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"- ..' Diocesan Faithful Join Natio!nwide Tribute to Pope Diocesan Catholics will join Sunday in a nationwide outpouring of love and devo- tion to Pope John XXIII, who will mark his 80th birthday Saturday, Nov. 4. They will return to their par- ishes pledge cards indicating participation in a spiritual bou Q quet which will be presented to His Holiness on behalf of Am- erican Catholics by -Most Rev a erend Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the United States. The cards were distributed in parishes last Sunday and WE're also given out in schools. throughout the Diocese. CHANCERY OFFICE 362 HIGHLAND AVENUE PALL RIVER, MASSACHUSETl"S .MOST REV. WILLIAM: O. BRADY but five brief years Archbishop of Saint Paul he has added tremendously to the growth and splendor of his See. But he wHl be most remembered as the pattern of the good shepherd giving his life, willingly and joyfully, to the service of God and his fellow-man. We are all much poorer for his passing from us; but he has left us a magnificent heritage. May God in His Infinite Goodness reward him. C)_, _ OiShOP of Fall River -a---- The Diocese of Fan River mourns the passing from this Hfe of her most distinguished son, Archbishop William O. Brady of Saint Paul, Minnesota. The manner of his death illustrates his whole life's work. Long accustomed to giving time and talents unstintingly to all those that made demands on him, he spent the best years of his life serving his neighbor, his Church, and his Divine Master. Funeral Services Monday In Saint Cathedral' For' Archbishop Brady. The Most Reverend Bishop will be one of the five Bishops·giving absolu.tions Monday morning in the St. Paul Cathedral over the body of Most Rev. William O. Brady, D.D., Archbishop' of the Minnesota Archdiocese, who died last Sunday in Rome. The Archbishop, Bishop Connolly and Rt. Rev. Francis J. Gilligan were all natives of Fall River and seminarians for the Diocese who volunteered to go to St. Paul after ordination to teach in the newly-formed St. Paul Archdiocesan Seminary. The Archbishop and Bishop Connolly both became rectors of the Seminary before their elevation to the episcopacy. Monsignor Gilligan is pastor of St. Mark's Church in St. Paul. Archbishop Brady, who was also Treasurer of the Adminis- trative BO;lrd of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, suffered a heart attack Sept. 23 while flying to Rome to take part in a meeting of the Pre- paratory Commission for Bish- ops and the Government of Dioceses of which he was a consultor. This group is one of several making plans for the forthcoming Ecumenical Coun- cil. The Archbishop was hospi- talized immediately in Salvator Mundi International Hospital in Rome where he suffered several subsequent attacks and died. Sister William The Archbishop's sister, Sis- ter Mary 'William, C.S.J., assigned to the Motherhouse of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in Rome, was with her brother during his hospital- ization and at his death. Mon- signor Gilligan flew to Rome on hearing of the prelate's sick- ness along with Dr. Charles E. Rea, K.S.G., a physician of the University of Minnesota and a devoted friend of the St. Paul Ordinary. On hearing of the Archbishop's death, the Holy Father sent his secretary to invite Sister Wil- liam, Monsignor Gilligan and Dr. Rea to the Vatican where he received them in a special private audience and expressed his condolences and the assur- ance of his prayers for the Archbishop and his bereaved relatives. . The Pope said that he had intended to visit Archbishop Brady but was waiting until the doctors gave the word that he was feeling better. Mass in Rome Monsignor Gilligan offered m Requiem Mass yesterday morn- ing in the Church of Santa Susanna in Romeo-the American Church staffed by the Paulist Fathers and the Titular Church of Cardinal Cushing. The abso- lution was given by Most Rev. John J. Krol, D.D., Archbishop of Philadelphia. The Mass was attended by Amleto Cardinal'Cicognani, Giu- seppe Cardinal Pizzardo, Paolo Cardinal Marella and Aloisius Cardinal Muench, all attached to the Vatican Curia, and by Most Rev. Martin J. O'Connor of the North American College in Rome, Most Rev. Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester, Most Rev. John P. Cody, Coadjutor Archbishop of New Orleans, Turn to Page Three Oct. 15 will participate in the congress. The others are Bishop Bernard Vincent J. Hines, Norwich; Bish- op Robert F. Joyce, Burlington; Bishop Daniel J. Feeney, Port- land; Bishop Eric F. McKenzie and Bishop Jeremiah F:Minihan,. Auxiliaries of Boston. Miss Margaret M. Lahey, ac- tive in the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, will speak at a session dealing with the prob- lems of exceptional children. Her topic will be "Methods of In,;, structing the· Mentally Retard- .ed." © 1961 The Anchor PRICE lOe $4.00 por Voar Socond Class Mail Privilegos Authorizod at Fall Rivor. Mass. FATHER SUTULA Diocesan Prelates to Speak At Regional CeD Congress Bishop Connolly, Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard and Rev. Joseph L. Powers, diocesan director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, will be among leading .participants in the 15th annual New England regional congress of the CCD, to be held Friday, Oct. 13 through Monday, Oct. 16 in Portland, Me. Bishop Con- nolly will preside at a session Saturday morning, Oct. 14, for lay teachers in parish high schools of religion. Bishop Ger- rard will head a concurrent ses- sion for discussion club leaders. Father Powers is scheduled to be discussion moderator at the opening session of the congress. Seven other members of the hierarchy including Cardinal Cushing, who will preach at a solemn pontifical Mass Sunday, Fall River, Mass., Thursdayu October 5, 1961 Vol. 5, No. 41 The ANCHOR An Anokot" of Che Soul, Sure /7htd Fif'm-==ST. PAm. Pontifical Requiem Today For Fr. Joseph E. Sutula . The Most Reverend Bishop sang a Pontifical Requiem Mass this morning at 10 in Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, New Bedford, for Rev. Joeeph F. Sutula, pastor of St. Casimir's Church, New Bedford, who died Monday ........... , .... after an illness of several weeks. Father Sutula, 74 years of age, had served in St. Casimir's since 1932. He has been recentJy engaged in supervising the construction of a new church for the parish.' Father Sutula was born in Olszanka, Poland, the son of the late John and Fnincisca Wolicki Sutula. He studied in St. Mary's Seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan, and was ordained to the priesthood on' June 8, 1924, in the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul, Detroit, by Most Rev. Michael J. Gallagher. Upon ordination, Father Sutula served as assistant in Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish, New Bedford, for two years. He was' administrator of St. Stanislaus Church, Fall River, from 1926 until Oct. 7, 1932, when he be- Turn to Page Twelve National Leaders Welcome Catholic Youth Week WASHINGTON (NC) - President Kennedy and other national leaders have welcomed this year's National Catholic Youth Week. The President urged "that our American youth, whether they are students or workers, consider the theme carefully." The theme ' of this year's observance is Exhibitor Scores "Youth - Unity - Truth.'" Ad It M · National Catholic You th U oVles Week, sponsored by the Youth For Children Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, HOLLYWOOD (NC) - A begins Oct. 29. President Ken- movie exhibitor has pro- nedy, Vice President Lyndon tested a policy which he says B. Johnson, former President forces adult pictures to be Harry S. Truman and others sent their comments to the shown at kiddie matinees, ac- NCWC Youth Department. cording to the Hollywood Re- President Kennedy declared porter. in his message: "Young people ';l'he trade daily said the con- who generously and coura- troversy may have "far-reaching geously serve the truth are the reverberations." . architects not only of our living The dispute is between Mar- national unity, but also of that shall H. Fine, president.of Allied world unity of free men which States Association of Motion can be the greatest prize of our Picture Exhibitors and Charles times." Boasberg, Warner Bros. sales He added: "1 want to extend head. to the seven million young peo- Mr. Fine vigorously protested Turn to Page Eighteen TUli'n to Page EigbteeJ'l

10.05.61

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TheMostReverendBishopsangaPontificalRequiem Mass this morningat 10in OurLady ofPerpetual Help Church, New Bedford, for Rev. Joeeph F. Sutula, pastor of St. Casimir's Church, New Bedford, who died Monday ...........,.... _-~., after an illness of several weeks. Father Sutula, 74 years of age, had served in St. Casimir's since 1932. HOLLYWOOD(NC)- A National Catholic Youth U PRICE lOe $4.00 porVoar Socond Class Mail Privilegos Authorizod at Fall Rivor. Mass. © 1961TheAnchor FATHER SUTULA "- •

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Page 1: 10.05.61

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Diocesan FaithfulJoin Natio!nwideTribute to Pope

Diocesan Catholics willjoin Sunday in a nationwideoutpouring of love and devo­tion to Pope John XXIII,who will mark his 80th birthdaySaturday, Nov. 4.

They will return to their par­ishes pledge cards indicatingparticipation in a spiritual bouQ

quet which will be presented toHis Holiness on behalf of Am­erican Catholics by -Most Reva

erend Egidio Vagnozzi, ApostolicDelegate to the United States.

The cards were distributed inparishes last Sunday and WE'realso given out in schools.throughout the Diocese.

CHANCERY OFFICE362 HIGHLAND AVENUE

PALL RIVER, MASSACHUSETl"S

.MOST REV. WILLIAM: O. BRADY

Altho~gh but five brief years Archbishop ofSaint Paul he has added tremendously to thegrowth and splendor of his See. But he wHl bemost remembered as the pattern of the goodshepherd giving his life, willingly and joyfully,to the service of God and his fellow-man. Weare all much poorer for his passing from us;but he has left us a magnificent heritage. MayGod in His Infinite Goodness reward him.

C)_, _~~~OiShOP of Fall River -a----

The Diocese of Fan River mourns thepassing from this Hfe of her most distinguishedson, Archbishop William O. Brady of Saint Paul,Minnesota. The manner of his death illustrateshis whole life's work. Long accustomed togiving time and talents unstintingly to all thosethat made demands on him, he spent the bestyears of his life serving his neighbor, his Church,and his Divine Master.

Funeral Services MondayIn Saint Pau~ Cathedral'For' Archbishop Brady.

The Most Reverend Bishop will be one of the five Bishops·giving absolu.tions Mondaymorning in the St. Paul Cathedral over the body of Most Rev. William O. Brady, D.D.,Archbishop' of the Minnesota Archdiocese, who died last Sunday in Rome. The Archbishop,

Bishop Connolly and Rt. Rev.Francis J. Gilligan were allnatives of Fall River andseminarians for the Diocesewho volunteered to go toSt. Paul after ordination toteach in the newly-formed St.Paul Archdiocesan Seminary.The Archbishop and BishopConnolly both became rectorsof the Seminary before theirelevation to the episcopacy.Monsignor Gilligan is pastor ofSt. Mark's Church in St. Paul.

Archbishop Brady, who wasalso Treasurer of the Adminis­trative BO;lrd of the NationalCatholic Welfare Conference,suffered a heart attack Sept. 23while flying to Rome to takepart in a meeting of the Pre­paratory Commission for Bish­ops and the Government ofDioceses of which he was aconsultor. This group is one ofseveral making plans for theforthcoming Ecumenical Coun­cil. The Archbishop was hospi­talized immediately in SalvatorMundi International Hospital inRome where he suffered severalsubsequent attacks and died.

Sister WilliamThe Archbishop's sister, Sis­

ter Mary 'William, C.S.J.,assigned to the Motherhouse ofthe Sisters of St. Joseph ofCarondelet in Rome, was withher brother during his hospital­ization and at his death. Mon­signor Gilligan flew to Romeon hearing of the prelate's sick­ness along with Dr. Charles E.Rea, K.S.G., a physician of theUniversity of Minnesota and adevoted friend of the St. PaulOrdinary.

On hearing of the Archbishop'sdeath, the Holy Father sent hissecretary to invite Sister Wil­liam, Monsignor Gilligan andDr. Rea to the Vatican wherehe received them in a specialprivate audience and expressedhis condolences and the assur­ance of his prayers for theArchbishop and his bereavedrelatives. .

The Pope said that he hadintended to visit ArchbishopBrady but was waiting until thedoctors gave the word that hewas feeling better.

Mass in RomeMonsignor Gilligan offered m

Requiem Mass yesterday morn­ing in the Church of SantaSusanna in Romeo-the AmericanChurch staffed by the PaulistFathers and the Titular Churchof Cardinal Cushing. The abso­lution was given by Most Rev.John J. Krol, D.D., Archbishopof Philadelphia.

The Mass was attended byAmleto Cardinal'Cicognani, Giu­seppe Cardinal Pizzardo, PaoloCardinal Marella and AloisiusCardinal Muench, all attachedto the Vatican Curia, and byMost Rev. Martin J. O'Connorof the North American Collegein Rome, Most Rev. Ernest J.Primeau of Manchester, MostRev. John P. Cody, CoadjutorArchbishop of New Orleans,

Turn to Page Three

Oct. 15 will participate in thecongress.

The others are Bishop BernardVincent J. Hines, Norwich; Bish­op Robert F. Joyce, Burlington;Bishop Daniel J. Feeney, Port­land; Bishop Eric F. McKenzieand Bishop Jeremiah F:Minihan,.Auxiliaries of Boston.

Miss Margaret M. Lahey, ac­tive in the Diocesan Council ofCatholic Women, will speak at asession dealing with the prob­lems of exceptional children. Hertopic will be "Methods of In,;,structing the· Mentally Retard­.ed."

© 1961 The Anchor PRICE lOe$4.00 por Voar

Socond Class Mail Privilegos Authorizod at Fall Rivor. Mass.

FATHER SUTULA

Diocesan Prelates to SpeakAt Regional CeD Congress

Bishop Connolly, Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard and Rev.Joseph L. Powers, diocesan director of the Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine, will be among leading .participants inthe 15th annual New England regional congress of the CCD,to be held Friday, Oct. 13through Monday, Oct. 16 inPortland, Me. Bishop Con­nolly will preside at a sessionSaturday morning, Oct. 14, forlay teachers in parish highschools of religion. Bishop Ger­rard will head a concurrent ses­sion for discussion club leaders.

Father Powers is scheduled tobe discussion moderator at theopening session of the congress.

Seven other members of thehierarchy including CardinalCushing, who will preach at asolemn pontifical Mass Sunday,

Fall River, Mass., Thursdayu October 5, 1961

Vol. 5, No. 41

TheANCHORAn Anokot" of Che Soul, Sure /7htd Fif'm-==ST. PAm.

Pontifical Requiem TodayFor Fr. Joseph E. Sutula .

The Most Reverend Bishop sang a Pontifical RequiemMass this morning at 10 in Our Lady of Perpetual HelpChurch, New Bedford, for Rev. Joeeph F. Sutula, pastorof St. Casimir's Church, New Bedford, who died Monday

........... ,...._-~., after an illness of severalweeks. Father Sutula, 74years of age, had servedin St. Casimir's since 1932.He has been recentJy engaged insupervising the construction of anew church for the parish.'

Father Sutula was born inOlszanka, Poland, the son of thelate John and Fnincisca WolickiSutula. He studied in St. Mary'sSeminary in Orchard Lake,Michigan, and was ordained tothe priesthood on' June 8, 1924,in the Cathedral of SS. Peter andPaul, Detroit, by Most Rev.Michael J. Gallagher.

Upon ordination, Father Sutulaserved as assistant in Our Ladyof Perpetual Help Parish, NewBedford, for two years. He was'administrator of St. StanislausChurch, Fall River, from 1926until Oct. 7, 1932, when he be-

Turn to Page Twelve

National Leaders WelcomeCatholic Youth Week

WASHINGTON (NC) - President Kennedy and othernational leaders have welcomed this year's National CatholicYouth Week. The President urged "that our Americanyouth, whether they are students or workers, consider thetheme carefully." The theme 'of this year's observance is Exhibitor Scores"Youth - Unity - Truth.'" Ad It M ·National Catholic You t h U oVlesWeek, sponsored by the Youth For ChildrenDepartment of the NationalCatholic Welfare Conference, HOLLYWOOD (NC) - Abegins Oct. 29. President Ken- movie exhibitor has pro­nedy, Vice President Lyndon tested a policy which he saysB. Johnson, former President forces adult pictures to beHarry S. Truman and otherssent their comments to the shown at kiddie matinees, ac­NCWC Youth Department. cording to the Hollywood Re-

President Kennedy declared porter.in his message: "Young people ';l'he trade daily said the con­who generously and coura- troversy may have "far-reachinggeously serve the truth are the reverberations." .architects not only of our living The dispute is between Mar­national unity, but also of that shall H. Fine, president.of Alliedworld unity of free men which States Association of Motioncan be the greatest prize of our Picture Exhibitors and Charlestimes." Boasberg, Warner Bros. sales

He added: "1 want to extend head.to the seven million young peo- Mr. Fine vigorously protested

Turn to Page Eighteen TUli'n to Page EigbteeJ'l

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,DONNELLYPAINTINGSERVICE

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135 franklin StreetFall River OSborne 2-1911

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Young 'Men Want~d r- For Full-time Boy Work.-For lifelong action and happiness.- For the Salesian Priesthood.- For the Salesian Coadiutor.

Brotherhood.FI,!II information free. W~itet

FATHB DIRECTOR, SAcRtD HEART .lUNIORATE,IPSWICH, MASS.

2500 Boy's Clubs-C~"'pS-st~Misiions" • .• • ..',. , 1 • '. ': ~.

NecrologyTHE ANCHOR,lists the deatll

'anniversar)' 'dates of priests·who 'served the Fall 'RiverDio~ese sInce its formation in1904 wltb the intentloDtbatthe faithful will give them apra)'erful remembl'lUlce.

OCT.SRev. Stephen B. Magill, 1918.

Assistant, Immaculate' Concep­tion, North Easton.

OCT. ,Rev. Caesar Phares, 1951, Pas­

tor, St. Anthony of the Desert,Fall R~ver.

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

Assistant, Immaculate Concep­tion, NO,rth' Easton.

ocT. 11__ Rev. James A. Downey, 1952,Pastor, Holy Ghost, Att~ebo~.

R.A. WILCOX CO.OFFICE FURNI1fURE

Official':, Bars I~arochial PupilsFrom Public Sc:hool ,Cafeteria.

\

, ' 'GOOD THIEF SUNHAY': St. Dismas, the 'Good Thief'a mutal (8' x 13') on the rea:~ wallo,!, th~ chapel atth~Iowa State Men's Reformatory, will be ,dedicated on ,GoOdThief Sunday, Oct. 8. Over 400 correctional iJistitutions inthe U.S. and Canada will observe the almual feast. NC Photo.

" ,-.\ - ~ . . .

College EconomicsClasses Via TV·. ST. PAUL (NC) -Six Cat1l.O­

lic colleges are among eight inMinnesota that are taking pul'tii1 a program of economicsclasses via television.

The intercollege experimentin TV teaching will provide acredit course for stu~ents atmember schools of the Minne­sota Private College Council.

Sees New Drivf.Against, ReligionIn Sovnet RussiaLONDON (NC) - Another

,campaign against religion isnow in full swing in SovietRussia, a Catholic correspon­dent has reported here.~ correspondent just back

from the USSR wrote in theTablet, British Catholic weekly,that after talking to priests andlaity "I was left in no doubt thata severe campaign against reli­gion which began last year was 'now in full swing.

"I was told about cases whenbelievers physically resisted theseizure of their churcD. I wastold of the intolerable taxation

'imposed on priests 'and of aU'manners of pressures and tricksto get the churches closed. Tem­porary churches', in privatehomes appear to have been par­ticularly hit by the wave ofclosures in the countryside."

Pressure on Young"ThE! correspondent, who s ename was not given, said he vis­~ted 'Russia incuding Moscowlast year and recently had spent

'three weeks mainly in Kiev,Odessa and Yalta.

He said the congregations hesaw ,crowding the dwindlingnumber of churches consistedmainly of middle-aged and el­

'derly women. Pressure againstgoing to church was being ex­erted on the ,young.

Teachers, serVicemen found it'"practically impossible to attend

church; Members of the Comm~nist party were officla1ly for­bidden to do so and most othersfound regular church attendancecould harm their 'careers.: MAnU-religious propaganda isvigorous and ubiquitous," heWrote. In the many boOkstandsin the towns he always saw

CUSHING (NC) - This Ok- ing its schools cannot' legally works attacking, the "incompati-lahoma commUnity of 10,000 provide school lunches tochil-' bility" of religious with 'social orsouls has become, a· center of dre~ attending a parochial ,scientific progress especially asstatewide controversy 0 v e r school." regards achievements in space.whether stl;ldents of, a Cath4>lic 'The cOntroveroov began, earHer" No religious literature was

y~ sold anywhere - not even theschool may eat luncll in apli1b-, ',this year when School Superin- '''Journal of the Moscow Patriar-lic school cafeteria. ; tendent George Rush told a Ro- chate," 'which he believed to be

The' state attorney genE!l"al tary meeting of plans for a new the only, Church periodical in,says, no. He handed down ibis , publiC grade school and cafe- the Soviet Union.roling upon the vigorous pro- teria directly across' the streettests of a young Protestant min-, ,from SS. Peter and Paul gram­ister, , against plans to let paro- mar school and kindergarten.chial school students eat m; apublic school' cafeteria unoierconstruction.

The sitUation is doubly anom-•alous since public school chi!::di'en have taken Part in a Catho­lic school's hot":lunch' progamin nearby Stillwater for the past16 years. The cafeteria of St.Francis Xavier School in Stiill­water' catered to. an average of100 public school students dailyuntil two years ago, when 1rhehigh school's' conversion inte. ajunior high school brought i:beaverage number down to 30. ..

Bus,'Rides DlegalIt hasal90 been declared -ille­

gal in Oklahoma to give paro­chial school students a ride onpublic school buses. Yet in Tulsathe school bus from St. Pius Xschool takes children to pUblicschool'as well. ' ,

In the C'ushing case, the at­torney general's office roled: .aAschool district operating a cafe­teria under the National SchoolLunch Act for children atte2Jd-

Dedicate .New SchoolFor Retarded Boys

CHELSEA (NC) - The new$700,000 St. Louis School' forretarded boys was dedicatedhere in Michigan by ArchbishopJohn F. Dearden of Detroit.

The school, opened this monthwith an enrollment of 33 boysis designed presently to, hOus~'and educate 60 pupils,but theenrollment is expected to 'climbto 200 within five years. '

The 'school' is operated byspecially trained priests of the,order of, Servants 'of Cha.rityfrom Como; Italy. it has twodormitories, eight classrooms,

,shops and speech therapy room's,as well as a ,gym, playrooms,chapel, dining faciilties, andad-.ministration and staff quarters.

THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River-fhurs., Oct. 5, 1961

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION

,Mass"Ordo

2

Oct. 8-Our Lady of the As­sumption, New, Bed-ford. _

t St. Roch, Fall River. ,Oct. 15-St. > John of God,

Somerset.Our Lady of the Immac­

late Conception, Taun-ton. '

Oct. 16-LaSalette" ' Ea litBrewster,.

Oct. 22--8t. Peter, Province:-town. '

, St. Hedwig, New Bed­ford.

Oct. 29--51. Michael, Fall'River.

St. Patrick, Somerset.St. ~, Raynham.

Washington FamilyLeaves for Mission

RIDGEFIELD (NC)'- Arch~bishop Thomas A. Connolly' ofSeattle presided at a departureceremony here for the archdio­cese's first Papal Volunteers of

f Latin America, Mr. and Mrs.John Little of Heisson, Wash., The Littles' and their thre,e, Ia Stock for ImmedlateDetiv817

children, aged 4 to, 7, will train • DESKS ,. CHAIRl»for four months at the Centerof Intercultural Formation in FILING CABINETSCuernevaca, Mexico, "before re- • FIRE FILES. SAFE!»,ceiving their mission assign-' : FOLDING TABLESment. AND CHAIRS

, , THE II.NCBOR The departure ceremony wasSecond Class Postage Paid ,at Fall River. 'held, at St. Mar,,y ;oLGuadalupe :R 'A WI'L'COYCO

Mas&. ,Published evel'7' Thunicla,. at no • .' A "Highland ,Avenue. Fall River, 'Maaa.. b,. mi~sion church here, of which ' 22 BEDFOR~ ST.,,' fthe Catholie Press of the Oioe""" of 'Mr': and Mrs. Little are parish-Fall River. Sub.""ripiton priee b,.",&U; , ' 'FAll ,RIVER ~7838,postpai!t""·QO;.p~:r: __rear.V'~"" ,_"<,,, ',-, "iorierjL'h "" ,c "".. "" __ "oU """"0""" ,-~ ",,__,~

,".'

,_.Priest Sees Loti,n t'~me,rica

Aid Ef~orts asFaiIWJt~· .SAN ANTONIO (NC) - V,.S. programs t6 help Latin'

,America are a fa:iJ,ure and it is because they did not includeeducation on how to use materials 'and equipment sentsouth- of the border;' This' is the view,of Father Carlos'~

~uinta~~,'after a' fact-fin?: ~ -Jiem~phe~e, he ·;~id that j'~dme· ,mg tour of seven Latm -,'alithorities with :whom' t· sPoke:,Amencan'~ou:iltries;,MilliomV predicted .. 'flatiy :that 'uJ,lless a'of dollars ,worth of'material,- , '.!irastic change', takes place im­he said, 'were~ "stockpiled - ~~!i' mediately,all.coUI1triessout~ ofwasted, because' the, people f0J: • ,the border(> w.Ill. be ,~ommunist- ",'

h ',tb'ey"ar',e' intended are not - 'controlled wlthm. fIve to ..te~wom ' ",' ' "ready for' that. kind of aid." - .. ,years. ,'" , " ,

" Both· Agencies ,: .,; 'Cuba's comm~nists, he said, .He' said ,this 'Included, equip..; had performed, a service, "br

ment 'sent by the'Fedenilgov:' ',awakening the consciousness of'ernment as well as' by .chur'ch-' other.. ,Latin Americans~the;

sponsored: 'Org~nizations an ,d' ,needs of the poor; hereto~ore,t~e

otherptivate Charit~grouP~., " conc~rn,of no-one., ' , , ' ,Father Quintana; ~ditor of La; ''Yet,'hesaid' few ,people'in a'

Voz,Spanish, weekly newfjpaper, position to, help are aroused for,of tile' San' Antonio'archdiocese, ',the need, ·of ,social refornl, '''The' ,made his tour to study pro~lems'., olrly concern of welrl.thy :peopleto' be ,faced by,the program" _of. -, seemed to be to ,'send their"aid for'Latin America 'deyeloPed "wealth 'out,of their countries toby the Missionary Activities 'provide for' themselves afterCom~ittee of 'theU; S. ,S1; Vin-; what seem~ to be an impending .cent de Paul Society.' ' ' doom," he said. ',' ,', " . '

,Resentment _,He reported great resent~ent BaltiinoreGreets

toward the U. S. for an attitude ' '.~f ..paternalism.... , He' vis~ted ,New Coad.-utor '

Ecuad'or, Peru, Chile; Argentina,' -, ' " 'Brazil, Colombia and ~exico;'" ~ BALTIMORE (NC) , - The

'Drastic Change ' -Most Rev. Lawrence J; Shehan"Americans dole out charity as came h0!D:e to .a warm \1Velcome

t 'd' '" h saI'd "Lat'in to his natIve CIty and took overo a nee y son" e. h' d ti C d' to A-ch. d 'h l' but does' IS ues as oa JU r ,n,.L' -

AmerIca nee s. e,p, I?ishop of Baltimore With thenot ask for ~harlty. . right of succession.

He also saId representatIves of ,U-. S. relief programs often fail ."That term ,me~s," Arch;-to learn the language of the peo_blS.h~~ Sheb~ exIa:med to thepIe they ,are serving., "Without ~IDltIated, 't~at I am" Arch­the language, they fail to com- bIShop Keough s helper~

preheJ,1d adequately the prob-:- At the h~ight of the welcomelems"the culture and the person- Baltim~re's Archbishop, Francisality, , of the Latin American ,P. Keoug~ gave the first assign,.p~oPle'," he said. , ,,',' ment to his "helper"::-the post, Of communist designs, 0J,l the, ¢ Vicar General. The appoint­

ment was announced at a din-" ner in honor of Archbishop,

Shehan attended ~y more than700 persons. Archbishop' She­

,han came back to Baltimore', after serving for eight years as

the first Bishop of Bridgeport.The, welcome was solemnized

,the following day when Arch­bishop Shehan offered a Solemn'Pontllical Mass in the, Cathe-dral of Mary Our Queen. '

Archbishop Keough presidedand the sermon waS preached

,by Msgr. 'Porter J. White, vice'chancellor of the archdiocese"who reviewed the career of

; Archbishop Shehan.' ,The 'two Archbishops' went

from the station to'the rectoryof the Basilica of the Assu,mp­tion where Archbishop Shehanformally presented' his creden­tials to Archbishop Keough andthe diocesan consultors.

