06.26.58

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The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST.

F~II

River, Mass. Thursday, June Seeond Clau M.il V".I 2, No. 26 . Aatho.lseci .t F.II Rin•. M....

PAUL

26~

Pri~jJ.lf"

1958

J'RICE 10c

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Year

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SCHOOL FOR SISTERS:, Rt. Rev. Msgr. J. Joseph Sullivan, pastor of Sacred Heart . Parish, Fall River, blesses one of the classrooms in the building, left, recently purchased and renovated by the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts to provide additional facilities for their School of Education. -,

Catholic Action t-(ecessary 'For Community Spirit. WASHINGTON-Parochial Catholic action organizations are essential to create "community and parish spirit". within the massive urban parish, a lay publishing executive said here. vincent Giese, editor of Fides Publishers, Chicago, declared that est'ab­

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PAPAL BLESSING: Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, diocesan· director of the Legion of Mary, presents document of Papal Blessing to his pastor, Rev. E. Sousa de' Mello.. of OU'r Lady of Lourdes 'church, Taunton.

Visit to' Lourdes Highlights Legion of M~ry Pilgri.mage

By Patricia McGowan ..A general audience with the Pope?" Sorry, Father, there won't be any for the next few days." , Rev. Edward A. Oliveira and his pilgrimage group turned away in disappointment. Then their informant l~arned that they were mem- ceived, not in general ~ssembl;, bers of the Legion of Mary. but in a coveted semi-private That changed everything. audience. . Immediately arrangements As this incident indicates,' the were made for them to be re- Legion of Mary is.. close to the :.Turn to Page seventeen ..

Ordinary Closes All-Negro Plant As Unnecessary

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)­

An'all-Negro parish estab­ iished here in 1945 has been closed and its members have been· assigned to other parishes ~ ,the city by order of Bishop Emmett M. Walsh of Youngs-

Prelate . Blesses Mode,n Rectory At No. Attleboro . The histor~c roundho.use, a landmark in North Attle­ boro for more than a c~ntury, was officially replaced by a new $200,000 rectory at St. Mary Church Sunday afternoon. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. James J. Gerrard, Vicar General of the Diocese of Fall River, dedicated and blessed the two-story brick building before a gathering of parishioners, friends and priests. Priests of the parish will now have comfort and convenience, two "luxuries" which were mis­ sing in the roundhouse. TheYI have much more room in which to carry out. their duties and eomplete suites in which to live. : Located n~xt to. the beautiful Turn to Page Fifteen

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lishment of such groups is the Church's answer to the "sociological problem" which exists in the large, imperson­ al parish, He made the statement in an address to a two-day meet­ Rev. Antonio M. Cabral ing of the lay committee of the Ferreira' of the Society of national center of the Confra­ Jesus will sing his first ternity of Christian Doctrin"l. , More than 40 delegates from Solemn High Mass at 11 A. M. Sunday in Immaculate 36 U. S. dioceses attended the lay committee's seventh annual Conception Church, New Bed­ . meeting. Bishop Matthew F. ford. Father Ferreira was ordained Brady. of' Manchester, N. H., Episcopal Chairman of the CCD June 19 in Immaculate Concep­ tion Church, Montreal,' by Hi. lay committee, presided, Eminence Cardinal Leger, Arch­ Double Aspect bishop of Montreal. .'\ member Mr. Giese,' speaking on "The' . of the Province. of Portugal, he Parish Community," called at­ completed his studIes for the tention to the "double aspect" priesthood at the house r>f . Turn to Page Fourteen studies of the Society 10 Mont­ real. He had previously attended the University of Lisbon. T,he ,Most Reverend Bishop Born Aug. 25, 1927 at Oporto, has, granted a dispensation from Turn tq, Page Five the law of abstinence for' Friday, Independence Day, .Jul,.· 4.

Fr. Ferreira Sings First High Mass Next Sunday

Dispensation

Third Order of.. St. Francis· Nuns Mothers ·Mfillg at St. Marg's -' .

By, Patricia McGowan

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'~We'do everythi~g that nuns can do !"Thus Sister Grace: Pierre,' O.S.F., Superior

of St. Mary's-Home, New"Bedford, summed up the work of 'her cqmmunity, the' Sisters ,of the ThiJ,'d. Order of St. Francis. The con gregation numbers ·1,500 members th~ugh­ out the United States and abroad and directs schools, hospitals, .homes .for .children and the, aged' and cate~hetical ,'in W94, the Si~ters have given ;good' indeed. We. sensed' the centers, in addition to labor- . tho~sands of boys and girls the. home atmosphere' of the big red­ ·town. . . 'In 'announcing the parish clos­ in~ i~ 'the Negro and Indian neA~~es:h~i~~~~f~':::yi~ar:~ry brick lJuild,ing as soon as we ing, Bishop Walsh said"the need mISSIons. . entered it. Sister Grace' Pierre, lor the parish no longer' exists. In this Diocese, however; the seated in her office; ..was' soothing five-year-old Russell, who'd Negroes in the Youngstown Sisters are krlOwn for. their oper-. area have been attending Masses ation of St. Mary's Home. which managed to soak his new sneakers l'n a te'mptl'ng p~ddle. in parishes in the vicinity of receives children of all ages, from a , their homes, and membership at five year old pre-schoolers to "Can I have some candy, Sister?" St. Augustine dwindled steadily . teen-age high school . students. he whispered, artd~ like mothers .. more of the city's Negroes In charge of St. Mary's since everywhere, Sister completed Turn to Page Five its opening as a children's home Turn to Page Se\tenteen

'Scientist Marks Humility Need Of Space Age

HUNTSVILLE (NC)­ Man needs humility in the " face ·of scientific achieve­ ments like earth satellites, nof idolatry of his accom­ plishments. . This is the view of Wernher v9n Braun, former German scientist credited. by many with leading the development of the 'Army's successful satellite­

launching Jupiter C. rocket.

He makes no secret 'of his be­ . lief. that technological advances have pinpointed more than ever man's need for "ethical guid­ ance." . Turn to Page Sixteen

President of Philippines Praises

Educational Legacy of America

Asks Serrans to Renew Vocations Effort to Offset Secular Apathy

CHICAGO (NC)-Bishop John K. Mussio of Steuben­ NEW YORK (NC)-Hailing American aid to Philippine ville has called on delegates to the 16th annual Serra Inter­ education since 1901 as this country's greatest legacy to national convention 'to renew their efforts in fostering the islands, President Carlos P. Garcia of the Philippines, religious vocations to offset the apathy of. Catholics con­ said the foundations for that achievement had been laid taminated by secularism. . three centuries earlier by lca . h a d a goo d f oun d a t·lOn on press disappointment when a the Catholic Church. . which to base that" system, and The Ohio Ordinary em- talented young man goes to the phasized corruption of Cath- semimiry. Their unspoken Speaking at Fordham Uni- that foundation was laid by the olic spirit by a secular thought is: 'Such a waste of versity, where he received church, which for more than­ eominunity is "the real tragedy brilliant talent.' FATIMA CHAPLAIN: an honorary degree from Jesuit three centuries brought to us of our time." "There 'is not an inconsid.erFather Laurence J. McGinley, the benevolent influence of the Father Nicholas J. Bonet­ Labeling the secularized at.., able n~m.ber of Catholics," he Fordham president, the Philip- Christian' Faith. titude of the community as "a added, "who believe that their sky, a Russian prince by pine' leader said U. S. soldiers The work of those early Benedict Arnold to the spirit- responsibility toward vocations birth and brother of the late had been the. first public school soldier-teachers, he' added, ual aspirations of youth," the ends with their dropping a coin Alexander J. Bonatt of Fall teachers in the years after the "mainly accounts for the demo­ Bishop deplored the negative at- into the collection basket for Rfver, has arrived in Fatima ceding of the islands to the U.S. cratic ideology which has so titude of some Catholics toward seminary support." .. . .. by Spain at. the end of the effectively won the masses of lOeligious vocations. Pointing out that "the 'r~ad' to take over his n~w post Spanish-American War. our peeple and which has made "It is not strange,": be· said,f9ced by vocations i~ th~s mo.derD 'ehapl~in ~t Blue Army. . In" esta'blishing its schools, . them spurn the blandishmenta ... bear. &Orne ,Catholica Ut-. . _ TurD fe P.....Twel. .· , , -'" ..·beadquarters;. NC Photo.' President· 'Garcia 'said, "Amer-" . Turn to Pace Sixteea

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2 .Thurs,.,-THE ANCHOI 26, 1958

Vatican ~I!'e~ate RequestsPu~lic To Promote Wholesome ·Movi'es

June

PARIS (NC)-The education pressed' in the language proper of public opinion is a necessary to the film,'" lie said. part of promoting wholesome Make Choice and. artistic motion pictures. He' added that a healthy pubMsgr. Angelo Dell'Acqua,. lic reaction "must be preserved, Substitute Vatican Secretary against the deleterious effects' of State, said in a letter to the of certain propaganda which ti­ International Catholic Film Oftillates passion and morbid curifice: . osity. It must be formed by wide- ' "It is a qu~stion of importly publishing and judiciously ance because in order to assure presenting the nioral appraisal the success of morally sound of films. This, latter is one of film, and hence to encourage! the capital tasks of the i1ation~1 producers to persevere in that Catholic film,office in each

path, it does not suffice that the cou'}try." film 'be appreciated by a select The. Monsignor concluded by group. It is necessary,that pub-' urging on behalf of His Holiness lie opinion come out in its favor Pope Pius XII that movie goers, and that it be pleasing to the "who by purchase of each entry crowds who daily fill the moving ticket, as if by a voting ballot· picture theaters." make their choice between good

Vicious Circle and bad films," think' carefully . The Vatican o'fficials sald that of,their serious responsibility. this is a question, which should interest producers' the'mselves since. they have f?und the cine­ ma industry threatened by the, TO OPEN HOTEL FOR PRIESTS: The Congrega­ development of tel.evision. He. On Mon'day, wheri summer tion of _tne S.acerdotal Fraternity will soon open its first added that there has been a session students enroll' at the vicious circle betWeen producers JOUlidation in the United. States, at St. Louis, Mo., where it Sacred Hearts School 'of Educa­ and ,public opinion!' will administer a 'hotel for ret~red priests to be Qpehed 'by tion, Fall River, they" will find , "When' one co~sidets the pub­ new facilities awaiting them; Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter, for the St. Louis Archdiocese.. lic's reception' of . a new' film," I In preparation for the summer Arriving to make. plans for the establisltment wer~ Father ·he said; "it, seems at first that I ' classes; a newly purchased there is a reciprotal and almost building at t!J.e corner of Rock. Albert R. LaFleur, C.F.S., (right) who will be sup~rior of the hotel, and Father JosephA. Bergeron, C.F.S., Rome, irresistible influ~nce between and Prospect Streets; Fall River,­ ,pubiic opinion,' which sanctio'ns w'as blessed by Rt. Rev. Msgr." superior general of the congregation. NC Photo. a production, and the produc­ J. Joseph Sullivan, assist~d by tion, which, flatter~public'opin- Rev. Daniel F.' Shalloo.- for, 20 ion.'" I years professor of religion and' .' I ~ To break the cir,cle and bring ethics at the School of~Educa­ abolit' good films ithe spectator tion..' , MONTREAL (NC) 7" Persons do not degerierate into. ,a cam­ Now 'in its 25th' year, 'the should be educated by being who attempt to fight th,e spread . paign where the elimination. of taught ·to savor tr~e values ,ex-' school, conducted by', the Reli­ of indecent iiterature' can ~xobscenity is merely.a pretext." gious ·of' the Holy Union of the' 'pect "ridicule, sarcasm and false:Cardinal. Leger assert~' that Sacred Hearu, exclusively for hood" from. their opponents, modern society has been, "in­ Religious, is a.ffiliated with the Paul' Emile Cardinal ,Leger, toxicated' by immoral, Jiter~­ Catholic University of America. Archbishop of Montreal has said. ·:ture." Since its opening, nearly. 700 "The campaign agai.ost obscen~u~t· Begun to Fight NICE Priests .traveling Sisters representing 14 religious ity requires "'heroic action," through this jewel city of the orders have" been enrolled in its ,Cardibal' Leger declared. "One "Under the false pretext of French Cote d'Azur will never courses. does not with 'impunity shake. protecting the freedom of, ·.the have to worry abOl'.tt the.oppor­ The new building; St..Joseph's up a nest of wasps or of vipe,:,s," :preSs," he declared "an immoral tunity of say~ng Mass. Hall, will provide additional; ,he saJd in his address to" more .literature can be edited and sold, . Archbishop Rem'ond of Nh:e classrooms' for the SchoQI of than 75,000 members' 'of the -which by. its obscenity, provoca­ has just blessed chapel unaer­ Education, which al~h()ugh in League of' the Sacred Heart, ,tive photographs, reports of neath the' customs' ,building at session year round, has a larger :gathered at the shrine of St. ~erimes, of murders, of the'fts aAd the Nice Airport that will be summer than winter enrollment.. Joseph's Oratoty to mark ,the suicides, corrupts,the,minds,and used by visiting priests an;iving Also, planned' for the School are 75th anniversary of, the organi- hearts of our peoples." , at or lea~ing from: the airport. elarged library'. facilities. A zation's founding. . The Cardinal recalled that All the visiting priests have to building' on - the ground'S of the Deserves Support 'opponents . of the, campaign do is to obtain the ikey from .an Provincial· Motherhouse, '520 Canada's Minister of Justice, against obsCenity had predicted office at the airport and they Rock Street, is being, c<mverted Davis Fulton, speaking to the that "our intervention would ean let themselves 'into a beau­ for < this purpoSe, and. will . be . League members pointed out come to nothing. Let them now t.fful new chapel. , . ready "for Fan- occupan,cy. that as long as assaults on ob- :r~alize that we have just begun , The simple altar 6f the chapel to fight." Courses offered .at the suwmer scenity "are aimed at the elimis surmounted· byl a colorful session of the School, to b~gin : ination of truly obscene pu1?licacn·t·· lClzed , C ard'InaI - L eger ceramic of Christ with the evan­ tions, the goal sought' deserves, Monday and end Aug. 8,include ,~·those scandalous men, who try, gelists on either side of Him. biology, 0 history of education" to be reached and the .campaign, with lame apology, to: present rhe figy.res were linspired by , educati~nal psychology; geogra­ merits all-out participation:" . "themselves, as good, Catholics, the early Roman, figures of , phy, English composition; a sur­ "However," ,he' continued, Christ and the saints ,and '~ : vey course iri' Engti'sl1 "iilerature• 'Iabusive or too, restrictive'cenwhi~e for the sake of. profit they :~re, ready ,to .employ t~e means .inay be classified a's "primitive ;' government,- music,· introduction sorship:must'be guarded,against. ,which Christian conscience con­ 'art." They are inspirational i,n I to philosophy, and logic. .' It . is above, al~ essential', that .,~dem,.nS"b,Y pubiisb,ing,' or, dil;1t.r,lb­ ~. .• .: ~';' ...... ;-.':'\A. ..... ~ .... -: .,,:.:-. : .:iheir simplicity', al\d spiritu~l these '·eflortsare not, motivated ~ffect. ." " Non~Cptllolic's by,personaldesigns or that they u~i~g inde.cent liteJ;atu~, ,,' : :.;: The e~a;lg~iistsare d,~pich~d with their symbols,. the four ,HOLYCROSS ACADEMY ~YRACUSE (NC)-An invi­ anim,als of the vision: of Ezechiel, Conducted by the .La~ty and under the figu~e of Christ ,tation to non-Catholic Ameri­ .Sisters of the Holy croSs LONDON (NC)-Greater I,lse cans to "take another look at is the Lamb carrying a Latin 535 Boylston Street th'e Catholic Church" !las been .of the laity and a more positive ,cross. . '. . , Brookline '46, MasSachusetts issued here by Bishop James J. ,exposition of Church doctrine :", The' ~Archbishop was assisted Navagh of Ogden'sburg, N. 'Y. ' are two great needs today for Resident and Day School for Girls .in the blessing of th:e chapel by , Grades 9-12 .Bishop Navagh said the world the reconversion of England. Canon Max d'Oreye; an official Affiliated: Cathqlic University is at the dawn of an age of open­ These points were stressed ,of the Diocesan. Cur' and a Acc~edited: 'in a report issued following ,a mindedness during which hu­ Canon of the Cathedral of Nice. New-England Association man institutions will be re-ex­ .two-day conference of 80 priests . 'Canon d'Oreye visit~d this Dio­ PHONE: School LO 6-8627 amined and reappraised. "This representing nearly every dio­ cese several years ago as a friend Convent 'BE 2-7419 and guest of Bishop Connolly the Church welcomes with open' Cese iii England and Wales and , several religious orders. who knew the Cano" "and his arms," he declared. family 'well when the Bishop' was studying at the l University of Louvain. .

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Relig,ious School Adds Facilities

Tells Indecent Liter~~ure .Fo~s' To Exp.ect Ridicule, Foisehood '

Dedicate Chapel At Nice ~irport

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;'Invite iTo·Appraise Church:

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

EIRE, FRANCE;

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June 2i-Our Lady bf ,Purga­ . . t~ry, New Bedford St. Mary, North 'Attleboro 'July 6-St. Franci~ Xavier, . '. Hyannfs' ',' I Holy Trinity, West Har..., , . wich ": " ":J'uly 13.,.-St. Joan oflArc, Or­ leans Ol1~ Lady of the IAs8U1"?P~ ~. tion Osterville.. . \.. ~ 'July 2(j~:::";St. HYra<;~rith,:,~e~ ",' ..... Bedford I' . . St. Mary, South"Dart::.' " St.·' Pl~~~lJ.x,·so~t)(~~i~:· '

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Legion of Decency The f6110wing 'films are to be added to: the lists in their _ spective classifications: Unobjectionable' for Genenl Patronage--Sierra Baron. Unobjectionable for Adult. and Adolescents - Thing That Couldn't Die. Unobjectionable for Adult&­ Key. Objectionable in Part for AD - Baby Face Nelson, Bonnie Parker StOIy, Dragstrip Girl, Dragstrip Riot, High School Confidential, Machine Gun Kel­ .ly, Mam'zelle Pigalle. , Condemned-Light AcrollS the ,Street, God Created Woman... '

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Church in En9Ia~d' Needs Active

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THE ANCHOR Second-class mail prJ'vile~es authorized at Fall River, ,Mass. Published every Thursday at '410 Highland: Avenlle, ~'all River, Mass., by the Catholic Prcss,ol the Diocese of (4"'alJ River. Subscription priee bi mail. postpaid $•. 00 pet ,ear.

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Mass Ordo FRIDAY - MasS of PrevioUl Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Second Collect for Peace; Common, Preface. SATURDAY St. Irenaeua. Bishop and Martyr. Double. Red. . Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect Vigil of SS. P~ter and Paul; Third Collect for Peace; No Creed; Com mOD Preface. "

'SV'NDAY-SS. Peter and Paul, :Apostles, and Fifth Sunday After Pentecost. Double of·1 Class. Red. Gloria; Second Collect Fifth Sunday After Pentecost; Creed; Preface 01. Apostles.

MONDAY-Commemoration' 01. St. Paul, Apostle. Greater Double. Red.. Mass ProPer;' Gloria; Second Collect St. Peter, Apostle; Third Collect for Peace; No Creed; Preface of Apostles. I TUESDAY Most Precioua 'Biood of' oUr Lord Jesul C~rist. Double of I ClaSs. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of the RoJ, CrosS. WEDNESDAY - Visitation . eI. the Blessed Virgin· Mary. Double of II ClaSs. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; SecOnd Collect SS. Processus ancl Martinian, Martyrs; Creed; ,Preface of Blessed Virgin. THURSDAY-St.. Leo II, Pop. . and Confessor. Simpie. Wh.ite. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for l»eace; No Creedi Common Preface.

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THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., June 26, 1958

Maryknoll Missionaries to Mark Founding Anniversary Sunday,

3

Stonehill Family Division Passes Halfway Mark

MARYKNOLL (NC)-Maryknoll, more formally the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America, will observe its 47th anniversary Sunday. Since the end of World War II; tne Society has doubled its membership I)which now nu~1?ers 1,624 prie~ts, b:QIn Hong Kong, ~a;YknOI~ers tl}.ers a~d semmarIans, Ill- are working in the most dense eluding a bishop and, 16 displaced-person area in the priests from the Fall River world today. With the influx

The final report meeting for the summer of Stonehill College Family Divis'ion took place last night with

Diocese. of Chinese refugees fleeing from $184,774 of a $325,000 fund goal Maryknollers from New Bedthe Red mainland, the population raised toward the Student Cen­ ford are Most Rev. Frederick A. of Hong Kong has tripled. The ter and Cafeteria now under Donaghy, Very Rev. David I. four well de~eloped Maryknoll 'construction. Rev. James J. Walsh, and Reverend Fathers parishes average 3,000 adult Sheehan, C.S.C., college presi­ John J. Considine, John J.Lawbaptisms a year. dent, is 'chairman of the family leI', John F. Lima, J. Ernest Korea Paradise division fund drive. Mailhot, Charles A. Murray,

'Fund-raising will continue in Japan continues to be a dif­

Edmund A. Toomey and John the fall under the direction of ferent mission area. Veteran J. Toomey. Rev. Thomas C. Duffy, C.S.C.. missioners have said that there Fall River members of the director of the college's $5,000,­ is probably no mission country Society are Reverend Fatheril 000 development program. in the world where consistant John M. Breen, William A Flet­ conversions are so d,ifficult., cher,oLeo J. Melancon. John E. Various chairQ1en reported Morris, Anthony J. PaUlhus and the folloWing towards their To reach the social-minded goals: Alumni, Rev, James V.

