05.18.72

Page 1

Accounting Closes Next Monday

The ANCHOR Fall V o I·

CCA Hits $590,554

Catholic Charities Appeal Diocean Director, Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, announced to. qay that the' 1972 Appeal has reached $590,554.73. Special' gift solicitors are requested to complete their remaining contacts this week. Parish solicitors are urged to make final returns to An Anchor 01 the Soul, Sure and Firm-Sf. flaul their parish centers by Monday, May 22. Msgr. Gomes said: "Final doRiver, Mass., Thursday, May 18, 1972 nations from the two phases of PRICE 10¢ the Appeal can be registered un16, No. 20 © 1972 The Anchor $4.00 per year til Friday noon, May 26. The books will be closed then for the 1972 final tabulations." Diocesan lay chairman of the Appeal, Raymond E. Lambert Sr., of North Attleboro, stated: "We are pleased with this new total and we look forward to an increase within the next few days. Special gift contacts are still outstanding. Many parishioners have more returns to report." Many parishioners are close to surpassing their 1971 totals. The number of _parishes' enrolled ~n ,

Plan to Explo're Issues' in Study Of Priesthood

VERY REV. H. T. MUNROE

REV. GERALO,T. SHOVELTON

New Marion Paris-h; Clergy Assignme.,ts The Most Reverend' Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, announced today the, establishment of a mission as a new parish, the resignation of a pastor, the appointment of a dean and two administrators, the appointment of directors of two diocesan facilities, the transfer of four assistant pastors and the first assignments of the four newly. ordained priests. St. Rita's mission in Marion, formerly attached to St. Patrick's Parish in Wareham, has become an independent parish with Rev. Gerald T. Shovelton, assistant pastor of St: Patrick's Church, Fall River, as administrator. At a time when there is much talk and writing about the closing of Catholic church ana school facilities, it is a sign of' vigor and growth in the diocese that the Marion area has taken' on parochial status. Rev. Msgr. Thomas F. Walsh, pastor of St. Joho the Evengelist Church, Attleboro, since April 5, 1961, has resigned as pastor of that Parish and Dean of the Attleboro' Area. Msgr. Walsh, a priest for 45 years will live at St. Mary's Home in New Bedford' and will provide priestly service there for the Sisters and children of the Home. Very Rev. Henry T. Munroe, Officialis of the Diocese, will become administrator' of St. John's Church in Attleboro while re- . maining Officialis in the Diocesan Curia.

Rev. Msgr. Gerard J. Chabot, pastor of St. Theresa's· Church, South Attleboro, sucoeeds Msgr. Walsh as Dean of the Attleboro Deanery. The two diocesan facilities affected are St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, and Cathedral Camp, East Freetown. Rev. Armando A. Annunztato, pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Church, New Bedford, will assume the added responsi~ bility of being Director of St. Mary's Home, New Bedford. Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney, assistant pastor of St. Patrick's' Church" Wareham, will become assistant pastor of Our Lady of Fati"ma Church, New' Bedford, and will be Director of Cathedral Camp. In addition to Father Mullaney, three other assistant pastors have been transferred. Rev. EdTurn to Page Fifteen

the parish Honor Roll for exceeding last year's final totals is 10. Since the last reporting, the eight new parishes added to the honor roll are: O. L. of Victory, Centerville; O. L. of the Assump- , tion, Osterville; Holy Cross, OUl' Lady of the Angels, St. Mathieu, St. Stanislaus, Fall River; Mt. Carmel, St. Boniface, New Bedford.

A final report of the 1972 Appeal will be issued five days after the final closing of the books. Parish chairmen and priest directors of the Appeal should make their reports in person at, headquarters by noon on Friday, May 26, in order to receive proper credit for this year's Appeal. Beneficiaries of the annual Appeal are the 31 agencies of mercy and, social service which depend upon the Appeal for their ability to serve the residents of Southeastern Massachusetts with. out regard to race or creed. This year's Appeal is especially dedicated to providing for the new Nazareth Hall for exceptional children already in operation, and for the new $t. Vincent's Home in Fall River ,which will open in th~ Fall.

Msgr. Walsh Resig-ns As Pastor and Dean

The Most Reverend Bishop has James L. Connolly, Fourth Bishaccepted the resignation of Rev. op of Fall River, named the AtMsgr. Thomas F. Walsh as pas- tleboro Pastor as Dean of the tor of St. John the Evangelist Attleboro Deanery. Parish in Attleboro, and as Pope Paul VI, in March, 1964, Dean of the Attleboro Area. named the Attleboro Dean as a WASHINGTON (NC) - The Monsignor Walsh will reside at U. S. bishops' massive study of St. Mary's Home in New Bedford Domestic Prelate. , For more than 20 years, Monthe priesthood will be studied by and provide priestly ministry to four subcommittees of the bish- the resident religious' and chil- signor Walsh has been associ· ated . with. Councils of Catholic .;ops' .Co.mmittE;!e. Qn J;'riestly Life. dren. and Ministry. Born in Fall River on Jan. 25, Women throughout the Diocese. Two subcommittees may have 1900, he is. the son of the late He was first District Moderator reports by late Fall, while two James W. and the late Catherine of the NCCW in Fall River and others will not' make final re- McDonald Walsh. One of nine on Nov. I, 1954 became the Diports; until later,' according to children, he was a graduate of . ocesan Moderator of the DiocMsgr. Colin MacDonald, execu- St. Joseph Parochial School and esan Council of Catholic Women. tive director of the committee's B.M.C. Durfee High School in The amiable prelate was closesecretariat. The subcommittees Fall River. lyassociated with ever increaswill consider both the priesthood After studies at Holy Cross ing women's contribution to the study and suggestions of persons College in Worcester, the future Diocese, in the always successful interested in the "priority areas" prelate prepared for the priest- Charity Balls, St. Vincent de and "practical solutions to prob- hood at St. Bernard's Seminary Paul work for youngsters at lems" of the priesthood. in Rochester, N. Y. He was or- summer camps and support of The committee decided at an dained to the priesthood by Most the many Nazareth Halls for April meeting to form the sub- Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, Second exceptional children. committees on the basis both of Bishop of Fall River, on May 26, It is highly characteristic of the data contained in the priest- 1927. Monsignor Walsh's involvement hood study and the priorities exAs Assistant Pastor, Monsignor pressed at meetings with priests Walsh served in St. Mary Parish, .and priestly concern that he has and bishops, Msgr. MacDonald New Bedford; Immaculate Con- chosen to remain close to needy children. His work amid the desaid. ception and St. Mary Parishes in voted religious of St. Mary's The subcommittees and their Taunton; Holy Name Parish in Home cannot but be of great chairmen are: Fall River. benefit to the resident students Authority and Its Exercise,-He has also been pastor of St. Bishop Edward A. McCarthy of Dominic Parish, Swansea; St. there for his priestly devotion will surely inspire and nrovide I Phoenix. Joseph Parish, No. Dighton; St. welcomed daily direction. Accountability, Bishop. James Louis Parish, Fall River and St. W. Malone. of Youngstown. John ,the Evangelist Parish in , Celibacy and Ministry, Auxil- Attleboro. Turn to Page Six On May 1, 1961, Most Rev.

Silver Jubile:ef.or Four Prie,sts Four priests ordained in St. Mary's C,athedral on May 31, 1947 by the late Most Rev. James E. Cassidy, D.D., third bishop of Fall River, are observing the silver jubilee of ordination this month. The jubilarians are Rev. George E. Amaral, pastor of St. Anthony parish, East Falmouth, Rev. John P. Driscoll, pastor of OUf Lady of Fatima parish, Swansea, Rev. Roger P. Poirier, Pilstor of St. Joseph parish, At-

tleboro, and Rev. (Colonel) Francis X. Wallace, U.S.A. Chaplain Corps, Fort Meade," Maryland. Father Amaral Father Amaral is the son of Manuel Amaral and Mrs. Maria (Souza Marques) Amaral. He was born Aug. 14, 1922 in Raynham and was graduated from Msgr. Coyle High School. He continued his studies at St. Charles College, Catonsville, Md. and St.Mary's Seminary, Balti-

more, where he was awarded bachelor of arts and bachelor of sacred theology degrees. Father Amaral's service as assist,ant includes St. Michael's, Fall River, June 1947-october, 1951; Mount Carmel, New Bed· ford, October, 1951 until April, 1953; St. John the Baptist, New Bedford, April 1953 until May, 1964; Immaculate. Conception, New Bedford, from May, 1964 until his appointment as adminTurn to Page Eleven

REV. MSGR. T. F. WALSH


2

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-thur. May 18, 1972 \

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'DIOCESE . OF FALL RIVER

OP'FICIAL

OFFICIAL

·DIOCESE QF FALL RIVER .. ,

NEW PARISH

The' Most' Reverend" Bishop has established as of June 1, 1972, the new Parish' of St. Rita, Marion, formerly a mission

attached to St. Patrick's Parish, Wareham. RETIREMENT

v

. The Most Reverend Bishop has accepted the resignation of Rev. Msgr. Thomas F. Walsh as pastor of St. John the Evangelist Parish, Attleboro, and Dean of the Att.Ieboro Dean- ' ery. Msgr. Walsh will reside in St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, wheJ;e he will provide priestly service to the Sisters and children of the Home.· Effective on June I, 1972. .. '

APPOINTMENTS

Very Rev. Henry T. Munroe, Officialis of the Diocese, from assistant pastor of Holy Name Church, New Bedford, to St. John the Baptist Church, Attleboro, as administrator. He will remain as Officialis in the Diocesan ·Curia. Rev. Msgr. Gerard J. Chabot, pastor of St. Theresa ,Church, South. Attleboro; to, be Dean of the Attleboro Deanery. Rev. Gerald T. Shovelton, assistant pastor of St. Patrick's 'Church, Fall River, to St. Rita's Church, Marion, a:; administra-' tor. Rev. Armando A. Annunziato, 'pastor of 5t:. Francis' of Assisi ',Church; New Bedford, to assume the added responsibilityof Director ·of St. Mary's Home, New Bedford. ASSIGNMENTS

Rev. Edward J. Byington, assistant p~stor of St. John the Evangelist Church, Attleboro, to Sacred H~art Church, Taunton, as assistant pastor.' .' Rev. Bento R. Fraga" assistant pastor of ·St. Joseph's c;hurch, Taunton, to 'Holy Ghost Church,'Attleboro; as assistant. pastor. ' ' "". Rev. Paul F.. McCarrick, assistant pastor of Sacred Heart Church, Taunton,' to. St. Patrick's Church, Fall River as assistant pastor. Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney, assistant pastor of St. Patrick's Church, Wareham, to' Our Lady of Fatima Church, New Bedford, as assistant pastor, and to assume the resllonsibility of Director of Cathedral Camp, East FreetQwn. Effective on June, 1, 1972. FIRST ASSIGNMENTS

Rev. George. C. Bellenoit to St. Mary's Church, Mansf.ield, as assis~ant pastor. Rev. Marcel H. Bouchard to St. Joseph's Church, Taunton, 'as assistant. pastor. . Rev. Timothy J: Goldrick to St.1 Ann's Church, Raynham, ,as assistant pastor. Rev. Daniel }i'. Hoye to St. John the Evangelist Church, Attleboro; as assistant pastor. Effective on June 1, 1972.

Bishop

0" Fall River

Report Critizes Det'ention Camp BELFAST (NC)-An International Red Cross report pub,lished the last week of, April' said 'that between October and December of last year no improvements were made in dealing with overcrowding in 'the Long Kesh intflrnment 'camp near here for suspected terrorists and that the morale of the internees had gravely deteriorated. The Long Kesh camp is located .....

1111I1I1I11I1II1II111I1II'1Il1l1111"I~llIIU'..""IlIIII'IIIII"IIIIIIIl'11 W

on a former airfi,~ld in Lisburn, some 20 miles southwest of Belfast, and has been the main detention center since internment without trial for suspected terrorists last August. The report said that the deterioration in morale c'an be traced to two causes: "Each. man lives in a state of mental stress, convinced that he has been wrongly deprived of his liherty.

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THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass, Published every Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue.&. Fall River. Mass. 02722 by the Catholic I'ress of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription price by mall, postpaid $4.00 per YW. . " .

The second cause of low morale, the r,eporl said, is overcrowding inside the camp that "should be eliminated at all .costs." .-'. "

N~W DEAN: Rev. Msgr. Gerard J. Chabot, pastor of St. Theresa's Parish in Attleboro, has been named the new dean for the AttleboI'9 .Area replacing Rev. Msgr. Thomas F;' Walsh, retiring pastor of St. 'John's in Attleboro.

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DANIEL ANTHONY CRONIN By' the':':'~raceof God and by the Favor. of the Holy See Bishop of Fali River

DEC'REE The Establishment of the .Parish of Saint' Rita Marion, Massachusetts'

The Dogmatic Constitution .on the Ch'urch of Vatican Council II remin.ds us that: The Church of Christ is truly present in alllegitiARE~~ mate local congregations of the the faithful which, united with their. pastors, are themselves cal.led churches in the New Testament. For in their own lo~lity these eire th~ new people called by God, Attleboro Area in the Holy Spirit and much fullness. In them, the St. John, Attleboro $!),278.'i'5 faithful are gathered together by the preaching St. Mary, Mansfield ll,234.00 of the gospel or Christ, and the mystery of the St. Mary, Attleboro 8,002.00 Lord's Supper i$ celebrated, "that by the flesh and St. Mark, Attleboro 'l,407.fiO blood of the Lord's body the whole brotherhood Mt. Carmel, Seekonk ·',130.fiO· . may be joined together." Cape & Islands AreQI .It lies within the competence of the Bishop, "the steward Our Lady of Victory of the grace of the supreme priesthood, especially in, the EuchaCenterville }O,24HI5 ri.st which he offers or causes to be offered, and by which Assumption, Osterville H,840.10 the Church constantly lives and grows," to call into being' St. francis Xavier SL!ch local congregations, or parishes, as the Fathers of the Hyannis 9,394.00 .Vatican Council described.' The establishment of parishes is St. Pius X one facet of the prudent exercise of the pastoral responsibilIty South Y~rmouth 8,239,4,9 . -" 01' the Bishop. Corpus' Christi For many years,. the Catholic fCrlthful of the Town of Sandwich 6,460.00 Marion have been served by the clergy attached to Saint Pcitrick's Parish in Wareham. In this fashion, there has been Fall River Ar«~a Holy Name, Fall River 21,Hh.7'5 significant growth in the knowledge, love and service of God. Our Lady' of the Angel!! No')w, however, it seems opportune to make even better proFall River 13,397.00 .vision for the spiritual welfare of the faithf.ul'of this region. St. Mary Cathedral I have taken counsel with the Reverend Pastor of Saint Fall River 12,840.25 Patrick's Parish in Wareham. I have received the recommenSt. Thomas More dGltion of the Board of Diocesan Consulto·rs. I have heard the Somerset 9,934.00 opinion of the .faithful of the Town of Marion, heretofore Sacred Heart, ~ail River 9,692.50 attached to Saint Patrick's Parish in Wareham. I have condl<lcted a visit~tion of the locality. . New Bedford Alrea In view' of these considerations, by the ordinary power Mt. Carmel vested in and in vir.tue Of those faculties delegated by the New Bedford 19,272.40 Holy See, I do hereby establish and constitute the Parish of St. Lawrence So!int Rita. in . ~arion, Massachusetts. New Bedford 14,896.44 St. James New Bedford 11,320.00 .The territorial limits an~ boundaries of the ]>arish of St. Joseph, Fairhaven 10,082.62. Saint Rita will·. be contiguous with the limits and boundaries Holy Name New Bedford 8,111.50 of the Town of Marion, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. ' All personS of the Catholic Faith residing within these Taunton ArelCl boundaries will constitute the membership of Saint Rit~'s' St. Mary, Taunton 8,096.00 Parish. The endowment and benefice of the Parish will consist St. Joseph, Taunton 6,284.25 of. the free will offerings of the faithful. Sacred. Heart, Taunton 6,195.00 Immaculate Conception The fonner Mission of Saint Rita' will now serve as the North Easton 6,050.00 '. Parochial Church. The Parish has' the privilege of reservation Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Sacrament under the usual provisions stated Taunton . 5,124.713 in law and custom, _of possessing a baptismal font,. and of having· all other. rights associated with the administration of Necrology the! Sacramenl:~. . I reserve to the Roman Catholic Bishop of Fall ·River the MAY 19 right to nominate all Rectors, Pastors and Administrators of . Rev.' Ambrose Lamarre, O.P" . thEl Parish of Saint Rita, and I appoint the' Reverend Gerald .1940, Dominican Priory, Fall T. Shovelton as .Administrator of the Parish. River The ,canonical 'erection of the Parish of Saint Rita in Rev. Thomas,: Trainor, 1941, MG!rion, Massachusetts, and the appointment of the Reverend jf>astor, St. Louis, Fall River. . Gerald T. Shovelton as Administrator are effective on ThursMAY 20 day, June 1, 1972.. Rev. Antonio L. daSilvia, 1952, Pastor, Our Lady of Health, Fan Given at the Seat of the Curia, Fall River, Massachusetts River on ',this, the thirteenth day of May, 1972.

LEADING :PARISHES

me·

MAY 23

Rev. William F. Donahue" . 1944, Assi'stant: St. FranCis Xavier, flyannis MAY 24

Rev. James F. Clark, 1907" Founder, St. James, New Bed.. ford

Bis~op

THOMAS .J. HARRINGTON Ch'rIncellor

L.S.

of Fall River


PARISH, TOTALS Attleboro Area '

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur. May 18, 1972

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New Bedford Area

AttleboroHoly Ghost $6,098.00 9,278.75 St. John St. Joseph 3,056.00 7,407.50 St. Mark St. Mary 8,002.00 St. Stephen 5,415.00 6,749.00 St. Th~resa Mansfield-St. Mary 9,234.00· North AttleboroSacred Heart 3,507.00 St. Mary 4,861.00 Norton-St. Mary 3,918.50 Seekonk-Mt. Carmel 7,130.50

New BedfordHoly Name 8,111.50 Assumption 670.10 Immac. Conception 3,602.30 Mt. Carmel 19,272.40 Our Lady of Fatima 3,139.00 Our Lady of Per. Help 2,260.00 Sacred Heart 2,444.15 St. Anne 2,205.75 5t. Anthony of Padua 3,374.00 St. Boniface 335.00 St. Casimir 854.00 St. Francis of Assisi 1,021.50 St. Hedwig 1,212.00 St. Hyacinth 1,093.00 St. James 11,320.00 Cape.& Islands Area St. John the Baptist 6,326.25 ,St. 'Joseph 2,670.50 BrewsterSt. KilIan 2,871.00 Our Lady of the Cape $3.419.45 St. Lawrence 14,896.44 Buzzards BaySt. Mary 6,270.25 St. Margaret 5,775.50 St. Theresa 2,877.50 CentervilleAcushnetOur Lady of Victory 10,247.95 St. Francis Xavier 2,716.40 Cha,thamFairhavenHoly Redeemer 4,461.00 St. Joseph 10,082.62 St. Mary 2,921.50 East Falmouth. 968.50 Sacred Hearts St. Anthony 1,818.50 MattapoisettEdgartownSt. Anthony 4,316.50 St. Elizabeth 1,024.50 North DartmouthFalmouth-St. Patrick 5,510.00 St. Julie 5,723.11 HyannisSouth DartmouthSt. Francis Xavier 9,394.00 St. Mary '7,155.50 Wareham-Sot. Patrick 7,918.00 Oak Bluffs. Sacred Heart 1,059.00 ' Wesfport-St. George 5,645.00 2,215.45 Osterville-Assumption 9,840.10 Marion-St. Rita Pocasset-Sot. John 4,255.50 .Taunton Area' Provincetown8t. Peter 1,598.00 TauntonSandwichHoly Family 4,929.00 Corpus Christi '6,460.00 Holy Rosary 2,518.00 Immac. Conception 5,124.76 South YarmouthOur Lady of Lourdes 1,855.75 8,239.49 St. Pius X' ., Sacred Heart 6,195.00 :,', Vineyard Haven--:" ., .. ', St. Anthony' I -. " " 3,784.80 St. Augustine 1,020.50 St. 'James . '.' , 4,303.00, WellfleetSt. Joseph ' 6,284.25 Our Lady of tourdes 2,334.00 St. Mary 8,096.00 St. Paul" 4,763.00 West HarwichDighton-St. Peter 1',298.00 5,884.00 Holy Trinity Nor,th DightonSt. Joseph 1,848.00 Fall River Area North EastonImmac. Conception 6,050.00 St. Mary 12,840.25 Raynham-St. Ann 3,854.00 Blessed Sacrament 1,460.75 South EastonEspirito Santo 1,402.00 Holy Cross' 3,068.00 Holy Cross 1,976.50 Holy Name 21,101.75 Notre Dame 6,520.50 Urge Mexican Nuns' pur Lady of Angels 13,397.00 Our Lady of Health 2,362.50 To Work for Poor : ~ Holy Rosary 2,865.00 MEXICO CITY (NC) - Nuns. Immac. Conception 5,077.77 must work for liberation of th,e Sacred Heart 9,692.50 poor if they are to be GospelSt. Anne 3,556.50 like, said a group of nuns at. a, St. Anthony of Desert 1,469.00 meeting on Christianity and SoSt. Anthony of Padua 2,665.00 cialism 'here. St. Elizabeth 479.00 Attending the meeting were St. John the Baptist 3,189.50 Sisters from 11 of the 132 orders St. Joseph 5,306.00 of women Religious in Mexico. St. Louis 2,406.00 They issued a call "to build a St. Mathieu . 2,701.34 new community of brotherly St. Michael 5,897.50 love as the foundation of ChrisSt. Patrick 4,516.00· tian living, both for personal 5S. Peter and Paul 6,035.50 faith and for a prophetic role in St. Roch 2,748.00 society." St. St·anislaus 4,675.00 The 11 orders represented at St. William 3,225.30 the meeting are de-,roted to work Santo Christo 1,854.10 among the poor. The nuns, five Assonet-St. Bernar.d 2,017.00 of them religious superiors, said in their statement that there is Central VillageSt. John Baptist 3,007.00 tension in Mexico between those defending "the old ,'structure of North WestportOur Lady of Grace 4,561.00 religious life" and those "advo. eating renewal." Ocean Grove"We must take the risk and St. Michael 1,520.50 change this structure according Somersetto present and demanding realSt. John of God 5,370.50 ities," they said. "A nun must St. Patrick 6,315.00 answer to loyalty to God and to 9,934.00 these .needs, especially, "man's St. Thomas More Swanseacurrent cry for independence, Our Lady of Fatima 6,313.73 liberation from all servitude, St. Domiidc 3,983.00 personal fulfillment and integraSt. Louis of France 5,094.33 tion."

