05.27.88

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t eanc 0 VOL. 32, NO. 22

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Friday, May 27, 1988

FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS

FALL RIVER, MASS.

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Groundbreaking set for Mashpee parish With commingling ofearth from the Holy Land, Rome, its mother parish and missions and the garden of nearly every parish home, ground will be broken at 3:30 p.m. Sunday for Christ the King Church at Mashpee Commons. The commingling, said Father Ronald A. Tosti, pastor of the new Cape Cod parish, will symbolize Christ the King's unity with the land of Christ, with the seat of Catholicism in the Eternal City, with its mother parish of Our Lady of the Assumption in Osterville, with former missions of Our Lady of the Assumption in Cotuit, San-

tuit and Popponesset Beach, and of parishioners with each other and the universal Church. Presiding at the ceremony will be Bishop Daniel A. Cronin and Father Tosti. Also present will be James Edwards, architect with the Boston firm of Holmes and Edwards and Charles Altieri, president of Auburn Construction Co. of Whitman. Invit'ed guests will include area clergy and the selectmen of Barnstable and Mashpee. Turn to Page Six

Officer arrests pro-lifers, then resigns as "penance" JACKSON, Miss. (NC) - A Jackson police officer has resigned as "penance" for arresting antiabortion protesters. Joe Daniels, 31, a lO-year veteran of the Jackson Police Department, said he resigned after he helped arrest 64 of about ISO antiabortion protesters for trespassing during an abortion clinic sit-in sponsored by the Jackson Right to Life organization as part of a national "Operation Rescue" abortion protest. "I have never been directly confronted with people attempting to save lives and 1had to draw a line,"

said Daniels, a former detective in the department's child protection unit. He described his resignation as penance for his part in the arrests. He said he was taking several demonstrators to the police station when they began "convicting" him for his part in the arrest. "I told them I was in sympathy with them but I just had a job to do. Then someone in the car started praying aloud for me and at that point I came to the realization that 1had done my duty but had cleared the path for thos~ people at the Turn to Page Six

PRINCIPALS AT DCCW convention, from left, Mrs. Theodore Wojcik Sr., first vicepresident; Mrs. James Almeida, convention chairman; Bishop Daniel A. Cronin; Miss Dorothy A. Curry, DCCW president. (Rosa photo)

"Do whatever he tells you"

35th annual DCCW parley By Pat McGowan

Undaunted by early morning thunder and, lightning, over 400 members of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women converged last Saturday upon St. Mary's parish center, South Dartmouth, for their 35th annual convention, hosted by New Bedford District II of the council. They were challenged "to so love and serve the world that you are an arrow of light shot in the darkness." The challenge came from Father Francis T. McFarland, director of the Boston Catholic Television Center and convention keynote speaker.

Speaking to the day's theme, "Do Whatever He Tells You," the words of Mary to the waiters at the marriage feast of Cana, Father McFarland pointed out that "Mary still says 'Do whatever he tells you.' " What he tells us, said the priest, is that we should feed the hungry, clothe the naked and perform the other works of mercy, remembering that "when you do it to them, you do it to me." These Gospel directives, he said, are the basis for church involvement in social ministry. Very often, he said, people undertake a cause enthusiastically, but commitment wanes. "But

Mary is still saying, 'Do whatever he tells you,' so how do we maintain interest and creativity? "Our ability to continue is in direct proportion to how much we pray," declared Father McFarland, noting, on the vigil of Pentecost, that "we must plug into the Spirit just as we'd plug into electricity -this will help us create a new social order." He added that confidence i-n God plays a large part in the success of one's endeavors: "After Mary told the waiters 'Do whatever he tells you,' she went back to her table and relaxed. She had Turn to Page Five

Retirement, Family Ministry changes set

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Bishop Daniel A. Cronih has announced the retirement for reasons of health of Father Daniel A. Gamache, pastor of St. Joseph's parish, New Bedford. He will retire on June IS. The bishop also announced that he has acceded to the request of Father Ronald A. Tosti, pastor of Christ the King parish, Mashpee, to be relieved ofthe directorship of the Diocesan Office of Family Ministry and the Family Life Center, both in North Dartmouth. Father Horace J. Travassos will succeed Father Tosti in the directorship. The change will be effective July 1.

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NC photo

Former detective Joe Daniels

Father Gamache Born in Fall River, Father Gamache is the son of the late Adolphe and Clairina (Lanneville) Gamache. After graduation from Blessed Sacrament School, Fall River, he prepared for the priesthood at St. Alexandre's College,

Limbour, Quebec, and St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. He was ordained to the priesthood Feb. 24, 1945, in St. Mary's

FATHER GAMACHE

Cathedral by Bishop James E. Cassidy. For 24 years he was associate pastor at St. Jacques parish, Taunton, for 17 years of that time also being a chaplain at Taunton State Hospital. Following four years as administrator at St. Jean Baptiste parish, Fall River, lle was named to his present pastorate. Father Tosti Father Tosti, a Taunton native, prepared for the priesthood at St. Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn., and S1. Mary's, Baltimore. Ordained May II, 1962, by Bishop James L. Connolly, he served thereafter as parochial vicar at Our Lady of the Assumption parish, Osterville, and Sacred Heart and SS. Peter and Paul parishes in Fall River. From 1970 to 1973, he was diocesan director of religious eduTurn to Page Six


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THE ANCHOR -

Diocese of Fall River -

"Renew" revisions increase its value

Fri., May 27, 1988

Statement rejects withholding food WASHINGTON (NC) - About 100 theologians and ethicists, in a recently-released statement, rejected on moral and legal grounds the withholding of food and water by artificial means for non-competent, non-dying patients. Except in rare circumstances, they said, it "is not morally right nor ought it be legally permissible" to withhold food and fluid from patients in irreversible comas or who are otherwise debilitated. Catholic and non-Catholic ethicists, theologians, doctors, nurses and lawyers signed the statement. It was released in Issues in Law and Medicine, a publication of the National Legal Center for the Medically Dependent and Disabled in Terre Haute, Ind. Auxiliary Bishop James T. McHugh of Newark, N.J., was among the drafters of the document. Others were William E. May, professor of moral theology at The Catholic University of America; Msgr. Orville Griese, the Pope John XXIlI Medical-Moral Research and Education Center in Braintree, Mass.; and Msgr. William Smith, moral theologian and academic dean at St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers, N.Y. Titled "Feeding and Hydrating the Permanently Unconscious and Other Vulnerable Persons," it challenged recent state court decisions that have allowed the removal of feeding tubes.

My shiningfeet will never run On early morning lawn; My feet were crushed before they had a chance to greet the dawn. My fingers now will never stretch To touch the Winning tape; My race was done before I learned The smallest steps to take. My growing height will never be recorded on the wall; My growth was stopped when I was still. Unseen. and very small. My lips and tongue will never taste The good fruits of the earth; For I myself was judged to be A fruit of lillIe worth. My eyes will never scan the sky For my high-flying kite; For when still blind. destroyed were they In the black womb of night. 111 never stand upon a hill Spring~ winds in my hair. Aborted winds of thought closed in On motherhood~ despair. 171 never walk the shores of liJe Or know the tides of time; For I WQS coming but unloved. And that my only crime. Nameless am I. a grain ofsand One of the countless dead. But the deed that made me ashen gre.v Floats on seas ofred.

To contact the Right to Life movement in the Fall River Diocese, please clip and send the coupon below to Massachusetts Citizens for Life, PO Box 40268, New Bedford MA 02744. NAME:

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"Food and fluids are universally needed for the preservation oflife, and can generally be provided without the burdens and expense of more aggressive means of supporting life," the statement said. "Both. morality and law should recognize a strong presumption in favor of their use." Some have argued that providing food and water by artificial means is excessively burdensome, but the statement said tube feeding could not be characterized as such. Traditionally, the statement said, a treatment is judged to be useless if the benefits "are nil" and excessively burdensome if whatever benefits it provides are not worth pursuing because it is too painful, too damaging to the patients's self, too restrictive, too psychologically repugnant or too expensive. But the statement's signers said the "moral certainty of excessive burdensomeness is required to justify forgoing nutrition or hydration." Providing food and water by intravenous means or nasogastric tubes, the statement said, "does not ordinarily impose excessive burdens" by reason of pain or damage to bodily self. It added that psychological repugnance to these methods or the fact they can be restrictive are "not relevant." It added that the cost of feeding by tubal methods is not excessive and usually no more than other ordinary nursing care. Over time, care of persons in poor but non-terminal condition can be costly "when taken as a whole," the statement acknowledged, but it suggested some patients could be cared for at home. The statement said when a person is near death a time can come when feeding by such means "is really useless" or when a patient can no longer "assimilate nourisftment." It said competent individuals and persons making decisions for non-competent persons do have a moral right to refuse treatment that is useless or excessively burdensome. But it emphasized that in reaching such a decision one "must exercise great care" that a judgment is not made to end a life nor that life is deemed useless. "H uman life can be burdened in many ways," the statement said. "But no matter how burdened it may be, human life remains inherently a good of the person. Deliberately killing innocent human life is never rightly regarded as rendering a benefit." The statement said current trends toward euthanasia must be rejected and warned against a growing discriminatory attitude toward the value of the lives of the permanently unconscious or seriously debilitated. In reaction to the statement, Richard Doerflinger, assistant director of the U.S. bishops' Office for Pro-Life Activities, said it closely parallels past statements of the bishops' pro-life committee. "The new statement is designed to focus a debate, not end one," he said. "In particular, its empirical judgments about the rarity of serious burden in feeding-tube cases are open to discussion as knowledge ofthese situations develops."

SISTER HILDA BEAULIEU admires a statue, handcarved by a fellow community member:, of Mother Ignatius Thevenet, who founded the Religious of Jesus and Mary in 1817. (Motta photo)

Memorial Day is double holiday for Sister Hilda, For most people Monday is Memorial Day, but for small and cheerful Sister Hilda Beaulieu of Thevenet Mission Center, Fall River, it's also the day she and fellow members of the Religious of Jesus and Mary will celebrate her 60th anniversary of religious profession. Festivities will begin with II :30 a.m. Mass at nearby Holy Name' Church, at which Father Francis L. Mahoney. pastor. will be principal celebrant and Father George C. Bellenoit, a Chaplain at Charlton Memorial Hospital. also nearby, will be a concelebrant. A reception for family and friends will follow at the mission center. At age 81, Sister Hilda. a native of Providence. looks back on a full life, guided by her upbeat philosophy: "I don't see why we can't be happy. You have to make the most of everything." She entered the Jesus-Mary novitiate in Sillery. Quebec, in 1926. pronouncing her first vows in 1928. She began her teaching career at Notre Dame parochial school in Fall River, then crossed the street to the former JesusMary Academy. where from 1931 to 1950 she taught business subjects. was alumnae advisor and for some of those years school librarian.

Ethiopia still getting food, reports CRS NEW YORK (NC) - Civil war in the Ethiopian provinces of Eritrea and Tigre has severely disrupted Catholic Relief Services feeding programs, .but programs have continued in parts ofthe provinces under government control, said Paul Cunningham, CRS desk officer for Ethiopia. Cunningham, who was recently in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, for reassessment of the famine relief effort, said a government order for foreigners to leave conflict areas had not significantly affected CRS because its counterpart agency, the Ethiopian Catholic Secretariat, distributed food with a staff of Ethiopian nationals. "At no time did we suspend or' terminate operations in either of the regions," he said.

Sister Hilda later taught at Villa Augustina. Goffstown, NH, and was a foundress of Regina High School, Hyattsville, Md., where she set up its library with a $100 donation, some 1000 secondhand books and "a beautiful. spacious locale with plenty of empty shelves." She holds a bachelor's degree in business education and a master's degree in library science and has done graduate work at Catholic University in Washington. A certified teacher and librarian in the states of New Hampshire. Maryland and Massachusetts. she has served on committees for the Middle Atlantic States High School Evaluation Program. Of her 60 years in religious life. 45 have been spent in the field of education. she says. "training teenagers for the business world, trying to shape their ideals and morals through good example and good library materials." After those 45 years. she spent some time in semiretiremenr, then reentered active life as a cataloger at the East Branch of the Fall River public library. retiring again in 1982. Some people might not call it retirement, however. At the Thevenet Center, she takes her turn at cooking for its II to 12 residents ("I didn't learn to cook until I was 76," she confides), helps with other household chores and keeps busy with knitting, crocheting, needlepoint, reading and shopping excursions. Surrounding and pervading all is prayer for family, friends and country. "The 60 years have passed very rapidly," she sums up. "most of them good despite the inevitable hardships and the strict observance of the early years of religious life. The drastic changes since Vatican II were rather difficult to accept at first, for they came too rapidly, but with time one got used to them and took them in stride." Monday's celebration will be the second for Sister Hilda. She and silver jubilarians Sisters Claudette Lapointe and Carol Ann Ferland, who also reside at the Thevenet Center, earlier joined other jubilarians of their community for a weekend observance at their provincial house in Hyattsville.

NEWARK, N.J. (NC) - The widely used Renew program will be "richer and more helpful to dioceses and parishes" now that revisions suggested by the U.S. bishops' doctrine committee have been made, said a letter from the committee to Newark Archbishop Theordore E. McCarrick, in whose diocese the Renew program began in 1978. Renew, which has been used in more than 100 dioceses in the United States, Canada and other countries, is a series of five six-week parish programs aimed at deepening faith, developing lay leaders and bringing back lapsed Catholics. Msgr. Thomas Kleissler, national Renew office director, said that in the new materials, "the basic nature of Renew remains the same," but "includes all of the suggestions that the doctrine committee made." For example, he said, materials on Scripture sharing and discussion include an explanation on the role of Catholic tradition and teaching in interpreting Scripture. The materials also provide statements from church documents, including those of the Second Vatican Council and papal encyclicals, relating to the theme of each week's program. In some dioceses where Renew has been started. it was opposed by groups who accused it of undermining orthodox Catholic teaching and practice. While the doctrine committee asked for inclusion of "what is distinctly Catholic in our faith process," it commended Renew for "analyzing the ~piritual needs of people in our country and for developing a process which helps the local church reach out to people and build more vigorous faithenlivened communities." "I think that the critics have always been a very. very small minority." Msgr. Kleissler said. "There couldn't be a more solid backing from the bishops."

Manual sfudies role of families WASHINGTON (NC) - The policies, programs, ministries and services of the church at every level must value and strengthen family relationships, according to a new manual written by a U.S. bishops' committee, which calls on church leaders to move from "an individual-centered approach to a family-centered approach." Written by the bishops' Committee on Marriage and Family Life, "A Family Perspective in Church and Society" notes that despite serious threats, the family remains the basic unit of U.S. society and must be given a central place in church efforts. A family perspective requires viewing people in the context of their families and other social relationships, the manual says. For example, youth ministry should not isolate the education of teenagers from issues affecting their family life. A family perspective would also evaluate efforts by church and society in terms of their sensitivity to the needs of families. The new manual is available from the USCC Office of Publishing and Promotion S~rvices, 1312 Massachusetts Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005.


Parish remembers bus 'crash victims

REV. ARTHUR C. LEVESQUE

New Bedford pastor devoted to parish The Mass of Christian Burial was offered Monday at St. Joseph's Church, New Bedford, for Father Arthur C. Levesque, former pastor of Our Lady of Fatima Church, New Bedford. Father Levesque, who died May 19, had resigned his pastorate last April 14 for reasons of health. Bishop Daniel A. Cronin was principal celebrant of the funeral Mass and Father Levesque's brother, Father Edmond R. Levesque, was among concelebrants. Father Rene G. Gauthier was bomilist. Father Levesque, a Fall River native, was born Sept. 27, 1919, the son ofthe late Desire and Elise (Albert) Levesque. After graduation from Prevost grammar and high schools in Fall River, where he was a member of the first graduating class, he prepared for the priesthood at Assumption College, Worcester, and St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, and was ordained by Bishop James E. Cassidy Dec. 22, 1945. Father Levesque was associate. pastor at St. Joseph's parish, Attleboro; St. Jacques, Taunton; St. Mathieu's, Fall River; and St.

Anne's, New Bedford, before being named administrator of St. Anne's in 1969 and pastor of Our Lady of Fatima in 1970. He was a former chaplain at Parkwood Hospital, New Bedford, and a member of Stang Assembly of the Knights of Columbus and the Order of the Alhambra. He "was certainly a good priest," said longtime friend Father Bertrand R. Chabot, pastor of St. Anthony of Padua parish, also in New Bedford. Father Chabot recalled that the two were named pastors the same day. He said that Father Levesque was devoted to Our Lady of Fatima parish, almost never taking vacations or days off. He is survived by three brothers, Father Edmond R. Levesque, pastor of St. Theresa parish, Attleboro; Brother Richard Levesque, FIC, of Alfred, Maine; and Hector S. Levesque of Tiverton; and three sisters, Therese Rheaume and Annette Levesque of Fall River; and Germaine Maurano of Tiverton. He is also survived by several nieces and nephews.

Diocese of Fall River

OFFICIAL His Excellency, the Most Reverend Daniel A. Cronin, Bisbopof Fall River, has acceded to the requestofthe Revetend Daniel A. Gamache, Pastor of Saint Joseph's Paris~ in New Bedford, to enter into retirement for reasons of health. Effective June 15, 1988 His Excellency, the Most Reverend Daniel A. Cronin, Bishop of Fall River, has acceded to the request of the Reverend Ronal4 A. Tosti to be relieved of his responsibilities as Diocesan Director of. The Office of Family Ministry and The Family Life Center. Bishop Cronin has appointed the Reverend HoraceJ. Travassos as Diocesan Director of The Office of Family Ministry and TI'l~ Family Life Center. Effective July J, 1988 His Excellency, the Most Reverend Daniel A. Cronin. Bishop of Fall River, announces that the Franciscan Fathers of the Province of the Immaculate Conception have accepted the invitationto· assume the pastoral administration of Saint Margaret's Parish. Buzzards Bay, and its Mission, Saint Mary's in Onset. Effective July I. 1988 .

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (NC) - Students at St. Christopher School in Radcliff, Ky., knew the victims of a fiery May 14 bus crash as fellow parishioners, band members and babysitters. . They remembered them by planting dogwood trees and with a plaque inscribed with Christ's words: "Let the little children come to me." Twenty-four youths and three adults were killed when a bus owned by the Radcliff First Assembly of God Church was hit by a pickup truck going in the wrong direction. The driver of the truck was charged with 27 counts of murder after a blood-alcohol test showed he was legally drunk at the time of the accident. Three of the dead teen-agers were members of the Radcliff parish, in the Louisville archdiocese. A survivor, Greg Burlem, is a sixth-~rader at St. Christopher's. St. "'Christopher 6th and 7th graders took some money earmarked for field trips to purchase the memorial plaque. They also planted three dogwood trees at the parish in memory of their classmates: Denise Ellen Voglund, 13, Amy Christine Wheelock, 14, and ' Mary C~theryn Daniels, 14. School principal Rose Mary Newton estimated that more than half the students in 5th through 7th grade attended the May 19 funeral Mass at St. Christopher for the three parishioners. Assumption High School in Louisville held a candlelight memorial service May 20. Sophomore Dana Connor, president of Assumption's Students Against Drunk Driving, the sponsor of the service, said "I hope that a message will be sent to all people not to drink and drive. I challenge you to have the courage to take away the keys from someone who has been drinking, and most certainly never ride with them."