Thomas Plunkett. Japanese, Maryknoll is placing a AT MEEtING- 'FOR DEAF: Demonstrating "Full of Lowery, C.S.C., $23,031 toward

Rev. Joseph W. Regan is from strong emphasis on the social Fairhavli!n and Rev. Raymond H. Grace" in sign language ai-e, left to right, Rev. John Bosco a $32,000 goal; Clergy, Rev. Er­

apostolate-'particularly with the Kelley, recently ordained, from recently organized Good Shep­ Valente, OFl\'I, of Providence, R. I., at Our Lady's Chapel, nest P. Royal, C.S.C., surpassed $5,000 goal by $705; College Mansfield. herd Movement. Founded in New Bedford; Rev. James A. McCarthy of Holy Name ,the Staff, Miss B. Anne Thomas .of Maryknoll the movement, con­ Imprisoned or Expliled Church, Fall Rjver, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles St. Pierre, Jr., Taunton, surpassed a $2,000 goal His Holiness Pope Pius XII centrates on mass communication of Fall River. ' by $1,14.5. media to bring the message of has entrusted to Maryknoll the the Church to the Japanese care of millions of people living Faculty, Dr. John J. Reedy of people. Its most ardent disciples in the remote areas of Formosa, North Easton, surpassed a $2,125 are newly converted Japanese. Korea, Japan, Hong Kong; the goal by $389; Stonehill Guild, Philippines, Hawaii, Chile, Peru, Mrs. W. Leo Welch, Whitman. Accoi'ding to MarYknoll's'Su­ Bolivia, Mexico, Guatemala, and president, raised $8,000 toward perior General, Father John W. PORTLAND (NC) - In 10 idea of having men spend the Tanganyika in East· Africa. a $25,000 goal; House Mothers, Comber, war-torn Korea is the yea'rs the St. RosF Nocturnal night in prayer before the The first Maryknoll departure Miss Helen Derby, North Easton, missioner's' paradise for rapid' Adoration Society of the Port­ Blessed Sacrament during the group of four priests left for the surpassed a $3,000 goal by $182­ conversions. land archdiocese' has grown 40 Hours. missions of China 40 years ago. Parents,. Judge Beatrice Han­ "Th~ Korean people seem to from 65 members to more than The devotion was introduced 'cock Mullaney, Fall River. Each succeeding year, more and have a natural desire f,or relig­ 1,300 men. into the country in 1882. Mem­ more Maryknollers carried the raised $108,883 toward a $175.­ ion." Father Comber said. "Even The devotion was introduced bership in societies in the United 000 goal; students, Rev. William Gospel to China until villages thoug, the work is difficult here by the late Linus Fuller of States today is estimated at more and cities becMne a promising from a physical point of view, F. Gartland, C.S.C raised $3,006 Milwaukie, Ore. Sixty-five men than 100,000 men. toward a $12,000 goal; suppliers, inissionary harvest. it is rich in spiritual consola­ gathered for the first meeting Emery La Liberte, Brockton, But the Chinese communists tions."v of the society in 1948. ended, this brilliant era in Church. raised $9,7(j1 towards a $68,875 In the first year of membership New African Diocese history: ,nine years ago by rat­ goal grew from 65 to 547. By 1952 tling, down' the Bamboo Curtain. MONTPELIER (NC) - More Since 1952, Maryknoll ,has there were about 1,000 members The 500 American missioners Vermont senatorial scholarships been in charge of six parishes and' new societies were formed working in China-200 Mary­ were granted nand used in the WASHnTGTON (NC) -The on the island 'of Luzon, in the, in the Portland suburbs and sev­ knollers among the~-were 1957-58 school year than at an,. U. s. Court of Appeal:; has under Philippines. Two months ago eral towns in .wester:n Ol'egon. either imprisoned or expelled. time since the program was advisement the legality of the it was agreed to take over an ,The idea for the worldwide With the release from a Red inaugurated. Jesuit Fathers' Loyola Univer­ undeveloped area of some 3,200 nocturnal adoration societies prison earlier this month of the One hundred and thirty-two sity of the South operating com­ square miles of the Province of originated in 40 Hours devotions last two American priests, q!1ly scholarships went to students at­ mercial television Channel 4 in Davao, on Mindanao Island. at ,the Church of Sancta Maria one American missioner remains tending St. Michael's College New Orleans. Wit~ the growth of.th~ Church in Rome. In 1810 Father Gia­ in China, Maryknoll's Bishop while students of Trinity Col­ throughout Maryknoll's Africome, Sinibaldi conceived the James E. Walsh. lege received 5. can mission in Tanganyika, the In all, 297 of the 300 schOlar­ In Other Areas Holy See created two dioceses. ships of $200 each were used. Restricted from all mission In October, 1956, Father Edward In past years a dozen or more activities, Bishop Walsh says he A. McGurkin, 'M.M., of HartGRAND RAPIDS (NC)- It is have "gone begging." Each of will remain in Shanghai as long ford, Conn., was consecrated the the respol'lsibility of the laity: to Vermont's 30 state senators as possible, to bolster the morale first bishop of Shinyanga; and make Christ live again in ,the awards 10 scholarships. of the Chinese Catholic, who are, nine ,months later Father John world, Archbishop Leo Binz of suffering a ,persecution. de­ .J. Rudin, M.M., of Pittsfield,'· Dubuque told the Knights of scribed as "one of. the most' Mass., was appointed first bishColumbus State convention. effective faced by the Chlirch op of Musoma. ",Wherever a Christian goes, ill the past 2,000 years." "SPECIAL MILK Elecfrical On this side of the world, in there Christ must go. When­ Although expelled from China, From Our, Own

Central and South America,',,' ever a Christian speaks 01' acts, Maryknollers formerly stationed more than 200, Maryknollers"are, then Christ must,spel\k'and act." " . Te'sted Herd" '.

there are, busy in other' mission working in Yucatan,Guatemafa;~' he- said:' , aceas. , ' ,'" " ,Chile, Peru,' and Bolivia·;.IJ;1 these,;, A~hnet, 3~457 Tne Archbishop, also, empha-' , During thll past few years, 58 .', Catholic countries, as. ·in most" .size$l '~he need for , th,oroiJgh 464 Second St. China-exiled missioners' were" • Special: Milk , of Latin, America: iheChurch 'training ,'and 'formlltionoflay 're-assigned to' the fringes of the • H~mog~nized Vito D Milk 'is 'stricken with an,-appaUing : apostles. He ,3aid~, "you must ~ FALL RIVER Bamboo Curtain. on the island • Buttermilk shortage of priests. ' ' " ' ,'interested in' forming yoursel\res .f Formosa: As a result of their .,Tropicon9 Oral1ge Juic, A highlight of the past year and in helping ~o' train otheri experience on the mai~~and; th~ OSborne 2-2143 ., CoffeeandChoc. Milk was the appointment of Msgr; as a' reserve force of "competent priests and ,Brothers have joined • ,Eggs ..:.., Butter with other mission' societies in Edward, ,L. ,Fe'dders, ,M.M:, of and' willing lay' apos,tles, 'a group, Convihgton, ,Ky., as'prelate Nul- ',of'Yilling and able helpers to making the island one of the lius of Juli, a new Maryknoll .participate in the Bishop's work, fastest growing missionary re­ 'territory along the shores of which is Christ's own work, of gions of modern times. Lake Titicaca, in Peru. building up his Mystical Bod:r., which is the Church." Authorized' by St. Pius X

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At the major seminary here, 48'American men were ordained to the priesthood in June by His Eminence Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York in the new Maryknoll chapel. The following day, 51 Maryknoll priests and Brothers received their formal mission assignments at the 41st annual departure ceremony, in the pres­ ence of 5,000 relatives and friends. At the request of the Ameri­ can hierarchy, St. Pius X author,.. ized in 1911 the establishment of a seminary to train American men for mission work in foreign, landl,l. In the first year the society o MEDALIST: Dr. Win- was located temporarily at Haw,.. throp Peabody, 'a leading au- thorne, N. Y., b,ut since 1912 ~he thority on chest diseases, natiol')al headquarters and major seminary of ,Maryknoll have has bee'n awarded the cov- been at Maryknoll. N.Y" 35 etedmedal and 'certificate ,of ' miles north, of New York, 'City Award of the American Coi- on the Hudson River,higl!. abOve lege of Chest Physicians. Dr. the village of Ossining; Peabody, a native of Wake:. '. :' The,·Catholic Foreign Mission field, Mass., is a parishion- ' ,SoCiety' of America, was found.., .. 'of Blesse'd Sacrament ed b,. two American diocesan , "priests, Father, James A .. Walsh Church;W~hi~gton" D~C~ '(l3~J7.,..1 936) ,andtather Thomu NePho~; .. ,I'. Pric~_,(1860-1li11~): ' ,:'

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Bala'nci~g the Books

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I

Saints and Our Child.ren Is . - , Useful -lGuide for Parents ,

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs.,,,June 26, 1958

4

Says Scienc~ Helps ,In Other Studies

By Rt. Rev.. Msgr. John S. 'Kennedy , Mary Reed Newland has writte:n some of the best books, on the Christiap tlpbringing of children. (She is ;;u~o one of the most luCid and entertaining speakers on this vital 8ubject.) . Her latest' publication in the category is .'fhe ·Saints and 06r Children ished' or 'lost through emo'tional (Kenedy. $3.95i). It shows problems too deep to be resolved , parents how the' lives of the, without specialized help." saints can be used as a guide

She cites. the estimate that one

DAYTON (NC) - "Children read, write and spell better in' schools where science is well taught," Sister Mary Aquinas, the "flying nun" of Green Bay•. believes. "If a teacher can teach science well, the child will come to like school better and the enthusi­ asm arising from his studying of science carries over' into the three R's'" the Wisconsin nun declared. "Johnny can't read," she' said, "because he doesn't want to read. Once you make him want to read, half your problem . ' solved." Although she is in her sixties, Sister Mary Aquinas keeps.busy conducting science workshops a~ound the country f~r elemen­ tary school teachers, and even manages to get in a bit of flyin, time occasionally. ' , A member of the Franciscan Sisters of Christian Cha'rity, she became famous when she organ- . iZ~ fying classes for young. men about to enter the service in the early' days of World War n.

/ in giving children's lives genu­ . out of 10 children in the U~it,e.d ine Christian oriehtation, integ-. States is emotionally disturbed. -rity, and depth. " She stres~es the fact that 'effec­ The book is tive help can be given, ,and also divided " into the fact that failure to provide two sections. such help has ~errible" some­ The first com­ times' disastrous, consequence~ p~ises fairly ex­ not only for the individual but NEW PROPAGANDA PRO-PREFECT: His Emi­ tensive studies also for families and fQr society nence Gregoire Pierre XV Cardinal Agagianian, Patriarch of 'five saints as a .whole. of modern times She alludes to numerous theo­ of Cilicia, of the Armenians, center has' been named Pro­ of, Abraham, ries (Freudian; etc.), b~t seems Prefect of the Sacred Gongregation for the Propagation of and of the holy to subscribe to no one of these the Faith, the post to ·which Cardinal Stritch Q.f Ghicago Family. in particular. Instead, she takes was app<;>inted prior'to his recent death in R?me. The Car- . . The second is from each, what she judges to dinal is shown with Msgr. Paul Tanner, left, of the NCWC a gathering' of

be sound. utterances by,

, Capital emphasis is put on the· and Archbishop Louis Batamian,right, Patriarchal Vicar or stories about" many saints, role of, parents. Although it is ,to the Cardinal.NC Photo. . which either are enlightening for dubious that parents are respon­ parents or can inJtruct and in- ~ sible for all emotional problems, ~ire childrer: . m , children, ,they 'are involved "The teaching and correction' in m o s t . . and conversation i of Christian' "It is the anxious parent," says • UIC. parents," says Mrs.' NewlaOd, Mrs., Moak;' "who tea<;hes his. BALTIMORE (NC)-The they graduate annually beUer without resorting to the RU8­ "ought to lean h~avily on the ' child anxiety the insecure paren~ United States will be setting than twice I;\S many as we do. aian m9del of central control.· Dints for help. This is how saint whC? fails to give his child the \".. They train 10 times as many More for Youth stories are best u1sed: to make secureness of direction his char-' the stage for commlttmg tecbnicians as'we do'" He called for this country .. a point, to wann I.the heart, to acter needs in order to develop 'national suicide a generation Avoid Same M~stake face the problem of scientifie stir up a hunger.'" and grow." She strikingly in­ from now" u~l~ss it, ~rts . to "This trend is indeed .disquiet­ kaining, . and particularly the The essays in th~ first part of stances the various ways in which do !l10re t? stImulate~unouslty iog," 'Mr. DeWitt continued, "for education of youth, on its own the book are thoroughgoing. The paren.ts contribute to emotional and. learnmg, a~ong Its. youth. the quality 'of professional' edu­ terms and in accordance wiUt author has not beJn satisfied to disturbances, not a fe,w of them Nlchol~s DeWitt, associate at cation in the Soviet Unio.n today its requiremerits~ skip through popu'lar biograph­ innocent-appearing but in fact the Russian. Res~arch Center of is at least equivalent, if not at "We have come to realize,· ies, snap up a few·lrandom facts, deadly. Harvard U~lver~lty, decla.~ed .at times superior, to that offered De concluded, "that unless we and gabble a 'superficial com­ Parents are also the central Loy~la Umversl~y that while in this country." start to do' more. for our young., mentary. ele91,ent in ~he. curi?g, of chil­ ou~ Ju~gment sh~ts, the ~ntral . But, the weak spot in the Rus­ sten today to stimulate their Work is Substant,ial . dren s emotional' disturbances, obJectI~e ~f the' Kr,:mhn----:-of sial! stress on scientific traini.ng, curiosity and learning, both ia f Rather', she has begun by do­ ~~sld"Moakh'dte~tils tfhel.w~rk ndo furthermg ItS power, mfluence he stated is that all of Russia's' and out of the classroom * * • . '1 t d I If d' ,;.. 1 psyc Ia ns s, 0 c IOICS a and. direct. control o\l'~r, the gains hav'e been attained "at the ·we will be setting the stage for , ng a grea .ea. ~ rea Ing,as schools and other institutions, d t f d t n the lengthy bIbhography attests. ti .' g h" th f t. nd es I~y 0 ~en a~, na 10 s

expense of what we call general committing national suicide a What she has read she has pon­ S owm ow ey unc !on ,a remams the same.

education and liberal ,arts, the «eneration from now." de d fIll' what they can accomphsh, but. World, Dominati_

humanIties and the lIOCial re '. care u YI ana.yzmg, she keeps coming back to par~ aearchm~ for key factors. ents and the family. ' . Mr. DeWitt, a native of Ruso: sciences." She has taken l'lJP ~et'pen" . ' sia, came -to the United States Mr: DeWitt said that the only when she has worked out, The focal pom~ of both t~at- in 1947. United States should not make views which are: cogent. And "ment"and pre;~ntIon of e~otI~mDeploring what he called the same "mistake, but sbould, always she has in mind the situ~l disorders, she. mamtams, this country's attitude Df re-' ;'promote foremost public untJer­ ation and needs of pai'entsand should be the family '.' . all garding Russia ~s a "menacing standing of the issues inV6lved children in our oWn society in ou~ .p~anni~g", in: terms. of new monster". at one. time and a our own time. faclhtIes, m wider, keatment "peaceful and palatable com­ CITIES SERVICE

. .Just as it is customary in euloprogra!'"s, in preventive wor.k petitor" at another, Mr. DeWitt DISTRIBUTORS

gies for priests to: pay a con- shou~d be based o.n !he, ::'~XI- stated· that education is playing ventionally' worded tribute'to "mum use of that prmclple. a vital role in furthering the Gasoline

their parents, so is it' the usual Whether or not one agrees Soviet objective of world dom­ thing to speak in a! general way with all of 'the author's opinions, ination. '. Fuel "Ond Range

of the influence of the parents one will find her book immense­ "The Russians today outnum­ of saints. I ,ly informative. It certainly l?er us' in, engineers· and scien-' But M~s. Newlan'd is at pa-ins achi~v,es' its sta'ted primary pur­ tists * * * medical doctors ** * to discover in pr~cisely ~'hich P9se:. "to help parents of dis­ agricultural ahd bilogi"cal science OIL BURNERS way' parental instruction and turbed children' to understand specialists," he, asserted. ' "In SUMIAER SCHOO~. example worked~ in the cases both the, nature ,of the problem ,engineering and science fields . G.'( BOILER: BURNER UNITS which she considet-s. Thus 'she with which they 'are Gonfronted JULY· 7 to. AUGUST 15

gives her reader~ SQ1nething and the means which cal'! be Prineeton: "The probability' of 45 weeks - 2 hours, doily

for prompt delivery specific and ~bsdntial to' get used to correct it." . life originating from accident is call WY 5-7024 or write .for

their teeth into andl digest. And it will move others to be comparable to the probability & ;Day & Night Service Again, she has a happy way sympathetic and helpful in any of the Unabridged Dictionary Bulletin 'luraI Bottled Gas Service of coming to gripsrwith funda­ encounters with (luch children. r6sulting from an explosion in menta Is. In writing10f St. DpmScientists Testify a printing shopt ., 61 COHANNET ST. I ~nic.Savi?, for example, she says, . After qualifying for the ProAnother writer observes, "We TAUNTON It l~ pOintless to t~1l ~r ex~ct 'testant ininist~y, .John Clover see too much, evidence in con­ Ameboro - No. Attleboro, a child to do a Chqst-hke thlOg Monsma made a career of, writ­ temporary American life indi- · 9 0 8 Purchase Street. Taunton if he has no kn<jlwle?ge n~r ing and broadcasting. He has eating that the American form New Bedford ..ery real love, of Christ. ThiS now edited a book called The of democracy is being under- / ~-------J , must be carefully cUltivate~ b.YEvidence of God in an Expand­ mined. It is being'slQwly secular- ~-==.:==:.:======_..!::=============~ pa~ents;, Love,come~ before Iml­ ing Universe (Putnam. $3.75)' ized and deprived of its religion tahons. . . . ! • which brings together the views and spiritual foundation . . . And 10 dlSCUSSll1g St. Maria of 40 American scientists on God The spiritual capital -and the Goretti, she says th+t when par­ and religion. fruits of Christianity cannot sur­ ents undertake to ttCach chastity, The contributors each of ­ vive if their roots are destroyed, "we cannot start "lith chastity. whom has written ~ few pages or' mutilated, or left unculti­ ~e stf~t ~it.h t~e .love of. God;: represent practically the entire vated." and With domg H:s w.lllli~ all ~hlOgs". ranges of the physical sciences. There is nothing new in this ~arents Will find ,10 thIS book They unanimously testify that, in book. Its force derives from .its ~lllted~ns~ers to: many ques­ whatever field is th'eir specialty, ,bringing together the witness to tions which stump them llS they be it scanning the vast heavens God of many sciences. • 'GENERAL TIRES • DELCO BA"ERIES strive to fulfill th:e.ir du.ty to or studying the tiniest forms of • PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

head and help their children life thev have encountered ir­ fAU'RIVER NEW'BEDfORD -,-'HYANNIS - NEWPORT

- toward .sanctit Mr~. ~ewland's ref~tabl~ evidence of the ex­ suggestIOns are n;J.YrJad, un­ 'istence of. God. hackneyed, and admirably prac­ Some of them point out that tical. i

science ~annot directly deal with Disturbed Child

God. But in the realm which is Helen Moak, author of The the province of science there are Troubled Child (Holt $3.50), is ,abundant indications that God the mother of an Iemotionally must exist. _ 'disturbed child. As the result Without Him it is impossible of her experienc~ in pealing with to ac<;ount for' the universe; som~ , this child and seekil'\g .treatment contend. Repeatedly instanced is Thomas F. Monaghan Jr. .for her, she has gained insight .the marvelous order of the uni­ into a vel'y serious problem and verse, as well as the balance Treasurer • BANQUETS • WEDDtNGS '~. PARTIES much information as to what in nature, the wonders of bodily 'is being done abou1t it in our functioning, the inner man, and • COMMUNION BREAKFASTS 142 SECOND STREET /COuntry, and has formulated so forth. Matter and chance can­ criticisms and suggestions worthy not fully explain these; mere , FALL RIVER ,of sober scrutiny. ,,' accident is unthinkable. 'There 1343' PLEASANT ST. fAll RIVEI "These are the children we 'must be an Intelligel1ce behind .' call troubled or emotionaily dis­ it all. , > OSborne ·.3-7710 OSborne 5-7856 turbed," she writes, "children One writer quotes the words ,whose potentialities ;are dt:mio­ of' Pl'ofessor Edwin 'Conklin ~f

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NEVER AN IDLE MOMENT: Giving their charges the loving care otherwise denied them, the Franciscan Sisters at St. Mary's Home, New . Bedford, are shown performing the daily tasks that aid th,e youngsters to liveonormal lives in a large "family." At left~ Sister Walter Josephine lends a helping hand at the wash basin to reluctant 'Paul Rusin, while J:immy Grant (left) and Alfred Pontes (right) ,await their tum. In second

Aim to Overcome . Sh' SIster ort~ge

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) The national chairman of the Sister Formation Conference liays the shortage of Sisters in the United- States has come about because "today's needs are much more multiplied than . 7esterday's." Mother Mary Philothea 01. the Sisters of Charity of Providence in Seattle noted "it UI certain that we have more voeations to the religious life than ever before in hilltory, but ill proportion to the population increase we have an increasingl,. dimfnishing supply." "Today's discoveries 'in the fields of medicine have opend new vistas-and new people are needed to further the explorations in medical research. Like­ wise, in the field of social work -new techniques are developed to meet new needs and new per­ ~nnel are needed for new tech­ niques. There just aren't enough Sisters to go around." Professional CaJlin~ But the Sister Formation Conference__an organization of American sisterhoods studying ways to. strengthen theprofes.ional and spiritual preparation .f Sisters-will help solve the YQCation shortage, Mother Mari Philothea said. The confere~ce believea that'

left photo Lorraine Roderick smiles ':Good .Night" to Sister Margaret Francis. Russell Roderick in second right photo"is ready to take off into outer space with the aid of Sister Josita. At rigbt Sister "Grace Pierre, Superior, accompanies the vocal trio of Sharon Roderick, Donna Boyd and Irene Roderick. . ..,

Continued from Page ODe the job of" comforting him by producing a piece. Russell disposed. of, Sister showed us around the shining building, "How do you keep it so tidy'?" we queried, thinking of the havoc only one or two children can create and refleeting that 80 boy~ and gira lived here. "The children help with all the work" she said~ "E:ven 'Russell?" "Especially Russell!' He . loves to dust." The children are given different work assignments each' month, Sister explained. The older girls help with ironing and kitchen chores, the boys have charge of the big dishwasher. and are also excellent floor scrubbers and waxers. But there's lots of time for the fun .of childhood. We saw . Yl>ungsters absorbed in TV, a shouting crowd in the big play­ ground, and a. musical group around a piano. Summer vaca­ tion will bring trips to Lincoln Park, swimming parties, camp­ ing, and a gala day at Fenway Park, said Sister Grace Pierre. . And ali year round special treats are provided. by New Bedford organizations, and. especially by the Home's auxili-

shelf over-looking each' dormiNot only did the triplets have I TOLEDO (NC) _ A new tory was .a, whole collection of them, but they spread through other dolls; in fact, we've never the Home, and those particular minor seminary of the Society seen so. many dolls in one place children 'will be long remem- of the Divine Word, situated on a 374-acre tract near sub­ as at St. Mary's, They overflow bered! the dormitories into the halls, More and more impressed by IUrban Perrysburg has been dedicated by Bishop 'George J. recreation rooms, and even the the order maintained in such a Rehring of Toledo. The new kitchen. large group, we visited the wash­ Children attend school at the rooms with their bouquets of seminary will accommodate 50 Home' through eighth grade, toothbrushes, peeked intO the students of high school age. then go to high school outside: elosets with each child's clothes ,Father Lawrence G. Mack, A school day begins at 6:30, neatly sec~ioned in drawers and Divine Word Missionaries pro­ with most of the - children aton hangers, and glimpsed the vincial, said a boy who goel tending 7 o'clock Mass, In sum- inviting library. from the eighth grade to the Lo v,e an d C are. new minor seminary begins 15~ mer time, however, the schedule is relaxed, and tbe children Ele,ven. ~Isters . su~ervIse St. years of preparation for ordi­ may sleep later. At 7:30 in the Mary s giVIng theIr . lIttle guests nation in the society which haa evening bedtimes begin for the the love and ~are cIr~umstances missions. in 31 countries. littlest children, and by 9:30 all have otherWIse demed them. are in bed after a busy day which .Th ' ey. bel ong t 0" 8t ' .A n th on~ ' s may have included,for the girls, ProvInc: of the ~hIladelphla special instruction in cooking, FoundatIon of the SIsters of the knitting, and crafts, and, for the Third Orde.r of ~t. Francis, which boys, training in sports. Both was orgamzed' 10 1855 by Ven. boys. and girls learn ballroom John~. Neuman':l' C,SS.~., then JENNEY GASOLINE dancing. the :'3lsh~p of PhIl~delphIa. . Supper. preparations were un­ GIrls Int~rested In .the vaned min. ork of t~IS commumty are ~d­ der way as we visited the kit383 ROCKDALE AVE. chen and one of the pretty help­ Vls:d to diSCUSS the matter WIth NEW BEDFORD ers was indulging in that favorth~Ir .confessors and make ~pite of teen-agers, an after-school ~hcah~n or request further Insnack. Somewhat impeded by a ormatIOn from Reverend Moth­ bottle of soda and a Dagwood er 'General, Our ~adY of Angels Convent Glen RIddle Pa style sandwich, she was arrang-. ' .,. ing platters of salad under the watchful eye of Sister' Cook.

