t eanc 0 VOL. 27, No. 23
FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS
FALL RIVER, MASS., FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1983
She knows the diHerence between Jesus Bread and people bread so she received her first communion at St. Bernard's Church, Assonet. Story, more pictures on page 9. (GaudeHe Photo)
$8 Per Year
2
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 10, 1963 _.-~
~' .~
MSGR. TANSEY
FATHER COLLARD
FATHER dos REIS
FATHER HIGGINS
FATHER WALDRON
Seven mark golden, silver jubilees
June is an important month anniversary is planned by Msgr. States ;and was assigned as for seven priests of the diocese. Tansey, who retired from the associate pastor at St. Michael's pastorate of Immaculate Con Five will celebrate golden jubi Church, I Fall River. He served at St. Michael's for lees.· and two will mark silver ception parish, Fall River, in eight years, then becoming asso , March, 1977. jubilees of priestly ordination. Today is the golden jubilee Dean of the Fall River deanery ciate at 'Our Lady of Mt. Carmel; day for Msgr. Arthur Tansey Of.the diocese from 1961 until his New Bedford. In 1955 he was and Fathers William Collard, retirement, Msgr. Tansey also named pastor at St. Anthony 'of, Padua, Fall River, where he re- . John Higgins and Howard Wal served on Cape Cod and in Taun dron. All were ordained June 10, ton, Attleboro, North Dighton mained :until his retirement in ' . 1933 by Bishop James E. Cassidy and New Bedford. From 1950 to 1981., in St. Mary's Cathedral. During ,.his years at. St. An, 1965 he was stationed at St. Mary's Cathedral, as associ~te thony's ;he supervised construc Tomorrow is the 50th anni versary of Father dos Reis' or pastor until 1956 and as rector tion of:a new church building, dination by Bishop Guilherme A. from that time until his appoint~ dedicated in 1969 by retired Bishop James L. Conl'lolly. Guimaraes at the Cathedral of ment to the Immaculate Concep Angra, Terceira, Azores. tion pastorate. : Father HigginS He also served as chaplain at AI1 the golden jubilarians are Fathe~ Higgins, pastor emeri retired from active ministry. Taunton State Hospital from 1934 to 1941, as a Navy chaplain tus of ~t. Mary's parish, Mans Msgr. Tansey and Fathers Col lard. and dos Reis reside at, the for two years during World War field, w~ere he served from 1966 until his retirement in 1978, will Catholic Memoria.! Home, Fall 11 and for many years as diot;e be hondred at the parish on River, while Father Higgins san director of social action pro grams. He was named a domestic Sunday. A concelebrated Mass makes his home in South Attle at noon: will be followed by a boro and Father Waldron in prelate in 1964. Taunton. .Born in Fall River Oct. 12, reception in the parish hall host Marking silver jubilees are 1906, Msgr. Tansey attended ed by s;t. Mary's Catholic Wo Father Luis Cardoso, 'pastor of public grammar school and man's Club. All are welcome to , Espirito Santo Church, Fall B.M.C. Durfee High School. He the event. River, and Father Henry Kropi~ prepared for the priesthood at Born April 4, 1908, in New wnicki, pastor of" St. Casimir St. Charles College, Catonsville, Bedford,: Father Higgins prepared Church, New Bedford. Father Md., and St. Bernard's Semin for the p1riesthood at St. Charles, Cardoso was ordained June' 15, ary, Rochester, N.Y. Catonsviile, and St. Bernard's, 1958 by Bishop D. Manuel Car Rocheste'r. After service at Sa Father C!>llard' valho at Angra. cred Heart parish, Oak Bluffs Father Collard will mark his and Our: Lady of the Isle, Nan Father Kropiwnicki was or dained in Poland June 22, 1958. jubilee with' family members. tucket, he was stationed at St. He 'was formerly. co-chaplain, of James parish, New Bedford for Msgr. Tansey A private celebration of his the Catholic Memorial Home, seven years. retiring in 1972 from the pastor Four ~ears as a World War ate of St. Theresa's parish, New II army ~haplain followed, then Bedford, to the chaplaincy post. service *t three Taunton area The jubilarian was born in parishes, I St. Mary, Immaculate Beginning at 8 tonight, the Fall River Dec. 8, 1905. He at Men of the Sacred Heart will tended city schools and studied Concepti?n and Holy Family. sponsor an all-night vigil of re. for the priesthood at the Petit In 1957 Father Higgins became paration to the Sacred Hearts of Seminaire in Montreal and St. the first: pastor of St. Augus Jesus and Mary. tine's, Vineyard Haven, then Mary Seminary, Baltimore. To take place at Sacred Hearts His first assignment was at went to lOur Lady of the As Church, Fairltaven, the vigil will Notre Dame Church, Fall River, sumption; Osterville, and St. begin with aMass of the Sacred followed by nearly three years Mary, Mansfield. Heart and end at 8 a.m. tomor of service as an Army chaplain F;ather Waldron row with a Mass of the Immacu in World War 11. Subsequently i late Heart. Father 'Waldron will be among ,he was associate pastor at St. At the first Mass members Roch's parish, Fall River,. re- honored guests at Father Hig of the men's organiafio'ri····will turned to Notre Dame;-- 'the'ii _.. gills"celeipr'ation on Sunday. He recite an act of consecration. served in New Bedford until his will mark his own anniversary During the night there will be appointment to the Memorial at a Ma~s for family members at 7:30 Sunday morning at Sa Home' chaplaincy. exposition of the Blessed Sacra cred Heart Church, Taunton. ment, conferences, the oppor Father dos Reis "I am ~rateful for being in the tunity to receive the sacrament priesthood so long," he com of penance, recitation of the 15- . Celebrating his anniversary decade rosary, a midnight privately, Father dos Reis, who mented. ! candlelight procession, a holy was born in St. Michael, Azores, A Taunton native, borIt- Oct. hour and reading of the papal Feb. 20, 1910, will look back on 7, 1909, he graduated from St. bul1 declaring 1983 a holy year. a priesthood that included ser Mary's High School in that city All are welcome to attend all vice in the Azores from the time and attended' Providence Col or any part of the program. Re of his ordination until 1938, lege before entering St. Ber freshments will bj! availa~le. when he came to the United nard's Seminary.
All-night vigil
His assignments after ordina tion took him to St. Patrick's parish, Wareham, twice to St. Francis Xavier, 'Hyannis, and 'to Sacred Heart, Taunton, St. James, New Bedford, St. Thom as, More, Somerset, and St. Mary, North Attleboro.
In 1957 he became founding pastor and builder of Our Lady of Victory Church, Centerville, and in 1964, returning to St. Thomas More, he supervised con struction of 'a new church fOt: that parish. He retired from ac tive ministry in 1978.
Two silver jubilees Father Cardoso will celebrate first at Our Lady of Health, Fall his silver jubilee with a Mass of River, as pastor and then return thanksgiving at 4 p.m. Sunday, ing to Espirito Santo in 1979. June 19. A banquet will follow at Father Kropiwnlcki Venus de Milo restaurant, Swan Father Kropiwnicki will con· sea, with Father John J. Oliveira, Espirito Santo associate pastor, celebrate a Mass of thanksgiving at 4 p.m. Sunday, June 26, fol among speakers and Father Jo seph M. Costa as master of cere- lowed by a banquet at Thad's monies. . Steak House, New Bedford. Born March 24, 1932, in Kuc 'Among Mass concelebrants zyn, Poland, he entered Warsaw will be Father Cardoso's brother, Father Antonio Cardoso, a priest public schools and after gradua on the island of Faia\, Azores. A tion from col1ege in 1952 enter sister, Miss. Maria Cardoso, will ed St. George's Seminary, Bia accompany Father Antonio and lystok. He was ordained by Bishop they will remain in the United Wladyslaw Suszynski for the States for a month's visit. diocese of Vilnius, which is now Another sister, Mrs. Anna Freitas of Fall River, will be on in· Russia. Father Kropiwnicki hand as will two brothers from then attended the Catholic Uni versity of Lublin and served ,in Canada, John from Vancouver and Antonino from Richmond, many parishes, holding teaching positions. Coming to the United both in British Columbia. An other brother, Jose, will travel States in 1968, he made brief stays in Chicago and Buffalo, from Newark, Calif. then was assigned by Bishop Father Cardoso was born Oct. James L. Connolly to St. Casi· II, 1930, on Flores Island, mir parish, New Bedford. Azores. He studied for the priest Later he served at Our Lady hood at the seminary of Angra. of Fatima and St. Anne parishes, Coming to the FaH River dio also in New Bedford, before re cese three months after ordina turning to St. Casimir. In addi tion, he served at St. John the tion to his pastoral duties, he Baptist and Immaculate Concep . has served as chaplain to vari tion parishes, New Bedford, and ous Polish organizations and has at Espirito Santo, Fall River, as taught Polish language and cul associate pastor before serving ture classes.
FATHER CARDOSO
FATHER .KROPIWNICKI
Chinese 'Catholic
held 27 years
VATICAN CITY (NC) -
Pastoral delayed WASHINGTON (NC) A committee of U,S'. bishops pre· paring a pastoral letter on capi talism has announced a one· year delay in the issuance of a first draft. The committee, headed by Archbishop Rembert Weakland of Milwaukee, plans to issue its first draft in time for the November 1984 annual meeting of the National Confer ence of Catholic Bishops. The delay is to allow sufficient time for implementation of the bishops' new war and peace pas toral approved in early May. Archbishop Weakland also stated that the committee is changing the title of the letter from "Christ'ianity and Capitalism" to "Catholic Social Teaching and the American Economy." The archbishop said the new title "much more accurately defines the scope and content" of the proposed pastoral.
............. ..... ..;
GOD'S ANCHOR HOlDS
, ..........•...........
-
,
3
THE ANCHOR (USPS·54S·020). Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass. Published weekly except the week of July 4 and the week after Christmas at 410 Highland Aven. ue, Fall River, Mass. 02720 by the Cath· olic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription price by mall, postpaid $B.OO per year. Postmasters send address changes to The Anchor, P.O. Box 7, Fall River, MA 02722.
A
French-Chinese Catholic was re cently released from a Chinese labor camp after more than 27 years in detention, Vatican Radio has reported. The station said that Ray mond Ratillon, 49, son of a French father and a Chinese mother, left China April 8 for France, where his father still lives. Ratillon was arrested in Sep tember 1955 in Shanghai, China, during a wave of arrests of Cath olic clergy and laity, the report said. Also arrested at that time was Bishop Ignatius Kung Pin mei of Shanghai, now 82 and "still imprisoned for the faith," Vatican Radio said. From the time of his arrest until his release in March, Ra tillon was held in a labor camp on unspecified charges.
<D
THE ANCHOR Friday, June 10, 1983
OUR LADY'S
RELIGIOUS STORE
936 So. Main St., Fall River
32 Inch Candles For Parish Processions 11:00 To 5:30 Sunday Thru Saturday
Tel. 673-4262
CHILDREN HOLD CROSSES for CCD classrooms at blessing of new parish center and rectory at Our Lady of Victory Church, Centerville. From left, Deacons Timothy Des mond, Joseph Stanley and Oscar Drinkwater; Very Re~. Edward C. Duffy; Rev. Corne lius J. O'Neill; Bishop Daniel A. Cronin; Rev. James R. McLellan, Our Lady of Victory associate pastor (behind bishop); Msgr. John J. Oliveira. Inset, Rev. John A. Perry, Our Lady of Victory pastor. (Rosa Photo)
Professor c,ompares Italian., U.S. values
By Liz MacLean "Here, work is an end in itself. It is all-important. Even wealthy people continue to work. In Italy, however, the family unit, friends, people, are more impor tant. Work is seen as a means to make life comfortable, to im prove one's life. If this is ac complished, work is no longer needed." That's how Mario Giangrande, associate professor of modern languages at Stonehill College, North Easton, summarizes the difference between Italian and U.S. values. He teaches a Stonehill course on the place of Italians in Am erican life and has researched and lectured extensively on the subject, drawing on his own ex perience as a 20-year-old immi grant who came in 1956 from
Diocese of Fall River
OFFICIAL ASSIGNMENTS Rev. Joseph Maguire from Associate Pastor, St. Patrick Parish, Somerset, to Associate Pastor, St. Patrick Parish, Fal· mouth.