THE ANCHOR - Diocese of Fall River - Fri., May 27,1988

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u.s. bishops back S. Africa sanctions WASHINGTON (NC) - The U.S. C.atholic Conference supports a bill proposing comprehensive sanctions against South Africa. Robert T. Hennemeyer, foreign affairs adviser for the U.S. Catholic Conference, told a Senate subcommittee May 19 that the conference supported the proposed legislation as an effort to bring about peaceful change in South Africa "and to make absolutely clear the church's abhorrence of apartheid." Testifying before the African subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Hennemeyer noted that the U.S. bishops have consistently supported the southern African bishops in their struggle against apartheid, South Africa's system of strict racial segregation. The bill being considered, H.R. 1580, mandates a trade embargo against South Africa, requires full disinvestment and issues requirements for the lifting of sanctions, including South African compliance with U.N. Resolution 435, which mandates independence for Namibia. The Foreign Affairs Committee has given the proposal a favorable report, and it is expected to be considered by the full House in June. ': ,'.' , 'J

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4 THE ANCHOR -

Diocese of Fall River -=-rri., May 21, 1988

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themoorin~ A Terrible Waste Massachusetts has often touted itself as a model of educa- ' tional progress. Among selling points made to potential business developers is its superior school system. True, our colleges and universities are outstanding. Our medical facilities and teaching hospitals are world famous. Our private educational institutions are universally recognized while our public. colleges and postgraduate schools are also excellent. But the picture is not so rosy on other steps of the educationalladder. To some extent the luster of our colleges and universities has led us to ignore or overlook the serious problem of secondary school dropouts. However, recent figures , should jolt us to a realization of the situation. According to projections by the state department of education, one out every five students who entered ninth grade in the 1986 school year is likely to drop out of high school. In the 1986-87 school year 20 percent, some 15,000, of the state's public high school students dropped out. Technically, dropouts are defined as those 16 years or older who quit school. Students under 16 are termed truants. The highest dropout rates are in the sophomore and junior years of high school. Most who leave are males and two-thirds of all dropouts are from urban public schools. It is saddening to note that Fall River, New Bedf()rd, Taunton and the area ~erved by Cape Cod Regional Vocational School, all in our diocese, have the highest dropout rates in the .state. It must be remembered that the dropout problem is but the tip of the iceberg. It reflects the host of complex realities faced by today's schools. Lack of aiscipline, demoralized teachers, political infighting and high' school students who cannot or 'Will not read or write are problem areas not to be solved by the mere in-fusion of public monies. They exist despite the adoption in 1985 of school overhaul legislation. " If real progress is to be made, much more should be done to approach the dropout problem from a more comprehensive view. Children are the prime victims of adult irresponsibility. Broken homes, abuse, drugs, and divorce are prime reasons why children drop out. If parents are too busy "finding themselves" and living their own lives, children wmcontinue to be victims. Continued family irresponsibility will continJJe to ensure escalation of the dropout rates. When such social difficulties involve immigrant, Hispanic or black dropouts, the seriousness of the problem escalates. Those on the lowest rung of the educational ladder have the most needs yet¡ often receive the ieast help. Not surprisingly, the dropout unemployment-rate is twice that of high school graduates. Dropouts get the poorest jobs and are the last hired and 'first fired. Thus the costs of dropping, out include the expense of welfare programs, health services and in many cases the criminal justice system. We must realize that .the dropout problem is not someone else's difficulty. It affects everyon~ in the state. From the monetary standpoint alone, all taxpayers will ultimately have to pay the dropout bill. But beyond this, dropouts should be seen as a human problem, one that should motivate us to seek solutions and find answers. As is so often said, "A mind is a terrible thing to waste." The Editor

NCpholo

MEMORIAL DAY

"Remembet 'the battle ~nd ~p~ak no morle~" J~b :40:27

Educated guesses on future DAYTON. Ohio (NC) - Catholic education representatives foresee a church in the year 2007 in which social justice issues are major priorities, the status of women is improved through education, Catholic schools have fewer than I million students, and the number of Catholic colleges is cut in half. That picture of the church ofthe future was envisioned by 336 repre-sentatives of 18 Catholic educational organizations who participated in a "Delphi" survey in 1987. The results of the survey, which addressed the future of the church's educational ministry. were the basis of discussion at a Catholic Education Futures Project national symposium which concluded yesterday at the University of Dayton. The symposium brought together more than 300 educators. theolo-gians, futurists and historians to develop an agenda for Catholic education in the 21 st century. In the Delphi exercise, 50 statements dealing with such trends as the decreasing number of priests. the declining enrollment in Catholic schools, and advances in biotechnology were circulated to participants. Developed in the late I960s. the Delphi technique. which takes its name from the ancient Greek oracle, asks experts to make predictions based on statements about the future. Through three rounds, participants stated their opinions, wrote contrary opinions when they dis-

agreed with the majority, and tried to reach consensus on the likelihood of an event occurring by 2007. its gesirability and its impact on the church. Survey respondents represented a geographic cross section of the country and included people who work in a v-ariety ~f ed,ucational , ministries. A majority of the respondents said they believe it likely that: - Social justice issues will be major church priorities. - The church will improve the status of women through education. - The Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults will be implemented in almost all U.S. parishes. - The majority of Catholics will be in South America and Africa. - Fifty percent of U.S. Catholics will be Hispanic. - The main goal of Catholic schools will be to produce an informed social conscience. - Parishes of at least 500 families will have professional religious educators. - U.S. workers will be retrained three times during their careers because of rapid changes in technology. The majority of respondents considered it desirable but unlikely that in the year 2007: - Increased understanding will foster a world religion, with less emphasis on denominations.•

- Parishioners will elect their own clergy. - - Twenty-five percent of Catholic school funds will come from the federal government. - Spanish will be taught in every year of school. - All children will be fluent in a foreign language by age IS. The respondents consider it undesirable, but likely, that by 2007: - Catholic schools will have fewer than I million students, as compared to 2.7 million in 19861987. - The number of U.S. Catholic colleges will be cut in half to 115. - There will be fewer than 20,000 priests and 35,000 nuns. - Thirty percent of parishioners will not have a resident pastor. - The clergy will become more conservative. - A national catechism for the United States will be published. - Fifty percent of the U.S. population will be over 65. They considered it both undesirable and unlikely that: - Catholics will be less than 10 percent of the U.S. population. - Religious and liturgical functions will move out of churches and into homes and other buildings. The Delphi exercise was directed by Father Stephen O'Brien, executive director of the Department of Chief Administrators of Catholic Education of the National Catholic Educational Association.


Fri., May 27, 1988

THE ANCHOR - Diocese of Fall River -

WITH BISHOP CRONIN are Marga,ret Lahey/Our Lady of Good Counsel Award recipients, from left, Mary Silvia, Mary Alves, Vera Macedo, Annette Hackett. Not present, award-winner Rita Hall. (Rosa photo)

35th annual DCCW parley Continued from Page One complete faith that Jesus would do what was needed." Prayer alone is not enough, however, any more than is activism, he cautioned, saying it was necessary to keep the middle way, to so love and serve the world that you are an arrow oflight shot in the darkness. "Mary always pointed to Jesus," he concluded. "We must, too." At a brief opening business meeting, the convention unanimously approved a resolution to "promote programs designed to create awareness and to educate people in identifying the causes, symptoms and effects of drug abuse, the goal of which is prevention and cure, along with the reawakening of individual self-esteem and realization of one's dignity as a child of God." Following Father McFarland's address, Miss Dorothy A. Curry, DCCW president, and Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, diocesan moderator, spoke, with Msgr. Gomes concluding by introducing Bishop Daniel A. Cronin, DCCW honorary president. Before presenting the annual Margaret M. Lahey/Our Lady of Good Counsel Awards to a woman from each of the five DCCW districts, the bishop comented on the recent recognition accorded the lOOth birthday of composer Irving Berlin, saying that over the years the Berlin genius had become taken for granted. "I don't want the diocesan council to feel taken for granted," he said, "and this yearly meeting is a reminder of how wonderful you are, how much you've accomplished and how comfortable we all are with you and you with the church." The 1988 Lahey/Good Counsel Awards for outstanding dedication

KEYNOTE convention speaker Father Francis McFarland (Rosa photo)

to the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women went to Miss Mary Alves, Our Lady of the Assumption parish, New Bedford; Mrs. Rita Hall, St. Joseph's parish, Taunton; Mrs. Vera Macedo, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel parish, Seekonk; Mrs. Annette Hackett, Holy Redeemer parish, Chatham. At the convention Mass, themed "Mary, Mother of the Church," the Prayer of the Faithful was offered by district council presidents and the bearers of gifts were diocesan past presidents. The soloist and leader of congregational singing was Denise Morency Gannon and George Campeau was organist. With Bishop Cronin as principal celebrant, concelebrants were diocesan, district and affiliate moderators. Msgr. John J. Oliveira, VE, was master of ceremonies. In his homily, the bishop recalled that "we are the church, the people of the new covenant" and that Mary, as mother of the human body of Christ, is mother of the people of God, given to humanity by Christ on the cross with the words "Mother, behold your son; son, behold your mother." Bishop Cronin noted that at times when the church "was in confusion, devotion to Mary was at a low ebb" and said "I suggest that as we meditate on the role of Mary in the church in these last weeks of the Marian Year, that we

May 30 1929, Rev. Jordan Harpin, O.P.. Dominican Priory, Fall River 1937, Rev. Edmond J. Potvin, Pastor, St. Jean Baptiste, Fall River 1950, Rev. James M. Quinn, Pastor, St. John Evangelist, Attleboro May 31 1964, Rev. Vincent A. Wolski, OFM Conv., Pastor, Holy Cross. Fall River IIIIII111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 THE ANCHOR (USPS-545-020). Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River. Mass. Published weekly except the week of July 4 and tlte week after Christmas at 410 Highland Avenue. Fall River. Mass. 02720 by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription price by mail. postpaid $10.00 per year. Postmasters send address changes to The Anchor. P.O. Box 7. Fall River. MA 02722.

make a superhuman effort to increase our devotion to her." At the convention luncheon, in addition to the traditional gift to the bishop, Miss Curry presented him with an engraved and leatherbound four-volume set of the

Liturgy of the Hours, the Divine Office prayed daily by priests. The gift commemorated the 20th anni.versary of the bishop's ordination to the episcopacy, which will occur Sept. 12. Five workshops concluded the convention: "Church as Community," presented by Sister Suzanne Beaudoin, SSCh.; discussion on guidelines for nursing home placement by Joanne Esancy and Linda Mcinnes; church response to AIDS, explained by Father Mark Hession; a discussion of mission needs by Sister Mary Antonia Tognetti, RSM; and tips for public speakers, offered by Lynn W. Foell. The convention chairman was Mrs. James Almeida, aided by Mrs. Alfred Rock, Mrs. Manuel T. Nogueira and Mrs. Aristides A. Andrade. Liturgy preparations were made by Father James F. Lyons, moderator of New Bedford District II. Subcommittee heads were Mrs. Raymond Lavoie, Mrs. Walter Galvin, Miss Theresa Lewis, Miss Lydia Pacheco. Mrs. James A. O'Brien, Sister Eugenia Margaret, SUSC, Miss Helen L. Stager, Mrs. Marge Foley. Members of District II affiliates assisted with coffee hour, luncheon

and hospitality responsibilities and preparation and distribution of convention information packets.

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FIRST SATURDAY GROUPS In accordance with the spirit of our Holy Father and as a special gift to the Mother of Jesus during this Marian year, the World Apostolate of Fatima (Blue Army) is promoting the establishment of the First Saturdays of Reparation in every parish of each diocese in the United States. Confident that First Saturday groups have been meeting each month in many parishes and that even without a group, at least one individual in many parishes is making the First Saturday devotions, we ask that those of you who are write to the following address and let us kn9w

(1) what parish you belona to and (2) whether you make the First Saturd~yslndlvlduallyor In a croup. World Apostolate of Fatima (Blue Army) FBII River Dlvl.lon 421 Brld.e St., RBynhBm, MB. 02767 Also, anyone interested in starting a First Saturday group in their parish may write t~:

FIrst Saturday Pledge Blue Army of Our LBcty of FBtlmB, U.S.A. Inc. Box 976, WB.hlnaton, N.J. 07882

SATURDAY, May 28 - Procession of Gifts 6:30 P.M. Band concert路 Games - Food, Auction to Midnight SUNDAY, May 29 - Concelebrated Mass Sung in Portuguese 11:30 A.M. Rev. Jonas Moraes, Preacher PROCESSION - At 3:00 P.M. - After Procession There Will Be Band Concert - Games - Prizes - Food and Refreshments and Auction until Midnight. MONDAY, May 30 - Memorial Day - Band Concert, Bazaar - Games - Food and Auction until 10 P.M. Music by Jorge Ferreira

EVERYONE IS INVITED

S


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6 THE ANCHOR -

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Diocese of Fall River -

Mashpee

Fri., May 27, 1988

Vatican picks delegates to Russian millennium VATICAN CITY (NC)- Pope John Paul II has named a highlevel Vatican delegation headed by Secretary of State Cardinal Agostino Casaroli to attend ceremonies in Moscow beginning June 5 and marking the millennium of Christianity in what is now the Soviet Union. The pope's action underscored his "hope that these celebrations can be the dawn of a new day in the history of the church of Christ," a Vatican statement said.

Franz Konig, former archbishop of Vienna, Austria, and a leader in East-West dialogue. Also Hungarian Archbishop Laszlo Paskai of Esztergom, president of the Hungarian bishops' conference; and Cardinal Jozef Glemp of Warsaw, president of the Polish bishops' conference.

The pope was not invited to the ceremonies. Vatican officials have said the millennium is not the right time for a papal visit, partly because it could detract from the Orthodox Cardinal Casaroli, the Vatican's celebrations, and partly because of top diplomatic official and the existing problems of religious first Vatican secretary of state to freedom in the Soviet Union. visit Moscow, will be joined by A Vatican official said that selecCardinal Johannes Willebrands, tion of the cardinals and bishops head of the Secretariat for Pro- deliberately gave special emphasis moting Christian Unity, and Car- . to those in communist countries. dinal Roger Etchegaray, president The millennium celebrations of the Justice and Peace Commis- mark the anniversary of the bapsion. Three other Vatican officials tism in 988 of St. Vladimir, the with ecumenical duties will also grand duke of Kiev, which led to attend. the region's conversion to ChrisA Vatican official said the dele- tianity. gation is the highest-level possible In a recent apostolic letter, the short of including the pope. pope emphasized that the millenThe pope also asked 10 cardi- nium offers ecumenical opportunals and bishops to attend the nities for Catholic and Orthodox ceremonies, to be sponsored by churches, which separated in the' the Russian Orthodox Church. 11th century. In a separate mesThey include Cardinal Julijans sage to Ukrainian Catholics on the Vaivods, president of the Latvian anniversary, the pope said he hoped' bishops' conference in the Soviet they would soon obtain the right Baltic region; Vietnamese Cardi- to worship openly. nal Joseph Marie Trinh Van Can, The Ukrainian Catholic Church archbishop of Hanoi and president of the Vietnamese bishops' is illegal in the Soviet Union, a fact conference; New York Cardinal considered a major obstacle to John J. O'Connor; and Cardinal improved Vatican-SQviet relations.

Officer quits Continued from Page One abortion clinic to continue their butchering," he said. Daniels said he processed the paperwork for those arrested, then resigned. Jackson Police Capt. Larry Wallace, Daniel's supervisor, said, "I think what he did was a personal conviction. I think a person should look at bis convictions before going into law enforcement. It's a job. You look at it that way and not as a personal affront to your convictions."

The protesters were released on personal recognizance. Since his resignation Daniels, who described himself as a devout Methodist, said he has been flooded with job offers and requests for interviews and pictures, but has made no decisions about the future .. "I'm just here praying and waiting on the Lord." He said his wife, Annette, was very supportive of his action. "After I resigned I felt I had done the right thing. I feel brightened by whatever's ahead of me," he said.

FATHER TOSTI

FATHER TRAVASSOS

Retirement, Family Ministry Continued from Page One cation and in 1977 was named pastor of St. Francis of Assisi parish, New Bedford. Since 1979 he has directed the diocesan family ministry programs and in 1979 also corrdinated a yearlong celebration of the 75th anniversary of the diocese. In 1984 he was appointed administrator of St. Jude the Apostle Chapel, Cotuit, and Our Lady Queen of All Saints Chapel, Mashpee. Later that year he was named founding pastor of Christ the King parish, Mashpee, formed by joining the two missions, previously part of Our Lady of the Assumption parish, Osterville.

Groundbreaking ceremonies for Christ the King will take place Sunday (See story page I). Father Travassos Father Travassos, born in Fall River, was ordained by Bishop Daniel A. Cronin May 12, 1972, at St. Mary's Cathedral. He has been parochial vicar at St. James parish, New Bedford, and Corpus Christi, Sandwich, and is presently stationed at St. Patrick's parish, Somerset. He has been an assistant chancellor and is chairman of the diocesan ecumenical and diocesan liaison with the Committee on Evangelization.

Continued from Page One The ceremony will include prayers and readings with music di-' rected by parish music minister Brian Gilbert. . The traditional song, "This Is Holy Ground," will be sung as the commingling ceremony takes place during a procession of choristers, altar 'boys and all parishioners. Earth from Our Lady of the Assumption parish will be carried by Mrs. Harry Thomas and Mrs. Dorothyann Callahan, Osterville parishioners who are on the secretarial staff of Christ the King parish. Santuit earth will be brought by John D. Medeiros; that of Cotuit by Miss Hilda Almeida. The Marstons Mills' contribution will be brought by Mrs. Charles Rogers, that of Popponesset Beach by Mrs. Mary Shea 'and Mashpee's by Howard Pendergast. Those wielding shovels for the groundbreaking will be led by Bishop Cronin and Father Tosti, who will be followed by Mrs. George Snyder, president of Christ the King Catholic Women's Club; Robert Paul, president ofthe Men's Club; and Sarah Fordham, representing the parish council. Also Miss Nicole Beckel of this year's confirmation class, Miss Sarah Brodd of the first communion class and Robert Tirimacco of the altar boys. Altieri and Edwards will join Father Tosti for the final turning of earth. Following the ceremony, refreshments will be served in a tent erected at St. Jude's Chapel, Santuit.

Communication grants announced WASHINGTON (NC) -The Catholic Communication Campaign has funded a $1.3 million "investment" in the Catholic Telecommunications Network of America and given grants for 41 media projects for 1988. the V,S. Catholic Conference announced. The 41 media grants total $1.383,786. excluding the investment in CTN A. the V.S. bishops' satellite communications network linking V.S. dioceses. The money distributed is raised through the annual Catholic Communication Campaign collection in V.S. parishes, Of the 41 grants. the largest $188.000 - went to Paulist Pro-

ductions in Pacific Palisades, Calif.. for production of a theatrical film called "Romero" portraying the life and episcopacy of Archbishop Oscar Romero of San Salvador. EI Salvador. who was assassinated in 1980. In announcing the grants. the

It was the third time communication collection money has been used to aid the financially strapped communicaitons network, which was founded in 1981 with $4.5 million from the bishops and the expectation that ii-would become financially self-sufficient within three years.

---A Present Help

V SCC said the "capital investment"

in the Catholic Telecommunications Network was made because the VSCC Communication Committee "determined the investment would enable CTNA to further its 1988 media goals pending completion of an in-depth study" of the Catholic Communication Campaign and CTN A.

"God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in time of. trouble." - Ps. 46: I

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GOD'S ANCHOR HOLD'

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TO CONSIDER ON MEMORIAL DAY

INNER HEALING RETREAT WEEKEND FRIDAY, JUNE 24 8 P.M.• SUNDAY, JUNE 26.2:15 P.M.

Facts and Figures on Abortion in the United States • 1,5 million abortions are performed each year. • 35,000 saline abortions (where a poisonous salt solution is

injected into the womb and painfully burns the skin of an unborn baby) are performed each year. • 12,000 abortions are performed On unborn babies 21 weeks or

older. • Nearly one-third of all abortions are performed on teenagers. • 81% of all abortions are performed on unmarried women.

• In Ig cities, including our nation's capital, Washington, D.C., there are more abortions than live births, • 35% of abortions are repeat abortions. • 10% of abortions are performed on women who have had 2 or

more abortions. FOR INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS CALL:

MARY ANNE BREAULT OR (617) 993-8919

LUCILLE PIMENTAL (617) 992-5402

On Memorial Day please pray for the 20 million unborn babies killed by abortion since 1973, the year ofthe Supreme Court decision of Roe v. Wade, which removed all legal protection from the unborn throughout pregnancy.


