06.11.82

Page 1

FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER

t eanc 0 YOLo 26, NO. 23

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SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSEnS

CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS

FALL RIYER, MASS., FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1982

20c, $6 Per Year

Po.pe key figure

By NC News Service Remaining a pivotal figure in the international spotlight, Pope John Paul II began this week with an hour-long private meet­ ing at Vatican City wi~h Presi­ dent Reagan. This morning he is scheduled to arrive in Argentina for a hastily-arranged 36-hour stay desigl\ed to counterbalance his trip to Great Britain earlier this month. The Vatican City meeting was the first between Reagan and the pope, although they exchanged sympathetic messages last year when both were targets of assas­ sination attempts and have also

~240 MSGR.COURNOYER

60 years a praest

Msgr. Cournoyer

By Pat McGowan

Talking to Msgr. Joseph A. Cournoyer is like opening a win­ dow on the gentler days of 60 years ago, when a newly-ordain­ ed priest could go an entire Cape Cod vacation season with only one sick call; when his sum­ mer flock at Our Lady of Lour. des parish, Wellfleet, expanded by only 50 or 60 persons; when he had a beach all to himself for his daily swim. Of course, mused Msgr. Cour­ noyer, It was also an era when it took nearly all his day off simply to reach his New Bedford hom~. "I had to take the train to Wareham, another train to Fairhaven and a ferry from Fair­ haven to New Bedford. Then I climbed the hill from the dock to where I could get a trolley car home." Not surprisingly, there were few such trips that long-ago summer. Recently Msgr. Cournoyer rem­ inisced about the days when the Fall River diocese was young in a leisurely interview at the New Bedford home he has shared with his sister, Mrs. Emma Wil­ son, sil')ce he retired in 1969 from the pastorate of St. Mi­ chael's ~arish, Swansea. }/. few days before, on May 25, he had marked his 60th anni-

versary of priestly ordination with a concelebrated home Mass of thanksgiving. Flowers still brightened the living room and cards were on display. A letter of congratulations had come from Bishop Daniel A. Cronin, wishing the 87-year-old jubilarian well and thanking him for his contributions to the dio­ cese. And priest-friends gathered to concelebrate the jubilee Mass,­ including Msgr. Henri Hamel, Msgr. Alfred J. Gendreau, Father Paul E. Canuel, Father Ernest E. Blais and Father Clement E. Du­ four. Father Blais came to the cele­ bration from the task of rees­ tablishing parish life at fire­ ravaged Notre Dame Church, Fall River, where Msgr. Cour­ noyer had served a total. of 21 years. Father Dufour, the present pas­ tor of St. Michael's, Swansea, from which Msgr. Cournoyer re­ tired as pastor emeritus after 24 years of service, during which he enlarged the entire parish plant, brought with him the love and good wishes of parishioners. Born in 1894 in Webster, the jubilarian came to New Bedford at age three, when his family settled in the former St. Hya­ cinth parish. One of his early Tum to Page Eight

consulted by letter on topics of the Middle East and Latin Am­ mutual concern. erica. After their private meeting, During the private audience the men read public statements with Reagan, Pope John Paul's in the pope's library, giving an top assistants in the Secretariat indication of the topics discuss­ of State and the Council for the ed. . ·Public Affairs of the church had Pope John Paul spoke of his a working meeting with Haig; concern for peace, especially in William A. Wilson, Reagan's the South Atlantic, between Iran personal representative to the and Iraq, and in ,Lebanon. He Holy See; William P. Clark, as­ called for an end to the arms . sistant to the president for na­ race and 'condemned "anything tional security; and James A that wounds, weakens or dis­ Rentscher, senior national secur­ ity . affairs staff member for honors human dignity." President Reagan criticized Western Europe and Canada. Poland's martial law government The pope told the president and said the U.S. would continue and his entourage that his to work for peace and justice in Turn to Page Ten

are

Bishop Daniel A. Cronin com­ missioned 240 Special Ministers of Holy Communion in services on June 3at St. Mary's Cathe­ dral. They represented 56 par­ ishes and apostolates of the dio­ cese. The candidates were com­ missioned for Mass, for ministry to the sick, or for both minis­ tries. Their names and parishes fol_ low: FALL RIVER AREA Blessed Sacrament Susan Ba­ con, Claudette Ouellette, Julie Borgatti, Sister Irene Comeau, S.S.J., Kathleen Rodrigues. Holy Name Jean M. Beaupre, Sister Patricia Custy, R.S.M., Paul G. Dextraze, Mrs. Henry G. . Ferland, Everett E. Martin, Jo­ seph E. Paquet, David A. Vivei­ ros, James Rezendes. Immaculate Conception John Burgess, Jean Bently, Margaret Charbonneau, Albert Jalbert, Nancy Jalbert. Sacred Heart David M. Du­ hancik, Marjorie Lothrop. st. Louis Patricia Carreiro, Thomas Carreiro, Eleanor L'­ Heureux, Gilbert L'Heureux Jacqueline Medeiros.

st. William Leo Aubin, Helen Janick. St. Bernard, Assonet Felician Brochu. Dominican Provlncialate, Dighton Sister Annette Desmar­ ais, O.P., Sister Joanna Fernan­ des, O.P., Sister Marina Mejia, O.P. St. John of God, Somerset Ed­ ward B. Medeiros, Rose Medei­ ros.. St. Thomas More, Somerset Jane M. Borden, Catherine C. Connelly, Leo E. Guertin, Jr., Gilbert Lowney, Mary Lou Rein­ hagen, William J. Torpey, Jo­ seph. Kolakowski, Patricia Kol­ akowski. st. Dominic, Swansea Doris Carr, Roger Pelissier, Rita Pa­ vao. St. Louis de France, Swansea Claudette A11'ItStrong, Sister Rose Boulay, S.R.C., Roger N. Levesque, William McAndrew,

Claudette Sy!ses, Robert Sykes. St. George, Westport Patricia

Arruda, Olivia Camara, Jeanne Desjardins, Alice Manchester, Maureen Pease, Raymond Pease, Chris J. Smith, Pauline Tar­ vares.

Charlton Memorial Hospital Donna DaSilva, Dian& Domin­ gue, Patricia Lackey, Grace Martin, Lana Moniz.

. st. Anne's Hospital Sister Jo­

seph Pelletier, O.S.

St. Patrick Albert Arsenault, William X. Murray, Sr., Anthony Ruggiero, Maurice Sirois. Mount 51. J()Seph Sister Marie Paul Bolduc, S.C.Q., Sister Fran­ ces Cullan,' S.C.Q., Sister Laura Moore, S.C.Q., Sister Gisele Thibault, S.C.Q. TAUNTON - ATTLEBORO Sacred Hearl. Taunton Del­ ores Larocque. St. Jacques, Taunton Jeanne Richards. 81. Joseph, Taunton Joseph Lema, Wililam K, McCarthy. 51. Mary, Taunton Arthur Bourgault, Charles J. Cronan, Frances Cronan, Orlando De Abreu, Ruth Diaz, Louise Drake, Robert Drake, Clifford Lentz. St. Paul, Taunton Edward P.

Bayle, Mildred I. Gedrites, Mar­ guerite Rogers.

