···1-4ortOI1 Pastor .to·Direct
The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAm.· . . '.
fall River, Mass.
Th~r_sday, Sept. 8ee~nd ,CI.... M.O ,Prl"Ue"M' ... uthorl.~ .t F.U ·Rlnr. M.....
10, 1959
Building Fund Campaign For Bishop Feehan High Rev. William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Mary's Church in Norton, will serve as epis. copal chairman of the drive for funds to build the planned $2,250,000 Bishop Feehan High School in Attleboro. This announcement concerning the' second dioceson regional high school was ,made today by the Most Reverend Bishop. Selection of five honorary . chairman and six, active of St. Mary's North Attleboro. chairmen together with two Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, pastor executive secr~taries has . 'o~ St. Theresa's, Attleboro. also' been announced at the Rev. Edward F. O'Brien, pas-
Chancery Qffice by Bishop tO,r of St. Mary's, Mansfield. Connolly, .' . ," , Rev. ,J. Om'erLussier, pastor , " PRICE IOc' 'The, co-educational Attleboro of St:- Stephen's, Attleboro. '$4~~per Year regIonal school, which wills e r v e ' Rev..'Cornelius J.. Keliher~ ad880. pupils, will' be' named in miJiistrator of St. Mary's, AttIe, memory' of the second Bishop b!>ro. . , of the Diocese,Bishop: Connolly' , has' 'reported. , 'Rev. Edmund ,J. Dickinson, ,a'ssistant at Sacred Heart, North The, following will serve in Attleboro. on honorary capacity in the drive for 'funds which' will be ' Two executive secretaries seconducted iIi the, dear future, lected by ,the' Ordinary are Rev. Edwin J.' Loew, assistant , for the new school will open in at' st. Mary's, North Attleboro September 1961: . and Rev. James F. McCarthy, '. Rt. Rev. John J.' Shay, pastor assistant at St. John the Evan· of St.· John's' Attleboro. gelist, Attleboro. ,Rev. Joseph S. Larue, pastor The Bishop Feehan High ·of Sacred Heart, North AttleS!=hool will be the first major 'boro. ' diocesan institution in the Rev. John F:' Laughlin, pastor Greater Attleboro Area. Its anof Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro. REV. WILLIAMD. THOMSON nouncement last week at a meetRev. Ubalde J. Denault, pastor ing of representatives of all the of St.' Joseph's, A~tleboro. The following have been as- Greater Attleboro pariShes was Rev. John J. Casey, pastor of signed to serve in an active warmly and enthusiastically re, Immaculate Conception Church, ,capacity as chairmen:ceived by the Catholic populace North ,Easton. Rev. Edward B. Booth, pastor Turn to Page Eighteen
Asserts Sordid Movies Injure . NURSING SCHOOL ENTRANTS: Three , diocesan " 'girls. , ',Film Industry "
Prelate Favors Drive 'To .End Steel Strike
register for the entering class at'St.Anne's Hospital S~hool' ./ ' L<?S ~~GELES (NC)-A f Nursing in, Fall Riv~r. They are, left to. right, Roberta .. ~ovle crlb.c he.re has warned' "The present steel strike is very unfortunate, as is the th t d d fIb f t attitude of industry towards it. It's causing bad blood and Medeiros: of New Bedford, Carol Berard of Taunton, Sister, . a., SOl' 1, 1 ms ,y ~s - a hardening of attitudes at time when labor and manageprpducers are harmmg, ment should be developing maturity in their relationships Madeline Clemence, director and Mary Brennan of Chatham. buc~ ',,' , ," , the mdustry. Philip.K. Scheuer of the Los towards' each other." So de- ' , Angeles Times said that those I d V R M dispute. "Round thhe clock care ery ev. sgr. meetings would at least show a who want the motion picture to George ·c. H'Iggins, director willingness' to work toward• .s urvive, as theater entertllinment must ,ask themselves one quesof social action for :the Na- . agreement." 0,'
a
39
Enter ·St. ',An,ne~s~, School of N~r$in'g"~'",,,':,, Twenty-eight girls from the Diocese are amotig the 39 who enrolled this week hi St. Ann"e's School of Nursing, Fall River. New Bedford leads in repres,entation" sendin'g 10 girls to the school. Fall River is:next with eight. Three are from Taunton,' two from, From Fall, River come Sister Somerset and one each from Alice Thomas, S.U,S.C., Claire Fairhaven, Chatham, South Audet, Allfiette Desautels, Cecile Dartmouth, Berkley and Ducharme, Anne Marie 'OuelSwansea. The new students hope to be settled i'n St. Anen's new school building by 1960. At present the old quarters are still in
use. , From New Bedford New Bedfordites at St. Anne's include Louise Amaral, Aline Cayer, Sandra Dalbec, Rtta LeBlanc, Patricia Ladino, MadeUne Manha, Roberta Medeiros, Eleanor Mellody, 'Suzanne Menard, and Kathleen Veer. '
lette,' Anne Savard;. 'Muriel Thiboutot and Murielle Guerette. Taunton is represented by· poris, Begnoche, Carole Berard, and Eleanor Kokoska; Somerset by Claudette Cote and Patricia O'Brien. Mary Lou Andrews is from Fairhaven, Mary Brennan from Chatham, Barbara Cardoza from South Dartmoutq, Danielle Desautels from Berkley arid Gail Padden fro!U Swansea.