I'RIDAY-St. Bruno, Confessor:'III Class. White. Mass Proper;Gl()ria; no' Creed; ,CommonPreface. Two Votive Massesin honor of the Sacred' Heartof Jesus permitted. Tomorrowis the First Saturday of theMonth. '

SATURDAY - Blessed VirginMary of the Rosal-y. II Class.White. Mass Proper,; Gloria;Second Collect St.Mar~, Popeand Confessor; Creed; Prefaceof ,Blessed Virgin. '.

SUNDAY-XX Sunday AfterPentecost. II Class. Green.

, Mass Proper; G:loria; Creed;Preface of Trinity. _

MONDAY-St:" John Leonard,Confessor. III Class. White.Mass Proper; Gloria; SecondCollect SS. Denis., Bishop,Rusticus and Eleutherius,Martyrs; 'no Creed; CommonPreface. ,

TUESDAY-St. Francis Borgia,Confessor. III Class. White.Mass Proper; Gloria; no

',_} Creed; Common Preface.WEDNESDAY - Maternity, of

the Blessed Virgin Mary. IIClass. White. Mass Proper;Gloria; Creed; Preface ofBlessed Virgin.

THURSDAY-Mass of previous'Sunday. IV Class. Green. MassProper; No _Gloria or Creed;Common Preface.

I,IIIII,

Page 3: 10.05.61

Bishop Connol!y 'to Best~w

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Ittl: ANCHOR-Diocese of Fort River-Thurs., Oct. 5, 1961

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PRELATES MEET" IN FALL RIVER: Most Rev. James L. Connolly, who wasCoadjutor Bishop of Fall River when this picture was taken, is shown with his predecessor~

Most Rev. James E. Cassidy, Second Bishop of Fall River, center, and his life-long fr:iend,Most Rev. William O. Brady, right, late Archbishop of St. Paul. Archbishop Brady waDBishop of Sioux Falls, S.D., when the picture was taken.

Holy Father Points Out Christian Unity PathCASTELGANDOLFO (NC)-' "Yet the Faith of all is one and Burgenland area, Pope John e]i-

Fidelity to the Gospels, love for tne unity that it produces is pressed his good wishes also "forthe Saviour and trust in His deeply felt. Along with the di- our brothers who in more recentmother will briIlg all Christians verse national origin of its in- centuries have separated tJ:1em­back into a single family, ac- habitants, this unity is what selves from this life-givingcording to Pope John. characterizes the new diocese. It unity, so that they, who also bear

Pope John spoke of Chr\stian is one in territory, one in its the sign' of Baptism on theirunity in an address to a group shepherd and one in its pur- foreheads, might soon rediscoverof Austrian piigrims. The group, pose.", the way of return and rejoin theled by Bishop Stefan Laszlo of Recalling the apostolic work great single fami~y, thus com-

~ Eisenstadt, was composed of 900 of St. Boniface to bring Chris- plying with the sublime aspira­'laymen and 56 priests from the tianity to the peoples of the tion and the assurance of theprovince of Burgenland in east- Divine Master: 'that there may

.ern Austria. House OK's Juvenile be one flock and one shep-The Pope recalled in his talk Delinquency Program' herd.'"

that until a short time ago the WASHINGTON (NC) _ The ~~-"""'~~--"'~~4f'region of Burgenland belonged House of Representatives hasto four different dioceses repre- passed a bill providing for asenting th,ree different language three-year $30 million program

.groups - German, Croat and to fight juvenile delinquency.Hungarian. He went on to say: Under the plan the Depart-

,Plan CCD Teacher ment of Health, Education andWelfare would be authorized to

TraBn~nq Program" spend $10 million yearly for the_ LANSING (NC) - A Confra- next three years.ternity of Christian Doctrine The money would be used forteacher training. and, adult edu- projects to demonstrate and eval-cation program will be estab- uate delinquency prevention and.J;~hpn ;" the Diocese~of Lansing control. It would also be used'this Fall. to train personnel for work in

Bishop Joseph H. Albers of this field.Lansing said the program ha,s a • ••two-fold purtJose. It will :lim tosupply each parish with ade­quately . trained religion layteachers who can assist priestsand nuns with religious instruc­tion of children attending publicschools.

It also will give adults an op-. portunity to obtain a deeper

understanding of their Faith'and a oasis for instructing theirown children, Bispop Alber:s said.

Pontifical RequiemFor Hammarskjold

NDOLA (NC)-Ndola's Catho,..lie cathedral, scene of a ponti:"fical Requiem Mass for U.N.Secretary General Dag Ham­marskjold and the 14 otherskilled with him in the planecrash, was also the site of theRequiem for Sgt, Harold M.Julien, U.N. security guard whosuccumbed here five days afterthe crash.

Julien, 36-year-old New York­er, received the last rites of theChurch before his death. HisCuban-born wife, Maria, wasat his bedside at the hospitalwhen he died.

Two days after the crash,Bishop Francis Mazzieri, O.F,M.Conv., of Ndola, had sung aRequiem Mass .in the cathedralfor- Hammarskjol'd and theothers who had' perished. TheUnited Nations leader's nephew,Knut Hammarskjold, ,was pres:"ent. The llag of Hammarskjold'snative Sweden draped his cata­falque, and the papal flag andthat of the Franciscan orderwere among those flying athalf-staff outside the cathedral.

Minor Seminary HasCapacity Enrollm'ent

ST. BENEDICT (NC)-Twentyper cent of the, students whosought admission this, Fall toMount Angel Minor Seminary ofthe Portland in Oregon Archdio­cese were turned away.,

The seminary, which is filledto capacity with 181 students,turned down 23 applicants andsent 15 others to Canada to studythis school year at the Christ theKing Seminary in Westminster,B. C. The seminary, here \ andthe one in Westminster are con­ducted by the BenedictineFathers.

Fat her Bernard Sandler,O.S.B., rectol' of the seminarynere, attributed the increase inseminarians to a population risein the area and effective voca­tions programs in the Portlandarchdiocese and the Baker, Ore.,and Boise, Idaho, dioceses.,

of 'Ie National Catholic WelfareConference in 1953, 1954 and

'1956. He wa,s elected treasurerof the NCWC administrativeboard in November 1957 and wasreelected three times.

In December, 1957 his 27­county archdiocese was divided,with the 15 western countiesgrouped into the Diocese of NewUlm. The other 12, including the'Twin Cities metropolitan area ofMinneapolis and St. Paul, thencomprised the Archdiocese of St.Paul.

In April, 1959 the Archbishopest.ablished his Opus Sancti Petriorganiz'ation to promote voca­tions and aid in the' material.development of seminaries. An'early result of the campaign isthe new St. Austin's House forday students at Nazareth HallPreparatory Seminary.

In June, 1958, he received anhonorary Doctor of Laws deg,reefrom Notre Dame university.

In March, 1960, the archbishopestablished a clergy commissionto promote vocations to thediocesan priesthood.• In August, 1960, he was nameda consultor for the Commisl>ionof Bishops and Diocesan Govern­ment, one of the bodies prepar­ing for the Second VaticanCouncil.

Rigorous ScheduleDuring September the Arch­

bishop had a rigorous. schedulewhich ,included deanery meetingswith the cl~rgy from throughoutthe archdiocese, a reception forthe Papal Sacristan, BishopPeter C. Van Lierde, a trip to areligious congregation's jubileein Aberdeen, S.D., and tpe tripto Rome for another meeting ofthe commission of which he wasa consultor.

He began his final trip Sep- .tember 21. On September 23,while airborne, he' suffered thefirst attack. He was admitted tothe hospital that same day.

'JIhe archdiocesan board ofconsultors of St. Paul has ~amedAuxiliary Bishop Leonard P.Cowley administrator of the,See.

93rd BirthdayALBANY (NC) - Retired

Bishop Edmund F. Gibbons ofAlbany observed his 93rd birth­day quietly at St. Peter's hos­pital here. Bishop Gibbons wasthe sixth spiritual head of thediocese, serving from 1919 until1954.

C~lDtinlled from JPl/,ge OneMost Rev. James H. Griffiths,Auxiliary Bishop of New York,and Most Rev. Leo R. Smith,Auxiliary Bishop of Buffalo.

Archbishop Brady's body wasthen flown to St. Paul accom­panied by Monsignor Gilligan,Sister William and Dr. Rea.

Most Rev. Leo W. Binz, D.D.,Archbishop of Dubuque and aseminary classmate of Arch­bishop Brady, wiH offer theFuneral Mass, Monday in theSt. Paul Cathedral. The eulo­gist will be Most Rev. WilliamE. Cousins, D.D., Archbishop ofMilwaukee. Burial will be inResurrection Cemetery in sub­urban Mendota Heights.

In addition to his sister,Archbishop Brady leaves abrother, Louis C. of Rochester,N. Y.; three nieces, Mrs. CharlesJ. Booth of Fall River; Mrs.T~lOmasKelleher a nd Mrs: Kath­leen Gorse, both of Rochester;and two cousins, Miss Mabel M.Davol and Thomas A. Davol ofFall River.

SS. Peter and PaulArchbishop Brady, a native of

SS. Peter and Paul Parish, FallRiver, was boron on Feb. 1, 1899.After his early education in thepublic school system of FallRiver, he attended St. CharlesCollege in Catonsville, Md., andstudied Philosophy in St. Mary'sSeminary, Baltimore, from 1918to 1920, receiving his M.A. de­gree. He then studied Theologyat "the Sulpician Seminary atthe Catholic University inWashington where he received,in 1923, his Master's degree inEducation. '

The Archbishop was ordainedin St. Mary's Cathedral, FallRiver, by the late ,Most Rev.Daniel F. Feehan, D.D., secondBi!'hop of Fall River, along with'Bishop Connolly on Dec. 21,J923. ,

In 1924 he was assigned bythe late Archbishop AustinDowling of St. Paul to the An­gelicum University in Romewhere he received his Doctor­ate' of Sacred Theology in 1926.He then returned to St.' Pauland became professor of MoralTheology in the Seminary.

In 1933 he was appointedOfficialis (Chief Judge) of theArchdiocesan Matrimonial Tri­bunal and Master of TheologicalConferences. In 1933, at the ageof 34, he was appointed Rectorof the St. Paul Seminary andcontinued to teach classes inMoral Theolol'!y, Pastoral The­ology and Italian. In addition1..0 these duties, he taught at St.Catherine's College, the Dioc­Cfian Teachers' College, andSt. Joseph's Academy, all in St.Paul, and wrote a weekly col­umn, "Faith and Practice," forthe St. Paul archdiocesan news­paper.

Bishop of Sioux FallsOn June 10, 1939, Pope Pius

XII named him Bishop Of SiouxD'aIls, S.D" and he was conse­erated in St. Paul Cathedral byArchbishop John Gregory Mur_rayon Aug. 24.

During his time in Sioux Fallshe instituted an intensive pro­gram to obtain vocations to thepriest.hood, established four newhospitals and expanded andmodernized six others, builthomes for the aged and servedfrequently as retre;at master forthe cler~y.

He also founded the SiouxFalls diocesan newspaper, theBishop's Bulletin.

ArchbishopOn ,June 16, 1956, he was ap­

point.ed titular archbishop ofSelymbria and coadjutor arch­bishop of St. Paul with the rightof succession to the ailing Arch-bishop Murray. ",

Archbishop Brady succeededto the St. Paul See on October 11,1956, the day Archbishop Mur­ray died.

Archbishop Brady was namedassistant episcopal chairman ofthe Department of Social Action

Page 4: 10.05.61

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Priests, ReligiousTo Join Britain'sSchool 'Strike

LONDON (NC) - Hun­dreds of priests, Brothersand Sisters are scheduled togo out on strike in Britainwith a bishop's approval.

They are members of the Na-­tiona1 Union of Teachers, whose250,000 members have been toldby their leaders to stage a one­day nationwide strike on Tues­day, Oct. 24 tQ protest againstlow pay.

The priests and Sisters are jus­tified in joining j;he strike, ac­cording tQ Bishop ,George A•Beck, A.A., of Salford, chairmanof the Catholic Education Coun-cil. •

A forerunner of this nationalstoppage took place when some25,000 teachers in a small sep­arate union walked out for theday, shutting over 1,000 schools.restricting classes in others andgiving nearly a million young­sters an extra day off.

The rights and wrongs ofCatholic 'teachers supportingthese stoppages-the first everin British education-have caus­ed some concern. But C.H. Sheill,secretary of the Catholic Teach­ers' Federation· (C.T.F.) toldmembers: "The decision is quitestraightforward. We have ad­vised our members to supporttheir unions.

Receive PayThere are over 18,000 ~atho­

lic teachers in the 2,000 Catho­lic schools training over 500,000Catholic children inside' thenational state system of free ed-

, ucation. They include both menand women members of teach­ing orders who are paid thesame fixed rates from the edu­cation authorities as their laycolleagues. Many Catholic teach­ers are also employed at non­Catholic schools.

British teachers claim theyare the poorest paid of the pro­fessional classes in Britain.Though granted a pay increaserecently, this was postponed ina recent gen~ral pay freezeordered by the goyernment tocheck inflation. '

Holy Cross Receives$384,464 in' Gifts

WORCESTER - Holy CrossCollege received, gifts totaling$389,464 during the fiscal yearending June 30, 1961, accordingto Matthew P. Cavanaugh, di­rector of the alumni fund.

Of the, total sum, $243,856 wascontributed by the Alumnithrough the ,Alumni Fund anddirect gifts to the college and$145,608 was received fromfriends and benefactors of thecollege. '

Restricted gifts for scholar­'ships, endowments or specifiedequipment totaled $119,648. ,

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GHANA ARCHBISHOP ORDAINS: In the seminarychapel of the. Divine Word Missionaries at Bay St. Louis,Miss. Archbishop ,John Kodwo Amissah, of Cape Coast,Ghan~ West -Africa., confers Tonsure on a seminarian. Thevisitin~ Archbishop also ordained, four missionaries to thesubdiaconate, the first major order leading to the priesthood.NC Photo.

THE ANCHOR-:Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., ,Oct. 5, 1961

Teenage Son, ~eed~' StrongGuidance of Parental Hand

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

, "We're' going through the mental anguish of havinga teenager' who takes no interest in studies,. and must re­peat his 'freshman year because he failed in f~ur ·subjects.He associates with a group of boys who spend much oftheir time tinkering with old people require at least eightears. How can I make him do hours of sleep, and since t~e hourhis homework and .prepare for rising is clearly defined'dut-

f h· I ? Al d jng the school year, it shouldn'tor. IS c asses. so, oes a b d'ff" It t f' t hparent simply forbid a son to 'the I. ICU

tt~ Igure ou w en

. t 'th t· b h ey mus re Ire.assocla e WI cer am oys w O' • : Have you developed a clear-have done no c.ut family" program concerningabctual wtr 0 n

lgl

the use of radio and television',ut wasea. . t h d' gth' t' ?' l' datmg, gomg 0 sows, spen mell' I~e. d ~ money,' -individual .responsibili-

~ ,~~n us.eh ties around the home, and so on?on now o~ An unplanned, d~sorderly family

t~t h:.ndl:; thIS circle leaves its mark on the per-SI ua IOn. ' sonalities of its growing' mem-

Aren't yo.u a bel's.''little late in ' Success in school iVtplies self-

you l' ~on~er,n discipline, as well as the abilityo vel' JUlllO: s. to plan and organize one's dailyB c hal a's tIC schedule. The formation of sucha c· hie v e - habits must be initiated in thements, Myrtle? His first semester homemarks must have indicated that l~fluence of Companionshe wasn't going to br~ak any Fourth, you are correct in feel- ,records, so I presume hIS teac~- ing that your son's friends caners warned you that he wasn t exert a strong. influence on him.getting his work. '. If he, associates with boys who

Now he has not only wasted a have 'no interest in school orvaluable year but has acquired give little thought to preparingslothful work habits and a thor- themselves for the future, heough dislike of school. The pic- will certainly acquire similarture may not be all black, how- attitudes. 'ever,-for you~ave been arous~d Hence you should by all meansto a more actIve concern, .whlle forbid or strictly limit his 'asso­he may have learned that he' ciation with such irresponsiblecan't get by -without studying. companions, and at the same

Poor Preparation time give him guidance and helpWhat can you do? Well"Myrtle, in forming other friendships.

your first step is to talk to his Finally, 1- was somewhat puz- C C -d dB-II'teachers and find out in detail zled, Myrtle, by the fact that you ,0n9 ress .' 0 nSI ere I Show they view your son's prob- did not mention your husband in

lems. What is his IQ, that is, is your: letter. It may be assumed ",Of Inter~~st to Churcheshe capable of carrying high that you are not a widow or you ~.

school work? Did he miss out on probably would have noted it. WASHINGTON (NC)-Congress deliberated this pastimportant training in grade Although mothers may beschool which he never made up able to handle most of theirchil- session on a variety of bills in which church groups had aand consequently lacks adequate dren's problems during grad~ special interest, with' chief con'cern centered on the pro­preparation for present studies? ~chool years, teen-age boys in posaJl for Federal aid to .education. The Senate passed a $2.5

Does 'he have difficulty, in particular need the control and t 'reading? Does he know how to influence of their fathers. Many billion measure to suppor private agencies cooperate instudy? Should'you put him under modern.fathers tend,to buck-pass 'publi~grade and high schools bringing children into, the• special .tutor for a time? their moral responsibilities' in but it was blocked~ in' .the United States for adolltion.

This latter suggestion may this regard, on the pretext that House Rules Committee and More than. 17,000 .youngstersseem to involve too much ex- they themselves are too busy or ,a compromise measurl~ was re- haIved~o~de lIn unCdethr 'Il~' dpense, but remember, if he lacks don't have time to bother with . t d th fl l' n 'lVl ua a 0 ICS a n

. . d 't 1 . th Jec e on e 00. C th l' b ked thadequate preparatIon or oesn, school work or consu tmg e Catholic spokesmee- appealed a, 0 lC groups. ac . e newknow how to proceed, merely, teachers. for aid to parochial ,imd other Arms Contro~ and Dlsarma~entrepeating the year will help him This is a· serious neglect of . t h 'I a"t of the Agency, whIch the PreSIdentli bo prIva e sc 00 s' as p. h' d' ,- 1ttle. duty. During adolescence, ys A al to 'Lend them ,as slgne m..... aw.

d measure. propos ' d f h hProper Use of Time are groping their way towar funds for "special purp,ose" con- th!t- e ~at for ccurc ~oUPsI

Second is his family environ- independence and consequently t, t· t forw'lrd but it IS sessIOn was ongresSlona, t s ruc IOn was pu " ' . f h M' Fment conducive to study? Does, tend to disregard the authori y too was blocked in the House. extenSIon 0 t e eXlcan a~m

he have a relatively secluded, o,f their mothers. They need to . e t were Pro- Labor Program under WhIChquiet place where he cim study feel that their fathers are in~r- Among Its oppo~ n s Mexican nationals are imported

testant and JeWIsh groups. "free from interference? ested in the:I)1, are concerned B'll f F d I 'd for con- to -work durmg harvest tIme on

. f b t th' h' t at I s or e era al . U S farmsDoes he have a set time or a ou ell' ac levemen s struction by colleges and medical .. . . .doing his homework, during school, and a.re willing to plan schools, both endorsed by Cath- • . Pr~nted ~bscemt:v . .which the use of telephone, radio and discuss their future with olic spokesmen

cbecause they , A bIll lr:' whIch ~he religIOUS

and television are strictly for- them. made no distiftction between press, a.s well. as . many otherbidden? Does anyone check on This, obviously implies that' public and private in:3titutions, nonprofrt- publicatIons,' had ahis homework? fathers have taken time to learn also failed. The proposd for aid deep stake ~~s put aside '. by

You can learn from his teachers something about the traits and to colleges was held in the Rules Con.gre.ss untIllts second ses~IO~,what work is expected of him. aptitudes of 'their growing chil- 'Committee' the medical school begmnmg on Jan. 10. ThIS IS

, Do you supervise his study time? dren. . ' aid measu;e remained in com- the proposal tQ increase postalSome teenagers p~t in the re- Although you are. starlmg" mittee in both chambers. rates.quired amount of time but waste rather late, Myrtle, brmg your " ' . R I'Church organizations, espe-it by day-dreaming or doing any- husband into t!te picture. Your Recogmze~ 0 e cially Catholic ones, also werething but applying themselves son needs the guidance of a firm ,~!:e role ~f pr.lvate o~:rs~~s interested in a proposal to cre-to study. ' paternal hand, as well as a relief '. agen~les IS sp,ecI ~ca. y ate a Federal commission to in-

Home Environment father's attention and encourage- recogmzed m the, $3,9 bIllIon vestigate the problem of printedThird do 'you maintain reas- ment. foreign aid bill enacted ,by ~_on- obscenity.

onable 'order and discipline gress and signed by PresIdentaround the home? Is there'a Priest Shot Resisting, Kennedy..fairly definite schedule for' eat- D... ftorrt o....n in Cuba ' CooperatIon' bet,ween th eing and are all members of the' ""I:"' ij "'" government and' prIvate org~n-

fa~ilY expected to be. preseAt' MiAMI (N.C) -A priest who' izations also will be a. practIceat least at the principal meal, or resisted recent' efforts of the of the Peace Corps,. whIch CO?-d f 11 k · d f 't d Castro regime to deport him to gress put on a permanent baSIS. 'o you 0 ow a In 0 ea -an - . f' ciesrun cafeteria approach in this Spain was shot during a, scuffle PrIvate, nonpro It agenreg~rd? with militiame? and is n?w in also would b7 l;'sed in, t?e three-

Do the children have a defi- ,-a Havana hospItal, accordIng to year" $30 mIllIon pro~:.x'am .en-nite time for retirement? Young· reports received. here. . _ acted. by ~ongress to fIght

Father Antomo Altamlra, 38, juvemle delinquency.Memoro<tllft to Honoll' a native of Cuba, reportedly was 'Immigration Law

shot twice in the leg by militia- , Congress' also passed a bill toFranCBSC\Qln 'Priest men who were rounding up put on a permanent 'basis' the

LOS ANGELES (NC)~A bell some 130 priests, and Brothers alien orphan' immigration law,tower will be dedicated Sunday, after the huge, anti-communist a 13-year-old program in whichOct. 8 at Mission San Miguel, demonstration staged .outsidenear, Paso Robles, in honor of 'a Our Lady of Charjty ChurchNavy chaplain who died' in in Havana.World War II. . A former counselor at the

The l)'lemorial honors, Father Belen School, seized months agoFidelis Wieland, O.F.M., who by the Castro government"'died on May .§" 1945, at a ,hos-' . Father Altamira has been doingpital /in Guam as a result of catechetical work on the islandburns he' suffered· when Japan- as well as ministering at twoese planes attacked a hospital chapels in the suburbs 'of theship, the USS Comfort. capital. When militiamen ar-

After the war his remains rived at' the Jesuit house, Villawere brought to Mission Santa San (rose, Father. Altamira de­Barbara Cemetery. Father Wie- , clared that Cuba is his countryland had served as superior at and refused to be deported. HeMission San Miguel before en- is now at the Surgical Centertering the Navy. in Havana, the reports said.

I

Page 5: 10.05.61

. SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT: Paul W. Ponichtera, top­ranking graduate of Holy Family High in 1961 and recipientof a Providence College scholarship, consults Rev. EdwardB. Halton, O.P., dean of freshmen, about his program ofstudies.

4..

51961

YOU'RE CERTAINLYLOOKING WEll THESEDAYS! WHAT'S YOUR.

SECRET?

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., Oct. 5,

AND I'VE 6EEN ~STBURSTING WITH ENERGV!

I STARTED

VITAMINS FROM

TOUHEY'SPHARMACY

Ship to Ship

Father Byrne moves from shipto ship to bring the Mass andsacraments via helicopter tcCatholic personnel in the Navy.The holy helo hop operation isa fairly simple one when theship of destination is a carrier orcruiser, because the helicoptermay then land on deck.

Hazardous

aut it is hazardous, when the,chaplain's port of call is a de­stroyer. For while the helicopterhovers overhead, the chaplainand his Mass kit must be loweredto the deck by means of a slingattached to a line, and recoveredfrom the deck after services.When the waves are high, thefantail af the destroyer is nolonger a stable platform. It isthen the chaplain knows the anx­iety that only 'the call of dutycan overcome. The sling looksfrail, and the deck below, risingand falling, offers an uncertaintarget.

Yet the danger must be faced,for so much spiritual consola·tion depends on the chaplain'!safe landing.

,~

Holy HeQo Hop~

H@~~ 'r@vc@®$@I<etJ"@me~t$

WASHINGTON (NC)­Catholic chaplains are allev­iating the priest shortage inthe Navy through "holy helohops," in which they travel byhelicopter to bring the sacra­ments to men at sea.

The office of the Navy Chiefof Chaplains has disclosed thatabout 100 Catholic chaplains inthe Navy are doing this oftenhazardous type of work in va­rious parts of the world.

Typical of these is Father(Lt. Comdr.) John P. Byrnes, apriest of the Trenton, N.J., dio­cese who is assigned on board

,the USS Bon Homme Richard,an aircraft carrier.

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Pope John ReceivesMam:yknoll Superior ..

CASTELGANDOLFQ (NC)­Pope John has received in pri­vate audience Bishop John W.Comber, M.M., Superior Gen­eral of the Maryknoll Fathers.

Father John ·M. Martin, M.M.,procurator general of the societyand superior of the Maryknollhouse ,in Rome, accompaniedBishop Comber. ¢_

Tne Bishop was in Rome onthe first leg of a journey whichwill take him on a tour ofMaryknoll missions' in Africaand the Far East. '

spirit is being enkindled as theywatch the daily progress oftheir co-educational school'sgrowth.

Newspaper Editors. Sacred Hearts Academy, FallRiver,' Shacady editors, AnnDomingos and Mary McCarty,have been graduated from thefirst Journalism, Workshop heldat Emmanuel College. The' SHAeditors joined with other EastCoast journalists -to study newtechniques and to improve theirschool newspapers. Ann andMary were presented certifi­cates of honor by Sister AnnBartholomew, president of Em­manuel College.

Seniors E~eanor Hacking,Jane Silvia, Alberta Metrasand Kathleen Farrell attainedfirst place in a Summer readingproject sponsored 'by the Acad­emy.

9 :00.-6:90

.except Wed.

DISPENSING

OPTICIAN

Office Hours

PrescripionsFor' Eyeglasses

Filled

T No. Main St.. Fal River OS S-0412

E)(pansion 'Progr(;8mDUBUQUE (NC)-Loras Col­

lege here in Iowa will under·take a $10 million expansionprogram, Msgr. Dorance V.Foley, its president, announced.

Plan Program to AidYouths Seeking Jobs

NEW YORK (NC) - A pro­gram to help young people findjobs has been developed by theClerical Advisory Council of theNational Association of Manu­facturers.

The council is composed of 18clerDm~ of the three m~M

faiths. Chairman is the Rev.Edward L. R Elson: of the Na­tional Presbyterian C h u I' C h,Washington, D.C. Father JamesL. Vizzard, S.J., director of theWashington office of the Na­tional Catholic Rural Life Con­ference, is vice chairman. Fourother priesh are on the council.

The group's plan calls forevery minister, priest and rabbiin a community to measure theemployment needs of young peo­ple of his congregation, and thenwork with business leaders inmeeting these needs.

Dublin, the home of the Foun­dress.

Announces ActivitiesA long - playing monaural

record, consisting af selectionsfrom the Spring 1961 band con­cert, is now on sale at CoyleHigh, Taunton. Th~ yearbookstaff will meet shortly to electofficers.

This year, four Brothers /0£the Holy Cross from the Taun-

. ton boy's school are enrolled inthe in-service General Sciencecourse at Brown Univers'ity'.The Brothers are: BrotherJoseph Lovito, C.S.C., BrotherCarl Winters, C.S.C.,' BrotherJoseph Ross, C.S.C., and BrotherJames Roth, C.S.C.

