04.17.58

Page 1

The ANCHOR

.,a'

Diocesan Teac:,ers J~eet· Next· Week

The Third Annual Convention' of the Catholic Teachers Association of the Diocese of Fall River will be held at St. Anne's School, Fall River on . '. Thursday aIid Friday of .next week, Apl'il 24 and 25. The meeting will bring

getheralm08t Brothers and

to-

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1,~OO'Priests,

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F a l l " ' K i v e r.. F r a n c i s c a n SIsters w h o ' "

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man the 57 elementary and . B a c k H o m 10 high schools of our Diocese. . " . ·.e e r . .ea rs The fruit of their discussions "They came all the way to New York to see me for 15 will affect the educational destinies of some 20,000 students in' minutes!" Sister Mary Fursey ofthe Franciscan Missionaries

oss~, urs pr. ',' , the schools under their super- of Mary was speaking of her FalJ River brothers and sisters

vision. from whom she'd been separated for 41 years until the 16­ 'Second' CI~ M.il PriYilee. 10c . . ' $4.00 PRICE ..... Y_, National 'FI'gu-- . minute reunion,. which took . . Fall Kit'er~ Ma.. AathoriSedat r.,I The keynote speaker of the place last week on the New

An Arlrhor of the So'Ul, Sure and· fi'ir1n-:-ST.PAUL ..

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more than four decades spent

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H o l y U n i ' o n . : C o n g r e ' g a t i o n : ... .work· in Africa ':' , " .; . :' . . I' .,,' fle\d of education. Doctor CrIb. "My family. only. learned the ." Reverend Mother GabrIel Clare, ProvIncIal .of.the m~" 'bin will address the group on date of 'JJ:\y arrival'.cme day be~ . maculate Heart Province of the Holy Union of the ':$acred .. "Contradictions in Education." . . : fore the ship was due at New , Hearts, will observe next Sunday.the golden jubilee .o( her .. A ,preview of the program in~' ,York," explained Sister, "and as entering the Congregati~n. . ' . '., .' :. . :::'.. , '.: '. ,di<:ates t,hat· 1Ji:any outs~nding many of them as could drove Rt. Rev. J. Joseph Sullivan Mal7ch 11, ~908.•. ·Sbe·.came:to sP,e;:tkers ,of nahOl~al prommence dOYvn to meet me. But by the will be celebrant of a High ,this countr-yi!l 1912,: where .she • ~11l prt.esent da vartl.ety 10f tabl~S 0tn time I 'was: off: the"· ~p. . and _.. . was _assigp.ed ·to St.. :I~iary's ,High'. Impor ant e uca IOna su Jec s. through customs, they had only .:Mass to be offered at 9.30 School, Taunton. She' nair been 'Alrel,lQ.y, definitely secur~d for 'fifteen minutes to spend· with me . :A..~. in the chapel of the Superior of St.. Mary's . and St., .the occasion are the following:' .. : before they had to start back to Provincial House, 520' ROck Joseph's: in .Taunton ··'and· '·also 'Miss :Mary, EUen. Heffernan,' FaU . . .R iver.But . they' provided Street, Fall River. The Superi- Sacred Hearts:'Academy; 'Fall ~IteadiIlg: Consultant, Scott, 'me.with one o(ttIe biggest sur­ .prises of my lite! . River. She has been' Provincial . Foresrri.a~, Company, New York; , . "I never expected they would since '1952. " " .On: "Reading the Cathedral Turn .to Page" Four . ..: " 'Basic Way."·. :~ .", .' .

Brassil Fitz'Gerald, Stonehill

College, North Easton; On: "Catholic Literature in the Catholic 'High School." Rev. Joseph Manton, C.SS:R./ Rt. Re,v. Msgr. James J. Turn to Page Sixteen . WASHINGTON (NC) ­ Gerrard, V.G" of New Bed­ The U, S. House JUdiciary ford, will preach the sermon Committee will soon consider at the solemn High Mass in legislation designed to clamp Immaculate 'Conception Church, a tighter ban on the distribution Taunton at 11 A. M. Sunday in of obscene material through the obsel'vance of the 75th anniver­ . mails. sary of the parish. Rev.'Thomas The bill would make it possi­ Taylor, pastor, will be celebrant. ble to prosecute .persons, who Immac~late Conception Par-' use the mails to distribute inde­ ish, third oldest in' the cii;y of .cent literature, in' the place Taunton, was established Jan.' where it is delivered .. At pres­ 10, 1883, with the Rev. James F. ent they can be prosecuted only Roach as its first pastor. .. where it is placed in the mails. Establishment of the. parish . Seldom Punished had been brought about by a \) . Officials of the U. S. Post rapidly increasing Catholic pop­ MOTHER GABRIEL' CLARE :~ Office Department have said ulation in Whittenton. Accord­ \.::) that most obscene material is ora from the various convents of ingly, St. Mary's was divided for mailed from New York and Los the Province will be present. the second time to forma parish Angeles. It has bee.,. charged The Reverend Mother atten­ for both the English and French­ that. smut peddlers are seldom ded the Holy Union Convent at speaking Catholics in 'the North ·convicted in those Cities. Danagher, Ireland, and entered End. The' bill would also provide a the Congregation at Highgate -~R, JAMES J. CRmBIN' TUm to .Page Eighteen Turn to Page Sev.ente~D Road, London, England on .

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Taunton Parish ,h ·t· 75 Observes · . A nnlversary

Advises, Colleges Stress. Quality

Congress Ready To Clamp Down On Pornography·

SISTER MARY FURSEY

Hospitals Save Gotham Millions NEW YORK (NC)-Cath­ olic hospitals save New York City at least "an additional hundred million of taxpayer dollars." Speaking in behalf of the New York Catholic Charities 1958 fund appeal, New York Hospital Commissione~ Morris A. ~aco~s called attentIOn to the gigantiC

AI ' d 1'111 .• II•• III ·,,' .fI oe ....., routca H ome .f or :I CI' Is Now' ·'Read•• for Oecup'· auc•• /.,/ :;O~S~i~:I~::J~n~f\~~~~~~~he~~~

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mll.hon people. PHILADELPHIA (NC)­ . " . By Patricia McGowan· .... , " W e have-help, much help,"

Confronted by a choice be­ Spring flowers were showing in the Highlands gardens and sunlight sparkled on the he said, "from the private vol­

tween education of superior quality and education for the Taunton River as we visited the soon to be opened nursing wing of the Catholic Memorial untary hospitals which, together

' hI d A F II R' . Off" II k th B' h C 'd M . I with the municipal hospitals,

greatest number of stUdents,' th~ H ome on H I~ a~. v~nue, a. lV~r. . ICIa y. no~n as e IS op ~SSI y. em?rla, form a network of facilities that

Catholic college ought to choose the 74-bed wmg IS deSIgned to p~'ovlde long-term nursmg care for chrOnIcally III patIents reaches into every area of the

quality. city. One of the most important That was the advice of Russell of 65 and over. Such a tour of inspection ~~~~"~"'~,~"'~~"""~ ".Theseare hospital beds," units in' this nt;.twork are the

ltirk, editor and author, in a 't th ht th . pointed out Mother, "but they're \ hospitals affiliated with the New

talk at the National Catholic Ed­ wasn , ~e oug ' . e gayTwo full pages of pictures .motorized. Nurse or patient York Catholic Charities." oational Association convention. est pOSSIble way to spend a of the new Bishop' Cassidy need merely push a button to "Beds in the Catholic instituThe college' "ought to choose Sl}rl' ng afternoon but that Memorial Wing' of the Ca.tholic . raise th~m to regulation hospital tions total 4 525. Translating this . quality," he said, "for the sake ·· 1y Memorial Home in Fall River bed height or lower them to figure alone' into terms of com­ not simply of scholarship, .but. was b e fore we me t e ff IClent · are on Pages 10 and 11 of this h eerf u I M0th er: M ary Maurlce, c standard height. We will, of muriity service, if the city had • • '" the effectual defense of edition. course, have tray service for to supply this number of addiChristian faith and Christian O. Carm.., superior of the M;emorial Home, and before ,we saw ",~",~,."""""""",,,,~ patients who must stay in bed," tional beds, it would mean an learning," the new wing. At the 'end of the. she continued, as we moved additional hundred million of Dr. Kirk said that the '\inter­ afternoon we were feeling quite able chairs awaited guests in along the corridor, which is taxpayer dollars." est of all Christians, and of all envious of the lucky 74 who'll each room, and cheerful, peach- equipped with handrails for our civilization, will be better be the first to occupy itli rooms.' colored curtains separated the patients needing such assistance, served today by a reputation for beds in the rooms for two and, 'I . Cheerful) and Comfortable ' but we WI 1 encourage any who intellectual power and moral four patients, Individual therm- can get up to do, so, and for worth, than by mere numbers. Our first impressions, as we' ostats. control each room's heat, them' we've provided dining Any folly or fallacy can attract entered ·the new wing, were of and a two-channel radio system. rooms on each floor." She SPOKANE (NC)-A Su­

numbers. But in the long run, sunshine and color everywhere, adjoins every bed. In addition,.

perior Court judge has up­ it will be possible to. "pipe" sh~wed us a pleasant parlor, intelligence will tell." the .sunshine reflected .f rom held the local released-time music throughout' the building Turn to Page Thirteen Predicting that Catholic col­ gleaming floors, gaily patterned·

leges "simply will not be able walls, and crisp, colorfUl bed­ by means of a newly installed religious education program,

to afford to be all things to all spreads, Modern but comfort." .'public address ·system. saying it is' "not only a worthy,

men," Dr. Kirk said they "will but a necessary adjunct to our Each of the three floors of' the not be able to increase infinite­ educational system."

wing has four pri~cte rooms,ex­ ..,. in size or number, and at the

Judge Raymond F. Kelly ruled plained Mother Maurice,. while <J~ SUPPORT ,~~ Ame time be able to improve, that the program did not violate other rooms accommodate two o THE or even maintain, their stand­ Federal or State constitutional

or four patients. Every room ards of scholarship.

has' a private lavatory, tiled in f -t prohibitiollil against using public

"They are going to have to

. funds for sectarian purposes.

colors to harmonize with the BUY FROM THE The suit against the program

make a hard choice, I suspect:

room's. color scheme. Our fav­ charged it was uncollf:,titutional ADVERTISERS IN J to give a great mass of students

OI'ite was tiled in pale blue, to . and contended that it gave no • mediocre training in almost comple&ent a lovely room with "" CA THOLIC .,.. "academic advantages" 'to pupils,

everything, or to give a tolerable blue floor, predominantly blue ~(:' . PAPERS ~0 but operated solely for the bene­

DUDlber of select students a'

wallpaper and ·drape!!, and sky­ fit of the' sponsoring church

decent education in certain ea­

blue bedspreads interwoven· with groups.' tIlbNbecl discj.pline&,"

. tiny gold threads.

Court Approves Released Time

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Jesus Mary, Dominican Academies Name' Winners of Scholarships

-THE ANCHOR Thurs., April 17, 1958

Bishop Wright Scores Modern School Theory TORONTO (NCr-The S~ called progressive school sys­ tem "only encourages young­ sters to express themselves before they have anything to express," Bishop John J. Wright, of Worcester told a Canadian Catholic education conference. Bishop Wright advocated' a revival of the arts' in North American schqols to nurture ·an ability to cope with sputnik'-age 'problems. 'He said that 'many _' school children in the United _ MEET ,AT EDUCATORS 'SESSION: In conversation States are "chronically incoher­ ent" in the use of the English opening the 55th National Catholic Educational Association 'language, and are so ignorant of convention, (left to right)' are Msgr. Frederick G. Hoch: history that they would not walt, Secretary General, NCEA; Mayor ,of Philadelphia, benefit from the lessons of the Richardson Dilworth, Msgr. Edward R. Reilfy, Philadelphia past' and apply them to present Superintendent of Catholic Schools and Gov. George M. problems. . Leader, of PennsylyC:mia. NC Photo. .~ "Children should once more be made to memorize poetry so' that some of its timeless phrases .would !!ometimes filter through the rock 'n' roll vocabulary," the Bishop said. The 'first annual Char:ity .Ball./ jective has 'been added, the Car­ 'Bishop Wright 'emphasized the to be sponsored by the Leon avans of the Order have, been need for increased appreciation . of philosophy, history; languages, Caravan of the Order Qf Al- urged to undertake' 'charitable hambra, Knights of Columbus efforts for -the benefits of the' including Latin and Greek, and of New Bedford' will be held orphans, aged and handicapped. ,religion. Saturday night, May 10 in the " Tickets for the ball may be , "When students receive' their New Bedford Hotel, with pro- 'obtained by contacting any A.B. degrees they should be able ceeds to be contributed to the meJ;Il.ber of the committee or to "translate their diplomas be~ Nazareth Hall, school for' re- from any member of the order. fore receiving them," he detarded children in Fall River. ' clared.' I In charge of the. committee , "Many schools have replaced are Chairmen Mr. and Mrs. E. Latin and mathematics with Gerard Hatte assisted by Mt. and courses 'in teen-age problems, Mrs. Emile€ a mire, Mr. and Mrs. beauty care and even in one in­ BERLIN (NC)- ComJ11unist .tance with a course in, fly-' Robert L. Pelletier, Mr. and Mrs. censorship in Poland ball/ied an Ned A. Rebeira; Mr. and' Mrs. casting," the Bishop said. ' article attacking the Church for Norman ,Rivet and Mr. and Mrs. B ish 0 p Alexander. Carter, political activity for fear that Apostolic Administrator of the L. Roger Giard. its appearance would increase , The Order of Alhambra, is 8 Saults Ste. Marie diocese, told popular unrest. a parent-teacher session that Catholic ,fraternal organization That is the opinion of observ­ and the primary requirements "the teacher can't be expected to ,do in' six' hours what the for admission to the order, is ers here, who point out that the Polish government cannot afford a good standing as a third degree parents are undoing in 18 hours." to allow the already large num­ Knight of Columbus who has Bishop Carter said that parents ber of its opponents to grow at attained the age of 21. The priv­ must shoulder most of the blame ilege of' joining' the Order is. a time when national unity is for any weakness in the educa­ needed to solve that country~s tional, system. The big need in extended by invita,tion to Cath­ ~conomic :'crisis. 'education is not "great new olic men who. have distinguished schools" but "devoted teache'rs," themselves' as Knights and who . The article was to have ap­ he said. ' have merited recognition as ones peared in Argumenty, organ of desirable for close' association the Polish Society of ~theists, both socially and fraternally. which 'since its inception has' • The ,cardinal purposes of the attacked the Church for its ' Miss Adele Neal of Saxonville, order are the promotion' of 'religious beliefs. In its March' 15 issue Argu­ state secretary of the Ancient social and intellectual associa-' tion amongst its members and menty claimed that the alleged Order of Hibernians Ladies the establishments of a fund for hospita.lity' of the PoliSh, bishops , Auxiliary, assisted by Miss Rita the preservation of Catholic his.-. .to the, ,government has ~'been Walsh of Middlesex County, in­ . developing, ,since, 'the return' of stalled newly' elected officers of torical places. In recent years a-third obthe Primate (His Eminence the Bristol County' Auxiliary at Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski) a supper meeting in New Bed­ Prelat~ from Rome, into a program of ford 8unday. political activity. We will elab­ The following officers were Installed: ', or~te on this in the following LIVERPOOL (NC) ,For issue.'~ , " .,' . Mrs. Helen B. Ma lone,' Divi­ Catholics, 'death is not a tragedy, It is this "elaboration" that sion IV, New Bedford, 'president; , but thlj! "gate to happiness," was banned. , ' " Mrs. ,Mary Neitsch, Division IX, Archbishop, John C. Heenan of/' ~ew Bedford, vice-president; Liverpool said here. Miss Margaret Brophy, Division The Archbishop declared: ~ I, North Easton, secretary. "Mo~t;.,people are prepared to " Mrs. Margaret DeMarco, p'i­ die ra'ther than let anyone, know FLORENCE (NC)-Professor vision VII, North Attleboro, death is approaching *. * * People Giorgio' La Pir~, former Mayor treasl,lrer; Mrs. Rose Briggs, within hours of death are told of _this Italian city, laughs out, Division VII, No. Attleboro, his..; that they are getting better, that loud at communism and believes torian; Mrs, Ann Ryan, Division everything will be all right; that the yvorld would do well to laugh IV, New ,Bedford, past county there is nothing to worry abqut. with him. president. ' 'Catholics do noLwant to be "Communism i~ finished, done Plans were made'to join wjth ' treated like that arid Catholics ,for., It has missed the bus com­ the A'. O. ,H., in ~ pilgrimage to treat no one else like that. Death pletely.~' He clapped his hands Our Lady of Fatima shrine in is ,not this horror, the ultimate and laughed as he said it, in the Holliston, May 18. Deleg'ates tragedy. Death to us is·the gate. same spirit as a schoolboy might were chosen to the State Con", to happiness. vention in Boston June 6-8 and .. Archbishop Heehan said tha't shout that today is' the last day to the 'national convention to be' he ha.d never seen nor heard of of'school. Even in the Soviet-Union cOm­ held in Providence in August. ,a so-called "death-bed repent­ munism is, in its final stage, 'he 'ance." said. Living on artificial strength FORTY HOURS

"I wonder where these death­ born of fear, its present show of bed repentance's are," he said. ,force 'is only a sign of its dying DEVOTION

"~I have never' seen' one and I struggle, he added. Men no April20-0ur Lady of' the do not know any priest who has. longer regard it as a hope for Holy Rosary. New Bed­ Ask any experienced priest. The the, world .and soon will no ford. good die well. The bad die badly. longer fear it: When they begin Holy Ghost, Attleboro. As we are, so we, die; If' we are April 27-St. Michael, Ocean', 'close to. God, in : life, we shall . to laugh at communism, he con­ cluded,it i~ fillished.

Grove" . ,."",,,---',':-: ' be close to God in death • .' •

Our Lady of the IJ11mac­ Never· have I seen, a go04 Cath­

ulate Conception;', Fall r 'FRANCIS J. olic die a bad de~th." River. ' ' May 4 - St. Casimir" New Le.gio~. Bedford 'The' following7films, are to be St. Mary, Hebronville added to the lists in their re.:. .222 UNIO~ STREET May ll--,-Our Lady of the Im'­ spective classifications:.

TEl . WY 6-9784

maculate Conception, . Unobjectionable fo'r General

North Easton Patronage--.:.From Hell to Texas.

NEW BEDFORD, MASS. St Patrick, Falmouth Unobjectionable for' Adults

and :Adolescent5---Suicide Bat­

THE ANCHOR talion, Tall'Stranger. Seeond-cJa86 mall prIVilege. authorised ~nobjectionable for Adult&GENERAL .i Fall River.' Mass Publisbed eve..,.

Cry Terror, '

Thursda, at 410 Higbland Avenae. Fall

. INSURANCE Hiver Ma.... by th~ r;stholi~ Pr_ of tlw . Objectionable in Part for All

Dtoee;f' of Fan Rh·e, C:;n"~~ril'f.io• •, . -ReformSCbool Gir1. '~ .., mail. --..ud ".00 per ,eu,

Order of Alhambra~K. of C. To Sponsor Charit~,b'le· Event' .

.

Communi.sts Fear Church Attack

Hibernians Auxiliary Installs"Officers .

Says Death Gate to Happiness, "

Asserts Comm",nism C'omple,te Fa'ilure':, .

of Decency

'LAWLER •

Two Fall River academies have announced awards of full or partial' tuition scholarships • to eighth graders who recently cOlPpeted in examinations' held at the schools. . Dominican Academy has named six winners, three' for full tuition' and three for partial awards. Jesus Mary Academy 'has awarded four' partial Schol­ arships. -Dominican Academy Six scholarship awards, three for full tuition and three partial, are announced by Dominican Academy on the basis of a com­ petitive examination held at the Academy March 15, open· to eighth grade students of dioc­ esan and public schools~ Francoise M. Lajoie, daughter of Atty. and Mrs. J. Edward La­ joie, ,of 1460 Gardner's Neck Road, Swansea, ranked first of all contestants and won the full ._four-year, Alumnae Association scholarship given annually to a student of Dominican elemen­ tary school. She is a member of 8t. Michael's Parish, Swansea. I Gertrude T. Gagnon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest P. Gag­ non, 258 Grattan Street, ranked second and won a full four-year tuition scholarship. She attends St. ,Jean ,Baptiste School 'and Parish. ' . Another full tuition 'scholar­ ship, given to '8 student of St. .Anne's school, was won by high­ ranKing' Michelle Gariepy, duaghter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gariepy, of 47 Manton Street. Three partial awards were also given by the Academy to the

~~1~';~~~~~1~~~~;:::':~~d:'~~~

ners of the full tuition awards: Jeannine C. Reagan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest P. Rea­ gan, of 154 Oliver Street, a stu­ dent in Dominican eighth grade and St. Anne's Parish, Claudette G. Cacciabeve, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Cacciabeve, of 1033 North Main Street, St. Matthew's School and Parish.

Marilyn Learned, daughter of

, 'Mr. and Mrs. Leroy,J. Lea.rned, of 91 Woodward Street, of St. Patrick's School and Parish, Fall River. Honorable Mention For distinctive achievement in

Navy HO,nors Priest WASHINGTON (NC)-Father (Comdr.) Herman J. Schnurr U.S.N., has been cited by th~ U. S. Navy for disarming a crew­ man' who killed an officer and 'threatened the, lives of other servicemen aboard a Navy ship. The, citation came from the Sec­ retary of the' Navy, T~omas S. Gates Jr. It described the "heroic conduCt", of' Father Schnurr aboard the USS Uvalde on May 28, 1957, at Treasure Island" San Francisco.

the examination, the foliowlng students merited honorable mention: Elizabeth Quintal and Lor­ raine Vidal, both of St. Jean Baptiste School and Parish: Nat­ alie , Viveiros, 'Pocasset School, Holy Ghost Parish; 'Tanya Geary, Dominican, Sacred Heart ~arish; Barbara Hart, Domini­ can, St. Patrick's Parish; Dianne Rochefort, St. Matthew's Sc'hool, St. Louis of 'France Parish, Swansea; Patricia Ann Mead, Morton Junior High School, St. Joseph's Parish. Jesus Mary Academy Louise Delisle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Delisle, 30 Grant Avenue, Somerset;' stu­ dent at St. Mathew!s School, Fall River. Vivianne Lamothe,' daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Lamothe, 715 Penn Street, Fall .River; Blessed Sacrment School. - Rita Lapointe, daughte~ Of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lapointe, 745 Bark Street, Fall River;' Notre Dame School.

