06.12.58

20
Fall River, Mass. Thursday, June 12, a Coyle graduate, will speak. Rt. Rev. Msgr: James J. Dolan, Seeond Clu8 Mail PriyileK'e. PRICE 10e P.R."pastor of St. Mary's Church, VOte 2, No. 24 Alithorized at Fall Rh'••• M...... $4.00 per Y_ assisted by Rev. William F. Mor- ris, will present diplomas to' 36 girls 'at St. Mary's' High School exercises' Suhday in the church. Rev. Edward J. Mitchell will be the preacher. Father McCarthy Planning' Day for Deaf A combined baccalaureate for Deaf and hard of hearing residents of the Fall River both schools will be held at 10 A. M. Monday in St. Mary's will participate in an after:noon of recollection, Sun- Church, with Rev. Brendan C. day, June 22. Services, to be conducted in both speech' and McNally, S.J., of Holy Cross Col- sign language, will begin at 2 at Our Lady's Chapel, New lege as the preacher. Bedford. Turn to Page Seventeen Rev. James A. McCarthy Adoption Exams efFall River, diocesan mod- erator for the deaf and hard Fgr Candidates of. hearing, says it is hoped that the event will mark the 'begin- To Priesthood ning of a social' and spiritual Ail' examination for college' REUNION OF .sISTERS: M. St. Roland, right, a mission- program for the deaf of the stu'dents who are' desirous of ary sister of Religious of Jesus-Mary from India, now Diocese. ' studying for the priesthood, will touring the American Province before her return to the The preacher will be Rev. be· held in the Conv.ent of the misson field, chats with her sister, M.' Mary Nathalie, a John Bosco Valente, O.F.M., of' Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, member of the faculty of Jesus Mary Academy, Fall River. St. Francis' Chapel, Providence. Prospect St., Fall River, at nine Himself afflicted with deafness, o'clock on Thursday June 19. he has studied' lip-reading and The matter_ for the examina- Language Pupils in America sign language for many years tions will. consist of those sub- and has just completed a w.eek's jects usually undertaken during mission for the deaf and the giv- the first two years of the classi- Have, Easy Time, Says Nun ing 01 a retreat to deaf children , cal college courses. There will be By Patricia McGowan in New York, no examination in ,The program at Our Lady's American youngsters who groan at studying Each candidate appearing for Chapel will include an opening the examination will be required language should be grateful they don't live in India. talk, instruction, hymns, and ser- to present the, following papers: . So says Mother Mary Roland, R.J.M., who has been mon, to be followed by a social ,1. A letter of recommendation visiting her sister, also a member of the Religious of Jesus- hour in the Chapel basement. Turn to Page Twenty Final instructions, a sermon, and Mary, at Jesus-Mary Con- tongues, and Sanskrit is a dead Turn to Page Fifteen REV. J. B. VALENTE, O.F.M. vent Fall River while on language studied for its cultural Deplores Neglect, 'I - f 'B' d value, as Latin or Greek are h ?me eave rom aro a,In- studied in the West. Holy Father Says Secula,r Institutes Of Liberal Arts dla. Teen-agers at the Jesus- Start All Over 'Mary School in India, she ex- Nor does the language prob- plains, study English, Hindi, lem stop there. If an Indian·" Gujerati and Sanskrit. Hindi is moves from Baroda to Bombay Reinforce Catholic Apostolate In U.S. Schools "Outwardly," Archbishop Richard J, Cushing of Boston INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Too India's national language; Guje- for instance, he must' learn much stress on vocational train- Jemarked in 1955, "there is no difference between them and rati is one of the 12 regional Turn to Page 'Five ing in high schools and colleges you or the person next to you. Inwardly, they are dedicated to the neglect of liberal arts 110 God." , courses is a basic weakness in Surroundings Diocese Impre.ss, U. S. education. The Archbishop was refer- cent development within the Dr. Jerome' G. politi-' ring to the same group of Church and because they, do not Visiting from 'England cal science professor at the Uni- people whom His Holiness court publicity, the secular in- The many activities of his bustling parish in th'e' south versity of Chicago tQld the co- stitutes are riot understood very educational Marian College grad- of England were described here today by Rev. James Gerard Pope Pius XII has called "a well by many people. But that uating class, that among other Devlin. strong arm which has come to leaders of ,the Church see'in the weaknesses were anti-intellectu- reinforce the Catholic apostolate tremendous potential for good is In the United States for the first time on a six-week alism and the needless 'prolong- In these troubled and sorrowful clear from such' a comment as visit to his cousin, Mrs. Ed- its surroundings are so pleasant, times." that of the Pope, that they are ing of adolescence. ward O'Brien of St. Patrick's . doesn't particularly 'want to A decline in the study of phil- The men and women thus de- "a new division. ;, • come to . F h VISIt other parts of the country lIeribed are members of the swell the army of those who pro- osophy, on the plea that it is parIsh, Somerset, at er during his stay. too theoretical, is evidence of secular new, Turn to Page Sixteen Devlin says Fall River and Yearly pilgrimages to 'Lourdes institutes, a rela- Turn to Page Twenty tively unknown - and perhaps conducted on a unique lottery immensely significant - move- basis, a thriving men's club- ment. house, and a whole battery of "World Catholics to Observe Both because they are a re- . services to the aged of the parish are only a few of the project. Turn to Page Fifteen Americans Today Feast of" the 'Sacred Heart Recognize Value By Rev. Edward J. MitcheB , . Prelate Cautions 'Not eVeryone can ride into Paray-Ie-M onial with a, second-hand ear dealer from ,Of Intellectuals' Algiers. And no one ever should! French politics and' a ,eranky ear do Il o t at all mix Against Dollar CLEVELAND (NC)-The with the beauty of Burgundy. ' ,'-, Sign StanClard . ,'Howeyer,'when we missed our morning train froI,D Lyons there was only one course, tfttellectual is more tolerated CINCINNATI-A college .. 'America today than pre.. open to us if. we, wanted to Blessed Virgin "to become one symptoms disappeared . president urged graduates of nously, but only "insofar as arrive at "City of the. of, her daughters" if she were Her symptoms disappeared, Our Lady of Cincinnati Col- Sacred Heart before dark--- cured: The hext, day all her but her - real troubles began. .. \!seful in working out the. be f h't hh'k They were ,the troubles of lege here to refuse to con- and techniques t" a anCIent, ar ..0, I C 1 - pretty . eighteen-year-old girl form to success standards meas- of a more efficient l.ng." , . with a good dowry, a swarm of ured in terms of dollar sign. iiuided missile." While 'our driver debated and suitors, a mother with marriage Msgr. Alfred F. Horrigan, Dr. John J. Meng" dean of ,gestured about the problems of in her eye, and at the same time president of Bellarmine College IIdministration at Hunier Coi- French Africa (at times with (wouldn't yO\! know it!) a vow in Louisville, declared that the lege, New York, made this state- both hands), the hometown of and desire for the religious life. modern Christian must be both ment in a commencement ad- , St. Margaret Mary Alacoque . When the parish priest spoke of a co'nformist and a non-conform- dress to graduates of Ursuline flew by the window; It was in . dispensing with the sick-bed ist. The "neat little solution" of tilIollege this little village that the Saint vow, Margaret refused. Her deciding always to be one or the More than just, the conven- of the Sacred Heart was born mother's ready flow of tears, other, he stated, is not allowed ience of a few individuals is at over three hundred years ago. however, kept her from entering to "the intelligent and virtuous atake in American anti-intellec- Symptoms Disappear the convent. for five long years. man." tualism, he warned, for every "If this Algerian has troubles," 'Th t D id d It' Dismal Failure weakening of the intellectual life I thought to myself, "young a ec e He told the graduates they marks a further step toward Margaret Mary's were even Duri?g this time Margaret "must 'conform to God's laws" lIlaterialism. greater."o Her father,died when dated the wealthy and eager but should "refuse to conform Human Progress she was eight years old and suitors who beat a path to her to prevailing success standards Dr. Meng, a native of Cleve- shortly afterwards she herself d0o.r. 'She dated which measure' human worth land and former faculty, member was stricken with a deadly them untIl, commg home from and achievement in terms of the lit the Catholic University of disease. For four years she grew a party one night, she found dollar sign and the number of America, Washington" declared progessively thinner and weaker. Ghrist waiting for her in her tail lights on the new model that, if the American way of life The doctors gave up hope. Then room. wearing the. crown of ears." III be preserved, "we must be one day, at the prompting of' her SACRED HEART SHRINEthorns.and blood-stamed robe 01. Declaring that mere adjust- ..... Marcaret promised ,1be Cancel' HOGle, .fall Kivu TurD M Paa-e Eichteea . rurn M' 'Pace 'Twelft The ANCHOR A" Anchor of.the Sotd, Sure and Pirm-ST. PAUL Diocesan Secondary Schools To Graduate' 561 Students . . A total of 561 seniors, including 218 boys and 343 girls, will receive diplomas this month from the 10 Catholic Secondary schools,of the Fall River Diocese. The schedule of, graduation exercises ,for the schools, located in five dif- ferent communities, is as follows: Taunton Rt, Rev. Msgr., James :1. Ger-, rard, V.G." will preside and pre- / sent diplomas to 116 boys at Monsignor James Coyle High School at 8 P. M. next Monday. Rev. John J. Hackett, vice- chancellor of the Diocese and

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John Bosco Valente, O.F.M., of' Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, ary sister of th~ Religious of Jesus-Mary from India, now sign language for many years tions will. consist of those sub­ and has just completed a w.eek's jects usually undertaken during mission for the deaf and the giv­ the first two years of the classi- people whom His Holiness court publicity, the secular in- The many activities of his bustling parish in th'e' south h?me eave rom aro a,In- studied in the West. 'I - f Devlin.

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Page 1: 06.12.58

Fall River, Mass. Thursday, June 12, 19~8 a Coyle graduate, will speak. Rt. Rev. Msgr: James J. Dolan,

Seeond Clu8 Mail PriyileK'e. PRICE 10e P.R."pastor of St. Mary's Church,VOte 2, No. 24 Alithorized at Fall Rh'••• M...... $4.00 per Y_ assisted by Rev. William F. Mor­ris, will present diplomas to' 36 girls 'at St. Mary's' High School exercises' Suhday in the church. Rev. Edward J. Mitchell will be the preacher.

Father McCarthy Planning' Recollectio~ Day for Deaf A combined baccalaureate for

Deaf and hard of hearing residents of the Fall River both schools will be held at 10 A. M. Monday in St. Mary'sDioc~se will participate in an after:noon of recollection, Sun­Church, with Rev. Brendan C.day, June 22. Services, to be conducted in both speech' and McNally, S.J., of Holy Cross Col­

sign language, will begin at 2 at Our Lady's Chapel, New lege as the preacher. Bedford. Turn to Page Seventeen

Rev. James A. McCarthy Adoption ExamsefFall River, diocesan mod­erator for the deaf and hard Fgr Candidates of. hearing, says it is hoped that the event will mark the 'begin­ To Priesthood ning of a social' and spiritual Ail' examination for college' REUNION OF .sISTERS: M. St. Roland, right, a mission­program for the deaf of the stu'dents who are' desirous of ary sister of th~ Religious of Jesus-Mary from India, now Diocese. ' studying for the priesthood, will touring the American Province before her return to the

The preacher will be Rev. be· held in the Conv.ent of the misson field, chats with her sister, M.' Mary Nathalie, a John Bosco Valente, O.F.M., of' Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, member of the faculty of Jesus Mary Academy, Fall River. St. Francis' Chapel, Providence. Prospect St., Fall River, at nine Himself afflicted with deafness, o'clock on Thursday June 19. he has studied' lip-reading and The matter_ for the examina­ Language Pupils in America sign language for many years tions will. consist of those sub­and has just completed a w.eek's jects usually undertaken duringmission for the deaf and the giv­ the first two years of the classi- Have, Easy Time, Says Nun ing 01 a retreat to deaf children , cal college courses. There will be By Patricia McGowanin New York, no examination in Philo~Qph~

,The program at Our Lady's American youngsters who groan at studying onefor~ignEach candidate appearing forChapel will include an opening the examination will be required language should be grateful they don't live in India. talk, instruction, hymns, and ser­ to present the, following papers: . So says Mother Mary Roland, R.J.M., who has beenmon, to be followed by a social

,1. A letter of recommendation visiting her sister, also a member of the Religious of Jesus­hour in the Chapel basement. Turn to Page TwentyFinal instructions, a sermon, and Mary, at Jesus-Mary Con- tongues, and Sanskrit is a dead

Turn to Page Fifteen • REV. J. B. VALENTE, O.F.M. vent Fall River while on language studied for its culturalDeplores Neglect, 'I - f 'B' d value, as Latin or Greek areh?me eave rom aro a,In- studied in the West.Holy Father Says Secula,r Institutes Of Liberal Arts dla. Teen-agers at the Jesus- Start All Over 'Mary School in India, she ex- Nor does the language prob­plains, study English, Hindi, lem stop there. If an Indian·" Gujerati and Sanskrit. Hindi is moves from Baroda to Bombay

Reinforce Catholic Apostolate In U.S. Schools "Outwardly," Archbishop Richard J, Cushing of Boston INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Too

India's national language; Guje- for instance, he must' learn ~ much stress on vocational train­Jemarked in 1955, "there is no difference between them and rati is one of the 12 regional Turn to Page 'Fiveing in high schools and collegesyou or the person next to you. Inwardly, they are dedicated to the neglect of liberal arts110 God." , courses is a basic weakness in Surroundings ~f Diocese Impre.ss,

U. S. education.The Archbishop was refer- cent development within the Dr. Jerome' G. Ker~in, politi-'ring to the same group of Church and because they, do not Prie~t Visiting from 'England

cal science professor at the Uni­people whom His Holiness court publicity, the secular in- The many activities of his bustling parish in th'e' southversity of Chicago tQld the co­stitutes are riot understood very educational Marian College grad­ of England were described here today by Rev. James GerardPope Pius XII has called "a well by many people. But that uating class, that among other Devlin.strong arm which has come to leaders of ,the Church see'in the weaknesses were anti-intellectu­reinforce the Catholic apostolate tremendous potential for good is In the United States for the first time on a six-week alism and the needless 'prolong­In these troubled and sorrowful clear from such' a comment as visit to his cousin, Mrs. Ed- its surroundings are so pleasant,

times." that of the Pope, that they are ing of adolescence. ward O'Brien of St. Patrick's h~ .doesn't particularly 'want toA decline in the study of phil ­The men and women thus de- "a new division. ;, • come to . F h VISIt other parts of the country lIeribed are members of the swell the army of those who pro- osophy, on the plea that it is parIsh, Somerset, at er during his stay.

too theoretical, is evidence ofsecular new, Turn to Page Sixteen Devlin says Fall River and Yearly pilgrimages to 'Lourdesinstitutes, a rela- Turn to Page Twentytively unknown - and perhaps conducted on a unique lottery immensely significant - move­ basis, a thriving men's club­ment. house, and a whole battery of"World Catholics to ObserveBoth because they are a re- . services to the aged of the parish

are only a few of the project. Turn to Page FifteenAmericans Today Feast of" the 'Sacred Heart

Recognize Value By Rev. Edward J. MitcheB , . Prelate Cautions 'Not eVeryone can ride into Paray-Ie-M onial with a, second-hand ear dealer from

,Of Intellectuals' Algiers. And no one ever should! French politics and' a ,eranky ear do Ilot at all mix Against Dollar CLEVELAND (NC)-The with the beauty of Burgundy. ' , '-, Sign StanClard . ,'Howeyer,'when we missed our morning train froI,D Lyons there was only one course,tfttellectual is more tolerated CINCINNATI-A college

.. 'America today than pre.. open to us if.we, wanted to Blessed Virgin "to become one symptoms disappeared. president urged graduates of nously, but only "insofar as arrive at ~he, "City of the. of, her daughters" if she were Her symptoms disappeared, Our Lady of Cincinnati Col­Sacred Heart before dark--- cured: The hext, day all her but her - real troubles began... \!seful in working out the.be

• • f h't hh'k They were ,the troubles of lege here to refuse to con­~rmulae and techniques forpr~ t" a

~he anCIent, ar ..0, I C 1 - pretty . eighteen-year-old girl form to success standards meas­lItl~tion of a more efficient l.ng." , . with a good dowry, a swarm of ured in terms of ~he dollar sign.iiuided missile." While 'our driver debated and suitors, a mother with marriage Msgr. Alfred F. Horrigan,

Dr. John J. Meng" dean of ,gestured about the problems of in her eye, and at the same time president of Bellarmine CollegeIIdministration at Hunier Coi­ French Africa (at times with (wouldn't yO\! know it!) a vow in Louisville, declared that the lege, New York, made this state­ both hands), the hometown of and desire for the religious life. modern Christian must be both ment in a commencement ad- , St. Margaret Mary Alacoque . When the parish priest spoke of a co'nformist and a non-conform­dress to graduates of Ursuline flew by the window; It was in . dispensing with the sick-bed ist. The "neat little solution" of tilIollege ~ere. this little village that the Saint vow, Margaret refused. Her deciding always to be one or the

More than just, the conven­ of the Sacred Heart was born mother's ready flow of tears, other, he stated, is not allowed ience of a few individuals is at over three hundred years ago. however, kept her from entering to "the intelligent and virtuous atake in American anti-intellec­ Symptoms Disappear the convent. for five long years. man." tualism, he warned, for every "If this Algerian has troubles," 'Th t D id d It' Dismal Failure weakening of the intellectual life I thought to myself, "young a ec e He told the graduates they marks a further step toward Margaret Mary's were even Duri?g this time Margaret "must 'conform to God's laws" lIlaterialism. greater."o Her father,died when dated the wealthy and eager but should "refuse to conform

Human Progress she was eight years old and suitors who beat a path to her to prevailing success standards Dr. Meng, a native of Cleve­ shortly afterwards she herself Burgundi~n d0o.r. 'She dated which measure' human worth

land and former faculty, member was stricken with a deadly them untIl, commg home from and achievement in terms of the lit the Catholic University of disease. For four years she grew a party one night, she found dollar sign and the number of America, Washington" declared progessively thinner and weaker. Ghrist waiting for her in her tail lights on the new model that, if the American way of life The doctors gave up hope. Then room. wearing the. crown of ears." III • be preserved, "we must be one day, at the prompting of' her SACRED HEART SHRINEthorns.and blood-stamed robe 01. Declaring that mere adjust­

..... Pac.F~ ~other. Marcaret promised ,1be Cancel' HOGle, .fall Kivu TurD M Paa-e Eichteea . rurn M' 'Pace 'Twelft

The ANCHOR A" Anchor of.the Sotd, Sure and Pirm-ST. PAUL

Diocesan Secondary Schools To Graduate' 561 Students. . .~--

A total of 561 seniors, including 218 boys and 343 girls, will receive diplomas this month from the 10 Catholic Secondary schools,of the Fall River Diocese.

The schedule of, graduation exercises ,for the schools, located in five dif­ferent communities, is as follows:

Taunton Rt, Rev. Msgr., James :1. Ger-,

rard, V.G." will preside and pre-/ sent diplomas to 116 boys at Monsignor James Coyle High School at 8 P. M. next Monday. Rev. John J. Hackett, vice­chancellor of the Diocese and

Page 2: 06.12.58

2

. .WEQNESDAY ­

. tor

-' tase,

HAPPY CLEVELAND REUNION: When recently or-:: dained Frederick Nac:htigal offered his first Mass in Cleve­ . land, one of the'"first to greet hiin wasCFritz Beckinan, former ....

.1..

.··~, •.u_".·"••••••·. "'.

-THE ANCHO« Thurs., June 12, 1958

Va.tican· Reports .yugoslav Pr.elate Now Seriously' III

VATICAN CITY (NC)­Vatican officials have 'con-' firmed reports tha t }Iis Eminence Alojzije Cardinal Stepinac, Archbishop of Zagreb, is seriously ill. They said, how- .' ever, that he' is not now in danger of death.

.A spokesman Jar 'the Secre­tariat of State said that the 60- . year-old. pr,elate's c<;>ndition.' is not 'excessively alarming', al ­though a ·broncho.,pneumonia complication has been aaded to a circulatory disturban(:e from which'.the Cardiiial has been suffering for sevel'a} years.

House Arrest The spok~·s~an.. add(:d' that

news of the il1ness of the prelate, who has been held virtually' under house arrest in his native village of Krasic by Yugoslav communist authorities since 1951, has deeply affected all ~atholics living in Yugoslavia and aboard, as well as all Chris­tians..

(Meanwhile reports received from .Belgrade,' in Yugoslavia, stated that' Cardinal Stepinac suffered a serious thrombosis in his right leg. The blood. dot was understood to have caused ilis heart to weaken, while at the same time pneurllonia. set rn. .

(Grave concern for the 'Ca~­dinal's condition .was reportedly expressed by his attending phy­sician, Dr. Tihomir BogiC'evic,.in view of the fact that he has been suffering for several years from an incurable blood disease, poly­cythemia rubra vera, character­ized by ·an abnormal inCl'ease in the red cells.).· .', . F~tal Consequenees' I

In August 1953, two i\rnerican specialists, Dr. John H. Law­rence, University of California authority'on radioactive therapy, and Dr. John F. Ruzic, Chicago Burgeon of Croatian descent, flew to Yugoslavia at the request of the American hierarchy and examined the. Cardinal twice ih his place of confinement.

The doctors" report at' the time stated that the disease could have fatal conseQuences unless held ,in. check by the r(!medies made available by the most mod­ern findings of medicaf. science.. Both' doctors then went on to emphasize th~ impprtance ~f

. other factors. which, although not physical, are related to the disease and'have a definite bearing on the' effect of' the treatment. .

Among the;e factors the doc­tors listed .the environment within which the Cardinal is forced to live and "hi!i present l'egime of restraint."

THE ANCHOR "Second-cJass maiJ prh'ileges liuthorized

at Fall Rh·er. Mas.. Published ever~ Thursda~ at 410 Highland Avenue. Fall River, Mass., by the Catholic I'resool the Dioeese of Fall River. SubecriplioD prlee '" mail. postpaid $4.00 per year.

German Army corporal. Thirteen years ago, the ~ew priest, then a U.S. waist 'gunner was shot down over BerliJ{~nd was taken prisoner. Instead of following .orders tAl shoot him .' Becknian;'no'W of' 'Connecticut,'became his pro~Wt··and' helped'him to.~pe. NC Photo. J.

. ·VT."V CATHOI~IC PRESS.OEFICERS:' Newly elected offiCers of the Catholic Press Associat" ',' chosen at the 48th annual convention ir Richm,ond; are, left to right, Donald J. Thorman, man::t.ging ~itorof Ave Maria magazine,' new board director, John J. Daly, editor of Th~ Catholic Virginian, Richmond, president; Father' Albert J.Nevins, M.M., editor and business manager, Maryknoll magazine, vice president; Father Raymond .Bos-

Jer,. editor,. Indiana Catholic and Rv30rd, Indianapolis, and "'Robert B. Labonge, assistant editor and business manager, The Tidings, Los Angeles, new, directors.· NC Photo.

Asks Return of. Ggd to. Rightful Place in Society WINOOSKI PARK (NC),,-:,The

fruit of the work done by the· Church". in' 'the· next decade "could result in this country's change-over from one that is in grave danger of being godless to one that should be God-fear­ing and God-loving." .

This ,observation was ma.de by Bishop Walter P. Kellenberg of Rockville Center in his bacca­

. . t dlaureate sermon to he gra ua­tion class of St. Michael's Col­. . .

Red,'Poles .Stop Church Building'

WARSAW (NC)-Stefan Car­dinal Wyszynski, Primate of Poland, has accused Poland's' communist government authori­ties of hindering the -bt';~ding of neW churches in this Polish capital.

.The Cardinal appealed to the faithful for suppor.t in. h.is efforts to obtain'government p~rmission for' new church' c()D:;;truction. .