HolY Ghost, Attleboro Maria C. Amaral, Donald Grott, Made­ line Turley, Constance Vincent. Turn to Page Six

12 priests are assigned

The Most Reverend Bishop has announced assignments affecting 12 priests. All will be effective Wednesday, June 23, and all in­ volve associate pastors. Father Richard E. Degagne, ordained last Saturday, will take up his first priestly assignment as associate pastor at Holy Name parish, Fall River. From St. Anne's parish, Fall River, Father Degagne taught music on the junior high' school level for two years before entering studies for the priesthood.

Father Henry s. Arruda, asso­ ciate at Immaculate Conception parish, New Bedford, will trans­ fer to St. Anthony's, Taunton. Father Arruda has served on the Diocesan Music Commission and was CCD cochairman for the Fall River area. He was pre­ viously at St. Anthony's for two years following ordination and has also served at St. Michael's, Fall River, Our Lady of Mt. Car­ mel, Seekonk, and St. John of God, Somerset. Father Richard W. Beaulieu,

associate at Sacred Heart, Taun­ ton, will transfer to St. Louis de . France, Swansea. The holder of a master's degree in education from Boston College, he is a doctoral candidate, also in edu­ cation. He was principal of Coyle and Cassidy High School, Taun­ ton, from 1977 to 1981, prior to being on leave to pursue ad~ vanced studies. Father Raymond Cambra, as­ sociate at Immaculate Concep­ tion, Taunton, will transfer to Turn to jf)age Three


2

THE -

ANCHOR-Diocese June' .. --, IJf Fail . River-Fri.,' . .

11','1982 ..

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WIND AND WEATHER failed to deter high school ... ",.~ "'" .•<::m"'"'''t'~::::~ ..>· '''' .. ,,~%''' ,. •.... ~"..p""

graduates. of the diocese from marching down various aisles towards their coveted diplomas. Top to bottom, left to right, unidentified Bishop Feehan High School graduates hurry towards ceremony; Bishop Connolly seniors Brenda Brooder, Cheryl.Gray, Dough,ls Ponte, Douglas Bax~ndale Jr. smile through raindrops; at Bishop Stang it's a double farewell as s~niors part from departing principal George Milot. From left, Kevin Downey, senior class president; John Vickers, secretary; Tricia O'Reilly, vice-president. . For the Downey family it's a special moment. Oldest sister Rita started at Stang 16 years ago when Milot joined the faculty; now the youngest of the efght Downeys graduates as Milot leaves;' a~ Coyle arid Cassidy, Gary Masapello, Bishop Daniel A. Cr~>nin, Dr. Edward Simmons and Mau­ .. reen Clark share a smile. Dr. Simmons, a 1942 Coyle grad­ uate,. is vice~president ~or academic affai.rs at Marquette. University; "We made it" seems the prevailing' mood at .' H,oly Family as Monique La Perriere, Robert .Tetreault, Robert Yergeau and Victor Pinheiro check the school year­ book.


THE ANCHO~-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 11, 1982

12 priests Continued from page one Santo Christo, Fall River. Or. dained in 1977, he served at Im­ maculate Conception, Fall River, prior to his Taunton assignment. Father Paul E. Canuel, asso­ ciate at St. Stephen's, Attleboro, will go to St. Jacques, Taunton. He served at parishes in Fall River, Wareham and Seekonk prior to joining the Society of St. James the Apostle in 1975 for service in Latin America. He worked in Peruvian missions. un· til this year. Father Jose A. F. dos Santos, associate at St. John the Baptist parish, New Bedford, will go to Immaculate Conception parish, also New Bedford. A native of Portugal, Father dos Santos was ordained in that country in 1953 and then taught and was vice· rector in the Seminary of St. Joseph in Felgueiras, served as a missionary in Mozambique and held several chaplaincies. He came to the Fall River diocese in 1970. Father Raul M. Lagoa will go from associate pastor at Our Lady of Lourdes, Taunton, to' the same post at St. John the Baptist, New Bedford. Ordained in 1979, he served at St. Mary's

parish, Norton, before his pres­

ent assignment and he has been pre-Cana program director for the Attleboro area. Father Arnold Medeiros, asso­ ciate at St. Anthony, Taunton, wlll go to Our Lady of Lourdes, Taunton. A native of St. Michael, Azores, he came to Fall River as a child and was ordained in 1975. He served in Somerset and West­ port before being assigned to Taunton. Father Bruce M. Neylon, since his ordination in 1975 at Holy Name, Fall River, wlll transfer to St. Patrick'S, Wareham. He is diocesan director of the Guild for the Blind, Fall River area CYO director and an advocate in the diocesan marriage tri­ bunal. . Father WiUiam W. Norton, associate at St. Patrick, Ware­ ham, will become associate at St. Patrick's, Fall River. He has pre­ viously served at St. Kilian's, Holy Name and St. Mary's, all in New Bedford, and was also chap­ lain and director of St. Mary's Home. He taught and was chap­ lain at Bishop Stang High School, was New Bedford area CYO di­ rector, chaplain of the New Bed­ ford nurses' guild and active in New Bedford pre-Cana Confer­ ence programs. Father William F. O'Neill, as­ sociate at St. Jacques, Taunton, will go to Immaculate Concep­ tion, Taunton. Ordained in 1967, he served at St. Joseph's, Fall River, and St. Mary's, North At· tleboro, before joining the Army Chaplain Corps for a six-year term. Returning, he was at St. Lawrence, New Bedford, before going to St. Jacques. Father Joseph F. Viveiros, as, sociate at St. John the Baptist, New Bedford will go to St. An­ thony of Padua, Fall River. He is director of the Diocesan Deaf Apostoil\te and served at Our Lady of Fatima, New Bedford, and Sacred Heart, Fall River, be­ fore beginning his present assign· ment in 1979.

3

Diocese of Fall River

OFFICIAL FIRST PRIESllLY ASSIGNMENT Rev. Richard E. Degagne, to Assistant, Holy Name Parish, FaU River CLERGY ASSIGNMENTS Rev. Henry S. Arruda, from Assistant, nmmaculate Con­ ception, New Bedford, to Assistant, Saint Anthony, Taunton Rev. Richard W. Beaulieu, from Assistant, Sacred Heart, Tau'nt~n, to Assistant, St. Louis de France, Swansea Rev. Raymond Cambra, from Assistant, Immaculate Con­ ception, Taunton, to Assistant, Santo Chdsto, FaLl River iRev. Paul Canuel, from Assistant, St. Stephen, Attleboro, to Assistant, Saint Jacques, Taunton Rev. Jose A. F. dos Santos, from Assistant, St. John the Baptist, New Bedford, to Assistant, Immaculate Conception, New Bedford . Rev. Raul M. Lagoa, from Assistant, Our Lady of Lourdes, Taunton, to iAssistant, St. John the :Baptist, New :Bedford Rev. Arnold R. Medeiros, from Assistant, Saint Anthony, Taunton, ·to Assistant, Our Lady of Lourdes, Taunton Rev. Bruce M. Neylon, from Assistant, Holy Name, Fall River, to Assistant, St. Patrick Wareham Rev. William W. Norton, frlt Assistant, St. Pstrick, Ware­ ham, to Assistant, St. Patrick, Fall River Rev. WiHiam F. O'Neill, from Assistant, St: Jacques, Taun­ ton, to Assistant, Immacu1ate Conception~ Taunton Rev. Joseph F. Viveiros, from Assistant, St. John·the Bap­ tist, New ·Bedford, to Assistant, St. Anthony of Padua, FaU River All assignments effective Wednesday June 23, 1982

