .... '.' '. .. .'... ...... . ,"""t"b~"a nu~atth..e ~ patients.in the infirmarY;·'~i~~,S.prU:~gfle~4~Mr~.:Kelley h~d.to.. . Pretty:aat?'

lose MIssion is. a scorched·sec- it' 'to th" 't "'t' 'ts"a",,'d .hurry from one ch.urch to the It's .. ." . .... . ' .._ s erlng e ou -pa len '.. " ....." .' ., .'· tion of. the Texas Panhandle'~\1~_. ".,~. 't'. ~ ·t~·", ,...... ··'t·h·..... " "h" 'e's'" .other to be present for the: cere-. "f d' Th' . h' 'k" ·".Sllng 0 uers.... elr om... ,.' "IideHere or., ere. s e~!>.r ,!, .' .' .. ,"', : ,. :,." '.'. . :1"::'" momes. . . . ' .aD:'~?\g Mexic~n ·.migr~~~ .'1!r,ol.'ke,r...... : l1t" ~~.~ , c~p!, i9ur f.!l?l.l, ~~~~. '.' Mrs. Kelley has six soris .andfamilies .~lving ~ ,.:,!'1"e~c~e~ .}~ach.w.~~~)IP-~. se..ve~ cl;1,l1dr~n, ~hree . daughters, . al~ ·ma.rried.·barrac~s 1,luilt dur~ng.. World . !,?ar~ a smgle barrack. v.:~~. .Mrs.Kelley was the youngest inWar 1.1 to house. ltal~~'pr~ .8t·hm~le. 'COdJd-Woll,tethr . ,faucet !:!~. a family of eight and her hus-, of '. I •. I • elr' nee s. u ouses are ....... .... ....ers . war. .: . ~nly a,ttempt at' sanitation. band was the eldest In a fami1¥

The mission is loeated ~. ~ . Pneumonia, diarrhea, measles of eight.center of a labM camP .where ·.and chicken pox are. c0l.'Ylm(;m. r----.;....-......-...;.----------...,...--...;.---:-....,'1000 people Hve ill cramped as is malnutrit~on, especiall.y

·~ squalidliUrroundinga. arpund Christmas',~nd. E,ster. . .' when .w~rk in the fields falls

Care 01. Souls off. Pinto beans and tOl'tillas'lU'ethe ord1Dary diEit. '. ,: ~

. ~ ,Barbara's. domain since 1955bali been .• one-sto:ry, "12-room

.infirmarY. She considers herself ."greatly privileged" because shehas been given ''the opportunityto share' with the bishop' and.priests in the~ of souls."

An Arm,. nUrse during the· war; she work~.inKingSbridge

Road Veterans Horn>ital in,~: Bronx after. her discharge. But

'she had the feeling she. ,wasbeing called elsewhere,' and sheknew where when .she read amagazine article about· a nursein the lay apostolat~

When she heard about theneed for a nurse at San JoseMission she volunteered. ,r,

'~.. .....

8

No. Attleboro isabell~

To Carol for Shut-InsBenedict Circle, North AttIe.,.

boro Daughters of Isabella, willsing Christmas carols for shut-inmembers,' Their caroling .tourswill begin tonight.

Annual party. foz: members'children will- be held from 2 to 4 ,this Sunday afternoon in St."Mary's School hall. ,Childrenfrom one to 12 are invited to at­tend. Mrs. Eileen Taylor is incharge of arrangements.

The annual 'bridge to benefitthe Rose Hawthorne Home isset for Tuesday, Jan: 24 at HptelHixon.' Mrs. Gertrude Staontonand Mrs.' Theresa Biazic are incharge of the affair.

Mrs. Marjorie Feeney ·is chail:- ' ,man for the regular Januarymeeting and Miss Catherine Mc­Nally is assigned for Februaq.

SpiritlL9~~ Gifts A're ~est ChoiceFor ,You Give Self with ~Them .

By Alice Bough Cahill ,Christmas is a time of joy-:-a time Of celebration, a

~ . time when you, should let ·your home reflect both the quiet, '. peace, and the gaiety 9f Gpristmas. You can brighten your

, home with Christmas radiance by simple decorations that· even a child can' make, or· youeans~nd many dollars· buying elegant and profes­

sional commercially' madeadornments.. One mother I know set herehildren to the task of makingtable favors forthe familyChristmas din­ner. The chil-

· dren deelded tomake an g·e Is

· and this is how:'to do it.

Cut a 'half­eircle of, stiffgold paper.Punch holes for

"erms and then·'1bread a pip e .eleaner into one hole, thro~ghend Of small bauble, (WhICh8erves .as' head) out other hole.Now faste~. papElr bito co~e

shape, inserting triang~e wings·of gold paper in se!U~~ ~h,ap'eone end of a pipe. cleaner l.nto ahalo and slide the otl).~r el!.4

, . 1'" k"down the ange s nec . .A wreath on your front door,

fashioned after the Della Robbiawreath, will win many admirers.

·For something different, make· your wreath of magnolia leaves

and attach. to it clusters of sh~l-· lacked fruit. If you have a whItedoor and want something dis­tincti.ve, make a wreath o..f mag­Dalia leaves and cranber:nes. .

To make such a wreath, stick'. rosy berries to a car~boa.rd cir­'ele and surround thIS. WIth the'leaves. A merrily decorated door· is a welcome to all comerli.

Let a, get:luine ¥adOJ;lna. add·dignity' to your hall table as

· "another welcome' to ,all guests.'who ·enter your· home. Arrange

III Madonna figure in a low. bowl· :Md, frame it' with holly sprigs

. . "and' candles. Or you might preferasmall creche on .a hall~ buffei., t1able~.· . , .

SWantD« .yet· Simple. ." .. .

This i. a' stunning, yet siD)p1e• rangement ~. appropriate fMany room in-youi' hoUSe. If y~lI

have 'a large 'rotmd fish. bowl,:rill it with" varicolored glassballs. Stick two tall ted candleS(one taller than the other) in thebowl. Encircle it with a greell• tin ribbon, .tied in a large boW,using greens at the base of thebowl for freshcontra.st. Theeandles, when 'lighted, will be

· reflected in the lovel, colors atthe balls.

For the big dinner with ever somany guests, you might like todecorate a long table with spray'Sof evergreen. Stick greens in ~needlepoint holder for addedheight. Then' hang .ornaments,in clusters near the center' ofeach arrangement. Maybe you'dprefer ,to use plastic foam, whichwill work just as well, cut in •long piece.

Christmas is gift-giving season-that delightful rememberingtime when you package surprisesfor your loved ones and friends.As you make out your list it gets

'. . ~

Page 9: 12.15.60

'1

:''-·.THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait Rlver....f1oturs., Dec. 15,1960

r-·-;<hI'

i.IlI

ClHIRISTMAs PARTIES: Yuletide festivities are enjoyed by membersof Catholic Guild for Blind in Fall River, and Guild for Deaf in NewBedford. Left, in Fall River, Santa Claus (Maurice St. Germain), greets,left to right, Rosella Hart, Mrs. Clara Harrington and Aime Barnaby. At

right, Mr. and Mrs. Frank .Rogers, St. Louis parish, Fall River and Mrs.Stella Bouchard, St. James, New Bed:f;ord, carry ona conversation in signlanguage with Rev. James A. McCarthy, moderator. Rev: George E. Sulli.van of St.. Dominic's, Swansea, is diocesan director of Guilds for the Blind..

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lish speaking nuns. throughout "whether they are on universitythe world will. be able to receive grounds or the edge of a de·sert."monthly religious instructions' . .. . .fro m . outstanding churchmen He SaId the recordmgs :WIllunder a new recording program. feature messages from Vatican

" leaders anq from noted church-The Conference - a - Month men of the United States Ire--

~lub," sponsore~ by ~e Carmel- land, England, Scotland, A~stra­Ite Fathers GUild,. will send a lia New Zealand and Canada.12-inch, long playmg record to' ,subscribing convents each month "Each speaker will present thestarting in January; one message he considers essen-

Fat her Ronald P'. Gray, tial f?r pr~gress in holine~ amia.Carro., director of the Carmel_ happmess, Father GrQy said.ite Fathers Guild at 55 Demarest He said convents may sign lIPAvenue here, said the Confer- for either 12 or 24 conferences.ence-a-Month· Club will make The records will form a libraqllvailable "the best of religious of conferences, be said.

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If You Knew Bishop McN.amaraYou Loved Him as Father

Womsil Term It DirtYIT

Not Sexy, LiteratureHALIFAX (NC)-The Cath­

olic Women's League of CanadaBy Mary Tiniey Daly . has recommended that the word

We never knew him when hecwas "Father McNamara." "di"rty," instead of sexy or sala­Somehow, though, Bishop John M. McNamara, elevated to cious, be used to describe offen­the episcopacy in 1927, always retained the fatherliness of sive reading matter.the parish priest for the thousands who knew and loved The league, representing 146,-

000 Catholic women, submittedhim. You couldn't know ity was an ever-present inspira- a brief to the Royal CommissionBishop McNamara without tion .to the Bi~ho~ an~ h: com- on Publications in which it said

. . mumcated thiS msplrabon to "f .lovmg him. We are not of everyone who knew him. the word "sex 0 ten IS wrong-his parish, nor are we in With in-the-family frankness, fully applied.the higher echelon of the Arch- Bishop McNamara would speak "Sex itself is a gift from Goddiocese which he served. to me about this column, never and therefore good ...," the brief

Yet for us, a with a sign of dictation, but wise stated. "If instead of using theetmple family. comments as to its strengths and word 'salacious' to describe cer-he was guide its weaknesses.' tain types of reading matter, weand mentor as We would taik 01. world and would use the stronger Anglo-be was for so local events, of hiB problems and Saxon word 'dirty,' then theselllanY' others. In ours, and· upon leaving, tb~ (objectionable) magazines'wouldjoys and sor- Bishop atways had presents for immediately lose some of theill.'NWS, in prob- the children. . appeal."

lem~ and fr~~ When our Mary·was confined BI,'nd G·Ul'ldtrattons,. .w e ~ bed with a back ailment aturned mstmc- . .. .. Bi h ·M New Bedford Catholic GuMtively to Bishop couple of years ago, s oP.. c-. '&';'1'. the B·ll'nd WI'U ho·l·d 'I'ts annual·

. Namara was· one of her first .LV

Mb

cNlamara ":~dd··I~~·,,,visitors:""":;dirhb'ina. our· steep., Christmas party tonight. at 1< ..e a ways· a ~,~.§t" f ' t t· '. .: .te'.,of his heart of· .C HaII.. Merp.~~.s ml!f.~ing·· .

time." Lookil}g .•.•.. r~~'t~ el?s 1';1. SPI .. .. '., . ,guests ~nd t.he ·program; WJ,1f in."back,· we· wOJ;lder. ,how:. in tho 90.n ,1 I.on. '.. . .<. ~ ...' .. '" ': '.. ·1 d 40' h . d

f Alth h h 82 'years o/!}' c~~ e,..a '. -\[Olce,.. ~. OIr,',I,:\l.1l er.,..·.world he made. such ~e .01' .:., oug· . e was .. '" .L: . D G d

leisurely, ,relaxed:cQllCern Wlth. a.g~.th~;.de~tl~.. o~ :el~h~p Mc-, ·:~:~~:t7~~0~nffe~~~~r~:,1llJ:ette

tt d · gs Namara came as a dlM.mct shock··· ..... .....'. 9,,,. - ...• .. ,. ,,:our pe y om ~ . .. . .' .' . ;, .. . ...d~d~~ :~~~ ~V~~. ~.~~ ~ml~ ~~~oontie~~ ~ •

General as·AuxiUary Bishop of 9thers.. '; , . ..: ,C'. .;-;.. ..,.,.: ,;; .. ·n ;i :"... .

• larg/·Arcndiocese, as p~stor "·.Wh.oever was 'fiJi ,.charge of·· .. '. ".1" ,.

of a big parlsh the multiplicity : wrilJlg~me'~lts P.1us~. have knownof his duties were beyond our Bishop McNamara well. For, in·CDmprehension. . .addi~io!1 tq rt.h~.. pomp and cere-··- For months sometimes years, mony accompanying the funeral·we would see 'Bishop McNamara of a Bishop of the c:atholiconly at formaloccasions: ordina- Churc~, ~e ordinary ~ople hadtions ceremonies when nuns the priVilege of. kneelmg closemad~ their vows, confirmations,· to his open coffin! not tw~ feetgraduations. At each of these, away from our frIend, saymg !l

Ute Bishop had the knack of prayer for him.saying the right thing. Tall, thin. And we remember when, not·"'Cardinal Gibbonisn," his slen- too long ago, he told a group ofder fingers would touch the pec- children: 'lIt is not your praisetoral cross as· he spoke. Always ][ want. I want your prayers." , .,without a text, the words were Those you will always have,sincere, appropriate to the occa- Bishop McNamam.sion and heartfelt, with a touch01. gentle, humble humor.

We would' meet Bishop M~

Kamara at other times: in thehospital rooma of friends, for benever neglected a friend; walk­Ing with his boxer dog "Buff"on the grounds around his rec­tory; visiting Emmitsburg where

. hi~ venerated Mother seton isburied.

Often we would visit him justbecause we wanted to be in hisquiet presence, stopping by dur­ing Christmas or Easter holidays.Bishop McNamara, with Buff atbis heels, welcomed us as thoughwe were part 01. his family. Atbls invitation, we would settledown for "a good old talk," Buffeurled at hia feet, getting lUI.occasional pat. The Bishop andtile Head of the House wouldIIeminisce about the old days iaMaryland and we'd have a cup.. tea and a piece of cake.

CoulclD't KnowInevitably would come up the

.use of Mother Seton and eachtime Bishop McNamara wouldtell us more about that remark­~le woman, founder of theDaughters of Charity in this~tI')', Her. exUeJne spiritual.-

Page 10: 12.15.60

not"affedthey- nowp,arochi~

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Cq~rt,,Approves"Released Time

SALEM (NC)-Private hometwill be classrooms and lay per­sons will be teachers in a pilotprogram of released-time reli­gious education for Catholicchildren in three public schooain Oregon.

The Salem project 'is an ou~

growth of a 4-3 decision lastJune by the Oregon SupremeCourt. The tribunal held that astate law permitting the programis constitutional.

No starting date has been setfor the local program, workedout by Father Joseph E. Vander­beck, pastor of St. Joseph'schurch, and Charles D. Schmidt,superintendent of the localschool district.