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MILWAUKEE (NC) - The' Speculations of. physical scien­ tists are closer today to the thinking of St. Thomas Aquinas than at any time in the last two eenturies,' Dr. Henry Margenau, nuclear physicist, has contended. Dr. Margenau, Yale Uoi­ Yesity professor and a nu­ elear physicist there, is the author of "Thomas and Physic. M 1958: A - Confi~ation," a pocket-size, hard cover book' published here by the Marquette University Press: The work U1' based on the 1958 Aquinas Lec­ ture delivered earlier this year

before the Aristo~elian Society of Marquette University. "The. comparison of present .cientific· methodology with those aspects of Thomas' system that are 'applicable to science UI more favorable today that at

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ary, the Infant of Prague Guild. As indicated by the teenEach Guild member "adopts" ~ ager's snacking, the youngsters child, remembering birthdays lead normal lives as far 'as posand Christmas and. visitinC the sible, said Sister Grace Pierre,

bo,. or girl each Dlonth. with the average stay at the

b,. raising the standards within . 'How Pret~:r' Home being two to three years.

religious life, more young people. "'How pretty!" was our in- But problems come kiflg-size in - will be challenged to seek their' ,Yolunt~ry e.xclamat~on when we 9Ucli a large family she eJ[­ ~ations. t h e r e . ' . 1s.' d onna t·ones, . lI8 w the l·ttl plained. Last year for' instance I e gu , "Today's youth is generous" ~ach wit~ a different· color . triplets came to 8t. Mary.'s 'f~ idea~·-tic and eager for a chalacheme,' pmk, aqua, and blue, a short stay bringing with them lenge. Sister Formation will with walls, bedspreads, eurtains, an unwelc~me guest, measles.' make them see' in the religious and even radiators matching.. . life a real professional calling," Holy water fonts at the right • L1NGUICA Mother Philothea commented. height for small fingers were at each door and on every bed • CHOURICO lay its little owner's favorite • MORCELAS doll or stuffed animal, ready At Grocers - Super Marketll for night-time cuddling. On a Continued from ,Page One Portugal, Father Ferreira is the .an of the late George and Mrs. Cabral Ferreira. He, has two listers and three brothers, one of whom is also a member of tile Society of Jesus.

Divine Word Society Opens Ohio Seminary

Franciscan. Nuns Mother Many at St. Mary's

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Uncatholic Catholics Some of the recent college commencement and' bacca­

laureate talks are well deserving of reading and study:

At times Catholics can be very uncatholic when, it

eomes to appreciating the words of those not of our Faith. We are apt to dismiss anything saisI by one, who is not a Catholic as being unworthy of attention or ,foolish or unlearned. Our possession of God's truth, instead of making 118 humble and grateful, can often make us quite patron­ ising toward others. We can at times draw into a ghetto of our own making and look down very uncatholic, noses at those who are searching after truth and trying to serve it without the full benefit of the Faith. , President Pusey of Harvard, for instance, an intelligent and capable man, had some interesting words to say on religion in a secular university. Dr. Pusey fears a secularism 'which will produce a world in which, in the words of Moberly, "Some think God exists, some think not, some' think it is impossible to tell, and the impression grows that ' it does not matter." Dr. Pusey thinks that .it does matter, and with that sentiment we all agree. , The fact that the President of Harvard speaks on the importance of God in education should not receive a patron­ ising and casual glance from Catholics. We should be voci­ ferous in praise of such a position, obvious and funda­ mental as it seems to us. And we should praise the man who .peaks that way. '. All too often we seem 'fearful that one word of praise for a man means that we must agree with all that he thinks or says. Such an attitude is unworthy of us.

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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Jun'2 26, 1958

,Weekly Cal~ndar Of Feast ,Days

we

TODAY-SS. John and Paul, Martyrs., According to tradi­ tion, they were brothers and officials in the households of Copstantia, daughter of Em­ peror Constantine. They were put to death about 362 under .Julian the Apostate when they refused to worship pagan idols. It also is said that their martyr­ dOJTl led to the conversion of Terentianus, the ,judge who passed sentence on them. TOMORROW - St. Crescens, ,Bishop-Martyr. He lived in the first century, was a disciple of 51. Paul, 'and was mentioned by St. Paul in his writings. Tradi­ tion relates that he founded the See' of Metz in Germany. The Roman Martyrology holds that he was martyred under :.::r'.rajan about 100. SATURDAY - S1. Irenaeus, Bishop-Martyr. He was born in Asia Minor about 130, was edu­ cated by S1. Polycarp and was sent as a missionary into Gaul, where he was ordained by 'St. Pothinus, Bishop of Lyons. He became Bishop of Lyons in 177 The Family Clinic School days are over for a few months. and by his preaching converted For some, they are over for good. Many a college and much o'f France to the Faith. With a number of his flock, St. high school graduate has taken a last look at the degree or Irenae~s went to' a ~artyr's diplorria and is now taking more interest~ in~the want ads death under Septimus ,Severus than in the sport and social pages of the n~wspapers. . . hi 202. ,Others are congratulating themselves on getting , By Father John L. Thomas, S.J. SUNDAY-SS. Peter and Paul, through this year and now they are seeking summer jobs; Apostles-Martyrs. This feast Assistant Professor of Sociology Some high school graduates are experiencing a bitter, commemorates the martyrdom. St. Louis University of, the great Apostles. St. Peter, knowledge-the eminent position of senior came to clim~x Many.of us older family folks have aserious problem- , the first Pop'e, was crucified on' commencement day and now there is the let-down-for when aild how to call a halt in increasing the family. At with his heal downward near who is more insignificant than a college freshman-to-be-in­ 37, I'm married 15 years, and carry my seventh child. My the Triumphal Way at the order September. . .' strength and my husband's income would do nicely with of Emporer Nero. He was buried Those who have been graduated fromelementarj four or five-as it is, I'm ' in the Vatican. On the same day, gations, and consequently DO also under order of Nero, St. IChools are anticipating with excitement all the chang~8 constantly running out of. need for ~self-control. Paul, who earlier was one of the that will come with high school.,......a pick of subjects,. bought both. My husband considers Act 0: Love greatest persecutors of Chris-, and brought lunches, more freedom, they think. his impulses as' God-given Third, because we are not tians only to be miraculously Class day orators have finished saving the world and, and to be fully exercised-God controlled by instinct but pos­ converted, was put to death' by will provide! Can you give us sess the use of reason, we are the sword on the Ostian way. marching down the road of life. ~me guidance? constantly "putting asunder The teachers are getting a we11-deserved rest. MONDAY-Feast of the Com­ "Older family what God has joined together." memoration of S1. Paul, Apostle. But the Summer months can serve as an invaluable folks," as you Thf;! Creator meant conjugal TUESDAY - Feast of the part of the education process. And this for youngO and old call them, Mar- relations to be a mysterious, tba, are not the unifying act ~f love which He Most Precious Blood. This feast, alike. , would bless with new life under was established by Pope Pius IX, These are the months when young people should be· only ones who seem' confused proper conditions and which in honor of the Blood of Our encouraged to read all those worth-while books that they" about the rights would strengthen and support Saviour which was shed for the never had time for during the school year. And here the and duties of the marriage bond throughout redemption ,of mankind. . emphasis' is on the word "encouraged." Not ordered' or married. 1i f e. WEDNESDAY-Feast of the life. dri'vim but encouraged. This could even take the form of Questions reBut husbands and wives fre- Visitation of the Blessed Virgin. quently put asunder this mar- This feast was estabijshed by reading aloud to the whole family. Certainly "Treasure lated to t his problem arise velous unHY of shared, mutual Pope ,Urban VI and extended to .. Island" read aloud for 'a haJf hour or so in the evening could so frequently pleasure and love, either : by the Universal Church in the 14th be a source of delight for adults and children both., . that the most ignoring its dignity or empha- century by Pope Boniface IX in , These are the months when eighth-graders and those' helpful approach will probably sizing its' merely physical as": mem~ry of the visit of the in high school should make some serious effort with proper be to spell out a few pertinent ,peets. As a result, it loses its Blessed Virgin to her cousin, St. ' and interested guidance to decide what profession or -voca- principles and facts applicable' true significance and is used for Elizabeth. to all of them. ,Some of these selfish 'purposes. iion or work in life,they are suited for and want. . may appear to be self-evident Primary Purpose : 'What must be considered in this regard is not the dollar and repetitious, but experience 'Fourth, the marriage contract al~ne, but' the important aspects of satisfaction in one's has taught me they are not. confers equal conjugal rights work and happiness and, of course, salvation. ' NEW YORK" (NC) - Jesuit Adjustment Possible IIpon husbar'i'd and ~ife~ but the ' How often it happens that the only reason a hIghschool Father John LaFarge has scored First, husbands and wives dif- use of these rights is subordi­ student can give for taking a certain 'course is that a friend, fer considerably'}in" the ,nature nated to the primary p~rpose of plans to build another Levit.,., town housing project "segre­ has. .taken the sarrie course: High school' years are "not too of their reproductive drive, the marriage, which is the pro­ gated like the others" as inflam­ personal _ implications of its . creation and education Of chil­ young to consider the future. ". fruHful use for their future, dren. Briefly, these rights may matory and dangerous. , These are the months when fathers and mothers should and consequently in their atti- not, be used selfishly but for The noted author expressed try to plan affairs' for the whole family. That does not tudes toward the exercise of this thlt 'good of the couple and of hope that Rev Robert B. Mey­ necessarily mean family vacation-how many families can' faculty in marriage. the family. This requires self- ner of New Jersey in whose Likewise, wide individual dif- control and a Christian sense of state the project will be built, afford that? ,But it could very wen mean a famHy picnic or wiiI do something about it." ferences exist; while age, health, respon-·bility. , ride or outing of some sort-modest in scope and yet bring­ His reference was to a state­ family respon!iibilities, and so' Tl,Irning now to your "older 'ing all members of the family together in a common and forth, cause further variations. folks" problem, Martha, your ment made by William J. Levitt, happy en.terprise. Parents can reap rich rewards just by , Hence, chances are that few letter makes clear that your president of the company plan­ ning the town on a site' between seeing their children's .faces a's theyaU":explore a,' zoo couples will always reach per- husband has put his own inter­ pretation on Catholic teaching Camden and Trenton. The build-' together. What better way to give the' experience of'happi- feet agreement in this area. This does not mean that there about marriage. Of course you er asserted that there would be ness in the family? " need be conflict". Most couples must trust in God, but this trust no change of policy that made , Summer months are called months lof recreation and soon discover that they may not should not 'be a thinly disguised the first two', Levittowns-on that is exactly what they should be-a bu,ilding up of f~mily agree on a' great number of excuse for selfish indulgence ..L ong Island 'and in Pennsylvania, -"white communities." ~pirit, a developing of plans for the future, a wicJening of things; they can lear'n to adjust and lack of Chr\i1tian restraint. The Jesuit editor pointed to and adapt if they wish to sucI know he will' protest that mtellectual and cultural tastes. . " , restraint is difficult under the Levittow'n to illustrate his con~ They should, in fine, be profitable months without the ceed. Must Accept Responsibility circumstances-has he ever tried tention that' in the exploitation Buggestion of pressure or strain. Second, the use of the repro- it? Has he made use of prayer of racial feeling, real estate is duetive faculty is a human act, and the sacraments to gain "the sensitive area here in the an act of the person, not the strength? Has he shared the North." He called' the co-existence of mere unrestricted exercise of a burdens of rearing a large fam­ bodily function. Hence it im':' ily by helping with the chddren familieS" "the front line of the racial pro.blem of the U. S:,,' . ,plies tl: accep,tance of full re-. around t,he ~home?' sponsibility, .for its possible con' UnleSs he can answer 'all have shown that it is possible sequences by, the couple as, a these' questions in the affirina­ with a little mutual cooperation OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER c O u p l e . ' ' tive, he had best examine his and the help of 'grace. Some .husbands are selfishly conscience very seriously. P'!blished Weekly by The :atholic Press ot the Diocese ot fall River' Som'ewhere in the past, mari­ irresponsible in' this regard, Rule of Reason- tal chastity acquired a merely 410 Highland Avenue forgetting that they must seriWhat car you do? . Well" if negative meaning in people'. Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 ' ously consider the health and he will cooperate, you' should mind-the avoidance of contra,.· PUBLISHER: strength o,f their wives, and also practice continence either peri­ ceptives. _ But chastity in all Most .Rev; James L. :"Connolly. 0.0.. Ph~D. their own' ability to make rea- 'odic or absolute, after your baby walks of life is some,thinr posi­ sonable provision for another arrives" until you have regained tive; 'the control and regulation GENERAL ,~A~AGER "ASST. GE"!E'RAl "MANAGER' 'your health, and your financial of our reproductive faculties acchild. Re..,. DaOiel f~ Shalloo, M.A. . Re..,. John P,DrlscoJl Marriage 'would cease ,to be situation is under controL 'cording to the ,rule of rigl;lt rea,. MANAGING EDITOR" . , human if the rights it conferred' Of" 'course, this 'may not be so'n. Your husband has evidenU7 Attlilrney Hugh J.Golden • carried'no cornispoJ:lding obli-" :'easy but many Christian' couple., 'forgotten this.'

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®rh~-ANCHOR.'

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THE ANCHORThurs., June 26, 1958

If

Holy Father Approves Pastoral Institute VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope ber at the direction of the Po~ Pius XII has announced that an aiff himself by the Vicariate of" Apostolic Constitution giving of­ Rome and. the Sacred Congrega­ ficial approv,al to the Pontifical tions of the Council, of Relig­ Pastoral Institute will soon be ious and of Seminaries and Uni­ publis'hed. versities. The institute has been func­ Purpose of the institutor Is to tioning at the Lateran University give advanced training to di­ for several months under the di­ ocesan and Religious priests for rection ,of Dominican Father ,their pastoral ministry, and to Raimondo, Spiaz'zi. prepare those who will be iia The Pontifical Pastoral Insti­ charge of'teaching pastoral the­ tute was established last Septem- ology in seminaries.

Must Recognize Two Aspects In ,Man

SAN FRANCISCO - A call for mutual appreciation by clergymen and psychia-' trists of their complemen­ tary, but distinct, roles in patient treatment'was made by Dr. John R. Cavanagh of Wash­ ington, D. C., a past president of the Guild of Catholic Psychia­ trists, and Father Ramon A. di Nardo, a Catholic chaplain at St. Elizabeths Hospital for men­ tally ill, Washington. Dr. Cavanagh said that "in the prot;:ess of ·moving closer together, it becomes necessary for each discipline to take a positive stand on the question of the other and its significance, not only in, psychptherapy, but in human living." He said both "are possessors of an incomplete knowledge of one of God's infinite mysteries, that of the human personality." The two have a "broad and in­ telligent view of that personal­ ity, but from different vantage points," he added. Two aspects The clergyman, he said, sees the::Jtuman person as organized by a fundamental principle called the human soul. "The clergyman ees man in .his rela­ tion to God, as the beloved, the creation, the child and the heir and the Image of the Almighty. He . sees other things too,. such as'm'an's buman frailties and his virtues which are but aspects of his dependence on his Creator," Dr. Cavanagh said.• The' other aspect of man, he continued, is that seen by the' psychiatrist as a scientist. "The psychiatrist deals with the causes which the philosophers would call 'secondary and acci­ dentaL' In the technical lan­ guage ')f philosophy and theol­ ogy, they are just that. But these causes are in practice, and for the' normal welfare of per­ sons, quite 'primary' and 'neces­ sary' for the diagnosis and treat­ ment of the psychic ailments of man." "The psychiatrist is trained and .experienced not so much in the 'why' as the 'how,'~' 'he stated.

Rejects New Hearing On Sunday Sales Ban INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-The' Indiana State Supreme Court has rejected an appeal for '.l rehearing on its ruling that baus the sale of automobiles on Sun­ days.­ "The appeal was filed on the ground that the law enacted in 1957 was unconstitutional. Ed Clarke, president of' the firm which sought the hearing. stated 'hat he is considering an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. ' One member of the Indiana high court dissented from the majority opinion to reJ'll~ a hearing. Judge Arch N. Babitt atated in his opinion the Sun­ day closing statute is '~discrml­ Inatory."

FORESTERS AWARDS: Past High Chief Ranger Francis L. Hannigan of Brighton and Rev. Walter A. Sulli­ van of St. Mary's Cathedral present the' Father John O'Keefe Awards, given in memory of the hlte chaplain .,of the Junior Foresters, to Joyce Petit' (left) of Sacred Heart School and Joanne Davis of St. Mary's School at ,Communion br~akfast in St. Patrick's School cafeteria, Fall River.

P,resent Essay Contest Awards To Fall River Junior Foresters Awards were presented to gan of Brighton and Probate

winners of the essay contest Court Judge Beatrice H. Mul­

conducted by Our Lady of laney, who organized the Court

Fatima 'court, Junior Foresters, and instituted the awards in

at a Gommunion breakfast in St. memory of the first chaplain,'

Patrick's school, Fall River, fol­ the late Rev. John F. O'Keefe.

lowing the reception )f Holy Songs were offered by Vice

Communion in' the' church. -Chief Ranger .Carole Kelly, Pa- ' Rev. Walter A. S~llivan, chapf tricia Murphy and Joanne Davis. lain, presented first award to Joyce Petit and second to JONme Davis. Other members presented gifts for writing on "Putting the Message of Fatima into Our TAIPEI (NC)-An American Daily Lives"· were Chief Ranger Jesuit priest' is conducting a Barbara Gaspar, Walter' Burns, course in medical ethics at the Michaelene Leary, Brenda national university of Formosa Hampston, Arlene "GasPar, Pa­ which is expected to have con­ tricia Murphy, Kathleen Stone, siderable' effect on the future Pamela Sullivan, Kathleen gene~ation of doctors in China. Beaulieu and Arlepe ,Braga. Father Edmund L. Fitzgerald Rt. Rev., Msgr. 'Edmund J. of San Francisco has been at­ Ward, pastor of 8t. Patrick's, tached as associate professor to gave th~ invocation and. wel­ the Institute of Public Health, a comed the group. Other speakers department of the university's were Rev. John Cronin, assist­ College of Medicine, since he ant at St. Patrick's; Past High came here in 1954. Chie.f Ranger Francis L. HanniTwo years ago the dean of the lI).edical college sent a question­ naire'to members of the faculty , asking for suggestions' regarding improvement of courses and BROOKLYN (NC) - Brother teaching methods. The San Francisco priest' sug­ Bertrand, O.S.F. has been re­ elected to a second, three-year gested that a course in medical term as Superior General of the ethics be included in the curri­ '. Brothers of the Third Order culum. The sug.eestion was well, re-­ Regular of St. Francis. ceived and a, year ago Father The election marked the lOOth Fitzgerald was ,asked to conduct anniv~rsaryof 'the arrival froin a course, in medical ethics for Ireland of t'le first members students of the' medical college. the' community.. Bro~her David, O.S.:"'., was chosen assistant su­ perior general of the U. S. branch' of the community.

University Adds Ethics Course

Marian Medalists DAYTON (NC)-Donaid C. Sharkey, and Father Joseph Debergh of Lowel have been named for the 1958 Marian Li­ brary .Award of the University of 'Dayton for their book '~Our Lady"of Beauraing". Father De­ bedgh is a priest of ,the' Oblates of Mary Immaculate. He heads the Pro Maria Committee which is devoted to spreading devotion to OUr La'dy of Be'auraing. Mr. Sharkey is a free lance writer.

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'Condition Satisfa'ctory.' I-Iappy Climax of Hours.of·Waiti,ng . By Mary Tinl~y D a l y ' . Date of her spinal operation set by the' patient,our 19-year-old Mary, a.R'd by Dr. Rush. "But you 'and Daddy have to call him, and please do it now," Mary urged. '''1 'Want this back fixed!" , , Yes, we milk - toastedly through the hot sudsy water agreed. We'd call-but after. until they were chalk white, the very physicaleHort bringing a lUnch. Frankly, we were release from tension. HQw silly phone-shy and found it hard to be bothered about, dishtowels, to pick up that receiver, dial' we told ourselves. ,that num!:?er. Somehow, though. 'hang~ng Arrangements 'them up iIi. the backyard, in the eompleted, ~e deep silent black' ·of the night, realized t hat the wind bringing a ·hint of­ this was it. Cold honeysuckle fragrance, we found with apprehen­ . :real prayer rising from heart·,to . aion, we count­ lips. And we slept. . eel the hours­ Long Wait' " and we prayed : Mass, breakfast, .and ~ a Tislt -tried to, that ill. Somehow, with Mary in the hospital. •- . t b e for mal We' kissed Mary and promised learned _ as _ a­ prayers a'!! she was rolled, away c hi I d, prayers to the operating room 011 a w 0 u 1 d vanish stretcher. '. Then the long wait, beiinning .from our' lips and ali we could summon was at noon. . . First a visit to the a "Please . . . Thy will be done small hospital chapel where -but Please: .." Don't dictate others were' praying ·for their to the Lord, we told ourselves, dear ones, the quiet broken only and breathed another, "Thy will now and then by a soft sob; .. be done." . The red sanctuary lamp twlnk­ How friends rallied 'round ling . . . the words of the Head, with prayers: The Sisters of the of the House. remembered, Visitation, where Mary had ".... all those prayers-we have . faith.." ' . SURE, 'CHA-RITY BEGINS AT_HOME'.: It was the "Luck of the IrIsh" for Alice'M. ,one to high school, were pray-' . . ing. So, too, were the. Sisters.at· Out into the sunshine, we ¥>ok Murphy, 23, nurse at St. Joseph Hospital, Patterson,'N. J.; and for her uncle, Father Donald Trinity· College;. the Piarist a long walk around the grounds. J. Murphy, pastor of St. Pius X Church, Rochester, N. Y. Alice's $3.50 ticket on the Irish Fathers, at the instigation of "Nice shrubbery,'" the Head of . Sweepstakes paid off $56,000 and'slJ,e promptly donated $10,000 of it to help the parish Mary's form~r teacher, Father the' House .commented.. . build a new school. She is shown with her uncle and some future students, as she turns 'Iranyi; the C~puchins, whose aid "Beautiful. Wonder what lPnd the first spadeful of· dirt at. ground breaking exercises.. NC Photo. eur friend Father Sebastian had· of a' bush that is?" enlisted; the priests in our own \l Blessed Sacrament parish. Mori­ "I think it's some kind of a, ". magnolia." ' aignor John McClafferty offered his Mass for her on the day of - "Yes, I guess .it is."· (We UI S. the operation. Countless gen­ eouldn't have cared less.) The 56 Catholic members of . SANTA FE (NC)-This city's men." said Archbishop Edwin erous lriends added their pray-, 12:55 .• '. the graduating class of BarnCatholic archbishop has criti-' V. Byrne. "If the Chambers of. • s to ours. The "bite ·of lunch" recomstable High School were guests cized bathing beauty contests as Commerce in New Mexico must mended by the Head of .the at the fourth annual Communion' . occasions of sin. ' 'use such wicked means to ad­ "We Have Faith' House .took up a little more. breakfast· sponsored b:y the. .. "Bathing beauty contests are vertise and publisize our be­ Night before' "admission," a time, but we found it hard. to, Guilds of Our Lady of the'. As­ indecent exposures of human ·loved . state, than· instead' of. big dinner of Mary's favorite swallow. The· hands of" the ... 'sumption, Osterville; Our Lady bodies, the temples of God, and bringing prosperity to our state,., lIteak (Mary gettinl$ the tender­ . clock seemed to crawl . . . '1:25. of Victory,Centerville, and St.. ' are'.. occasions to wicked

they. will .bring God's displeall-.' , . . . of sin . '.' loin), with mushrooms, and ure." "Tliey.'ll bring her the Francis Xavier, 'Hyannis, at with .Aunt Virginia as special Although the prelate did not elevator near" this waiting Hyannis Inn. Asks Women Restore luest and alf of us pretending inentioh . it by name, there WlUl room," the nurse at. the .desk Attired in caps and gowns, the , that .the party was. in honor of Concept of Charity a . belief' that he was referring toldias, so: we took up. our graduates attended M~ss in St. Virginia's belated birthday. Then WASHINGTON (NC)-Arch­ po!!1 .•• 1:40. . Francis Xavier Church. Cel­ to a beauty contest in the city Mary's gang descending in full bishop . Patrick A. O'Boyle of A chat with some other .wait­ ,ebrant was Rev. Justin McCar­ of Albuquerque. . . ' . . .. force for. an evening of non-= Catholjcs in' the Santa Fe .. jng families and convalescing thy, O.~.M: of St. Fr~ncis Fdary, Washington has urged 80me Rnse. Lights out at 11 and archdiocese are forbidden to, take patients in the sunny' waiting Brookhne, who was also guest 3,0()() 'women attending the in,.. "'Wake me for the 7:30, Mom," part in bathing beauty contest.s augural meeting of the Wash­ room . . . 2:23 .... ... 3:05. . apeaker at the breakfast. from a sleepy Mary. .. Then our .patient was rolled' In his address~ Father M~-. ington Archdiocesan Council of. of any kirid. Those who wilfully "She's so calm," the Head of do so, and parents 'of such 'con­ the House said. "That's the way' off the elevator on the' stretcher. Carthy, creator' of .the comIc Catholic .Women to help restore testants, are to be denied' the" to be. All ,those prayers • • • -a waxy-pale Mary with· blue strip, "Brother Juniper,:' urged the ~onc.ept of personal service reception of the sacraments,~ in charity. . eyes fogged but brightening the gl1aduates to be herOIC Cath­ we have faith." . when· she saw us and a wan olics and develop the custom of The Archbishop also asked Next day, routine admittance the women to prepare a sug­ to the hospital. We, and a dozen replica of her cheery smile: daily Mass and. Communion. "Hi," she' ·whispered. '''Nice of Grace was sald by Very Rev. gested socbll code for youth of or so others waited, answered you to wait. .." . LeonardJ. Daley, pastor of St. the archdiocese. Funeral Home the necessary questions and Re'assurance from the sur­ . Francis Xavier.. Seated at the NCCW president Mrs. Robert went up to Mary's room with 571 Second St. geon that all was well and "con­ head table. were Mrs. DOllllld H. Mahoney, of Hartford des­ her-and left. Fall River, Mass. ditioo' satisfactory." James, preSIdent, a.nd Mrs. John cribed the'. national council's That evening at home was . . . ' Bowes, youth chaIrman of the federation of 11,500 organiza­ OS 9-6072 outwardly calm. We looked at Another VlSlt to the chapel for O· t '11 G'ld' d M G s erVl e Ul , an rs. er­ tions as "a firm, strong, spirit­ TV and 'didn't know what we a f erven t "'th an k ..Y 0 u'" MICHAEl: J. McMAHON . trude .Childs, representing Our ual cable, to help lif' America 8llW; we read the evening paper Licensed Funeral O'irector Lady of Victory Guild. to the moral and spiritual but It might have been printed Actress'Voices Faith'