Rev. Patrick J. ,O'Neill, Act­ing Superintendent of Diocesanschools, visited at Bishop Fee­han High this week. Encour­aging the- students to make thebest use af the educational pro­gram that was being offered to''them, Father O'Neil emphasizedthe fact that while some phasesof the construction programmay be annoying, the Feehan

Five representatives from eachhome room have been electedto work with Sister Mary Kateri,RS.M., faculty moderator. Thecommittee members told the stu­dents of the over-aU plan. Plansare now in formation for cam­paign speeches, posters' and elec­tion of the Student Council.

College NightOn Monday, Nov. ,13, Coyle.

High School, Taunton: will pre­sent a College Night. Represen­tatives from all 'of the major col-·leges in this area, plus severalothers, will be present to intro­duce their respective colleges tomembers of the junior and seniorclasses. Parents are requested toattend, much of the informationbeing directed to them.

Tests Announced at SlangThe National Educational De­

velopment Tests, patterned afterthe National Merit ScholarshipQualifying Test, are to be ad­ministered at Bishop Stang onMarch 6, 1962. Interpretive in_formation is supplied with "thetest results, so the teachers andpupils may assess academicstrengths and weaknesses. Thejuniors will take the Merit Qual­ifying Test on the same day.

Award CertificatesMary Beth Jette, junior, and

Aileen Moloney, sophomore,Sacred Hearts Academy, FallRiver, led the 15 students whoreceived certifica'tes for havingthe highest percentiles in theNational Educational Develop­ment Tests. These certificatesare presented to students whoscore in the top quarter of eachstate. .

The Science Research Associa­tion also presented certificatesto Alana Almeida, KathleenCollins, Nancy Davis, MarleneGauthier, Anne Gibbons, RitaSullivan, Margaret Donnelly,Susan Landry, Jane Hawayeck,Ellen- Mooney, Joyce Petit,Nancy Powers, and Anne Wright.

School ElectionsPrevost High School, Fall

River, has announced the fol­lowing class officers: seniorpresidents, ,Henry Lapointe andRobert Desrochers; vice-presi­dents, Claude Belanger andBernard Petite; secretaries, Rob­ert Whitehead and RaymondCousineau; treasurers, EugeneGauthier and Richard Clairmont.

Junior class officers are: pres­idents, Robert Goyette and Nor­man Dumaine; vice-presidents,Robert Gagnon and Paul Mor­rissette; secretaries, Paul Le­vesque and Wilfred Garand;treasurers, Henry Louis Thibo­tot and Roual Cote.

New band officers at CoyleHigh, Taunton, are: president,John Hickey, Thunton; vice­president, John Gillet, FallRiver; secretary, Jeffrey May­nard, Taunton; and treasurer,Christopher Qualters, Mansfield.

Ann Turner is the school cap- ,tain at Sacred 'Hearts Academy,Fall 'River. Other officers are:sodality pref~ct, Diane McGee;St. Agnes Captain, Pam Mean;St. Margaret's Captain, ElizabethCollins; president of debaters,Margaret Silvester; Janua editor,W aId a Lyons; Shacady co­editors, Mary. McCarty, AnnDomingos; glee club president,Diana Abrahams; orchestra pres­ident, Rita Cleare; Marian play­ers president, Margaret Gillette.

Other officers at SHA are:seventeeners' president,. Barbara

'Kane; gym council co-chairman,Eleanor Hacking and AngelaMedeiros.

New officers of Our LadyCause af Our Joy Sodality of St.,Mary's High School are: prefect,Helen Donnelly; senior vice-pre­fect, Mary O'Hearn; junior vice­prefect, Collette Murphy; corre­sponding, secretary, CharlotteColton; recording secretary, Bet- I

sy Brennan; tresasurer, Helen ,-------------......

Gilman. Mercy Day ANTONE S. FEND, JRT'he student body at .Bishop

Feehan High paid honor to theSisters of Mercy and "their Foun­dress, Mother Mary McAuley.Sister Mary Urban, RS.M.,principal, extended greetings inan assembly this past week.

Rev. Thomas Walsh, regiondean, expounded on the life andworks of Mother McAuley andgave a very interesting accountof his visit to Baggott Street,

Better Reading Means Better LivingWith New Scientifi~ Achi~veme~t

PFograms in Dioc<es~n ~~D'COO~$By ])a~ien J. IDIe]aney

One of the basic skillsnecessary for education isthe ability to read. In thetypical classroom, readingabilities range across six, eight,even 10 grade levels. Little im­provement takes place when stu-'dents are reading in materialsthat are either too difficult orto easy for them.

Each student needs the op­portunity to advance in readingskills as fast and as far. as hislearning rate and his learningcapacity permit. Nearly' everystudent can improve his presentreading performance both inrate and comprehension.

The two most widely acceptedreading programs are the PAR- Program of Achievement inReading-and the ,SRA-Scien­titic Res ear c h Association,Reading LaooratQry. The s eprograms provide individual­ized reading training for juniorand senior high pupils.

The PAR offers a programfor adults as well. Fascinatingreading materials are offered inthese programs. The topics in­clude sports, adventure, biog­raphy, science fiction and cur­rent events. Because scienceand social studies materials areof great interest to all, they areincluded at each grade level.All selections have been adaptedby professional writers to se­cure uniform length and theright level of difficulty.

Offer ProgramsA course in' developmental

reading will be given to allFeehan High, Attleboro, stu­dents this year. Diagnosticreading tests will be adminis-­tered this week to all, and theSRA Reading Program will be­come an essential feature in theeducational program of each,Feehan student. Sister MaryIncarnata, RS.M., will directthe reading program.

Coyle High of Taunton alsooffers the SRA Reading Pro­gram. This program is offeredat 10 Saturday mornings in theschool library

PAR ProgramThe PAR Program consists of.

a study set of four texts de­signed to hel'p the student inspeed and comprehensive read­ing, and vocllbulary building.Contact projectors and speedreaders are used with a greatdegree of success.

A class will be offered inFall River beginning next Tues­day night, another will be of­fered on Saturday mornings.Information can be obtained bycalling OSborne 8-0360.

Aid in AdvancementBoth programs offer aid for

advancement. Anyone who canread quickly and with, compre­hension will save much time indoing homework; will' aid ingetting better grades at schooland on the CEEB Exams; willimprove chances for scholarshipawards. Better reading meansbetter living and more enjoy,,:ment.

Installation CeremonyAt the first assembly at the

Sacred Hearts Academy, FallRiver, Rev. John H. Hackett,school' chaplain, who 'presidedat the convocation, remindedthe girls that cooperation withtheir leaders, and respect andreverence for law are most" im­portant factors in developingthat good school disciplinewhich will enable the studentto take her place in society asan effective and self-satisfiedadult.

Sister John Elizabeth, princi­pal, listed the qualities of anideal SHA'er as spirituality,studiousness, courtesy, andfriendliness.

Student GovernmentThe results of t/le Student

Government elections at BishopStang High School, North Dart­mouth, have been announced.The new president is WalterBayliss of the junior class; vice­president, sophomore J 0 a nDavis; treasurer, junior MargoDionne; secretary, sophomoreBrian McMahon.

Student Government wentinto effect this week when aPlanning Committee was formedat Bishop Feehan High School.

Page 6: 10.05.61

Questionsand

Answers

Quite regularly in the Sun- I

day Gospels we hear of theScribes and Pharisees. I'm notsure of just who they are:perhaps if I read the Bible alittle more often I wouldn'thave to ask, but could youexplain?The SCRIBES were a group

of professionally trained copy­ists and notaries. By the timeof Our· Lord, they had becomethe interpreters of the Law ofMoses. In' doctrine and practicethey commonly favored thePharisees.

The PHARISEES comprised aparty among .the Jews in thedays ·of Christ; they separatedthemselves from all association

,with the Gentiles. This groupwas noted for its strictly literalinterpretation 'of the JewishLaw and scrupulous adherenceto tradition and ceremonial.Their power led to. degenera­tion and they became exclusive,formal, proud and self righteoushypocrites, thus provoking theindignation of Our Lord.

llnciden tally, your commentabout reading .the Bible morefrequently may suggest a reso­lution . that. you (and others)could make.

byRev. James A. McCarthy

St. William's Church • Fall River

! have seen PapaH repre­sentatives listed as "ApostolicDelegates" and as Apostolic"Nuncios". Is there any dif­ference between these twotitles?

There is a distinction betweenthe Papal Representatives youname. For' clarification, let usconsider all representatives of

. the Holy See.An APOSTOLIC NUNCIO is

the diplomatic r"eoresentative ofthe Pope (ashead· of theState of VaticanCity) to a civilgovern­ment. His' du­ties are tohandle affairsbet we e n theApostolic Seeand the state,to watch over r""the· status of i'(the Church in ~the country to which he is as­signed and to kep the Holy Seeinformed of conditions there. Hisrank is equivalent to that of anambassador .extra-ordinary andplenipotentiary, and he is thedean of the diplomatic corps inthe country where he is accred­ited. All nuncios are archbishops.

An INTERNUNCIO is a diplo­matic officer of lower rank·

-than the nuncio; in the absenceof the nuncio, he performs theduties of that office. His rankis the equivalent of a ministerplenipotentiary.

A CHARGE D'AFFAIRES isa lower rank diplomatic officerand a REGENT is a temporaryadmjnistrator.

An APOSTOLIC DELEGATEis a legate or represen,tative ofthe Pope who does not havediplomatic status. He watches

,over the status of the Church inthe country in which he is sta­tioned, keeps the Holy See in­formed of conditions there andserves as intermediary betweenthe hierarchy of .that country

.and the Holy See.* * *

Father John R. FoisterWrites Next Week

On Hail Mary

Mass ExplanationFeatures Africans

SALISBURY (NC)-An Eng­lish Jesuit has taken a series ofphotographs explaining the Massto Africans. All prelates, priests·and laymen pictured a I' eAfricans.

Father John Gillick, S.J., waschagrined to see during a visit toSouthern Rhodesia that all avail­able' explanation of the Masswere illustrated with photo-

enwbs of EuropeallL

·MOND~Y-St. John Leonard.Confessor; The lessons of thisMass of a confessor stress againthe theme of peace, the peacetha't Jesus offers in his Churchto guilt-l'idden and sin-con­science man (Gospel). So thatfor' the Christian the virtuouslife, the pai[lful struggle towarda deeper and more perfect love,is not at all a matter of earninghis salvation, a barter with God.It is a thanksgiving, rather, forthe pardon and peace which He .has already assured us, alreadygiven us (Epistle).

which are independent of ourmerits and our striving, impor­tant though these are. It is Hewho tells us confidently that thebeing (ourselves) we had thought.was sick unto death will live(Gospel). It is His passion and.death, His resurrection andascension, which turn our guiltand contrition into a thanksgiv­ing (Epistle). We have too muchrestricted the notion of forgive­ness and pardon to the one sacra­ment of Penance. Bu:; this is partof the central 'message of> the

'Gospel, and every act of Chris­tian public -worship is a procla­mation of it.

TUESDAY-St. Francis Bor­gia, Confessor. The law of Godin the heart of a man, the wts­dom and justice in his words(Introit).,--these do not precedeGod's action and make His deedsa. resp~nse to human initiative.They are rather the product ofGod's. justification, characteristicof .a man already graced andmade' "just" by' God. So Chris­tian public worship should ai-

'ways mean an experience notonly of praise, thanksgiving andadoration, but also of the libera­tion, the freedom from sin anddeath, ~hich are Jesus' gifts.'

..WEDNESDAY~Motherhoodof-the Blessed' Virgin Mary. And Heean offer these gifts because He­is God infleshed. The truths the­Church teaches concerning Maryare above all a protection of thetruth of the divinity of her Sonand of His full humanity. TheOld Testament reading appliesto her the possession of all grace,ali hope of life and virtue, be­cause Christ is in her. And 'sowe C~ristians, in whom Christlives, count her as mother, too,and share her joy' in a love prior

. to our love and a grace prior' toany II}eriting of ours.

~()W' About [t,. K?

r ~. ,- .' - -" -~..

'Thncru.q.h th~ CMh£k With. th.£ Ch.Wlch. JBy REV. nO.BERT 'W. HOVDA, Ca,tholic University;

TODAY-Mass as on Sunday.So the' highpdints of thi's year'sliturgical week were this year,in my view, the following:

I). the daily celebration of theEucharist, in which huge con­gregations of laymen; priestsand Religious found unity andrenewed faith in an intelligentand intelligible proclam;a'tioll ofGod's word, in a serious andsolemn offering of the Lord'sPassion, Death, Resurrection andAscension, and in sharing thatBread' which is the stapl,~ of theChristian's diet;. 2). papers on the proper read­

ing and interpretation of theWord of God in public worship;.. 3) the Bible devotion ,~onduc­

ted by Baltimore's Fr. Connollyto show that liturgical fo:rmationand education, as well :fl: Chris­tian inspiration in general, can,come through well preparedevening devotional services.

-SATURDAY;.,. Blessed Virgin'Mary of the Rosa:r~. Mary be­came fruitful .and -the~other ofLife because she looked a.nd she'listened. She heard His Wordand accepted it. This year's litur­gical week, both in its major ad­dresses and .in iis discussionsmade it evident that man;r of usare not hearing the Word ofGod adequately, and that ourlack of resoonse to it is not en-_tirely our fault.-

Proclaiming it in our language,with a dignity that commandsrespect and reverent listenii1g,and with a preaching that is bothsubmissive to the Word and pen­etrating to its meaning -- theseare the' things desired by thosewho· have, the good of Catholicpublic worship at heart. First Friday

20th SUNDAY AFTER PEN- Rev. John H. Hackett willTECOST. The texts of -today's 'address the Fall River First Fri­Mass are full of· sfn-con:3cious- . day Club tomorrow night. Mem­ness, but without any hint of bel'S will attend 6 o'clock Mass·despa{r.. The pardon and peace at Sacred Heart Church and pro­for which the Collect prays' is ceed to K of C Home, 209 Frank­proclaimed in every Mass. A lin Street, for supper and Fatherpardon and peace which radical- Hackett's address, which willly and totally belong to Jesus, deal with the Ecumenical.Coun-

.which. He shares freely with us,cils of the ChUl'ch.

TOMORROW' - St. Bruno,Confessor. The imagery 'of whichthe liturgy, and, the Bible aswell, _make such constant andfruitful 'use requires of the"Christian the watchfulness oftoday's Gospel. Words them­selves are images,,,,and so thewords of public worship, wheth- .

'~er of :ts common prayejr or ofits proclamation of the savinggood news of our redemption, ,require attention, real listening,the attitude of a good student.

And beyond the bare words,the same can be said of all theliturgy's signs and ceremonies,all itsgestul'es and colors, allitl; lights and vesture- all be­speaking more than human artand craft . . . all mannfestingaf the very least the dignity ofthe' worship of God and theb!'!autY'.of His creation.

-. ~:("cese of Fall River-'Thurs., Oct 5, 1961,TL;: .~.

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPIE~ OF THE DIOCESE Of FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic P~ess of the Diocese of F~II\River410 Highland Avenue "

Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151

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

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

MANAGING EDITORHugh J. Golden

.

®rhe

6 --------------------Archllilu§lhlop Hi·ad-y- .

There is a certain fittingness in the manner in whichthe late distinguished Archbishop of St. Paul, Most ReverendWilliam 0, Brady, spent his last days ott earth. He was·stricken en route to Rome to place his many talents andconsiderable ability at the disposal of the Universal Churchin making preparations for the forthcoming Ecumenical

.Council.This prelate of the Church, son of a hard-working father

and a pious mother wh() was -a convert to the Faith, whileyet a seminarian for this ·Diocese of Fall River, had a d~pth

of vision that looked beyond the confines of his own home.It was this desire to serve the Church that led him to offerhis services to the Archdiocese of St. Paul.

it was this love Of the Church - the extension of JesusChrist in time and place - that characterized his labors,brilliant and wide-reaching, as seminary professor, rector,writer; shepherd of souls.

It .became almost commonplace in the midst ofcontroversy or a difficult situation for men of thought tolook for the penetrating an~lysis and balanced solutionproposed by the Archbishop of St. Paul.

The Archbishop was never content ·to spend himselffor his own Archdiocese alone. He was a Churchman, and thewhole Church was the object of his love and labor.

. The Diocese of Fall River has lost a ,distinguished­son. The Archdiocese of St. Paul has been' deprived of a •zealous shepherd. The Church on ,earth prays that he whoserved Her well may be now enjoying the fruit of his laborsfor, Christ.

"WOman's Place, No less a personage than the able Secretary of Labor,

Arthur J. Goldberg, has placed his not inconsiderableprestige behind a movement that is becoming more andmore a 'part of the modern scene and more and more'distressing with its spread. The new attitude that is showingitself with disturbing frequency is that of interesting more,women in jobs outside the home.

Some writers along these lines take the attitude thata woman gains by this work in keeping up her interests.Others take the point of view that it is just as well not tohave members of the family depend -too much upon mother.For after all, the reasoning goes, she is not going to bearound forever.

To answer the last argument first, the logical extensionmight be to place' infants immediately after birth -in acommunal nursery and raise -the children without anydependance upon mother at all. '

But hold on!. That is n9t the American way of life,is it? °the traps into which logic pushes one!

And as for keeping up mother's interests. It wouldseem that a woman who is called ·upon .every' day to be'wife, mother, dietician, manager, referee of arguments,soother of hurt bodies and feelings, diplomat to siblings,educator, lawyer, model- well, there seems' to be a wideenough range of interests in the home for any energetic andvital person. -

As the Jesuit Father Edward L. Murphy remarked, hehas "due regard for the Secretary in the field of labor butless regard for him as a sociologist, psychologist 'andmoralist." , .

A wife and mother needs, an occasional change ininterests, to be sure. She needs adult 'companionship. Buther glory and happiness lie in doing her work inside thehome. Anyone can take her place in the mill or, shop orstore. Noone -can take her plac~ there.

Parish School of'Religion 0

, There are five and one-half million students in Catholicelementary and high schools in the United States. TheCatholic 'school system has grown one hundred and twoper cent in the last fifteen' years.

These statistics would give great' satisfaction if theystopped there. But they do not.

It is also a statistic ,that the percentage of school-ageCath<:>lic ,children· in Cath9lic schools has dropped' tenper cent from what it was ten years ago. ,

There are simply not enough places in Catholic schoolsto accommodate those who wish to attend.

, Arid so,- parents must look to the. Confrate~nity ofChristian Doctrine - the parish school of religion - forassistance in the religiou's education. of their children. Itmust have the .. support and cooperation of all. It is heeded.It is fulfilling an m.dispensable role.

/

Page 7: 10.05.61

JAMES H. COLUNS. C.E~. Pre••

Registered Civil and Structural EngineerMember Nati9nal Society Professional Engineers

fRANCIS L COUINS. JR~. Treas.THOMAS K. COLUNS. Sec'y.

ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER. MASS.

"

,"'

7

• HYANNIS• HARWICHPORT,., ,SOUTH YARMOUTH,

~

DOAN~·8E.Al·AMri'3. !NCOIl.POIl.ATEO

JE,FFREY E.SULLIVAN

Faneral Dome

550 Locust; 81.Fall River. Mass.

OS 2-2391Rose E. Sulhvan

Jeffrey E. Sullivan'

~I)1

'II,.I,m

Missiorru ffi'O®lf~m

Usill'lg LO}fmenGrow§ B~gger .

WASHINGTON, (NC)Laymen have a big job inthe missions which willgrow bigger in coming years,experts agreed during the 12thannual meeting of U.S. mission­sending societies.

And, the experts added, theuse of laymen in the missionsis not a stop-gap desperationmeasure, but arises from theduty of every Catholic to pro­mote the missionary work ofthe Church.

Father Victor Fernandez, S.J.,of the Latin American Bureau,National Catholic Welfare Con­ference, stressed the importanceof the Papal, Volunteers forLatin America program in thedevelopment of the lay mission­ary apostolate.

Father Fernandez said -theHoly See's announcement in theSummer of 1960'of the program-under which lay volunteersare- recruited to work on behalfof the Church in Latin America-was "unique" in that it wasthe first time that the Vaticanpointed out a specific task forlaymen in the Church.

Underlining the crisis condi­tions in Latin America, the Jes­Hit noted that there, one-thirdof all thtil Catholics in the worldhave only one-tenth of thepriests. /

It would take 200,000 morepriests in Latin America tobri3ng the ratio of priests-to­people there to the same levelthat prevails in the U.S., FatherFernandez said.

He said the Papal Volunteersprogram will be "primarily awork of collaboration.~' Foreign.,volunteers will not take tneplace of local leaders, he said,adding: "Latin Americans are,sick and. tired of paternalism."

The response of U. S. Catho­lics to the program has been"truly' inspirin~," he declared.

G,rgnt From Kod~kNIAGARA UNIVERSITY (NC)

-Niagara University has an­nounced receipt of an unre­stricted grant of $9,600 from theEastman K 0 d a k Company,Rochester, N. Y.

THE ANCHO~-

Thurs.. Oct. 5, 196t

INCORPORATED 1'937

GENERAL CONTRACTORSand ENGINEERS

f:. l~ COLLINS &. SONS

O'ROURKEFuner,.,',· Home

571 Second St.Fan,River; Mass.

as, 9~72MICHAEt J. McMAHON

Lic6nsed ·Funeral DirectorRegiltered. Embalmer

AUBERTINEFuneral Home"fl'en Aubertine Brough

Owner and' Direetor

Spacious Parking AreaWY 2-2957

129 Allen 81. New Bedford

Dinner SpeakerNEW YORK, (NC)-Former

President Dwight Eisenhowerwill be a guest speaker at theAlfred E. Smith Memorial foun­dation dinner Oct. 18 in theWaldorf Ast-oria Hotel.

-"'--.'--,-··-..-----:·~- ..·-l

(

c. Pa HARRINGTONFUNERAl. HOME

986 "'I.ymouth AvenueFall. River" Mass.

TeL OS 3-2271

DANIEt ~. HARRINGTONUcensec.. Funeral Directore-t RegiMe,eeI Embalmer

D.O. SULLlVAN·& SONSru~ERAL HOME

469 LOCUST STREETFAll RIVER~ MASS.

OS - 2-3381~

Wilfred Co James ,E.Oriscol~ sumvon. Jr.

Rules Carols, Hanukkah SongsLegal Public School Practices

TRENTON '(NC)-5tate Com- Jewish holiday occurring aroundmissioner of Education Frederick the time of Christmas. This pr;lc­M. Raubinger has ruled that it tice and the recitation of the Oldis lawful to sing Christmas carols Testament passage are author­and Hanukkah songs and recite ized by the local'board of educa-an Old Testament verse in New tion. 'Jersey public schools. Traditional Acceptance

Raubinger rejected a petition The Gould children do not re-by Mr. and Mrs. John Gould of cite the Scripture verse but ac­Freehold, N. J., charging that the cording to the record they gen­practices are illegal because of erally participate in singing thetheir religious implications. carols.

He said that in restricting re- The Goulds contend the prac-ligious practices in the public tices are contrary to their reli­schools" the legislature "had no gJOus beliefs and those of theirintention of excluding every children, and that the saying ofvestige of religious thought to U.e Old Testament verse consti­the point where even the exist- tutes a religious exercise in vio­ence 'of a Supreme' Being was to lation of 'the school law.be unrecognized and unacknowl- In his ruling on the recitationedged, but acted rather to set of the Old Testament verse,restraints and limits so as to bar Commissioner of Education Rau­any infiltration of. sectarian binger held that "as a single andpractices leading to divisiveness djrect expression of thanksgivingand discords." to an acknowledged Supreme

. Being, which the courts haveHave Local Aothodzatfon held to be acceptable in the tra-

The Goulds have two daughters dition of this nation, it is not ain Broad Street Pubiic School, religious exercise prohibited byFreehold. Each day they are the statutes."served milk in school. Before''drinking the milk, the teachersand children bow their heads,f-old their hands, and: say;

"0 give thanks unto the Lor~

for He is good, for His mercyendureth forever."

In December, Christmas carolsand Hanakkah songs are cus­tomarily sung in the Freeholdpublic schools. Hanukkah is a

Sixth from AzoresANGA DO HEROISMO (NC)

-The nomination of Msgr. PaoloTavares as Bishop of Macaobrings to six the number of liv­ing bishops from these islandS,

,with a Catholic population of318,500.

DEBATERS MEET: Members of Narragansett DebateL'eague meet at Dominican Academy, Fall River. Rear, PeterSaracco, Coyle High'School; front, left to right, MargueriteSilvestre~ SaCE'ed Hearts Academy; Mary Rose Dupont,Domm~can; Sharon :Fennessey, Mt. St. Mary Academy..

FUNERAl: OIRI:CTORS

15 IRVINGTON CT.WY 7-7830 '

NEW BEDFORD

a. M.rcel~ - c:. Lorraine RolR'4!1l't!I' LRFran..

BROOKLAWNFUNERAL KOMEr INC.

Spectal'UJt8 tnSpecial Flof"CJ' A:.,.ranO,ements

• Funerals • Corsages• Weddings, • Hospital, 2082 Robeson St;

Foil River OS 5..7804

I . BONNER FLOWERS

Two RccG-ntesters I F'l 'ROCHE5TED (!jC)-$t. John " 0 we r s

. ~,FiSher, ~6th century martyr-

,bishop 01 Rochester.. England" ~

has been designated patron I H T··· .saint of the Rochester, N .. Y.• ', ,e.",.ry ,. elxelradiocese~, Bishop James. E.Kearney of Rochester an- ! Johnny Lemos: Florist,nounced· that St. John had been Inamed diocesan patron in a • ~y~~n~ .......... :r: '~-:3?6Adecre~ by ~pe .Tohn., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

High School' ReceivesConstruction Grant

SYRACUSE (NC)-A $120,­000 gJ:aLtt. has been given to theDiocese of Syracuse for theconstruction of. a combinationchapel, gymnasium and audi­torium at Utica Catholic Acad­emy for Girls.

The grant, announced byBi!hop Walter A. Foery ofSyracuse, was given by theCarton Foundation, establishedunder terms of the w.ill of thelate Matthew, A. Carton of"Utica.

SOJ$ Wel:f~l\'e Stgte,IG~~d and USg~~~·

TOLEDO (NC)' - Sen. EugeneJ. McCarthy of Minnesota hasdefended the term ~'w.elfare

state" as "good and usable."Be sard the term, as tradition­

ally understood,. means a statethat "seeks to meet its institu­tionDI 'responsibfiities in assist-"ing its eit~,":ens i:ni their effortis:to secure those things whim arenecessary to the good Life. to thehappirtess of man.'F .

But he noted: "If by the termwe mean to define a state whIc1'1'enters into every phase oil' life.unduly restricting freedQm noton]y at the economic level butalso at the level of the intellectand the spirit, seeking to de­termine personality so as to fiteach person into a· predeter­mined. pattern,. 1l1'1at wellfaJre stateis to be condemned."

full time- in 22 parishes in Texasand Oklahoma.

He 'cited the following ex­ample of the effect of lay mis­sionaries' work in the U. S.:

"In one parish in the South­west, which included a dozencommunities in three counties,it had been considered fortu­nate to have an increase of twoCatholics in a year's time. Now,after two years of work by layvolunteers in a catechetical pro­gram, the increase has reached70 converts a year. In the be­ginning, there were only 210

. Catholics in the parish.""It is ,not- really possible to

calculate results 'of the work,"he added,' "because' it also pre­disposes people in rural areasto embrace the Faith when theymove to cities.','

Both men and women' are ae- .cepted as Extension VQlunteers.Most of the participa~ts 'areyoung peesple just out of col­lege, chiefly because they areusualy more able to leave for.assignme.nts inmi.ssionary areas.

Enjoy WorkIndications 3l!e that the vol­

unteers enjoy their work andits accomplishments.

"We think' it significant,"said Father Sullivan, "that of23 full-time volunteers at work,in one diocli!se last year. 16have returned this year. Fourothers married and one enteredreligious life."