43 Schools

In the next school year, how­ever, the program will be e:l'­tended to the remainder ofSalem's 43 elementary, juniOl'and sel!ior high schools.

Dr. Felix Dilger, a Salem den­tist ,who initiated the I:OUJ'l

,action that brought about theSupreme, Court's .decision, saidhe, ,is' pi~ased .iheprogram i.underway.

But he said it willhis' children, becauseattend St:' JoSeph's

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Public RelationsROME (NC)-Pope .John has

ordered the establishment of Iispecial news information officefor the 'coming ecumenicalcouncil.

Seek$ to O~$t Bishop'Of Dissident"ChLiich, ERNAKULAM(NCh..':'A mein-.001'0£ the Mar Thoiriite dissidentChurch has asked, a civil courth~re in' India,)o".exl;:omml,lnil;:atethe church's bishop ;and si:)me ofhis followers' because 'they 'prayfor-the ,dead.. ,.: ':,

K. N. Dani~.l has'brou~ht ;'hissuit against: Metropolitan MarThoma before a court· COrhposedof twei non'-'Christians, JusticesM. S. Menon and M. MadhavanNair. " ,

The Mar Thomite church splitfrom the dissident Malabar.Jacobite Church early in the iastcentury under the influence ofProtestant missioners. It does notbelieve in prayers for the dead.

European BishopsDiscuss Marriage

AACHEN (NC)-Thirty Euro­pean bishops. and a group ofpriests n:tet~ here in C;;ermany, ,to

.discuss the. pr-o.blems' of modernmarriage, with participants fromGermany, Austria,Holland; Bel.,.gium;. Luxerrbu;rg; .$,wjtzer)aq4and Fran~e.. . ~..~".i ;.~ , .... \ .,:!, (: :,:.' "

Dr. P:'An~ta:uxrif :Malin~s,:Belgium, stress.t!d. jn,pis. openingaddress t~~t·ri:>ut~·shou~d b'e ed-; .ucated. in, ·purity.asa .fuildamen­ial preparation for :inarriage·...

Delegates :sttessed the great' ..problem that purity: poses' 'for' '.youth. ';I'hey reminded that edu­cation for purity' must begin a'thome and can only,. be supple­mented by the confessional.

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Page 11: 12.15.60

THE ANCHOR- '11Thurs., Dec.' 15, 1960

Expla'ins PQrish·Duty to Aged

CLEVELAND (NC) - Parishprograms to visit and help agedpersons are highly important,according to the national coor­dinator of Catholic participationin the White House Conferenceon Aging.

Msgr. Raymond J. Gallagher,assistant director of Clevelanddiocesan Catholic Charities, saidsuch programs will give theaging person, or couple, "a re­newed sense of belonging to thecommunity."

In a handbook he prepared forCatholics who will attend theWhite House Conference Jan. 9to 12, Msgr. Gallagher wrote:

Ranks Third"It should be possible for ooe

person to volunteer to see thatan elderly worn",n living alonegets to Sunday Mass. Anotherwoman could supply a casseroleof food once in a while. Anothercould spend an hour: a weekcleaning the house or writing

. leiters.

'~If it were s'n elderly rna.Jiving 9y ·himself,. a young· hu~band could volunteer.. Tw~ -.young persons Could call on _elderly couple." . ', . The pa~ish's responsi·bility. *'the aged, he maintains in thehandbook, ranks third, behindthe individual himself, ,then theindividual's family.

'. ,. .' i ,J '.~.I ..

PROFESSED: 'Sister Mart,; I

Rc>sarie; 'O.Carm, : ,daughter.; .of . ·Mr;" "and 'Mrs'. .Ernest

Rogers of St: Michael's Par­ish, .Fall River, was pro­fessed as a Carmelite Sisterfor the Aged and the .Infirmat the },iotherhouile ill Ger­mantown, N.Y.

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Colloquies such as this havebeen. carried on for a number ofyears at seve'ral European Bene­

. dictine abbeys.Unib' Candle

<?cciJpying a conspicuous placeduring the discussions was aChurch unity candle. For sev­eral years a Church unItycandle has been used at theBenedictine Abbey in Niederal­taich, Germany. It is lightedevery Thursday as a reminder topray for Church unity. The'can!ile .burned. during the theo­logical discussions here as asymbol'of the'fact' that human'efforts',alone will never by them-

. 'selves a~hieir'e religious ·unity. ', ~ ... .

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Page 12: 12.15.60

. Readers! Po 'not .allow your outlook on the world to be definedby the newspaper:s. Most. ne~s tod~y concerns the breaking of one

. or the other of the Ten' Commandments. The world of the ·futurecan .be peaceful and beautiful, for it is not determined by politics,but by God. Christ is the Lord of history, not· Marx. For ten yearswe have been urging in this column a greater spirit of sacrifice tobring' the Sacred Heart to the potential Catholics of Asia andAfrica. And all the Vicar of Christ gets froin us Catholics in theUnited States is 27c per year-the price of one package of cigarettes!

.• 1" ' •. ':':..

" DAUGHTERS. OF ST:;'~UJ ..:.!II"•.~ ..... 04-111,.. ; ..Ch~........~a~ .. _ ~, ..Edition: Pr"', lladio, MoYiee , ....

~t:' w""siet"=.:=-~~.::~ .

.. aI 'ceIw .' .Per w.r-tio. write... .

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COYNE~NDUSTRIAL LAUNDRY

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RENTAl WORt( UNIfORMS

SHOP TOWELSAho Reclaim IndUltriat Glov_

'the answer ·Is: mankind does notactually belong. to. the Sacred Heart, butpotentially it does. Although not everyone accepted the Redemption of Our !Lord,that Redemption is available to everyone.The waters of life are' more abundant than

· the cups that are brought to the. yvell. but.its refreshment is npeJi to ·aIL. -

This is the basis of our lo~e of· the Mis~ioDS. We ~hou.~.,not·think of non-Christians. as "pagans"; rath!lr they are anti­Christians; that is, they are like caterpillars who can, by a fullrespon~ to grace,' become butterflies.

Love of the Sacred Heatt'"

·God Love You( BYM08tReV. Fulton J. Sheen, D.O.

To whom does' humanity belong? Is there a" common"bondbetween races and people 'sO diverse in mannen andlio"div'ided illinterests? . .

'Pope Leo XIII said of his act of consecrating all mankind tothe Sacr~d Heart: "It is the greatest aCt of my pontifica~e and itwill hasten the arrival of those mercies for the world which weaU await."

The answer to this· is' to be found hi the Encyclical letter' of. Pope Leo X1D,Maj Z6, 1899,'in which he consectaied the entire

human race to the Sacred Heari. But, you· ask. how could this be'! The Moslems donot believe in the Divinity of Christ; theHindus refuse· to admit that among' themillions of gods one is Sacred: the pagancolts based on fear never think of religionas having a 1)eart.

Beally! Do yoa think we can' bring the love of the SacredHeart to the world thrOugh' our missionaries for Z1c a year? Now!What are you going to do'! For the love of thc Sacred Heart or'His Vicar oil earth can you consider one of these possibilities:

1. Be one of • thousand who haSenongh ofthe world's goods to jpve to Africa 01' Asia, Ill.honor of the Sacred Heart, a chapel costing aminimum of $2500. Only let tbeHol,.· Father .·determine the siie. -

Z. Be one of.a million who will i'ivelOc •day for one month fa h~or 01' the Sacred HearL

Sead your sacrifices to the Boly ,Father through his Socie~ forthe ·Propag·aUon of the I'a.ith. 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I,~ew York. ' . ,

, . 'GOD LOVE' YOU to R:M. for-.'16. "An~ther ':Y~ai ';Wd ,ag8in Ihave'· received my Christmas Club check. Before'! do' iUiY~pJ~ ~elsewith it"I want to share a:'littl~l!9f i~, with the p~r .l)f.~~e.""orld."•. ·\to· K.K,,''!· fOOlid:'thi's" dol1jlr .on the. s~~.I?L~roundsi w~i;le Iwas playing.·I promised,ifj~di~ ~ot ~elong.,toany<?ne:l,WI?~~d.giveIt to the Missions."·::',.fo~;S.K~,~9r$IQ9 ".l pro~ised.:t~Js ~9;YoUfor the Missions·ill.the .event that I would find a no-f~ job..I<did,'arid*,~Uid like sQlIl.eori~'·l~,theMissions to have. a'haP'PY Chris~mastQo." .., '.', .. '. ". "" .. -;.:' .....:...,.....,:,.. ". ,.} ..... :,

...;.: .~...;... ~'. ... , .: ',.;' .: . '.: ~ ;.- :' . '.

';~ ~ id~~.f~~.C~r.~~,irita.~:~iv~·~:~~?~qitpj~ss.i~~ ~9S;ARY.This is.1f> gift· that conve)'ll' the. SPIrl~..o~ g09~ wi." tba~IB, th~. ~uejoy. :of' .the Christmas .season~..:.:E~h .. ·deca·~~ .. ,Of -.thls ...llosarl is.color~ci to, correSpon~ to. ·oneo(:.the five· ml~sio'n~r:f"~9Iltln·el1ts.As you. pray•.your spiritual intentions are offered for the sickQJld poor and homeless throughout the world. Give a WORLD­mSSION ROSARY this Christmas. To re<:elve one send your

, request along with an offering of $2.

Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to theMost Rev. FultonJ. Sheen, Natiorial Director of the Society forthe Propagation of the Faith, 366 'Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N·. Y.,or your .Diocesan Dkector;' RT.'<REV. RAYMOND ·T., CONSIDINE,

.368 'North Main Street; Fall River, Mass..", . ," . ." '':'~. -,' , : ',t'

HONORED: Croatian-bornsculptor Ivan M.estrovic waselected 'to the American,'Academy of Arts and 'Let­tel's. The 77-year-old sculp­tor, 'qne of the country'sbest known Catholic artists,is a member of the fac'ulty

'at the University of NotreDame. NC Photo..

AttractivenessEntire Person'

,:'

.:.".. :...!!'1!..:2=- T:_i_~t:_A_N_C_H_O_~_·,~__Dio_c_e;_e_o..;.f_F_o_II_R_i_ve_·r_-_Th_u_rs_.,_·D_ec:_~'1_5_;_1_9_60

'Fe'minineInvolves

. ,I.

'I:.:,

ii·,

i

:1. ,

By Father .Iohn L. Thomas, S.J.AsS't Sociology. Prof.-St. LonisUniversity

. I'm Iii heartbroken te(mage girl" (17) with a problem.'I've almost given up ever getting married. I'm the plainest"

"... of. five girls and am extremely fhin "and:wear glasses. Ipray to forget my bitterness~ buLsonletimes I have to facethe facts. I don't keep com- You say' you wear glasses.pany with .my friends very ·.Well, so do a good marly othermuch be'cause I do not like people,both young and old; and-the crowd, that much. Can linight add, a good many others

.' should be wearing them. .you help me!"·It seems to me; Betty, you've Now I know glasses can be a

.Diven up your inalienable right bit of a nuisance at times, par-e ticularly during games andts "life, liberty, sports, but let's face/ it. If thesnd the pursuit"

type of glasses. you wear arebefore you ever' suitably chosen, ·most. peoplereached fhe age

around you don't really notice.to ,use it. Why; .them.··

:', lIlOt give ·your-. Glasses No Obstacleis elf h a 1.£ a Young people are sometimescllance? I know.that some girls so sensitive ab'out wearing

glasses because they fear to bein our society. different, but at 17 you should

. feel quite .ma- be growing out of this insecure V@h,/lInlU'~e[f'Sture at 1~-in stage .of utter dependence onfact, about one others.. ' Continued from Page Oneout of every Glasses will mean no more or olic University at Ponce, P. R.seven getting' David O'Shea, executive sec-Jess ·than what you make them

'F.!/ married, are this age-but you .retary of the Chicago'Archdioc-· f mean. People react to you, not· still face some 60 more years 0 esan Catholic Action Federationsf to your glasses, and it is only

life. Aren't you pulling out 0 and former U. S. national secre-. because you lack confidence in;the competition rather early 10 taryof the ,,Young .Christian.y,ourseI£, that yqu. s~ yO,ur,. the race? Workers, will also serve asglasses or your figure as ob- .

; You say' you have to face the national secr'etary' of'· the papalstacles to popularity.tIlds. All right, let's face them. Remember, it is )"!lU, 'the volunteers secretariat, he said.At present you're considered the entire you as a person, your The national secretariat .hasplainest' of five.' How do 'you be been established in Chicago withwhole personality, that must

. know? Well, your sisters are attractive. Individual items take the permission of Albert Car­. always being told how attractive their meaning from the .. total, dinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chi-

· ....ey are. h t cago. Cardinal Meyer has given.- unique self t a 'you are.., I realize that this must be Giving Comes First, the secretariat free office spacebard to ·take, but what does it This .brings up a final point- in the headquarters of the Chi-ftally mean? Perhaps· your si8- to be,loved, you must be lovable. cago Catholic Action Federationa.:ters are older than ·you or have You say you don't keep company To Tra.in Nativesdeveloped physically more rap- with friends very much because The papal volunteers' program.

. Idly.' you' don't like the crowd that· was announced in August byBoth boys and girls show a much. But if you don't make an the Holy See. According to the'

wide span of age..;differences at effort to like them, how'can you plan, teams of three to 10 laymenwhich they start to "blossom expect them to like you? will be recruited both ·in. Latis• ut."· Of course it's rough to be We become lovable only 'b7' America and elsewhere, gives'«»nsidered the "plain one" but. loving, because love is not a one_ -waining and sent' to areas of

i' l'emember this is a temporary, way street, 'but a mutual g'iving Latin America at tile invitatiOil.passing matter. and, receiving-and the giving of lOcal' groups to traili potential

eo~es.first.An important part of native lay leaders. .' .Thoughtless Comments Father Considine said .lastIt is also a temporary matter growing up ~s to overcome the

"1 Chat you now f~l in competitioll childish expe~tancy to receive,' September that th'e first U. S.th ·ste t l' t and learn to give --" "c';· teams"of papal"volunteers' 'may .

. ! wi your -S! rs- or, 8' eas ~:;:,~...., '. ' . \' _ .,. -be"in "the -field bY':Oetober i961. I-

·.onstantly compare yourself" ,,:-When you're; .with ·.ot!l.ers; try.'·· . ,.h t . . . He einphasized thoen' that the .with' ,them:'., When" ;you reach ,..:··to·see, w a you ·can·~give;:and:'

"'~.·turity·: ;.y.ou'·wilrbe.· acceptect··what,·.. you; can contribute' 't;o the 'volun'te'ers will :notgo 'to'Latiii-'. ., ., h' f th .:'" .. " America;aS "outsiders to tell the~~:~hatYo1,l:aJ·ln,i)YQurse~.. :., applMss,o 0 .era. ':; . . LatIn's howto·.do"':tRe-ir WOrk.'"