THE ANCHOR -

Stang's senior in the swim By Joseph Motta Joe Sullivan, according to William Hart, athletic director at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth, is "a class competitor." "He's done himself, his family and his school proud," Hart says. For the past four years Joe, 18, has been swimming for Bishop Stang. Hart and others use words like "initiative," "sportsmanship" and "enthusiasm" when speaking of him. He has four varsity letters for swimming. And when you consider that Stang has no swim team, his achievements mean even more. Joe, a member of St. John the Evangelist parish, Pocasset, started swimming about seven years ago. The breaststroke quickly became his area of expertise. At age 14 he "hit a high point" and was seeded within the top to New England breaststroke swimmers in his age group. "I was doing fairly well," he said modestly. The young man, who plans an art or design major in. college, swims at the Cape Cod Swim Club at Massachusetts Maritime Academy in Buzzards Bay. He said the club's head coach, Mark Solomon, "encouraged everyone there to keep plugging away," and he alerts Joe to competitions. When Joe enrolled at Stang, he followed the example of students at Bourne High, who represented their school on their own at swim meets, training themselves and relying on parents for transportation. When Joe goes to a U.S. Swim Meet, he represents himself and the Cape Cod Swim Club. He swims for Stang at high school meets. Participation in the latter requires the cooperation of Stang's Hart and coaches of other school teams involved. Paul Kitchen, coach at Fall River's B.M.C. Durfee High School, has been especially helpful, Joe says, noting that Kitchen often finds him a slot when the Durfee team is competing. Joe swam well at the end of the USSM's recently-completed short course season, coming out of "Silver Championships" at Dartmouth College with two medals and a ribbon. One medal was for finishing second among about 50 young

Diocese of Fall River -

Fri., May 27, 1988

TV should be "controlled substance," says mom

7

men in the 15-and-over category of the 200-yard breaststroke. The other was for a sixth-place finish in the toO-yard breaststroke. Dear Editor: Joe took the ribbon for finishI am contacting you about the ST. PAUL, Minn. (NC)- Par- reroof the house, rotate the tiresing ninth among 30 or 40 competiFirst American National Rosary tors in toO-yard butterfly stroke Congress to be held at the National ents have the power to declare the you name it." competition. In her house, television is consiShrine of the Immaculate Concep- family television a "controlled subStang's athletic director notes tion in Washington, D.C., June 6 stance" requiring permission before dered "a major appliance." Just as that Joe has also been a regular at through II. The week will consist use by kids, says the mother of the children aren't allowed to light South Sectional swimming chamthe oven or start the car, they can't of around-the-clock prayer, cen- three TV restricted children. pionships. "The best way to get kids to read touch the TV without permission. tering on the Mass, eucharistic The easygoing swimmer has "The television and everything adoration and the rosary. The more is to get them to watch televiworked spring and fall weekends rosary is so important for our fam- sion less," said Molly Stein in an in it belongs to Mom and Dad," and fulltime summers at a Catauilies, for our parishes and for our article titled "How to turn your Ms. Stein wrote. "Sometimes we met restaurant while maintaining individual spiritual lives. family TV into a controlled sub- share it, but mostly it is offJimits." a "B-plus to A" average at Stang. The approach has worked, she Both the perpetual rosary and stance" in the Catholic Bulletin, And he appreciates the people rosary congresses are being estab- newspaper of the St. Paul-Minnea- said. "Even if the kids are pretty who help keep him in the swim. sure it will be OK ifthey watch TV, lished in the United States and polis. Hart, for example, is "great." Ms. Stein is a free-lance writer they always ask first." Canada by Apostolatus Uniti and There are drawbacks to a swimthe Marian Movement of Priests. and coauthor of "The Catholic Ms. Stein doesn't deny that the mer's life, of course. Joe spends .Iat Join us as we gather in prayer Wedding Book." She and her hus- controlled access sometimes proleast two hours in the water" every and adoration. Mary, our Lady of band have a "parent-centered" ap- vokes grumbling. "I am often reday Monday through Saturday the Rosary, and our mother, needs proach to use of television. minded that every other child in and works out with aerobics, our help to return the world to "TV is a treat," she explained. Duluth has cable, the Disney chanstretching and isometrics for 45 God by a rebirth of authentic spir"The less TV our kids get, the .nel, H BO and no restrictions. minutes to one hour "at least once ituality. We can never have too "But after a while they give up more TV they want. And the more a day." many caring hearts. and accept the TV rules as they do TV they want, the more they'll Six days a week. Year-round. Joanie Zak accept rules about snacks and bedto get it. It's as simple as that. "It takes time away from other Monument Beach times," she said. "Why take a wonderful bribe, things," Joe says. one that is essentially free, and "And when all is quiet on the But the good outweighs the bad. give kids unlimited access to it?" domestic front, after dinner and "After you've gone through a she asked. before bedtime, you just might really hard workout, really killing Showing Love "With the promise of TV, "Ms. hear the sounds of someone lookyourself, working beyond your. "God shows hiS love for us in Stein wrote, the children "will pick ing for something to do, and findhardest," Joe claims, "if you make that while we were yet sinners up their toys, those they weren't ing that something on the bookthe goals you set for yourself durplaying with, dust the bookshelves, shelf." ing practice, you can sit back and Christ died for us." - Rom. 5:8 really feel relaxed and good about yourself. "It's the same thing when you're in a meet and you're swimming really' hard and you're done and "The trophy for you look at the clock and you've "...and the winner in the city champs, beaten your best time by a couple the women's singles division is..." in the men's of seconds. senior league..." "It's something I enjoy doing."

Rosary Congress

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Brain drain WASHINGTON (NC) - U.S. Catholic Conference officials have expressed strong reservations about a bill to revamp the immigration preference system, calling it likely to produce a,"brain drain" in Third World countries and voicing concern that it might be used to control the makeup and "complexion" ~f the U.S. immigrant population. The bill would keep modified provisions for immigrants with U.S. family connections but extend visas to a new category of "independent" immigrants with needed education and skills.

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8 THE ANCHOR -

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Looks toward quincentennial of Christianity in Latin America AS UNCION, Paraguay (NC)Almost 500 years after missionaries brought Christianity to Latin America, Pope John Paul II traveled through four countries preaching Christian values and "liberation from sin and the -injustices that accompany it." His ninth trip to the region with 41 percent of the world's Catholic population was a call for Latin Americans to employ Christian values to surmount material and spiritual problems. The trip took the pope to U ruguay, Bolivia, Peru and Paraguay. It ended May 18, his 68th birthday, in Paraguay, where he was greeted with a chorus of "Happy Birthday" as he approached the altar for a Mass in the city of Encarnacion. . After dedicating the country to Mary, he was given a huge birthday cake but he passed it on to needy children, saying, "Children always like dessert." On his return flight to Rome, he was given another birthday cake by the crew of his airliner and a gold pen by the 60 journalists accompanying him. During his trip, the pope strongly sided with Latin American countries in their struggles with the developed world. The Third World is the world's hope and future, he said.

The pope warned Third World countries to avoid the pitfalls of liberal capitalism 'and Marxism, but he spent most of his time criticizing capitalism, the historically dominant economic factor in Latin America. He stressed, however, that criticism is not enough: Latin Americans must control their destiny, uniting in power blocs to challenge the developed world. Pope John Paul rejected accusations that Christianity is responsible for many Latin American problems because it sided with the Spanish conquerors as they repressed people and cultures. His argument was that Christian missionaries came to evangelize, not colo~ize native populations and cultures. The pope said the missionaries created Indian alphabets, taught farming to nomads, introduced literacy programs, developed artistic talents and helped protect Indians from abuses by European masters. At the same time, he reaffirmed that Indians who become Christian must change traditions such as trial marriage that conflict with church teachings. The pope said Latin America's social problems are basically the fault of defects in the capitalist system. The successes of free market

.economies "should not serve as a pretext to smooth over the defects of an economic system whose driving force is profit," he said in Bolivia, South America's poorest country. Labor should not be reduced to "the mercy of the comings and goings of the law of supply and demand," the pope said. Regarding the huge foreign debts that hobble development efforts of most Latin American countries, the pope asked for restructuring of loan conditions. '. But he also criticized Latin American countries for not carefully examining loan terms before getting involved in the foreign loan system. The pope warned against seeking solutions in Marxism and against political polarizations between right and left. He called for a "new evangelization" geared to contemporary Latin American realities and resolving spiritual problems such as lack of participation in the sacraments and proliferation of fundamentalist sects. The pope pointed to 1992. the SOOth anniversary ofthe coming of Christianity to Latin America with the arrival of Spanish ships led by Christopher Columbus. He said the anniversary should be a rallying point for .this new evangelization.


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Telling it like it is By Joseph Motta 11:28 p.m. Monday, May 23 It's not often that I begin to write a story at this time. I'll be dragging tomorrow, I know. But what I witnessed earlier this evening was so powerful that it has to be written before I sleep. I was aSsigned to cover a Marian Year healing service at St. Anne's Church in Fall River. Over 20 diocesan and religious priests and permanent deacons were participating. St. Anne's is an exceptionally large church and was filled to overflowing with faithful of all ages and cultures. The power of God's love was hard at work tonight. As I took notes I wondered how I could relate what I was witnessing with mere words. But an answer wasn't long in coming: a friend spotted me and- laughed at my worried expression. "I don't want to tell you how to do your job," Ron said. "But just tell it like it is!"

• • •

"Let's begin by calling the Holy Spirit to be with us," said guitarwielding Father Andre A. Patenaude, MS. The priest-musician, better known as Father Pat, led songs of praise to open the service. Over 1600 voices lifted in song and hands were raised to the Lord.

And all the while the church was filled with what I can only describe as an awesome peace.

tunity for confession was available afterwards.

Many persons were "slain in the Father Robert S. Kaszynski, Spirit" - collapsing as if uncondiocesan liaison to charismatic scious - during and after prayer groups, asked the congregation, over them. Dozens lay on the "How much real Bible-based trust church floor at anyone time, gently aided by volunteer "catchers" as is in your hearts?" All of us, he said, have problems they fell. Watching the Holy Spirit at placing 100 percent trust in God. "The one who leads us to trust is work isn't easy. Many were in the Woman," the speaker said emo- tears. My heart beat fast and loud tionally. Jesus gave his mother as I watched a sturdy teenager cry responsibility for all humanity mo- - out in what appeared to be pain as ments before he died, Father Kas- a priest prayed over him. He fell hard, then lay completely still. zynski explained. A young woman came to at my He said that the service was held feet, crying her eyes out. A fragile on the feast of Mary, Mother of the Church, because "where there elderly woman slid gently to the is the presence of the Woman, the floor at the same time, just a few feet away. Mother of God, there is trust." The teen, minutes later, got to He told his hearers that 99 perhis feet looking curiously refreshed. cent of the healings that would He identified himself as a 17-yearoccur at the service would be ofthe old member of a Fall River parish, spirit. and told me that extreme nervousHundreds of individuals were ness had kept him from leading a prayed over by priests and deafull life but that he'd been better cons who had prepared themselves able to handle day-to-day activity for the experience with their own since he began attending healing fervent prayer. Some of the faithMasses. ful were seeking physical healings "I love Jesus," he exclaimed, from heart trouble, cancer and "and I know he'll help me a lot." other ailments. Others sought relief I don't know how many physifrom depression and anxiety. Praycal healings took place. But I do er, praise and singing continued know that after the service I saw a throughout the service. The opporlot of smiles.

Chicago archdiocese to sponsor Mass for gays, lesbians CHICAGO (NC) - Cardinal Joseph L. Bernardin has announced that the Chicago archdiocese will assume sponsorship June 5 of a weekly Mass for gay and lesbian Catholics previously sponsored by the Chicago chapter of Dignity, a group which opposes church teachings on homosexual activity. "I am very concerned that gay and lesbian Catholics receive the pastoral care of their church," said a statement from Cardinal Bernardin read during the group's May 15 Mass. The cardinal planned to announce his decision personally, but weather delayed his return . from an out-of-town trip. Officers of Dignity-Chicago welcomed the move as accomplishing one of their goals: to gain an official church ministry to gay and lesbian Catholics which recognizes their gifts and needs. In an interview with National Catholic News Service an officer of Dignity-Chicago, who asked not to be named, said Dignity knew the archdiocese would have

to ask it to discontinue sponsoring the Mass because a 1986 Vatican document on homosexuality prohibited use of church facilities by groups opposed to church teaching. The solution offered by Cardinal Bernardin, after meetings with priests ministering to the homosexual community and other interested individuals, "is a dynamic model that other bishops can follow," said the officer. The Dignity liturgy had been held for more than 17 years, beginning as an apostolate of the parish's Legion of Mary. "It is my responsibility as pastor of the church of Chicago to make sure that the church's teaching on human sexuality is presented clear-. Iy and without ambiguity," Cardinal Bernardin said. The statement said Cardinal Bernardin and the priests "agreed on some basic principles upon which our ministry to the Catholic gay and lesbian community should be based." They included: - affirmation that the rights

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Dear 0 . Kenny: I was widowed three year! ago. Now I have started to date again, and I am catching some criticism from my two teen· age sons. They just don't want mom to have other men friends. Either they are jealous of my time or they feel that I am being disloyal to their father. I don't know. Please help. - Philadelphia. Often, raw jealousy is cloaked or covered up by another argument. usually one of "principle." Your teens have raised the issue of loyalty. They tell you that it would be disloyal for them or you to come to like or love another man. That is, of course, not true. In fact. the desire to date and remarry is a compliment to your deceased husband. an indication that your relationship was basically sound and positive. one worth repeating. Remarriage is not an indication that the first marriage w.as lacking. Rather it is a sign that the loss was keen and needs to be replaced. Most of us would want our spouses to remarry if we were to die. Most of us would want our

children to experience the security and love of two parents in our absence. You mi,ght also reassure your sons that you will never replace their father. He was special and will always remain so. But each relationship is different. Now life must go on, and without forgetting the past you need to make new choices. The same is true for your sons. They can come to like and love another man without being disloyal to their father. He will always be their father. But he would want another protector and caring person to be there for them. Adding another adult friend does not mean subtracting the dad. It is possible to respect and come to love more than one father-type person. They need never call the new person "dad." Generally children find a name or title with which they feel comfortable. That should be left to them. If possible. your teens should meet your men friends and get to know them personally. Ideally. half your dates might include your teens.

Jealousy is an issue all by itself and a very normal and common problem. There is no way to argue logically, to tell your teens that you need your own social life or to try to reassure them verbally that they will always be first in your life. You can and should say all this, but they are not likely to hear you. Rather than being on the defensive, trying to explain yourself. it is wiser to take a positive approach. Find special time to be with them. whether you go out some place together, play games or rent a home video. Actions speak louder than explanations. To review, tell your teens that your new friend will never take their place in your affection. Nor will he ever replace their father in your mind. At the same time. demonstrate your love for your sons by finding private and special time to be with them. Good luck in your new life! Reader questions on family living and child care to be answered in print are invited. Address the Kennys, Box 872, St. Joseph's College, Rensselaer, Ind. 47978.

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By Antoinette Bosco There is little talk about an increasingly desperate group of teens - those abandoned by their parents. My friend Anne introduced me recently to an 18-year-old girl who has been living with her since February. I'll call her Linda. She is a beautiful girl with a heartbreaking story. Linda was the adopted daughter of a professional man and his wife. she said. The couple adopted Linda as a baby. Soon. however. the wife gave birth to her own son. Apparently Linda's parents never felt she was really their daughter. Last January on her 18th birthday, Linda said they told her to 'move out of their house immediately. Absolutely unprepared, she was forced to quit high school five months before graduation. For a few weeks she stayed with a teenage couple. She was about to move in with two guys when my friend Anne took her in at no charge. Linda is now working full time at minimum wage. She wants to pay some rent to Anne and save money to get on her feet. She intends to get a driver's license. a car and a high school diploma. She's scared and lonely, but expects to pull her life together with Anne's help. A family services social worker told me recently that although the majority of adoptions are successful. some parents try to reverse adoptions as soon as adolescent problems emerge. One couple. she said, went to court to try to force their adopted son to change his name because they wanted so badly to disassociate him from their family. But the problem of c,bandoned teens is by no means I;mited to adopted children. I remember a lovely girl from a well-to-do suburb whose mother threw her out at age 15. The girl was taken in by a couple until she finisned high school and got a scholc rship to college. But few abandoned t 'ens are fortunate enough to have' omeone open home and heart l them.

More often they are left to wander . Will I eat tonight? Who will take care of me tonight?" the streets. Father Bruce Ritter founded Parents often become angry and Covenant House to provide crisis frustrated after years of disobecare for homeless youth in New dience, disrespect or delinquency. I truly feel for those parents. York. Houston. Fort Lauderdale. Toronto and New Orleans. But before they decide to abandon a teen-ager, they should realize He said that when he opened the how helpless and vulnerable a teen first shelter for runaway and abandoned kids he was shocked by can be~ especially one who hasn't their stories of violence and bru- finished school and has no financial resources. tality. Every community needs to pay But 19 years and 65,000 youths more attention to the problem of later, he says nothing shocks him abandoned teens. They should anymore. Street youth endure a never end up sleeping on a floor or living nightmare. "The questions facing all of them selling themselves on the street. Our youth deserve more compasare simple." says Father Ritter. "Where am I going to sleep tonight? sion and protection.

This kid's a main dealer By Hilda Young They say parents are often the last to spot it. This was confirmed for me yesterday when the vice principal called. "We figure he's a main dealer." Mr. Boggs said in his Sergeant Friday voice. "We caught him seiling behind the gym during recess and rumor is that he has been trading in the boys' room at lunch hour." "You mean ...... I stammered. "Yes." he inserted. "Your son is a junkie, a baseball card junkie. We searched his locker. Found four shoe boxes of the things." "H is father and I thought he was going through a lot of shoes." I admitted. When I look back. I realize I should have seen the little signs. Rectangular lumps in all his pants pockets. Taking three-sack lunches to school. two of them weighing four or five pounds. Weird phone messages like "A Pete Rose is a Pete Rose is a Pete Rose." "He'd probably still be dealing if someone he had hooked hadn't turned him in." the vice principal went on. "Apparently your son swapped him three Tim Teufels for a Mickey Mantle." "Who's Tim Teufel?" "That's the problem." he explained. "Nobody knows. But

Mickey Mantle. Do you know what that card is worth on the street?" "What can we do?" I pleaded. "Well, he probably has a 10 to 15 trade-a-day habit. He might need counseling. Start by confronting him." We did. At first it was denial. He claimed he was saving the 14 boxes of baseball cards in his closet for bookmarkers. Then it was blaming everyone else. He tried to make us believe the pressures of doing book reports for Mr. Wordstrong drove him to it. Then it was misdirection. "Even in Boy Scouts they encourage us to develop fun hobbies." Finally it was attempted compromise. "OK. I'll cut back," he said slyly. "I just have a few more trades to make for the Kansas City Royals and then I'll go cold turkey." "What happens when temptation arises, like trading three unknowns like Tim Teufel for a Mickey Mantle?" we asked. A twinkle came to his eye. "Yeah. that was a great score." he sighed. "Mr. Boggs didn't know what hit him. I wonder what he'lI do with those Teufels." Send comments to Hilda Young, 25218 Meadow Way, Arlington, WA 98223.


