Maronite 'p'ontifical To Open Chair
The ANCHOR
Of Unity Octave
Chor-Bishop Joseph Eid, D:D., Ph:D., pastor of St. Anthon'y of the Desert Church, F.all River, will celebrate a Pontifical ,Mass in the Maronite ltiteat 7 :30 Monday eve~ing, Jan. 18, in St. ,Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, to open the Chair of Unity Octave' 'On the contrary the variety in in the Diocese of Fall River. such non-essel1ti~ls as ceremonAn Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL The Chor-Bishop will be as- ials, language and customs are sisted in the Mass by Rev. a ~ark of the Church's vitality George Saad, pastor of Our Lad; and universal!ty. , . Fall River, M(!'J$s. Thursday, Jan. 14, 1960 The Marom~e :Rlte ,IS .one of of Purgatory Church New Bed.... 4 ' l©l1960 ' PRICE lOe , ' . the many rites withIn the o. The Anchor $4,00 per Year I 4 I .~O. So ford, and Rev. Norman,J. Ferns, Ch' urc h , Wh'l I e mos t Ca th 0 I'ICS , M ' C 'h Second Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River, Mass. assistant at St. ary s hurc, f th W t b I t th L t' Taumon 0 e es e ong 0 e a In , ' , , Rite, there are many Oriental r~- , fl' ~USICMass for Will t?e be PontIflc~1 MarRites XII to be"in "held," say Pope omte provided by Pius equal asesteem and the choir of St.,' Ant?ony's equal ho~or, for they adorn the Church ul1der the directIon of common Mother Church with a Tanous Khoury! with' Carl royal garrr.mt of many colors. , ' Bshara as orgamst. ~tar boys Whatever the difference of Rite ALTONA (NC)-A leading Catholi« authority on unity': will be from the Chor-Bishop's the' flame of faith is one." ' CHOR-BISHOP EID Church also, and v~rious parish _ The' Maronite is one of the movements among non-Catholic bodies 'sees three principal societies from St. Anthoriy's vyill, Oriental Rites an'd is one of the factors ilarrowingthe gap betwee~ Catholics,. Orthodox and also be in ~ttendance. ' ,oldest,in the Church, being the Protestants. Father Gu!'\tave Weigel, S.J., hst~d, them as' " " . ,While the, Church ill one ,in . ancient Syriac Liturgy of An• I -movemen, 't ' faith, sacraments and authority, :Unrich'ascribed to St. James the' t, h e l't 1 urglca COll.ege,,~ a Jesuit semina,r,y, sai!!', '.' s h e has, never held to a'uniform-' ,Less,' first Bishop of Jeru~alem. , , ., greater use of the Bible, and, the litu gical movement has'de-' ity in ce'remonies' and language,. . Turn to Page Eighteen ecumenical, or unity, plans velQped am'ong, people anew NEW ORLEANS, (NC)among- Protestants. understanding of the f~nctions Archbishop Jos'eph F. Rumof the Catholic Church and has 1\3 for reunion of all churches, ,aroused greater interest in its mel of N ewOrleans,' emphathe. Jesuit theologian told, the rites and ceremonies. ' sized the duties of parents to Christopher Lecture Forum of 'their children regarding "comAl.~ool1a:. Liturgical ,Movement pany-keeping" and preparation, VIENNA (NC)-The use of nuclear weapons' is morally When CatholIcs, Orthod~x, He asserted- that "both Protest-· for :marrhl!te in a pastoral letter. forbiddeJ?, if, any ,one of our r,najor, 'conditions is absent, an andProtestantswork together 111, an~,.arld "tatholics hay-e. deve~-., ' .... " , ';' , " , terms of Christian love in which ,oped their own liturgy, 'and that ' :(VIuch of the trouble 111 mar- Au~trian Bishop has stated. Bishop Paulus Rusch, Ordinary they all bclieve, then mankind a continued development of the' ri~d l,~fe. today,'! the A.rchbishop ean' hopc that God in His mercy '-liturgical 'movement' in: bOth sal4, anses fr?m~he Immature, of t,he Apostolic Administration of Innsbruck-Feldkirch, Bishop Rusch stressed the will bring all men together in churches will' be the source unsoun~ and m~sgu.lded app~oach ,said, the llse of atomic weathe' same church, the same doc:-' of' ~ew considera~foQli: mutual' ,to marrlagt; whlc,h IS ~oQ common po~'s ,can,be; ju~tified' 6,n,ly 'condition that the destructive trine and the same