?;Jt'$~';what yo~ have made of:,·;· i""·' Others·Need'Support:.· 'y().l:irsl!llf' \tlj~t :wilh:Qu,rit, so don't" ,. 'Inpractice this ftleans tliat'you . . Assist Leaders.. .~li into\:tne·;;illY,:habit 9£ always.- ,,"·take an' active interest:iil: otpers, ·:-."Weare.resp·ondirtgto the cal\:~~Pilrl;~g"y6Yrse.1f: ,with your' tn· their feelibgs,'·:·pr6biems,~. of intelligent, people who. are .si~ters, "partic;iJi~rly.>when, : the' views, and concerns." Y6ti"learn. anxiolis for. o;OUf .. cQoperation...·

:,,' :.. croiilparisoi1,m~y :be!based Ollthe to listen to observe reactions. ,he said. ~'Nqrth America.nr;; will·~p~~h~l~fts.coip.m¢'htS';of others..:'''·and··iO g~'Uge'feeli~g!l:' ..; .:; not aSsume ditect leadership is.'

.!. :But I'rit,soexlremely thin! ,Are Soon:.You'discoveri\hat others .. Latin " America/ but' will assist, ['. you' really;' or; is this'hist in Com':' are very much like yourseIf.' the great bOdy' of .po'tehtial

parillqn:, ~i.th 'YO~:'S!llters? Most Th"ey .need . slipport~'affection; . Latin AnHiricaiiieader5-'-manyg~rls your 'age are starting to run encouragement, and understand_ of whom are highly ·capable-:-bybito tl1\'l opposite problem:'-too . ing. They have their doubts, cooperation' in the "techniquesmany pounds, or too many ill the their fears,' their human inse- that they will be" employling illlwrong places! curities, b'ut also their hopes, strengthening the Church."" .However, if you,happen to be desires, and, aspirations. In fact, In announcing establishment

.. '...~nusually thin, you might check they're very much like yourself. of' the national' secretariat;.your diet. Some young people Seek to give when you're with Father Considine said Feb. Iiacquire strange eating habits. your friends and you'll like them, has been set as a target date for 'Following their imagination you'll 'receive -'and "you'll be.! .. I'e<:ruitmellt '. 9f.. ~olunteers' b.rather than their normal app~ attractive!" :.f·' ...: ..:. ..,. '. .begin.. ... ..,... ,lite, they insist there's a Whole '" . , ." .. :. . ,After lan. 1,.',1)e said, inq1,liries.·

.oategory of foods they don't like :'A~cepts l~vitation 'concerning .the "papal.volunteer,,_ .... "just.can't eat." T G· I'" . program. should ~ sent to. the·, Diet, Exercise., "'olve . nvocation secr~tariat, ]20 ,N.orth . Rush ', Much of this'issheer iri.fa~ti1e'-' BOSTON (NC)-Richard Car... ~ Stre~t.CQicago, g,,Ill..... ' .

!! tancy. Stick to'a well-balanced dinal ,Cushing, ArchbishoP at Hes.aJd....~he .·N.CiW.C, ·LaUadiet-if you're in doubt about' Boston~ said here he bas accepted America Bur.eau wI.·ll chann~l to.

I wh'at foods are needed check an invitation to give·, the invbca- the .~cretarl~t.r o~~e the Invl­with your home ec~nomiC8 tionat the inaugtirateion of Sen. tations for U. S.' VOlunteer teanYteacher or counselor: .If you're John F. Kennedy as President OIl that ·it . r~ei~esfrom .L~tinthe kind, that skips breakfast Friday, Jan. 20. America~. blSho~s .and religlOI.Wregularly, change the habit right The invocation for President commumtIes.,BOW, and give your growing Eisenhower's first inauguration Urges Cooperation...stem a break. in 1953 was given by Archbishop Plans c~ll for. the vol~nteeN

Also, get plenty of exercise Patrick A. O'B-oyle of Washing- to serve ..1ft ~atIn Amenca .£01'and at least eight hours of sleep. ton. The Archbishop gave the fro~, two to fl~e. y~ars, wIth the.Of course, if you really are just benediction at President Tru~ option of remamlllg longer. Both"skin and bones" you should man's' inauguration in 1949. The single men.a!1d women and mar­'oonsult a-docto~ since your late Edward Cardinal Mooney, ried couples w~ll. be el~gi1:'le.growing body may require addi-' then Archbishop of Detroit, gave Father Consldme. sald In Sep­tional vitamins or changes in the benediction at President temberthat the "key" to the sue­Four usual diet. Eisenhower's inauguration OIl cess of the program lies in the

Jan. 21,1957. cooperation of Catholic orgaR-Kenya Students Seek The benediction at President izations and institutions - inc-

Frank D. Roosevelt's second and cluding colleges and universitiesChange of Climate fourth inaugurations was de- -which ·will sponsor the volun-

GLENALLEN (NC) - Some -livered by the late Msgr. John A. teers. The sponsors are to P81'118tive boys of Kenya. British Ryan, director of the Social the training and travel expensee'East Africa, apparently are look_ Action Department, National of volunteers, while in mostjog for a change of climate. Catholic Welfare Conference. cases Catholic agencies in LaUD.

., Fourteen requests for schol- Bishop Michael J. Ready of America will be expected to Pfll1..ships have come from that Columbus, who died in '1957, their living costs in the field.equatorial territory to the Cop- gave the benediction at Presi~ The volunteers are to b'2per Valley SchOOl here in the dent Roosevelt's third inaugura- drawn primarily from the 21-45interior of Alaska. The school has tion in 1941. The Bishop 'was age bracket, .with possible ex­na .Eskirt:lo, Indian and white., then.general secretary of tbe eeptions on the recommendatioD

'.!'..:: '~~i~' . . . NCWC. 01. .local sponsorinC ~~~ :,

Page 13: 12.15.60

"

...."

Ca...• ..

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Juvenile Crime Rat~Increase Small '

WASHINGTON (NC)-JuveQoo ,He delinquency court cases in­creased by two per cent in 19~Q,

the Children's Bureau of the De-. partment of Health, Educatimand Welfare reported. .

This was the smallest increasereported during the past decade"the Federal agency said. The re.­port is based on a sampling ct1U. S. juvenile courts.

Sin.ce 1948, it said, juvenilearrests and court cases 'havemore than doubled, although thepopulation of youngsters, be­tween 10 and 17 years of age hallrisen by less than 50 per cent.

C@lfdinal AdvisesPwess Support

MILAN (NC)-Giovanni C~dinal Montini, Archbishop ofMilan, has told Catholics of hilldiocese that they have a dutfto support the Catholic press.

The Cardinal said in a pastoralletter issued on Catholic PressDay that "the cause of theCatholic press is a cause strivingfor the spreading of the word oftruth and of salvation."

Catholics have "the honor atdefending it, the obligation ofpropagating it and the require­ment to make it live in theIne>selves and in the world."

Catholics also must avoid badliterature or forbidden news-papers and books, he said. .

"These are the e.xponents ofideas which offend Christiallprinciples," he stated. "They arevehicles of infection and 0«moral and spiritual poisoning.They are not suitable in the

" hands of Catholics, who by hav­ing them, give bad example an~

create a mentality harmful 1lr2Imoral resistance and order." ..

, , ' 1l'fE ANCHOR-,., .. 13ThuV'S., Dec. 15, 1960

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: . ·MISSIONER'S PORTRAIT: Mrs. John'Flynn, Taunton,. with oil painting of Rev~ James L. M~rtin, C.S.C., who, died last March in East Paki~tan. Painting will hang in- Notre Dame College in East Pakistan, of which Father. Martin was president.

~, .~.

ViSITATION GmLD,EASTHAM

The Guild will bold a Christ­mas dinner and party at 6:30Monday night, pee. 19 in TowDCenter Restaurant, North East­ham. . A business meeting isplanned fQr 8 Thursday night.Dec. 29 at the home of Mrs. FredG. LaPiana Sr., NausetRoadNorth Eastham.

ST. ELIZABETH,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will hold• penny sale Saturday, Jan. 21,with Mrs.' Manuel Ferreira aschairman, aided by Miss AmeliaOliveira. The annual malacadesupper will be held Saturday,Feb. 11, with Mrs. Gilbert Am­aral in charge.

ST. JOHN'S,ATTLEBORO

Mrs. Joanne Moore and Mrs.Catherine Gorman of the Moth­ers' Club will be co-chairmen ofa Cana Conference planned forearly 1961.

Mrs. Elaine Thompson willchairman a Mardi Grac and buf:"fet planned for Feb. 14' in theschool auditoril,1m.

New Year Plans.,The, Parish Parade

~!?l@lfillkDfi'ilg ~frDelkSOUTH ORANGE (NC)-Ed­

'Ucators are expressing interest inan exhibit at the Seton Hall UnI­versity Museum that features aDlid-fashioned 8,P8Ilktng at1ck.

ST. MARY'S CATBEDRAI..FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will holdits 'next meeting Feb. 6. Enter­tainment will be offered by theSunshine Group of the Golden

,Age Club. Mrs. Charles Cavan­agh will be in charge of arrange­ments.

Sewing sessions will be re-'sumed after the holidays. Newmembers are welcome to jointhe committee.HOLY ROSARY,FALL RIVER .

Mrs. Gino DiNucci and Mrs.Charles Santos wj1l be in chargeof altar arrangements for themonth of January as represen­tatives of the Women's Guild.ST. LAWRENCE.NEW BEDFORD

The Couples' Club will hold •men's supper in January. TheChristmas meeting featured apanel show and motion pictures.

OUR LADY OF ANGELS"FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will bolda pilgrimage to La Salette shrine,a variety show and a pie andcookie sale during January. Asilver tea is planned for Feb-ruary. BLESSED SA()R.AMENT, .ST. MARGARET'S, FALL RIVER " ..BUZZARDS BAY , . The Women's Guild will hold

The 55. Margaret-Mary Guild a calendar party Wednesday.,will hold a turkey. whist at 8 Feb. 15.

tonight in the new addition to ST. ANNE'S, Father Martin's Portrait to Hangthe church. Mrs. John McManus FALL RIVERwill be in charge. The Social Group will hold a In Notre Dame College, DaccaSANTO CHRISTO. meat pie supper Satur!iay, Jan... A well-known Taunton artist, ton, D. C. Ordained in 1948, beFALL RIVER 21. A parcel post booth will Mrs. Flynn has done many por- was assigned to East Pakistan in

Th CYO '11 h Id d also be operated. Next' regular .e WI 0 a ance traits, mcluding one of Blessed 1949, and was named presidenttomorrow night and a Christmas meeting is set for Wednesday. Edmund Campion for Campion of Notr~ Dame College in 1954.party Thursday, Dec. 22. Mem- Jan. 4. . Hall School of Education at Bos- . 'bers will receive corporate ST. MARY'S, 'ton College, of Very Rev. Joseph' A 'portraIt of Rev. James L.Communion the third Sunday NEW BEDFORD R.-N. Maxwell, S.J., former pres- MartIn,. C.S.C., Taunton nl!tiveof each month. The CYO will hold a Christ- ident of Boston College and of who dle~ very sUdd~nly last

mas party, Mo~dl,ly Dec. 19 in Dr. Clement Maxwell, ~resident March, WIll soon be on iq; wayST. JAMES, K of C Hall, Acushnet Avenue. of Bridgewater State College as to Notre Dame College, Dacca,NEW BEDFORD \ Members and g'uests are wel- well as several for prIvate i~di- East .Pakistan, of .which Father

Monsignor Noon Circle win Martm was d t thcome and Miss Kathy Hughes Ie viduals in the area. ' . . . preSI en ,at econduct its annual Christmas . ' . . tIme of hIS death, to be on per-Party Tuesday evening iii 'the' in charge of arra·ngements. _' She also has done commercial manent exhibition -there 'Church Hall at 7:45. A Christmas Christmas caroling will be. art for advertising agencies, . . ' •Play entitled "One Red Rose" held b.eginnil!g,a~,7 ,.'I,'h.urs.daY' given private art instruction. and The oil pllinting, executed bywill be presented by: the Catb-' night, pee,. 22:. :Mem~l'lI. will , has· exhibited locally. '.' a Taunton artist, Mrs. Johnolic Women's Club in, co-opera.,. ,meet a.t the cpu,r~lt· ." ".: . . Born in Taunton, hi ,191'1, ~lynn of 133 Hart Streetw88tion with the Catholic Theatre, A mid-Win~r.o9agt;e ,is set . Father Martin' attended Coyle . commissioned by Father'Mar­Guild. Mrs. Frank W. Mahon will ~o,:, v:"ednes,~~r;.I?~.:.~~,~~.Ga~ High School, Holy CroSS'Sem- tm's family in his memory, anddirect. c;l~t~.;s~avI~lon,,~nm~,Medei~ ,inary' in North Easton, Holy was done from photographs 01.

Member. of, the Circle wiR J'QS IS ch,~lr~~' and ·Wayne Cross Novitiate, North' Dart- the, Holy CrOss missioner. Mrs.e~change gifts and refreshments Bailey will be dl~ j~c~e7.. . mQuth, the University of Notre' . Flynn, the,former Elizabeth Anllwill be served by the Hospitality Da~, and Holy Cross, Washiilg- . Jones, is a,graduate of·St. MarY'.Committee. All" members may ST. ROCH.",High School, and received her

FALL 'IlIVEIL ' 'bach,elor of arts degree from thebring a guest. Mrs. ,Romeo Cba,rest heads POpe ,Cong~atulcit. Co~lege of New Rochelle, NewST. MATB~U'&. Women's Guild offiCers, to'be' . Canadian Missioners' Rochelle, N. Y.. wher.. me'FALL RIVER installed at a banquet iari,.'9., major~ ill art. .

The Women's Guild wiD hold She will be sUpported by Mrs. VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope

a ChrIstm'as sale at 'the parish Paul' Giroux.: : vice ~president; John has congratulated, Canada '·B·A·&R·_B·FAM'_·Q·"L~·H·~·~•.EK.A;.NS••"j~, 'ball following Masses this' SUfi- ' Mrs. Ernest' Gagnon;tr.easurer; ,~the. Ch~istian ,:vitality. it' ...day. 'Proceeds will ijenefit the Mrs. Pierre ,GagnoJ!j' secre~ry. sh~ws il?- its ~ission!lry activity.s c h 0 0 1 building, fUnd.' Mrs. 'Mrs. Girou;J!:1S, iii charge of8l'- Pope John praised Canada'.Thomas L'Heureux is chairman. '1'QJlgements for the b~~qU:et:. ' 'numerous inissionary vocations,

" In ~ television message released WY '7-9:''l6 .