Ortona, Italy, to join his parents in this country. "My family would receive 'let ters from relatives and friends boasting of success in America. Occa~ionally gifts were sent. Stories of success were often ex aggerated or fabricated because those in America were eager for their faqtilies to join them." Such letters and gifts fostered a "myth of America," he said, with those in Italy imagining that lots of money awaited them in the new world and that the
REV. MR. PAUL M. SUL UVAN, SJ, the son of John and Jeanne I. Sullivan of St. Bernard's parish, Assonet, will be ordained to the Jes uit priesthood at noon Sat· urday, June 18, at Holy Cross College, Worcester, of which he is an alumnus. Rev. Mr. Sullivan entered the Society of Jesus in 1973. He did graduate studies at Boston College, Gonazaga University and the Jesuit School of Theology, Berk ely, Calif. He will offer his first Mass at 2 p.m. Sunday, June 19 at St. Bernard's.
streets were almost literally paved with gold. But once arrived, most immi grants found poor wages and in· ferior working' conditions, noted Giangrande. He said that he was more fortunate than most be cause he was able to take time to study English and then to en roll at Boston College. The only difficulties he en· countered, he said, came in ad justing to "weather, environ ment and architecture" and in making "all new friends."
THROUGH YOUR
WINDOW. AN INVITING
WHI1E BEACH.LOVEL Y
GARDENS AND GRASSY
LAWNS. TRADITIONAL
YANKEE CHARM.
SERENl1Y
,~D COMFORT. ACTI\Il7Y OR SECLU
SION IS YOURS AT
A WATERFRONT RESORT 6. SURF DRIVE FALMOUTH, MASS. 02540
(617) 548-3975
§Ve
WEEK OR ASUMMER ENJOY IT AT
CATHOLIC BOY'S DAY CAIP
f::'";:P;A;c~~141l)J
A Non Sectarian Camp for exceptional Boys and Girts
JULY 5.· AUG. 28
d-
".
Transportation Provided at Designated Bus Stops
Fall River, Somerset, Swansea, Westport. Dartmouth,
New Bedford, Fairhaven
CAMP 01 RECTOR: Father William Boffa with complete adult staff
Rev. John Ozug from Associate Pastor, St. Anthony Par ' ish, East Falmouth, to Associate Pastor, St. Patrick, Somerset.
PURPOSE - For the spiritual, educational, and recreational well-being of boys in this age bracket. To keep boys occupied in wholesome outdoor activities during the sum mer months. PROGRAM - Campers engage in all typss of athletic events and water safety instruction at our new pool.
Rev. Steven Furtado from Hospital Ministry, Charlton Memorial !Hospital, Fall River, to Associate Pastor, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish, New Bedford.
LOCATED AMID BEAUTIFUL ,SURROUNDINGS - in Westport. Private beach located nearby at Westport Harbor.
APPOINTMENT Rev. George ,Bellenoit from Associate Pastor, St. Mark Parish, Attleboro ,Falls, to Hospital Ministry, Charlton Mem orial Hospital, Fall River, with residence at Sacred Heart Rectory, Fall River.
$25.00Iwk..- Additional Savings for more than 1week.
All effective Wednesday, June 22, 1983
FOR IIFORMInOI or REI-ISTRlnO. FOllIS CILL 838-4375 or write Catholic Boy's Da, C. . or _ Day camp 573 AdamsYllle 1lOIII, WIItpart.
0Z180
THE ANCHOR.!....Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 10, 1983
the living wo,rd·
themoorin~
'Kudos The season of graduation is finally nearing
~ompletion.
For months colleges and universities have vied to offer prestigious personalities honorary doctorates. Board mem bers and influential alumni have scoured, the countryside for the biggest names possible in efforts to add luster to commencement ceremonies and, not incidentally, to attract television and newspaper coverage. Even high schools get into the act, attempting to add glamour to their proceedings by the presence of someone known beyond the pale of the local city .council. This time of year is a field day, above all, for politicos. From White House to Congress, from.governor's mansion to local precinct" graduation means notice for those whose job depends upon the whim of the voter. Especially those who think they" can read and write seek at any cost to get before the crowd. So often a politician seems to gain a certain credibility when pictured in the robes of acad emia. The whole process is becoming rather embarrassing, especially for schools, colleges ~nd universities wishing to be known as Catholic, with all that the adjective implies. It is somewhat anomalous for a Catholic college to award an honorary doctorate to a politician who supports' abortion. . It can be somewhat scandalous when a judge or other legal notable is honored by a Catholic institution despite having publicly ridiculed and denounced the basic moral teachings of the Catholic Church. Even on the high school level, it is shaming that the speaker should be an outspoken opponent of any aid whatsoever to parochial schools. No matter how much they desire publicity, Catholic schools on all levels should become more selective in their ·choice of people to honor publicly, either by award or, rhetoric. It is horrendous to think that on the one hand we ask Catholics to follow their moral conscience in the polling booth and on the other recognize in a very special way ' the politician who is the object of such a reminder. People in. public office or in any other position of note who openly oppose the church's' right to educate and to form moral conscience should not be flaunted before gradu~ ates, their families and friends as recipients of special honor. They do not cleserve such recognition from the church, interpreted of course as a sign of acceptance and "approval. From university president to high school principal, sincere efforts should be made not to embarrass .the church merely for the sake of a moment of media limelight. ' To be sure, some will feel that there is a dichotomy between, the person and his or her politics; who will say that they are recognizing the person, not his or her beliefs. Such thinking, although commonly used, simply begs the question. ' '
The church is not offering 'a spiritual buffet. She can only serve a fixed-price meal; she cannot change 'her menu' to appease particular appetites. It is about time for some of ~ur Catholic educators to take this into account when they plan their commencement exercises.
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER .published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River , 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, D.O., S.T.D. EDITOR FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATOR ~ev. John F. Moore Rev. Msgr. John J. Regan ~
I.eary Press-Fall River
'Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might.' Eccles. 9:10
Preparation for By Father Kevin J. Harrington For th~ past few months I have wor~ed with the Attleboro area mardage preparation pro gramgram; coordinated through the diocesan Office of Family Ministry under the direction of Ronald A, Tosti. This pr9gram has introduced me to a group of dedicated mar ried couples who devote much time and their considerable energy and talent to the worthy apostolate I of preparing engaged couples fbr the sacrament of matrimon~. ' ' The program consists of two four-hour sessions which include talks by five ,couples on such topics as communication, differ ences, finances, sexual intimacy and the sacrament of matrimony itself. Most of' the time, however, is spent on lexercises designed to assist the: engaged couples to apply the 'lessons communicated through tile talks. The Office of Family Mihistry provides a pre sentation on natural family plan ning and a priest speaks on the wedding -ceremony and on Hu manae Vitae, Pope Paul VI's en cyclical on' marriage. The nutnber of couples en gaged in [the program has in creased since the promulgation of . the Diocesan ,Guidelines on Marriage last Advent. Of course, mandatory pro
grams are usually entered into .the thought of sitting down for with less enthusiasm and open eight hours is unwelcome. The ness than are optional ones. typical questions are "Do we However, while many couples have to, Father?" or "Is there start out with grave misgivings, any way we can get out of this?" Interviewing couples after the their objections are usually dis pelled and ~he overwhblming program provides a refreshing majority find the marriage prep difference. Whereas their ex pectations were usually very aration program worthwhile. negative, they have found the A bond of trust and respect program to be very positive. usually develops between the Little time, (or instance, is married and engaged couples spent on ways of avoiding div with the latter' looking upon orce. Rather, most of the time those .already married as con goes to preparing couples for cerned people who want to help the stable and satisfying union the~ through an honest sharing that is the ideal of sacramental of experience. marriage. In the marriage preparation The positive feeling of shar program clergy and laity work ing the joy of young people anti as a team to fulfill a crucial cipating a life of intimate union need. The lived experience of with theilr spouses and their married couples has proved "'ir Lord abundantly rewards what .replaceable in the instruction and ever efforts are expended. . , preparation of engaged couples. Such shared' responsibility must not be seen as the clergy passing the buck to the laity. Problems might develop only ,if either fails to appreciate how crucial their working together is to the good of the program. As a parish priest I have the unique advantage of meeting with the engaged couples before arid after their involvement with the marriage preparation pro gram. No one likes to be told that he or she must do something. The months before a wedding • .o6t< 'oOUi<: HUS6I>NC' IF HE REALLY W'NTS are usually crammed with details 10 6E HELPED•• that must be at~ended to and
'"
Family Night
A weekly at-home program for families
sponsored by the Diocesan Office of Family Ministry
OPENING PRAYER Our Father in heaven, how grateful we are for being able to share together as a family. We pray especially for our grand· parents and ask you to bless them in a very special way. Thank you, Father, for making grandparents for us to learn from and for us to love. Amen.
TO THINK ABOUT • Grandparents are very special people in passing on the heritage of individual families. Families should make a conscious effort to spend as much time as possi· ble with grandparents that the children might foster their own sense of identity and worth. It's easy to imagine Jesus visiting his grandparents, Joachim and Ann. He must have enjoyed the games they played and listened with wonder as they told him stories.
ACTIVITY IDEAS Young and
Middle Years Families
1. .If grandparents are in town, have them over for dinner and
an evening of "Honor Grand parents." Decorate with bal loons; make big red hearts to wear with "Hurrah for Grand ma ..." and "Hurrah for Grand pa . . . " on them; give them gifts; serve their. favorite treat. Plan a "This Is Your Life" pro gram and share all sorts of fun information about them. Try to make it a surprise if possible.
about the child who talks back and the child who goes into silence but what about the child who mutters under his breath when he doesn't like something you said?" I was one of those who laugh. ed the most because we had a mutterer in our family and from the reaction of parents there, I found we weren't alone. All of us need ways of re sponding and reacting in situa· tions where we feel put upon or unhappy with the prevailing ruling structure. With peers, we can say, "I don't want to do that" or "I don't think that's fair." But with parents, teachers and bosses we have to find ways of making our feelings known without getting into trouble. The two most common meth· ods invoked by kids are talking back and silence. We had one of each. If I said, "You can't watch that TV program," to the former, she would launch into a dis cussion of her advanced age, her given rights and her feelings about autocratic parenting. If I said the same thing to the next, he retreated into aggrieved silence. But then God sent us a mut terer. This was the one who at about age 11, spent a year or so talking under his breath. It wasn't until I went In for parent
Read aloud Deuteronomy 4:9 and 2 Timothy 1:5. Recall some old stories about grandparents. What is so different about life today? If you could change one thing today what would it be?