BISHOP RECEIVES BLESSINGS OF PRIESTS: Rev. Geo~geC. Bellenoit, Rev. Marcel H. Bouchard, Rev. Daniey F. Hoye and Rev. Timothy J.Goldrick bestow their blessings on' Bishop Cronin, the ordajning prelate, following their ordination to the priesthood on Saturday afternoon in St. Mary's Cathedral. .

Special' Gi.fts National $125 Rev. Joao de, Medeiros $75 Rev. Clarence J. D'Entremont I.

$GO ','

Walsh Brothers, Inc., Cambridge

Attleboro. $1000 Attleboro Dyeing & Finishing Corp. . $300 St. Vincent de Paul Conference, St. Theresa $150 McGowan Insurance Agency $100 St. Vincent de Paul Confer· ence, St. John W. H. Riley & Son Mrs. Leon Pini , St. Jean Baptiste Duvernay Council No. 42 Dr. & Mrs. James Dewitt Swift & Fisher Co. $75 Hi-Lo Market Attleboro. Lions Club $60 . No. End Social Club $50 Beauchaine's, Inc. $40 Pete's Barber Shop Alice's Shop $25 B.P.O.E. Attleboro Lodge No. 1014

Atty. Ronald A. Brais Riley Bros. Lumber Co. Mandeville Chevrolet Co. . Wamsutta Drug Co. Mr. & Mrs. Joe Levis Ashley's Drug Store Lyons Advertising, Inc. W. E. Richards Co. K. F. Bassler Co., Inc.

Selfishness 'l'he selfish spirit of commerce knows no country, and feels no passion or principle but that of ,gain. -Jefferson

New Bedford $1000 Hemingway Transport, Inc. $500 Almeida Bus Uries, Inc. $250 , . Loranger Copstruction, Corp. Harriet Transportation Co. $125 First Federal Savings & Loan Association $100 Dartmouth Finishing Corp. Park Oil Co. Kiwanis Club of New Bedford Moss Trucking Corp. Blue Ribbon Laundry , $75 Ashley Ford Co. Hathaway Oil Co., Inc. $50 Laborer's Union Local No. 385 Dr. Thomas H. Flyim States Nitewear Co., ,Inc. Adams & Adams $35 Browne Pharmacy, Inc. $30 Manhattan Bottling Co. Pat McKenna $25 American Flexible Conduit Co. Ryan & Scully, Inc. Austin Funeral Home Sharkey's Tire & Rubber Co. New Bedford Firefighters Assn. Local No. 84 Capeway Sheet Metal Co. Bishop Stang Council K of C Construction Building , & Trades Council Local No. 224 IBEW N. B. Catholic Guild for the Blind lv~"'J

BROOKLAWN

Bricklayers, Masons & Plaster' . ers, 'LN. No. 39 Dahill Co. Guy's Pharmacy Dr. Max 'Blum. . . N. B. Jo'inC'Board,' T~xtile Workers Union of America, CIO· AFL Dr.. J. Gr~er McBratney Brodeur's Machi~e Co., Inc. D. L. Hathaway & Sons Atty. Jack London Catholic Nurses Guild of Greater N. B. Union Liquors Co. Plumbers Supply Co. New Bedford Typographical U!1ion No. :n6 Cape Cod Caterers, Inc. L & S Concrete Co. H.M.C. Cutlery

JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN Funeral Home 550 Locust Street Fall River, Mass. 612-2391

Rose E. Sullivan Jeffrey E. Sullivan

O'ROURKE Funeral Home 571 Second Street Fall River" Mass. 679-6072 MICHAEL J. McMAHON Registered Embalmer Licensed Funeral Director

ROller Lafrance

Wilfred C. Sullivan Driscoll FUNERAL ~OME

FUNERAL DIRECTORS 15 Irvington Ct. New Bedford 995-5166

206 WINTER STREET FALL RIVER, MASS. 612-3381

FUNERAL HOME, INC. R. Marcel Roy -

G LOrrame lay

D. D.


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Walter Flavin J.oseph Doyle $25 . Rev. James F. Buckley, George A. Granville Jr.; Daniel F'arrell, William .Durgin, Jeremiah J. Crowley Mrs. Thomas Govett, George \ Thompson, Joseph Hertig; Orner R. Chartrand, Henri Ozon. Doris Goff, Joseph. Silansky, Kathleen Bresnahan, Jane Keen. an, Frederick B. Henderson . . Maurice Gauthier, James McCabe, Donald Walwer, T. Frank Sullivan, Cornelius Spillane David L. Collins, Bruce: Hammett, James B. Downing, Harold J. Hawko,Earl Caswell 'David Bessom, Thomas Counihan'

THEANCHOR-,Diocese of F.all River-ihur. May 18, 1972

Special Gifts W. Irving Peirce & Son

Fall River

Inc. $2000 Professional Pharma.cy F. L. Collins & Sons,. Inc. Bristo.l Knitting Mills, Inc. $1010 MoniCa E. Gordon Residents of Catholic M,?Crawford Electrical Company morial Home Ralph Keyes $1000 Economy Body &, Radiator Gold Medal Bakery A Friend ' Works Mass Catholic Order 6~ 'Forest• White's Family 'Restaurant ers $750 Furniture Village Slade's Ferry Trust Co. . Danfred Jewelers $600 Atty. Robert A. Bogle Dliro Finishing Corp. Donnelly Painting Co. $500 Fall River Paper & Supply Co. Montie Plumbing & Heating Co. Mr. Thomas Abbott Artcraft Fixtures - Div. De Fall . River Catholic Nurses Soto Foundation Guild. Citizens Savings Bank Oak Grove Pharmacy Mr. & Mrs. Emilio Dispirito Jdseph' Borge it SoilS, Inc. , Fall' River Permanent FireMr. & Mrs. Henry J. Feitelberg $337.50 men's Benefit Ass~n. Residents of Highland Heights Joseph M. Madowsky , Sullivan's Motor Sales $350 Sociefy of St. Vincent de' Paul Ray's Auto Radiator Works Notre Dame Exchange Angelina Arcand First Federal Savings &, Loan $250 '. Tauntol11 Lafayette Coooperative Bank '$607 , $200 Guests of Marian Manor' Anderson-Little Co., Inc. $150 . $185 Modern Plastics Engineering Waring·Ashton Funeral Direc- Corporation tors . Talbot F. Tweedy $100 $100 . White Spa Caterers New Process Twist Drill Co. Tioga ~portswear Co. 'James E. Miles Insurance. FranJ( X. 'Perron Insurance Agency . Wilfreg ,J. Gingras Insurance Sanford EI¢Ctrical Co. Harvey Probber, Inc. . Weir .Pharmacy .. :Fllll . ~iver Council. No. 86. K.' $75 of ,C. " . : Dr. N~rman·dP. Larocque Peerless'Laundry , .' ~St. ViJ?cent de Paul ConferIn Memory- of Rev: George B. '. ence, S[' Ann, Raynham McNamee ' , . $ 5 0 . '. .' , l\1!lry E. Noon. Dr. William L. Donahue $75 W. H.Riley & Son :'. Fall River Lodge No. U8,' BPO Frank~J. Smith Elks· . . 'John Bright Shoes $50 St. Ann Women's Guild,RaynLetendre. & Boule. Wholesale' .ham Grocers , . St. Vincent de Paul ConferGamache Trucking Co. ence, St. Jacques Atty. & Mrs. Wm. P. Grant. $25 Fall River Glass Company Bristol County Furniture Co. Valcourt Industarial Supply Dolan-Saxon Funeral Home Jay-Vee's, Inc. . . Abreau's Oil. Service Cook Borden & Co.' . Farrell's Restaurant League, of Sacred Heart, St. A H. Leeming & Sons, In~. Eugene Pontiff Jacques ' Pierce-Taunton Supply ·Co. Fall River Knitting Mills, Inc. Edward Brayton St. Jacques Women's Guild Smith E~ectrical Supply Co. St. Joseph Women's Guild, Taunton Chace Electric Co. J\irpe Pelletier Electrical ConCape Cod';.,. Ildands tractors , Mr. & Mrs. Charles Daby $1000 . Coffee Sam Industrial Caterers St. Vincent de' Paul ConferFa~I River Florists Supply Co. ence, Our Lady of Assumption, • Robert L. Germane Contflictot: Osterville Corcoran Supply Company . $200 Coronet .Print, Inc. St. Vincent de Paul Conference, St. Pius X, So. Yarmouth Louis Hand, Inc. , $45 . , $150 St. Pius X Guild, Atty. Peter Collias' $100 $35 Falmouth Diner J. E. Amiot & Sons Boyer Paper' Co., Inc. Anonymous . . $75' Engine Service & Supply, Inc. Wood Lumber 'Co., Falmouth $30 $50 Mr. Andrew J. Lyons Falmouth NatIonal Bank Mrs. Amanda Levesque . $25 Holy Name Society, St. Augustine, Vineyard Haven Dr. Elmer Leigh Jr. St. Elizabeth Guild, Edgartown Atty. Thompson & Reed Gendreau Moving, Trucking & $30 I AI's Package Store, Edgartown Rigging Co., Inc. $25 Nelson's Dairy Travel by Betty Doherty, Buz· Robert C. Hadley Insurance zards Bay . John P. Slade & Son Danny Kay's, Falmouth Sherwin & Gottlieb Quequechan Products '. Cape Bus Lines, Falmouth Lewis Gray Sons' Co. . Mel.lo's Gleaners, Buzzards Bay Coca Cola Bottling Co. of the Thos. P. Egan; Inc. Islands, Inc. Poiri~r Buick, Inc. o

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Centerville OUR LADY OF VICTORY ..

$100 Mr. & Mrs. William Dacey Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Donahue $65 · Marion Hanigan $50 · Mrs. Leo Cushing Dorothy Fawcett Margaret Fawce~t Mr. &Mrs. Richard Griffith Mr. & Mrs. Kevin'O'Neil · $35 ·Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Nugnes $30 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Rougeau $25 . Mr. & Mrs. John Anderson, Dr. & Mrs. G. Curtis Barry, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bearse, Eveyln' G. . Coyne, Kathryn Coyne . Mr. & Mrs. Harry Davidspn, Mr. &. Mrs. James Erwin; Mr. & Mrs. William' J. :Hearn, Dt.. & . Mrs. Richard LeJava, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Murphy, .ir. . Mrs'. Josie S. Sheaffer, Mr. & Mrs. ,Robert' Starck, ,Mr. '& Mrs. Charles Swain, Mr. & Mrs. James G. Timlin, Mr. & Mrs. john' Willett .

HONORED: Rev. I

Msgr. William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis since 1964 was honored by his parishioners Sun'day afternoon at a reception commemorating pis 40th anniversary :as a priest. Monsignor offered a Mass of Thanksgiving following the reception. ' I 1111111111111111

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Oman Construction Co., Inc., West Yarmputh . . Wareham Lodge of Elks No. 1548 " Buzzards Bay Garage Dr. Ralph G. Angus Crowley ,Associates Realtors D~:lsie's $ervice Station .' Cape' Cod Nursing & Retire' 'ment Home

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PorishGifts So. ;YarmQuth S.T.PIUS x' $500 Bay Colony' Federal Sa.vings .& Loan Association . : $400 Jo:m F. Martin $200 Martin Geraghty I $100 Francis'p. Patti Alice· A:Brady Thomas ~ague John Do~erty John F. Mart,in, Real Est. & Ins. James H. Quirk :. $60 Ric:hard .Terri'o ' , $50 George Roberts Raymond Ludden Mrs. Ernest Eastman Jeremiah . He~lihy . Charles <;:ollins . J'ames L Keany James H: Quirk Jr.' Joi;eph 1\1. Manning Stephen Crowley " $40 James Dooley , $35 Henry J. ,Healey $30 'George Lucier John M. ,Osterman Edward Robinson Harry J . .Doherty , $25 Franklin I Basset - Sunnybrook Farms, Wilfred J. Paquet, Eugene Deveau, Thomas Eaton, Eveline Sul~ivan Edward.Streile, Thomas P. Dean,Fred Moriarty, Joseph Ruscio, Ern'est 1.. Maillet Jo~;eph. Dias, William F. Erisman, Lawrence Kenney, Joseph

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5

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur. May 18, 1972

Propose Shorter Abortion Period NEW YORK (NC) - A proposal to shorten the period in which· legal abortions may- be performed may soon be introduced in the state legislature in Albany, it has been reported here. The proposal, offered by Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, suggests that legal abortions be reduced to fall within the first 16 weeks of pregnancy· instead of' 24 weeks as the law now stipulates. There were indications, however, that the Rockefeller amendment would not be acceptable to either those who want total repeal of the present liberal law

or those who want the law left untouched. Gov. Rockefeller has ruled out the possibility that he would sign an amendment which would repeal the present abortion law but said he would sign one shortening the abortion period. In Albany, there was specu- , lation that the Rockefeller amendment would have a better chance of passage in the State Senate than in the Assembly. It has not even been decided which of the houses would first consider the amendment, an important factor in a year when most of th~~ state legislators are seeking re-election.

WHO SIGNS BUILDING CONTRACT FOR NEW MATTAPOISETT CHURCH: Looking 011 as Bishop Cronin signs the contract for the new St. Anthony Church in Mattapoisett are Very Rev. Thomas J. Harrington, chancellor; Ronald R. Loranger of the Loranger Construction Co., New Bedford; John Schleyer of the Edward P. Denning and Associates, Architectural firm of Providence; Rev. Leo King, SS.CC., assistant at the Mattapoisett parish; Rev. James F. Kenney, secr~tary of administration and' finance for the diocese. Plans call for the completion of the new edi fice early in 1973.

CARES ••• ? THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH

Dear' friend, Who cares about Holy Land refugees? Who cares if the baby born tonight in a refugee tent will have a clean blanket? Who cares if eager breadwinners deprived of their Iiveliho~ds can be re·trained for new jobs? Who cares about the orphans of war? Our Holy Father cares. Ever since these wars began, our Pontifical Mis· sion for Palestine has been caring in practical terms: shoes, blankets, hot meals, medicine, AN new houses, new classrooms, self-help family OPEN loans, re-training, scholarships. LEITER' " .fTC> The world is beginning to care a lot about the hazard· to everyone's peace ,in. the unsettled YOU status of 1,500,000. Holy Land refugees. While diplomacy remains boggled, your priests, nuns and lay workers are feeding, healing, teaching, mending the peace person-by-person-by caring where it counts. We believe that you cCjre, too. About shivering children, about Christ's homeland, "about peace, about th~ humane thing. The headlines of recurring crises in the Holy Land will not let your caring rest. We beg you to invest in people who need you. with the handy coupon below. Your gift will go to work right away. And thanks for caring, Monsignor Nolan

Concern Mounts Over School 'Aid Rulings (An NC News' Analysis) . CathoHc school officials are registering acute concern over the growing number of lower court decisions invalidating state aid • programs : for ~onpuQ\ic 'schools'.': " . ' . (', .. The'sedeci~ions, they's'ay, espouse even stricter limits than those set by the U.S. Supreme Court in last June's landmark decision outlawing direct aid payments to nonpublic schools in Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. Three times in April-in Ohio, Pennsylvania and, most recently New York-federal courts blocked new avenues of TlOnpublic schooi aid. The New York ruling handed down April 27 was especially significant, because the statute it struck down had been regarded by constitutional experts as one aid form which was immune from court action. The so-called Mandated Services Act reimbursed New York non public schools $28 million per year for record keeping and testing required by the state. Actions 'Predictable' "All of us are disturbed by the rash of opinions which come from lower federal courts recently and have even gone far beyond the limits of the regrettable Supreme Court decision of last June," said Cardinal Terence Cooke of New York the day after the mandated services decision was announced. Charles J. Tobin, Jr., secretary of the New York State Catholic Committee .in Albany, expressed his concern "that lower courts in th'is country consistently chip away at national needs and desires with this kind of decision." One constitutional law expert, however, called the federal court actions "predictable." "It's much easier for these lower court justices to knock out any new forms (of nonpublic

school aid) that come along, than to go against the basically hostile tenor of the Supreme Court decision last June," said Father Charles Whelan, law professor at Fordham University. Campaigp. ~t :tIarassment What is really significant, the Jesuit said, is; how the Supreme Court will handle appeals of the lower court decisions. State officials .in both. Ohio and New York have already announced plans to appea'l the federal court ruling 'to the high court. In Pennsylvania, where federal judges ~erely refused to dismiss a suit challenging a tuition reimbursement law, a decision on the constitutionality of the statute' is stm pending. . Supreme Court considera'tion of the invalidated statutes is'the shred of hope which Catholic

Plan Distinctive Liturgy for Eskimos OTIAWA (NC)-The Canadian bishops are planning to develop distinctive liturgical ceremonies and catechetical programs geared to the culture of Canada's Indians and Eskimos, including the use of traditional dances and songs in the Mass. At <their Spring assembly here the bishop stressed the need to make the Gospel more meaningful to the Indian-Eskimo way of life. In a communique, the' bishops said that the native people of Canada are by their make-up spiritual people with deep human and religious values that must be strengthened and which ~an be shared. Bishop Gilles Ouellet of Gaspe said that the old Baltimore Catechism had little impact on Indians and suggested an educational program based on life experiences of the Indians and Eskimos, rather than an intellectual approach to God.

schQol officials are grasping in their discouragement over the federal court'rulings. "We certainly trust," said Bishop Francis J. Mugavero of Brooklyn, }',. .. that ,the Supreme Court' of the United States will call a. halt to this ,campaign of harassment being' mounted by lower fe,deral courts." .