liturgical Week Conference Thrilling for A.ttleboro Man "A woriderful experience" is the way Donald Antaya of Attleboro, speaks of his participation in the twentieth North American Liturgical W~ek conducted at Notre Dame. Mr. Antaya attended the 'conference as a'consultant arid observer ori Church Structure art to learn what I could about ~and Participation, in the the latest trends." Mr. Antaya is Mass, which was under the associated with'his brother in ehairmanship of Rev. Pat- makin,g religious articles in
rick O'Donnell of the Glenmary .Attleboro. ' , Amateurs ,Are 'Wilmers Home MissiOllers. " "The entire ·conference. cpn.. : "What 'made it most thrilling was that our group was the one cerned participatjon. ,in the responsible for bringing ,Cardi- Mass," he said; "accordjng '.to the Instruction of the Congregation nal Lercaro over to speak," Mr. Antaya added. "He is' a most of Rites, Sept. 3, 1958. Our group colorful personality; and his talk presented aseties Of l~ctures by was the high point of the con- . members of clergy and laymen ference. The Cardinal also spoke on Church structure and art, particularly as it affects 'lay privately to our group." ' Mr. Antaya worked with participation." "It was really something to Father O'Donnell in preparing material for the group. "I also meet people from all over the worked up the presentation country, experts in their fields, medal, designed by Father and to see how much is being O'Donnell, for the architectural ,done towards lay participation award," he explained, "and by people from other, parts of Turn to Page Eighteen . attended all the conferences on
'tion: . ' . tional Catholic We~fare COhfer- ' "It's my guess that the Pres"We must ask ourselves if we • ence, in Fall River, to preach ident, will invoke the Taft-Hartwant ,to see it survive on those " at the Labor Day Mass held ,in' ley iaw to send the steelworker. terms-in a welter of 'exploita- ,St. Mary's Cathedral for' ,the -back ,to their jobs for an 80-day · tion' q\lickies that wallow in sex, city's .United Labor Council.' cooling-off period," said the gan'gsterism and juvenile delin. He - said that the five -day priest.. "Of course, that doesn't quency." week prevailing in negotiating solve 'anything; just gives more / The issue, according to Mr. sessions did not indicate any time for bargaining," he added. Scheuer, is "mass versus class." eagerness to settle the lengthy Turn to Page Eighteen "Hollywood is a house divided against itse:\f," he' said. "The Turn' to Page Eighteen
P~iest to
Teach At ,Coyle High The Most Reverend Bishop has appointed Rev. Edward J. Mitchell, assistant, at Sacred Heart Church, Taun-
Six. New Faculty-Members At Coyle: High.in Taunton
Six new members have been added to the faculty of Monsignor James Coyle High School, Taunton, and two Brothers have been named to special' assignments.. The new faculty members are: Brother Armel Latter~l, principal at St. Thomas School, Brook. Brother Fran'cis Leary will lyn, 'will teach freshman teach French and English. He is English and serve as Ath- from Dujarie Hall, Notre Dame, letic Director, replaciug Ind.
ton to teach Religion t.; the Seniors at Monsignor Coyle High School. Father Mitchell will Brother Joseph Roos, former continue with his parish work. Director, who will take charge Father Mitchell, in teaching of the ,Coyle Barid. the three divisions of Seniors at Brothers William Babbitt and Coyle, will follow in the footsteps :of the iate Rev. Raymond . Maur.ice Healy, both formerly on the staff of Holy Cross High. B. Bourgoin whom many Coyle School, Flushing, will teach alwnni will remember for hi; teaching of Religion in the 1940s. Latin and History, respectively. Brother Joseph Lovito of St. Edward's . University, Austin, , Texas, will teach Latin and Biology. .
James D. Lanagan Jr. will assist James Burnes on the football coaching staff and teach Sophomore English. ) ,Special assignments include: Brother Thomas Gallagher, who has' been at Coyle for six years, ,has been named 'assistant principal and Brother Richar.d MacDonald has been appointed Turn to Page Eighteen
Cardinal Lercaro Spurns Notion Of Coexistence With Communism
WASlIINGTON (NC)~Giacomo~ Gardinai Lercaro has said' there' can be "no, coexistence" between the free world and communism; The Archbishop of Bologna, known as a . ' bitter foe .of commi:mism~ made, the statement after an informal hour-Jong meeting ~t 'lator~ 'th'at the principal center the, U. S. Capitol with' a of Red activity ih Italy is'situgroup of" Congressmen; in- ated within, his See of Bologna. eluding members of the Sen-·. The Cardmal was reported to
REV. EDWARD J. MITCHELL
, . . , h a v e had a "very pleasant exate ForeIgn RelatIOns CommItchange" with the Congressmen, tee. who questioned him extensively Observers who attended the' about communist strength in meeting said afterward that the Bologna. Congressmen questioned CardiThe Cardinal was said to have nal Lercaro closely about comtold the legislators that "the munism in' Italy. The Cardinal heart of the strength" of the was said to have told the legisTurn to Page Eighteen