Registered Embalmer Also Mrs. John Dillon, youth heights which its present po­ • "Greek.. Finally, bedtime.' •• chairman; Mrs. Adolph Richards aition of leadership demands." In Youth of Todciy ,

We remembered some ironing and Mrs. Leo B. Lewis of' St. LOS ANGELES- (NC)-Irene to be done and crept down to Franci~ Xavier. Guild. Mrs. .the kitchen. setting up the iron- , I)unne says she would be will­ Michael C. Austin ing board, we 'noticed a couple ing to "buy stock in" the future . Lewis· represented MiSs Ursula of today's youth. . . . ... Wing, president, who was un-· of dingy dishtowels ·on the Inc• . Miss Dunne, film star who . able to.. be, ,presen~,; rack. . . Corne to 'think of'itall the 'dishtowels had been getting served as alternate representa­ Says Re~ession Helps'

.,rayish: ..' . tive of the United 'States, to the . FUNERAL SERVICE Futter.' Pouring bleach and detergent United Nations, 12th General Soviet Prop'aganda

, Diredo... Into the dishpan: we· squinched . Assembly declared that Ameri­ WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-Tbe ~49 COUNTY ST. those towels through and can young people are entering current recession has already ... LO'eust St.. Fall al". a '·'tumultuous" world. provided ammunition for; com­ NEW BEDFORD, MASS. OS 2~3381 Represent Hyacinth . However, she said. their re-' munist . propaganda. Atty. James T. Tynion of New ligious beliefs and the traditions . Covncil af Meeting of American democracy make it York told: gI:aduates of St. NICKERSON Final plans' for the national possible· for them tc;l face ~e Michael'~ College in Vermont " JEFFREY E. Convention of the Daughters of future confidently, . . that Russia has capitalized on the FUNERAL and Isabella were discussed at the Miss Dunne delivered the com­ recession ..by claiming before MONUMENT state meeting in Statler Hotel, mencement address at Loyola Latin American' nations that Futter..' Dome Boston. Representing Hyacinth University. "the United States caused their SERVICES Circle No. 71' of New 'Bedford ' . economic crisis." 550 Locust St. BOIJRNe:f· SANDWICH. MASS. , were Mrs. Catherine 'Letendre, 'Bishop Asks Support Fall Ri-crer. Mass. Mr: Tynion also pointed' out that "in the world of today, r~g~nt and st~te monitor; Mrs. Of Catholic Press OS 2-2391 Serving Ll1han GuthrIe, Mrs. Blanche America and the Catholic Rose E.Sullivan CAPE COD King and Miss NatHe Ferreira.. OPOLE (NC) - ·The official Church 'are allies in the struggle .JeffrE!y E,' Sullivan end Surrounding Communities _ Mrs. Guthrie win be chairman organ of the Chancery 'office has with Russia's totalitarianism." of reservations for the national published an appeal issueg by banquet and Mrs. King, chair­ Bishop Franciszek Jop of Opole man of reservations for the state to the clergy of his diocese call­ banquet. Miss Evelyn Hendricks ing . for support of the Polis~ is in charge of reservations for Catholic press. . FUNERAL HOME tours. .~n his', 'appeal' the Bishop' May Lynch, Manager

Following the state banquet pointed to the fact that because lJ· .86 Plymouth A".. Tourists -. Day or Week

Oft Aug. 7, there will be a recep;" of the lack of theological books Fall River ·123, BROADWAY·" ,­ '.f' . tion for the new state chaplain, . in this country, Catholic publi-" .' ,Aucoot "Rd.. off Route 6'

TAUNTON MASS ., .. Rev. Joseph ·A. Beatty of Newcations haVe become a' valuable ... .... : Mattapoisett, Mass. ~ 05 3-2272 ton, professor at, tile St. Seba~.,., aid: in sPreading theological . .. Tel.: ,SKyline 8-2522. " .' :-•• !:o.' ,';,: ~ '·'i.;. VAndy.ke.2-218.1, ...." : ". tian School. .' "'JlnOwledge~' .. ".

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To~ay's Fashi~ns:

Thurs., June 26-;~l958 'i;:' .. ' :,'

Suggesl:s:.. .W.ome·n· WeCl';r'~"Sl:yle Most Suitable for Individual.

'Pkln':BrQodcdst; ; ,.,' ,For Instruction .' Of Immigrants

. . By Ellen .Kelley I've had so many telephone and mHil. requests, asking about the 'chemise and the trapeze fashions that I've decided on a general all-around answer: wear the chemise if you have slim hips; wear the trapeze if you have figure faults you want to minimize; wear dreams around, ifl. the floating the Conventional silhouette white silk organza, I helped to if you look best in that choose for a young client last week. I repeat, it was made of fashion. Combine it with

a

. becoming version of the relaxed look-with telling effect. A "Big City" suit-dress (in two parts) is the elegantly slim cotton I admired last week in a new irridescent waffle weave that manages to be cool, yet. citified enough for all but the most important evening occa­ sions. It's available in navy or brown with velvet tie and col­ Jar binding of satin. Despite it's expensive look it's tagged with .a· modest price. . Cord Suits Another "Big City" suit-dress version- is a Summer-cooled dacron and cotton that' will prove to be the "most lived in" fashion you own. It's a wash­ able drip-dry fashion, has full, permanently-pleated skirt and an ingenious bloused bow-band back. A lovely gray/blue print, it will look well frosted with white hat, handbag, gloves and flower-corsage. (This chic little fashion is thriftily priced, too!) Commuter's delight -is the cool, crisp Summer cord suit. It stars, incidentally, in sizes for juniors, women and misses! It's travel a'nd city-perfect, has the Dew, relaxed· jacket line, a IImart, slim' skirL Made of combed cotton, rayon and chromspun, it resists wrinkles, . ill a crisp grayed-white tone, and is a dream to care for! "Just tell me it drips-dry­ and I buy it-automatically"

lIaYS a friend of mine. She has,

indeed, ;1m extensive wardrobe -suits, blouses, skirts, dresses, robes, etc., of no-iron wonder­ fabrics. it. case in point is a

crisp white 'dacron suit she

weal'S. , She tells me she tosses tt in ·the washer, drip-dries it on a hanger, and presto! In no time at 'aU the suit is dry, looks freshly 'ironed! Dacron is, in­ deed, but one' of the many of today's 'wonder fabrics that save the drudgery of ironing! Print Playclothes Have you seen and admired the' new, exotically beautiful Hawaiian print playclbthes? They have all the encha~tment of the islands in sleek-fitting cotton swim suits with matching jackets' and shirts, some with matching skirts, too! They sing in bright, tropical colors and authentic Island prints. So-o-o be a delightful mermaid or sand witch in one of these colorful

Hawaiian print ensembles.

(What cl''''pliments you'll col­ lect! ) Dainty, rosebud-print cotton plisse sleepwcar is in our. midst and nothing short of entrancing! Inc1uqed in the lovely. collec­ tion I inspected yesterday, are gowns in regulation floor-length, gO,wns in popular waltz_length, night-shirts and baby doll pa­ jamas. They're availab'le in red, pihk, yellow or blue rosebud pl')nts. Some aloe deftly tailored, others are lace-lavished, while still others are beautifully be­ ruffled. A refreshing wave of pleats spills softly over the Summer­ a cool, dlojp-dry blending of dacron/colton/nylon, a dress with a narrowin<,: Empire waist.:. line, a wide whirl of pleated skirt. Lovely indeed, in honey beige, still another example of today's wash-and-wear wonder fashions you won't want to miss! White Ol'gallza Dress Junior Sun-Sheaths are high on the fashion horizon this sea­ son. Some of the, loveliest of them are made of. Cupioni, an adroit blend of rayon/cotton or rayon-and-cotton. They're gently titted, and are available in a Summer rainbow of colors and .hadings. Perfect basics, too, to dress up or down, as your mood Ilf\d· the moment suggests. I\n appealing Junior fashion liD. a party mood, 'a' dress to spin

9

THEA~C~O~-

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VATICAN CITX .(NQ)-. The. director of· the. L~itin American section ofVatic~m' Radio sees great possibilities in its new series of programs . now being beamed to the Amer­ ican continent for the instruc­ tion of Spanish-speaking peoples in the United States. "Reception reports from the United tates have been so good," says Jesuit Father Fran­ cisco Ramirez, director of the Latin American section, "that we forsee .its possible uses as an aid to the apostolate among Puerto Rican immigrants and Mexican crop followers." A great many of the radio sets in use in the United States are capable of picking up shortwave signals as sent by Vatican Radio. Father Ramit'ez believes that it is only neces~ary to make the program schedule and possibil­ ity of reception known and many Spanish-speaking people will ,be able to benefit by the news, information and cultural con­ tent of the broadcasts. Making use of a group of di­ rectional antennae at Vatican Radio's new Santa Maria di Gal­ eria transmitting station, the four months ago .beaming spec­ ially prepared broadcasts daily to South and Central America, Mexico and. southern ~ United States. J;lowever, there have been reports of excellent re­ ception from 3" f<lr north as Canada. Letters and telegrams have poured into the Vatican Radio offices from every Latin Ameri­ can country, including -letters from the apostolic nunciatures of Ecuador, Peru, the Domini­ can Republic and the apostolic delegatio in Mexico. Letters from the United State. have come from New York, In­ diana, Texas, California and Washington, D. C. Many of them were from amateur radio op­ erators reporting on reception conditions. Others were from casual listeners. Some wrote that they did not understand Spanish, but that the music was beautiful and that is was a thrill to hear the .bells of St. Peter's basilica ringing at the .close of the program.

ethereal white organza. It's elongated bodice and skirt­ banding, inked with delicate black lace in popular Chantilly version. It looked too-expen­ sive-to-buy but its tag told a story of amazing value -'- for little money! c Fashionable Make - Believes are in our midst and so fashion­ effective! They're make-believe fur wraps and blouses made by furriers and look so like broad­ tail that only their tiny price tells you that they're "just pre­ tend!" GOI...DEN WEDDING: Mr. and' Mrs, Owen Gilligan of They're made of lustrous, 53A Hillside Manor, Fall River, receive congratulations of light cotton-backed rayon; just Rev. Robert L. Stanton following 50th wedding anniversary the right weight for an air­ Mass in Immaculate COlH;eption Church. cond.itioned restaurant or thea­ tJ'e, an airy roof-top, or an evening garden party. My favorites were a demi­ eased Empire jacket and a waist-length chemi-jacket in PORTLAND (NC)-Archbish- stated: "We wish that this cus­ black or white make-believe op Edward D. Howard of Porttom of having male choirs, which broadtail, available in small,­ land has issued a pastoral letter has fallen into disuse during the medium and large sizes. Un­ urging the revival of "The cuspast several centuries, be re­ believably, the price was under tom of singing the Ordinary of vived." . $L5! the Mass by the congregation. He added that women "are Spun Sugar Tops are the. The Oregon ArchbIshop also to be encouraged to continue frosty Summer blouses seen stated that women should no with their efforts by aiding and evel'ywhere of importance. longer sing as member~ o~ the' assi~ting the co~gregation to sing They're made of feather-weight parish choir but should take durll1g the serVICes, but they are white cotton" frothed with em­ part in the c~ngregational singto do this as part of the congre­ broidery, some' with intricate ing. . gation and not of the choir." tuekin·gs. too-for added flair. The Archbishop said that The pastoral letter forbids You'lI want several of them to "from-the earliest Christian censolos' by individual members of top your .pretty· separate skirts· turies it was the constant tradithe ch'oir .during Masses, wed­ (daytime and date-time lengths!) tIon of the Church to have the dings and. Benediction, and 00­ faithful participate in a most fore or after such services. Cites Catholic School active manner in the EucharThe Archbishop declared that istic Sacrifi<;e and Offices by through congregational singing EXQmpie to Anglicans their singing." "many of the truths of our Cath­ KINGSTON (NC) -'- Mixed , H.e described the "silencing olic Faith will be borne into education' is playing havoc with oC the congl'egation" as being the minds and hearts of our the education of youth on' this responsible for many of the '. faithful people to their immense continent. abuses ~t the time of the Reprofit. . Rev. Mr. T .. HaJ;vey Good told formation, and declared that the the Anglican Synod of Ontario Protestant tradition of activ~ Real Cooperation Diocese, "Ninety per cent of our participation was originally an. EAST ROCHESTER (NC) _ students today, go to school integral part Of Catholic wor­ 'Ninety-four plumbers, carpen.:. thillkillg only of whom they ate . ship. tel'S, bank executives, accountgoirtg to -llleet, ,and make a date Referring to membership. in afterwards. r' would like to see . parish ch.oirs, the Archbishop. ants, store clerks and truck drivers, plus plenty of hard work· Ule Ani(1icill1 Church of Canada do : something . about -making that's the 'recipe for the new Gu~m Guild Members Study · schools IOcparate 'for the sexes. , convent being built here. Men WASHINGTON (NC, _ MiIMr. Good cited the example To Aid Parish School of the parish pitched in to build dred Scanlon, staff member of of the Roman Catholic schools, the new horne for the Sisters of the National Catholic Community TOLEDO (NC) - Thirty-one and especially the respect chil­ St. Joseph who teach in 8t. Service, has been named asso­ members of the Gesu Mothers dren arEdauj:(ht for the clergy. Jerome's parish school. ciate director of the Guam USO. Guild here took teacher-train­ ing . courses during the organi­ • • • • • • • • • • • • •4t ~-,--""""""""" Daughters of America zation's first year to prepare FOR HEALTH themselves to help out in the Plan July Conclave . parish school. KANE '(NC) Archbishop EAT The women, studying at Mary

Gerald T. Bergan of Omaha will Manse College, were trained to

Measured ' officially open the 27th bien­ serve as substitute teachers and and nial convention of the Catholic teachers' assistants. Two quali­ That-R-Rich'N'Yellow-Robust+ , Installed , Daughtel's of America July 6 fied for certification to teach in FRESH CUT-UP POULlR'(:: up t01h:-l2 : ,in Omaha. elementary schools.

Some 500 delegates and visi­ Organization officers estimated

SEA L : · tors are expected at the July members spent about $1,640 in. 6-11 convention, which is dedi­ . FARMS Aluminum Window Co, : tuition fees during the past year cated to. "the qevelopment of a to qualify to help out in the :145 Washington St. Fairh~ven : 328.Durfee Street, Fall River: more active and a more articu­ clas~room. . • Just off Route 6 OS 8-8022 Portsmouth 84 : late. Catholic laity." , .

.Portland Ordinary Urges Revival Of Congregation Singing at Mass

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l\lISRIONARY AT 91: Fat,her LOllis. Taelman, 91, Jesuit mlssiori~l.ry among the U. S. Indians for 58 yeal's, observes the 60th an­ niversary of .his, or~ination on Sunday, NC Photo.

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The Yardstick

,10. Thurs., THE ANCHOR­ June 26, 1958 '

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·D'eplo~es. Att~rnpt t'o Vilify

Irish President Receives New PQpal Honor

Auto Worke.rs.UnionH'ead By Msgr.' Georg'e G. Higgjns Director NCWC 'Social Action Department

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, Several weeks ago, 'i)1 testifying before the McClellan Committee on the Kohler strike in Sheboygan, Wis., Emil Mazey, secretary-treasurer of the United Automobile Workers, 'questioned .th~. integrity. of some members of the Sheboyg'an clergy. ' ". , ,,-. Real :furpose ' Under hostile' question­ . The purpose. of .this speech ing Mr. Mazey implied;' if', and of Dr. Greenfield's covering he did not .actuaITy state; letter is to create the impression

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.'.' ,VATICAN CITY (NC)~ The Gold Collar of the' Order 0:( Pius IX, a new·' papai 'honor destined'to be award­ ed to heads of state,' is a beau~ fully wrought piece of art. . First models of the newly in­ stituted honor have been com­ pleted.· Irish .. President Se~n O'Kelly, the first recipient of. the collar, has been invested in a ceremony in Ireland. ' The collar, about 10 inch'es in diameter and more than an inch wide, consists of a double gold chain with altermrting decora­ tions of the papal keys and the coat-of-arms of the reigning Pontiff, Pope Pius XII, in i?lue and white enamel. ' At the front of the collar is • · tiara in gold fl,!nked by two go~den, dove~. From the tiara hangs a. star-shaped medallion in blue' enamel bearing the in­ , scription "Order of Pius IX,in:' creased by Pius XII." On the reverse side is the year 1957 iD Roman nuin~rals. .

that the Kohler Company con':' that the top leadership. of the troIs the Clergy in Sheboygan UAW is anti-clerical.' Actually, courity and in­ this is merely one of their pur­ fluences their poses. . Their real purpose seems to be action!? and de­ cisjons. A few to create the impression-under hours later Mr. . . cover. of the religious issue­ Maz,ey apolo­ that the UAW is irresponsible gized, in tele­ and much t~o pO,wedul. eco­ gr.ams to the nomically and politically, for'ito; She boy g a n OWn good and the good of the clergy, for his nation as a whole. . intemperate re­ Dr. Greenfield is very explicit marks. on' the latter point. He says he , The follow­ does not see "how we can. con­ in g day a tinue, in silence, to countenance ,UNIQUE MEMORIAL CHURCH: Visitors to Minne­ spokesman for' the coerci<)lls which are buil'ci­ sota during its centennial year will see this unique memorial the Catholic clergy ~f Sheboy­ ing the uncontrollable power church, sllid to, be thelarge;t all-weather log church·in the­ gan, Father John J. Carroll of now being concentrated in the , St. Clement's parish, issued' the union movement and upon United States: St. Mary'sChurch honors the Jesuit mission­ following statement through the which the corruption which has ary Father Jean-Pierre ,Aulneau, massacred by Sioux In­ N.C.W.C. News Service: . already been exposed is. sure to dians in 1736. The church interior has walls of redwood, "Our original criticism of ·Mr. thrive." , MazeY was limited exclusively Dr. Greenfield and his friends , altar constructed of Winona' stone. crucifix' of hand-carved '" : New Uniform to his letter of attack upon- the in Spiritual Mobilization are en­ linden wood, candlesticks, of myrtlewood and locally fash­ integrity of the 'local court. "I ·titled to· their own opiniori: In . Those' invested with this ioned oak furniture. NC Photo. ' have received Mr. Mazey's' my' opinion; however, ,they are honor are also giveria . star­ .' . . apology,which'l consider a geri'­ doing a' great disservice' to· the · !ihap~d plaque to wear on the tlemanly gesture," and . would cause of religion as well as to Orthodox' Clergy~~n Notre' Dame to Hold breast. It is similar to the me­ prefer to make no further ;i:6m';; the 'cause of organized labor by , dallion but its rays on which the ment."· ' trying to make a religious issue Assu.mption Aiumnus Religious Institute' star is set are of silver while . UAW Cooperative' "

out of their political and eco­ ihosc' of 'the ~edallion are 'of WORCESTER (NC)-A Syri:" , NOTRE DAME (NC) - T~o go·id. . . . , ' . ,.Shortly thereafter while.,., i!l nomic disagreement with Mr. an' 'brthodox: priest :was ambng Bishops wili addre~~' the 'sixth . Detroit on other business,. t dis:,: Reuther and his associates.' 33 'gtadtiate'sof Assumption Col­ annual lfi!;tituteof SpiritiJality. .,IL uqiform has been ~­ ..', '.' ,." ,,', eussed this unfortunate inc.id,el1t

' 'l'he UAW, to. be sure, is far lege. t.<1 ..be hel~ .at the Univ:ersity of 'signed. to~.gpwith t~~' decora-:" with some of the top leaders, !>{' :(rom., perfect,. but to accuse ..,it tion. It consists of waist-length Rev.M:r: 'Tho~as' Ruffin, re':' N9~r.:~ Damestarting August '6. " the UAW. I was told that Uier. o~ being anti-clericalis stooping ceived bis'bachelor. ~f arts de­ BislloP I:,.awrence J. Shehan 'of jacket witli 'long, 'flowingtails deeply regretted Mr. Mazey's in.~rather. low to conquer. ,To para­ gree in pb.ilosophy.·He 'had been Bridgeport will -speak ,at ·,the and irousers, without cuffs, aU temperate statement before, tp~ phrase the title of Senator Cur­ of dark.blue. The high collar of a full::time' day student at 'As­ opening and, Bishop Joseph M. McClellan Committee, MO,reo~er, t;!i' speech, this Vilification of sumption for two years. 'At the Marling, C.PP.S., of -Jefferson ,the 'jacket, the cuffs 'of the I definitely got the, impression ·the UAW must stop." The sooner same time, he has ministered City; . will close the sessions sleeves and .he pocket' flaps that they would have apologized the better. ' red 'with gold-braid embroiderY ,to his chur(,l an':! 1,400 parish­ Aug. 12: in the, shape ~f laurel leaves. to the Sheboygan clergy on be­ ioners. . More than 800 superiors of , Court Says Obscenity half of the UAW 'in the unlikely Similar gold embroidery de~­ Married and the father of two women's religious communities event that Mr. Mazey had balked .Law Unconsti'tutional children Rev.' Mr. Ruffin is a and their houses of formation' orates the front panels and wai~ at doing so in his own name. · of the jacket as well as the back. native of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. are expected to attend. RICHMOND' (NC)-The Vir­ A gold ,stripe is worn on the I also ·discussed ,Mr. Mazey's He is spiritual advisor' to the . The institute is designedto ginia State Supreme Court has' trouser legs. The haUs the tr3.­ unfortunate statement with New England Region of the Syri­ provid~ religious superiors with held as unconstitutional a sec­ some of the leading representa­ an Orthodox .Youth Organization a '-theological understanding ditional boat-shaped form of tion of the state's anti-obscenity black 'velvet, bordered with gold ·tives of the Catholic social action and secretary of the" Central which willa'ssist them' in the fuovement iIi Detroit., They, too; law which forbids distribution braid and.hung, with gold tasse~s Massachusetts Council 6f East­ spiritual formation of Sisters front and' back' and surmounted oeeply regretted the statement; of' literature deemed obj'ection­ ern' 'Orthodox Churches. under their ·superyision. a.bfe for youth. , . by white' plumes. i10t .only because it was ul)fair The', court's ruling cited an to the, Sheboygan clergy," but also because it was unfair to· opjl1ion of the. U,S. Slipreme