Church in India 'Too Western' MADRAS (NC) - Christianity in India is still presented in "Western garb" and' this has damaged and relations between Christians and other Indians, Cardinal Joseph Parecattil of the Syro-Malabar-rite archdiocese of Ernakulam told an ecumenical meeting here. Cardinal Parecattil appealed for Indianization of Christianity so that a beneficial encounter with Indian culture can begin~ The cardinal said that some Indian Christians are unfortunately still Indian only in color and by birth, but Western in' their cultural outlook and atti· tude toward life. Their Western outlook and attitude has stood in the way of Christianity's progress in India, the cardinal safd, adding that Christianity is regarded' as an alien religion opposed to India's national interests. Appealing to Catholics to en· ter the mainstream of India's .cultural life, Cardinal Parecattil said that Indian culture is essentially_ spiritual and that an encounter between such a' culture and Christianity can only 'be mutually beneficial. The cardinal explained that by Western garb he means "not only European garb, but also a Semitic garb of the so-called Middle East, which after all is West when looked at from India."

... ....

$ • . .. My 'Stringless Gift,' use it where irs needed most $2750 Equipment for Pediatrics Center $1390 Sound lab for 20 deaf-mute boys $ 525 Three-room home for refugee family , $ 300 Two-year vocational training for refugee youngster $ 210 One-year hospital care for an aged refugee $ 50 Sewing machine for a refugee girl $ '25 One year's medical care for a refugee family $ 10 Braille books for blind children $ 5 Two dresses for an orphan girl $ 2 Blanket for a baby $ 1 Lunch for a child for one month

WAYS TO SHOW

YOU

CARE

fa

Dear Monsignor Nolan:

ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND

Please return coupon with your offering

$

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FOR NAME STREET CIT'I'

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6

THE ANCHOR~OiC?~ese of Fal! :River-Thur. May 18, 1972

Score. Schoo)·

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Aid .' "Report.

AVatican weekly newspaper. has pubJished an article' by an Italian priest-th~'oiogian stating that. the Church in the United States was' being. shaken. by a "tremendous earthquake".and seemed on the' verge of collapse, but hoped that the "silent majority" would 'save ·it.· .' . Cause of the' apprehension voiced in L'Osservatore · Della' 'Domenica seems to be the press coverage given in America to Church difficulties and protilenis. Another cause is that Roman Catholic writers and' publications in the United States criticize the Church· "with a· masochistic .furor that-has few precedents in the history not only of. the church but also of any society." , . Most Rev. JosephL. Bernadin,generaJ. secretary of the National Conference of Catholic 13ishops, has countered .by saying that while the .Church in this country has prob·lems, so does the' Church the world over. An(~ he has cautionedilgainst' a one-dimensional. view of the Church, a view that is sometimes given by American newspapers and , magazines. . It'is true that the Church is going through a period of .' renewaL Renewal 'is usually painful. And it is equally .true ., .. that in the process the' story of the pain makes more news i: than the story of the progress. . .' . .. The ·use of the new rite of Mass all throughout the United' States does not reach out. and grab headlines although ',it is a momentous event in the life of the Church and in the spiritual understanding and development of Catholics. But let Catholic schools close, let a small-perTime bo:mb ~entage of C~tholic priests turn away' from their ministry, let Sisters ask to be released from their vows, and the press coverage given would give the impression of total collapse. And yet, the majority of Catholics are attendiing Mass T~ro Catholic' OfHciall5 Rejec't · regularly, are receiving Holy Communion, are striving to · live up to' their~faith, are anxious t:hat their. children know Anltiul$raeli Bias ill1 Sermons WASHNqTON (NC) - Two..:: Pastor Elson had chided Chrisand .love God and the.things of God. Catholic qfficials have strongly titans who· justify Israel's control· But the' "orcEllary" seldom makes news. And" man's rebuked three prominent Chris- of Jerusalem on the grounds that pursilit of holiness and the following of ,his religion are tian church, leaders who, in ser- ii: is a fulfillment of prophecy. considered ordinary and unnewsworthy; The ~nusual, the mons here ~n Palm: Sunday, criti- fie said the church founded after bizarre, the frightening, .the disaster, the unexpe,cted.;· the cized Israeli policies in Jerusa- Christ's resurrection became gloomy-all these are the stuff of which newspaper head- lem. News: reports of the ser- "the ne'w Israel of God" and the mons in loc~l newspapers caused ol)ly authentic Israel that· a . , lines are' made. FathE:r Edward H. Flannery and Christian· ean have. A lesson that can betakEmfrom the Vatkan newspaper. Msgr. George G. Higgins to send 'Father 'Flannery' and Msgr. is that Americ~n Catholics wo'uld do well to introduce more letters to' ~he dailies' rebutting Higgins wrote that DealJ Sayre balance into their thinking and writing about the Church. .' the. clergymen.. should have checked' his inforAnd some had better examine· what they write beqmse · "We can affirm that we found mation, ac:cusing him of feeding the criticism of some does ,indicate an' emotional hysteria, no evidence of violation of non- Christian self-dghteousness and and a masochistic furor: that· borders: on the ahnorma( Jewish ,rights or of oppressiort," encouraging contempt for Israelis 1he two..Catholic priests who or Jews. They said that Prof. It is newsworthy, of course, but then the·. abnormal us~ally said explained. that they had inter- Shahak's views are distorted and is. Not balanced,not .sane, not; even correct-but news- . viewed many Christian church- "a singulclrly weak basis 'upon worthy. men, Palestinian Arabs' and Is- which to build a s'ermon." .

Someone Cares

These' few days can be .cnticai pne~. in the story of this year's Catholic Charities Appeal Individual' collectors in : individual parishes must be sure that.they have given every person within the parish the opportunity to partidpate in, the charitable work of Christ and His Church. And this is exactly the way the Appeal must be viewed. Money is a stewardship and. the one who has little or much of this world's goods is a steward who must give an accounting of what he has and how he uses it and what concern he feels toward those who have less than he has. There are always two beneficiaries of charity-the giver and the recipient. And one who gives with this in mimi knows that his gift and the sacriffice and good will that .go with it hilVe accomplished .much for himself and for the. one who will benefit. . :

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raeli officials while on' a factfinding trip; to Jerusalem a few . weeks ago. i

'Outdated' Theology'

"Is there not something very w.rong with Chri·stians employing anti"Zionist Jews to witness for them against Israel?" the two prIests asked: "Is it not too close to the old anti-Semitic stratagem of using passages from the Hebrew prophets in order to scold Jew: s?" The source' of their irritation They accused Dr. Elson of re· was th,e preaching of Dean Fran- ' .Cis B, Sayre Jr. at the National lying on outdated theology in Episcopal Qathedral. and of the saying thut the church is "the Rev. Edward L.R.Elson; chaj)· only authentic Israel." As for lain of theU. S. Senate, at the .current conditions in Jerusalem; National .Presbyterian Church. they said: In addition, Bishop Popken, the "The situation in' Jerusalem 'Armenian 9rthodox legate to today is the best. it has been in Washington, spoke to an entou· many years. For the' first time in ·rage of followers and stressed decades the holy places are open that Jerusalem Ioell?ngs to aU to all and protected by the go.v'elmment, a.nd ~he city is an open orie and 1:1t· peace. Father Flannery is executive secre':ary of the American Catholic bishops' Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations. Msgr. Higgins is director, of .the Urban Life Division at the U. S, Cath· olic Conference.

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"Where were the critics from 1948 to 19167 when the situation mon that the Israelis, the 0»" left so ,much to be desired under -OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER 'OF THE DIO'CESE OF' FALL 'RIVER " ,pressed people.'in the June 196;7' Jordanian administration?" Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese. of Fall River war with the. , Arabs; have now 410 Highland Avenue '. become 't~e oppressors. He , ' '. l~rogressioll1 Fall River,' Mass. 02722· 675~7151 charged th~tArabsin Jerusalem · now ::tave n~)voice and-no hapI have· to 'study politics. and PUBLISHER . pines:;, quoting Prof. Israel Sha- war so that. my .s!Jns 'can' study M~st Rev. Dani~1 A. Cronirt, D.O." S.T.D. . ,', 'hak of Hebrew University ~,s mathematics,. commerce and'. agGENERAL MANAGER _,A>SS.:r.. ,~~NE~A.L },I\ANA~ER ,.saying that. the Israeli'annexll- ricul~ute, so their 'sons ~aii.: stud~ Rev. Msgr. OahielF. Shciiloo,' M':A.. . Rev. ·John P. Dr~scoll ,tion cf East Jerusulem is "an im· poetry; painting arid ,music: , .~leary Press-·Fa" River .. ~,'>:' moral und unjust act," ", " ••• . -Ada.ms t

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" . NEW' YORK· (NC~The recommendations of the Presidential 'Panel' on NonpublicSchools were'· called "self-serving" by the Committee' for Public Education an·d. Religious' Education, a, coalition' of groups. opposed to aid nonpublic :schools. .The .panel's recommendation that the' federal government aid nonpublic .schools was "scarcely a surprise;" Mrs. Florence· Flast, PEARL executive ,vice-president" said.· . . Mrs. 'Flast . pointed out that "All four' members (of' the· panel) 'represent religious and'private school interests.,,···· "There 'can' be. no credibility in Ii paJlel so 'constituted," she said. The panel members' wer.e Clarence Walton, president of Catholic University; Auxiliary Bishop William McManus of Chi, cago; William G. Saltonstall, former principal of. Phillips Exeter Academy; and: Ivan Zylstra, a Christian Reformed Schools official. . . The panel· recommendations included educational fax credits for middle income· families, aid to the urban poor and low inter- . est loans for nonpublic school construction. Mrs. Flast said "the panel's conclusions" that such aid forms ."would be· constitutional is be~ lied by a series .of recent federal court decisions." Thecolirts, sh~ said, have ruled that such aid is "just as unconstitutional as di~ rect aid to the schools themselves," Rather than pass bills aiding nonpublic schools, Mrs. Flast. said, .. Congress should provide "adequate "support for public schools, the only schools which can be mandated to insure equidly and equal protections under the law." .

Priesthood Study Continued from Page One . iary Bishop Thomas J. Grady of Chicago. , Research and Scholarship, Archbishop Philip M. Hannan of New Orleans, who is also chairman of the full committee. Msgr. MacDonald said he hopes the first two committees will present final reports to the full committee late this Fall. Some material may be on the agenda of the bishops' November meeting, he said. The other subcommittees plan to use a report on priestly spirituality, which is still in preparation, as the basis for much of their work. Expands Work , At meetings with priests and bishops, Msgr. MacDonald said, "Authority and the selection of authority, the accountability of bishops and priests for their performance and ministry, the need for a meaningful spirituality for mOdern-day priests, and the problem of polarization and discouragement among priests are priorities that surface constantly." The committe, originally called the Commit,tee'for the Implementation of the Study of the Priestly Life and Ministry: was renamed at the hierarchy's Spring meetng. The new name-Committee on Priestly ,Life and Ministry-shows that the committee will expand its work to .inClude issues in the. 'priest/lood st.udy, the Monsignor' said.


Buzzards Bay ST. MARGARET

, $50

Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Payton ~ Friend Douglas Taylor

$30 Mr. & Mrs. Charles Lindberg Mr. & Mrs. Joseph SCUlly Mrs. M. Marcellino

$25 Mr. & Mrs. ~eonarci Baker, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Boraks, Mrs. Catherine H. D. Bowen, Mr. & Mrs. Melvin Burns, Mr. & Mrs. Henri C. Coulombe Mrs. Catherine E. De Lay, Mr. & Mrs. Victor Gosselin, Atty. & Mrs. James R. McMahon Jr., Mr. & Mrs. A. Moore Mr. & Mrs Raymond Fitzgerald Mr. & Mrs. William Larkin, Mrs Mary Matthews, Mrs. Anthony VaHoreggio Mary Bodanza Mr. & Mrs. Sail Shaker, Mr. & Mrs. Edward·O'Melia, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Post,' Mr. & Mrs. Francis Paulette

E. Falmouth', ST. ANTHONY

$300 In Memory of Manuel Amaral Sr, "

$100 Mello Electrical Co. . $50 Mrs. Dorothy W. Sylvia $40 Mr. & Mrs. Stanley H. Santos Mr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Souza

$30 In Memory of John Rose & Manuel Amaral Sr. Mrs. Beatrice Emerald

$25 In Memory of George P. Cabral, In Memory of Ernest & Eugenia Kewack, Harold Baker Co., Inc., Mr. & Mrs. Patrick P. Bishop, Mr. & Mrs. Dav,id F. Correllus Falmouth Council No. 813 Knights of Columbus, Mr. & Mrs. John Pena, St. Anthony's Couples Club, Mr. & Mrs. Julio Santos, Mr. & Mrs. Antone G. Souza, Mr. & Mrs. Frederick E. Ward

Vineyard Haven ST. AUGUSTINE

$200 Rev. William F. O'Connell

$100 Mr. & Mrs. William Cross

$50 Leonard Martin Mr. & Mrs. Dean Swift Jr.

Edgartown ST. ELIZABETH

$200 Rev. Justin J. Quinn

$50 ·Mrs. Corrine Fourner

$35 Mr. & Mrs. Ellsworth Fisher Mrs. Margaret & Mary I. Madeiros Charlotte Madeiros Mr. & Mrs. George T. Silva

$30 Mr. & loughby

Mrs'. Freeman Wil-

$50

~~(~~'~~~r;;"

.. $35

Marion & Mrs~ John L. Kane John A. Roy, Thomas Sparkes . Joseph A. tweed $30'

James H. Andrews Lawrence J. Frawley Elizabeth Norton John Speight

$25 Dona~ Barabe, Sergus J. Bernard; Marie .Brent, Chatham Furniture C'o: Chatham Trust Co. Frank' E. Devlin, Carl P. Doelger, Jr~, Frank Dresser, Jr., First National- Bank, Chatham, 'Lawre'nee A. &, Eldredge 'c5, L. Hunter . Edward L. Farrell, Jr., Edw. F. Galligan, .Marion H. Gray, Andrew 'J~ G~iffin, .J.. Thomas Haley Dr. E. Robert Harned, James Jackson, R.' R. Lally, John B. Loftus, Geo. MacLean . , Frank Maloney, Daniel Marine,' The Martin Family, John W. Mc~ Grath, P. E. Murphy Dr. Richard ·W. Page, Freeman' W. Phillips, Jr., Florence E. Reilly, Joseph E. Reynolds, Jennie E. Roderick Wa{ter D. Rogers, Dr. Joseph Ropulewis, Geo. J. Smith, Philip Stello, John Ventola

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Doyle, Mr. & Mrs. G. Albert Kent, Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Mercier Jr., Mrs. Margaret O'Neil

Chatham HOLY REDEEMER

$100 James B; Bell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Gormley _ Ralph W. Guida Henry P. Hamrock John M. Mohyde Norman St. Pierre Frank H. Wing

/'

$40

~yannis

ThHE .~NMCHO.R72" T urs., ay 18, 19

Margaret Moran

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ST,IFRAN:CIS XAVIER

$35 .

$200 Society of ,St. Vincent de Paul, Particular C~)Uncil of Cape Cod .and the IsI~r;tds .

$100 . Dr.. & Mrs. Francis O'Neil William .Conlon In Memory of John P. & Lillian E. Shea

7-

Peter Lynch, M'argaret Ray. Mand, Paul Slavin, Mr. & Mrs. Jahn Barrows, Margaret Brooks Mr. & Mrs. N. Nault

Mr. & Mrs. A. Dias Catherine Towey William Cotter Edward Souza Francs McGuire

Osterville

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OUR LADY OF ASSUMPrION

John Medeiros

$100

$27

Paul Snyder

Mr. & Mrsi F. GOlenski

$31

$50

$25

Bishop Tyler General Assem· bly, 4th Degree Knights of Columbus Edward L. Bennett John R. Reyburn Manuel Coute Margaret C. McCarthy E. Thomas Murphy George M. Shannon Irene Shea Mary ~hea

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Cairns Jr., Mr. & Mrs. A. Trocchi, Mr. & Mrs. Elmer' Nixon, Dennis Nixon, Robert Jameson Mr. & Mrs. S. K Reid Jr., Dr. & Mrs. J. H. Miller, Mr. & Mrs. A. J. Dutra, Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Kelleher, Mrs. N. Barter Edward J. Rutherford, Anna E. Cullen, L. Santos, M. Frucci, .Eugene .Rioux, R. A. Auger

Howard Rhodin

$30 Royal Gaffney John Botelho Anonymous

$25 Mrs. Boyd Watson, George Benway, Robert Scalley, Thomas Shields, William Adams 'Joseph Alduino, Dr. John Shea, Walter Butler, Mrs. Bernard O'Keeffe

Provincetown ST. PETER

$300 Rev. Msgr. Leo J. Duart

$100 Rev. John A. Perry Blessing of the Fleet Mrs. Mary Roberts

$50 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Carreiro Margaret Roberts

Cnth'edral Cnlup

$35 'Dr. & Mrs. Daniel Hiebert

Resident and Day Camp for Boys

$30 Mr. & Mrs. John B. Ferreira

Our Lady of the Lake

$25' Mr. & Mrs. John F. Cook, Mr. & Mrs. Warren Costa, Land's End Marine Supply, Mr. & Mrs. Eugene P9yant, Mrs. Joan Snow Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Stephens, William H. Young Insurance Agency

Wellfleet

OUR LADY OF LOURDES' .

$300

.

J. L. Marshall & Sons, ·Inc., Pawtucket, R. I.

$250

Day Camp for 'Girls SponsQred by the ·Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND, ROUTE 11, EAST F«EETOWN, MASS.

RESI DENT CAMP 53rd Season - July 2 thru August 26 - 8 Week Season

Siaff:

Diocesan Seminarians - College Students & Teachers Under directioa of a Diocesan Priest.

Program:

Sailing, s.)o/IIimming, water skiing. horseback riding, riflery. archery, hiking, overnight camping trips, oris & crofts. Indian crofts. camp crafts, athletic (team & indiv.idual) competition and inter-camp competition, professional tutorial service available.

Wellfleet Savings Bank

$100 Mr. & Mrs. Donald Knaus

$75 Mr; & Mrs. Joseph Peters

$50

.

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur F. Joseph Mr. & Mrs. Ernest F. Rose Mr. &: Mrs. Lawrence Rose Downs Insurance Agency,

$35

$25

,

r John B,' HYnes BarryKane , Geo. E; Killen John J. Martin The Pumphret Family, William Thomson Oil 'Co., Inc.

./' .

.

Mr. & Mr$. John J. Kelley, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Rogers, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Albert Rose Rita Rose .

$30 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Silva

$25 Mr. & Mrs. Winthrop Bassett Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Leroy Ryder, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Rose, Mr. & Mrs. Norman Gill, Mrs. Alice Richey : Laurence Cardinal, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Filliman, Mr & Mrs John P. Connors, Mr. '& Mrs. Laymon Clark, Mr. & Mrs: Richmond Bell Mr. &: Mrs. John Thomas

Facilities:,

Private beach, large luxurious camphouse, dining hall. modern washrooms, arts. and crafts buildings. camp store and office.- first aid and infirmary, beauti'ful chapel, overnight ond weekend accornodations for parents. a'WEEK PERIOD $375 4 WEEK PERIOD $195 2 WEEK PERIOD $\00 PLUS $5.00 REGISTR~tION FEE

Cathedral Day Camp For Boys JULY 3

Camp Fee $35.00 for 2 wk. period and $5.00 Registration Fee AUGUST 25 Camp Fee. $125.00 for 8 wk. season period and $5.00 Registration Fee .FEES INCLUDE; Transportation. Insurance, Arts & Crofts, Canteen, Horseback Riding. Weekly COok-Ouls & Milk Doily w,thout Added Cost. .•

Our -Lady of. the Lake Day Camp For Girls . JULY 3

CalTlP Fee $35.00 for 2 wk. period and $5.00 Registrotion Fee Camp Fee $125.00 for 8 wk. season period and $5.00 Registration Fee FEES INCLUDE: Transportation. Insurance, Arts & Crofts. Canteen, Horseback Riding, Weekly Cook-Outs, Milk Dady wilhoutAdded Cost.