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BISHOP DANIEL A. CRONIN congratulates Father Richard E. Degagne, the newest diocesan priest, following ordination rites la9t Saturday.

u.s. echoes

English 'meeting

Common and together go within By NC News ServiCe to offer our common prayers to U.S. Catholics and Episcopal­ ians heid ecumenical services our common Lord." Cardinal Medeiros cited his around the country to commem­ orate 'Pope John Paul II's May 29 long acquaintance with Bishop meeting with Anglican Arch· Coburn, declaring, "This is more than a personal visit between bishop Robert Runcie of Canter­ bUry, England, leader of the old and good friends, it is rather a celebration of the distance our worldwJde Anglican Commun­ two churches have traveled after ion, to which the Episcopal 450 years of silence, suspicion Church belongs. They included a meeting in and separation." Boston of Cardinal Humberto . The cardinal and the 'bishop Medeiros and 'Episcopal Bishop read together from the Book of John B. Coburn, who prayed to· Common Prayer in the Chapel of St. Botolph, patron saint of gether for the success of ecu­ Boston. menical initiatives at the Epis­ Other Episcopal-Catholic ob­ copal Cathedral of St. Paul. In his welcome Bishop Coburn servances took place in New spoke of the pope's ·visit, saying York ,City, . Buffalo, N.Y.; Eau it "seems only appropriate when Claire, Wisc., and Trenton, N.J. the holy father and the arch­ bishop of Canterbury meet to­ gether because of their common THE ANCHOR (USPS·S4S-D20). Second Class Paid at Fall River, Mass. Published spirit looking toward reconcilia· Postage waekly except the week of July 4 and the after Christmas at 410 Highland Aven­ tion of the churches and of the week ue, Fall River, Mass. 02722 by the CaUl· ollc Press of the Diocese of Fall River. nations that you and I meet to­ Subscription price by mall, postpaid $6.00 gether on the steps of this ca­ per year. Postmasters send address changes The Anchor, P.O. Box 7. Fall River, MA thedral overlooking ,the Boston to 02722.

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THE ANCHOR-_Diocese of Fall River":'Fri., June 11,' 1982

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themoorin~ A. Problem for A.II 'Pte figures are in and they speak for themselves. The shortage ·of priests in the United States is about to reach crisis proportions. Official Catholic Directory statis~ . ticians estimate that the Catholic Church in America will have 50 percent fewer active priests by the end of the century, a mere 17 and a half years away. ( A quick glance at seminary enrollment tells much of\~ the story. In 1966 there were 48,000 seminarians. By 1972 this 'number had been reduced to 22,963.. Now, if one can stand· the impact, there are only 11,500; down 800 from . last year's figure. Over the last 16 years, the figures indicate a decrease of 36,500 seminarians in this country. In other words, there are over 75 percent fewer men studying for the priesthood than there were in 1966. And there seems no end to the slide. Some of the fallout from this decline is obvious and already having its effect. The Catholic Directory reports a present total of 58,085 religious and diocesan priests in the United States. Taking into consideration the drop in seminarians' and allowing for attrition due to retirement and disability, it is projected that by the year 2000 fewer than 25,000· priests will be serving the American church. If today there are dioceses that must close parishes because of a shortage of priests, jf .today many priests are involved in dual or triple ministries, and if today priests are burning out from overwork and stress, what will it be 'like in a few short year~? Some Catholics are looking to the permanent diacon­ ARCHBISHOP OF CAN1l'ERBURY ROBERT RUNCIE AND POPE JOHN PAUL II SHARE PRAYER IN

.ate and expanded lay ministries to fill the void. But noth­ MARTYR:DOM CHAPEL OF CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL WHERE ST. THOMAS A BECKET

WAS MURDERED IN 1170 AT THE INSTIGATION OF KING HENRY n

ing can substitute for the priest. Deacons and lay ministers are a most valuable asset to the church but cannot replace 'Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in the priesthood. unity.' Ps. 132:1 . Some feel that .the sole solution is to reshape ordained ministry; but it is obvious that such remedies are.in the realm of speculation. The Holy Father has consistently rejected the idea of married priests or women priests. Nevertheless, the vocation crisis comes at a time when there is somewhat· of a religious revival in America. The Qy Naney Frazier to admire a selection of famous tion and development of the Catholic population is on the increase, with over 51 mil­ The Vatican will send 200 of works of art collected by the Vatican Museums with works of lion U.S. Catholics; some would say that an accurate its art works, including the paint­ popes, but also' to understand high quality," Pietrangeli said. count would put that figure at closer to 75 million. The works to be on view will ing of "St. J~rome" by Leonardo the significance of their presence Yet vocations decline. What is to be done? The pope da Vinci, to the United States in the Vatican," said Carlo Pie­ include: - The Apollo Belvedere, a year for a 12-month tour in trangeli, director general of Pon­ has taken a positive step by appointing Bishop John A. next three cities. tifical Monuments, Museums and Roman copy of a Greek original Marshall of Burlington, Vermont, to head a papal" com­ from 330 B.C. and the first piece The exhibition is scheduled to Galleries. , mission to evaluate our seminaries. But it is also realized open Feb. 26,' 1983, at the Met­ The estimated $5 million cost of sculpture obtained for the ropolitan Museum of Art in New involved in loaning the exhibi::- ' Vatican Museums. that the church must go outside herself and see this prob­ - Leonardo da Vinci's "St. York, move to the Art Institute tion will be financed by the three lem in a sociological context. ' . . of Chicago on July 24, and make U,S. museums and corporate Jerome," painted during the Contemporary American life is not conducive to the its final stop at the Fine Arts funds, including a contribution 1480s and the only work by fostering of vocations. Decline in family values, acceptance Museum of San Francisco from from Philip Morris that Philippe Leonardo in Rome or in the of moral decay and the greed of the marketplace - all Nov. 19, 1983, to Feb. 19, 1984. de Montebello, director of the Vatican. - A complete set of vest­ "These works of art will have Metropolitan Museum, called combine to devalue the priesthood in many eyes. a contribution to make to the "the most generous ever made ments woven in silk, gilt and The ambivalent attitude towards religion of most men and women of our day," to an art exhibition by a corpora­ silver thread between 1593 and Catholic colleges and universities, as well as the desire of said Pope John Paul II at.a tion." 1597 for Pope Clement VIII. . Catholic professionals for social acceptance have been press conference announcing the The works will be away from - Bronze statues of Mars and among major factors causing vocations to decline. To exhibition. the Vatican for 14 months be­ Athena, made around 440 B.C. The exhibition is described as ,cause of the time required for and originally located on the have a son who has made it 'as a doctor or a lawyer is much more prestigious in our society than to have a son a priest. an extension of the pope's airshipping them across the At­ Acropolis of Athens. worldwide trayels. Officials said lantic and for setting up the mu­ - Two basalt lions dedicated To be sure, the litany of faults and failures in popes throughout history have seum shows. by Egyptian Pharaoh Nectanebo this regard is endless. One thing, however, is for sure. Un­ Key impetus for the exhibition I to the god Thoth in the late considered the Vatican art col­ less we realize once again the value of the priesthood, the lection "an· instrument for came from Cardinal Terence 300s B.C. spreading the Christian message." Cooke of New York, a trustee of church in America will be poorly served indeed.,· - "Sainte-Face," a painting

Vatican art

theMe

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, D.O., S.lD.