The volunteers' work withpastors but under the super­

Lay Missioners vision of six priests in theSouthwest who serve as fieldTo Aid Church Tepresentatives of the Extension

RALEIGH (NC) - Bishop Society. .Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh ' One Ye2r ServicepreSIded at a graduation cere- An Extension, Volunteer re-mony here for 12 young women ceives room and board, trans­who will do apostolic work in portation f~om home to thethe home missions of North. mission 'arid return, a trip ~omeCarolina. ,1 for Christma"s, hospitalization

They completed a' month of insurance and, $50. a month.intensive training in catechetics, Term of service is one year.census taking and the missiol- On his recruiting tour, whichogy of North Carolina under the is taking him to 140 Catholicdirection. of the Sisters, Mission colleges and Newman clubs atHelpers of the Sacred Heart. state ~olleges, Father S:ullivan·

also- provid~s information 'onReach Thousands 'the pregram oll the Papal Vol-

Bishop Waters presen.ted to unteers for Latin America.each a Mary Missioner medal. Father John J., Considine, M.M.,the only distinctive identifiea- national director of PAVLA,tion of the Mary Missioner. and the Extension Society work

The Bishop said: "Because of closely together in seekingthese 12 generous young ladies, workers, in the two pro-jects.who have dedicated a year of "We share facilities and cham­their life to the home mIssions pion both. causes, because thein North Carolina,. the Church [programs a I' e compatible,"will be brought to· thousands Father Sullivan explained. .who would never be reached He is, being, assisted in theunless these apostolic ladies had recl1uiting tour by two veteranvolunteered' for this missionary lay volunteers who have servedwork." in mission. areas in the Exten":

sion Society's program. Theyare Patricia Darcy, a graduateof Albertus Magnus college,New Haven, Conn., and Bar­bara Boggs, a: graduate of'Man~hattanville Colleg.e 'of the,Sacred Heart,. Purchase, N. Y.

u.s. Mi,ssion,' Dioceses Ask ~---:---~'"Extension, Lay Volunteers , ' '~~

PORTLAND (NC)'- Thirty-six missionary dicceses '. "-':in the United States have requested assignment of Exten- ., .,sion Lay VolunteG!rs, and it is hoped that at least 10 of therequests win ,be filled 'by next year, according, to ~ather

John J. Suflivan , nationaldirector of the program ofthe Catholic Church Exten­siol'l Society. Extension LayVolunteers, and it is hoped thatat least 10 of the requests willbe filled by next year, accord­ing to Father John J. Sullivan,natiOJ2I!1 director of the pro­gram of the Catholic ChurchExtension Society.

Extension Lay Volunteers en­gage in four general types ofworle, he said. Some teach inparochial schools in missionareas where qualified teacherswould not otherwise' be avail­able. Some work as nurses.Some serve as catechists,who go into areas with sparseCatholic populations to workwith parish priests in teachingboth Catholics and non-Catho­lics. A fourth group works atstate universities' in missionareas.

Create Demand'The Extension Society wishes

to invest its means and' energiesnot only in church buildings butin creating a demand for churchbuildings through the Jay apos­tolate/~ Father Sullivan said'.

Convertli ,"Basic qualifications for Ex­

tension Volunteers are that theybe mature" intelligent Catholicmen and women who are prop­erly motivated," he explained.

He said there are 64 Exten­sion Volunteers now at work

Page 8: 10.05.61

NeW BEDFORD AREA·WY 7.7089

CAPE COD AREA'.51' 5-~.'

·T"'UNTq", AIM• VA ~1t~..

D~ncinri Every SaturdayNiteto' 'the Music of .

Eddie Davii and his. Orch~str~

Famous for our PrimeAged Charcoal. BroiledSteaks ~ also Roast

Beef ~.Sea Food

Buek Ossic:ksRED· ANGUSRESTAURANT

'Pleinn;ng .A .Wedding, Shower. Ban­quet or Meeting-Call our lonquet

. D~partmetlt for details. AM Partingiv~. our.'Exp~ Attentlon":"'~n .

MAYFAIR ~888-4-"'"91 Cra~ciail.Rd. Tiverton, R.t

COUnCil HeadsMeet Tonight

The President's Meetifig forFall River .District One of theDiocesan Council of CatholicWomen will 'beheld I/onight at .SS. Peter. and Paul parish hall

Speakers will inClude MissMargarflt ~" Lahey, Diocesanchairman cooperating withCatholic Charities and' Mrs.James O'Brien Jr., second D~oc­

esan vice president and Dioc­esanchairman ., for family andpaI:ent education.

Mis's Helen Chace, districtpresident, .will introduce Rev.Raymond W. McCarthy, districtmoderator, 'and her co-officers.. They include Mrs. BradleyMcDermott; v i 'c e president;Mrs. Elm~r Aitken, recordingsecretary; Mis s 'Grace. M.Walsh, corresponding secretary;Mrs. John 'Silvia, tr~asurer.

LAUNCHES'iAVON.its 1961, Christmas Business Today. Cash in on this profitable

. selling season by. Cal.ling for Appointment; NOW. Few. Territoriei!.. AvaiJpble· (won't be,. later). NOW is the Time

to Dial.'. ,., .'

",'. < FAll R'VER AREA. 058-5265'·

ATTLEBORO AREA.' . .... ·-,CA 2-3651

. ." , ·ftOC.crON.nOUGHTON . MIA. :, "i '" .': '.IU.S-34M '.'

ri ..::.:.:.: ~f: :'.~':':'.i:>iocese of Fall Riv~r-Thurs;,.,Oct..,5, J9§1

, .

...~,

..

Nominates Prayerbook PilfererFor Meane'st ·Th·ief Title .

. By ,Mary· 'foinley Daly;~"':'. Dear Mrs. Da:ly~':, This letter. is written in such. a .fine

admixture .of sorrow arid anger' that it is.difficult to saywhich 'outweighs the other. One reads in the'papers'aboutthe "meanest thief'!,:""":" usually one whosteal~fromsQmeone

'W?,O, is .ha~~ica:ppe,d. '~ere-' \Vhocoul~ -"rimt the prayer-'wIth I submIt another nom:- book as much ·as its rightfulination for the title - the owner,. and why? Would one's

· on~ who steals a,prayerbook.. spirituality. -. or .ev~n one::Most· of get attached to prayer- French-benefit by Its use.books. One sees the well-worn Seems unlikely.volumes in lov- . Perhaps through your column,ing hands in' YQu can awaken consciences andevery church. I ,prevent this careless cruelty~Orrecall my aunt's .alert parents to .check on un-request, for her'familiar prayerbooks that :their85th birthday . : children casually acquire.. Anywas to have her such books can be mailed backmissal rebound. . 'to'the church from which they Urges AII.-Clergy Effortit had been her w~re taken." '.' .: M. . -In Commynity atter~'-mother's. Aunt- . 'Mine waS a slim red-covered·ie said, 'Td like , ~ne' 'notthe usual'missal shape' . IT.A.L.I.A.N.S .IN' ~MER.,I.e,A.· ••.. ·.B.. is,h.·o.;P .Ren.';.a.~. ..:. L'uis.·.i. o.f WORCESTER (NP)-A Cath-to leave it to: 'in'that'its'sides formed a squal'e' . IN·, otic priest· here advocated thatyoq gir.s·in good . ~rather" than a"rectangle: I shall Foggja. Province, Italy, ·visits..,his .$ister, . Oblate Siste~~lergymenof ,all religious faiths~ndition.'! . ·;continue·to inquire for it M the Superio~ ,·m. YQ.ungs:town,' ·'0.'· Bishop'Luisi ·founded,the·band· together··in the:cause.of

Catholic Washingtonia~were· church. .j.. ,..,.. . American equivalent' of-13oy's Town in SipOnto and Bovino' :c~~:~~iti\:::tr~~.Howes, di';'...... sca,ndali,zedto read in tliepaper, 'j.~ And'I'shall':~oritinueto muse'. aild.is·on a':~isit to this countritO explain his w~rkfpr tl:ie . rector of community'. relations

thisSpx:ing of two teen-age·gi.fls on.the i~ony of;steimng prayer';': . edu~l,l.tion ~f orphans. and ~a.bafidon~.cliild~R.• ~C. Photo.- for the Worcester diocese, sa~dwho announced they had· a mis-: books. Certainly ·the motivation .' . .. ' ., . .' . ". _. . that "cooperation between' thesal belonging ·to President Ken"; "could n6t be ··mercenary..c..:they' ·G.o'.v.e·....r·..·n'·m,'e'nt·· 'Off'I"c' 1·0",lis':· ·,W.·',. ·.'-I"f'e' .··L"o·uds· .clergy in such ;causes as mentalriedy. It seems they had taken it .have little 'commercial value. health, juv~nile delinquency and~ y'ear before £rom a pew ,in . 'Makes one wonder how a thEio.. ·· .M. is·slo··.n.. 5.Ch.lf"\.O".Is ; i'n: ' .To',ni g'any·l"ka· . civic' planning is rare, and atthe parish church he attended logian -Would assess the efficaey v best, fragmentarY."

· as a·Senator. To add to the out- 'ofprayers'read from a pilfered WASHI;NGTON(NC)-":Mission ..... '.. ' '.'This disparateness has a dou-rage, they .announced ..they . m~s's8l. Why, then, are'such 'per"; schools in TanganYika are doing her:self of a miSSion school con- . hie faul~ in ill,'! Father Howeswould·.return It to th.~ Pr~sI4e~t.. ',sonal treasures' taken; 'and'by ,an excelle.rit job; according to adu<;te~ .. ~y the. Holy. 9host stated. "We do not effectively'if he would see them person,al- whom? Perhaps the psycholo-. Tang~nyikawoman whc'u visit- Fathers at Moshi, Tangan~lka. bulwark forces wbrking for theIy,!.A new form· of blackmail? gistS.have an answer? " ". mg the U. S. ':Theyoung Negro Cathohcwas common good in our commu-

One' wonders how such a Y' be dl , . .'. ask,eel' if there .is any danger that· ." . . ours muse y, 'The mlsslons~hoolsare rea.IIr mission' scl:1ools in . Tanganyika nities. We make it difficult formen~ality is produce?. Is. the ,Anonymous. . .~el.e.ad.ers now ~n the education might be nationalized. community leadership to reachMadison Avenue pubhclty Ideal .. field In Tanganyika and are con us by standing separate and bystronger than the values taughb k' . . -. "There is no difficulty in thisin the home, church and ~hool? Quebec Nurses Ta e· ducted ,~s .well as governme~t area," she. stated, pointing out providing no forum for contin-

P·.erLi M,··ss·.·,on. Posts sc~ool~, slud M~s. Paul Bo~an... that Prime Minister Julius Ny- uing contact."Lost MiSsal... wife of -the Mimster of Agrlcul- '.' '.. ,

. A few weeks ago I left my' .: QUEBEC (NC) 2:,;. T.wo nu.rses . ture and' Community Develop erere, a Gathohc, recently argued Chur·ches. Serve Food'ml'ssal I'n a large city church, in . , . .. . ,'..' . . "ka" - ·against. proposals put . forth in

of the Hotel Dieu here have gone ment lD TanganYI . some quarters to nationalize such At State Fair Standshaste to get I/o a Communio~ to Peru to work for two years . Mrs. B~mani, Vil'hose .two-week . schools.breakfast. After the breakfast, in the mission fields. ''1'hey arelrtay ·.in .Washingt~n \V~18 spon- Tanganyika,"a self-governing ST. PAUL (NC)-ParishionersI went back to the churcll· No .Claudette, T'a9chereau and Low.. sored by the National Counc.il of 'British tr'ust' territory" of. the of St. John the' Evangelistml'ssal We'll' I thoug,ht the .' chu'rch, Little Ca"nada,' again., 'sette ·Poulin. ,Catholic Women, is a produ.ct United Nations, will achieve itsushers have picked it up-I'll. . staffed a snack stand and diningcall. tomorrow. A call the' neXt.· " Their decision came through . f independence Dec. 28. hall at Minnesota's' 100th state

· day' and weekly' thereafter their -Work in the Laval-Mission- Reviva i '6 .Party fair to help. wipe out the debt onseemed fruitleSs. The missal was .naire movement, a lay. ~rganiza- . I P"R first Sisters of Order a church-school addition builtnever ·turned in. tion formed at Laval University ri uerto· ico To.Leave for Columbia by the parish.

The missal was' in Fr.en~h. two years·ago to provid~ pl'ofes- SAN JUAN (NC)-The Ca,th- It marked the eigh'th year. I ·d.... d d 1 ped DUBUQUE (NC) - The firstNow,' Mrs. Daly, the percentag'e· slona al 11<1' un er eve o. oll'c-backed Christian' Action members' of. the parish have'.' Sisters of Charity of the Blessedof French-speaking thieves must countries. party, crushed by .Gov. Luiz served fairgoers in a dining hall. Virgin Mary 'ever to be sent to

be fairly low, arid perhaps' re- Nurses Taschereau and PouLin Munoz Marin's forces in the Solith AmerIca are getting ready and lunch counter. They aver-stricted to our "better educated" wili work at a dispensa~ at November, 1960, election, has' for their new assignment.' age' $13,000·profit at each fair.population? I had purchased this Indiana on the Amazon, head- hit the comeback trail in prep- . Sisters Mary Ruth Marie of St. In all, 20 halls and stands atmissal in France a few years ago, quarter:s of St. Joseph~s Mission; aration for the 1964 eledion., . Louis,' Mo., and' Mary James the fair are> operated by churchesand grown attached to it. Per- founded in the jungle at the It was reported that the CAP Leone of Dubuque .have beeen of various faiths. Five of themhaps it can be replaced - but headquarters of .the Amazon 14 now has the required number of assigned to teach English at the are run by Catholic paris~es. St.with considerable expense lind years ago by Canadian Francis- party registrations to campaign Pontifical Xaverian University Patrick's Guild, St. Pa\.!l, and thenuisance. cans. '- in eight. towns. To gain .the in Bogota, Colombia. Legion of Mary of the Twin

What can't be replaced are status of an islandwidE! party, . In announcing the departure Cities conduct religious literaturethe little holy picture~, each one . Couple Celebrates 74th the CAP must have a member- .. of the Sisters, Mother Mary Con- booths.of which' evoked a tender mem- W dd· A . . 0 ship equivalent to 10 per cent solatrice, .Silp.erior General, ex- ,..-------------.ory. One was received from the' e m9· ,nmversary of the total vote cast in' the plained that the assignment rep-hand 'of His Holiness, Pius XII. ST. STEPHEN (NC) - Work November, 1960, elec'tion, as resents .the first step in 11 planAnother was a souvenir of the hard, live simply-,that's 'the well as 10 per cent of the vote whereby the 2,270-member com­last Easter Mass celebrated on formula for a happy married life cast -in each election district. .munity will provide teachers inthe beautiful, ill-fated ship recommended by Mr. and Mrs. Puerto Rico's Department of Latin America, in complianceAndrea Doria. Two others had frank Fit~simll?-ons:They' should Justice has ruled that' the CAP with a recent appeal from Rome.touched the tombs of St.. Gene- know - they've' just celebrated has won the right to use a bluevieve in Paris' and S't. Therese. their 74th wedding anniversary. bell as i'ts political insignia. Note On Princessin Lisieux.· . It was a· bright sunny morning The party originally had a VATICAN CITY (·NC).:.....Vat-

San Marino when Frank Fitzsimmons, 22, rosary as its insignia, until Gov. ican sources deny any knowledgeOne card came from San and Jessie Olmstead, 18, ex- Munoz Marin signed a bill for- of reports that. Prince. Juan Car-:-

· Marino, that tiny country rated changed marriage vows befo,re bidding the use of religious sym- los; son oi the p!etender "to thea's the ·olde~t 'i'epu.blic, where re.,. Father .E. Doyle in St. Stephen's boIs by political parties. . .SpaQish throne,. has applied toligion and' democracy were Ch.urch, Milltown,' New Bruns- .Pope ·John for the. admission ofwedded in antiquity under the wick, on Aug; 27, 1887. Frank. S· t 'f N to' his. 'fiancee, 'Orth<,>dox Princessb'less'I"ng .o·f· l·tS founder-saint. . '5 ,rs 0 .' (). re .(Ime ,had gone to work at a local lum" Sophie' of ,Greece, into the

'. Less' cosmopolitan, but even ber mill when he was only 10. Establish New Province Church,'. dearer, was' ii 16vely little. pic- ...Today Fitzsimmons" 96,' and . DALi.J\S. (NC)-:-The C::ongre-· .'ture·r·eceived ··.from·my only his wife, 92, look back on a life gation' of: 'School Sisters of

.siSter· shortly ~fore her death. of contentment, although there Notre' Dame has established a .' . ',' . :" .' . . \

. , . '. . .' . . .were times when the, going waS , South-Central PrOVinCE! with ".):.D.'..E.,....B.R.. '. 0..,,' ..5,.. SE.. 0.. I.L.. ~ ..17th Mcinerney Child . rough. Fitzsimmons r~niained i~ headquarters in ·Dallas with the ,..Enters Catholic School the lumbering business all· his approval of Bishop. Thoma!! K.. :".' CO. ..' I ~ '

• LOS' ANGELES (NC)-Kevin active life... Gorman of Dallas-Fort Worth. ·.·~'''t.·.H·'e'af.~:i·ln·Q' OI~I"'s' ... ~., McIIierneY-has'started first grade' " ',.:, .... The'motherhouSe' ~nd;'house ~ ~

. . . 'here 'along with . his nephew" .Expect 250.1000 Persons of..stud-iell for. th~ M~ p~ovi~ce .) . '. 'd" ·S·'· .' ,. ~. .- Christopher Vaughan. ." . ·1 . "'R II' . wll b~ locate~ at the UDI'yer~I~Y.:. .' ·.·.an :,'.. "r.n.e.rs t:'. . . . Kev.in is the 17th McInerney At Fam' y, Rosaryay . of Dallas; a diocesan instltutlon. ~

child and also the 17th to·be en- . ·SAN F·RANCISCO (NC)--'-Re-' The .new province ~ill i~clude ).3~S N~RT,~'FRO.NT·.STREETI.rolled in a parochial scliool: He' sponses rollinL{ in from' 255 par- Tex~l!! . N.ew Mexico, ..JU:lzc;>na:. .~. ". NEW: BEDfoRD .....aU'ends Immaculate C6nception ishes in the San Francisco :arch- .LOUISIana, Arkansas, MISSISSIPPi. ~School here." . . "". diocese indicate this city will and· Alabama. ~',.' . WYman 2-5534 .~

The McInerneys enrolled their have its largest public assem- Permission for the e1:ablish-· first 'child in St. Anselm's School blage in history for 'the Rosary . 'ment of· the' new. province was

in the Bronx 25 years .ago. Since Rally to' be held Saturday, Oct. 7 .given by Mother Mary Ambrosia,then all the : little McInerneys .in Golden Ga~ park.. ' .. Mother Gep.era,loft1)e sisterhO()d.have attended parochial schools. '. The r~lly is expected to ,draw..' _---. ~_~_,__......,

some 250,000 persons to· the . MEN 17 ~ 25."Fashion 'Show park's polo stadiuni. .There,-· . .

Wives of members' of Bishop Father Patrick Peyton, C.S.C., JOIN THE' NE"'"· Cassidy Council, Swansea will givean.address climaxing a':, .Soc.,ie..ty .0fB~.other's o.·.f,'· Knigh'ts of Columbus will lItage five-week Family RosarY Cru-:-

a Christmas fashion show-at'8 sade.: . ()ur:La~yoIProvidc!nce''Sunday 'night, .Oct. 22 at ~ the The quarter-million turnout,. • ..Council Hoin:e,Milford Road. it is said, .V(ould 'surpass 'in iJize" For information writEI to;Co~Chairmen are Mrs. Ciaire '. any' previouS U. S. Rosary.rally. ' "FATHER MASTER .

· Travers and' Mrs:' DeloresSfui-' 'Th~'Golden .Gat~park'stadi~; St.' JoSeph the Work...·mons. They wfll meet with. their . covering 30. acres, is the' city'., . . ,. :Novitiate· .. ..

. 'committ'ees at: 8':30 this Sunday' . G.nlY site capable of :holdinc the· ,·:·Wo....;.,ick Neck, it I!.· 'night, also at the Council.Home. . anticipated'tbror;lC." ..... .. ' . ..,,. ,

; ..... ~ ".

. ,j

Page 9: 10.05.61

Cardinal Cushing Invites SistersTo Establ ish Convent in Boston

91«)61....:-_--THE ANCHOR­Thurs., 0 ..

New DormitoryBUFFALO (N C) - Bishop

Joseph A. Burke of Buffaleblessed Lourdes Hall, new$1,070,000 dormitory at RosaryHill College 1 a s t Saturday.The school for women is con­ducted by the Sisters of St.Francis of Penanee and ChristiaaCharity.

NEW BEDFORD

273 CENl'RAl AVE.

WY 2-6216

BLUE 'RIBBbN

LAUNDRY

Women OpposeRed China in UN

WAASHlNGTON (NC)-TbeNatibnal CoQlleil of CatholieWomen has 'Voieed con~ overplacing dillCUBllion 01 adinissioaof Red· China on the UnitedNations G e n ~ r al AssemblJagenda,

In a telegram tG Secret.1U"Y eiState Dean Rusk, Mrs. ArthurL. Zepf, NCCW president, re­called that in a past nationalconvention NCCW delegates re­solved that "by its open acts ofag~essions, its flouting of-human -rights, and in particularits refusal to release Americanawhom it holds prisoners, com­mUDist China has continued teviolate in deed as well as inWint, the principles of the UNCbarter.~ .

Mrs. Zepf said that since thilbebaVHJr has continued, theNOCW Board of Directors, attheir Mard!, 1961, - meeting,stated that "to admit a nation""hkh the United Ji{ations baacondemDed _ an aggres&Qrwould clrastieal1y weaken themoral authorii)- of this wwldbody."

OPEN 'FRIDAY 9 A.M. te 8 P.M.

charged by the Hierarchy withdirecting the' national Catholicwomen's organizations, aCCURdCatholic women of allowingCatholic homes to rot into ma­terialism for want of solidarityand support, of looking for Godin the sky inStead of seeing HUnin people and 110 not giving apart of their lives to socialservice.

Bishop Pearson was urgingCatholics to support the Catho­lic Women's League, founded in1906, but which "in !Orne quar­ters baa been so little understoodand supported in its- efforts totrain Catholic women to play auseful part in service to the com­munity as a whole." He was alsoappealing for the other women'sgroup, tbe Union of CatholicMothers.

Dividends On Savings Deposits At Thefa" River Trust Are Exempt FrOP"Mo.•. State income Tax.

1:__Put Your CAR FINANCINGin the Hands of the Fall .Riyer Trust

W1lether yott are ia the market for a new or 11M e8I' ~the Fall River Trust will finance it for you atWW BANK RATE.S.

We wffialao iIIdude your in8Urance premiumiJi the leU -- aDiaplyhave your favQrite ilbturanee agent tell '118 the amount.

Fall RiVer Trust Low Coet AutG Fiu.neilll' ie a-v.ailable at,our Main Bank or at any ~foureonvenient neighborhoodbranehes:

-MEMBER 1''''''' Depoell llUuran« CerlOrdWIt,_ Fedmll He.erw Sr't._

_ Hint Bftmch -...,... Br.__ ".,~ ~ __~~ ~~_12l9~ntSt. ' .,f'~', •. , 1.64,9 $c?, MaIR ". 11.1 Staff~rd~ ,

Prelate Deplores Britain's ShortageOf Catholic Women in Social Work

LONDON (NC)-A biBbop saidhere that the biggest single-disgrace in Britain, is the short­oge of Catholie women in theIIOcial services.

This amounts to keeping OurLady out of pu~lic life, he added.

"It is - dangerous for womento be content with fulfillingtheir duties at home and to per­suade themselves that what Godwanta of them end,s there."Auxiliary Bishop Thomas B.PearllOn of Lan,cashs' said in aspecial -statement in the Cat&>olie Times, British weekly.

"It ill treason to the MYsticalBody fw priests to assuagetheir coD8Ciences witil this easydoctrine unless because of severelimiting facta it ia the starktruth," he continUed.

'Rot iate Materialism'The 54-year-old B ish 0 P •

EN·RO~ TO MISSIONS:, M4!dieal :Mission Sisterswho leave for mission posts in Dulla, EaSt and West Pakistanand Ghana, receive words of advice- frOm Father Edward L.:Muiphy, 8.J., ofNn-York, pioneer ill the field of miMionstudy. The departure group includes one doctor, two medicaltechnologists, qme X-ray techniciaD aDd two bookkeepen.NCPhoto.

The sisterhood was founded inParis in 1843, and was intro­duced to the United States ill.1892. At present, 58 nuns of thecommunity staff high and gram­mar schools in the Archdioceseof Detroit and in the Diocese ofKansas City-St. Joseph, Mo.

The congregation comprisesthree branches--educators, socialservice Sisters, and contempla­tives. In some circumstances, thesocial service Sisters wear secu­lar clothes rather than the com­munity's black habit, whitehead-dress. and veil, CardinalCushing disclosecl.in his columnin the Pilot,Boston Archdiocesenewspaper.

Notre Dame Nuns InstollFirst Head of" Province

ST. LOUIS (NC)-M otherGeorgianne Segner was installedas first provincial of the newSouth Central Province of theSchool SIsters of Notre Dame atceremonies at the community'sheadquarters here.: She had beennovice mistress for the SouthernProvince here for the last eightyear.:

The new province came intobeing here officially at a Massat the 'Notre Dame Motherhouse

-_the' campua- of 'the diocesan­owned University of Dallas,Texas. Mother Georgianne said.

qui1e different children. Feel­ings change as children ~e.~or example.!J01D€ mothers de­light ill the soft helpless de­pendency _of -all their iDfantsand can't bear the obstreperous"NO" of any of their two yearolds. So each child in turn be­comes a "favorite."

second, parents can't possiblygive equal attention to all chil­dren. Youngsters have differentneeds at different tiDies. Youwouldn't think of waking allthe children .for equal attentionbecause you sPent twenty min­utes, soothing one who', suffereda frightening nightmare.

Third, one reason children ia, the same faJIlilyare"80 diHer~eDt is that it cill impossible forpan;mts to provide the same en­viro~nt for every .child. Yor-a While your firstborn is tileundisputed favo~8Jl exaltedposition-the othft'· ebildrencannever know. Later children areaffected not only by their posi­tion in the flUlliQ', but also bythe amount and quality of theirinteraction with older andyounger brothers and si~s.

EDClOBrac-e -Dlfferenee.Don't be afraid to encourage

the diHerences in your children.The larger thefamilly, the moreimportant it is to encourage theindividual sell in each child.It's foolish to-buy two construc­tion sets if one child prefersstamp collecting.

In the ups and downs of fam';ily living, some favoritism isprobably unavoidable. But you'Dkeep it from becoming an over­riding problem if you try totreat your children as individ­

'uals and avoid open compari­sons. "Smartest, prettiest,"wworse yet "slowest, laziest"labels have a way of stickingand discouraging young peoplelong into their adolesence andadulthood.

Parental radar is sensitiveenough to ferret out the uniquequalities in each child. Giveevery youngster his share of in­d-ividual attention and help himdevelop his special talents.

BOSTON (NC) - A century­old community of nuns, the Con­cregation of Our Lady of Sion,dedicated to "promoting under­standing between Catholics andJews" and to "combatting anti­Semitism" has been invited toestablish a convent here.

Richard Cardinal Cushing,Archbishop of Boston, said healready had met with two SistersSuperior of the group, and thatdetails were now being workedout to establish the' communitywithin a year. It will bring tonearl)- 60 the number of speCial­ized religious eommunities theCardinal Bas invited kere sincehebecalfH! Archbishop ill 1944.

'Peruvian Sisters' Superior LaudsAmerican Nuns' Spirit of Charity

LIMA (NC) - The president she declared. "The Holy Fajhft'of the Peruvian Federation of has only 'to speak," she -id,IWligious Women said she ill '~and the Ameriean Sisters re­'~eDchanted witlh the spirit of !pOnd."ebiuity" she found amOBg Am.- The Peruviaa Federation 01.el'iean Sisters on her recent vi* Women Religious ill similar toto- the U.S. the U.S. Sister Formation COIl-

Mother Domitila, superior of ference.the Religious ofthe Good Shep­herd here, a.ecqmpanied 22 Peru_viall Sisters who flew to tbeU.S. in August to study in 10

. Catholic colleges for women onscholarships granted by theSister Formation Conference ofthe U.S.