Cou'rt which invalidated a sim-'

the reputation of the union; ilar Michigan statute on ,the

: They assu~ed' me-and this I . grounds it would "reduce the knew in advance from other re­ adult population'" * * to reading . liable sources-that Mr. Mazey only what is fit for children." was not speaking officially for the union when he took after the~ . The decision reversed a lower Sheboygan cler,gy. ,ThlC union:; court conviction ,of· a Norfolk, they said, far from being anti~' newstand operator charged with PROVI~CE OF QUEBEC, CANADA Clerical, has cooperated rather selling ol:>scene books and ·pic­ tures. closely and harmoniously with ~he Catholic social action move"; Mer.·t CO'unc'.·1 ment in Detroit ever since it was 6rganized 'in the middle '30s. EVA.NSTON (NC) - Father

MASSES: SUNDAYS: from 6:00 A.M. until NOON, every 45 m{nutes. Aim to Embarrass John' J. Green, O.S.F.S., asso­

WEEK-DAYS: A.M.. Continuous· from 5:45 until 9:00 and 11 :30 ciate 'secretary of'the secondary

P"M.: 4:00 and 9:00. I am not trying to cover uP. school. department, National'

'for Mr._Mazey. That "would be Catholic 'Eucational A.ssociation,

PILGRIMAGE 'SERVICES: 10:30 A.M., 2:3G P.M,··and4:00: P.M. I. Ii""dishone'st waste of time.' for it has been named to the advisory,

8:0'0' ··p.M. (everyday) Candlelig~t P~PeessioP"" is perfectly obvious that. Mr. ,coufidi" of the National Merit,'. ...... .. , Mazey ·pulled a monumental .,:'Scholarship--Cofporatjon.'The' . boner. His intemperate criticism organization conduc'ts the. larg: 0of the.- Sheboygan clergy was est private scholarship program ~dmittedly' unfair and unwar'" ....~ in' the country. ranted and from .every, point of: : view, extremely regrettable,'. ..", . Nevertheless I am person·ally··· ..' 'convinced that Mr. Mazey really' . is ,not anV-clerical at heaJ,'t.::. Moreover, lie did apologize and If you cqnnot ·make the his apology was accepted in the spirit of Christian charity, by a July.,··t:"I9v.~ria at Ste. representative spokesman' for . .. the Sheboygan clergy. An"e Beaupre,' ·.send The 'matter should have' ended, ' .... , right there. Unfortunately, how­ ever, an organization known as your petitions. . Spiritual Mobilization is trying desperately to make capital out of Mr. Mazey's' blunder for the obvious purpose'of embarrassing the 'UA'W and the labor move-. ' ! Mail to: ment as a ~hole.· , . . 'Dr. Edward W. Greenfield, a . 'LIBERATOR' STAMP:' Rev. "Pilgrim~ge' .Oi rector Presbyterian minister 'from . "-; . Simon BolIvar, "The Llber­ • Princeton, Ind., who openly ad­ ator,'" Catholic foundero£': -Basilica of Ste. Anne mits .that he is being financially assisted by Spiritual' Mobiliza­ . p~n-:.A'mericai1ism; features Province' of Quebec, C~nada tion-is currently distributi ng to' the new: four and eight. cent his "brothers' in the Christian U. S. postage stamps i~ the. clergy" reprints' of a speech, by !~Champion of Liberty;' ser.. Senator Curtis of Nebraska en­ .-,' title<! "Vilification of the Clergy ies, to be issueq'Jtily 24. NC" Photo. . . . . ., MUlilt Stop." ' ;" ----~--~--~-----------'!'"'"!"-'""""!"' ---I "

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.. TERCENTENARY' JULY t--fOVENA AT ST. ANNE" DE. 'BEAUPRE

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(July

17~26)'

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THE ANCHOR":'" Thurs., June 26, 1958

11

Slovakian ~eds Aim to Thwart Bel.ief in God

Obscenity Law Violator Faces Jail Sentence

VIENNA (NC) - Red Czechoslovak government authorities are dissatisfied with the results achieved in

CLEVELAND (NC)-A

precedent-setting conviction

has been 'obtained, against the owner of a "fun house"

Slovakia by anti-religious com­ munist indoctrination methods. The fiI:st indication of this waa given at the opening of the con­ gressof the Slovak Communist party in Bratislava: Karol Bad­ lek>, first secretary of the party'. central committee, declared that the standards of Marxist and Leninist instruction in colleges and universities are "entirely unsatisfactory." He said greater efforts should be made to "free youth from false religious con­ cepts of nature and society."

Vaclav Kopecky, Deputy Prime l\IIinister of Cze'choslovakia ad­ dressing the congress. said: "It is of the utmost impor­ tance that we fight our battle against religious prejudices without hurting the feelings 'of people who believe in religion or disturbing the unity of the National Front formed by the alliance of industrial worken and peasants.'" Religious, InfI uence He alleged "the overwhr,lming majority of religiously mir~d~ people, including ,many pries~ , take a, positive attitude toward democracy and so~ialisll1' and are hqnest in their desire ttl cooIJ~r­ ate' w.ith us, in our ,work for o!Jl' coun.try, and to jqin us in, the struggle for peace." "By developing socialist ag,:i­ culture, carrying technical, achievements and 'a' better u~ derstandiilg of scientific prog­ ress into rural districts,and gen­ erally raising the cultural stand;; aids of village life, we shall step by step reduce religious infhJ­ 'ence among the rural popula­ tion," he asserted.

f~r p~sses~ing and exhibiting ob­ scene movie films. Mrs. Gertrude Gervaras, own­ er of "Jean's Fun House," faces prison t~rms of one to seven years and a, fine of from $200 to $2,000. Common Pleas Judge John' J. Mahon deferred s~n­ tence pending a defense appeal for a new trial. First of Kind It was the first conviction of its kind in the memory of veter­

an court officials. In the wake of a campaign by NEWLY ORDAINED TWIN PRIESTS: Identical twins, Kevin (lMt) and Dermot Cole­ a civic organization called Citi­ zens for Decent Litera ture, 'the man are shown with their mother, Mrs. Mary Coleman, and their sisters, following their conviction is regarded as a spur ordination as Catholic priests at Youngstown, Ohio. Sister Ann Vincent, (left) and Sister for more stringent self-regula­ Alexis are members of the Order of Holy Humility of Mary. The new priests said their tory action by other operators. first solemn Mass in Christ the King Church, Cleveland. NC Photo.' Test for Jury Two prospective jurors who admitted they were readers of the Catholic Universe-Bulletin, WASHINGTON (NC)-Spain's presented by the other probl~ms international assemblies in favor Cleveland diocesan weekly. were Ambassador.to the United States mentioned, using them for its of independence of new nations, dropped from the panel before called·, the present day a ."con-, purpose." to whose freedom the;r are com­ the trial began. One disqualified fusing hour in worldpPlitics" "Thus we see the tremendous pletely indifferent." himself, saying that as ,a' father in. a speech before ,the Washing-, irony of modern politics," the Bring Back God and a reader of' articles attack­ ton' archdiocese's First ,Friday Spanish diplomat continued. ing pOl,"nography appearing. in Club. ' ,"We see communis~ rulers, who "For us Catholics,'!, he' contin­ the Universe-Bulletin he 'did not Ambassador Jose M. de 'Areil- ,after' enslaving whole nations,' ued, ~'this is also an hour of pro­ , believe he could be "objective:" za said, that. although some "ml\.ke sentimental speeches in -found spiritual movement, , Films seized by the police causes of the' confusion are e c o - - since Catholicism, as the word were shown to the jury of six n'omic and social,among the Wants Corps to End, indicates,' means universalism, men and six women. They were major factors "is the tremendous, I C and for' the first time, due. to the asked to'decide if the films wer~ revolution that is-goingon now 'Juveni e rimes technical means of diffusion, the obscene and if the operator ex~ in'so many countries of Asia and 'MAN'CHESTER (NC) _ N'ew ,idea of 'a world', is something hibited them "knowingly." , Africa.;' '.' Hampsl:1ir~'s top, la,w enforcewhich means m'ore th~:111 a' word,' 'In' hiS charge to the jury, Double Talk ment official has recommended ",.. "Forethe'first time'in history, Jlldge Mahon defined obscenity ""~ut, ab!>ve 'all, there'" is 'not establishIl'\ent of a, juvenile <!e- ,the'Catholic ideology tan arrive as having "a substantial tend!. only ,tbis dizzy, situation. ~head terttiori 'corps to provide a rigidly SimultaneouslYwitli the word of ency to deprave or corrupt by of us, but ;ils'o a 'great' and in- 'sCheduled tife, without pleasure God 'at" the' farthest corners of arousing lascivious thoughts or creasing danger which we must of any kind, f9r vicious min'ors. ,the earth, and 'therefore enable lustful desires." ~ now f,ace" in international com-, Attorney ,General Louis c: the order which the Lord gave Police Crackdown munism. Wyman said this juvenile deten- . to His followers to be carried The Judge also explained that Communism "preserits not tion corps should have "the out, when He, commanded them the proper test for obscenity is only a direct threat, but it-takes toughest schedule that 't is pos- to "preach the Truth to all "whether the average person, ..advantage of every occasion' sible to devise without exceed- . peoples and nations of 'the earth." applying contemporary commun­ ing the limits 0;£ human endur.There can be no ~nternational ity standards, the dominant Catholic Pupils Win ance."Only those juveniles who justice without a moral code con­ theme of the material in ques­ commit despicable acts of terror cluded Ambassador de Areilza. Honors in Spelling PRESCRIPTIONS tion, when taker. as a whole WASHINGTON (NC) -:. Three and brutality would be sen- '''A spiritual guidance, a Supreme appeals to the prurient interests." Joseph' Norris, Jr. law" is needed to rule the inter­ , This is identical with the test Catholic school students ,placed ,tenced' to the torp, The Attorney General denational order, that may be ac­ 686 Pleasant St. for obscenity laid down by the among the first 10 contestants in clared:, ' cepted by' all. '''And for this pur­ New' Bedford

U. S. Supreme Court'in its Roth a national spelling bee. "i am' convinced that in deal-: ,pose, we need to bririg back God

Betty Morgan, 13; finished in WYman 3-3918

decision last year. '. \ Assistant Cuyahoga County fifth place and received a prize ing with minors who commit', to international life; and to use

the Gospel as the fundam'ental

Prosecutor Thomas L. Osborne of $100. She ,stumbled on the cr'ime there has not yet been world "chiaus," misspelling it found sufficient deterrent to that principles of our internal and

said the conviction will open the small element of the juvenile foreign behavior." way for 'police to crack down on "chause." Receiving prizes of $50 each 'community that commits really operators who for years have and been "walking on a razor edge were Richard P. Hire of Fort vicious crimes against smaller between obscenity and legality." Wayne, who came in ninth, and children, girls and cripples. Yolanda Laurel of Laredo, Tex., "While tender, loving kind­ who was tenth. ness and the milk ,of human un­ Thomas P. Whittaker., a Cath­ derstanding must always be John B.

olic who attends the American available to those who deserve BOYS WANTED, for the

School of Oslo, Norway, placed it, those minors who commit SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-One seventh and received $100. Priesthood and BrotherhOOd.

vicious acts of brutality should of the nation's foremost authori­ Jolitta Schlehuber of Topeka be dealt with by our courts Lack of funds NO '..impedi­ ties on chest diseases bas been won first prize of $1,000. There in the same manner as adults ment. "

and Sons. {nco presented the coveted medal and were 41 girls and 21 bOys .in the and they should know it. in ad­ Write to: certificate of award of the Amer­ contest. vance." OSTERVILLE lcan College of Chest Physicians P. O. Box 5742

.at the annual convention of the GArden 8-6509, Baltimore 8, Md.

college. " .• , Dr. Winthrop Peabody of" ~ Washington, former' president of' the college, was cited for unsel­ fish devotion to the aims and ideals of the college sinc'e its :foundation, particutarly for his efforts in the advancement of SIZE ;, 'King Size postgraduate medical education. : (OBSTERS LOBSTERS , A native of Wakefield, Mass., and an alumnus of Boston Col­ lege and of the Georgetown Uni­ lb. ,lb. versity medic:al school, p.r. • I Peabody 'sr "ved, as superinten­ , dent of Tuberculo&is Hospital in the nation;s capital from 1921 to 1924. and as medical director of " UNION WHARF FAIRH~VEN. MASS. . the Glenn'Dale, Md.: tUbet-culo:': sis'· sanitarium. He has served as ~ ~

, an instructor at the Geotgetown , W Are University medical sch091. '

. He is a former president and

HONOR?.~, has' been active in the affairs of

the District of Columbia Tuber­ The Capuchin Brothers are ·workmg forM culosis Association ,'sin,ce, ;.,its "a hundredfold and life everlasting'~. ;founding in 1921. In 1951 he was Find happiness -serving God here an,d awarded the Vicennial Medal of.."

in foreign 'missio~s as sacristan. cate­ the Georgetown University meci~' .

chist, infirmarian, office worker. gar­ dener; chef, tailor, doorkeeper. carpen­ ieal school. .

ter electrician, maintenance man. etc, Yo~ng men betwee,n 18' and 3') inter­ Blue Market ested in joining the Capuchin Brothers SEOUL (NC)-The American

to work for Christ write to: Bishop's overseas .relief agency

has started. to ,manufacture

noodles in Korea in an effort

to keep relief flour from being

resold by its redpients. '

Emphasizes ,Confusing H'o ur, in '-World' Politics

Post Office Pharmacy

CONTRACTORS

Trinitarian Fathers

Physicians Honor Bay State Native

BUILDERS

LEBEL.

...................

!"YES:;WE HAVE .~.' ' f" "KINC;,' " EX'tr6lge'~"

Store': Will Be' CLOSED :Frid~y N'ghts durin~" 'the' Summer: ,

Remember:

"

Mc'Whirr's':isas 'near as your telephone If you cannot sho'p in person Dial OS '8·5211 Fall River'

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49C

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•t ,Mae'L'EAN'S SEA' FOODS ' ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .................................... ...... hat ,·WEALTH?

You Working For? .. SECURITY?


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Continued fl'om Page One

Bv Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. day is a hard and difficult one,"

the . Bishop asserted: "It is. no

We are fa'milia; with the word Catechism, but not so familiar. secret that the poison of our

with the word Catechist. ~ catechist is one who teaches religion secular age has seeped into the

in au area, to a group,' preparing them for reception into the , .minds of.' men, into the home, '. _Church by a priest. Catechists do not work to any great extent into the community, into the": in the United States though the need is imperative. On the very spirit of our times.' There . avera.ge each priest in the. United States has only three converts is no nourishment of vocations "a. year. If the laity were trained In their, faith and zealous ~nough in a spirit soured by secular­ . the -number of 1)9nvertll .per year in the United States would' ism." . increa.~ ten fold. Praise Serra' Bishop . Mussio stated that '. . The Missions cannot exist without cate­

what is needed tOday'to build ~hists; because priests ar~ so few for the

religious vocations is the <type harvest. Here· is an example of how one

M. spiritual en.couragement 'giv­ small seed has grown· into the mustard tree,

en bv Serra International,-,-.: : .­ Fifty years ago, 'two White Father mission­

. ''P~ple who look out·of inon- . aries on a brief visit trained- and f.;h«;n left

ey-tinted glasses do not fo~~ the one catechist for·,the Alur country of Africa

background of such spI.rltual which at th~ time 'was wholly pagan. Today,

encouragement," he contmued. in that area there are 80,000 Catholics. In

-:I'hese same Catholic people ·~ne. village last year there were 2,000 adult

try to simplify the problem of baptfsms which equals the number of con­

their own responsibility to the verts' in some of our large cities.

lPirit by employing gadgets to ensnare vocations. Her:e lies an opportu~ity for tile faith,ful "Such means might contribute to live up to the obligations of the Sacl'ament .'. ._ 80mewhat when used in con­ of Confirmation. Baptism incorporates us to ChrIst. the King Who junction with the .basic apP?al , • founded the Kingdom 'of His Church; Holy Orders. mcorporates. u~ ... self-sacrifice, but as an 10­ POETRY PLEASES POPE: Pope Pius XII provides to Christ the Priest Who sacrifices Himself for the sms of the wo~ld, eentiv'e in themselves they are an attentive audience 'for ,young Walter- Rossi of the Villa Confirmation incorporates 'us to Christ the Teacher 'Who came mto ~ess.· In the Serra program these means are valuable as long Nazareth, a school for extraordinary orphan 'children the world to "give testimony of the ~ruth." • they flow from the. Serra founded by' Msgr. Domenico Tardini, Vatican Pro-Secretary lPirit." Catholics who realize that Confirmation imprints an indelible of State, shown with his little charge. NC Photo. The Bishop declared that God character on their soul know that the,y are bound to.spread the 'called on Serra Internation­ faith and make converts, In other words to be CatechIsts. If y.ou al to offset the "deplorable de­ have. failed to fulfill the duties of Confirmation at home then ~Ire . 1\ections" in regard to religious VATICAN CITY (NC)-Radio Other' reports from Berlin, the catechist to do so for you in the Missions. One can be hIred l"OCations, Vatican today cited several inVatican commentator continued, for as little as $20 a month. '~en you send your, sacrifice to t.he "God n'eeded in this day a stances showing that the antiann-ounce the creation of a so-' Holy Father through his Society for the PropagatIon of the FaIth ebampion of the altar and found religious campaign in countries called "society of funer!,L ora­ he distributes it to the area of the world most in need" Thank you .... the Bishop said. "He called under the communists is being tors" by the communist author­ again and again for helping him spread the Fait". JOU as an organized force for intensified. ities of East Germany. The JIOOd to overcome the delin­ The 'Vatican commentator, society is made up of persons GOD LOVE yOU to W.X.C. for $40. "For Our Holy Father's quencies of the home, to become quoted two Russian publications who eull?gize defunct commun­ Missions, hope it will do some goodsonlewhere." ... to Little Ma:gie IIle renewed Christian spirit of' supporting his contention that ists during the burial ceremony. for $5~'I saved five dollars .from my allowances and have deCIded ebe com'munity as it affects the Soviets have ·not let up in The intention is to create a to, sehd it to you for the Missions." ... to Miss E.B. for $8 "I won_ 'l"OCations," their anti-religious attitudes. . counterpart to thtl ~Christian this at my place of employment by making a suggestion. for saving Serious Problem Moscow meideDts

burial service, since priests deny time' and money-may it help to save a soul." . 'J ·Yours is in every sense a vo­ . He said the RussUm magazine, such serv.!,:es to communists. .tion" he concluded, "'a true Literaturnaja Gazeta,_reported a

When you leave for yoonr summer vacation, do ;,ou leave As a further example' of anti­ ealling by God to .participate as' behind an earring or cnfflink that has lost its mate, gold eywass Religious was recently atrested religious' tactics, Vatican Radio laymen in the vital needs today . in Moscow and that an active . pointed t a solemn communist frames a rin~ or bracelet you no longer wear' or old gold anel til the holy priesthood." , search is being carried on to . ceremony held on "International jewelr; you no longer use! Don't Jet them go to waste, tbey ina" Archbishp Juan Landazuri locate another Religious for pro­ . Childhood Day" when commun­ help the missionaries in five continents. Just send them to us, lticketts of Lima, Peru, stated moting meetings of a _religious -. hits made, a rite out of conferring "­ we will resell tbem, and the mone" will be sent ~ the Holy Fatber that "the most serious problem nature. . . names "'on children to replaCe to .aid tbe poor and'snffei-ing in. aU mission lands. . , which all our South American The Soviet youth. review., their Christian names. ' countries suffer is without doubt Pioniyr, the commentator-said, Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice' to -it and mail it to the: lie scarcity of clergy. has attacked spiritual exercises Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for ,"In Brazil," he said, "there is calling them' "inadmissible mani­ the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth ~veI:'lJe"Ne~.York1, N. Y., eRe priest for every 6,qoO Catho­ festations of, -medieval ignor­ or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. ~YMOND T: CONSIDINE, liCs; in Argentina, one for every 1 af.lCe." 368 North 'Main Street, F~l Rive!, Mass. .,500; in, Peru one for eve;y BOGOTA (NC)-The spirituai, Outside the Soviet Union the 5,000; in Columbia, Ecuador alld campaign is also' being waged intellectual and cultural training By" Chile, one priest for ever-y 3,000 on a vast scale, he said. He cited of 'priests will be the main topic llaithful." ates would eventually ,become WORCESTER (NC)-A grad­ of study at theCongress of Rec­ the example of East Gerinany,. union members because of the Tbreaten BeliPoD . tors of Latin American Semin-' uating class of Boys' Trade where Bishop Helmut Wittler'of "spirit of the' times," Bishop "The situation would be much aries to be held· in Rome Sept., HighSchool-potential union Osnabruck has declared that·l the Wright exhorted those who do worse," he~asserted, "H it were . fight against the Cburcbhas be­ .20. mbmber.s-has been urged to join - to attend union meetings, aot 'for the help giv.en by· th.e come greater in the past six .The rectors of all major sem­ become more ·than pawns in Ilumerous members of the Eu­ to take part in' all voting, and to months. ' inaries in Latin America are ex­ ropean and North American' be sure to know "why, how, and East .German" pected to ,take part. The me_ing some union leader's quest. for dergy." in whose name" decisions are The Bishop, speaking to a cori-' was organized in connection wit~ Power. ",To solve this problem is to vention of Catholic editors in Bishop John 'J. Wright. of made. the cermonies marking the 100th brighten the future of the Church Hamburg, said school directors He cautioned the graduates anniversary of the 'foundation of Worcester told them' that this' in South America," the Arch­ in East Germany' ,now, must the Liltin American Pontifical would mean constance vigilance against allowing themselves to bishop said. "because upon it supervise the political tenden­ CoHege in ,Rome. The congress in addition' to conscientious per­ ·"be reduced to mere statistics" depends the Christi.an formation cies of all teachers, including formance of their duties and ob­ in furthering some national or will be presided over by the rec­ of the faithful and their spirit­ priests in cha'rge of religious in­ international union leader's am­ tor of that college, Jesuit Father ligations as union members. asl welfare." struction. . bitions. Pablo Lopez de Lara. .Remarking that many 'gradu'. . 1 "Upon it likewise depends," •he concluded, "the ability' to forestall other ideologies and lect!! such as laicism, communism and PJ:.otestantism, which _ are gaining ground to the detriment of, our traditional religion." '

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This Tir,tely Message Is' Sponsored By The Fol­ lowing Public Spirited Indiyiduals and Busi­ ness Concerns Located in Greater Fall Riyer

Bove Chevrolet Brady Electric Supply Co. Cascade Drug Co.. , Connors Travel Bureau

leo J. F. Donovan, C.PA. Q Duro Fir:-ishing Corp. Enterprise Brewing Co.'