CATHEDRAL CAMP, E.FREETOWN Spirit of Jesus prayer group, Hyannis, weekend retreat today through Sunday. SS. PETER & PAUL, FR Mr. and Mrs. Adrien St. Laurent are celebrating their 50th wedding PUBLICITY CHAIRMEN ST. ANNE, FR anniversary. Gayle Riley has been Ire Isked to submit news Items for this St. Anne novena 3 p.m. Su1'1day, appointed director of religious educacolumn to The Anchor, P.O. Box 7, FIll shrine; healing service follows. Sum- tion. River, 02722. Nlme of city or tC1wn should mer Bible study program meeting ST. PATRICK, WAREHAM be Included, IS well IS full dltes of IlIlctlvItles. Plelse send news of future rlther June 22; information: Father HerCYO meeting 7 p.m. Tuesday, thIn PISt events. Note: We do not normllly bert T. Nichols, 674-5651. hall. CYO senior Mass and picnic clrry news of fundrelslng Ictlvltles. We Ire June 12; trip to Rocky Point Park hiPPY to clrry notices of splrltull proST. JOSEPH, TAUNTON grlms, club meetings, youth projects Ind June 18. Vincentians have shipped 5200 slmlllr nonprofit Ictlvltles. Fundrllslng Ibs. of <;Iothing to Appalachia. Pa- D of I, ATTLEBORO projects mlY be Idvertlsed It our regullr rishioner Jennifer Potoczak is WorItes, obtelnlble from The Anchor busiDaughters of Isabella Alcazaba ness office, telephone 675-7151. man of the Year at Coyle and Cas- Circle meeting June 2 at K of C On Steering Points Items FR Indlcltes sidy High School, Taunton. Home with Birthright baby shower FIll River, NB Indlcltes New Bedford. and supper. ADORERS OF THE BLESSED O.L. VICTORY, CENTERVILLE SACRED HEART, OAK BLUFFS SACRAMENT, NB Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Nolan are New officers: Violet Rego, presiExposition Fridays at St. Therecelebrating their 40th wedding annisa's Church, New Bedford, follows 9 dent; Jean O'Brien, vice-president; versary. Guild banquet June 13; infor- a.m. Mass to 7 p.m. Benediction; all Estelle Suprenant, treasurer; Nancy mation: Anna Huber, 428-9255. ParBillings, secretary. Installation Mass welcome. ishioners who are graduating seniors June 13; dinner follows, Ocean View will dine at the Paddock Restaurant ST. STANISLAUS, FR restaurant. at 6:30 p.m. June 3. Polka Mass 10:30 a.m. Sunday. LaSALETTE SHRINE, ATTLEBORO Healing service 2 p.m. Sunday led by Father John Lazanski, OFM, of St. Anthony Shrine, Boston. All been recognized for their perform- welcome. CC's Warrior Weightlifting Club set 14 meet records and walked ance during the third quarter of ST. ANN, RAYNHAM Women's Guild installation II a.m. away as team champions from its the 1987-88 academic year. 25 seniors, 43 juniors, 32 sopho- Mass June 5; communion breakfast own Warrior Power Meet VI, held mores and 25 freshmen were third with storyteller Elizabeth Cameron recently at the school. follows; new officers: Lucille CouStudent Joe Paulo was named quarter achievers. Seniors earning high honors were ture, president; Cory Adraneda, vicethe heavyweight division's best liftpresident; Helene Telesmanick, secreer, and, at the meet, four CC lifters Sean Andrews, Lynn Campbell, tary; MaryJo Foley, treasurer. qualified for the upcoming national Carlos Diaz and Jeanna Sylvester. meet in Glens Falls, New York: Juniors were Michelle Boivin, IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, TAUNTON freshman Joe DeSousa, sophoDerek Eddy, Lisa Lamothe, David Canned carrots will be collected at mores Bill Czepiel and Jason Melanson, Dora Melo, James weekend Masses for Our Daily Bread Wetherell and junior Chris Cabral. O'Gara, Sandra Pelletier, Melissa soup kitchen. Babysitting at parish DeSousa won the 114-pound Vallillo and Linda Wilke. center during 10:30 a.m. Mass Sunclass, 14-15 year-old age group Nicole Dorthe and Stacey San- days. competition with a 600-pound total born, sophomores, earned high ORDER OF THE ALHAMBRA (235-pound squat, 115-pound honors, as did freshmen Sarah Fall River's 'Leon Caravan will bench-press, 250-pound dead lift). Funke, Paul Gomes', Christina participate in a council meeting 8 Shawn Smith (132Ibs., 14-15 years) Pinto, Melissa Poyant and PatricK p.m. June 3, Our Lady of Mercy won with a combined lift of 745 Sweeney. Center, Worcester. pounds. Czepiel (132 Ibs., 16-17 O.L. ASSUMPTION, * * * years) lifted a combined weight of OSTERVILLE 78 boys participated in A record 925 pounds. Paulo won the 220Bible study group meets 9:30 a.m. Wednesdays; all welcome. Adult pound, 16-17 year-old division with CC's recently-held annual Twochoir will sing at 4 p.m. Mass tomora meet record squat of 600 Ibs., On-Two Basketball Tournament. Gabe Dutra and Carlos Diaz row. bench press of 305 Ibs. and meet record dead lift of 550-pounds for were juniorj senior division wina combined meet record lift of ners, and Roberto Diaz and Todd Ducharme took freshmanjsopho1455 pounds. more honors. Wetherell won the 275-lbs., 14A portion of the tournament's 15 year-old division with a total entry fee went to CC's ongoing lift of 1130 pounds. Other Warrior lifters sharing in project of providing meals for the team championship are Cathal Boston's homeless. O'Brien, Keith Wallace, Chad * * * Larivee, Joe Hines, Ted ZackieDuring a recent vacation, sevwicz and Tom Hughes. eral students traveled to Portugal The meet attracted lifters from and Spain on a trip sponsored by the Southeastern Massachusetts the Cultural Heritage Alliance of area and Maine and Virginia. PhHadelphia. Points visited inJ25 students at Coyle and Cas- cluded Lisbon, Seville, Granada sidy High School, Taunton, have and Madrid.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., May 27,1988

ST. JOSEPH, FAIRHAVEN Seminarian Gregory Mathias will speak at all Masses this weekend. SEPARATED AND DIVORCED, ATTLEBORO Support group meeting 7 p.m. June 5, St. Mark's Church, Attleboro Falls; information: Jack Cotter, 699-8078. 15 religious education students had perfect attendance at 1987-88 classes; confirmation students Elizabeth Lamer and Gregory St. Lawrence were lauded for academic excellence. MCFL, ATTLEBORO Massachusetts Citizens for Life Attleboro chapter membership drive 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Florence Sweet House, Bank St.; all welcome. ST. MARY, SEEKONK Adventure youth group officers: Brian Potter, Paul Ring, Vicky Curran, Tara Potter, Jeff Souza. Softball-for-all I p.m. May 30, North School field. ST. JOHN EVANGELIST, POCASSET New Women's Guild officers: Lynette Harley, president; Lillian Joly, vice-president; Marjorie Costello, se-. cretary; Patricia O'Donnell, treasurer. Information on June 21 guild luncheon: Agnes Reagan, 759-8164.. Vincentian meeting follows 8 a.m. Mass tomorrow. Parish council meeting and elections 7:30 p.m. Monday, parish center. BLESSED SACRAMENT, FR Mass and healing service 2 p.m. June 19.

11

CATHEDRAL, FR Memorial Day Mass 9 a.m. Monday. Meeting of seniors wishing to form a group 2 p.m. J~ne 6, school. ST. ANTHONY OF THE DESERT, FR Exposition of Blessed Sacrament noon to six p.m. June 5, St. S\,!arbel Chapel. LaSALETTE CENTER FOR CHRISTIAN LIVING, ATTLEBORO Retreat for single-parent families June 10 to 12; information: 222-8530. VINCENTIANS, FR Mass and meeting 7 p.m. June 7, St. Louis de France Church, Swansea. - ST. JULIE, N. DARTMOUTH Seminarian James Medeiros will speak on vocations at June 4 and 5 Masses. O.L. CAPE, BREWSTER Ushers needed; information: George Doherty, 385-2008. ST. JAMES, NB Memorial Mass for founding pastor Father James F. Clark 9:30 a.m. Sunday. ST. MARY, FAIRHAVEN Teachers' appreciation dinner tonight. Parish council nominations June 18 and 19; election June 25 and 26. Council meeting 7 p.m. June 7, rectory. Seminarian Douglas Roderigues will speak at all Masses this weekend. Ladies of St. Anne corporate communion II a.m. Mass June 5; luncheon follows: information: 993-5840.

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KINDERGARTENERS in Chad, among nations aided by the Sahel foundation, are introduced to proper nutrition at a milk break. (NCj UNICEF photo) .

Papal foundation challenges desertification of Africa VATICAN CITY (NC) - "Let us not wait till frightening and devastating drought returns! Let us not wait for the sand to bring death again! Let us not permit the future of these peoples to remain forever threatened!" With these ringing words spoken during a 1980 pastoral visit to the African country of Burkina Faso, then called Upper Volta, Pope John Paul II appealed for international efforts to halt desertification of sub-Saharan Africa. The appeal came at a time of worldwide publicity about the soil erosion and drought threatening eight African nations· faced with problems of razing forests for fuel, overgrazing by livestock, poor crop rotation and drought. That was several crises ago, however, and today the sand-threatened region known as the Sahel rarely makes the front pages. But the pope's impassioned appeal sparked a unique aid organization operated by African bishops and funded by West German and other Catholics. Known as the John Paul II Foundation for the Sahel, it is administered by bishops representing the threatened countries:' Burkina Faso, Cape Verde Islands, Gambia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal and Chad. The foundation spends money only to train home-grown leaders and experts to teach their neighbors self-help techniques. For the pope a particular concern was that the Sahel foundation be seen as one local church helping another local church, said a Vatican aid official. Its administrative seat is in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, where eight bishops allocate funds drawn from the interest on the original West German grant as well as another $2.5 million given to the foundation by others.

The foundation promotes "the training of persons who place themselves at the service of their country and of their brethren ... for the purpose of fighting desertification and its causes and for the purpo~e of aiding the victims of drought in the countries of the Sahel." From 1984 to 1987 the foundation funded 96 projects costing about $2.5 million at today's exchange rates. About half the projects were for the formation of personnel. The foundation has funded activities such as the training of six students to read and make use of weather data and other information provided by satellites. It provided literacy training in the Burkina Faso diocese of BoboDioulasso so that village leaders could be instructed in gardening and breeding techniques to share with their people. Literacy training is often the first step in self-help, allowing local leaders to take advantage of information on soil conservation techniques, reforesting and hydraulics. The foundation does not call on outside experts, utilizing local facilities or sending students elsewhere for training. In other words, it is run by Africans for Africans to meet African needs. It plans only to continue its quiet work of reseeding, digging wells and forming local leaders. In 1980 the pope painted a realistic portrait of its task. "The needs are immense if one wants to stop the advance of the desert and even gradually to push it back, if one wants each man, each woman and each child of the Sahel to have enough water and food, to have a future ever more worthy of a human being." The generosity of Western Catholics and the Sahel's local leadership have made a start in pushing back the sands.

ROME (NC) - A long-awaited mission considered a proposal to reform ofthe Vatican Curia will be upgrade the Council for the Laity a fine-tuning rather than a major to a congregation. However, that overhaul of the church's 400-year- plan was rejected, "30 Giorni" said, old central bureaucracy, predicts because lay council directors would the Italian Catholic monthly "30 , have to be replaced by cardinals Giorni." and bishops, according to curial Proposed changes limiting the rules. powerful Secretariat of State and Changes likely to be announced expanding the influence' of the include upgrading of the CommisCongregation for the Doctrine of sions for Health Care and for the Faith in ecumenical matters Migration and Tourism. In addiwere rejected by cardinals drafting tion, the clergy rather than the the reforms, said the magazine. doctrinal congregation would hear The magazine said questions laicization appeals. awaiting Pope John Paul II's final The Vatican's array of councils, decision include proposals to comcommissions, secretariats, tribubine the Pontifical Justice and Peace Commission with the Pon- nals, congregations and offices tifical Council "Cor Unum," and would be simplified, at least as far reunite the Congregation for Sac- as titles are concerned. The magazine said announceraments with that for Divine Worment of the curial reform plan is ship. The congregations were split imminent, with one possible date in 1984. The six cardinals on the reform being June 29, the 80th annivercommission consulted Vatican of- sary of the curial reform underficials, national bishops' conferen- taken by Pope Pius X. This year ces and the College of Cardinals also marks the 400th anniversary before submitting their recommen- of the establishment of the Curia by Pope Sixtus V. dations to the pope. The current reform commission "Lively opposition" from bishops' conferences helped squelch a is headed by Italian Cardinal proposal to have a "council of Sebastiano Baggio, head of the presidents" oversee the Secretariats Pontifical Commission for Vatifor Promoting Christian Unity, can City State. for Non-Christian Religions and Other commission members are for Non-Believers, the magazine Cardinals Edouard Gagnon, Opisaid. lio Rossi, Francis Arinze, Rosalio In the spirit of last year's Synod Castillo Lara and Alfons Stickler, of Bishops on the laity, the com- Vatican librarian and archivist.

No right to abortion decision VATICAN CITY (NC) - Parents have no right to decide on an abortion, said the Vatican newspaper in criticizing an Italian court decision allowing a wife to have an abortion without permission of her husband. It is an "absurd proposition" to think that husbands and wives have the power to make such decisions, said a front-page L'Osservatore Romano editorial. "The protagonist is neither the mother nor the father, but the conceived baby," said the editorial and a decision by a couple or one parent "is an inadmissible offense

to the integrity of the person to be born." The newspaper was commenting on a constitutional court decision that said the 1978 Italian abortion law leaves the mother solely responsible for the decision to have an abortion. The decision overturned a 1984 lower court ruling saying parents have equal rights if conception takes place within marriage. The editorial said much of the debate over the decision has focused on whether the husband has the right to a voice in the abortion decision rather than on the need to legally protect all unborn life.

India"s bishops unite KOTTAYAM. India (NC India's bishops have decided to work as a single body. with bishops from the Latin rite and the country's two Eastern rites sharing responsibility within the nationallevel structure of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India. The bishops' decision. made at an April meeting in Kottayam, was considered significant because it was the first time the bishops met after Pope John Paul II's directive permitting the three rites to form their own separate episcopal bodies. with a national confer-

ence of bishops handling only matters of a national or doctrinal character. The rites have clashed over differing approaches to evangelization. The Eastern rites say they are justified under their canon law. to take their missionary effort anywhere. Latin-rite authorities cite their canon law. which establishes geographical jurisdictions and requries permission of the local bishop for missionary activities by groups not a part of the jurisdiction.


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TOP to bottom, left to right: Eighth grade winners of Bishop Stang High School's Principal's Scholarships Michelle Roy, Margaret Bowen, principal Theresa Dougall, Kimberly Snow, Karen Ryan; Katie Sullivan, BMC Durf~e High School, winner of Fall River Catholic Woman's Club scholarship grant; Christine Dufresne and Brjan Col;. lins, valedictorian and salutatorian at Bishop Feehan High School; Elizabeth Figlock, Coyle-Cassidy High ~chool alumna and f~cuI~y member, whQ .will study British culture this summer on partial scholarship at the Universi.ty of London; Maria Sarmento, Fall River, an honor graduate of Salve Regina College, Newport.

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environment for students followCarrying on what has become a . party, changing to leisure wear for ing the prom," thus safeguarding tradition, seniors at Bishop Con- events from 2 a.m. onward. The program has been planned "a significant percentage' of our nolly High School, Fall River, will return to the school after their by a post-prom committee con- . community's youth." annual prom, to be held June 2 at cerned to provide "a chemical-free the Sheraton-Islander in Newport. With a "Catch the Wave" theme, the post-prom party will begin at Todd J. Piantedosi, 1988 class positions in the recent Rodman midnight with piano .and guitar music. "Snacks from the sea" will president at Bishop Feehan High Ford Essay Contest on "My Perfeature scallops, shrimp, clams, School, Attleboro, recently receiv- son of the Year." caviar and lobster hors d'oeuvres ed two scholarships: a Principal's Leadership Award from Herff and non-alcoholic drinks. Comedian Teddie Bergeron, Jones, Inc. and an award from the Students Robert Giroux, Heathwhose credits include appearances National Association ofSecondary er MacKinnon, Diane Gagnon and on the Tonight and David Letter- School principals. Lauren Hickman attained summa He was among 150 Herff Jones man shows, will entertain from 2 cum laude distinction and gold to 3 a.m. and an outdoor barbecue winners in the nation out of 5,685 medals in the National Latin Exam students nominated. and "the Great Beach Challenge" for Latin I students. Giroux topped Piantedosi also won accolades will follow until 4:30 a.m. the pack by missing only two of 40 Food and Comfrom the United Continuing the program will be :juestions. a senior slide show, "The Best of mercial Workers Union, Local Silver medalists, maxima cum 1445. His father is a union member. Times," and breakfast, featuring laude, were Deborah Harrington, The student, who ·will attend Belgian waffles, wiII be served Amy Matoian, Elizabeth Hastry, Holy Cross College, Worcester, beginning 5:15 a.m. Caroline Crockett and Merry PerRaffles will take place through- will deliver a tribute to parents at koski. out the evening and the Beach the school's Parents' Night June 2. Challenge will feature prize events. In Latin II, Steven Goodreau A special senior raffle for a windwon a magna cum laude certificate. * * * surfer will be held at 5:45 a.m. Over 67,000 students from the Students Christie Carges, JenStudents will remain in prom United States, Canada, Australia nifer Dudek and Jennifer Figlioattire for the beginning of the lini took three of five runner-up and Japan took the test.

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Trauma' Preventi<in· Mo~th, .not-· ing that 76 percent of U.S. deaths in the 15 to 24-year-old age range are caused by trauma, with.90 percent of those deaths alcohol related. Programs included a presentation by emergency room nurses science projects judged by area from Sturdy Memorial Hospital professionals. in Attleboro, highlighted by slides Fourth and fifth graders at St. According to Edmund Borges, Throughout May the student showing the effects of alcoholMary's Primary School, Taunton, the school's principal, each stucouncil has sponsored activities, related accidents, sO' graphic that recently had their assigned annual dent was responsible for choosing publications and productions for many queasy students had to leave . the auditorium. . ,...----------------------------------------~------~~, The Performance EJ:lsemble of Boston followed up with skits depicting substance abuse, addiction and. chemical d~pendency; and·related videotapes and printed materials were available for classroom use during the month.

in our schools

St. Mary's School

a' topic, writing a research paper, formulating a logbook and constructing a project presentation with posters and experiments. Grade four students Jennifer deAbreu, Matthew Arpin, Laurie Aranjo, Michael Silva and Sean Barney won first place awards. Five of their classmates Won second place prizes, and six won third place. Kevin Marcondes, Diane Fig-

ueredo;Dawnne Henderson: Dominic Gaudiano, Jeffrey Angeley and Shannon Murray were first place fifth graders. Six fifth graders placed second and seven placed third.

Bishop Feehan

There Is A .Difference!.

Dominican Second graders at the Fall River school recently went behind the scenes at a supermarket, while fourth graders visited St. Anne's Hospital and seventh graders attended a day of recollection at St. Thomas More Church, Somerset.

St. Anne's School

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Fall River Police Department members are presenting a child abuse prevention program to students at St. Anne's School, Fall River. Kindergarteners and first through third graders are als~ participating in a "Safety First" program.

• • •

Eighth graders took a class trip to Niagara Falls and' Toronto. They will graduate June 6.

• • •

Kindergarteners recently visited the Caratunk Wildlife Refuge in Seekonk, preparing for the visit, sponsored by St. Anne's Home and School Association,. with class work. Grade three students will attend a Caratunk program this month.

• • •

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The school's annual picnic at Our Lady of the Lake Camp, East Freetown, will be held June 9.

• • •

The Peanut Butter and Jelly Company/ Small Feets recently presented an exhibition of dance theatre with audience participation.

• • •

The School's pre-kindergarten will have a stepping-up ceremony June 8. Kindergarten graduation will be June 3.

USA Today honors 17-year-old staffer WASHINGTON (NC)-A 17year-old staff member ofthe Rockford, Ill., diocesan newspaper has been named to USA Today's AllUSA Academic Team. Erik Phelps, a senior at Durand . (lll.) High School, was among 20 students honored by the national newspaper. Phelps was chosen on tlte basis of academic work, community service and a variety of computer development projects, some of which benefit the Catholic pre~s. He is a staff member of The Observer, Rockford diocesan newspaper, and its Catholic Computer Clearinghouse team, which developed the first computer software to capture and manage on personal computers satellite transmissions from National Catholic News Service. Phelps is the son of Jane and Owen Phelps, editor of The Observer and director of the computer clearinghouse.


~. ~/

1988 catholic charities appeal S150

Robert Kane Funeral Home, South Easton Hector Demers, Esquire • $100 Dave's Crossroads Cafe, Inc., South Easton St. Anthony Confirmation Class Immaculate Conception Conference, No. Easton $60 AI's Painting

NATIONAL $25.00 H. Carr & Sons, Inc., Providence, R.I.