Mass 'Ordo'

FRIDAY - :M:a~s of Prevfoul Sunday. Simple. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for Peace; no Creed; Preface of Easter, SATURDAY,- Mass 'of the Blessed Virgin for Saturday. Simple. White: Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for Peace; Preface of Easter. SUNDAY-Second Sunday After Easter. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Col­ lect for Peace; Creed; Preface of Easter. MONDAY-St. Anselm, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of' the Church. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for Peace; Creed; Preface of ' Easter. , TUESDAY-SS. Peter and Caius, 'Popes and Martyrs. Simple. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; 'Second Collect for Peace; Preface of ,Easter. WEDNESDAY-St. George, Mar­ tyr. Simple. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for Peace; Preface of Easter. , THURSDAY-St. Fidelis of Sig­ maringen, Martyr. Double. Red. Mass Proper; Glotia; Second Collect for Peace; Pre­ face of Easter..

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Favor Education

Aid Plans Open

To All Students'

THE ANCHOR':" Thurs., April 17, 1958

3

Swansea Knights Sponsor Dances ForTeenagers

PHILADELPHIA (NC)­ Catholic school te~chers and administrators have urged that proposed govermnental

The first of a series of

IICholarships and other educa­ weekly dances sponsored. by tional aids be made available the Youth Activities Com­ to student)! of all schools. mittee of the Bishop Cassidy Delegates to the National Council, Knights of Columbus, Catholic Educational Association will be held tomorrow night. convention adopted a resolution ,. which noted that both Federal Chairman Norman L. O'Brien and various authorities are con­ announces that the dances will lIidering educational aids to be restricted to youths between .trengthen the national welfare. 13 and. 16 years of age. The new The NCEA resolution main­ activity is to be held in the new tained that these aids would be K of C Home on Milford Road, directed toward the national Swansea. The time of the dance. welfare, which is concerned with 'l'W,O PRELATES VISITING DIOCESE: Most Rev. Kenneth R. Turner, S.F.M., Bishop .will be from 7:30 to 10:30 each all students, rather than direct­ of Lishul (left) and Most Rev. Paul L. Hagarty, O.S.B., Vicar Apostolic of the Bahamas, Friday night. ly toward the benefit of schools, Each boy and girl will be are visiting the Diocese. They have been ad ministering the Sacrament of Confirmation

and therefore should be avail­ asked to register as he or she during the convalescence of Bis~op Connolly. '

able to all students. enters the K of C home. Chair­ New President man O'Brien announces that the This is the third time a Cath­ responsibilty for getting the olic educational group has taken children to and from the K of C the stand that students in non­ Home will rest with the parents. .May devotions in honor of the public schools should not be TOLEDO (NC) - A Polish It is planned to set up a Youth Blessed Virgin Mary will open A Cana Conference will be overlooked when, in the inter­ lawyer-journalist visiting the Advisory Committee to plan be­ at 4 o'clock Sunday, May 4, at held next Thursday evening at. est of the national welfare, gov­ United States said Poland's havior, entertainment and activ­ the Grotto of Our Lady of Our Lady of the Assumption ernmental aid is given to ed­ economic problem accouQts for ities to make these dances more Lourdes. on the Stonehill College Church, Osterville, when a ucation. its tie with Soviet Russia, and attractive for the teenagers. AU Campus. This is the fifth year review o.f Cana I to Cana IV will The delegates also elected a added this picture might be be outlined to the married dances will be properly chaper­ new president general. He is changed if it were made easier of May devotions at the Shrine, oned by members of the Knightl couples of the area. Bishop Lawrence J. Shehan of legally for development of U. S. ' which was dedicated during the of Columbus and their wives. 1954 Marian Year. Bridgeport, Conn., who suc­ Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca of -Polish trade. All programs will be directed The Rev. Thomas C. Duffy, ceeds Bishop Matthew F. Brady Immaculate Conception Church, Dominik Morawski, on a five­ under the Youth Activities Com­ of Manchester, for a one-year month tour iri this country, made C.S.C., director of the. college New Bedford, and Rev. John P. building fund, conducts the short Driscoll of SS.' Peter and Paul mittee. Girls are requested to term. possiple by a Ford Foundation wear party dresses; the boys; 15-minute service which in­ Eleven resolutions were adop­ Church of Fall River, will con­ fellowship, is both a lawyer and suits and ties, or sports jacket cludes the Rosary, Litany of the ted at the closing session of duct the conference. a journalist in Warsaw. and ties. Blessed Virgin Mary and, the the NC:EA's 55th annual conven­ The Second Cana Confer~nce In terms of freedom, Mr. Mor­ The program wni consist of Memorare. tion. The gathering drew more at Our, Lady of Grace Church, awski said, Poland has made prize dances, requests, an­ than 15,000 visitors who selected The public is invited tocattend North Westport, will be held in nouncements, teenage enter­ meetings from a program of considel,'able progress since Oc­ the devotions which continue the parish hall on Sunday even­ tober 1956, when Wladyslaw tainment, dedications and re­ more than 125 sessions and who each Sunday afternoon through­ ,ing at 7:30. ' Gomulka returned to power as freshments. toured an exhibition hall filled out the month. The Grotto of The Conference is being con­ head of the Polish Communist 'with 524 exhibitS staffed by The committee assisting Chair­ Our Lady stands only a few ducted unqer the auspices of the party, taking a position against man O'Brien includes Co-Chair­ more than 1,500 representatives yards away from the exit-gate­ parish Council of Catholic Wo­ Soviet interference .with Pol­ of educational equipment firms. way of the campus and is pro­ men in cooperation with the man Lawrence Borge; Program. and's internal affairs. Donald Grushey; Chaperones, Adopt Resq,Iutions vided with ample parking space. Diocesan Family Life Bureau. Sputnik Propoganda Manuel Silvestre; Refreshments The major NCEA resolutions: The Conference deals with the and Records, Lloyd Jarvis; and Urged school personnel to Mr. Morawski acknowledged relationship between parent and Publicity, ,John Oliveira. investig'ate the increased use of that there is some censorship of child from 'infancy to puberty, Jay persons on advisory boards, the press in Poland, but said treating such matters as child .ince the laity has shown "a dis­ Rev. Edward C. Duffy, for­ this mainly concerns "tone." He responsibility, authority and dis­ position to aid and assist." mer Navy chaplain and assistant said that distributiori of press MONTR.EAL, Que. (NC) - A cipline. Called for more parent-teach­ at St. James Church, New Bed­ materials in Poland is solely a total of 1,853 pints of blood wa. Rev. Anthony M. Gomes of er conferences to promote pro­ government operation 'and is ford, spoke and showed. pictures contributed at a blood clinic Santo Christo Church and Rev. grams for students with unusual­ carried on through public sales. of the Orient at a recent meeting which has grown into an annual Reginald M. Barrette of St. ly gooj mental abilities. Good Friday tradition at Cit)" The lawyer-journalist as§erted of the Infant of Prague Guild at Roch's Church, both of Fall, Said increased emphasis that proposals to rearm western' St. Mary's Home; New Bedford. Hall here. River, will conduct the confer­ should be given not only to The basketbail team of the Germany with nuclear Weapons' ence. mathematics and science, "but lack imagination. He said that Home, sponsored by the Guild to the humanities in particular, Poles are aware that ·Germany's and under the direction of James • L1NGUICA mindful of the prominent values Konrad Adenauer is "not etern­ Hesford, will be guests at a din­ • CHOURICO which they possess in a balanced al." Mr. Morawski said he does ner party during the month. PARIS (NC) - A famous' • MORCELAS educational program." not favor disengagement of al­ Members were reminded of statue of Christ has' been sent At Grocers - Super MarketlJ Suggested school administra­ lied troops from western Europe, the cake sale and advised that to Portugal by the French. gov­ tors strengthen efforts to integ­ but contended that the ..situation they would be notified of the ernment as' a gift to mark the rate Religious and lay teachers. should be viewed from a parts­ 40th anniversary of the battle date.

Called for intensification in of-problem angle" rather than

LISBON SAUSAGE CO. of the Lys, in which Portuguese Rev. John Hog~n, director of . American economic and politic­ from the whole problem. 433 So. Second SL troops helped to insure Allied the home, thanked the Guild for al ideals and in the spiritual WY 3-'7645 And from the Polish stand­ victory in Worla War I. . their accomplishments and foundtltions of, our culture to point, Mr. Morawski said, Russia provide an' effective refutation made no real propaganda gain closed the meeting with prayer. In charge of the' coffee 'hour to the principles of communism. by dispatching the first sputnik were Mrs. John Newby assisted Pledged that association mem­ into space. by Michael Norton, Elmer Page,

bers continue to study, the con­ Miss Ethel Medeiros, Miss Patri­

vention theme, "The' Right to cia McGlynn and Miss Anna Mc­

Education-Role of Parents, Glynn.

Church, State," and respect ""IJ-IA'T the rights of other persons and WASHINGTON (NC) - . Dr. AMERICAN agencies engaged in education." Hugh H. Hussey has been named NAVAL OFFICER: INNSBRUCK, Austria (NC)­

Dean of the School of Medicine BUILT ONE. OF Preparations are almost com­

of Georgetown University, effec­

HIS SHIPS IN plete for the 100th anniversary

tive July 1, Jesuit Father Ed­

celebration of the theological

20 DAYS FROM ward B. Bunn, university. presi:'

ROME (NC)-"Above all we faculty of the University of Inns­ TREES NEARBY want to make the Catholic dent, has announced.

bruck on May 29. ' A LAKE Dr. Hussey, at present pro­

Church known and esteemed in SI-JORE. Greece, where it is an object of fessor and director of the med­

ical school's department of med­

prejudice and age-old jealousy." icine, will succeed Dr. Francis

The statement came from M. Forster, eminent neurologist

Bishop Hyacinth Gad, newly ap­ who is resigning to devote his

pointed Apostolic Exarch for full time to his specialty. Dr.

Catholics of the Byzantine Rite Forster will remain at George­ in Greece. town as professor and director of The Bishop is in Rome to see CITIES SERVICE the Department of Neurology. Pope Pius XII and confer with DISTRIBUTORS Dr. Forster, dean of the medi­

officials of the Sacred Congre­ Commodore Mac'Donough in the War of 1812 cal school since 1953, was called

gation for the Oriental Church to the White House as a con­

about the problems of his new Gasoline sultant when President Eisen­ post. hower suffered a blockage of a Fuel and Range "We (Catholics) must always blood vessel in November 1957. make ourselves more widely known," he said. "This, and not proselytizing, is the goal of my • FOR ECONOMY •• OIL BURNERS apostolate." Speaking of a possible union . EAT· G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, to For prompt delivery

which the great majority of Greeks belong, Bishop Gad said: & Day & Night Service That-R~Rich'N'Y ellow-Robust

8-5286 "This is very distant because from Rural Bottled Gas Service there is still too much prejudice

Proposes Closer Ties with Poles

Plan May Devotions At Stonehill College

'"

Plan Cana Talks At Osterville

Father Duffy Speaks "At Guiild Meeting

Blood Clinic

·Statue of Christ

AMARAL'S

KNOW

Name New Medical Dean at Georgetown

AMERICA

100th Anniversary

Greek Bishop Wants Church Esteemed,

·W.H.RILEY

& SON, Inc.

···········.. f

~

OIL,S

E-G-G-S

too much animosity for anion to succeed." ''Our' task,". he went on, "iI ... smooth these 'difficulties little b)- little by means of our exam­ pAe and work."

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4

Public School Baccalaureate

Portland Dispu~e Normal In .Democratic Socie,ty

Hartford Institute

Honors Two Me"

By Donald McDonald Davenport 'Catholic Messenger

The dispute over high school baccalaureate se~ices in Portland, Maine last week serves as a rather classIc ex­ ample 0'[ a conflict of consciences which .is bound to occur in a democratic society but which will not be resolved by simple - minded ,appeal .to in the JUdaeo-Christian faith" U Americanism" or "democ­ and in the fact that "the public racy:" , school is a strong instrume~t,for, Bishop Daniel, Feeney of the perpetuatio~ of rehglOus Portland' has instructed his' priests and people that n~ither the clergy nor ' theC at h 0-1 i c stu den t s in public schools may take- part in "religious services of an­ other fa i t h " nor may the parish priests "i n v i t e the g r a d u at in g class of any public ... school to hold or at­ tend baccalaureate services in the parish church, nor in any hall or meeting-place on parish property." The reason for Bishop Fee­ Dey's action is clear enough.' For Catholics to tak~ part in the religious ,services' of another faith would be an implicit ac­ knowledgement that one faith is as good as another, This, at least external, display of religious in­ differentism is a violation of the conscience of every informed Catholic who knows that his ill the one true Faith.

-THE ANCHOR Thurs., April 17, 1958

values among us. To, say that. we ~ave h.ere a clearcut confl~ct of co~sclences" is not to say Uiat both sides have the same ~erit, or that the argu­ ments balance each other. HONOR SEXTON : Manuel Domingues was guest of Weaker Case honor at a parish reception at White's Sunday night when It seems to me'that the minis­ a plaque was presented to him, in recognition of 25 years' .ters, for a number of reasons, service as sexton of St. Anthony of Padua Church, Fall have the' weaker case:' First, a religious baccalaureate service River. Felicitating the recipient are (left) Rev. Laureano in itself does not insure "per­ Dos Reis, pastor! and Rev. Arthur Dos Reis, pastor ~f St. petuation of religious values" in - Michael's Fall River, and former pastor of St. Anthony s. the public school. Unless those religious values are present throughout - the school year" a, religious baccalaureate' 'wIll Continued trom Page One ous parts of England, of which' strike mostg!-"aduating seniors coine such a distance to meet time she has grim memories of as quaint or alien,' if not hypo­ me, especially when I was to be the World War II period. ' critical. in Fall River so soon." The London convent where And if the religious, values are, The family, however; feels, she was assigned was, with the i~ fact, present throughou! the that lots of visiting needs to be exception' of its chapel, c~m­ school year, the'1 the lack of a don~ in the short time that,Sis­ pletely demolished by bombs. denominational bacc~laureate at ter will be in Fall River before Up till' then the Sisters had the end of the year will not receiving her next missionary labored heroically ,in bringing diminish those values to any .assigtlment. After .her stay in assistance to those around them. appreciable extent. New York, Sister's next stop was Many homeless were sheltered Second, though the Protestant at the provincial house of the and as qualified first aiders they insistence on a "service of wor- , Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, also gave help to the wounded. ship" springs from a convinced Fruit Hill, Rhode Island. There After being bombed out, how­ conscience, the elements of that again her family met her for the ever, the Sisters were evacuated conviction are a mixture 'of reli­ trip to Fall River, where she is to their country novitiate, where gious and socio-democratic sen­ receiving friends and relatives they offered hospita.lity to Am­ ~iolate Con~cienee sibilities. They' are concerned, at St. Anthony's Convent, 621 erican servicemen in addition to t f th (b with religion and religious Second Street. h f their routine duties of home ~ e orJ11a 0 ,es~" acca­ values; but they are lllso con­ And Sister has much to tell visiting, care of the poor, and laureate) ceremonIes, notes . ... 1 th t cerne d WI'th "t'he p ub'l'c I ,school her visitors of the events of the other social' service activities. ' " an d BIShop Feeney, IS a ways " a as a UnI'f" ymg ms t't I u tIon past 41 years, Foremost among ,Her English experience' has of-, ~e,w England. CongregatIoJ:l­ with "a faith wherein sectarian­ alism. The conSCIences of those. . t 1 ' b' t' d the visitors, of course, are her left Sister Mary, Fursey with a who are not pr~ducts of this Ism; m.o e:a?ce, IgO ry '~,n

brothers ,and sisters, Teresa, Jo­ decided British accent, and this tr d"t" r thus violated in the ~ace preJudIce have no place.

a I Ion a e ,. I do not pretend to know the seph, Antone.and Dennis Santos, was quite a surprise to her fa".1 i­ Mrs. Evangeline Plunkett, and' ly. ','But they might have ex-, name of non-sectarIanIsm and . d" ' f" 1 bTt o~etimes in the name of varymg egre~s 0 ,mvlO a I I Y Mrs. Hilda Barbosa. Among her 'pected it after 31 years!" laughed eve.n s " s o far as conSCIence IS concerned. pohteness and democracy. , But it does -seem to me that the first acts was a visit to her Sister. She is ready, now' for mother. -Mrs. Joao Santos, of 235 assignment to any part of the A group of 31 Protestant mm. . , .' , . ' j t 'n P rtland has' issued a Catho~Ic conSCIence, m. th~s dIS­ Tremont Street, and' she hall far.-flung territory of the Fran­ O. , pute IS much more mVlolable s ers I ciscan Missionaries of Mary, statement urgmg that the. pubhc than' is the Protestant ministers' found.time, too, ~or some sight­ school baccalaureate serVIces be " . seeing. which'inCludes convents in 55 h Id I Th . , ter conSCIence, smce the former 11 , "The city has changed a great eountries. Her adventurous fami:" e , asusua. e mInIS s of purely' religious origin, deal' since i left in 1917," she ly haS agreed to visit her any­ frankly acknowledged that such h th I tt " . t ' llerVIces are not merely secular, w ereas I fe, aI" er IS a mIx d ure, ' noted. "Of course there WeFe where on this continent-but if . . ,as say, 0 re IglOUS an SOCIO­ affaIrs. They descn~ the bacdemocratic and fellowship' ele- , two major fires which destroyed she goes back to Africa or -:t::ng-:­ calaureate as a "servIce of wor't' , , ,

many landmarks, but the new land -they're not so sure )tbout men s.

· " I h Ip , _ post office was a surprise to me." that! " h g And, though I may be wrong,

· d . A n, agam, w en y o u n . '. ' ,She' chuckled as she recalled , a comI belIeve that · t oge th' that, as a chil.d, going'to cate­ peop I e, d rawn er In , , : where . ' astrlcUy , -~-~-'-~~._._._-mon unity (the public' school) religIOUS conSCience _ works no chism class as one of a group of , , ' ha'rm to the common good of a hundred or more, she used to , are eager to solemnIze theIr edu­ . t't t be - l t d '. . . '. socle y, I canno ' VIO a eln ' join the crowd in -taking a short catIonal achIevement In a serv­ th f h I ' d t' : 'ONE STOP h' h t 't e name 0 S!1C vague y-I en l­ cut through the ,old post office, , f ice 0, wors Ip, ":' a a pI y fied lesser goods, as ' "unifying running from one, end of it, to then If some are dIsbarred and . t't t' '" "1 "g f SHOPPING C:::NTER the other. ' thus' marked off from their ms I u .lOns or. so emnIz~n 0 Television' - Furniture , Her convent life has included classmates in such a high mo­ educatIonal achIevements. six years service in A.frica, ment in their· graduation exer­ Burden of Proof - Appliances - Groeery cise." Finally, since in this. instance where the Franciscan Mission­ 104 Allen St~. New Bedford aries of Mary conduct schools The 'ministers fi'nd' the neces­ the Protestant ministers are at­ , WYman 7-9354 . _, and orphanages. This was fol­ .ity for inter-denomi_~ationar tempting to impose something on ' '_1_ _-_- _1_. lowed by 31 years spent in va~ibaccaiaureates in the "basic a group of their fellow-citizims, truth that our education and de­ it would seem to me that the mocnicy have their fou'ndation ministers have the burden' of ~ . Eledrical proving that what they wish to impose is so important to the Contracton wellbeing of the community at MAKES YOUR

large that it justifies the viola­ tion of 'the religious conscience CAR RUN, BETTER

of the Catholics. At New Car Dealers But let us make no mistake about the existence of a real arid Service. Stations difference between the Prot­ Everywhere estants and the Catholics in 944 County St. ~ Portland, nor should we raise' - any question about the sin­ New Bedford cerity of the motives of the • OFFSET disputants. These differences are normal ,LITHOGRAPHY in a democratic society in which unity, not uniformity, is a, dis­ • COLOR tinguishing feature. The expres­ PRINTING' sion of these differences can weaken the democratic fabric • BOOKS and only if it deteriorates and be­ comes a name-calling contest 'in PERIOQICALS' which one's commitment to the I democratic society is made the • WEDDIN~ object ·of suspicion.. doubt or INVITATIONS even ,question. ,

/N~n Back Ho~e After 41 Years

V

0

0

NEW HAVEN (NC)-Connec­ ticut's state labor commissioner and the president of a Connecti­ cut industrial concern have been chosen to' receive the 1958 Mc­ Auliffe Medal Awards of the Hartford Archdiocesan Labor Institute. Labor Commissioner Renato 'E. Ricciuti and James S. Sulli­ van, president of the James S. Sullivan Cable Co., in Water­ bury, will receive the award. from Archbishop Henry J. O'Brien of Hartford, next month.

Expecting' 1200 Men At National Retreat COVINGTON NC) Some 1,200 persons are expected here from' August 21 to 23 for the convention of the National Cath­ olic Laymen's Retreat Confer­ ence. The convention will, draw representatives from every re­ treat house in the United States, plus visitors from other coun­ tries. They w'ill participate in workshops and other activitie. that have been planned tfl pro­ mote the program of closed re­ treats for men. . Retreat conference president u William Halloran of Providence.

Cuba Farm Workers Hungry arid Sick HAVANA (NC)-=-Cuba's farm workers are hungry, illiterate and prey to illness. They work seven days a week for an aver­ age wage of 17 cents a. day. These are the findings of • IJUrvey made here by the Catho­ lic University, Organization, aJI association of. Catholic univer­ sity graduates,' her~. La Quin­ cena (The Fortnightly), Catholic review which published the sur- , vey's #ndings, termed theIII terrifying."

James F. 0 Neill 1

.APPRAISER

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ANNIVERSARY: Cardi­ nal Fuma::wni-Biondi leaves chapel aft e r celebratiDg, Mass on his 25th anniversary as Cardinal and Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. The Cardinal consecrat~d the late Bishop Cassidy a bishop. NC Photo.

Receives Papers WASHINGTON (NC)-A col­ lection of papers of the ,famous' 19th century American lawyer and agnostic, Robert G. Inger­ soll, has been donated to George­ town University. The collection, valued at an estimated $50,000, was giv~n by Isaac D. ;J:..evy, Philadelphia attorney alld civic leader.