He said that sirtl:ehis return to his post in October 1956. aftE:r. three. years of. arrest, . he has "fruitlessly and humbly pleaded" with the authorities. He added:

"Since prewar days 'th~ Cath':'. olic community of WarsaW has increased by "300,000 .a'rrd we need·.about 40 new churches .'. • The lack of churches is a· source of great grief t6 me and since the difficulties seem to be in..; sui-mountable, I come to' you today to share my grief with you and to ask you humbly to pray that we may' not .be. forced.to look for"places of. worship in cellars' • • • and in the fields.'"

lege here' in Vermont. , . ' ~ "Unfortunately, many. 50­

called educated people of our time," the Bishop said, "are liv­ing. in. an outer space of. false values and without the solid con­viction of sound, clear principles

. of truth which they should .have to guide. them in the .maze of this confused. world."

These persons, h~ said, live" d' t th I accor me . 0 e secu ar and

material ideals of' a societywhich has 'forgotten the' very source of 'all its wealth and blessings." He called upon the graduates .to adhere to require­ments stressed by His Holiness Pope Pius XiI-"Clear princi- ~ pIes, personal counfge and an unbreakable union between re­ligion and life"

Bishop Kelienberg told the graduates they should "expect, to

Mass \)rdo FRIDAY-;-Most Sacred Heart of

Jesus. Double of I Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed;· Preface of. Sacred' Heart.' .

SATURDAY-St. Bas,il, Bishop" Confessor and Ooctor 'of the· Chu,rch. Dou~le" White..~ass Proper; . Gloria; Second Col­

,lect for Peace; CTeed;.-Com-: . inon ·preface. .:. . .. .

S'UND.... Y':"-Third Sunda;aft~r Pentecost: _ Double.. ~ G~een.· Mass P~oper;' Second Collect .. Ss. VitHs and Companions,. Martyrs; . Third Collect for Peace; Creed; Preface of Trin­ity. .. .

MONDAY-Mass of Previous Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Second Collect for Peace; Common Preface.' . '

TUESDAY"":'Mass of Previous Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Second Collect fo..r Peace; Common Preface.

St. Ephraem, Deacon, Confessor and Doc­

of the Chul"ch.Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect Ss. Mark and Marcellianu's, .Martyrs; Third Collect ~or Peace; Creed; Common Preface. '. .

THURSDAY-8t. Juliana Fal-' conied, Virgin. Double. White. Mass' Proper; Gloria; Second· Collect Ss. Gervase and Pro- .

Martyrs; Third" Collect . for Peace; No Creed; Common Preface. C

. ...;.

-' ' .. :' , . _~;,'.NpW 5'81~' STO~~$ to SERVE 'YOU '8EnERI . , .

NORlbN, .Np. EASTON:,,:;..~.BRiDt;;EWAt~R' .·:RANDOLPH·· '. PlAINVtLL!',';.Route12~ ,., Route 138 . Route' 18' . Ro~te,·21t .. ' Jet.' 106& 1.

be out of ~tep with much you find' in every walk of life today." He added that this would require courage since the' odds are high against those who. love and serve God, He warned:· "You will be tempted- to comprom(se, to ad­j\;lst themselves.· to circum­stances."

Live Happy Ufe M '11 f t '. . 1

any WI orge 'prmclp est k 1" l' htl d thO ' t't~·re ~I~n Ig d r' d~n: elf al :an. es~en 0 IS c:'nesty

'~nd ~~r~hty, he contmue~. Intheir hvmg we see the tragIc

resul~s of brc:'k~n h~mes, i.rivalid ~arrIages, mfldeht~,. dIvo~c~:' dlsh~nes.ty, graf~, sUIcide, rum.

• The Bishop sa~d tha~ the .gr~d­uates w~o. c~mtmtle to exercise opportumtIes for ~he love and service. of ~o~ and their fellow man. WIll hve a happy, s~ccess­

, fullife, "not as the world -Judges but as God judges."

"Your challenge as a' 'Catho­lie college graduate is to live as God wants you to live and to bring' God back to his rightful place iri .modern society," -Bish­op Kellenberg concluded~.

:Legion of Dec~ncy . The following films are to be

added to the lists, in their're-' spective 'classifications: ;

Unobjectionable for General' Patl'onage'--Apache' Territory;

Unobjectionable for' Adults and Adolescents-- War of the Colossal Beast.· _

llnobjectionable for .. Adults-­H51rrors of Dracula, Life' Begins at 17, Naked Earth.

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Observes Church' Unyield~ng. FOe Of Communism . WINSTON-SALEM, (NC')

-The world can always look to the Catholic Church as' an unyielding .foe of commu­nism, a 'supreme director of the' Knights of Columbus' has told the annual North 'Carolina K 01.' C State Council.

"Not only our citizens, but the entire free' world/' said Charlea J. 'Morgan of .Chicago, should re­jqice over the growth of the Church in this nation. "The free

.. world recognizes the threat' of. communism, which can probably. be' most concisely described as irreligious state feudalism."

The free world also recognizes, he added, "that there are but two universal organization's_one the Roman Catholic Church, the other communism."

These_ universal groups, Mr. Morgan emphasized, are "dia­metrically' opposed in principle and philosophy, and the Roman Catholic Church will never capitulate' to the forces of. tbill tyrannical opponent."

Three new cou";cils have beeD established in the state 'during the past year:and K. of C. mem-' bership has increased by 15 per cent. I ' • . :.

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nt£ ANCHOR- 3 Thurs., June 12, 1959

Missioner Sees Japs Preparing For Catholicism

WASHINGTON (NC) ­Japan has been showing signs that it is turning away from 'its materialistic' phil­osophy and from communism.

This observation was made by Immaculate Heart of Mary Fath­er Joseph J. Spae, secretary gen­eral of the Japan Committee of the Apostolate. A missioner in Japan for 20 years, Father Spae . said currently the Japanese in­telligentsia is slowly being pre­pared for Catholicism. He listed the following as signs of a change in Japanese thinking:

Await Invitation Postwar Japan has seen the

resurgence of nearly 700 re­ligious sects, many of them in­spired to some extent by Chris­tian teaching. This has led many Japanese to practice Christian ideals without reference to th~ Catholic Church.

FIRST HOLY COMMUNION: Rt Rev. James J. Gerrard,Thinking' Japanese find that to maintain the traditional mor­ V.G. distributes Holy Communion to one of the six cerebral ality they must go beyond the palsy children. at St. Mqry1s Cathedral chapel. Assisting are frontiers of their nation, that .Rev. John E. Boyd and Miss May Leary, teacher at thethey must learn to understand

Cerebral Training Center, Fall River.international life and morality. They are groping for a human­istic way of life, which for therrl .Jesuit Asserts Catholic Parishes • Chritianity.

The Belgian-born missioner Must Help Solve City' Problems said a 1957 survey showed that ~HILADELPHI~ (NC) - Philadelphia' Catholic Housing'lOme 20 million Japanese had no !'lelghb~rhools which are .chang- Council, said that "just as the objection to becoming Catholics, mg racl~lly represent .b?th an Church has restated her originalbut revealed that they had not opportunIty for CatholICism to teaching and refined her social been invited to join the Church. grow through conversions and a mission to apply to the present

Parish .Programs challenge to parishes to adopt his'torical scene so the parish This is the real problem facing a Christian attitude in solving must redefine it; mission to meet

catechists in Japan. Japanese community problems. the needs of the community in a feel they must be invited into Jesuit Fatn.er J. William changing city." social gl'OUpS. He said this makes Michelman, a panelist at the

. Shows Interest it almost mandatory for Catho­lic Action groups to contact Franco Decrees Emphasizing that the city par­

ish must become communitybroad segments of the popu­lation. The Legion of Mary and He.w' Basic Law conscious and social minded, the

Jesuit pastor said that "the cre­the Young Christian Workers MADRID (NC)-A new Law ation of a Christian atmospherehave been most active in this

of Fundamental Principles as­ is necessary before we can ex­wOl'k, he stated. ' serting the Christian character pect a vibrant Christian life"Fr. Spae noted that neighbor­of Spain and its government. "Small thing; like' flo~er­hood organizations' have been has 'been proclaimed by Gener- boxe's, painting a curb, fixing aestablished in 45 per cent of the

.alissimo Francisco Franco. house, are symbols of somethingparishes for purposes of contact­ing more Japanese. very important in a neighbor-'

step toward preparing the Span- . The new law is regarded as a

hood," Father MichelmanSees Increase stressed. He said that somewhereish stage for a s\lccessor to \ the

The religions of Shinto and there must be a starting point inGeneralissimo. The 'SpanishBuddhism have been found' community action.Chief of Stat~ decreed the newwanting in modern, industrial ­ "Parish influence in this kindlaw as a set of permanent regu­ized Japan, Father Spae stated, of. civic coolleration," he said, and sqt:ial norms of the past "means that with proper direc­

lations aimed at giving Spain greater political stability and

have been ignored. by the new tion and leadership the largerestablishing the basis for thegeneration' as being outmoded community eventually can setfuture administration of theand inapplicable to modero' out on programs based oncountry as a traditional CMho­problems. Christian principles rather thanlie monarch¥." .

What is needed now, said on other principles."Stressing the country's cen­Father Spae, is a synthesis of Parish cooperation in neigh­turies-old Catholic traditions, hethought which is at once Jap­ borhood projects lets non-Cath..;.said: . anese and Catholic. Efforts must . olic residents know that the be made along these lines by "Spain considers it a mark of Church is "interested even in

honor to respect God's law ac­Japanese Catholic intellectuals. the' simplest of. neighborhoodcording to the doctrine of the . Within the next 10 years the problems," he said. Holy Catholic, Apostolic andveteran missionary foresees a Roman Church, the ·only· truedefinite increase in the number BAYLIES SQ. • • • faith of the national con­of conversions in Japan. Current­science." ,"ly there are about 350 persons PLATE GLASS CO.

"The Christian ideals of so­entering the Church each year. Curved Windshieldscial justice," he added, "mustFather Spae expects the number Furniture Topsinspire all policies and laws."to reach 750 annually by 1968.

The new law also refers to Steel Sash Spain's interest in the "fulfill ­ Store Fronts meI!,t of Christian social justice." 1800 'Acushnet Avenue

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executive director of Catholic Relief Services-National Catho­ R. A. WILCOX CO. lic Welfare Conference.

The present program admin­ OFFICE FURNITURE istrator, Father Edward 'Synow­

DELEGATE: Judith P. iak of the. Buffalo diocese, .left • DESKS • (HAIRSPoland about a month ago. HiS FILING CABINETSMcKnight, junior at Mt. St. application for a re-entry visa

•. FIRE FILES • SAFES .. Mary's Academy, Fall River, has not been' granted bytbeleavea tomorrow for a .week Pulish. government. FOLDING TABLES

.AND CHAIRS .of . citizenship training at .Und~r U. S: law; supplies of Bridgewater Teachers'-Col­ covernment surplus food cannot R.A. WILCOX CO. ..be shipped .. to countries where&ege. She was chosen by the 22 BEDFORD ST.there is no American residentJQhn Foster Stafford Auxil­ delegate ·to· oversee their' dw­ . FAURI.~~R 5-78~~W¥ of theAm~ricanLegion.: . wibutioo. .

Modern Missionary Must Promote Economic and Sdcial Programs

OSSINING (NC) - An un- dent of Santa Maria University usual conference or specialists in Ponce, Puerto Rico, warned on the problems of under-· that under the triple threat' of developed areas of the world industrialization, urbanization has stressed that the modern artd mass migration,· family life missionary must promote .the is breaking down in Puerto economic' and social welfare of Rico. the people he serves, as well as Father Illich said the deteri ­their spiritual welfare. oration of the family in Puerto

The conference drew special- Rico was shown by the fact that, ·tsts from East Asia, Africa, Eur- whereas in the U. S. one of five ope, Latin America and the marriages end in divorce, in United States. In attendance' Puerto Rico the ratio is now one 'were ex~rts in such fields as out of four. marriages. sociology, economics, social an- Jesuit Father Marion Ganey thtopology, agriculture, labor of' Gillespie, former missioner relations, public health, mission- in the Fiji Islands described how ~logy and dogmatic theology. he helped save many of the

The delegates heard Msgr. natives from the toils of local ,Luigi Ligutti, executive director loan sharks. It was done largely

of the rural life conference, de- through the establishment of clare in his keynote address that credit unions.

, the modern missionary must be The Jesuit missionary worked "all things to all men." in the Fiji Islands from 1953 to

Breaking Down 1955. He said the islands are "The missioner is another just emerging into a money

Christ," Msgr. Ligutti reminded economy, yet the credit unions them. For' that reason, he con- he helped to establish had tinued, "he cannot be only the achieved a remarkable record Christ of the soul. He must also by the end of last year. be the Chri!lt of the body. He _Christian Community must be the Christ of the sick, Father Ganey said the results the Christ of the poor. He must showed that people had "enorm­work to elevate and spiritu~lize OUS, possibilities for helping a· depraved natural order." themselves in the face of social

The importance of training and economic difficulties re­and using the local laity as gardless of how primitive they leaders was stressed' by Dr. may seem to westerners." Thomas O'Dea, sociologist from They also prove, he said, that Fordham University. He warned the greatest gains are made against a paternalistic attitude when people are helped to help on the partVof missioners, de- themselves through agencies claril,lg that too often clerical they control themselves. dress causes dependent attitudes Bishop Joseph Blomjous of on the part of underdeveloped Tanganyika reminded the con­communities. . ference that the real aim of

Father Ivan Illich, vice-presi- mission work is not merely to . make converts, but to establish

Columbian Squires the Church~the Christian com-

Elect Robert Silva m~~~~~p Blomjous urged in-The newly re-activated Bish- creased anthropoligical studies.

op Feehan Ci.rcle"" No. 168, Co- so that native cultures will not lumbian Squires, selected its be lost under the impact of officers recently at its initial social change. meeting in the Catholic Com- r-----....------ ­munity Center, Fall River.

The following were elected. Chief Squire - Robert Silva' Deputy Chief Squire - LUdge~ Roy; Burser-Paul Charland' Marshall --;- William Desmond; Captains-Steve Kozak and Al­an Manning; Auditors-Paul Du­tra, John Foxx and Charles Sul­livan.

The Circle is sponsored by Council No. 86, Knights of Co­

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4 -THE ANCHOR-Balimcing the Books Thurs., June 12, 1958

New Coillection of Ess,ays Urges Catholics

Attacksl\4oder'n Writers To StrengthenBy Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy'

Whether he realizes it or not, every nov~list has a Social Action, AUSTIN (NC)-The time hall

oome for Catholic Amedcans ktphilosopry of life: that is, he subscribes to a s~t of postu­lates concerning th(~ nature of man, the source and the end

search their consciences to helpof his being, the purpose of hU,man life, the, good life and a troubled world. its laws, etc. And that phil­ .John Q. Adams, noted CathollePage family. Its present, owner

·osophy of life, again whether and .editor is Henry Page, a layman and president of the Manhattan Refrigerating Com­he realizes it -'Or not; under­ small middle-aged man keenly pany of' New York, declareddevoted to his cQmmunity, hislies, informs, and shapes the that "never in the history of thepaper, decent journalist.ic stand-'Interpretation of life which he U. S. A. have Catholics had suchards, and fre,edom of the press.presents in his fiction. a unique chance as now to ful­Henry has a wife who is indif­This is the ' fill all the expectations thatferent to his ideals and sociallythesis of a lec­ their fellowmen put into them."ambitious; a giddy' teenage·ture which the "Our. fellow Americans anddaughter; and a son who haswriter of this the people of the world expecthad a mental breakdow'n, fromcolumn g a v e something from us, somethingwhich he has recovered with the many tim e s more than we have done untilhelp of a girl of lower class some years ago. now," he asserted, adding Cath­origins, whom he has subse­The body of the olic Americans are' failing be­quently married. In Hedlestonlecture took up cause:and its environs Henry is avarious philos­ 1) "We are lacking in clear,much respected figure, a symbolophies of life as recognition of our responsibili ­of stability and rectitude.found in then AID BOLIVIAN MISSION: Auxiliary Bishop Charles ties, and we are lacking ill

'Roaring Climaxcurrent novels. action.A.•Brown, of SaItta Cruz, Bolivia, Maryknoll missioner from 0All of a sudden one of theNow there ap­ 2) '''There is ignorance in theLondon press lords, the pub­ New York City,presents a pair of8il~er vases over 250pears a collec­ field of social consciousneaa

tion of essays by Edmund Fuller, lisher of several mass circula­ years' old to Msgr. Anthony P. Wagener for Bishop John P. among Catholics." •tion, sensation-mongering sheets,entitled Man in Modern Fiction Treacy of La Crosse, Wise., who made possibl~ a Church 3) There is· "faulty thinking

(Random House. $3.50), with make,S Henry an offer for the and rectory rec~ntly dedicated at Santa Cruz. Father In the question of race relations." IIOmething of the same idea, al ­ Nort.hern Light. Henry is mysti ­ 4) Catholics lack a spirit OIlJoseph Walijewski (in tropical white cassock) a La Crossethough far more fully llnd au­ fied. Why should this c'olossus "real teamwork" in their rela­

be interested in a plodding pro­ Diocese priest on mission leave is at extreme right. NCthoritatively. treated. tions with other groups, boUl Mr. Fuller, points out that vincial paper? The offer is re­ J>hoto. .majorities and minorities.

until about 50 years ago what fused. Declaring that "the time has may be called the traditional Then the press lord's goon come to search our conscienCe,·

squad swings. into ·llction. I The Cardi~al Tisserant Sees America view. of man was held by' most Mr. Adams called for an intensi­n~elists and reflected in their paper is going to be acquired fied social action based on prin­

by wbatnver' ineans, for Lon­ Witnessing Rebirth of Culturework. _ e:iples enuQciated in the papalIn this view man "is a'created don kno,ws, as Hedlestori does ROME (NC) - The United the U. S! on four occasions point­ encyclicals.

being, with an actual or poten­ not, that a nuclear reactor plant State is witnessing a rebirth of ed to an enormous increase in the tial reiationship to his Creator. and a huge 'housing development culture, Eugene Cardinal Tis­ ~nrollment of universities and

are coming into the He<UestonEach man is a unique person. 'serant, Dean of the Sacred Col­ colleges, advances in library Man is seen as inherently im­ area - providing a huge new lege of Cardinals and Librari ­ sCience, the great production of perfect, but with immense pos­ field for circulation and profits. an and Archivist of the Holy cheap paperbound editions of the sibilities for redemptihn and re­ Poor Henry is Sorely tried. Roman Church, has said. classics and the trend to indus­conciliation to his Creator •.• The villains bludgeon him, box . Speaking at the American try-supported university pro­He inhabits an orderly universe. him in, attack ~im aiong every Council of the International grams.

"His fundamental moral laws are University of Social Studies, "It is my business to be real­avenue, even that of his family. At last it seems that he can holdcommands of his Creator." commonly known 'as Pro Deo, istic. To accomplish an acto!them off no longer. But thenBut now many novelists hold, the Cardinal praised the culture justice, I must conclude that' inthere is a roaring climax, out ofand communicate in their work, which lies beneath the "external the field of culture America iswhich Henry emerges t~e win­an entirely differentyiew of appearances of this mighty tech- witnessing, a renaissance far

man. That is, man is,seen "as an ner""'::but also, in an acute per­ nological nation." , more important. than its work iD ironic biological accident, inade­ sonal sense, a heavy loser. 'How­ There' are intellectual and the field of gadgets."

ever, his integrity and that of hi.quate, aimless, meaningless, . '.• spiritual riches in 'the U. S., he morally unanswerable to no one, paper are, preserved. Nid, which' are. now being ex­elasped in the vise of determin­ Mr: Cronin here gives us an­ ploited without any fanfare' or isms economic or biological. other of his fast-moving narra­ pubHcity.

He is ,not a creature of God; tives. It may lumber. It may The Cardinal, who has visited he is not a person; he is essen"­ lean excessively on improbable tially sub-human, a merl! animal coincidences. It may ~, prac- tain happiness for himself' and or a mere machine.. ,tically a classic catalogue of for .... his downtrodden people!

./ Cites Examples cliches. Its characters may be Erika set to' work, to that end, paper-thin contrivimces. Its 'big . surreptitiously seeking helpThat such a view obtains scenes may be quite implausible. from the Indian ambassador. But it moves and is garish. This

widely among' novelists .- and / She' had to leave Nepal before I

is genuin~ mediocrity, and emi­playwrights - Mr. Fullf'r can

her schemes came to fruition. example after exampll~. The nently salable. But eventually they did So. The

, sensitive reader will be horrified

readily demonstrate by citing

Entirely True? king became king in fact as well by some of th~ examples, even It is hard to make up one's as in name; the fresh winds of though they are but sna,tches or mind about Erika and the King democracy began' to -' blow summaries of a book or a short by' Erika Leuchtag (Coward­ through the country;' _tory. McCann. $3.95). Not as to She had little contact with

Mr. Fuller gives the fallacies whether or not it is interesting; , the king thereafter; his' death in which are the.... intellectual roots it is very interesting, despite its 1955 crushed her. But she had' of so much contemporary fiction, debt to Anna and ,the King of done her historic work.

This amazing story i.t;, com­• rigorous examination. He Siam. But,. rather, as, to just shows up their poisonous falsity. how much ,of it is strictly true: pletely told. An exotic setti'ng He has a field day criticizing Miss Leuchtag is a German, a and unusual people make it the novelists, critics, reviewers, and physiotherapist, now, it seems, more absorbing. There are gush­prize juries who have glorified in her late forties. She fled from -ing passages here and there, but anti-humanism and, 'indeed, the Nazis and eventually settled in the main Miss Leuchtag it!

nihilism. in India. In 1948 she was asked matter-of-fact" However, the He is especially savage- in to go to' the kingdom of Nepal doubt remains in the critical

dealing with Philip W)'lie, to give trea:tments, to one of the reader's mind-was this woman' "America's. number one cocktail ­ king's two wives. as responsible for great even_ party-style philosopher," ,and the She vividly describes the jour­ as she suggests? pretensions of other celebrated ney, across, India, into the re­artists and commentators are mote and fabulous- fastness of mercilessly exposed. Nepal, and finally to the capital Be thou faithful

Th~s is a brisk, bold frontal v' city. There she was excellently unto death, and attack on a sickne~s of the mind housed and provided for. Sh~ I will give thee which has given us a litel'atul'e was first received by the. prime Hfe crown degrading man. minister, who, she learned later, of life.

1\lore of Same was actually ruler of the c,oun­Apoc.2:10try. The .king was the prisonerA. J. Cronin goes on turning

of this despot, a nd allowed' toout the sort of novel with ~'hich live only becaus~ he was sup­he made his debut about 25

, posed to be the incarnation of' JEWELED CROSS .'~"::::'it years ago. He writes as if Joyce COMPANYa ,god. had never existed, or Camus, or ' NO "TTLEIORO, _""ASS.Fif)ally Erika got to the pal­ M""NUFACru~US OFNorman Mailer, or James Jon,es.

ace., There, in incredible luxury, ~ CRUCIFIXES ANO ARTICLES'" DEVOTION'Art means, nothing to him, and pined the king, a marvelouslyhis single 'objective appears' to handsome man surrounded bybe to give people "a good long marvelously beautiful queens .J;. Electricalr.ead," as melodramatic as the and ladies in waiting. Beforestage plays of the t~Jn of the starting to m~ssage the ailing - ~~ Conl,odorscentury. queen, Erika taught the kingAnd he always meets with how to. dance. He, was most ~~popular response. I doubt that

. grateful and showered her with any of his many books h~s failed gifts.to be a best seller, and w'ould not

predict such failure 'for his latest, ~aAmazing Story The Northern Light (Little, Soon she was an intimate of Brown. $4). the royal family. She was also ~~

The novel's title is the name of their :ierce partisan. If only the­ 944 County St. ~ • paper which, for generations, king could throw off the yoke of has been published in the Eng­ the prime minister, become' a New Bedford ' lish city ofHedl€~ton by the constitution'al monarch, and 8t­

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1'ME ANCHOR­ 5 rn,urs., June 12, 1958

Feels Formalism Is· Big Obstacle In Life roday·

BALTIMORE (NC)-The most serious obstacle to Christhm living today is -'formalism," an internation­ally famous liturgist said here.