SNACK'TIME
5
The new
gospel of peace To watch Bishop Walter F. Sullivan of Richmond, Va., explaining the Catholic bishops' pastoral letter on
nuclear war in the parish hall of the Blessed Sacrament Church Watermelon or· a grand is to realize how far the bishops parent's favorite dessert. have come - and how far they 2. When grandparents live oU,t still have to go in transforming ENTERTAINMENT of town, each person can write a the American church into a Hold a watermelon seed spit letter or draw a picture saying "peace church." ting contest. how very dear and very much The bishop's presentation of they are loved. Plan to mail SHARING the study and prayer that had them tomorrow. Or telephone - Share a time someone felt resulted in a final draft which grandparents and let each fam super happy .during the he said proudly put them in ily member have a chance to past week. . direct confrontation with the visit. U.S. government, was received - Share a moment when with warm applause from the 3. Families whose grandpar someone was really sad. audience of some 200 mostly ents are deceased can try to find - Share a time someone felt older people. But the question pictures of grandparents and God's presence in a com period demonstrated vividly that share some fun stories about the forting way. for some of the faithful, the new grandparents. gospel of peace is as unnerving CLOSING PRAYER as the abandonment of Latin as Dearest Lord Jesus, praise the language of the Mass. you, wondrous Jesus! Bless us as Blessed Sacrament Church, we strive to serve you daily. which is located at Chevy Chase Help us continue to grow in Circle among pleasant old your love. Thank you for to homes, is a kind and open-mind night and for our grandparents. ed parish given to endless good Amen. works: Its people feed the hun gry, visit the sick, care for the elderly and read to the blind. At the Pentecost folk Mass, they had aerobic dancing. The Com mittee for Social Justice invited Sullivan to come back to the par conferences that I learned that By ish of his boyhood to spread the muttering is part of the ll-year word that the church has old psyche and my undying ad DOLORES changed. miration goes to the 6th grade The bishop, a tall, loose-limbed teachers who live with it daily CURRAN man with a long mobile face, and survive. took the microphone off its Still, of the three ways of re 3tand and held it in his hand sponding, I prefer the mutterer. like a night-club entertainer. We didn't have to hear what he He seemed prepared for the was saying. We simply put up questions that proved his feel We mumble something like, with his muffled feelings for a ing of being "thrilled" with the "That's because I'm mother and year or so as background noise. bishops' work is not universally I have a right to a cluttered When it became annoying, I shared. Since he began evangel room. Makes it homey." It began to say, "I know you don't izing about the letter, he has doesn't make any sense and we want to wear your boots and traveled up and down the East know it so we say it under our hat today. I know no other par Coast encountering rage, con breath, getting the message ent is making her children wear fusion and bewilderment from across that we don't have any them because it is only 10 be Catholics who feel the ground answer but that we don't like low. You, my dear, are going shaking under their feet as they being questioned in that way. to wear them, but you get 10 encounter a doctrine so alien to That's basically what mutter minutes of legal mutter." He the simple superpatriotism of ing is all about we can let usually took them and more. their youth. "Jesus Christ," the our feelings be known without· bishop observed, "said you But like everything else in being responsible for what we .should love your enemy, not parenting, this has a way of say.. deter him." backfiring. Now that he's a teen In talking about the phenom Some take refuge in the assur ager and past the muttering enon with other parents, I've ance from one of the few anti stage, he remembers my words found an even more hilarious pastoral bishops, Archbishop and when I'm fuming about form of muttering and that's the something, quips, "You get 10' snoner. "My son just .snorts··· Philip M. Hannan of New Or leans, that the 'letter ·isnot minutes of mutter, Mudder." when he doesn't like something "morally binding." One man What can I say? Muttering is I scold him for or ask him to rather edgily inquired what ef a time-honored tool of parenting. do," said a mother. "What can fect the pastoral could have We develop sophisticated ways you do with a snorter?" when Catholics were not oblig of muttering, talking things out Never having had one, all I ed to believe it. with ourselves when nobody else could suggest was my tool, "You Sullivan knows his material is wants to listen. Sometimes it's :get five snorts and then I expect explosive, so he adopts a laid· safer to· mutter than be under you to empty. the trash." back, disarming manner. This is stood because we don't have to another strangeness for people A smarter mother nearby sug take back unwanted words later. gested she express concern about who were brought up with au thoritarian thunderers as their Sometimes we mutter when his sinus condition and threaten, shepherds. there's no other reasonable re lovingly, of course, to make a "Well, obviously, it had no ef sponse, like when a child says, doctor's apppointment. It just . fect on Archbishop Hannan," "But your room is a mess too." might work.
.The mutterer
At a parent workshop re cently, a mother brought the house down when she said, "We've talked a lot
Adult Families
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 10, 1983
. By
MARY McGRORY
he chuckled and let it go. The friendJiest query he got was from a man who asked what in fluence the Vatican had had on the letter. The bishop used the occasion to advance another heretical suggestion - that the bishops of smother day had been wrong. He noted that after Hiro shima the European bishops ask· ed the Americans to join them in a condemnation of the atom bomb, an idea promptly shot down by Cardinal Francis Spell man, the apostle of getting along with government. But it was obvious that the heart of the problem is the bishops' declaration that we must deal with the Russians as human '·dnp'~. Many in the parish hall had heard for most of their lives !win '.hi.: pulpit that the god less atheistic Russians were the source of all evill in the world in other words, the philosophy of Ronald Reagan. "How csm we trust the Russ ians?" asked a baby-faced young man. "They have broken every treaty." "The thing I remember about SALT II," the bishop reminded mildly, "is that we did not rati fy it. They did." He was asked by an older man how the bishops had failed to notice the Soviet buildup, that "the only place we are superior is in our helicopters." The bishop said that the Scowcroft Commission had said there was "no window of vulner ability," for which he was glad, but added that being vulnerable hadn't bothered him. The young man came back again to the gnawing question of "trusting the Russians." The bishop asked provoca tively, "How can the Russians trust us?" There were gasps, and one man burst out, "That's unfair. Look at Western Europe and Eastern Europe." The bishop reminded them that the United States had drop ped the atomic bomb. In the hope of defusing them, he cited a familiar god, Fulton Sheen. who called dropping the bomb "the worst evil ever done in our world." A man of World War II vin tage leaped up in indignation. "The only reason we did was because we had it, and the others didn't. It was good that we did and got it over with. If we hadn't, we would have lost a million men invading Japan." They were "just getting warm ed up" when he closed the meet ing promptly at 9:30 p.m. He did it by reading a passage from the pastoral about the need to train people for peace as they are now trained for war. It was a gentle reminder that he is not the only one in a Roman collar who is preaching revolution.
6
Appeal is filed
in Mansour case
THE ANCHOR Friday, June 10, 1983
the moll pocket
Awards rite is tonight The 24th annual presentation of religious awards to adults ac
tive in the Boy and Girl Scout
and Camp Fire programs will
follow a Mass at 7:30 tonight at
St. Theresa Church, New Bed
ford. Bishop Daniel A. Cronin will be principal concelebrant and homilist for the Mass and will present the awards. Concelebra ting with him will be Rev. Mar . tin L. Buote, diocesan chaplain for Catholic Scouting, and area youth group chaplains. Music for the Mass will. be by the St. Theresa choir, directed .by Patrick Gagnon. Youth group members will be acolytes, flag bearers and ushers, while adult leaders will be lec tors and giftbearers. Members of the Catholic Committee on Scouting and Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus will also , participate in the ceremonies. Roger Pooler and Mrs. Ken neth Leger, diocesan Boy Scout chairperson and diocesan Girl
Scout and Camp Fire 'chairper,son respectively, will direct the awards presentation. J!\ buffet will follow.
Mother 'Teresa gets wheels VAATICAN CITY (NC) Pope John Paul II gave Mother Teresa of C,alcutta the keys to an automobile during a recent Mass in his private chapel. He told Mother Teresa that he hoped the car would help her Missionaries of Charity in their work with the poor of Rome. It had be'en given to him May 21 by the Italian town of D'Esio, near Milan.
SILVER SPRING, Md. (NC) The Sisters of Mercy of the Union have filed a canonical ap peal of the dispensation from re ligious vows of Agnes Mary Mans~ur, who resigned from the order in order to keep her job as director of the Michigan Department of Social Se~ices.
letters ate welcomed. but should be no more than 200 words. The editor reserves the right to condense or edit. All. letters must be signed and Include a home or business address and telephone numDer tor the purpDse of verlflatlon If deemed 'necessary. I ,
,
Patiline epistle Dear Editor:
Often, I read The Anchor. It is an ex¢ellent ,Catholic paper. The balapce and proportion in which the news is presented is very helpfulvery helpful. ... .May The Anchor continue to prosper a'nd grow. I noticed on the front ~ page of the May 20th issue, that you have a picture of the past6r of Notre Dame Church, marching to the Cathe dral on the anniversary of the great fire.. It is excellent journalism.' "
DEACON MARKEY
New deacon ,Paul G. Markey, the son of Ruth R. Markey, now of South Dartmouth, and the late Ray mond' D. Markey of Nevi Bed
ford, was ordained to the per manent diaconate for the Boston archdiocese in May 14 cere . monies at Holy Cross Cathedral. He will serve at Holy Family Church, Rockland. He is mar
ried to Louise (Gingras) Markey, formerly of North Dartmouth, and is the father of four child ren.
Then-Sister Mansour was dis pensed from her vows May 9 after she declined to agree with the Vatican that she resign her state job. The state agency she heads is involved in funding abortions. . REV. MR. AGUILAR
I
Msgr. Francis J. Gilligan Archdiocesan Director Society for the 'Propagation of the Faith' St. Paul, Minn. 1
I
New
"The Congregation for Reli gious mandated that Sister Ag nes Mary Mansour resign" her state job "or be subject to im ,posed dismissal from the Sisters of Mercy," the nuns' statement said. "Distressed by the events that led to the dispensation, the 'central administration of the Sisters of Mercy decided to ini tiate the appeal."
bi~hop
(UNDATED) (NC) Pope John Paul; II has named Auxili Deacon Markey, the holder of ary Bish0I:! John ,J. O'Connor of degrees from -Stonehill College the U.S. Military Ordinariate to and Boston College, is on the be bishop :6f Scranton, Pa.. suc faculty of Massachusetts Bay ceeding Bishop J. Carroll McCor Community College. He and his mick. Bis~op O'Connor, 63, is Sister Kane said the appeal is wife are active in the Cursillo former chief chaplain of the based on the right, provided REV. MR. CREGAN and charismatic movements and U.S. Navy: and was a member under church law, of recourse have served in their parish CCD of the committee which prepared against church actions. She said the U.S. bishops' pastoral letter program. the appeal cites a lack of due on war an~ peace. In an inter process in the case, a lack of view with: Catholic New York, Rev. Mr.. Genaro P. Aguilar opportunity for a hearing and a He Is Nearer , newspaper I of the' New York and Rev. Mr. Mark T. Cregan lack of clarity on the specific "Lift up your heart to him, Archdiocese, Bishop O'Connor 'will be ordained to the priest causes of the action. sometimes eyen at your meals, said he objected to inclusion of hood for the Congregation of specific strategic and political ,Holy Cross at 11 a.m. Saturday, and when you are in company; Church officials have said the the least little remembrance will proposals in the pastoral, but June 18, at Holy Cross Church, Vatican took action in the case always be acceptable to him. You that he had voted for -it. He South Easton. The ordaining pre because of the "scandal" and need not cry very loud; he is also said he would do his best late will be Auxiliary Bishop the importance of the abortion • issue. nearer to us than we are aware to teach it 'faithfully in his new Peter A' Rosazza of Hartford. diocese. ' of." - Brother Lawrence Rev. Mr. Aguilar, son of Adolph and the late Juanita Aguilar, attended public schools i in San Antonio, Tex.,. and holds degrees from, St. Mary's Univer sity, San Antonio, and the Uni "Facing Apocalypse," a con
versity of Notre Dame. He has been active in Hispanic ministry 'fernce featuring internationally
in Connecticut and Indiana. He renowned poets, psychoanalysts
-(OMPlETE HEATING mTEMS I will teach at Holy, Cross High and historians, will take place at
lAlEJ & IIISTALLATlOIIS "010' DElIYElIES School, Waterbury, Conn. in, the Salve Regina College, Newport,
': DIESEL OIlS today through Sunday.
fall .
Two ordinations
Apocalypse, topic at Salve parley
O~ Co., '..9ne. rmBI
HEATING
OIL BURNERS
992-5534 I 999-1-226 J I 999-1227 I
24
HOUR SERVICE' 465 NORTH FRONT ST. NEW BEDFORD
'OlL
...
-
.
-~--
.
6aktte ShTln~ :,;'" .".-:' ,_. -.-
RIT &
CONFERENCE CENTER
is the Answer:
Rev. Mr. Cregan, son of Wil liam and Bernice Cregan, was educated in Newark and South Orange, N.J. He graduated from Stonehill College, North Easton, and is a master of divinity can didate at St. Michael's Univer sity, Toronto.
;
Are You Looking for a Vacation Spot ,£ for Farr-i!y and Friends? / 'b'l
~
I
.\.
IJ!-<
'_it '
Located on Lake Mascoma - Rte. 4-A - Minutes from 1-91 &89 Dail, Uturu - Swimming - Boating - Hiking - And lore : \
The Sisters of Mercy, based in Silver SI?ring, Md., said in a statement that the order's cen tral adrhinistration initiated the. appeal on May 18 and that it was directed by Sister M. The resa Kane, Mercy Sisters presi dent, to Cardinal Eduardo Pi' ronio, prefect of the Vatican's Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes.
Facilities: Chalets - Cooking Facilities - Limit 35 People , Shaker Hall - Individual or Groups - Meals -Excellent Food - Modest Priced
For Further Information, Write or Call: (9:30 A.M.-4:30 P.M.) Rental Office La Salette Enfield, N.H. 03748 .(603) 632t5533
While a college student he assisted in the religious educa tion program at Holy Cross, South ,Easton. He has also done parish work in the Bronx and ministered to hospital patients and the aged. In the fall he will begin the study of Spanish in ·Bolivia. The ordinands will celebrate a Mass of thanksgiving at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, June' 19 at St. Mary's Chapel, Stonehill COl lege.
To be heard are Robert Jay Lifton, Yale professor of psy chiatry and first to address the phenomenon of "psychic numb ing;" Danilo Dolci, Nobel ,Peace Prize nominee, poet, architect' and social reformer; Wolfgang Giegerich, psychoanalyst and scholar of German literature. David Miller, professor of re
ligon at Syracuse University;
James Hillman, Jungian psycho
analyst, author and editor; Nor
~an O. Brown, philosopher and
psycho~historian; Mary Watkins,
psychologist and student of the
psychology of the imagination;
and Denise Levertov, award
winning poet whose oratorio,
"El Salvador," premiered at Har
vard University last month.