English W~men'sSuffrage' Leader in Canada.' ROS,ELAW"-D, .The Pope's telecast Inaugu- 1"\1

Becomes Convert in .Austra'li'a . rated a new television series FARMSportraying Canada's Catholic 1 W bi S .

SYDNEY (NC) - Mrs. Adela "In Dundee we. wen't On.. missioners in' their farflung ao- as ngton t., "&li..~Constantia Mary 'Pankhurst bunger strike and seven 'or'eight 'tivities. . . . . Just o~--1wute 0:Walsh, one of England's three of us were released' because of -. The' p.roducer I.mc:H 6rigine~l? ,Wat~h fOR' SignaPankhurst sisters who led ·the our health. The Scots doctor Whil'struggle for women's suffrage said my heart couldn't stand it" of the series, Jean Pellerin Cl:1 ,- e out fora Driw 7

there, has been received into the The suffragettes began their _Montreal, .and i~ ,,_i\!u:raWlr; - Stop m~ this Delightful SpotCatholic Church. campaign for. women'lJ x:Ight 't& Father Loull~.~"§J'Jg-:itegis,O:p.. ~"''''''''H'''•••••••~. "After all these years, I haw vote in May of 1905. During the ,oil .~nb."e1il, toured CanadIan ,--------------------------...

come home at last," she said~ ~lection campaign, t~~-fflis~lons throughout the world COME IN - SEE-.. and DRIVEMrs. Walsh, 71, is the widow'oathe premier, C~.R'lpbell Bannellb d.urmg the past summer to take

Tom Walsh, lelaad~e:;r~o~f~~~~!lll~a~;::;;h'.:;u, ,films for the telecost. , , THE';'61 FORDS,trslian Sellman.! non durIne In Novembel?'of 1918, the very , ,Mu--st=ug~ gor li'ecognition i.6l ~onth the World War, ended, Ufb. World'. Most Beautifully Proportioned

'"fu<e 1920'0. Parliament passed a bill allow- at~ ing ,women to become members,

~ Mel? mother; Mrs. EmmelinQ of the House of Commons.Pankhurst, and her sisters,Dame Christabel and Sylvia, Nun Aidsbeaded the campaign of harass- Adela Pankhurst came to Aus-ment that eventually brought tralia alone, with, assets of onlyEnglishwomen the right to vote 20 pounds sterling (then worthand the right to enter Parlia- about $100). She married Tomment. Walsh, who had been born into

a Catholic family but quit theHer father, Richard Marsden church when 'J'k' entered union,.

Pankhurst, was a politician and affairs. . .an agnostic. Walsh was regarded as a I

JH[ungell' Strike socialist extremist bY many con_ 'Of her days as a sUffrag~ite, servativ~, Australians, and, the,

Mrs.. Walsh says: "I was the governrriei.lt. tried to'deport himsecond person to go to prison in 1925. The'present c~ief justicefor inciting public demonsttil- of New South W~res, Dr. H. V.tions and I went to prison on two Evatt, was his defense lawyer.more occasions. Mrs. Walsh carried on an ex-

tensive ' 'correspondence aboutreligion with a Dominican nun,Sister Assumpta. The nun puther in touch with a Sydney"priest, Father J. Bird, and shewas received into the Church afew weeks ago by Father V.m-.cent F. Folkes of Asquith.

Page 14: 12.15.60

. -A 'CHRISTMAS GIFT TO' YOlJRSELF-GREGORlANMASSES CELEBRATED AFTER YOUll DBA'lB

-ARRANGE FOR 'TIIBM NOW- .

PIRSIAN&~ lAST· SYRIAN CHlUSTIANS

MANY PRIESTS will be getting new Cassocks for Christmas.Would you care to give II Missionary priest Ii Cassock as aChrJstmllll present? The cost is $25.

wbo refused &0 accept &lie Cbureh'. cond.emna~ 01 UIe .te'".lDPot NedoriuS, separated $he_Ives .from Rome In' tile "u

. st .fh ·500;·tbeF an kDowIl - Nestoriaas.~'b-. "~,'More thana tboUSllD4 ,.ean passed

"'dO before llIlF of these. ChristIana began,; ~. seeking reUDi~1L In the year 1551 tbeell ~ filrstgl'oup came book to tile Chruda~ ''A IIlIId ~ tbeD tbeF ha.. been 1'0-

+ .. lluming slow17; those who have re-jected the Nestorian hereSJ' aad re­umited themselves with the See orPeter are called CbaldellD& In 01U'

day more and more Nestoriall8 .....7!t HoI, FaIbtri Mirsirm Ait/ becominJ disposed to return to won

'- tht OrimttJClnmh with the Pope. 10 the village ofr' . IK:HANlKin SYRIA there are a few

hundred Chaldeans and a' few hUndred NestoriaD&' Neithergroup has a Church although there Is D Protestant Chon:h therewith a small membership. After years air prayer for more voca­tions the Chaldean Bishop now has a priest available for assign.ment to KRANIK. His ExcellenCJ' has high hope that with •resident priest in the village 'all the Nestorians will be won back.It will take $4,000 to erect a suitable ChmdL.Could "011 bell'flnanee' the building of itT

·CHRlSTMAS GD'T .SUGGESTIONS - ODe 01' more 01 t1Ie. 'o~owi.ng ,SlIcred ArUc1elI, Deeded ·for Chapels IIDd CbIll'ClhaIn Mission L~ given in the name of a relative 01' fdeD4:

" Mus lOt..•. ,$100 Ciboriam .••••. $fO Picture ,ISIUtar ..• ' . • • • • 75 StaYJe .. ,.. • •• SO SaDc',. Lamp ••• IS ..Vestm~ts .•. 50 fa!Nll1lacle· .••• , 25· Aliai' LiDeas ••• 11ponteu.ioDai • ,50' Crii~ '......is· Pyx , ~ IiMonstranee .• 40 Stations . • •• •. 25 Altar Stone •••• '1. :~alice.... .. '40 eeDser' .: •..•• '20 Sane'y BdI ..•• I

oua CHRISTMAS GIFT CARDS are very beautiful. If yO.wish to give 11 Sacred Article as a ChrisUnas remembrance _will send the -:eeipient one of our Gift Canis telling him orbel' of FOUl' generous thougbtfulness.

":I'~"''''FIiN'.;~.\): '~~p',,:;-Jle,~t:::(;', -':,. Priest. Solon' 1:

ANCHORAGE' '(NC) .".. .. 'l'he,first Catholic 'prie~t,elected \q\,AI~k;i's ,state legislature,· cijdn';teveu"know he was' a ca;n"dida'te

',\..' .;,. I until"'shorUy'-'betore" the!1 elet.j;·,~·l)~;~ ~ tionS~ . ,.~. l I"",l '~")i,6r"'111Ir'('\'··~'llI('I.'~·

J~ .',..\-t, 0 ":1;;'- :,' . '''. Father Segundo .Lloli'entetS.J;,: :.,,\~~, ¥~.. ,"",<,,", ..,. • who-has·served Alaska~s.Bering ,

"., :ro..'-? ,/> ~. "", sea· and Arctic parishes for·' a .'\""'''''1.,,, I,.. • quarter of a century, will be the

State Representative in'-:Juneaufor the 3,000 Alaskans in eleo-·

, tion district 24.A 'write-in' winner, the Jesuit

priest polled more votes than the I .

combined total of his twooppon..ents, including the incumbent.

Write-IoShortlY' before' the eleCtions,-'

Father Llorente was tol~ that thepredominantly Eskimo vj1iageson the Yukon river delta would

, write. his name on the ballot..' ATOMIC. ENERGY: . Present· and representing the· whether he· accepted or not.

Holy See at AtQmic 'Energy Conference in Vienna' were "I just sat tight.in my rectory~"Frank M~ Folsom and Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C.,. the priest said, "without making

P 'd t f N D NC Ph one single speech 01: in any way.reSI eno otre arne. oto.. . advertising myself for the job.

The .people did it themselves."The priest, who is a strong

advocate of' the Eskimo people, .. said: "Perhaps .my greatest joy. is to marry couples that I bap­tized as babies and then to baP­tize their babies."

14'~ THE ANCHOR-Di~'of FaILRiver~1~~~~;,-~:ec.J:~~J~69"~;i:

The Caiho~s~ Slnl A~~tica" .", :~

C~ftia~rnnif!)P~@v~.fU[j'~{d~;~'c;n'li'n~~UB~ BITU' ~W@[f·~cdJ· 'W@[f '~,... ~.~

0,1': ····By Rev.' Pete'r J.' ntihill, Ph]O.··'> .".'," the· Knights of "cohimbus 'aro~'~ed'\''the' it~ of':Tlle )..

M~nace :in"appropriating:'$50,OOO to investigate prejudicein <the'United States.' A spurious";'#tl\"ihr.mtite'd··:'tQth~t '.organization; apparently used forf.the.first·tiine aga~sta.~"member in a Pennsylvania' C ". 't'" f th~' G' d ·S·h··:·h··'·d. . . . 1 I' . . onven 0 e 00 ep. erco~gresslOnaeectlOn, wa~ . in Cleveland to search the prem-frequently spread across the '. ises'- .. ,front page. Much like the" The ~other Superior tele­falSe "Instructions to Catholics" phoned BIShop Joseph Schrembsfabricated by' the A.P.A., K of C, for instructions; the.Bishop re-m'e m b e rs' sponded,bycoming immediatelywere alleged to cOnduct the tour himself. Rep-to swear that resenta~ive Hawkins was sothe y would impressed that he at once had

. butcher those the bill ki~ed in commi~.. .ill o:t of the . Meanwhile, as one wnterhas·Faith. When. . . joc~arly ,expresSed; "the ~usi-the bog u S. tan18' had been S1:"nk. b7 .-Ct a.t.h was GeI'D.lan U-boat, haVlng. no dlS-published in cover~ble connection with thea' national . Pope.Catholic . "The most avid sensationalists Pli'esident····Praises ·Father ,Peyton'snewspaper were satiated :With the warThe Menac~ news. Subscriptions .to 'The Fam,e•. Rosary Crusade en Chelesmeared the character of a West Menace declin~d, but ~iUy Y .. . I I .~itginia priest, who was awatd- .P~k~s. ~:.ursions to ..~. SANTIAGO .. (NC)-The presl-' Iladto provide extra Masses toed' $1,500 for libel. It was the City dlV~S grew more !Jl:- 'dent of Chile summoned'FathU accommodate the crowds flock­attorney for The Menace who pensive w~th the. !.I.C.L. (Hl~ PatrlckPeyton, . C$.C.. to' Jiis' 1ng to church.cIeclared that the newspaper was Cost of Living), the phr~ of ~nere to thank him for hia

the day IS-month Family Rosary Cna-• notorious that its 'charges ..... E' ·ti-~'sh';'.11- , .. , lIIidein this coun~-.moUld be believed by no one! . Menac~ ~ ....... ""', ow;r

'. . . The heavlly msured plant of President - Jorge Anesandrt, Pr~flts Attract Files . . the newspaper went .up in said Father Peyton has "done

1'estimony. during the trial~ . flames as a sort .of Christmas a great good fur Chile" by bring­wealed that. during the first six present to Catholics in late ing . the family Rosary into. aJI\~Q.ths of :\914 this. "scandal December, 1919. A skeptical in- million homes..sheet" earned $500 on each $100 . surance company refused to pay .Father Peyton's crusade inshare of stock. The ho'ney of off in cash and· forc'ed Parker Chile took him the length ofsuch profits 'attracted fiu.merous to rebuild.' the country, from the tropicsravenous flies. Sixty rivals Hammer and nails could not to the sUbantarctic. He started.bloomedforth, seeking to make restore the address plates of sub- his crusade in August, 1959.

. stings against the Church in \ scribers and The Menace started More than a million people at­their newspapers the loadstone down the isolate road to ex- tended ihe 23 rallies he heldto riches. . tinction. But its fame--or in- In all the. important cities of

A retired Congregational min- famy - was not extinguished . ·Chile. 'ister, Dr. Theodore C. (DaddY) . immediately. 'A c'c 0 r din g to Lauds PeopleWalker contmued as theological . Frank Peters in the Springfield The Irish-born priest who be-advisor of the town's "best (Mo.) News & Leader, a young- gins 'his next crusade in Mexicollmown production." The more . ster in a White House receiving in 'February, paid tribute to the~portant financial con t r 0 1 line blurted out: '~Mr. President,. Chilean people in a farewellpassed from. Phelps to Billy . I'm 'from 'the home of The Men- message. ..Parker, erstwhile organizer of ace." Warren Gamaliel Harding "Torrential downpours 0 f=cal miners. . ' needed. no amplification; "Oh rain, strong winds, cold, intense

Wine had no attracbon for : yes, Aurora, Missouri." heat, the difficulty- of communi-!Ilandsome Billy, but women and Though the last gasp did not cations did not lessen the en­so'ng soon were consuming most come' until after his death thusiasm and the attendance atof t he unaudited billo~s of Cardinal Gibbons' judgment of the rallies,which in' total hasp:eenbacks' which surged into . 1914' was vindicated. The Arch- been over a million," he said.Aurora. Highways, or rather bisbopof Baltimore then ad- "CHile has been the firstaioss-sta~ roads, were little: vised a,gainst Catholics endeav-,. country' in Latin America toUlraveled in those days, but the . oring . to have The Menace' execute literally and effectively

. oi~es of box cars, in ad.dition t,o barr~ from the mails. Freedom the Family Rosary Crusade- '- t!h e. multitudinous numb.ers; of the press was more itnPorl- plan. Chile has lighted a fire

ibore. the persistent exhortatiOn: a!lt to him than hastening Ill' that .is spreading. beyond itsMA.). 'l.:~E MENACE. collapse which he foresaw was 'borders. Already, archbishops,{)o::ilvemt--~cu certain to come.. . and bishop~ of other.: ~untries

-'Unlike 19th ce~t\lJ'Y forerun- Before the corpse of The.' in this continent have promised.ners, this journal did· tiot urge Menace was buried in the to· execute .t'le Family Rosary