$50 Epicurean Caterers, Inc., Easton Floors Etcetera, North Easton Sacred Heart Women's Guild

S125 John FStafford Insurance Agency

$25 Coyle·CaSsidy Mother's Club, D. J. Moitoza Asphalt Paving

$100 layre Dept. Store Holy ROSlry Women's Guild

FALL RIVER $1600 Bank at New England, N.A. $500 St. Anne Credit Union Trina, Inc. 5300 Leone's on the Waterfront Dr. Paul P. Dunn

Americana Travel Coachmen Restaurant, Tiverton, R.I. $40

TAUNTON 5300

$200

North Easton Savings Bank

$150

$200 Knights of Columbus Council 82 St. Mary Women's Guild

$1000

$500 Great Rock Tractor Co" Bourne R.M. Packer Co.. Inc., Vineyard Haven

The Standard Times Shawmut Bank at B.C. $500 Cliftex Corp Perry Funeral Home

$4OD Bank of Boston, Southeastern Region

NEW 8EDFORD Our ladyol Assumption $100 Knights of Columbus clo Our Lady's Chapel: $58 M·M Joseph Ramos: $25 M·M Norman Turner. Denise Porche. Mary F. Caravana. M·M Stephen Gomes.. Constance Tavares St. Anthony $200 Charles Franklm.ln Memory of Msgr. Berube. In Memory of Msgr. Gerard Chabot, St. Anthony Bmgo. Anonymous: $100 In Memory 01 Fr. J.F. McCarthy. Anonymous: $50 Anonymous: $34 Dorothy Despres. $25 Eva 8enolt. Maurice Cote. Robert lebvesque. George Abreu, Steven K. Mendoza. Anonymous St. Anne $25 AFriend. St. Mary $600 Rev. John F. Moore: $400 St. Vi~cent dePaul Society of 5t. Mary's: $100 M·M Richard Brown. M·M DaVid Resendes: $50 Edward MacLean. M·M Elton Cunningham: $40 Henry G. FortinIJane Martin·Fortin: $35 M·M Robert Sheehan: $30 M·M Nicolau Medeiros. M·M Fernando Rebello: $25 Laurette Payette. Susan Deston, M·M Brian Pepin. M·M Arlhur Greene. M·M Arnold B. Camara. M·M Anthony Giunta. M·M Joseph Towers. M·M Ronald Hubert, M·M David Greene. M·M Fred J. Scott. M·M George Green. M·M Robert Pehljean. M·M Mariano Genlili. M·M John Pimentel. Jr.. M·M Michael J. Knowles. Mrs. Allred DeFreitas. M·M Raymond R. Vates, Mabel Rezendes. St. ThereSl $150 M·M Henri Valois: $100 M·M Raymond Bourassa, M·M Joseph Mandeville: $50 M·M Raoul LeBlanc. Mrs. Paul Fontaine: $30 AFriend: $25 M·M Richard Bousquet. M·M Richard Bousquet. M·M Roger DeneaUlt. M·M William Dugas, M·M Patrick Gannon. M·M Gerald Loranger. M·M Roger Nadeau. M·M Eric Newberg. AFriend. St. John the 8aptist $200 Conlirmation Class of 1988. M·M Manuel Neto: $150 St. Vincent dePaul Society: $100 Anonymous. Afriend: $75 AFriend: $65 Anonymous: $50 Portuguese Charismatic Prayer Group. Allee &Mary Fagan. M·M Joseph C. Molta. M·M Alberto Pereira. M·M Angelo Martins. Roseanne Perry. Edmund Shannon. Anonymous. AFriend: $40 Anonymous: $35 Anonymous. AFriend: $30 M·M John Alves. Isabel &Agnes Souza, Anonymous. AFriend: $25 M·M Joao Henriques. M·M Jose A. Macedo. M·M John J. Rodrigues. Mary Schusner. M·M Manuel Mello. Evelyn Mello. M-M Anthony Mathews, McBride Rentals (Norma Conde). In Memory of Msgr. John A. Silvia. M-M Americo Vieira. Anonymous, A friend. Holy Name $150 M-M Leonard (Souza: $125 M·M Philip Murray: $100 Doris K. Lawrence. M·M Charles Quinn: $75 Mrs. John B. O·Toole. Jr.: $60 Lillian Pike: $50 M-M Richard Babineau. M·M Hugh Earley.ftl·M Sergio lacaponl. M·M Salvatore Fernandes: $40 M·M Robert Doyle: $35 Edith Mcintyre: $30 M-M Lawrence Burns, Jr., M·M Charles A. Gunning: $25 M·M Robert H. Arruda, Joan Atchison. Kathleen Fmnerty. M·M Lawrence Harney, Jr.. M·M Donald E. Lamond. Eileen Marshall. M·M Joseph Marshall. M-M AntoniO Mendes. M·M Augusto Vieira. M·M John J. Sweeney. Our Lady 01 Perpetual Help $1000 M-M Andrew Banas: $50 M-M Mitchell Gacek. Anonymous: $35 Anonymous: $30 M·M Henry Cembalisty. Anonymous; $25 Walter Bienia. M·M Charles Daignault, Eugene N,konow,cz, M-M Paul A. PabIS. Charles J. Rutkowski. M-M Joseph Siwik. OLPH Bingo. Albert Longpre. St. Cuimir $1000 Ferdinand B. Sowa. Esquire: $60 SI. Casimir's Senior Citizens: $25 M-M Jan Domagala. Felil J. Walski, Anonymous. Immaculate Conception $350 Confirmation Class of 1988: $200 M·M Victor F. Rebello Jr.: $100 M·M James P. Moniz, In Thanksgiving. AFriend: $75 Bernadette Costa, M·M Victor Rodrigues: $60 M-M David P. Lira; $50 M·M Fernando Costa. John Soares. Jr.. M-M Joao V. Soares. Dr.lMrs. David Cosla. M·M Duarte M. Arruda. Donsilie G. Feliciano. In Memory of Mary N. Correia: $40 M-M Fernando Condez. M·M Gualter A. Raposo. M-M Gilberto Mendonca, M-M Jose Macedo; $35 Maria P. Simas, Mary S. Beltencourt. $25 M·M Antonio Barbaosa.ln Memory 01 M·M Manuel Sol. Serafum J. Da Conceicao. M-M Durval R. Costa. George Souza. Manuel Vilela. Maria A. Medeiros, M-M Humberto Lopes. Maria C. Medeiros. M·M Fernando Viveiros, Albert Rapoza. Henrieta Arruda. Maria m. Pacheco, Albertina Arruda. M·M Manuel Beltencourt. Holy Name Society, Holy Rosary Sodality, Mary A. Pilta, Antonio A. Pitta. Manuel Medeiros, June D. Medeiros. Holy Ghost Society. $500 Society of St. Vincent de Paul Particular Council of New Bedford: $50 Anonymous: $35 Agnes Bizarro St. HedwiSUOO M·M John L. Mello: $50 M-M Malthew Dobyna; $25 M·M Bernard Cook. Crown Travel. M·M William Wunschel. Wanda Monize. Our lady of Fatima $100 M-M J. Louis LeBlanc. M·M Robert Berche: $50 Mrs. George Desrosiers. M-M Carlos Machado. M·M Norman Hebert; $40 M-M Robert Roy: $25 M-M Jose Noia. M·M William Corrado. $500 In Memory ot Rev. Arthur CLevesque; $200 St. Vincent de Paul Conlerence St. Francis 01 Assisi $30 M-M John B. Figueriredo. St. Kilian $737 St. Kilian's Bingo: $50 Joseph & Lucy Benardo: $30 Mary L. Augeri. O.L. 01 Mt. Carmel $50 Mt. Carmel Holy ROSlry Sodalily: $30 M-M Peter Vincent; $25 M-M Jose Gaspar. M-M George F. Roderigue. St. Joseph $100 Anonymous: $25 M-M Edmond Charelte, M-M Normand Perry. Anonymous. St. Lawrence $150 In Memory of John. David &Frances Gough; $125 M·M David R. Nelson: $100 Mrs. Edwin Livingstone. Jr.: $50 M-M Robert Bedard, Dorothy Curry, Mrs. Thomas Foye, M-M Frank Mahon. Albert P. Porter. Joseph V. Smith: $40 M-M Steven Beauregard. M-M Elmer Page, M·M George Swansey, M-M Edmund Harrington; $35 M·M Albert Anderson, Mary Winterson: $30 M·M Mar~ Muldoon; $25 M-M Albert Smith. M·M Steven R. Warn. M-M Arthur B. Walsh, Mrs. lewis Dutra. M·M William Kasper. Ann Mahoney, Frances A. Mcintyre. Joseph B. Mcintyre, M·M Pierre A. Plante, M-M Richard Sparrow. M-M Bradley Sylvia. lillian Tablas. Mrs. Edward Varsel, M-M Gordon J. Vieira. M-M John R. Whalen. ~~~o~~~ ~i~~rtes Touhey; $35 Patricia Norton; $25 In Memory ot Helen MBreen, Mrs ABCrowe, M·M

St. Jam.. $50 M·M Edward Connully, M·M Steve Messoud, John Quinn, M·M John Sylvia: $40 Adelaide Medeiros; $30 Mrs Mary Menino; $25 M·M Fernando Garcia, M-M Chartes Gomes, Helen S Lewis, M·M Calvin Medeiros, Atilia O'Rourke, M·M Paul Rezendes, Mrs Luke Smith, M·M Roger Tremblay, Mrs Thomas EWhitlle

USO

American Press, Inc. Catholic Woman's Club

mo $lOD

Anderson & Olsen, Inc. Chartes R. Desmarais, Esq. Guard of Honor·St. Lawrence Church Macedo Pharmacy $60 Paul & Dilon

$101 Buller Tire Sales, No. Altleboro

WeIer and Parker

$100 Communily Pharmacy, Inc., Plainville W.H. Riley & Sons, Inc., No. Attleboro

$25 Parisi Seafood, Duff's Plumbing & Heating, Mr & Mrs Michele Magalelta, Jr

530

$50 Kelley & Tatarian Ins. & Real Estate Portuguese·American Club Mandeville Chevrolet, Inc., No. Altleboro London's, Inc., Robert A. Peloquin Ins. Agency, Charney

CAPE COD $1000 St. Pius XGuild. So. Varmouth

Sacrad Heart $125 M-M Roger Menard: $100 In Memory of Mr Normand Seguin' $30 M-M Joseph Williams: $25 M-M Raymond Fortin. Mrs Jeannette Lapage '

PARISHES

5300 Our Lady of Victory Coilference, Centerville

Westcolt Construction Corp., No. Altleboro

m

~~I

$625 St. Elizabeth Conference, Edgartown

$150

$25 Altorney John Bruce Mitchell, Waluppa Package Store, Inc.lWestport Fruit Market, No. Westport, Mullen Bros. Jewelers

Collins Construction Co.

Aluminum Processing Corp

5300 Aftleboro Lions Club

Electro Systems

$250

Jackson Company, Inc.

ATTLEBORO

$SO

CHARITIES I ~j

NEW BEDFORD

$125 The Daher Family and Beatrice Howe

$75 Tri·CiIy DIIice Equipment Cotp.

~.

FAIRHAVEN St. Joseph $150 M·M Joseph DeMello: $60 M·M Donald Sullivan: $40 M·M August Gonsalves, M·M Ernest Pare: $35 M·M Arthur Hardy; $30 M·M Earl Hebert, M-M Robert Riding: $251n Memory of Richard Antonsen, M-M Robert Bach. M-M William Benoit, Mrs Ernest Bouley, M-M Maurice Burke, Mrs Laurian T Clement, Theresa Correia, M-M Arthur Cousineau, Ms Jean Cyr. M-M Robert D'Anjou, M·M Joseph Duarte, M·M ArthurGovoni, M-M JamesGreenway, M·M William Hagen. M-M Patrick Hunt, Mrs Edmund Joseph, Mrs Vvonne LaPointe, M-M Antone Lopes, John J Lowney, M-M Antone Perry, M-M Daniel Ryan, M·M Charles Tetreault, M-M Harry Voung, M-M Lawrence Collins, M·M Michael Wieczorek WAREHAM St. Patrick $200 M-M George Barrell; $100 M·M LJ Henricken, Ann CHPark; $75 MrsAGetchell: $60 Desmond Murphy. M·M Edwin Shivvers; $52 M·M Eric S Ronnie: $50 Barbara Dym"a, M-M Ernest Joynt, M-M Chester Rusinoski, M-M Chester ASmith: $35 M·M Charles Cassidy: $30 Mrs Jeldino Melloni, M-M Joseph Gonsalves, Hugh O'Brien: $25 M-M Joseph Cappello, M-M Ben Bartie. Ellis EChorlton, M-M Humberto Farias. Corrine Fernandes, Ethel Gallos, M-M Glenn Leonard, M·M Dennis Maltos, Mrs Jean F Samia. M-M Erich ASchulze Jr, M-M John Spinale, M-M Harold Tomkinson, M·M Robert Williams ACUSHNET St. Francis Xavier $75 AFriend: $50 Fitzgerald Family. AFriend: $30 Amaral Family; $25 John Farrell. Gerard Tardl!. FAIRHAVEN St. Mary $200 SI. Vincent de Paul Society: $25 Philomena Charamba. Maurice Hevey. Irene Wojcik. MATTAPOISm St. Anthony $200 Mrs. Norman Gingrass: $100 M·M John W. Bender. Oamien Council4190. M·M B.L. Corkum III. Sue McGowan. M-M Paul Vermelle: $50 Richard Bono & Mary Anne Brogan. M-M Howard Chadwick Jr., Dr./M Lee Estes. Janice Hilley, M-M Richard Regan. M·M Edward Sylvester: $40 M-M William Heiden: $35 M·M Michael Dahill, Mrs. Kenneth Tuttle: $30 M·M Antonio Andrade, M-M John Seaberg: $25 M·M Roy Andrews. Robert Alves. M·M Andrew Bobola. M·M Raymond Briggs. Eleanor Contant. M-M John Costa. Gerald Fitzgerald. Robert Furtado. M·M Michael Jennings, M-M David Lawrence, George Liberty, M·M John McGarrie. Or./M F.T. ~oore. M·M John Murray. M·M Philip Silveira. St. Anthony $50 M-M Edwin Allard, Helen Tyndall; $25 M-M Walter Bowman, Barbara Brady, M-M Edward Days, Jr. M-M Stanley Orzechowski, M·M Joao Rodrigues MARION St. Rita $100 M-M William A. Burgess: $50 Robert & Mary Katasinsky, William F. &Reges Henry. Mrs. R.J.leonard. Jr.. Mrs. James Dougall. Richard Duffy· 1. Harron. Dennis & Debbie Kenney. M-M Steve E. Okotita. Hiller Company. Inc.. Fred & Susan MacDougall. Frank L. Robilollo: $35 John & Patricia Burns: $30 M·M Richard lens; $25 Ronald & Cecelia LaRochelle. John & Nancy Rolli, Richard & Dorothy Verville. Rober & Esther Bent. John Brugliera. Harry & Patricia Leber. M·M Peter Sowden. M·M John J. Sullivan. L'Auberge de Marion. M-M Robert 1. LaCrosse. M-M Kingsley Maynard. Edward & Corrine Rogers. Dr. Robert & Jeannelte Tremblay. Wareham Pharmacy. Inc.. Thomas Gay. Frederick & Lorraine Donovan. Mrs. George Howland. Dr. Robert & Margaret Johnson. SOUTH DARTMOUTH St. Mary $300 M-M G. Albert Roy: $150 M·M Armand Rheaume: $75 M·M Hubert Mandeville: $50 Evelyn Sebastiao. Norman Menard, M-M Paul Clark: $35 Frederick Corbiel: $30 M-M Manuel H. Sylvia. M-M Fernando Barreiros: $25 M-M Walter Martin. Irene Gardner, M-M Edmund Sylvia. M·M Eugene Rheaume, Anna M. Varao. Sophie M. Varao. Michael Stenson. M-M Donald Wiluz, St. Mary's Guild, M-M Joseph Darmofal. M·M Frank Andrade. Alice Kerwin. Dr.lMrs. Lester V. NickroSl. M-M Thomas E. Wilson. M·M Daniel O. Saulnier. $200 M-M John WOrcult Jr: $50 M·M Edgar Moorhouse, Shirley Perry: $30 M-M Henri Desplaines: $25 M·M Paul Gelineau Sr, M-M Anthony Freitas, M·M Michael Brillo, M·M Antonio Benevides, M-M Joao Carreiro, M·M~althew Martin, M·M Gilbert BFerro. M·M Randall Medeiros, M·M George Wright, DrlMrs ASenesac, M-M Freddy Groves NORTH DARTMOUTH St. Julie Billiart $500 Paul G. Cleary; $400 M-M HardingJ. Carrier: $100 M-M Francis D. Melthe M-M William O'Donnell; $60 M:M Arthur H. Bennelt, Jr.: $50 M-M David Bolton, M-M Stephen Braz. M·M lloyd FrancIS. M·M Walter GuJlherme, M·M Edmund Kelley. Jr., M-M Richard LaFleur: $40 M-M Joseph Gonsalves, Roberta K. Dutra: $35 Sarah Sylvia; $30 M·M Raymond BUlls, Louise Roberge. $25 M·M John J. Barros. M-M Oldemiro Canlo. M·M Jose C. Carvalho, M-M John A. Copeland, Marylou' Delgado. M-M Wayne L. Hamlet. M-M Joseph Jacinto, M·M Ernest M. Kobza, Bernice Laliberte, Grace Moreira. M·M Jasper Parnell. Jeanne Patnode. M-M Kenneth Sylvia. Holda Torrres. Mary B. Waegelin. M-M John Wenc. M-M Joseph Arruda, M·M Kevin Barrett. Jane Brightman. M-M Jay Carolus. M·M lenine Gonsalves, Sheila Isherwood, Lorraine Lafrance. DrlM Albert Luiz, M-M Uriel Maranhas, M·M Robert Martin. Marianne Morin. Ruth O'Brien. Mary Rivet. M·M Raymond Sylvia, M-M Edward J. Viveiros, Mrs. Edgar G. Whealon. M-M Antonio Carramona. NORTH FALMOUTH St. Elillbath Seton $1800 M·M Joseph BMcCarty; $350 Mrs William FForan: $100 Mrs Arthur Miller, $100 M·M Hebert I Sullivan, M-M James CTansey: $50 M·M William GAndrew, M·M David Bercovici, M·M Fred S. Eggleston III, Frank L Halady, M·M Jack Howard, M-M Lawrence Palmer, Mrs Julianne Palmieri, Mrs Harry Papp, M-M John A Ryan, M·M Richard Brezinski, M·M Joseph Caissie, Mrs Alden Cook, M·M Manuel DeCarvalho, M-M William DiCroce, Mrs Marie Fournier, M·M David Graham, Danielle Guay, M·M C. Keefe Hurley. M-M Burton C. Jackson, James McCue. M·M Glenn MMedeiros, M·M David Morreale, William FMoynihan. M-M Joseph BNoonan, M-M Edmund O'Rourke, Mary KennY,M·M Johann Schruckmayr $100 David Carboneau BUZZARDS BAV St. Ma'Pret $100 In Memory of Elsie McCoy. M·M Andrew Garbult: $75 Josephine Post; $50 M·M Lawrence White. Jr, M·M James Lynch; $35 Mrs Helen Perkins; $25 Paul ACaldwell. Mrs Henry Clancy, Roger Tessier, M·M Louis Fachelti OSTERVillE' Our Lady of th. Assumption $2000 Anonymous; $100 M-M Armand Mathis, Anonymous; $50 James Barry, M-M David Pina, M-M Thomes Warren. M·M Elinus Hadley. Anonymous: $30 M·M Louis McKnight, Catherine Moriarty, Anonymous; $25 M·M Patrick Rohan. M·M David Hayward, M·M Joseph Amaral, Mrs Edwin Pina, John SFlynn, M·M John Szymanski, Colter Family, Mrs John MSullivan, M·M John Bambara, M-M Andrew Wilter, M·M Ronald Beals, M·M James Shields, Kathleen Shields, Anonymous $1000 Anonymous; $200 M·M James Ryan; $100 M·M Wimam Laverty

$2SO St. John's 55 and Over Family, Pocasset Nickerson·Bourne Funeral Home, Bourne $100 St. Elizabeth Guild, Edgartown Welch Electric Co., Inc., Edgartown John Lawrence Funeral Home, Marstons Mills Ally. Arthur Rapoza, East Falmouth Falmouth Knights of Columbus Knights of Columbus, Falmouth $50 Berube Electric, Inc., Edgartown Edgartown Hardware, Inc. Dukes Counly Savings Bank, Edgartown Wells Oil Service, Inc., Edgartown La Bell Plumbing & Heating, Edgartown Sisters 01 the Holy Ghost, East Falmouth South Varmouth Hardware $25 A. Lawrence Lovequist, West Dennis, Cape Cod Cooperative Bank, Varmouthport, Donane Beal & Ames, Inc., So. Var· mouth, Longlellow's Pub, So. Varmouth, Roberts 1 Hour Cleaner, West Varmouth, Today Real Estate, So. Varmouth, Varmouth Furniture Co., So. Varmouth, Silver Cloud Towing, So. Varmouth, Riverway Lobster House, So. Varmouth, Golden Sails Restaurant, East Falmouth, Falmouth Coal Co., Flowers by Henry Teileira, Inc., Hyannis