AUGUST 25

BOYS' CAMP . Tel: 763dlli4

For further information write or, telephone

P. O. Box 63 -

t~ Registrar:

East Freetown, Mass . 02717

Toll Free Call from Fall River -

644·574)

Applications are available at all Rectories

GIRLS' CAMP leI. 7603 J~


8

THE ANCHORThurs., May 18; '1972:

Pocasset ST. JOHN $400

Rev. James A. McCarthy $150 Mr. & Mrs. John R. Greenhalgh $125 Mr. & Mrs. John Phaneuf $100 Mr. & Mrs. Louis J. MacArthur Mr. & Mrs. William Carr $50

Mr. & Mrs. Otto P. Becker Jr. ' Mr. & Mrs. F. O'Neal Sprague Spooner A Friend Marie Lawlor Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hurley Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Perrault St. John's Women's Guild Mrs. Martin' Lawless $40

Mr. & Mrs. Norman S. Blodgett $35 . , Mr. & Mrs. Angelo J. Dimodica $30 Mrs. Earle MacDonald Mr. & Mrs. Robert Kennedy' $25 Francis~Mackedon, Mr. & Mrs. John F. Nelson, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Dunlavey, Mrs. Robert P. Leary, Mr. & Mrs. G. Stanley ~ Johnson Mr. &' Mrs. Robt.' J. Perchard, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Whalen, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Reynolds, Mr. & Mrs.' Fred Comings, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Medeiros Mr. & Mrs. George Smith, Mr. & Paul Paul Sabourin, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Lucier, Mr. & Mrs. John Adams, Mrs. William McGarr ' Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Fortucci,' Mrs. John P. Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. Alex. McPhillips, Mr. & Mr.s. John O'Connor, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Dungan Mr. & Mrs. Frank Flanagan, Mr. & Mrs. C. Minihan, Mrs. Manuel Britto, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Nash, Mr. & Mrs. Russell Burns' Mr. &' Mrs. Ralph Brown, Mr.' & Mrs. Raymond· LeBrun, Mr. & Mrs. Paul T. Geary, In Memory of Francis C: Mahoney, In'Memory' of William, Ellen, and Michael Mclaughlin, Mr. & Mrs. Richard l;I<?pwood '

[t

. SCHOLARSmp WINNERSF Mrs. Harold E. Ward, left, incoming president of the Fall River Catholic Woman's ClUb, Fall River and Mrs. James A. O'Brien, Jr., right, outgoing president, witness Miss Marion E. Fahey, second right, chairman of the Club's scholarship co~mittee present the annual awards to Ruth M. BHtcliffe imd Barbara A. Conlon, third left, this year's, recipients of the club's scholarships.

$50 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Aldonis, Mr & Mrs Edwin Roderick, Mr. & Rev. Bernard O'Rour]<e Mrs. Raymond J. Alvey, Mrs. Alan O'Farrell ", John Cain, John Donlay Arjen Steegstra Mary Grant & Alice Carmain, Richard Wales M. Madeline Hayes, Catherine Mr. & Mrs: Paul G. Carney Lavedan, John J. Mullins Sr., Mr Mr. & Mrs: Albert J. Edwards & Mrs John ,R. O'Brien Sr., MI'. Dr. Arthur D'Elia Mr. & Mrs. John Gegenwarth & Mr;,. Amos Leyton Mr.' & Mrs. Arthur LaFrenier Sandwich. Mr. & Mrs. Richard Shea , CORPUS CHRISTI $35 $300 William Downey Rev. William F. Morriss John Lopes $150 John Bowen Mr. & Mrs. Edward Caron Mr. & Mrs. John B. Higby $31 $100 Norman Dagenais Mr. & Mrs. James Bazzinotti Joaquim Pena Mr. &: Mrs. Fred O. Earle $30 Dorothy Gallant Mary Piersall Mr. & Mrs. Leo Kelly Catherine, Mary & Rose Sylvia MacDonald's Hardware Store Isabel Gomes Mr. & Mrs. John McDonald Leo Sullivan , Mr. & Mrs: James Militello Donald Taylor Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Milroy Marguerite Riley WilUam O'~onnell $25 $80 Mr. & Mrs: Robert Ellis John Gonsalves, James Athy, $75 Winifred Carney, Marc Carrigan, Mr. &: )\1rs. George Campbell Amy Carbonneau Mr. & Mrs. John Clinton Chester Chase, Courtenay $60 Chase, Elward quett, Joyce CofMr. & Mrs. Richard Mannion fin, Joseph Connell $50 Alphonse DesRocher, Ronald Rev, Edward F. 'McIsaac Dowgiallo, Dennis Duggan; Mr. & Mrs. John Bernard West Harwich Thomas Egan, John Fitzmaurice H9LY TRINITY Margaret Geoghegan, Joseph $150 Grant, Neal Holland, Catherine' Dames' Patronnesses Catherine Lane Hudson, Carl Johnson , Plan s are' being completed by , $100 James Kelleher" John Kelly, Les Dames Patronnesses of Russell Brennan Mary Jane Kinch & Catherine_Sacred Heart Home. New BedCatherine Griffin Smith, Ken Kline,. John Kuhn for4; for their 47th annual public Betty & Marion Halbritter Anthony Marini, H. T. Mad- desser: card party, to be held at Richard Maguire den, John Morrisey, Francis Mur- 1:30 Wednesday afternoon, June Daniel Thompson ' phy, William Murphy 7 at Holiday Inn, New Bedford. Mr. & Mrs. Russell Rose Jr. Proceeds will benefit the home. John' Raneo, 'Raymond Rioux; Ch' . aIrman is Mrs. Bruno Char.. EII'zilbeth L. Batso'n' Mr. & Mrs. ,Th,eodore Berghaus .,' John Kathleen Roche, F. bonne IlU , al'ded by Mrs; J oseph Milot Hoche, Underwood $75, Marco:JX and Mrs. Roland Mag.. Gertrude Gibbs "', 'Edward Uppgard, David Web- ' nant. Tickets are available from " , , ' '" ,ber, Wal,ter, Trainer ' , " , For "Regina Pa~::i's"" '.:- ~;.·:::~r. ,&.M!s."Ju!io,c'l3'arrows, :~~e:)r members of ~~heir com.. Awhite;elephant and rUJll.mage, }',f~ry ~ec~er~ Mr: . &,Mrs;,Edward sale to benefit Regina Pacis Cen.' .. ,Boyle, :NI~ ..•&: ~Mr~. ,Wm., Carto, ter ,for the Spani;>h Speaking;',~ Mr~, ~ 1'1rs.' J~el Cloud, . New Bedford, will be' held fr,om James J. Connor, .Mr, & Mrs. 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. Saturday, May" p. Leo Daley",Mr.,~~~s. Arthur 20 at Sac;red Heart School Hall,: Frost; John E.. Lampert, Mr., & , .. , ' Linden street, Fall, River. ,The,: Mr~., Johri McCa,rte event is under 'the' direction of Mary MacDougall, Ida O'Brien, Sister Carmen Joseph, S.U.S.C. ; Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Walsh, Mr. 273 CENTRAL AVE. & Mrs. Bernard .Welky, Judge , , Robert A Welsh ; EduCation 992-6216 Nations have recently been led Dr, William Falla, Mr. & Mrs. to borrow billions for war; no Larry Duffy, Mr. & Mrs., Paul "'lEW BEDFORD nati9n has ever 'borrowed .large- Hunter, Nellie Raneo, Mr. & Mrs. ly for, education. -Flexner' , ~u!isell Hamlyn Sr.

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY

=:==:===:====::!iJ

Mrs. Christopher Brady Mr. & Mrs. Leo Diotalevi Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Duarte Mr. & Mrs. Herbert A. Hamlen Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Jacinto Mrs. James Mahoney Mr. & Mrs. Michael McNamara Mr. & Mrs. George Mooney George & Mary Ortolani Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Ryan Frances Silva John Sullivan & Family Mr. & Mrs. John Wilson $40 , Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Dipietro Family $35 Mr. & Mrs. John Bulla Raymond Doucette Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard Latimer John W. Ross Mrs. 9harle~ Whitmore & Fam. $30 Mr. & Mrs. Roland DeConto Mr. & Mrs. Russell McAuliffe Mr. & Mrs. Luigi Pasquale Mr. & Mrs. Earle C. Rich Mr. & Mr~. Charles Russell $28 Mr. & Mrs. Earl Flinker _1

_

$25 Mrs. Claire Allen, Mr. & Mrs. ' Walter Alvezi,' Arnold's Package Store, Mrs. Helen Barcer, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Bazzinotti Mrs. William Bettley, Mr. & Mrs. James Boles, Mr. & Mrs. John V. Bonner, Mr. & Mrs., Robert Cahoon, Hovey Chapin Mr. & Mrs. James O. Earle, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Eischeid, Mr. & Mrs. Walter Fagnant, Mr. & Mrs. Dante Gallerani, Mr. & Mrs. Milton Garvin , Mr. & Mrs. Justin George, Mr. & Mrs. John Gillis, Mr. & Mrs. Ame'dio Gonella, Mr. & Mrs. James Hamlen, Mrs. A. Cleve· land Jones 'John J.' Kennedy, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Kohn, Mrs. John T. Liber· ty, Mr. & Mrs. John McQuade, Mr. & Mrs. Tello Tontini Mr. & Mrs. Fred Twomey, Mrs. Lillian Tully, Katherine Maley, Rose Maley, Mr. & Mrs. John McArdle Mr. & Mrs. Pat McDonnell, Mr. & Mrs. Charles McHugh, Virginia McLaughlin, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Milliken, Mr. & Mrs Mark Mooney, Mr. & Mrs. Samuel 0'Gorman Mr. & Mrs. Louis Papi. Edward Parent Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Charles Parks, Mr. & Mrs. William Parks Mr. & Mrs. Donald Philbrick Mrs. Dale Richter, Mr. & Mrs. J. Louis Roberti, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Rondelli, Mr. & Mrs Harold Shurtleff, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Silva, Mr. & Mrs. James Sutton, Mr. & Mrs. Dante, Tassinari,

Marion ST. RITA $150 Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney $50 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Zens ' ,$35 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Demeo $25 Mr. & Mrs. Jere M. Donahue, Mr. & Mrs. J. Roland Letendre

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Wareh~", , ST. PATRICK $500 In Petition for Peace $125 Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Pappi $100 Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Baptiste $75 Dr. & Mrs. Joseph Moore $50 Mr. & Mrs. Hulot Haden Mrs. Mildred Madden Mr. & Mrs. Andrew McGraw Mr. & Mrs. Leo St. John Mr. & Mrs. Agneus Veiga In Memory of Albert Getchell Mr. & Mrs. Guilhermo DaSilva $30 Frances Murphy Mr. & 1\1;rs. Peter Orlik Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Achin Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Sylvia $25 Mrs. Ellsworth Atwood, Mr. & Mrs. Mario Govoni, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Govoni, Edwin K. Greer Co., Mr. & Mrs. Jeldino Melloni, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rose Mr. Paul English, Mr. & Mrs. Antone Gomes, In 1\1;emory of Elinor Hetherson, Mrs. Dale Hill, Mr. & Mrs. John Hobbs In Memory of Dorothy A. & Samuel R. Banks, Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Semedo, Mr. & Mrs. Chester Skinder, St. Patrick's Circle, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sylvester

Mansfield ST. MARY $200 Atty. & Mrs. Robert Currivan $100 St. Mary's Catholic Womens Club \The Darmedy Family Mr. & Mrs. Edward Jameson Memory of Kenneth E. Guillette $50 Mr. & Mrs. Orlando D. Souza A Friend Mr. & Mrs. Leo Parente Dr. & Mrs. Anthony Gasson Thomas P. Haven $40 A Friend $25 Mr. & Mrs. Victor Narciso Dr. & Mrs. Charles Meszoeley A Friend Mrs. Rockina Cavallo & family Mrs. AIda Spencer Mr. & Mrs. Robert, Shaw, Mrs. Margaret Jordan, A Friend, Atty. & Mrs. Robert Shaw, Louise Soldani Mr. & Mrs. Clarence Leonard, A Friend (3), Mildred Hannon, Mr. & Mrs. William Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. James Musto, Mr. & Mrs. John Baroncelli

Norton ST. MARY

$250 Defiance-Azon Corp. $100 Old Colony Nursing Home Mrs. Patrick Devlin $50 Mr. & Mrs. Charles Drane $36 Mr. Be Mrs. Francis Gallagher $30 Mr. & Mrs. John Norton $25 Mr. & Mrs. Charles Wickland, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McGrane, Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs. William Flaherty, Mrs. Raymond Shea Mr. & Mrs. Charles Blomer, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Hyatt, Mrs. Richard Charette Mr. & Mrs. John Rosato, Mary Ferreira, Mr & Mrs Joseph Daley

Attleboro . .

HOLY GHOST $25 Mr. & Mrs. John B. King, Mr. & Mrs. John Heslin, Mr. & Mrs. George Audette ST. MARK $150 Aime Grenier $25 John Rioux, Mario Roque, Wil路 liam Whalen, Emilo Gautieri, Arthur Sarazin Joseph Furtado, Joseph Ferland ST. JOSEPH $100 Doris Levasseur $50 Mrs. Yvonne DesVergnes & Louis Jeannette Dupuis Mr. & Mrs. Mark Mercier Richard V. Boucher $30 Mr. & Mrs. William Galligan Mr. & Mrs. ,Rene Dubuc $25 Lucien Paul, Mr. & Mrs. Armand Bouoher, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Boucher, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Harrison; Mr. & Mrs. Edward G. Mellon Mr. & Mrs. Henri Paradis, Mr. & Mrs. George Stafford, Mr. & Mrs. John Logan, Mrs. Omer Gaudreau, Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Joubert Mr. & Mrs. Condrad Maigret, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Perry, Mr. & Mrs. Richal'd Castro, Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Zito, Mr. & Mrs. Marcel Chretien Mr. & Mrs. Joseph McGee, Anonymous ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST $125 Mr. & Mrs. John P. Lee $100 Dr. & Mrs. Vincent O'Donnell Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Bartek $75 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. King $50 Mr. & Mrs. Donald DesVergnes Mf. & Mrs. William Goetz $40 Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Magina $35 Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Jewett Mr. & Mrs. John Carty Mr. & Mrs. Clark Heon $31 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Rockett $30 Mary Wilhelm Mr. & Mrs. Robert Edwards $25 Mr. & Mrs. Adrian PeJ"letier, Mr. & Mrs. Gerarq LaCombe, Mr. & Mrs. Norman Pelletier, Mr. & Mrs. John Braun, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Taylor . , Mr. & Mrs. David J. Foley, Mr. & Mrs. Louis S. Alongi, Mrs. Jo~ seph O'Donnell, Mrs. Philip Dav路 ignon, Sr., Mr. & Mrs. Edward' J. O'Donnell ' Helen Sheehan, Rocca Fantaccione, Mrs. Raymond Brennan, In Memory of JohnJ. Johanson, Celestine Whalen " ,.',' ST. THE~SA, . $150" Mr. & Mrs. Vincent De Quattro $100 Mr. & Mrs. John Sacco Mr. & Mrs. 'Donald Boardman $50 Mr.. &' Mrs. Thomas 'Leedham, Jr. $40 Mr. & Mrs. Normand Carrier

Core of Change We can change 'our whole life and the attitude of people around us simply by changing ourselves. ' -Dreikurs

. THE ANCHOR.Thurs., May 18, 1972

"

l

SCOUTING AWARD: Mrs. Gertrude F'arias of Taunton receives the, medal of Our Lady of Good Counsel Award for her service in the Girl Scout Program of the Diocese in the Taunton Area. $35 Mr. & Mrs Anthony Moskalski Linus Gignac $25 Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Goulet, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Cournoyer, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Jaron, Mr. & Mrs. James Mann, Mr. & Mrs. Del Fachada . Mr. & Mrs. Michael Arata, Mr. & Mrs. William Pitas, Mr. & Mrs. Rodney Blythe Mr. & Mrs. Armand Choiniere, Mr. & Mrs. Al Grenier, Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Connolly, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Desmarais, Mr. & Mrs. Louis McBride Mr. & Mrs. William Niquette ST. MARY $300 Rev. Edward C. Duffy $250 Mr. & Mrs. James Egan Mrs. Pierre Lonsbury $~OO

St. Vincent de Paul Society $150 Mr. & Mrs. George Agostini $100 Dr. & Mrs. John Belsky Mr. & Mrs. Robert Durant Mr., & Mrs. John S. Francis Mr.路 & Mrs. Robert Legare Mr. & Mrs. John Marshall Mr. & Mrs. Henry Messier $75 Dr. & Mrs. A. H. MacIsaac $70 Mr. & Mrs. John Harrington $62 Mr. & Mrs. B.A. Dzija $60 'Dr. & Mrs. Eugene Gaudet Dr. & Mrs. Paul F. Shannon $50 Mr. &' Mr,s. James Coogan Mr & Mrs. Clement Lesage Vincent' Lynch M.r. & Mrs. John Murphy Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Murray Mr. & Mrs. Frank Padykula", Mrs. Mary .Smith Sot. Mary's Women's Guild Holy Name Society Mr. & Mrs. Alfred L'Heureux ATTL~BORO'S. Leading GardE?nCenter

'CONLON & DONNELLY South Main & Wall Sts.

9

--...;....-...:...--...;....----John Doyle, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Emond Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Marcel Ferland, Mr. & Mrs. Roger Ferland The Fisk Family, Mr. & ,Mrs. William Foley Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Bart Hunt & Family, Mr. & Mrs. Lewis Jackson, Mr. & Mrs. Norman LeMere George T. McCarthy, Mr. & Mrs. Harold McCormick, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Mello, Mr. & Mrs. William O'Brien, Joseph Ostiguy Mrs. Pauline O. Patenaude, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Perry, Mr. & Mrs. J. Pugliese, Mr. & Mrs. Wil路 liam J. Sitko, Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Stowik Mr. & Mrs. Russell J. Sumner, Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Theberge, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Toppin, In Memory of Mrs. Alice Whalen, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Wildgoose Dr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Aissis Mrs. Pauline LaFrancois Mr. & Mrs. Richard Voccio

North Attleboro

SACRED HEART $100 Dr. & Mrs. Raymon S. Riley Mrs. Blanche Precourt Mr. & Mrs. Gaetan Brochu $50 Mrs. Mary Cazemiro Dr. & Mrs. Armand Dyon $40 $40 Mr. & Mrs. David Blake Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Dargis John Lynch $30 $38 M~. & Mrs. Roger Pinsonnault Dr. & Mrs. A. Longobardi Edna Masgay $25 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph N. Sherry In Memory of Aime Collard, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Ferreira Mr. & Mrs. Albert Desilets, Mr. $35 , & Mrs. Wilfrid Paquin, Mrs. AICatherine FIsk dea Brais, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Beauregard Marilyn Fisk Mr. & Mrs. Eugene McGovern Mr. & Mrs. Robert Voyer Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Rene Jr. CHAS. F. $31 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Biron Mr. & Mrs. George LaBelle $30 Mrs. W.J. Amos OIL CO., INC. Richard Blake Fred Farrell 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE Jacques Leduc NEW BEDFORD, MASS. $25 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Baumgartel, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Begin, Agnes Blake, John Blake, William Blake HEATING OILS Mrs. Dorothy Cahill, Mr. & COMPLETE Mrs. George Casey, Mr. & Mrs. HEATING SYSTEMS Sterling Dalton. Mr. & Mrs. Dauray, Mr. & Mrs. Rocco DeFuscio INSTALLED Kathryn Donahue, Mr. & Mrs.