EDITOR

!lev. John F. Moore,

FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATOR Rev. Msgr. John 1. Regan . . . . !.ear)' Press-Fall River

Other participants in the press the Metropolitan Museum, who by French artist Georges Rou­ suggested it as a follow-up to conference in the Vatican's Sy­ ault, dated around 1946. nod Hall included Archbishop the pope's October 1979 U.S. - An Aztec sculpture in red­ John oR. Quinn of San Francisco; visit. The ·art works were chosen dish stone of the "feathered ser­ William A. Wilson, personal rep­ resentative of President Reagan . during .consultations between pent" representing Quetzalcoatl, at the Holy See; and art patrons Vatican Museums officials and divinity of .wind, firl;! and light. - Raphael's altarpiece of the from .the archdioceses of New representatives of the Metropoli­ "Coronation of the Virgin," York,' Chicago and San Fran- tan Museum. cisco. "The guideline used to 'Select .painte,d between 1502 and 1503. . "The exhibition, without pre- . them was not one of assembling - A 16th-century cross and cedent in the history of the Vati- a collection of masterpieces, but two candelabras in finely chisel­ can, will enable visitors not only of telling the story of the crea­ ed gilt and silver.


Video games

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 11, 1982

This statistic died

parents, certainly a time-honored By tradition not limited to video DOLORES , machines. The money issue aside, should CURRAN we be concerned about the at­ detractors, whether it's pool, like traction of these machines? Only in The Music Man, cOIl)ic books, if the time spent on them gets ' or roJJer skating. I don't want to out of balance with other activi­ be guilty of this in talking about ties. Publicly, I don't think video games, but I've had enough they're a concern. They sure what there is to do, it isn't healthy. Children need .exercise. cautious questions from parents beat the old pool haJJ for environ­ Richard Kage had to die They need to play with others to on them that I think we need to ment and companionship. Kids to prove to the Social learn to 'live with them,' not to look at them and their effect on playing in the supermarket prob­ Security Administ-ration that interact soley with robots. kids and families. ably have more coJJective paren­ he was really sick. They need to become engross­ Obviously, they are immense­ tal supervision than any other Two doctors who had treated ed in a book they can't put ly attractive to the youths who place. him for years for a variety of plunk a couple of doJJars' worth Privately, in the home, kids down. They need to work in the ailments had certified his dis­ of quarters into them in the can become addicted to the point garden so they can experience ability, but Social Security cut same amount of time it takes that they aren't interested in being part of a responsible fam­ off his benefits after a 15-min­ their parents to drink a cup of anything else - sports, friends, ily. Family therapists today are coffee. They're showing up in chores, reading, or hobbies. A concerne<i about the number of , ute examination by a staff oph­ thalmologist, who said that he activities that take individuals movie lobbies, service stations mother reported that her six­ was not "a total cripple:" away from relationships and at­ and airports. And in the family year-old sufferEld migraine head­ Richard Kage's widow, a tract them to machines or activi­ room. aches after spring vacation. The round, mild, low-voiced woman ties that limit human interaction. CommerciaJly, they're a bon­ pediatrician blamed, the home named Ethel, came from Reed anza to any establishment will­ video games her son had played Compllterized footbaJJ games, City, Mich., to teJJ her husband's TV, video games and the like be­ ing to give them space. A Seven­ most of vacation. story to a Senate subcommittee. Eleven manager confided that He told her that the intense coming more prolific and more Kage was a casualty of a 1980 three Pac Man and Defender concentration and noise inherent sophisticated. Each year we can law that requires review of dis­ expect more. machines pay his ~onthly rent. in playing these games can over­ ability cases. I can see why. The copy machine load a person's stress level to AJJ of these are good in that Congress recommended a two­ in my supermarket sits next to alarming proportions, especiaJly they hone skills and teach but year delay in starting the sweep, one and since I spend as .much a young child's. He didn't forbid they aren't good if they become but David Stockman of the Off· on copies as on milk, I've had a playing for his young patient a child's primary companion. ice of Management and Budget good opportunity to observe and but prescribed a half hour of ac­ EventuaJly children may become eavesdrop on youthful players. tivity after every 15 minutes of jaded with video and computer counseled immediate action for quick savings. Fifty percent of I've learned that a good num­ play. games and tum to human com­ those questioned appealed their ber spend their lunch money on As in so many areas of par­ panionship but parents shouldn't cases, and 67 percent of them the machines without eparental enting, balance is the answer. wait for this surfeit to set in. For won. The benefits to the budget knowledge. I've also· seen older While it may be convenient for some children, it may not. Com­ are not known. Mrs. Kage re­ siblings strong-arm younger ones parents to permit their children mon sense guidance is still the counted the human cost. for money, threatening them uninterrupted TV hours because best role we can assume as par­ If the grisly weeding process with bodily extinction if they teJJ they aren't fighting 0; asking ents. continues, some 250,000 A:meri­ cans will be put through the wringer that Richard Kage did not survive. While under review, their payments will be withheld. They are more or less assumed to be cheats until they can prove otherwise. It is part of the con­ U.S. News and World Re­ ,straint in recent wage demands By tinuing assault on Social Secur­ port frequently is classified and: in some cases, given back MSGR. benefits gained in earlier nego­ ity and one of the most anguish­ as a conservative weekly. tiations. They have done so with ing although not always fatal, GEORGE G. But there is nothing con­ the understanding that other ways of making Social Security, servative about the magazine's groups were prepared to make HIGGINS recipients one of the most in­ annual survey of executive pay. proportionate sacrifices to help secure elements in our society. This year's survey, "Execu­ Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.,.said, end the current recession. tives' Pay Goes Up, Up and "None of us want folks on the Things have not worked out Away," is the sort of article you that way, however. Weekly earn­ interviewed by U.S. News and roJls who do not belong there. might expect to find in the AFL­ . World Report predict that the But we want people on the roJls ings for aJl non-supervisory CIO News or one of the "liberal" workers on private, non-farm sal­ bubble of executive pay hikes who do belong there with equal weekl'ies like The Nation. passion." aries increased 8.6 percent in may be about to burst and that "Hard times aside," the article 1981 - far below the 13.4 per­ new raises may be harder to The' panel of Social Security reports "pay levels of corporate cent. increase in wages enjoyed come by in 1982. Let's hope they officials who testified before chiefs have again hit new by the 966 top officers of the are right. Mrs. Kage exhibited no passion heights, raising questions as to 349 largest U.S. corporations. If executive pay continues to whatever - except for saying whether they are worth the rise dramaticaJly despite the reo nothing that was clear, humane The median pay of these ex­ money ... Never have so many cession, the next round of col­ or sensible. They never see the ecutives was $375,000. Twenty­ executives made more than $1 people who suffer their judg­ six earned between $1,000,000 lective bargaining could be very minion a year. The ranks in­ rough indeed - just when labor ments. They are numbers. Only and $2,668,500. That means, says creased to 26 in 1981 from 15 records are consulted. U.s'. News and World Report, and management need to de­ in 1980." velop a more, 'cooperative and The Kages never' met anybody that last year it took the typical These figures do not begin to constructive relationship based from Social Security face to face. factory worker more than three teJl the whole story. Some execu­ on equality of sacrifice. They met brutal indifference, in­ tives raised their incomes still weeks to earn what a $2-million­ efficiency and lies. a-year executive made in an more through stock options and hour: $961.54. In April 1981, Richard Kage, other financial arrangements not, American workers take .it for who had been receiving $459.80 counted in the magazine's annulil granted that there always will ih monthly disability payments survey. , since 1974, got a continuing dis­ Executive salaries are being be a sizable difference between ability investigation notice, and questioned not only by' labor their income and that .of top some weeks later notice of an leaders but, in some cases, by executives. They accept this as a appointment with a Social Se­ aggrieved stockholders. ~re­ fact of life and don't spend too much time complaining about it. curity staff doctor. After a 15­ over, many corporate officials minute examination, the doctor But they will fight back at the themselves are beginning to real­ reported that while the patient ize that disproportionately high bargaining table if they suspect was "blind for aJl practical pur­ executive salaries and fringe industry is taking advantage of poses . . . the presence of cen­ benefits are giving industry a them. And what else can they tral vision in his right eye gives bad name. be expected to think when they him some reprieve from being a learn that while their income is The 4ramatic increase in ex­ total cripple." ecutive compensation must be going down, executive pay is Kage had been a diabetic from particularly g~Jling to American steadily and dramaticaJly rising? Some management consultants the age of 12, his widow told the workers who have exercised re-