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Pri'est Weaves Liturgical Te'xts into Horror Story By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy There have been many accounts of -life (if that is the word) in Soviet slave labor camps. But "My Thirty-third Year" (Farrar, Straus and Cudahy. $4.50) is different from the rest on two scores. First, it is written by a priest. Secortd.ly, it weaves into t~e petty harassment to VICIO~ narratIve of horror the Itt­ calumny and physical abuse. urgical texts for the SunUltimately, he became a mass days and some of the feasts of running sores, a victim of of 'the year. pellagra, as the result .of defiThe author Monsignor Gerhard cient diet. ,He suffered intense A. Fit t k ; u, pain, b~came extrem~ly weak, man age d to sank into lethargy, believed that 1" . bring along and he was going. to die. Still he keep a missal, struggled to do priestly wo~k, , which although and still he drew consolation ~~~~~jli ~ ~>~ be c~uld not from reading the Mass texts. offer Mass, he Reunited With Family RECEIVE PARTIAL AWARDS: Jesus Mary Academy, Fall River, has named, left to read regularly. When word came that Mon- right, Vivian Caron, Vivian Lamothe, Louise Delisle and Rita Lapointe as winners of the The divinely in­ signor Fittkau and some others competitive "examination for scholarships. spired words af­ were to be released, he knew no ford a moving joy. He had heard that his and ilIuminat­ homeland was doomed to be ing c 0 u n t e r­ divided up between Russia and INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Some Father Henle said that philos­ adequate philosophy of knowl­ point to the Poland, with the German in­ - philosophers in secular univer­ recital of nau­ habitants ousted. And his physi­ sities are "dogmatically" closing ophies have failed since the time edge should be our common .eating bestiality. cal condition was such as to their eyes on further philosophic of Descartes in the 16th century, concern," he' said, "Let the "not so much because of what logical positivists contribute their The story begins in Prussia in make it seem impossible that he investigate, rather than re­ they positively conceived of e'xcellent analyses of certain 1944, with the author's installa­ could live through another jour­ maining receptive to tht;l truth. tion as pastor of a small coun~ ney like that to the north. . This observation was made by knowledge, but rather because of formal relations. Let the experl~ parish. The war was gOing ,But· he did iive through it, Father Robert J. Henle, dean of what they denied." He urged his mentalists con t rib ute their listeners, .to profit by the expe­ excellent analyses of some prob­ against the Nazis, and th~ people with much pain, depression, and the St. Louis University grad­ realized that they wer~ likely. to grief. He got to the free zone ate school and retiring president rience of the past few centuries, lematic situations. Let t h • semanticists contribute their ex­ be engulfed in the approachmg of Germany and was reunited of the Philosophy of Education and "soften their denials." ''The task of developing an cellent analyses of certain lin­ Soviet offensive. By January, .with those members of his fam­ Society of America, convention guistic traps and temptationL 1955 they were caught in a Red ily who had weathered the ter­ as he urged all philosophers to Let the ThomlSts contribute ,pincers. ..... ror. He gradually recovered hb use more restraint in "saying their exceilent analyses of anal­ Church Desecrated health and resumed priesU,. \ DO." ogous knowledge. The coming of the Russian. work.' Applica~t Open Mind Set Sights W8S even worse than, in imagReunion in Berlin Too often, Father Henle said, TRINCOMALEE (NC) "I am not proposing to accept ination they had expected it to Or, more accurately, full, philosophers have been "too Brother Everard J. Booth, S.J., be. The soldiers were officially active, priestly work. For all the quick to say no." Thus frequentl,. was looking over the mail at a mere political conjunction of systems. I am well aware that · allowed 100 hours for looting while, though unable to offer' whole systems of philosophic St. Joseph's College here in Cey­ there are oppositions which can­ and ravaging at will, but thill Mass, he had been doing priestl,. thought have been brushed aside 'Ion when he was singularly in­ · limit was not observed. Most of work _ hearing confessions, by 'a philosopher, before he hal terested by one request for a job. not be reconciled, and in which a' philosophical determinaiioD the women were assaulted, some preparing people for death and made an adequate investigation n was signed 'K. Abraham Lin­ must be made. many times. The soldiers appro­ fulfilling his vocation by suffer­ to determine what truth they coln." "But despite all difficulties, printed whatever they fancied, ing. . contain, he asserted. The American Jesuit Brother only good can come of an effort destroyed practically everything At the nadir of his existence "What we need is a philoso­ else. Wrecking and wanton de­ in the prison camp, he writes, phy of knowledge that will be sent Mr. Lincoln the .following to soften our denials, to broadell reply: our examination of intellectual struction took place everywhere. "Yet my priesthood gave pur­ broadly hospitable to all forms experience, and to work toward Monsignor Fittkau's church was pose to every day of my life and and varieties of intellectual "Dear Mr. Lincoln" a larger and commoner philoso­ "We received your request for desecrated, its furnishings de:" saved me from the pit of futility' experience," he said, "not stroyed. and desp'air that swallowed up dogmatically enclosed in one an interview and we welcome phy of knowledge" you to St. Joseph's College. We Shortly he was ordered to re­ ~those who could find nothing method or one definition." feel it only fair to you, however, port in a nearby town. He made to live for in an e:x;isten~ Soften Denials 'to call your attention to the

his farewells, not forgetting the· wrenched out of the context "Intelligence is more than signature of this letter. •

ruined church, and prepared for that had given it meaning. Sincerely,

· deportation. The Soviets were Stripped of ,a church, formal any or all of its directions, oper­ E. J. Booth"

· rounding, up people from all ceremonies, respect, dignity, the ations, or phases," he, pointed over the countryside, crowding naked priesthood could still out, noting that the "closed-.

The coincidence in surnames mind" approach had been unable possibly frightened Mr. Lincoln. them into cellars, interrogating function." Anthracite & Bituminous to produce a true philosophy 'of them, treating them With calHe managed to get in touch He was. understood to have euillted brutality, subjecting with $ome of his parishioners, knowledge. "Consequently, the started looking for a job else­ ,COAL them to a systematic breaking­ and invited them to a reunion in effort to reduce it to one such where. ' down process. Among these Berlin, Eighty came. "God has always been self-defeating" A..-omatic Coal Stokers companions in misery the au­ knows," he says, "there was thor quietly pusued his min­ enough tragedy in the room to Canadian Schools Bag Coal -. Wood latr,.. make a book of horrors. But it Charcoal Plan, Bible Study Life in Labor Camp was kept buried under present TORONTO (NC) -.The first

When finally he was loaded worries, present cares, and even attempt to teach a whole book:

Into a boxcar, he had a feeling under present laughter." OILS of the Bible in Ontario public 01. relief. At least the uncerChrist Sole Li.-hi schools may be made in the Fall Oil BURNERS "inty was, over; it was now The day was the feast of the The discloslire was made b,. Also complete Boiler-Burner plain that' he and those with Ascension. Monsignor Fittkau Dr. Lewis S. Beattie, chairman or Furnace Units. Efficient him would be sent to work lD read to this remnimt of his peo_ of the Ontraio Education Asso­ BURNERS low cost heating: Burner and

, Russia. But the relief was short­ pIe .the Epistle of the Mass of. fuel en sal!'8 and servlee. ci.rtion'" inter-church committee

lived. The journey stretched the feast: "They therefore who 640 PLEASANT ST. on religious educl!tion in schools. Stantey Oil Co., Inc. over weeks. The boxcar wall were come. together' asked Him, , NEW BEDFORD Dr. Beattie said the experi­ crowded to suffocation; it was saying: Lord, wilt Thou at this ment may be made with 'seventh 480 Mt. Pleasant Street WY 6-8271-28-3 filthy and verminous., Food was time restore again the kingdom New Bedford WY 3-%61'7 grade pupils, and added that a

practically nil. People fell sick of Israel? But He said to them: teacher's guide for the seventh

and died. On one train alone It is not for you to know' the grade now is being prepared for

there were three cars piled from times or moments which the submission to the Ontario Minis­

floor to ceiling with rotting Father hath put in His own ter of Education. Dr. Beattie said

corpses. power: but you shall receive the a teacher's guide for the eighth

Upon ani val in the northeast­ power of the Holy Ghost coming grade should be available in

ernmost corner of European upon you, and you shall be wit­ September 195~. Russia, the su~vivors of the jour­ nesses unto Me in Jerusalem, ney were herded into a primi­ and in all Judea and Samaria, Uve labor camp. They were to and even to the uttermost part work with pick and shovel on a of the earth." vast canal. They were abominIt is a callous .reader indeed • BANQUETS • WEDDINGS • .pARTIES .GUARANTEED abiy housed, fed,. treated. Con­ who will not. be touched and • COMMUNION BREAKFASTS dititlOs and scanty, wretched shaken. by his plain-spoken tare brought on illnesses, and book. Here is an excursion into SERVICE - .REPAIRS

for these there was no medical the foul and capacious lower Member R. T. T. G.

eare. The sick simply declined depths. of the vaunted twentieth 1343 PLEASANT ST. FAll RIVER JAMES E. NORTON and died, and their corpses were century world. .o!\nd the only 46 Miadle Road OSborne 3-7710 flung into a great pit, light in the hideous, reeking pit Acushnet WY 5-7548 Continues Priestly Work b that of Christ. One of the worst features of It is also bOQk which should . amp life was the bullying b,. shake UP. the American reader. criminals and ex-Nazis. Instead We must feel shame that some of curbing it, the Soviets encour­ of Monsignor Fittkau'. fellow aged "it. Nor was this surprising; sufferers: ill the Soviet inferno the author noted identical quali­ had got safely out of Soviet ter­ ties in Communists 8J1d Nazis. ritory but were obligingl,. ID. some of the prisoners their handed over to the Reds by our ordeal brought out latent good authorities. WET WASH

qualities. But in more it brought Again, we must wonder why ORY CLEANING

out the worst. outrages such as those here deFrom the former Monsignor scribed concern us hardly at all. FLAT WORK Flttkau knew many consolations, We fail - or, rather, we refuse 27 PARK STREET ATTLEBORO 1066 COUNTY STREET especially in the response to bia - to see that they are satimie NEW 8EDFORD elandestine priestly minlllUy. fruit which infallibly proclaims' 292 UNION STREET NEW BEDFORD But from the latter he suffered the tree on which they erow in­ WY 7-9798 WUer peraecution, raoline tn. ,tl'iosicallT eviL......... 1

Jesuit Feels Some Philosophers Too Dogmatic

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The Philosopher Today

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-THE ANCHOR

Thurs., April 17, 1958

>. The eyes of the, country and,-indeed, the world ~re on the various scientific programs presently at work in our schools or being drawn up for speedY·introdllctiQ.D., into the, Ichool system. . ' ' There has been a realization that education is not a TODAY-St, Anicetus, Pope­ matter of giving the child what he desires but what he Martyr. He was a Syrian who needs. ' The' "'beadstringing-social graces--educate for succeeded St. Pius I as Pope in living': philosophy of education is giving place to one that 155. He defended the Faith calls for work on the Part of the' student to realize the against Valentinus, Mardan and other Gnostic heretics, He is said ~apabilities of his mind and talents. And the stress is to have been put to death at being placed on the sciences. the order of Emperor MarcUB , Amid the sCientific crash program that have bee~ Aurelius in 166. inaugurated, a meeting of a philosophical group could easily 'TOMORROW-St. Apollonius, go unnoticed. And even if it were found, newsworthy, its Martyr. He was beheaded in voice would seem to be a small still one lost in the scien­ 186 after he had been accused tific uproar of the ,times. .' as 'a Christian by one of' hill slaves and had refused 'to deny The American Catholic Philosophical A,ssociation has his Faith. He won the name of just finished its Thirty-Second Annual 'Meeting in Detroit. Apollonius the Apologist for hill' Its proceedings will not make headlines. But some of the eloquent defense of his Faith statements that were made at it are worth looking at.' before the Roman senate, oJ. \ which '-he was a member. Hill The keynote speaker at the meeting, Franci~can 'Father fellow senators voted his death Pacific L. Hug from Quincy College, Quincy, 'Illinois, spoke sentence. on the influence of the Catholic philosopher and the con­ temporary scene. He- warned that there is an "a~l but . SATURDAY-:'St. Timon, Dea­ C h r cOn-Martyr. He lived in the eomplete lack of genuine communication between at 0 IC first century and was one of the philosophers and the philosophers whose thinking ~trongly first seven deacons chosen by determines the tone and temper of our contemporary cul­ the Apostles. There a rEi con­ ture." , mcting traditions concerning his life; The Roman Martyrology , Father Hug told the philosophers that they must study says he first preached in Beroes, the trends of current-day thinking, even though these may , then was made Bishop of Cor­ be 'outside the traditIon of scholastic philosophy. They Sage andSanc:l i , inth, where he was crucified by must know what are the themes directing modern thinki~g, Jews and pagans. what the effects of modern philosophical writing. SUNDAY-SS. Sulpicius and Iii the midst of the' scientific concern of the age, it is Servilian, Martyrs. They were a matter of wisdom not to neglect philosophy. Those who Romans whose conversions trad­ b~lieve that philosophy is the pursuit of the intellectually,­ itionally are attributed to the D prayers of St. Flavia Domitilla. By Most Rev. Robert J . Dwyer,D . . . ret ired or the impractical theoreticians are missing the , Bishop 01 Reno ' They were beheaded for the lesson that the current problems in education give. Faith about 117 during the reign For behind all the mistakes of the present' criticized / In the paralyzing cold of Jan. 31, 1868, they, buiie~ of Emperor Trajan. MONDAY-St. Anselm of school curricula ,lies philosophy. Before programs were Bishop Frederic Baraga of Marquette. Not one of his breth­ ut into action, there was a philos6phy of education. In ren of the American hierarchy of 90 years ago could imike Canterbury, Bishop-Confessor, P d 'it for the obsequies in the bare wooden structure that served Doctor. He was born of noble many instances it was a philosophy that was concerne as his cathedral. parents in Aosta,Italy, in 1033 with the child here and now. It tried to make the child himself, a transformation of, a and, joined the Benedictines. an integrated member of society and give him the means Bishop Henri of Milwau­ fairly handsome young priest He was named Archbishop of to, earn a liv-ing. It stressed such things as working with ,kee' had -done his best,but into an aging bishop who might Canterbury in 1093 but was others, etiquettte so as not to offend, the means to "pick beyond Green Bay the howl­ have passed for a Chippewa twice banished from his See be-., , 1 d th f t th t th . tell t ing blizzard turned back the chieftain. The grim photograph cause of his resistance to Kings Up a fast buck." "It neg ecte e ac a e III ec stagecoach. Only six priests oJ. which survives of his last years William Rufus and Henry I ovet must be used and not pampered, that capabilities take 'work the area could is a study in the harrowing of the question of investitures' of to develop, that learning is not always a pleasant proposi­ gather for the hardship. Bishops. He died in 1109 Hia tion. It neglected to a large extent the nature of a person chanting of the Volunteers for Missions' writings are numerous, as one capable of the higher and finer things of life, one office and the

If not of noble birth Baraga TUESDAY-SS. Soter and with creative desires and' powers, one whose life is essen­ Mass of Re­ came of prosperous Slovenian Caius, Popes:-Martyrs, St. Soter j\ quiem. But over la dh Id t k d . tially different fr:oni that of an animal, one who must be ,3,000 of the n 0 er soc an was gIven 'an It~lian, succeeded Pope St. ' th a t h'IS eff"IClent work faithful, many

ample' . educatioQal advantages. in 166, was noted" for taught how to use WIseI y t h e ielsure ' at Anicetus He took his law degree his charity to the poor, and UI · m.' of them Bara­ V· th d t 1 leaves for hl lenna, en turne 0 theo ogy said to have been martyred in' and was,ordained at the age of 175. St. Caius was a Dalmatian Weak' school programs, babying students instead of ga's In d ian s,

teaching them to work, neglect of mathematics and science :~~~al~:tfO~: '

26 on Sept. 21, 1823. For seven and a relative of Emperor Dio­ which' have brought about such a concern today-these last look 'at the years he did parish work' in his cletian; He succeeded Pope St , native diocese, only to be up­ Eutychian in 283. Though he , mistakes are deeply rooted and took their rise from, a phil­ rugged features rooted' by the urgings of the was not put to death for' the osophy, ' a' way, of thinking; a 'set of' principles, a set of of. one of America's greatest Leopoldine Society 'for mission­ Faith, his many sufferings for ' postulates, an evaluation of the pupil and the purpose of missionary', apostles. ' aries for the' American West. He religion earned him the title 01. educa.tion. , ' T h e r e were, many then and volunteered for service under 'Martyr. He died'in 296. '

Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days '

B h'e ' is op Baraga, s " areer Is h '' '. Heroic Copter in History

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Bishop, Edward Fenwick of C i n - . , cinnati;and in May; 183i, found :. '"WEDNESDAY-St. George, himself among the Ottawa oJ. , ~artyr. The ~atron. of England ArbreCroche (Harbor Springs), 18 revered hIghly In t~e East Mic~igan. ' . " ,:~~ 'i~:t. ~~r'i:~~a~n ~~~~e:n~c:.: - WIth youthful zest he attacked Emperor DI'ocletl'an, He I'S Bal'd the lang~age problem a?d, con­ to have rebuked the ,emperor quered. It. In an asto~lshIngl.y for his persecution of Christians, short tIme he had establIshed. hIS refused to sacrifice to pagan ascendancy among the IndIans gods and was beheaded in 303­ and ,seemed well on his way, ' , , toward creating a missionary French, and Irish, began to move ,. para d'Ise. H'IS d enunCIatIons of in. By 1853 they were so numer­ the liquor traffic, however, made ous that a Vicariate was,called bitter ,enemies for him among for and Baraga was consecrated the traders, who forced him to by Archbishop Purcell. ' He was remarkable on, many' leave in 1835. It was then that counts. 'He was not' only a he set his' face to the North and For God Alone saintly ,missionary priest and ,marked' the bleak shores of Lake Four years later the see oJ. bishop but an ethnologist and Superior as his halidome. Sault Ste. Marie' and Marquette linguist' of rare accomplis.hment. 'was erected and he took 'his H tl Compiles Textbooks' place in the American hierarchy. e ,was, m,oreo.ver, ~mInen, y, ' , successful In hIS dealIngs WIth , Here were ~faChippewa, the Not that it made much difference the Indians, something whlchOtchipve of-hi!! phonetics. From in his way of life. "I have had cannot be said of many of those La Pointe on Madeline Island,' the pleasure," wrote a traveller who have undertaken this apos­ his headquarters until 1843, he of the '50li, "once in my life, oJ. tol te ·visited almost, every Indian en-' conveersing with an absolute 'Tahe. grea't F renc .. h mIssIonarIes ,. . campment along the lake, canoe- . gentleman . . . kind, serene, who labored in ,the Great Lakes ing itby summer, snowshoeing it urbane, and utterly sincere. Thill area all through the 17th and by winter. ,perfect gentl!,!man was a Roman 18th centuries, 'Jesuits, Sulp,i-, Kept at home by the storms, Catholic bishop whq had spent cians, Recollets" garnered' piti­ he busied himself with linguis­ 30 years of his life in the woocU ably meagre harvesis from iheir ,tics, compiling his' Theoretical near Lake Superior." : painful sowing. 'There was some­ and Practical' Grammar of the Exposure and privation took thiJig in the Indian complex ,:Otehipve' Language (published their inevitable toll. By 1866 he which they could not 'penetrate, in 1850), and his Dictionary of was a broken, man, and his de­ no matter how' generous their the Otchipve Language, (853). termination to attend the 2nd sacrifice or how 'eloquent their -' They are still the 'standard Council of Baltimore that ,FaD preaching. They were,-' :for the texts. ,'If in so scattered' a mBd" resulted in 'a stroke suffered in most part,magnificent failures. he could not' reproduce the Archbishop Spalding's house, Not'so Baraga. Something'in' ,striking results of,Arbre Croche, where he fell headlong down the - his 'personality, some quality of he performed nevertheless, a stairs. , his 'appeal, won the confidence of gigantic, and ,enduring work..' . But he made. it home, lingered the tribesmen 'and enabled :hiril' His C~tholic Indians have kept for ~ year, and died in the win­

to m.ake them Christians, not in ,the' faIth. .. _, ter's loneliness. It was' a fittin,

name merely but in 'solid fact. - , ',But by the '50s his _country end for:a -man who had lived for,

With, the, passage ,of, 'time, 'in- 'was changing. The vast copper' GodaiQne. It was the way be deed, ,it was noted that he came' deposits w~re ready forexploita- wanted it; the way of ,the people to look very much like an Indian tion, and the miners, German, be loved. '

For one to say that this, is no -time to talk of phn080phy is to miss the point completely. This above all the time for all thinking men to think-to ask questions and to seek answers-to inquire of the whys and wherefores of life-­ 'dom. ' · to b e t Ime seek ers a ft'er WIS Our Catholic philosophers must know what other think­ ing men are doing. They must' read their works, 'under­ stand their minds'. They must know what are the thought trends that will influence not only school programs but the , d' ' f l'f Th thinking patterns of lea ers m all phases 0 I e. ey must know what approach others take to life-its purpose" its goals, its v~lues. • Th C thorc h 'loso he doe ot do h's work hen e a I pIp r s n 1, W 'he presents his principles to the world. He must do more., He must make sure that others understand him, and that, means knowing their vocabularies as well as his own. It _.means that the Ca,tholic philosopher must, in the words of' ' . Cardinal 'Mooney translate their thinking' into language " ", . ' , more u~derstand~ble to ~~e layman III order to exert a greater mfluence III today s world. .I \ The philosop'her still has a vital role in today's wt>rld. And others would do well to listen to him., , '

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@The ANCHOR

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OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE' OF FALL RIVER

pubiished 'tYeekly:by'TheCatholic Press the Dioce'~e 'of Fall 410 Highland Avenue ' - Fall River, Mass. .- OS~orne 5-7151

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, , ' . ',' ,," ~ PUBLISHER .~, Most Rev. James: L. Conno/iy. ,D.O•• Ph.D."

GENERAL MANAGER ' ASST, GENERAL MANAGER, Re~. DanieIF.Shall'oo. M,A. ' -'- -.:Rev. '[)riscoll' . .' . .. ..' .'. . :' John'p. '... , ' . .,... -, MANAGING EDITOR' Attorney Hugh J; Golden ~'"

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later, who thought of' Baraga as • saint, canonizing him in grate­ luI memory, but it was only in 1957 that canonical steps were initiated to introduce his cause in 'Rome. It is fruitless to speeu­ late on the outct>me,' but at the very .least the detailed study to which his career must be sub­ jected will revive for us a, heroic chapter in the history of the Church in America and 'bring into rell'ef the stalwa'rt character' of the man himself. , Successful With India~


Son of .God "

Pope 'Insists Psychologists See

authorities might authorize psy· chologists to, use any method in the general interest. He noted it is a characteristic of the totali­ tarian state "to give no thought to .the meaps employed but to use without distinction all that serves the aim pursued, without regard .for the demands of the moral law." He said .the fact that proce­ dQres may be authorized by pub­ lic authority does not add to their morality and that the prin­ ciples already stated would also apply to them.