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10

fHE ANCHORThurs';, May 18, 1972

Will Ho/nor DilJ~mond' 'JubillJ~riajrls Sunday, :'At Sacred HelrJrt Home, New BedforrJ ,

OUR LADY OF FATIMA $100 Mr. & Mrs. William Belanger $50 A Friend Mr. & Mrs. Clement Damicone Mr. & Mrs. Roger Lachapelle Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Motta 40 Corella .& Genevieve McKenna Mr. & Mrs. Francis Frey $30 Mr. & Mrs. Jean Lequin

Two nuns, whose religious lives have spanned most of this century, are celebrating ,their diamond jubilees. In an era when sh.e has known; of many who have lost their' vocations, octogenarian Sister Mr. &, Mrs. Raymond Rous· Ste.· Ida says "I have always been happy in my vocation and thank seau Mr. & Mrs. Paul Frey the good Lord for having pro- , tected it here." Mr. &: Mrs. Normand Parent Dartmouth $25 "Here" for Sister Ste. Ida and ST. MARY .Sister Alexis de' F~ome is the Mr. & Mrs. Emile Beauregard, Sacred Heart Home run by the Mr. Mrs. Emile CormJer, Mr. $400 Sisters of Charity of Quebec in , & Mrs. Edward Dowd, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. George Saint AuNew Bedford. - Mrs. Jean Louis teBlanc, Mr. & bin Sis'ter Alexis has h'een assigned -Mrs. Francis Lawler $150' to the home for 32 years and ' Lucille Lequin, Dr. Augu'stus . Dr. & Mrs. Paul E.· Corley well remembers that it was once, McKenna, Mrs. Leopold Meunier, . Mr. & Mrs. Fred DeCristoro a much ,smaller structure with fyfr. & Mrs. Roger Ouimet, Mr. $100 only a small number of residents & Mrs. Paul Parkin Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Glenand 25 Sisters to ca.re for them. Mr. & Mrs. Conrad Pelletier, non Jr. With three additions to the Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Pereira Mr. & Mrs. John J. Hayes building, there are now 196 paMrs. Loretta Rousseau, Mr. & Dr. & Mrs. Louis Miskell tients with a large staff, 'includMrs. Bernard Swansey, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Brady" ing 25 nuns, taking care of them. Mrs. Joseph Boldiga -~Mr. Be Mrs. Owen F. Hackett· Even at 83, Sister Alexis continTherese Bonneau, Mr. & Mrs. Jr. ues to don her white habit each Roland Gaouette Jr., Mr. & Mrs. , $52 day to oversee patient care ona Austin Manning, Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. James Barrett JUBILARIANS: Sister Ste. Ida, Jeft, and Sister Alexis Jean Sevigny section of the second floor. She, .$50 checks on trays, feeds patients' de Rome of the Sisters of Charity of Quebec. ST. JOSEPH Mr. & Mrs. Carlos Alves who cannot eat on their own, $200 Dr. & Mrs. Vito Ciminello and helps with the !lewing. eni:ountersas she moves swiftly Joseph's: Home, and at the In loving memory of my parFrancis Mahoney Life's Work down the long corridors of New order's, other home-school in ents-Anonymous . Angelo DeMello The habits of a lifetime are Be:iford's largest nursing home. Lowell. $100 Mr. & Mrs. N~il Fitzgerald hard to break, and even though She does not find it difficult eiA native of Prince Edward Rev. Msgr. Henri A. Hamel Mrs. Edward Hicks she and Sister Ste. Ida could thE:r, to sum up her life's work Island, whose family left Canada Rev. Roger D. leDuc The Silveira Family keep better hours, rising time very simply, "I was always happy when her father died, Sister Frank Grenier Dr. & Mrs. John Dias continues to be 5:30 every morn$60 Mr. & Mrs. Paul R. Vermette ing with bedtime around 9 P.M. to take care of sick people, and Alexis a.lso was educated by the I'v,~ tried my best to make them ~isters of Oharity. She entered Mr. & Mrs. Henry Brouillette $35 "But I rest a, lot," Sister Alexis happy." the order in July, 1910, and $50 Mr. & Mrs. Alfred J. Couto is quick to point out. Sister Alexis can share the ex- worked first with exceptional Mr. &' Mrs. Manuel DeMello Rev. Marc H. Bergeron The nun has Ii word for all of periences of a lifetime as ~ Sis- children at St. Michael's Home Josephine F. Foley $40 the ,patients and personnel she $31 ter of Charity with her 8S-year- in Quebec. Gardner Family Dr. & Mrs. Carl A. Pitta old sister, Sister St. Christopher, Both Sisters are . looking for$35 Mr. & Mrs. Henri Gardner $30 who is in Canada and with her ward till· making the 60th annie "$2"5 Mr. & Mrs. Frederick 'Corbeil $25 Euclides Cabral, Mary S. Bet- nieces, Sister St. Margaret of the versary of their pronouncement $25 Lucille Allain, Mr. & Mrs...R. tecourt, Albertina Barros, Joao Sa<:r,!!d Heart Home, who is COfll- of vows,. a jubilee they will share Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Frasier Ferro, 'Manuel de' Silva 'pleting an accreditation course.· with 27 other members of their Blackburn, Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Jr., Dr. & Mr,s. Anthony Martin, In Memory of Mitchell Jasin- at LakevHle Hospital for prac- order ·Iater this month at the Girard Mr. & Mrs. Francis S. Winsper, ski, Augustus Raposo tical nurses licensed by waiver, mother house in Quebec. Mr. & Mrs. Frank Coleman, Mr. and Sister St. ,Winifred of RaOn Sunday, in New Bedford, HOLY NAME & Mrs. Thomas Maher mouHki, P; Q., a social worker. . their community, relatives and $1200 Mr. & Mrs. Walter Martin, SiHter Ida reve'als part of her friends will honor them on what The Misses Gertrude & LoretSee Us First . Mr; & Mrs. Manuel H. Sylvia ta Daley: in memory 'of Rev. life's work when she describes they truly consider "a jubilee of Mr. & Mrs. Isaac Dawson iner age as "20 years multiplied grace." . Msgr. Leonard J.' Daley , . $131 See Us Last . Mr. & Mrs. Joseph G. S)'lvia by four, plus one." She still helps George Rogers nn the office, and formerly was Sacrifice New Bedford treasurer, as well as superior',. of .' $110 But See Us . If this nation is going to sur& Mrs. John B" O'Toole Jr. Dr. . the commgnity at the home. ST. JAMES vive meaningfully, and, then per$50 haps grow decently, it has got ' Prefers Gregorian $125 Jqseph Foley: In memory of ,to begin to know and accept St. V.incent de Paul~St. James the Foley Family Music, however, is most dear enormollis deprivation. , $35 Parish to :h.er, and although she prefers -William Sar?yan $100 Mrs. Omer BeHenoit Gregorian chant; she responds, Dr. & Mrs. James Quinn $30 too, to modern beats. ",I love '$60 . . Mr. & Mrs. Walter Carter everything in music," she says Mr. & Mrs. William Hendricks Mr. & Mrs. JameH Gleason warmly, apparently not. regret$50 Mr. & Mrs. Francis Kennedy ting that years of singing have Mrs. Alexander Whelan Mr. & Mrs. Walter King left her vocal chords in a someMr. & Mrs. James Giblin $25 what damaged state, but sorry $30 Mr. & Mrs. Frank Bures, Mr.. ()nly because sile no longer sees 1001 Kings Dorothy Baldwin & Mrs. William Demsky, Wilfred quite well enough to read music $25 . DeSerre, Mr. & JVIrs. Lawrence for playing the organ. . Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Tower,s, A. Harney Sr., Gerald HarringNEW BEDFORD Sister Ida has served in many ton Mr. & Mrs. Roland Lepire the one at convents including Mrs. Stephen Markey, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. Robert Clark, Mrs. St. Raymond de Portneuf, P. Q., The Falmouth National Bank Armand Langis & J a'ne; Leo Mrs. Manuel Mello, Thomas Mil!Open Eveningswhere she was a boarding stu. FALMOUTH. MASS larkey, 'In Memory of William Worde~ By !he Village Green Since 1821 dent from the age of, 7, when 'Fred Kelley, Clifton M. South- P. Powers, in Memory of the she was orphaned, until 17 when . 'worth, The James Walsh Family., Whitmer-Adams Fa~lily she entered the order after comST. FRANCIS OF' ASSISI William O'Malley, Mr. & Mrs. pleting her studies. That was 62 $200 Robert Arnett WE SELL MONEY, BUT OUR BUSINESS IS PEOPLE years ago this month, and deRev. Armando Annunziato the best'thingihat ever happened to Cape Cod Frances Whelan, Mary Whelan, ' spite her many assignments and , ' $50 her various roles as music teach' Mr. & Mrs. ~onald Tetrault, Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Pasquale Nicolacci er and bookkeeper, .Sister Ida Vincent Shea, Mr. & Mrs. Gerald $30 say:;, "The most irilportant place Lewis, Mary W~rren , Mr. & Mrs..Leo Grande for me has been here." She first Mr. & Mrs. Baptiste Vercel· IivIMACULATE CONCEPTION came to New Bedford in 1946. . lone A FULL ROUTE 28 HYANNIS $300 $25 Sister Alexis, too, is devoted S~~~RE BRANCH OFFICE ROUTE 28 S'O. Y~RMOUTH Rev. A.Castelo Branco, A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Domenic to Sacred Heart Home, but she - $50 775-4500 Catalano, Rose Funaro, Ghilardi also has fond memories· of a Holy Rosary Society Family, League of St. Francis of quarter of a century's work with. Holy Name Society Assisi chj.~'dren in Fall River, at St.

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New" Bedford

rHE 'ANCHORThurs., May' 18, 1972

ST. THERESA

$300 Rev. William E. Collard $150 Rev. Ernest E. Blais $100 Mr. & Mrs. Louis Fleury $50 Roland & Gerald LeComte Mr. &Mrs. Albert Caron $35 Mr. & Mrs. Aldege Cote $30 Mr. & Mrs. Raoul LeBlanc $25 Mr. & Mrs. Adrilm Angers, Mr. &. Mrs. Maurice Bonneau, Mrs. Alice Content, Mr. & Mrs. Angelo DeBortoli Mr. & Mrs. Roland Dumas Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Lemieux, Mr. & Mrs. Laurier Marcoux" Mr~ & Mrs. Normand Mathieu, Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Richard, Mr. & Mrs. Louis A. Roy Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Coutu, 'Mr. & Mrs. Peter Duff, Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Frechette, Mr. & Mrs. Gaston Loranger, Mr. & Mrs. Ovila Rock, Rock Funeral Home ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST

$300 Rev. Manuel P. Ferreira $150 In Memory of Charles F Vargas $100 ' Rev. Jose A. F. dos Santos Aubertine Funeral Home In Memory of Manuel J. Soares Rev. Ronald Sylvia Rev. Jose A. F. dos Santos, C.M. $75 Mr. & Mrs. Frank Martin $60 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. Vera i

$50

/

Friend (3) Mrs. Helen Brough Dr. & Mrs. Manuel DeMello Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Souza Mrs. Eva 1. Sylvia $40

Mr. & Mrs. Walter Oliver $35 Mrs. Brazelina & Family $31 Milton Richmond $30 Mr. & Mrs. Alfred DeCosta & Son $25.50 St. John Couples Club $25 Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Correia, Mr. & Mrs. Oharles Duponte, Germaine Ferreira, Mr. & Mrs. Vincent 1. Furtado Mr. & Mrs. James Gaffney, Friend, Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Laurent Guillette, Friend Evelyn Mello, Manuel Neto, Mr. & Mrs. Armando Prenda, Mrs. Joseph Ponte, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Rezendes Mr. & Mrs. Vasco Villela, William Wallace Mrs. Eva Carreiro, In Memory of Son George F. Costa, Atty & Mrs. Joseph Ferreira, Rosalie & Joseph Ferreira, Jr., '路Mr. & Mrs.. John Gracia Mr.. & Mrs. Roger Lanteigne, In Memory of Evangelina Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Soares, Mr. Joseph Sylvia, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frank Edwards, In Memory of Manuel Rodriques, Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel S. Silva ST. KILIAN $100

In Memory of Louise B. Finnell

FATHER AMARAL

FATHER DRISCOLL

FATHER POIRIER

'FATHER WALLACE

Silver Jubilee for Four Diocesan Priests Continued from Page One istrator at St. Anthony's on Oct.

1949; St. Anthony's, ,New Bedford, December, 1953; Notre Dame; Fall River, Decemqer, 27, 1967. ., .He has served as notary and 1955; St. Joseph's, Attleboro, pro-synodal judge on the Dioc- 1962; Notre .Dame, Fall River, January, 1963. esan Tribunal. " Father Poirier was appointed Father Driscoll admirlistrator at Notre Dame on Father D,riscoll, the son of Aug. 12, 1969 and became adMrs. Julia (Curley) Driscoll and ministrator at St. Joseph's, Atthe late John W. Driscoll, was tleboro on March 3, 1970. born on July 4, 1924 in Fall Father Wallace River. He was graduated from . Father Wallace was born Nov. SS. Peter and Paul school and Msgr. Coyle High School and "at- 30, 1921 in Beverly. The son of tended Holy Cross College, the late Harry W. Wallace and Worcester for two years" contin- the late Mrs. Florence Louise uing his education for the priest- (Hayes) Wallace, he was gradUhood at St. Mary's Semnary, ated from Holy Family parish Baltimore, where he路 was award- school arid Holy Family High ed bachelor of arts and bachelor School, New Bedford. He continued his education at of sacred theology degrees. St. Aq.selni's College, Manchester, He 'served as assistant at Our Lady of the Assumption,' Oster- N. H. and St. Mary's Seminary, ,ville, until Dec. 13, 1950 and at St. Lawrence, New Bedford until ST. LAWRENCE April 6,' 1954 when he was $150' named secretary to 'Bishop ConMr. '& Mrs. William Kearney nolly and assistant chancellor. A Friend Father. Driscoll served as asMr. & Mrs. Maurice Downey sistant at SS. 'Peter and Paul, Fall River from July 1955 until $130 his appointment' as Our .Lady of Dr. & Mrs. William Muldoon $125 , Fatima administrator on Oct. I, 1969.. Dr. & Mrs. James Bolton $115 WhenBi~hop Connolly founded The Anchor in April, 1957, he Dr. & Mrs. William Walsh named Father Driscoll assistant $100 general manager. He has also A Friend served as prestdent of the In Memory of Michael J. HarPriests' Senate, chairman of the rington, Clergy Personnel Board and as Dr. & Mrs. Robert Durant a trustee of the Fall River Public Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Keating Library. He is a member of the Dr. & Mrs. Joseph F. Buckley Family Life Bureau. Mr & Mrs Edw. F. Harrington ~75 . Father Poirier A Friend Father Poirier is the son of A Friend the late J. Napoleon Poirier and A Friend the late Mrs. Irene (Audette) $60 Poirier. Born in New Bedford The' Doherty Family June 12, 1923, he was graduated Ruth B. McFadden from St. Joseph parish school Mr.. & Mrs. John D. Kenney and Assumption Preparatory $55 School, Worcester. He studied at The Joseph A. Burke Family Assumption College for one year $50 and continued his education at A Friend St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Davis His assignments as parish asMr. & Mrs. Arthur Kirkwood sistant include St. Theresa's, So. A Friend 1947; St. Attleboro, June Mathieu's, Fall River, January,

Following ordination he served as assistant at Corpus Christi parish, Sandwich, until 1951, when -he joined the Army Chaplain Corps and served at various chaplain posts. On August 1, 1969 he was promoted to the rank of colonel and assigned as Deputy, First Army, Fort Meade,

Md.

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Mary Downey Mrs. Thomas Mahoney Mr. & Mrs. Henry Horn Mrs. Thomas Osborne $45 ' Mr & Mrs Edward McIntyre $40 Mrs. William Downey Mr. & Mrs. James Kearney Hope McFadden Helen Gleason A Friend Mr. & Mrs. John Fletcher Theresa Beehan Helen L. L'Brien $35 Mrs. Thomas Foye Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Hassey Mr. & Mrs. Paul LaForest Mr. & Mrs. Charles Phelan Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Domaine Mr. & Mrs. Willis Goodwin Mrs. Frances Koch Mrs. Mary Winterson Elizabeth O'Brien Mr. Wm. J. O'Brien .Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Parker,

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ST. ANNE " $300 Rev. Roland B. Boule ,$30 , Mr. & Mrs. Henri Constant OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION $25 Joanna Ramos, Our Lady of Assumption Club

k

$31 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rivet Rita Limerick $30 Mr. & Mrs. Alan J. Campbell Mary Downey Mr. & Mrs. Walter Loveridge Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Page Anna Pontbriand & Mr.' & Mrs. James Aylward Mr. & Mrs. Charles Burke Mr. & Mrs. Dalpha Levallee Mrs. Edward Lyons

Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Makin Mrs. Roland Mathiew Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Phillips Mr. & Mrs. Edward Ryan Anna F. Meade Mr. & Mrs. Joseph MacFarlane . Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Marshall Mr. & Mrs. MyrQn Tripp $29 Mrs. Florence Brower $25 Frances A. Burke, Francis Craney, A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Fanning, Alice & Theresa Fennessey Robert Ford, Mrs. Edw. W. Galligan Mr. & Mrs. 路William Kasper, Mrs. George V. Kelley, In Memory of Anthony S. King Mr. & Mrs. James McCann, Rosemary Porter, Albert Smith, Ellen A. Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. John Sullivan Mrs. Edith Thatcher, Mr. & Mrs. Victor Turpin, Mrs. Josephine Whelan & Ann, Mr. & Mrs. John Treadup Mr. & Mrs. Harold Barton Mr. & Mrs. Harold Carpenter Ellen Downey, Margar~t Downey, James Durant Mrs. Catherine Hayes, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Hebert, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Leandre, A Friend, Anna McGlynn Mr. & Mr~. James E. Murphy, Mrs. Joseph Por-ter, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Smith, Mr. & Mrs. John Whalen \ Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bedard, Elizabeth Callahan, Mr. & Mrs. James Goldrick, Mr. & Mrs. Peter Lemos, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Macedo Mr & Mrs Pa.ul Malone, Frances McCarthy, Helen McCoy, Helen F. Moore, Mrs. James Mosher Mr. &. Mrs. Joseph MUl)dorf, Genevieve O'Connor, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Pierce, A Friend Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Bolton, Anna M. Brady, Mary E. Carroll, Laura Culhane, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Duffy Mrs. James A. Galligan, Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Kennedy, In Memory of Eugenie & Adrien Pelletier, In Memory of Frances C. Mahoney, A Friend Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Mello, Mrs. Bernard Murphy, Mrs. Edward D. Murphy, Jack Nobrega, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Perry St. Lawrence Couples Club, Isabel & Robert Sullivan, Mary & Eleanor Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Wood