I suppose it's a given that every time our young people discover something new and pleasurable, there will be

Executive pay

5

By

MARY McGRORY

subcommittee. He suffered eye hemorrhages. A stroke left him with tunnel "isiop. He wanted to work, Ethel said, but he couldn't even walk without someone hold­ ing him up on either side. But on May 14 last year, Kage was informed of "pending cessa­ tion of benefits" and told that the decision was based on re: ports from his own doctors. ActuaJly both of his doctors had written letters to Social Security attesting that he was "in no condition for employ­ ment." On July 30, the Kages got a notice that his benefits were terminated "effective that date." Ethel Kage wrote in August asking for reconsideration." In October, she caJJed the regional office to find out the status of her appeal. The voice on the telephone said she would caJJ back - and never did. Three weeks later, Ethel Kage caJJed again and the voice said her hus­ band's records had not come from -Baltimore - they were "tied up in the computer." "AJJ this time, we had been without any income," she said stoically. She, went to work as a secre­ tary in the local high school. Her husband, having, been officially notified that he was able-bodied, found a job of sorts as a care­ taker in the cemetery. He devel­ oped gangrene in a toe and was hospitalized. . On Nov. 5, Ethel Kage sent a SOS to Senator Levin. Levin has in his files a copy of an .internal Social Security memo dated Oct. I, written by a disability eJtaminer at the Balti­ more headquarters, saying of Kage, "Initial cessation appears shaky to me." , . Levin's intervention resulted in another notice of "disability determination" and a new ap­ pointment with the doctor who had found Kaye "not a total cripple." On Nov. 27, Richard Kage had a heart attack and died. "I called the district office," Ethel Kage told the senators in a remarkably steady voice, "to say that Dick would not keep his appointment, that he had died. The woman didn't say anything." Apparently, the death of Rich­ ard Kage meant another file could be closed., Richard Kage's doctor of 18 years, Keats V. Vining of Grand Rapids, Mich., wrote a letter that should be framed and hung on the walls of the Disability Deter­ . mination Section: "This is probably the greatest example of a miscarriage of a disability determination by a bureaucracy that can't possibly function in an honest and ethical fashion. . . . This service is a disastrous failure." 0


6

St. Roch,'s to ',close

THE ANCHOR­ Friday, June 11, 1982

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The Most Reverend Daniel A. Cronin, Bishop of Fall River, an­ nounced today that St. Roch's parish in Fall River wiIl close at the end of this month. Services at the Parish will cease follow­ ing the Sunday Masses on June 27, 1982. In making the announcement, Bishop Cronin explained that St. Roch's parish has been experi­ encing a decline in parishioners for more than a decade. Demo·, graphic changes in the central section of Fall River contributed to this decline. The pastor, Father Lucien Jus­ seaume, adverting to the very small number of registered par­ " ishioners, indicated that fewer lOCh' h T h'" h ' " h . than 100 worshippers were at· 'rIDS STRIKING tapestry, fist t e eac er, blessed at t e Easter Vlgl1, ung 10 tending the weekend Masses. the sanctuary of St. Theresa Church, New Bedford, throughout the Easter season. Inspired" Father Jusseaume reported by a similar tapestry at St. Stanislaus Church, Fall River, it took parishioners Diane Li- that a number of older folks,' zotte and Marie Boutin nine months to create. (Sister Gertrude Gaudette Photo) former members of the parish, \ had in receqt years moved to apartment complexes in the downtown area.

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"The handwriting has ,been on the wall for years," he observed, speaking of the decline in parish Lambert, John I. McAfee, Don­ cUe Robins, Shirley Ward, The­ :vitality. ald A. McHoul, Helen M. Mullen. resa White, Mary Crowley. Parishioners will be absorbed St. Theresa, South Attleboro Our Lady of the Cape, Brew­ Lorraine Sequeira. ,by existing area parishes' in ac­ ster Mary Dumas, Charles Ma­ St. Mary, Mansfield Susanne lone, Mary Lou Monks, John O'­ cord with the preferences individ­ Benoit, Joyce Gomes, Alec Red­ Donovan, Stephanie Palmer, uals will express. There are sev­ fern. Florence Razzetti, Charles Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, See­ Sampson, Millicent Tully, James' eral nearby parishes. Father,Jus­ seaume indicated that he will konk Carol Frattaruolo, Vincent Woods. Frattaruolo, Vera Macedo, Don­ personally facilitate 'the registra­ Our Lady .of Victory, Center­ na Motta, Joseph Motta, Carol ville Robert AndersoR, David tion of each parishioner in exist­ Perry, Stephen Perry. Butler, Edward Butler, Claire ing parishes. HolY Cross, South Easton Pa­ Colw~ll, Robert Donahue, David tricia A. Brophy, Richard Slein, Doolittle, Richard Paradise, Es­ All parish records wiII be Juliann Smith.·telle Staniey, Joan ,T~qmey. transferred to Notre Dame rec­ Bishop Feehan High Schoon, Hob Redeemer, Chatham tory for safekeeping" remaining Attleboro Louis Gazzola, Sister Helen Dillon, Mary Higgins, accessible for those desiring Rose Marie Rocha, R.S.M., Jean Fred McKendrie, Frank Murphy, sacramental certificates and Siddall. Joan Payne, Teresa Rousseau. other church records. Morton Hospital. Taunton st. Patrick. Falmouth Claire Diane Cote, Lorraine Hickey, Conley, Grace Donohoe, Dr. Am­ Diocesan spokesmen reported Barbara Martin, Carolyn Pow­ brose Finnell, Gerald F. Flynn, that an agreement has been exe­ ers, Ann Thomas, Anthony E. J. Mrs. Claude (James) Karalekas, Medeiros. cuted for sale of the parish prop­ Joseph McLeish, Margaret Mit­ erties to Crystal Springs School chell, Marga.ret Noonan, Irene ,NEW BEDFORD AREA Russell. for use as a center for day care Holy Name, New Bedford of exceptional St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis development Melissa Medeiros, Ronald Pion, ' Catherine E. Callahan, Caterine children. Father Jusseaume ob. Sandra Sevigney. M. Collucci, Arthur M. Con­ served that parishioners have ex­ st. Anthony of Padua, New nelly, Dr; John H. Miller, Mi­ pressed to him their satisfaction Bedford Gaston Laverdiere, Sis­ chael W.O'Laughlin, Ralph C. ter Lucille Levasseur, SMSM, Rocheteau, Lena M. Spells. at this intended use of the par· Lionel Robitaille. ish facilities. ' St. Elizabeth Seton. North !Fal-­ St. James, New Bedford Irene mouth K. Dale Fairhurst, Patri­ Normandin, Mary Oliver, Carol cia Stone. Walsh. Ufe~d Hope st. Joan of Are, Orleans Sacred Hearts, FaIrhaven "We are blessed in our faith • Yvette Costa, Norman Daigle, Claire', Chiarello, Robert Habbel, tradition with a wealth of values John McCar,thy, Mary McDevitt, Doris LaRocque. Gerard O'Duffy, M. Kay Ozon, . concerning the human person. St. Rita, Marion Terese ,La­ Alber.t Starkey, Robert Upton, The word of God is the story of vallee, H8I'old LeBlanc" Harry Sr. ' Schmitt. the communication of life and St. Peter the ApOstle, Prov­