VATICAN CITY (NC)~ Psychology makes itself li­ able to error' if it fails to recognize that man i8 the son of God and made in His image. His Holiness Pope Pius XII warned delegates to the Rome Congress of the Intema­ t.ional Association, 'Of Applied Psychology, who were received ,,in audienc'e here. The Pope also told his listen­ ers that modern psychology in general deserves 'approval from a moral and religious viewpoint, but that certain moral problems arise ·froin some of its methods, such as the use of lie detectors and the so-called truth serums. . The Pope's address' was divi­ ded into three major parts: ' . 1. A definition of the human personality from the psycholog­ ical and moral points of view. ' 2. A discussion of the moral obligations of the psychologist in relation to the human per­ sonality.' 3.' A discourse on fundamental moral' principles of the human personality in psychology.

Personality Defined .The ,Pontiff defined personal­ ity, as "the psychosomatic unity of man i!,!sofar as it is deter­ mined and governed by the

• .oul."

Personality Principles

POLIO FOUNDATION PLAQUE: ·Magr. Frederick G. Hochwalt, (left) secretary General of the National Catholic Education Association, and Bishop Matthew F. Brady of Manchester .(center) accept a plaque from the National Foundation of Infantile Paralysis for the NCEA. Frederic C. Windoes (right) made the presentation for the Polio Foun': dation. Bishop Brady is president general of the Educators' Association. NC Photo. certain fundamental principles must therefore·be adhered to, and he expressed the hope that psychologists and theologians might work toward agreement concerning these principles.

The Pope said: "When one considers man as a work of GOd, one discovers in him two important characteris­ ties . for the development arid Fundamental Principles value of the Christian personal­ it,: its resemblance to God, de­ As the Pope gave th~m, these rived from the act of creation, principles are: and its divine sonship in Christ, 1)' "Arty man must' 'be consi­ made manifest by Revelation. dered normal. until there .. "In fact Christian personality proof to the contrary." 2) "The 'normal man does not becomes incomprehensible if one neglects these points and psy­ have theoretical freedom alone, . chology, especially appiied psy­ but enjoys the use of freedom." chology, also lays itself open to '3) ~'The normal man is capa­ misunderstandings and errors if ble of surmounting the difficul­ it disregards them. For' these ties which hinder his observance are not imagined or assumed of the moral law when he makes motions, but real facts." proper _use of the spiritual en­ ergies at his. disposal." Objecqve Standards 4) "Abnormal psychological Equally essential along with tende'ncies are not always con­ these two points from a religious straining and do not always de­ and moral viewpoint, the Pope prive the subject of all possibil­ said, is the fact that man has the ity of free action." capacity and duty to perfect his , 5) "Even the dynamisms, of nature, not as he might like to, the unconscious and the sub­ but according to -the objective conscious are not .irresistible; standards established by the plan there are still great pos~ibilities t»f God. I for mastering .them, particularly 'At this point the Pope noted for the normal subject." that there are "certain disput­ 6) "The normal man is there­ able 'assertions" in the code of . fore ordinarily responsible for "Ethical Standards for Psycho­ the decisions he makes." , logists" compiled a few years Merits Approval ago by the American Psycholog­ Proceeding to -the second' pal7t ical Association. He said that the idea which inspired the code of his discourse~the obligatio~ mWlt be approved, but added of the psychologist In relation to that "whoever neglects or scorns the human personality the tile norms of a moral objective Pope stated first of all that modern psychology in generai order will ·only a'cquire a de­ formed and imperfect personal­ merits approval from the reli­ gious and moral viewpoint. . , ity." However, not all of themeth­ The Holy Father declared that If' one admits that man is obliged ods it uses can be defended, he to observe certain rules of mor­ said. For example, the Pontiff ality,- one must also admit that said, moral problems arise in regard to those· methods, that he is objectively and sl,lbjective­ ly capable of obeying them. He intrude into the "sacred· inti­ macies" of the personality, such said ~hat, contrary to the posi­ "on held. by some psychologists, as narcosynthesis (use of drugs

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the revelation of secrets (of state, of office, of family or of confession) . or simply the right of individuals or communities to ~r reputation. It doeS not suffice th~t the psychologist him­ self 01' his assistants maintaia secrecy. . • There are certain secrets which absolutely cannot be revealed. not even to a cau­ tious person."

Missouri Justice Heads Men's Council JEFFERSON CITY

(NC)­

Justice Henry J. Westheus of

the Missouri Supreme Court has named first president of the newly-formed Jefferson City Diocesan Council of Catholic Men. Judge Westheus has ~ree children in religious life. His son, Msgr. John H. Westheus, is Chancellor of the neighboring Diocese of Springfield - Cape Girardeau. Two daughters are Sister Francis, Cabrini .of the Sisters of Charity and Sister Joan Cor of the Maryknoll Sis­ ters.

been

Human Guinea Pig

to .aid in psychoanalysis) and the use-of lie detectors. In this connection he said: "It must be said that one rhust sometimes deplore the unjusti­ fied intrusion of the psychologist into the depth of the personality with its. resulting serious psy­ chic harm to ·the patient and even to third' parties. It some­ times happens that the full con'" sent of the interested person is not assured, and to justify ques­ tionable procedures (thepsy­ chologist) invokes the ,priority of science over mQral values and over the interests '.the 'indivi­ dualS." . ,,, " The Pope said that the de­ mands'of scien'ce 'do not in them­

selves justify the' use of ali

methods. even by sincere psy­

chologists .and for'. good purposes:

. "Th'e primary 'question is not psychology itself and' its' possi­ ble progress, bu·t'.the human per­ so~ who applies it and· who obeys 'higher social, moral arid religious norms," the Pope said.

"The same also ,applies to the

other branches of science . . . ,.,

of

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Sacredness of Psyche

In cases where a person wil­ lingly sub mit s himself, to psychological experiments and treatments, he said; it must first be borne in mind that ~'the con­ tent of the psyche is the exclu­ sive property of the person." Therefore when tJ:1e patient gives what is his, the psychologist may make use of it" he sa.id, aqding: "But one may alsQ. ask whether the consent of the patient is suf­ fiCient to give the {)SYChOIo~!st unlimited access to his psyche... As a matter of fact, mini does not' 'have" 1in" uniimited pqw~r o~er h!m&CI( \'.,,": . ...:, .." , "Let us first of. all observe that the 'ihterveITtion of" the psycholo­ gist rhight :injure the right of' a third party; 'for instance by

Proceeding· to the third point of the discourse-the funda. mental moral principles of the human personality in psychology -the Pope' set down the follow­ ing general guides: -Some acts· are immoral only because they violate the nornu of a positive law. -Others are immoral in them­ selves. --Still others become immoral because of circumstances. An e,xample of the latter, the Pope said, would be the im­ morality of invading a person'. conscience, although the act could become moral if the per­ son gave his valid consent. An­ other example, the Pope stated, . w~uld be a situation where cer­ tain dangers exist in Undergoin& tests. Here· too, he noted, the act would become moral if pro­ portional motives justified the danger.

"The norms which We have

formulated are of a moral or­ der," the PoPe deelared. "WheD p..'lYcbology theoretically discua­ IeS a methol or the effective­ ness of a technique, it only con­ siders their aptitude to achieve a specific aim: Psychology pur­ sues and does not deal with the moral aspect. . .

Speaking of "heroic altruism," where a person allows himself to be used as a human guinea pig, the Pope enunciated the principle that the moral value' of the human act depends upon Moral Limitations. its object. If the object is im­ "The psychologist who really moral, the act is immoral, and wishes to seek only the welfare this holds true no matter what . of his patient will be all the the motive or the aim. more careful to respect the limi­ "People who, urged by (al­ tations given to his action by truistic) motives, ofTer them-· morality. One may say that he selves for very painful experi­ holds in his hands .the psychic ments in order to ,help others faculties of a man, his capacity and be useful to them deserve' of acting freely, of 'achieving the admiration and shouid be "imi­ highest values of his social voca­ tated," the Pope stated. "But tion and of his personal destiny." one must ,be wary of confusing Among the 400 delegates at­ the . motive or the aim of the tending the congress was Morris action with its object and of Simon Viteles of the University transferring to the latter a moral of Pennsylvania, PhiIadell1lo1i~ value which' it doeS' not de­ The group al'so included repr.. serve." . sentatives from the Universitie. ,Th~ Pope. next analyzed the of Poznan, Poland, and Zabreb, question' as to whether public Yugoslavia.

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,-"8:' ,L:rHE.'ANCHOR

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Give-a~aY6f UsedFurriit'ur~ Fails to Impress DalyF~mily

Thurs., April 17, 1958

New Publication To'Aid Parents

By Mary Tinley Daly" Every household is redecorated periodically, -we find. And, if you don't set a deadline, you're ~unk. Our deadline approaches and we beat it, for once. The' paint is off the firepla~e! April 20, we had agreed, would see the bricks restored to One is a Florentine tapestry their pristine' ruggedness job with carved legs, suitable' and we'd "go early Ameri-, 'for a baronial castle, incongru­ can" in the living room or ous in our house. The other is ,

DUBUQUE (NC)-A '·Guide for Parents of, Catholic' Youth" has 'been prepared by the Arch­ diocese of Dubuque, Iowa. A 36-page pamphlet, it is the work of Msgr. Justi,n A. Driscoll, ar~hdiocesan superintendent of schools. Its purpose is "to serve as a practical guide for parenta in helping their children live up to the things required of them." The publication contains re­ commendations for parentai guidance 'of children, in sucb fields as recreation, dress, dat­ ing, drinking and smoking and transportation. The Guide ill "not to be considered as legi~ ,1ation in the strict sense; rather it should be looked upon' as a serviceable outline for paren'­ of Catholic youth." In a foreword to the pamphlet, Archbishop Leo Binz of Du­ buque declines ,that it "should serve as a constant, reminde.... for parents of their "God-giveD responsibilities in the trainmc and education of children."

the fireplace would be repainted a blue upholstered, authentic and we'd return to our hOdge- "Early Grand Rapids." There is podge of mid­ "the red chair," bought because everything pe_ it was comfortable and a bar­ "AND A PIl'lCH OF THIS": The camera caught (left riod. ' gain. , to right) Patricia Gifford, Ann LaLiberte, Dorothy Holloran We shudder In a more formal setting it and Elaine Carori following instructions in their C09king to think of the would be .known as ,"The Gen­ class at Fall River CYO.' tons of energy -,tleman's Chair." At our house expended 0 n ' it was always "Daddy's Red the pro j .ec t, Chair'." It's springs undone largely by Pat, . again, upholstery ,worn,one leg -. ' HOLLYWOOD (NC)-'Angela: who in the pro­ broken and repaired, one arm, Greene" and, Stephen McNally' eess evolved • no longer repairable, the .. red brick _ restorer chair ,has had it. Emmanuel College's musIcal have been named to receive '.the , 0 m ,b i n it tion Next, '~«l wobbly mahogany',' i9ciety ~ill salute-Spring in, its annual awards of the Catholic which only she dropleaf table and the table we'd 'ilinnyal"concert at 3:30 P.M;'Sun- , Film ,and' Radio Guild, given to could describe. "antiqued'; when the' craze' 'was day in the college auditorium. actors, writ~rs, directors arid ItS chief componen~, ;u; ;we 88W on, for, white paint-and-burnt- "The, program ,will include 'pr~ucers of Irish ancestry who

It, was elbow"grease. 'umt>er. Messy.. classical selections sUch as exemplify Irish ideals of family, '

' . ,Brahms' "Psalm XIII," 'and Men..' life., , ' . What-Is-It ' Ii t evemng' H owever,' th a t 'rs ,delssohn's "Lift.. Thine Eyes,"-' Ange~a 'Greene (Mrs. Stuart B~idge I when we 00 k e d around th e And the coffee table, for which n f T '1" g , ' t a G e v a e r t ' s "0 Filii et Filiae," and : Martin) was born in Dublin and ' we have sentiment 'but. no- real 'Thompson'., "Fueri Hebraeor­ • ce- amI lar Ivm r~m, I Sponsored by the Salve Reg...

is the mother of three. Stephen rug rolled up, furniture placed use. Presented on our wooden College Alumnae Association, a

McNally is 'the father of eight primly around the walls" .we" weddjng' anniversary ,by the lim." scholarship bridge and fashion

' were taken slightly aback: We' Head of the House, it was our' English: Scotch, and French children. ' show will be conducted, . t .

laad taken the piunge. " " pride ~nd joy. ~t on high legs~ tUnes will add a light note. Con- , ,The guild awards, statuettes of ' o'clock tomorrow night in~ the

St: Brigid and St. Patrick, were Eariy Ainerican that room has it was the size and style of'the temporary Broadway, selections

Crystal Ballroom of the Narra-,

lot to be. One gets the instinc-' '3Os.' ' , f r o m Rodgers and. Hammerstein first given to Irene Dunne and gansett Hotel, Providence" R. L

Spencer Tracy in 1940, and last' live impression,' from 'viewing ,Around its top bad been • ,will eomplete the program. year went to Princess Grace of Miss Judith A. Albanese' 01.

the .dominating fireplace, that, beautiful' pie-Crust edging, per'Mr. Alexandre Peloquin will Providence, is general chairman.

' Monaco and William Luncligan. the early'settlers could come and feet for small boys and girls to ,direet the ch()ral BJ:0up. make themselves right at home, use as. 'boat. Such sailing ad­ woasting meats;' baking bread, ventures, and the table when warming their chilled bodies: overturned Serving as .. fort ton­ Budding Business Man siderably weakened' that pie­ Now foratep two:' Certainly erust ~dge--:split it, as a4matter tbe Oriental rug isn't appro.., of fact, and everitually neeessi­ . . .,.' ' . ' . . . priate. It's -historic, that's for tated'its removaL AlsO,,in One, lIU~, but into'the dining.room it of our m6Qernization ventu,rea; ~s. A bit nc)stalgically,' the we had 'cutdown 'the'legs; Now : '.. '. ... .. : ' . ' . ~ead of the House and I recalled the oncepreciollli fifth an'niver':' how we had bought itin Chicago sary gift'U'rlothing 'bUt ....hat­ 'when, we were on our, honey­ is-it.'·' , " ,­ moon and didn't even know ' Piano, two chain and '-laJripti-' ' where ,we were going to live, and ,.re O.K., '.rid - tIlUll 'endS u.e­ "tor ,lOme time it had been ,our, inventory:-'" ,:", en1y household possession. ' . ~'eli~f) ;WKb~~~b , ' We remembered" too" how "So like the patriarchs of old, 'nars later when the rug was and with'. "We..,who-are-about­ !'OIled up for its summer stay in "to-die-sabite"you"ges~ure; we, the 'baseme!1t, Johnny 'had called 'in all :-the-children~and; propped his to-gallon fish' tank wrote 'the samet«> Eileen: ,"Any­ .gainst It. That was the 'sum-, thing you want, you may have." mer he was nine 'and started his' Had,' 'we expected a keen first business venture by "board­ scramble, we'd have ~n dis­ ing" gold fish for the neighb<;lrs appointed. . , while they were away on vaca,. "Maype the blue chair (Grand tion. ,Ten cents a week, as we Rapids) would do in my upstairs ,recall, or two-for-15 at "The den," Johnny spoke up--perhaps Gold Fish Hotel:' and we, just to, save our feelings, thought he was quite the bud­ '''I might, like the drop-leaf ding business man. r table," Pat added. "Still, I don't We thought so until fall, that .know.. ;" , A murmured "No, thanks," is, when we unrolled the rug' ~d found that there had- been from Mary, and a whispered con.., ' . crack in the back of the sultation between Markie and tank. . . You g'uessed it-a big Ginny; the tenor of which was , piece of mold that had to 'be cut "I want to furnish my house out of the once-impressive rug: from scratch when I get mar­ , ~ohnny's rental system" netting ried."" him $5.75, had cost us $150. Well, 'to be realistic, we had Miseellaneous Chairs had the,same sent{merits--only it The~ the. other ,furniture, of has taken us uritil now' even to , Bel par~i,c~ll'\!' period: the cO,uch ' .pproach'the realization' of that its 76th ATIlliversary by bringing-to , , ,nd chair,. inherited and done ambition.' Always; 'there wa. 'aIlBiver an9ther F"~T -,the Dew Electronic Secretary that over and 'over,the two wedding, 'something 'else'~ sChool" bilb", present 'chairs .from folks whose medical'bills, etc.-to takepreceMrve8 :ron when the tit-rig Store i8'elosed ,(b~tween 10 P. M. and.8 Wteswere the antithesis of 'dence over furniture.' ' .A.. K. dail;, uUi' Sundars betwee~1 M. and' 6, P. )f) , ' , ' ,' , "each other. Maybe'it's more 'fun that way?

Emmanuel Choristers Radio and Film Guild Picks 'Award Winners' To Present Concert

Alumnae

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Touhey's Pharmacy 75th Year

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"~uheY'.PlumnaeY e~lebrates

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ROOM LEADERS: .officers of Freshman Room 7 at Mou~t St. Mary ~cademy, Fall River, are, left to right,

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PresIdent Carol Ann Chrupcala, Vice-president Grace Bond ' and Treasurer Eleanor Wise. Seerewy,Margaret w~ absent when:photo was taken.-, , , " , '

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Today's .;Fashions

\ Print Suits Present' New Idea For Spring and' Summer Wear By Ellen Kelley , A delightful new fashion idea for Spring and Summer

is the print suit! Along with the usual wonder-blends that

have made a place for themselves in suits for travel and

business wear during the warm and hot months the print

suit, in all-cotton or blends, other. was a· beige, honeycomb

is outstanding as some- knit, very effective from the

thing really new! With the viewpoint of style and color.

big trend to prints-in-gene-. Shoulder Capes

eral, a suit in print strikes a Chic little, double - tiered

fresh style-note. Since these shoulder-capes are in our midst

new type suits are unlined and and that flattering topping dres­

styled with setaway necklines ses and suits exquisitely. Many

and short or three quarter of them are faithful copies of

sleeves, they can double as two- genuine fur capelets; others ap­

piece dresses as well. pear in ric h velvets. One

I looked at a colorful group shoulder-cape that, to me, was

of modestly priced print suits very' effective indeed is an ·only·yesterday. Made of polished elegant black satin, has a Medici COl.LEGE CLA$S LEADERS: Leaders of- the Junior College Class at St. Anthony'. cotton in colorful splashy. floral red satin lining, looked very Hig~ School, New Bed!ord are, left to right, Alice Cayer, secretary; Roland LeBlanc, prints, the styles include the ~charming as topping for a' clas­ ·presIdent; Alfred St. PIerre, treasurer,. and Claire Belanger, vice-presiden~ , cocoon-back jacket and, the sically simple b 1 a c k crepe

chemise jacket with low-placed sheath-dress. These little "fa-.

band." Another group included shion wonders" are worn during print suits in dacron/orIon and the day and make perfect after­

100% dacron, in charming floral five Summer coverups as well! prints in such unusual colorSheer blousons are newly . GENEVA (NC)-It i~ imp~s- points' of view of equality 'ill combines as 0 ran g'e-green, beautiful in nylon prints; in Sible for !D0ther~ ofyo~ng ch.I1- 'the sharing of responsibilities green-blue, pink-hot pink! Many Paisley, ·rose and polka-dot pat­ and from that of freedom of CONCORD (NC)-TheState dren to cope With their family of the jackets are fitted, while terns. They may be worn as responsibilities and outside em- women to choose a career ia Department of, Education has .kirts are pleated and flared. blouses now, make a feminine recom,mended a, Sister as a can­ . ployment, at the. same time, .the family life or business. Trapeze Silhouette coverup for playclothes and for a Catholic organ. didate for a national award"88 spokesman told th' U' N' C '. The representative of the . t· I predict that the new "Tra- swimsuits later! Iza Ion e . . ommlS- C th 1" I t t · I U . an outstanding science teacher. peze Silhouette" from the house Neckwear' is full of new a . 0 IC n. erna IOna 1110n for sion. on the Status of Women~ She is Sister Mary Beatrice . M L' B .' t· SOCial Service spoke at the three­ of Dior is going to be a tremen- fashion tricks for this sparkling rs. O.UlSar, r~presen ~ng week session here of the Com­ of St. Joseph High School for dous hit with the American new season. The diamond-shape the Cat~oIIc In~ern~tlOnal Umon . mission on the Status of Women, Girls, Manchester, who has been public! Indeed, the New York square is the newest scarf. Try for SOCial SerVice, mformed the one of th t h' 1 " active in promoting the New commission:' and' Boston markets, at various it-it~s so easy to tie or· drape. e ec mca .commlsslons Hampshire State Science Filir . of the U. N. EconomIC and Social price levels, are already adding An oblong makes a smart pouff "T~e economic and social or- Council. She testified on the to Spring and Summer lines, in a suit neckline. A new idea and the Greater Manchester Reg~nization.of the various count- commission's 40-page report on gional Science .Fair. . trapeze versions of dresses, suits is an oblong tied in a low sailor During the summer of 1957, rlea .should be such as not to . "Economic Opportunities for and even coats, and they look knot. It's terrific that way, worn Includinl Workin, exquisite! with a chemise. A jabot or Sister Beatrice was selected to require both .father and mother Women, to accept paid employment to Mothers." attend the Summer Institute in insure I. predict that the "Trapeze pussy-cat bow adds a pretty the family's livelihood." • •• Silhouette" will be Ii. strong feminine touch. If you want to Radiation Biology at Harvard She also asserted that r~cog­ · University. A number of her fashion influence for next Fall, be wonderfully thrifty, wear a as well! Women and girls who crisp nautical collar on a last students have won top prizes in nltion of the right of others to NO JOB TOO BIG national and local science con- t;are for .and bring up their have been staying away from year's dress!· NONE TOO SMALL children without having to work tests. t the chemise, because they have Gloves to Match The State Department of Ed-· .!>utside t~e home should be re­ large-hip problems, will find Scarves and flowers are wonthat the swingy trapeze skirt is derful color coordinates!.' You ucation was asked by the New garded as a sign of' social pro­ marvelously wearable! can get any costume color in England chapter of the Anrted gresS... Accordingly, Mrs. Louis­ Forces Chemical Association to Bar said, the problem of "equal The trapeze skirt itse'Lf ~as a either; one. They come in the economic opportunities for wo­ definite new shape, difficult to most luscious shades, too! The suggest a nominee for the chap­ execute, but already being per- same ~autiful. colors come in. ter's entry in the association's men" should be studied from the fected, and it is' combined with glove!!. :''Incidentally, hot pink, contest to honor anQoutstanding L'OWELL, MASS.

an easy, away-from:-the':'body.· surn(hiJl'e. yellQw. :and orange are science teacher. Sister Be;ltrice is the second top. Actually it is ailOthex: beau- marve}ohs. a ce.n t s. They're Teleohone Lowen

nun known to have been entered titul version. of the relaxed 'nothing short of stunning, when Service Station

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chemise trend, but a version that complementing. navy or gray in the association's contest by ita local chapters. Sister Mary Jo­ widens toward the hem, instead cOlltumes, and .it's an easy and AMOCO GAS Auxiliary Plants . of tapering ip. . inexpensive way to coordinate. seph of Mother of Mercy High Tune-ups and Brake Work If you're selecting a trapeze Why not make your gloves School, Cincinnati, is the other BOSTON 801 As'lIey Blvd., cor. Tarkiln dress or two for Spring and part of a planned color scheme? Religious who is a candidate. Bill Rd.,·New Bedford OCEANPORT, N. J. Summer, be sure to acquire too This Spring, there's a wonderful Winner of the national award Gilbert J. Costa. Prop. PAWTUCKET, R. I. the new "trapeze petticoats" to range of colors. You can match will be named at the associa­ WY 6-9276 make this delightful new dress any costume color in gloves. How tion's annual convention in At­ __ ·__ fashion, nothing short of devast- about a color to match your lantic 'City, N..J., in May. The ating! shoes and handbag Take two · winner will receive an award Chemise Slider different colors, to vary your of $1,000. Have you seen and admired outfi~. You can wear pale or the "Chemise Slider" ... a: bias- vivid gloves with navy, and the cut oblong with a bow that basics-in general-match your ~ "slides" so that it can be worn gloves with shoes and handbag high at the neck or low at the (perhaps with your hat, as well) waist, or anywhere in between? with telling effect! It can be' used also as a waist Mattress Campaign or hip sash. In a' silk-blend, ­ BARCELONA (NC) - About spaced floral print or an aHower 400 mattresses are being made warp print, the'''Chemise Slider" daily here as part of a campaign is delightfully different, and a by Caritas, Spanish Catholic colorful dress accessory! charitable organization, to pro­ The "Chemise Bias Tie" is a BOWLING • SKATING fashion newcomer, has no tricks, . vide poor families with proper . 8pecial Arrangemen&a 1'01' bedding. is simply a long (60 inch) bi88 BANQUETS A, total of 208,000 mattresses tie that can be knotted wherever PLATE GLASS the wearer wishes, c;>r worn as , will be distributed during' the' , Painting and year-long campaign, 70 per cent a sash. lfs particularly colorful CONTRACT. In silk 'blend prints or; solid ' -of them going to poor families Decorating GLAZING colors, and just as lovely in and the remainder to charitable BATHROOMS-KITCHENS rayon and acetate. institutions. S44 Court St.. Mew Bedford 686 Cottage St. New Bedford Sunny Sacks

Recommend Nun Outside Employment· for Mothers

For Nationwide' Incompatible with Social Progress

,Science Award'

SULLIVAN BROS.