Jesuit''Father Johannes Hofin­eel', head of the Institute for Mission Apologetics in Manila, now on his fifth visit to the United Slates as a guest lecturer. at the University 'of Notre Dame Summer school of liturgy, de­8Cribed formalism as:

Maze of Gadgets "A deep sleep induced by

following a routine, mechaniCal .et of operations and jobs, with­~t a realizati'on of. the vitality and urgency of really living with God. We are so busy with a1perficial things, we work only on the periphery of life, so that we can't begin to live in the Important things. We are lost In a maze of gadgets, and just don't know what is important.

''This is even mirrored in the Jlturgical and catechetical apQ9­tolates. Some of our own people are so concerned with questions .. lace 'fersus linen, or chant versus polyphony; that they have lost worship, and are seek­ing esthetic experiences. Some ·lieachers ",re so concer,ned about technique that they have .lost the 'good news about Jesus·...

Papal Concern "The Eucharistic fast, the He­

..toted Holy' Week liturgy, the hi-lingual rituals and all of the modifications which the Holy See has provided, are all based on the needs of the people today. .lust this year, the Holy See has liven the Bishops of the Eccle­siastical Province of Agra; in North India, several permissions which show a desire to remove the causes of mere formalism.. They can now sing the Kyrie. Gloria, Creed, ,Sanctus, Bene­dictus and Agnus Dei in the people's language during a Sung High Mass. , .

"Also in a Sung High Mass, «he celebrant, immediately after he has sung or read the Latin of the Epistle and Gospel can turn towards the people and read or sing it in their language. Per­haps, even more significantly, they have the permission to read all of th"e Scripture Readings during Holy Week in the native tongue. When we break the Bread of the World of God to the P I f G d in their owe

}'IRE CAUSES EXTENSIVE DAMAGE: Ajire believed started from a plumber's blow-torch caused extensive damage to St. Anne's Church priory in FalI- River. Water

.damage was great, especially in the library. Here, in the left photo, Mother Pierre Marie and Sister Madeline CIa-

Kelley Spea·ker At Breakfast

One hundred and fifty mem­bers and adult advisors of· the st. James CYO, New Bedford, received Holy Communioll and attended their annual Commun­ion breakfast Sunday. The Mass was celeL:'ated by Rev. Edward C. Duffy, spiritual. director.

Speaker at the breakfast was Fred Kelley, director of the' physical education program of the New Bedford School Depart­ment. .

CYO parish president, Michael Zajac, presented Rt. Rev. Msgr. Hugh A. Gallagher, pastor of St. James, with a spiritual' bouquet from membe,rs in recognition of his being made a Domestic Pre­late.' Other 6fficers of the CYO are Darnell Travers, vice-presi­dent; Phyllis Boudreau, secre­tary, and John Regan, treasurer.

Adult advisors to the group are-Miss Mary Foley, Miss Mary Boyle, Miss Margaret Kinniery, Mrs. Shirley Kozik, Miss Mary Walsh, Miss Isabel Lima,· MiSi Agnes Ellison, Edward McGuire, imd Frank Baptiste.

Priests of'Diocese Donate to Stonehill

About $3,000 of a $5,000 mini­mum goal was subscribed ·at last night's first report meeting 01. the Fa,ll River Diocesan .Clergy Committee for the StonehIlI Col­lege Development Program. Rev.

Jaeop ego. ~ave taken alone-William H. Dolan, pastor of .;:~~:~.;r~m mere formalism, Holy Fa~ily Church, East Taun­tgwards a vital action." ton, chal.l·man, reported that the

funds raised came from 12 mem-Essential to People bers of the committee repre­

, "Bisho!,s and priests, always senting an avereage gift of $151 Iteenly conscious of the Pastoral each. .Deeds of their people, are ~om- More than 200 priests are be­Ing to see our wor~ as .espec~al,! ing contacted to subscribe to a Important from thiS vIewpomt, Memorial fund that will be used be said. "They are .beginni?g, to to construct, furnish and equip understand that a VItal Christian a conference room on the second w:orship ,ca~ b~ ~he source of floor of the new $325,000 Stu­Vital ChrIstlal! livm~, and tha.t a dent' Center and Cafeteria. The properly centered course of m- building now being constructed stru~ti~ns is essentitl to • on the 'North Easton Campua, Christ-centered people. will open in the fall.

Baptizes Parents· EAST LIVERPOOr" (NC)­

Father Joseph RUshton, newly ordained Ohio priest baptized hi. parents in the Catholic Faith the

_night before his ordination. Father Rushton became a con­vert to Catholicism while at ­tending high school. He gave hia parents their first Communion when he offered his first Solemn. Mass. .

mence of the Dominican Sisters. of Charity of the Presen­tation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, who staff St. Anne'. Hospital, watch at the height of the blaze- shown in the center. Rev. Rene Patenaude, O.P.. assistant prior, is at right. ,-

Jesus Mary Nun Visiting Friends in Diocese Continued from Page One

new regional tongue. This is ill addition to Hindustani, a corrup­tion of Hindi, and the innumer­able dialects of India.

But finding her way about thia linguistic maze has formed only a part of· Mother Mary Roland'. activities for the past eight years. In Baroda from 1950 to 1957, she' was first a teacher, then principal at the Jesus-Mary High School. ~rom 1957 until her return last month to the ·United States she was principal at the Congregation's school iD Dehra Dun. In September, .he will return to a new assignment as principal at St. Agnes High School, Bombay.

Teach Hindus She is the daughter of Supe­

rior CoU:rt Judge and Mrs. Eugene L. Jalbert of St. Joan of Arc parish, Woonsocket. Be­fore her foreign assignment she taught for, five years at Notre Dame parochial school, living at the Jesus-Mary Convent in Fall River, where her sister, Mother Mary Nathalie, .now is.

Before the majority left India, theo enrollment at the Baroda high school was mainly .Euro­pean, said Mother Mary Roland. . Now, of a student body of 500. only 65 are Gatholics. The rest ar~ staunch Hindus, but they are &ent to the Sisters for the bene­fits of convent. discipline and training. "I find Hindu children very respectful and easy to maD­age," noted Mother,

Build Jor "e Catholic children are ift ­

structed in catel:hism, but Gov­ernment reg·ulations permit the Hindus to receive only general moral training. "We do what­ever we can to make them lead

good lives," said Mother. "We are building for future genera­tions." ,

The community, has received many noteworthy pupils, in-

Spending Increases WASHINGTON (NC)-New

.religious constr'uction rose four million doUars in May over the previous month. A total of $65 million dollars was spent for new religious construction in May, compared to 61 million in ApriL However, new religious construction for the first five m~nths of 1958 amounted to $319 million· dollars, compared to $327 million for .tbe same 1957 peiiod.

What A·lie You Worlc'ing For? .WEALTH? ••• HONOR? ••• SECU~ITY?

The Capuchin Brothers'·are working for "a hundredfold and life everlas~ing".

Find happiness serving God here and in' foreign missions as sacristan, cate­chist, infirmarian, office worker, gar­dener chef, tailor, doorkeeper, carpen­ter eiectrician, maintenance· man, etc, Yo~ng men between .18 and 35 inter­ested in joining the Capuchin Brothel"ll to work for Christ. write 'to:

BIOCHEMIST: Sister Hil­ary Rose, D.C., shown in the lab of the U.S. National Lep­l'Q8arium at Carville, haa .pent 35 years research in this field. She has received the President's Medal of St. John's University, BrooklYL XC Photo.

_

eluding the youngest daughter of Maharajah Gaekwar of Ba­roda, reputedly one of the wealthiest men in the world. "She had a lovely time, wear­Ing a different sari every day," smiled Mother, "but then we in­stituted uniforms for the student body, 1IO that had to stop."

Flourishin&" Noviiiate The Bombay school to which

Mother Mary Roland will re­turn, one of six the Congrega­tion operates in the city, has an enrollment of 1,800. "But all

·schools arc called high schools," .he explained, "and the 1,800 are

'in ·a1l12 grades, with 700 in what we would term high school."

The Religious of Jesus Mary have 15 houses in India and sev­eral in Pakistan, with a flourish­ing novitiate in Poona, training native Sisters. Only four Amer­icans are among members in India, the other Sisters being from European houses of. the Congregation. Another Amer­ic~n with Fall River connections; Mother noted, is Rev. Mother St. Luke, formerly a student at Jesus-Mary Academy. She was Mother Roland's superior in Ba­roda and is now stationed iD Pakistan.

Dressed in her white Ip....

sionary habit, Mother spoke to students at Jesus-Mary and Notre Dame schools, telling of her Indian experiences, and ~on­trasting the 10 months it i'lOk the pioneer members of the Con­gregation to reach India in 1114:&

, with the 48 hours of her air journey. Her talks were high­lighted by her recitations of the Hail Mary and Our Father ie Gujerati. She and Mother Mary Nathalie, who is directress of the Jesus-Mary Glee Club and Notre Dame parish choir, then joined in singing India's national an­them.

During her summer stay here. Mother Mary Roland will visit friends and relatives throughout the East and make stops at vari ­ous houses of the Congregation.

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Page 6: 06.12.58

On Winning' Converts f, . . ,

According to the new Official Catholic Directory, which eontains the statistics on the Church in this' country for

I ' ,the last year, there were two hundred and eighty-one con­verts in the Diocese of Fall River, in 1957. ­

. That meaJ)s one convert to the Faith in this Diocese for every eight hundred. and ninety Catholics~ That does not Beem like a very good percentage of incre~se.

No one, of cQurse, can dictate the grace of God. No one can demand that Almighty God send His gift of Faith toa certain number of non-Catholics every 'year. No one can arrive at a mathnmatical conclusion aJ)d demand that God work according to this formula.

Faith is a free gift of God. But it is a gift that God will not force lipon anyone. The recipient can ~cce:pt it, or ~ject it.' ' , It is here that Catholics can do something to help the 'minds and souls of non-Catholics that the seed, of Faith may fall upon good ground,

If non-Catholics l~ee Catholics believing one way and acting quite to the contrary, they will not'be in any frame of mind to accept the gift of Faith. They will look upon the Church as a body of hypocrites. ,.,

If Ca1JlOlics are not able to explainJhe teachings,of the' Church, making the dogmas of the Faith acceptable, then t:he Grace ~f God is going to meet resistance from preju­.diced minds. ,,

If Catholics never think to ask a non~Catholic husband Gr wife or friend -if he has ever considered the Faith, then that barrier to the Faith may never be remoyed.

There are surely many sincere non-Catholics to whom God seems to be holding out the gift of Faith. But these people need help and encouragement ,to accept it. Their' ,minds may be filled' with mIsconceptions about the Church.

, They are trying- to look at the Faith against a background of prejudice and intolerance, and confusion. The soil of their souls needs wor.k and' preparation that the seed of Faith 'may be received "with a, right and gOod h~ ~eld fa.st, and bear 'fruit in patience," '" , . ,

U we have tried to clear away the barriers to the Faith in the lives of others by giving good, example, by showing the Church at its t>est in our lives, by encouraging ,and explaining-if we have tried to do' t~is and God ha.s not-' given t}:1e gift of- Faith, then we have done all we can. If, however, God.is holding out the gift of Faith, to someone who touches our,lives, and we. have not Jl)ade the, accept­tance of that gift easy 01', indeed, have made it 'more diff­icult, ¢hen how can we be called worthy apostles and follow­ers and witnesses to Christ?

,Even granting that this DiOcese is largely Catholic, even granting that many of our associations ate with Catholics, can we believe that God held out the gift of Faith to only two hundred and eighty-one persons in this entire area last year? '

Wherein lies the fault?

Let' Father' Begin <Father's Day somehow runs a .very poor sec_ond' to,

Mother's Day in the sentiments that, it pI:oduces a:nd the resolutions 'it gi~es riSI~ to.

, Mother's Day sees all sorts of people praying -for their mothers living and dead, offering Holy Communion for their mothers, resolving to be more obedient or re8pe(:t­ful or thoughtful toward mother in the future.

The only oneS 'who approach Father's Day with relish are the merchants who insist that father needs matched clubs or a 'gold-plat,ed toothpick or at, least another tie,.

Americans are reluctant to wax' too sentimental about father. But they should~n Father's Day-take the same resolutions about obedience and reverence and thought­fulness that they do for mother.

And perhaps the fathers themselves can ,do, some­thing al:!out the day. Perhaps they can use it as an occasion of reasserting their rightful position in the, family;: Per­haps father can make a resolution, to assume his place as head-not dictator'-:'-but head of the family. Perhaps he can resolve to take more of an interest in the doings of his wife and children. Perhaps he can set the pace a.s the spiritual head' of, the family-setting an example of prayer and Confession and Communion and solid manly piety.

Father's Day should start with father doingaOm&­thing about himself. .

®rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

'Published Weekly by The :::atholic Pressot the Diocese ~t Fall River . ,410 Highland Avenue ' , Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0.'- Ph.p.,

GENERAL MANAGER' ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rev. DanielF. Sha!loo. M.~ Rev. John P. Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR ~

Attornl~y Hugh J. GOlden

The BTess;ng

'

The~Family Clinic .

Experience ,PrC)~es Wisdom 'Of 'Chu'rchMar,riage Laws'

By Rev. John L. Thomas. S.J. -, Assistant .Prolessor 01 Sociology

St. Louis University

, Why does the'Church erea~ such,a stJr about getting marr-ied? You'd almost think sh.,e was against it.. When, Myrtle and I went. to her Pastor about our marriage, he insilited that the banns had to be read in both our churches though we've, Jived· there have concealed a previous mar­most of our lives. To top it riage or some other impediment loff, he wants us to come in and attempted marriage e~eft

though they were not free to do. for instructions. As if any­10. This tYpe is still around, asbody old enough to marry in any' experienced pastor will tellour day and age, didn't know you, sci the Church tries ,to pro­what he was tect its innocent members fromgetting i n t o! them by this rule.Why 'do~n't

the C h ur c h Both Must Understand drop' some, of Second, you are surp~ised that these outmoded the pastor insists on giving you customs? instructions. - You 'feel that

I suppose a Myrtle and you know what mar­good number of riage is about or you wouldn't' you ll' g people enter it. You're probably right, feel as you do Jack, but there,are several other

" a b'o u t many points to consider here. ~Church I a w s The pastor used these instruc­governing mar­ tion periods as an / additional riage, Jack. Of means of finding out if impedi­eo~rse, the obvious, answer is • ments to a valid contract exist that the Church has been in the and also to assure himself that marri~ge business for about 20 both of you are entering mar­centurIes and probably knows riage with full knowledge and the ins and outs of the trade eonsent. He cannot in conscience pretty well 'by now. officiate at the ceremony unless ,

Experience can be a good he does this. teacher, particuarly if people Furthermore, - Jack, I ihink are willing 'to 'learn. And you must recognize that niar­Churchmen have ..been willing riage involves many new'situa­to learn because they are deeply tions having serious moral im­interested in saving Souls and plications. Both of you must in protecting the dignity of a clearly understand the rights sacrament. , and' obligations you ;Ire about to .

The rules of which .you speak, acquire. .Jack, are' not mere residues or Finally, 'marriage is a sacra­earry-overs from the distant ment, and your pastor will want past. . The Code' of canon law to make sure that you know

I which embodies these rules is ·what this means. As a way of , revised according to changing life leading to perfection, it in-'

eonditions and times. eludes both aids' and obstacles The last big revi'sion of the to mutual sanctification. It is

Code, was published in 1918, and well to review these now; lest frequent minor changes, have you miss the full flower~ng of beef! added since then, so· its your life, together. laws can hardly be consic:lered Considering the Church's posi­outmoded., . tion from another viewpoint, we

Banns Protect Contract' ean see that the banns and in­, Now, let's take another look at structions serve an additional your' problems. You feel' the purpose. Because of the delay publication of banns in your case they necessarily involve, they is not necessary. help prevent those thoughtless,

As you probably have been hurried -marriages all too com­tQld, the C~de states that on ,mon today. three successive Sundays, or Studies have shown that the feast days of, obligation before requirement of even a relat.ively marriage is to be celebrated, brief delay cuts down the num­the names 'of those" who are 'ber of civil marriages consider­about to contract marriage must ably. We have no reason to be announced at the principal doubt that the same factors are mass, and the faithful are in­ operative among Catholics. formed that they arc gravely You may be interested, Jack, obliged to make known to the in hearing of an expetience I proper authorities any' impedi­ had .concerning the Church's ments or reasons why this rules on this point. I was asked eouple~ should' not marry. Only to lecture on the Catholic view­the, bjshop, call dispense ',from point before a graduate sociology the publications of ,the banns. elass 'in one of our large secul'ar

Why does the Church insist on universities. the banns? Obviously, to' pro­ As, I discovered from the ~m­tect the marriage contract.,'Ex­ ments afterwards, all 'these ' perience has snown thatJlOme young, sociologists, were greatly

,6 -THE ANCHOR Th'urs., June 1), 1958.

Weekly.Caleridar Of Feast Days·

TODAY-St. John of St. Fa­cundus, Confessor. He was a Spaniard who became a hermit of the Augustinian Order at Salamanca. He was noted for his devotion to the Mass. The power of his preaching brought about a reformation in Salamanca. He denounced the impurity rife at the time and went to his death iD 1479, poisoned by a woman whose companion in sin he had converted; 'TOMORROW-Feast of the

Sacred Heart. This occurs eight days after Corpus Christi' and commemorates the' love and sac­rifices 'of Christ for the redemp­tion of mankind. Generally this' date is the feast of St. Anthony of Padua, Coi'J.fessor-Doctor. He was born in 1195 in Lisbon, joined the Order of Canons Reg­ular at an early age and trans­ferred to the Franciscans in 1221. Prompted by a desire for mar­.tyrdom, he set out for Africa but a storm brought him to Italy. There under the guidance of St. Francis ,of Assisj, he began a great 'career as a preacher and worker of miracles. He died in '1231 and was canonized a' year later by Pope Gregory IX. He was declared a Doctor of the Church by Pope Pius XII.

SATURDAY - St. Basil the Great, Bishop-Confessor-Doctor. One of the most celebrated of the Greek Fathers, he came from a family of saints, best known of whom are his brother, St. Greg­ory Nyssen, and his sister, St. Macrina. He was born at Cae­sarea in Cappadocia, Asia Minor, and became Bishop of Caesares 'in 370. 'He was known as the father <of monastic life in the East and combated the I Arian heresy. He died in 379.

SUNDAY-St. Vitus and Com­panions, Martyrs. St. Vitus, a child, with his nurse, St. Cres­centia, and her husband, St. Modestus, who had instructed the boy' in the Christian Faith, were driven from their homes by his parents and forced to flee 'from Sicily to Italy. There they were imprisoned and suffered martyrdom for the Faith under Diocletian in 302.

MONDAY-SS. Aureus, Justina and companions, Martyrs. It is believed they lived before. the seventh century. During an in­vasion by the Huns, St. Aureus, who was Bishop of Mainz, and S1.. Justina,' his sister, and others were driven from the See. On 'his return, his zeal for Christian­ity aroused certain evildoers and while he was, offering Mass, he and his sister and a number of ,others were murdered ,ill church.

TUESDAY - St. Antidius, Bishop-Martyr. He lived in the fifth century, and was a disciple" and the successor of Sf. Froninus in the Diocese of Besancon, east­

'ern France. He was put to death by marauding Arian vandals at Ruffey, where his relics are en­

, shrined. 'WEDNESDAY - St. Ephraem

of Syria, Deacon-Confessor-Doc­tor.' He was born in Mesopota­mia and became a monk while a young man. He attended the Council of Nicaea in 325 as a deacon. The chief place of his work was Edessa, where he taught school and became famous for his oratory and poetry. He died in 378.

Last in Red World LUBLIN (NC)-Catholic Uni­

versity of Lublin, in Poland', the only remaining Catholic' univer­sity in the communist world, will hold a two:'day 'celebration next Septe!Ilber to mark .its 40th an­niversary.

impressed by the wisdom of the , Church in requiring banns and

instructions: 'They all Celt that Catholic couples' were 'getti,ng a

. real break here and wondered whether the practic'e couldn't be generalized. '

I believe if you give it, a , little further thought, Jack, both

you and Myrtle will recognize 'that the Church is doing what it can to help make your mar­riage and· that of other couples a real success.

Page 7: 06.12.58

THREE FORMER PUPILS OFFER JUBILEE MASS: Sister'Mary Louise, SS.CC. receives a spiritual bouquet from Rev. Damien Yeary, SS.CC. as Mother George, SS.CC.. watches. The officers of the 'Mass: Father Yeary, celebrant; Rev~ Benedict F. Folger, SS.CC., deacon; and Brother Robert Caton, SS.CC., subdeacon. The testimonial following the' Mass was sponsored by K of' C Damien' Council 4190 of Fairhaven and Mattipoisett.

Installation of New 6ffi~~rs .

The Parish, Parade' SS. PETER AND PAUL, ,tor Rev. Maurice Lamontagne FALL RIVER addressed the members briefly.

Mrs. Emond and her co-officersMrll. Rocco Postiglione is were presented gifts: ,chairman of the committ~e plan­

ning the outing to be held We~­ There will be no Guild meet­nesday, June 18, at Stone Bridge ings in July and August. Inn. Reservations may be made ST. JOSEPH'S.by contacting any officer of the

.FALL RIVERdub. The second annual Corporate

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST. Communion of St. Joseph'.CENTRAL VILLAGE Men's Club will take place Sun­

The annual banquet and enter­ day at the 9:30 Mass. Members tainment of the Ladies' Guild are asked to assemble at the will b~ held next Wednesday at Parish Hall at 9 o'clock and White's restaurant. Co-chairmen march in a body to the Church. are Mrs. John Costa and Mrs. Breakfast will be served im­

mediately after the mass in the A meat loaf supper is sched­

E. P. Whitty. Hall. James F. Bullock, this

uled for Wednesday, June 25. year's chairman of the Catholic Charities Appeal, will be thein the parish hall. . speaker.Entertainment for the June

meeting included vocal solos by ST. DOMINIC·S.Mrs. Richard A. Violette, ac­

SWANSEAcompanied by Mrs. E .. B. Sand­burg. C.Y.O. Director Mrs. Hen­ The annual banquet and in­ry Schelter announced that the stallation of officers of the Wo­weekly meetings of St. John's men's Guild were held last night. group have been cancelled until The following officers were re­September. - elected and installed: MisS Jane

Plans are being made to attend Borden, president; Mrs. Manuel a Red Sox game in Boston. A Caton, secretary; Miss Alice series of Record Hops is planned Pacheco, treasurer. Mrs. Irving by the C.Y.O. for June 27, July Riendeau was elected and in­18 and Aug. 29. stalled as vice-president.

The installing officer was Mrs.OUR LADY OF GRACE. Raymond Hayworth and Mrs.NORTH WESTPORT Alphonse Ruggero was the mar­

Mary :-~. Fonseca was guest shall. 8PCaket and installing officer at Invited guests included Rev. a recent meeting of Our Lady of George E. Sullivan, pastor of St.Grace Guild, North Westport. DOminic's Church and Rev.

Guild officers for the coming James. F. McDerr.lott, adminis­7ear are Mrs. Winifred Robin. trator of Our Lady of Fatima president; Mrs. Beatrice Berube, Church, Swansea. re-elected vice president; Mrs. Margaret Goslin, secretary; Mrs. ST. 'JOHN THE BAPTIST, Loretta Vandal, treasur~r. FALL RIVER

The following were announced A style show featuring sack IllI new committee heads: Pro­ fashions highlighted the final gram, Mrs. Ralph Greenhalgh; meeting of the season of the Youth, Mrs. Briand; Sunshine Women's Guild following a mys­

'and Hospitality, Mrs. James Bar­ tery ride. Mrs. Eugene Hebert bOza; Spiritual, Mrs. Picard; was chairman. Luncheon wu Publicity, Mrs. Edwin Borden; served and prizes awarded. Reg­

,Membership, Mrs. Octave Pelle­ . ular meetings' will be resumed tier; Family and Parent, Mrs. in September.,Edmond Beaulieu; Discussion,

.Mrs. Clinton Lawton. 'Protestant SurgeonEntertainment was offered by

. "'The Three' Notes," the MisSes Wins·.Papal Honor Ciaire Martinville, Ma'rie P~card, ROTTERDAM' (NC)-Dt. P. and Claudette Vanasse, accom­ R. 'Michael, a non-Catholic pro­panied by Miss Jocelyne Cyr fessor of surgery haS been named who also played several piano . a Knight of St. Gregory the

'1OIos. Mrs. Florence Labecld Great. He received the papal lave comic selections. hohor for the wotk he has done

", 'Outgoing president Mrs. Lor­ fot'the Dutch Catholic National raine Emond and Guild modera- First Aid Society.' '.'