CENTERVILLE Our Lady of Victory $500 M-M William Prior. Deacon &Mrs Joseph PStanley; $300 Mrs Raymond Tynkoop: $250 M-M William Dacey III, M-M David WWroe; $200 Alty & Mrs Robert Donahue, Helen T McCabe: $100 M·M J David Crawford, John FCreamer. Michael Dacey. M-M Howard WDaviau, M-M Harry CDever, John Fleming, M-M Richard Griffith, M-M Clarence Hanson: $90 M-M Robert DThompson: $60 M·M Peter Boissonneault: $50 M-M Roger DeRosier, M·M William Devine, M-M Dennis Driscoll, M·M Richard Gleason. Mrs Margaret Hardey, M·M James WHiggins, Mrs Arthur Morash, MrsStephen O'Brien Sr. M-M Gerald MOtt. M-M MichaelJ Tenaglia: $35 Mrs William JColler, Mrs John Pratt; $30 M·M Dennis Moynihan, M-M Robert Wheeler; t25 M-M Timothy Acton, Mrs Stella Ailtaniemi. M·M John Almeida, Annie's Bloomers. M·M John Baldner, Margaret ABerckmann, M-M Donald Brunelle $25 Or & Mrs Loren CBurger, Mrs Marilyn Carlow, M·M Ralph Childs, M·M Arthur L Desrocher, M-M Roland Durocher, M·M Edward J Eastham, M-M Lawrence J Favreau, M·M Richard Finn. M-M William Gent. M·M Edward Gould, M·M Stephen Goveia; Mrs Frank Gray, M-M Joseph CHennessey, Leonard M Higgins. M·M Charles JHuber, M-M Ellis Johnson, Samuel WKeavy, John FLeary, Mrs Chartes 0Meeker, Mrs Jean GO'Neill, M·M Wayne Paddock, Mrs Edward S Roache, M-M Harold J Roberts, Mrs Gloria Rocha, M·M P. Joseph Salmon. Albert Scaramelli, M-M Kenneth Stuart Sr. Mrs James GTimlin, Mrs Arthur Tomlinson $100 M-M Joseph Crowley, M-M Jon AGlydon, Dr & Mrs William Johnston Jr, M-M Marcel RPoyant; $50 M·M ThomasJ Flynn; $30 Mrs Douglas GRitchie: $25 M-M Anthony Pino, M-M Hl Biron, MrsJohn Crowley, Mrs Robert Elliolt, Mrs Frank EGreen, M·M Lee FKenney, M-M William Kenney, M·M Robert Levine, Mrs Wray Lockwood. M-M Charles MacAleese, M·M John RRobichaud, MCStewart, Ally & Mrs Don Weber. Mrs OIavi'Wiinikainen SOUTH VARMOUTH . St. Pius Tenth $500 M·MJohn FMartin; $200 MrsJoseph FMitchell;$IOO M·M John JCurry, Joseph PGibbons, Sara WGibbons, M-M Laurence Kane, M·M RGSibley, M·M John lick: $75 M·M Albert Barbo, Mrs John ASteen; $50 M-M Richard Bronske, M·M John Curley, Mary L Fee, M·M Thomas Robinson, Richard & Anita Sedlock, William & Sylvia Scalley, M-M Henry Sprissler, M-M Robert Stamp, Dan Sullivan, Mrs John J O'Hara; $35 Mrs Robert Childs; $30 M-M Billy-Joe Gieselman, M·M Joseph Perna $25 Wilfred Amnolte, M-M William Bullock, Mrs Joseph Chaisson, M-M John Davidson, Mary 0 Graves, M-M William Hefler, M-M Paul Joyce, M-M James Keary, M-M William Keith, Mrs Dale Laasch, M·M Frederick Lindahl, M-M Thomas Lonergan, Ruth Thatcher, M-M James Ruhan, Mrs John Shea. Mary L Sullivan. M·M Albert Sutherland. Donald Walsh $150 M·M V.R. Keeffe: $100 M-M Andrew Costa, M·M Thomas P Dean, M·M William PGleeson, AJ Kochis, M-M John Marques, M·M George RNestor, M-M James H Quirk, Jr; $60 Mary J Donovan; $50 M-M Robert Carey, Allred Ferro, M-M Thomas M Gallagher. John-Grace Howland; $30 M-M Francis Orimmins; $25 M-M John Hogan, M·M Everelt AHyland, Mrs Ceclie RPacker, M-M Guy Rinaldi, Philip A Tringate $500 M·M Richard Panciocco: $100 M·M Domenic FDiCori. M·M Walter WCurtey; $50 William E& Marion FLally: $25 M-M Peter Personeni, Vincent N Delaney . $250 Harold J & Barbara A Jarvis: $100 Thomas & Sally Butler, Deborah A Kowal; $50 John J McMahon. M-M William McPartland, Anita &Richard Sedlock; $30 Patricia·P Rose Brunell; $25 Leslie & !.inda Campbell, Edward Carbone, M-M WRDunn, Leo &Marjorie Hofman, Mrs Donald Lake, M·M James WLemmis, M-M Francis McCarthy, John & Louise Taupier $100 KEL·KIM; $50 Mrs Alice Donohue, $25 Robert J Beaulieu, M·M James Byron, M-M Ronald Murphy; $100 M·M James EKeefe HVANNIS St. Francis Xavier $350 In Memory of Fr. Joseph Caplice, O.M.I.; $300 M·M Edward Murphy; $100 M·M Edward JMcCarthy, Mary MLandry, M-M Donald Rogers, M·M William Hedringlon; $50 John JBell, John FDempsey. M·M Bernard JFoley, Mrs Harry Laird, John McGowan, M-M Richard JMurphy, Mary Murray, M-M Charles Senesac, M-M Vincent Simeome; $40 M·M Cedric Saars; $35 James Pelletier; $30 James Brpwn, Fern LeMay; $25 Mrs Wesley Bennett, M·M David L Berkley, Richard Cressy. M-M Paul Donahue, M-M Thomas MGoodwin, M-M John Hastings, M-M Thomas Houghton. M-M Edward Lariviere, Mrs John P lyons, M-M Alexander MaclSlac, Mary McKenna, Martin McDonough, Mrs James F McMahon. M·M Joseph EMontminy. M-M Spencer FO'leary, Margaret Pelder, Blanche Robertson, Ken Shaunessey, M·M Joseph Urso $500 M·M Richard WPeckham: $100 Elinor Kniley, Margaret Lucht, M-M John Medeiros, Alice & Marguerite McMahon, Dr & Mrs Francis XWalsh; $75 M-M Ralph Berting; $50 M-M Cart Ferdensi, M-lol Thomas Gianrdino, Patricia MFlanagan; $30 M·M John F Donovan, M-M Allred FGarons, Mrs Esther Murchison, M·M Gil Raposo; $25 M-M John BruSSlrd, Gerard JCallahan, M·M G. Howard Christine, Mrs Margaret Cunningham, Joseph J Defalco, M-M B J DuBois, Marie Hallgren, Mrs Helen Hertihy, M·M Timothy FLinehan, Eileen L McVeigh, Mary TO'Neil, M·M Edmund PSkinner, D MIC MSchaffer, M-M Roger WSellers $60 Alan ECavanagh: $50 M·M Ralph GBoutell, M·M Edward Kelly. Jr, M·M John Deasy; $35 Connie Smith; $25 Katherine Connolly, M-M John Cavanaugh, Joseph JDelalco, ROSI BFernandes, M·M Julius P Morin,Jr WOODS HOLE St. Joseph $$500 AFriend, Norman MacNeil: $200 AFriend; $100 M·M Corneilius Hickey. M-M Brian McDermott. M·M John Collins, M-M Leonard Belord, M-M Kevin Nolan, Marion Hogue, M-M Herbert Weeks, AFriend: $50 M·M Walter Daniels. Mrs Daniel O'Grady, AFriend: $40 AFriend: $35 AFriend; $25 Dr & Mrs Walter McLean, Julia ABeliveau, M·M Thomas Orluskie, M·M Harry EHandy, Rosemary AForey, M·M Fred Metell, M-M Donald lehy, M-M Frank Burry, AFriend; $100 Or & Mrs Thomas Sbarra, M·M George Rooney. Falmouth Knights of Columbus, AFriend; $450 M-M Stephen Mcinnis, M·M August Canepa: $30 M·M Frank Duffy, AFriend EAST FALMOUTH St. Anthony $200 M·M John Collins; $100 M·M James Boudreau, M-M Colin Murphy, M-M Patrick Lewis, M-M George DeMello, M-M Anthony Solimine; $75 M-M Allred Marks: $60 Ella May Hayes; $50 Nancy Andrade. Daniel Botelho, Fresh Pond Holy Ghost Society, M·M John Goldpaugh, Fredia Mae Hayes, M-M John Saltelmair. M·M Frank Teileira: $40 M-M Jude Royals: $35 M·M TheolphilusOliveira; $30 Marguerite Wall; $25 Robert Bourassa, M-M John Courtema, M·M John Courtemanche, M·M Stanley Eldgedge, Genevieve Farese, M·M Joseph Ferreira, M·M William Gerzoco, M-M Louis Fucillo, M-M Frances Galiani, M·M James Grady, M-M George Howarth, M·M Gerben Kuipers, M·M Leonard Marks, M-M Louis Marks, A.R. Medeiros. M·M Hugh Ownes, Jackina Peters, Rose Walker $100 M·M Richard Corey, Marjorie MacLennan, M-M Richard Vitagliano: $50 Richard Corey Jr, M·M Ernest Holcomb, M-M James McNamara; $35 M-M Charles Davis: $25 M-M Richard Briana, M·M John Mulroy $250 M·M Frederick Murphy; $200 M-M John Michaels; $100 M-M William Bonito, M·M Chartes Oliver: $50 M·M Angelo Colelti, Mary Mendoza: $30 M·M Robert Sylvia: $25 Marion Burgess, M·M R.J. Feeney, Ruth Irvin. M-M Daniel O'Brien, M·M Antonio Pilla $100 M-M Daniel Bailey, M·M Arthur Monteiro, Atty & Mrs Joseph Paruti. M·M Manuel Souza, M·M Manuel White Jr. M·M Lawrence Peters: $25 M-M Frank Lima, M-M Frank Macedo, M-M Teresa Prete $50 M·M Arthur Bouzan; $25 M·M Chartes Gelmini, lorraine Reardon, M·M John Rapoza

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FALMOUTH SI. Patrick $120 M·M Robert J. Reddy; $100 M·M Ernest P. Foley, M·M Paul McGonigle,"Mrs.JohnV.J. Joyce, M·M Joseph Connor, M·M James V. Toner, Anonymous; $50 Joseph·J. Costa, M·M Robert Koob, M·M Philip F. Mackey Jr., Mrs. Everett Finnell, M·M Carl S. Paige, William J. O'Brien, M·M Terence McKenna; $40 M·M John Farrell; $25 Dr.lM Richard Abisla, M·M Adrian Dufresne, M·M Robett Nolan, M·M Michael Phelps, M·M Allred F. Vallone, Helen l. Avery, M·M William Murphy, M·M William McEachern, M·M Leonard Costa, M·M Thomas E. Plausky, M·M Ronald Slone, M·M Edward G. Enos, Jr., The Dowling Family, M·M Thomas Bullio, M·M John H. Gray, Anonymous. NANTUCKET SI. Mary $100 M·M Edward Metcalf, M·M John J. O'Neill, M·M Robert Mooney, Mary Holmes, Lucille Hays, M·M John Hallett; $50 M·M Richard Sylvia, M·M Kenneth McAuley, M·M Stephen Kotalac, M·M Norman Gauvin, M·M Paul Mottern; $35 M-M Richard Ryder, M-M Sidney Conway; $30 M·M Michael Kalman, M·M Warren Valero; $25 M·M Richard Valero, Marguerite Maloney, M-M Theodore Kalman, M·M Albert Glowacki, Mary Louise Conway, Richard Leone, Martin Buglisl, Michael Belardo, M·M Donald Araujo, M·M David Dunham, Margo Howes, M,M Robert Garrabrant, M·M Stephen Albright, M·M Callie Pearce, M·M Stephen Lamb, Andrew Reis, M·M Dale Waine, M·M John Siavitz, M-M Frank Psaradelis Jr., M·M Edward King, M·M Sheldon Jenkins, Bridget ledwell, M·M James Egan Sr" M·M Brian Davis, M·M Glen DaSilva, M·M Andrew Costakes, M·M Fred Coffin, Molly Coates, M·M Norman Chaleki, M-M Vito Capizzo, John Brown M·M Harold Boehm, Bertha Angers_ $25 Joseph Abdallah, M·M William leVan, Anne Coffin, Mrs Frank Conway, M·M Peter Kaiser PROVINCETOWN SI. Peter $100 M·M Edward Dahill, M·M John Cook, Stormy Harbour Restaurant; $50 M·M Edward Carreiro, M·M J. Howard Days, M·M Napoleon E. Poyant; $35 M·M John Medeiros; $25 M·M T. Dahill, M·M James Roderick. POCASSET 51. John the Evangelist$420 M·M Arthur Hatch; $300 Richard Crespi; $250 M·M Robert Heath; $120 M·M James Lucas; $100 M-M Brendan Connell, M·M lawrence Brennan, M·M William Arnone, M·M Harold Shurtleff, M·M William Powers, AFriend; $75 M·M Robert Galante; $60 Mary Jacobson; $50 M·M Keith Songer, Virginia Anne Frappier, M·M Bartley O'Connor, Mrs. Manuel Britto, M·M Vincent Corsano, M·M Edward Coye, M·M Robert Brady, M·M Joseph Sullivan, Joseph Sullivan, M·M John Migliaccio, A Friend; $40 M·M Philip Kittredge, M-M Kevin O'Brien, M-M leo Jacobs; $35 Elizabeth Taylor; $30 M-M William Beninghof, Nancy Grygent, M-M Thomas Dungan, Mrs. Raymond lucier, M-M Victor Lindblom, Mrs. Arlene Sparrow. $25 Grayce Felman, M-M Robert Fallon, M·M Edward Grant, M·M Kenneth Pereira, M-M John lynch, M-M David Judge, M-M Mark Cummings, M-M Fred Dunbuy, M-M William Auffinger, M-M leonard Dexter, M·M William Desmarais, M-M Paul Galligan, M-M Ronald Crossman, M-M BenjaminDimlich, M-M William McGarr, Mrs. Herbert Schaefer, M-M Charles Costello, M-M Robert Gilmartin, Catherine Connelly, M·M Robert Primmerman, M-M Anthony Sansone, M-M Thomas Proudler, M·M Michael Harrington, Francis Mackedon, M-M Joseph Ciampa, M-M Howard Robinson, Mrs. Edward Carlson, M-M John O'Brien, June A_ Reilly, M-M Raymond LeBrun, Mrs. Lucienne LeBlanc, M-M Michael Kelly, M-M Gregory Folino, M-M Robert Berkeley, Elizabeth Mortimer. COTUIT/IIASHPEE Christ the Kina $200 M·M Robert EDosch, M-M Harold Alick; $125 M·M James Flyons; $100 M-M James R Waskiewicz, M-M Louis Chong, Anne Hanley, Mary Hanley, M·M Robert Jutstrom; $50 M·M Hubert Raymond, Mrs lawrence Gilligan, M-M Ronald Butler, M·M Carl EMueller, Mary M Bjork; $25 M-M Charles Kaplan, M-M William JHansen, M-M Frederick Regan, M·M Douglas Gaudette, M-M Richard ARaittio, M-M Nicholas Morris, M-M John Bafaro, Thomas Murphy; $200 M·M John J Sullivan WEST HARWICH Holy Trinity $300 M-M Maurice Houten; $100 M-M Joseph Cassidy, Sr, M·M Louis AChadik, M-M Louis PDrinkwine, Jr, M-M Cornelius J Driscoll, Margaret & Hester Griffin, M-M William Heffernan, M·M Edward Jala, Col William Leahey, Nathan TMowry, Margaret Trainer, Joseph Whalen, EJoan KWhitney, Mrs Donald Wolf; $75 M·M Francis Recka; $50 Elizabeth Ahern, M-M Joseph Barber, M-M John Bongers, Mrs Mary GBurke, William E Connors, Mrs Ralph Cummings, M-M Norman Dagenais, M-M Robert F Flynn, M-M Edward Fontaine, M-M Ernest THoUis, M·M Carmelo Lociciero, M·M Herbert Maxwell, M·M Albert Musto, M·M William McShane Jr, M-M Charles McVay, M-M John Ormond, M·M R Terrence Russell, Alice Saudade, Mary Sylvia, Rose Sylvia, Alfred Thomson, Catherine B Tobin, M-M Russell Wedge, Mrs Frank Welch; $40 Marian Macaulay, M·M Lawrence J O'Connor; $35 Mrs Dorothy Desrochers, M-M JHarry Long; $30 William &Elizabeth Hubbard, M·M Edwin Roderick, Adaline Wetherbee $25 M-M Raymond Alvey, Mrs Gertrude Baker, M·M Michael Barczak, M-M Julio Barrows, M-M Paul Bedard, M-M Ronald Blanchard, Mrs Amy LCarboneau, M-M Michael Chilinski, M·M Harry Collings, M-M Lawrence J Conroy, M-M William Conway, M-M Clifford ADaLuze, M-M Leo H Dauphinais, Anthony F Donnell, Mrs Margaret Downey, Mrs Andrew Drysdale, M-M Leonard WDutille, M-M James PEgan, M-M Alan Ford, M-M Stephen Ford, M-M Robert Garofalo, M·M Joseph Gilmetle, M-M Valere Godbout, M-M James Gomes Jr, Mrs Robert Gott, Mrs Elizabeth Halloran, M-M Richard Hazelhurst, Ms Agnes Hennes· sey, Mrs Grace Hurst, Mrs George Jensen, M-M Patrick Kelleher, Angela Lynch, Helen 0 Mardsen, Anne 0 Martin, Mary TMartin, M-M John Mero, M-M Paul Murray, Mrs William McColgan, Mrs Dorothy Nelson, M-M Thomas Ogborne, Mrs Julienne O'Keefe, Mrs George O'Malley, M·M Rufus Pina, Anna Raftery, M·M Clement Smith, Mrs Francis J Smith, Mary FStevens, M-M Thomas Sullivan, M-M Eugene Valliere, M-M Jan Vandenberge, Lucille Waiver, Mrs Cha~es Williams, M-M Roland Williams .$200 Catherine F George, M-M Paul McKenna; $150 M-M A Francis Finnell; $100 Cecilia Barrett, Elizabeth Batons, Jane Britton, M-M Edwin Burke, Frances CGeorge, Daniel & Irene Manning, M-M Walter Mason, M·M Michael Monahan, M-M Alexander Savieli, M·M Robert Tassinari, Elizabeth C Thomason, M·M Wallace Turzyn, M-M Claude Sproule; $75 M-M William Brophy, M·M Michael Walsh; $50 Mrs Howard EClark, M-M Paul Cuddy, Gertrude Oean, M·M Kenneth Durling, M-M Gerald Duwors, M-M Raymond Fournier, M-M Frank Matrango, Patricia Navin, M-M Charles Samko, Margaret Valencia; $40 M-M Roger Cahill; $30 Mrs Ethel Albiani, M-M William AGreen $25 M·M George Ambrose, Marie Brenner, M-M Edward Chaput, Francess K Chilinski, M-M David Conlin, Mrs Dorothy FCrossen, M-M Francis J Crowley, M-M John Daluze, M-M Joseph Demango, M-M Edward TDonnelly, M·M Wa~er VDoucette, M-M John Eastman, M-M Joseph Fernandes III, M-M William L Flynn, M-M Thomas PFuce, Betty MGerry, M-M August Glaser, M-M Stanley Gonsalves, M-M William Grant, Frances VKelly, M·M John EKelly, M-M Adrien L'HeureuI, Mary McKeon, Mrs Mildred Mazanec, M-M William J O'Donnell, Mrs Francis O'Neill, M-M Vincent Roscio, Raymond J Rose, Evelyn Savini, Michael J Sheridan, M-M James Supple Jr, Marie Walsh, M-M Francis Woelfel, Christine Wood EOGARTOWN 51. Elizabeth $400 Rev_ George FAlmeida; $100 SI. Elizabeth Guild, Welch Electric Co., Philip Walsh; $75 Mrs Wa~er Smith; $50 _Mertco & Associates, M-M Donald Maguire, M-M Lauress Fisher, M-M David Gazaille, M·M Jeremlls V,e"a, M-M Albert Sylvia Jr, Mrs Alfred Doyle, GAlbet Kent, Arnold Andrade, Edgartown Hardward, Dukes County Savmgs Bank, Wells Oil Service, M-M Ronald Muckle; $35 M-M Antone Bettencourt, M-M Freeman Willoughby, M-M Wa~er Knapp, M-M John Pine, M-M Edwin Gentle Jr, Charlo~e Mede"os, Stuart Fuller, Sh"ley Hamby; $30 Jacqueline Pimentel, Mrs Anna Hoglund, M-M Michael Bettencourt; $25 LaBell Plumbing & Healing, M-M Arthur Lindberg, M-M John Norton, M-M Joseph Mello, M-M Eugene Belisle, M-M Ronald Chambers, M·M Edward Belisle, M-M Gordon Bates, Mrs Philip Norton, Mrs Albert Prada, Mrs Sophll Campos, Mrs Mi~on Wright, Mrs William Wray, Katherine Si\,edd, Mallon H,ggms, Mrs Margaret O'Neill, M·M Norman Rankow, Mrs Manuel Correllus, Mrs Ddeama Sliva, Mrs George Willoughby ORLEANS 51. Joan of Arc $50 Theresa Counihan, M-M Donald Walwer; $40 Donna M Faivre CHATHAII Holy Redaemar $300 Association 01 the Sacred Hearts; $250 Richard & Cecile Maranhas; $10 Mrs Robert Wolin, J. Donald & Mary 0 Plunketl, Constance MGormley, Anonymous; $75 M-M Richard Griffin; $60 M-M Vmcent LeBlanc; $50 M-M Paul Brown, M-M Thomas Gogan, Mrs Charles GGritis, Margaret Murphy, Mrs Kenneth Bloomer, M-M Joseph Ahern, M-M Joseph VO'Connor, M-M John H Clavin $25 M-M Paul StJohn, M-M John Dominic, Helen TMcKeon, Elaina Whelden, Eleanor Lacaillade, M-M Henry Murphy, Ida Galligan, M·M DavidErwin, Harold N Scheurer, Marie Cronin, M-M Gerard Barry, Joseph & Rita Reynolds, M-M James Stratlco, M-M Paul Dubovik, Mrs Alna Ford, M-M Frank Dresser, M-M John PD'lon, Edward & Barbara Mahoney, The Allen Family, Albert JDrueding, Mrs Walter JFord Jr, M·M Paul Mansuy, M-M Gary Hackett, Jennie Roderick $100 M·M WThomas Whitely, Richard Klein, Lorraine P Rollins; $75 M-M William Collins, Richard J Rochette; $60 Mrs ECecelia Jackson; $50 M-M Albert 0 Richard, M-M George MacLean, Jr., M-M James Gnffin; $25 Katherine DaVino, Mrs Jerimy Smoller, M-M Richard Monahan $4000 Holy Redeemer Bingo; $500 Holy Redeemer St Vincent de Paul; $400 Sacred Hearts Fathers Holy Redeemer; $300 M-M Thomas McHale; $200 M-M Clement J Coleman, M-M David MO'Hara, M-M Robert MByrne; $185 M-M Joseph Anderson; $150 M-M Thomas McGrath, Mrs Albert Doherty; $100 M-M Edward Forgeron, Henry Welch, James RDeignan, M-M William Brennan, 1st Communion Class, M-M Andrew Scherding, M-M James Enright, M-M Edward Smith; $60 John M Ford, Mrs Robert Cook $50.M-M Leonard Fougere, M-M Paul L Fougere, M-M Douglas Wells, M-M Daniel Lavach, M-M Mark SylVia, Mrs Rolff Campbell, M-M Eugene Kissel, M·M Herbert J Bober, M,M Joseph Forbes; $45 Martin McHugh; $35 M-M Thomas Sparks; $25 John Antonuccio, Mrs Jeaqn Malahan, Mrs Doris Watson, M-M Charles CKenney, Amelia L Allen, M-M Thomas Philpott, M-M Thomas Maher SANDWICH Corpus Christi $400 M-M Michael De Nortio; $350 Rev_ James ACalnan; $250 M-M Dante FGallerani; $200 M·M Thomas G Judge Jr, J Leo McCarthy, M-M William H Mitchell, M-M Albert J Dkiriu$, Anonymous; $160 M-M John J McDonald; $150 Patrick E Murray; $125 M-M Joseph Sciacca, M-M Richard GVincens, M-M Ca~ EWatters; $100 Lawrence EBalboni, Agnes L Bilby, Katherine E Bilby, M-M Joseph MCarpenter, M-M Richard J England, M-M Robert J Fitzpatrick, Clarence J Kilgallen, M-M Michael AMcNamara, M-M Eugene LMaleady, M-M Richard FNoonan, Robert LO'Malley, M-M Robert J Price, M·M Martin TPutnam, M-M James FRadloff, M-M Francis WVan Nostrand, M-M John AWegman, M-M George 0 Williams, M-M Henry AZanell6; $75 Peter JCooke, III, M-M Francis JFleming, M-M Frank 0 Haley, AFriend; $60 M·M Henry J Roul, AFriend; $50 M-M Michael EAndrews, M-M George ABaker, M-M Robert BBaron, Agnes TBlanchard, M-M Bertrand FBoulay, Mrs John J Burke, M·M Benjamin H Colonero, M-M Milton RCook, M·M George VCol, M·M Grant MFisher, M-M lloyd AForsyth, M-M Justin WGeorge, M-M John J Gillis, Mary FGoswell, M·M Joseph S McCarthy, M·M Francis J McCusker, M-M Patrick L McDonnell, M-M John M Mitta, M·M John F Murphy, M·M Robert S O'Brien, M-M Paul J O'Connell, M-M Leon J Pistone, M·M Earle C Rich, M-M Antonio Rigazio, Or & Mrs Sabino J Rizzo, Rosemary PSweeney, M-M Robert ESwifl, M-M Richard JSymonds, Anna MTokarz, M-M James PWalsh $45 Winifred RTobin; $40 M-M FDow Clark; $35 Jean Cugno; $30 M-M Wa~er RAlvezi; $25 M-M Neil WAllison, M·M Albert ABazinotti, Joseph FBazzinotti, M·M Edward ABrennan, M·M John VCahalane, M-M Daniel JCarey, M-M George WChapman, Theresa PChisholm, Stephanie ACornick, Olga MConsoni, M-M Ralph J De Cubellis, M-M John RDesmond, M·M James WDoherty, M-M John J Donovan, Mary E Dugan, M-M John J Ewing. M·M James J Fair Jr, M-M William J Farrell, Rosemary Flick, Katherine I Flinker, Lucy NFonseca, M·M Joseph PGreene, Thelma GHeddy, M·M Joseph FHennebry, M-M Thomas AKennedy, M-M FrancisJ Kohn, Mary RLeGwinn, MrsV.Lesperance, Katherine FMalley, M·M William M Martin, M-M Gregg RMassard, M·M John FMcHugh, M-M Wa~er KNoel, M-M William FO'Connell, M-M Kevin FO'Connor, Raymond AOliver, Yone Oliver, Mary L Pa~rineir, M·M Columbus J Pasteris, Victor Pasteris, M-M lloyd WRaymond, M-M Paul R Regazio, M-M Chester A Rich, Mrs Chester Rich, M-M Richard J Rivoira, M-M George WStreeter, M-M John PTassinari, M-M Rod PValentini, M-M Richard P