Don't Let This Happen· To ·You!

The Exterminator Co. (Leo LaCroix)

Globe Manufacturing Co. Kaplan Furniture Co.

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Kormon Water Ca. MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.

Automobile traffic

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is expected to

break all-time records during the Summer , month's and with it will come' increased

Mooney and Co., Inc.

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through residential areas and be on . the alert for children darti,ng across, our I'

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Take 'an extra hour or two to get

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many lives are being lost and the toll

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highway' accidents and tragedy. ' ..

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14

.....THE ANCHOR Thurs., June 26, 1958

Corporate Communion

The~,Parish·Parad"c

Pa rish Demahds Continued from Page One of, the Church, which is both "an institu,tion or a visible" means of' grace, and also a co~~' , munity of, the hithful" - the, Mystical Body of Christ. , I ' , When the Church is consid­ ered' only as an institution, he, said" ,laym~'1 are likely to re­ gard ,their parish as "a kind of handy filiing station to which we come once a week to be spiritually refuelled ..." But when th~ Church is con­ sidered as the Mystical Body, he continued, "\\!e begin to see tha~ as members of the parish we are. responsible with our priests.. for all the soul~ath­ olic and non-Catholic-who' live within our parish boundaries, and that we are' responsible for . MASS ABOARD ROMANCE: Very Rev. William E. building a real community on the temporal order in our parish , Rively,S.J., newly-appointed Jesuit Superior to the Caro­ 'line-Marshall 'Island's Mission, says Mass-aboard his 50-foot , neighborhoods." The disappearance of the so­ mission schooner "Romance." In the background, assisting ealled "national parish," organ,­ at Mass, is the schooner's native crew. 'Ne. Photo. ized on lines of nationality, has created many problems, for urban parishes, Mr. Giese said. ,Without Roots "Parishio.ners today are basic­ ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-Sym- demand that he 'and his family aUy without roots," he declared, be greeted reassuringly, that "without attachments or loyal­ pathy, kindness and understand­ hospital regulations be present­ ing should be expressed the mo­ ties to a parish." , M~my 'members of city par­ ed courteously and medical terms ment a patient enters' the hos­ Ishes,he added, "no longer feel pital, a Sister who is, a hospital ' not be used in a manner to a closeness, an identificatiof!, a consultant told the 43rd' annual needlessly trouble or even terrify loyalty to the parish. The parish convention of the Catholic the uninitiated?" she asked. has, become more of a plant Hospital Association here. General Session than, a community of the faith­ Sister Justina Morgan, a Presiding at the general ses­ ful" , member of the Daughters of M~, Giese went on to point: Charity of St:' Vincent de Paul sion 'was Msgr., F. M. J. Thom­ ,ton, of Sea Girt, N. J., president out that the parishioner's lack from Marillac Seminary. Nor­ of the, association. Greetings of identification with his parish , mandy, Mo., spoke of ,the open­ to the, delegates were delivered is similar to the situation that ing general session of the con­ by,B'ishop Justin J. McCarthy , 'exists in other areas of' modern vention which had as its theme: of ,Camden. .x:iety. , "The Hospital Aposiolate in a Speakers were Msgr. Thom-, The individual feels a loss of Changing Era." ton, Msgr.' Donald A. McGowan; \ identity, he remarked, in the Primary Purpose director, Bureau of Health and face of "big corporations, big "We must accept' literally, .. Hospitals" NlltiQnal Ca~holic labor organizations, big politi­ never before, that hospitals, hos­ Welfare Conference, Washing­ caf parties, big government." pital administration, schools of, ton; and Sister Francis' Xavier, "It is a major, problem" b~ laid, "and almost all who have' nursing ind schools of nursing ,dean, schoof of nursing, D'You­ administration exist,' for one ville College; Buffalo, N.Y. considered it come to, the Same In another convention session, conclusion - once again smaIlI' primary, purPose and one OQly, namely, the care of the patient," 'intermediar:' groups" which act Dr. James F. Collins" medical Sister said. ' as a buffer 'between 'the lonely 'director of Cambridge City Hos­ '''We all know this to be true. pital, Cambridge, Mass., warned individual and large associa­ rhen, why have we 'strayed so against the tendency to rely on tions, must be developed." far from care-care centered Small Groups "modern medical. magic," to the neglect of medical fundamenials. T~us, he said, "the more we I around the patient?" she asked. "For years,'" she continued, Dr. Collins also said that med­ ellD landscape our parishes with "we have justified our position 'icine' should be a happy com",:, lIIlall Catholic Action groupings, community -<;sociations, block in terms of the war, shortage of bination of art and 'science, but modern, communication organizations and so forth, the ..­ nurses, shortage ot' all ,types of ,that facilities, have . glamorized the hospital personAel, and vthe .40­ better our chances of building hour week.". '" scientific..aspect. ' CQmmunity and' parish spirit 'in these, massive urban neighbor-, Sister Justina said another boods and of restoring to the factor is the shortened hospital lonely individual his sense of stay today, but she said 'that When it's time dignity." "for the very reason' that the 'In con~rast with the city par­ patient will be with us so short to retire • • • Buy Ish, Mr. Giese said, the new shb­ [a ,'time, 'the elements of sym-, urban parishes seem to have "a pathy, kindness, understanding godd' natural 'community spirit." , and love' should be felt and ex­ Parishioners are, eager for Cath-' pressed from the moment be: otic education 'for both chiidren enters the hospital." and adult" he declared, and "lay' "Does not total' patient care.' participation in the liturgy" is more frequent , Mr. Giese maintained that it &I "simply ,an impossibility, for the average parish priest today to carry out his ministry alone', It is estimated that an average JOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY priest can successfully contact owner/mgr, " no more than 600 people a year, 142 CampbeIJ St' r and yet we' have parishes from New Bedford, Mciss.~ five to 10 thousand, with only three or four prie:;ts to a parish." WYman 9-6792

It'is for this reason, he sai~, 276 central St,. Fall River HEADQUARTERS FOR

that "the modern parish needs great numbers of the laity" to COLONIAL AND

OSborne 6-8279 carry out the "catechetical TRADITIONAL FURNITURE ap.ostolate"":""census work, teach­ ing, home visiting, record-:keep­ ing," Mr. Giese also expressed the hope that eventually the Con­ fraternity of Christian' Doctrine 00' You Work in a Factory, will "be able to send lay cate:' Garage. Machine Shop or chists tb mission lands as part of our, contribution to the world' Gasoline Station? mission activity of the Church." We, pick up an.d deliver, clean 'and repair overalls. Also, we have ' M~rk o complete line at Coveralls. Pants ROME' (NC)-The Daughters' and Shirts tor sale. ' ,...of the Heart of Mary have cele-, We reclaim c!!"d, wash ,any oily, brated the first centenary of the' dirty ,or greasy rags, opening of their first houSe here. Why' Buy~ When We Supply 'The Society, founded in Paris , ,in 1790, has approximately 1,500; , :members scattered throughout the world. 'The organization was established in the United 'States in' 1851, and has houses , 2' Row;.:'d' Ave.~, New Bedfotd ,in"13 archdioceses: and If dio-' WY 9-6424 or WY ~ci425F 'Celie&. • 4. :

Hospitals Must Ce'nte'r Attention

Always Arou"d Care of Patient

'BOWEN',S

Furniture Store

O'NEIL FISK TIRE

Attention ,Me~han;cs!

Centenary

,NEW,ENGLAND: -OVERALL & SUPPLY CO.

NOTRE DAME DE LOURDES, FALL RIVER All members of the Women's Guild are urged by their officers , to receive ,corporate Communion at the 8 o'clock Mass next Sun-,' day morning. They will meet in the vestibule of the upper church where ranks will be formed. ST. FRANCIS XAVIER, HYANNIS " High honors and perfect at­ tendance awards were presented to ciiildren attending Christian Doctrine' classese at recent cere­ monies conducted by Very Rev. Leonard J. Daley, pastor., The classes are taught by the Missionary~Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity, tbgether with five lay teachers. - Meriting High Honors w~re Elizabeth, Morin, Gerald Mur­ phY,_Michael Gladych, Bonnie Farrenkopf, Donn~ Harris" Mark Sullivan. Also Annette Cloutier, Jen­ nifer Murray, 'Suzanne Gladych, Ellen Karu~as, Nancy Dunne, Michael Donovan, William Fra­ tus, Karen Hurley, Patrick Donovan and Philip Sullivan. Twenty-nme ,awards were made for pepect attendance at classes throughout' the year.

ST. LAWRENCE,' NEW BEDFORD " " " The Annual Reception to new members of the Guard of Honor SoCiety was held the Feast of 'the Sacred' He'art' "of Jesus, when 40 new members were re­ ceived into the society arid en­ rolled by the pastor, Rt. 'Rev; Msgr. James J. GeI'~rd, V.G. This society is dedicated to adora'tion and reparation to the Sacred Heart-of Jesus and Mon­ signor Gerrard spoke to the members of the many ways to practice this devotion. The meet­ ing closed, with Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament. The following are to repre­ sent St. Lawrence Parish"in the District Council of Catholic Wo­ men for the coming 'year: Delegate, Mrs. Leo Gallagher; Alternate, Mrs.. Emile Monfils.

on:

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Counteract Reds LONDON (NC)-An English Catholic 'veekly has appealed to this coun: 'y's Catholics to help pay for the distribution of leaf­ lets at the Vatican' Pavilion of the Brussels World Fair to coun­ teract ,the flood of free propa­ ganda issued' by the Russian center of the fair.

'GOD'S HOME FIRST ~ OUR'S LATER!

Sis~r Gladys of the Hoi)' Cross, superior of St. Mary's Convent" Brnakulam. India writes: "we humbly approach our benefactors with a request. Ii is forb years since thls in­ stitution has been started .•• we are now 50 sisters • • • we conduct a hIgh school with an enrollment of 1,300 pupils . • • about 80 girls room and board with, lIS • . . and we have an orphanaJe willi 52 children. The sisters live in part of the + school building and the schoo. veranda' is used as a chapel. In all these )'ears we have not been able to dve a proper plaee to Ow: Lord . ',' all our earnings have te be used to run the school and orphanage. So, our beloved benefacton, we approach you humbb. 'with a request--will )'ou be kind enough to help us build a chapel?:' . . . To build a chapel for

these sisters will cost $4.000. Could y'oU heip? The)' are aski~\ for

a, home for Our Lord. '

OUR FUND FOR ORPHAN'S BREAD HELPS To FEED AND

CLOTHE SEVERAL THOUSAND ORPHANS IN THE NEAR EAST)

A DOLLAR A MONTH ~ELPS TREMENDoUSLY.

Q

GOD INCARNATE ·0 wOl1derful power of the priest," 1I87S St. Augustine, '"in whon

handa the Son of God becomes Incarnate evermore, even as He onee

became Incarnate III, the womb of His Vlr­

dn Mother." Truly, all wonders are Inslg­

nlilcant In relation to the Btupendous thing

that takes ,place ever)' time a priest cele­

brates Mass. If you could give ilnanclal aid'

to "i1"boy In the Near East who Is' studying

to become s priest, you would, be helping

him ,toward the day that he will be riven '.' -power whleh surpasses that of an'gels. PAUL and 'GEORGE hoPe one da)'to be priests 'of the·'Most High. The)' are studyln'g 'at Ii seminaI"}', In INDIA. Preparation for the priesthood entalls a lonr.

arduous eourse or studies. The cost' of tuition is $100 a year for ,

Ib: yean, " '

MEDICINES TO EASE THE PAIN OF THE SUFFERING LEPERS OP INDIAi OUR "DAMlEN LEPER FUND" HELPS· TO BUY ~EEDED MEDICATIONS FOR THESE POOR PEOPLE. ,/

SHARING IN MERIT

SISTER WILLIAM and SISTER JOSE hope to' deYote their IIv~ .. God • Relidous. They have bee-un their preparation for their dedicated service and are now In a uovltlate ID PALAI, INDIA. ,If one of them was your "adopted daughter In Christ" 10U would reo, celve a share In the merits of her apostolate and a remembrance In her dall)' prayers . . • How caD yoU "adopt" one of them?, By aldlnl' , her In a material way wblle she is learning tho rudiments of religious life. Two years of trai.... Inll' In the novitiate are necessar)' for a girl wbo wishes .. become a Religious. It cOllis $150 a year to support a DOvlee.

HAVE YOU EV-ER PICTURED YOURSELF WITHOUT A HOME, WITHOUT FOOD, WITHOUT ANY MEANS OF LIVELIHOOD'!' THE,rOOR REFUGEES 'ARE IN THIS PLIGHT. 'THEY NEED OUR ,HELP.• 10 WILL KEEP A FAMILY FOR ONE WEEK.

'~Go Y8 'Into the whole world snd preach the Gospel to every ereature" , .. this commission of Christ to His followers haa beea oamed .out since the day It was a-iven ' •. It we are truly Catho'~o. we wi~l be zealous for the spread of the Kingdom of Chrbt ••. If we are zealous, we will help to spread that kingdom . . , By our pr~y~n and alms, let us prove to God and His Blessed Mother that our hearts are In harmony with the Sacred Heart of Him who prayecl tbat there ,may be but one fold and one shepherd. "

~'l1ear . "

wt ffiiS$ions~

,'F~ANCIS CARDINAL' SPELLMAN, 'President , Msgr. Peter P.Tuohy, Nat" Sec', Send all communications to:

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,\ 'CAT"HOLIC NEAR EAST' WELFA~E ASSOCIATION

','~~,O L~Jiit1gtonAy~, QtA~th St~

New York 17, N. Y. '

.,:

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Ne~ Rect~ry

Replaces Roundhouse

Continued from Page One -'h w h'IC h'In I'tse If'IS a land ­ .,.Iurc mark in this town of more than 13,000 people, the rectory gives the parish four red brick build­ lngs within a comparatively lIIJ1all area. The church also owns. a two­ story wooden house whIch was used as a te~porary. rectory l:>t'­ tween the bme the roundhouse was torn down and the new building was completed for oc­ cupancy two weeks ago. Roundhouse The roundhouse came into the possession, of the church when property bounded on three foides by Park, Tifft and Broad 5ts. was purchased for $20,000 in 1877. Legend has it that the build­ lng, part of the so-called Tifft property, was used during the Revolutionary War days as a hiding place for Negro slaves who had fled their Southern

Movement for Unity Causes Uneasiness ROME (NC)--Ceflain activ­ ities of the world Council of Churches have caused uT)easi­ ness in many Catholics inter­ ested in the movement to unite Christendom's separated church­ es. Jesuit Father Charles Boyer, editor of the Catholic magazine Unitas, voices this fear in an editorial entitled "Misgivings on the Ecumenical Movement." Father Boyer, who is also a professor of patristic theology at the Gregorian University, said the uneasiness arises from two lIOurces-exterior unity without doctrinal unity, and a tendency of the council to, devote itself to activities other than the search for unity. The Jesuit writer said the council was formed as a result of the ecumenical movement and was intended from its begin­ ings to promote Christian unity.

Intellectual Life RIVER FOREST (NC)--More than 200 persons from 20 states and Canada have registered to attend a two-day symposium on the Catholic contribution· to American intellectual life at Rosary College in Illinois, start­ ing June 14.

masters. . There was a tunnel w.hlch con­ nected the basements of th.e church and the rectory but It had not been used for. many yeAars· II' .. f few years ·al;o a section 0 the lawn between the church and the, roundhouse collapsed and revealed a hidden, under­ ground room, walled with heavy blocks of granite, which could have been' used years ago for either a hiding place or a veg­ etable cellar. The roundhouse' consisted of two floors and a small ~upola at, the top center. It had a spiral staircase winding up from the first floor to the cupola directly in the center of the building. New Building In c~trast, the new building has spacious rooms, separate, second-floor suites for the three priests assigned to the parish, a large recreation room in the basement, a suite for visiting priests, and another suite for the housekeepers. , The four suites for the priests occupy the second floor. On ~e first floor are the quarters for the housekeepers-with sep­ arate bedrooms for each one-a kitchen, dining room, three of­ fices, lounge, and a sitting room for the maids. , The building is 66 feet across the front and 41 feet deep on the south side-next to the church --and'80 feet deep on the op­ posite side. It is in the form of an ell. There are concrete floors throughout, overlai¢ with lino­ leum and carpeis. A feature of' the building ia the inter-communication system connecting the suites, offices, and other areas on the first floor. The recreation room provides an area where the Rev. Edward B. Booth, pastor of the church, has· been' conducting convert classes. Thomas F. Coleman was the contractor and the architect was Joseph M.. Mosher Jr. Both are from Providence The late Rev. Francis J. Ma­ loney, who was succeeded by Father Booth as the. pastor, planned the rectory but did not live to see the start of ~on­ struction. Msgr. Gerrard was assisted in

Deschenes Wins Scholarship

Spotlighting Our Schools SHA ELEMENTARY, FALL RIVER Presentation of ,a gift 'to Sister Marita Dolores, S.U.S.C., princi­ pal, by Elizabeth Donnelly, cap­ tain of the schoo~, was one of the highlights of the annual party for the Sacred Hearts Academy, elementary division, graduating class. held on the

CARNEGIE GRANTEE: Rev. Brother James M. Ken­ ny, S.J:, of Morrist9wn, N. J., business manager of the service enterprises at New York's Fordham Uni­ versity, has been awarded a Carnegie Foundation grant to 'attend the 1958 ShE>rt Course in College Business Manageptent at the Univer­ sity of Omaha this summer. . NC Photo.

THE ANCHO~­ Thurs., June 26, 1958

school grounds Monday after.:. noon. The class pro]jhecy was given by Sharon Cronin and Brendl!l Shea, the will by Patricia Calla­ han :md the Who's Who by Barbara Kane. A buffet lunch-. eon was served. SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO At the graduation exercises of the school Gerard Deschenes was awarded the annual schol­ arship given by the Student Fund of the parish. His aver­ age in the combined year's aver­ age and competitive examina­ tion was 90 per cent. This proj­ ect, started in 1948, helps boost attendance at Catholic, . fligh schools which is, one condition for accepting this award. The winner is given $100 each year for the four years of high school. Funds are provided by monthly contributions made by a group of interested parishioners. 'Son of Mr. and Mrs. Agenard Deschenes, Gerard has been en­ rolled at Assumption High School in Worcester. He has a brother studying at St. Francis College, Biddeford, Me. Other prizes awarded during the party' held for the graduates in the. parish ,hall following graduation. exercises were do­ nated by 'Rev. Joseph Larue, pastor of the church; Rev. Ed­ mond L. Dickinson, assistant and director of the school; State Representative Carlton H. Bliss; Ladies of St. Anne Sodality; Duvernay Council, No. 42, Union S. Jean Baptiste; North Attle­ boro Catholic Women's Club; Succursale Ste-Jeanne d'Are, No. 174, Assumption Socie.ty; Mr. Hector DeBlois, Dr. Henry

Bedard and Dr. Roland Smith.

15

Reds Flood World

With Literature

NEW RECTORY: Rt. Rev. Msgr. James J. Gerrard,V.G. (second left) is shown with Rev. Edward B. Booth, pastor (left), Rev. Edwin J. Loew and Rev. Armando A. Annun­ ziato, assistants, at laying of the cornerstone of new rectory to replace historical "roundhouse" at St. Mary's, North Attleboro. the dedicatory ceremony by . He said the faith of the f)eople Father Booth, Rev. Edwiri J. of North Attleboro is' well Loew, and Rev. Armando A. known throughout the diocese. Annunziato, assistants. Father Booth cited the new. rectory as a "monument to the Visiting Priests parish." • Visiting priests included Rt. Rev. Msgr. John J. Shay, pastor He was presented with a check by Mr. Fisher on behalf of the of St. John the Evangelist society to aid in paying for the Church in Attleboro; Rev. Cor­ building. nelius O'Neill, Ubalde J. Den­ neault, James F. McCarthy and Edward Rausch, all of Attleboro; Revs. Gerard Chabot and Roger Gagne, pastor and assistant, re­ spectively, of. St. Theresa Church in South Attleboro; Rev. Patrick TT. Hurley of T,lUnton; Revs. Thomas Parris and El­ meric Dubois of LaSalette Sem­ inary, Attleboro; and Rev. Cornelius Keliher of St. Mary Church in North Seekonk. Addressing the gathering were Msgr. Gerrard, Father Booth" George R. Fisher, representing the St. Vincent de Paul Society; Bernard J. Doyle Sr., represent­ ing the pat:ishioners; and Albert M. Larsen Jr., Chairman of the Board of 'Selectm~n. PLATE GLASS Father Loew introduced the CONTRACT speakers. The vicar general expressed GLAZING his thanks to the parishionen' BATHROOMS--KITCHENS "for your cooperation and loy­ 686 Cottage St. New Bedford 'alty" in making it, possible for WY 5-7388 the priests to live and work in 'comfort.

WASHING'(ON (NC)-- More than 300 million copies of pub­ lications were distributed by Russia in the free world last year for propaganda purposes: This figure represented a five per cent increase over 1956, the United States Information Agen­ cy reported. In the Middle East, however,' the figure was up 400' per cent to a total of 413,600 books and 1,515,400 pamphlets. . Russia will issue 700 new titles in 26 languages for dis­ tribution in the free world, dur­ ing 1958, USIA estimates. The USIA said it had about three million books in its 156 libraries in 64 countries last year. Since 1950, it has assisted foreign publishers in bringing out 40 million copies of 4,400 American books, printed .in 50 languages.