., 1ME ANCHOR- 7 Thurs.• June 12. 1958 .

Amer.ican People Must Understand Asians, Africans

DUBUQUE (NC) - When it comes to understanding Africa and Asia, the United States is

. "an underdeveloped area. "General Carlos :p. Romulo,

Philippine Ambassador to the trnited States and former pres­ident of the United Nations Gen­eral Assembly, made the state­-ment in a comJ:llencement ad­dress at Loras College.

"America's destiny," he warned, "may depend on understanding the crowded millions" who live in Asia and Africa.

He added that Americans have "very much to learn about the thinking 'and·· feelings 01. the millions who inhabit this huge area now' on. the rise iD: world power."

While Americans "need not necessarily agree with" these peoples. the General said, it is essential to "know what makes. them tick."

Americans must understand . the psychological scare 'left by

generations of colonial status, he declared, as well as "the terrible tensions created by the overnight jump from subjuga­tion to independence."

,TOUHEY'SI,'PHARMACY

75th Year '. ­

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Holy Family High Class of '33 Reunion Holy Family High School of bers preceded the dinner. Tele­

New Bedford climaxed reunion grams and letters were received activities for the class of 1933 from former classmates who over the weekend. A highlight could not attend the reunion. of the group's 25th anniversary Prizes were awarded to mem­was centered around a dinner­ bers of the class for accomplish­dance attended by 150 persons ments since 1933.

,including guests of the gradu­ Mr. and Mrs. Richard BalT7 ates. of South Dartmouth served as

A social hour prior to the co-chairmen of the Reunion. dinner allowed for renewing of with Mrs. Leo P. Lariviere and old friendships and memories Theodore R. Lariviere of New of high school activities. A mo­ Bedford and Mrs. Catherine P. ment of silence in beloved Fitzgerald of North DartmouUl memory of deceased class mem- comprising the committee.

MAKE IT A

SUPER-R.GHT TREAT

FO'R DADI Dad will be delighted with • tender, sizzling Ite.k « fulcir roalt of beef on hil day ••• Sunday, June 15. And for th.. matter, the rest of the f.mlly will Ihare in the treat, tool Whatever your selection they're .11 cut from heavy, _Ite... com-fed Iteer beef. "Super-Right" goodnesl that II guar_ teed to please. 'It's the right day ••• at the right prlca. You'll please the budget, tool

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Page 8: 06.12.58

ArOur Hou~~' ,," ."" ,::,;\:~~::"../)'~tt:~~~:'~~'R:~::i;~r~:'h'~;'"

Therapeutic'Va'lue11b';;'be::'R~&~:~ In'TeUing Troubles to :'O,~her~

- By Mary Tinley Daly' " " By peculiar coincidence, three letters arI'ived at our

house "this week from different parts' of the country but all with the same tenor: ,'"

"I just wish you'd try to write abou,t our house," wrote .. woman from Pennsylvan- paitent are calm and realistic.

_ia "We're having a heck of We try to be' the same way. '. .'

of a ~lme gettmg aIOl~g. My husband has been lmd off, three of the kids al'e sick. Family life is hard!" Fro~ a ~ea~er

1ft V I rg I n I a: "'Y 0 U m a k e raising a family lOund like, the proverbial

'::;~e ~~~; family is ideal, but we, h a v e tl'oubles."

From Canada: "'Doesn't a n y­thing 'ever' go wrong at your , bouse It sure does at ours. This 'has been A Da3', We've just learned that our oldest boy bas eye trouble' and will prob­

"

The postscript to the letter Ibowed that this mother could "cop«:"; "P,S." she. wrote, "I feel better just getting the whole thing. down on paper. The Lord

'will give me strength. Guess the old saying 'about, the b af:k s and the burdens will pro....! itself _to 0 K ?""

' .. " Most Undergo Surgery

. ',. O.K. we ~y to our Jlpend In

Canada, than~b~rfor her flettther and for remmdmg U! 0, e adage that "The Lord lltrength­ens the back to bear the bU,r-"

lien." We're ,ratefui, too, for. the.

letters' from Pennsylvania and Vjr~inia. ',' "

Pernaps we have been a little L.._ la-de"-da in the past few ...... columns, ., Pollyannalshness whjch,' we must confes:;, was a ..ere whistling before the wind.

There ,is ,o~e ~tention, for which we'd be mighty gratefultor the prayers of readers.,'

For some months now we have been faced with the fact that our

. 19-year-old Mary must undergo cOmplicated surgery for a seri-ODS back ailment. Under the care of an orthopedic surgeon­aince'Christmas, she has been in \ almost constant pain but has put off surgery until completion of freshman year in college; Now, the date of the -operation has been set.

Mary herself is anxicius only to have it over and cc,mments eheerfuUy, '''I'm so awfully lucky that it's fixable!" ,

The dOctor calls the condition. ~idableH but be llnd ,hi.

Perhaps, if- we seem to stress the, light, the' frivolous, we're trying too hard to hang' onto the "gift of laughter."

One Another's Burdens In a family column such as

this, even a weekly description' of what goes on in an ordinary

'-not an ideal-Catholic, family we believe should not be ~, much of an airing of troubles.'

~:~:es::~o~~:~~\:= ~g~; eolumns" with their "near Ann,. "Dear 'Abby" "Dea'r Mary'

every a tur ay afternoon an ably always h~ve.to w~ar glas~es, evening! Troubles as well as

Hayworth .. .'''" ,And there are' troubles and

-' bl 11 bo t ' W h' Pthro ems a tha 'lU US , etabelar

h,

em over e unc eon e,t t' i th k t,

a pat~ le~l nh e :~perr:;.ar e~ er e d P an

S'TvV A e .onke, , he rta Fl°th. n thm w a a ert h t h' "b t"

mus sear ad IS ox par Yd'

KATHLEEN E. CORRIGAN CLAIRE A. DUCHARMIi:

St M H" h S hiSI, . • cry s t ,Ig C' 00" enlOrS'

Win 'Scholqrship ahd AWards

, , 262 Tremont Street, was awarded

a four-year scholarship to Stone­hill CQllege: following a _com..'

t't' 't' A'~ pe lIve examma Ion. magna cum laude graduate, she was ac­ti·, 'd' Gl Cl b RV( , ~g~ge d I~ et, u ci

Four seniors of St. Mary's High School, Taunton, have been named recipients of special sChol~rships and awa'rds.'

Claire Ducharme, daughter ofMr. and' Mrs, Eli Ducharme of

,IllY mother-m"-law 15 commg confessions are poured into his. osary, u an ,rama ICS, an next week to ~make her -home ' , d h ' k' ' dly d "ce '. was assistant busmess manager, , '. ear an e gIves m a VI ~

with us' and the four littlest as well as absolution. ,- of the. Corona. ones have m~asles, and one of There's comfort in the mere 1 JudIth Megan, a magna cum

. 'em had chIckenpox already. til' f tr ' bl '" th' " 1 dy aude graduate, daughter of Mr. , e mg 0 ou es--as ea· d . ,Now, how would you cope WIth, from Canada found, _ and a an Mrs. Josepn Megan of 120 that?" th t' 1 . th d' us Broadway, has been awarded the , '. ,erapeu IC va ue m e ISC' ,- ' h' "

sion of problems that relieves Amannua.l sChAolars. IPt' ,glvefnub~ the tension. Though the listener, can ,encan SSOCla IOn ~ mver­not aiwayscome up with a 8Ohl- , ~t~ .Wo~en, Her c~rncula~ ac­tion, very often the one' with, tivltIell mcluded vIce-presIdent the problem CIJD see a',:ay of ,of fres,hrpan class, Glee Club, light, through the· clouds. ,cdrama:llcsS'h orchesbtra! Student

ouncl e was usmess man'Twas ever thus. ,Even back in . , -Biblical time~ we find "Bear ye ag~r ~fCorona. , one another's ~burdens;' SheIla McGarry, daughter of

.' '. Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Mc-And so, a la our. CanadIan. 'G f R t 4'4 R h "

friend' "I feel "better just get- arry 0 ou e ,ayn am, IS

'ti th h 1 th" g down on ' 'an alternate for a full scholar­p:;er" e. "':,.0 :nd I; chance'" ship to ~a~~erin~, Gibbs School.

k f 'Her actIvItIes mcluded Glee as or prayerL Club' and dramatics. She was

assistant literary edl'tor' of, Cor-G Old Members Meet UI, ' ona and student reporter for the

Student Council, librarian, dram­atics. She was news announcer, WPEP, and editor':'in-chief Of Corona, ,A cum laude' graduate,

"she has also been an acti,ve member 'of the' Girl Scouts dur­ing her high school years.

Members of the graduating class of '58 have registered at the

..following schools.

Liberal Arts Colleges Elsie Cayer, Patricia Cooper,

Claire ,Ducharme, 'and Linda Menoche, Stonehill College', Jacqu~line Bouchard and Bev­erly Tompson, Bridgewater State Tea,c,hers' College', Kathleen Corrigan, New Rochelle; Judith Megan' and Elaine O'Keefe, Regis; Patricia Goggin and Maureen' Van Zandt, Sacred Heart Schoot' of ,Education.

Schools of Nursing, Frances Corcoran, St.. Ann.'s;

Mary Lou Doyle, Beth Israel,' Na.ncy Griswold and Irene Mil­ler,' Ne,~ton..,Wellesley; . Le;e Jackson, Pawtucket Mem,orl'al Hospital; Mary Silva, Sturdy' - mo erMemorial.. of seven young children 'was

Elizabeth Tallent, MasSachu-' among the '162 students gradu­:,setts General; Claire. Tonry, ated from Mundelein College.

,She is Mrs. Patricia Runkle Kei-Saint Luke's; Mary o.'Dea, Prac­tical Nursing Course at MortonHospital;" Dorothea Sullivan,

'X-Ray TechniCiail Course, at At St.' Maryls Home Anchor. '. ' 'Newton-wellesley.

Members of the, Infant fill Kathleen Corrigan; daughter' Business Schools 01: Mrs. Dominic Corrigan and Corolyn Baker, Chamberlain.

Prague, Guild 01. St" Mary's _ the late Mr. Corrigan oi. 151 School of 'Merchandising an'd Home, New' Beqford, were en-' Weir' Street, was presented a Retaill'ng' She'la' M G ' d' tertained by the d~cinc dasI, ll)eCial book award by the Omi- ,I ' carry an 01. the Ho~e.,!,hechI1drell un.- . eroo Chapter 01. ,Delta, Kappa . Shir'ley Custer, Katherine Gibbs eollege last ,',Sep'tember. der the dIrectIon 01. Mrs. Kay Gamma for outstanding achieve-' Secretarial School; Rita Mastro-' Hanley Theg, with the assistance' ment in scholarship', leadership, marino, Franklin School of Arts r ~..1

and· S,ciences', Lorrain~ Traversof Mrs. James Hanrahan and and service to the' comuunity. FOR HEAlTH Miss Bernice Costa, ,presented a Her curricular activities' in- 'and CoreE!na Vargas,' Wilfied' , ' ,

,Academy. ' '- EAT program 0,f tap, rumba, .balle t, duded Glee ClUb, orchestra, pol~as and ballroom dancmg.

Mrs: Witiiam Berthold pre- Quincy College Honors, sided at the regular meeting 01.. K "d d the Guild at which Mrs. Dennis .. enne Y an Hopes Munroe pr~sented the slate of QUINe.. Y (NC) - Bob Hope officers for the eoming year.anq his wife were among thQse Elected and installed on Tues- honored oy Quincy College in day were Miss Mary Burns, pres- Illinois .at its '95th baccalaure­ident; Mrs. Gordon Bariteau, ate and eommencementexer­vice-presdent; Miss Florence eises.· -Rousseau, treasurer; and 'Mrs. I The pop'ular entertainer re-' Albert Silva, secretary. . letters "in recognition 01. his

Mrs. Pat Kwiatkowski' and ceived an honora~ doctorate of Miss Anne' Tompke wilL be in many benefit performances." , eharge, of the cake, sale which Mrs. Hope received' an award will be held' at the Star Store honoring her· as the Franc. 011 Saturday, June' 21. ' ,can wife and 'mot~er"of-the'year.

An honorary .doctor of law. degree also went to 'u~ 'S: Sena- ­

• tor John F. Kennedy of MallBil-' c:husetts. '

;-'---------'-------~-; : WEDDING : ~ GIFTS ~ -~ SOMEtHI~G DIFFERENT :­- KEATING'S ­~ ~

-~ Emily C. Perry -~

: 562 COUNTY' STREET : : opp. St. ,lawrence Church,: : New Bedford, Mass. ':

------~-----~---------_.­,HOLY CROSS' ACADEMY

\ Conducted. by the , Sisters'of the Holy Cross

535 Boylston Street . 1:lrookl1ne 46, Ma'ssa~husett9

:Resident a'nd Day School for Girls Grades 9-1% '

60th 'WEDDING ANNIVERSARY:' Mr. and Mrs. George , Affiliated: CatholicUniversiqDo LeBlanc of the Sacred Heart Parish, North Attleboro, . , Accredited: are piduredwith Rev. 'Edmond L. Dickinson;'who preached' '. New England Association.

the sermon at their anniversary Mass. They wereinarried PHO~E: SchoOl .. Lc) 6~627 , ConveJft IE 2-741'June 7, H~9ll in 'St,AiJ:thony,'a C~urch,-New 'J3edtord;, '-, .~ '.. '.

SHEILA It. McGARRY

, 0

,JUDITH T. MEGAN

M d " G d'0

U, n e em ra uate,S

Mother of Seven'; CHICAGO (NC) A th

ly, who received a bachelor 'of ts d

<ar egree.Mrs. Kelly left' Mundelein 'ill

,1947 to be married. With the help of a baby sitter to look after Michael, 9; Charles '8; Stephen 7; Kevin 6;' Peter ,4; Tom, 3, and M,ary Ann, 2, Mrs. 'Kelley was able to telur'D' ..

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Funeral' Home, ROS.ELAW...... 1"'11II •

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,CU fT ,0 RED P E A'R l '

'1U1', 14K,Gold·0 ''~'. '

DMP ,

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Price from 3.50 ;,,': .

';.1,' ';. '" tft,· ,",

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'.",·Zl ...~,:.. . -'". '. ". ., , ....

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.';;.l • .-',

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I •• '''" ., .

Page 9: 06.12.58

9 THE A"· ....O..- ,:-hday's, Fcnh~,' , Thurs.• June. 12, 1958

'S~9gests New J=:ringed Dres'ses Nurses Planning With Matching I-Ieadache Band Varied Pr~gram , By Ellen Kelley . .

Future activities for the Fan , The new fringed dress fashions for Summer are really River Catholic Nurses' Guild

IOmething! One lovely that I admired,the other day was include a cake sale on Saturday a shadow-cool black, imported lace over taffeta! It was and the manning of a first aid fringed from its square neckline to its hem. It's the type station at St. Anne's Church for

the benefit of the crowds ex­of, dress that when you dry' cotton bro~dcloth. They pected to attend services on theCharleston the dress dances, have a scoop neck, harem' hem feast oC St. Anne, July 26, too. and wide patent belt, are a dif- An August picnic and a Sep­

Furthermore, it has a fe~ent fashion first, available in tember reception for new Guild matching "headache band" that's wme red,: royal' blue or emerald members are also on the agenda utterly devastating. Incidentally, green w.lJh ba~k backgrOun~. announced by Mrs, George Sulli ­the "headache band" is one of Add a crisp white middy skirt van at last Sunday's corporate the new, delightful "minimum (in m~dern, drip-dry. pleats, Communion held at St. Anne's coif bands" worn so effectively proportIOned to your heIght) to hospital 'hapel, with Rey Ray­by all the gals from teener to your sUll]mer separates ward­ mond Corriveau,' O.P" as Mass grandmother! robe. ,~ad.e of marv~lous ne~ ceiebrant,

The pique coat' covers the sharkskln]/l Arnel tr18cetate, It Breakfast followed Mass in the flown makes news in, black' or 'fits those of. you who are 4 feet hospital cafeteria, and Mrs. Jerewhit~ cotton andois cr.isped with 11 iQches to 5 feet 2 inches in , V. Sullivan showed slides of a taft'eta lining! It's slim, simple height" Junior vers~on, and it" trip to Spain and Portugal.styling slips easily over the new too, flaunts a low-prIce tag. Guests for the event included fashion shapes of summer. The new white terry cotton 'Father Corriveau O. P. distributes Holy Communion to a the presidents from the New jou'll find it's a natural trav- cover-up jackets with matching , Bedford, Attleboro and Tauntunmember of, the' Nurses' Guild at their annual Corporateeler, too. Despite its high styl- terry slippers are popular new councils of the Catholic Nurses'Communion Mass. lng, it's price is delightfully beach-comers! The hip-length Guild; also a representative from modest! jacket sports two big, convenient the diocesan council. Members

One of New York's leading patch pockets and jackets and Doctor Says Oral Contraceptives of nurses' guilds from other _im suit manufacturers is fea- matching slippers come encased cities in the diocese were also tl,lring right now swimwear in in their own plastic plaid carry Can Cause Harmful Reactions in attendance. The breakfast

,women's sizes! So, whether case that inflates to a beach WASHINGTON (NC) -;- A completely unnatural and re­ 'arrangements were under the you're in for a,swim, or out for pillow! , chairmanship of Miss Eleanor M.Catholic psychiatrist and a fam­ pugnant to Christian thinking."the sun, you'd be wise to shop A clever idea for a graduation Higgins.ily life expert have given a The statements were made in these wonderully flattering sea:':: gift, bridesmaids' favors or ,for the light of an announcementwarrii~lg here about the physical Other chairmen for future_ ,oing fl!~hions. yourself, are the new "golden and moral effects of a newly which claimed that oral con- < events are Mrs. Oscar Dube and

These particular swim suits fashion hours" Swiss watches 'discovered "birth control pill." traceptives had proved to be as Mrs. Thomas J. Fleming, cake are youthfully detailed. All have enclosed in mesh or textured, effective as mechanical means sale; Miss Angela Harrington,,Dl'. John R. Cavanagh, ofstraps and skirts and are deftly gold-colored baubles on golden in preventing p'regnancy. One first aid station; Miss MargaretWashington, a past president offitted by way of "form control" chains. The watches, by the way,' commentor went so far as to .J"~'n1ethe Guild of Catholic Psychia­ QUinn, picnic: awl M;~~ units! They feature graceful are guaranteed for one year and say the new discovery "may Riley, reception for new mem­trists, said there has not beenlonger-lines to accent the beauty the price is startingly low! solve the problem of birth con­ bers.opportunity to assess the harm­of the mature figure. Vacation - perfect separates trol for Roman Catholics."fu1 effect of the new drugs.

They are, naturally, to be feature striped fashion strategy Dr. Cavanagh said' "from time Benefit for the Agedmost becoming, styled in deep, in cool colton match-ups! Stripes Completely Unnatural immemorial" some' individual A large gathering of membersvibrant tones - navy, brown, and solid-colors work together Msgr. Irving A. DeBlanc, di­ has attempted to devise ~ new ,and out-oC-town guests wereIreen and black. (Incidentally, to give you a breezy, colorful rector of the Family Life Bureau oral contraceptive, and that re­ present at the :t3rd annual bridgewhite and pastel-toned swim active summer of fun in the sun. of the NatiorlBl Catholic Welfare .cently investigators have turned and whist party of the Dame8Uits seem, to show up every They're available in two ver- Conference, said that beca'use to endocrine preparations. Patroness of the Sacred Heartextra ounce!) sions (in about all the shops!) the new ('ral contraceptives are Severe Reactions Home, New Bedford.

Cotton Gingham Popular One style features a slim- designed t6 control 'and prevent "These," J;>r. Cavanagh con­ Welcome was extended byPick a piq~ant pouf bow to lin~d, sleeveless mid~y (in, the menstrual period, ':they are tinued, "are, said in some in­ Mrs. Rodolphe Paradis, presi­top your summer curls in, the stnpes) aQove. a ,solId-color stances to have the ability to dent. Mrs. Frank Ch~rtier·.eolor or colors that complement short; flared skirt., The other Nun FirstWomon delay and, prevent ovulation." chairman, was assisted by Mrs. your summer wardrobe and style features a fit~d, solid­ These substances have legitimate Simonne Rousseau, co-chairman.you'll be prettily' hatted for "col?r, sleeveless, bodlc~ atop. a Graduate Dentist 'uses in the practice of medicine many, an occasion. Those I stnped, short, flared skIrt. With Winners of special priz~

in, the treatment of menstrualWASHINGTON {NC)-Sister 'were Mrs. A. Guenette, Mrs.aoted yesterday were crisp" tail- them you'll wear a striped-band disorders, which if correctedMary Simon Mehrl is the" first Rosaii'e 3urpri'mant' and -Misswed white cotton or soft rayon Breton straw hat or an equally might promote fertility. No con­woman dentist ever graduated Rose Esquinola.Wllvet many in misty pastels sma'rt, reversible car cap in

CORPORATE COMMUNION FOR FAI~L RIVER NURSES:

clusive evidence has been pre­from Georgetown University., ' and':-black. . , stripes and soli,ds! sented that~they suppress ovul­A popular city suit for Sum- C:olor Trans))~rencies She received her degree in ation. "There is some indirect

dentistry at the school's 159th'mer ill a cI:isp cotton gingham as 'The sweater,~ blossoms forth evidence that this is true. : commencement Monday.wonderfully was~able as ,your for 'summer iii many, many ,en­ "In one field oI study in which

hands al'td crease-resistant, toot ,chanting ways! Some of them, Sister Mary Simon, a native the drug was used in Puerto It's a two~piecer to w~ar to work, actually are made of sheer nylon of Dubuque. is a member of the Rico, 17 per cent of the patients into town for the day, for short chifl'oll .. some are softly tex­ Medical Mi'ssion Sisters, who had reactions of varying sever­travel, etc. I saw it and ad- tured' orlons .. come in short have their U, S. headquarters in ity. It should be borne in mind mired it - available in black, blouson or longer chemise fash' ­ Philadelphia. She is also the that upsetting the endocrine navy or brown checked with ions. ' Some are charmingly first member of hel' community balance to this' extent can, have white-a day or so ago. I was printed. some flaunt every color­ to be trained as a dentist. serious remote detrimental ef-' pleased, too, that it was available nuance' ,of a summer rainbow. ~ After training in dental sur­ fects. This drug has been so re­in misses' and women's sizes and Prices, by the way" are slightly gery at the Washington General cently used that there has been I marveled at its budget price! above the average.' Hospital. Sister Mary Simon no opportunity to assess its

Beauties of many an era have Flouncy nylon tricot, "night will be assigned to one of her harmIul effects." worn floating chiffon. Today;, 'shifts" are in our midst and community's mission hospitals. you can choose it in wondrous nothi~1g short of breath-taking! no-iron nylon. A charging Jun-, They're the new chemise gowns Fat! Riv~r Students at lor version features muted flow- with lace bodices and inserts of ers adrift on nylon chiffon over ribbo~ lace, on the' skirt, edged Manhattanville College taffeta and net crinoline. l' ad- with a wide flounce of pleated I Among the 122 students re­mired it most in Ciel blue but it nylon sheer net and lace. There's ceiving degrees from Manhat­was also available in orange, a baby doll pajama set to match, tanville Gollege of the Sacred IUnshine yellow and platinum all in summer-beautiful white, lfeart, Purchase, ·N. Y" -were white. It was Empire styled, had strawbelTy or seafoam,- in small, 'two Greater Fall River resi ­banded hjgh, round neckline, a mediuni large sizes. dents. They are Annette R. ....irred bodice and mock midriff, When' summer shadows fall LaCroix and Marion L: Torphy. topping fot a' bouffant, fully don a pure silk ,organza gown i~ 'M'iss LaCroix, daughter' of Mr, ..th~red skirt. ballerina ,or floor. length in one and' Mrs. Leo-A: LaCroix ()f St.