PRINTERS

TRAVELER'S'

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Delectablebits of fashion are

"Sunny Sacks", a group of sleeveless over-the-head blou­ sons and over-bl\>uses, plus a longer, double-breasted chemise jacket. In pretty, easy-care cotton floral prints, these "Sunny Sacks" will look just terrific over swimsuits and wand-slim sheath skirts. The rayon "Linen-Look Jack­ et", a fashion top-liner right now, is at its loveliest in a color range of red. navy, beige, black and white. To make a complete outfit, simply team it wUh a slim, matching-color skirt. (The price for the outfit is ridiculous­ ly tiny!) Cotton knit jackets are to the fashion fore, particularly woveft print cotton-knit blousons in navy or red on white ground. I saw two chemise jacket styles that promise to be fashion­ leaders. One was highlighted 1ft ' beiie. red, black or white, the

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IBis~rcp Cassidy Mem6riaiNow

Ready for Occupancy

REAL CHARITY HAS PROVIDED THIS NEEDED FACILITY: The " completely equipped physical therapy and rehabilitation suite, with new Bi,'lhop Cassidy Memorial. Wing stands at the right end of .the aerial whirlpool baths, hot pack devices and exercise aids of every qescription, view on the Catholic Memodal Home. Photo No.2 shows,the first floor may be seen in Photo, No.5., . And, Photo,No. 6 shows some of the many patients' lounge and"gHme room. A Carmelite sister (Photo No.3) ,gets'. item's,necessary for fine.'patient care iitthe clinical storage room. One a chance for re:"ort· preparation, as ·she ·Govers the reception :desk.; Here. of· the several utility·rooms;· conveniently located and fully. equipped,' al.co is the public :lll-;l'ess 'system through .which music-and,; special "pro-:.> '. appeat:s.in P~ot04No. ,7·...·}l1his,new wing:has· bee~.named·in,.honor,of·the grams Hre,..·;.l'··;"~l ,to p"ti,mts.,throughout .ttte ·beautiful·.lIewaodition,,·, 'late ,Bishop, Ca~sidy who-,-was' responsible ,for' the construction of the Photo-I'-: u. '1 'oJ' ••.\ i(;,; . of the, medical. examination··:room.." . Some.C)f 'the, '" 'Catoo!ic ·-Memorial..Home. ""v., < ~..h,.·.~"••"._.._.~ •." M ',,' " "


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Ultra Modern Addition Assures Aged Fin-est

HOME FOR AGED CHRONICALLY ILL READY FOR OCCUPANCY: Beautiful lanterns and graceful landscaping add to the impressive front entrance of the new Bishop Cassidy Memorial Wing of the CathoHc Memorial Home in FaIPRiver.· A Catmelite sister is shown in Photo No.2' at the' first floor nurse's station where the most modern equipment is exemplified by.the nurse-to-'patient fnter-eommunication system: ,Photo No. 3 shows th~ built-in storage-wall facilitiea·-in a typical, foul""-bedunit. Therapy and recreation .will both, be available·.iaapecial'.·rooms·on'·all···

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floors, as is illustrated in Photo No.4. A fuJly-equipped'salon (Photo No.5) has been established in the basement for women pmient;. The ultra-modern stainless steel ranges and fixtures <Photo No.6) wi]] make Chef Giroux's working conditions ideal. Photo No.7 shovVs Oil\') of the several diet kitchens, designed to supplement tIL {ireparatio"' nr the principal meals of the day which will be traJl:->ported to tlienew '''~~ in electrically heated hospital food 'u:ucks; .. _". '-', ., -' . " ' .. ',

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Filmin:g John 2P(iu'~! J:ofi'es~:'~, In Spain ,Causes, Protest l

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Little Gifts Born of Love

G'od Love You By Most Rev. Fult.on J. Sheen. D.O.

, Bv Willium R Mooring It is not surprising that Hollywood's labor union,s op­ pose the making of Amet:ican movie~ abroad. Various rea­ sons are given for this "run-away" film produ~tion. Some­ times impounded foreign film earnings can be used' up ,in this way. Sometimes a need bo~ts heeded for the film; to­ for authentic, backgrounds gether with other 'additional or international casts is the high ·costs, would have involved lure. Sometimes, no doubt, him in pro~ibitive expense, lower labor and set-building costs provide the attraction. In any case American-labor is deprived of m u 'cb needed 'employment. More or lesS, in i 1 d protests ' have been made in the past. ., It is, more than a litHe' odd, hQwever, that the A. F. of L/s Hollywood, Film Council , ehooses to make a fighting stand ~w, th~t' Spain is the country chosen. The labor organizati!}n, ell~iming to represept' 24 thouI8nd members, of film unions ' .ndguilds, is protesting to Presi­ dent Eisenhower and CongreSs, the shootiiIg in Spain of part of Samuel Bronston's independent production, ,iJohn Paul Jone,s." The'union also is urging a,boy­ cott of ·the film, appealing to 8Uch patriotic groups, as, the American' Legion, the DA.R., etc,,' for their, cooperation. This 'represents a striking deviation of policy, on the' part of labor­ liberal interests, usually found In violent opposition to what are called "pressure groups.".

,,' EqualJy Firm Action Needed " He implies that this might have shooed off the financiers. 'However this may be and what­ ever the outcome of the contro­ versy, there are strong indica­ tions that the Holly.w~od film

labor leaders are influenced

in their action not only by the

fact that "John Paul Jones" iB,

being filmed largely outside

these United StateS; but that it happens not to be filming in France, Italy or Britain, but in Spain. Unless and until equally finn action is taken by the Film unions against "run-away" pro­ duction generally, this ~prelt­ sion i$ likely to prevail. ", i "Marcelino" MY~I'J'

The Spanish film, "M:ttce­ , lino," which tells of an orPhan boy who is "adopted" by monks raised in a monastery, was quietly revived on Good Friday, at New York's Guild-50th Thea­ ter. This is a Grand Prize-win­ ner at the International Cannes ,Festival and ,unless it is ''too quickly snatched off agaln, it would be well to make thiB showing so successful" that its distributors may feel encour­ aged, aven obliged, to shmw Pr~hibitive E~pense "Marcelino" all over the coun­ A. F. of. L. spokesmen express particular (objection to the film-­ try. , Many people, including some Ing in Spain of such scenes as the signing of the Declaration of ,theater owners, have asked me what had happened to this film, Independence, Valley Forge and a big ball, sequence suppOsed to .after its initial showing in New take place in Fredericksburg, York just_over a year ago., ·Mr. Richard Davis, president' 01. Va. Producer' Bronston says' ,it was ,UMPO, 130 East 58th, 'Stree~ never his intention to shoot these New York, whose company has .cenes in Spain. They ,will be the USA distribution rights, for made in this country, in or near ,sonie strange reason,' seems un­ prepared to, ,disclose -why his the ',original, historic locales. RQbert'Stack is starring in "John company did notexpl9it "~ar-' Paul Jones" and John'Farrow is, celino" with the same vigorous directing. 'Besides those hired 'showmanship it put behind such French pictures as ",Rififi," ','The abroad, 38 Hollywood' actors and Sheep Has, Five Legs," ''Ola­ technicians are' being used and bolique" and "French Can-Can." the picture will cost $3,500,000 to Three of these are on the Legion make. Bronston further explains that "'of Decency's "objection;:lble'; list. "Marcelino," incidentally, iB for years he tried unsuccessfully okayed tor "general patron~ge." to raise money to make this

Should "Marcelino" come your movie. Now it is understood,

way get your Catholic organiza­ Rockefeller, Pierpont and Du­ 'pont money has been invested, tions behind it in the Christopher spirit. Help make it so success­ with Bronston producing for Warner release, which means ful that UMPO is persuaded to give this film an equal chance. that Bronston himself, must After all Mr. Davis at ieast has answer to the investors.' He l8ys the cost of building in USA, ,to answer to the.Jilm's producers.

and

The Society for the Propagation of the Faith ga~e $i2,000' to a Bishop of Afdca. What happ~ned to it? Well, a delegiition;of'African Catholics came 100 miles in an open truck over dirt roads to see the Bishop. They did not want any of his money; they wanted a resident priest in their little bush station. Presently, a priest got to them rarely to read Mass. The Bishop said: ''It costs $900 to sup­

port a pries't for one year." That argument usually worked on the natives, because they. ~new that the Bishop had so little to keep his priests. But the leader stood up, unravelled his toga-like robe', and took out of 'it a roJl of bills saying: "Yes, My Lord, ,we know we would have' to support our pastor. ,Here is $600 we have saved and when your Lordship eomes to confirm, we shall have tile other $300 for, tile first

,.ear."

I

TALLEST STATUE: This statue of the Sacred Heart overlooking the ,city .ofGQay­ aquil, ,Ecuador,will tower i81 feet in height, the tallest statue in the world. ,The Statue of Liberty in New York is presently the world's tallest statue, rising" 158 feet. NC Photo.

Brooklyn Priest Denies Charge

The Bishop lost the debate and the people won iheir priest. The Bishop knew , that the little' mud ehapel of Ntronanc was uot' adequate for dall;r M~. The Bishop cave them the $1!,OOO atid tOCla;r a brand DeW, chapel of Ute Blessed Sacrament now sbncls ,In!ihe' midst, , 01 the mud hut village, Its twin towers of brotherly love pointin~

, heavenwards. 'The chapel was built b~ native labor; black hands.

" burdened backs. earned, all the eement blocka to 'tile toP of the

twenty foot wall, and Ute fifty foot towers.' " ,' 1 " And who told us this story! Father David Schouten, a ,Divine Word Missionary; who is now the pastor 01. the Church' of the Blessed, Sacrament. We practically never reeeivea I18crifice of $1Z,OOO which can build a church where Our Lord Is adored for the fj'rsi' time in a certain spot of His ereation. But little cUts born of 'a'love for Christ, and a desire to make up for sins, can add' up to another such chapel. Just remember that whatever sacrifice you send to _tile Society for the Propagation of Ute Faith coes to the Hol;r I Father. He makes the distribution; we do ,not. Your merit is greatest when, 1'011 give to the Vicar of Christ to spread ,the 'love of Christ a.nd Him Crucified amonc the pagans of the world.· ,

NEW YORK (NC)-A 'Catho­

lic priest ,has objected to state­

GOD LOVE YOU to Anon "Being a teen-ager I riat&au y don"t ments in' a recent series' on ,et hold of a great deal of money' at one time. At the' preSent, juvenile delinquency appear­ however, I do have $7.00 here are six of' them for the' MisSionS." ing in the, New York Times. ' ' . . . to Y. G. "I _am. a han~Ucal)ped 'worker and 'it is the firSt time In, a' letter to the newspaper, In about two years that I have had any money left' after paymg 'Father Joseph G., ,lrlcGroarty, my bills-here's $2." •.• to Mrs. M. for the sacrifice'of'a'diamond assistant pastor at St. Peter , ~~,~, "When I look .~t. my now care-worn finger; ~reft of jewelry, Claver church in the Bedford­ I i.now that the mlSSlOns ~nd·I share a secret." , ", ' , Stuyvesant area of Brooklyn,­ --'­ ,-took "strong exception", to the _Nowhere '!s the, r~~ ,o( ,~xchange for old 'gold quite· So good , .tatement that "only the Pente­ as ,when you' re~~eit, ~om"disuse and send it to be used 'for the costal .pastors seem interested in relief of the pOor a~d sUffe.ring in miSsion'·'lanas. Lay up treasure whether 'Bedford '-'Stuyvesant for yourself. in heaven by ,sacrificing some of the valuables that ,lives by, the, Gospel or not. YOU'. treasure on this earth; diamonds, rings, bracelets, sterling . . The series was written by' a . 'serVIce and flatware, lockets;' 'necklaces. precious stones,. stict:pins, New York Times reporter, Har- watches, cuff links. Please put your old gold and' silver to work rison E.' Salisbury. . ,~r the 2/3o~ the PC?ple of the world who go to bed hungry eveiy Declaring that he did' not RIght:;, (You can mail the packages to the addresses, below.) ,"

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know what Mr. Salisbury's au­ thority was for the statement, , 'Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the Father McGroarty said he "did Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director' of The Soci~ty for know" ,what the 11 Catholic par­ the Propagation Df the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N. Y., ishes of that neighborhood have or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE been doing. 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. ' . At great expense to their own congregations, he said, "l)ine of these (parishes) maintain paro­ chial schools with a total enroll­ ment of 7,827 children." Inc. The fact ·that "none of these

'schools have been featured in

, FUNERAL SERVICE Funeral the press as a center, of juvenile , Direetor. delinquency speaks well for the 549 COUNTY ST. ,children who attend and for the t69 Locust SL, Fall River 'type of training they receive'" NEW BEDfORD, MASS. h~ asserted. ' OS 2-3381 Father McGroarty' alsO "chal­

lenged 'Mr. Salisbury's claim

,:" ' .. that "churches' tend to cater to

NICKERSON their own congregation." FUNERAL and Only , overcrowding ,ot: the .. ' MONUMENT Cat~ol,ic, schools, makes,' lt im­ poSSIble for them to accept "the SERVICES 11:"- .. hundreds of non-Catholic child­ 571 Second St',,'

BOURNE· SANDWICH. MASS. ren who' apply' every term," 'Father McGroarty said.

Fall River; Mg'Ss.' r ,.: ' Scmng . \. . .' 1 l' .

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Michael C. Austin

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NORTH ATTLEBORO

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OS 2-2391 Ros~ E. Sullivan

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Jeffrey E.' Sullivan

OFFICE FURNITURE I. Sto(:k for lniinediate DeUTery

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PRAYERS FOR MONSIGNOR: Kl:ttherine, Sheila and Mary Elizabeth Kear.ney pre~ent a spiritual bouquet at parish re~eption in Sacred Heart Schopi, Fa'l'River, Sunc:lay in honor of Rt. Rev. Msgr.Joseph Sullivan, pastor, recently , named Donlestic .f>~·elate bYP9pe 'Pius XII. " .".,

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THE ANCHOR-' Thurs., April 17, 1958

Spring Concerts

Spotlighting Our Schools

Catholic N~rses Convene May 18 ST. LOUIS (NC)-More than 2,000 nurses are expected to at­ tend the ninth biennial conven­ tion of the National Council of Catholic Nurses to be held here from May 15 to'18. Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of St. Louis will deliver the keynote address at the conven­ tion's opening session. He will speak on "Catholic Nursing-It. Spiritual, Professional and So­ cial Values."

The Glee club will hold its annual Spring Concert, Wednes- l... day night, April 30 in the audi­ torium. The Varsity volleyball team won thre~ and lost four of the first set of games in the' Narry Girls League, winning from Taunton, Westport and New Bedford Vocational, and losirig to Durfee, Fairhaven, New Bed­ ford and Somerset.

HOLY FAMILY HIGH, NEW BEDFORD

13'

The National High School Poetry Association which pub­ lishes an Annual, Anthology of High School Poetry has accepted for publication 10 poems sub­ mitted by members of the senior and junior English Classes with the approval of their teacher, Sister Mary Daniel, R.S.M. Three seniors including Paul­ ine Bosario, daughter of Mr. and SACRED HEART ACADEMY, "are not adequate to meet atomic Mrs. Archimede Borsario of 225 FAIRHAVEN needs. Review the' tremendous Edmond Desrosiers, director Earle Street, whose poem was charitable accomplishments that entitled "An Appeal to Courage"; of the Academy Glee Club for have resulted from past Appeals. Joseph T. Callaghan, son of Mr. the past 11 years, will conduct Consider the still pressing de­ a concert to be given, by the and Mrs. JosephT. Callaghan, , SqENCE FOUNDATION WINNERS: Dr. John J. mands for enlargement, replace­ 1245 Plainville Road, author of club on' Sunday, April 27 in the R:eedy, associate professor. Biology at StonehiU College ment and commencement. "Twenty Thousand Years Ago"; New Bedford High School audi­ Miss Rose E. Gillin.and James T. Sparks, pre-medical stu~ "Complacency has no standin, torium. Mr. Desrosiers is, also Susan Craig, daughter of Mr. ihe arranger for, the choral and dents at Stonehill, observe the activity of fruit flies, current' in charitable effort. Raise your and Mrs. Henry Craig of 23 Wel­ minds and hearts to the height. ' , come StJ.~eet, autbor' of "Day instrumenta,l sel~ctio~s. ~xperiment of the science students. All three, are recipients ' that charity impels and then Dreams"; and Ellen Markey,,' a , 'Mrs. 'Joseph . Cataldo; "Jr., of awards fro,m the National Science Foundation. NC Photo.' . raise your standard of giving .. ju'nior, daughter of'Mr. and Mrs: chairman, will ~ assisted by a . " ' . . , be ,equal to the impulses of your S\ephen Markey, 23 Bullock large committee' of Alumnae heart and mind.'" Street, who wrote "An Unpleas';' members' for ,the event whichO Mr. Bullock an~ Task", receive4 special men­ , is called '~A ,Cavalcade, of Songs". 'Continued 'rom Pace One charges mature and go forth Chairman Bullock stressed tion for their contribution. The academy chorus compris­ equipped with s~~ll tables each face the· world; instead, . they the importance of the variOUS Accepted for publication were ing '85 voices will be assisted seating foUr. Sliding doo~s di- prepare their charges tel face parishes as "the heart of the by' an instrumental ensern,ble of the works of Laurent Beaure­ .vided it, making part of the God. , .. ' drive." 16 'musicians all, of whom are .rOOm a lounge for, television gard, wn of Mr. and Mrs: R. But something of HIS near~~sS "It'is here, he said, "the sue­ profeSsionals and m~mbers ,of watchirig, reading; 'or chatting.' ,seems reflected in the Sisters' Albert Beauregard of 43 Dud­ cess of each campaign is de­ Musicians Local 214. Mrs. Doris ley Street, Ann Marie Splaine, Occupational the rap y and serenity. Every face we termined. It is here the pace • daughter of Mrs. Ann Splaine of L. Sullivan, an academy alumna, physical therapy rooms are pro":, ~irrored it. Yes, those 74' pa­ set for the future. I think you 5 Warwick Street, and Joan will be, accompanist fol' the vided for the patients, in aadi- bents are lucky people. will agree we cannot expect ' Whalley, daughter of Mr. and concert. lion to an up to the minute Rt. Rev. Msgr. James J. 'Ger­ satisfactory donations from com­ Mrs. George Whalley of 7 War­ SAC~ED HEART ACADEMY, beauty parlor and barber shop. rard, V.G., presided at the 'meet­ mercial and industrial firms ill wick Street, members of the FAI..J,. RIVER 'Care,for details is ,evidenced in ing of committee members' of the Diocese if parish giving • Class of 1958; and Ruthann Car-' Three upperclassmen from' the •. luch matters as bathrooms with Catholic Charities Appeal pari,sh below the level it should be. ter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Academy of the Sacred Hearts doors wide enough to admit organizations at Catholic Memo':' In regard to the ,Special .. Raymond Carter, 307 Mill Street, have won recognition in the wheelchairs and the deadening rial Home in Fail Ri~er Monday Advance Gifts division, the lay Ethel Rostron, daughter of Mr. field of creative writing from the of sound as far as possible by afternoon, with Rev. William b. chairman pointed out that and Mrs. Richard Rostron, 4 So­ National High School Poetry the use of acoustic tiled ceilings Thomson and James E. Bullock, "Catholic Charities has a good cial Street, a'nd George J. Thom­ Association. Poems, .writtenby and heavy doors. I , lay chairman, as speakers. !!B les argument to present .. as, Jr., son of the Mr. and Mrl. Barbara Nobrega, Gloria Proulx, ,Special Voeation Fatber Thomson business concerns and busine85­ , George J. Thomas of 416 Rivet and,Mary Lou. Simcoe. have been men in the Diocese, but it ia 'II' Street, all juniors. , acCepted for' inclu'sion in The, In.addition to ,Mother Mat:y, Father Thomson appealed 'for to us to do the selling job,. .• '''The potential donor must be Scheduled to participate in the AnnuaL Anthoi"gy of',' High ' MaurIce, the nurses and other ,~'a', reassessme~t ·of your sense of ' Rhode ISlandang Southeastern' School 'Po.etry' to. be published lltaffmembers·· wilt be ·super-. values ,an~ your deterllli~ation,' told that, the private charit:r in' ,ellrly May'.'"The 'three ,8tu­ vs~sed by, Sister Mary Ann and to ~xe~ VIgorous leadershIp for dollar is far more effective thaB Massachusetts Debating Tourn­ Ister Mary Victoi'ia. Present' charity,"stressing that'''the par- 'thepublic welfare dollar. Be ament to be held Saturday at dentS are members 'of the' crea",