~'FallRive~ New Bedford Samaritans The Samaritans, an around the clock suicide prevention organization, will open a branch to serve the New Bedford/Fall River area. Latest available figures show, say Samaritan officials, that each city recorded eight suicides in 1981. "Since suicide is always underreported," said Monica Dickens, founder of the U.S. branch of the international organization, "the actual number is probably greater, and for every suicide, it is estimated that there may be 200 suicide attempts." The new branch, like the four others in New England, includthe centers in Falmouth and Providence, will offer "befriending rather than counseUng to anyone who is suicidal, depressed or lonely, both on the phone and in the center." The Samaritans win be located in the Center for Alcol1Ql· Problems building, 386 Stanley St., .Fall River, but will not be connected with the alcoholism service or the Women's Center for Independent Living, also in the
PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERnSERS
WAL~WALL
A C.LLECTION 0' HElPFUL FL_ HINTS BY 'Al' GARANT
GARANT
FLOOR COVERING
30 CRAWFORD ST. (Runs parallel to South Main behind Ray'S Flowers)
FALL RIVER • CARPETING • CERAMIC TILE
Test tube babieS LONDON (NC) A bioethics committee representing the Catholic bishops of England, Scotland and Wales has urged severe government restrictions on in vitro femlization and expressed serious misgivings about the entire "test tube baby" procedure. The bishops' said they opposed experimentation on human embyros which would damage the embyros, selection of embyros so that only the fittest are implanted in the mother, and other such practices. In vitro fertilization involves laboratory fertilization of an egg to produce an embyro ,to be implanted in the mother's body and develop normally.
• CONGOLEUM • ARMlno",
674-5410
679-5262' ALL READY .FOR Flag Day on Tuesday are these youngsters from St. Stanislaus School, Fall River, who got into the swing of things at a Christian Patriots' Assembly featuiing such personages as Charles Carroll, John F. Kennedy, Rose Hawthorne and
Dorothy
Da"Y~
l'
TOURS
Clergy Alcoholism Council to meet The National Clergy Council
X. O'Neill, a priest of the diocese
on Alcoholism will hold its 35th annual symposium June 20 to 24 at Marian College, Indianapolis. Featured speakers will be Archbishop Edward T. O'Meara of Indianapolis and Father Joseph ("Chalk Talk") Martin. Other talks and workshops will deal with ministry to alcoholics, seminary formation, religious women, spirituality in recovery and the family and youth. The program, designed for both professionals and non-pro.fessionals, is sponsored by the National Clergy Council, headquartered in Washington. Information on the symposium is available at PO Box 313, Indian· apolis 44206. The National Clergy Council was founded by the late Father Ralph ~au (also known as "Father 'John Doe';), a priest of the Indianapolis archdiocese, to gather together in relative secrecy recovering alcoholic priests. Annual meetings were held in various parts of the country in order to spread the organization's message of hope and its growing store of practical information and advice to priest victims ot alcoholism. Support was provided almost from the begilttling by the noted Jesuit moralist, Father John Ford, who encouraged NCCA to expand its apostolate to families, the "other victims" of alcoholism. In the 70s NCCA expanded both its general membership anel that of its board of directors to include laity, sisters and brothers. In 1978 the council's central office was moved to Washingcon, D.C. on the grounds of Holy Redeemer College. The present executive director is Rev. 'ohn F.
of Brooklyn. NCCA promotes adoption of policies by dioceses and religious to assure .~ for members suffering . from alcoholism. It seeks. also to educate those engaged inpastonl ministry and the teaching professions with regard to alcoholism and alcohol abuse as affecting both individuals and families. Membership is open to all interested in learn-
LEARY PRESS
.,
building.
The suicide prevention pro· gram is expected to open in November. Volunteers will be interviewed during July and training will begin in September. Volunteers should be 20 or ovet:, good listeners. and able to give Ii few hours weekly to .telephone duty at the Samaritan' headquarters. Those interested should call 993-6242 in the New Bedford area or 679-5222 in the Fall River area for an interview appointment. Started in England The Samaritans began in Eng~ land in 1953 and was brought to the US in 1974 by Ms. Dickens, a British writer and descendant of Charles Dickens. She is helping organize the Fall River /New Bedford branch and is' actively associated with the Cape Cod branch. With headquarters in Falmouth, that branch has started a jail suicide prevention program and was responsible for erection of suicide barriers on the Bourne and Sagamore bridges across the Cape Cod Canal.
7
1 '
THE. ANCHOR - . Friday, June 10, 1983
ing about or helping with the problem. The 1983 Symposium proceedings will be dedicated to Father Pfau's memory. Recogni. tion will also be paid to the SMT Guild and to five area women who direct its operations. The Guild promotes the sale and distribution of Father Pfau's books and recordings, his best known work being "Prodigal Shepherd," an autobiography.
Direction of Rev. J. Joseph Kierce Author and Producer of The New- England Passion Play
''THE CHRISTUS"
·~=:s.~F·,
OPEN rOR TBI SEASON!! ~~
'''iijoBy''nIci(''
TOUR 2 - HOLY YEAR IN ROME! Plus ITALY, FRANC~, ENGUND, GERMANY, AUSTRIA, HOllAND, SWITZERLAND, MOJW:O, THE YATICAN! GRAND EORO· PEAH10UR
FOR ONLY
WHARF RESTAURANT
$1675
Overlooking Historical Westport Point , (1st Ript Over Rt. 88 Bridge)
JULY 14-30 (Scheduled or N.Y.)
'-Aii"lc;b;t~',;"~~d"ci~;;C~~k;d-t;o;J;;::""
UlNCHEON MENU
Mon. - Sat. 11:30 - 3:30 P.M. Early Bird Specials Every Day 4 - 6 '.M. Except Sat. and Sun.
$1975 AUGUST 6·23
Mon. - Thurs. 5· 9 P.M; Fri. - Sat. 5 - 10 P.M.
(Scheduled fillht from/to Beste. or U.l Includes two meals a day, tips for bauap ad I'lNIAlS. delllXe and 1st class ho~ls and air-condltiened coach.
SUNDAY & HOUDAYS 12 - 9 SuNDAY SPECIALS 12 - 4
V1 r:A
lOS ;:~ ~ii~~46SS
CAlr .fares sabject to chlllle)
SPACE LIMITED - CALL NOW .REY. J. JOSEPH KIERCE
St. Kevin Rectory
IN OUR LOBSTER TRAP LOUNGE
35 Yirlinia St, Boston, Ma. 02125 Telephon: (&171 436-2771
FOR YOUR USTENING PLEASURE
~
~
C
..
DAVE NADIEN at the Piano--'.. WED. 7:30 p.~. & ~~N. 7 P.M.. _ 9
~~~~~~
80stol
FOR ONLY
DINNER MENU
.
I/'HI/to
TOUR -S - TlfE I(tlDEN WEST, CANYONUNOS, WE TAHOE, YOSEMITE. DISNEYWID CALIFORNIA, ARIZONA. UTAH. NEYADA! SEE THE WONDROUs,. HISTORIC BEAUTY SPOTS OF OUR OWN COUNTRY.
Natural Sweetness and.Tenderness are best Preterved by our. own Sea Water Steam Process, ScallOps, Fish, Steaks.
~ ~
flipt
.
OR
GEORGE OSBORN-UNIVERSITY TlAyn CD. 129 Mt. Aubur. St., Cambridp, Ma 0213. Telephone: (617) 864-7100
THE ANCfiIOR-Diocese of f'all River-hi., June 10, 1~a3
8
~'.
'
.\
wc
.
.
a.te "\,'.,
~~."
~
.,
'value -,-. '.. , .
" - '->f'~
J
t'~..,.
,SUts·tt $~1'5 .... ~:.:: - ...~~~~.,....= .. .
'
" ,,,.
,~
~'i.;f~~·i~at>·p~" saunas, colo{~v: an( ~.
jh
'..~."
.
~.;diningexperience ~.J4fti !\is.";
:. ., '
>
• •: \
-
apclrt. From 3 egg omelettes to s,ucculent, WusMng ~t.me rib, our a CPWlET£ 'm8GJs per couphulftcLowilnique, private a.Y.O.B. lounge with live. eAtel:toinment and dancing/.mole. ;.J>. . . . . .o,.-eNS Th.UltilftOfe Volue. ' .:. . . . .:iaW eMIII.We at GtMnHorlMw Motor Lodge.
~~ • •"f_.:;WATER-RONT MotOR
I.QPGE
~V'~4tAaes In " , ' " .. ~"
It
f
·11
t .17) - -.
....
,,,.-',. ..1<
l J'
")
,
'"
.
t
.lesus' children receive
." Pat.1IeGowaa . With tears and laughter, with .'clapping _nd' cheel'll, 15 .Chil~n from ''Crystal Springs SChool, Assonet, received ':.J~ Bread" at a ~d~ D:aY. M4SS •. St, Bernard's Church, also Assonet.
/
A well construttec;l dtl~
or tennis court is a ~~tment.
Either wltJ' increase the valUe 'of your property. ,
!'
. j,.. .
1
,
Springs. In explaining the rele of the Deaf Apostolate. The children leuned weU. In a homily simul~ly SJJ9ken and signed by Father Viveiros, be as)ted' them. wlat. they would
'w- Fecieivibg.
'...' .
"Jesus Bread" tlJey signed,
Dro,tSt ,wi,th ,mvltip!e disabilities, wQdcedfor months with Sister . )Caihy Murphy, OP, ~d Father ~.fOIePh Viveiros, both of the di-
language.
.~ i.m the difference ~ween ,Jesus Bread and "people bI'ead."
bers of Sister KatliTs Don\iniean
~ Ca~ic Deaf Apo~te,
Then. .. laughing, .
claPJ'in~,
swaying in rllYthm to' "Wf! Come to Your Tabler sung'by mem-
community, the ehUdren came to si 8erttanl's altar to receive -,; ;,~~ugh ~ have only two' their first OOftIfnuilion. Stumbling, limping,'Some' car. ~ ~ many are non..~ ~; we u:;e 8iga language ried by parents or, pushed in ~;,welJ as s~h. to co~uDi· wheelchairs, all- came. . , . c1iri~ tb,em," said Mrs. Rob- ,. Afterwards each gc)t a large, ,~,;rr¢nor.. RN, directoJ; of ~oduJ WOOllen rosary,' re~ servi£es at· C~ ceived to-·the acc:empaJIimentof
claiPs-. aJid >.~
from ~l.
mateS. .'j:beY're so prpud of
each other:~ said .. -an.on1Qoker ~ her tears. .:'Tbis is a mo.ment when .hea·
veD aindearth to~" declUed Father Joseph sCii~ne.u.. c.ss-R., uncle of one of the first communicaiits;·· whO' assi~ted at the
tant as the physical:" " . She shared h@r, conc:em ~ith Father Leonard Mullaney, pas. tor 'of St. Bernard's. He referred her to the diocesan chancery office. which sought the assistance of ~,oe_ ~PO$>~" Enter'~:~~iriIf.·· :
Lefkowitz of Congreg8lion Agudath Adlim hi 1'apnton took over. for the .....iSh, boys and girls, who~<' ~r~y followed the Mass And't6ok place at Crystal SpringS', hew Fall ,,~il'~.~ the ~ St. '!loch "~'''' .', /' assoc~'"_~'at St. . . "t:.~ was ilade ~y by of Padua parish, Fall River, and the day, which if i~'~ will Sister Kathy. They ~ a yeai' .' become an said ago by holdiag <& IIIOOthly pray. Chprles .At ·'''()ung.·'~stal _..,r service at· 'crystal 'Springs. Springs 'e1C:~iiv~ii:rectoft .
aIW:ual,c.nt.
\~t ~.. ~,~I~~I~~~~;;"~~~~'';~i,~:,;·:~;~~"t';~~'· ~ \ ,-.{ ft.S? #v *".(,:iI;·;h>:.~l '.,
\
\
C-,"- )<
-~
~.
"• ..,.
~------
~
:g.
#.i,;
jtC.k tXt
)
4 t'
'0',1 .