The _.Gpod Shepherd Stiperiol'llBid that she had observed a'~~ndou., •gowth in worldvision among American Sisters,"since her previous visit 10 yearwago.\c'" ,,-

She ~ared that AmeriC8BSisterS'are aware of the prob­lems that tbeChurch :feces inmany'jJai'tsr'Of tile- world, eape..­dany ir{J'Latiti Ameriea. Theyare ,~-~d 8DJ'M>u. to help,

-Give Children Individual Love,,Develop, Special-Talents

,,By Audrey Paba Riker- '~Sure, <me'ia the apple of: my eye,» laughed a young

motherof'fotlr. HThe one who giveS me least trouble at the1JDte." But Cho<>$jnia tavontechild is often a real and farJnore'subtle f9l"ee in tainily,:life. Favoritism is clangerOus; itencourages jealousy between'brothers' a B'd- sisters, it

-'lleigh~n.s .l:"Jv3h"y fot par­ent's affecti,on, and it fr&­quently results_ in lifelong re­sentments and feeling of inade­quacy.

Actually, it'snatural for par­

-ents to feel apreference for aparticular child;an uneducatedfather t a k esdeep pride in a

-lIOlis brilliantIChooI ,achieve­

-ments' ~ a shy,~'Inother

delights'iIl •alid' ! aBsutanee illtioDs.

.Aad ,jut .. naturall1', -. tam­lit aeapecoat may 'emerge. Billf

-, c1levelOps the -manneriS1D8 of~tftIl' 'loO" lik:-e black.isbeeplTDcle Harry~ Mal'7 grabs for_1be largest dessert exactly likeselfish Aunt Tessie. From thereit'. an easy short step to endow• hapl~ child with additinonaldespised qualities of such rela­tives.

Adulthood doesn't guaranteethe sudden disapearance of allehildhOOd feelings. Grown par­ents may still struggle withfeelings of rivalry toward' theirown brothers and sisters. And illdoing so they set the stage fwreliving the dnma of theireulier years.

, Sides WUh BabyJ.'or example, the mother who

wu' youngest and weakest in'her own famil)- alway. aideswith the baby; the father whowu aandwiChed between twoaisters shows obvioUll prefereneef»r hill own lIOn.

When parents recognize suchfeelings in themselves and faeeup to them Ley've taken the firststep toward handling them. Thesuggestions that follow may re­assure you - and, at the sametilne, help you to cope withfavoritism.

First, parents can't possiblyfeel identical love for severel

, ,.-:-

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Hames SupervisingChaplain of Prisons

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheU.S. Bureau of Prisons hascreated a supervising chaplain'spost to further its rehabilitationprogram.

Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedyannounced that the Rev. LutherB. Saltzgiver, 44, a Lutheranminister, ha.s been assigned thepost.

Rev. Saltzgiver, Protestantchaplain at the Federal Reform­atory, El Reno, Okla, since 1944,will supervise the work of 40full-time and 20 part-time chap­lains•

Building PerpetuatesNames of Leaders

ANTIGONISH (NC) - FirstbUilding of the Coady Interna­tional Tnstitute, founded twoyears ago for expanding trainingfor international students, willbe opened at St. Francis XavierUniversity here in Nova ScotiaTuesday, Oct. 17.

At the request of Richard Car..dinal CUshing, Archbishop ofBoston, the building will benamed for the late Bishop J.,hn'R. MacDonald of Antigonish. TheCardinal contributed $200,000 tothe building fund.

The building will perpetuatethe names of two leaders of thecooperative movement in thisarea - Bishop MacDonald andthe late Monsignor M. M. CoadY,director of the university enten­sion department, for whom theinstitute is named

Assisi's CitadelDrawing CardFor Skeptics

ASSlSI (NC) - The eon­vergence of three cardinalsand dozens of other churchscholars for a week of dis­cussions here was no novelty forAssisi: The center of attractionwas a soft pink group of build­ings known as the ChristianCitadel.

Rising harmoniously amongthe ancient stone homes of thiscity of St. Francis, the ChristianCitadel sits on a quiet, hilly backstreet of AssisL But its magnet­ism draws saints and sinners,believers and skeptics by thethousands every year.

The recent 19th ChristianStudies course was only one ofdozens of conferences held atthe Citadel each year. This year'slist of speakers-Cardinals Gae­tano Cicognani, Gregorio PietroXV Agagianian and Giovanni'Urbani, and Msgr. Loris Capo­villa, private secretary to PopeJohn-was typical of the caliberof churchmen who take part inthe Citadel's program.

Preach in StreetsAmong 'the hundreds of 18,..

·men and priests attending thestudy courses are the Citadel'sown inhabitants, about 90 laymen and women volunteers whohave dedicated their lives tomaking Christ known in thestreets and cities of Italy. Theypreach from street corners andpublic squares to reach thosewho refuse to enter the churches.

Everything turns on Christ.The museum of modern Chris­tian art has hundreds of worksby the top contemporary artistsof Italy reflecting Christ inwidely differing styles. The rec..ord library contains more thalli.3,500 works composed aboutChrist.

Welcome EveryoneThe library houses 40,000

photographs of artistic works,from the first Christian centuriesto today, documenting Christ inthe history of art. And there isalso a special section dedicatedto a bibliography on informationwritten about Him, amountingtoday to 35,000 titles with carlkdescribing their contents.

Like thf' monasteries of oldthe Citadel and its volunteer~welcome whoever comes to thed 0 0 r. Catholics, Protestants,pagans, believers and skepticsall find a warm welcome.

"We don't preach at them,"·one of. the volunteers explained."We show them how we live inChrist and how we try to prac­tice fully the virtues Hepreached."

1IttE A-NCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 5, 1961

in Webster Groves, Mo., de­signed a blue glass, recessedgothic-arched window which isone of. the features of thechapel.

At the time the chapel wasbuilt the area here was sparse­ly sett'ed. Catholics attendedSt. Anthony's church in nearbyButler. Now there are 250Catholic families in the areaand Bishop James A. McNultyof Paterson has givea thechapel a mission statua.

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made the donation because ofhis wife's devotion to the Cath­olic Faith.

Has Marian Motif

Before the visit ended, Millerasked the Bishop to instructhim in the Catholic religion.Following his conversion, Millerpersonally designed the chapelin the Marian motif and namedit for Our Lady of the Magni­ficat during the 1954 MarianYear.

Mrs. Miller, who now reside.

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KINNELON (NC) - Latestmission added to the roster ofchurches in the Paterson dio­cese is the Chapel of Our Ladyof the Magnificat, replica of 14thcentury architecture at. Hares­comb, England-the gift of aconvert. .

About 10 years ago ArchbishopThomas A.Boland of Newark,then Bishop of Paterson, visitedH. W. Miller, a retired stockbroker, to thank him for thegift of his 67-acre estate to thePaterson diocese. Miller had

SODALITY PANELISTS: Members of St. John's Parish Sodality in Attleboro>resented a panel on Mental Prayer, Religions of America, and Basic Theory of Communismto a capacity audience at the School Hall. Reviewing the highlights of matter presentedat a Sodality Convention at Fordham University this Summer were, seated, left to right,Valerie Metters, Jerilyn Johnson and Joanne Hunt; standing, Suzanne Wagle and DianneFlaherty.

Convert Gives Chapel to Paterson Diocese

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Mites Aid MissionsST. LOUIS (NC) -StUdents

in the St. Louis archdiocesegrade schools donated 8ft aver­age of $1.59 each to the missionslast year, a survey by the Arch­diocesan Mission Office dis­closed. High school studentsg,.ve an average of $2.36 each,the mislllon office said.

.Suggest SubjectsFor CouncilTo Consider

QUEBEC (NC) - Morethan 100 French Canadianshave suggested unofficiallythat they would like theeoming. Second Vatican Councilto consider the question of cel­ebration of Mass in the vern~alar.

.A total of 109 of the 134 per­sons offering suggestions askedthat all of the Mass, or at leastthe spoken parts of the Liturgy,be said in a language spoken bythe people. Most of those whosubmitted suggestions we r •priests.

Father Marcel Dubois, C.SS.R,.a consultor of the LiturgicalCommission for the Council,tabulated tho suggestions in theQuebec diocese's weekly pub­lication, Semaine Religieuse deQuebec.

Ask Shorter BreviaryOther' requests, with the total

number in par~nthesis, were:T.hat the Mass end with the

"'Ite Missa est," with the prayer"Placeat" being said just beforethis (116).

That every priest allowed tohear Confessions in a diocesebe permitted to hear them anyplace in the world (77).

That the Breviary be simpli­~d and shortened (94).

That marriage be celebratedduring the Mass, after the Gos­pel (66).

That the Canon Qf the Massbe recited in a loud voice (51).

That communion under bothspecies be authorized for cer­tain occasions, such as ordina­tion, marriage and religious pro­fession.

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Archbishop Rum.....Asks Aid for Cubans

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Areh-·bishop Joseph F. Rummel ofNew Orleans has appealed farhelp for Cuban refugees in hillarchdiocese.

The Archbishop Mid in a pas­toral letter read at all Massesthat there are about 390 refu­gees in the archdiocese whoneed "clothing, food,. shelter and,in many cases, medical atten.­tion."

He anouneed thet a committee110 aid the refugees has' beenorganized, with Msgr. WilliamJ. Castel, pastor of St. Ritachurch, as chairman.

Cathonc' HowLists ProgramFor October

NEW YORK (Me)Bishop Theodor Suhr, O.S.B.,of Copenhagen and BarbaraWard, author and economist,will be among ·the speakers Oft

the "Catholic Hour" radio pro­gram 10 October.

Individual programs iR theseries, entitled "World Reporton the Ch~rch," follow:

Oct. 1: An interview with Bar­bara Ward,comlucted by FatherAngellu's Andrew. O.F.M., direc­tor of Catholic programs for theBritish Broadcasting Company.

Oct. 8: "Report on Scandina­via," Bishop Theodor Suhr ofCopenhagen.

Oct. 15: "Report on Africa,"Father Placide Pernot, O.S.B., ofChrist the King Priory, Toum-liline, Morocco. .

Oct. 22: "Report From Ger­many," Msgr. Gerhard Fittkauof the newly created Diocelle ofEssen, Germany. '

Oct. 29: "The Profession of aNun," recording o~ a professionceremony of Ursuline nil_ .ofPaola, Kan.

The "Catholic Hour" is pro­duced by the National Council ofCatholic Men in cooperation withthe National Broadcasting Com­pany.It is on the air everySunday from 2:30 to 3 P.M., EST.

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Elect AbbotCORPUS CHRISTI (NC)

Abbot Alfred Hoenig, O.S.B., 49,has been elected the first abbotof Corpus Christi BenedictineAbbey here. The election fol­lowed the Holy See's action iaraising the former Corpus ChristiPriory to abbey status a monthago. The new abbey brings thenumber of abbeys in this countryto 25.

Racial JusticeAction for Interracial Under­

standing is the title of theThird Order eyf St. Francis' offi­cial Catholic Action program.Its purpose is to promote pro­grams among the more than100,000 Franciscan tertiaries inNorth America to help solveracial problems.

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Acting College HeadDAVENPORT (NC) - Father

Frederick J. McMahan has beennamed acting president of St.Ambrose's College here byBishop Ralph L. Hayes of Daven­port.. A native of Iowa City, bewas ordained ia 1940 and hasbeen a member of the college

He told the tertiaries: "Yauare best equipped to take thisaction as your apostolate livingand working in the world, tot'your inspiration; your very wayof life, embodies the only realspark able to ignite the flamein men's hearts directed to burnaway evil prejudice and to en­kindle union in Christ-that is,love."

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The Bishop' told FranciscanTertiaries at a Mass in St. Pete~

in Chains cathedral that "inac~

tion fosters the vicious circle ofevil segregation that makes itboth cause and effect of bitterexperiences on both sid~s."

"PrUdent, sincere, earnest"courageous, prayerful, €hrist~

like action, based on true prin­ciples of justice and charity,"he said, "is the call of ourBishops-to seize the mantle ofleadersip from the agitator andracist on either side."

Tertiaries ShouldCINCINNATI (NC)-Christ~

like action is needed to promoU!racial justice and "to seize themantle of leadership from th~

agitator an~ racist," Auxiliar"Bishop Paul F. Leibold of Cin~

cinnati said here.

ADMIRING PRISONER'S WORK OF ART: Brother Charles Henry, right, assistantSuperior General of the Christian Brother s, admires a hand-carved, hardwood prayer­plaque designed and cut by an anonymous inmate of the Maryland State Prison. Thework of art is now in the possession of the "Brothers' Middle Atlantic States provinceheadquarters in Maryland. Brother Benilde is at left. NC Photo.

Charges GroupAims to DestroyMoral Supports

NEW YORK (NC) - AMass congregation ~as .toldhere that a powerful, well­financed group is seeking bylegal action to destroy everymoral suppor.t which the statebestows on religion.

This is being done, chargedFather Robert F. Drinan, S.J.,at the very time religion shouldbe recognized as the fountain­head of the truths by which thefree world can triumph overcommunism.

The mission of Christian jur­ists is to study the religiousroots of American law, he said,and to combat "the new notionof America as a secular state."

Father Drinan, dean of theBoston College School of Law,delivered the sermon at the 33rdannual Red Mass of the Guild ofCatholic Lawyers of New York.

Op,inion DividedThe Jesuit pointed to a "pro­

found division of opinion" as tohow America can deepen andspread "those fundamental spir­itual values on which the sur­vival of freedom depends.

He said a theory that theAmerican government must bea secular state is being advancedin an "aggressive manner bynon-Christian and religiouslyneutral forces."

He said these forces have notbeen successful in having theirviews accepted by Federal orstate executive or legislativebranches of government.

"It is in the judicial branchof government, however, thatthe forces supporting the notionof a secular government neutralOIl principle towards religionhave been active and sometimessuccessful," he said.

"It is the mission, therefore,e:f Christian jurists to study thereligious roots of American lawand to combat the new notionef America as a secular state.

10 THE ANCHOR-Thurc Od. 5, 10~1

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, ....WY 6-1271·

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Basis of Hope

God Love You

MISSION -combines the best features of all other maga:;:ines:stories, pictures, statistics and details, human intere9t. Take aainterest in the suffering humanity of the mission world and sendyour lIacrifiee along with a request to be put on the mailing listof tilie bi-monthly magazine.

But these au aU otdBide os. Are we penonally doblc IUlYtbincte merit the protection of GOd? It would seem tIlat we re«ardCOIDDlUll.isIIl, Juvenile delinqtlency, broken bomes and alcoholism

.as unrelated io otlrselves,conditioDS for which we are not respon­sible. But, in truth, they are not outside as. The;r are' mslde ....as they were so much inside Our Lord III the Garden 'of Edenas io produce a bloody sweat. for the sinful werieL Did not BeWho Wall innocent take Conununism and juvenile deUnqllencJ'and alcoholism upon HImself as if Be' were guilt;r? But cle'we?Wherti'is our penance! Where is our atonement fof' CemmunismfWhere is our reparation for divorce with all oar noyenas forptll1JOnal favors? When do we do penance for the world?· Why,what we In the United States are spending on redaelnr; fauwould feed the starvin&" of Asia for ODe year!

Bestir yourselves! If you have never. made a convert, then i.God's name give the Holy Father the meaJl8 to do so. If yo.u· havenever made any reparation for your sins, then help the Holy FatherbuiLd a chapel in Basutoland where sinners will be .absolved. Ifyou see the sins of the world as leprosy, then put into the hallds ofthe Holy Father'materials to help him care fQr his 400 leper coloniesin the mission world. Whatever you give to his Society for thePropagation of the Faith you send to him Who knQWS better: th8llyou the needs of the world. Think of title sins of the 'worM :in thelanguage of St. Paul: "Before your eyes Christ has been set forthcrueified among y<>U." Will you not make reparation by sendmg usyour sacrifices?

GOD LOVE YOU to C.A.B. for $4 "In &"I'atitude for findlD&"a lost ring." ••• to T.P.W. for $50 "It costs about $50 to repaira small bUlline8ll machine for «oed operation. Please ase this teput a few souls In working order." ••• to M.W.F. for $1 "Tothank God for a favor reoeived."

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Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to theMost Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society fOl'the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N Y..or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,368 North Main Street, Fall River, MaN.

Famo". Reading HARD COALNEW ENGLAND COKE

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By MOitt Key. Fulton.J. 811..... D~D.Are ;rOIl ..-orried abOat the world bMaUe' of dat'to. read

bt>the ~WltP&pe.. abd bear :-~~ boar oyer Ute radIo!"Or aN;r01l woJ'tledbecaase 1'- see-·'tliat the neyll 1Ias ''beieD. ,hlen a'l~ rope! Frankl)'; W'e ~. deeply' dtsWe88ed nOt ...1)" becauseI'If active barbarism (CoJllm1UliilJil) btit also beeause of '-paSsive

'barbarism. (the decline of morality 'aDa Faith til tJleW~tera

-world). But- thoull'b we' aioe distreSsed,' '" are not ,east down.' Forourbj)pe'ltl 'not m politicS or III arms bat'in':God. Who wiD'iDtervene' In oar behalf 1!.,we are deserving of it. . .

On what do we base our hope? Most of the ream aft outsideus. We may tx:ust in God)s help beCause of: (1) The martynsin theworld. There have been more martyrs forthe Faith since 1917 then in the first 300 yearsof the Church's hiStory. As Abel's blO<>d criedto God tor justice, so does theirs ery to Godfor retribution. (2) The pradice of povertyamong our missionaries who are' always inneed. On~ missionary bishop from Africarecently visited 77 dioceses by bWl, at onetime traveling fQr 13 continuous hours. Hehoped that by associating himself with thepoverty of Christ the faithful might be moregenerous, to his pOQr sheep. (8). TheChr-iat.­like zeal ,of our missionaries:. Some priestol

'f mstruet over 100' converts a year :in 'Korea.' Vietnam aDd Afriea.· To them a soul. u ~ "only reality. Can they be wrong wheIl. it . . . ,wa!! Our Lord. Who said that one aoui w.. W'Orih DIIOI'e 1ban ..cosmOs .....;; even with atlits nucleM' bombs?

ICE CREAM

PRINTERS

YEAR'S WORK: Rev.~.othy Shea, O.P.,a native of'·F,all ,Riv;er"has been namedretreatmaster of Our., Ladyof Springbank Retreat Housein the' ChaJ,'IeSton, S.C., Dio­cese for tne coming year.

LEO •• B&&t1BB. Ikr.HI 8... at. 'bl. or 1-7IM

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Main OHice and PlantLOWELL, MASS.

Telephone LowellG18-6333 and GL 7-7500

Golden JubileeLITTLE ROCK (NC) - The

50th anniversary of the found­ing of St. John's Home MissionsSeminary here will be cele­brated beginning Sunday, Oct.22 to 26. Bishop Albert L.Fletcher of Little Rock will behost for the. five-day observ­ance. Bishop VietQr J. Reed ofOklahoma City-Tulsa, presidentof the seminary alumni, willpreside at the annual alumniaasoclation meeting.

SULLIVAN BROS.

.Auxlliary PlantsBOSTON'OCEANPORT,". J.

'PAWtUcKIT, ... I•

Father SutulaContinued from Pate Or.·

came pastor of St. Casimir's,Officers of the Mass

- Assistant Priest. to the BishQpin . today's pontifical Mass wasRt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeirosand Deacons of Honor were Rt.Rev. Louis E. Prevost and Rt.Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher. Deaconwas Rev. Casimir Kwiatkowskiand Subdeacon, Rev. RobertKaszynski. Acolytes were Rev.Clement Dufour and Rev. LouisA. Cardoso.

other officers of the Masswere Rev. Luciano Perreira,thurifer; Rev. Thomas E. O'Dea,book· bearer; Rev. Roger ~.

Levesque, £andle bearer; Rev.~ohn V. Magnani gremiale bear­er; and Rev. Lucio B. Phillipino,mitre bearer.

Masters of eeremonies wereRev. John H. Hackett and Rev.John J. Murphy.

Rev. Hugo DyUa, pastor of St.Stanislaus' Church, Fall River,was the eulogist.

Chanters at the Office of theDead on Wednesday were Rev.Adalbert Szklanny, Rev. Hya­cinth Seremet, O.F.:M. CQnv.,and Most Rev. James ~. Ger­rad, Auxiliary Bishop of theDiocese.

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Day of RecollectionCHICAGO (NC)-Vespers ac­

cording to the Byzantine Riteclosed the annual dayofrecol­lection sponsored by the CatholicGuild, for the Blind at the Con­vent of the Helper of Holy SOlllshere. A special Braille bookletwas made available 1lo enable theblind to pa~pate in the Ves­pers liturgy.

found in The Catcher in the R,yemark this volume too. Mr. Sal­inger again is master 'of theidiom . of his characters. Andagain he expertly blends hilar­ious comedy with genuinepathos.'

But he is here searching morewidely and deeply than before,and his grasp is not S'oneat asit was, in the nQvel whiCh .madehis reputation. It is a good sign,however, that he is ll()t contentto repeat himself... If family influence is strong,in Franny and Zooe.y, it is'·oom­inant in The Frontenacs, and iJl'the latter,' &Sin. the former;,'there is a strain of'my$tical ex-,Pedence. "'. .' , '.

"FamilJ' r.n.e~,It ,practically goes without

saying that M. Ma~iae is writ­ing about people ,who. live inand near Bordeaux and are in­tensely interested in family tra­dition and the conversation ofinherited property. ,

The Frontenacs are timber'merchants. The branch of thefamily on which the book con­centrates includes the widowedBlanche Frontenac, her .fivechildren, and a FrQntenac unclewho looks after their interests.

The two girls are hardly morethan names. They figure in themost minor way in the narra­tive. Each of the three sons ex­perien<;:es a temptatioIP to rebelagainst the confines of the fam­ily business and estates, and twomake good their escape. Thelives of all three are determinedby the family, by way of eitherconformity or reaction.

The eldest, who ill tM sim­plest in character, settles downto his responsibilities and to adull domestic life. The next songoes off to the Foreign Legion.The youngest, Yves, is a poet,whom some take 1;0 be at leasta partial self-portrait by M.Mauriac, although one wonderswhether Gide might not havebeen in the author's mind.

Dlustrates PrincipleAt any rate, Yves, while stilt

a youth at home, has intimatioWlof a divine call to a life of loveand service of others, perhapsin the priesthood, although thislast is' never specifically men­tioned.

But he pursues his yearningfor freedom and the literarylife in Paris, and by the book'send he has ceased to receive thesacraments and to pray.

The author observes in oneplace, "Every human being hashis peculiar form of suffering,the laws of which take shape inearliest youth." His novel illus­trates this principle, and, curi­ously, it applies as well to thepeople in Mr. salinger's story.

Plan New LocatiORfor Sodality U~it

TORONTO (NC)-The direc­tor of the National' Secretariat9f Sodalities of Our Lady,Father D.E. D-aly, 5:J:, has an;.nounced that its. ().ffices will bemoved from Toronto to Ottawain mid-October.

The secretariat. will be locatedat the recently acquired Jesuitresidence there,' Ogilvie Hlil\!se.

Father Daly saisI that thetransfer is being made so that80dalities can cooperate moreelosely with projects of theCanadian Catholic Cotlferente,the.' -agency of the Canadian.Bishops, which has ita head-

quarters in Ottawa-

12 .... !ocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 5, 1961- --------------Salinger,. Mauriac NovelsHave Much in Common

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kenl\edyTwo newly. published works .of 'fiction, 'Franny aM

Zooey' by J. D:o Salinger (Little, Brown. '$4) and 'TheFrontenaes' . by .Francois Mauriac (Farrar, Straus- and.Cudahy. $3.75), have more in common than one might.suppose·were one to judge bythe comparative ages andbackgrounds of the respect­iveauthors. Mr. Salinger isa young American who has madea considerable reputation 'with

'a single novel, arid a smallnumber qf shortstories. M. Mau­riac, winner ofthe Nobel Prizefor literature,.has entered oldag'e and hisbooks are num-

. : 'bered by the: dozen~ Franny. and Zooey com­

.. -prlses two long8liort storie.. the seco~ f_

. lengthier than the first.They fit together and are two

pieces in a major work wilichMr. Salinger is engaged upon. Adefinitive judgment on themmust await completion of that

'work. M. Mauriac's novel is notnew, but has never before beentranslated into English. Muchabout it-from setting and themeto minor details-recl,llls whatis found in his other nQvels;and .this on~, though skillfullywrought, must: be rated, belowhis principal accomplishments.

Two DialoguesMr~ Salinger's Franny is a

college stud;ent of 20, a girl ofextraordinary beauty and sen­sitivity. In the first story, whichbears' her name, we are toldnothing about her antecedents,but are simply introduced 1loher on a railway station plat­form where she is being met byLane Coutell, her date for a fOQt­ball weekend at his college.

The seco'nd story "Zooey," be­gins with three pages of expla­nation of the relationship' ofthese Rieces to the larger under­taking; as well as an acknowl­edgement . that a writer's pro­fessional undoing is threatenedif he concerns himself withmystical experience and seri­ously introduces the word"God," as is here the case.

The story itself consists chieflyof tWQ long dialogue~, one be­

tween Franny's brother Zooey(his proper name is Zachary)and their mother, the other be­tween ZOQey and Franny herself.

Astonishin&" Discourse'As the story begins, Zooey, a

television actor, has a protractedconversation with his mother,who is worried about Franny.The girl has returned from, thefootball weekend depressed,distraught, and seemingly ill,and is now asleep in the livingroom.

Zooey goes inw the livingroom, awakens his sister, andthere occurs another extendedexchange.

: Then he discusses the methodof prayer he knows she is em­ploying and shows her sbe illgoing the wrong way about be­ing religious. ,His astonishingdiscourse, liberally interlardedwith profanity, strikes onereader as implausible in view.f the source, but it is extreme­l7 interestlDg and, ;-in its wq,impressive.

Blen_ ComeclJ', Path..The inventive brillianee aDd

the meticulous craftsmanship

Page 12: 10.05.61

transporting Jews to concentrootion camps and to respect th8rights and dignity of man. '

Father Martini says that t'1toNuncio, at' the urging of tooPope, visited the concentrationoamps beyond the Dnieper River.where most of the Jews werebeing held. The effect of thesevisits was to improve the condi­tions in them. The Nuncioworked particularly hard to winthe permission of, governmentauthorities to send Jewish or­phans to Palestine, despite ef­forts of the German secret p0-lice to block this. ,

In April, 1944, the GrandRabbi of Bucharest, Dr. A. Sliff­ran, paid tribute to the effortalmade in, behalf of RumanianJews by writing to the Nuncio aafollo'!Vs: ' ," '.

"In the most difficult -ii'O\irn .which we, the Jews of Rumania,have, undergone, the generous as­sistance of the Holy See, carriedout by 'means of your high perwson, was decisive and saving.

$ladS a(j C

(STRAIGHT CUT Ib 69q

.IESHIIISKIT 49c.IOMT CUT L'8

LAMB LEGS

Rumanian Jews GratefulFor Papal' ,Intercessio~

ROME (NC) - Efforts by Pope Pius XII and 'papdldiplomats did much to save the Jews of Rumania froi!l!lextermination during World War II, according to an' articioin a magazine here. The article, written by Father Angel@Martini, S.J., appears in'Civilta Cattolica, publishedby the' Rome province of theSociety ,of Jesus. FatherMartin Writes that although halfof the Jews in, Rumania werevictims of persecution because ofnazi racial laws, it cannot bedoubted that "the continuous,disinterested and univ.ersal ac­tion of the Holy See brought tothem '... the heartbeat of thecharity of Christ."

War YeanFather Martini notes that 'the

Apostolic Nuncio in Rumaniaduring the 'war years, ArchbishopAndre'a 'Cassulo,was in constantcommunicatfon' with Rumanianauthorities in trying to protectthe rights of Catholics of Je""isborigiri. ,, While his post required, himprimarily to work in the inter­ests of Catholics, ArchbishopCassUlo exercised his' influence .repeatedly in behalf of, otherJews as well, urging the Ru­manian' government ag a ins t

. ,

THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 5, 1961

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SERVICE SECRETARY:,Mrs. Charles O'Neil of Mil­waukee has been appointedexecutive secretary of theNational Home and SchoolService, sponsored by 'theNational Councils of CatholicMeR. and Women in coopera­tion with the NCWC Dept. ofEducation: She is a formersocial 'science department'director . at Holy AngelsAcademy, Milwaukee. NCPhoto.