Communism But One Christian Life Threat NIAGARA FALLS" (NC)-­ Communism is only one enemy in the "long struggle of mankind' for the good Christian life.'" Eugene P. Devine, Albany at­ torney and bank director, told Niagara University graduates that "while preparing to fight, if necessary, for what we be­ lieve is needful to our happiness in life, we must not lose in that preoccupation the very basis of the things we are fightinc for." . '

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Sage and Sand'

Denies Theory More Money Cure for Educational 1.lls

St, George

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I.•

.:.THE ANCHOR

Thurs.; June 26, 1958

Praises Legacy

;.;

" " " ' " - - - - - - B y Henry Miehael..;.'------..1

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

16

/

IS

Reno

It is an article of the unwritten' American creed that

there is .nothing so bad that another billion dollars or ,so won't mend it. If, for example, we seem to be in danger of falling Qehind in' the race for space contr9l,' the obvious us to shell ouf 'd 0 IIar a~ t h ' f l'libl remedy is• for 1" e m a e pana~a. '. ast:onomlca sums of ~oney Have we enemies anywhere to recapture leadership: If in the 'world? We can buy their our schools have been delin.,. friendship. Have we a dearth of

Continued from Page One and the wiles of communism." On his first full day in th~ city, President Garcia, with his wife and Archbishop Julio Ro­ sales of Cebu, the Philippines, attended Mass ,at St. Patrick'. cathedral. The Philippine head of' state was greeted from the episcopal throne !?y His Emin­ ence Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York. Cardinal Spellman said: "I hope, Mr.' Garcia, that you feel as completely at home today as I was whim given the privilege of celebrating the first Mass in the rehabilitated cathedral in Manila last year." The sermon was delivered by Msgr. Charles J. McManus, di­ rector of the Cathedral Informa­ tion Center. Following the Mass, President Garcia lunched with Cardinal Spellman in the Cardinal's resi­ dence. He then went to the Ford­ .. ham Campus in the Bronx. Edue3tion is Greatest Ally President Garcia told hill Fordham audience, composed of Father McGinley, Philippine dignitaries and members of the clergy, that the U. S. should expand its program of educa-, tional aid f~r southeast Asia. His country, the president ·said. could supply the "cultural liai­ son" and be the "focal center" of such an endeavor. The U~ S., he continued, by utilizing such institutions as the Ford and Rockefeller F.ounda­ tions, with their ~'va'st means and resources, can "embark on an expanded educational aid pro­ gram for southeast Asia througll the Philippines, and help' train the' youth of the region who will be the Asian leaders of tomor­

quent in producing sufficient 'brains? We can buy the,~ very brain power, why, then, the cure best brains in the open market. is more money This, of course, is a guaranteed -much more recipe for bankruptcy. But were m 0 n e-y - t o ' Ameri.ca's economic resources m ak e them . secure even against the social­ produce, ists and the pseudo-liberals who It is a cheer­ are bent on disipating them as luI form u 1 a,

fast as possible, it by no meall8 u and it solves

follows that the formula fits. all our anxieties

As it is, America is already •• . without tears.

spending far more money on Not unexpect­ ,education than all ·the rest 'of edly it was Dr.

the world combined. It might lOS .Jam~s Bryant

seem reasQiiable that if the an­ C()I1ant, whose

swer were to be fc;>und in this 101 . name is great direction we wo.uld have had among the chemists, who pro-. some faint inkling of it. 46 BorD 107 New Greek ACROSS 56 Pi"og. 41 Armbo_ (abbr.) 68 HarmoDI_ 1 Rude ves.el posed it the other day with 0 More Power for Socialists 49 ()boo.er 60 .;nlist lOll M.a'. D.11M J I> Unile witb 'special reference to opening the ·The .suspicion, however un-, 51 Swallowed 61 Sharp eurae.. 109 Guarant7 beat 63 Kind of bird l i t Wither"d floodgates of funds for our worthy, is unavoidable that , Sli"btlr upe. ,53 ~:~~~~io. 6U Eacle'. De.' 1I0WN 'it WomaD'. IS ""nod of time G6 Gives p l _ Amercan educati&'nal system. what the' educational socialist8 1 HK WAS Dam,. agaia II Fearsome UNDER ..... ~_ Our schools, he told his' com": ~ally want is not better edu­ 56 FrozeD rala 68 Try thin/i . PKRSECU­ 51 RDrll 10 Stupe,...,.... ·1'1 On" ,a debt lIlencement 'listeners, are not cation for America but more for 'TION .. 59 Kemaia'" lIS Flo,yia&,. II Cr.wl. really bad schools, nor have' themselv.es. GZ SaiDl, 'em­ _,;arment; Z NilDbl.. 13 Walked iDin.. (.bbr.- ' SH.r....... 15 Head eo.....rlae , .. "'"a&u o• ..­ they actually failed in their ed­ Dr. Comint is a highly intel­ lit Sail·or. t TeaehioJ'• • niYer.e ~ EDfli." poli... llCational mission. Tliey. simply ligent man; it is very difficult , Prevailed . ira figur.· If M.ke wi"' Zit Manner cloth aDd • Wld.,-""'a...... '79 Hamori." 1& Bi ..er i . have not had enough money to to believe that he is 'wholly thread Bl C.pit.1 jae Bassi. lIS Vegetable • t;II'C"""_ 40 their job. Give them 'more serious when he says that more ,~llZ S&"adr 1% F ••t,,_·r (pl.) I HII:SLII:W ' III I ••bor fede..... "Be.li_ _ -much more-and they wiU money can produce more brailllL A .. ti •• (.bbr.) " Famoa. V. L editor . • COBsamM profit 1M Revamp work like a charm. 'But there' is no question that ,. TUl'; . It ;JDpi&er 11 Rep ...._ ....... .: :lNt·TH'. • HEW'" KMl'lI!:SOa

Seek Nationalizatioa the conversion of the .Americaa A . TRIKD TO ,II I'ari ... 1! !leo. . ..ATKOIl . Now it should be borne in mind ~u~atio.nal syst~m into a mono­ : W. Ma.. UI"Iee SAINT 1M St.ti. . . . OF .........._ " Pari of a

that Dr. Conant, sometime pres­ lIthIC dletators~lp wou}d mean U POsitive

M More • F.rlD". a "Ident of Harvard University (a' t~e grcatestsmgl~ co~centra­ . bUIDf! el"etrieaf

Ml"llliaal.

!t'I • Di.'ri"t la private school), has widely ad!Ion o~ po.~er, fmanc~al and 1O~:I.1o

,. p.rt.f . . . ' • Wid"• • • I ..ado. _ epeaial{

Yertised his view that the prr.:: IdeologIc.al, In - the natIOn and II ladiaa .boi" h"ad :: :tl~~':or Ito HE !lU&ll'I B.7"r. 15 Ued ..... row." Yate and religious schools' of perha,?s m. the w~rld. . Vn'J:D TO&­ II ...inted ... :.......,RANII: S1 Do . This could herald the' "end III Ch.rmer TUREBY SI lUai•• D Spr"ad.'_ America are divisive and .there­ The quam~. adYlce. of the poet as I'_m 81 FeDe" ..... d'r,ia~ . of communism in our section of fore harmful to the best inter­ Beaumarchals t?Napoleon that let i~$"'­ 1111 Spbere • D"aumlaatl_ M Req.e.t the world," he declared. lit Otber (e...... SII SolelDa 't· he make, the prunary schools of lOS Unil I~ "~neouDtel' th form) f t 1M Motb....... _48 S""red table es s 0 e na IOn. F h" d . 45 J(iad o. aa' Appearing later' the same day III E][cb ••lte We may safely judge, then, ranc~. IS ~ropagan a agencI~. Hele. Un. - II Nfl' &lJ Wreath. a' &I HE SAVED 9S Commotio. on "Meet The Press," the NBC Mrth., ftowers that he is not letting his gen­ was t;-llhpuhan compared to this. 96 Terrltor7

TRr. ......... :.. ltD Di.perM " Shar"hold"r'. television program, President 99 .;][i.t..d 11 docnmflat DAUGHTEa 101 qDiekl7 IS easy enough . to say tha.t erosl't y ge t 'th e· b e tt er 0 f h'1m, . IIIt. h' .. Aecarate Klad.' AM 106 I. bed Garcia said his country would and that when he calls for more a t IS bears. watchmg, partIe­ not recognize Red China even Solution _ Pace Eighteen money for our schools he is. ularly ;-vhen those interested. in if the U. S. should .do so. thinking only about the state­ promotmg the deal are makmg God's The next two days (June 23 Report ~pported schools. He" should no .obser,,:able effort to conceal . theIr tactIcs and 24), President Garcia was be more preCIse. He could easTh '. , . Programs Inc:rea~e l;IIIint in' Family' honored by official and' semi­ By get'into trouble over this. e real dIffIculty and the , CHIc'AGO (NC) - Father WEST BADEN SPRINGS (NC) official visits, which included It is pretty much of an open real challenge are to get our a· breakfast given for him at the RCret that what the' educational schoo!s back to their essential' Hugh M: Beahan, Grand Rapids -,Jesuit Father' Thomas Kun­ nunkal a native of Malabar, inWaldorf - Astoria Hotel by ~ialists would like to see and f';lnchon of' teaching without diocesan director of radio and eIther b an k ):'up t'mg th e na ' t·lOB TV reports 44 American dioceses dia, has been ordained at the Charles P. 'Romulo, Philippine .ee quiCkly is the complete, na­ are'producing 108 'live televisian ·J'esuit seminary here in Indi-' "Ambassador to 'the U. S. ' tionalizatjo~ of all American ~ d~stroying their own integ­ programs. Among these, 0.5 ana; is the ninth member' of hill Cardinal Spellman attended a ,education and educational agen­ rlty 10 the process. This take:­ 'eies, so that the problem' could m~re than 'watching; it take. per cent are on a weekly basis, .family to enter the priesthood 'dinner' in' 'President. Garcia'. 13.5 per cent are presented more fIC' religious life. ' honor at the Sheraton-Astor be handled with all the conveni­ oomg.. . Ho~l, . given by the Philippine thaft once a week arid 14 per ence and dexterity of a federal Fleefro'm Reds Father Kunnilnkal is one. 01.. Community Executive Council. eent less than ~nce ~ week. bureaucracy. Then indeed the The 61-'year-old Philippine money could be commandeerecl BONN (NC)-East· to West Half-hour programs constitute 'IS child·ren. Three of his' seveR' nuns, while" all fiVe leader rQde up Broadway from and channeled 'in the right di- flow of refugees continues like a 52 per cent of the total,Father' .ste~s Jlattery Park to receive the tra­ IOeCtio'ns: ,. .seemingly, endless trek througla' Beahan !"lid. Sunday is the most of bis brothers are in the 'sen-­ popular day of telecast with oil ice' of the Church.. Two are Je~ ditional .city welcome to visit­ It iSil n intoxicating prospect, the Iron Curtain. More ethan • end the current wave of anxiety .quarter million people escaped per cent of the programs origi­ . uits-a priest land; Brother; ODe ,ing heads of state. Thousanda 'w a Carmelite .priest, another 01. cheering' 'New Yorkers lined ever the alleged Americim' edu­ from th.eSoviet zone of German,. nating that day. a Capuchin priest arid another 'the sidewalks. Ticker tape flut­ elltional lag affords a splendid alone last year.That is more' thall Father Be'ahait revealed local ~red from hundreds of open epening for those who' agree the total of .Hungarians who' , Catholic telecasts have increased a diocesan priest. Educated in India; the new priest came iD windows in the downtown 01.­ found their. way to freedom' after ,220 Per cent in the past five with them to persuade the na­ fice section. tion to go along. . the bloody uprising there in 1956. years and 45 per cent in the ~ this country thre~ years ago. 12 months alone.. Faith in the Dollar Let us by no means under­ The maj ority of the telecast­ . Continued ·from Page One . ing, he continued, is done as a estimate these men, their power Things weren't as complex public service by 'TV stations. or their determination. There is little doubt that the present. for man prior to the Renaissance, About two-thirds of ·the pro­ ' .

The Only Catll,~ltc College in the DWcese of Fall Rw'er situation poses one of the great he said here. grams are on the air on thill "Then. the qmrch applied in­ threats to genuine Ameri~~n'ed­ basis. About 28 per cent pay for ,ucation in our entire experience: dividual guidance to emperor .their, broadcast time and about and beggar' alike," ihe scientist, For it is completely w.i.thin four per cent are sponsored. the realm of possibility that the who is a Lutheran, points out. "But when science 'freed' it­ American people, stampeded by the psychology of 'panic,' m~ht _self from the bonds of' religioUs dogma, thus opening the way decide that the educational so­ eialists have the right to it. . for. the technological revolution, the Church lost some of its in­ It is not. I!.ecessarY to· antici­ pate the nationalization of the fluence on· the ·ethical conduct .. , entire system as an immediate of man., WET WASH "The crucical challenge .of OUl' .tep; but if the move for ·federal day .is . to recoup this influence, control through financial dicta­ DRY CLEANING> to restQre to the Church the torship is' successful, the real task d guiding man. along:.hi8 ~ FLAT WORK'· 'battle will have been won. The ' rest is' a matter of picking up dangerous road.'" 1066 COUNTY STREET the pie~es.' . NEW BEDFORD • Cafeteria • soon to 'be ~pened Now a glarlng fallacy )1t the R. A! WILCOX CO.

'WY7-9798 root of· Dr. Conant's rh'etoric. is OFFICE FURNIJ:URE.

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Three Fall River Chinese Sisters Achieve Outstanding Records \

TttE ANCHORThurs., June 26, 1958

Catholic Deaf Are to Meet At Louisville

An outstanding record is being made at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, by a trio of Chinese si~ters. Their story, in refreshing contrast to the tales of juvenile delin­ quency haunting today's headlines, is an example of the influence for good young­ ~er sophomore year and hasn't sters can have on each decided" what career she'll fol­ other. ' "' low. It began when Joyce Pride in Daughter Mark a 1954 graduate, enthused about'the academy to her friend, Elizabeth Ng. Elizabeth, daugh-, ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Yan Ng, 357 South Main' Street, Fall River decided to attend SHA. Professing no religious affilia­ tion, she took a keen interest in academy religious classes, which she attended voluntarily, usually earning top grades in tests and quizzes. By her senior year she was seriously considering enter­ ing the Church. During ~e IIenior chiss retreat she discussed the matter with the retreat mas­ ter, Rev. Daniel Egan, S.A., who not only encouraged her person­ ally, but obtained Chinese lan­ guage catechisms for her so that she could explain the,Faith more fully to her parents. Alter graduation' Elizabeth obtained a civil service job in Washington, living in a Catholic residence there at the exprea desire of her parents. She, began formal religious instruction and was baptised on Holy Saturday this year by Rev. Cormac: Long' of St. Peter's, Washington receiv­ ing the sacrament of confirma­ tion on Pentecost Sunday. But the chain of events started by Joyce Mark has not yet Mopped. Both Elizabeth's sisters followed her to SHA. Jean Ng Iraduated this month and has been awarded a full tuition IICholarship, to a 'Providence business college. Eventually she hopes to follow Elizabeth w a, lovernment position: The young­ est sister, Carol, is now enterinl

Meanwhile, ,the whole Ng family, who work together in operating a restaurant, are an­ ticipating Elizabeth's retarn to Fall River on vacation in July. Family projects are not new to the Ngs, however. Another un­ dertaking was the -founding of a Chinese language SChool ~hich all the children attended. They're united, too, in their pride In Elizabeth. When their restaurant was visited during a quiet period they gathered t~ supply details of Elizabeth's achievements. And they have an added reason for pride in that their daughter is now the King's daughter as well. This was reflected in her choice, of a baptismal name; she's now Eliz­ abeth Regis Ng, "Regis" mean­ ing "of the kin~."

the rosary the Hail, Holy Queen and Apostles' Creed were sung, al80 in Latin. The combination of so many tongues with the uni­ versal language of the' Church lave me a tremendous feeling of the oneness of the Church -and the Mystical Body." Visit Headquarten The Legionaries felt at home ift Lourdes, too, upon visiting the Legion headquarters there, a building given to the organi­ zation by a nephew of St. Berna­ dette on condition that it hi: used for religious purposes only. At the headquarters Legionaries from all parts of Europe take turns in serving for a month' or two at a time. They distribute literature and try in other ways w make the work of the Legion Continued from Pace 0_ known to Lourdes pilgrims. heart of Pius XII, said' Father, On its return voyage the :Fall Oliveira, diocesan moderator' of River pilgrims' ship left from the Legion, and curate at Our Gibraltar, and even in that Lady of Lourdes Church, TauWl­ fortress city Father Oliveira dis­ ton, of which Rcv. E. Souza de covered fellow-Legionaries. He Mello is pastor. Whenever Le­ has returned to his Taunto~ par­ lion groups visit Rome, he bid, ish more than even enthused they receive preferred treat­ over the Legion apostolate. ment. At his own sunny, rose-sur­ All over Europe the Dublin­ J'ounded shrine of Our Lady of founded Legion is active in its Lourdes he detailed some' of the work of cooperating with the accomplishm'ents, of the three t:lergy in the salvation of souls, praesidia active in his parish. J'eported Father Oliveira, re­ Nearly every previously uncon­ cently returned from, a 4-day firmed adult has received that pilgrimage to Old World shrines, 'sacrament, many marriages 'have made with a g,roup of active and been rectified, and th~ number auxiliary Legion members. . of parishioners approaching the , "When the Pope blessed us it sacraments has been tripled in was as if he were trying to take the five years the Legion has in the whole world with his ex­ been in operation. In the entire tended arms,"said Father Oli­ Diocese, he' said, there are 21 veira, A prized souvenir of his praesidia organized in 13 p:u­ trip is a group photograph in ishes. which he stands next to the Holy Parish Shrine Fa'ther, and, in view of his great devotion to Our Lady, a memory A miniature Lourdes proces­ equally prized is that he said sion is' held monthly to Our Mass daily while in Rome at the Lady of Lourdes' parish shrine, basilica of St. Mary Major, with parish and' City-wide largest church in the world dedi­ groups taking turns in partici­ t:ated to Our Lady. pating. The shrine itself be­ longs to the parish in a unique Unity of Chure" ,way, for it is made of stones Other points of interest vi8­ eollected from the fields of Ited by the pilgrims from the nearby farms. Father Oliveira Fall River Diocese included Fatima; Ars, where the parish' himself manned a truck for a month during the Mariah Year t:hurch of the Cure of An is still of 1954, when the shrine. was in use' Pompeii, with its world­ J'enow~ed painting of Our Lady built, aiding parish teen-agers in collecting suitable stones. of Perpetual Help; and Paray­ "The Legion of Mary multi­ le-M'onial, made famous by St. plies the zeal of priests by pro­ Margaret Mary Alacoque. They viding them with capable 'help­ are probably one' of the' few ers," declared the diocesan mod­ -groups ever to visit Mon-aco for erator. "Please pray for the work the purpose of seeing its Cathe­ dra I, completely by-passing the' of the Legion, and for increased . membership in the Diocese," he casinos of Monte Carlo! concluded. Lourdes,however, in.its cen­ tennial year, formed the high point of the pilgrimage, said Father Oliveira, But he fore­ , went the privilege of bathing in Maintenance Supplies

the waters of the shrine. "There were so many sick people wait­ SWEEPERS - SOAPS

ing that I cou'ld not bear to take DISINFECTANTS

time needed by them." FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

He cited the nightly torchlight procession to the grotto of Lourdes as a never-to-be-for­ aotten expcrience. "The rosary 1886 PURCHASE ST. was said by each pilgrim in bis HEW BEDFORD', own tongue, with the, Gloria Patri at the end of each decade WY3-3716 recited in Latin. At the end of "

Visit to Lourdes

SCHOOL

'DAHILL CO.

17

LOUISVILLE (NC)­ Two important developments for Catholic deaf persons are expected to come out of

REV. CORMAC LONG

ELIZABETH R. NG

Preiate Says Today's Youth Victims Of False Philosophy of Discipline GREENSBURG (NC)-Today's "To a great segment of our young people make up neither college men ana; women today," • "beat" nor a "silent" generathe speaker declared, "freedom tion, but rather are the "articuill a situation in. which the indi­ late" and "aggressive" 'victims vidual can do or say an).thing of a false philosophy of difici1II1hich he wants to say or do, pline. without regard to Hi~ rights or Rt. Rev. Msgr. Donald M. privileges of ,anyone else. To Cleary, chaplain to Catholic stuthem the exalted idea of the dig­ dents at Cornell University, nity of man has been corrupted Itbaca, N. Y., offered this analyinto the idea of the supremacy Bis in a commencement address of the individual's judgment. at Seton Hill College here. Cor"When the are told that lib­ nell has been the scene of recent . y. ' outbreaks of student violence. ert~ IS the opportulllty to do ~hat , Students like those who took whl~h one. ought to do, th~y Im­ t t' t mediately choke on the word · th d par t In e emons ra lOllS a , ht' f ·t·, r th.t Cornell, -he said, are the "fu1loug. 'to or 1 ~mf. 1~~ ~,u on ~ blown products of an educational restrlc Ion an, Iml a .lOn, an theory which has as its fundathese words hav~ long .slnce been . a glarmg . their One mental premise error. "deleted . ht from th t leXicons.' 1 The error, he continued, i15 the mIg say a ~oung ~p e belief "that\ liberty and freedom have :always rebelled agamst aJ'e unconditioned and UDrea~t~or~ty, have always resented '-' t e d commod't' diSCiplIne, SwlC I les-th a t p h'l I. ' . have always fought ' hy w h'IC h t eac-h es =th a t ord e . r agamst stnctures 'osop . . . on h speech and 1 can be established without disei­ actio~s. . . B1.!,t ,It as been eft pline and that morality i.Fits to thl~ generatIon t~ deny t~e b roa d est sense IS . the prod uct of very of. authonty and diS­ . r right t t" the adored democratic process." Clp me 0 eXls . This, point of view, Msgr. : M,sgr. Cleary pointed out that Cleary Said, is "the only pos­ "order caimot exist without au'­ sible explanation'" of students' thority,' virtue cannot flourish "violent, reaction to anything without discipline. Any philos­ which resembles authority' or ophy which teaches the contrary discipline. While unexpressed, must of necessity inculcate chaos their attitude seems to be: 'We and anarchy." 'will accept and Ii've by only r'-·-----~-----those rules and that code which WE consider to be just 'and fair,' "

...

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Closes Parish Continued from Pac~ 0_ 'moved 'to other parts of town. . The St. Augustine parish was erected. by the late Bishop James A. McFadden to serve a large group of Negro Catholics living ,on Youngstown's east side. The parish has been di­ rected by priests of the Society, of ,the Precious Blood. Father Cyril Kennedy, C.PP.S., pastor, has returned to' the commun'ity's Brunnerdale Seminary in Can­ ton for reassignment.

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SULLIVAN' BROS. , PRINTERS· Main Office and ,Plant

the ninth annual convention of the International Catholic Deaf Association here, July 6 to 12. Convention directors are look­ ing for an agreement on a set of hand signs fQr Catholic usage which will eliminate differences in the signing of such terms as "sacraments," "rosary" and "Mass." A printed form for Confession by deaf persons is the second m'ljor items on the agenda. This will make it possible for the deaf person to confess his sins quickly and accurately with a pencil. ~fhe majority of deaf persons attending the convention will be those who use signs rather than 'speech for communication. All meetings will be conductt.>d by sig-ns, in silence. 'Father Gerald Timmel, con­ vention chairman, said transla­

tors will be on hand, They wiD

interpret signs for those not pro­

ficient in sign language. As the

"sl>eeches" are delivered in sign

language, the translators wiD

convey the meaning in words.

An estimated 1,000 deaf per­ sons, their husbands and wives, and chaplains of local chapten, of the association are expected to attend. In addition to con­ vention meetings, vacation and 'mission features have been in­ cluded in the program. Daiiy mass with sermon and

Confessions are planned. Toun

of places of historical' interest,

a boat ride on a river steameF.

a grand ball and a, civic recep­

tion are also on the agenda.

Registration will be held July'

at convention headquarters ..

Louisville's Kentucky Hotel. The

daily Mass will be ofTered at the

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·THE flGHftlNG 'CHAPLAIN WHI/£ YOtltV61(.g,CHA!'lAIN TIM AllliARN RE§r{J AT THE AUE~/CAN CON4HlATE IN HONG ){ON/;;, MATTE/?g, OF VITAl IMPORTANce OCCtrPy TilE ArrENTION OF THe ?€N7i4GON IN WA{;,HINGTON, D.C . •.•.

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,mllCE ON f"Ar.EVL FINO TH6 IIAFI.E~q. V/C77M •• ••

MR'. ,~E:CRETARY _

'

CHAPLAIN AHEA£N WIL.l- HAVE' H/~

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A DAY, Og lWO.