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". ~'12

THE A~CHOR:-Diocese of:Fal! River-Thur. MOlY 18,19~2

Charles E. Harvey,." James Healey SACRED HEARi Dr. & Mrs. JamesP. McCourt $60 $40 Mr. & Mrs. Leonard simmons' J. Frank Conley, Inc.'. ' $45 . . Mr. & Mrs. Francis Mahoney' Mr. & Mrs. Omer Tardi' $35 . $40 . Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence A. LyMr. &. Mrs. A,ured .L: Bouchard ons $25 $30 Mr. & Mrs. David Goulart Anne M:· Harvey Catherine,·J. Harvey Fairhaven Grace F. Harvey ST. MARY Mary V. Harvey, $100 Mr. &. Mrs. John. Reardon Mr.. & Mrs. Roland· Bourgault Mr. & Mrs.' :A!varo . M. Sousa . James Finn . $~5. .' Dr. & Mrs. Robert Gaudreau A Friend, J~mesAbreu, ,Mr. A Friend St. Vincent de Paul Confer. . & Mrs. Virgil Andrliws, Mr. & Mrs. Alan Lee Blackwell, Mr. & ence Mrs. Ross Bridge $50 Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Camara; Mr. & Mrs. Charles Ehmann HOSPITAL SERVICE A'VARD: Mrs. Alberta Janson Mr. & Mrs. Geotge Cartei', Mar. Joan Ehmann guerite Carter, Dr. & Mrs. John receives the 45~years-of.·service award from Sister Jean Mr. & Mrs. :Ernest Laure~deilU Connelly, Elizab~th Coughlin Ma.rie,adm~nistrator of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River in Mr. & Mrs~ Matthew Hart . Mr. & Mrs.. J,ohn DeCoste $35 Helen Doherty,' .. MX'. ,& Mrs: thE: presence of Harold K. Hudlner, hospital truste~. ' Dr. & Mrs. Dennis B~ault James Doherty, Mr. & Mrs. John $32 $50 Mr. 8i Mrs. WaHace , ltayll1ham Mr. & Mrs: Weber Torres Jr. Downey, Milton .Ayers .. Fulcher ' $31 .. ,.. Amelia C. Morris ST. ANN Mrs. Eugene Geldart, Mr.'. & In Memory of Honarina Allua $35 $50 Mrs. Michael Goldsmith, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Costa John Coelho JosepQ Nardozzi Mrs.·John Graca Jr.,. Mrs. $30 Maria" Figueiredo $35 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cataldo Jr. Michael Harkins, Mr. & Mrs. $30 Paul Fountain Cornelius Harvey Jr. . . $25' . Anibal Antunes $25 Marg~ret .Healey, Immaculate Mr. & Mrs: Leo Grenon Mr. Andrew Marshall Mrs. Raymond Paine, Edward & Mrs. Manuel Martin,' Stella . Conception Women's Guild, Mr. , $25 Hyland, Herman' Poirier, Mary & Mrs. Lawrence Kavanaugh, Pacheco, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Seguin, Joseph . R. Amaral, Candida . McGrath, Edward J. Murby Mr. & Mrs. Albert Vigeant; Mr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Kelly, Mrs. Abreau, Joseph Abreau,. FrederBernice Fountain, Lloyd McDaniel Kent . & Mrs. John Wojcik ick Barger, John Abreau .Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Kent Jr., .' Govern, Edward Rogan Mr. & Mrs. John Botelho Robert Burnett, Manuel Costa J:. Lahey; !VIr: & Mrs. William ST. JOSEPH Laurentina Craven, Antone Da.&: Mrs. MarAlbert LaRosee, Mr. $100 Talllnton Costa, Louis Dansereau tyn Lincoln,. Mrs. Anna C. Loud Mr. & ·Mrs. James Walker John Ferreira, Antonio Gaspar, IMMACU.LATE CONCEPTION & Mrs. Joseph Lyons, Mr. . Mr. $75 Antone Gomes, Joseph .Gula;. $50 & Mrs. Joseph Lyons, Mr. & Mr: & Mrs: John Davidson Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Brennan Frank Lewis. Mrs. William McAndrews, McMr. & ·Mrs. Raymond Barbero Jesse Linhares, Maria Macedo William F.' Leonard Carthy Coal Co., Mr..& Mrs. $50 . Mr. &,Mrs. Richard J. RebE:110 Peter. Nolan; Nunes Family, Idili~ Charles McCarthy Jr., Mr.' & Mr. & Mrs. Earl Dias. N~~ : ' , $30 Mrs. William McEntee Mr. & Mrs. Albert· Moquin Joseph Rebello, Francis Rege'l, . Mrs. John Meu~ier Mr. & Mrs. Leo D. McEvoy, $30 Joao' Reis, Joseph Sousa, James , $25 Mr. & Mrs. Henry Malinosky, Helen Sullivan Mr. & Mrs. William Lecuyer T. Thomas Mr. Johri Meehan, Mr. & Mrs. " Margaret Mangham . Frank Vaz,'Joseph Vaz . Thomas Murray Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rezendes' OUR LADY OF LOURDES Philip O'Connell $25 $200 ST. JOSEPH Mr. & Mrs. Frank Reynolds, Marguerite Carroll, Pat NicoRev. Manuel M. Reserides Mr. & Mr~. Wm. D. Simonson . $100 laci, Mr. & Mrs. Allen Days, Mr. '$125 Mrs. Joseph H. Martin & Mrs. Anthony Fernandez; Mr. . Sr., Mr. & Mrs. James M.Sulli~ Rev. Msgr. E. S. DeMello van, Mr. & Mrs. LeRoy VanDe& Mrs: William Towers $120' $50 , Mr. & Mrs.' Roland Despres, C;;arr, Mrs. Isabelle 'Somerville Rev. Antonio'-C.· Tavares Osborne· McClellan Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Wilde, "Mrs. Walter D.. Smith, Mary P. . $50 .. Mr. &: Mrs. George Williams Gage, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Sylvia, Mr. Mr. & Mrs., Fremont E. Wood, Mr. &·Mrs. Jame~ P. Silvia $31 > Mr. & Mrs. Robert Wooster. . . $30 & Mrs. Edward Fitzsimmons Mr. &' Mrs. Joseph S!lntos Joseph Mello, Mr. & Mrs.• DanMr. & Mrs. Adelina Paulo So. East'on $30 iel Roy, Mr. & Mrs. Antone De$25 HOLY CROSS Mary Donahue Terra, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Genevieve Elias, Mary' Mattos, $75 Mr. &: Mrs. J. E. LaPre Meekin, Mr. & Mrs. Lewis Myd& Mrs. Roberts Mendes, Mr. Mr. St. Vincent de Paul Society' . Mr. &: Mrs. Manuel Mello lack I .& Mrs. John, FernandeS, MI'. & & J\i.lrs. Earl McLoud Dr. $26' , Mr. & Mrs. Norman Ga'udreau Moitoza Mrs. Albert $25 & Mrs. James Cleary Mr. & Mrs. Alcide Pelletier ' Barbara Peterson, Mr.' & Mrs. Mrs. Mary Coy, Robert Con- ;. Edward :Franco . . nors, Mr. & Mrs. Leo 'Brophy, . No. Easton' Mr. & Mrs'. Frederick Doloff SACRED HEART IMMACULATE CONCEPTION $500 . No. [)ig~lton ,. $50 ST. JOSEPH . Sacred Heart Parish Women's Rev. Joseph F. O'Donnell $150 . Club $100 The Buckley Faminly In Memory of the Skelley Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Belanger Kathryn F; Healey . $40 Family . Mr:.&.,Mrs. James D. Mullen '. $50 Mr. &. Mrs. Edward Trucchi . Sr. $35 Mr.. & Mrs. Franlt· Gomes' .. .$30 Eilleen McCarthy.' Mr. & Mrs, john.B. Parkes A Friend Mr. & ~rs.· Richard A. Don~ . . $30 ahlle . . . .. ~. . Mr. &.·.Mrs.. WiliamGallagher Vincent Galvin _. . $75 ~~s~. Beatrice Dev:ine". $25. ' Mrs. Charles McCarthy Sr. r. & Mrs. John .Lane ": . Mrs. Marg.ar.et'·:R6se, Mr. & '. . $25' . :' :--:. . $70 .' , M~s' ..George\Vhite, Mr. & J\llrs. Dr. & Mrs. Vincent P.Wright Mr. &·Mrs. MaUrIce J. Kent," Wilham MacLean; . James Kevi$50 . Mr. & Mrs. Harold Mendoza ·Mr. can, Mrs. James McKenna' Dr. & Mrs. A. P. Connolly Jr. & Mrs. Rogert·...Turner,. M~. & Francis Cronin, Mr. & Mrs. Jo· $55 Mrs. Frankly'o . H..Weeks, Mr. seph Martin, Mr. & Mrs.·Robert Mary. Buckley & Mrs.. Thomas Marsden: . Ross, Mr.· & Mrs. Eugene Gorey, . $50 '.. Mr. & Mrs. Oliver Collard, Mr. Mr. &, Mrs. Frederick Reams, ,l\:1r: & Mrs. Clement· J. Cough- & Mrs. Robert Dutra, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. Francis Soitos lin· -' ..'. . Mr.s. Harold J, Roberts, Mr; &' ,ST. ANTHONY flelen Derby' . Mrs. Norman LaFrance, Mr: & Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Galiagher ·Mrs. Bruce Murphy . $100 Mr. & Mrs. Walter Gallagher " Dr. l!t- :Mrs. George' C. SchoRev. Antonio da' Silva Mr. &,Mr:s. Albert' Giordano loemer, Mr. & Mrs. RobertMc$80 AUceU. Hanrey .", c Conville' Rev. John ,f. Oliveira

'New 8edford.

Mr-

, \

$25 , ·-Mr..& .Mrs, Melvi.n Lewis, Grace McManus, Mr; & Mrs. William Moniz, K. Helen Smith Mr. & Mrs. Edward Aleixo, Mrs. Katherine Cambell, Joan Frazier, P. Frank Leddy Leslie McNulty, Mrs. Mary McNulty, Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Walsh HOLY FAMILY

$250 Rev. James F. McCarthy $50 Rev. Robert. F. Kirby Mr. & Mrs. Thomas White Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Raposa . Elsie Amaral Mr. & Mrs. Antonio J. Gomes & Son Mr. & Mrs. Robert Crosby Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Mozzone Mr. & Mrs. Russell Chamberland East Taunton Kennel Supply" Co. $35 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Cameron Mr. & Mrs. F. Perry $31 Steve Punda $30 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Booth Cynthia Crosby Mr. & Mrs. Edmond St. Yves Mr. & Mrs. Charles Geer Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kenyon Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Mendes Mr. & Mrs. Al Dutra Mr. & Mrs. John Shea Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Brassard Mr. & Mrs. Robert Larkin Mr. & Mrs. Fred Patrick $25 Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Cooke, Mr. & Mrs. John' Cwiekowski, Mr. & Mrs. John Perry, Mr. & Mrs. John Plentus, Mr. & Mrs. . John W. Shea· Cora Silverman, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred St. Yves, A. Amaral, Mr. & Mrs,' Francis Dutra', Mary' Raw' . posa Mrs. Mary Murphy, Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Oliveira, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Volkm'an, Mr: & Mrs. Eugene Lecuyer, Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Davis Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Machado, Dr. & Mrs. R. Heywood

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Publicity ganizations news items Anchor, P. 0272~.

chairmen of parish orare asked to submit for this column to The O. Box 7, fall River

Wesley Schondek

Taunton

The Parish Parade

ST. JACQUES

Claire Hamel Rogert Parent Henry Perra Jr.

$250

OUR LADY OF FATIMA; SWANSEA There will be a Spring' Whist Party on Wednesday evening, May 24, at 7:30 in the church hall. Donation is $1 and refreshments will be served. There will be door prizes as well as 'whist prizes. Lighted· parking area adjoins hall. ST. JOSEPH, ATTLEBORO Parish council elections will be held at all Masses this week.end by secret ballot, in the time usually reserved for the homily. A bowling banquet will be held at 6:30 tomorrow night at the Harp and Bard restaurant, Norwood. Boy Scouts of Troop 37 will participate in a "Soar with God" retreat this weekend at LaSalette Shrine. Cubs will sell trash bags at the church door at all Masses, also this weekend. The Young Married Couples' Club will meet at 7:30 Saturday night, May 19. HOLY NAME, NEW BEDFORD

Rev. Andre P. Jussaume

$100

$25

Rev. Richard W. Beaulieu Matthew Bury

13

tHE ANCHORThurs., May 18, 1972

$30

The Bilodeau Family, Mrs. Mathilda Boivin, Gerard Bonenfant, .Adelard Carbonneau, Rodolphe Dusseault Francis Guay, Laureat Guay, Dr. & Mrs. Fernand Hamel, Regina Hebert, George Mador Alfred J. Marotte, Mrs. William McMahon & Elaine, Edna

Riley, Mrs. Emile Vallancourt, Henry Vaillancollrt HOLY ROSARY $35 Mr. & Mrs. Marcellus Lemaire

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, $50 $30 FALL RIVER Mrs. Anna Bourdeau & Son Mr. & Mrs. John Dubena Mrs. James Dwyer Members of the Mothers' Club $25 .Dr. & Mrs. Donald Lamarche will meet at 7:30 on Tuesday Holy Rosary Sodality of Holy Raymond Nolin night, May 23 in the Cathedral Rosary Church $35 ' School. Polish-American Citizens Club _ Roland Auclair Mr. & Mrs. John Kokoszka & OUR LADY OF ANGELS, Ma!Jrice Riendeau Family, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Tokarz FALL RIVER .Members of Holy Rosary Sodality will hold a breakfast meeting following 8 AM. Mass Th. furniture Wond.rland Open Dally 9 A)A.1o 10'oM. Sunday, May 28. Indudlng Saturdays of the East The Feast of Espirito Santo will be observed the weekend of June 2. The Holy Name Society will sponsor a baseball trip Sunday, June 18, open to all parishioners. ST. GEORGE, '• ...••. )- •.... i,',"" . ,,"., .. •.. '. '.' i ."i., .,"'. ! .. ..•.. !' ...' , .' '..'...•..' !.".;I. .• , . , .• ,.I!;· WESTPORT , I , ' . ' ' ....! : .:" ': :_:: ; ': c.:".' '. _ _. < The Ladies Guild announces a . , luncheon whist at 12:30 P.M. Thursday, May 25 at the school hall on Route 177, Westport. Tickets are available from Mrs. Linda Bono, chairman, and will The Women's Guild will sponalso be obtainable at th~ door. The guild plans a public flea sor a mini-penny sale and fun' market and auction from 11:30 night at the next regular meet, . II AM. through 5 P.M. Sunday, ing, slated for Monday night, !~;'I June 4. Pickup service for dona- May 22 in the church ·annex. 1'''''i~''I' tions may be arranged by con- Members are asked to bring a tacting Louise Buckley, chair- gift-wrapped item costing $1 or man; Linda Bono, co-chairman; less. Plans are being finalized for or Helen Niello, president. Furniture, glassware, clothing or the annual banquet, to be held any other items are acceptable. in June. HOLY REDEEMER, SS. PETER AND PAUL, CHTHAM FALL RIVER The Home-School Organization Mrs. Alexander Griffen will be will hold a dance from 8 P.M. to honored for her 42 years as parmidnight Saturday, May 20 at ish organist at a tea from 2 to St. William's Center, Stafford 4 Sunday afternoon, May 21 in Road. Music will be by the Jar- the church hall. All are invited to dinaires. Co-chairmen are Mrs. attend. George Perry and Mrs. Ralph GROUP A - Rustic Barbecue Table with 2 Side ST. ANNE, Benches; 2 Lounge Chairs and End Table - EveryLabouliere. They announce that FALL RIVER thing Complete Only tickets will be available at the .•............................. An important meeting of St. door and proceeds will benefit • • Anne's Parish Home & School the parish school. at 7:30 Association will be held ST. MARY, tonight in the school auditorium. NEW BEDFORD • • : - In Original Factory cartons : The Women's Guild will spon- Parents and parishioners are ............................... sor a parish show, "All in Our urged to attend. -_ Made from rustic california Redwood and Economical enough to fit the most mopest Family," at 7:30 P.M.-tomorrow, Saturday, May 20, 7:36 P.M., so rugged it will last for years and years: All budget, handsome enough to grace" the cushions are vat dyed, mildew-resistant and Saturday and Sunday in the a-May Dinner Dance sponsored most lavish lawn, patio, beach house or den, these smart groupings represent casual liv- water repellent. Individual pieces may be by the Parish Committee will school hall on Illinois Street. purchased separately. ing at its best. take place in the school audiRev. Paul Connolly is director, at ' torium. Tickets are available and Mrs. Joseph S. Correia and Mrs. Bernard Vanasse are co- the rectory. chairmen. Mrs. Manuel Menezes Children from the parish GROUP B - Luxurious Chaise and Mrs. Joseph Boldiga are in school will receive Holy CommuLounge with 2 matching Lounge' Chairs in smart vat charge of tickets. Children will be nion for the first time at 10 AM. dyed prints. Here is superb admitted to the program at a Mass Sunday, May 21. comfort and quality at one low price. special rate on Friday night. Also on Sunday, May 21 Cub ST. LOUIS, Scouts from Pack 50 will meet in FALL RIVER the school yard at 12:15 P.M. for The Women's Guild announces an 'outing to the Coast Guard a public ham and bean supper to Station in Newport. be served from 5 to 7:30 SaturBingo is ,held every Wednesday evening, June 3 in the parish day in the School. auditorium at 7 P.M. auditorium on Eagle Street. The guild's semiannual rumSt. Anne's Council of CathOlic. mage sale will take place from Women held their May meeting 6 ~.M; to 8 P.M. Wednesday, . with Mrs. Floren Dore preSiding; , , May 24 and from 10 AM. to 6 Miss Lucille Gauthier, chairman. P.M. Thursday, May 25, also in of 'the nominating committee the auditorium. Those Wishing presented the slate of officers: donations picked up may contact Mrs. Florence Dore, president; GROUP C"': Handsome Settee with 2 matching Lounge Mrs. Wilfred St. Michel, tele- Mrs. Gertrude Morrissette, vice-' Chairs make an ideal grouping phone 674-3047. president and Sunshine Fund;, for porch or lawn. The complete ~nsemble is yours at one OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, Miss Edna Boutin, 'secretary; low pnce. OSTERVILLE Mrs. Francine Pelletier, treasuThe following slate of' officers rer; Mrs. Doris Asselin, correhas been elected .for the coming sponding secretary; Mrs. Marie year: Mrs. George Walsh, presi- Dion and Mrs. Juliette Lessard, . PERSONALIZED BUDGET PAYM'ENTS Enjoy a Personalized Payment Plan Tailored To dent; Mrs. Robert Scanlon, vice- registrars. Your Income. No Banks or Finance Companies president; Mrs. Lawrence GilliMrs. Irene Lemay, chairman, To Pay. "New England's Largest Furniture Show~oom" gan, treasurer; Mrs. John Swift, announces that an installation recording secretary; and Miss banquet will be held Monday, PLYMOUTH AVE. AT RODMAN Sf. FALL RIVER Margaret Kelley, corresportding June 5 at the Brookside House secretary. Tea Room at 7:30 P.M.

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THE ANCHOR:....Dioc~se ..of Fall Riv~r-Thu~. May 18',1972 /.

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DEDICATED TO REliGIOUS: EDUCATION: Rev.. John Sigstein,. ..sultants. Right: Sr. 'Miriam Doyle' operating camera during television '. founder of the Missionary Sisters of Our L,idy ·of Victory. Center: Sr. ,presentation of "The Little :·Flo·c." Five Victory Noll Sisters 'are active Martha Wordeman and S.r. Della An,n Chartrand, religious education con- .in CCl) work in this Diocese. .

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Commemora·te· 50. Years in'Field of .Rel·igious.. Teaching The 50th anniversary of the founding of the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Victory will be marked in the Fall River Diocese with a Mass of Thanksgiving at 7:30 P.M. Monday, May 22. Mass will, be concelebrated in Holy Na;ne Church, Fall River, by Bishop Cronin and priests involved in parish CCD programs. Among invited guests of honor are Bishop Connolly and Bishqp

Gerard. A reception will follow at Holy" Name. SChool. All are iIivited to attend the anniversary observance, particularly' CCD workers and their friends. The Victory Noll Sisters, as they are known, from the name of their motherhouse in Hunting. 'ton, Ind., .were founded in' Illi· nois by Rev. John Sigstein. Their field is the teaching of religion to public school children, train-

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PARI~H· CCD ~OORl)"NATORS: Sr. Alic~O'Brien, CCD Coordinator at St. .Pius. X Parish,. Sq. Yarmouth and '.. --Sr. Muriel Balch, CCD coordinator at St. Joseph's; No. J:)ighton.· ..'\ . '

ing of CCD workers, home and! institutional visiting and work in dinics. Five Sisters .are active in the Fall River Diocese. All live in a former school convent in Immaculate Conception parish, New Bedford. Serves Cape Sister Aliee O'Brien is in charge of the CCD program at ~;t. Pius X parish,' South Yar· mouth, while Sister· Muriel Balch seves ,in a similar capacity at ~;t. Joseph's ,North Dighton. Sis· ter Elizabeth Anderson is a social servic~ worker at' Regina Paeis Center. for the Spanish. , speaking in New Bedford, where she is often called, upon to act as interpreter for Puerto Ricans newly arrived in the city. Sister Del~a Ann Chartrand anell Sister "Martha· Wordeman serve the entire Diocese in t:1eir posts as religious .education consultants in the Diocesan CCD Office. The celebration at Holy Name Church will be especially meaningfulfor Sister Martha and Sister Alice. Both will mark 25 years as Victory Noll Sisters' and willl renew their religi9us, vows during the Mass. , Sister DelIa 'Ann noted that the Fall River Diocese since 1953, when they took charge of the r,~ligious education program at Holy Trinity parish, West Har· wich. "We work oilly in parishes with no Catliolic school," she said. Perhaps ,the activity by, which the Sisters became best known in the Diocese came in 1!)64 and IB65 when they presented "The 'Little Flock," a weekly television p::'Ogram for children' over WTEV, Channel Six, New Bedford. Only the in'abillty of the st.ation to continue offering Satu::day morning time to the Siste:rs caused the end of the program, which parents still inquire ahoillt sa~d Sister Della Ann. People often won4er how the community got' its name" she said. "It's named after Our Lady of Victory and Archbishop Noll . of Fort Wayne, Ind., who helped

Concern I am a man, and whatever concerns humanity is of interest to m e . - T e r e n c e

Father Sigstein found our. congregation." Collegial Assembly The golden jubilee of the community began lailt summer, she said, when for the first time its nearly 400 .members met together instead of sending delegates to a general chapter. The unpre,:edented event "renewed ,the ardor" of the congregation, she said, also noting that among new officers elected was Sister Jeanette Halbach, named' vicepresident. F'Ormerly known as Sister Joseph Adeie, she had served at Immaculate Conception parish, North Easton. The general meeting of all members' for purposes of deci-

sion making and holding elections was unique for a religious community, said Sister Della Ann. The success of Victory Noll's experiment is beng studied by other communities interested : in establishing collegiality. 'But Victory Noll is. accustomed to being ahead of the times. Its· founder might almost be consid-' ered prophetic in that 50 years ago he established a community specializing in social work and religious education. Father Sigstein couldn't have foreseen the ~anging Church of the 70's, but "building better than he knew,'" he enabled his community to be a pacesetter in the work of bringing Christ to His people.