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plans ca~l for 'pre-opening to\ll1l ' ish is the individual.un,it of e must be to'ld' that Catholl'c Cha~Providence' College are' Justin tive w.riting un.a "o f .English., III of th~ f aC11 'l'ty, f' •­ ' ". rom 2 to. 5,on D,l.o,ce,se, ,a.n,das su¢his the sOurce itiesstretches its dollar Kelleher and Mary Jane Walker and IV,~ndu:c,ted:!>y.' Sis~r Mar1 Sprida,y. The first patients wlll Of t h' 1 ' ' .... who will support,the affirmative, Hortense,S.V.S;C. " . ,'" '

~a<lmitted in May."'" '~'. ,grea ,paroc la . atjainm~ntll.top Umit ,of accomplishment. and PatriCia Oliveira, and Rose­ A~ept8"OnCe :Wiih,"'s.p~,ci,a,lin~,n..;

" .,' ;But the Parish is not an exclu"He must be' told that the Leaving the Memorial .Home ", sive, un~t i? the church. There work being done by Catholic anne Thoma's; the negative.' , tion was' awarded, ,Gloria" that ,lovely spring" d~y,'we ,are., (,IbhgatlOns ,that ,fall, on the' Charities Agencies is vital t­ op C US'b"mg s' , D lO~ese., These the Diocese· can 'our communities I and is a major DOMINICAN ACADEMY , Proulx,.'S' selection, ..~,'Me,dita·tiori ,thought 0 f ArChb'ISh' On a "Psalm" ...The', da1.lgbter ,ot" often-expressed, opinion of 'the, fulfIll only by the C()mp~ete' CO" factor in keeping' down public FALL ltlVER Debaters will be represented ,Mr. and Mrs. ,Roland Proulx of very specl'al v ocat·I on granted to .. operat'l0l,l 0 f. ,every par~sh and ,welfare costs.' To' put it bluntl1. 50 Wingold street, anda,me~ber ,Sisters who serve the aged. They., each person III every parish.' the choice is between Charit:r by two teams in' the First Annu­ of St. Roch's, .parish, Gloria ia, have no reward, hum'anly speak"Horse and buggy dollars," and Taxes, and Charity. a ill Southeastern New England active at the Academy. in sodal- ,.. ing, as do teachers, wh9 see their Father Thomson pqinted out, much better 'buy'." Secondnry School Debate Tourn­ ament to be held at Providence ity, library work, and gym.' Mary Lou: Simcoe, the daugh­ College next Saturday. Rochelle Olivier and Claire Reilly will ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Simcoe of 537 Gardner Neck .Road. make up the affirmative team, Swansea ,and a member of St. while Elaine Maltais and Jean­ nine Barrette will debate the Michael's parish, Swansea, was negative. ,With only one more also reCipient of a special men­ tion award for the poem" "New debate remaining in their sched­ York". Mary Lou is a member ule, the debaters have a record of seven won, three lost and one of the Debrabant Debators, So­ dality, Gym, and Shacady,News tied. Thirty-seven juniors will take staff. For her poem, "Discovery" the National Merit Scholarship Test on April 29. Anne Marie Barbara', Nobrega, the daughter Ouellette and 'Joan Panek, high.;. of Mr. and Mrs. John Nobrega of 80 Truman Avenue,. Somer­ est ranking juniors; are' entitled to free testing' in this, national set, 'was presented' with a certif­ examination, ',which is being' icate of acceptance. Barbara, a member of St. John of God' givel,l to juniors for the first time 'this year, having previous-, parish, Somerset' iil,an active ly been offered only to seniors. member 'of the glee club, ,the ' orchestra, Sodality, gym,a.ri'd The' Members .:of "the Athletic As­

Anchorite, a school organliaUoh IOciation wH,1 enjoy next: week­ which', :Supplies "hews fot" 'the, " end camping afGirfScout Camp IIChool column'of. T~e AnchOr. < Tattapanum in, Dighton.A. "A. officers Hannah Sullivan, Paul­ ine Letaliefi and Margueite De- , mers, assisted ,by Jeannine' Ouellette,: jacqueline Oliveira, The Secret :P~l Group of' Hya~ Frances Reilly and Sharon Ver­ clnth Circle 171, New B~dford mette form the executive com­ mittee ht charge ot 'the outing, Daughters of Isabella, 'will hold its annual dinner Tuesday, April under the direction' of Miss 29, at White's, it was' announced Nancy Walsh, physical education at a recent meeting' conducted director of the Academy, who by Mrs. Catherine Letendre, re­ will accompany the group. gent. ' In the final game ot the bas­ Reservations may be made ketball intramurals this after­ noon, Claire Reilly's Explorers with Mrs. Julia Morris, chair­ and. thousands of New,Englanders buy Hood Cottage Cheese every will meet Jacqueline Oliveira's man. The Juniors will sponsor a day. So, It's made fresh daily, dairy~fresh when iCs delivered. Yes, Hood is Milky Ways. These teams elim­ inated Joan Panek's Sputniks cake sale to be held on Saturday, the freshest.qottage Cheese you can buy. Get the fresher'flavor that stands May 10, in the SlarStore. They and Madeline Michaud's Van­ out every time. Get Hood Cottage Cheese at your store ,or door. are also planning a Mother'. tea guards in the semifinals, played and vaudeville show. before vacation. An invitation was received Miss Gladys Brightman 3 WAYS TO SAVOR FRESHER FLAVOR referee today's game. Winnen from Assum'ption Circle 1'74 tel their ,40th anniversary' dinner will receive championship rib­ ~eartJ La:~~ . M sm:~~ i l d .~arden'Fresh Chi~~ M:heduleci for Sunday, May 4. bons at the, A. A. Awards Aa­ The -charter was draped in ~~bI1 in May. Eleven te8I'DI ". ..,' '" tonned the "UniverSal League" memOf1 of Mrs., Mary Douglas, III the basketball intramural 111'11. Bertha, Tichon; Mrs; Maf1 . . ," • 'r c' ~ ; . . lIurphy aDd )(ft._. P1IillomeDa ~urnarnent, wbidl',... ~ .. yUki,.. """.' • ebnu7.

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Bishop'.. Cassidy Memorial '

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FRESHER FLAVOR STANDS OUT!

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New Bedforci: Group" Plans 'Annual' Dinner

THAT'S WHY HOOD .COfiACE .CHEESE IS NEW ENGLAND'S LARGEST SELL,ER!

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The Family Clinic'

~~THE

ANCHOR Thur,:, April 17~ 19~8

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Maturing Girl Should H'uve Courage, of Convictions

Upbrai~sP~osperous,.f~rFailure

,To Support Charitable Projects

TORONTO (NC)-Catholics who can afford to contribute , support to a charitapie under­ , ,taking, but fail to .do so. were 'rebuked here byHJS Emmence ,"Jarilt~s Charles Cardinal Mc­ ..(;uigan.' , .' ': ',The Archbishop of Toronto ,.characterized such Catholics as victims of "sordid, mean selfish­ ness and materialism.:' The. Car,:"

dinal had designated the Easter collection for the House of Prov­ idence to assist the sick, poor and aged of the archdiocese. He By Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J. called it "The last chance for Assistant Professor 01 Sociology the slackers, the dodgers, the . St. Louis University . , , cold-shouldered and cold-heart­ I'm 19 and have been going with Joe for about tWo ed Catholics to join their fellows months. Mother is making my life very unhappy. She leaves and the Risen Christ." the room when he' comes and insists she'll never speak to Cardinal McGuigan noted "a ,tear came into my heart to see me again if I ever marry him. You s~, joe is Italian and so many who could give but I'm Irish, and that's what tend to interpret his·words and H~ar did not." upsets mother most. Father actions in terms of our national The prelate said that contri­ likes him and I've found his image, rather than to check the NEW YORK (NC), - Bishop butions came from persons in parents to be wonderful, validity of this image agJliristour ' Albert R. Zuroweste of BeiIe­ moderate circumsta!,\ces, even friendly people. Joe is beginning new experience. -ville will give the keynote ad-. from the poor and unemployed. to mean 'a great deal to me, but National Traits Imporlant dress on May 21 in Richmond He added there are others "with I don't want Well, Rita, I'm not going: to ,,at the 48th annual Catholic Press cars, upholstered chairs and to hurt mother. read you a lesson on group p~e. Association cOI;lvention.' comfortable beds in' wnich to What can I do? judices, butel think it will help sleep, who give nothing to the The Bishop's talk will be his .y 0 u r letter 1.ou deal with youi" problem if NEW SUPERIOR: New first major addre~s to the CPA poor, the aged, the afflicted," and Interests me, you understand som~thing, of its Father Superior General Of l!ince his selection as Episcopal expressed wonderment that such Rita, because it origin. On' the other hand; we Chairman of the, Press Depart­ persons can go to Communion the Divine Word, Mis~ion­ shows that namust not ignore the ,facts.Na­ ment, National 'catholic Welfare' while lacking charity. t ion a I differ"tional differences .do ,exist, and adesi~ Very Rev. John Conference 'and as' honorary "These same people," the Car­ ences are 'still i: . some of them persist ,for genera­ Schette, former, missionary president of the association. dinal said, "hold cocktails, drink recognized and itons even in ,our, c6nformist in' China.NC Photo.. liquor until ,they are more beast keenly felt by Society., than man, and still think they m e people. ' , 'Particularly in famtly; matters, are good Catholics." CHICAGO (NC)-An honor­ Most Americans national tr.aits concerning food, ary membership in the Catholic tend to deny , the raising of children, the ill­ Broadcasters Association was this. They f~l fluence and 'clOjlenessofrela~ NIAGARA FALLS (NC)-The ST.' LOUIS (NC)..,.., Although presented to' Samuel Cardinal ' It is undemocratic, but we can't tives, and so forth"ax:e freq~ently, Slrite:h, Archbishop of Chicago, 333rd anniversary of the found­ they were all founders of re­ .iter facts by denying they exist. retained an4, in many eases, before he left to take over new ing of the Congregation of the l.igious congregations, SS. Al­ Unfortunately, differences tend" adopted by outsiders. " phonsus Liguori, 'John'Baptist.1ie duties as' Pro-PrefeCt Of the ,Mission of St. Vincent de Paul eo be regarded as marks 'of in-:,' Now the first pertinent ques:: ']a Salle, Phiiip Neri, Vincent de "Sacred ,Congregation for the (Vincentians) will be observed feriority. As the little, Mexican tion in your case, RitS, is whe-' PropqaUoa of the Faith ill on the Niagara University cam­ Paul, and several others all be­ boy in California explained when' ,ther the, possible existenee of pus here 00 April 23. ' Rome.

gan their priestly careers as di­ uked to define a minority, "It's 'nationa,l differences,. either your ocesan ,priests--more than 700 people who are considered dif-: own or Joe's, will hinder 'su~si of them are on the Church's rolll fel'ent-and worse." in marriage: You can of :' Saints and' BlessedB-'-COD­ Just what national group tends this by finding out whether you bained in Diocesan Priests, a .. be at the bottom of the social agree on the nature and purpose bOOk ,written by Father Ray­ totem pole vai'iesfrom region to of marriage; the statuses arid In the lalld of ll&eel COIIS&rueUon aD4 region and from time to, ,time. roles of husband, and wife in the mond A. Hutchinson and pub­ lIIassive baildinC8 we bardIJ' realUe lao. Whenever people', of different family, and ,110 on. If you want lished 'here by' the, B. Her~ fracite Iao-. hOuses and wbole tow... national backgrounds, start liv-· success' in marriage,. you' win 'Book Co. 111117 be in cKher paris of the wo..l4. In &he Ing'together in the same region, have to, answer this question mOe town 01 Kfar-Koues (Lebanon) &he • type' of, s9cial' prestige system satisfactorily,' no matter whom Maronites, who are loyal &0 our Hol7 uSually' develops, according to you marry, even, as you say "an Father. have DO Chureh today beeaWle of which some groups are ranked Irish guy" of your mother's own , a recent storm. The,. built &his 'Cbureb AUSTIN (NC)-St. Edward', higher than others. ~he original ,choosing. 'wi&h their own money and tbe loss 01 It b8sis for .this ra!lking may, be Second, what about the loss of University has, announced' that leaves them desolate financially - and Brother Raphael Wilson has wealth;' ,~ducatioI), religion. social prestige if you marry Joe! without Our Lord. The old chapel was decl­ pO~er"lariguage, or ,mere 'num­ This seems to bother your won one of two competitive ap­ , icaled to Our Blessed Motber and they pointments to serve next ,Sum­ bees. , ' , mother. I think you will find ~'My Fd,MrJ. M;(f~ A,;! look to her and to YOU for help _n bri~, Racial PJ'ejlidiee' that the' present generation of mer as' a visiting associate in ina-Her Son back am~ng them. The total cost 01 a strong buDdinc test. development., at the"Educa­ Ei'perience'also shows that' the young' Americans pays little at:. will be $2.000. Wiu :'/'00 help Mary build a home lor her Son! tional Testing Service; 'Prince­ ranking persists: 'long after its tention to this as long as you are ton. ' basis in fact cea.ses to exist. In successful. Your mother evi­ ELSE I' NEED PRIESTS ... '." a mis­ The selection is based on aca­ other words, a group image, a dently was raised in a different slonar7 bishop writes us. "Without more priests I have DO hope.~' be national stereotype, tends to be climate of opinion and finds it demic' scholarship and success­ continues, ,"there is simpl;r no one to instruct ' ful teaching and administrative created in people's minds: All difficult to change. the, converts, say Mass for the faithful, care for experienCe that would be ap­ the dying." This is not a new appeal but the need Germa'ns, or Poles, or Italians, o r ' Attitude Unreasonable plied to the problems of evalua­ &TOWS more urgent wi'th the passing of eacb day. Irish, etc, are ambitious, or lazy, -. You ask, Rita, what can'l do to tion o'Lnationwide testing pro­ Antoine a04l Jacques are anxious to ·answer this or slow, or intelligent etc. avoid hurting Mother? Well" in eaU aDd await admittance to tbe Maronlte semin­ St~angely enough, even wheri the first place, your father is on grams.' U'J' (Lebaoon). BUT, ihey cannot go furUJer un­ they' know. several members :,of' your side. Although most men' .. national group., who clearly' are no match for their wives'in present" you should' ignore it , Ie.. some benefactor is lound to supply $600 for E=~~~=::l ' each to make the six tear course possible. U ,yoo ," contradict the false' image, most such matters, he can probably prudently and respectfully. ,Wisb to have a "priest, in th~ faDiily." adopt one of them ·today. You people tend to regard ,them as help you modify her opinion. At Sooner or later, every.matur­ may PlI7 the $600 in any manner convenient over the six year ped­ exceptions to the rule 'and never' the same time, you "have the ing person must, l.earn tosta!ld Od "your son" will be studyinc., question the soundness of their assurance that he likes Joe, 80 up for what he thinks is right, opinion concerning the national you may feel greater confidence even though those who are dear !'EN DOLLARS WLLL BUY A FmST COMMUNION OUTFIT FOR' Il"oup in general. in your own attitude. < iohim feel otherwise. This A POOR CHILD . . . CAN YOU FIND A BETI'ER BARGAIN ••• 'This tendency of preconceived Finally, this is your marriage., occurs frequently in choosing a HELP A REFUGEE CHILD TO MEET OUR LORD ... bnages or ste.r:eotypEis to pers1st You don't want othurt your religious vo<;ation; it may occUr­ unchallen'ged in our minds is. mother, but her attitude is un­ in choosing a' marriage partner. "'STRAIGHT TO ~AVEN· •• ;. LIKE, THE; PRAYER OF A also at the root of most racial reasonable and ,consequently You and your mother may as NUN • • ." Bow man:,/, times have :,/,ou heard this expression • • • prejudice. When we meet a cannot serve as a guide. If y,ou well start' learning that lesson and ,we all know how true ills. These chosen souls. hidden in cl6isters. have a special 'appeal member of another race. we cannot change her attitude at right now. to heart 01 Our Blessed Lord. SiSter MU7 Leo and Sister Mary Emmanuel desire to give 1- themselves toa lile of prayer in the Carmelite I Order (Changanacherry, India). Each must have a sponsor who will pay a total 01 $300 lor wbile she is in the novitiate. Would you like to have the prayers of a Carmelite protect you• • your family; your activities. Think it over and see whether you can atTord NOT to have "a daughter a nun." You may pay the $300 in inanner of instaUment while "your daugbter III Christ" spends her tw~ years in the novitiate. '

Journalists To Bishop Zuroweste

.0

,

.

Honorary Member

'

New Book Features'

D'iocesan Pr'iests

answer

Vincentians

MAN'D THE WINDS BLEW'THE

LITTLE CHURCH, DOWN ..."

Name Texas Brother Visiting.Assoc ia'te

'"M~~E TliA~:ANYTIIING

the

' I

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SUGGESTION OF THE WEEK

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,MOTHER'S DAY will soon be 'with uS again with its thoughts 01 all we owe to the one ,who worked so ha;d and gave so much that w,e migbt live and be 'happy. What can we do to show our 1!Ppreciation and our gratitude? We cer­ tainly cannot limit our, thanks to one day in the year, rather we should always show our a'ppre­ eiation of the sacrlfilies made for our welfare. Wb7 not give an article to a Near East Chapel 'o,r your mother's httimtion or .in her memory. 'rhe prayers of the poor people who speak to Our Lord in UJese small Churches witi bring blessings to you anrl to your mother. We will send our beau­ Ufu~ gift c.ar~ anywhere to tell your mother of your gift in her name, and' we w111 Include FLOWERS OF THE HOLY LAND which have , been blessed on the Holy Sepulcher. Mass bell . ~ ,$ 5 )fonstrance $40 Altar Stone ' '10 Crucifix ,........ 25; '-iCtur,e ,......... 15 Statue ...••..... 30' Altar 75 t:Candles 20 Chalice' 40

FILM SHOWS DAY TO DAY LIFE OF PRIEST: "From The Rising: of the SU~,H a new motion picture on the life' ,of a parish priest; is examined by Archbishop Edward D. Howa'rd, of Portland in Oregon, at center, as audio~visual expert Father Aldo Orso-: Mam:onetta, at left, and cinematograph~r Fat~erO 'Robert C. Mundt look on. The film, in color, is designed,to interest young men in the priestly life, showing the many roles the prieSL IS called upon ~o playas teacher, counselor, and administrator. The two priests, acting through Archdiocesan Films, sponsored by Archbishop Howard, are making the film 'ava~lable nationally.. NC Photo. ' " .

:;

.:

"

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GIVE TO WIN THE WORLD FOR CHRIST

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~'J2eat:iastOJissioUs~

fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President Ms9r. Peter P. Tuohy, Nat" Sec',. Send all communications to: '

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Let's· Help Them Celebrate Again Next Year!'

Sullivan Signs Textile Workers Union of America, AFL·CIO Yellow Cab Company Wm. N. Wheelock & 50n, Inc.

(The Original)

, A birthday can be either a sad or a joyous occasion. It's joyous when I the children are around to enioy it and not a sad reminder of the days

when they were healthy and kicki ng.

D~n/t leta careless accident ~aunt you the rest of your I'ife. 'Slow-up and

let ourchildr~ngr:ow-up~

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"Drive Slowly • • • Carefully For The Child You'Maim .·May Be ··Your Very Own· \

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, The Yardstick

I 16,

St. Luke

Saints ,In_·~ross·word.s

'Industry:Council Concept

By Henry Michaell------....l

Deserves Fair Hearing

II

,By Msgr. George C. Higgins

Director' NCWC Social Action Dept.

A feature article in the April.issue of Nation's Business, (U.S. 'Chamber of Commerce) expresses the :fear that the so-called Industry Council Plan, advocated 'by the late Philip , Murray, and other CIO officials, may be "sneaking up on as" in the form' of "piece-· names 'of Philip Murray, Walter meal demands" currently Reuther, John Brophy, and Mr. being made by Walter Reu- X mayor may not be completely ,­ sound; the concept itself is re­ · ther and other "imagina­

..

tive" labor leaders. The anony­ mous author (probably Joseph Ga mba t e se) warns that some of labot's new moves are aimed at "busi­ n e s s control" and t hat the ultimate goa I' of the Indus­ try Council Plan may. be achie,ved through .these demands. Some exam­ ples cited seem to bear out this conclusion, others have little re­ lationship to tilE; Industry Coun­ cil Plan. For example, reference Is made to the fact that the United Mine Workers recently joined coal producers, and ex­ porters and coal-carrying rail­ roads to form a company to pro­ Tide shipping at stable rates ·to carry coal to western Europe. Reference is also made to '. recent announcement that the ·Commur.ication Workers of America is going to take part in ,telephone rate setting by ap­ pearing before, and trying to Influence appointments to, rate .ctting agencies. These examples .cem rather wide of the author's mark. They don't really tell us anything about the attitude of Ute C.W.A. with regard to the Industry Council Plan. . Must Be Voluntary The author is 'on more solid ground in suggesting that some of Walter Reuther's current pro­ posals bear the earmarks of the industry c'ouncil concept.. But he leaves the impression that Reu­ theris trying to sneak the In­ dustry Council Plan in through -the back door. Actually Reuther makes no .ccret of the fact that he still believes in the Plan. The fact that he may be talking about' it less today that he was in the late 40s and early 50s does not indi­ cate any deviousness on his part. It does demonstrate that he is realistic enough to know that the climate isn't ripe for it fruit­ ful, public discussion of the in­ dus'try council concept. ' Reuther also appreciates' the fact that the Industry Council Plan musl be developed gradu­ aUy and by voluntary agree­ ments between labor' and man­ agem~nt. He is' opposed to the 'idea of establishing the Industry Council Plan by government fiat. This, he says, would not only be in~ffective but potentially very dangerous in that it would give ,the government too much power in the economic order and could conceivably lead to · some form of totalitarianism, . It is not our purpose to apolo­ · gize for Mr. Reuther or to give an imprimatur to his particular version of the Industry Council Plan or the method by which he hopes to achieve it. Reuther and other proponents of the Plan will have to defend their proposals on their merits., They can hardly expect everybody to agree with them. They do have a right to ex­ pect an intelligent hearing from management, the press and the p!lblic. It simply will not do to dismiss them summarily as sta­ tists or socialists, nor does it, serve any useful pllrppse· to try to play them off, to their dis~ advantage, against the so-called "conservative" labor leaders. ' Endorsed by PoPes 'It ~ems unnecessary ·to point out that American Catholics

ought to be especially willing

and eager to discuss the industry

council c,oncept calmly and in­ · tlelligently. While the particular,

applications of this concept

which assOciated wiUl the.

are

peatedly e'ndorsed in the writ­ ings of' recent popes, 'notably in Pope Pius Xl's Encyclical 'of 1931, Quadragesimo Anno. , Incidentally, our pr:esEmt Holy Father, Pope Pius 'XII, has lamented the -fact that the par­ ticular section of Quadragesimo' Anno ,in which the industry council concept was endorsed has not been given an adequate hearing. "This passage of the Encycli­ cal," he said, 'aroused a se'ries' of objections. Some saw in it a concession to modern political, opinions (fascism); while others ' regarded it as a return to the Middle Ages." But surely, His Holiness con­ tinued, "it would have been in­ comparably wiser to put aside old and inconsistent prejudices and come together, wholeheart­ ~dly and with good will, for the realization of such a .project with its many practical applica­ tions." These words of the HoI,. Father are even more timel,. today than when they were first' . addressed to the International Union of Catholic Employer As­ 'sociations in May; 1949. Let us hope that they will be 'taken to heart, however, belatedly, b,. the Chamber of Commerce and other employers' associations in the United States.