WMe

$600 M-M Owen Gaffney; $300 M-M Richard Bradley; $250 M-M William FMulcahy; $100 M-M Victor M Devme, M-M Gerard FGoodwin, M-M Paul M O'Brien, Anonymous; $75 Mrs John Handrahan, M-M Robert G Quinn; $60 A Friend; $50 Charles M Chase, Sr, M-M Donald V Cianciolo, M-M Henry J Graebener, ElleenT Kudera, Joseph AKudera, M-M Gerard EMacDO/lald, M-M Leo RManning. M-M Paul BMcKane, M-M Richard ENycz, M-M Wa~er POldham, Jr, M-M James HSibson, M-M Richard £'Tavares; $45 M-M Charles HParks; $40 AFriend; $35 Daniel & Rita McDonough, Anonymous; $25 M-M Mark G Bergeron, Ann CDoyle, M·M Paul RFeeley, M·M David PGagnon, Janine MGibbons, J James Hamlen, Mrs Paul F Klmb~lI, M-M CPatrick McKeever, June HMiller, Mrs Bruce RNichols, M·M Gerald J Swift, M-M'John HWIII,ams, M-M FrancIS AYoung, Mrs Carmel DiMaria BREWSTER Our Lady of the Cape $100 Annette Hailer; $25 Robert Swegart ATTLEBORO Holy Ghost $300 Constance Poholik; $55 Anterio Perreira; $40 Mrs Antonio Raposo; $35 M-M Fre6erick Proulx; $25 Mrs Annette Fanning, M-M larry Davidson, George Fredetle, Mrs louise laird, Charles lewis Jr, Mabel lewis, M-M Anthony Martins, M-M Frank Matrone, M-M Earl Sweet $500 M-M Kenneth Murphy, $125 M-M John DaSilva; $25 Mrs John Betty, M-M Joseph Brousseau, lorraine Cabral, Mrs Harry Yaghoobian ~ St. Theresa of the Child Jesus $300 In Memory of Helen Grady, S_ Attleboro Kof C; $200 M-M Ronald Bouchard; $150 Anonymous; $100 St. Theresa Confraternity of Christian Mothers; $50 M·M Arthur Boudreau, Anonymous, M-M Robert Coelho, M-M John McManus, M-M Antonio Pinto, M-M James Sweeney; $30 M-M Vincent Brennan; $25 M-M Paul Brillon, M-M George Fontaine, Mrs Joseph Gawlik, Anonymous, M-M James Hanley, M-M Anonymous, M-M Joseph Ledger, M-M Robert Maynard, M·M Thomas McBride, M-M Philip Ouellette, M·M David Paine, M·M E6ward Pion, Mrs Alfred Ratte, M-M Roger Turcotle $120 Anonymous; $60 Anonymous; $50 Anonymous, Mrs Rose Hagopian, M-M Russell LeBeau; $40 M-M Joseph Robichaud; $35 Anonymous; $25 M-M Albert Desvoyaul, Walter Foran, M-M Vincent Keane, Frad &Monica Maroon, M-M William Niquette, M-M Dennis Nolan, M-M Gerald Fricot, M-M David Weldon, Anonymous M·M Timothy Adams, M-M Claude Labossiere, M-M Norman Standring, M·M Robert Trahan $300 Anonymous; $100 Anonymous, M-M Robert Joubert; $50 In Memory 01 M-M D. Levesque, In Memory of Mr. Armand Levesque; $40 M-M Rudolphe Bergeron St. John the Evangelist $75 Mrs Thomas Blake; $50 M-M Oscar Frechette, Mary Anderson, M-M Gerard laCombe; 440 M-M Alfred Paille; $35 Helen Bruen, M-M Lawrence Coppola; $30 M-M Salvatore Ciccio; $25 Mrs Joseph Simmons, M-M Michael Simons, M-M louis Langelier, M-M Andrew Jelle, Mrs William DeAvellar, M-M Paul Coogan, M-M John Byrnes, M-M Paul Taylor, M-M David Adams, Charles McDermott, Henry McDermott $125 M-M John Braun; $50 M-M Fred Bartek, Janet Morrissey, Georgette Nelson; $30 M-M David Gibbs; $25 M-M William Bergevine, Major·Mrs J. T. Murphy, M-M Armand Beauregard, M-M Kenneth Brough $120 Or-Mrs David Ison; $100 M-M David Reed; $75 Dr-Mrs Richard Shea; $50 M-M Pasquale Lattari; $25 M-M David Carreiro, M-M Richard.Foster, M-M Donald Swift, M-M Richard Santos, M-M John Curry, Thomas Keane, Emeral Hanlon, Arthur Johnson, Mrs Rose Percy, M-M David Teleira, Mrs Irene Bolton, Judy Leaden, Keith Choquette, Richard Pimble $100 M·M George Cassidy, M-M Oscar Drinkwater, M-M Edward O'Donnell; $75 M-M Robert IIg; $60 M-M Richard Doherty; 440 Arlene Doherty, M·M Roland Frechelle; $30 Thomas Bolton $ M-M Harold Washburn; $25 Joseph N Castro St. Joseph $200 M·M Philip Bartholomew; $25 M·M Bruce Arpil, M-M Richard Bagwell, Sr/Sra Vidal Balcarcel, M-M Charles Dubuc, M-M Richard Hanley, M-M Roland Pariseau, M-M Ronald Simmons $25 M-M Richard Farmer St. Stephen $50 ConstrucliOn Design, Inc.. M·M J. F_ Farley; $25 M-M John Drazek Sacred Heart $100 M-M Robert Sirois; $75 M,M Theodore Daigneault; $50 M-M Robert Bartlett, M-M Albert Desilets; $40 M-M Lionel Pinsonneault; $30 M-M John leite, M-M Henry Larocque, M-M Gerard Desilets; $25 M-M John Adams, M-M Arthur Cloutier, M-M Peter Driscoll, M-M Andrew Gauthier, M·M Ernest Goulet, M·M William Larocque, M-M Kevin Mercier, M-M Norman Ouellette, M·M Alfred Weldon $50 M-M Noramnd Achin, M·M Richard Darsis, M-M Richard Deschenes, Mrs Hector Coutu. M-M Richard Hindle, M-M Gregory Pion, Mrs Lillian Seymour; $25 M·M Charles Deschenes, M-M Richard Dion, Doris Gagne, Mrs Gertrude Roy, M-M Brian Coyle, M-M James Ficicchy, Jr St.Mary $1200 William AStjohn; $125 M-M Robert Wessman; $120 Kathleen MSweeney; $100 M·M Hugh Donnelly, M·M Stephen Linfield, M·M Charle. RPeck III, M-M Mark HVanDenBerghe; $75 M-M Francis Leary; $60 M-M James Hall; $50 M-M Roland Cloutier, M-M Raymond Desautel, M-M John Devlin, Mrs Edith McCabe, M-M Francis Murphy, M-M Joseph Sultivan, Mrs Raymond Vandette; $45 M-M PhilipJ Clark, Sr; $40 M-M Normand Brisselle, M-M John Colhns, M·M Robert Goyette $36 Mrs Alan Waugh; $35 M-M Joseph Bourgeois, M-M Mark Levesque, M-M Alvin JSnyder; $30 M-M William Brunell, Mrs Laura Conti, M-M Thomas Desisto, M-M T. F. McCarthy, Sr, M-M Robert Scarlatelli, M·M Frederick Thorpe, M-M Allred Vanbever; $26 M·M Joseph Cabral; $25 M-M Joseph Arruda, Or & Mrs Robert GBedard, Mrs Lawrence Birch, M·M Merle Burtchell, M-M Fred Butterworth, M·M Orner Charron, M-M John Collello, Judy Colvin, M-M FranCIS Cote, M-M Robert Croteau, Mrs Gertrude Dalton, Mrs Patrick Doherty, M-M Howard Gaudelle, M-M John Gaumond, M-M Mark S Gilmore, M-M Louis GOUlet, M-M Hervet Gray, Jr, M-M Edward Hebert, M-M Paul Henau~, George J Jacobs Jr, Robert A Kelley Jr, Mrs Jeannette MKelly, M-M Joseph Kelly, M-M Raymond King, M-M Gerald LaFontaine, M·M PaullaFalla: M·M William Lamar, M-M John Larner, M·M Normand Letourneau, Alice Littlefield, Janet CLynch, M-M Eugene Malgret. M-M Edward Mann, M·M Ronald CMeyer, Robin Miolen, Barbara Murray, M-M George Normand, M-M Roland Perreault, M-M Harold Schriever, M-M Richard Thimot. Mrs Edmund Welch, Mrs Jospeh Wilhington MANSFiElD St.llary $140 M·M Daniel Sullivan; $100 Patncia Blye, M-M Lawrence Scanlon, M-M Orlando Souza; $50 Nancy Carroll, Mrs Raymond Cassidy, M·M Barry Breen, M·M Thomas ERogers, M·M Guy Tomase, M-M Anthony Vldello, M·M John Walgreen, M-M Bernard P,zura; $40 M-M David Lomartie; $35 M-M Marc St Jean; $30 M-M Joseph Souza Jr; $25 M-M Paul JDeGirolamo, Mrs Salvatore DeLutis, M-M James DeIter, M·M F.J. Ferney, Margaret Gardner, M-M John Hammond, M-M Philip Hatch, M-M Harry Harrington, M-M Robert Keirn, Mrs J.R_ Keough, Steven lamoureul, M-M Jeffrey La per, M-M Michael Lmdley, Josephine LoDico, M·M Alan JMcKenna, M-M Mark Mulvaney, M-M Gregory Nash, M-M Dommlc PoilluCCCl, M-M William Rose, M·M HSalerno, M-M Dennis Sawyer, M-M ThomasScarpellini, M·M Robert ESmith, M-M James Stokinger, M-M Paul Volpe, M-M Benny Wong $300 Peter Farnam; $200 Catholic Woman's Club; $100 M-M Thomas Markt. Or & Mrs Philip Sibilia; $75 M-M Thomas GClemens; $50 M·M Paul Ethier, M-M Kevin Jackson, M-M Wa~er Thomas; $30 Beatrice Mugtord, Rita Pascale, George Pomfret; $25 M-M Wilham Ad,e, Jr, Mrs Harry Alden, M-M Bonney Annese, M-M Donald Ardumo, Madehne CColhns, M·M Stephen Conroy, M·M Richard Devme, M-M Edgar Deviney, M·M Stanley Dudek, Mrs George Farnham, Mrs Donald Flint, M·M Paul J Gaughan, M-M Raymond Goddard, M·M Karl Hartmann, Jean Mygan. M-M Kennelh GMcDonald, M·M Lee RNunziato, M-M Gary Palmieri, Mary Ann Ross, M-M John J Silva, M-M Gerald Wright; $30 M-M Kevin Higgms; $25 M-M Alan Benson, Mrs Jonathan Carrol, M·M W. Paul Gnffm, M-M DaVid Rushlow. Jeffrey 0 & Karen L Laper $150 M-M Brian Healy; $50 M·M Andre J Charpentier; $35 M-M Alfred Turinese; $30 Mrs James F McMorrow; $25 M-M John DePalma, M-M Dennis Giokas, M-M William Higgins, M-M Michael Kitchen, Kevin O'Sullivan, M-M Ale18nderThompson, M-M David Tucker, M-M John Bolster, M-M Francis Rafferty, M-M Richard Scotland SEEKONK Our Lady of Mount Carmel $100 M·M Ralph Castmo, M-M John HElhs; $50 M·M James EBlythe, Mrs Una Bosworth, M-M Richard A Costa, M-M Alfred Quallrucci, M-M Robert Skurka, M-M J Roger V.,lIancourt, M-M Michael Durkay, M-M Wilham Heaney, M-M Paul-Jannetti, M-M Harold Messenger, M·M Alfred TMorris Jr, Dr & Mrs Peter Pizzarello, M-M James ERoberts, Mrs Cornelius Shackell, M-M Peter SWard; $40 M-M Michael O'Connell; $35 M·M George McGee; $30 M·M Leo Monn; $25 M·M Paul Armstrong, M·M WilIJam Bowen Jr, M-M Jellrey WCreamer, M-M Ronald Derr, M-M Walter Kelly, M-M Raymond Korkuc, M-M Henry FMachado Jr, Joseph MMello, Carl & Elizabeth Pmucci, LOUISe Russell, M-M Robert Rutko, M-M Nell Sullivan; $50 M-M John Furtado; $25 M-M Stephen Clegg St.Mary $120 Robert MAlves; $100 Robert &Jean Clillord; $50 Robert E& Lorella LGraveline, Dorothy and Lilian Reid, M-M Donald J Olivier; $40 Mrs William Figura; $35 Albert J &0 ALamarra, Jr $100 In Memory of Thomas EToppin; $30 M·M Norman Chicoine, M-M RIChard Comeau; $25 M-M Raymond Korkuc, Samt Mary's Prayer Group, M·M Neil Copes, M-M Edward Slattery, M-M Stephen Sevigny, M-M Frederick Theberge, Mrs Anne Sevigny $125 Or & M Aiel Macissac; $50 Knights 01 Columbus, Council lOS, Kevin & Brian Fisk; $35 M-M Stephen ESylvia; $25 M-M David Holden, Melissa & William Riley, Robert J Joyal; $50 M-M Robert 0 Besselle $80 Louise Legare; $50 M-M Daniel Hanlon; $25 Emma Legare, M-M Richard Mignacca NORTON St.Mary $100 Or M. Thomas Fay, Ethel Precourt; $50 M-M Neal F. Biron; $40 George Delio Rosso, Paul Varnum; $30 M-M Thomas B Howell, III, M-M Robert H Ouellette; $25 M-M Henry Alves, M-M Bryan Beattie, M-M Gerald FBrallon, M-M Janis C"ss, M-M Francis Ellard, M-M Paul FGriffin, Rick & Sheila Lincoln, Mrs Henry LeClaire, M-M Wa~er Messenger, Mrs Donald Nevius, M-M Robert APeloquin, M-M Andrew Principe, M-M Leo Schleicher, Robert Smith, M·M Frederick J Celeste $250 M-M Joseph EFernandes: $100 Vangie Fonseca, M-M Michael J Murphy, M-M Anthony T. Pires; $50 M·M Robert GBurkhart, M-M Eugene LCecere; $35 M-M Paul RGrenier; $30 M-M Jeffrey Brown; $25 M-M Ronald Almeida, M-M John Bartley, M·M Edward Beatty, M-M Paul DeLuca, Eleanor Higgins, M-M James Malloy, M-M Charles Marchese, M·M David J Moitoza, M-M Thomas O'Toole, M-M Richard Pires, M·M Albert 0 Ratcliffe Sr, M·M Edward CSheehan, M·M George Vinson; $25 M-M Kosta Jovanovic ATTLEBORO FALLS St.llark $100 M-M Raymond Pierson, Judge & Mrs Edward Lee, Or & Mrs Ronald Ciombor; $80 M·M Anthony Cipriano; $50 Anita Gendron, M·M Michael O'Connor, M-M Bernard Holmes, Or & Mrs Frank Masci, M-M Daniel Noreck, Janice Lowenstein, M-M Christopher Carges; $35 Eugene Touzin, M-M Laban O'Brien; $25 M-M Francis Chambers, M-M Carmen Piantedosi, M-M James Basque, M·M Raymond Ferrara, M-M Frank Pirri, M-M Theodore Winston, M-M Robert Landry, M-M Craig Forget, M-M William Walker, Jr, M-M Peter Mikulis, M·M David Humphrey, M-M Richard Reinbold, Leonard Pierce, M·M Richard Fisk, M-M James DiNitto, Mark & Sheila Fisher, M-M Richard Neely, M-M Thomas Gledhill $100 M-M James GConnor, M-M Kevin Judge, M-M James Swanson; $50 M-M Charles Roland, M-M Peter Cragan; $40 M-M Wayne Harrison; $35 M-M Emmett Ashe Jr; $30 M-M Gerald Larence, M·M • Edward Armon; $25 M·M Robert Seguin, M-M Gregory Smith, M-M Mark Shorrock, M-M Michael Davidson, Michael & Maureen Kummer, Mrs Joan Morse, M·M William Nangl~, Mrs Elizabeth Sturdy, M-M Robert AEverton $100 M-M Roger Turcotte; $50 M-M Richard Harris, Ms Linda Farrin, M·M Robert Mangiaratti, M·M Stephen Rothemich, M-M Thomas Gruppioni; $35 M-M Normand Pinsoneault, M-M Eugene Martha; $30 M·M John Priest; $25 M·M Richard Marcotte, M-M Robert Colleran, Mrs Claire Freeman, M-M James Davis III, M-M Michael Miller