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, SOCIAL' SERVICE: 'Sr. Elizabeth Anderson, social service workerai Regina .Pacis Center, New Bedford counsels a visitor to the Spanish-sl?eaking center.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese·of Fall River-Thur. May 18, 1972

FR. ANNUNZIATO

FR. FRAGA

FR. BYINGTON

FR. McCARRICK

FR. MULLANEY

Personnel- Changes in . Directorship.s and. Parishes Continued from Page One ward J. Byington, assistant pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church, Attleboro, be~omes assistant pastor of Sacred Heart Church, Taunton. Rev. Bento 'R. Fraga, assistant pastor of St. Joseph's Church, Taunton, becomes assistant pastor of Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro. Rev. Paul F. McCarrick, assistant pastor of Sacred Heart Church, Taunton, becomes assistant pastor of St. Patrick's' Church, Fall River. The four priests ordained by Bishop Cronin last Saturday have received their first assignments. Rev. George C. Bellenoitwill serve as assistant pastor at St. Mary's Church in Mansfield. Rev. Marcel H. Bouchard will be assistant pastor at St. Joseph's Church, Taunton. Rev. Timothy J. Goldrick will be assistant pastor at St. Ann's Church, Raynham. Rev. Daniel F. Hoye will be assistant pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church, Attleboro. All assignments and appointments are effective on June I, 1972.

Father Annunziato Born in Taunton on October 10, 1930, Rev. Armando Annunziato, pastor of St. Francis Parish in New Bedford, was ordained to the priesthood at the North American College in Rome on Dec. 16, 1956. He has also served at St. Mary Parish in No. Attleboro and as Chaplain to the Daughters of Isabella, Tribunal Advocate, Chaplain to Guild of Blind and member of the PreCana Conferences. Father Byington Rev. Edward J. Byington was born in Fall River on March 20, 1939. After brief military, governmental and business'work, he studied for and was ordained to the priesthood on Aug. 14, 1970. Since then he has. served at St. John the Evangelist Parish in Attleboro. He is also aided as Assistant Moderator of the At·

tleboro Area CYO 'and as member of the Diocesan Commission .for Div~ne _Worsh'p. _ " .Father Fraga' Ordaine'd a priest on March 17, 1956, Rev. Bento R. Fraga was born in Taunton on July 30, 1930. The Taunton curate also served as assistant pastor at St. John of God Parish, Somerset for 13 years. He has ,also worked as Director' of Somerset- Swansea CYO, Director of Cl,ltholic Cernteries in Taunton Area, Director of the Apostolate of Spanish Speaking, Director of Taunton Area Catholic Charities Appeal and as member of the Diocesan Ecumenical Commission and the Priests' Senate. Monsignor Chabot Rev. Msgr. Gerard J. Chabot, the new Dean of the Attleboro. Area, was born in No. Attleboro on March 8, 1908 and ordained to the priesthood on June 10, 1933. He has ~erved at St. Jean Baptiste Parish, Fall River; St. Anthony of Padua Parish, New Bedford; St. -Joseph Parish in Attleboro and is .now pastor of St. Theresa Parish in So. AttleborQ. A member of the Priests' Senate, he has also aided ina number of diocesan commissions. Father McCarrick The Diocesan Director of the CYO, Rev. Paul F. McCarrick was born in Malden on April I, 1931 and was ordained to the priesthood on March 17, 1956. He has served at the Cathedral and St. William Parishes in Fall River and Sacred Heart Parish in Taunton. He has' also served as Fall River Area CYO and CYAO Db'ector, member of the PreCana Conferences, chaplain to Mt. St. Mary Academy and the Fall River Fire Dept. He. was also a member of the Advisory Committee 'on Drug Problems. Father Mullaney Born in Fall River' on Oct. 7, 1936, Rev. 'Leonard M. Mullaney was ordained a priest on Feb. 2, 1962. An Advocate of .the'Diocesim Tri1?unal he has served at St. Patrick Parish in Wareham and St. Rita Mission in Marion.

Father Munroe '. Very Rev. Henry T. Munroe, Nations will rise and fall, but Officialis of the Diocesan Tribuequality remains the ideal. The nal, .was born in Fall River. on universal aim is to achieve re- Nov. 21, 1928 and ordained to spect for the entire ·human race, the priesthood on Nov. 30, 1953. not for the dominant few. Since then he has served at Holy ·-:-Romulo,. Name Parish in New Bedford and

Respect

held Diocesan Tribunal posts 'of Gerald T. Shovelton was born in Notary, Secretary, and Officialis. Fall River on Oct. 5, 1930 and • Father· Shovelton ordain~d to the priesthood on The new administrator of the Feb. 2, 1956. He has served at Diocese's newest parish, Rev.' St. Patrick Parish, Fall River; St.

Mary Parish in Taunton; St. Thomas More Parish in Somerset and as Director of the Apostolate . to Spanish Speaking in Taunton. .

''..(et tke CkilJr~n C~~~ to.Ate" Telling Bible stories to children is a happy time for missionaries discover how much God loves them and is their lifetime friend

seeing them the Good News!

For 150 years the Society for the Propagation of the Faith has shared in this great joy of missionary,service - telling others the Good News of the Gospels. In celebration of this anniversary, we will send you a Commemorative Edition of the GOOD NEWS FOR MODERN MAN (The New Testament) as a fitting gift to you who have helped make this possible through your generous sacrifices for the missions. Return this coupon today with your special anniversary gift.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thul'. May 18, 1972

KNOW YOUR FAITH World:' A'renf~

Our ,Lives',:ore our' Kingdom

It may, be too simple to say that within the Church today we have rediscovered ·the world, but in a sense that is, true. Ar.d if we have not rediscovered it, our view of' it "has remarkably 'changed:

SR. MARIE HARRIS, CSJ

SHARED SERVICE: It is better to give than toreceive implies that someone is in need of receiving the gift of our time and our talents as is evidenced by the cate given to children by a young friendly girl. NC Photo. "Leading others to Jesus" is and feel - all these are our a 18-week series in KNOW YOUR unique possession. FAITH beginning this, week and Yet, we have difficulty' ruling continuing through the entire them. Sometimes, it seems, these summer series. Written by Joan , are the things that ,control us. Heider, a member of the Super- They hold us down and, stifle ior, Wis. Religious Education Of- our movements. They rule us. We have talents and gifts' of fice, the theme of these articles varying kinds which belong only is that we are all "Jesus People." 'The most effective method' we to each one of us. No one else have for leading others to Jesus has these saqle gifts. Tiley. are is to follow the method Jesus ours to be shared. In return himself followed, which is devel- others' give to us those, things we need or would like to have. oped in the IS-week series. Someone in a communitypos_lg[Wm;%mr"'rj{l!~,liW! sibly can sing well. This person offers his talent. He leads, the parish in singing during the celeBy bration of, the Eucharist. Someone else' has' the 'ability' JOAN to meet people easily. He, heads HEIDER the social' activities, committee. Shared Service . The priest of the parish has the special privilege of leading people in the celebration of the "A little kingdom I possess, Eucharist. He does this. Where thoughts and feeling Several retired people may dwell; count the collection or visit shutAnd very hard the task I find in people. This is the way a parOf governing it well." ish be~omes more than a church This little verse, from the building. To say that ,i~ is better to give Life" Letters and Journals of Louisa May Alcott could well e~-, than to receive is to admit that press the sentiments of any of , we each have something to give. us. Our lives are our kingdom. It also. implies, that someone is The things we have" want, think Turn to Page Seventeen

Perhaps it began with Teil:h.ard's dedicating' his "Divi'M :Ylilieu" "For those who love the world." Perhaps it came when we read Bernanos' "When I shall 'be dead, tell the kingdom of thl~ earth that I loved it far more than I ever dared to say." At any rate, there has been a real !;hift in the Christian attitud(~ toward the. world. It was seen as a place of temptation to be avoided; now we see a place of revelation to be reverenced, em.. braced, 'and re-created. One of the .leading character· istics of c,ontemporary theology, for example, is its ecumenical character. "EcumenIcal," can be l:nderstood in two senses. In the first place it refers to the ecological, 'the earthly, the material structure of the world man inhabits. The contactChristiariity has recently had ,with nonwestern religions has helped to r<~vive understanding, of the "world" in this second sense, for these religiol?-s have kept alive in their own traditions an understanding of the unity of man and nature. Within this second understanding of ecumenical, where the entire temporal. world is to h~ reverenced, a reminder of the bodily nature of human existence i~ preserved. In a religious sense, this is an affirmation of the doctrine of Incarnation which points to a humanity sprung from the ' depths of the earth. Despite the fs,ct that human beings are often tempted to run away from the fl:ndamental timecspace charader of their hodily lives, this is not possible nor even desirable For to be concerned' with man is to be concerned with all of man; and his entails coming to grips with his bodily life as well as with the material worlel in' w:lich he dw'ells. Narrow and Exclusive This -leads ..to· another understanding of the world that our contact with world religions has made' dearer to us. This is that our own private worlds are often very narrow, ,and sometimes highKy exClusive as well. We tend to think that ours, is the only world there is, partiCuhirlv in America:, We tend to thini{ of the world that has the, most reality as "us" and the rest of ma,nkind, in Marie Augusta Neal's phrase, as "non-us-es." ,

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Christian Spirituality

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We Americans tend to forget these worlds of our less fortuthat although we' have only 17, ,', nate brothers and sisters. On one per cent of the world's, popula~' ','level, we can always - and we tion we have 83 per cent of 'its' ",: should always-share with them wealth. We have to, be reminded our money, our food, our cloththat there is a world of poverty ':,ing, our homes. But on another and starvation; a world of the "level, we'are called to work with poor;: a world of the imprisoned;, ',",the social, economic and politia world of the physically, and ". ,tal structures of our world so mentally ill. Long accustomed " ,that these 'structures are weightto living among the third of the, ",'¢d to favor the :poor, not the world that has enough to eat, we' "rjch; the exploited, not the comrarely lose sleep over the two-', 'f9rtable; the inarticulate, the ,', third,s of the world who :go to "widows, the orphans-those who be,d hungry. ', have no powerful lobby to speak Re-create the Wodd' 'for them. We are called to beChristianity points u!? toward Turn to Page Eighteen

r

The Catechist and the World

A poster, distributed last month throughout Brazil' pictured Jesus dressed in a coat and tie. Reaction was i.mmediate and dividE~d. Some saw the poster as an indication of the final triumph of secularism over religion. Jesus' ,Christ had become not only a "s~perstar" put' a "business rnan" and a "capitalist." Others took a totally opposite view. Picturing Jesus in a business :mit and tie suggested ,to them that Christ is ' alive and with' people ,in 'their workad~;Y

'~'i~;i®;~mm0:it~~m1 ~:.

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By FR. CARL J.

PFEil FER, S.J.

world. He is not just a past'reality, but an influential person in contemporary society - God's' son with us as he promised. The reaction to the poster, in Brazil is not unlike the reaction to relil~ious education programs. Some people view pres,ent day Catholic catechesis as capitulating to secularism' ,or existentialism. The fact that textbooks and other religious educational media are fiHed with photos, of daily, secular experience has led many to view them at best as simply another. form of social studies. ' Others, equally concerned, view the striking presence of daily experience 'in religion programs as a very positive sign. To ,them it suggests that religion, is not ,something set, apart from' the wo]~ld, blit actually the deepest dimension of daily experience. The world is not something primarily ,to be feared or fled, but a reality to respect and love. Ultimately it is there that God is to be met because it is there that he is at work. Where is Jesus? Without defending either the Brazilian poster or every particular ]cecent religious education program, it may be pointed out that thE! Sc;:riptures and long tradition summed up in the Second Vatican Council give'strong support to a view of the world

which recognizes it as the arena, of Christian growth. There is no denying that in daily life there are risks, temptations, evils. There is, however, a strong affirmation' that the world of human experience is the normal place for recognizing and responding to God's call to grow and live as a Christian. Even a cursory glance through the Gospels confirms this view of the world. Where is Jesus to be found? With, 'people at work and at leisure, along the roads, 'in- city streets,' in 'shdps';' eating, drinking, fishing, picnicking. He' is also found in the synagogues each week and in the' Temple whenever he visited Jerusalem. But his time was spent mainly wherever the men and women of his time were to 'be found. His manner of teaching reflected his life. Not only did tie draw upon secular realities and events for his teaching, but he taught people to find God in their ordinary lives. If one were ,to translate Jesus' parables into photographs, the Gospels would be filled with pictures of birds, "animals, sick people, rich people, poor, people, fountains of water, win~ skins, fishing boats, construction workers, farmers, money, ,city streets, country roads, fig trees and mustard seeds, vineyards and pig farms. Some pictures of synagogues and Temples, of biblical scrolls and religious symbols would be interspersed with the predominantly secular pictures. Think Positively The <Bishops during the Second . Vatican Council suggest a positive view of the world similar to that found in the Gospels. "The Council focuses its attention on the world of men, the whole human family along with the sum of those realities in the midst of which that family lives. It gazes upon that world which is the theater of man's history, and carries the marks of his energies, his tragedies, and his triumphs; that world which the Christian sees as created and sustained by its Maker's love, fallen indeed into the bondage of sin, yet emancipated now by Turn to Page Nineteen


'We Were ~ever TheirAge'

THE ANCHORThurs., May 18, 1972

Recommended for Parents

17

Our Kingdom

Continued from Page Sixteen in need of receiving the gift of our time and our talents. Jesus, the model we aim to follow, lived his life in giving of his time and talents. He taught in the temple. He helped those in pain and sorrow. Finally, he gave his life for his people. There is no ·doubt that he gave '~iH:::II!i!!::::111 A novel which perhaps can be to -the fullest. He also accepted appreciated only by the young . what others could give to him. is Don DeLillo's End Zone For example, he permitted By (Houghton Mifflin, 2 Park St., Mary Magdalen to express her Boston, Mass. 02107. $5.95). An repentance by washing his feet RT. REV. absurd oversimplification would and drying them with her hair. state that it is all about football COYLE-CASSIDY PRODUCTION: Students at Coyle-Cas- As he was dying on the Cross he MSGR. and atomic destruction. But sidy High School, 'I:a~nton, will present "I Never Sang for . accepted the wetted sponge JOHN S. there is more to it than that. My Father" tonight, tomorrow and Saturday in the school which was offered to him. Jesus did not give the people The end zone on the field and cafeteria. From left, Robert Hamel, Mary McGovern, MiKENNEDY in his life the feeling that he did ,the end zone toward which hu- chele Ring in scene from drama. not need or want to receive from manity seems headed dominate them. He was not a dictator in the book. But there are wild exhis kingdom. He knew the task titled We Were Never Their Age cursions into many other subof "governing it welL" His me·thand subtitled "A Guide for jects by the zanies who constitute od was shared service. Christian Parents" (Holt, Rine- the cast of characters.. Fantastic Could we also ease the task hart and Winston, 383 Madison situations and free-wheeling diaof governing each of our kingAve., New York, N. Y. 10017. tloguespill through the pages. doms by_ thinking and living: "1 $5.95 clothbound, $2.75 paper- Mr. DeLiIlo writes brilliantly in a way altogether unconventional. Coyle and Cassidy High School municate the love each feels for give to you and you give to me?" back).. The vocabulary is far from po- Student Theatre, Taunton, an- the other. Their conflict and its if so, could "true Christian love" The authors' main point is that today's young people have been lite; it is often profane and obs- nounces its spring production, tension is the theme of the play. be the result? growing up in a world drastically ·cene. The ideas expressed turn Robert Anderson's "I Never Lead Roles different from the one. their accepted standards upside down. Sang For .My Father," which will Seniors Robert Hamel and Ocean Grove parents matured in. They make The book is like a series of be presented in the school cafe- Peter Stoddard are cast in the ST. MICHAELshocks, such, one supposes, as a strong case for this contention. teria tonight, tomorrow and two lead roles of Gene and Tom Never before, for example, has football is, not to mention atomic Saturday. Theatre-in-the-round Garrison. Freshman Michele Ring $275 will be used, with a rear projec- is Margaret, the mother, and the threat of atomic extinction holocaust. Mr. & Mrs. .Joseph Faria tion screen for scene· changes. sophomore Kathy Keefe is Alice, hung over the world. Never be$75 Trouble the, Top fore has there been a generation Student director Paul Castro and the sister. Rev. Maurice E. Parent exposed to what McLuhan calls Older people may look with student director Kevin' Bolger Dr. & Mrs. Joseph McGuill Others are Joseph Foster, "the total involvement in an all- some anticipation of pleasure to are working under the'. instruc- Mary McGovern, Brian Bault, $50 inclusive nowness" which TV_ Charles' Bracelen Flood's novel tion of Brother Gerald Robbins James Perry, William Ventura, Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Brophy produces. .Trouble .at the Top (McGraw- C.S.C..of the faculty. Maureen Bourque. $30 Hill, 330 W. 42nd St., New York, . "I Never Sang For My Father" Mr. & Mrs. John Szuba Tickets are available in adNew Problems 10036. $6.95). They are due for chronicles a relationship be- vance and at· the door.. If demand $25 For Catholics there has been a disappointment. Mr. Flood has tweeria father and son-two warrants, additional perforMr. & Mrs. Alfred Bolduc Jr.~ special sort of change. Until fair- produced some excellent fiction m~1.1 stnJggling to break through mances will be scheduled after Mr. & Mrs. Rene Dufresne, Mr. ly recently· the majority of 'Cath- in the past. ~ut is this perform- an· emotional barrier and com- Saturday. & Mrs. John Seguin, Mr. & Mrs. olics in this country lived ance is flaccid. John C. Lindo, Mr. & Mrs. Norlargely in a milieu all their own. J{e is wrIting of a time, some Miss. M. Hoye mand Paine "-Taunton They were marked by certain years hence, when a man named Mc{{~n Family ST. PAUL social and cultural differences· Harry is President of the United . $35 $100 Somerset which had to do with their reli- States. All kinds of trouble face D. J. Sullivan Clayton Rennie . ST. THOMAS MORE gion. But these have mostly dis- him, but his most pressing prob$30 . $70 appeared. There is greater ex- lem is a civil war in Mexico. $100 W. Cliffford Rev. Raymond P. Monty· posure to other ideas and values. Should the United States interMr. & Mrs. William J. Gibney W. J. Casey . .$50 This greatly affects the young. vene· militarily? Some cry "Yes!" St. Thomas More Women's E. Flood Sr. Family Joseph Dr. & Mrs. William Fountain Hence dealing with the young and some cry "No!" Guild $25 . Mr. & Mrs. Leo A. Leroux, presents problems not encounA leading interventionist, and $75 Mis~R. Baker, J. Carney, Mrs. Mrs. Matthew McCarty tered in earlier times. There are old antagonist of the President is Albert Clement, J. Connors, J. McClellan Fuel Co., Inc. Mr. & Mrs: Edward Roster many and important aspects of Senator Augustus Owen, who GaHagher $30 $30 their experience which their eld- lately has married a beautiful Dr. J. J. Gregg, W. Hansen, D. Ernest Prado ers have never known at a like woman much his junior. When Mr. & Mrs. Terrance J. Lomax, Holmes, E. Lesan, Martha M.· Jr. $25 stage. The authors' urge that par- Harry undertakes to go to MexMr. & Mrs. Louis Bartel, Rita Leonard ents and teachers take this into ico to mediate between the con$26 . Mrs. L. Munise, Catherine account. tending forces, Owen is in the Carroll, Mr. & Mrs. Robert FieldMr. Benny Paskavitch Murphy, Miss M~· Murphy, Alice official pa1"ty, and his wife comes ing, Leonard Goslin; Mr. & Mrs.. Plea for Understanding McCusker, Michael McCusker $25 James Ramsey along. Dorothy & Marguerite McMr. & Mrs. Frank Shumway, Florence M. Sullivan, Mrs.. By then, Harry, who has a By no means do they contend Manus, D. McSweeney, F. J. Frank H. Johnson & .Mrs. Antonio Tosti . Mr. wife and daughter, is somewhat that the youngsters are perfect. O'Boy, J. O'Boy, Dr. T.. O'Brien ST. MARY Mr. & Mrs. John O'Brien, Mr. This is not one of those books involved with Claire Owen. The J. O'Hearne, Miss A. V. Edward F. Welch, Dr. & Mrs. $200 which glorify the young and vil- affair continues in Acapulco O'Keefe .or. & Mrs. John Fenton . Donald F. Peters ify everyone over 30. The incon- - even as the struggle at the con· $150 siostencies of the young are noted. ference table grinds on and MexMr. & Mrs. Wm. Fenton But a plea for understanding is ico is racked by tornado and $100 earthquake. repeatedly sounded. Rev. James W. Clark The work of the United States Don't immediately leap into angry argument; the authors in- delegation is hampered by the , Miss M. O'Brien Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Galvin sist. Rather, listen and then en- steady leaking of highly classified $50 critical information. What daster into calm discussion on the. Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Baker basis of what you have heard. tard is doing it? on the Cape A number of specif~cs are disNot to Disturb cussed. The Highesf Savings Dividettds Another disappointment is in- confidently awaiting the death This book is recommended for Allowed by Law the serious attention of parents, flicted by Muriel Spark's Not by murder and suicide of the teachers, and others who are baf- To Disturb (Viking, 625 Madison master, his wife, and their secre5 ~% - Regular Savings fled and dismayed in their deal- Ave., New York, N. Y. 10022. $5). .tary, who have locked them· 5 112% - 90 Day Notice ings with the young. It offers Miss Spark has in the past shown selves in a room to thrash out 5 %% - Term Deposit Certificates, 1 yr. them enlightenment and assis- herself a writer of dazzling ver- their differences. Each of the ser6% - Term Deposit Certificates, 2u3 yrs. tance. satility. Nothing. by her could be vants is preparing his or her ac·For the most part, it threads sloppy. But here she merely wor- count of life in this strange me· Bank by mail - it costs you nothing . its way sensibly through com- ries a small idea to death' and nage, with a view to selling it plex and difficult terrain which beyond. to the press. They wait through is plentifully booby-trapped. One 'In a baronial countryhouse in the night for the fatal issue of 307 MAIN sr., SOUTH YARMOUTH, MASS. 02664 may strongly disagree with some Switzerland, the servants are ,the quarrel. It comes.