---------
1J_ f
10·
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri.,
ju~~
10;1983
,~~~aae~~~~~~~~~
By Dr. James and Mary Kenny
S PEe I A LS
- Some time ago we published a letter from a woman asking how she could be loving toward her 'husband when she did not feel loving. Her husband had hit her on three occasions in their' seven years of marriage. Except for this behavior, she said. they ,have a good life and beautiful children.
-ALSOCATERING TO WEDDINGS AND BANQUm
-BIC FISHERMEN -CLOSII MOIIIAYllItIclI 11:30 • 2:30 - 1\tIIIIl' s:oo • .:00
I ....... -
EAR L Y BIRD Daily 5:00 • 6:00 P.M.
THE
Rt•• 28, East Falmouth
T... . , 111,. Fr.
Hosts· Paul & Ellen Goulet
SItIInIaY s:oo • 11:00 '.M. S"'" 12:01 • ':00
548-4266 or 548-4267
i;:rTHEBEST*
LAWI MAINTENANCE AVAILABLE
EQUIPPED TO SERVICE ANY SIZE PROPERTY EXPERTL.Y.
Me S. A. LANDSCAPE 87 STOWE STREET - FALL RIVER M.
~~c;.UIAR6
7 8 - 8 224
HANOYER· HOUSE ;,X\
H ::
I.MDElFUL
ALTERlAnVE TO IUISII. HOME PUCE.EIT -Semi-Private and Private Accommodations that are less expensive than a . nursing home - Provides 24 hour supportive services for short term and long term stays .. Medication, meals and personal . hygiene are monitored . • A beautiful lifestyle amid diversified activities and companionship ,
HANOVER· HOUSE is located adjacent to Charlton Memorial Hospital Call 675-7583 for information
- - - ,------
,.
Read·er,s disagree
~-
_.
We answered that only she could decide how to respond to her husband's treatmen.t, and we suggested ways to behave, not lovingly, but positively toward him. Some of our reader responses follow: --"Didn't address the real question the woman was asking ... Chances are . . . the abuses will escalate ... No amount of positive thinking . . . will change that behavior unless the abuser is also willing to change. to Director of an Illinois shelter for abused women. "Assault is a crime ... Firm, drastic action should have been advised - perhaps file charges against him, seek an injunction. at least separate herself and her children from him, even if it means getting herself and her children out of that house and leaving it to him." - Iowa. We did not overlook the drastic solutions which our readerS propose but chose not to sug-
gest them for the following reasons. 1. "Get out of the house," Our reader asked how to behave positively. She did not ask what to do about her abused situation. Perhaps, as some readers suggested, the problem will get worse. As columnists. reading her letter several states away, we simply cannot make such an assertion. Therefore, we take our reader as an adult. We answer the question she posed. We do not tell her what her problem is. Furthermore, we suggest options she might take (one of which was to leave the situation). We· do not tell her what to do. 2. Get her husband to change. In many cases· a problem would disappear if one could get the other to' change. Unfortunately" this is not the way human relationships work. Making another person change is rarely a practical solution because it is not within our control. The husband did not write us. We do not know . whether. he wants to change. We answered the woman's question. Being positive is nice, some of our ~aderS '.uggested, but it does not go far enough. Actually, we think that positive action is the most powerful means available to our reader. Confrontation, giving orders, insisting, demanding. an lead to hardening of a position, escahi-
tin~ of differences, anger, perhaps further abuse. Being positive, on the other hand, reaches the spouse where he is open to being reached, where he can perhaps be motivated to change. The problem with being positive is not that it is ineffective. Actually it is most powerful. The problem is that it is very, very difficult to do when we do not feel positive. The charge of wife abuse is currently popular and a very serious problem. However, like, other problems, it does not have one single solution. The adult facing the problem is in the best position to decide the action to take. Counselors, columnists, family doctors, all can aid persons in making decisions. But they overStep theit role when they actually decide for another adult. This is different from the abuse of small childTen or the helpless elderly. Getting out of the house is one solution to abuse. It is a drastic step to take in response to three occurrences in seven years: It is not the only solution. And it is up to the person involved to. decide whether to take this drastic step. Reeder questions on famUy Uving and chUd care to be 8Jrswered in print are invited. Address The Kenny,. BOX 872, St. Joseph's College, aensselaer. Ind. 47978.
Presidential commun~on queried WASHINGTON (NC) President Reagan attended a funeral Mass and received holy communion at the Navy Chapel in Washington June 2, a White House spokesman confirmed June 6. , The Mass was celebrated for Joseph R. Holmes, a long-time Reagan aide who died of cancer May 27. The president and Nancy Reagan attended the Mass and took communion before leaving for a four-day weekend at Camp David. The event was reported June 3 in the Washington Post. Efforts to reach Father (Commodore) John R. McNamara the Navy chaplain who celebrated the Mass, were not successful. In Father McNamara's office, Father (Capt.) Joseph O'Donnell, Navy chaplain and executive assistant to the chief of chaplains, said he was not present at 'the Mass but that non-Catholics such as Reagan are sometimes given communion. "When I'm up distributing communion . I'm not making judgments about who should receive and who should not. The , fact 'that· it happened t~ -have been the president t;)f the United States doesn't mean beans." The only way a priest can deny a person communion on the spur of the moment is if that person is a public sinner, according to Father O'Donnell. President Reagan "is hardly a public sinner in the eyes of the church." Fathr John Hotchkin. director !,f the bishops' COmmittee for
Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, said if approached by nonCatholics priests "are trained not to refuse the sacrament so publicly. You might be misjudging them and cause other people to misjudge . . . Normally you give them the benefit of the doubt and proceed." In the case of a public figure such as the president, "on the spur of the moment the priest might proceed as normally," Father Hotchkin saict. He added that while most Roman Catholic priests "wouldn't want to seem to judge too harsh· ly," -and refuse the sacrament, "Orthodox priests are more likely to give a blessing" instead of communion to a non-Orthodox who approaches the altar. Father Hotchkin said non· Catholics may receive, permission, from a bishop to receive the
sacraments of rconciliation, the Eucharist and anointing of the sick under certain conditions. The non·Catholic must have a faith in the sacrament that is in agreement with the Catholic faith, should have the proper disposition to receive the sacrament and should have a serious ..spiritual need for it, Father Hotchkin said. Also, if the non-Catholic is in a situation where for a period of time his own minister would be unavailable he could receive permission from a bishop to receive communion, Father Hotch. . kin said. Usually the funeral of a Cath· olic friend would not be considered a case of serious spiritual need, he said, but if the nonCatholic had not requested permission in advance from the bishop it's not likely he would be turned away at Mass. .
Mother Teresa out of hospital ROME (NC)-Mother Teresa of Calcutta was released June 3 from Salvator Mundi Hospital in Rome where she had been admitted-JuneLfof, what..a,ho$pital spokesperson said was a complete medical check-up. It was Pope John Paul who had suggested the check-up, a church source said. A member of her religious order, the Missionaries of Charity, said Mother Teresa was "not in good health but feeling better" when she was released. According to the church source
the. 73-year-Old Mother Teresa was suffering from exhaustion from recent extensive travels. In May visits to charitable works conducted by members of her order had fakenher from India to Spain, northern Italy and Rome. She participated in an early morning Mass in Pope John Paul's private chapel at the Vatican May 31. After Mass. said the church source, the pope said that she looked worn out and should have a medical check-up.
~
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June lO, 1983
I
I '
11
With 27,000 Subscribers, It Pays To
Advertise In The Anchor
Religious Gifts & Books
wrltO
Heritage House '76, Inc. "Th,' 1'r''l·iulI,~ F''l'I /'Ioop/"" Box 730 • Tav,or, AZ. 85939
for every occasion . ..
~ r
~
' .'.. 1
by F==TJi~~~~~ ~:[.~~~~:~;l~~en~:;l~g
tioned in London, England, who traveled to Chatham for the first communion of his niece Jennifer Kenney (third left, first row). At the. Kiss of Peace, the first communicants pre sented their mothers with white carnations ald roses were placed at the Mary altar at the conclusion of Mass. Each child received a rosary, prayerbook and first communion candle. (Kelsey Photo)
A complete line of Pra-Ufe. Pro-Family
B.aptisms First Communions Birthdays Confirmations Weddings
Items, at rock /Jottom prices.
Ann;,e"',;e,
;'~~~~;'ffE;,
• Preciolots Feet
• Bumper Slickers
• Lapel Pins • Necklaces • Charms
• Envelope Stickers 0 Poste" 0 Post Cards
• Earrings • Buttons
• Decals for T·Shirts
• Books
• Pamphlets
• Mother's Pendants • Assorted Pro-Life • Your logo lapel pin
Send todav
Pro-Family Jewelry
'Of FREE CATALOG
Conscientious objection
By Rev. William N. Matthews Pax Christl USA Many conscientious young men are concluding that the best expression of their patriotism is one that shows their devotion to their religious beliefs. This leads them to be conscientious objectors with respect to parti cipation in war. . Some are registering for the draft and writing statements of their religious beliefs to be filed with diocesan offices or other when a miltary induction order is received. Others are not regis tering at all, often writing the same statements of how their moral beliefs will not allow them to do so. These conscientious objectors are joining with other persons in peace marches, ral lies, and other nonviolent demonstrations. Perhaps your son, grandson, brother or friend is one of them. Why are they doing this? Recently many have seen the movie "Gandhi." For Christians it is especially interesting. to see a man who, though not a Chris tian, took Jesus Christ at his word in his teaching about non violence. Few men or women in history have been so noted for trying to form a right consci ence, and then following it faith fully. Forming a right conscience has always been a Christian ob ligation. In our nuclear age, forming a right conscience about issues of war is a particularly important call of the Gospel for each of us. Conscientious ob jectors have responded to this call in a specific way. In 1945, the first and second and so far only uses of nuclear bombs ~m human populations occurred' with the U.S. bomb ings of I-Jiroshima and Nagasaki. At fi~t very few people re flected Qn the horror and the suffering of those,. mostly civilians and innocent children, who were killed or maimed by
"the bomb." How could people reflect? No one had ever dream ed of a weapon so fierce, let alone imagined the human misery it would cause. Commenting on the ushering in of the nuclear age, Albert Einstein said "Now everything has changed, except our way of thinking." Unfortunately, his statement is still generally true. But what about our young people? Young people today have the benefit of history, rather than personal experience, upon which to establish a perspective. Those in the draft age group generally have no personal. memory of the Viet Nam conflict. They have had no direct experience with the way in which the weekly body counts on the evening news became a part of the "us ual" routine ·in the homes of U.S. families. Neither do the vast majority of these young Catholic Ameri cans know anything of cons cientious objection insofar as it is an official category of the Am erican laws about military ser vice. Much less do they know how to go about 'deciding whether they are themselves conscientious objectors accord ing to government criteria, or how they might go about es tablishing themselves as such in the eyes of their government. Nevertheless, many young Catholics view war and its vio lence differently from their pre decessors. They are thinking twice about it; whereas the majority of recent generations (the present writer included) did not. In the past, only small num bers of youths questioned regis tration or the draft. Nor was the supposed "need" to go to war questioned with any frequency. Military service was seen as a romantic, adventurous and often necessary part of growing up for a young man.
. But many young people to day have begun to have, as the Second Vatican Council called upon .us all to have, "a new way of thinking" about war. These young persons have lived their entire lives under the real threat of possible annihila tion. This has taken its toll on them. It has been hypothesized that this is one of the main fac tors behind the attitude of many young people who seem to place little' emphasis on planning for the future, directing their energies instead toward im mediate gratification such as that found in drugs and alcohol. It may also have much to do with diminished appreciation fo.! a life long commitment to mar riage or a religious vocation, or indeed for long-term obligations of any sort. Youth who conscienciously object to war are prophets to us. They have begun to think in an entirely new way a~out war. Pope John Paul II often re minds us of this imperative of the Second Vatican CounCil. It was also what a man like Gandhi exemplified in his life. What truer act of patriotism could anyone perform for his country than to call it a"ay from disaster by his- courage to stand for what he believes is right? Speaking at Nagasaki in 1981, Pope John Paul II said, "To young people everywhere, I say: Let us together create a n~w future of fraternity and solid arity; let us reach out to our brothers and sisters in need . . . bringing peace where only wea pons speak. Your young hearts have an extraordinary capacity for goodness and love. Put them at the service of your fellow human beings." Those interested in finding out more about· conscientious objection may contact Pax Christl USA, PO Box 726, Cam bridge, MA 02139-0726.
We're Better Together
-rn
-rn NationaI~
Durfee AttIeboro~
Falmouth
Members Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
LINCOLN PARK BALLROOM
ROUTE 6--between Fall River and New Bedford
One of Southern New England's Finest Facilities
Now Available for
BANQUETS, FASHION SHOWS, ETC.