St. Anthony, Mattapoisett the restoration of hope." Nancy Davis, Carol Ducey, incetown Ronald Vallee.

St. Pius X,, South Yarmouth Bishop Matthew Clark Thomas P. Jackivicz, John John V. Callahan, Michael Gilli­ Shockro. gan, Rita Harney, Dorothl Mc­ St. John the Baptist, Patricia Laughton, Barbara Whelan. Condon. Cape Cod Hospital, HyannIs stang High School, Bishop Theresa Bastille" Helen Daley, North Dartmouth Peter Crow­ Marilyn Devlin, Barbara Mur­ ley, Carol Stigh, Hannah Sulli­ phy, Keith Sacht, Marian Lale­ June 12 van. vee. Rev. Thomas H. Taylor, 1966, St. Luke's Hospital, New Bed­ ford Lillian Bouchard, Mary Sacred Hearts Novitiate and 'Pastor, Immaculate Conception, Cregan, Alice Hebert, Marie Jo­ Retreat House, Wareliam Broth­ Taunton doin, Mary Medeiros, Shirley er Damien O'Hare, SS.CC. A. Mello, Angelina Talbot, Rhea June 13 Teves, Diane Vasconcellos. Picture on page 9 Rev. Edward F. Donahue' S~J., Our Lady'S Haven,Fairhaven 1974,'B.C. High School, Dorches­ Sister Brendan Rosarie O. Carm. Relationships ter, Mass. CAPE COD AREA "The Bible itself speaks to us June 14 St. Marg'aret. Buzzards Bay of the origin of the universe and Rev. Msgr. George E. Sullivan, Kathy Besse, Raymond Boucher, its makeup, not in order to pro­ Theresa Boucher, Constance 1980, Retired Pastor, St. Joseph, vide us with a scieptific treatise, Carbone, Irene Gosselin, Jean­ Fall River nette Grant, David Gudinas, 'but in order to state the correct Mrs. David Guidinas, Eileen relationships of man with GOd June 18 Harrington. Rev. James M. Coffey, P.R., Mrs. Cholace Lussier, Eleanor and with 'the universe." - Pope John Paul II 1935, Pastor, St. Mary, Taunton Nickerson, Lemar Pipkins, Ce­

(necroloSij)


THE ANCHOR Friday, June 11, ~ 982

7

the man packet

Letters are welcomed, but should be no lIore thin 200 words. The editor reservea the rlaht to condense or edit, If deemed necessary. All letters must be signed Ind Include I home or business Iddreu••

TOURS

Response to fire Dear Editor: On May 11, 1982, hundreds of people in Fall River stood out­ side the Notre Dame church area and watched their homes and worldly possessions destroyed by the great inferno that levelled the beautiful Notre Dame Church. My daughter and her family were among those families. I, too, stood among God's people as I watched the expressions of families in the streets crying and clinging to one another. As I stood, partly frozen from unbelief at what I was witness­ ing, and tried to console my , daughter and her family, I won· dered what God's reason was for choosing those families involved. Why those specific people? What was the message for them and for us? For my daughter, it restored her faith in human nature. Carol is a young woman who can still vividly remember the teen-age years and the difficulties coping with peer pressure. To Carol, the world was not a nice place to be in and that's an unsound and weak attitude with which to go through life. We ourselves sometime have thIs same attitude. As we read the front pages of our local newspapers - wide spread with crIme and violence, how quickly we read through ·the good news on the 10th or 11th page - of the teen or young adult who is to be admired for their action, but spend much time reading every word of the unfortunate youth who came along with his friends, probably for the first time, getting involved with some wrongdoing. We have beautiful people in Fall River and our surrounding areas whose compassion was and is still overwhelming at this time when these victims needed them. My daughter and her falJ)ily stayed with us for three weeks after the fire and so much of the response came through our home. The phone never stopped ringing for days with people who offer­ ed their help and concern in vari· ous ways. We would come home to find clothing, groceries and gifts at our doorstep, never knowing where some of them came from. The response from the Red Cross, Salvation Army, St. Vin­ cent de Paul Society, the Bishop and the city of Fall River as well as our families, friends and neighbors was overwhelming. Within 48 hours of that un· believable experience,my daugh· ter said to me, "Mom, I thought there were more rotten people in this world than good, but now I can see that there are more good people, more caring and loving people than I ever real· ized." I stoo~ with tears of joy, full of graces of God and quietly said, "Praise you, Jesus Christ, for all the good you bestow on us." Carol's faith in human na-

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BACKGROUNDED BY the Pieta statue at St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, follow­ ing a Mass for regional directors of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith are Car­ dinal Terence Cooke of New York, Msgr. John J. Oliveira, diocesan Propagation director, and Msgr. William McCormack, the society's national director. (Heffernan Photo)

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Third World needs e~phasized Msgr. John J. Oliveira, dioce­ ions, Evangelization and Social san director of the Society for Ministry," he emphasized Third the Propagation of the Faith, World needs for spiritual and was among directors attending physical assistance.