New I~ashion Firsi, of the ne~ and, fascinating Louis of France Parish, Swan..;Have you seen the new (and "color transparencies," filmed sea, majored in the History of

slightly bizarre!) bubble blouses? and furled in the most provoca­ Music and plans to do graduateThey're dramatic topping, for tively pretty ways .' • a gown work in music at Boston Univer­

,your separate skirts and, despite that's as romantic as a waltz. sity next September. She was ttJeir frivolous manner, worn In colors, white or shadow­ ,a member of -the College Glee with slacks and swim suits! Gay beautiful black --- and collect Club and the Pius X Choir. flowers swirl across crisp, drip-' compliments! Miss Torphy, daughter of. ,

Judge and Mrs" William A.Cathol ic Leader Says 'Americo"ns Torphy oI Holy Name Parish,' Fall River, majored in SocialUnacquainted with Moral Laws Theory. She too was a member

DUBUQUE (NC)-The cxec- give man ~he courage, strength oI the Manhaltanville Glee Club ative secretary 'of the Nati0l1al and wisdom to save himself." and Pius X Choil'.

~ouncil of C~th.O~ic Women says, Women must be alert to op-', ,

many of Olll clt~zens are. almost pose false and immoral remedies : '.~LUMINUM :totally unacquamted wIth t~e to the world's problems.natural and moral laws" despite '. ' : HALF-SCREENS :_I' great scientific knowledge. Cath?h~ women should ex-

Margaret Mealey observed ert theIr lI1f!uence through par­ , ~easured ' that the world has "rich re- ticipation ,in parish organiza­ :' and $4.50: -.urces and bounties" yet "three tions. : Installed :

to :_t of four of its ~eople go to Instead of condemning such , : up' 3!:d! bed hungry every night." 'groups as the United Nations, , , ,

Miss Mealey urged American UNESCO and other organiza­ :, T R,U -,

S E ~ L . -: women. to meet the world's tiOllS for international coopera­ : AlumiluimWindow Co. : pl'obleml in a three-fold way: tion for their imperfections,

Women must fulfill' their 'tra1.o' MiSs lYIealey added, people : 328 Durfee' Street, Fall River : "tional role "to hold the home should be aware of their il'eat : os 8-80!! Portsmouth 84 : w",~~_~_~,_~ ~, tluCetAel', to defend principle, ie potential fOr good. .

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Page 10: 06.12.58

I '

!; Conduct Pilgr;...age'nte Yardsti,tk'1 ;!:, ':~' I c" '~<q. ,.c,;:'

• .:, ' •

,To LaS:alette Shrine Praisesf:;Cor'dh1al',Strit(;,h's 'The second annual pilgrimage . ".. . . :i'~ • • 1!l'~' '~~"-r:/' '\ .,.,....,-

I of the Holy Name Societies of the Attleboro Area took place'Contribut,iions ::-t~ '"~"P~ace, SUilday, iJune 8, at 3 P. M: at

By Msgr. George G: Higgins La Salette Shrine iii Attleboro. 'Director Nc-WC Social Action. Dep'artment I St. 'joseph's Holy Name Society

of Attl~borr was the host unit.'Humanly speakiul(,' it was rather sad that Cardinal Rev. Rene Sauve, M.S., direc­

Stritch had to die in JRome;3,OOO miles away,from his own tor of La Salette Shrine, wel-' archdiocese. Much as he loved the Eternal City, where he corned the pilgrims. Members had studied for the prIesthood, he, loved Chic~go e~en marched in procession ;from the

chapel to the outdoor shrine and more. He ha~]jved in Chica- clear, in' a business ~onverSation again during 'the recitation of go longer than any other with several of us, from the the rosary. Rev. John Pelissier, place and must haVE! anti- NCWC staff, that, when he took M.S., missionary in the Philip­

. t d d"ing there sur- up his new assi.gnme~t in Rome, pines, preached the sermon. Theclpa e J. . • • ,he' had every mtentIOn of con­ Stations of the Cross were pre­rounded by hiS spIritual so~s tinuing, if not intensifying, his

sided by Rev. Rerie Sauve, M.S.and. dayghters, consoled by their lifelong intere~t in the field of . Rev. Henry R. Canuel, Diocesan

lovmg care and international relat'ions. . Director of the Holy Name So­solicitude.' That was at the end of Febru­ ci'ety, led the members in the~romano~her . ary. Less than three months recitation of th~ Holy Name

pomt of. View, later we are mourning his un- Pledge. , howeve~, it was. expected death, which charac- Benediction of the Most ' appropriate that teristically, he joyfully accepted _

Blessed Sacrament followed. ' the Angel of, , with tranquil, resignation to 'the Rev. Ubald Deneault, pastor of'Death, w hen Will of God. St. Joseph's, Attleboro, officiated, ' disPlltched,un- We h~IVe lost a,great spiritual assisted by Rev. Joseph Downey,expectedly . ,by leader ...c:... perhaps the greatest

the merCiful :leader the American hierarchy "LISTENS" TO A BOOK: John Bush will recei;'ehis "of our Lady of Lourdes Parish.. .in'Jamaica Plain as deacon and ' God Who or- has ever known in the field of ' 'B.A. 'degr~e,in speech from St. Ambrose Coll~ge, l?avenport,', by, Rev. Edouard Marcoux, M.S.,'

ders, "all thin~~ international relations. The Car- this month. Blind since birth,he is shown hstenmg to the 01.'as ,sub-deacon. The Deacon I wee t 1 y,' , dinal was intensely proud of his recording of one' of his' textbooks in 'preparation fo~ class. ' Exposition. was Rev. Arthur:s h 0 u l~' ha~e e at the very oyvn ,country arid never hesitated

Students and faculty ~embers have purchased a seemg-ey,e Lemieux, M:S.found HIS Em~nenc to say so publicly· when, the The, clergy in' attendance in-'center of Christendom,. 1 'proper occasion presented itself. dog for him. NC Photo.

eluded Revs: Cornelius Keliher, .p~esun:'ably it wdas In t~a~mhe~ , But there was nothing of the pastor of St. Mary's, Seekonk,'dUring hiS student ays, jingo' or the isolationist about

t quire . the' supra- ' . ' Urges Research, Program ,'t'o Learn" James F. McCarthy 'and Ed-.beg.an, 0 ac nd interests him. He,was a true internation­ ward Rausch, both of St. John's,national outlook a h' alist in the best sense of the

h · h' later years made 1m, . . Causes of Mental Re.tardation ' 'Attleboro. The choir of the La w IC In, ' f' 't word He firmly InSisted on our1 . 1 choice as the Irs . '., , . ' , WORCESTER (NC) ~ Money we are going to come up with Salette Seminary sang c during.the oglCa" . S' h obhgabonas Americans to share 'spent, for' research int~ t~e ,either the exact reason why' so the devotions and the entire pil-Chairman of the An:'erIcan IS - "our materIa'l abundance with the,''S . I Committee to Pro- ',', causes of mental retardation In many of our children are ,born, grimage joined ,in the singing of ;ops pecla ,poorer nations of the world and

children will prod~ce greater with mental ,or PQysical handi-, "Holy God, We Praise Thymote the Pope's Peace Plan. I he repeatedly, emphasized "the Over the years,' as ~e deve

l-· urgency, of our laboring without, v~lue than money spent to build, caps, or else. with a cure for' Name" at the conclusion of the '

d d deepened hiS know-. . . institutions for children thus af- some of them." exercises. ' " ' , ope an, "d" f the ceasmg for. theorgamzabon of edge and, understan mg 0, .t' 'international ,society under just 'flieted. ----:.,-~-----~-----:-.....:....:---'----------

ChristiaQ principles of"peace'hl laws whi,ch. will offer' help to .so said Archbishop,' Richard h B' h of Roml~ t e '," , . -- J. Cushing of Bost~n,at the 30th,w~s to t e" !S op earth .th~t he' the ,weak ~md, restram the st~ong

:anniversary banqu~tof-thec;ath ­VIcar of,9hnst on '. ' . '. ' among the nations andpeoples.u ,

eonstantly looked for, msplratIon , It 'was hisf~rvent prayer~in olic Daughters of America. d f ,.'dance It was then . ' "Archbishop "Cus~ing;acknow­an . or.~Ul .. 'n that he the ,words,opus February Invo­

"ledged' ,the value of 'special'provldel1tlally fltt! g. . ',.' cation~that the United States should Ii'~ye endea hI~, da~s In whose' traditions he" 'knew~ sChools for exceptional children~

, f' Vatican , ,','the ' ,,', .. but said 'they do not serve 'to,the, shadow 0 '. 'well and so' deeply respected " ,which ha~ done so ~uch to .pro- would live up to its "grave obli~ root out ~he -'causes' of retarda­

' "e' of, mternatlonal, , " mote the caus , . , gation of being the protagonist tion. He declared that research -.peace and international SOCial of genuine peace and the unsel- 'into the' causes would begin

within the next few weeks injustice. , . fish, active defender of the dig:' The Cardinal's .last pubhc. ap- nity and rights of the human the-Boston archdiocese.

peai-ance,' on the national scene, 'person.u ' , "I am personally convinced," was on behalf of a very worthy In calling attention' to Car­ he said, "that in God's good time,

eause in the field of internat!onal dinal Stritch's many contribu~ Reds I· n Pola nd relations. Just a few days before tions to the cause of interna- J. F. ST. AUBIN his appointment to Rome was tional peace and international LI·ft" R,e'gulatl·onsannounced' to the. public, ~ he understanding, I am merely came to. Washington to, deliver echoing" what' di;tinguished 'WARSA:W, (NC)' ~ Poland's Painting and the Iny,Ocation' at the W~ite i' ,leade.rs' of' ClIurch ,artd State'"7, Mhlister of E~ucatipn Wladyslaw " ," ',' Decorating,,House C::::onference on Foreign Cardnial Mooney, for example, ' Bienkowski has called on local Aid.:' ," and Vice President Nixon":':"have", eommunist authorities through­ 3d Court ',St.: New &dford I:

".1This beautiful Invocation was' ,already said a~out His Emiri«mce 'out ,the country to.tmforce gov-' , ,WY 2-3171

Christian principles, of pea~eately after his death. " '\ freedom ,of religiousinstr~ction , and a' fitting climax to the, Car- " 1 woul'd"like to add a pei-sona,1' in'''~hool~. "", , ;" dinal's distinguished; career ,as . ,word of gratitude for t~~ c0n.-~. ,.The off,icialaction came ,after the leading spokesman ,of the stant encouragement Hls"'Eml-, Catholic parents complainep that,

a m~sterful summary, of the." in !1tatemerits released, immedi- : ,ermnent regulations:, gi:allting

M; b~.KENNEDY American hierarchy, in' the field n~nce gave' to ,mlC,petsonally" local auth.orities continued to Window Companyof international relations; : and to my associates in the~ath-' place obs~ades,in.; the, ~aY, of :

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Page 11: 06.12.58

~mence~e~ti This Month I Spotlighting Ou~ Schools

MOUNT ST. MARY ACADEMY, nes Caron, senlor; Sandra Man­FALL RIVER deville and Helene Frechette,

Sisters ;,i Mercy and the stu­ juniors; Diana Flood, Margarida dents at the academy are grate­ Carreiro, Charlene Lapointe ful to their' JlIany friends and and' Muriel Monteiro, sopho": the general public for the gen­ mores; Gardenia Wojtuszewski erous response and enthusiastic and Dolores P.avao, freshmen. cooperation given at'the Annual This examination was admin­Bazaar, held on the school istered to 27,500 students grounds. The goal set was suc­ throughout the United States cessfully achieved. and neighboring countries.

At the High Mass celebrated at The commencement exercises the convent Tuesday on the oc­ will be held in the Academycasion of the Silver Jubilee of chapel at 7:30 P. M. Sunday.Ordination of Rev. John J. Mass for the graduates will be Galvin, S,T.D., the Liturgical celebrated on the followingChoir of the academy partici ­ morning. ,pated in the singing of the Mass, The Glee Club members en­At the recent meeting and joyed a wiener roast on Wednes­ NU1~ IS FAVORITE TEACHER WINNER: Sister Noreen, O.P., has been named theelection of the Diocesan Catholic day afternoon. This, however,Student Council, Geraldine winner of the Columbus Favorite Teacher Contest. Her Ohio'students and friends sent iB

does not' close their activitiesRodgers '59, was elected vice­ 39,000 votes to win her a 12-day all-expense tour to Europe accompanied by the school'.fro the year. On Sunday, Junepresident. ' 22, they will sing at Kennedy principal, Sister Mary Phillis, O.P., Sister' Noreen, eighth grade teacher, is shown witla

Newly-e,lected officers of the Memorial Youth Center; while, flome of her pupils looking over a set of the Encycl9pedia Britannica awarded her clasaAlumnae Association are: Susan the following ·Sunday, June 29, for ou~tanding work. NC Photo~ ,,Whalon '50, president; Mrs. will mark their final concert forHelen (Garon) Viveiros '52, vice-president; Joan Walker, '53, theseaso'n, at Gaudette's P.avil- Leona Morin, assi!Stant ,editor; Hungar,ia,:n,. Paper AS,serts Priests

ion, :A.cu~hnet. Margaret Spillane, Business'treasurer, and Pauline Johnsen '50, secretary. Manager; , Irerie Dubois, adver- A B tt 'T h Than Re'ds

SAINT MARY'S HIGH, tising manager; Carol Berard, re e er eac ers ' The anriual Communion Break­ TAUNTON' 'literaryeditor. , , ' VIENNA (NC)-A Hungarian' Hungary'S communist leaders.

fast for the Alumnae Association The junio.rs t~eated the seniors Jeanne 'LeClair, art editor; communist paper has admitted "We look silly," the articlewill be held on Sunday, with to a turLey dinner Wednesday Beverly Oliveira', photography priests are much better educa- said "when we hear that one 01"MaSs at 9 A. M" in the convent' night at the annual Junior-Sen- editor; Jeanne Richards, copy tors than the country's Red the'other' of our comrad'es at ­,chapel, foilowed by breakfast in ior Reception, held in the school editor; Joanne Silva, alumnae leaders. tends religious services, or thatthe academy cafeteria.

hall. editor. This admission was made by he goes to Confirmation, or get.The Senior Prom will be held ,The program began with, ad- . Rita Hutchins, '59, and Jane the newspaper Somogyi Neplap secretly married in church and next Monday evening at, the dresses by Rita' Hutchins, junior O'Hearne,"59, wtire the school's in an article deploring the lack has his children receive religio~Sheraton-Biltmore Hotel, Provio: class, president, and Rt. Rev. official deleg~tes at GQvernor, of interest in the private lives instruction. ' dence. Prior to the social, the Msgr. James Dolan,.,followed by Furcolo's· conference for the of party members 'shown by "But have we ever stopped ..seniors ~ith their escort~ visit

the presentation of awards to the, ' foundation ,of a Youth Council in the Convent chapel at 8:15. think? Why do, we not realizethe academy, meet the faculty, outgoing, Corona editors: Kath-, in Massachusetts. The discussion that from his' point 'of view theand dedicate their Prom to Our Following mass breakfast isleen, Corrigan, Editor-in-Chi~f;, was held at the State House in served to 'the group by the priest is a far better educatOl'Lady of Lourdes, in a traditional, Frances Corcoran, Assistant Edi- Boston. Additional meetings ,than our comrades are? He nevel'inspiring ceremony in the audi­ M "B' '11 b h Id' th F 11 jupior class committee, then the hesl'tates t'0 VI·S'I·t' even' communl' ­tor; Judith egan, usmess WI e e In e ,a ." entire student bOdy, seniors and ...torium, attractively decorated

for the occasioQ. Manager; El/!ine O'Keefe, Ad- ACADEMY OF T~E SACRED ' mothersasseinble at the Shrine f~milies,and to give them'., .vertising Manager; Carol Baker, " , , of the Sacred' Heart, for an Act sound taiking~to, an4 when thi8, '

JESUS-MA'RY ACADEMY, ,Literary Editor; Nancy Gris- HEARTS, FAL-. R~VER , fails to produce results he 'wiD 8 A AI Cl f 19"" of. Consecration. ' "

FALL RIVER wold, Art Editor;' Patricia .R.· umnae, ass 0, ...., openly condemn the 'deniers' ~, Cooper; photogr~I?hy Editor; 'graduating from' colleges this ,Cla~ Day Officers ehoSen' God' in his, sermons,'or he wiDA bilingual panel discussion

,Claire Tonry, ClUb', ~ditor; Eliz- month include the/following: from the group of honor" gradu- try to enlist, the help' of the was conducted on station WALE, abeth Tallent, Alumnae ,Editor;. Audrey, Jane Almeid<l, Pem- ates are as follows': Presiding family's relatives.Saturday; May 31;' at', 7 P. M. and Constance LaPlante, S~cial: broke; 'Judith Cl1ristine Ankar- Master of Ceremonies, Anne "Have we ever thought," theMsgr. Prevost High, Dominican

,Editor. The juniors presented ,a stran, Connecticut ,College' for Delaney;' Class Essay, Fernanda paper added, "of the large num­and Jesus-Mary Academies were dramatization of the seniors en- Women; Patricia Ann Byington Garreira; Class History, Jacquel- ber of our comrades who, to ap­,the three representative schools titled "To Be or Not To Be" and 'a'nd Marie Josephine Kelly, Re-, i!1e Bussiere, Mary Castro, Mary pear 'decent' to their acquaint­of Fall River who took part in sang a farewell song. ,The de- gis; Mary Amelia Furtado, Al-, Dunn, Catherine Howard; Class' ances and friends, have revokedthe symposium. Seniors Georg­ 0

parting seniors also sang a selec- bertus Magnus; Carol Ann Leon- Will, ,Lynne Collins, Elizabeth their communist convictions andette Campbell and Diane Caron tion of' songs to the' juniors. ard and Carline Ann Mello, DeFusco, Denise Jeunesse, Joan are actually going to church orwere selected as, school repre­Each junior sister presented her Framingham; P~tricia Loui~e Morris; Class Prophecy, Helen sending their children to thesentatives from JMA. senior sister a medallion of the Petrone, University of ~hode Is- Gannon, Mar-¥ O'Neil, Leslie teache~ of religion?

SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY, school emblem as' a token of land; Barbara Claire Phelan, SalVo, Rita Souza; Presentation ...·AIRHAVEN ' this memorable occasion. Salve" Regina; Marion Louise of. 1958 Janua, Leslie Salvo.

Members of the graduating Torphy, Manhattanville .college. The Senior Prom will takeTen students have been • OFFSETclass and their ,parents will at- At the elections for school place Monday e,v,ening, at theawarded achievement 'certificates LITHOGRAPHYtend a tommunion Breakfast in officers'for'185S':59 held at the New Bedford CQuntry Club. Mr.for outstanding work in the na­the schboL auditorium Sunday.", Academy, J\1I1e :6, 'the following and Mrs~ Joseph Delaney~ Mr.tionwide Latin examination

, Rt.· Rev,'. Msgr., James Dolan, m~mbers of' the Class of '1959' and 'Mrs. Leonard Collins" and • COLORsponsor~dbyAuxilium Latinum, pastor of" St: MaI-y's Church, were chosen by vote of ttieirMr. and' Mrs,;John A. Powersnational Latin classroom maga­ ·PRINTINGwill be the guest of ,honor., The classmates and faculty apptov-' will be chaperones. Lynne Col­zine. chairmen for decorating and pro- al: C~ptilin: of the School, Lu- iim and M;arg~ret Powers, are'Barbara Baker, sophomore, • BOOKS andgramming are Frances Corcoran, cretia Carreira; S9dality Pre- C9-chairmen ,in' c,harge ,of ,ar­has been award'ed a superior ,PERIODICALSPatricia'Goggin, Elaine O'Keefe, feet; Carol Religan;'Captain of, r~ngements,for'*eaffair.merit achievement certificate,' Irene Miller, Carolyn Baker, ,8t; Agnes'; Mary DePaola; 8t. , ' ,tnagna cum laude, for meritori ­ • WEDDING,ous proficiency in Latin:' Nine JilcqtIeline, ..Bouch~rd, Agnes', ~uad. ~ader~' PatricIa', f',C-O·-R·-,R··-E'·I··,A"·':":"',&·"-"-:~'·,s,,'Elise uO~:S'~ii' Cayer ~nd Kathleen Corrigan. Brindley'; Captain of 8t.Mar-' I~other' students received hOl)or­ INVITATIONS

able rrieritilc'hievemeilt cedifj':..'" •. Msgr.-'DoIan; ann,ounced at the garet's. ,Sandbi Seneca; 8t, Mar­cates,. cum laude, for 'general garet's Squad Leader, Beverley ',',,' : ONE' STOP , i ,

Junior-Senior Receptic)Jl the f\?I"'Corey; Shacady Editor,' Rita SHOPPING C~NTERI•proficiency in Latin. ' lowing stafffor ttie '59 "Corona":, WILLIAM and 2 ..~ STS.Faria; 'Janu'a Editor, Agn~s '. " 'T'hese' students are Mary Ag­ Ja,ne: O'Hearne, editor-in'-chief; 'O'Neil; GlE;e Club. President" "_ TelevisioD _ Furniture NEW B,EDFORD, MASS :Mary Boland; Debrabant Debate i- A..ppliaDces - Gr~cer:J ' Club President, Nancy Lafleur; !a, , , Orchestra Club President. Janice lOt Allen St.• New Bedford • Reynolds-Dp-\ValtFaria; Leader of Library Aides, -'. ~~~.!:,~~,~v_ ..! Mary Floyd. "

CI~ss DayE'xecises for the Graduates' of 1958 will take place Friday June 13 at three o'clock. The day begins with

'Mother and Dallghter Corpor­ate Communion for the Seniors

RECEIVES DEGREE IN HOSPITAL BED: Louis F. :.. Finucci of Fall River, injured in an automobile accident,

receives, his" Providente College degree from, Very ReV. Robert J. Sht~jn~ O:P.'; 'e9l1ege president,'at,St; :,\nrit'~lI..

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Page 12: 06.12.58

, Aclrnow·· •_ '::nt of .Pepend~n~;-;;;-CrE!atol<

VanrUcJrd St./C~ristopber Me,dol Sym~o~izes Faith'

By Joseph A. Greig Cleveland Unlver~ Bullethi

A medal of St. Christopher, patron of travellers, is eircling the earth in America's Vanguard satellite, which is expected to continue in, orbit for 200 years at least. - What is the theology of I th is sort of· thing? Has the medal anything to do with \he fact that Vanguard III succeeded, where Vanguards I and II -had failed?

Not the medal in' itself,' of eourse not. But the faith to which the medal testifies Is another mat­ter. To spurn that is to spurn Ute idea of ask­ing' the h~lp of God in human "., affairs. I

It is to miss, also, the deepest mennings of the United States of America. and the motives that moved the Pounding Fath~rJ and their treatest successors. Abraham Lincoln said: '''I have been driven many

times to my knees' by the over­whelming conviction that I had aowhere else to go. My own wis­4Iom and that 'of all about me 8l!emed insuIIicient f.or the day."

Human Wisdom Insufficient What Lincoln felt was felt by

~me of the scientists who ·had labored heartbreakingly on the first and second Vanguards, only '" see something go wrong at the "at moment. '

To F. Paul Lipinski, an engi­_er for the Martin aeronautical eOmpany, there came' the thoug'ht "at human wisdom seemed in­·..fficient for the day.

Lipinski suggested that some­.ing· b~do,ne to give open ac­knowledgement· WI America's traditional reverence for, and *pendence uPon, 'the Creator ., the universe. . . - .

. Kleven of his fellow-scieniists _ Project Vanguard-Catholics," ~ws, Protestants ._- agreed to loin with him in IJUbmitting' ,a l'equest for permissiion to install tile Christopher medal.

Their theology ~'as as sound • their science. .

On an official' form.;,paper, lIleaded "Drawing ,Change, Re­"'est," 'they' sketehed a St. Christopher medal, with a nota­tion that the cost of attaching it would be borne by' fieid crew members.