FOR DETAILS, CALL MANAGER -
636·2744 or 999-6984
CHARlIE·S OILeOetINC. "1IOMl1lA_ COUIICII. M£MIfI"
• FUEL OIL·.
2·WAY RADIO
FOI "OMPT 24 Hou, s_~ (ho,le, Velolo, Pre"
-OfRCf ., OAII GlOVE AVE.• fAll IMI
"
,
,.
12·
· '. THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 10, 1983
\
J
JOY REIGNED at diocesan high school graduations.
From top to bottom at left, Lynn Frazer, James Conceicao, Annmarie Almeida of New Bedford's Holy Family get year book autographs; Msgr. Daniel F. Hoye, U.S. Catholic Con ference general secretary, congratulates Robert E. Perry and
~iece
Donna Marie Hoye as he returns to his native
Taunton to speak at Coyle and Cassidy's
gra~uation;
caps
and gowns are adjusted by Kelly Fusaro, Sheila Perry, Lau rie Bouchard and Patrick Horan of Bishop Stang High, North Dartmouth. Above, proud parents Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pregana give daughter Gail a last-minute once-over .~
b,efore ceremonies at Bishop Connolly, Fall River; their smiles say it all for Daniel Juslynski and Lisa Ann Di Pietro at Bishop Feehan, Attleboro. (Rosa, Gaudette, Tor chia Photos)
, ..,
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 1C, 1983
13
Religious leaders· rap genetic
WASHINGTON (NC) Twenty-one U.S. Catholic bish ops, joined by other religious leaders and scientists, have backed a resolution opposing genetic engineering to improve the human species and caned on Congress to prohibit genetic en gineering of human cells. The religious and scientific leaders compared use of human genetic engineering to nuclear weapons technology. In their resolution the clergy men and scientists "resolved that efforts to engineer specific gen etic traits into the germline of the human species should not be attempted." (fhe germline re fers to basic human cells called germ cens, which can unite with another cell 'and form a new in dividual." According to the Washington based Foundation on Economic Trends, which released the reso lution, the Catholic prelates who back the resolution include Archbishops John L. May of St. Louis; JQhn F. Whealon of Hart ford, Conn.; and Daniel E. Shee han of Omaha, Neb., as well as 18 bishops, including Bishops WaJter F. Sullivan of Richmond,
Va.; Leroy T. Matthiesen of servation of the human species Amarillo, Texas, and James W. as we know it and should be op Malone of Youngstown, Ohio, posed with the same courage and who is also vice president of the '~conviction as we now oppose the U.S. Catholic Conference. threat of nuclear extinction," the statement says. Representatives of other de nominations and groups include "It is very likely that in at tempting to 'perfect' the human Methodist Bishop James Arm strong, president of the National species we will succed in en· Council of Churches; Bishop gineering our own extinction" John M. Allin, presiding bishop because "eliminating so-caBed of the Episcopal Church in Am 'bad genes' will lead to a dan erica; Rabbi Ira Silverman, presi gerous narrowing of diversity in dent of the Reconstructionist the gene pool," according to the Rabbinical College; the Rev. .statement. Jerry Falwell, founder of the The letter says that manipula Moral Majority; and the Rev. tion of human genetic material Avery Post, president of the to prevent disease, prolong life United Church of Christ. and provide other medical bene fits, despite its dangers, is "com Leaders of Lutheran, Baptist, Mennonite, Disciples of Christ ing to us not as a threat but as and other congregations also a promise; not as a punishment but as a gift. And here is where were represented. the true danger lies. "It will soon be possible to "Ultimately, there is no se engineer and produce human be ings by the same techological curity to be found in engineer design principles as we now ing the human species, just as we have now learned that there employ in our industrial pro cesses," said a statement, called is no security to be found in building bigger, more sophisti a "theological letter," accom cated nuclear bombs," the state panying the resolution. "Genetic engineering of the ment says. 'The statement says the genetic human germline cells represents engineering opponents hope their a fundamental threat to the pre
an adequate justification for as suming it should be done or that it can't be stopped from being done." Other Catholic prelates back· ing of the resolution are Bishops James D. Niedergeses of Nash vilie, Tenn.; George A. Fulcher of Lafayette, Ind.; Mark J. Hur ley of Santa Rosa, Calif.; Ed ward J. Herrmann of Columbus, Ohio, (retired); Thomas J. Mar daga of Wilmington, Del.; Jerome J. Hastrich of Gallup, N.M.; Paul V. Donovan of Kalamazoo, Mich.; Joseph J. Madera of ROME (NC) - On the warm Fresno, Calif. Rome evening of June 2 Pope Also Bishops William G. Con John Paul II carried the Blessed nare of Greensburg, Pa.; Ray Sacrament up a slightly graqed mond A. Lucker of New Ulm, mile-long street in a procession Minn.; Frank J. Rodimer of Pat celebrating the feast of Corpus terson, N.J.; Loras J. Watters of Christi. Winona, Minn.; George A. Ham Speaking on the Eucharist at .mes of Superior, Wis.; and reo a Mass in the square outside the tiring Bishop Thomas J. Drury Basilica of St. John Lateran, the of Corpus Christi, Texas, who cathedral church of Rome, the recently resigned, and his suc pontiff told some 25,000 wor cessor, Bishop Rene H. Gracida, shippers of the "jealous love currently of Pensacola-Talla with which the church guards hassee, Fla. this treasure of inestimable value." ONlYFULl·l.INE RElIGIOUS Then, joined by the huge 61FT STORE ON THE CAPE crowd and by eight cardinals • ePEN: Mon - Sll; 8 - 5:30 and 30 archbishops and bishops, • OPEN 7 DAYS the pope carried the Eucharist C:uling IUmllltf on an hour-long procession. !I-• .30_I111!!!!!1~~ Previously he had spoken of 4<i ~ Christ's promise that "he who eats this bread will live forever," "We will set out among songs and prayers, carrying with us the sacrament of the body and 428 Main SI . HyanniS blood of the Lord," he said. "We 175-4180 will go where the life of human John & Mory Lees. Props. beings pul.ses, where their pass· ions rage, their conflicts explode, where their sufferings eat away at them and where their hopes flourish." "We will go," he added, "to give testimony with humble joy 102 Shaw<l)met Avenue to the fact that in this little Someraet, Mass. white host there is the answer to the most worrying questions, Tel. 674-4881
there is comfort for every grief, 3VI roo:n Apartment
there is, in pledge, the satisfac 4 '12 roorn Apartment
tion of that searing thirst for Includes heat, hot water, stove reo
happiness and love which all frlgerator and maintenance service. people carry inside of them, in the hidden recesses of their hearts." iresolution will represent "a watershed in our thinking" about science and technology. "For the first time, it affirms the right of humanity to say no to the application of its own scientific knowledge," the state ment says. "Just because some thing can be done is no longer
'Jealous love' of Eucharist
I
SHAWOMET
GARDENS
l.,
(necroloCiY)
NC Photo
'EHorts to engineer specific genetic traits into the gernlline of the human species should not be attempted.'
June 11 Rev. Msgr. Augusto L. Fur tado, Pastor Emeritus, 1973, St. John of God, Somerset June 12 Rev. Thomas H. Taylor, Pas tor, 1966, Immaculate Concep tion, Taunton June 13 Rev. Edward F. Donahue, S.J:, 1974, B.C. High School, Dorches ter, Mass. June 14 Rev. Msgr. George E. Sullivan, Retired Pastor, 1980, St. Joseph, Fall River Rev. Msgr. Joseph A. Cour noyer, Retired Pastor, 1982, St. Michael, Swansea June 16 Rev. James McDermott, Pas tor, 1975, St. Patrick, Somerset \
w.
H. RILEY & SON, Inc.
"Serveng the Community Since 1813" (itie. Service Petroleum Produdl
Gasoline " Diesel Fuels
Fuel Oil.
Liquified Petroleuln Gal
Stewart-Warner Winkler
Heating & Cooling
Installations
24-Hour lBurner Service
448 BROADWAY, TAUNTON
Attleboro - No. Attleboro
Taunton
.
~
1'4
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of
F,all' River-Fri.,' June '1"0,1983
tion for them'selves. While the person's contribution "might have appeared to go unnoticed," Rawls stresses that "I got it right here in my heart." It is very important to recog· By nize and thank those who have stuck with us. Who are some of TOM these people? Most of us have been influ LENNON enced for the better by teachers. By Charlie Martin Is there a particular teacher who helped form your attitudes or THE WIND BENEATH MY WINGS values, or who went out of his Q. I have been smoking lot more drugs if I wanted to ~go or her way to challenge you? ! You know it must have been cold standing in my shadow marijuana for some time,and on living. I had gotten into sell ~ You never had the sunlight on your face Have you told that person I've been very tempted to ing drugs when I was 14 and , You were content to let me shine how he or she helped you? try hard drugs. I wonder needed more money to' buy I While you even walked a few steps behind Often the people most behind if you really can give me a heroin." : And I was the one with all that glory youths are parents. But some· Marianne: "Tell this person good reason not to try them~ i While you were behind me with all that strength times parents also are the ones to check out some of the hard I Just a face without a name .teen-agers have the most con A. You seem t~ be saying drug users. Listen to their sl~rr : But I never ever once heard you complain flicts with. Other times teen that you really don't want to ed talk. Watch how some have I Did you. ever know that you were my hero agers feel disappointed because use hard drugs and that, you trouble walking straight. Look -; And everything that I would like to be parents have not been all that want me somehow to stop you at their long, dirty hair. Find i I can ny higher than an eagle they wanted or needed them to from doing so. put how low their grades are." :You are the wind beneath my wings be. Perhaps your apparent desire Greg: "I've got a very expen 'It might have appeared to go unnoticed But, \\,hatever your feelings not to use such drugs will be sive habit - cocaine. I've bor : But I got it right here in my heart about parents, have you looked strengthened by what some of rowed thousands of dollars to i I want you to know that I know the truth at all they have given you? Can your peers have to say about keep going. In the city where my would be IIIOthing without you ' you forgive them for their fail them. I family lives I borrowed an awful ings, realizing that parents try Sung by Lou'Rawls, Written by L. Henley and J. Silbar, © 1983 These young people I've ques lot of money from some syndi to do the best they can? by CBS, Inc. tioned are not goody-goody cate dudes. I couldn't pay it Have you expressed your types, but are hard-driving and back so I left home and took a RECENTLY I heard a speaker a shortage .of heroes? gratitude for their years of sup . sophisticated. . Thy!ve been job here. remark that today'syouth have Rawl's hero is someone' who port and care? around and seen a lot, and all "Now I can't go back to where . few authentic heroes to look up encourages another to be better
Is there a void of heroes to are in their teens or early 20s. I grew up becaus' I've gotten the to. and keeps on doing so even day? What do people think? Who Lou Rawls differs from that when the other makes poor jug Donna: "Can t}lis guy afford word that I'll be killed for not are the people that you really point :of view In "The Wind Be- ments or decisions. Such a per hard drugs? As a starter, he'll paying back the money lowe." look up to? Who is helping you need about $25. Then when he Tod: "Speed will cook .your neath I My Wings." He speaks of son's support can provide us with ';fly higher than an eagle"? a person's heroic support and the strength to evaluate our life becomes addicted, his weekly central nervous system. Some Please address correspondence caring while another advances in and change' our actions, values bill can run as high as $3,000 guys on my soccer team used it, to Charlie Martin" 1218 S. the public's 'attention. or goals. or $4,000 - easily." and they're all burnt out now." Given this sense of the word, The song comments that such Rotherwood Ave., Evansville, Dave: "Most guys who use Terry: "I've used acid, and I've Ind. 47714. . is thel world really experiencing people often seek Httle recogni .been on some fantastic trips. But hard drugs don't eat much. ", They're usually small and weak. coming down is awful. The de pression is' so terrible I can't You're better off to spend the 1 four-year colleges; 16.25 precent than to acquaint our fellow hu describe it. Tell the dude to stay money on a YMCA membership. man beings with the person' of to two-year colleges; 17 percent away from all hard drugs. I You can exercise and build up your body and get into sports. Jesus Christ. If we really want are entering the services; 9.4 don't tou<:h 'em now." :By Cecilia Belanger You feel a lot better and have to know who we are, we should percent will be employed; and Mike: "I stopped using hard more fun that way." try to see ourselves in His light. 2.9 percent are as yet undecided drugs when I was 16. I made Jesus tied himself to no one. us get rid of the excess on future plans. He helps Send comments or questions my decision when some big guy He w~s available to all. He did baggage we think is so impor 1312 Mass Ave., to Tom'Lennon, At an awards assembly, 21 was pointing a gun at my head not fight his battle by proxy. tant. students were recognized by the and telling me I had to sell a N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. No one died to save him; he died theatre arts and music depart to save humanity. He walked ments, five for art and mechani dusty : roads, hungry, thirsty, cal drawing, 19 for journalism, sleepless. He was everything good Tonight is the closing per literature and yearbook contri and pure. If one had a need, he formance 0 fan Irish festival be butions, and eight for home had a ~upply. There was neither - ing presented by Easton school· economics. brim nor bottom to his love: children on the campus of Stone raisingi the Jewish maiden from hill College, North Easton. 24 student council awards her bed, ,rescuing the sinking were made as well as 15 for At 7:30 p.m. in the Heming Peter, :pitying a hungry multi general academic achievement. tude, weeping with the sisters of way Theatre fourth graders will Numerous citations for excel present selected dramatizations Bethany, warning those who 'lEmce in speCific subjects, for of Aesop's Fables and Androcles would injure innoce!1t childhood. and the Lion by George Bernard service to the school and for athletic prowess were also an· Jesu~ was a slave to nothing. Shaw. They are directed by Al nounced. He was free from sin, from bert Cullum, a former Stone jealousy; hate, selfishness-the hill College professor who has list is ·~ong. Not to be in bond adapted many plays for child age to: vice or obsession is in ren's' productions.' deed to be free, to be complete MILAN, Italy (NC) - Bishops Also at Stonehill; new depart ly liberated. ment chairpersons are Father representing 22 European coun Jesu~ is telling us that we too Francis Hurley, CSC,biology; tries have recommended to Pope John Paul II that the theme of George Carey, chemistry; Ray can be !free from hate, from ac the 1986 World Synod of Bish qUisitivEmess, from coveting what mond Pepin, economics; Mau ops be the mass media. The sy others have and all the rest of rice Morin, English studies. nod of bishops meet every three the sins that put people in bond years to discuss topics suggested age and slavery. I by the pope. Jesus, tells us not to be lovers National French Examination of power nor one of those who scores brought the State Award aspire to this world's kingdoms. to Feehanite Carole Gagnon. He tells IUS to lay down vengeance Level I high scorers were Pam SCHOLARSHIPS
and take up a cross. He tells us ela Baldwin and Donna Fortin, UNLIMITED
to stop smothering our cons while Level II toprankers were COMPUTER MATCHING TO FUNDS
ciences,: pretending that we don't Maura Datorie, Theresa Haroo FOR COLLEGE, PLEASE SEND 25c
know. right -from wrong. tunian, Maura Toole, Erin Mur FOR BROCHURE
He instructed us in moral phy, 'Joseph Hall, Nicole La AND APPLICATION.