"When we were their age ... " These words frequently pop out nowadays when parents are discussing their children. And they are followed by such assertions as "We respected our elders. We obeyed our parents. We wouldn't think of· missing Sunday Mass," etc. To which James of what is. said, but the main DiGiacomo, S.J., and·Edward thrust is reasonable and right. End Zone Wakin reply in a book en-

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18

Spirituality

THE ANCHOR,Thurs., May 18; 1972.,c

Continued from Page Sixteen come involved and muddied and often misunderstood by working to change the conditions under which people live, remembering that "he who withdraws his hands makes them dirty." In the kind of world where Christian men and women do not consider themselves free until all their brothers and sisters are free from dehumanizing conditions, Christianity is found credible. In such a world, which' we are called to re-create, a new heaven and a new earth are -r' possible. This is the world described in the New Testament where "God wiH wipe away every tear, death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying nor pain." In such a world, all these things "will have passed away." It is up to us, with -the help ?f God, to bring it about.

Somerset ST. JOHN OF GOD $125 Rev. Henry'S. Arruda' Lawrence Borge . $100 Rt. Rev. Augusto .L. Furtado St. John of God Women's Guild $25 St. John of God· CYO, Leon-' ard Tessier, Mr. & Mrs. John, Gaspar , ST. PATRICK $50 Mr. ,& Mrs. John Diogenes $25' Mr. & Mrs. Edward Casper, Edward M. Soares

. Swansea ST. DOMINIC $300 Rev. Daniel E. Carey $100 ' Mr. & Mrs. Norman Ashley Mr. & Mrs. Charles Gray Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kinnane $50 ' Mr. & Mrs. Philip Griffin

ST. MATIlIEU

$40

t<

$300 Rev. Lucien Jusseaume $200 _ In Memory of Rev. Bernard A. Lavoie, by his family $100, ' Rev. Thomas E. Morrissey Dr. & Mrs. Omer Boivin $60 Juliette Belanger $50 -Edgar Poisson $35 A Friend In Memory of Dr. Eugene J, Dionne-by his wife & children Mr. & Mrs. Paul Lapointe $25 Mr. & Mrs. John Cabeceiras, ,Dr. & Mrs. Roland Chouinard, Mr. & Mrs: Dora -Fiola, Alphonse Mailloux, Mr. & Mrs. George Cummings Mr. & Mrs. Robert Ouellette, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Poisson, Ann Roussel IMMACULATE CONCEPTION $300 Rev. Msgr., Arthrur W. Tans~y

Mr. & Mrs. John Fitzgerald $35 Mr. & Mrs. Robert LaChance Mr., & Mrs. Thomas E. Ryan $31 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Cavanaugh $30 Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Couto Mr. ,& Mrs. Thomas Paiva $25 Evelyn Ryan, Mr. & Mrs: John Silva, Mary McLeod, Clement NEW ENGLAND CHAMPS: Bishop Gerrard Academy of Fall River placed first in Family, Mr. & 'Mrs. William the high school competition in the New England CYO Cheerleadlers contest held at the Cody , Mr. & Mrs. William F. Johan~ University of Han;f9rd and also scored the highest number of points of any team in any nis, 1\1.1'. & Mrs: Frank Denis, Mr. division. Top to bottom, left to right, Beverly Johnson, Deborah Almeida Claudia Pinson. . , ,& ,Mrs. Roland MarteIly, Mr. & neault, Mic~e Giroux, 'Susan Rebello, Denise Jette (substitute), Sue Pereira, Gail Fortin', Mrs. Edward Carey, ,Mr. & Mrs. Sandi Asselin, Joan Pacheco, Linda Massa, Donna Viveiros, Judi Amaral, Karen Mendonca. Albert Rousseau In Memory of James Cox, Mr. S5. PETER AND PAUL Margaret Kehoe, James Wha& Mrs. Daniel Moniz, Mr. & Mrs. Westport lon, John Whitty $50 . Mar,io Paradiso, Mr.' & Mrs. John OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS ST. GEORGE Lawlor, Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Crowell $25 Russo $35 $50 John Branco Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Calisto, Mr. Mr. & Mrs. Frank Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. Joel D. Sunderland & Mrs. Robert-Evans, Mr. & Mrs. Mary Tyrrell -ST. STANISLAUS , $35 George Vent,ura, Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. David L. Buckley Jr. $30 $40 $200 Arthur Costa, Mr. & Mrs. Donald John Dolan $31 . Mrs. Henry J. Duffy Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski Souza $25 $35 Mr. & Mrs. Henry J. Picard $75 . The Sweeney Family, Mr: & OUR LADY OF FATIMA Mrs. Catherine Brahy $30 Frie!1ds Mrs. Nicholas Tyrrell, Mr: & $30 Mr. & Mrs. Leo Romeo Du$75 I $60 Mrs. Edward Tyrrell, James Mr. & Mrs. Charles Santos breuil Mrs. Ernest L. Wood Mary F. Joy Roger:~ Jr., Mrs. 'James Rogers ' $25 ' St. George Conference, SVP $30 $50 Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Foley, In Mr,s. Andrew Bercier, Edward Mr & Mrs'Charles J. Chorlton Mr. & Mrs. Walter Kocon $25 Memory of Lawrence Lynch, Mr. Hennessey. Eileen McNally, Fred Daniel $25 A. Sullivan Mr. & Mrs George Barlow, & Mrs. Joseph Stankiewicz" The J. McNally Dr. &.Mrs: William Freeman, Mrs. Linda Bono & Family, Mr. $30 Farren Family, Mrs/Francis TayMr. & Mrs. Clarence R. Wam- & Mrs. Frank Cardoza, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. Richard Ernst lor boldt Mr. & Mr-s. Leo .Lavoie Mrs. Kenneth ,Gaisford, Mr. & SANTO CHRISTO Mr. & Mrs. John Cabral ' $27 John Fernandes The Drury Family, JamesJ. $175 Mr. & Mrs. Thoma's PietrRszek Mr. ~ Mrs. Almedor Houle, Rev, Joao C. Martins ONE STOP _ McDermott, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas HolY,Name Society, Mr. & Mrs. $25 $50 . P. Schultz, Mr:-& Mrs. Raymond Lawrence Lefebvre, St. 'George Mary Makuch, Mr. & Mrs. SHOPPING CENTER G.Thurst<)D , John N. Brilhante Joseph Scroczynski , Women's Guild • Television • Grocery $31 A Friend, ST•. WUIS DE FRANCE Mr. & Mrs.: George Stebenne, • Appliances • Furniture Mr. & Mrs. Antone Souza Mr. & Mrs. Martin Forczyk Mr. & Mrs. HonorE~ Vaillancourt, , $25 104 Allen St., New Bedford $25 Mr. & Mrs. William J. Leeming - William O'Neil, Roland Goddu Westport Packa'ge Store 'Jo'seph Souza, :John Mello, 997·9354 ST. PATRICK Mary JR. Cabral, Mary Gagne North Westport $50 Fall Riiver , OUR I4\DY OF GRACE' In Memory of Mr. & Mrs. ST. LOUIS , $50' George V. Broderick Lena St. Pierre $100 ", Mr. & Mrs. John Blake 'Kenneth Smith In Memory of Mr. & Mrs. TimMr. & Mrs. Edward DeCiccio ,.R~ymond Lavoie othy F, ,McCarthy '$35 - $25 . $60 -. Mr. & Mrs. Clarence J. HarManuel Faria, William' Costa, Connerton Family: ney Norman Sasseville, 'Donald Ber$30 ' $30 nier, William King Anne Tuttle' In Memory of James E. Shea • BANQUETS • WEDDINGS • PARTIES $25, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Urban Hindrances Mr. & Mrs. Victor Auclair, • COMMUNION BREAKFASTS $25 Most of the luxuries; and Mary' Cantwell' many of the so-called comforts of Peter Cantwell,lI1argaret Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Thibault, 134:3 PLEASANT STREET FALL RIVER life are not 'only indispensaBle, Doran; Rita Doran Margaret Donnelly ThoII,las Doran, 'Mr. &',Mrs. but positive hindrances to the In Memory of Mr. & Mrs. 673·7780 elevation of mankind. William P. Lynch, Gertrude Michael Forand -Thoreau -O'Neil Edward Healey --,

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CORREIA &SONS

WHITE SPA CATERERS


Fall River SACRED HEART $300 Rev. Msgr. Lester L. Hull $200 Dr. John E. Manning $125 Elizabeth M. Trainor $100 Grace Family In Memory of Mitchell Family James L. Connor Adelaide C. Trainor $70 Mary V. & Alice C. Harrington $50 Elizabeth L. Leonard Mr. & Mrs. T. Arthur McCann Margaret Morris ~aura N. Sullivan Mr. & Mrs. Eddy Kaufman In Memory of May Healey $35 Catherine I. Trainor In Memory of Herman J. Springer , ·Mr. & Mrs. John H. Springer & Mrs. Mary Larrabee $25 Kenneth E. Leger, Helen F. Loftus, Charles V. Morris, Wile liam C. Chippendale, Margaret Desmond Kathryn V. & Margaret M. Whalen, Leonard Burgmyer Jr., John F. Hallisey, M. Doris Sullivan, Hannah G. Connors Elizabeth Roach, William Black, Martin A. Reardon OUR LADY OF HEALTH $50 Our Lady of Health Holy Name Our Lady of Health Ladies Guild In Memory of 'Rose Freitas $30 Mr. & Mrs. Jeremias Rego $25 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Almeida, Mr. & Mrs. Caetano Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs. Francisco C. Silvia, Mr. & Mrs. William Silvia, Augustine Viveiros, In Memory of Antone Ferreira NOTRE DAME $50 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Courchaine Dr. & Mrs. Adelard A. Demers Jr. $30 Mr. & Mrs. Milton Fuller $25 Mr. & Mrs. Normand J. A. Belanger, Mrs. Adrien Cote, Mrs. Albert Petit, Mr. & Mrs. Edgar St. Martin ST. ANNE $250 Dominican Fathers $50 Mr. & Mrs. Louis Beaulieu $35 Dr. & Mrs. Alphone Poirier Cecile Sutton $31 . Mr. & Mrs. Reginald Bellerive $30 Imelda, Alice, Leon Gauthier Mr. & Mrs. Paul Hamel $28 Mr. & Mrs. Benoit Canuel $25 The Gauthier Family, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hamel, Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Lemay, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Nowak, Mr. & Mrs. Roland Sorel, Mr. & Mrs. Philip R. Thibault Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Dupre Loretta Fillion Anottymous ST. JOSEPH $200 Fred W. Shay $25 Gilbert Cabral Jr., In Memory of Arthur F. Mello, Helen McAVOY, Walter Nichipor, Mr. & Mrs. Timothy ,Thompson

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., May 18, 1972

19

Plan First CYO Track Meet Sargent Field, New Bedford, will be the scene of the first an· nual CYO Diocesan Track Meet, to be held at 1 Sunday afternoon, June 18, with the New Bedford Area CYO as host unit. Competitors will be accepted from all parts of the diocese and will be chosen by area cya die rectors and coaches. Any youth born after Jan. I, 1953 is eligible. Events will include the 100 yard dash, the 220, 440, 880, the mile and the two mile. Field events will be the discus, the long jump, the triple jump, the shotput and the high jump, as well as the 880 relay and 120 high and 120 low hurdles.

TESTIMOMAL FOR STATE CHAMPS: More than 600 supporters of the Holy Family High School Basketball team attended a testimonial Friday night at Lincoln Park to honor the Class-Three State champions of Massachusetts. The highlight of the evening occurred when the trophy was brought forth by Paul Walsh, left, team captain, and presented to. the school principal, Sr. Charles Francis, RSM, in the presence of Bishop Cronin and Jack Nobrega, right, coach. ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL $100 Margaret Lahey $50 Helen Burns Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas Tyrell , $40 Catherine Lynch $25 Manuel Almeida, Falvey Family, Mrs. Katherine Kaufman, Walter Torphy, Mr. & Mrs. John Mulrooney Francis A. Moran, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Souza BLESSED SACRAMENT $150 Rev. Herve Jalbert _ $40 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Hamel $30 "Mr. & Mrs. Roger Lauzon Mr. & Mrs. Louis Ste. Marie A & W Root Beer Stand $25 .Mr. & Mrs. Edward Langlais & family, Irene Michel HOLY CROSS $50 Holy Rosary Society In Memory of'my parents $31 Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Canuel $30 Celia· & Helen Plichta Joseph Szewczyk & Family $25 .Holy Cross Mens Club, Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Bronislaw Beben, A Friend (2) . Mr. &: Mrs, Robert Ciosek, Mr. & Mrs. Ted Krupa, Holy Cross Conference- .st. Vincent de Paul, Mr. & Mrs. Stanley W. Nowak . . Richard J. O'Brien, In Memory of John A. Pietruszka, Mr. & Mrs Stephen Pirog, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Rebello, Mrs. Etta Walmsley, Mr. & Mrs. Walter Witengier ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST $50 St. Vincent de Paul Store $25 Ladies Guild

OUR LADY OF THE HOLY ROSARY $25 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Graci, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Marcucci, Albert Ragonesi, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Stetkiewiecz· Sr. HOLY NAME $300 In Memory of Charles & Margaret Bonner $150 'In Memory of Anne V. Kelly Dr. & Mrs. John Delaney $135 Mr. & Mrs. John Burke $125 Dr. & Mrs. John Carvalho $100 Mr. & Mrs. George Bolger Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McGuire Mrs. John Harding Mrs. Harold Clarkin ' Dr. Anne Marie Higgins Marion L. Torphy Dr. & Mrs. Victor Palumbo Mr. & Mrs..Caesar Fortuna!to $75 In Memory of Mr. & Mrs. Louis B. Devine $60 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Burke $50 The Kenny Family Mrs. Michael Regan Mrs. William A. Torphy Mrs. Thomas Tansey Hilda Phillips Dr. & Mrs. Rasmis G. Elias Frederick B. McDonald Franco Family Singers $40 Mr. & Mrs. Romeo McCallum Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Pinsonneault $35 John W: Cummings Joseph W. McDonald $31 In Memory of Deputy Chief Walter Pietruska $30 Grace Sullivan Hlissey-O'Neill Family Mr. & Mrs. Charles Leonard Mr. & Mrs. James Harrington Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Salois

$28 Mr. & Mrs. James Medeiros $25 Mr. &: Mrs. James Hoyle, Mr. & Mrs. John Hart, Mr. & Mrs. John E. Cruger, James Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. Leonard H. Phelan Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cummings, Mr. & Mrs. Antone Almeida, Alice Jane Harding, Mr. & Mrs. Hugh F. Reilly, The Nash Family Frank Perry Jr., Gertrude K~l­ ly, Mary Kelly, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Dussault, Margaret Lahey Mr. & Mrs. Anthony D'Am· brosio, Elinore Kennedy, Mr. & Mrs. Henry J. Lemerise, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph McGuill, Dr. & Mrs. Amine B. Maalouf Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Zervis, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Hammond, Mrs. John Welch, Mr. & Mrs. John A. Burke, Kathryn M. Drogue Mary Smyth, Kathleen Smyth, Mr. & Mrs. Roland Gagnon, Mrs. Thomas Collins, Mrs. Francis Leary Edward P. Grace & Family, Mr. & Mrs. Pierre Brouns, Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence E. Graffam, Eileen Higgins, Elladore O'Neil Mr. & Mrs. Edward Witkowiez, James J. Higgins, Mr. & Mrs. Lionel Braz, Mr. & Mrs. Fernand Bonnoyer, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Crowley Mr. & Mrs. James E. Donnelly, Mr. & Mrs. William Renaud, Marcella Regan, Mr. & Mrs. Stephen .Nawrocki Jr.

Bishop Cronin Trophy Awards will go to the top ,three scorers in each event and the winning relay squad. A special trophy will go to the outstanding all·around performer and the Bishop Daniel A. Cro?in Trophy will be won by the highest scoring area. .Area entries should be received by Rev. Paul F. McCarrick, diocesan CYO director, by Sunday, June ll. Area directors and coaches are Rev. Francis Mahoney, Fall River; Joseph RYiln, Cape; Joseph Brackett, New Bedford; Rev. Donald Bowen, Attielebom; Dr. Michael McCarthy, Taunton; Robert Lane, SomersetSwansea.

The Catechist Continued from Page Sixteen Christ" (Church in Modern World, 2). I Religious education efforts of the past few years have attempted to reflect this balanced view of the world. Perhaps at times the efforts fail to achieve the proper perspective, but the underlying approach rests on a. view of the world as graced by God's creative, saving presence. Catechetical programs are being designed to enable people to grow in a realistic appreciation of the entire world of God in Christ. Sin is part of that world, evil is found everywhere, but God and his grace are even more dynamically present. Jesus may not be wearing a tie, but if he is anywhere he is to be found with us in our own contemporary world.

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