$50 Miss Mary McDonough; $25 Mrs Susan Richards, M·M Alfred Dumas, M-M Larry Stack, M·M FranCIS Strzepka _ EAST TAUNTON Holy Family $50 Stanley SlaVICk, Paul W,lhams, Edward Fowler; $25 Anne Bettencourt, M-M Denms M·M Charles Perry Jr., M-M Douglas Perry, M-M Richard Rocha, M-M David St. Yves, M-M William Ventura, M-M Edmond Nadeau, Mrs. lekly Stevens. Perrau~,

NORTH DIGHTON St. Joseph $150 Nancy Martm; $100 M-M Raymond Monteiro, Mrs. Arthur Burgau~, Mrs. Paul Horton; $60 Mrs_ Thomas E. Bo"os; $50 Mrs_ Arthur Costa, Mrs. Norman laFrance, M-M Donald Scott, M-M Manuel Vargus, St. Joseph's Women's Guild; $45 M-M Oonald Cleary; $40 M-M Brendan lynch; $35 M:M Edward McGllhvary; $30 M-M George Hagerty, M-M Raymond Menard, Leo Duffy; $25 M-M Stephen Wllusz, M-M Gilbert Cambra, Joan Coelho, M-M Bruce Murphy, M-M Virgilio Perry, M-M Alec Rich, M-M Francis Torres, levite Carrier, M-M Joseph Coelho, Mrs. Richard Donahue, Josephine Ferreira, M-M Wilham Ferreira, M-M Joseph Jackson, M-M Wilham Johnson, M-M Kenneth leanues, Susan McGuirk, M-M Denms Mede"os, M·M Nelson Meunier, M-M Henry O'Connell, M-M Thomas Perkms, M-M Antone Rose, M-M William Wade. NORTH EASTON Immaculate Conception $365 Vincent l. Galvin; $250 M-M Robert Moulton; $200 Margaret Rafuse; $100 In Memory of John B_ Parkes, Buckley Family, Dr.lM R,chard Regnante, M-M Michael Peterson, M-M Donald Scarlata, M-M Ronald Turowetz, Anthony J. &Barbara Cerce; $80 M-M Wm. F_ Sullivan; $75 M-M Wm. O'Keefe; $50 M-M Donald Burke, M-M Wm. O'Connell, Elizabeth Knapp, M-M John Murphy, M-M Robert Stone, Mrs_ Charles McCarthy, Sr., M-M Edward La Belle, Mrs. John Connelly M-M Joseph Palano, M-M James F. Riley, M·M George Pratt, M-M J. Tremblay. ' $50 M-M Charles Felice, M-M Robert Matlhews, M-M Joseph Cleary, Mrs. August Arns, Jr., Isabelle Somerville, M-M John Fagan, M-M Alvaro Sousa, M·M Albert Corte, M-M Joseph Urciuoli; $40 M-M Martyn Lincoln, Miss C. McMenamy, M-M William Morse, M·M Robert Wooster; $30 M-M Glen lIacqua, M-M McCarthy, Jr.; $25 M-M George Knapp, M-M Ronald Neely, M-M John Santos, M-M Robert DiFabio, Joseph D. lawlor, Richard W. & Catherine Bodio, James E. DeCouto, M-M Robert DiCarli, M-M Arthur L. Beaudoin, M·M Michael Gavin, Joseph McGuiggin, M-M Joseph Giordano, M-M John Desmond. $25 M-M Joseph Kunz, M-M George Carter, Jr.. James D. Mullen, Jr.. Dorothy Mullen, Anna Craig. Clyde Craig, Mrs_ Harry Eastman, M-M Dominic Falzone, M-M Sabe Garjian, M-M Anthony Tersta, M-M Ralph Thomas, M·M Wilfred Roberge, M·M James Doherty, M-M Richard Tino, M-M John McEntee, Patricia Dahl, M-M John Ippolito, M-M John Gibbs, M-M Thomas Stone, John & Doris Downey, M·M lawrence Small, M-M Lewis Aries, Mrs. A. Urolatis, Hilda Almeida, M-M John Garca, Jr.. Michael Garca, M-M James Gallagher, Virgmia Roger, Mrs. Royal Rollins 11f, M·M Michael Boyle, M-M TJ. Kent. Jr.. M-M Jonathan Coe, M-M J. McAulille, M·M Wm Lupica, M-M W. Fulcher, M-M Bnan Hoffman, M-M Richard Coughlin, M-M John Goodman, Mrs. Robe~ larson, M-M Wm. Hicks, M-M Roy Howard, M-M Robert Drewniak, M-M John Papineau. SOUTH EASTON Holy Cross $100 M·M Albert Fleury, Joanne Ward; $60 M-M Daniel O'Reilly, M·M Joseph Walton; $50 M-M Lawrence Kelly, M-M Daniel Kinnally, M-M Donald Tuttle, M-M William Stares; $25 M-M Thomas Gentile, M-M Frederick Klppenham, M·M Joseph Derian, M-M John Fmning, Mrs. Bernard Pietrowski, Arnold Amirault, M-M Michael Ponticelli, M-M Henry Powderly, M-M Frederick lally, Daletha Waters, Janet Richardson, Mrs_ David Conrad. RAYNHAM St. Ann $100 M-M Edmund A_ Goodhue, Jr.. M-M Edward Albert, M-M Antenon Da Silva; $75 M·M George Gould, $60 M·M Oscar Vilali; $50 Christine A. Bo~on, Robert Davidson, M-M Robert Murphy, M·M Thomas McDermott, M-M James A. Stanton, M-M Francis Dunford; $35 M-M leo Champagne, M-M Paul Mello; $30 Robert Reddy; $25 M·M lawrence Frost, M-M Robert Gray, M·M Thomas Zaks, M·M Russell Martorana, Lawrence &Theresa Moniz, Mary O'Neil, Pauline Davidzuk, M·M John A. Furtado, M-M Mark Sheehan, Dorothy Champagne, Marguerite Kruczek, M-M Paul Pelletier, M-M Elmer Sargent. M-M John Hollaway. EAST FREETOWN St. John Neumann $50 Joseph Charbonneau. \

TAUNTON Immaculate Conception $40Carol A. Lees; $25 Eleanore Cadose, M-M Richard Hooben. Our lady of Lourdes $500 Rev. Arnold R. Medeiros; $100 Our Lady of Lourdes Whist Party Committee, Our Lady of lourdes Feast Committee; $75 Our Lady of lourdes School Children; $50 Alvera Shea, John Mede"os, Georgllnna Arruda, AFriend; $40 M-M Carlos Cabral; $35 M-M Alcides DaGraca; $30 AFriend; $25 Joseph Reis, M·M Herbert Tavares, Our Lady of lourdes Holy Name Society, Mary Terra, M-M Michael Carlos, M-M Richard King, Barbara Wordell, James & Patncla Reilly, M-M Antonio Loura, M-M George S_ Pmhe"o, M-M laurenio Raposo, Ida R. Crowninshleld_ St. Paul $40 In Memory of Albert E. Wilbur Jr.; $35 M-M Stephen Pansi; $25 M-M Elwood Shepard, M-M Charles Paul, M-M Timothy Gallagher, M-M Vincent Laffan, M·M Richard DeVincenzo, M-M Wilillm Rose, M-M Donald Beauvais, M-M John Young_ St. Joseph $600 Dr.lM Thaddeus Figlock, AFnend; $135 AFnend; $125 Stephen Linhares; $100 John J. Custova, AFriend; $50 M-M William E. Dias, M-M StanleyS. Pawlowski, Anna Champney, AFriend; $25 Judith Cooperstein, M·M Wilham A. Floor, Sr.. M-M Wilham McGann, Paul Blain. M-M Herman Thompson. $100 M-M Robert P Hartung; $60 Louis Chaves; $50 M-M David Charlsworth; $25 M·M Joseph Rickells St. Anthony $120 Rev. John A. Raposo; $100 Nunes Family, John Ferreira; $50 Hila Wyatt; $40 M-M James Pereira; $30 M·M IdlIJo Nunes, M-M Orlando Pinho, Urania Jacinto, M-M Raymond D. Beaulieu; $25 M-M Joseph C. Vaz, Herbert Lima, M·M John Andrade, M-M George Abreau, Jr.. Manuel A. Silve"a, Anthony Burgess, M-M Antonio Amaral, M-M Jose DeMello, Ren'aldo Aschiero, M·M Frederick Rocha, Maryanne Jacinto. Sacred Heart $100 Dr.lM Gerald J. Doiron, Mary Kennedy; $50 Francis Boudreau, Joseph Coelho, Andrew Mulhern, Margaret Sllvan; $40 Tony Babbour, M-M Michael Pearson, M-M Thomas Stevenson; $35 M-M l. Severino; $25 Rosemary Allison, M-M Fernando Amaral, M-M Stephen Boynton, Shirley Brady, Mrs. P. leo Brady, M-M Eugene Braga, "1-"1 J. Leo Conroy, M·M Robert Crowley, Mrs. Chester Dewhurst. M·M Richard Dusseau~, Grace Ganzer, M-M Thomas Halloran, M-M James Hebert. Helen's Hair Studio, Matlhew Kuczek, "1-"1 Thomas McMorrow, Evelyn McCrohan, M-M Robert Malone, M-M Franklin Marchand. M-M Albert Mendonca. M-M Richard Peylon, M-M George Rogers, Mary Ann Rogers, M-M Paul Sabin. M-M Gilbert Stringer, Wilham C. Leger, M·M Robert Lund, M-M Joseph Tavares, M-M Jimmy Carroll, M-M John T. Colton, M·M Francis O'Neill, Stacy's Beauty Salon. St. Jacques $110 Glona & Helen Hudson; $50 M-M Wilham Grundy, Paul Ouellette; $35 Jeanne Richard; $30 M-M David Barre"os. M-M lawrence P. Courcy; $25 M-M Bernard Berube, "1-"1 Jeffrey Connon. M-M Laurent DesrOSiers, Louis Donnelly, M·M George Frates, Mrs_ Wllfnd "11101, M-M Walter Nunes. M-M Roger Renaud. Holy Rosary $100 M-M William Powers, Ally. & Mrs. Thaddeus Strojny & Family; $40 Bertha M. Bolster; $35 Ally. & Mrs_ Richard Patenaude & Family, M·M Mallhew Stelmach; $25 Emily Bourque, M-M Henry A. Bzdula, Charles Cardoza & Adam, M-M Chnton Foss, M-M Joseph W..Gorczyca, M-M John Holland & Family J. Kelliher, Katherme Kiernan, Kevm Kiernan, Julia Kula, Anita Maciejowski, Esther PataSim &Family. Emily Pelczarskl &Family, M-M FranclSPelczarski & Family, M-M Michael Sylvia, M·M Stanley J. Tokarz. St. Mary $200 Mrs. Fred George, Dr.lM John Fenton; $175 M-M Richard Bentley; $110 M-M John Gonzals; $100- Catherine McCarthy, M-M Robert P. Murphy, Clara O'Keele; $75 M-M Philip Farrell, Wilham W_ Smith; $50 M-M John Lawson, PatnclI McSweeney, Mercule & Celia Meunier, M-M Joseph Medeiros; $35 Ruth Dras, M·M Charles Fitzsimmons; $30 M·M LouIS Raposa, M-M Oonald Cole. Mrs. Harold Galligan, DennIS McSweeney, Mrs_ l. Senecal. Mrs. James Vernazza_ $25 M-M Charles Cronan, M-M Thomas Crowley. Mrs. Thaddeus Figlock, Joseph E. Flood, M-M Albert Fonseca, Mrs. Joseph Fournier, M-M Thomas Granfield, Mrs. William Hansen, M·M Normand Hudson, Doris Magee. M-M George Milot. M·M Edward McGaughran, Momca McGuire, M-M James Moran, M-M Gerald Peterson, Annie Salisbury, M-M James F_ SllvlI, "1-"1 Mark Terra, lillian Theroul, M·M Robert Thigpen. M·M Geral<! Tripp, M-M Robert Walsh, Thomas DiVmcenzo, M-M Raymond Boffettl, Louanne Laughlin, M-M WllI,am McGlynn, M·M William Silva, M-M John Alphonse, James Chiesa, Jeannette P. Collis, M·M John laughlin, Patricia McNearney, M-M Henry Murray, M-M Russell Seekell, M-M Chester Stankiewicz, The Waldron Family. FALL RIVER Holy Name $150 M·M Steven Pereira; $50 In Memory of Frank 1. Pacheco, Grace Taylor, Mrs. Eleanore Howard, Ruth & Elizabeth McArdle, M-M Jan Plelraszek, M·M DaVid T. Sullivan, M-M Alex Cabrales, M-M LouIS Camara, M-M Santi DiRuzza, M-M Frank A Connolly, Jr; $40 Marcy C.. Emily & Lorena Pacheco; $35 M-M Angelo Stavros, Helen V. LornaI, Malle AMurphy; $30 M-M William Keating; $25 Grace MMeSSier, Barbara JOliv,er, Damel PMedeiros, Mrs Russell CDuellete, M-M Thomas Leamy, M·M Armel Audet. Alvaro Cabral, Margaret MMcCaffrey, Ellen MLeshan, M-M Bllan Bentley, Mrs Wlliam Higgins, M-M Fred Plasskl, Marguellte C. Picard, M·M Donald flogers, M-M John FCoons, M-M Peter Pacheco, M-M Raymond Medeiros, M-M William J Paul, M·M Thomas Norton, Jr, Mrs Everetl GCrowley, M-M Charles Wills, M-M John JFurze, Mrs Arthur Shea, M-M John Kirkman, M-M Joseph Correia, Mary R & Anne EHamp.ton, M-M Jules Jacob, M-M Rene Garant. Lynn Garant. M-M Raymond HGariepy, M-M John D'Ambrosio, M-M Robert Hebda, Mark Wills, M-M John Azevedo $300 Ally. & Mrs Fredellc Torphy; $200 In Memory 01 Raymond J Clancy; $150 In Memory of Paul Shurko, Or & Mrs Rene Nasser; $120 M-M Henry JPleiss, Jr; $100 Mrs William ATorphy, M-M Herman R Mello; $50 M·M Joseph Callahan, Leah Ferland, M·M William Renaud, M-M George Flanagan, M-M Nadilio Almeida, M-M Charles Hodkinson; $40 Theresa Ryan; 30 M-M Joseph Delaney, In Memory 01 Frank & Maria Isabel Medeiros; $25 M-M Anthony Coelho, Mrs Warren Wood, Mrs Thomas AO'Donnell, M-M I Paul Lanzisera, Mrs WFarrell, M-M Maurice Ouellette, M-M Jean Louis Beaupre, M-M Lawrence Como, M-M George TLuzltano, Madeleine Hamel, M-M John PMarlin, M-M Ronald EGagne, M-M John GarCia, Mrs Edward Murphy Santo Christo $451n Memory of Manuel Rezendes; $40 M-M Alexandre Pereira, M-M Antonio Casimo Santos, M-M Jose Laureno Tavares; $35 M-M Nuno MAraujo; $30 Anonymous, M-M Norbert ACarvalho, M-M Raul Viveiros & Family; $25 Anonymous, M-M John RCabral, M-M Donald RChabot, M-M Claudio Chaves & Daughter, Beatrice Costa, Carlos Regerio, M-M Thomas Simmons, M-M Joao Rego Sousa, Maria L Gouveia St. Jean Baptiste $250 M·M Donald Vezina; $100 M-M Bernard Paquette; $50 M·M LOUIS RBouchard, Mrs Dvila Caron, M-M Raymond Francoeur, M-M Charles Grinnell; $35 AFriend of Catholic Charities; $25 M·M Gilbert Canuel, Anonymous, M·M Ronald Menard, M·M Damel Silvia; $400 Germaine Caron; $60 St. Vincent de Paul Society, St. J. Bte. Conference; $40 Marie Guilmette; $25 M-M louis Goyette, M-M Manuel Pimental, M·M Richard Andrade

Special Gift and parish listings will continue to appear weekly-in the order received by the printer until all have been listed.


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