purity, Igave us spiritual insight chance, Dianne MacKinnon. AMERICAN GUIDANCE SERVICES
through the Holy Spirit, set us Also at the Attleboro school, DEPT. NO.5, BOX 127
A boy writhes in pain as he goes through on the path we should follow. a survey of seniors shows that MILLIS, MA 02054
There is no nobler service 69.6 percent are continuing to heroin withdrawal,
What's·
on your
mind?
,
CIJ
:1 I
Jesus
Stonehill College
Mass media topic
Bishop 'Feehan
I.
.'.'.
,
By Bill Morrissette
portswotch Feehan Netmen In Final Having won the South Sectional Eastern Massachusetts boys' tennis championship the Shamrocks of Bishop Feehan High School will. oppose Manchester, the North Sectional Titlist, at 1 p.m. next Tuesday at Newton North High School for the Eastern Mass. crown. Feehan gained the South Sectional final with a 4-1 victory over Sharon and went on to a 3-2 decision in the final over Duxbury, a 4-1 winner over Hingham in the semis. The loss was the first in 19 outings for Duxbury. In the final last Tuesday Dux
bury took a quick lead with vic tories in the No. 1 singles and doubles but the Shamrocks won and the South Sectional crown. Feehan will enter next Tuesday match against Manchester with an 18-0 record. Playoffs for the' South See tional schoolboy baseball championships get underway tomor row with Durfee at Attleboro, Diman Voke at King Philip Re gional High, Case at Archbishop Williams, Old Colony Regional at Westport and Westwood at Fairhaven. All games start at 1:30 p.m.
.
tv, mOVIe news
NOTE Please . check dates and times of television and radio programs against local list ings, which may differ from the New York network sched ules supplied to The Anchor. Symbols following film reviews indicate both general and Catholic Film Office ratings, which do not always coincide. General ratings: G-suitable for gen· eral viewing; PG-parental guidance sug· gested; R-restricted, unsuitable for children or younger teens. Catholic ratings: AI-approved for children and adults; A2-approved for adults and adolescents; A3-approved for adults only; A4-separate classification (given to films not.morally offensi~e which, however, require some analYSiS and explanation): O-morally offensive.
New Films "Psycho II" (Universal): Nor man Bates (Anthony Perkins) stars in this sequel. Judged not Baseball guilty by reason of insanity for In the season opener of the Thursday - Swansea vs. St. all the nasty things he did in Bristol County CYO Baseball Elizabeth, Kennedy Park, Our "Psycho," he is now declared League at Chew Field, Fall Lady of Health vs. St. Michal's· sane. Actually, this time Norman is more sinned against than sin Club, Lafayette Park, 6 p.m. River, last Sunday, former cham ning, since relatives of some pion Kennedy defeated the de It may still be only spring' of his victims, a mother and a fending champion Maplewood, but for athletic directors in high daughter (Vera Miles and Meg 10-7. schools it is also time to look Tilly), are determined to get him In games Monday night Som ahead to the fl&11 sports and recommitted. But all concerned among football ·schedules already get more than they bargained for. erset, behind the four hit pitch ing of Bill Kay, defeated South arrived it is noted that Dart The plot is unins'pired, complex End, 12-2, and North End routed mouth High will host Bishop and incredible. Violence gradu newcomer Anawan by the same Feehan on Sept. 23 and Bishop ally becomes bloodier but the Stang on Sept. 30 in night single most offensive scene is score. games set for 7:~0. The Fall River Area CYO the shower murder scene frolll Baseball League schedule for In field hockey Dartmouth the first film, inserted as a pre next week follows: Sunday will be at Stang on Sept.· 30 and lude. Because of its violence, St. Michael's Club vs. Immacu home .to the Spartans on Oct. Psycho II is rated 0, R. late Conception, 5:30 p.m., and 19. In cross-country Dar.tmouth "Tough Enough" (Fox): Den Swansea vs. St. Patrick, 7:30, is at Feehan on· Sept. 20, at Our both at Lafayette Park, St. Eliza Lady of Providence on Sept. 24, nis' Quaid plays a would:be beth vs. St. Anne, Maplewood home to Stang on Sept. 30 and country-western singer who be Park, 7 p.m. Monday· - Our at Catholic Memorial on Oct. 15. comes a fighter, entering a. series Lady of Health vs. St. Anne, Stang, Bishop Connolly and of "tough man" contests put on by a promotor played by the Kennedy Park, 6 p.m. Tuesday Holy Family have home-and late Warren Oates. Nothing in "- St. William vs. St. Anne, home engagements with Dart Kennedy Park, Notre Dame vs. mouth in soccer. The home terms of characterization or plot, Swansea, Lafayette Park, both games are Connolly, Sept.· 20, all emphasis being on the brutal at 6 p.m. Wednesday - St. Holy Family Sept. 29 and Stang, fights themselves. A3, R Michael's Club vs. St. Patrick, Oct. 18. Away tilts are Stang, TV Programs Kennedy Park, 6 p.m., Notre Sept. 23, Connolly, Oct. 13, Holy Irish television breaks into Dame vs. Immaculate Concep Family, Oct. 24. American broadcasting with an tion, Lafayette Park, 8 p.m. exceptional documentary on a fascinating subject, "The World All-Star Selections of James Joyce," airing Wednes Mike Graham of Falmouth junior ColJeen Kaleta, Mans High School is the only player field, discus; senior Tracey day, June 15, 8-9:30. p.m. on from the Southeastern Mass. Davidson, Mansfield, high jump; PBS. Produced by Sean O'Mordha Conference named to the Boston junior Patty Drury, Canton, 800 Globe's 1983 all-scholastic base meter run; senior Sue Bliss, for Radio Telefis Eireann, the ball team. The stocky outfielder North Attleboro, 100 meter low documentary is both a portrait of pre-World War I Dublin and batted around .540, hit 11 home hurdles; freshman Melody John runs and drove in 36. son, North Attleboro, 100 meter the man who wrote about it during his 40 years of self-im The HockomocIq League's run; junior Julie Buckley, Can ton, 1,000 meter run; sophomore posed exile. girls' tennis all-star team: sen ior Wendi Slade, King Philip Terri Jones, Oliver Ames, 200 Interweaving the Dublin con High, juniors Suzanne Blom meter run; junior Andrea Petten text with Joyce's life and writ strom, Maura Tector, Stoughton, gill, North Attleboro, two-mile Jngs, t~e documentary trans-. and junior Colleen Garvin, run; Oliver Ames relay team lates its very Irish subject into (Chestnut, Jones, senior Linda a universal experience, made Oliver Ames, singles; juniors Di anne Blomstrom and Tina Gal Boman and sophomore Kathy richer by the fullness of its imag ley, Stoughton, senior Paula Goode), 4xl00 meter relay; Fox ery carefully culled from archi McGarry and Tricia Tobin, boro relay team (sophomores val sources. Oliver Ames, and sophomores Janet Lonergan and Kelly Walsh, Monday, June 13, 8-9 p.m. Kyle Pfeffer and Lisa Quinn, junior Kelly Gallivan and sen ior Kelly Murphy), 4x400 meter (PBS) "The Russians Are Here," Canton, doubles. Offering insights into both U.S. The girls' all-star track team: relay; senior Dawn Cronin, Can ton, senior Lori Laderoute, and Russian life, this "Frontline" sophomofe Jean Calder, Fox North Attleboro, and freshman dO,f:umentary deals with a com boro, javelin; senior Maureen Ka munity of Russian immigrants leta, Mansfield, shot put; senior Paula Lodi, Franklin, overall per who have recently arrived in this Cheryl Chestnut, Oliver Ames, formance. country. long jump and 400 meter run;
eyo
4t
Religious Broadcasting - TV Sunday, June 12, 10:30 a.m. Diocesan Television Mass. "Confluence," 8 am. each Sunday on Channel 6, is a panel program moderated by Truman Taylor and having as pennanent participants Father Peter N. Gra ziano, diocesan director of social services; Right Rev. George Hunt, Episcopal Bishop of Rhode Island; and Rabbi Baruch Korff. This week's topic: Political Dirty Tricks. "The Glory of God." with Father John Bertolucci, 7:30 a.m. each Sunday, Channel 27. "MarySon." a family puppet show with moral and spiritual perspective 6 p.m. each Thurs day, Fan River and New Bed ford cable channel 13. "Spirit and the Bride," a talk show with William Larkin, 6 p.m. each Monday, cable chan ne135. Sunday, June 12, (ABC) "Di rections" - What's being done to' help compulsive gamblers. Sunday, June 12, (CBS) "For Our Times". - Religious leaders react to the pastoral on nuclear warfare. Friday, June 17, to Wednes day, June 22, 11:30 p.m. (NBC), "Highlights of the Papal Visit:" 10-minute reports on each day's events. On Radio Charismatic programs are heard from Monday through Fri day on station WICE 1210 AM; Father John Randall, 9 to 10 a.m. -and 11 to 12 p.m.; Father Edward McDonough, 8:15 a.m.; Father Real Bourque, 8:45 a.m. Father McDonough is also on WMYD from 1:30 to 2 p.m. each Sunday. Sunday, June 12, (NBC) "Guideline" - Msgr. John Foley, editor of the Philadelphia Cath. olic Standard and Times, rem inisces about Pope John Paul II.
Norris H. Tripp
THE ANCHOR' Friday, June 10, 1983
15
-
Cornwell Memorial Chapel, Inc. 5 CENtER STREET WAREHAM, MASS. DIGNIFIED FUNERAL SERVICE DIIlECTORS
GEORGE E. CORNWEll
EVEREn E. KAHRMAN
295-1810
REBELLO'S NURSERY
INC.