. its' readers to t&r and leather ~rav~yard of anti-Catholic pub-. Crusade plan." .Catholics or to burn their bcahons, al,mol)t· ami 11 ion During most rallies ~ gov­t:hurches. But wasn't so mueb American Catholics had helped ernor of each province and· thep~ure bound ·to produce SlD~ ..bri~ .World "!ar I to a vic- mayor of. each city recites .a·qu-uption? . tm.:I~~S concluslpn. . Mystery of. the Rosary, together

iBlatantly proclaimed to 113 A.i~e.r. pre.s~ntmg long bst~ of with their families. In addition~ased on '.'facts" from' The paclflSt,mInlsters of varIOUS to the rallies;' 15 films on theMenace a rash of "convent in- dertominatiun~ a compiler stat- Mysteries ,of the Rosary werespectio~" bills were introduced ed: "I" am infofffiW~,there were shown. in ~~e"poor districts ofin:. state legislatures' from'Ver- one or two Catholic' prie,sts who each city vl~lted by Father Pey­mont to Arkansas and from were pacifists during tli'e-·war. ton.Florida' to South Dakota. .out I have been unable to :finct-·--. Before Father Peyton left SISTEI!t lINFAN'll' MARY Ia n noviee of tile CARMELITE. Inevitably Missouri had one, them." C~1rlw:.(J,~stributed150,000 res- . SISTERS iE INDIA.. The name aSister Infant" sounds strangepresented in the House by John The' same, aut.hor, Ray H. aries throuih-1r~..a~~.cy:of thG I to O\1lli' earn but Sister hoo taken her re- r--=-::;::""."..""r7'~';;;H.·Lehr, from a county near Abrams, declared that theN bishops..These rosar~~ . llDgiem lIumMl iI!I benor of the Infant of Beth-Aurora. In . effect it was tabled was not one case of a Catholic given to hiro by friends in tho~~he llIlaDlell 'IrlB(l[JR'ilJPA,¥lIlL =d VIA.-by the House Judiciary Commit-·. soldier being_ unsettled in hio U.S., Ca~ada and Ireland. !l)AmE'll'~ are also strange t>0 O!l

te:e, but a companion measure in belief in God. Again America One bishop described the Fam- bue n>mLlIn> 1I ~ IPlBlthe state senate afforded an had seen that Catholics wero Dy Rosary Crusade as "an ex'- . 'lTA.lIl&I~lJ!:'IrllilA.lLAl!{AL ar4l two Cathoopportunity for a member to the best of citizens! plosio~ of faith." Bishop Manuel ,!boYD seucb1na for the ~riesthooa at SMN'll'launch a stream of slurs at the Next Week: Hatred inflamed Larra~ Errazuriz of. Talca said JJOSJEJPlBl'S Slli.:lWlIN,(lltYl im [N][JI1IA.. 'Could « .......Church and her members. . by the Ku Klux Klan.t~at~~ce the. crusade came to roo.' figuratively speahilllg, take one .ofthese. '. lI.o L

.Having endured aU' he could, "'""nn",8 'Woo",,,,,,,,, lRI@llM"",his.cpocesemanypastory; havEl '~r~del'l3'infrom I:l strange ll!lIld into your home this Christmas .~S~n!ltor Mike Casey warned that' ",'W~.ll ~'I><I•• ;'illI IP VY"1lI ' ..y a.oP. g" ollle of them? You can. "adopt" one of them by,one, more ·jnsinuation would Ard'ldic4:~se 'C<rose JAN£ON'S" '6nancm.g his OI!' heu- ed1llcati0B--$30l) for SisteJr Want, ~600 forbring personal action by him- ., _WASHINGTON (NC). _ The .. ' . either Philip Oll' Joseph.. ' .:'If.' Poe's description of 'rhe U.S. Supreme Court has refused •. ,.. PharI1l1Gcy " . -~--.------

a.v.~n applied to the reviler: a. request by the Los Ang'eles, ......h • ..' '/lll h' . '.' . THE' BABE OF BETHiI..EHlEM "OCNothing further then he ut;. .. .~. ~~ ..•~nlO~,' fieg. P "a.rm. , WtIi.· .b.lesa 'y.ou.. '. f.or .rememberl.·ng th'ose people who' were b--- ,.tered.". , . arc~dioc~se that it compel the 'IDIABETOC AND .SICK R.OOM:, . "'.u

:',', . '. .'.' ,Cahf()rma State"'Supreme"COUri. . and who grew:up in lila own land but who are now exiled f~om;;.., Has Bill Killed . ,; ., ,; to,hear.its appeal in a zoning d~: .' SUPPLIES 'it. .$~O.~ wil1·~~~p.l;is.~~s,ome,measure'of happiness 'this .. '.J\jbit later in Ohio Represent- pute. ..204 ASHlEY BOULEVARD Christmas to the Palestitiial1 REifugees•. Will you.helpus with a '.

a~ive Richard R. Hawkins intra-' The appeal had been made bt·., r;:""' 'N«!~:'8Etdford">':":::-':: ::t:;- dO~.~~.QIl.?" ..,:.,:.," .' ,,'...", . . ..dfu~d similar legiS1l1tiOn.Bd~-'-,th.e·:ar,chd,iocese on behalf of 58;: .~~(~wy. 3-8045 ' "':'.':. '.... ''';'';.tr>i:i\.. .... " .... , .. ' .'. ,.,,'''' .'q~e a vote was taken: he ma, ¢.-(; ~_Fe)i'cjtas .. (and~ ·,Perpetua churcli".,' \:: ~".: --. " ., : : 1...-:~E· RIEMIUWBER '~'GOJD) ~D 'HIS MISSiONS· IN t ~OU1t f~<'

~:;~nauthorized dero:an~ on', the:. :In.S~.n,N;lf;lripa,.~alif. The dispu~:" " LAST WILL AND 'l'ESTAMfbNT . . t" '. , ."

\ :'~::::~Goodl Ne8~~b@1f' .. ·.r'.~~~~~~~~~~r~h:t ~~;u;~~i:~S c:~;:~ '\~,:MJ:BI~G~ J~!YI~G,XI'~~..:.:'.·,·. :.:!:.',;,::....;:·:~\.~.;.A,·,·,:,. '4~-.. '-. ,f)'Q.~.I. A>t~'.<M....~'·,· ..~~~~.~~.. '"'~.-.'.:"."'.-..".,'.';':DETROIT (NC) - S a,c re(4 ;,.q,u..ellbw: !J.se a lptit::own~:-:.fqr a'· . IN"!!,,, ~~~l> ~ ~~;tlJ&J~l>\Y'tl&8) .

Hea~t Minor Seminary here, parking lot and playgroun'ci: The.. 1\ . foI' DomesU:e . l, . ,., .'; ., ...... '. .'

~iJi~t.. 36·'·:Y.ea~s.ago,. but· today,: ,:~ity, held that lhiswould ·:viOlate· I',.' &··IndUiltricl:.f :.... .. .. ,F.!!~N.~~ CAaQ.INAL~·SPE.L~AN"Prellid~,..~. .,d

·.Wer.Peror P. Tuohy, Nat~1 ~'lI.an mg .In the midst of a. zonmg laws. . '., '. .. :Salea .• ant.l." .... .... ," • .

"<\hl,lpgi'ng' ri.eithborhood," held":' 'The:. City : officials" ,action 'was .' Oil Burners Serv!ee . . , .. . ,'" . Sond GIl com~unic¢iOftll, to: ., ..an'open ho~ for its new neigh- upheld by lower courts, and ~., ~::: WY;5.~1631' ~; .',';:'" _ ' . CAri:lOUC NEAR EAST.WELFME A$SOCIAffON .

::;:~,l;:~=;~,:. t::~e~SOh::~::" ~~~t:~~~~p~~:e~~e;:;' .1.:..; .. ~.~N'.~SUBSE:HDNE1'F·o'RDAft ,~ ,,~:: •.,.. ~~:~~'~7'~~~·.:~:~(!.,:.,. st.,.New,·Yodc~17.,.N. Y. ..';, .iIII. lil.$emlll~ryft, I . '. " ,.:, . ··)UcndioCeSe's':app·eal·:iil:ul~.'ca,,:' i II:lI'l ,;-:,'1~ ,.:,' .;,"j. ".1:", .,. :'.", 1,

,'~ .'~' .. ,:' , .'~ ,.. ~ "". ~',.. ::.' ~ .:;%~;~:~-..: \';~'.;":""-:.',;._ ~.,-_; :~~; :....:;~.·,..,.~.,.,,;.;..,:;.:::<;-S~ .. ,·~:;Jl,,·::t'·:-.

'- -

Page 15: 12.15.60

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COMPANY

FAIRHAVENLUMBER

Complete LineBuildDf1Ig Materials

8 SPRING ST.• FAIRHAVENWYman 3-2611

Permanent CenterAnother bill would set up a:.

permanent juvenile study center .'at the Michigan State Universitypolice administration school. '

Another measure would pro­vide for punishment up, to $200fi'ne and three months in jail forany parent who violates a pro­bate court order for control of achild on probation, and allowthe court to confine a child whoviolates probation.

Most of the other measures in_volve police and social agencyresponsibilities to young offend_ers.

Study leading to formulationof the bills took three years.

Father Healey added, "becauseof television, radio, more educa­tion in general, and the numberof people moving around thecountry, but in the strongholds,anti-Catholicism is still solid,and regularly there are meetings,especially around ReformationSunday, called solely for oppor­tunity to attack the Church.Whenever you hear an attack,"he advised, "just ask the per­son who founded his sect. it willstop them every time."

FOR•

The KEYSTONEWarehouse Salesroom

New and UsedOFFICE EQUIPMENT

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With most of the "No-Priest"areas in the South, the Glenmarypriests have concentrated onthat area. The first contact in lil

new area is usually made byGlenmary tent preachers, whocome into a town, set up a tent,and hold a week of sermons,singing and talks on the Bible.

"Later, two priests will arriveand settle there, usually in thesparsely populated hills. Thepeople fear and suspect thepriests ,at first, but ev~' ,become used to them.

"Our job is where there areno Catholics," Father explained."We start from - scratch, andbuild what we need as we can.The Sisters can get in and dothings we can't do. The poor arevery proud, and somehow theSisters know how to help themin a way that doesn't embarrassthem. Their work is especiallyeffective in the hospitals." '

start to WoarkAs soon as they arrive, the

priests start to work, helpinganyone they can in whateverway they can, whether it bebuilding a house, furnishingclothes or food to needy families,or just passing the time of day,

"The situation is improved,"

HOME MIS$IONER: Rev. Robert Healey of theGlenmary Home Missioners (left) with Rev. Patrick J.O'Neill, Holy Name Society moderator of St. Thomas Moreparish, Somerset. Father Healey addressed members onneeds of America's "no-priest land."

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Glenmary Father Outlines "No·Priest" Problem :~~rs~N;~~Rl~. 1960

To HQly Name Society, Somerset Stat~ Legislature, .;oy Marion Unsworth . To Study Youth

'''The Church has'a mission problem right in this country," Glenmarymissioner Rev. 'Robert Healey told the Holy Name Society of St. Thomas More Church, Somerset, at its Delinquency ~ill~monthly. meeting.. "There are 700 counties which have no priest at all,. and 800 counties. 'LANSING (NC) _ Eigh­that have 'no priest i~ the rural areas. These people have no contact with the Church ,teen bills aimed at curbingwhatsoever." "Father Hea-' juvenile delinquency in Mich-ley, whose order, the Glen- igan will come before themary Home Missioners, was ~egislature when it convenes ililfounded and dedicated to January.help establish the Catholic The bills, formulated by a spe-church in rural communities in cia1 House committee, werethe United States, added "You drafted after hearings with po-don't find the situation much lice officials, judges, educators,here in the North, where there clergy, social workers and par..are many cities, and particularly ents. Committee members alsomany educational opportunities." inspected pilot programs in va-

A young order, the Glenmary rious parts of the state.Fathers were founded in:l~37 by High on the . list of recom-Very Rev. W.' Howard Bishop, mendations is one for establish-who realized the need for such ment of camps for waywarda grou~ when he disc~vered that youngi?ters at local, county andone-thIrd of the Umted States state levels. One includes set-was unserved by priests. Coin- ting up a Michigan Civilian Con-ing the phrase "No-Priest Land, servation Corps at the MichiganU.S.A.," Father Bishop estab- National Guard 'training groundJished headquarters at Glendale, at Camp Grayling. It would train0., and set to work to fill the about 900 young men the firstgaps. Today there are 55 Glen- year.mary priests laboring around thecountry as well as GlenmaryBrothers and Sisters to assistthem.

Be KindFather Healey told his audi­

ence that, in dealing with non­Catholics, they should "be kind,be kind, be kind. When someoneasks a question, be very patientand be sure that you answer it.One unanswered question mightmean years before they ask an­other one, perhaps forever.

,"In small towns, people arefriendly," he continued. "There issome prejudice, but, if you letthem know you, you have noidea how many people's preju­dice can be changed. We can'tblame them. They don't hate theChurch, but what they think theChurch is.

"A priest in some of thesesouthern towns is an ecclesias­tical politician. One of the hard­est things he has to do is walkinto.town on Saturday afternoon.People will respond to friendli­ness. There are always one ortwo who are looking for some­thing, and you can answer theirquestions. Don't ever be ashamedto answer. You kRow more aboutyour religion than all thesepeople put together.

'''Fhe last war did more thananything else to spread knowl­edge of the Church. With lack ofeducation the hardest thing wehave to cope with, a lot of boysgot out of these small towns forthe first time. They met Catholicboys and saw how they lived.

"One boy who served duringthe war, came home interestedin the Church, but it took hinifour years to rid himself of long_seated feelings about Catholics.Now he is the only, Catholicwithin 25 miles, and he is goingto make more converts than anypriest could hope to, becausepeople will not be afraid to askhim questions."

No ChanceFather Healey, who has served

nine years in Russelville, Ky.,and five years in Franklin, N. C.,added, "1 think people are get­ting gypped, because they haveno chance to know about reli­gion. The greatest asset we haveis the radio, through which wecan talk to people who wouldnever approach us directly.

"The only way to, reach morepeople is to get more priestsdown there," the missioner, whohas been speaking about theorder around the eastern areafor the past year, added. "Butthere is one thing everyone can,do; learn to pray for the mis­sions and for non-Catholics. Youhave something they don't."

Cardinal· ProposePaid LaymenAs· Soluti~n

BOSTON (NC)'---: A· paideorps of .. laity to combateommunism by teaching'Catholicism .will·be proposedat the ecumenical council byHis Eminence Richard CardinalCushing.