In the form's "Reason. for' Change" section, L,ipinski and

. IUs associates .wrote the theologi­_lly precise statement: "Addi­

. lion, of Divin" Guidance." Installed With P'recision

They attributed 'no power to' .e medal itself. Adding it to Vanguard would be l1 'recogni­tion of the Ruler of the heavens~ and, a testimony of prayer for Bis help. '

The medal symbolized faith,'as'" ·!Ioes a church tower or' bell. 10' addition, it .was an appeai to St. Christopher to companion the aientists in their petition.

The suggestion made on the official form was approved. , With meticulous precision, th~

'12 scientists installed the medal of st. Christopher at the base of

•a gyroscopic guidance system in Vanguard's second stage.

This time, Vanguard worked , .to perfection: Its moon went into . orbit in a tremendous ellipse

which is carrying it, on each. ,round, 2,500 miles out into space, but bringing it also within'..405 . miles of Earth. '

This facilitates both 'the as­sembling of infonnation about outer space, and its easy trans­mission .to :radio listening sta­tions.

Vanguard III is also a dramatic, reminder to the world that America has never ceased to be a land of noble ideals and of firm belief in God's fatherhood and man's brotherhood.

'Simple, Issue' Against godless' communism's

sputniks\ Vanguard III writes in the heavens the message that the Declaration of Independence was also a Declaration of Dependence on God: .

"And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the Protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our For­tunes and our sacred Honor."

Henry Cabot Lodge, U. S, am­bassador to 'the UN, said the other day that it is a bitter pill to America to,observe that neu­tralist nations miss the .distinc­tion between communist tyranny and the free way of'life. He said:

"To us it is a simple issue: ,between the man' ·who cold-· bloodedly calculates and ·the man ,who is, truly ge~erous; between' a thirst for conquest and a sin-· cere desire for peace; between brutality and kindness; slavery, and freedom; cynicism and faith;

·atheism· and religion. To \18 it is as fundamental as that."

.Such is the meaning of 'the. Chri~topIier medal in Vanguard,IlL' ,

Attacks Popular French Novels' ..

VATICAN CITY. (NC)~ The popular novels of French author Fancoise Sagan have, been at ­tacked by a priest columnist in L'Osservatore della· Domenica . as \'dangerously depressing."

Criticism of the best-s'~lling

author 'of "Bonjour Tristesse" and "A Certain Smile" -was made in the Vatican City Week­ly's question and answer column.

Msgr. Mario Crovini, ~ho

heads the section for the cen­sure of books in the Sacred ,~

· c.:::(,)ngregation of' the' Holy Of,­fice, referred to Catholic week­lies. and d'ailjes which, ~ said, 9

have been '!4n'animous and neg­ative" in their judgment of the French aufhor's' books. .

He repeated an appraisal given in the Roman publication, Studi Cattolid (Catholic Studies). ­

·which described the contents of Francoise Sagan;s oovels as "nothingness, emptiness, bitter­ness _ . . dangerously depress­ing, particularly for Ute souls' of· youth.".~ '"

'

. , -THE ANCHOI , 'I'Thun., June 12, 1958 ,.. Sug~tedSacrif~

. ing is certainly untouched by' the proclamation of Christ that: He had come to east fire Up()ll

the earth."

.NEWLY ORDAINED: Rev. Jerome E. Nadine, first ne­gro to be ordained. in the Diocese of Syracuse, will be a.'lsigned in th-e. Diocese of Brooklyn. He is a natjve of Scrariton. NC Photo. . .

Dollar Sign Continued from Page One

ment is not the purpose of edu­cation', he added: "In fact, if ylJU feel' completely at home, com­pletely 'adjusted' to all the situ,.. ations which will- confront you in the years Immediately ahead, your education certainly will have been a dismal failure."

"An education which merel,. makes a person a good organ­ization man," he continued, "and an 'acceptable model for the gray flannel· suit of standardized ·liv-

On .the other hand, non-coo­formity -must 'oot be taken a8 "Something goOd·.and sacred ill Cut outthts eolunm, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the iL'lelf," he' stated. "Non-conform-. °M08t Rev. 'Fulton ~. Sheen. National Director of The Society .for ity can become an adolescent. ihe- Pr0Pll.gation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N. Y.. fad, and as much of '8 menace ~ your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,in itS way as unexamined con­ 368 .North Main Street, I'all :River. Mass, tOrmity."

The person who aueceeds' in hotb conformiiio; 'and refusing to confQrin "must struggle along painfully and wearily," Msgr. ~orriga!l .asserted, "making one difficult decision and distinc-·

COMPARE .:•• then ioin the

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tion after another. He will find hin:tself reiularly and very largely misunderstood. Tbe con­formists will .consider him a little queer and unsafe, and the professional non-conformists will. 'aclluse bim of being a victim of authoritarianism and social pressures." ..

"My proposition," heconclud­ed, "is that the Catholic college graduate of today mu~ be both a troditionalist and revolution­ist, a conservative and a radical, a conform,ist and .a noo-con­formist."

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Worldmissionaires wbo pledge themselves eacb .1'7: to itraF for the Missions, to make a sacrifice or ad Of· sell-denial whicb amounts to 25c • day, to send the almS diredly to the Hol:r Fatber through ~is SocietY fC;!r the Propagation of the Faith.

These are some of the sacrifices actually made by the memb~rs to produce the dail:r 25c for the Holy Father:

FOOD AND DRINK: 1) Skip dessert at daily lunch if you eat

out.. 2) Skip nightly visit to the refrigerator. 3)' Select the cheapest item on the mellU

when eating in a x:estaurant. 4) Give up all T.V. snacks.

SMOKING: 1) If you smoke two packag~!!. a day re­

duce to one pack. That is the quarter \ for the day. .

ENTERTAINMENT AND SPORTS:' '1)00 without a secular magazine which

.' kills the Spirit of Christ. . . 3) Carry' your own clubs or use • caddy 'cart instead of havm£

a caddy. ., ,AUTOMOBILE:

1) Save gas arid oil by walking to Church. . 2) Buy ten gallc;ms of regular instead of premIUm gas.

Tltese are but a lew of hundreds of different sacrifices made daily 'by these noble men and women..

We wonder how many would be interested in making similar acts, of self-denial? Or who would become group leaders in offices and coiled ZSc a .week from the more Christ-like of the workers?' , . .

We need help badly! "We" here means our identification witb the lepers, the pagans, the refugees, the ignorant, the sick in .our mission lands. Perhaps .some of you would cut into your capital which becomes a "sacred cow" and send it to the Holy Father.

No greater charity exists on the face of the earth than to: aid In the conversion 01 the pagans. heal the sick who are 'Poor. make an ad of faith in Ole Viear of Christ by sending cyour alms .. Ute Holy Father. This 7- do whenever' Y08 give to his !Meltty for the ProP&6at~on of the Faith.

. ~ . May the Passion of Christ and the Compassion 'of Mary inspire

you either to daily or lfl'eat sacrifices fOl' the 1,500,000,000 pagans Of the world. '

" -O'ROURKE -D~ D. Sullivan Funera' 'Home ,571 Second St.

'Foil River, 'Moss. &. Sons

r_e." OS9~72 ~ MICHAEL J.McMAHON

'licensed Funeral Director"'~_~hII'"" Registered Embalmer \

OS 2-3381

.(S,SCHf)'··' rnHIP WINNER:. , Boyd

~

Jean Ng, Sacred Heart TOOTELLAcademy, Class of 1958, has been awarded a full tuition Monument Works flCholarf'hip to Johnson and 'AL ALBANESE. Prop. Wales Business School, Prov­ Desig~ing & Manufacturing

IV' aHR~:SON ST.. NE~ BEDFORDidence. Jean is the daughter Just above Shawmut Ave.ef Mr. :11'1 Ml"S. Frank Yan

WY 8-5142 OS 3-4074Xc. Fall Ri,cr.

~7'ZEWb!la & Z2 " -~

SOutH END' .

I ~

ELECTRIC CO. .

-, Electrical

Cont,,,cfors

464 Seamd St.

FAllIIVEIt

'OSborne 2·2141

~1I1iii!i 'i'

The Campbell School'

908 PurchoH Street New Bedford

'I ", .~:'"' .,~ ••. -.

Page 13: 06.12.58

'1··t·l ..... .,) .,.; ·····5 v. .' .. '" :.', Time

This Time'y Message's Sponsored By The FoI·

'owing Pub'ic Spirited Individuals and Busi·

ness Concerns Located

in Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products, Inc.

Building Materials Inc.

Donnelly Painting Service

John F; Doyle, Contrador

Enterprise Brewing Co.. '.

Globe Manufaduring Co.

Gold Medal Bread

A.G. & W.J. Howland, Inc. . Insurance

Hutchinson Oil Co.

MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.

Mason Furniture Showrooms

Gerald E. McNally Contractor

George M. Montie, Plumber .

Frank X. Perron, Insurance

SobiloH Brothen

StaHord Fuel Co., Inc.

Sterling Beverages Inc.

Te)(tile Workers Union 'of America, AFL-CIO

.Yellow Cab Company

Wm. N. Wheelock & Son, Inc. (The 'Original)

DRIVE· CAREFULLY Soon the highways will :be iammed with Take an 'extra hour or day to get where

va~tioners ~king a respite from a yearls you're going 10 that you get there safely.

toil and labor.

Too many lives ~re lost through excessive

Many of them will drive as though it witi speed and careless driving on our hig~.

be the last~acation of their lifetime-and ways and the toll is rising daily.

well it might be. /

SLOW·U P ancl· Let Our ::'.' 'Children GROW·U·P

~ "

,.': : .. , .. '.. : .

'. h .•. •1. ",1 .. ~,:',. :..'.J..... ,<v. .,. .....'::;...

..-..-.. .

Page 14: 06.12.58

-, 14 -THE ANCHORS~~e and Sand ,

, Thurs;, June 12, 1958

Theology' Meets ~Rigorous Hibernians Hold' Requiremen'ts .of SC'ience State Seassion'By Most Rev. Robert J., Dwyer, D.D. _

Bishop of Reno Irish mISSiOnaries of tbe 'Golden Age and their presentThe theologian is the theolog~an and the revivalist ill day counterparts was the sermonthe revivalist, and never (wen, hardly ever) the twain shall. topic of Rev. Michael J. Houli­

meet. St. Bernard of Clairvaux might suggest an exception han, state chaplain of the An­to the rule, but it is recorded that even he came to regret cient Order of Hibernians,

who celebrated the openingthe passion of his polemic. brought ba6k amounted to little .Mass of the organization's 69thCertainly it seldom happe~s more than a repetition oLProt­ biennial state convention inthat the religious orator.even estant fideism, the idea of faith Boston. Twelve delegates from

with all the protection of alone. as suffi~ing, togeth~r with the fall River Diocese attended. , . a faIrly typIcal confusiOn of orthodoxy, . manages to satisfy mind concerning the ultimate . Present at the sessions were the. tigid st~n~ard.s of the theo- nature of faith itself. . Miss Kathleen Roche, Past State loglan, and It IS "We can't put Godin a test President; Mrs. Anna Ryan, Past even more sel- tube or reduce Him to a mathe- Bristol County President; Mrs. dom -t?at the mati~al.formula;" he' thundered. Helena Malone, Bristol County theologIan is "When we come to Godowe must .President. gif~ed with the com~ by faith. There is no'scien­ . Also Mrs. Elizabeth Roman. power of sway- _ tific proof of God. but there w Miss Anna Harrington and Mrs. b~g the heart of evidence." . Mary Neitsch from New Be~­hIS hearers. . Indulging in an imaginative ford; Mrs: Elizabeth Donnelley,

.The Rev. Mr. flight, one' can picture St. CERAMIC. EXHIBIT AT 'PARENTS NIGHT: One of . Mrs. Rose Briggs, and Mrs. B111y.. Graham, Thomas: Aquinas jumping up to the most popular activities at the Fall River Girls CYO is Louise Carley from North Attle­f r () m a.ll ac- CONeet th.e unfortunate lapse of. boro; and Mrs. Rose Nagle, Missthe class in Ceramics. Pictured in the workroom are left

· counts, IS the Mr. Graham. But there you are. Rita :f,urlong, and Miss Margaretto right; Odelia Amaral, St. Michael's Parish, Fall Rive_r;mo~t s'!l;cessf'!l . By .the time St. Thomas could· Brophy from North Easton. ".revlVahst o~ hIS get around to the kernel of his Judy Hunt, Sacred,Heart Parish, Fall River; Rita Fiola, St.

Other convention speakers in­g e n era t Ion. . argument the audience would LOuis of France Parish, Swansea. cluded Very Rev. Christopher'~ven if somethin~ must be dIS- have long since melted away. Griffin, chaplain of Our Lady ofcounted from hIS sp~ctacular The few that might possibly eyO Gids Pr~sent,Pare~ts Night the Railways Chapel at Boston'.elaims for the evengehcal. con- remain and could (improbably)

Art Class-Mrs. Gertrude Bar- South Station, and Lt. Gov­Parents, relative and friendsquest of Sodom and Gomorrah, follow his' thought would learn a a,bY', Instructor. . ernor Robert Murphy.Of the members of the GirlsNew York and London and San good deal about distinguishing .C.Y.O· attended a Parents night.Francisco, m,ore t~an enough re- the meani~g of the key term. at the Community Center Tues-­~ains ~o make. hIS performance .. "sCientific," as well as being

. day evening.hlghlY.Impresslve. . treated to a thoroughly scien-If hIS ardent supporters are t·ft review of 'the scholastie. The program consisted of an ···OOTSIDE LOOKING IN

biased in assertin!( that he has :r~ments for the existence of introduction of Fall River C.Y.O. a& $bek own Chapell So small is $be room servinA: .as a Chapel ba~raeticallY w~ipped, up t1,te ~- God. o. . ' offiCers by Rev. Walter Sullivan, St. Joseph's Convent, 'Muvattupuzh, India, that the nuns must attend·tiOl~ ~o the pItch. o~, m~km~ . a ,But the vast majority would Fall River moderator of C.Y.O. t Mass frortJ· an adjoining room and an ado.'deCISiOn for ChrIst,. h~s ~rl~lCS have scattered to the four cor... activities. ~~S, fb. joining O~D school' veranda. Sister M~'are equally at fault ~n dIsmIssIng· ners of the campus convinced of . The officers are Howard Taft, .c.,' I'd' guerite, superior, writes that \ $bere are·hrm as a mere flash In the pan. what they had ~uspected all Santo Christo Parish, President; 'l:r ~. thirty-two nuns living in the cOD,vent aDd

Should Pick Audiences ,along;' ,d had in all likelihopd Anne Marie Ouelette, Blessed ClI' 0 $bat $be room used as.a chapel is 10 feet Pretty evidently he is the an- been tQ~d to look for, that Chris­ Sacrement Parish, Vice Presi­ ·,~ ::s by 12. Present in $bis Uny,room is the God

~er to a need, felt most acutely tianity, whatever else may be dent; Elaine Dempsey, St. Louis + Ch $bey are dedi.cated to ·serve.· Space permit.:by those who long for a vigorous said for· it, is unscientific and Parish, Secretary; Terrence r.o:­ + only two, or. at the most $bree, of $be reaffirmation of an evangelical a'nti-intellectual. . .max, S't. Mary's Parish, Treas­ sisters to visit aDd adore Him at ODe time. 'faith which has sufl'ered for gen- Science Is Knowledge urer. They 10Dg for a" Chapel iarge enough to mtions from a kind of spiritual It is perhaps.. unrealistic ·to Following these introductions accommodaie all the sisters for their com­malnutrition. He has had the emphasize the intellectuality of a fashion show was presented ­ fDUDity exercises and prayers. $3,000 wllJ happy .fortune of riding the crest· the average American university under the auspices of Mrs. Rob­ build a Chapel where thirty-two Duns will fir JIx Orimtal Church·of the wave of a revival ofttte audience. Certainly in respect ert Messier, Instructor and Mrs.. worship their God daily and pray for their traditional American Protestant- to a ·grasp of philosophy or theol­ John Shannon,' Assitant of the benefactors. The sisters of St. Joseph's Convent, Muva&tupuzh, India. Ism, aided by, his uI).doubted ogy it would rate as a group of Cadet Division; Mrs. Wilfrel will be l:'ratefuJ for aDY help l:'iven them to make their dream of a assets of a captivating personal- kindergartners alongside the Garand, instructor and Mrs. Ruth new chapel, a reality.. tty and a seemingl:, transparent gownsmen of a medieval univer- McConnell, Assitant of the inter­ "THE'WORLD FOR THE SACRED HEART, THE SACRED\HEARThonesty. \ sity. mediate. division FOR THE WORLD"-ONLY BY YOUR HELP, SPIRITUAL AND

It has been remarked more- But there is a kind of magic Presentation of Red Cross MATERIAL, CAN THIS BE ACCOMPLISHED. over, that he has rarely if ever to the modern mind in the word Certificates was made'to the girlsdescended to the anti-Catholic "scientific." It is a shibboleth TO BE A PRIESTwho had completed their First·billingsgate which is the stock- of marvelous potency.' Anything -God-given call bringing boys to seminariesAid course given by Miss Fran­in-trade of so many of his that is unscientific is ridiculous, Ihe world over. DOMENICO and GREGO­ces Cash R.N. Miss Patricia Rich­:revivalistic competitors. . and the meaning of 'science has RIO are twa Egyptian boys who. are answe.r­ard. R.N. assistant to Miss Cash - But Billy Graham preaching been progressively restricted to 'log tXod's invitation to be His priests. Theypresented the certificates.old-fashioned Protestant funda- , 'a matter of apparatus .a.nd test ­ are is need of financial help and their

Of particular interest was amentalism in Madison Square tubes. · .])nents cannot supply it. The seminary tul­Model Meeting conducted by the:Garden or the Cow Palace and Science is s~mply ,knowledge, Uca. is $100 a year and there are six yearsYoung Christian Students GroupBilly Gra~am in the role of a physical or. metaphysical. The of preparation If. you would like to helpunder the. direction of Mrs. John.:theologian defendinl~ the essence . arrogance of 'certain physical DomeDico or Gregorio you ean "adopt" one Sullivan.'of Christianity before a critical scientists in attempting to re­ of them for $100 a year and pay the money

Awards were presented to the .university audience present dif- strict the term to the. kingdom bI "y manner eonvenient to you. o'1-tstanding players in the bas- ..:ferent faces of the same coin. of matter is even now an obso­ketball leagues. TtIE' "CHRYSOSTOM'S" IS A FUND TO HELP SEMINARIES· . If the shoemaker should stick ,Jete and outworn obsession, un­

The members of the Dramatie TRAIN PRIESTS: IF YOU CANNOT "ADOPT" A SEMINARIAN,to his last, the revivalist, even if worthy of a' university. Club closed the program with a PERHAPS YOU COULD DO SOMETHING FOR·he is as famous as Billy Graham. .Yet the scientffic intolerance, skit entitled "Ladies of the Mop" THE "CHRYSOSTOM'S."mould pick his audiences. The amounting to a kind of passion­under the dire~tion of Mr. Rob­good he might do iIi one instance .ate 'ignorance, of a man like TO CHOOSE CHRIST FOR A SPOUSEert Benoit. Miss Catherinecould well be off,set by the hann Thomas Huxley, still throws its Each year thousands of girls choose Him and dedicate themselvellCoughlin serves as advisor tohe does in the other. ghostly shadow. As in another to a ute-time of sacrifice. SISTER DOMiNIC and SISTER AQUINAthis group:Unfortunate lLapse day it frightened the life out have already choseD Christ and are now iD the

Preaching on the campus of of poor Bishop Wilberforce,' so Exhibits were on' display 01. novitiate of the Adoration Sisters 01 Kndutbu­the Vniversity of California at it still frightens Billy Graham, the following classes: ruthy. India. Their' novitiate trainin&, will eost Berkeley, the other day, Billy frightens him into giving away Ceremics Classes-Adult Class, $150 a year aDd they will be novices for two Graham made an excursion into the case for the very existence, Mrs. Rita Banville, Instructor. years. Yon can "adopi" Sister Dominic or Sister the realm of theology. What he of the Being' he is so concerned Girls Class,' Mrs. Grace Sisson, Aquina for $150 a year, payable In aDY maDner

. to preach. . Instructor. ' . ' 01 installmeDt coDvenient to yon. Payinc for That faith can ,and' should be Photography Class-Mr. ROb­ the' traininl:' of such a novice insnres yon of a.

scientific in the most' rigorous ert Messier, Instructor. "adopted daughter" iD whose We'. work y_ n

sense is an axiom of Catholic Cooking Class-Cadet Divi­ would iaavc a share. theology. That God, His exist ­ don, Mrs. Thomas Porter, In­ STRINGLESS GIFTS ence. His nature, Hi.s revelation. structor; Intermediate Divisian. Material assistance from the members of his can be t r ,ted and proved by the Misses Meri Sweeney and Jan­ flock who are able to give It, enables our Hob sternest intellectuill standards, is ice Hurley, Instructors. . Father to give aid t. the needy. Daily, His the justification of. theology .. Holiness receives an nntold Dumber of requests a science. for financial assistance from the Near East.Gi/be,t C. O/ivei,aBut it is a theme which hardly' ,Will yon help supply the needy out of anylends itself to a camp-meeting,. abundance that yon mil:'ht have' No matterINSURANCE even.,when held on a campus. bow small yon may think your l:'ift is,lt will Mr. Graham, for all his golden

6) A~PRAISER be, big iD ·the eyes,of God If it-Is l:'iven from a

,. intentions, might do. well, to REALTOR ebaritable hearl. 'leave the university to the Angel

... was bungry and you gave Me to eat... These will indeed be•<if the Schools. wonderful words to hear from Christ. There are ·many people in the

~ ·;tt::i:;; n;.1foly FaJhtrt Misn'on Aid

· NURSING AWARD: Alice ~Wojcicki, a senior at Sacred

.>Hearts AcademY,·Fairhaven, :'has been awarded a scholar­:'ship to the St. Luke's School ~'of .Nursi.p.g, New. B.edford. '

BOWEN~S .Furniture Store

JOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY owner/mgr.

142 CampbeO St. New Bedford. Mass.

:,.:-,' WYman 9-6792

HEADQUARTERS FOR .COLONIAL AND

TRADITIONAL FURNITURE " '. . ,"I.',

05 2·2000 world who' 'are hungry. Numbered among them are the refugees III

1320 No. MaiD Sl. · 'the Holy Land. A FOOD PACKAGE sent to the refugees is a true FALL RIVER Christ-like act. The cost is' $10.00 a package.

ANYTHING YOU DO IN THE NAME OF CHRIST' WILL BRING YOU BLESSINGS. '

GEORGE M. MONTLE. ~'l2eaf6stOJiS$ions~<Plumbing"':" Heating. Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service

806 NO. MAIN STREET Fall River OSc5-7497 - " 0 - ...

fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President Msgr. Pete; ... Tuohy,. Nat'l Sec'y ,

'Send all commuAications to: , ' . CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIAnON

480 Lexingt~'; A~e·. at 46th St~· ,'New York ,17, N. Y.

Page 15: 06.12.58

lIfE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs., June 12, 1958

Day for Deaf , Continued from Page One

Benediction will close the after­noon, and there will also be the opportunity for the deaf to go to Confession.

Durini"the social hour tenta­tive plans will be made for future gatherings of the group. It is emphasized that non-Cath­olics will be welcomed and Father McCarthy further re­'quests that he be sent the names of any unable to attend such meetings due to age, sickness, or any other reason. He. will eon­tact all whose names are re­ceived, no matter where they are located in the Diocese.

He may be reached at Holy Name Rectory, 709· Hanover Street, Fall R,iver. I

Arrangements for the June 22 program have been made through the cooperation of Rev. David Fleming, O.F.M., Rector of Our Lady's Chapel, and Rev. Everett McPhillips, moderator for the deaf of the Providence Diocese, who coached Father Valente in .ign language and gave him hi. first opportunity to preach to Ute deaf. It will be Father Valente'. first visit to the' Fall River Diocese.

Intellectuals Continued from Page One

alert to all the implications and meaning associated with the po-' litical, economic and social de­Yelopment of our time."