the annual national meeting of Msgr. William J. McCormack, the society, held recently in New . national director of the society, York. expressed appreciation for the Guest speaker for the two-day generous support of U.S. Cath­

gathering was Msgr. Joseph olics for the nearly 900 mission Gremillion, organizer and first dioceses' around the world. secretary general of the Pontifi­ Within a few weeks, he noted, cal Commission for Justice and contributions go to needy dio­ Peace. Speaking on "The Miss- ceses. "There is no investment. 11"'111111111111111""111111111111"111111111111111111'1"l"llllllllllllll!'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillIiIUIIIIII"lIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll""l'lllllllllllllli1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111'

ture has been restored and, I believe, for many others, too. That no lives were lost and no one hurt was a miracle, indeed! Thanks be to God! For Carol, Dave and their infant daughter, it was a blessing in disguise. May the water that put out the fire of the flaming inferno of Notre Dame flow into the heart of the person standing or sitting next to you as yOJ.l read this article and become the Living Water of burning Love in your family, friends and neighbors. Mrs. George Frenette Fall River

being pro-choice on abortion is an acceptable Catholic position. Never - the Catholic church's stand is for pro-life - this is the acceptable Catholic position. We stand for the dignity and rights of the human person in all stages of life. . Oh, the selfishness of "man" ­ all Of 'the pleasures without the responsibilities. The church's stand does not need revision, as Ms. Kissling advocates. It is not ours to re­ vise - aU life belongs to God. Mrs. Doris C. Cote New Bedford

No revision Dear Editor: Frances Kissling, executive director of a lobbying group called Catholics for a Free Choice, believes abortion is an individual choice that must take into consideration such, factors as a woman's health, economic situation 'and ability to raise a child.

If these are considerations that she must weigh" then why pregnancy? VVhy snuff out that life that has just begun? Her goal is to convince people that

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall· River-Fri., June 11, 1982

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A conditional agreement has provisions of the agreement, into our. overall expansion been signed for sale of the Re­ which has been in negotiation plans," he declared. The sisters' Eastern Avenue ligious of Jesus and Mary' con~ since late last fall according to complex has a total land area of vent and retirement center, for­ Sister Vivian and Young. merly Jesus Mary Academy, at "The Sisters are pleased with 161,478 square feet with a wall­ Eastern Avenue and St. Joseph the proposal that this landmark ed and fenced frontage of 35~ feet on Route 6. There are three Street, Fall River, to Crystal in Notre Dame parish will con­ Springs School, Inc., of Assonet. tinue, in a new way, to serve as major interconnected brick struc­ The announcement was made an educational facility," Sister tures: the four-story main build­ ing erected in 1887, a three-story today by Sister Eileen C. Reid, Vivian said. annex added in 1925 and a gym­ RJM, Fall River superior of the She emphasized that the sis­ Jesus Mary community. ters who staff Notre Dame nasium-auditorium built in 1939. Sch1lol will continue to reside in Also on the site is a She said the agreement is sub­ ject. to approval of renovation ,the area. The retired sisters, she three-story frame house which was the original convent for the plans, . including installation of a said, will reside in a fire-resis­ sprinkler system and obtaining of tant convent in Marieville, North pioneer sisters who came to No­ a zoning variance and financing Providence, previously occupied tre Dame parish in 1877. It was by sisters serving in the diocese later purchased and moved to its necessary to prepare the build­ ings for use as an extension of of Providence. Some sisters will present location at the rear of live at the order's residence 'On 118 St. Joseph Street. The origin­ Crystal Springs School. al brick building was renovated The residential school provides Highland Avenue, Fall iRver. after a 1964 fire, an elevator The former Jesus Mary Acad­ education, training and care for" exceptional, retarded and physi­ - emy and convent complex' is was installed in 1974 and the cally handicapped persons aged· ."perfectly suited" to the Crystal third floor was remodeled into Springs program, Young said. It .an infirmary in 1975. 3 through 21. Presently 52 religious reside at The agreement, with ecclesias­ will accommodate about 60 resi­ . tical authorization, was signed by dential and 40 day students, he the center. The long-established Jesus' Sister yiv,ian Patenaude, RJM" noted, with a round the clock Mary boarding school for girls prOVincial superior for the Am­ staff of about 200 persons pro­ erican province of the Religious 'viding the individual care and from kindergarten through grade of Jesus and .Mary, by Sister training required under state 12 was phased out in 1960. Jesus Mary Academy, a day school for Eileen, president of Dames de standards. "Most of our key employes girls, joined with the former Mt. Jesus 'Marie, the Massachusetts. corporation holding title, and by now come from Fall, River," said St. Mary Academy and Domini­ the director, explaining that "the can Academy to form Bishop Charles 'B. Young, executive di­ rector of Crystal Springs School. excellent labor force here was a Gerrard High School in 1971. In A September target date has factor in our choice of this city turn, Gerrard closed in 1980. been set for completion of a in selecting such a fine site for Marketing of the Jesus and timetable allowing. for clearance our planned expansion." Mary property began almost a The. long-established Assonet year ago, following a series of .of· conditiQns, relocation of the sisters now 'in residence in the . school will continue, he stressed. studies and evaluations, said Sis­ center and fulfillment of other ~'The ·sisters' property fits well ter Eileen..

Msgr~' Cournoyer

Continued from Page One boro. In 1925 he returned to memories is of seeing "a· wagon Notre Dame, where he would re­ without a horse" propelling it--' main until 1945, for the last self down Ne~ Bedford street. seven years as the giant parish's "I ran all the way home to tell administrator. He remembers becoming a my mother," he chuckled. But· it wasn't long before "pretty good horseback rider" young Joseph was, with other in North Attleboro, where he altar boys at St. Hyacinth's, would. regularly race horse bravely going for rides in the . against car, with the horse a pastor's newfangled horseless frequent winner in those days of unpaved roads. carriage. "We had a blowout al­ It was a tough era for young most every time," 'he ·recalled: , "I got very good at fixing flats." priests. With few telephones, ,Joseph was the only one in his the sick call routine included class at St. HyacintP's to make going to the home the previous it through eighth -grade. "As day to alert the family. Each .of soon as a child became 13, he or the five curates serving the she left to go to work,"· he ex­ 10,000 member Notre Dame par­ plained.. Joseph, however, was ish in the 1920s· had no fewer only 12 in eighth grade and in than 50 communion calls to make any case had opted to continue at least monthly. Most home his education.·' . visits were made on foot. He attended. the Assumption "I didn't have a car until I Fathers preparatory school and became administrator of Notre college in Worcester before com­ Dame in 1938," said Msgr. Cour­ pleting preparation for the priest­ noyer. Then, for $600 he became hood at St. Mary's Seminary, the owner of a new Plymouth, Baltimore, and Sulpician Semin­ which lasted 10 years. ary, Washington, D.C. The veteran pastor was devas­ When he was. ordained in tated when he heard of Notre . 1922, there was a special gift. Dame's destruction. "I can't get Sister St. Francis, CSC, his it out of my mind," he ·said. teacher at St. Hyacinth's, sent During his time at Notre him a treasured crucifix, which Dame, Msgr. Cournoyer helped she had promised to the first of raise money for its beloved her students to become a priest. downstairs grotto, installed about That crucifix, now darkened and 1936, and supervised lowering of worn, is on Msgr. Cournoyer's the church's landmark steeples. night table today. . At their earlier soaring height, After his initial idyllic summer, they had been considered danger­ Msgr. Cournoyer served briefly ous in the wake of the 1938 hur­ .as associate pastor at Notre ricane. . Dam·e Church, Fall River, then He was also responsible for at Sacred Hea!t, North Attle­ Notre Dame' Cemetery, to which , .