"On The Cape" "WE BEAUTIFY OUTDOORS" Flowering Shrubs, Trees Lawn Fertilizer • Loam • Annuals Landscape Design 958 MAIN ST. - RTE. 28 EAST FALMOUTH
Evergreen~,
548-4e42
·.'0.·0••.•• FUNERAL
SERVICE
,
\.A.e . " .
.
Howlrd C, DOino Sr. Cordon l. Homer Howlrd C. DOlno Jr. Robert L. Studley "YAIIIIII nS-G114
IlutII Ylrmlutb 211·2201
Hlrwlch rlrt 4U-ClSU
HOL Y FAMIL Y
RELIGIOUS
GIFT STORE
~
-
1223 STATE ROAD
JI~ ~'. WESTPORT MA , L o c a t e d ne.
I '. 'I ( • , .
6"""!"VI
i~
Lincoln Park
Full L1nl Relilioul 81ft Sbop
TEL
636·8482
OPEN MON.· lAT•••SO A.M•• 8:00 P.M. fRIDAY 1:00 P.M.
Savings? We have a high-interest plan for every savings need!
SHEET METAL J. TESER, Prop. RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL 253 Cedar St., New Bedford 993-3222
Now 11 convenient offices including Seekonk &: Taunton.
ORTINS
PHOTO SUPPLY
NIKON • CANON· OLYMPUS
ROLLEI • VIVITAR • TENBA
SONY· PANASONIC
267 MAIN STREET
FALMOUTH - 548-1918
ARMAND ORTINS. Prop.
. ~
Montie Plumbing & Heating Co. Over 35 Years
of Satisfied Service
Reg. Master Plumber 7023
JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR.
432 JEFFERSON STREET Fall River 675-7496
THRIFT STORES SOl COllEm STREET
NEW BEDfORO, MASS.
11 S~ JEfFERSON BLVD.
WARWICK, R.I.
(At.
III loutll· Airport bltJ
.....
-
!
16
I
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 10, 1983 .. ST. RITA, MARION. . Thbse wishing the Sunday morriing babysitting service to continue during the summer are asked to notify the rectory.
Iteering pOintl
. SACRED HEART, FR
'\
!
PUBLICITY' CHAIRMEN
CATHEDRAL, FR
are asked to submit news Items for this column to The Anchor, P.O. Box 7, Fall River, 02722. Name of city or town should be Included as well as full dates of all activities. please send news of future rather than past events. Note: We. do not carry news of fundralslng activities such as bingos, whists, dances, suppers and bazaars. We are happy to carry notices of spiritual prollrams; club meetin!!s youth pro/ects and similar nonprofit actiVitIes. Fundralslng pro Jects may be advertised at our regular rates,
obtainable from The Anchor business office, teleShone 675·7151. n Steering Points Items FR Indicates Fall River. NB Indicates New Bedford.
(I ,
Parish council meeting: 7:15 p.m. Sunday, rectory. ST. MARY, NB
Women's Guild 6:30 p.m. in stallation Mass Tuesday, follow ed by banquet at Portuguese Shanty. ' NOTRE DAME" FR
Jesus-Mary Sisters, now set tled at 332 Eastern Ave. will ,hold an open house after all Masses this Sunday. All wel
come.
ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI, NB
~
.
New Women's League offi.,. cers: Susan· Sylvia, president; Diane Arruda;. vice-president; Terri Leary, Natalie Arsenault, secretaries; Mary Neves: treasurer. . I Men's and Women's League officers' meeting: 7 p.m. Thurs day; Men's League meeting: June 26 after 10 a.m. Mass. Parish picnic: July 31, Ca thedral Camp.
K of C, FR
Knights of Columbus, Council 86: election 6. to 8 p.m. Monday. Stang Assembly election: 6 t.o 8 .p.m. Wednesday. Council 86 awards night: 7 p.m. June 18, banquet, dancing and awards program. Recent Knights of the Month have been Henry Holtham, March; Armand Cousineau, April; Msgr. John J. Oliveira, May; Dennis Hurley, June.
SS. PETER & PAUL, FR
CYO council meeting: 7· p.m. Tuesday, Father Coady Center. Newly ordained Father Paul A. Caron will celebrate a clos ing of school Mass at 10 a.m. Tllursday. A parishioner, he taught at SS. Peter and Paul School before entering the seminary.· .
The parish was consecrated to the Immaculate Heart May 22 with ceremonies consisting ofa living rosary, homily crowning of. our Lady and Benediction. .
O. L. GRACE, WESTPORT
SEPARATED/DIVORCED, FR
Diocesan mariage guidelines; available at church doors. Adult Bible study and pray er: 8 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, church basement. Picnic committee meeting: 7:30 p.m. June 21, basement.
General discussion: 7 p.m. Tuesday, Our Lady of Fatima church 'hall, 530 Gardners Neck Rd., Swansea. . Line dancing lesson or gen eral discussion: same' time and place, Wednesday, June 22.
HOLY REDEEMER, CHATHAM
Applications are being accep ted for parish religious coor dinator. Information at the rec tory. , HOLY NAME, FR
Women's Guild 'board meet ing: 7 p.m. Monday, rectory. ST. ~OHN OF GOD, SOMERSET
Holy Ghost feast:. tomorrow and Sunday. Noon Mass Sun day, preceded by 11 a.m. pro cession, forming at Slade's Ferry: and Brayton AveTlues. Band concert, Portuguese foods.
WIDOWED SUPPORT, TAUNTON
Meeting: 7:30 tonight, Sacred Heart Church 'basement; guest speaker Dr. Hugh Boyle psy chologist. All welcome; meet ings each second Friday. O.L. ANGELS, FR
Patronal feast planning meet ing: 7 p.m. June 20. Council of Catholic Women requests donations of white cloth to make pads for the Rose Hawthorne Home. Musicals: 7 p.m. Sunday, June 19; all welcome. Parish council meeting: Mon day, 7 p.m.
HOLY NAME, NB
'Women's' Guild final meeting: 6:30 p:m. Tuesday, Dugdale's Towne House.
I
ST. MARY, SEEKONK
SECULAR FRANCISCANS, POCASSET
Prayer group: 7:30 p.m. each Monday at church. All welcome.
Meeting: 7:10 p.m. 'Tuesday,
St. John's parish center. Mass, Today's Mass wil be' followed 'talks on reconciliation. All wel
by prayer to the Sacred Heart. . come.
ST. ~CHAEL, SWANSEA
FAMI,LY UFE CENTER, N. DARTMOUTH
St. Francis of Assisi parish council dinner: 6 p.m. Sunday. St. Kilian Widowed Support Group: ·buffet supper 6 p.m. Monday. I
ST. MARY, FAIRHAVEN Mas~ 4 p.m. Sunday, followed by a banquet in observance of the parish golden jubilee.
I
.
ST. JOSEPH, NB
Senior citizens breakaway party ;and Mother and Fa~her's Day observance: 2 p.m. Thurs day. ' Parish council members are 'sough'~: informa~ion,' Dennis Bowen, 995-6015. ST. STANISlLAUS,FR
Women's Guild meeting Wed-. nesday'. . Senior citizens' meeting: 1 p.m. ;Monday, preceded by ,board meeting at 11:30 a.m.
ST. DOMINIC, SWANSEA
. Altar boy classes for 'boys in 4th grade or over wlll be held rectory. Women's Guild: Installation 6:30 p.m. Monday, June. 20. Banquet following at Venus de Milo restaurant. . . '
ST. ANTHONY ,OF PADUA,
FR
There will be only one vigil
Mass ,tomorrow, at ·4 p.m. Holy
Ghost feast celebration; 6 p.m. to midnight. Sunday: feast day Mass 11 a.m.; guest homilist Msgr. Luiz Mendonca, vicar-general' and pastor .of O.L. of Mt. Carmel Church, New Bedford; pro cession 2 p.m., followed by en tertainment. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, TAUNTON
Youth groups and altar boys will 'hold 'their annual Rocky Point outing June 29. The Gorey Scholarship to
Coyle and Cassidy High School
has gone to parishioner Thomas Hoye. BL.SACRAMENT,FR
Parishioners have received a letter from Sister Rosalina Ca bral, a missionary in Peru, ac knowledging a gift of $350 real ized from parish Lenten sacri-'
fices. She wrote: "We have been ·able to ·give financial help t.o families in need and pay medi
cal and hospital bills for 'the
poor, buy them eyeglasses, etc.
. ... lam amazed at how God
in his loving providence comes ,to our aid so that we may help others."
I ' -, .. 'JI'?" f_ .11"'-
,... <
~.:I ... >
11... ..,. c.
.~
..
.
....
HALLETT Funeral Home Inc. 283 Station Avenue South Yarmouth, Mass.
Tel. 398-2285
ST. JOSEPH, FAIRHAVEN
Blood bank: 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday, June 26, church
hall.
First communion pictures:
available at school. ESPIRITO SANTO, FR
Preparations ·are complete for the silver jubilee observance of Father Luis Cardoso, pastor. A 4 p.m. Mass Sunday, June 19, will be followed by a 6 p.m. banquet at Venus de Milo res taurant, Swansea. Informaotion: Mrs. Josephine Medeiros, 6721723. .
Holy Ghost Feast: procession 6:30 p.m. tomorrow; Domingas procession 10:30 a.m. Sunday; Mass ·and crowning ceremony, 11:30 a.m. Sunday, followed by sopas in ,the church hall and entertainment until 10 p.m., in cluding drawing of 1984 Dom ingas. ST. ANNE'S, FR
Exposition of ,the Blessed Sacrament today, .the feast of the Sacred Heart, after 11 :30 a.m. Mass; 'hour of adoration from 2 to 3 p.m. in ,the shrine. Fifth Annual Summer Pro gram: July. 20 through 22, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at St. Anne's School for children in grades 1 through 8. Information and ap plication forms at rectory.
Spanish issues VATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope John Paul II has called on Spain's socialist government to respect the convictions of the nation's predominantly Catholic population on abortion and reli gious education. The issues have produced disagreements between the Spanish Catholic hierarchy and the government. Accepting the credentials of Spain's new ambassador to the Holy See, Nuno Guirre de Career y Lopez de Sagredo, the pope spoke of the "right of parents to choose reli
gious, moral and human educa
tion which corresponds to their
own convictions" and said that
protecting "the' irreplaceable role of the family in civil society" means respecting unborn human
life.
Warning ATMORE, Ala. (NC) - Less than a week before his April execution in the electric chair, condemned murderer John Louis Evans II videotaped a message to school children, to be used after his death; telling them, "Don't follow me." According to the priest who was his spiritual adviser, Father Kevin Duignan of St. Robert Parish, Atmore, "He wanted it used as a weapon against crime."
i···········
: :
PILGRIMAGE TO CANADA JULY 9. 12, 1983
• • • • :
: • • • • • : •
SAT., JULY 9 - leave 6:00' A.M. from Parking lot, corner So. Main & Oliver Sts. 7:30 P.M. - Mass at St. Jude's Church, Canada. SUN., JULY 10 - S1. Joseph's Oratory, Montreal. Maybe the Church of Notre Dame, Montreal. Cap-De-la·Madeleine: 8:30 P.M. Torchlight Procession. MON., JULY 11 - Quebec City: Visit the Parliament of the Province of Que· bee, Battlefie,ld Park,\ Montmorency Falls, S1. Anne de Beaupre TUES., JULY 12 - Shrine of OlU' lady of Grace, Colebrook, New Hampshire' ':Talk on the role of Mary by Fr. Ray Bourque, O.M.I.,.The White Mountains. GENERAL INFORMATION: Sleepover, Mass and Breakfast everyday, in an atmosphere so peaceful and loving you will feel as if you have one foot in heaven and one on earth at the Retreat House of the Dominican Fathers at St. Hyacinthe, Canada: COST: Bus Trip, Room (double occupancy) and Breakfast $135 Per Person Single Room:' add $5.00 Per Person Per Night.
• : • • • • •• •
: •
CALL: IRENE COTE 674-6254 OUT OF FALL RIVER 1·674-6254
• :
•
...
I
This Message Sponsored by the Following Busines~ Concerns In the Diocese of Fall River PAUL G. CLWY & CO., INC. EDGAR'S FALL RIVER FDTELBERB INSURANCE ABENCY
GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO. INTERNATIONAL LADIES GARMENT WORKERS UNION
GEORGE O'HARA CHMOLETCAOIWC .
•
~
....;1/1.
~
: :
•
• • • • ••
•.
~