NEW CARDINAL O'HARA DORMITORY WILL BE READY FOR OCCUPANCY AT STONEHILL COLLEGE NEXT YEAR
The. ANCHOR
Cardinal O'Hara Dormitory To Meet Growing. Needs . At StonehiIiColle,g.e
Cardinal O'Hara Hall, 'first dorm~tory on the'Stonehill College ca~pus, will be ready to receive,·men students in the fall of 1961, ft was announced today by the Very Rev. Richard H. Sullivan, C;S.C., president. ·Construction of the $875,000 building, which will be built undei-. the gover,riment college housing program, will begin in July, Father Sullivan said. The dormitory, which will be ' the largest, ne,,: J;milding on .. A~geles . An Anchor of the Soul, Sur, and li'irm-ST. ~AUL the Stonehill, campus, will t - a c c o m m o d a t e ' 2 f O ' m a l e stu0 I '
,
Los See PI ans B u •Id 61'st 'High School
Fall River; Mass. ,Thur~day," Feb.' 18, 1960. deilts and five prefects. 111... 7 © 1960 The Anchor ' PRICE10c' " Liberte T'he architect, Emery '$... OO,pe~ Year of. Brockton, will VO.I 4, I~O. Second Clau M~II PrlYilegea Au'thori'zed at Fall Riyer, :Mau.
T.~, he .Anchor'
,
F0 r
R
e C0
" ,
He: ad'.- ng'
d S I '. 'rae's ,
• .
Lacon-' .tinue'the traditiorial Georgian Colonial architecture of, the
LOS ANGELES (NC) The 61st high school in Los Angeles' archdiocese will be built -in the foothill com-
b~:~~;:~~:;i~~tmpus.
othf:r The building' is named in honor of 'John Cardinal O'Hara, C.S.C., Archbishop of Philadelphia. Cardinal O'Hara is the first member of the Holy Cross . . F th ers rellglOus ,a order to become Ii Prince' of the Church'. He 'was named a cardinal by Pope John XXIII at the same'
. A new record fo~ weekly home-delivered subscriptions, to The Anchor l'S l'n prospect tod'ay'notwithst,aridi,ng the fact , t.hat the initial Diocesan parish cir~ulatiop. returns ar.e not due for another week. Two parishes have ali-eady notified the Circulation Depal"tme~t Blessed Sacra~ent' Chur~h'. -in' .~~~e"a~~iChard ~ardin~l<?i.tsh;CAltD~AL'O!HARA they will again~ meet then: Fall: River; hilS a record. for ever; , 'cardiria~ Q'J!lIra,has be'en di~ .. quotas. The most ·encourag.. ' past,or of the Diocese to surpass~, : ,Turn to'"Page Twelve, . . ' . jng part of the mes~ages, He ~as more t.ha? 9uil~ri.lpled his· ," '. ' I
parish sub&crlption,tq,tal of 19,57. 'Sout,he'r~ "W~ are pleased,~ith the re.-" , , log," , . sp,onse of o':!r parishion~rsand Rev. Patrick H. Hl.!rley, pastor we ,are looking ~orw\lrdto th~ , of St. Joseph's Church in Taunday~not too far mt~ t~~ ,futu~e ton, was' first this year with a -:;-w!'ten The .Anch,or. ",:!1l, be m,' " " ", . . quota announcement. "Weh'ave every ,home:.m the pansh ,eyery. :NATClIE.Z:: (NC) -..: The' eallily attained our quota and you wee!t," the .Fall ,R.ixe~ pastor ,pre~iaep.t ('of, the . So~thern can' eXl?cct to add mote names to eom~e.nted.,".. ',' ,~""" .~' -Baptist , , Con'vehtion ' has our parish li~t of weekly su~,It.i~ ,~l.so the seco~d successive' .. stated' -that ;B~lptists cannot Beribers to an excellent Cathoh~year fo~ B,les~ed Sacra1.D~nt: to "'supi>orttl~e :~andidacy of a Diocesan' newspaper," ,surpass lts parish quota. .. . ,.. Catholic' for' the lIT.' S. presi':' This is the second successive Aiready,.lO per cent over his dency. . Tear for the Taunton parish in, established quota Rev.' John' J. 'The convention rtlore than the quota class. Father Hurley Casey" pastor of Immaculate '"nine million' members " and' is expressed great satisfaction with Conception Church in ,North rated the second largest Proteshis, parisJ;! response because it E,aston, has assured The Anchor' tant group in the country. represents a 50% jump in .weekly ,Circulation Department "that Addressing' t h'eMississippi subscriptions over his 1957 mark. more families. will, be added, 'Baptist, Evangelistic Conference, Rev. Eugene Dion; pastor' of after next Sunday,", . Dr. "R~msey -Pollard of Knoxville, 'Tenn" said: "We Baptists b,eliev~ in complete and ,abSOlute L~nteri Foru~for , religious liberty for all mim, and we cannot w~lk ,with <'lose who deny' this' fundamental 'freedom "Youth Looks at Life," a' Lenten forum for' young on which every ~ther lib~t'ty is adults, will be hel<;l Sunday nights. during Lent at the fourided,"· .- '. I Dr. Pollard told the conventi:m Catholic Community Center, Franklin, Street, Fall' River, he \yol.\ld not ,"stand QY and keep and at Kennedy Center, New' Bedford. 'It wiil begin, ~t my mouth shut when' a man 7 Sunday· night, MaJ,'ch 6. Christo Churcl); Rev. Joh'n P. und~r coiltr:ol of the' Roman Open to high schQol juniors Driscoll, SS.' Peter and· Paul; Catholic Church runs for 'Presi. and seniors and other youths Rev. Paul McCarrick, St.- Mary's dent of the United States,"
Church Op" pO,s,es C",citholic 'F 0,', P res,i d e,n t
however was theaddedpnrase of both ~astors, "and mor'e Com":
has
Young Adu.lts ", To Open on Sunday, March :6 ..