"I can find no other practicalway we can reach the multi­tudes," said the Archbishop ofBoston. He said there are notenough priests to do the job.

"The day when the laity wasoutside the church, looking in. . . is over," he said in a ser­mon at a Mass marking the 50th ,anniversary of Our Lady of thePresentation parish, in suburbanBrighton.

Cardinal Cushing, who rec­ently toured several LatinAmerican countries, said thisarea· is the Church's biggestproblem. "The whole place is ahotbed of communism," he said.

One reason for this, he said,is "the abysmal ignorance of90 per cent of the South Ameri­can Catholics about their Faith."

Parents SupportPrayer Policy

GREENHILLS (NC) - Nearly500 citizens of this Ohio com­munity turned to voice theirsupport of the public schoolboard's policy permittting teach­ers to 'offer "non-sectarian"prayers in class.

At a public meeting called bythe board, parents of publicschool pupils took sharp issuewith efforts of a small group topersuade the board 'to withdrawits permission for classroom OldTestament readings and sayinggrace in kindergarten.

Adopted two years ago and re­affirmed last Spring, the policystatement declares: "The boardof education will permit openingof school with a brief readingfrom the Old Testament of theBible or recitation of the Lord'sprayer or in kindergarten a non­sectarian prayer before takingfood.

"This is left to the discretionof teachers and no teacher shallbe compelled by order of an em­ployee of the school system tolead any religious activities.",

4,000 Pilgrims VisitShrine Built by Saint

BURBANK (NC)-Four thou­sand pilgrims climbed MountRaphael here to pray at' theshrine built on its crest by St.Frances Xavier Cabrini in 191'1.

The pilgrims are members ofthe Italian Catholic Federation',Msgr. Robert E. Brennan, theirchaplain, led them in the 15 mys­teries of the Rosary as they,climbed the rain-softened traiL

The intention of their pilgrim­age was "the reunion of all·Christians under the HolyFather," Benediction before theshrine of. Our, Lady Help 01.Christians eoncl.uded the pll­grimage.

New·Calendar GivesLiturgical Changes

To the liturgically-minded, theChristian Life Calendar issuedyearly by the Bruce PublishingCompany is almost a necessity.This year's calendar was delayedbecause of extensive revisions

'necessitated by recent papalchanges in the rubrics of Massand the breviary, and up anddown the country daily Mass­goers have been in a liturgicalfog.

Now, however, the calendarhas appeared, together with anote apologizing for its lateness,and all is serene.

The Christian Life Calendar,unique in its field, begins withthe first Sunday of Advent andcarries through the liturgicalyear.

Saint, vestments to be worn,Mass to be said, and instructionsfor recitation of the breviary aregiven for each day, together witha pithy 10-second homily, de­signed to lift the reader's mindand heart from things of earthto things of heaven.

Once you have it, you'll won­der how you managed withoutit.

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deluged with tricky circularswhich come to him in plain en­velopes. One million children ayear are so solicited, according tothe estimate of Post Office peo­ple. And no effective relief seemspossible.

There are those who maintainthat no real harm is done. Thequestion of personal -spiritualand moral harm is not evenraised. But others see a cause­and-effect connection betweenyoung people's introduction tothis sewage and the increased in­cidence of sex crime and vio­lence, delinquency, and variousother disorders.

Parents ask in anguish whythe racket cannot be effectivelystopped once for all, why itcannot be summarily and finallystamped out.

. Historical ReviewThis leads Mr. Kilpatrick into

a wide'-ranging inquiry. Primar­ily the inquiry is addressed. tothe law as to obscenity and por­nography. But it does not stopthere. There is an historical re­view of the law regarding ob-

. scenity, from the Comstock Actof 1873 down to the SupremeCourt decision in the Roth andAlbert Cases of 1957, and tochanging social attitudes aridcodes.

The law has never protectedobscenity in print, nor doesfreedom of expression as guar­anteed in the Bill of Rightsthrow a mantle of immunityabout its purveyors. This prin­ciple has never been overturnedby the courts.

But it is not the easiest thingin the world to define what ob­scenity is, and in different gen­erations different views of thishave been held. _

Court DecisionThe Supreme Court decision

of 1957 laid it down that, to bejudged obscene, the matter mustappeal to prl,lrien~ inteJ;est, mustbe considered as a whole, mustbe offensive by contemporarystandards and of deleterious ef­fect on the average adult reader.

Mr. Kilpatrick goes almostminutely into the background ofthese' two cases, their advancethrough the courts, and theseveral opinions by. members ofthe Supreme Court. This is aprotracted treatment of a ratherspecialized subject, but the anal­ysis familiarizes the reader withaspects of the subject which hemay not have thought of before.

Somewhat less detailed is Mr.Kilpatrick's review of the ques-

. tion of motion picture censorship,its operation in various formsand places, and its curtailmentin the last decade by theSupreme Court.

On Side of FreedomThe author is ~trongly on the

side of freedom; he wants nointerference with the' right toexpress oneself without hin­drance. But he is not an advo­cate of completely unconditionallicense.

He rebuts the liberal·literati'scontention that a black night ofunreasonable suppression andpuritan dictatorship has de­scended on the country. The re­verse is true. He chides themfor ignoring the fact that ob­scene materials cause socialdamage.

."1 am persuaded that' pro­longed subjection to obscenematerials can have a profoundinfluence on sexual attitudes andsocial behavior not only of ado-.lescents but of adults also, a'ndnot only of especially susceptibleadults but of tolerably normaladults too.

"What is involved, or so itseems to me, is a slow rotting ofthe social fabric, and I believethe. states and the localities,moving with the utmost careunder due process 9f l~w, haveevery right to protect theirsociety from this 'sort ··of· slowcorruption."

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. KennedyThe title of James Jackson Kilpatrick's' book, 'The

J~mut Peddlers' (Doubleday. $4.50), might lead ,one.to.suppose that the work dealt only with the ponography and.obscenity and the censorship of motion pictures, as well asa series of proposals as to.what might be done to pro­ject legitimate freedom of-expression and at the sametime safeguard the interests of'the community.

Mr. Kilpatrick, editor of theRichmond NewsLeader, say stha t last yearhe and others·fu his office be­came interestedin questions offree speech anddue process in­volved in legis­lation whichthe postmasterg e n era 1 re­quested to facil­itate the prop­er policing of the, m ail s .They wondered whether the

_,. heated complaints about an ob­scenity racket had any justifica­tion.

To find out they answeredadvertisements offering books,pamphlets, still photos, mo.tionpictures. What they receIvedamazed them.

In short order, they were cqn­vinced that the peddling of por­nography through the mails is"a big 'business, a cynical busi­ness, a dirty business." Mr. Kil­patrick went on to become some­thing of an expert on the subject,and his indignation mounted asbis resear.ches progressed.

Stuff Is VileAt some length (and often in

excessive detail), Mr. Kilpatrick'describes and quotes from thematerials which he investigated.His citations roundly prove thatthe stuff is vile beyond belief..But they will also pose a serious

problem for certain readers: thatis, passages here reproduced, aswell as particulars about· thepornographic filth, may be muchmore than some people can besafely exposed to.

At any rate, here is ampleevidence of the depravity andcorruption which is being circu­lated at the taxpayers' expenseand to the aggrandizement ofprofiteers in perversity.

.The scope of this obnoxious op­eration is vast indeed. "The ob­scenity racket now operates inevery state in the Union, throughsYndicates, wholesalers, and dis­tributors as efficiently organizedas any reputable manufacturingfirm. Postmaster General ArthurE. Summerfield estimates theirgross mail-order revenues at$500 million a year."

~ Obscene films, also sold bymail, bring their peddlers atleast $200 million a year.'

Preys on Young ,All this is horrifying enough.

But much more horrifying is thefact that the racket makes aspecialty of preying on theyoung, that it solicits businessfrom mere children.

A el,1ild who innocently 'an­swers em advertisement for aknife or some gadget, may easilyQnd quite unwillingly have hisname p~aceq on a mailing list towhich mat.'li or most of the deal­ers in defilement have access.

Thereafter the child will be,

~~q;,Hru!filO!fil® ~~lJ'il'ilO!fil«llli'Yj ;11@(l [L@U'® V@~@U'6«mS

BOSTON (NC) - A nationalseminary specifically for menwith delayed vocations, the firs.tof its kind in the United States,will be built in the Boston Arch­diocese next year.

Richard Cardinal Cushing,Archbishop of Boston, said theseminary is now in the "planningstage" and construction willprobably begin next Summer.

Men who began careers in thesecular world before entering

-r·the seminary bring special quali­. ties to their· vocation, Cardinal

Cushing said. He predicted. thatgraduates of the new seminarywould "bring to the priesthoodmaturity, experience, leadership,DeW ideas and new methods."

.t 6 T. . i jO~-Diocese of Fall River-ihurs;,·Dec;·lS,.1960·,

ISmMlJ Peddlers' Is AnalysisOf Pornography and Law·'

'--~

r­tI\

Page 17: 12.15.60

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.GEORG~ ~.MONTLE

Ston®huDI ElectionThe Stonehill College student

body has elected several newmembers to its newly organizedHouse of Representatives, a stlP.dent government body.

Included in th~ group are F.Richard Gendreau of Fall River.eand Margaret Duggan, New Bed,..ford.

THE ANCHOR-hurs., Dec. 15, 1960

POi1)\to~~ ~~"[email protected]~D~D@ll)f ~;$hOpSFOlt C@[]l)@cdJ@ Sees

VATICAN CITY (NC)­Pope Joh'n has named three

. new Canadian bishops.Msgr. Paul Emile Chal"o

bonneau, 38, was appointed Ti..tular Bishop of Tapso and Aux,.iliary Bishop of Ottawa.

Father Joseph R. Windle, 43,­was named Titular Bishop ofUzita and Auxiliary Bishop ofOttawa.

Father Jean Marie Fortier, 40,was made Titular Bishop ofPoma:ia and Auxiliary Bishopof Samte Anne de la Pocatiere.

Msgr. Charbonneau, born inSainte Therese de BlainvilleQue., on May 4, 1922 wa~ordained in 1947. He serv~d as aseminary teacher and rector, andlater as a parish pastor. He wasn:tade a monsignor in 1956.

Father Windle was born IIllCalabogie, Ont. on Aug. 28, 1917.He stUdied at Ironside College•.the Montreal seminary and theLateran University in Rome.Ordained in 1943, he has beenserving as pastor of St. John theEvangelist parish in Campbell'sBay, Que.

Father Fortier was born illlQuebec on Aug. 1, 1920. Hestudied at the Quebec ~eminary,Laval University in Quebec andthe Gregorian University inRome. He was ordained in 1944and in 1946 was appointed pro­fessor of Church history at theQuebec major seminary. He wasnamed the seminary's spiritualdirector in 1955. He has alsoworked as vice-postuiator of thebeatification cause of BishopFrancois Laval, Canada's fir~bishop.

The old church on Elm Streetnow is St. Peter's EpiscopalChurch. The former rectory onElm Street was sold and a newrectory was acquired diagonallyacross from the church.

Father Considine acquired landacross the street from the newchurch and has blacktopped itfor basketball and other sports.

In addition to the guild otheractivities at the church are themen's choir, Holy Name Society,Girl Scouts and High SchoolGirls' Club. Catechism classesare conducted four days eachweek by lay teachers and Sistersof Mercy of St. John's parish,New Bedford.

The Rev. John V. Magnaniwas appointed an assistant atthe church last summer.

So. Dartmouthand Hyannis

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Russian PatriarchAt Catholic Mass

BEIRUT (NC) - PatriarchAlexei of Moscow, head of theRussian Orthodox Church at­tended Mass in a Catholic churchin Alexandria during his visit toEgypt, "it was learned here.

The Russian Patriarch flew toAlexandria from Moscow andwas the guest of OrthodoxPatriarch Christoforos II ofAlexandria for his four-day stay.He attended Mass in the Maron­ite Rite Catholic church inAlexandria.

. a church fund to 'purchase itemsfor the church. The Guildbought the altar linens, goldvases and paint whic;l was usedby men of the parish to refur­bish the church and rectory.

The first administrator of theold church was the late Rev.Francis J. Duffy, who had beena curate at St. James. He servedat St. Mary's from 1930 to 1935.He was followed by the Rev.James B. Downey, May 1935 toFebruary 1938; the Rev. John F.Broderick, from 1938 until hisdeath in December 1940.

Father Broderick's brother,the Rev. Christopher L. Brod­erick of Fall River, filled in atSt. Mary's for about six monthsduring his brother's illness. TheRev. Patrick Hurley was at St.Mary's for the next five monthsand he was followed by the Rev.Leonard J. Daley, 1941 to 1947,and the Rev. David A. O'Brien,1947 to 1954.

The Women's Guild was ex­panded by Father O'Brien in1948 and the old Guild waschanged to a "club." When thenew church was built the origi­nal women's guild memberscontributed a pew and a win­dow.

Women VolunteerFor Young Patients

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Fiftymembers . of the MetropolitanWomen's Club who are rearingfamilies of their own' are givingtime to the "Tender LovingCare" project at Hotel Dieu here,hospital conducted by the Sistersof Charity of St. Vincent de Paul.

"Tender loving care" is whatpediatricians write on the chartsof their young patients, and thewomen have volunteered to fol­low through on it. One step inthe project has been to decoratethe walls and drapes of the chil­dren's playroom with circusscenes and other bright pictures.

"Bel.ls· of St•.Mary's" Cheer Fami.liesOf Padanaram., South Dartmouth

By Avis RobertsHymns of praise to Mary peal forth eac h Summer night through the charming village

of Padanaram in South Dartmouth, lightening gardeners' chores and cheering familiesgathered together in their yards for the la st hour before sundown. Muted music isenjoyed by householders during the colder months. The hymns are played electrically onthe 25 bells installed in thenew St. Mary's Church inDecember 1956. The firstnew Catholic church inSouth Dartmouth, St. Mary'odfirst Solemn High Mass wascelebrated May 10, 1956, withBishop Connolly presiding.

It was celebrated by Rev.John S. Considine, M.M., ofMaryknoll, N.Y., brother of Rev.Arthur G. Considine, pastor ofSt. Mary's since Oct. 24, 1954.Another brother, Rt. Rev. Msgr.Raymond T. Considine, pastor ofSt. William's Church, Fall River,was a chaplain to the Bishop.

Beautiful LandmarkSet on a three-acre tract of

land, St. Mary's is a beautifullandmark in this small New Eng­land village~ Its design is tra­ditional New England in keep­ing with the decor of many oldhomes in Padanaram. The tow­ering white spire has pinkstained glass windows.