worship." " friendship and mutual 'adrnira- amofolg 0'-,lr: ,~een:-aged and adol-:-, unoer, ,the .!qllowing. four ' ;po~er of the micl~ar weap~D Father Weigel professor' of 'tion'." " , "\ :'. .. esc~nt young peopl~. conditions: ' ,must, be controllable. I!1 no CIr" , ' " , '. cu~stance, ,he declared, would. theology at WO~dstock' (Md.) Tu~n. topageE,il;\'~~,en ,"Too'f!laJ;ly p'arents shirk their , "responsibility,' wisely and pru1. ~~e war tnus~ be strIcti! a ',it be morally justifiable to use the' atom bOmb indiscriminately. ,'dently to instruct their teen- defenllive one agamst' an 'unJust aged 'children about the importattack. This would simply be a method ance of modesty, purity and 2. The basic values' of an enof annihilation, he'said. , , chastity csp'ecially in their asso-' ti~e nation" sU~h .as the. Christ!an' , Bishop Rusch cited tbe, ~uty of faith and ChristIan wa~ of hfe, ,a Christian, to, do' everything in Tum to Page Fifteen mu~t be at stake., , , _ ' :his.power to prevent war. ChrisPITTSBURGH (NC)~If the' man: ,who "is 'remembered , 3. The ,eff~cts. o~ ,t~e,at0rtic ,tians 'a,bove: all' must help create 'as the' ,"architect" of the United Nations Charfer. were stiil weapon must be, controllable. , 'an ,atmosphere of peace, he said. ~live, he would be, satisfied ~ith the results bf the organi~, . 4: Atbmi'c weapoqs can be're- ,and this endeavor requires much tion he helped shape, his wife has stated. "I think Leo would " , " , sorted' to only if no other suf- "sacrifice 'and considerable humilficient means, of 'defense, IS: iti: on thei~ part. ' ~y today that the designers was~ anatu~alized citizen of the availa!:>le., ",.:, , , " Turn to Page Fifteen of the ~N,~ad ?c;>ne' a pretty 'U!'ited States, died in 1953; :PROVIDENCE (NC)":"'-
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~uc,leClr 'Weapons Must '~em'gi'n' Under:Control
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Architect of UM Charter W ouldApp'rove .Re'sults' ,,~:, ,
'Ordinary Assists Compa ny' Keep ,In Business
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IJOkb, , Mrs. • asvo s y. e never , I consider the UN the perfect IIOlution to the world's problem's. It'. not the complete answer. But it's' the best thing we have." ; Leo Pasvolsky was chairman ~ d' t' g 'ttee of VL a coor ma m comml. . 14 persons at San Franclsco.m 1945 whQ were charged With ma king a charter out of the paragraphs a,nd sentences agreed to by technICal committees. Mrs. Pasvolsky, a native of Aliquippa, Pa., and a graduate of Seton Hill College in Greensburg, Pa" made her comments while visiting relatives in the Pittsburgh area. Her husband, .,ho was"born in Russia but who
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Bishop ,will,' her husband in San Francisco in - ' '. . 1945, believes the drop in .enproper.ty to keep m thIS area thusiasm in the,UN since then a busipess firm, which might , '~, e~a; c;ame because people expected otherWIse have moved ' away, ,W.AS,HINGTON (NC)'-Ten programs of graduate study too much of it. ' : " affecting' 520 employees.: "The UN was 'oversold. People B' h' R' II J M v; fat,: se,v'en _Catholic universities have been' approved for a ' ' IS op usse " c mney 0 I F ', thought it would be perfect,'" she Providence said he agreed to sell ,tota' of 45 ederally sponsored fellowships, ,U.S. Commis-' commented, "When it proved the land'to the Fram Corpora- sioner of Education Lawrence G. Derthick has announced. not to be, they said, 'It can't ~o tion ~'realizing the importance Th 406 ' ' ey are, among pro- proved -for be'nefl'ts provI'de,d b w this,' 'It can't do that.' But- they to the economy of our state in ' overlooked the many things the the" continuance of the busigrams at, 136' graduate the- National Defense Education UN can and does 'do." ness .. ." schools, 'involving -1,500 Acts. Turn to ,Page Eighteen Turn to Page Fifteen three':year fellowships, ap-' Under the fellowship program, the