16 and over, of all faiths', the talks will discuss teen-age problems and ways to succeed in preparing fot adult life. Panelists will be priests of the Diocesan Family Life Bureau, which conducts Cana and preCana' conferences for married all,d engaged couples. The forum ill being sponsored by the Council of Youth Organizations in both cities. First Five SuneJ,a,Ys' , The series will be held for' the first five Sunqays of Lent, ending April 3. Registrations are being accepted at both, centers from young people wishing to attend. Fall Riv,er prlests.~ speak at I'ranklin Str~et inch,lde Rev. Anthony . M., Goip.es, SantQ.
CatpedraJ; Rev.. ReginaldM. Barrette,St., Rech,.and· Rev. William O'Connell, also SS. Peter and Paul. ' In New Bedford, Rev. Luis G. Mendonca, Rev. James ,Clark, Rev. John F. Hogan and Rev; Bertrand Chabo~ will' :speakat Kennedy Center.
D'eclare"s Cat'h·ol.·c Church T.·hrea,tens U. S. Down f a II I
BOSTON (NO)--::-"CatholiCism jn the. United States is' the'most spiritually whoiespme arid soundly alive Catholicism .in the whole world." .,A M;ethodist bishop who s~id he had seen' Catholicism. in ,'action' iIi', 30 countries delivered the triOute' in a strange setting Americaill"eople "can be trusted ~ 'before the 12th national t~' face truth and act together," 'confere'nce of:' Prote&tants and" they will appreciate "dis, and Other Americans United cussion of the controversial," he ,for Sep~ration of Church, and State (PQAU). " ' . Bishop Richard C: Raines of ,Indianapolis made an appeal before the' anti-Catholicorganization for an '!honest appraisal 'of the 'Ameri~an principle' of Church and State.... He advocated: "Let us discover in what we can, agree 'and admit p'~nkly where we differ 'and why;"
sa~d. Bishop Raines accused Protestant churches of helping to tear aown' the' "wall of separation" between Church and State in. . ~hre~ ways: . ,1) by accepting tax exemption's, an indirect form of government subsidy; 2)' by participating in the mill. Turn to Page Eighteen
Two Cincinnati "Newspapers Adopt Code to Govern.' Amusement Ads
, CINCINNATI (NC)-Two ,Cincinnati 'daily newspapers have adopted a "code of standards~' banning objectionable ' movie advertisem~pb~. The code, identical for both news' papers, spells out rules 'governing both copy and art work in amusement ads. The , rr=~*===*=======*===')F==~E====;~====l~==;'~newspapers adopting the I ' code are . the Cincinnati Enquirer and the Cinciimati
R,on'e.· r
S.,t~
"
V
I. [
Pius X' ':'. '. S·d at: "In a' i n
will y. 0 u build . chtirclies, p r ~ a c h . missions" ' ' found schools. All your ." , 'efforts will be' 'destroy'ed , , : "unless' you wield" the defensive . and offensive weapon of apress that' , is Catholic~ loyal and: sincere.:r. will. make . 'any sacrifice; even to pawhingmy pectoral cross; .' ring .and .cassock, to support a :Catholie newspaper.~ ,',
Lenten NQtices
munity of Siera Madre. 'It will be Alverno Heights Academy, with a capacity for 500' girls. Sisters of St. Francia Of, Penance and Christian Charity ,yvill staff the school. Alverno will be the seventh neW. high school built through the, Archdiocese's 1959 Youth Edu~a~ion Fun~. ,
. , Realizing- '. that the regula' . , social events and dan~es'are eliminated' in the penitential season 01 Lent, March, 2 to' April 1'7, 'it ,is the policy 01 The ANCHO& to anticlpatfl' notices 01' spiritual activities from PublicitJ' Chalnnen. 01 Parish, GuilcJ and ,l"~u',h • . "!',oups dU..i,~~1s hol7 ·periH.:
,
: ' •. , .' ,~
Post ;md Times Star. 'Adoption . of the 'code was revealed by Brady Black, exec\!tive, editor of' the, Enquirer. , The code' bans' illustrations or text' suggesting sexual immorality, 'excessive violence, ' consumption of alcohol, use of narcotics or any "conduct generally immoral or contrary .to established modes," The code, also requires that "any illustration or quotation used in advertisement in a way which implies that it is a part of '.the show as it is ex'liibi~d loca,pi:"
an