The interior of the church isa far cry from the somber Gothicstructure of most churches inthe Diocese. Woodwork, likethe outside clapboarding, iswhite. Pews are natural birchand white and walls are 'fWilliamsburg blue. Parishionersshowing their beautiful churchto strangers persist' in callingthe wall paint "Blessed Virginblue."

The gold and white stationsof the cross were a gift of theRt. Rev. Msgr. Henry J. Noon,long-time pastor of St. JamesChurch, New Bedford, to theformer church in 1923. Theywere redecorated for the newchurch by a South Dartmouthparishioner.

The interior /light and airinessof the church is achieved bytransparent windows dot tedwith bright bits of stained glass.

Under c'onstruction since July1955, St. Mary's has a seatingcapacity for 550 persons. Thereis a blacktopped area for morethan 100 autos and more black­topping is planned by FatherConsidine to accommodate in­creased traffic from nearbySummer residents.

A statue of Our Lady ofGrace, presented by the childrenof the parish, is centered onthe church lawn at Dartmouthand Middle Streets. The appealof the grounds is enhanced inSummer by showy borders ofpetunias and in the Fall by gaybeddings of chrysanthemums.

The former church, on ElmStreet, Padanaram, was erectedin 1834 and used as a vestry forthe Padanaram CongregationalChurch. In 1923 it became thefirst Catholic church in Dart­mouth. At that time it 'Vas achapel of St. James CatholicChurch, New Bedford, but in1930 it was made a separatechurch and named St. Mary's.

Most of the equipment for thefirst tiny church (it held lessthan 200 persons) came fromSt. James and as gifts of NewBedford residents.

First GuildIn 1935 a group of 18 women

working on money -' makingprojects for the parish organizedits first Women's Guild. Theymet once a week at each others'homes to play cards. Eachwoman contributed 25 cents for

~~@1 Dli'owe If~D~~

hTj l~t9=YM«Jn~Q1BERLIN (NC) - The Soviet

Press in Lithuania has virtuallyadmitted that a year of intensi­fied antireligious propaganda int hat predominantly Catholiccountry has failed.

n was learned that the com­munist press in Lithuania is nowblaming the government's paidpropagandists of atheism andteachers in Lithuania for the factthat Lithuanians are still prac­ticing their religion.

The Red press, the only pressin Lithuania since the nation was'seized by the Soviet Union andannexed in World War II, hasprinted articles almost daily forthe past year castigating theclergy and religious practices ofthe people.

Prison TermsPaid propagators of atheism

outnumber priests by four toone. Priests are stricuy forbid­den to teach religion to childrenor youth. Earlier this year, sev­eral laymen and women weresentenced to prison terms offour years or more for teachingreligion to children privately.

It is believed here that thecurrent attack in the press onthe atheistic propagandists andthe teachers stem in part frommanifestations of religious fer­vor last September at the Lith­uanian Marian Shrine at Siluva.

New ChaplainPARIS (NC)-Father Francois

Russo, S.J., has been named ec­clesiastical advisor to the Inter­national Catholic Center forCoordination with the UnitedNations Educational, Scientificand Cultural Organization.

Urge IncreasedSocial Servi~@

To FamU~e$NEW YORK (NC) - In­

creased social services areneed~d to preserve theAmerican family, findingsby. 24 business and labor leadersindicate.

They concluded that familybreakdowns have serious eco­nomic and social consequencesand that the worker with troubleat hotDe is not only less efficientbut a danger to his fellow work­ers.

"Family breakdown is a majorhuman problem in America to­day," Thomas J. Watson, Jr.,president of the InternationalBusiness Machine Corporation,noted.

He said he spoke not only of"actually broken" families, butthose experiencing "deterioratingfamily relationship" and the"absence of healthy family life."

Conditions such as these un­dermine "a substantial numberof our population," Mr. Watsonsaid.

He stressed that "'business andindustry have a big stake in thecommunity's effort to maintainstrong families."

Community Problems"Yesterday's family problems

are today's community prob­lems-delinquency, irresponsibleparenthood, weak citizenship,mental illness, alcoholism, emo­tional distress and the inevitablecosts of these and other prob­lems to the voluntary contrib­utor and to the taxpayer," hesaid.

George Meany, president ofthe AFL-CIO, and other spokes­men expressed firm support forthe work of social agencies en­gaged in family counseling.

R. H. Collacott, public rela­tions director for the StandardOil Company of Ohio, said mod­ern business and industry havebrought with them a host ofsocial problems in whose solu­tion they must now assist.

He said social services havebecome as characteristic of mod­ern industrial society as banking,legal and judicial services.

For its own good the corpora­tion should help support andmake social services availableto its employes, Mr. Collacottsaid.

The findings of the businessand labor leaders were set forthin a special 50th anniversaryissue of Family Service High-

. lights, publication of the FamilyService Association 'of America.

Page 18: 12.15.60

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Rabbis Hit Alleged Jteligion in SchoolsHILLSIDE (NC)-':t'he RatJ- character are most appropriately

binical Council of New Jersey observed wi'thin the home orhas decri~4 what it calls' "the amidst a proper religious envip..growing number of ,religious ob- 'onment."servances being held in public The resolution did not refer to

,. schools throughout the state." any . specific celebrations, butThe Jewish Orthodox group, in, stated: "We trust school author­

a resolution adopted at a meeting' ities' will take notice of suchhere call,ed for a halt to such sentiment and view programs"sectarian practices." Their res- based on religious symbolism asolution asserted that "celebra- inappropriate because they as­tions or symbolism of a religious sume a sectarian character."

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Urges, ExpulsionLA PAZ (NC.) - Ireneo

Pimentel, leftist 'labor leader,has urged Bolivian PresidentVictor Paz Estenssoro to expelall foreign priests, from thecountry and threatened "ener­getic reaction by the workingclasses'; if' the demand is notmet.

state supreme court has held thelaw to be an attempt "to securerespect and reverence for theLord's day."

Forces ClosoingMr. Ehrmann complained that

such a law compels his OrthodoxJewish client to close his storeboth on Sunday and on Saturday,because' that is the Jewish Sab­bath. The Massachusetts law spe­cified: however, that kosher meatcould' be sold from 6 to 10 A.M.on Sundays.

Mr. Ehrmann said that .underthe law Orthodox Jewish mer­chants in Massachusetts hadeither to close their stores twodays a week or submit to an"economic compulsion to makepeople abandon their own reli­gion."

. When the Massachusetts lawwas ruled unconstitutional .inMay, 1959, Richard CardinalCushing" Archbishop o~ Boston,described the ruling as "com­pletely at variance with the tra­dltions of the past and inconsis­tent with' the purposes of theSunday observance as they havebeen' implied in our previouslegislation."'Father Robert Drinan, S.J.,

dean of the Boston College,lawsehool, said' the ruling was thefirst in this co'untry to assert that,compulsory Sunday closing lawsviolate the Constitution by plac­ing ,an unreasonable burden onthose who worship on anotherday of the week.

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Await Closing Laws Decision

CONFERENCE MEETING: St. Vincent de Paulconference at Mt. Carmel church auditorium. Left to right:Dr. David Costa, Jr., President New Bedford ParticularCouncil, Msgr. Vieira, Moderator of Mt. Carmel conference,and Conrad Andrade, Pres. Mt. Carmel Conference.

Continued from Page OneOnly in Massachusetts was the

Sunday closing law struck downby a lower' court. The laws in­volved in the Maryland andPennsylvania cases have beenupheld so far.

Massachusetts CaseLeading off the two-day ver­

bal battle was the Massachusettscase in which the state is seek­ing a reversal of a May, 1959,Federal court ruling· whichstruck down its law on groundsof religious discrimination.

Assistant State Attorney Gen­eral Joseph H. Elcock concededthat the law may originally havebeen enacted for religious rea-'sons. But he said the purpose ofthe law in modern times hasbeen to preserve 'Sunday as aday of "rest. and recreation."

Mr. Elcock argued that states.have the power to set minimumwages. In providing for a day of'rest, he said, 'it is best for a stateto choose a day .which is alreadyobserved by most people.

Mr. Elcock was asked by thecourt at one point whether com- ,pulsory Sunday closing places';'an economic burden on theprac-'tice of the religion by those who,conScientiously believe the'ymust not 'work on some other'day as well.

He replied that this situationdoes not differ at bottom from

, that in which parents send theirchildr~Ii to parochial schools' 'as­a matter of conscience while the'state refrains from ,giving them:economic assistarice to do so., ,Herbert B. Ehrmann, counselfor the Crown Kosher' Super­market of Springfield, Mass.,'argued that the Sunday law'spurpose is still ~ssentially reli­gious.

He' said that as late as 1923 'the

Danish ConvertCOPENHAGEN (NC) - A

. well-known Danish doctor - aconvert to Catholicism-has an­nounced plans .'to become' aBenedictine' ,monk.

He is Dr. Paul Reiter, a 66­year-old speciil1ist in psychiatry.A student of medical, thologicaland philosophical problems, hiswritings include a study 011

'Martin Luther. '

TI;;: ANCHO;::­Thurs., Dec. 15, 1960

, Continued from Page One

freedom is lacking there is no,morality, he told a session of the~fth annual conference of theDistrict of Columbia PoliticalScience Association. The meet­ing was held at the Catholic'University of America. .,

Denies Morals. Mr. Elliott pointed out that the

international communist con.:spiracy "denies all morals, in,our sense of the word" and in- .deed "forbids" the basic condi­tion for morality~free individ­wil ch~ice-by refusing to grant.any "protected area" of individ-·ual freedom safe from statedomination.: No regime :Which does not pro­

tect free choice is. "acting withinIi moral framework," he de­clared.

'Ce~tury of Sell'vi<ee,'NEW NORCIAL (NC)­

Spain has given its Benemeritu8award to two Spaniards who

~have .served as missionaries hereto Australian aborigines formore than 50 years each. Theyare Father Rosendo' Sosa,O.S.B., and Brother Luis Arru­fat, 'O.S.B.

New Rectc)'ry' 'Continued from Page One

Avenue,' South Yarmouth.Anderson Bros-Strom Inc. of

Hyannis are the general contrac';'tors. The sub-contractors are:electrical, Fuller Electric Co.,Hyannis; plumbing and heating,William Wahtola, Hyannis;

, painting, Edward Halloran, WestYarmouth.

Gaffney Associates of Hyannisare' the architects.

Foreign AffairsIn a discussion after Mr. EI­

11ott's address, Charles' BurtOnMarshall, a ~esearch, associatewith the Washington Center ofForeign Policy Research, saidthere exists today a false moral­ity in the ,field of foreign affairs.

. , : Mr. Marshall" a former mem- ,ber of the State DepartmentPolicy Planning Staff, 'said this'false morality manifests itself inappeals for independence inareas of the world that are not,ready for independence, in' ex­cessive devotion ,to the principleof neutrality, and in, an unveri­fied faith that international ne;­gotiations are good things in,themselves., George Pettee, of the Opera­

tions' Research Office, JohnsHopkins University, deplored thearrogance of scientists who thinkthey are qualifiedto comment onforeign affairs because they aregood scientists.' '

Ord i'nation: Continued from Page ODe

Theological College of the Cath-''oJic University of America andfrom 1957 to the present has,attended the North American,College.'He holds A.B. and M.A. 'de-'

grees from Catholic Universityand a Bachelor of Sacred Theol­ogy degree from Gregorian Uni­versity, Rome. He will celebratehis first Mass at the Generalateof the Sisters of the Holy Unionof the Sacred' Hearts in Romeand will be assisted by Rev.Gerald Lachance of the WhiteFathers, a native of St. Anne'spar'ish, Fall River.

Rev. Mr. Delaney will return 'to the FaIr Riv'er Diocese inJune at the completion of hisstudies. "

His parents and brother willvisit relatives and friends' inEngland and Ireland before re­turning to' the home at 424 Lin-

........den Street, Fall River.In all, 50 young men will be

ordained to the priesthood and. represent 44 dioceses in 23

states. About 275' parents, rela­tives and friends of those to beordained will be present. Forty­nine of the students, will beordained by Archbishop O'Con­nor; the fiftieth, Thomas S.Maloney, will be ordained thesame day by his brother, MostRev. Charles G. Maloney, Auxi~liary Bishop of Louisville.

'18

Page 19: 12.15.60

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa(River-Thurs., Dec. 'i'5, 1960

are the boys who were give!llserious consideration for firSlteam berths on the basis of thei..fine showing on' the gridironOof the .area this past Fall.

The BenchlEnds: Roger Duarte, Dighto~

Don Carey, Durfee; Paul GiusU.Dartmouth; Gerry CarpenteZ"Case.

Tackles: Mike Morin, Attls-:.borb; Norm Benoit, Falmout~Ed Fitzgerald, Oliver Ame~

Ralph DePillo, Mansfield; RegBarrows, Wareham.. Guards: Ron Therriault, nu.­

fee; Tony Rego Fairhaven; Tom.Martin, Yarmouth; Dick Souzo.Coyle.

Centers: Jim McQuade, Co~Harry St. Jean, Durfee.

Backs: 'John Sullivan, .JUaMcMahon, Durfee; Don Boisve~ ....N. B. Vocational; Len Lopel\.Wareham; Ed Carvalho, Taun­ton; Rick Lippard, Yarmou~

Kevin Blake and Neil Poil"~

North A~Uebol'Q. ' , .

5'8"-160 ~ •. a repeat All-Dioc­e~an ~election . '.. operated fromthe QB slot this year . . . re­turned to halfback 'by poetic'license • . • ran 'pitchout option:effectively . . . always a threatto the outside ••. college course.senior." Ron Gentili, Mansfield: 6'2"­

185 .... the other junior on theteam • 0 • All-Diocesan for thesecond successive year . . . alsoconverted to quarterback thisyear ••. a genuine triple threat• ••J scored an even 100 pointsthis Fall ... a four lettermanand a great competitor in eachsport.

Fallback -'.Jim Gravel, Attleboro: 5'10":'­

175 ..• captained Jewelers •• 0

the area's most explosive back. . • an aggressive clutch per­former ••• good speed and tim­ing • • • innate running instincto 0 • co-captain elect of basketballo •• a college prep senior.

··-'·'Ancl' noW'for the beI1cll. Theae

ward wall: •. devastati~gblock­er pulverized safety-man O!l

winning TD vs. Mansfield .•.fourth" year 'of varsHy ball'. • •college course senior. 0 • Univ.of New Hampshire.· .