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VISITATION GUILD,EASTHAM

Guild members will attend asocial at 8 Thursday night, Oct.26 at the home of Mrs. HelenConlin and Miss May Hogan,Sainoset Road, Pochet, East Or-leans. " .

ST. MICHAEL,FALL RIVER

A Solemn High Mass will becelebrated Sunday morning at 11o'clock in commemoration of theFeast of the Holy Rosary andwill be attended by members ofthe Rosary Sodality.

A reception of new memberswill be held Sunday' aft~rno()nat 3 o'clock in the Church. Thiswill be fol1ow~' by a coffeehour ih the'school hall. "

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA,FALL RIVER

T.uesday, Oct. 17 is the date fora lllemberShip buffet planned bythe' Council of Catholic Women.The unit will join the Holy,Name Society in corporate Com­munion S,undaY.l0ct. 29" feastof Christ the King" The councilboard will meet Monday, Oct.2 at the· home, of Miss MaryYascon,cellos, 'Oresident. '

ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISINEW BEDFORD

St. Francis of Assisi ,Leagueplims a membership tea Sunday.,Oct. 22 at New Bedford Women'sClub.

Forthcoming events also' in­clude a games party in ,Novem­ber, a Christmas party in Decem­ber, charity projects in January,and parties, a style slrow anddance in succeeding months. .

ForeSters1lnstaliationSt. Eulalia Court, New Bed­

ford Foresters, will hold installa­tion ceremonies Wednesday, Oct.18 at Carpenters Hall. Mrs.Kathryn McCarthy will head thearrangements, committee. To beseated are Mrs. Mary T. Riley,chief ranger; Mrs. VirginiaXavier, vice chief ranger; Mrs.Agnes Barker, financial secre­tary; Mrs. Patricia Langis, re­COl'ding 9ecr~tary;, Mra. HelenBarr'y~ t.reaslll'8c.

ST. JOSEPH.TAUNTON

First annual Installation andDance tor the Holy Name Societyis' set for 8 Wednesday night,Oct. 11 in the school auditorium.Rev. John Moore will be install­ing officer, seating James Tonry,president; Louis Charves, firstvice president; Arthur LaPointe,second vice president; FrankMcManus, third vice president;Arthur Souza, 'financial secre­tary; Charles Leonard, secretary;John Perreira, treasurer.

Michael ,Welch is programchairman.

ST. MATmEU.FALL RIVER

Forthcoming Women's Guildactivities indude a rummagesale and Hallowe'en party thismonth, a Christmas sale' andparty in December, land a sup­per, style show, Communionbreakfast, whist party and in:'stallation 'ceremony for theSpring months. •

ST. LOUIS,, FALL RIVER

Rev. Patrick O'Neill, acting DI­ocesan superintendent of schoolsand curate a't St. Thomas Moreparish, Somerset, will be featuredspeaker at the Fall meeting ofthe Confraternity of ChristianMothers, to be held at 2 thisSunday afternoon in the parishhall. Coffee hour and entertain­ment will follo~ the meeting.. Mrs. William Davis, president,,eminds members that a plenaryindulgence may be gained by at­tending Mass and the meeting onSunday. '

HOLY NAME,NEW BEDFORD ,

The parish hall will be thescene of a dance Saturday' night,Oct. 14, to be sponsored by theWomen's Guild, with Mrs. Mari­ano Baptista and Mrs. ArthurBancroft Jr. as co-chairmen.

:Qavid Haley presented thefilm "Operation Abolition" at,lIhe opening meeting of theWomen's Guild with Mrs. Wil­liam J. Carter Jr. presiding.

ST. PIUS X,SOUTH YARMOUTH

The St. Pius X Guild will re­sume meetings Tuesday, Oct. 10'in the church hall. Mrs. FrankSheehy will be chairman of therefreshmen1 committee.

ST. MARGARET,BUZZARD BAY ,

SS, Margaret - Ma..,. Guildplans monthly whist parties be­ginningat 8 this Saturday night,Oct., 7. Subsequent partieE will,beheld the first Saturday of eachmonth in the kindergarten hallat St. Margaret's church.

The annual rummage sale wiHbe held from 9 to 12 Saturdaymorning, Oct. 28, also in thehall.

ST. GEORGE.WESTPORT

The Women's Guild lists on itscalendar for this year a countryauction Friday, Oct. 13 and astyle show MonliollY, Oct.' 30. AnArmistice Day dance is plannedfor November, a cake sale in BLESSED SACRAMENT•.January and a variety:, show i~ FALL RIVERFebruary. March ,will, see a tur-key supper and another cake sale ~ Parishioners will sponsor ais planned for April. A whillt in supper and penqy sale at 6 Sat­May rounds out the schedule. ---urday night, Oct. 28 in the

church hall. A meethig of theCouncil of, Catholic WomenWednesday, Oct. 18, will featurepadmaking for Rose HawthorneLathrop Home. '

NOTRE DAME.FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenplans its annual Communionbreakfast to follow, 8 o'clockMass Sunday morning, Oct. 29.To be served at White's restau­rant, the breakfast will have asguest speaker Rev. Gerard A.Boisvert, council spiritual direc­tor.

For teen-agers, the councilwill sponsor a roller skatingparty tomorrow and a whistparty Friday, Nov. 10. Councilmembers are eligible to entera photography contest for in..;fants and children to age 12.Entries will be displayed at theOctober meeting of the unit andwill be judged at the Novem­ber meeting.

A family Halloween costumeparty is set for 7 Tuesday night,Oct. 31 in the parish hall. Nextregular meeting is set· for thepreceding night with Mrs. ReneMonast and Mrs. Lionel Cadrinas chairmen.

Continuing council projectswill include a community sing­ing session at each meeting andrecitation of a daily decade ofthe rosary through 'Decemberfor peace and the conversion of,Russia.

ST. JOHN BAPTIST,CENTRAL VILLAGE

Honoring' 'Rev. William R:Jordan, outgoing pastOl', theLadies' 'Guild and St.' Isidore

. Council; , Knights, of Columbus,co-sponsored a farewell parfyand welcome to' Rev. 'John G.Carroll, new administrator forthe parish. Father Jordan re-,ceived gifts and his housekeeperalso shared in the occasion, be-'ing presented Ii floral center­piece by Guild members

SS. PETER AND PAUL.FALL RIVER

Mrs. Arthur L. Duffy' andMrs. Edward F. Johnson are co-'chairmen of a Whist Party thatwill be held in the Church Hallnext Monday evening at 8.

Many FaH Activities

The Parish Parade

New Bedford OfficersNew officers of New Bedford

District Two, Diocesan Councilof Catholic' Women, includeMiss Lillian B. Ross, president;Miss Lenore N. Luiz, vice pres­ident; Miss Martha A.Douglas,recording secretary; Mrs, HomerJ. Mandeville, treasurer; Mrs.Arnold H~ Parson. correspond-

, ' big seere~ '

Page 13: 10.05.61

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Bishop' Approves'. New Sisteeohood!For Rectories ,

YOUNGSTOWN (NC),A i-eligious community forpriests" housekeepers. hasbeen: given preliminary .ap­provaf by .Bishop, Elnmet M•,Walsh of Youngstown.

The tentative name is TheHandmaids of: Mary. It has foui'applicants and two propertiesfor use as a convent.

Joan Frank, 31, housek~eper

at St. Mary's rectory in Mas­sillon, is founder of the prospec­tive community. She has listedthese general rules:

E'ach candidate will undergoa six-month postulancy as a vo­caHon test.

Each will receive a year ofintensive spiritual training in anovitiate.

Each will study for one yearsuch courses as typing, record­keeping, and filing,. as well aspersonality development, cook-,ing" .and: religion. Those withmusical talent. woufd' learn toplay, the' organ,

Each wilL take vows of pov­erty" chastity,~ IDui· obedience.

, Each will. weal! a modern. habitconsiSting ot white bl,ouse' anddark; bluljl: skirt.

.It is.planned! to,have'the mem­.bers. work in pairs at rectoriesand return to the motherhousetwo: days each week for recrea",tion and prayer.. On those twodays, novices will substitute forprofessed, sisters to gain exp'eri­ence.

Applicant must be high. schoolgrad'uates aged: 21 to 30 and' in:r~a'soria'ely good' health.

Miss F'rank said that the train­ing program will prepare eacli.member as a houseKeeper, secre,..tary, catechism teacher, and insome-- instances; church organist,

. PO.: .information about. tlie

Holy·;Cro~. Fathel'S', or,,BrOthers,. write, to:

'. HOLY :CRQSS FA1HERS·.Norlfi, .EOst~nl' AACissachosetls

ASS9ClA'EION .OF-

WiY 3.2783,

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E"xflro,' on',' Sysfem:atic .Bonus' .Savihgs'.' ',. ',. . . ,., ..

,'/ :

W:AN

.~:·,';·',FO·U.R W~.JS TO :S~R'V!E- CHRISTAS A, HOLY' CROSS, FATHERi

PdeSt..Teacher . ' ". Home, Missioner.Eor.ei~nl Missionat:yJ Par.ish: Pi:lest·

AND:

Tile: KE1fSTONiE'Warehouse: Salesroom

New; and USed:Of.FrC~" EQUIPM~NT

We sho.w a large'assorfment ot~sedand new deslts. chairs; filing cab·inets. tables•. etc.• in wood" and steeLAlso: metal stomge cabinets, sales, )shelving !ockeJ:S;, etc. ' .

~::::::;::~~-::a'1 108 Jamesnear: Union: )

poetry. He is the author ofmany: poems, 'and of the. biog­raphy of F:ath~rSharbel: Mak..!houf, priest of the· Antonian,order of the, Syro-Maronite Bal­adites..

Bishop Eidhas worked: uu . ; §nSlL!lli'e Teac9'Dersceasip.gly; for. years to further NEW' O,RLEANS (NC)-Bluethe cause·' for' beatifihtion and , . Cross .. hospital-' insurance' hascanonization 6f Fr;, Sharbel. beeD' provided' for religious and

Following' the per:iod of de-· lay teachers' in tile' Archdiocese- ., .pression. of.' 1930-1940, parish- .of New Orleans and the' newioners, renewed2 their efforts to· Diocese of Baton Rouge. .

. beautifY their 'ehmeh, Seven­teen new' stainedl glass windowsancL five~ new statues were. in,..stalled.-giits of. individuals and

.church, societies,Ind948, a statue. of Our Lady'.

Queen of' Peace. was' unv.eiled·ancL dedicated. Located' at the.entrance of the . church the·statue is fitted with a bronzetablet which is inscriliere "In-,honor of ·those who. served'and.in memopY of those who gave:

.their 'liv.es: .in," World War IL:~'

Ten. young; men. of: St Anthony's;.gave their lives in World War U:

ST.. ANrHONY OF TH1~ DESERT,. FALl.. RIVER

Lodge 'to Speak·'. sm:. J!,OUIS, (~€») - Henry

CabOt. Eodge" fO!Mler' chief U.S.delegate: to the- United. Nations,will be. the principal speaken"!ltSt. Louis University.'s, civil din­ner here Monday, Oct. 23, asparitof the Univ.ensit;WsFoundersWeek: activ.iti.'es:, Special enter-.talnmentl full the! e:v.ent. will! bepx:ovided ,by; 'comedi'an DannyTliomas:·

Progessuf St.'.4n"wny~I'Desert Church.Tribute' to L~i1fjo"3" ~9·f. Cho;r.;.Buhop Bid

. " .By Avlir Roberts' . . ". During. the' ,episcopate of BiS'lIopi Fee'han" tlie., first M'aronite church. in the. Diocese"St. Anthon¥ of. the D~seFt"was' fo~cfepi in'1911. lLebanese·Catholics firs t sett~ed in FaIl RiveEabout 1900.anw for.' the' next 11 yeiml' they attenrle9i servi,ze each Sunday ill' Notr:e' Dame,and, St.. All1l1e Churches" Fall Rivef.:Thei17 spiritual ne'ed's were, tended' by Lebanese priestscoming from.Bostcm. In 19-11 .,the Rev" Gabriel Corkemaz..of Boston spentthree months '

· in Fall River, During thattime he ·purchased a dwellingat 286' Jencks Street and con-' "verted it into a Lebanese church:'

lUter Fat~er Corkemaz re­turned to Boston. the pastoratewas given to the ~ev.. IgnatiusSaye~h. whQ was called fromLeoanon. He administered theparish's affairs until 1920. 'From .192u to 1929, Father CaesarPh~res was in' charge' of theparish. During his adininistra-t;on the proper1!y on', .Jencks'Street on which' tlie oTd church.

· edifice stood' was soTd. S'ubse'"quently the land 011.' which thepresent church, stands' was' pur-chasedl. o~

Cbor~Bistiop EidOn June' 23\ 1929', parisnioners'.

greeted' the' Rev. Joseph Eidiwhen he' assumed: the' pastorate'whiCh' he ,hold's today; He- came·to Fan River: from France,Father Eid' (now1 Chor-Bisfrop)'

· was bol'll' fu 18gS; ill' Mount IL.ee-·anon, studied classics. at the.Jesuit University' of Beyrouthandl .oetained" his, doctorates, fn;philosophy ,and! theology. in,Rome;. wqere' he· was ordained1to the priesthood in 1924.

Father Ei'd semred! ill! the! 0:ri:­ent and' later was assigned tomissionary wOl'k in France 'prior Qu:u;t'Y, Street, were held Dec.to coming to Fall Ri.ver. He! con- 11" 1960•. and the center wasverses' fl'uemtly im sfuc languages opened Iast Spring. The buiid­-English, French" Arrabic, Latin, ing includes a hall and two.Italian and Sydac, classrooms, kitchen and stage

As th'e' Lebanaese colony facilities; and is· of brick finish.mounted in numbers· the little' A cement. .walk connects thechurch on Jencks: Street became' main ennranc;:e to the church.'woefully inadequate and on The center provides a spot for.Ma~·, 4;. 1930\ the cornerstone. ' patislL me,etings;, social 'activities,waslaidJ by Father Eid,delegated' CYO.events, Atabic school, cate:- ..to officiate by Bishop - :j!llectchrism, classes: and' a day nursery.

· James E. Cassidy. The ·church on, MovablE! waIlS coimecting theQuequechan and Alden: Streets' classrooms may. be .pushed aside

'was dedicated: Oct. 12; 1930' and' . to, provid'e' a. lirrge single, room.blessed by Bishop Cassidy. The' same .day .the. ground­

The arcl'litecfure' of the' breaKing. took plac;:e' Father Eidchurch- is a combination of occr- blessed: a new outdoOl:: marbledental!. and' ·.oriental' art. The statue of the Sacred Heart..hOl:seshoe:- arch-- at the! church in connection with the SOthportals' is. o£teDl seen' iIlI oniental'. annivef1sarYlchunch, celebration'lll'chitectur.e.. The effect was, in.., last May, Bishop Connolly wastroduced: also in the. church, in- presented the! Lebanese go:vern­terior.. The building. accommo- ment's;National Ordf-t' of Cedars..dates 450' worshippers. . The award~ nighest honor' the

Church' Construction. Lebanese go:vernment. can be-There'is an ample choir 10ft,. stOWI upon persons outside'gov­

fronted by an intricateIy- ernment service, was presentedby' Paul' K~ HandY- oft the' Eeb­

designedl rail. Wails, of, the' anese' <:::onsul's office in Boston.church are of m;lsonry bl'ocks

·The golden anniversary' ob­supported, in.. the int,;rior .by .servance' was. launched by acement cov:ering. The exterIOr Pontifical Maronite Mass in thewalls are stucco.

A,' statue- on St:' A\nthoniY' the chur.ch: at which· Bishop Eidofficiated'. He was assisted by

Great is.. set: ,in the masonry at .several -pI'iests, including Rev.the' front: of the cllunch dfrectl:w

GeoI'ge Saad of Ow; Lady ofover' the' portals;. .In the sanctuary 'are three: PUrgatory, Church in New Bed­

foI'd!.. Fon many years Bishopaltars. In addition to the center . ,It . th . . . t St Theresa' Eid, was.alsm pastor of the Newa ar. ere IS, one 01. .. B' df' d ch· '. h .

an<ione to_9~~ Lad~ of Lourdes. . : ~t'0~, '~Old~~ ~nniversary ban-The" rectory,. IS' next to, and sci t th' '.. ts f Stback from. the; church. que" ... e cO~~.Illcan 0 •

Tne' cnUJ:cll· moI'tgage· 'was Ap:thoniY" ancE an Lebanese peo-b . dOt 2'8 1945 pIe were lauded by Edward M.u~~e NO:." 30~: 1952'~ the pallish:.. Ken~edY" y-.oungest. brother' of

ioners'heid a testimonial' ban- PreSIdent Kenedy. .quet for their eeloved .pastor< "~:',' :Li~ary Acbieovements':when lie- was; ele.V:ated .~mthe: T~~ p~st'or;.who; numbers ~80

,dignityr 0.£ elior.'-BiSfrop.~. Tli~ fl,!nuhes; m.1?e! r.--eba~se ~arIsh,

honor was extended ,to Bishop has made hIS mark In- lIterary~ Eid .by"-the .Maronite Patriarch circles with.a history of French

; of' ~ntioch in Lebano~; Arcli..·bishop Arida; ,

- , Tlie' ele;vatlolll cOincideell with.'the: . 25th! ,anniv.ersary ·off thepastor's. ordination. It confells'special iiturgical privileges to.be exercised in churches of theMaronite rite~ The title of Chor­BiShop· dates back to an. ancientpractice: ext'endiilg( to, centain;pastons: in! rura!l diStricts· some~

of the functions of. the BiShopof the' diocese~

Chor-BiSbop's. l!ri:v.ilegesToe' pmvileges include wear.-

, mg' of' purpl'e' colors; use of' the: TRl.C:llTYMitre: and crozier on the· pnin- OF.F'I1'C..E' E',nu I.P,.cipal religious sofemnities of: the: • I 'l(year and the weallingl of the'.

/ pectoral cross on\ these solemn BUSINESS ANDoccasions. Dl,IPlICA,T:ING MACHINES'

'f.he' parishl off S1.; .AnthonYI - Second and .Morga" Stl&contlnues,. to. gJ'ow;, and prosper. I, VERGround .. 'breakiIig~ ,ceremonies· 1 . , ,FAir.; RI,··· .fol" the' newr St: :A\nthony». of, the! , W¥/. 2~Q682' 0S 9l6~l2

Dese.z:l Parish. Center. located. USI~-=.;:Eo~·,;;:J::;,=M::.... :G::G::.I~N~~=;::.. ·:;;::p.:;:r:O:;:I?:_':Ii'~':::l~h,.,'[·~'~W~~~MW~.w~MW~~IWlI~W~.M<~""'w""'_w"'". baclit" .of . 'Uie' chuicli,-' 'facmg" '" '"

THE ANtJ!fO'R:-Thur.s., Oct. 5,.. 1961

ORDAINED) A\T 66.:: Fr..Fidelis. Collentin~, a Mil­waukeel physiCiam for 37years, and the' father ojr 3> .children., the g.ranrl:£a:ther.· OL18, Wasl r.ecentlM ondarned. aBenedictine priest. His wife'diEici· in 19'5I. NC' Pllc:ito~

'Courage in Triids'. .He urg~ his, youthful visitors;

to preserve their dear vision of'life~ tlleir "courage in facing' themost··arduous, trials" and their."interest in the good things oflife.'" ..

"In'· your ordered' and serene­youth," the P'ope' added" "lies. the;secret· of the peacefill dev.elop,.·ment of the society which awaitsyou."

The 'Pope; discounting voicesof concern that question the sol­idarity 'of today;'s' youth, said:"We trust iro your mental giftsand in those of· your heart, towhich willi be enfFusted in thenear 'future civic and' social re­sponsibilities.'"

H~Dy ~@tfheli: S'@)fS'

Yo~g.~ Glm~Ni'@rtll·"~<e'

Of. W@rd@]'~~@~,eCAS:.L'ELGANDOLFo. (NC)

.-Catholic youth a:ue' the,'''guarantee of peace and thehope for better times'" in a..troubled world" Pope. John said'in a special audience grantecL to·1,200 Italian Catholic' schoolehiI'dren.

"Your presence ts like a. com­forting, response w Our anxiousconcern~' for peace, the Popetold the. children, who had: beenjudged winners' of a: nationalcatechism contest held in ?40dioceses.

POpe John, recalling that he'recently ad'd'Fessed a' plea for'peace to, men'" of state' and' ofgovernment, told the chiI'dren:'"YO\ll atre in, fact the g,uaranteeof peace and' the; hope for better.times.~'·

'.I1he Pope: tol<L' the' pupils. that.three' specral charactetristics: ofyouth' shine on their foreheads."You are young; you have. good,will;. and you, are studious," he.tafed.

,

P~ess TeCMIOff:On Aed, Mission

LOS ANGELES' (NC)-Twomembers; of a Uve-man. Catho:';lic Press. Association: team. haveenplaned' here on a' mission of·aid to the' Catholic press in.Latin America'. . . ,. Robert. S. La'bonge; assist'ant.

editor and' ·adver.tising; dil:ectOl:. of· the .Tidings;. archdiocesan. newspapel'; andl': Ra:w Ruppent,.

managing; editor of Our Times,Yakima, Wash.,. diocesan paper,.left for Panama City and' LimaPeru.' .

They will; meet in. 11ima\ with..other members of' Hie team':Father Eugene Culhane, S.J.,managing. ed'rtor of AmeriCa.magazine; Joseph Gelin, man­aging editor QE the' <:::atholicUniverse: Bulletin, Clevelanddiocesan .newspa'per.; and' Thom­as Clemente, direcoon: of CfarityPre~s, Allbany, N. Y.

\" ,, New Chapter.·

They will conduct ai seI;'ies. ofweek-long seminars;in· J;.ima,. SaoPaulo and Canacas; for; Catholicnew's~apermen i'r'a'm' ·seven,South American nations. ,:

Page 14: 10.05.61

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Vocations Program'BURLINGTON (NC) - The

Burlington diocese has adoptedan adult education program topromote vocations to the priest­hood ,and religious life.

pretext f~r a campaign of reli­gious persecution that will erad­icate the last vestiges of Catho­lic leadership in Cuba.

"With this plan in mind," thestatement said, "the communistregime announced that it holdsresponsible for all events Auxil­iary Bishop Eduardo Boza Mas­vidal ... who does honor to theCuban ancestry of his familynames and to his position as pas­tor and guide of Cuban citizenryduring this tragic period."

It then listed the names ofseveral priests and laymen andsaid their lives are endangeredby the communst regime iJlCuba.

The committee said it is call­ing upon the world's Catholics.and particularly those in LatinAmerica, to:

Ask Diplomatic ActionExpress unity with pel'secuted

Catholics in Cuba by offeringprayers for them, encouragingthem, and by denouncing threatsto their freedom.

"Send strongly 'worded cable­grams to the government inCuba protesting the machinegunning of defenseless process­ions and the slander, imprison­ment, exile or execution of bish­ops, priests and laymen."

Petition their respective gov­ernments "for an effective diplo­matic action of public protest toprevent ... this spectacle of bar­barism which the communistgovernment of Cuba is display­ing before the world."

'Trail of Good Will'Father Clement Hotze, S.V.D.,

headmaster of the Catholicschool, was chairman of the localcommittee. Forty-three Africanstudents took part in the project.

Following completion of thebuilding project here, the Am­erican students left for a tour ofGhana, Togo, Dahomey and Ni­geria.

A spokesman for the gorupsaid they hoped to "leave a trailof friendship and good will"wherever they went in Africa.

by gifts from individuals andprivate organizations.

Each student team was underthe: direction of an Americanminister· or teacher, and in mostcases an African co-leader andAfrican students worked alongwith the Americans.

The American student teamwhich worked at St. Peter's herethis Summer was under the di­rection' of the Rev. Dale E. Hew­itt, associate minister of TrinityPresbyterian church, Tucson,Ariz.

Urges Catholics to ~[fotest~" ora 1:1_ til II~~giM~ li9)~rl2?@!~is)8W

MIAMI (NC) - The Committee of Cuban Catholicsin Exile has urged Catholics throughout the world topetition their governmeniJ to lo~ge diplomatic protestsagainst the "barbarism" of the Red regime in Cuba. Thecommittee's statement re­ferred specifically to a rec­ent incident in Havana inwhich Castro militiamenfired upon Catholics who pro­tested cancellation of a proces­sion in honor of the BlessedVirgin.

One youth was killed and atleast' five other persons wereinjured during the demonstra­tion, which took place at theChurch of Ou:: Lady of Charityof Cobre in Havana.

Used as PropagandaThe committee's statement said

the communist leaders in Cubahave used the incident as a prop­aganda vehicle by accusing thevictims of being the aggressors.

The committee said the intentof the Red r~gime in Cuba istwofold:

To take the offensive and con­fuse public opinion, thus cover­ing the repression that exists inCuba.

To use the recent incident as a

Castro

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 5, 1961

Protestant Students Help Bui!dNew Wi lTJg' at Cathol~c School

BRIDGEPORT: Newly­named Ordinary of Bridge­port is Most Rev. Walter W.Curtis, Auxiliary Bishop ofNewark, who succeeds MostRev. Lawrence J. Shehanwho has become CoadjutorArchbishop of Baltimore.NC Photo.

NKWATIA (NC) - Interfaithcooperation came to Ghana in apractical form this Summerwhen a team of American Prot­estant students helped build anaddition at a Catholic highschool.

Students from 12 Americancolleges and universities pitchedin to build a two-unit classroomaddition at St. Peter's College, ahigh school conducted here byCatholic Divine Word Fathers.

The students were members ofOperation Crossroads, an Ameri­can student movement begun in1958 to promote interculturalunderstanding by bringing youngAmericans to Africa during the ,Summer to work on cultural andsocial projects.