"Too many college-trained Americans," he asserte<l, "fail to exercise properly the mental powers which they poSsess. Too many find it much easier to par­rot the thoughts of others."

"No great human advance was ever accomplished unless behind it stood the intellectu'al-the man of vision and ideals," Dr. Meng laid, "Interlectual activity is nec­essary to human progress. It is mandated to us as Catholics; it is the greatest weapon in the defense of American freedom."

1958 Charity Appea I 'Gift$

ST. MARGARET'S Buzzard's Bay

$10.00 Wm. J. Larkin.

SACRED HEART-New Bedford $150.00

Tallman, LaBrode, Rounseville -Architects.

ST. AUGUSTINE Vineyard Haven

$30.00 R. M. Packer Co., Inc.

Special Gifts DIOCESAN

$20.00 Sacred Heart Sisters-Fair­

haven. $10.00

B. Flink & Sons. FALL RIVER

$100.00 Gold.Medal Bakery.

. $25.00 List Family Foundation, TravIB

Furniture. $10.00

Franco American Women'. Club, Inc., Chace Electric Co., Inc., Steamfitters' Union, Terry I.; Crawford.

NEWBEDFORp $25.00

United Auto Workers, Int. Hod Carriers & Bldg. & Commoa Laborers Union of America. \

NORTH ATTLEBORO $10.00 \

Frenchie's Service Station, Dan Landry Real. Estate, Thorpe Automotive Co.

$15.00 North Attleboro Foundl'7. Co.

TAUNTON $50.00

Katherine Maloney,. Dr. JobD Fenton.

$25.00 Dr. & Mrs. Howard B. Carron,

Carpenter's Union Local 1035. $10.00

Hi-Way Market. NEW BEDFORD

$75.00 Fairhaven Inst. for savin...

$10.00 Rayon Workers Local No...

Davidson's Pork Product., Ideal Sales Co.. Inc.

Visiting Priest Continued from Page One

going on at St. Laurence's par­ish, Birkenhead, Cheshire, of which Father Devlin is adminis­trator.

> Walk Barefoot The Lourdes lottery is spon­

sored by the St. Vincent de Paul Society of the parish. Under its terms parishioners form into small groups, each member contributing a shilling or so a week to a comnion kitty. At year's end, each group draws the name of one member and he ,

REV:' J. G. DEVLIN is entitled to the pilgrimage. This has been going on for years, says Father Devlin, and has en­abled many parishioners to make the trip. ,

Another popular pilgrimage is to the shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham, 140' miles from St. Laurence's. Most of the trip is made by car or bus, but the last mile, known as the Holy Mile, is walked barefoot.

The men's clubhouse, said Father, is open daily, and offers billiards and other game facili­ties, bar service, and a very suc­cessful sports program. The club's soccer . team has won against all comers this season, annexing four cups. '

Active Laity Parishioners are .no less active

In spiritual affairs. Formed into the Legion of Mary and the St.

. Vincent de Paul Society, they visit the sick and those in prison. Old people are the object of

American ·Priest Heads Capuchins

ROME (NC)-The Capuchin Friars Minor, who have more than 1,000. members in 33 sees in the U.S., have elected Fath­er Clement Neubauer, 68, of Milwaukee as their new Super­ior General. '

American-born Father Neu­bauer headed the order previ­ously from 1946 to 1952. He suc­ceeds Father Benigno da Sant 'Ilario Milanese; who succeeded him in 1952. "

The Captlchins have 1,210' houses throughout the world with a total of 15,321 Religious. During the 400 years of its ex­istence the order has given seven laints and' 11 blessed to the ehurch.

OLDSMOBILE Chosen "Best, Buy"

SIMCA . Picked No. 1 Import Buy lacked by Reputable ~ervice

Park Motors frt Middle Street, Fairbavell.

WYman 9~6479

-'

WORK PROGRESSES ON THE FIRST DIOCESAN REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL: The new regional high school, which' is being built on a I5-acre tract of land in Dartmou th, close t9.the New Bedford city line, is shown as the first stage of construction is being· completed. The foundation fpr the adll!inistration building, gymnasium and convent are .now ready for the first floor walls.

special attention. Father Devlin told of one in­

stance in which St. Vincent de I

Paul member!? painted, deco­rated and cleaned an entire house while its occupant, an old widower, was in a hospital. On another occasion young men who had made the Lourdes pilgrim­age· bought records of the songs and prayers of Lourdes and w~nt

to the homes of aged parishion­ers to phiy them. '

Birkenhead is noted for itI

docks and shipyards,. said Father Devlin; in remarking that he'd crossed the Atlantic on the Mau­retania, which was built there.

. Relatives Here There are 7,000 in his parish.

which is the site of an interest­ing housing experiment, the first of its kind in England. Eleven­story housing projects of poured eoncrete- are being constructed, he explained, each section fin­ished in a record 19% days. Occupants of the project were

·moved from their slum homes, relocated, and settled in the new buildings within a year.

While here Father.Devlin h8)ll laid Mass at the Catholic Memo­rial Home in Fall River, for hia aunts,. the Misses ·Julia and Mar­garet Devlin. He also plans • visit Mrs. Thomas King of Fall River, another cousin. He will Bee New Hampshire and have a quick look at Canada on a trip with Mr. and Mrs. O'Brien, ha Somerset hosts.

An Important, Message

To the People

of Greater. New Bedford

I

The Glen Cool & Oil/Co., Inc. is a Massachusetts Cor­poration recently formed for' the purpose of. acquiring and operating David Duff & Son. The principals of the Glen Coal & Oil Co., Inc., have been actively engaged in the wholesale and retail coal and oil business for more than 40 years, and are the principals' in the Union Oil Co. of Boston and Glendale Coal & Oil Co. of Charlestown, and several other wholesale and retail fuel .companies. Therefore, we are eminently qualified to provide com­plete, prom'pt and efficient service to all of the purchas­

I ers of coal and oil and purchasers of burners and stokers.

i We are well aware of the heritage of David Duff & Son in the community, and it is our sincere desire to retain and continue that heritage by serving you in .the manner that David Duff & Son has done since 1887. We are tre­mendously proud to have been selected 'to succeed this company. We will retain the s~me, loyal employees and high principles enabling us to serve you as David Duff & Son has done in the past.

The Glen Coal & Oil Co.,· Inc. pledges to maintain the reputation of David Duff & Son for QUALITY~INTEGRITY­SERVICE and solicits a continuation of your valued patrona~e.

GLEN COAL &Oil CO., INC. Successors to David Duff & Son

640 Pleasant St. ·Yardat Fi~h Island• 't'

•••••••••••••c.o •••••••••••••••••••••••coo •• t ••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••

,

Page 16: 06.12.58

••••• •

-- Whaf'$.Wrong with' EciucGti~n ". ~ . .

SOUrce-Material. 'Avai'lable On COll1dition' of· Schools

By Do~ald. McDonald Davenport Catholic 'Messenger

In order to form an'. i~telligent pUbli~ 'opinion on the ICltolastic condition of American schools, it seems to me we must know: _

(1) What we want our schools to be. (2) What the schools' are· than those of-a generation ago.

doing at the present time. And yet the complaints of the . (3) Who is re:>ponsible for high school teachers ·multiply

the present conllition of our and intensify with each passing ICho015. year. The children entering high

There will probably, never be school constitute an indisputable' a static consen­ proof that, regardless of statis':' IUS of, w hat tics, something is wrong in many we want our of our American grade schools. 'schools to be. High School. Curricula Tim e, society While the· emphasis in the and civiliza­ grade scho'ol should De on basic tions c h '1 n g e learning skills, in- the upperand inevitably grades the children will be intro­these changes duced to knowledge of ideas; will be reflected judgments will be made which in the curricula will be broader and deeper thaD ef the schools. any judgments students had to

But there is make in th\llower grade's. a n unvarying High school curricula shouldfactor here and refine a' develop reading a~dthat is the nature of man. Though writing skills, but will also leadPlan's social and cultural and' the student . into knowledgeeconornic conditions change, his which, though in many area. aature does not and so it is will be highly specific or par­possible (as a matter of fact, it

ticul!lr, will_specially iit hi.'- necessary) to arrive at a con­ junior imd senior years--becomeeensus ~f indispensable mini­increasingly generalized.

mums in education. College and university. work,We need only :read Plato and

while including'great amounts ofAristotle t.o understand just how additio!1al knowiedge and infor­anch~ngeable human nature is, mation, will concentrate on thoseand, I might add, if we do read things that are proper to under­Plato and AristotlE!, we'll get a standing and wisdom-the for­pretty fair start on the lIst Ol. mulation of judgments on philo­those "indispensable education

.lOphical .and theological univer­minimums." sals concerned with the nature ofCertainly, among thli! ultimate man, human 'society, human' be­truths the educat(~d man should

are his nature, his; origiD havior, government, law, eman'.know relationship to God.and his destiny, which.is to say,

philosophy and theology. But if . As to what the schools are 1D we start at the other end of the fact doing these days, there educational process, we can say seems to be no end of present that students ~n the grades must' source-material,now ·that the learn those skills which will be Soviets have scared us into at tools they must have for later least a science-preoccupation. learning - readin/( and writing One of the best sources is our being the most fundamental, the own Congressional Record. In­most useful, of,all the skills they creasingly, Senators and Repre­will acquire. sentatives hav,e been, inserting'

Complaints Increase into the Appendix of the Record speeches" articles and' papersThat is why we can say. with­

. prepared by people who areeut fear of exaggeration, 'that close' to the. educational 'situa­the greatest tragedy that can be­tion. .fall a student. is to be passed on

This material must be readleom grade to grade without been required with some discrimination: someever having to

of it is obviously more rhetoricaldevelop his reading and writing th;m factual. But the Record is aabilities, treasure-trove of much ot. the . And the most !levere indiCt­good and true things that arement that can be 14~veled against being saiff and written on edu­p-ade schools is leveled repeat­cation today. ' edly by "-ustratedl high school

Other sources in'clude, inter.,. ·tleac~ers when they complaill estingly, our more "conservative'that students are unable to han­publications: the Wall Streetdle high school courses because Journal, Business Week, U. S.they have never. learned how to News & World Report.' ­. lead, write oi even spell.

The liberal 'org,ans, like .TheEd uca tionists who are· respon-' New, Republic, The Reporter,.ble in great part for this tragic and other, have not ignored thesituation can recitE! endless sta­present re-examination of edu­tistics which "prove" that today'. cation, but almost without ex­ehildren are "better educated" ception their approach has beeD more akin to what 'one might encounter in a desultory salon­type' conversation in which no­body ever seems to quite come to grips with the heart of the matter. .

'Why the conserv:ative jourl'lals should be more realistic about our schools is not easy to ex­plain. Perhaps. the liberal or­

~ gans, so devoted ,to "freedom" find it difficult to develop a com­parable passion about the appar­ent need for an increase of free­dom-curbi';g discipline in the classroom. -

In a future column, I hope to discuss the third point listed at the beginning of this article: "Who is responsible ·for the pre.. .ent condition of our schools?"

Religious Organize "Midwe.st Province

LAKE FOREST, (NC)-A new midw~tern province of the ,Re­ligious. of the Sacred' Heart has been established, embracing the community's institutions -in Illi ­DISC JOCKEY:' Chief Les nois, .Miss.ouri, Ohio an'd' Ne-

Lightning, a near full-blood­ braska. , ed. Chippewa Indian and a Mother Agnes Regan of Barat member of Cathedral Parish, , College has been named pro­

vincial of "the new unit, formedCrookston, Minn., is Amer:' out of territory which previous­

"lea's only Indian rElcord-spin­ ly inCluded all of the commun­Ael'. NC.~hoto. ity's west coast house.li as welL.

'.. GREET N~W PAPAL DELEGATE TO KOREA~ . Monsignor Egano Righi Lamber­tim of Italy arnves at the Seoul airport to assume his post as Apostolic Delegate to Korea. Left to right ~r.e Bish~p Adr!anLarribeau of .the Paris Foreign Mission Society, Adminis­trator Apostohc of TaeJon; BIshop Thomas QUInlan, 8OS.C., Vicar Apostolic of Chunchon and former Regent of the Apostolic Delegation at Seoul ; Msgr. Lambertini and Bishop Paul Rho of Seoul. NC Photo. .

Holy Father Praises Wo'rk of Se~ular' Institute' Continued from Page One Secular institutes are cailed in which their various activitiee

fess the evangelical counsel in "secular" because their members may be carried on. the w:orld." remain in the world and retain An immensely varied aposto­

A prototype of secular 1nsti ­ the status in life they had before late is conducted by the insti ­t\!tes . was founded during the joining the institute. .Unlike tutes. There follows a listing of French Revolution' by 'Jesuit Religious, they do not take pub­ the ten institutes found in the Father Pierre Joseph Picot de lic vows. Their vows (or, ill United States and Canada which Cloriviere. In 1790 the idea Some cases, promises) of pov­ have atttained pontifical or di­came to him while at prayer to erty, chastity and obedience are ocesan approval, and the name

private ones,' but binding illestablish new associations oil. and address of the person to la)rmen to do the work of the conscience. Generally, they are contact for further informatiolL suppressed religious communi­ taklm temporaJ;ily, for a speci- Caritas Christi: a society for

. fied 'period Of time, and re­ women. Address: Rev. T. M.ties. On February 2, 1791, a small newed regularly; but in some Sparks,., b.p., 7200 DivisioD

group of priests and laymen to­ cases the vows are made perma- Street, River Forest, Ill. nently after a time. .gether pronounced the vows of Missionaries of the Kingship

poverty, chastity and obedience For those who are unable to of Christ: society of womelL , live according to the evangelicalat the" church 'of St. Deni. ill Address: Rev. Stephen Hartde­

Paris' Montmartre section. counsels, as for example, mar­ gen, O.F.M., 14th and Shepherd On the same day a group of ried persons, several of the in­ Streets, WashiJgton 17, D. C.

lay women took the same. vow.. stitutes offer associate member­ Opus Cenaculi: a society for The men's group, known as the ships. Such members -live the secular priests. Address: Rev. Society of the Heart of Jesu~ life· of the. institute as fully u Yver Delapierre, 832 North lA dropped out of sight in the mid-' their state in me will permit. Claire Avenue, Chicago 51, Ill. 19th century; but the women's EvangElJ,ieal Counsels Opus Dei: a society of priests society, the'Society of the Heart Since the essence of the secu­ and laymen. Address: Rev. of Mary, continues today. ·lar institutes is the living of the .Joseph Muzquiz, 5544 WoOdlawD

Today's Regeneration evangelical cotinseis, oof .poverty, . Avenue, Chicago 37, Ill. chastity and obedience, and ,Regnum Christi: a society for. However, the movement did

~ot .cOlue truly alive until the, apostolic work in the world, the womenr Address: Rev. Armando second decade of this century. institutes are' suited to both - the Pierini, P.S,S.C., Villa Scala­Then, in rapid succession, laity and secular priests. And, in brini, Melrose Park, Ill.nu­merous ,institutes were founded. fact, there are institutes for both Schoenstatt Sisters of Mary: More . have been established .groups, as well as some which a society of women. Address: since, and they continue to be admit Qoth priests and laymen to Sister M. Winfriede, S.A.C., New established. - membership. Schoenstatt, RR 1. Box 30,

Today, at least five institutes The internal structure of the Madison .4, Wis. have received form,al approval institutes varies from/society to Society Devoted to the Sacred from the Holy See, and many society, and may be hierarchical Heart: a society of "women. Ad­others have reached various The vow of obedience taken by dresS: 831 Bloor Street, West, stages along the way toward full members requires that they obey Toronto, Ont., Canada. canonical approval. Several their superiors in the institute. Society of the Heart of Jesus: claim more 'than 2,000 members. rhe manner of observing the a society of priests. Address: Opus Dei, the first to receive vow or promise of poverty va­ Rev. Yves M. Guenver, 81 full approval by the Church ries, but . in all cases calls for a Ghurch Street, Putnam, Conn. (and perhaps the best known. limited use of material goods iD 'Teresian Institute: society of as a result of the part some of accordance with the rules of the women especially .engaged ia its members play in Spanish 'institute. The vow of chastity education. Address: Miss Ange­public life) has more than 200 requires complete chastity. Uta L. Barcelon, 318 Terrae.

.. houses throughout the world. The members do not ordi­ Avenue, Apt. 7, Cincinnati 20. The institutes are found iD narily live together, as in the . Ohio. ""

Europe, the Near and Far East case of Religious. However the OUr Lady of the Way: society Africa and North and South Holy See has been specifi~ in of women. Address: Rev., Don­America. Twenty-four institutes stressing that the institutes nell Walsh, 445 Church Street, of various sizes and degrees at. should maintain central houses San Francisco 14, Calif. organization exist in the United states and Canada.

Aims of Institutes Commentators on the secular STONEHILL COLLEGE

institutes have pointed out two great ne~ds which they meet. The Only Ca~holtc CoUege in tJJ,e Dweese of Fall Rwer The first is the revitalization at lay spirituality, the second the re-Christianization of the mod­ern world: .

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••

-Honywood in Focus

Doubts Value of Showing Lurid Facts. About Dope..

By William H. Mooring When "High School Confidential" hits the movie thea­

ters within the next few weeks, public protests are likely to make the "Blackboard Jungle" controversy of three years ago seem like a faintly remembered whisper; ,

NATIONAL FORENSIC TOURNEY VICTORS: Over 600 debaters and speakers from 50 cities in the United States and Canada participated in the seventh annual tournament of the National Catholic Forensic League in ChicagQ. Students from St. John's Prepara­tory School, Brooklyn, won four first place prizes. They are, left to right, Vincent Picardi, first place in original oratory; James Simms, first in debate; Jos~ph McGrath, first in oratorical declamatioJl; Richard Kane, another first in debate; Bart Verdirame, second place in e'xtempore speech. NC Photo. '

Secondary Schools to Graduate 561 Seniors

"High School Confidential",is about dope peddling and attendant immorality in and around our American high .chools. It stars Russ ramblyn with John Drew Barrymore, Mamie Van Do­r e n, Michael Landon, Diane J erg ens and other favorites of the teen set.

To quote a studio source, it is "based on the exploits of 'Texas' ;Joe Foster, an under­cover man for a Texas narcotics squad, who exposed a campus dope ring, back in December, 1951." Printed under "Teachers' Nightmare" in a national maga­zine, Foster's findings are said by a studio spokesman to have been "toned down, not exag­gerated," although conditions around the schools now· are much worse than in 1951.

Movement for Lell'islation Independent producer Albert

Zugsmith, who filmed "High School Confidential" for MGM release, does not claim to have undertaken the job as a public: aervice. He is in business. How­ever, he does say that he, his writers Lewis Meltrer amI Rob­ert Blees, and director Jack Ar­nold, whose treatment pulls po punches, have tried to show how terrifying the dope habit has be­come among students and how nefarious are the criminals who peddle the stuff. The picture may well support a movement for legislation to make the death penalty mandatory' for those convicteg of pushing dope among juveniles.

The film's message is clear, even though it is sensationally delivered. "If you play around with the. weed, you're sure I to end up on the hard stuff." I do not pretend to kpow whether this warning will help or'hop up youngsters when the mood to try dope is upon them.

Regret FilmiDll' .

The screenplay does not, tD my _pinion, violate rules in the Movie Code as to how the sub­ject of illicit drugs shall now be treater' in motion pictures. I am reasonably sure,o however, that the Code Administration and many of the more responsible Hollywood movie producers who .upport the Code, must regret that stories of this kind are ever filmed at all.

'Many people, including IIOme law enforcement agencies, say it is futile to ignore the spreading mena'ce as a subject for com": ment in the press, movies, TV" radio and other communications media. The public goc;>d is better served by telling the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the, truth about this creepinll can­

cer, which begins to threaten the " security as well as the health of the nation.

Certainly no more forceful medium could be chosen to sound the warning than the motion picture screen. The cru­cial question, it seems to me, is this: Do the lurid facts about the traffic, use and ,effect of, dope, when vividly imparted by the movies, dispel or excite human curiosity?

Human nature being what It is, may not the greatest danger of such films lie in. the fascina­tion which evil has for so many of us? What do, you think?

"Sister Luke' Exposed I do not know why Sister Mary

Augustine, S.M.S.M., waited so long to tell what she knows 6f. the real Sister Luke whose con­vent experience Kathryn Hulme claims as "inspiration" for her novel, "The,Nun's Story." Per­haps the interesting information Sister gives in the May-June issue of "Marist Missions," has only just come to light. I cannot help wishing someone had speeded it to press a year ago when Robert Anderson was writing the screenplay Warners' have now all but finished film­ing. .

Sister Mary Augustine quotes from a 42-page report by a nun who entered religion in the same group as "Sister Luke," worked side by side with her throughout the novitiate, pronounced her vows with her on the same day and has access to the 'whole life history of the nun, before and after convent experience.

. Essentially Fictional This report "refutes every

pivota! situation on which the novel is developed." This is not to say that Kathryn Hulme wrote and Warners purchased a pack of lies: Movie makers know, even better than book publish­ers, that half lies often are more .erviceable when the literary or dramatic objective is to appease the prejudiced while appealing to the critical senses of the pre­judged.

That way you "bag them all" at the box office! Kathryn Hulme and her publishers claim, as Warners may well re-echo, that "The Nun's Story" is true in all its essentials. The case now forcefully made out by Sister

, Mary Augustine proves that it ia essentially I fictional. '

It is too late for Warners rad­ically to change their screen-. play, even if they so wished. It may not ?e to'o late for them to change the film title, which is not likely a marquee magnet anyway. ,

As it reads now the shift of a single apostrophe might convey the impression that this is the story of the Nuns. It is the story of none of them.

Continued from Page ODe , New Bedford

Monsignor Gerrard presented diplomas and awarded priLes to the Holy Family High School graduating class, including 32

•boys and 49 girls, Sunday night. Major (Rev.) Thomas F. Daley, U;, S. Army chaplain at Aber­deen, Md., gave the address.

St.- ,Anthony High School lI"aduation exercises will be held in the school auditorium at 8 P. M., Sunday, when Rt. Rev. !\fsgr. Louis E. Prevost; pastor .of St. Joseph's Church, will award -diplomas to 15 boys and 42 girls.

Speakers will be Roger Cou­lornbe, valedictorian; Russell Bessette, salutatorian, and Si­monne Poulin, ~sayist.

FairhaveD

Twenty girls will receive dip­lomas at [acred Hearts Academy graduation at 7:30 P. M. Sunday

.in the academy chapel. Rev. Stanislaus . Bernard, SS.CC., academy, cha(;)lain, will preach and present the diplomas.

. Fall River Rt. 'Re,v. Msgr. Allred J. E.

Bonneau, pastor of Notre Dame Church, will present diplomas to

Sa~s Serving Others Privilege. and Honor

ST PAUL (NC)-Archbishop William O. Brady of St. Paul has pointed out that persons who serve others cannot regard them­

-selves as having "done favors by serving them."

55 boys at Monsignor Prevost High School graduation exer­cises in the school auditorium at 8 P. M. Sunday.

Brother ~orge, F.I.C., direc­tor-general of the Brothers of Christian Instruction Mother­house in Alfred, Me., will be the 8peaker. Armand Aubut will be salutatorian and Richard Pou-' liot, valedictorian.

Brother Alban, F.I.C., princi­pal, will be master of cere­monies.

Fifty-six. girls will receive Sacred Hearts Academy diplo­mas at 3 P. M. Monday. Mon­signor Gerrard will preside and Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, assist ­ant at 81. Mary's Cathedral and Fall River C.Y.O. director, will speak. Class Day will be held tomorrow. .

Monsignor Gerrard will pre­aide and present diplomas to 51 girls at the Mount St. M~ry Academy graduation to be held at 2 P. M. Sunday in the Cathe­

. dral. Very Rev. Arthur W. 'Tansey, rector, will present the

c:andidates and Rev. WiIliam A.

diplomas to 54 girls at Domini­can Academy graduation exes­cises at 4 P. M. Sunday in the school auditorium. The speaker will be Rev. Reginald M. Bu­rette, assistant at St. Roell'l Church.