.CenterllloR Roach, Wareham: 5'11"­

222 ... the team's big man •• 0

good play .: .. diagnostician •••likes physical. contact ... 4 yearman on Capeway eleven •••accurate snapper-back ... mem­ber of basketball squad, also ..•hopes to pursue physical eduClrtiOD studies at So. Conn.

QuarterbaekGerr7 Cunniff. Coyle: 5'8"­

160 ••• inherited Hoey's mantlewith grace and aplomb •.. All­State Class C • • . captain-elect .of basketball . • • All-Scholastic '.llecond baseman • • . a versatileathlete with lots CJf heart •• 0

leans toward' Boston College.'. Halfbacks. ,BOf) ..l4onaai1lo·,New :BecifoN:

<.

.' o. 'a converted. fullbackdropped back to do the puntingfor the Crimson ... a weightmanon the track. squad·'.\ . collegecourse senior' .. ~ undecided be­tween Boston University and So.Conn;

lEd Walsh, Coyle: 6'2"-200 .• 0

bulwark of a fine Warrior fron­tier . • . second year of varsityball .•• hails from. Mattapoisett'• • • stands high in the estima­tion of his coaches and team­mates ... classical course seniol!'eo. Boston College bound.

GuardsT0D7 Arruda, Durfee: 5'7"­

180 • • • Hilltoppers' fire plug upfront • • • actually a tackle .' . .blocking his forte ••. quiet butworkmanlike • 0 • All-BristolCounty •.• weightman in track• • • victory over New BedfordIftatest thrilL

Bob Guthrie, North Attleboilo1'10"-220 .•. great field leader .••aoc:hored North's B',lpe!'latlve~

Marquette Drr~ps

FootbcU, Trc~kMILWAUKEE (NC) - Mar­

quette University is dropping itsintercollegiate football and 'trackprograms and cutting down onother athletes.

Father' Edward J. O'Donnell,S.J., university president, told nnews conference the programswill be dropped 'at the end ofthis year to enable the universityto concentrate on a "decade O'llacademic explosion." The uni­versity recently announced mla-year building program costing$30 million.

Marquette began football in1892 and has played a majorintercollegiate schedule since1902. The university's footballteams were natfonal powers inthe 1930s, but fared badly inin recent years. The team wonthree games and lost six lastseason. Father O'Do'nnell saidthe deficit from last season mayreach $50,000.

All-DiocesanContinued from 'Page One

starting berths was keener thanever. B,rief thumbnail sketchesof the All-Star9 follow,

, EndsDick Breziriski, Coyle: 5'-is5

•.. All-State Class C .•• out­standing pass .receiver ... runslike a halfback ... went 71 yardsvs. Taunton .... solid defensively. . . second year of varsity foot­ball • . . also a starter' in basket­ball ..• college prep junior .• 0

likes Boston University..vohn lFitzimmons,' Somerset:·

13'-170 ••• Raider co-captain ..•led by example ... a tremendoustwo-way operative ... devastat­ing blocker ... works at condi­tioning year round ••. adept atturning plays in • . • succeedsnamseake Mike, ez-Coyle, onDiocesan eleven.

TacklesStan Tenters, New Bedford:

8'2"-190 ••• big, fast and agile

Second MiracleVATICAN CITY (NC) - The

Sacred CongregatioD of Riteshas approved a second miracleattributed to the intercession ofan Italian Capuchin friar, FatherInnocent of Berzio, whose beat!­ficatiOll eawJe Ja DeiDi stuc:UecIheI'e. ...~~ ..

Attleboro A1?ecieyo OU'g(u'Jh~es

Hoop leagueCompetition in the newly

formed Attleboro Area CYObasketball league will begin onWednesday, Jan. 4, Rev. BernardF. Sullivan, director, announces.

All games will be played at St.John's gymnasium in Attleboro.Parish teams will include St.Marys, Norton; St. Mary's, Mans­field; St. Joseph's and HolyGhost, Attleboro; Sacred Heart,North Attleboro; Our Lady Ol!Mount Carmel, Seekonk, and St.Theresa's, South Attleboro.

Attleboro Area CYO is alsoplanning a glee club, with FatherRoger LeDuc, assistant at SacredHeart, North Attleboro, as direc­tor. Candidates are being givenindividual auditions. Father Le­Duc hopes to present a concertin the Spring.

The Attleboro group w.ill pre­sent a drama, "The ChristmasStory," over WARA, Attleboro,from 2 to 3 P.M. next Sunday.Broadcast primarily for the agedand shut-ins, the play is ex­pected to have appeal for elllisteners.

Christmas PartySt. Mary's CYO, Norton, wltl

sponsor a Christmas party forgrammar school children of theparish next Saturday at NortonHigh School. Refresli¥Dents willbe served, and gifts will be pre­sented to each child by the pas­tor, Rev. William D. Thomson.Santa Claus will appear andSalty Brine and Jeff will stopby to greet the youngsters.

The Norton group is forminga girls' basketball league. Anall-star team will compete withgirls' teams of other parishelland other area teams.

Other Norton activities includeformation of a boys' basketballteam in the junior age group tocompete with other parish tearnsin the same age group.

Page 20: 12.15.60

. ~',

"~

.,SACRED HEART WOMEN'S GUILD :'.Unusu~r projectsare.enjoy·ed.· Center,Ann 'Ma~y,.' recii>ieh~ of ,first embF~id~red:baptismal· robe' given: to·.by nieri~hers.' of Sacred'Heart. Ohurch!s Women's 'G.uild,Fail ;RiveJ,Left; .: . babies.of I>aris~,.'witIl :pareilts; ;¥rtaild.¥t:s.:Daniel'Jlelaney:-Right; MissRev. John G. Carroll, mode~ator, with Mrs. John J.. ' Sullivan,' president.' Mabel Smith-,in <;harg;e'Of)·~eWly40P,ened.p~~is.hli.~rapr,Ais~ri~tin:gbOok~•

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.'Small New Christians ~f'Sacred Heri'rfParisn ··:j·od,'. ~eninanship--'. R'e'ce:;ve,'H'a'n'"d-E"m'.b··'roo':de'"r''e'd'" B"ap't··:s····m:·a'Z' R'"'0'"be''s' '.E~~~I~R~:t~s~~~r~~~ ,

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, Lucky ,the child who's' born in Sa~redH~art~arish, Fall River: Thanks to 'theWomen's"" "I'thinlt ,it c?mes d~wn .~o, ~ ,

G 'ld h . . "b t' 'I ·t;'·f . '. th "ff' . t" .. t" 't th ·t·' f 'h' . matter of pohteness FatherUl.; : receIves 'a ..~p )sma garmen . rom eo. ICI~ mg ~>rIe~. a' e~ lme 0 . IS :Joseph F.. Downey, sJ., 'arts'and

chrIstemng. A leaflet given the parents WIth the garment, whIch IS embrol(~ered '~Ith "science dean at John Carrollthe Greek chi rho monogram, itncient liturgical syn1bol for Christ, explains: "Th~ white .University, ·Cleveland,· told alinen cloth which your child' . . ' '. 'm~eting of d~ans .o~ Jesuit col.-.~.' 'd d . 'th' "B t' Members of the committee, head;' tirday afternoons, arid after each leges and umverSltles here.

receIve urmg e ap IS- ed by Mrs..Henry E. Boulds,' 'Mass on. Sunda.y. . "It b '1 d h h. .',' 01 S own to w et er themal c~r~mony IS. a symbol of embroi~er the child's name an!! Catholic Interest 'writer has a feeling for neatnessthe punty of hIS soul after baptismal date on the garment, Books and magazines are of an4 a genupine respect forit has been cleansed of the stain which is returned to the parents specific Catholic interest, notes others," the priest stated. Badof original sin by the Sacrament within two weeks. Miss Smith. There's no children's ,penmanship is a difficult prob­of Baptism. Appropriately, the first Sacred section as yet, but it's hoped to lem to cope with on the college

When the cloth or Baptismal Heart baby to receive a garment add one in the future. Parish- ; level, he said, "consequently,Garment is given to the newly' was the new child of Mr.' and iOITers are' not charged for the colleges have learned to livebaptized baby the priest says Mrs. Daniel Delaney, 424 Lin- li'brary service but some' dona- with bad penmal1ship by simplytheSe words: "Receive this white den Street. The baby's uncle, tions have been received, which giving objective tests and re­garment and see that you carry Rev. Mr. Joseph P. Delaney, will will be used to add new titles. quiring papers to be typewrit-it unstained before the judg- be ordained in Rome this Sun- Books on hand include many ten." ,ment seat of Our Lord Jesus day. Another uncle is a sem- biographies, novels, stories, ofChrist, so as to' attain eternal ,inarian. missionaries and anthologies.life," The providing of baptismal Soon to be on the Guild agenda

"The Sacred Heart Women's garments is not the only unusual is yet another project-the co­Guild has provided this Bap- activity of the Sacred Heart operation with pastor and prieststismal Garment so that you may Guild, headed by Mrs. John IJ. in the introduction of sungkeep it for your child as a Sullivan of 369 June Street. An- Masses for congregational par.,memento of his rebirth in Christ other committee has opened a ticipation, in accordance withthrough Holy Baptism." parish library under direction of recent papal directives.

Madonna Committee Miss Mabel Smith. Non-Catholics are as welcomeAttached to the lei:lflet is a Starting with a nucleus of 125 as Catholics in the Guild, em-

coupon which parents detach books, the library has added new phasizes Mrs. Sullivan. Specialand return to the Madonna Com- borrowers each weetk, Hours are invitations went out at (the be­mittee of the Guild, together to suit the convenience of par- ginning of the club year to non­with the baptismal garment. ishioners, from 3 to 4:30 on Sat- Catholic mothers of children at­

t.ending Sacred Heart School.

Alaska COMll't StudiesCase of Bus Rides

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A deci­sion in a case involving publicb' ; transportation for parochialschool students is not expeCtedto be given by the Alaska Su­preme Court for about threemonths.

The case came before thisstate's high court on an appealfrom an injunction granted bythe Superior Court, which pre­vented the Alaska Board of Edu­cation from withholding 'publictransportation to 12-year-old~udY Kay Quinton, a pupil a~Immacuiate .Conception CatholicSchool here, The injunction' wasgranted last February. . ', Atty' Gen. Ralph Moody o~

Alaska argued before' the Su-preme .. Court ,that. such. ·trails;­'portation is':, against the state:constitution. because ft consti­,tute's direct aid, to. a religious''Sect ' .

Vene%ue!anBishops Issue WarningAgainst Communist In.filtration '

LOS TEQUES (NC) - Vene- the social . doctrine of thezuela's Bishops have called for Church, .basec;l: on justice, ,char­a social order' that does not fty and respect' for the humanlimit well-being 'to a minority. . person." ~, . ,. . ', .. . The Bishops spoke in a joint . Consequently, they said, theystatement issued after ,their "aspire toward. .and suppoJ,"t .ameeting her~. . '., .' 'social !>rder i,n which well-be.ing

They . also warned' against is not limited to a minprity, butcommunist infiltration-"among' ',one in which'well' being imiy'he'Venezuelals ,youth and .studentS: aftained' DY' all Venezuelans." .': "The faithful must ,always .re~ ',"'.. ' ' ", " -'"JIlain on,guardagainstUie·tricks .. 'T\ie,~lsliops then wa~n.ed '~o!.ofcommunism which' canmli , the' ,co,nstant attemi:?ts 9f . «om;' ,'give ~ail real ~ell:being;'"they munism ~to. 'infi!trate ...am.o!!g ,

. 'said. ,: :," .." ' ~ young' students as, well 'as .th~

: Young': Vin.cen~t.ians· ;T!:ie'Bishops" meeting " dealt ~ess. f;avo:t:e:I' .clas~~s, . Ei1fpl~iting. DUBUQUE- (NC) _The St. ' 'mainlywith '. hiternaI-. Church ~!' .t~e .former tliel~ .n,oble feel."

'Vincent, de Paul Sciciety should, matter!!.. ~n .this cou.ntrY. Bu(.mg!l~?f. comPl:l~~on.f!?r s~f~e;iilg,'eniist,more 'young 'men in its 'their 's~ilte~ent. po~nted()ui,_ .apc;l.m .th,e laH~~t):l~ ~t~alte~e~.i.elief.. 'efforts, Dudley Balter" they' also disculised the' "prob:' .e~()n.o~~c.~ond,~tlQns: ~n vvh1Cli

, executive ,secretary' of the ·Sod'- '}ems of1l I:eligiou:;; and' 11l()ral the~ !iI:e.llvillg..• ty!s·supreme council, said·here.. ,natur.e grow~ng out. of tpe soci;a~. \--~--",;,--~-~~~~,

: ·~~So far' in }his ,country, the ',;and econom!c situatjoI! of th~ na- 'A... 'D.~; M,C,MULLEN,', .'Yincentians.have ,shown ,only.. ~ ,ti~n.u:., . . t \ I •

,sporadic interest in a youth' .: In' recentnionths the \ mitionmovel,llent," he stated.· h'as, been shaken by ~ul.attempt

on the life of. its President, Rom­ulo Betancourt.: At the . sametime agents'of the Cuban regime'of Premier Fidel Castro, which'is under strong Red influence,'are sowing unrest here. This is'taking place ~gainst' a back'­'ground of economic' re'cessionand social ferment. " , .

The Bishops declared in' theirstatement that they ."reaffir·m.

Succ~eds. Prelate:~s College Hea~

EMMITSBURG (NC)-Father:'.' Robert R. Kline has been named '

to succ~ed Msgr. John L. Sheri­dan as :.presidentof Mount St.Mary's ..college .and Seminaryhere in' Maryland. '. He wiil assume. duties as the18th pf(~sident of the nation'ssecond. oldest Catholic collegeat the' June, 1961 corporationmeeting of the colleg~ council.

Msgr. Sheridan has been pres­ident for 25 years. He resignedthe office, but 'will continue atMount St. Mary's as presidentemeritus, '

Father Kline is a native ofWilliamsport, Pa. He graduatedfrom Mount St. Mary's college,and received master and doctordegrees in philosophy fromGeorgetown University, Wash­ington, D.C. He has been on theMount St. Mary's faculty since1946, and is a priest of theScranton diocese.

, China Study.SOUTH ORANGE· (NC)

'Seton Hall University's Instituteof Far Eastern StUdies' .here has

Y 'been granted $31,600 by the Na­tional Science. Foundation for' astudy on "The Utilization' and,Employment of' Cci~munist~hina's Scientists and Engi­neers: 1959.:60:" .