Convent•.on Continued from Page One' Mission Church, Roxbury; On:, "Religion in the Catholic School." Re',. Raymond T~ Considine, Diocesan Director of the Propa­ gation of the Faith, Diocese of Fall River; On: "The Missions and the Schools." Rev. William' J. McMahon, Diocesan Director of Lay Re­ treats and Director of the Cathe­ dral Camp, Dio,cese of Fall River; On: "The Cathedral Camp and the Lay, Retreat Movement." Mother M. Boniface, I.H.M., Director of. St. Francis de Salles Model ~chool, Philadelphia; On; "Arithmetic." Rev. Stanley Bezusska, S.J.. Chairman, Mathematics Depart­ ment, Boston College; On: "New Trends in Mathematics." Sister Francis Loretto, S:S.J.. author of Words in Action Spell­ ers, Mount St. Joseph Convent, Philadelphia; On: ·"Spelling." , , Display ProdUCts There will also be, as part of ,the.Convention, an exhibit of the most recent educational text­ books and materials. Sixty firms from all parts of the country -have taken'booths and will have on display the products of their concerns.' " The foliowing are the mem­ bers of the Convention Commit- . tee: . Rev. Edw'ard J. Gorman, Gen­ eral Chairman. ·Rev. John P. Driscoll, Hospi­ tality. Rev. Edward J. Bums, Exhi~ bits. , Rev. John F. ,Hogan, and' ReT: Rene Patenaude, O.P., Halls. Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson and Rev. Howard A. 'WaldrOn, Luncheon. Rev: Maurice Souza, Awards.

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-THE' ANCHOR

~~hurs., April 17, 1958

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17

Urges R~ligious Teachers Adopt Christ-Like Way PHILADELPHIA (NC)Teachers, of college religion courses have been told they can heighten the 'quality of theiJ:' classes by employing the teach~ ing methods of Christ and by ,applying them with "a generoWi measure of patience." Dominican Father Thomas C. Donlan of Dubuque urged the adoption of Christ's pedagogical techniques in an address before the Society of Catholic College Teachers of Sacred Doctrine at its two-day convention. He is the society's retiring president Father Donlan said that Christ' could have taught by illumin­ ating the Palestinian audiences directly but that He ch'ose the human approach instead.

20 2)

28

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77

" ACltOSS 411 Tremble 81 On &be ' 51' "r,anl.1t 1 HE WROTE 46,HE WAS .beltered .Ide k ngdom THE ..... A........ 8S Clercman sa Feel rer.....

01" THE 47 Fold 1M R , ... Al'OSTU'lS n Thing. Dot nb d awa~ S9 Brief 5 Move. beyond bere :: ~::::::nt 40 Depre••lo... ,U Anelen& Oree"" Enrope.. 87 Prevents ,41 Inellned el&,.-.ta... at ;~~~e.n.. 88 Taro' root U Salt of oIeIe 17 Portion 61 Period I. DOWN aeld IS HI!: WAS A &lme 1 On tile ~~:rior:rt SKILLED ....... 51.lnJu.. ' I Oe........ed I. " Openlnll'. .1 HoOJ! ' I S Small ph !'flllef . 68 At tbat pl_ . ZO P"r.laa poet 114 Cn.blon • Dlk.. 49 Ventnre. 11 Member of 116 HE WAS &JI 4 8&ral.... 61 RoU.' a nnruly ero... EABLY _ ,5 Pr_.1oa golf ban III Orooved " Entl_ • 0 ..& op IWI CIImblng ..... IS Sorea... 68 Allot 1 Dan . 11'7 JIlxtended ' (areb.) lit Compl'" • 8""11... 68 AIInla... JI Snake III Fixed' t' Compa.. poIat 60 8enonneed .5 Man'. . . routln.. 1. Rlv..n II T tb It AdJeetlval 81 Fruit .,.tl'tlClt U Poper (;:~X)r .allia n Comp... ..,I.t eorrene7 8S Beret • Part .,. a 81 Canvas 11 HIS CO.. 6f, Bnrn. .blt, abo.. .belter. 1'04.1'1101'1 66 Hom... ......rlh.. 6f, Inebrl"te 11 Insed 88 Llfele•• .. Keen 66 S"plent 14 1I'Ixed ....laU... 8'f HI8 NATIV. S! C..rr, .68 Sharp U DI.ea.. COUNTRY sa Ob.erve prong. 16 Maddie 68 Fountain. 1M HU. 89 Seen..rl... ll8 MI..... (abbr.) 89 Pnre ........lvel' 7S One of JDDD~ lie Noan .nlllx 70 St&eked 16 Muter of " HE , WA8 A of &&,enq '71 Up a tree . Arlo (..bbr.) CAPTIVE se All",. 7lI Narro.. !! p ....ler IN ....... 11 Edm_ (eomb fOnll!

ell Mln ..r 76 Exclamatloo dl.llke '4 Kind 'of quarr..l. 01 .urprl.e 81 Sen.ltlv.. IInwer 40 H II: 18 rH. 78 Encircled pereeptlo.'6 Part' of a PATRON OF 77 Homilv H P"roay.m church' ~HE ........ 79 HE WROTE 116 Tender 18 Encountered 1& (.r",," god," THB THIRD II Sov..relgn'. 80 Mot.., ' wu lao.... I. Repo.ed

Ie" ::

Solution on Page Eighte,en

Prioress Marks Golden Jubilee Mother of Mary Dominie, ",casion of her golden jubilee. twice Prioress of the Dominican' Mother Dominic, an alumnus ,Mother house in Fall River, wsa of the academy, class of 1906, honored at a reception Sunday entered the religious 'life' that afternoon in the Dominican year and ,made her religious pro­ Academy' by relatives, friends fession in'1908. She served with ,and members of' the Academy the academy faculty for· 20 yean Alumnae Association on the Deincluding three years sa prin­ .cipal. While in Fall River she NOTRE DAME, Ind.-The ap­ a member of the General Council pointment o,f Dr: Mario J. Goglia of 'the Congregation for six as dean of the College of Engi­ years a.ndbursar for' the Counell neering at the University 01. for another six years. Notre Dame has been announced Serving as Prioress and Su­ by Rev.. Theodore M; Hesburgh, perior in Fall River at thepres­ C.S.C; university president. ent t~me, Mother Dominic was Dr. Goglia, who will assume also acting Superior in Cohoes, bis new duties July 1, has been N. Y., Grafton, N. D.; Plattsburg, serving as Regents' 'Professor N. ,Y,., and Acu_shnet ~asS. of Mechanical Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Tech­ nology, Atlanta. '

Appointed Dean

Commies. Slip' KHARTOUM, Sulan (NC) The communists failed badly in Sudan's recent parliamentary elections. They contested onI,. 14 .of the 17~ seats and 'were de­ feated by big margins in every one of .them.

was

Trut~ Springboard "He accommodated Himself to our ways," the· Dominican priest con,tinued. "He prepared His hearers, beginning with what they knew, leading them progressively to new knowledge, preserving them from error, while He bore their misunder­ standings and mistakes with patience and hope." Asking the teacher-delegates to adopt the same Christian' spirit in their classJ;'ooms, Father Donlan said "beginners must be made to learn, and all begin­ ners must make mistakes. Hence, the teacher must tolerate this with patient good humor, but with suffjcient wisdom to see that error becomes a springboard for truth, and not 'a mire or jungle into which the pupil 18 led and there abandoned."

Common Direction

Knowledge of the subject mat­ ter Father Donlan identified sa "the first arid indispensable qualification of the teacher." He urged members of the educa-, tional society to pursue advanced studies in theology and to culti­ vate the spirit of scholarship, reminding them that the teach­ er's "mind works in the same way as his pupil's, .and he must laboriously tread the same measured paths of reason." "Human learning '. is ~ slow climb up a ladder," Father Don­ lan said. "The only thing it shares with the jet-propelled intuition of the angels is the common direction toward the unknown." .

Resumes Publication ROME (NC)~Publication 01. an interna~ional review,· cover­ ing the activities of the Knights of Malta, has l?een resumed here after an interruption .which be­ gan with the outbreak of World War II. The magazine will con­ tain articles i" ,French, English, .Spanish, Italian and German and is to be issued four times a year.

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NORTH EASTON, MASSACHUSETTS


THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., April 17, 1958

Anniversary

17 J

Women's Guilds Active

1/

Continued from Pal:'e Oae The Most Rev. Bishop of Prov­ Idence had previously, in 1882, .ent the Rev. N. A. Rivieres to Inquire into the feasibility of a, parish in the North End of Taun­ ton. He remained until Decem­ ber 'Of the same year. The first entry posted in the Baptismal Register of the church was the baptism of James O. Boucher, Oct. 29, 1882, by Father Rivieres. The history of the parish really began with the long and fruitful pastorate of Father Roach, which lasted nearly 23 years. The first Mass in Whit­ tenton was celebrated in Love­ ring's Hall, /lOW occupied by the Whitten ton Total Abstinence and Benevolent Society, known today as Temperance Hall. Shortly after assuming his pas­ torate, Father Roach set himself to the task of the erection of the first church on Bay Street, the cornerstone of which was laid! in 1883. The first parochial residence was built about the same time. An account of that day describes the Church as "... an imposing .tructure with two lofty towers, each surmounted by a gilded eross. The interior is very beau­ tiful with its memorial window. and Stations of the Cross." , First School The site of the first parish .chool, at the corner of Wash­ Ington and. East Whittenton Streets, was purchased in 1890 and in the following year"... a .pacious parochial school WIUI erected at a cost of nearly $20,­ 000." The school, with six grades, opened in September 1891, un­ der the direction of the Sisten of the Congregation of the Reli­ gious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts who still serve with devoted and dedica'ted zeal. It was du~in'g the pastorate of Father Roach that the parish was divided, and St. James's par­ ish founded, in, 1904, with the Rev. Alfred Carrier, assistant at Our Lady of the 'Immaculate Conception, as its first pastor. Father Roach, after many fruitfu'l years in the Vineyard of the Lord, died Jan. 6, 1906, eredited with "... giving his Jife for his work and the increase of his parish." The second pastor of, the par­ Ish, the Rev. Patrick F. Mc­ Kenna, succeeded Father Roach in 1906. With priestly zeal be continued the work of his prede­ cessor. The Sisters of 'the Holy Union pf the Sacred Hearts, who, taught in the first parochial ~hool, had lived in St. Mary's Convent from 1890 to 1908, and, not Infrequently, travelled by foot in all kinds of weather from the convent to school and return. After much difficulty, Father McKenna acquired property on Bay Street, and on June 10, 1908, the Feast of St. Margaret, opened, the Convent of St. Margaret as the new home for the Sisters. Father McKenna died in 1913 and was .followed in the pastor­ ate by Rev. Thomas A. Kelly. After serving the parish for two years, he was transferred, In .;luly 1915, to SS. Peter and Paul Church, Fall River. The fourth pastor was the Rev. George F. McGuire, who served with priestly devotion from 1915 .until the appointment of the Hev. Michael J. O'Reilly. Father O'Reilly's pastorate was the longest served at the church, c!xtending from Feb. 5, 1919 until his death Feb. 1, 1948. Monsignor O'Reilly Father O'Reilly's first accom­ plishment was the erection of a new rectory of brick construc­ tion to replace the first rectory which had ~beendestroyed by fire in subfreezing weather in the early morning of December 31, 1917.

Gilbert C. Oliveira INSURANCE

The Parish Parade

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MEMBER OF TRIBE: Holy 'Ghost Missionary Father Eugene Hillman is the ]on'e white man to be initiated as a blood brother into the fiercely independent, proud and intelligent Masai Tribe of Tanganyika, Africa. NC Photo.'

Priest Wins Converts by Mail SAN FRANCISCO (NC) "We teach the Faith by ma'il," The odds are stacked against he said. "We run ads in news­ him, but a young Irish priest \ papers and magazines, inviting is out to convert Engla'nd-by non-Catholics to write in and mail. ' g e t the factS-:-in a plain sealed After four years' trying, he's wrapper." 3,000 converts to the good and, "Since 195~ we've had 96,000 55,000 persons have taken his replies," he said. "Of these, correspondence course in Cath­ 5:>,000 people wound up taking olicism. our 21-week course of instruc­ Father Michael O'Connor, 35, tions. Time from sign-up to Bap­ is a Tralee ma!}, on loan to the tism averaged two to three years. English hierarchy from the Dio­ Three thousand of those who cese' of Kerry. Re runs the Cath­ started in '54 have been received oUc Enquiry Center in London. in the Church." He next replaced the old con­ Bishop Cassidy at St. Patrick's vent building with a modern Church, Fall River, from Sep­ structure, " . . . in which every­ 'tember 1920 to November 1934, thing was planned for th~ com­ when he became Administrator fort a~d convenience of the of St. Mary's Church, New Bed­ Sisters. He .said the first Mass ford. He was appointed pastor of St., Paul;s Church, Taunton, in the new convent in Septem­ ber, 1926, dedicating it to Our in 1939, and served there until Lady of the Immaculate Con­ his appointment to his present ception." pastorate of Our Lady of the When the first Immaculate Immaculate Conception Church. Conception School, at the .~rnei' Father Taylor's first efforts of Washington and, Whittenton were'directed toward the retire-, Streets, was destroyed by fire in ment of the church debt,' which April, 1929, Father O'Reilly un­ was successfully accomplished dertook, with characteristic in 1951. For some time, it had vigor, the reconstruction of a been apparent that the Immac­ new and modern school building. • ulate ·Conception parish needed In March, 1930, the new school a new churc;h. In 1953,' Bishop was blessed an~ on the nine­ Connolly, approved Father Tay­ teenth of the same month the lor's plans for the erection of a' pupils resumed their studies. It new church of Gothic design. was formally dedicated by the A drive for funds for the n.ew Most Rev. James, E. Cassidy" church was conducted in Eebru­ D.D. L.L.D., June 29, 1930. ary, 1953. A sum of $46,000 in. Beloved by the children of his pledges, in addition to the parish and respected by the en­ budget system, was realized in tire community., Father O'Reilly, this first effort through the gen­ "Dean of the Taunton Clergy," erous, response of the parishion­ was honored by elevation to the ers. A second drive for church rank of Right Reverend Mon­ furnishings, conducted in 1954, signor. resulted in pledges and contri­ butions in the amount of $20,000. Father Taylor, All this attests to the constant Three new buildings of brick generosity and abiding faith of construction, a convent, a 'school, the people of the parish in their and a rectory today stand as true and devoted priests, who monuments to his memory. are of· the' kind ". • . not Rev. Thomas H. Taylor, the seeking the things which are sixth and present pastor of Our their own, but the things of Lady of the Immaculate Concep­ Jesus Christ. ..." tion parish, succeeded. Right The new church was dedi­ Rev. Monsignor O'Reilly, April cated by Bishop Connolly on 7, 1948. Father Taylor previously served as assistant to the late' September 25, 1954.

,

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ST. PIUS TENTH, SOUTH YARMOUTH Members of the Women's Guild will be hostesses to mem­ bers of the National Council of Catholic Women, District 5 at 3 P.M., Sunday, May 4 in the church. Mrs. Martin Joyce, a member of the guild, is presi­ dent of the District Council. Mrs. Joseph Greelish, chair­ man of the ways and means committee, announces that a rummage sale will take place from 9 to 2 on Thursday, April 24 in the church hall. , Plans are under way for a fashion show to be held in June and a bazaar in July. Mrs. Haskell White announced during the last meeting that a children's choir would be form­ ulated Wednesday afternoon, April 30 in the church. The Communion breakfast has been post,oned to Sept. 21. The guild will donate $5 each to the Red Cross and the Heart Fund. S8. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER Rev. Philip C. Kelly, C.S.C. ot the Holy Cross Mission House, No. Dartmouth, will be guest speaker at the annual Com­ munion breakfast of the Wo­ men's Club next Sunday morning following the 9 o'clock Mass. Mrs. Rocco Postiglione and Mrs. Raymond A. Dooley are chairman and co-chairman, respectively. The annual requiem Mass in memory of deceased members was celebrated last Monday morning at 9 o'clock. ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, CENTRAL VILLAGE At the regular monthly meet­ ing of the Women's Guild which took place last Thursday night in the parish hall the following activities were outlined: A spaghetti and meat-ball sup­ per to be served from 6 to 7:30 Wednesda~ night, April 23 in the parish hall. A mother and daughter Communion breakfast, Sunday morning, May 11, to be served in the parish hall follow-, ing the 7:30 Mass; A member­ ship tea, slated for 3:30 Sunday afternoon, May 18 in the Parish hall; and a rummage sale for Saturday, May 24 in the church hall. In charge of the membership tea are Mrs. Melinda Costa and Mrs. Emily Bartkiewicz, chair­ milD and co-chairman, respect­ ively. Chairman Mrs. Genevieve Whitty will be in charge of the Communion breakfast and will be assisted by Mrs. Virginia Andras who is in, charge of tickets.

books. Contributi9ns will be ac­ cepted at the parish school dur­ ing all masses or picked up at the homes as requested. During a meeting which was held last Sunday morning fol­ Jowing the corporate Commun­ ion of the Holy Name Society the new lending library was dis­ cussed. NOTRE DAME, FALL RIVER Members of the Women'. Guild will hold a cake sale fol-, lowing all Masses next Sunday morning in the choir of the lower church. Chairman Mrs. Armand L'Italien will be assist­ ed by Mrs. Norman LaFrance as co-chairman. Pastry dona­ tions may be delivered next Saturday to the church after novena devotions. ST. JAMES, NEW BEDFORD The ladies of Monsignor Noon Circle will sponsor a whist party at 7:45 next Wednesday night iD the lower church hall, corner of Rockland and County Streets. Chairman Mrs. Rita Lacala and co-chairman Miss Helen Robi~ son are in charge. Tickets ma,J be obtained by contacting an7 member of the committee.

ST. PATRICK'S.

FALL RIVER ..

Rev. Lucien Ducie, C.P., aI St. Gabriel's Monastery, Bri~ ton, will be guest speaker at t~ Holy Name Society's' annual banquet to be held Sunday, May 4, in the school cafeteria. Father Ducie is a director 01 the National Laymen's Retreat Association and former busines manager of The Sign, national magazine published monthl:J by the Passionist Order. NOTRE DAME. FALL RIVEJt, A whist party for teenagen only will be conducted ,by the Ladies' Guild at 7:30 tomorrow night in the school hall. M,.., Wilfrid Garant is chairman anlI Mrs. Edward LaerQix, co-chail'­ man. 0U1l LADY OF THE ISLE. NANTUCKET Very Rev. Edward F. Dowlint. pastor and moderator, and MI'lL Mary Almond, president of U. Diocesan Council of Catholie Women, were speakers at the annual Communion Breakfast .. St. Mary's Guild in Father GriJ­ fin Hall following the 7 o'cloell Mass Sunday. Mrs. Charle. Flanagan, guild president, wel­ comed 60 members and guests. A committee headed by MI'lL Charles Stackpole planned ,he affair. The breakfast was pre­ pared and served by the local council of the Knights of Colum­ llus.