Thirty-five girls will be grad­uated from Jesus Mary' Academy at exercises to be held at 2 P .... Sunday. Monsignor Bonneau wil) award the diplomas. Rev. GeP­ard Boisvert, assistant at No*­Da~, will be the ,speaker.

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"The· serving ot' others," the Fall River born Archbishop de­iared, "is a privilege and an honpr." I

Archbishop Brady added: "As a mother serves her children so she has her ho~c;>r. As a father serves his family, so he has prestige. As a priest serves hi's people, he gains for himself. As • rich man serves the poor, such is his real in terest."

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GOLDEN JUBILEE: At the Holy Family Alumni gathering at l(ennedy Center, New Bedford, are, left to right: Mrs. Alice Sullivan Mooney, Mrs. Mary O'Connor Keatjng, Rt. Rev. James J. Ge~rard, Mrs. Francis Murray Rathgeb, and Mrs. Kat.herine Daley Doyle.' The ladies were members of the' class of 1908..

Page 18: 06.12.58

1

THE FIGHI/'INcrCHAPLAIN:':' MAl lEE HA~ R6{Jc.ilED Hig FAmp~, FAMED ~tlN l.C'£ I' FI'OM THE COMMVNI!1T GI?IP• . W/7JI YOtiNG tI.~. CHAPlAIN 71M AH£A1!.N 71-1£ Tl?IO

. BAIL .INTO HONG. !<ONG flARt501? AFTEI?•. MAI(ING ,GOOD THEIl!. £BCAP£ ~.'~~I . l

THE SATTLE: FOR THE F~E€DOM' OF MAI'lKIN0 lQ,gOUND TOGE1l-\E~ WITi-\ Cf-\~I~JI\NITY. THI:Y Aft,~ ONE AND THE' GI\~E. T~OG,E r-MO WOULD EM~LA"E MAN'f; roDY AND GOlofL ~P~K 1'HE LANG~AGG OF GODLgg,N€g,q,. NOW GOD';PEED TO YOW BOn-I.

, . called the devotion to the SacredFeas1~ of- the Sacred Heart · ..:':iOUC F"A ~ Heart "the .. practical profession

Continued from Page One <Iood Friday. That decided it. It was the convent or nothing. ID May of 1671 her brother took Iaer to .~he Visitation convent at Paray-le-Monial. Madame Ala­aoque had finally eonsented.

Paray-le-Monial iH asmall and beautiful town in the middle of Burgundy. The. hundreds of tiny shops which line its streets point lie a middle-class society; the ~res of churches which top its Ilills point to' a lively faith. In &958 ,Paray is a spiritually­awake city. But not so the Paray rJI.. St. Margaret's time. For in tile 17th century a paralyzing chill gripped the Mystical Body ~ Christ in Paray--le-'Monial, in

. P'rance, in much of the Catholic world. It was the chill of Jan­-.nism.

Tilted by Jansenism Heresy is a sickness in the

world of belief.' It is a sickness that blinds its followers' to . the ~ole truth. Such was Jansen­isiai: It stressed the srern God of. lustice who ·had died for a chosen few. It decried man'. --­p:'Oveling unworthiness because r4. Original'~n. It pre~ribed" tIile Eucharist as a reward for tile nearly-perfect '

.1ansenism peddled gloom. And lie ~ddest thing of all wa~ that lDany Catholics had followed !bern into the: forest, of fear. Frequent Communion was rare, wen in convents and monas­~ies.. The God of :Justice had' liwarfed the God of Love. Tra­liitional Catholic devotion was I1pside down.· 'And jansenism

.. !lad d~n'~ the tilting." Love Conquers Fear

To correct this sick ness in the ~y which is His Church, God ()re~ribed an 'unlikely medicine. He sent a pretty young French ~rl. Her name was Margaret Mary.

It was the destin)' of Sister Margaret Mary to popularize a devotion that had bcieh in the Church for centuries: the 'devo­tion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. God would remind the world of His intense love for it. For only love can conq\ler fear.

Feast Tomol'row The first of the great revela­

tlons of the Sacred Heart to Sl. Margaret Mary came in the year If!73. Alone .in the chapel .during the Christmas holidays, "I lost . all thought of myself and of the' {)lace where I was and aban­lioned myself to the Divine Spirit * * *. He discovered to me 'the marvels of His 'love and the inexplicable secrets of His

1) I will give those who ..prac- .~"X, '1/1-/ of the whole Christian religion," tice this devotion all the grace. U·~ SUPPORT ~I And why not? For it dramatizes necessary for their state in life. \ .... God's love for us' arid the need

2) I will establish . peace in 'THE of our return of 'love to Him their families. . 1- (ATHOLIC' PRESS t, and all our fellow men.

3). I will. console them in all' The world of 1958 is a' world their trials. -+ BUY FROM THE . t riddled by fear and hate. A

4) I will be their sure refuge ADVERTISERS IN ~ J. "summit conference" is not Ule in life, but especially in ·death. '" CATHOLIC 7- answer. Only love is. The whole

5) I will pour: abundant bless-;z, . '? gospel' 'message is a message of ings on all their undertakings. ~ PAPERS ~ love. And the devotion to the

6) Sinners will find My Heart, *5.P ,,\' \:, . Sacred Heart-which is' the com­the infinite ocean of m·ercy. t" . pendium of that message-will

7) Tepid souls shall grow fer- meet.,•• TheY,are the love of. remain timely just as long as vent. lone and the' same Person, a the gospel itself remains timely.· . 8) Fer-vent souls shall advance divine love refracted in the "Give me a man who loves," rapidly to perfection. prism of His human nature.

9) I will ble~s the dwellings in ."There is, therefore, the. cIo&­which the -image of My Heart is est possible bond linking this Glen Coal & Oil Co., Inc.

'exposed and honored: 10) I wi~l give priests the

power to touch most harden~ of·hearts. ­

11) All who spread this devo­tion shall have, their names .wri't ­ten on My Heart,. never to be effaced.

12) I .will grant to all who communIcate on the first .Friday for nine consecutive months the grace of fi~al .repentance. The,. shall not dIe In My displeasure'wwillioutthe~craments.

Popular Devo*ioD /' Is it any' wonder that .devotion

to the Sacred ~eart became t~ .most popular form of devotion to Christ in 'our times? A 'pic­ture of the Sacred Hea-rt now hangs in every home '* * * invo­cations to the Sacred Heart are' said after every low Mass • '. * the "Sacred Heart Program" is beamed into millions of homes ** * religious congregations are founded in its honor * .- • churches dedicated to its glory.

Behind this great .popularity, however, lies a half-hidden truth: the devotion to the Sacred Heart springs right' from Cath­olic dogma.

' We worship the physical Heart of Christ considered not as mere flesh but as united to· the Divin-. ity. We adore it as the' Heart of the Person to' whiCh it is in­separably united...

Divine Worship It would be absurd to speak

of this principle as novel for' it is as old as belief in the' Hypo­static Union - which was sol­emnly denied in the year 431.

All the members of Christ united to the rest of His sacred humanity and to the eternal Word,are the object of diviIie wor!ihip.

:As the' Jesuit Father Tuc~i wrote so beautifully: "Christ'~ heart of flesh is the nat'lral symbol of :ais 'love.. For thi~

Sacred Heart" , • heart beats ··out the story of His In.a later vision Our Lord redeeming love all through 'His

commanded her to receive Holy" earthly life; and it is'still record-' . Communion .on the first, Friday in~ the:same'lov~·for,us in IDs·

()f every month. ThEm came the glorified !;>odyin:heaven. . request' that til.e Friday aiter the "e.artof Christ octave' of . Corpus Chris~. be ' c. "~is heart, moreover, is the made a special feast. in honor of' . heart of the God-Man,' the· divine His Sacred He;l'tt' (This' is the" ,Person wno ·lives in two natures'

~ast w;i~:l~~::\~~:;~:~ow.)· ~~~::t:~~::::~~i~Ii~s(~~~'b:~' Tradition ~ys that Our Lord. love ,.and . a· spiritual ·love;· as

made the following wonderful ·God; He':has"His divine Spiritual. ........ lG St.·Marl:aret Mar,.: love. -In Christ·all·these 'love.

1 ~Mo.LL 61V£ yowTHe NAME OF A PRI64T 1 KNOW HE'~:';.

YES, TI-lE"RE WILL BE .,.. New ASgIGNMEI'Ill' FWM WA~HINGTON.A"

"ANY llME / NOW. UNTIl. IT AA2IV£~ , iHO~H, . 11M GOING TO JlAST ~IT He~ AND ~E-LAX!

18 -THE ANCHOR Thurs., June 12; 1958

Canonical Visit NEW YORK (NC) -Abbot

HUbe.rt A. Noots, Abbot General of the Norbertine Fathers, will arrive in United States from Rome June 21 for an official visitation of Norbertine houses in this country. Canonical visi-' tations .ythe Abbot General are mandatory every six years.

said St. Augustine, "and I'll tell him what God is."

Gov is Love.

threef~ld love together in Christ. . And it is the human heart of Christ that is the natural symbol of all this love.' It is the symbol of the immense love that Christ had and still has for all of us-­His sensible love His' human

. 'spiritual love and His divine love. It is th~ total complexus of Christ's love that His Sacred Heart stands for." .

In his recent .ency~lical letter, Haurietis Aquas Pope Pius xn

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Page 19: 06.12.58

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

, Sports Chatter .

Young' Soccer Star Hopes For Professional Career

By Jack Kineavy Antonio Morais, 17-year-old b~er boy from New Bed­

ford, was adjudged the outstanding player of·the Southern New England CYO Soccer League's first i!lvitation tourna­ment. Selection of Morais was made by a nine-man committee· which comprised Manny Freitas, tourney director; Bill Morrissette, league sec­retary; Manny Martin,Jim Grimshaw, Frank Rezendes, Mike Franco, Bill Brooks, Bill Lapierre and Roger Preston.

The selection of Morais was unanimous, but J 0 h n Harr?p, Tiverton Ori­oles, and Stan Ryzcek, of the champion Lud­low Boys Club, merited serious con s i deration for the award. To insure a most objective appraisal, the identity of the selection com­mittee was not revealed until they met to confer.

It was quite an honor for Antonio to receive the MVP award; his facial' expression mir­rored his appreciation. For An­tonio who has been in this c9un­'try a'short two years, English. is still a deep, dark chasm, but there was no denying that smile. of pleasure as he carefully handled' the striking trophy do­nated' by the Fall River Police Department.·

Shows Fine Sportsmans,hip Through our olTicial inter­

preter, Manny Freitas, and with the helpful assistance of Tonio's older brother, Fernando, we were able to delve into the youngster's background briefly and record some .of his impres­sions. Antonio is one of five children born to Mr. and Mrs. Eliuterio Morais and he resides with his family on Acushnet Avenue, New Bedford, wh~re

they are members of Mount Carmel parish.

He was too .young to play or­ganized ball in Faial, Azores, hIs birthplace, but even as a young­ster he had a strong inclination for the game. Shortly after his arrival in this country, Antonio hooked on with the Portuguese Sports with whom he has played for the past two seasons.

Normally an inside forward, Morais shifted to center forward in invitational play. The speeet finesse of the diminutive lad­he stands 5'6", weighs 140 pounds - particularly impressed local soccer savants. Throughout the tourney competition, Morais ex­hibited a fine sense of sports­manship, another factor . that vitally influenced the 'award committee.

Asked to compare the calibre of soccer here with that abroad, Antonio remarked' that "it was almost the same except th,)t play is a good deal rougher ln' this country." Morais chipped in with two goals in tourney play to bring his season's total to 16. Should the opportunity pl'esent

. itself, Tonio would like to take a

fling at pro ball. That's in the future, however. Right now he is enjoying the fruits of his labors, the proud possessor of a shiny new trophy which stamps him the best of the younger soccer set.

Small Crowd Disappoint,ing If soccer is to enjoy a renais­

sance in these parts, Manny Freitas and Bill Morrissette are the men to bring it about. Both are dedicated to the game and to the needs of youth. Freit;ols is acting as league presiqent and· Morrissette serves in the onerous capacity of secretary. Plans are

.. currently being formulated to extend the CYO League, and an effort is being made through the office of the director, Rev. Wai­ter A. Sullivan, to interest area high schools in the establish­ment of a soccer league.

Tourney director Freitas ex­pressed his appreciation to Joe Madowsky for his donating· the use of Fall River Stadium and t9 referee Mike Franco who. Iik:e­wise' offered his services gratis. He also commended the man-' agers and players of the ~ix teams that participated for the good sportsmanship that was evident throughout tourney play. The only disappointing feature of the tournament' was the small crowd--only 117-that was' on hand to view the championship final.

Turning to baseball, four area teams survived the qualifying round of the Eastern Massachu­setts Schoolboy Tourney on Th·ursday. Durfee, defending State titlists, edged Natick, 2-0, on the slick two-hit mound per­formance of Doug Baxendale. The -big redhead won his own game in the first with a long home run. In Class B action, Wareham, Old Colony crown­bearers, easily disposed of Case, 14-3, and Dartmouth,. Narry champion, edged Plymouth, 8-5.

Scouts Eye Eccleston Falling by the, wayside in the"

initial round was Coyle High of Taunton. The Warriors couldn't get, started against Framingham who toyed with a trio of Coyle hurlers in posting a decisive 13-4 victory. Durfee and Framingham were, sched­uled to meet at- Mansfield yes-' terday in the quarter finals, while Dartmouth and Wareham were paked off at Sargent Field, New Bedford. Yarmouth, sur­viving Cape entry in ·Class C, was booked 'against Avon ;1t Wareham.

We took in the Wareham-Case game ~-st Thursday at Hopewell Park, Taunton, where senior Tom Eccleston turned in a 'mas­terful 4-hit 18-strikeout per­formance.. Major league scouts were well represented in the stands. Neil Mahoney, chief New England Red Sox scout, was on hand with associate Joe Dugan, as was Bill Kearns, Los Angeles Dodgers representative, in the area. Young Eccleston, a fine student as well 'as a splendid all-around athlete, was the cynosure of all eyes. He is re­portedly headed for West Point, but an o'utstanding professional offer.could alter his p.lans.

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BOSTON CELTICS' STAR SPEAKS: Bill Russell of the Celtics is shown towering over Father Anthony Gomes, C.Y.O. Parish Director, and players Richard Estrella (left) and Anthony Avilla. Russell was the main speaker at the banquet tended tpe Santo Christo Basketball Team, C.Y.O. Champions of Fall River: '

Ludlow Boys Club Boosters Win First J~nior'Soccer,Tourney

The first annual invitation won the title with a 1-0 victory junior soccer tournament of the . over the Portuguese Sports of Southern New England CYO Soccer League is over and the Ludlow Boys Club booters are the tourney champions.

The boys from the Berkshires

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MONROE (NC)-Father Den­nis Curren, who will mark the . silver jubilee of, his ordination

'June 22, was a Cardinal before he became'a priest.

Father Curren was a pitcher with the St. Louis 'Cardinals back in 1919.

The Cardinals were managed by Branch Rickey wI:tile Louisi ­ana Father Curren (then "Bobo" Curren to sports fans) was with the club. The Cardinals' top star in those. days was Rogers Hornsby.

Father Curren once beaned George Sisler, Hall of Fame first baseman, while the Cards were working out with the St. Louis Browns. "I don't know if Sisler was mad," he remarked, "but the Browns' manager, chased me off the field."

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New Bedford in the tourney final at Fall River Stadium. .

The championship g~;;e was the opener of a soccer double.. header for the benefit of St. Vincent's Home, Fall River. The nightcap of the benefit program was a disappointment as the highly-touted Greek-Americans of Brockton 'did not measure up to ,their advance reports and were trounced, 6-0, by toe Tiv­erton Rovers, who substituted for the Young Nationals of Fall River. _

The benefit program netted $50 for St. Vincent's Home.

After the title game, trophies

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THE ANCP.O"- 19 Thurs., June 12, 1':58

Tigers htC J'der Receives [D)~gree

DE-TROIT (NC)-Although he doesn't, Reno Bertoia now is qualified to play third base for the Detr9it Tigers with a college graduate's mortarboard, the tas­selover his left eye.

The ball-playing Bertoia has been awarded his bachelor 01 a'rts degree at Assumption Col­lege, just across the bridge ill Windsor, Ontario. .

After the ceremonies some­one in the Tigers' dressing room wanted to know whether aD'

"AB" degree' would help Ber­toia in his baseball career. The ebullient Billy Martin, short­stop, had the answer: "An "AB" won't help. What he needs is a 'BA'." "BA" is baseball for bat­ting average.

St. Anthon,y C.Y.O. Chooses Officers·

Temporary officers 'chosen by the newly formed C.Y.O. unit in St. Anthony of Padua parish, New Bedford, include Normand Boulet, president; Muriel Flor­ent, vice-president; Suzanne Minard, secretary, and Alfred St. Pierre, treasurer.

Chairmen of committees aft

Laurette Benoit, cultural; boys', physical, Robert Doyon; girls' physical, Rhea Boivin; social, Michael PisarC2;k; spiritual, Ron­aId Nolin; entertainment, Lor­raine Cloutier, Renee Richard•. and Simone Deblois; publicity;' Aline J. Cayer.

Rev. Bertrand R. Chabot headl the adult advisors.

donated, by the Fall River CYO, were presented to the LudloW and New Bedford teams. Anto!,!io Morais was given the outstand­ing player trophy which WM

donated by the Fall River Police Department.

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Mother Francis (center left). a 60-year jubilarian, is the gracious portress.LABORS H'AVE PRODUCED GRATIFYING RESULTS: The Fran­Daily adoration is held in the convent chapel. A nun kneels before theciscan Miss{onaries' of Marv have been active in the affairs of Fall Ri~er Blessed'Sacrament, (cellter right). At the right, Mother Mary Damianfor almost a half-century.' Mother Mary Holy Family and 'Mother Mary teaches the first graders.at the Espirito Santo School in Fall River. Pupils St. Hedde (in the left photo) prepare the floral arrangement in front of are Thomas Baker, Paul CaQral ·and Janice Telghman.Our 'Lady of Fatima statue at the Second Street' Convent' in Fall" River.

··Fr~,uei$eo'" IJ1_issioners of' Morg Li,1~e for· Truth fJrld IMercy . By Patricia Mc~wan' ,

The smiling little Sister who opens the door for you at St. A.nthony's Convent, 621 See­end Street, Fall River is, you're astonished to learn, a diamond jubih~rian, having spent ever 60 years as a Franciscan Missionary of Mary. The small convent, the .only house of.. the Institute in the Fall River Diocese, als<? boasts six golden jubilarians.

Mother Francis, the ·60- and were' housed on the third~te many 'orphanages' and shel­year' veteran, is doorkeeper floor of 51. Anthony's Convent.· ters for abandoned children,

· arid sacristan for the house In Many Fields hospitals, and day nurseries. "It. '. . . ' Diverse occupations, however, only parents would recognize

and .t~e gold~n JubIlarlans are not new. to the' Franciscan their responsibilities to their are SimIlarly aCh.ve. In fact, t.he Missionaries, a worldwide order' children," said Mother Mary of ~h~le convent. IS a-hum With dedicated to missionary work- St. Hedde sadly, "we would have ~arled ~cc~patJ?ns. The Fran- which can cover almost any- no problem of juyenile delin­tiscan MISSIOnaries, Mother Mary. thing. In other cities they oper- quency." of 51. Hedde, their superior, told . . A d'f 1 more children as. have'been in Fall River since Lleberal Arts n ~. on y .1910, and their, story has been . wer~ pnvl1eged to. come u.nder

. . . . Contin.~ed from Page 'One the mfluenceof the FranCIscan ene of ever-mcreasmg activity. M" . th ht t . " t t·· t 11' l' D ISSlOnarIeS, we oug ,a grea

'. Ho~~ for Women rampan an I-m e ectua Ism, r. deal of harm could be forestalled. TheIr orI~mal reason for com- Kerwin .said.· But althrugh work for children

Ing to the 'city was that of -teach- School Functions . 'is near to the hearts of the I Sis- . "t "The harm from this attitudep· ing a.t E spIn 0 .,anto. school,. a ters, they are active in many

commItment they stIll .fulfili. is already felt in the field of other fields as well, under their Now, how€'ler, they also ,teach science," Dr. Kerwin said. "If Institute's broad two-fold aim catechism at six other. P.ortu- we have fallen behind in science, of expiation for sin and partici ­.. h h k 1 b 'it is precisely in the area of basic ...uese· c urc es, eep vlgl e- ~heory." pation in the apostolate. fore t~e. Ble:sed Sacrament ex-. Offer Selves posed m .thelr chapel from 6:30 Supporting his contention that "P t d' " th . A. M. to'5:30 P. M. daily, SUPIJ1Y w'e 'are "needlessly prolonging" . . over y an p~?yer, ~Ir

'R'l C . h t t the adole'scence of our studEmts, hterature states,. charactenze' o y ommunIOn, os S' 0 many th' . . . 'l·f·· · area. churches, and since 1912 the, professor cited three points: . ell' mISSIOnary I e, whIle they have' operated 51. l~rancis Guild 1) ·the country-club atmosphere bend ever~ effort to hel~ souls a home for businesswomen. ' of some schools; 2)' the wide- by educatI9nai work". m 239 ',A' t··t h' h th spread, erroneous idea of par- schools; care of the SIck and.

umqueaclvlywlC e. 1 "92h 'tl"'lSisters handled until 1942 was ents that behavior reform is the epers I~, OSPI a s, SOCIa, a?d 6&.. ···t t· f' . . scbool's functiori and 3) misdi'- catechetIcal work and 157 dls­",e VISI a IOn 0 women pnson- . ' ers in Fall'River: For a period rectionof adolescents' vocations pens~nes. To·the three vows. of

.also these prisoners were pa- by wrongly motivated parents. obedl~nce, poverty a~d .chastIty, :IOled to the . f th S· t The function of schools, Dr. the SIsters add at theIr fmal pro-'

care u e IS ers Kerwin, emphasized,- is "to give fession the offering of them­· e'm I- n'a r'y Exam the' students something to feed selves as victims for the ChurchS on all their lives ••• to make and for souls." . o

Continued from Page One 'them bet~er neighbors, bette.r Persons interested in further This Royal ~eward Offer compliments your ·"om the..college which he has fathers and mothers, better eiti- inform~tion 'about the Francis­ good taste in choosing Coronet Ice Cream by attended together with an offi- .zens." can MissionaFiesof Mary may aal record of ,his' scholastic Fancy Trivia write to" Rev. Mother Superior, Hood. Simply 'purchase. and enjoy tWo' pinta. fianding .in the various studies Within· the school systein, in- 39.9 Fruit Hill 'Avenue, North ~fCoronet ; .• the World's Finest Ice Cream.· which he has pursued. tensification of study' through Providence 11, R. .1.

, ._ '2. A letter'of recommendation .re-organization of the curricu-' from the Pastor .of the Parish, in lum into 6-4-4 plan of school

'which he resides. grades .. was. advocated by Dr. 3:' A certificate' of his Baptism. Kerwin, who added that '. it 4. A certificate of nis Confirm- would mean "squeezing a great

'. iition. 'deal of wa,ter" out 9f the pres­.' ~: A certificate of: his parents' sent" high school curriculum and '_rriage~' . doing aWay' with much' "fancy'

trivia." .

~merican Daughter.s In Catholic higher education .. two problems of paramount sig­Aid Work in Missions nificance were stress~d.The

OMAHA (NC) -!More than first is the need for competent, 1;200 compl~te sets of vestments, dynamic 'teachers of philosophy made by members of the Catho­ to instruct 'and inspire theCath­lic Daughters of America, have olic youth' in Catholic. 'schools; ,been sent' to missionaries since the second, the newly created the CDA's 'mission ,committee . demand for Catholic. scholars was organized in 1951. to teach philosophy· and theol­

The vestments are actually the ogy in secular and other non­equivalent of 2,400 sets, 'for they Catholic colleges and univers-· are' sewn so as to. be reversible. ities. .

'Another major mission com­ "It is vital that we Catholics mittee project is to support sem­ teach philosophy for two rea­

.. inarians studying for the priest ­ sons," Dr; K'erwin said. "First,~,,,

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'. r · lIelP'of:the CDA committee.' ' faith..~ ,

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