Worked With AfricansDuring the Summer of 1961, 210

students from the U.S. and Can­ada took part in projects rang­ing from Senegal to NorthernRhodesia and Kenya. The pro­gram is supported in part by thestudents themselves and in part

Lovers, The RonllnaMademoiselle Gobette Savage EyeMagdalena Savage TriangleMating Urge Seven Deadly SinsMiller's Beautiful Wi" ScarredMiss Julia Sensualita (BarefootMitsou Savage)Mom and Dad She Shoulda Said NoMoon Is Blue Sins of the BorgiasNaked Night Sins of Mona KentNona Smiles of a Summer NightNever on Sunday StellaNight Heaven Fell Strollers, TheNo Orchids for Miss Third Sex

Blandish Three Forbidden StoriesOno',Summer of HappinessThrill That Kills, TheOscar Wilde Trials of Oscar WildaParis Night ViolatedPassionate Summer Wasted Liv~s and ThePleasel Mr. Balzac Birth of Twin.Pat Bouille (Lovers of PClIfis) Ways of LovePrivate Property Women Without NamesQuoolioi'l of Aduliecy Young and the Damned, 1Mhv"",

Adorable Creature.And God Created WomanBaby DollBod of GrassBod, TheCome Dance with MoDesperate Women, TheExprosso BongoFrench Lino, TheFruits of SummerGame of LoveGarden of EdenGree;' CarnationI Am a CameraIllicit InterludaKaramojaLa RondeIe Plaisi.letters from My Windm,"Uane, Jungle GoddeaaLave GameLave Is My ProfessionLadv OIattorlov's Lov....Laver's Return

AdaAll in A Night's WorkAngry HillsAnna's SinBig Deal on Madonna

StreetBreakfast at Tiffany'.By Love PossessedCash McCallCome SeptemberCouch, TheCranes Ara FlyingCrimson KimonoEnd of InnocenceExodusFacts of LifeFast and Sexy·Fever in the BloodFive Golden HoursFour Fast Guns

The Particutar Council of St. Vincent de Paul Societyof tho A"leboro Area sponsors Legion of Decency List as apublic service to readers of The Anchor.,

Legion of Decen~yA-I - UnobjectRoll1labie for General Patronage

A Dentist in tho Chair Left, Right and Centro The Boy Who CaughtBeyond the Time Barrior Libel A CrookBig Gamble, The Mighty Crusaders The Last DawnBroth of a Boy Misty The Magic BoyBernadelle of Lourdos Modern Times The Amazing TransparentCapture That Capsulo Mysterious Island ManDavid and Goliath On the Double The Purple HillsDays of Thrills and Passport to China The Sand Castle

Laughter Pepe The Snak.. Woman .Desert Allacl< Pied Piper of Hamelin The Sword and th Dragonfverything's Ducky Pirates of Tortuga There Was a CrookedFabulous World of Queen of the Pirates Man

Julos Verne Question 7 Tomboy and the ChampFace of Fire Romanoff and Juliet Trouble in the SkyFidelio Secret of Monte Cristo Twelve to the MoonFlight That Disappeared, The Sergeant Was Ii.. Lady Warrior, Slave GirlForever My Love' Serengeti Shall Not Die Watch Your SternFrancis of Assisi Story of Mankind Whe" the Clock StrikesFrontier Uprising Swan Lake Valley of the DragonsGallant Hours Tammy Teli Me Truo Voyage to the BollomGuns of Navarone Ten Who Dared of the SeaInvasion Quartet The Lost World You Have to Run Fast

A-2 - Unobjectionable for Adults and AdolescentsAtlantis, the Lost I Aim at the Stars Scream of Fear

Continent IIbgC" Ten Seconds to HellBattle of the Sexes Journey to tho Lost City The CanadiansCage of Evil Magnificent Sevel1 The Cat BurglarCurse of the Undead Marie Octobre The Cow and IDevil'. Disciple Mein Kampf The Devil at Four O'ClockDr. Blood'! Coffin Mummy The Fiercest HeartFanny Operation Bottleneck The Naked EdgeFerry to Hong Kong Pit and the Pendulum The Secret WaysFour-D Man Pleasure of His Company The TormentedFrantic Prisoner of the Volga Twenty Plus TwaGeneral Della Rovere Raisin in the Sun Young DoctorsGidget Goes Hawaiian Sardonicus Walking TargetHoliday For Lovers Secret of Deep Harbor Walk Like a DragonHome is the Hero Se"en Ways from SundownWild and the Innocent

A-3 - Unobjectionable for Adults400 Blows That Kind of WomanFrench Mistress The Big Bank RollGirl With A Suitcase The Captain's TableHe Who Must Dia The HustlerHouse of Intrigue The Season of PassionMagician The UnfaithfulsMake Mine Mink The Young OneMan Who Could Cheat Third Voice

Death Three on .. SpreeMurder, Inc. Thunder of DrumsMusic Box Kid Tunes of GloryOdds Against Tomorrow Touch of LarcenyOne Foot in Hell Town Without Pitylkiru Two WomenOperation Eichmann . Why Must I DiePossessors Virgin IslandsRing of Fire Virgin Spring (prints shownRocco and His Brother in the United States)Spartacus West Side StorySavage Innocents Wonderful Country

Separate ClassificationNever Take Candy from a Stranger (deals with molestation of SOlaR chil­dren and, although tre ated without sensationalis m, could have harmfulaffects upon young and uninformed unless accompanied by parent. Adver­tising carries warning: "Notice to parents: No child will be admitted'unless accompanied by you."

B - Objectionable in Part for AllAnd Quiet Flows tho Dan Home Before Dark Road RacersBack Street Horrors 0: the Black Museum RookieBeat Generation House of Fright Room 43Between Time and Eternity House on the Waterfront SanctuaryBimbo the Great Hiroshima, Man Amour September StormBlood and Roses I, Mobster Sex Killens Go To Collea-Born Reckless Intent to Kill Sign of the GladiatOf'Bramble Bush Inside the Mafia Solomon and ShebaBreath of Scandal II Storied With a Kiss Some Came RunningBucket of Blood It Takes a Thief Some Like It HotButterfield 8 Jack the Ripper Sons and LoversCan Can Jazz Boat Splendor in the GrassCarryon, Nurse Joker, The Squad Car •Crack in the Mirror Last Mile Studs LaniganCry for Happy Let's Make 'Lave Subway iI. th" SkyDaddy-O Lil' Abner Summer PlaceDesire in tho Dust Man-Trap Surprise PackageEighth Day of the Weolt Mania The Curse of theElectronic Monster Middle of the Night WerewolfElmer Gantry Missile to the Moon The EntertainerExplosive Generation Millionairess The HeadFemale ' Naughty Girl The Marriage Go RoundFemale and the Flesh Never So FeIR The MinotaurEsther and The King Of Love and Lust The Right ApproachFivo Branded Women Paris Blues The World by NightForbidden Fruit Parrish Three MurderessesFrankenstein's Daughter Patinum High School Thunder in CarolinaFrom Hell To Eternity Peeping Tom Tunnel of LoveFrom the Terrace Perfecl Furlough Two LovesGangster S.fory Pharaoh's Woman Virgin S~crificoGI Blues Portrait of A Sinner What Price MurderGirl in Room 13 Pretty Boy Floyd Where the Boys AreGirls Town Prime Time Where the Hot Wind Blo_Goddess of Love Private Lives of Adam Who Was That Lady?Go Naked in the WOf'ld and Eve Wicked Go to HellGoodbye Again Pusher Wife for a NightGreat St. Louis Bank Queen of Outer Space Wild River

Robbery Rat Race Wind Across the Evergla_Guns, Girls and Gangsters Rally Round the Flag, BoysWorid of Suzy WongH Man Rebel Breed , Young CaptivesHappy Anniversary Revolt of the Slaves Young Jesse JamesHead of a Tyrant Riot In Juvenile Prison

C - Condemned

Page 15: 10.05.61

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Clergymen S i 9 nAnti.. lBias Appeal

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Astatement calling all persons towork for "the· peace and orderof the city" by "respecting the.rights and dignity of all men,"was signed here by more than100 Catholic, Protestant and

,Jewish, clergymen.The signers included Arch­

bishop Joseph F. Rummel,Auxiliary Bishop L. Abel Cail­louet and 50 priests of the NewOrleans archdiocese. The state­ment asserted:

"The basis of the Judeo­Christian tradition, which weshare as our common spiritual.heritage, is the belief that aUmen are brothers because Godis their Father. In this sense,weare indeed 'crea~ed equaras the American Declaration ofIndependence affir~.

Repudiates God

"It follows from this that anyact of discrimination againstour fellow men which leads t!the denial of his equal rightson grounds of race or for anysimilar reason is a repudiationof the one God Who made Ufl

aU."Therefore, we, the under­

signed clergymen of New Or­leans, speaking in the spirit ofour common religious tradition,appeal to our fellow citizens ofevery faith to translate the factof human brotherhood into therealities of daily life by respect­ing the rights and dignity of allmen... "Let us demonstrate our faithin God and our loyalty as re­sponsible Americans by refrain­ing from all acts that turnbrother against brother, and byworking for the peace and wel­fare of our city."

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Appro,ves AbsenceOn Churc" Holi'CIa~,

HARRISBURG (N C)' ---, Dr.Charles H. Boehm, state supE:r­intendent ~f public ,instruction,has recommended that Pennsyl- ,'vania's public school districts ex­cuse students from school on re- ' ,ligious holidays if requested.~ pupil who is absent ~r(lm

school because of major religiousholidays should not be deprivedof the opportunity to compete forany award because of absimee,Boehm said.

UNUSUAL CHAN~:E~RY: The most unusual chanceryedifice in the 'Uni~ed St~t,es is this huge concrete and glassstructure now nearing completion in St. ,Louis for the staff

. of Joseph Cardinal Ritter. The huge Byzantine Cathedralof St. Louis is in background. The contemporary lines ofthe chancery were designed to harmonize with the ancientByzantine style of the Ca.thedral. NC Photo.

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this, country like some uncleanbeast, snarling and spewing itsspite. Another trifle.

~aricature of lIIierarchyIn close association with this

latter is the cultivated fear ofhierarchy. 'Cultivated, .becausethis ground has been workedover with impressive zeal bydedicated men for generations.They have succeeded in creat­ing an image of the Catholichierarchy which is pure hallu­cination and magnificent cari­cature.

The bishop in his chanceryUs the evil spider weaying hisnet to catch and devour the un­wary. and whenever two orthree prelates a're gathered to­gether ,(it might be to celebratea birthday) there is a plothatched to take over the govern­ment.

Granted that such gratuitousimagination will o'nly appeal tothe extremes of ignorance,there is still the shadow on thewall. It may be a trifle but it ismanifest, at least in this coun- Stresses Pope's Right to Speaktry, that it operates powerfullyas. a barrier to understanding. On Social, Economic Issues

Waning Prejudice DETROIT (NC) .- Cathallics "must be, wiling to grasp the. In . candor we hav~.to rec<>,g-. must, acknowledge the Pope's w~ole ,of the encyclical.'",

mze. t~at even at thl~ late date 'right to speak out on social and He said this would preveDtthere 15. a strong feeling among. ., ea' priest said " of thProteStants, however 'earnest ~conomlc ISSU s, ., one e most common errorsthey are in their professions of eFre'

thJ A Petz' S J ":""'that of extracting from it only

g d'll d f II f l' a er erome. " .., those portions that are advan-00 WI an . e 0'!'i- ~e m~, declared that the Pope "has the tageous to one's own vI·ewpol·nt."

that the Catholic mmonty IS . ..' . . 1t 'll th "Ital' ..,,' authonty to set forth pnnclp es ,

s I e Ian miSSion, a th t h l' t' . the Need Courageparvenu society of dubigus 'and a. ave an app .Ica IOn m"undesirable social habits. , SOCial and economIC spheres. & for a "courageous mind,"

.. . Father Petz, former -dean of Father Petz said, this causes oneA:s.su.redly .thl~ IS a w~mng th U iv it of Detroit' law to learn from the encyclical not

preJudice, yleldmg on every e n ers y . _ 'ft· t hId' t'll 'ts . school, urged Cathohcs to ,re- only his rights but his "obliga-~~nd'te f 0 mg s I. 1 ,',mnedr spond generously to the social tions." .

CI e 0 unconscIous a n I' I f P e John' "The rapid trend towards so-sometimes' unwanted superior- encyc IC~ 0 op .. cialization' creates an evenity. Cites Three ESllCntials. greater need for courage now

It will be surrendered in "Each person's approach to than in ,the past," he said.time, but it may be seriously ,the study of this important' doc- "There is now a greater tend­questioned if the capitulation ument must 'embody three im- ency to be loyal to one's own"'rill pr?fi~ .the present, genera- portant essentials: They are a ecoJl()mic, political 'or' social'

. hon WIth ItS concern for the sympathetic mind,' an under- groups, even when practices andarder,t't hopes of the reigning standing mind, and a courageous policies within that group arePontiff. . ~-mind," he, said. running counter to the common

, Plea to Forget ',l'rifles ,I He said a "sympathetic mind" good.Catholics themselves, here "is one which recognizes "that t:he "It takes courage to speak ,up

and abroad, .~specially of late Pope h~5 authority to'speak on for the common good in suchyears, have been given to ex- such matters" ·and that "the rea- circumstances."amining their own consciences .son for the encyclical is to pro-in the light of their own contri7 mote the good of humanity."butions to ill-will and' misun- The' reader' with an "under­derstanding. To the extent that standing mind," he continued,'we are culpable of offendingagainst charity we have amplereason to beat our breasts andmake public 'confession of ourfault: ' '

There are enough matters ofprimary importance outstand­ing between Catholics and Prot­estants to make it imperative tocut the trifles'down to size.

If we point out that this is a''two-way street it is not by wayof emphasizing our own moralsuperiority. It is rather as aplea that both concentrate onthe things that are tremendousand forget the trifles.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 5; 19'6116

Los Al71geles PlanningDri've Against Smut

LOS ANGELES (NC) - TheLos Angeles City Council's pub­lic health and welfare committeewill hold public hearings Oct.11 on the pornography problemhere.

Councilman 'Edward 'Roybal,committee chairman, said thehearing will seek to enlist thecooperation of magazine. Sellersin drawing up a, code of ethics;and will discuss formation of acitizens' committee to.,probe the'pornography problem.

D~p~@r@~ Trif~i~~ ~@J~[[D@;[f~

T@ UW'i)ot~ Am@D1)@ ~~[fB~U'D@rrn~By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.

Uishop of Reno

Chesterton, with his uncanny feeling for the inevitablephrase, called one of his collections of essays "Tremendous

, ~

Trifles." But thEm" perver::;ely, it turned out that all histrifles were eternal truths. He was not a man to' dealpatiently with petty things,the minor obstacles andscruples which beset man's'journey through life':':"" shoe­strings, for example, or razorblades. yet the phrase has a'liieral v ~ 1 u ewhich 'shouldDot be underes­timated. If itwould be falseand misleadingto say that thethings whichdivide Chris­tians on theeve of the Ec­IJmenical Coun­eil are all meretrifles, it is stilltrue that a good many of themactually are. Essentially 'unim­portant, even foolish, their in­fluence is nothing short of tre­mendous.

'Take the enduring predjudiceof the North against the South.This applies in a thousand con­texts, but' never so powerfullyas in the case of the identifica­tion of the south as Protestantand the north lis Catholic.

Legacy of ,ReformationThis curious fixation is, of

c;ourse, the legacy of the- Reformation in Europe, where

as a matter of fact the northerncountries (with some conspic­uous exceptions) became Prot­estant whereas the southernnatio~s (again with exceptions)remained Catholic.

lot is a cherished illusion inthis hemisphere that northern­ers are more intelligent,' moreenergetic, and infinItely moredependable than southerners.

Applied as a yardstick incomparative religion, the con­clusion was clear that Protes­tantism must be the faith ofthe master--races, while Cathol­icism was the opium of theeffete and languid Medi-terran-eans. '

Prejudice RemainsAnthropology and history

have disposed of this nonsensewith crushing finality. Never­theless it is one thing to dis­prove a thesis and quite another,1.0 dispose of a prejudice.. The:-e has been a great 'dealof talk lately about myth, mostof it without any clear under­standing of what myth aCtuallyis, but'if a glaring example besought, here it is in all its arro­gance and with all its 'stayingpowers.

A trifle, certainly, but a tre­mendous one. 'Behind, much of

"the rhetoric' of modern secu­larism lurks the fear that thesouth might overwhelm thenorth.

Poisons AtmosphereThis !inds its appropriate echo

in the further identification ofaemocracy .as 'a northern, andtherefore a Protestant, inven­tion, and tyranny .or dictator­ship as a southern, and there­fore a Catholic, tendency. .

No scholar mindful of hisreputatioil would' refer to, thisas anything but the worst pos­sible misreadin'g of politiclilscience, yet it lives o'n in theremote passages of the popularmind, emerging now and thento poison the whole atmosphereand to foment' distrust and de­stroy harmony.: It crept out of its lair i~ therecen~ presidential cam'paign in

Page 16: 10.05.61

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THE ANCHOR­Thurs., Oct. 5, 1961

Leave For MissionsPHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

departure ceremony was heldhere for eight Medical MissionSisters bound for Ind·ia, Pakis­tan and Ghana. Father ThomasC. Duffy, C.S.C., the nuns'chaplain, presided at the cere·mony.

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Suggests GreQterEffort to BolsterFamily life

AURORA (NC) - Catho.lie families are in serioustrouble' in today's cultureand it's up to priests to givethem a spiritual lift, diocesanlife directors from all parts oft.he U.S. and Canada have beentold here in Colorado.

Father Arthur L. .Meloche,Ontario, director of Holy FamilyRetreat House, told the priests"We must awaken to the faCtthat never before in history haveour families needed more des­perately the help that should beavailable to them through theirreligion.

"Why is today's Catholic fam­ily not too different from thepagan or the Protestant?" heasked. "Why do we follow theleadership of these others? Whyilre we so late with so little tooffer the people?"

"The answers to these ques­tions," said Father Meloche, "theawareness that our Catholic fam­ilies are in .serious difficulty inour present day culture, and thefrank facing that as their spirit­ual leaders and fathers we must"aid them to solve. their problems"is the rationale for Catholicfamily programs."

Bishop Christopher J. Weldonof Springfield (Mass.), episcopalmoderator of the Family LifeBureau, National .Catholic Wel­fare Conference, told the dioces­an directors there should bemore cooperation and an inter­change of' ideas among familylife directors to help familiestrying to live a Christian life.

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another aid to their own read­ing."

Catholic parents especiallyhave a wealth of material avail­able in stories of saints forchildren, and hooks about Jesusand Mary, the angels, andother truths of religion.

. Main Thing"The main thing," sums up

Sister, "is for parents to realizethat just as children differphysically and each has hisown rate of growth, so theydiffer mentally. Some childrenare slow to grasp ideas, butvery retentive, whereas a quicklearner may be an equallyquick forgetter.

. "Force only hampers a chilli-just as a baby can't walk ortalk before he's ready for it,so a child can't read until he'sattained the requisite mat!Jrity."

A complicated business theteaching of reading ... but toSister Dorothy Therese, it's adelight. "I love it," she said.

"If 'you push children, youonly confuse them," she said.-

Home background is import­ant in developing r~ading chil­dren, she ·noted. Availability ofbooks encourages reading, andthe sight of reading parentsstimulates the desire to imitatethem.

Among the many drawbacksof working mothers, she com­mented, Is that such mothersrarely have'. tiine to sit downand read w their children, tosay nothing of reading them­selves. Thus an important stim­ulus for the child is lacking.

What should be read? -Sisterfeels that nothing outranks· thefamiliar nursery rhymes andfairy tales. "Children loverhymes and they love repeti­tion," she pointed out. "MotherGoose supplies rhyme and manyfairy tales are built on the ideaof repetition. This helps fixwords in the children's minds,

Stills Church BellsMONTREAL (NC) - Church

bells are not to be rung before8 A.M.; or after' 8 P.M., atCatholic churches in the Mon­treal archdiocese, Paul EmileCardinal Leger, Archbishop ofM'bntreal has directed. The prel­ate explained the move was for'the benefit of persons whowanted to rest, especially' thesick. Exceptions will be Christ­mas, the Vigil of Easter and theFeast of' Co~pus Christi.

FIRST STEP: First graders at Sacred HeartsElementary School benefit from expert teaching techniquesof Sister Dorothy Therese. Given good start, she says,children need never have remedial reading problms. Leftto right, Nan<;y Curtis, Carol Audet, Nicole Chouinard.

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~Holy Union Nun Helps Little Children with BigPro~lem,Advises Parents on Readi.ng Aids

By ~atricia McGowanHelping little children with a big problem - that's the after-school avocation of

Sister Dorothy Therese, S.U.S.C., first and second grade teacher at Sacred HeartsElementary· School, Fall River. The diminutive religious, not much bigger than some ofher pupils, is a specialist in remedial reading. After' school, on Saturdays and' duringvacations, she helps childrenwho for one reason oranother have gotten off to apoor start in reading. Thereare many reasons why childrenhave reading difficulty, said Sis­ter, noting that even childrenwith superior intelligence some­times have trouble in this area.Emotional problems account forsome non-readers, while a -too­early start in reading is oftendisastrous.

"Sometimes children can coastalong until third grade or sowithout anyone noticing theyar~n't reading properly," Sistersaid. "Then, in subjects such ashistory; geography and religion,they start having terms not intheir everyday vocabulary, andit's realized that previously theyhad merely memorized words."

'nt's A Miracle!'She told of a high school girl

who had never been able to readand had struggled throughclasses by dint of having workread to her at home. Embar­rassed on one occasion at beingcalled upon to read aloud inpublic, she burst into tears andwas referred to Sister for helr.-

After a few months work, sheaccomplished the feat, for herunbelievable, of reading a book."Sister, it's a miracle!" she' ex- .claimed.

Far better than "miracles,"however, is the forestalling ofreading difficulties, emphasizesSister.

Should parents anticipateteachers and start instructionat home? Emphatically no!"Read to children, but don'tteach them to read," counselsSister. .

If parents will read to chi!'­dren from the time. they'rewilling to sit still long enoughto listen, they will do more forthem than by any formal in­struction. In this way a hearingand speaking vocabulary isdeveloped.

Such a vocabulary is a pre­requisite for 'reading, and themore words a child is familiarwith,the easier reading will befor him.

Boys Take LongerSeventy to 80 per cent of

non-readers who need specialhelp are boys, said Sister. Thereason seems to be that boysmature more slowly than girls, .and simply aren't ready to readso young.

"We usually divide classesinto three groups," said Sister,"and almost illways most ofthe best group will be girlsa'nd most of the slowest group .will be boys.". .

Naturally the boys catch up.later on, but Sister emphasizesthat parents shouldn't worryabout little slow-starters andthat above all they should notforce children, boys or girls.

Chaplain Celebrates~ass in Death Row

ANGOLA (NC) - Mass wasoffered for the first time indeath row in Louisiana StatePenitentiary here.

Father William McCallion,penitentiary chaplain, offeredthe Mass on a temporary altarfacing the cells of eight con­demned men.

The three Catholics amongthem received Communion. Twoof them said it was the first timethey had aUended Mass sincethey entered death row 11 yearsa80.

CIA Chief HoldsChurch Honors

NEWPORT (NC) - John A.McCone, former chairman of theAtomic Energy Commission andPresident Kennedy's nominee asC e n t r a I Intelligence Agencydirector, holds' high Churchhonors.

McCone, a Los Angeles busi­nessman and engineer, has beena Knight of St. Gregory since1955, and in March, 1956, wasdecorated with the Grand Crossof the Order of St. Sylvesterby Pope Pius XII.

He was in Rome in 1956 asPresident Eisenhower's per­sonal representative at the cel­ebration of Pius XII's 80thbirthday and the 17th anniver­sary of his coronation as pope.

McCone will succeed AllenDulles in November as head ofthe super-secret intelligenceoperation. President Kennedyannounced his appointment dur­ing a press conference, at theNaval War College in Newport,where the Chief Executive wasvacationing.

Vatican ExecutiveDescribes NeedsOf Missions

VATICAN CITY (NC)What the missions need .most are more native priests,more catechists and well in­formed lay leaders, the secretaryof the Church's mission execu­tive said ina letter establishingSunday, Oct. 22, as World Mis­sion Day.

Archbishop Pietro Sigismondi,Secretary of the Sacred Congre­gation for the Propagation of theFaith, noted early in his letterthat "the tribulations of the mis­sionaries have been many andserious."

But he said their progress hasnever ceased. He. added: "Thosewho have eyes to see can knowthat nothing can check the wayof God among men."

He also recognized that Catho­lics throughout the world, en­couraged by Pope John and bytheir bishops, have given prior­ity to works of mission coopera­tion, prayers for the missionsand study for the ·missions.

Native Clergy"Love for the missions is the

best means for the developmentin oneself and in others of theChristian spirit taught to us bythe Lord, whioh says: Father,may Your' reign 'of peace enterall hearts, all families, all socialclasses and may it enter amongall nations and peoples."

Archbishop Sigismondi, citingthe need f6r forming a nativeclergy, said: "This clergy, whicl1bas been and is the most im':­portant objective in the work ofevangelization, has proved itsvalue even in the most disturbedtimes.

"In the humble ministry as inthe highest positions of respon­sibility, in ordinary circum­stances as well as in the mostdelicate, the native clergy haskept admir·able faith with thegl18ve commitments of its priest­hood.

"We can never be gratefulenough to the missionaries ­accused wrongly by some ofcolonialism - for having madethese results possible on such abroad scale."

The Archbishop said that a'necessary adjunct to the forma­tion of native clergy is the con­struction of new seminaries andthe expansion of those alreadyexisting. He also noted that theimprovement of the efficiencyand scientific level of these sem­inaries is necessary.

Page 17: 10.05.61

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if not all, of the young men andwomen in America today rec­ognize the great heritage nfwhich they will' increasinglybecome the guardians' in thedecades just ahead."

"I wish for this year's ob­servance of National CatholicYouth Week unlimited success,and I wish each of you unlim­ited success in the yearsahead."

Nation's Asseis,Ex-President Truman com­

mented "the youngsters' wileare properly trained morallyand physically not only makethe best citizens, but they be- ,come assets to' the nation."

U. S. Attorney General Rob- ,ert Kennedy referred in, hismessage to "repeated evidencethat the image of Americanyouth is one of courage, under­standing and responsibility andnot delinquency."

Next GenerationAdlai Stevenson, U. S~ Repre":'

sentative at the United Nations,commented, "In your theme forthe week's observance you have:linked youth with the words'Unity and Truth'. It is wellthat our young people shouldaccustom themselves to thinkdeeply about their meaning.May National Catholic YouthWeek help to foster those quali­ties in the next generation 011our nation's leaders." #-

City Z~ne

o DAMlEN LEPER CLtJB ... cares for leperso ORPHAN'S ,BREAD. . . . • • •• feeds orphanso PALACE OF GOLD .•.••.. provides for the ~ged

o THE BASILIANS ,. '. . . . •. su,Pports Catholic schoolso 'fHE MONICA GUILD·, ... chalices, l!ltars, ete. for churches-0 CHRYSOSTOMS ..•• '.•.••. educates native priests 'o MARY'S BANK ,.; •..•.•.. trains native Sisters

~'12ear&stffiissions~, !FRANCIS CARDINAL SPEllMAN, President

Mlfr. Jos'" T. Ri.a. folI~'1 Soc',Seed an _Icatlons to:

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION480 IJexlngton Ave. at 46th St. New York 11, N. Y.

Sir.eet .•'•••••••••••••••••• ; •'•••••••••'•••••••••••••••

SEVEN GRAVES IN IRAQ, . ,

Name ••••._•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••' •••

DURING OCTOBER; THE MONTH OF THE HOLY ROSARY.PRAY THE ROSARY FOR OUR MISSIONARIES. Our priests,Brothers and Sisters in INDIA, JORDAN, EGYPT. SYRIA,LEBANON, IRAQ. IRAN, and ETHIOPIA need your prayersdesperately.

HOW, CAN YOU HELPtIf you're already a member of °the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST

WELFARE ASSOCIATION, we'd 'like to count on you to help'us regularly~by your membership in a mission club. The clubplan is an ideal way for you to do, without hardship, what youwant to do. ,The dues are only $1 a month-yet think ,what thismeans to the missions year after year! Clubs make it possiblefor our priests and Sisters to plan for the future, because theyknow they can 'count on your help regularly ••. just as longas you're able to help them. 1/'00 can "drop out," of course.whenever you want, to, for any ~ason. Meanwhile, we'd like t6have yoU with us. Select one or more ,)f these clubs,' and writeDS. We'll send you the details.

Dear Monsignor:Plel!8e 0 enroll me. 0 send information about the

clubs I have selected.

,THERE ARE SEVEN NEW GRAVES in TENA, • mountain<illage in northern IRAQ. Ttley are the graves of men who died

ill T'ENA's latest tragedy - the eol­la)Hle or TENA's only Catholieoburch ••. The men 1Il'ere volu.nteers.Farm-wo~kers b7 trade, they hadagreed to' help' the pastor who was'worried ,fOl' fear the church mightfall down whUp. crowded on Sundaymorning. For months on encl, theygave their tim~ and labor, workingevenings WltiJ daril. Then one eve­ning. as, the last beam was put into

21f Holy Fathtr'J MiJ~ Ail place, the entire roof collapsed., _ Twenty-seven peoPle, were trapped

for tht.()rimtaJ Chtirr/> i1Il the debris. Seven men were dead;hYent,. others were iujur..... some 91- them permanentl,. ••• Theruins still rentai'n, a mut~ monument to men who died'for theirparish 'ehurch ••• But "'ho wili take Cllre of the seveD widows?Who will provide for the forty children in TENA who are leftwithout fathers? Who will see to it that the SDDW this winterdoesn't blanket the altar 'whieh lies exposed? .•• These an

, the questions that trouble' the Bishop and the parish priest.•• The parishioners, Catholics ,of the CHALDEAN RI~, arepoor fann-workers who grow their own food and make theirown clothing. They have practically no money. The Bishop asksif we will ask yoU to help • • • Will you help! Whatever: yousend-$! or '$lOO--wUl help clo the, work of Christ in TENA.Your gift will bring some reHef to-a harried widow, or' a father­less child. We'd thank G:0fl ,If we could send something-$l,OOOperhaps--so that the Bishop could begin to rebuild TENA'sonly Catholic church ... Se,nd your gift now, whether it's largeor small. The Catholics in TENA have need of you.

Continued from Page OnepIe of the National Council of'Catholic Youth, which reachesto the dioceses, parishes, schoolsand universities of this nation,my warm encouragement asthey observe National CatholicYouth Week."