institutions submit graduate a~l study proposals. Those approved II II ~ 'then take applications from students for ,the fellowships, submit these'to the Office of Educa" ': ',~ , ',' , II ' , II ' tion. and ih ,Summer, 1969, stuBy Patricia McGowan dent recipients will be announced, from Wasl)ington. O ne ,of three. sisters belonging to the Dominicans of Charity of the Presentatiol1, the Each graduate school receive. community staffing' St. Anne's hospital, Fall River, Sister Joseph de la St. Face has been up ·to $2,500 per year for the assigned to the order's school in Baghdad, Iraq since 1938. She was'born in F~ll Rive~ and cost of educating each fellow. attended St. Anne's school until sev~nth grade, when her family ,moved to Hartford. She' The fellows themselves each reis one of seven children. One dormitories and an infirmary eludes Arabic, English and ,ceiye $2,000 for the first year of NEW YORK (NC)-"Spisister who joined the same was added for our orphans." F r ,e n c h from kindergarten ' Turn to Page Eighteen ritual flabbiness" could be community was, assigned, to The school curriculum in- through the equiv~lent, of first more dangerous to this . ' . year college. "IraqIS learn English quite eallily and have 'a country's survival than its Iraq and dled,the~e m 1911. Anotller, Sister' M, Therese particular knack' at pronunciafailure to launch a missile, Dr" des Anges,is now serving at St. tion," says Sister Joseph: "Some Grayson. Kirk, president of Anne's, Sister Joseph, the form200' pupils pass in my class each Columbia University, warned er Marie Theresa 'Pelletier, has year and I really enjoy teaching JIere. them.'" VATICAN CITY (NC)He told the annual meeting of taught English to Iraqi girls during her whole time in the counAs regards religion, she ex- Pope'John has hailed a gaththe New York Academy of Meditry. plained, all 'creeds are wel- ering of future missioner~ cine that the U. S. cannot mainSchool Is Growing corned in the Sisters' school. Relairi its world position merely by "There were 250 girls in the ligion lessons are given in Arab- at which languages from all possessing vast nuclear destruc- c whole school in 1938; now there ic by Chaldean and Syrian parts of the world were heard, tive power. are 950 and the school is g.{owpriests; in English by an Eng- as "a demonstration of youbhful Such power must be held, he ing and growing," writes SIster lish Carmelite; and in French by fervor and joyful hope." declared, by a people united in The multilingual meeting was Joseph, adding "There is never a French Carmelite. purpose, "who are willing to held in the Vatican's Hall of "i The Dominican Sisters operwork very hard for somet.hing enough space for our needs and Benedictions to commemorate we refuse an average of 7 0 ~ . :'jl ate a dispensary in Baghdad in more than money, and whose the 40th anniversary of Pope ideals are neither those of the Benedict XV's encyclical on the e;::::::; has been I cynical individual nor those of a laboratory for our science 'it," 100 needy daily. Among Sisters missions, "Maximum Illud." the market place." Appearing extremely tired, classes and an ,auditorium for assigned to the dispensary is On .the subject of education, lectures, plays, etc" but it must Sister Mary Patricia, a gradu- Pope John addressed the meetDr.- Kirk observed: ate of Sacred Hearts Academy, ing 'n Latin. He revealed it was ''-Our public schools and far remain a dream because other things are always more pressing. ~ Fall River and St. Anne's school exactly 59 years ago to the day too many of our colleges have Turn to Page Eigh~een Last year, a whole story of three, ,of nursing. , Turn to Pag-e Eighteen
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'Former, F', R,:ver G:rl A mong Three S: Qters Membe' r's of St Ann e' s Hosp:tal Commun:ty
Noted Educator Gives Warnin'g On 'Flabbiness
Declares Future Mission Priests 'Joyful Hope'
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