ST. MICHAEL'S, OCEAN GROVE "Make space on your book shelves" state the parish priests who with the assistance of the parishioners, are formulating a new lending library known as the "81. Michael's Book Club", in an effort to contribute goodo . literature to both teenagers and adults. SundaY,-....April 27 has been set aside for donations of good

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Dis'dain for International Law Co'uses World Havoc

Thurs., Apri(17. 1958

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Continued from Page ODe' all types of obscene material. fine of $5,000 or a jail ~ntence Rep. Fulton's, bill is identical of up to five years, or both, for to a measure introduced earlier the first conviction on charges by Rep. Eamer J. Holland, also A C or s P A S S E S S P A R or A of using the mails to distribute, of Pennsylvania. By Joseph A. Breig indecent, material. 'A second At present Federal law pro­ 0 or T ,~ , , Cleveland Universe Bulletin offense would draw ,a maximum hibits the transportation of ob­ A! Ri ~ H 0 fine of $10,000, or a minimum of scene material. Most prosecu­ ~We cannot have life without law," said,JamesFrancis ~ S L A MS MA T S D 0 C T 10 years in jail, or both.' ' tions today, arise through atR Cardinal McIntyre of Los Angeles the other day. And around, K G The bill has already been ap- tempts to use the mails for the D A N E N the earth orbited Sputnik·II, Explorer and Vanguard. proved by ,;1' House Judiciary distribution 'of such material. At the United Natioris: Secretary 'Gen. Dag Hammar­ Sub-committee. It is a compo- The Fulton-Holland bills would i~R R 0 T S C ..kjold began preparations deaf-although far from mute. site ,of anti-smut proposals in- extend this ban to all kinds of F A N GS S C R I P T troduced by 'Rep. E;manuel Cel- transportation, including rail, for a study by the next "We cannot have life without' lei of New York and Rep. John air and private car. They would General, Assembly Of the law," 'said Cardinal McIntyre; Dowdy of Texas. also extend the ban to the manu.,. I ~tAsE#lf~tR problem of law in outer but there are those who grow Now Is Time facture, distribution and sale of sick with fright at the thought ~ace. Rep. Patrick Hillings' of Cali- obscene materials. But what about law among the , of an international judiciary to fornia; a member of the full ,The bills would impose a settle disputes between' nations' Dations here on Judiciary Committee, predicted $5,000 fine, or five years' im­ without war; a'n international earth? that the group would report the prisonment, or both, on persona "The law of police, to control national gang­ bill favorably for House action. convicted of trafficking in ob­ sterism, and international legisDr. John P. Sullivan, assistant God~~' said Car­ "The time to crack down on scene materia~s., They would lative, economic and welfare professor of education and Guid­ dinal McIntyre, dealers in smut is now," Rep. also provide for confiscation of bodies. ance Director at Stonehill Col­ "'is the law frpm Hillings said, adding? "This the materials. Cruel exaggerated nationalism lege, North 'Easton, will lead a , which'alllaw is legislation does not represent -which is the prostitution, of round-tabie discussion on teach­ ba sed." Cer­ censorship, but plain decency." ' patriotism and the class struggle iog at the New England Regional "inlly law is The objectives' of the Celler­ of nations-spawned two world Meeting of the National Catholic Dowdy bill have received the WASHINGTON (NC)-Martin aot. law unless , it is just. St. ,Thomas Aquinas wars. It brought forth also the' EducationaL_Association, to be endorsement of spokesmen for H. Work, executive director of 'dismissed unjust law as "unlaw." monstrous communist conspiracy held at Holy Cross College, the Post Office and Justice De­ the National Council of Catholic History is largely the account to enslave all peoples tinder the, ~Worcester, Saturday. Men, has accepted membership partinents, as well as FBI direc­ eI. man's struggle to establish hellish order 'of godless mate- '. _on the executive board of the ' ,tor J~ Edgar Hoover, ~he Na­ '" arid defend right law. To that, rialism. Committee for International tional C'o un c i I of- Catholic "end, millions have died, and Economic Growth. The commit­ Men~ the 'National Council of , Blind Selfishness Ibousands of the finest intellects tee is an outgrowth of a recent Churches, and other civic and Nevertheless, some of us bit- ,'­ labored tirelessly. , conference on 'foreign aspects of . , religious groups. terly oppose every effort to fit \-­ From the ;Founqing Fathers nationalism into its proper place \ ; U. S. national security. Exten'ds Ban' ,",til now, the U, S. has sacrificed in an international order. Some ,,­ , Meanwhile Rep'. James C. Ful­ hugely for the pri'ncip'e that of us cannot even' abide the "'­ ton of Pennsylvania has intro-' mlght must serve right. ,That is thought of richer_nations 'helping -"~ duced in the House a bill' which one of the deep' meanings and, ,poorer;'or stronger nations help- 'I) .would place an absolute ban on bright glories of America. ' ing weaker. .' , production and distribution of ~ , No, fact stands forth more What is the explanation of tht. 1Il0untainously than that peace,. blind' selfishness? It is simple. progress, civilization and happi­ The heresy of dog-in-the-rrianger Dess demand right law. nationalism. has 1:?eendeeply

Little Regarded" embedded in minds through

P.llim~ingCHARLES F. VARGAS But for centuries, international hundreds,of years of false propa­ 915 Acushnet Ave. ganda.' ' , law has been little regarded. 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE "We cannot have life without Each nation has been encouraged At Weld Square NEW BEDFORD, MASS. to consider itself a law unto l~w," 'said Cardinal McIntyre. / ' New Bedford itself, imposing law upon its own But what we surely can have, without w<;lrld order under law, N_ Bedfcwd'. Leooi:"',

people, but itself obeying no DR. P. SULLIVAN PlumbM'

tribunal, and participating in no it: the liVing de;;lth of an earth turned into a huge ,concentra­ legislativE process for the good With Rev. J. ,Joseph Ryan, S.J., tion camp operated by commu­ of all nations. of Holy Cross, Dr. Sullivan will "We cannot have life without nism. explore the criteria for teaching "The law of God," said Cardi­ law," said C!,!rdinal McIntyre. efficiency and the personality nal McIntyre, "is the law from' appraisal of prospective teachers And overhead the space satel­ 'which all law is based." Either with a' view to judging their lites ellipsed, while UN diplo­ mats burned midnight oil over we will be governed in reason­ value as educators. ' "finest sinee 187"­ able freedom under international the question of order in the lim­ Dr. Sullivan, who lives in law conforming to divine Nat­ itless sea of the universe. North Easton, had some 30 years Same day service

In Rome, Pope Pius XII, in ural Law, or' we will perish of teaching and administrative if desiredl

audience after audience with under the whips of tyrants. work in the Boston public school leaders of nations, continued his "We cannot have life without system before Joining Stonehill great search for peace, through 'law." It is the trtrth. College. law adopted by peaceful nations 6 CAMPBEll ST. and imposed on outlaw govern­ ments. . , NEW' BEDFORD 'There is not one of us who does not know that without law, and

a hom~, a village, a state, a na­ Third Order Regular of tion is a madhouse. Yet some of us cannot see that the disdain St. Francis . for international law is what has Offer to,Young Men and Boys made the, international scene special opportunities to John B. one of howling lunacy. study for the Priesthood. Lack of funds no obstacle, , Mirrors Divine Order -. Few are so obtuse or criminal For further information, write to as not to see right law ,as a mirroring o'f divine perfect' or- ' FATHER STEPHEN, ,T.O.R. and Sons, Inc., der. We realize that God com­ ", FRANCISCAN, " mands it as 'indispensable for, OSTERVillE PREPARATORYSENnNARY our peace. But when world , ,P O. BOX 289 ,Warm E'~nds" GArden 8-650' order, under law, is mentioned, ROLLIDA YSBURG 1%, PA. lOme ot us are stricken suddenly

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SPORTS CHATTER

Predicts Keen Competition In Interscholastic Baseball By Jack Kineavy , Somersd Hil'b Scbool Coach

Interscholastic b8$eball officially gets underway this week. Wareham, perennial Old Colony contender, launched it.') campaign to regain league supremacy against Rockland on Monday. Bristol County and Narry competition is scheduled to· get under. way Spring. Rightfielder Man n y today. Durfee, Class A State Sousa; who proved an effective man for the '57 cham':' champion and defending lead:..off pions, is also back for duty. Bristol titlist, will entertain Leading pitching aspirants are

a strong Coyle nine at Alumni Bonalewicz and Driscoll, both of Field, Fall River. whom saw occasional service Somerset, last season. Bob Hargreaves, Eastern MC!ss. Gibson's understudy in '57, is Class B stan­ slated to start behind, the bat. dard bearer, Coyle Contender will open at Coach Jim Burns' Coyle War­ home against riors could prove a leading con­ Dartmouth who tender for County honors. The Is expected to Taunton parochials will field a give the Raid­ veteran unit which features the ers all lhey can DIOCESAN CHAMPIONS: Our Lady of Assumption Church basketball team of New reunited Somerset battery, Al handle. Case, Bedford includes kneeling (left to right) Joseph Rozario, John Andrade and Robert Santos. Costa and Pete Bartek. Costa, defending Nar­ a big righthander with a good Second row: Coach Peter Britto, George 'Gracia, Richard A. Monteiro, Robert Pina, David ry champion, Alfonseca, John Fortes and Charles Tavares, assistant coach. Third row: Frank Diniz, plays host to Diman Vocational fast ball, was Coyle's leading of Fall River in the loop's other moundsman last year. Bartek, Manuel Costa, Franklin Pina and John Silveira. who with first baseman Pete headline contest. The full po­ Gazzola gives Coyle good plate tential of these and other scho­ THE ANCHORpotential, saw duty chiefly in .::>.lastic nines in the area will Thurs., April 17, 1958 NEWARK (NC)-l'he Inter­ the.outfield last season. hardly be attained in early sea­ national _Federation of Catholic In Narry League circles, the Eon contests and as Ii result any­ WORCESTER (NC) - Holy Alumnae will hold its triennial Cross College alumni have pendulum seems to swing again 1hing is apt to happ.en. convention here from August 19 in the direction of Case and elected five men to their College Wareham Strong Somerset, though I hasten to ad~_ to 24 with the New Jersey chap­ Athletic Hall of Fame. . Wareham and Somerset with that this observation is . based. ter as host. They include Ken Simen­ Twenty parishes were repre­ 20 games carded have the most solely on last year's performance It was' announced here that dinger of Philadelphia and Phil sente8 at a Spring dance which extensive schedules in the area. of returning personnel. Both delegates to the convention will O'Connell of Worcester, football was sponsored last Saturday Coach Clem Spillane's team will have swept a pre-season exhibi­ represent some 600,000 alumnae stars of 30 years ago; and Tom night in the CYO Hall, Franklin again feature the talented, tion series from Warren High, of Catholic educational institu­ -Stankard, Tim Larkin and Andy Street, Fall River by the Dram­ mound tandem of Tom Eccleston Warren, R. I. The Travis twins, tions. Coakley, baseball and football atic Club of the Catholic Youth and Ken Bors~ri. Last year, as Phil and Jim-the latt.er a mem­ stars in the 1900s. Organization. juniors, Tom and Ken pitched ber of the '57 All Diocesan foot­ The Holy Cros's Varsity Club Coakley pitched nine years The decorations. were com­ Wareham to a 19-0 regular sea­ ball team-Wayne Goss and Bill will honor Daniel J. Murphy with the Philadelphia Athletics, pleted. by a wishing well into son record. Handling their slants Christopher give the Cardinals Cincinnati· Reds, Chicago Cubs Which money was deposited and once again will be rugged Gene a quartet of gopd hitters. Lack coach of basketball at Province­ Lopes. Willie Cardoza, rangy of experienced' pitching talent town, at the organization's an­ and New York Yankees, and for contributed to the Can c e r centerfielder, completes. the seems to be the major problem nual dinner April 26. Three Home. This practice will be con:­ years was head baseball coach other New England high school at Columbia University, until down-the-middle nucleus' that of Coach McCarthy who is mak­ tinued in the future and the coaches will also be feted. Coach again should make Wareham the ing his coaching debut. his retirement. parishes represented will eacb Murphy's Provincetown quintets team to contend with in the Old have an opportunity to donate They will be inducted into Pitching' is Somerset's forte. have won nine Cape Cod titles Colony circuit. the money to a charity of their the Hall of Fame at the annual Coach Luke Urban's Durfee . Jim Bridgeman and John Faria, and in 1943 and 19~2, the P­ Holy.. Cross Varsity dinner choice. the Raiders' ranking hurlers of Towners have taken Class C team, though bereft of the ser­ a year ago, are again ready to honors in the -Tech TOllrnament. vices of the Tom Arruda-Russ Dennis Collins,' veteran Weightlifting at Stonehill Gibson battery combination, and go. A MUST

min u s All-County pivotman catcher, infielder Paul Chace and The Stonehill College Weight­ For Every Catholic

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graduated, nevertheless will be Jack Carreiro form that down stration in the college gym the middle nucleus that's so vital Thursday, April 24 at 8 P.M. It .. Moste,s an extremely formidable unit. SWEEPERS - SOAPS

Returning infielders include Al to a team's success. Somerset ill will be open to the public and DISINFECTANTS

by J. Edgar Hoover green enough in other' spots, Lavoie, hard-hitting first base­ to the Stonehill family. The FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

man; Stan Kupiec, flossy fielding. however, so that the bizarre is. club, which attracts a small but earnest group of students inter­ shortstop, and Gerry Elias, a not unexpected. CYO Alumni 'Day good hot corner journeyman. ested in physical development, Emily C. Perry is .under. the direction of Brother Charley Carey, lefthanded hit­ A CYO Alumni Day is sched­ 1886 PURCHASE ST.

562 County Street Joseph Paul of the Congregation ting second baseman, who gained uled Sunday at the Kennedy Opposite St. Lawrence Churcb NEW BEDFORD

a wealth of experience in Legion Community Center in New Bed­ o( the Holy Cross. Several of ball last summer, has the inside ford at which time a plaque the active competitors in New New Bedford. Mass. \'Iy 3-3786

\, track on the vacated keystone listing basketball and baseball England weightlifting will also champions from 1938 to the be- on hand to demonstrate their job. In the outfield Coach Urban present time will be unveiled. sp'ecialties. Among these ~ll has in Doug Baxendale the An afternoon of basketball be Armand Turgeon' of New area's outstanding. centerfielder. scheduled, the top attraction Bedford, record-holder for high':' Doug played Summer ball with being a contest between Dioce­ est total poundage in the" 1'48­ . p~und class. '. the Augusta, Me. Millioriaires san champions OLOA and last year, and it's a certainty that All-Star aggregation. Efforts to major league scouts will give organize a CYO Alumni Associa­ Whitel~ Far~ the big redhead a close look this tion are proceeding favorably.

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Church 'Leaders Fail in. C~ban' PeaceEffort

,WI~. SCHOLA.RSHIfS:,~Awflrded.fun tUition, or partial .s~ho~arship~ to Dominican Academy, FaURiver, :were, left to rIght, FranCOIse M; LaJOIe, Jeanm~e C. Regan, Michele ,Gariepy, Marilyn,' Leflrned, Claudette Cacciabeve and Gertrude Gagnon: .

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.Parochial' 'S.chool Legal Status Stronges, Ever

C'uba's civil 'war - the trl:igic outcome. of poverty' uplQifei:l by the rich and, powerful. and of desperate

Nathan Cqn'version" Is Now Re.vealed .

PHILADELPHIA (Nc)-.i'·The ' nature of children's education. "Under,Ameri~anlaw, pare~t- week after a long' 'illness, had status in law of private' gchoo.ls, Sees No. Conflict al and' s~te. rlgh~ respectmg been aCatholic~' since ,last Oc­ e~pecially churcIi-relat~d'.'ones,· . Dr. William J. O'Keefe, 9f the ~he educ~tlOn of chIldren a~e..n?t ..-,tober. ,, : is 'stronger and more.securEi:than :,Boston College Law School, said m. confhct. Both may ,exl~~. 10 His conversion,: kept. a secret. at any other time in hi!itory."· American legal traditi0J.1 recog... perfect harmony ,,~, ~x~rI~nce until after his de;lth, was an- . IesJstance to a cruel dictatorship George Reed of the" National ;; ~izesth"'at "state systep1S-of. pub- has,remonstrat~4; .lie said. _ nounced . by .officials of the -lias rea-:hed a blood-stained BeyonCl .-Limi..!. chancery office, New York arch­ aiiSis . despite the efforts of Catholic . Welfare· ''''Conference lic. instruction were. in.tel}ded :~;~. ChlJr~h leaders for peace. Legal, Department~' attribu1ed merely to cooperate wiiji'~!1r~nts .' MrReed' sa1d two o{the cur­ diocese. .,:. '';l'he regime of President Ful-' this to the recogni~ion'by courts * -~ * ~ot by any s~retch·.of Im­ . rent :legal d~fficulties' 'involv~ng The famous author, editor and. ee!i~io Batista is using terrorism that parents' gu~ra~t:es under a~matl?n to d~pr~~ethem of rights .of private schools are: critic, long an associate of the to ~\'keep itself in power. The the freedom of,.rehglO!1 clause rIghts 10 education. . I)? the movement for excessive late H. L. Mencken, was received ef)position while divided, is of' the First Amendment of the However, Mr. O'~e~feadded, state 'regulation. of parochial into the Church on October 9,' Itepping up its efforts to over­ S. Constitution in~lude' t~e, th~ state has. the right "t~' ~­ schools, and 2) recent .zoning 1957, by rather Charles J. Mc­ II1r~w ,BaFsta's government. rIght to educate chIldren m qUire that chIldren shall receive legislation which discriminates Manus, director of the informa..:. Torture Cat,holics churc_h-related sch.ools. Mr. Re~d the mini~um of training. ne~e~­ against' parochial' schools. ti«;m center at St. Patrick's at the National CatholIc sary .t~flt them for their CIVIC "Th' t' b t cathedral. Two recent· rebel efforts in spoke l' A 't' n cORven bI' t ' ' ' ' ere IS no ques Ion a ou d SSOCia 10 ­ 0 iga 10n. the right of the state to insist Havana ard Santiago to oust the·' E. uca lOn 4lictatorship, 'Yhich took' scores tiOn. . , upon regulatory measures to ef lives, have apparently ended . . He warned that. thIS. parents . guard the health and safety of In failure. But more violence is right to e~ucate IS threa~e~ed . children," Mr. Reed stated. "But, expected. In Havana three young today:. as ~t ha.s been durmg· unfortunately, today there is a Catholic Action leaders were certam penods m the. past, by MARYKNOLL (NC)-FatheJ;' tendency to enact laws which go Iortured and killed by the police. advocates of "the statistconcept," William A. Fletcher, Maryknoll beyond legitimate regulation." H'd I ed As government troops put who say the 'state has the ex­ .. . Missioner .from Fall River, will e sal some secu ar uca­ clown- these uprisings in Cuba's clusive nght to determme the observe the 35th anniversary of tional ,groups have taken the two la r"est cities and tried to his ordination to the priesthood position that the state must' ltave off a threatened general on May 26. • license, charter and, approve Itrike, the forces of rebel lead­ Father Fletcher brother of . private schools. .. Fidel Castro occupied a Cath­ . Ralph J. Fletcher of 357 Whipple This constitutes prior approv­ olic . school in Las Villas prov­ The first corporate Commun­ Street,' Fall Rivi;!r, is a veteran , al of nonpublic schools, he de­ Ince and held a priest as hostage ion and breakfast of the Attle­ of 20 years of mission work 'in clared, and such action by public after allowing the children and boro Area Particular Council China, the Philippines arid Latin officials is "contrary to settled lieachets to leave. of St. Vincent de Paul Society America. ,. constitutional law." The last chance to avoid con­ will be held .next Sunday in' .St, Father Fletcher entered Mary­ 'tinued bloodshed in Cuba van­ Theresa'S- Church, South Attl~­ knoll in 1914 follo~ing his grad­ Ished a few weeks ago when bol'o at the 7 o'clock Mass and uation from St. Patrick's school BY MAIL BANKI~G both sides turned down the re­ breakfast will follow immedi­ in Fall River. He. was ordained quest of the country's bishops ately in the parish hall.' saves you time,. steps' " to the priesthood in Fall River for a "national unity" govern­ Arrangements are being made and money. In fact, it.'s on May 26, 1923. The following' ment. Following the failure of. in each Conference by' the . re­ September he departed for the so handy you'll want to their' pe<u;e effort, Church au­ spective, presidel)ts. Deadline 1I10rities were forced by the for reservations has been, set at. missions in China. After five use this service often. .r..ears. there, he was transferred liense 'situation to cancel the April 18,' It is aimed .to have 'a' to the Philippines where he .!iaditional Holy Week proces­ So whether you want· 100% attendance from all Con,. )!ons and Easter festivities ferences and each ~ember has served as secretary. to the Arch­ to make deposits, take bishop of Manila. throughout the island. . been invited to bring any frien'd . In 1938, Father Fletcher was out savings· or make Pn;",ses Election . interested in the work ot' the selected' to serve as personal ·mortgage payments do Earlier hopes for national St. Vincent de Paul Society. to His ,Eminence Pietro' Card­ peace had been dimmed when 'AL' ALBANESE. Prop. it by mail. Ask for a The following conferences inal Fumasoni-Biondi, prefect both government and rebels' are members of the Attleboro Designing & Manufac'uring FREE supply of "bank­ to the Sacred Congregation for turned down a proposal for a 196' ROBESON ST.. NEW BEDFORD Area Particular Council: Attle­ the Propagation of the Faith In by-mail" forms! ~aranteed free eleCtion made Just above Shawmut Ave. boro-St. John, St. Joseph, Holy Rome. by Cuban leader, Cosme de' la Ghost. . He was later assigned to work WY 8-5142 'OS 3-4074 Torriente. Later Batista called The Hebronville-North . Seeko'nk, among the Indians of 'Guatemala lor. elections on June 1, which , for a number of years before St. Mary. , <:..---::>.' bave' now been postponed to;' taking up the post of director' Mansfield-St. Mary~' Nov. 3. Sacred of the. Maryknoll ,Bookshelf' at N()rtth' Attleboro But OP?' )sitidn groups an­ Maryknoll headquarter~. In the DO(mced th2Y would boycott the Heart, St. Mary. Truck Body Builders

Fall of last year, Father Fletcher' elections, which they claim will . Norton St.Mary. Aluminum or Steel

was appointed as chaplain of the DOt be free, ,have turned down South Attleboro-St. Theresa. 944 County St.

Manhattanville College of the any settle] nent involving Bat~ Officers of' the 'Particular Sacred Heart at Purchase, N. Y. NEW 'BEDFORD, MASS.

Ista's participation' in the gov:' Council includes Myles F. Daly, WY 2-6618'

ernment a'1d called for ,"total Attleboro, Pr.esident'; Roland Fall River Savings Bank wa,r." ~ ,WATCH QUR Fregault, North Attleboro and 141 N. Main-Fall River Extr erne Terrorism Manuel Castro, Attleboro, Vice TIME and At the same time the oPPo-. Presidents; Joseph F. Bienvenue, Next Door to Hotel

TEMPERATURE aition also committed acts of ex- "", Hebronville, Sec retary; Nando Mellen-Fall River

b'eme ternrism which were, Melchiorri, Mans1\eld, Treasurer. SIGN resented by the people. The .;."~~~~~:;;:;:;::;:;;:~~;;:;;;::.:;;::;;;: ,ITS FOR .YOUR people, ho",vever, reaHze that _~.~~

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Fat her' FIetc her P·".-est 35 Years

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Attleboro Council To Hold Breakfast

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Monument Works

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the rebels cai1 use no other means against a dictatorship, bacKed so far by a ..rong, well-equipped army. The meLlods of the dictatorship were revealed last Febru­ ary when constitutional guar­ antees were restored for a short time. During that period ,the CQurts ordered the release of po­ litical.pr::oners and charged -army and police' officers with torturing t!1~m.·

Indj""n'Missions TOPAWA, Ariz. (NC) ' - A

Pontifical -: :ass of Thanksgiving

was offer:.1 here by Auxiliary Bishop' r '~ncis ,J. Green 'of

Tucson, C 1memorating 50 suc- .

eessive yc' :'S of missionary serv­

ice by., t11:' Franciscans to· the Papago,Indians who live ·in this U'ea.

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ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS

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