Vice President,Vice-President Johnson noted

in his message: "There isnothing more important to thefuture of our country thanrearing our children in thepaths of unity and in the pathsof truth. In a world beset bycommunism, it is essential thatours be a nation of unity ofpurpose and this unity can befound only by dedication totruth." ,

The Vice President also 'said:"I hope that the observance ofNational Catholic Youth Weekwill help advance the objectivethat all of us' as Americansseek, and for this you have mybest wishes."

Unlimited SuccessAbraham Ribicoff, Secretary

of Health, Education and Wel­fare, said: "I believe, that most,

Joliet Ner'spaperJOLIET (NC)- The Diocese

of .Joliet will begin publicationof ,a newspaper, the CatholicNews-Register, beginning Satur- 'day, Oct. 13. '

Sunday Law UpheldCHICAGO (NC)-Validity of

the new Illinois law prohibiting'sales of automobiles on· Sundayswas upheld by Superior CourtJudge Walter Butler here. Theruling. was made in a suit insti­tuted by an auto sales COmpaJilY.

hClCol:::>C:lOQoC::K:lCol:::>C:lOQoC~

RETIRES: Msgr. JohnO'Grady.. for the past 41,years secretary of the Na­tional Conference of Cat:ho­lie Charities, Washington,has retired with the hOnor­ary title of secretary-emeri­tus. The 75-year-old pri,esthas been an authority on allfacets of charity and welfarework and 'has been friendand counselor to presidynts,legislators and social wOl~k­

ers. NC Photo.

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Warner's policy on "Fanny"whose percentage lea'se contractsrequire that it be played all dayon each day of exhibition. " ''Mr. Fin'e contended that the

picture was not suitable' forchildren's matinees since it dealtwith illegitimacy.

'''This is undoubtedly why theLegion of Decency rates the pic­ture A-2 (for adults and' ado­lesc~nts); the Green Sheetrecommends it, to 'aqults 21ndmature young people' -only; andParents Magazine says it is spe-

, cifically not for children. 'Fine for Kiddies

"And yet' yo~r contention isthat it is fine for the kiddie!;. Ijust can't believe you mean :it,"Mr.' Fine told Mr. Boasberg of.Warners.

"A bettei' than two hour_lcrngadult drama would haVe thechildren restless beyond controlat best, bilt one which bas atheme as adult as 'Fanny' would _surely not be considered by ~"ouor anyone as "being, even 'suit....able' much'less 'desirable' to useas a kiddie 'matinee in the:firstplace."

The HollywOod Reportea.- ,quoted,Mr.fine as rejecting 1heWarner proposal that the exhibi­,tor play another feature on them:a'tinee but give Warners ritspercentage of receipts anYwal.Y.

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He also points out that scien­tific and tecl;mical progress"should be valued according totheir true worth, namely, as in­struments or means used toachieve ,m 0 I' e effectively ahigher end, that of facilitatingand promoting the spiritualperfection of mankind" both inthe natural and superna,turalorder." ,

Moreover he points with sat­iSfaction to a number of devel­opments w h i c h contributetoward making' human beingsmore conscious of their ownlimitations' and toward creatingin them 'a striving f.r spiritual,values; and his cannot be buta happy earnest of a sincereunderstanding and profitableco-operation.", ' ,

The Holy Father's concern,then, is not to condemn oranathematize', mode.rn progressbut simply to point out that"after all, this progress, andevan because of it; there re­mains the, problem that thesocial relationship be recon­structefol in a more human ,bal­ance both in regard to individ­ual politiCal cOJ1lmunities andon a world scale."

\ ,

Interracial CouncilTo Present Awards

NEW YORK (NC) - TheCatholic Interracial Council ofNew York announced that theJames J. Hoey Awards for In­terracial Justice will be pre­sented Sunday, Oct. 29 at aluncheon in the Summit Hotelhere.

The white recipiEmt' is RalphFenton, official of an insurancefirm in Norwood, Mass. TheNegro recipient is Mrs. ~OsmaSpurlock,. a social worker of In­dianapolis.

At no point' does he turn' hisback on the modern world withall its problems, and at no pointdoes he contrast the present un­favorably with the past.

To be sure, he deplores "themost perniciously typical aspectof the m<>dern era," Which"consists in the absurd attemptto reconstruct a solid and fruit-­ful temporal order prescindingfrom God ..' .".

Important Phase

, At the same time, however, heis at pains to emphasize thatscientific and technical progressand "the resultant natural well­being are truly good and, as'such, mark an important phasein buman c;ivilization."

"Our era," he says, "is pene..;trated and shot through byradical errors, it is torn andupset by deep disorders. Never­theless, it is also an era inwhich ,immense possibilities forgood are opened to the Church."

Understands ChangesThe Holy Father's optimism is

Jl()tably apparent in, his' treat­ment of the "profound trans­1ormations" which have taken.lacein recent decades in theIield ofsciel1ce, technology' andeconomics, in the social field,Ind, finally, in the field of poli­lies.

His: comprehensive listing' ofhese transformations shows

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 5, 1961

EDITOR·BISHOP : FatherAndreao Makarakiza, W.F.,editor of ,the UsumburaCatholic weekly, has beennamed Bishop for the newdiocese of Ngozi, Belgian-

'administered trust territor.yof the United Nations. The42-year-old son of a noblefamily is a convert from the

, Bukeye region of Africa. NCPhoto.

~@M@~ [r@[PJ® J©)lruOi)!l~· AfrU'g{[lliJdJ®T@wara ,M©H\l1~r[{)J ~[f@®[f®~S

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

Mr. D. L. Munby, Professor of Economics at NuffieldCollege, Oxford,.notes in a' recent book, 'God and the Rich'Society,' that "the main, if not the only, really inesc~pable

thing in our society is change." He asks himself, as ad e v 0 u t member of, the 'that he has a thorough under-Church of England and a standing of the modern, world.serious student of Christian But even more impressive thansocial ethics,' "how far is this hisa underst3:nding of' the spe­in itself a blessing<J or a curse;" cifil: changes which have takenHis answer is Qn the optim,istic place in' recent, years is his

serenely optimistic attitude withBide. "We live," regard to change itself.Professor Mun-by writes, "in a 'world of rapidehange, whichwill continuefor as long aswe can seeahead." This, heeoncludes, con­fronts us with aDumber of seri­ous problems,but it also "pre­sents us with everwidening op­portunities to give glory to G<>d,as we discover mofe of his uri-'searchable wisdom." ,, Professor Munby has much in

eommon, in this regard, withPope John' XXIII. Surely one ofthe most distinctive features oftile Holy Father's new social en­eyclical, Mater et Magistra, is itseonsistently positive and con­structive tone-its tone of quietand reassuring Christian opti­mism and unaffected benevolenceso characteristic of its author.

POsSib!lities 'or ~ood "In view of world conditions,

one would not have been great­lY surpriSed' if the encyclicalhad taken 'a ratheI' dismal andpessimistic view of the immedi":ate future. The fact is, however,that' Pope John is profound~y

",optimistic in .the face of prob­lems which might have tempteda -lesser man to throw up hishands in despair. '

Page 18: 10.05.61

19

• PARnES

Prelate DefendsGoulart's RightTo Presidency

PORTO ALEGRE (NC) ­The Archbishop of PortoAlegre has defended the con­stitutional right of JoooGOUlart, as vice-president in thegovernment of fonner presidentJanios Quadros, to succeed tothe presidency.,Archbishop Alfredo Scherer

spoke out shortly before Gou­lart returned to Brazil in hiseffort to take the presidencyover the opposition of militaryleaders. Goulart entered Brazilat this eapital 'of' his home state,Rio Grande do SuI.

Archbishop Scherer said: "Hewho has the right to do so inaccordance with, the provisionsof law, must assume power inorder' to assure democraticideals, the progress of Brazil andthe happiness of Brazilians."

Despite Goulart's reputationfor extreme leftism, the Arch­bishops of' Sao Paolo, Rio deJaneiro and Brasilia have pub­licly supported his right to thepresidency.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Oct. 5, 1961

Dominican Fathers, and while he 'plans to, teach after he is grad­uated, his ultimate aim is coach. ,ing. Gerry stays in one of thedonns at PC during the weelt,and has presently been spending'weekends with his family.,Gaining a berth on the NIT·

,champion PC hoop team will beno easy task, but to Gerry, agame competitor who asks only achance, it will probably becomea reality.

Spirited PlayerAgainst a tall man like big

6-foot, lO-irich' Jimmy Hadnot,the Friars' center, it would seemthat Gerry does not have 11chance.

But Coach Mullaney knowsthe value of "small men." Lastyear it was PC's Vinnie Ernst,the 5-foot, 8-inch wonder who,by his scrappy ,play and deter­mination ;was chosen the mostvaluable player of the NationalInvitation Tournament.

Gerry is the same type ofspirited player, with determina-tion-plU6. '

, Bright FutureIt will come :ns absolutely nG

surprise to see Gerry, one of thefinest athletes to come out ofTaunton in some years, leadingthe Friars to another NIT crownin the near future.

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three sports. Last' year he quar-, terbackM the Warriors to their ,

second consecutive Class C state, championship in football.

'Coach Jim' Burns' eleven hadbeen hard hit by graduation in1960, ,but with' Gerry master­minding the team, Coyle gainedthe coveted State crown with a7-1 record; In fact, the Warriors,

_with Gerry rolling out well andpassing with precision, dealt apowerful Durfee grid unn itslone loss of the season.

Active in CYOGerry's starring role in lead­

ing the Burnsmen to their Statecrown also gained him a berthin the Bristol County All-Starteam last season.

In baseball, although Gerry'sbatting average trailed off a bitlast year, his classy fielding atthird base and his Justy hittingin 1960 gained him a spot ORanother Bristol County dreamteam.

A communicant of SacredHeart Church, Taunton, Gerryhas also found time to play CYObaseball for teams at his parish,under the direction of the Rev.francis B. Connors.

Teacher and CoaehGerry'lll hobbies, besides the

leading sports, are hock~y, swim­ming, and in the words of hiBmother, "anything that's diffi­cult." ,

He is studying education atProvidence College, run by the

RARIN' TO GO: Gerry Cunniff talks over his prospectsat landing a place on the Providence College Freshmanbasketball team' with Father. Francis B. Connors, assistantat Sacred Heart parish in Taunton.

By Frank Tround

Voted "Athle~e of the Year" for his outstanding performances in football, basketbaftand baseball at Coyle High School this past season, Gerald "Gerry" Cunniff is now a­student a.t Providence" College and is eying a berth on the crack PC hoop squad. Theson of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Cunniff of 343 Berkley Street, Taunton, Gerry plans totry and capture a ,place with,Coach Joe Mullaney's Friars,'one of the top college baskE!t­ball teams )n the nation last'year. He also plans to try outfor the PC 'baseball team neXltSpring.

Friar Hopes HighThe Friars last year clinched

the coveted National Invitation.Tournament championship, witha tight 62":59 win over big st.Louis in the final game atMadison Square Garden, NewYork.

In 1960, another spirited PCbasketball unit finished -runner­up' to Bradley in the big NITchampionship event.

Gerry, 18, who has two olderbrothers, Edward J. Jr. andThomas M., was one of the fewbright spots last year in anotherwise dim seasOn ror, theCoyle High cage team.

Real Hustler

Not a big youth, as basket­baIlers go, Gerry ,is 5 feet, 9inches tall and tips the scalesat 157 pounds, dripping wet.

But like other talented ath­letes, Gerry's height did not pre­vent him from being a successas a basketball player at CoyleHigh in Taunton. Playing out ofthe right guard position, he wasthe third-highest scorer in theB r i s t 0 I County BasketballLeague last year wit'h a total of424 points for the campaign.

While Coyle was be i n gwhipped last year 'by a tall,talented Fairhaven High Schoolfive, 81-44, Gerry never quittrying. He emerged from ~hM

particular game with 26 pomts.Three Letterman

An adroit ball handler, Gerryscores well from outside the keyon the hardwood. He.- can lit­erally give the opposition "fits"with his unerring accuraey OR

long set shots. ' 'But, basketball at Coyle High

School was only one of Gerry's

Gerry Cunniff of Taunton to SeekBerth on Friar Basketball Team

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New CoulseFor Parish Leaders

INDIANAPOLIS (NC) - TheNational Council of Catholic Menhas unveiled here a course de­signed to stimulate leadershipon the part of parish lay leaderson issues--such as racial justice-facing the Church and its

• members.'Called the ''Parish Leadership

Development Course," the seven­unit program also aims at givinglaymen instruction in "leader­ship skill," such as planningagenda for a meeting and parlia­mentary procedure.

The subjects outlined iIi thecourse are "The Lay Apostolate,""Leadership in the Lay Aposto­late," "Catholics' and Education,""Apostolic Formation,", "C.ath­olics and Racial Justice," "Cath­olics and ,Communism';" and"Leadership Techniques."

Mark 50th JubileeMONTREAL (NC) - Fifty

years ago 83 nuns made t':eirsimple vows as members of theCongregation of Notre Damehel·e. Of th9t number 53 wereat the community's motherhousefor a F,olden jubilee celebration.

'Parochial Grid Inaugural HasStang VSlt Coyle at Taunton

By Jack KineavyThe student will test the master this Saturday when

Bishop Stang travels to Hopewell Park, Taunton, to engagethe Warriors of, Coyle High, defending Class C champions.For Coach Carlin Lynch and his assistants, Charley Connelland Peter Bartek, the occa- turned in by Mansfield's onesion will be in the nature of man gang, Ron Gentili, whoa homecoming, for each scampered to five touchdownsstarred on the gridiron for as the Hornets ripped FranklinCoyle under the astute guldance 42-0. Gentilli, twice accordedof genial Jim Burns, the beloved All-Diocesan recognition, is re-dean ,of South- putedly the finest college pros- <)

eastern Mass. ,pect in the area. paCk at hisgrid mentors. familiar fullback slot after a

Stang in its year under center the big fel-initial year of low is off to the best start invarsity com- his star-studded career.petition has a Talking about All..,Diocesan1-1 r e cor d ; selections reminds us that threeCoyle is un- former team members weredefeated. Both very much in the gridironh a v e played spoUight last weekend. All-IvyDartmouth. The tackle Bob Asack and Mans-War r i '0 r s field's Tony Day were in theedged the Indi- starting lineup for Columbiaans, 14-8, while Stang was de- which devastated Brown, 50-0.cisioneg. 18-16 in a real thriller. Charley Carey, ex-Durfee lu­The latter contest, an arclight minary now playing guard forencounter, drew an estimated Co l'b y , nabbed an errant5,000 fans, reportedly the largest Bridgeport aerial which even­crowd ever to view a game at tually led to a score in theMemorial Stadium. Mules 13-6 victory over the

Virtually the entire student Connecticut eleven.bodr at Stang marched from the A football renaissance is inschool to the' Stadium for the progress at 'Barnstable Highgame, a display of spirit as re- which has now won two straightfreshing as it is uncommon. 'And under new coach John Parkertheir team proved worthy of who came' to the Cape viatheir support against a Dart- Brockton High where he servedmouth team that may be reck- as' line coach under ChetMil­oned among the school's best in lett. The Cape eleven has shownmany years. It was a hard' con-' high scoring potential, downingtested game with, both clubs Dighton-Rehoboth, 34-12'a n dexhibiting a high degree of Somerset, 30-8, Qn, successivesportsmanship, a wonderful in-' Saturdays. Sparking the 'Barn­augural for what undoubtedly stable offense is halfback Davewill becaome one of the area's Hostetter. ,natural rivalries. ' On 'the coIiege front it was '8

Coyle High, off to a fast start disastrous day for New Englandin defense of its State laurels schools involved in intersectionalhas a veterah-studded squad contests. Most, startling, ofabout which Coach Burns, was course, was the 45-0 defeat suf- ,candidly optimistic in his' pre- 'fered by Boston College at theseason analysis., The Warriors hands of Northwestern of themust be conceded the edge in Big Ten Conference. Prior to thethis one on the, basis of experi- game, the old Bald Eagle brigadeence, depth and performance, recalled with pride and anticipa­though you may be certain that tion the Tulane victory of 1940the Stang squad and their high-' which catapulted the ;Frankly vocal partisans will concede Leahy coached squad into na­nothing. It should, be Ii lively t~onal promlnen<;e. ,contest on the field and in the Dave Yelle, an All-Diocesan,cheer,ing sections. tackle at Coyle was voted line~

Attleboro Strong man of the week in New Eng-In other major games in the land for his tremendous perfor-,

area, league-leading Attleboro mance in B.C.'s opening day 23-0Hi~h is down to visit Fairhaven ~'victory over Cincinnati. Davewhile New Bedford Vocational was injured in that game, how­is scheduled to' entertain North ever, and didn't' see any actionAttleboro at Sargent Field. against Northwestern. Also withCoach Jim Cassidy's Jewelers, the Eagle squad is quarterbackundefeated in two starts,' num- John Antosca, a sophomore frombel' Durfee and Taunton as its Mansfield High..victims to date, while F'air- The betting gentry says thehaven, loser to North Attleboro Yankees. This was also true lastthe first time out, rebounded year when a team of Pittsburghlast Saturday to upset Voca- pros, having their best season,tlonal, 20-6. Look for Attleboro proved the consensus wrong. 'to relaln membership in t'he Quien sabe? It's a great game.elite unbeaten-untied society.

New Bedford High has the Unveilslongest trip of the day. TheCrimson, fortified by an impres­sive 28-8 victory over RindgeTech, journey to the Westernpart of the State to engage apowerful Chicopee e 1eve n .Coach Nisk Morris' club, led byhalfback Jim Botelho, unveileda potent ground attack againstthe Cantabrigians who proved, nomatch for the fired up Whalers.For what it's worth, Rogers Highwhich played a 6-6 tie with NewBedford on opening day routedHope High of Providence, 39-6.

A couple of firsts were cele­brated in the Regional tilt inwhich Old Rochester downedDighton-Rehoboth, 14-6. It wasthe first venture in interscho­lastic competition for the RedWings who are under the di­rection of Frank Almeida, for­mer Wareham varsity mentor.For the D-R the occasion of.dedicating their new gridironwas not an auspicious one, al­though they had much the bet­ter of the going in the first half.

GentlU SuperbThe day's most superlaUve

individual scoring effort 'was

Page 19: 10.05.61

" ,

Layman ExpertOn Canon LawWins MedalST. BONAVENTURE (NC)

,~ Stephan Kuttner~ a lay.man expert on canon law.,will be 9resented with the1961 Catholic Action Medal ofSt. Bonaventure University nextWednesday.

Father 'FraiIcis W. Kearney,O.F.M., university president,said the award made annuallysince 1934 is given to an out­standing Catholic layman. Hesaid the presentation will bemade on the feast. of St. Francisof Assisi at exercises on thecampus of the university con­ducted, by the Franciscans.

Kuttner, 54, a native of Bonn,Germany, taught law at BerlinUniversity from 1929 to 1933when he fled the country to es·cape Nazi tyranny. He has beenprofessor of the history ofcanon law at the Catholic Uni­versity of America in Washing•.ton, D.C., since 1942.. In 1955, he founded Jlnd is

president of the Institute ofResearch and Study in MedievalCanon Law, Washington, an in·ternational organflzation ofsCholars engaged in editing acollection of medieval works ofcanon law., Kuttner has' been an honor­

ary consultant in Roman andcanon law at the Library ofCongress, Washington, since 1943,and of the Vatican Librarysince 1955. He was given anhonor by the American Counc}lof Learned Societies for dis·'

_tinguished achievements in hu­maniti~ in 1959.

/

hArmy Separates Twin'Airborne Cha!>lanns '

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)~

The Army bas split up its best,brother act - twin airbornechaplains who hit the silk;together many a tune.. One half of the team, Father

(Maj;) Gerald' J. Gefell, now.has a desk job at the Sixth'Army chaplains' office here.His identical twin, FatherJoseph G. Gefell, is with the18th Airborne Corps at FortBragg, N. C. '

The priest-brothers werewith the famed 82nd Airbornedivision at Fort Bragg for threeyears. Before that they werestationed together for two anda half years in Alaska.

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PSan Hugh Schoc!sHARRISBURG (NC) - Two

new high schools and an addi­tion to' Bishop McDevitt HighSchool here are planned. BishopGeorge L. Leech of Harrisqurgsaid the~constructionis requiredto serve the needs of 21 Catholic'par.ishes in the area.

Tells of Guinea'sOusteD' of Pre~ate

Rome (NC)-While the oustedhead of the Catholic Church in I . I • h'Guinea remained reluctant' to ' VATICAN EDITOR: After more than a year m ISdiscuss the Church::'state conflict 'new post as editor' of the Vatican City daily, L'Osservatorein that West African republic, Romano, Raimondo Manzini considers the changes tnat hisinformation reaching here indi- 32 years in newspaper work have brought to make his papercates his expulsion stemmedfrom his' demand that the 'more readable. NO; Photo~Church be allowed to exercise a SiC• P bIits authority in the religious Co rd i rilCU antos . lfoes rro ems

Ifiel~~hbiShOP'Gerard de Mille;' Of C(jJthoU~~; in, Philippines 'ville, C.S.Sp., of Conakry con~ MANIL,A (NC)-Communism The immediate material prob­ferred with Pope, John on the ana shortage of pti,ests and lems are those training youngGuinean' situation, but he de- churches are problem!s confront. men for the priesthood andclined . to .commeIit publicly on ing the Catholics of!he Philip. building more churches.the rift which,culminated in his. pines, Rufino Cardinal Santos, "Vocations to the priesthoodexpulsion from Guinea. " Archbish,?p of Manila:, said here. have been increasing,'" the car,,:' Meanwhile; however, copies' of The •.Cardinal is 1the first dinal stated, "but not proportion.both the Archbishop's pastoral

'letter which Guinea's leftist , Filipino' member of ~e Sacred ately with the growth' of thePresident sekou ..roUre· de-' College. In~erviewed jby N~WC' population.nounced over the radio, and the' News ServIce here, qe outlmed "Our, facilities for' trainingprelate's subsequent 'left~r to ,problems anq. projec~. , p,riests have been increased. NowToure, were received he~e. " "The first problem~ eommun· all seven archdioceses in the

Unjust Demand ism; . endlingers all_I the other Philippines have their own, Archbishop' de Milleville's let- peoples of the world: a:; well as major seminaries, as well as two

'ter to his p.eople 'W~s issue~ fol- the Philippines," Car1dinal Sa?- 'interdiocesan seminaries. Andlowing the. meeting at which ' tos s'aid. "There islcCtmmumst nearly every diocese has its, ownToure's Democratic party":-the- infiltration here at p.rese~t, es- junior seminary."only party in the country-voted pecially among,stuc:lents. Most notable of the recent de-

,to nationalize: all schools. He is confid~nt, :hokever that 'velopments in this field is theThe 49-year~0Id french-born communism will nevbr rule the completion of the new Philip­

prelate labeled as an injustice Philippines, pine College-Seminary in Rome.the party demand that all,mis- ' "Our people are so Idevoted to It will be dedicated .on October

-sion schools be closed. He told Our Lady and so many of them 7, Feast of the Holy Rosary.his people' that despite the deci.,. 'are faithful to the family ros- Cardinal Santos; who led in ini.sion they still have the "strict ary" he said. "For m~; that'i§. a tiating the project will go toobligation to see to it that all the, gu;rantee' tnat the Philippines Rome with other' members ofChristian children and catechu.,. , will never fall into the hands of the Philippine hierarchy for theDiens continue togo to the mis-, ,t1}e communists." II dedication.sion stations in order to learnthe fundamentals of our Faithand to receive a· Christian edu­cation."

Rhode Island Mill's' Belfry BenTo lin'g· Out Angelus in England'. '

LINCOr.N (NC) - A belfry then ship it to Bedford, England.....bell so old its early history has 'There, it will serve'the Motherbeen forgotten soon will ring 'Cabrini church now under con­out the Angelus from the steeple struction.of a church in England. ' The bell is a gift to the church

It is known that the ben has from- the F.' Ronci family of'hung in the belfry of a former North Providence, last owners

, textile mill here for more than of the mill. A longtime, friend75 years. In the early days it of the Ro,?ci fa~ily, .Fatherrang daily to summon people to Angelo Susm, P.S.v.C., IS nowwork rang for the noon lunch stationed in England. The st.hour 'and some 50 years ago was Charles missionary formerlyused as a curfew signal at 9 p.m. was pastor of st. Rocco's c~U!'ch,

to get youngsters into their Thornton, R. I. ,homes. .

The bell was sounded for the Pittsburgh Oratorylast time on Sept. 22. A North R • PI dProvidence firm had it taken ecelves e gesClown; will clean and re~ir it, PITTSBURGH (NC) - The

.... newly formed Pittsburgh ,oratory, has received the pledges of its

first two candidates.The two are William Clancy,

formerly of Newsweek and Com­monweal magazines, and JohnCharlot, son of artist Jean Char­lot and formerly a student atHarvard. /

Clancy will study for thepriesthood of the Oratory atBirmingham in England, andCharlot at Louvain; Belgium. ThePittsburgh Oratory has beenfounded to carry a spiritual andintellectual apostolate to Cath­olic students on general c8J!l­puses of the area. '

~Q,..:..'_TH_E_A_N..:C_H_O_R_~~D_iOC..;.;. ..:.~_,;...'~:.,.·_F_a_II_R_iv....e_r-_Th...u...;~;...s._"....O....ct_.-:-5...., _19....6_1

,~~roc~g~1 Schoo~~ MM~~ ~c~e

;Probl~m$of E~w~~U~®~<fr ..rl'fTSBURGH (NC) - The supe:dntenden~ of Pitts.

burgh's" diocesan schools, has advised parochial schools, notto drop any grades until the question 6fstate :,or federalaid is resolved. Msgr. JohnR McDowell said in his a~mual

report: "If' the decision is and to r~spect this program, formade against parental rights 'many children will have it asand in favor of the establish. the sole source of formal reli-

, ,ment ,of a monolithic school gious training, in the, years, system, then it wiH be time 10 ahead, and because the work of

abandon on some levels, however the Confraterni·ty is dependentreluctantly, many treasured ele- in great measure on the intelli­ments of. American education gent' and dedi~ted service ofwhich have served so well the the laity."

Msgr. McDowell called forRepublic and our American way continUed reassessment of theof life."

Increasing .Numbers ' traditional education that, heMsg'r. McDowell said the im':' said, the past decade has indi-

cated contains serious defects inpossibility of meeting ever it,l- form.creasing enrollment demands In

Catholic schools must be facedend alternatives supported.'He urged absorbing small

schools into district ventures, in­creasing Confraternity of Chris·,tian Doctrine religion classes,and modernizing educationalmethods. '. "Under present circumstances

the expansion of Catholic 'schoolsat the rate which has been rou-'tine during the past decade ap·pears to be imposible;" Msgr.McDowell said. ,

Lack of Personnel'"The lack of personnel, the

ilapid 'and sOm'etimes unreason..able increase in state require­ments, and the mounting cost ofeOnstruction and operation read­'ilY explain this situation •••

"The number of children un­able to attend Catholic schoolwill- continue to increase. Theserealities must be faced," he said,

,Doting that many Catholic' par- "ents 'who' attended parochial'

, schools are "stuQned"-when theirChild cannot.

Secondary SchoolsWhere expansion is feasible,'

preference should go to second-'My over elementary schools tomeet the swollen elementary'school enrollments of the 1950'sthat now are pressuring the sec­ondary schools, he said.

'District or joint projects shouldbe given preference over parishventures, he continued.

ConfraternityMsgr. McD"well said the Con­

fraternity of Christian Doctrine,which teaches religion to chil­dren not attending Catholic

, sChools, must have, full partner­ship with the parochial schools.

. "Parents must come to know

45 W'orkers Leave'For Posts in Chile

NEW YORK, (NC) - Forty-. five Peace Corps volunteers left

here by ship for Valparaiso,Chile, and are expected to' ar­rive on Thursday, Oct. 12. '

The 29 young men and 16young women underwent aneight-week training, period at

, the University of Notre Dame.They will work for nearly twoyears among peasants and oper­ators of small farms in rural,Chile. '

Upon arrival in Chile, theywill receive additional trainingfor work with the Institute ofRural Education, a private non­sectarian organization, in suchfields as family education, hy.

'giene, home economics, smallfarming methods and commu­nity development. The Chilean,Peace Corps project is spon.,.sored by the 34 colleges anduniversities of Indiana.

7

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