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IIErT' Wt8::.. HEW ~DeRI6 fOR CHAPlAIN

•. , Hollywood in Focus,

,',

Sees. New, Moral \Hazards In Trend .to 'Grey' Films

I ,18

-THE ANCHOR Thurs., June 26', ,1958

, Family Prayer Is ':lope of World

The sanctity arid unity of the, ern Provincial of the Order; family n'iust be protected at all Special police were pressed costs and this must come about into duty as the large crowd, thro_ugh' family prayer, Father began to pour into the grounds RAFT WELD AJAR ERA Patrick Peyton of the Holy of the Holy Cross Fathers Sem­ OGRE OWER TOG SUIl By William oR. :Mooring / M NEVA EVE C 0 ,Cross Fathers told more than inary where the Fair was held. ALTER RIGS ENGLAND A young fellow who knows movies so well he ought to 3500 people a't the Country Fair The order has under construc­ SORO TEEPEE in North Easton sponsored by tion on the same grounds a new 10 on "$64,000 Question", 'offers "two reasons why many the Associate Family of the Holy Seminary, the first built in the 'almost first-class films fail to click' with the public these Cross Fathers. East by the Order that conducts days." Some, he says, "lack a positive point of view." Others' The' salvation of the world Stonehill College, Notre Dame hinges on the return to unity, University, King's' College in , "display too little regard for (James Stewar~), concientiously love and respect in ~h~ iamily Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and' other' consistency 'in characteri~- retiring from the poliGe force circle, the world famous founder institutions. ~ tion." . becaU!~e he suffers dizzy spells, of the Family Rosary Crusade Father Peyton left North "Any Hollywood producer then shortlyalterwards getting and the Family Theatre said. Easton for Minnesota where he ehoosing a theme like' negroinvolved in' a dizzy love affair The famous priest, who rewill conduct a State-wide Family whife integration, anti-semitism, with a woman he knows as the It seems only a short time that turned recently from the BrusRosary Crusade on the sam'e wife of a-friend? ' poll'tical charRoddy, with his mother, used to pattern he has' followed in dio­ Jatanism,.laborIn the soon to be released come to our home to' dinner,' sels World's ,Fair, 'where the Holy Cross Fathers are showing ceses throughout America Eu­ in a nag ement film; "Houseboat", .Sophia Lorthen play cowboys and Indians a film three years in the making, rope, Asia and Africa. ' apheaval, etc., en plays the deVoted fosterwiH'f our children. • h 0 u 1d not ' mother of Cary Grant's children Dean Stockwell's last visit was "The Fifteen Mysteries of, the Rosary", was introduced to the pose and ex(as a means, of course, to landwith his brother Guy, about overflow crowd by the Rev. ploit the social ing their Pa.) At the start we three years back. He then seemed problem then see her teachIng the little boy quiet, even 'timid. His career as' George S. DePrizio, CSC, East­ mn away from how to steal from a street bar- a boy star had finished. Would It' without atrow! he make it again as an adult tempting' any solution". What '" Similar inconsistencies have actor? VATICAN CITY (NC)-The

might' happen if positive conturned up' in other recent pic": Holy See's participation in the

'0 1 t' be Today, presumably,' he is all t ures.. ne exp aria IOn may elusions were drawn in such , Brussels World Fair has been th a t " H 0 11ywoo d - pro d ucers are se.t again, although ,I hope this ' films, l'S another matter. , role in "Compulsion" will not : eommemora t e d y ab new series C'HARL'ES 'F.'VARGAS breaking away from stark black f V' t' . C't " t t Cl·tes Examples 't " , ty.pe Dean Stockwell either. l) a Ican 1 y,po~,age's amps. 25" ROCKDALE V E h . T'he young' man cites as typian d w I e 'contrasts-between vir' .. A EI\IU 'Character typing is one of the t uous and , vicious 'characters. -1of the' "rl'p ,and run tech' ' NEW BEDFORD, MASS. ..... most stupid and inexplicable of, 'Ilique" in screenplay,..t,el,ling, The fair-haired hero and black '"'Ma'rkof. the Hawk", .in, Wllich, moustachioed'villian ai-e' not Hollywood's casting habits., , _ "''', ",' 'P,u'p Te ......~t.~ •.99· ",~. ." " -, ~.,he.: p'roducers set Littl~ Rock even seen in West'erns any more. ' Marg!lret O~Brien ~ow,awaita, , , Produce "k"to t " adult fulfillment as 'an actreliS, t,o" .an, ,African "tune"; rS,see. ,cr,ea e, lin , , Ivr,ics I , b e t ween' 'th'e once "arid he, r m,'other:hinted" the II Tent' . ~ ....

, ~Ma' rJ'or,ie Mornings' tar~'" whi,ch, are'a, 'of 'g ,rey ,-\'' ~ Wa' C~tp ~n def~re-n'ce' to popuiar' senti,..' ,typi,cal ,herq and heel, ,the :pre-. "H911ywood, producers' cannot'.. .~:.,"""" '. ' .-v

,.nen('watered 'down the Jewish mise being that, there is ,good, forget the pert little girl and ~ , , ,;>,' ,5x7 - 11.50 '

, ' eharacteristi,cs .. and' aspirl!tions in the worst of- us and :,bad' in' ,look to the ~alerited young Wo.,. . ", ' 'U'" M'B'REl'L'A', "T' ENTS'

,expressed in theJ)qv,el'~, and: the best. 'U dramatic conflict thus man. Pigeon-hole:thinking! '

::,,;~ "Bridge on the River Kwai", becomes a" trifle leSs c:ut,.and· " '7x7 ~

CrossWord Solution

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'tractive but deceptive down of moral hazards for· the Legion

the dove of peace". of Decency to deal with. .

This young man was born and Seeing Margaret O'Brien and

lived many years in the! East. her mother on TV, via Ed Mur­

He is familiar with' the typical row's '~Person to Person", re­

British colonial officer, .whom called for me, more personal

contacts I had with them when

he k nows, as. '!, very d 1'ff eren t character from the one Alec Margaret was MGM's top child

Guinness plays in ,"Kwai". So star. The crisp diction and earn­

too, one suspects, does Guinness est 'expression were still there

himself, who almost refused to, on TV, but like the pigtails, the

play the part. O'Brien dialogue was gone.

"Paths· of Glory", "Sayonara", Margaret used to talk a blue

"'The Young Lions", "The Enemy streak'!, catechism, school, pets,

Below", all recent and exceleverything, While She and Dean lent. films about war, are chalStock,well were making :'The

lenged by our young friend Secret Garden" together, Mar­

because they "implicitly degaret left her arithmetic' to m'ake

nounce patriotism and national me lemonade. "I hope, someday

pride", although he quickly adds to become a good cook", she

that his own military status said, "and a good philosopher

gives him "an urgent and imtoo!" _

mediate concern for the preserNow as Margaret gets her

, vatioh- of world peace." lovely face on. the front c<>ver

.As he suggests, it may well be' of "Life" ,md is instantly com- <f'

that more people than Hollypared with Elizabeth Taylor,

wood 'producers suspect" 'ar~ Dean prepa-res to" co-star' 'in

alienated.whether they realize Richard' Zanuck's production ,of

it ()["',not, by such trends of, the 'Loeb'-'Loew crime story;

thought,which .. come iil cycles,"Compulsion" which brought a'

lodrum, up Ii particular theme sensational press 'to' ro.iuig'

with monotonous, repetition. StOCkwell and his co-st~r .lto,d.,.'

Inco~sistencies dy, McDowall along'Broadway. '-,:.: Hitchcock may. be forgiven ' Calls "Typin&," Stupid , <the, far~fetcJ:led story in "Ver:- " Roddy, I hear; will not appear' tigo""because::, the p.ictu~e is "a,' in, the, ,filni,'. He, fears being .. maste:rpieceofNsusp,en~e". '15' he "ty'ped", 'which'in, thE:, circum-', , ,,,as readily,'pardoned for, 'the iri-' .. stan'ces 'of-the role is somethinc .: ',oOnsistency, which has, hi.: bero,: "to, consider. __,', :"" . i:,

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19 I

Sports Chatter '

THEAW·PO"- _~_ Thurs., June 26, , ~

Worcester Parochial High Win~ State ~hampionsh'ip" By Jack Kineavy

.

K of C F,J'"esees 'Anofhell' 't~agy'

,

In Tito Move

Somerset High School Coaeh

The latest in a long line of giant killers is St. Stephen's High of Worcester which last Sunday defeated highly­ touted Newton, 4":1, to annex the 1958 state baseball cham­ pionship. The achievement is all the more remarkable when the comparative male en­ Gernert are the ,only men ,who rollments of the two final­ have performed up to par to ists are compared. St. Ste­ date. The "unSeasonable weather

phen's, a four year school, has, among other things, re­ had a total of 96 boys where­ as Newton lists 1400 in grades 10 through 12. . As a matter of fact, the baseball turn-. out this year (125) exceeded the total 'num­ ber of boys in the Worcester school. If St. Steph­ ens were com­ peting in the Eastern Tourney, the school would presumably be included in Class C, which would make .it ineligible to compete~ in ·the State final. St. Stephen's b coached by .Jack Tivnan, for­ mer Holy Cro~ pitcher a decade or 90 ago. The game originally .scheduled for Saturday was held 'over by threatening ~eather but a banner crowd of 5,000 thronged the stands at Fitton Field Sunday to witness the final ' Don Riedl was the starting and . .winning pitcher for St. Steph.en;s but he needed help from Paul Morano who came in the sixth to hurl 3 1-3 innings of scoreless ball. Morano was indeed the fair­ haired boy for the Worcest.6 parochials. In addition to his fine relief stint, Paul came through with a bases-loaded , triple in the fourth to provide more than the needed margin for victory. In another tl'emencious exhi­

bition of versatility, St. Steph­ en's catcher, Paul Cantani-who himself owns a 5-0 pitching rec­ ord-was all over Fitton. Field catching pop flies. In all be hauled down five, two well back of the plate and two up the first base line: The talented catcher had 10 putouts in the ~ame. For coach Howard FergusOn's , Newton nine, the loss must have come as a distinct shock.' The Eastern Mass.., titlists had -nu­ merous scQring opportunitie but.they left'a .record. 16 strand>­ . ed; ,.RoD ' O'Lolighli.n, ,'·wjt.b two' f singles and :-a·.. triple, Paced·,the ~' " iI Tige!,. ';. 10>:'hiC~,a.t~cl!:. ', It,,·, wa~ 'rNewton's ,seventh, apllearance i~ ; the tour.ney:liliai. TheY.',ve woo l,two state:;tifl~. ',>.. From Yu~tan, MexiCo com~ : an anecdote from which YOU'll : get a chuckle. It didn't take the :Padre long to realize that the 'Saturday afternoon confesSion line was longer than usual. "When confessions were over ,I found out why," said Father • J obn P. Lomasney, Maryknoll Missioner from Dorchester, Mass. A gang of kids, who were playing baseball instead of at­ tending doctrine class,' rushed into Cburch ·to take shelter from a heavy storm. "My catechist-never one 'to let. an opportunity pass-<:or­ railed them for their doctrine lesson, and then recommended that they all go to confession. When I complimented him, be

replieq, 'Padre, for three weeks l',ve been trying to get those ball players in here. Don't thank me-thank the good Lord fOr raining thelit out!'" With the Red Sox currently riding along ,in fourth. place, just' a game and ,a half out of

second, their sub-standard pace

Js almost lost sight of. But only

once in the last 25 yearS have

the Sox had as poor a,mark as

thefr present 31-33 record. III

1954 at this time the Bosox were

~4-30, buried in the American

League cellar and 20, games. off

the pace. Thatw~ Lou Bou­

dreu's last year at the' Boston

helm.

': Inconsistent' 'pitChing, and the

lack of timely bitting are the

basic cal.i~s·, ofthe:SOj[>,:pligbt.

.kosen, Malzone, Runnels, and

,:.< •..

NEW HAVEN (N(j)­ The national head of tfte Knights of Columbus has expressed opposition to at.­ tempts to extradite a minister of wartime Croatia from thiI

country to face charges of " _ crimes" in Yugoslavia.

Supreme Knight Luke E, Hart declared that Andrija Artuko­ vic, Minister of Interior in the Croatian go~ernment during World War II, would become "a second Imre Nagyll if sent back to Yugoslavia. "11 any example of what might result from the granting of the petition of Yugoslavia Lor the return of Dr. Artukovic: to that country were needoo," Mr. Hart said "it might be formed in the news from Hun­ gary. I pray not and I am JOe­ luctant to believe that this g09­ e1'llment would be willirl'g ae have his blood on our hands."

tarded the great Ted Williams.

Ted needs that real warm weather to get going but the weatherman is still holding out. On the mound, Frank Sulli­ van and Tom Brewer, the aces of the staff, have been able to account for only seven victories between them. Willard I Nixon, at 1-7, is in the throes of .his worst professional season ever. The former Yankee nemesis now is suffering' fr6m a sore should­ er which probably means he'll do stint in the bull pen before getting another starting aSsign­ ment. " On paper the Sox' personnel .SAFETY PROGRAM: Seminarians_from St. Mary's stacks up with the best in the Semmary, Baltimore, ,are shown ~tising a relea.'!e from' league. ~,us it would be pre­ I [ 01 C Member a front head hold during waterfront safety Fogram at mature to consign them to a Mr. Hart's statement followed Cathedral C~mp. Seminarians Donald J. Bowen and James' a resolution passed by the __

disappointing'fate. Detroit at the E. Murphy, are in the water while' National Red Cross preme board of directors ot ~

moment is the Cinderella team of th~ league. The TigerS 'took' Instructor Donald V. Brand g.ives pointers. The seminarians Knights of Columbus, a ftIIII!F

the vaunted. Yankees over the will be counsellors again at Cathedral 'Camp this S':lm'iner. of whiCh was sent to Secre~

jumPs' seven consecutive times of State John' Foster Dulles. .

'before being blown out 'of the Mr. Artukovie is a memlais

park. 15-0, of!. Saturday. But, if of tbe St. Columban's Counao:il,

you're going to lose 'em might

'Knigbts of Columbus, of W""'" as well lose 'em gOod. ' 'minster, Calif. NEW YORK (NC)-The "prin- . ian emigrants continuany,". he Out in Milwaukee the four False Charges cipal work" of a priest is offer- declared, "becoming' their be­ teams competing in the Young ing the Mass, His Excellency loved spiritual fathers, benefac­ Catholic Little' League have The Yugoslav governm_ chosen novel names for 'their Archbishop Amleto Giovanni, tors, counselors, infirmarians" has been trying since 195,., . they are ever ready to defend clubs: The Popes, the Cardinals, Cicognani has said. have Mr. Artukovic, 57, ex.... them when in difficulties and the Bishops and the Padres. The , "The Holy Sacrifice transcends dited. A Catholic, he' sel'ftld . clerical· names were selected all h ~ activity,' the Apos- distress; they open schools for as Minister of Interior in ~ tolic Delegate to the United their tnaining, and never aban­ league sponsors said, pro-Nazi Croatian governm_t

States decIared in an address at don them or become disheart­ the league for boys 9:'12 hopes from April 1941, to October

to eliminate' competition on a the dedication of a new $500,000 ened by any kind of' difficulty, 1942. Croatia was made an an­ parish ~ and .encourage the wing at St. ,Charles Seminary, hard journey 'or ,dangerous addependent state after the Ger­ youngsters to get "along with Staten Island. venture - • • They increase man invasion of Yugoslavia. ' boys outside their neighborhood. Mission of Priest their zeal aod affection in acWhen Tito's communist p8I'­ A player pool has been formed Archbishop Cicognani 'said in co~nf'e wi~ the • • • needs of tisans took control of Croatia ill

from '12 boys in St. Elizabeth, 1945, Mr. Artukovic fled .­

his address that a seminary is a ,thell" people. St. Mary Czestochowa,. 5S. Peter place where candidates for the "It is the ebarity of Christ British-held territory. He came and Paul and St. Robert parish­ to this country in 1948. priesthood prepare themselvell which animates these good men," es. The players will be divided "so that one day they mayexerMr. Artukovic has been de­ Archbishop Cicognani said., into four evenly matched teams. cise their proper and principal 'They offer their talents, heart fended by the former privaw An 4P wire photo out of office" of offering the Mass. and 8OuI, their labor and re- secretary of His Eminence AI-­ Cleveland last week pictured' a The Holy Sacrifice, he added,sow:ces; 'moved by the charity of oysius Cardinal Stepinac, Fatber

group of nuns attending the game ,"is .an, act superior to anything' Christ, they never tire." Stephen Lackovic, woo '~ , ,

in a body for the first time. The ,that, might be --accomplished resides in Lackawanna, H.Y. 4Jt..... ..._ ...._....._ ... __ footnote to the picture went ·on .through intellectual talents, lit­ to explain that the sisters· were' erary, ability or any other gift," dyed-in-the-wool Indian fans "To offer to God the Holy Body Builders with but one' exception. The in­ 'Sacrifice and to, distribl.1te ,the dependent <,thinker,.-'a· Y~llkee gifts of God, the sacraments .and Aluminum, or Steel' fan. was relegated to a badttow ..th~ ,' t;ruths of faith-such is,:the 944 County St. .eat by her. assoCiates. Whim' the .NEW BEDFORD. MAss.' mission . of the priest," Arch­ "lor Your Protect~ visiting' Yan~ w~re, app~i~ ,~~opciCogi;lani said.. ' :":, : " , WY 2.:tt618 .8uv From of 'the situation, ·theY:,p~i~(ed ",,'rge Apostolic, Dele~a~. ~liio theiJ;: loyal rooter with "ait/'auto­ PERFECTION~ ,praised the Scalabrinian Fathers lJ"aphed ball. 'wbo conduct the New Y ~rk 132 Rockdo',£ semmary. "Th~y look after 1131R~I'igion New Bedtord

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Prelate Stresses Principal Work For Priest Is, Offering Mass .

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Science and In Close Harmony . s'!.

LOUIS (NC)-'-"Harmony between science and religiQ!l' has always been a postulate of. the Catholic philosophy of educa­ tion," Bishop Charles H. Helm­ sing of Springfield-Cape Girard­ eau, Mo., said at·· baccalaureate ceremonies at St. Louis Univer­ sity. ' "More than 15 centuries ago." he observed "St. Augustine pos­ ited the Catholic attitude toward truth when he stated that'10,000 difficulties in regard to religi­ ous truth never make "a single doubt. Truth is one and can never contradict itself.

"Seeming contradictions," BiShop Helmsing pointed out, "come from ignorance. When there is a supposed conflict be­ tween religion and science, the conflict comes from either ig­ norance of science or ignorance of revealed truth."

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I 20

Policy

:'Church,"s Caution Source Of ' Reassuring Strength By Donald. McDonald Davenport Catholic-Messenger

The other day, when announcement .wasm'ade that the first, step toward the possible beatification of John Henry'Cardinal Newman would be taken June,.17, a friend of mine wondered aloud why the Church has, on more than one occasion, viewed a' man were coming out in' unprece­ with suspicion, if not 'alarm1 '" dented profusion' and the during his lifetime, o~ly to Churcli simply lacked the re­ search and intellectual resources ~nonize him a century or

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to make on-the-spot judgments Rveral centuries later. , Newman lived under a Cloud and distinctions 'between what was true and what was false in for 20 years these philosophers (and a great following, his deal of it was, in fact, false). I conyersion ,t 0 .' ' the Catholic It was only natural then, and Fa i t h. An d I feel it very reassuring, that while Newman . the Church should have adopted scholars , are still· dIsputing the justice or, inj ustice, of it, no 'one denies the faet that ,the cloud did' , exist. Newman,'- of course, was not the first saintly Catholic to encounter suspicion, eoolness and official opposition.. St. Thom~s Aquinas was not al­ lowed to teach Aristotle at the University of Paris, and saints . ,like Teresa of Avila,.John of the Cross and Joan of Arc met with opposition of a' ferocity the gent,le Newman never knew. i don't think anyone single' factor can adequately explain this apparent paradox of official reproach and reservation during a saint's life and r post-facto canonization. But several con­ siderations come to mind which might put the thing into a focus where ·it is' seen as normal' and natural. and certainly nothing,' about which to get terribly' upset.

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brought in lieu of a false peace a wait-and-see policy as Thomas -THE ANCHOR performed the incredible task , .' Thu.~s., June, 2,6', 1958 . that cannot 'rise above the natu­ ral order, and she knows quite of working. his way .through well the need for ferment and Aristotle, Averroes' and Avi­ the exigencies of revolution., cenna, keeping all that was good both of which are essential to in their systems, rejecting what the vitality of the Church. The Free From Error was false, and ,constructing, one ,. is conservative, the other I with Aristotle's' magnificent revolutionary. I realize that these few conphilosophical methods, a sys. t·t . siderat,ions are not the whole of tern of Catholic, theology.' that The Church, as an InS 1 utlon, this matter, but I do think theY . must ,be conservative." But the still stands today as the coi'net­ are relevant. revolutionary ferment must ~tone of all Catholic "theologiz- '. come from her individual mem­ And I think that far mor~ l!,lg. _ ',' _,'~ bers,. a,od ,if the ferment and noteworthy than the Church's Active Elements revolutionar.y action is needful, historical hesitancy, in adopting A third consideration is sup-. ; sh.e . ~i11 per~it it ~n.d,. if need an<;l endorsing what is' eventu~ plied by the great co~tempor~ry , be~4 e,!"dorse.lt explICItly. , ally proved true, is the fact th~t, French'" th~ologian,' ,Henri de As "an 'institution, commis­ . for 2,000 years she 'has been able to keep her teachings on Faith' 'Lubac, S.J., who himself, has' .. sioned by Ghrist'·to lead souls and morals il'11mune from the in­ known what it means to have' to salvation, she is' the Holy fection of error. his writings and his teachings ·,Mother" and, like a mother, legitimately circumscribed' by . fiercely. dedicated to the con­ An awful lot of wrong:-headed Church authorities. ' " ' servation of life. • people have tried to introduce error' into that teaching and In his' first' book of "Para- ' . But' the Mother·' knows, what tradition. Their attempts add doxes," Father de Lubac. ob- Christ, her Head, has' said about up to an interesting' and volum­ serves that in the 'Church there the kind of "peace" He has inous history of heresy• are alwa'ys two active ·elements, give~, and' the "sword" be had

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Test of Analysis And in at least one important respect the Church's caution, deliberativeness and reflective­ ness before endorsing the thought and judgmente of one of the faithful constit.ute one , of the sources of her great and reassuring strength.

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This, in fact, is the first con­ sideration I think we should

look at. ,We canno't have the

reassurance th~t the Church

will not 'be "taken iii" by false

doctrines and philosophies

without running the risk that

the same Church will delay tor

what seems to some of 'us an

intolerably long time before she

endorses .what is true.,

If we want to be sure that 'error' does' not insinuate itself into Church tradition and ,teach:­ lng, it seems to l'11e we' must reconcile ourselves' to 'the .faC!', ·-that truth, too" must .submit to ' the time-consuming' test of 'an- ' , alysis, examin'ation; reflect'ioil and deliberation. . , ; Human Frailties , , It might be. objected -....: imd here wecorile to a:"secorid'con-' sideration that Church au-, thorities 'should ,be more per­ eeptive, that they should be able to recognize more quickly what is true and ,good'" that 'they should be able easily to distiIl­ guish between truth and error. 'This objection, ignores, I think, two facts. First, that in: cases involving extremely subtle theological and philo­ sophical positions, those who are in authority must rely upon the theological and philosophical erudition of their advisers who, as often as not, may be the, technical inferiors of the theo­ logians or philosophers whose works ate being examined and evaluated. , Nor would it be surprising if advisers to authority suffered from such human frailties as envy. frailties that would color' their judgment. Time and Age , Secondly, the circumstances of time and age must be given '' sufficient .. weight. In the ,case '. CAPE COD of St~ Thomas Aquinas, for ex­ Victory ,Church ample, the ',Church up until that nice'st pI of time h,ad. not deve.loped. the ~ys. aces

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PllIDES IN NEW CHURCH: Our'Lady of is in the center right. Tl:Ie Sixth Station-Veronica Wipes in Centerville today off+rs one of the the Face of Jesus':-is in the insert. The lower left is a view h' ° th F II R' DO Th .woors IP.' In ~. a Ive~. ' l.ocese... e of the sanctuary from the middle aisle. The parish rectory layout. above shows the baptismal font a d Our Lady of is at t~e lower right. The' Church may be reached by taking tematic we know to­ Victory shrine togethetwith a right turn from Mid~Cape' Highway at Craigville. Motel c l a y ,theology, '" , " the facade Ol[ the church' at , Transletio'ns of, the .Greek 'and, the top.' Modern kitchen facilities are· in, t e: churCh base-' to Short: Flying Hill Road and continuing to center' of Arabian. pagan .. ,philosoph~rs . ment, ,shown in the. ,center left ph~to and the main altar Centerville Viilage. .. " "


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