a

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he introduced power landscaping equipment and the use of con­ crete vaults" thus. obviating the winter cave-ins formerly com­ mon to burial grounds. Over a quarter century it was Msgr. Cournoyer, as an old New Bedford hand, who assisted· the Franciscan friars of Our Lady's Chapel in establishing them­ selves in the Whaling City. Named a domestic prelate in 1964, he recalls knowing every bishop of the Fall River diocese except its founder, ·Bishop Wil­ liam Stang.. "Of course I· was around at his time, but I didn't . actually know him," he said. These days Msgr. Cournoyer has more time for' his lifelong hobby of reading; A prime favor­ ite is his often-perused History of the Church· by· Henri Daniel­ Rops, all of whose works he has read. He laments, however, today's letdown of morality, evidenced even in the mystery novels he enjoys and the writings of au­ thors previously above reproach. . But although he loyally main­ tains that "we had a lot of good things in our day too," he is pleased by recent changes in church practice, feeling that they have made the Eucharist and other sacraments more avail­ able to the faithful - his ideal throughout his ·priestly life.

Truth ''There is no truth existing which I fear or would wish un­ known to the whole world." ­ . Thomas Jefferson •

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., JunE! 11, 1982

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CLASSMATES ORDAINED together 40 year~ ago celebrated their anniversaries Sunday, May 30, and Sunday, June 6. Top, at Pentecost Mass offered by Father Joseph A. Martineau, pastor of St. Theresa's parish, New Bedford, concelebrants Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, his classmate; Msgr. Henri Hamel, homilist; Father Marcel Bouchard, whom Box G, Dept. A, Shore Street, Falmouth, MA 02541 (6171 540·3000 Father Martineau baptized; Father Martineau. At a following banquet, Father Martin­ or call free (8001 352·7100 lin Mass.) eau was honored by parishioners and friends. He received a papal blessing, citations from the Knights of Columbus, for whom he has been a longtime chaplain, a congratulatory communication from Supreme Knight Virgil Dechant and poetic tributes from young parishioners. Bottom, folloWing a Mass at which Bishop Daniel .A. Cronin presided, Msgr. 'Gomes, pastor of Our Lady of Angels parish, Fall River, is congratulated at testi- ~ijilj=;;;j:i;:~f":i monial banquet by, from left, arrangements committee member Alfred M. Mello, Fall ._IIiIi=::=:iiIlii:lliilrt#~ River Mayor Carlton M. Viveiros, committee member Mrs. Dorothea Almeida and com­ mitte chairman Joseph Theodore. Banquet toastmaster was Father Martineau and also ~~CUI4e present were representatives of the many diocesan groups with which Msgr. Gomes is 391 HANOVER STREET involved. Like Father Martineau, he received a papal blessing. He was also the recipient FALL RIVER, MASS. of gifts, citations and letters. of congratulation from numerous organizations and. individ­ uals, including Father Theodore Hesburgh, esc, president of Notre Dame University, and For individuals who should not be living Notre Dame sports coaches. (Phofos: Top, lEdward Rosa; bottom, Hank Pollard, courtesy alone, .but who do not need the expensive care of Fall River Herald News) of a nursing home, Hanover House can become

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Continued from page one "greatest preoccupation" is for world peace. He did not make specific ref­ erence to Israel's invasio,n, say­ ing the crisis in Lebanon con­ tains a danger "of furth~r provo­ cation in the Middle East, with immense consequences for world peace." The pope caIled for "reciprocal' trust between nations - a trust that is manifested and proved through constructive negotiations that aim at ending the arms race, .and at liberating immense re­ . sources that can be used to aIle· viate misery and f~ed,millions of hungry human beings." In Latin Ameri~a, Reagan said,

the U.S. wants "to work closely with the church . . . to help promote peace, social Justice and reform, and to pr~vent the r spread of repression and giless tyranny." Regarding disarmament, the U.S. leader pledged "to do every­ thing possible" through the Uni­ ted Nations' special session on disarmament and through "our individual initiatives for peace and arms reduction, to help bring a real, lasting peace throughout the world." After the talks, Pope John Paul g~ve President Reagan an ivory sculpture of the madonna and received a crystal chalice in return.

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Arg~ntina

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During the pontiffs 36 hours in Argentina, plans caU for him to celebrate two outdoor Masses, one at 5 p.m. today at a Marian shrine at Lujan, about 40 miles from Buenos Aires, the other in Buenos ~ires tomorrow morning. It was expected t~at he would be greeted at the Buenos Aires airport this morning by Presi­ dent Leopoldo Galtieri, an army general and also meet with :the other members of the three-man ruling military junta June 11. The government added that the junta members would attend to­ morrow's Mass. '

This would contrast with the British trip, during which the pontiff avoided meeting govern­ ment leaders. He met with Queen Elizabeth, but in her role as 'titular head of the Church of England, not as titular head 'of

state. The moral inacceptability of conventional warfare, such as it being used by. Argentina and Britain: has been a steadily es­ calating 'papal theme since the' fighting started over possession of several South Atlantic is­ lands. Argentina could provide a more dramatic setting than Brit­ ain for such messages because it has received the brunt of the fighting. It chaIlenged the world's third most powerful military force, which sent nuclear-pc;>wer­ ed submarines and sophisticated conventional' weapons to do battIe with Argentina's hand-me­ down war machines from' the United States and , Western Eu­ rope. Many Argentines resented the pope's decision not to cancel his British trip because of the fight­

ing, seeing this as a be.traya! of their nation's CathoIi'c' culture by their spiritual leader. About 90 percent of the 28 million Ar. gentines profess Catholicism and the nation's president is required to be a practicing Catholic. Argentina may provide the pope with a more dramatic set·' ting for his peace message, but it also could require a more deli­ cate pastoral approach to people physicaIly far closer to the scene of war than are the British. •

Liaison secretary WASHINGTON (NC) - David ' J. Suley, a teacher at John F. Kennedy High School in Seattle, has been appointed executive secretary of International liai­ son, the U.S. Catholic coordina· ting center for lay volunteer ministries.

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PARISHES

ATTLEBORO St. John The Evangelist $560 Very Rev. John J. Smith; $100 Kevin Lawless; $80 Dr.-M Lino Tiberi; $50 M-M Thomas Castro, Rev. Mr. Richard Degagne; $25 JulIa MUl"phy, Mrs. Edmund Rainville, M-M Manuel Botelho, M-M Roger Forget, Mary Martin, Ellen Loew, M-M William Killingsworth Sr., Claire, Conley, Agnes Dodd, M-M Gary Nyzio, M-M Paul Garon, In Memory of Mrs. Mary Hart, Mrs. Blanche Brown, Margaret Gaynor, M-M Edward Healey, Mrs. John Wither~ll, M-M John Hannan, Alfred Tetreault. Saint Stephen $25 Andre Ladabauche, M-M Rich­ ard Smith, M-M Frederick Curtis. Saint Joseph $150 Spanish Speaking People of Saint Joseph. ATTLEBORO FALLS

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Saint Mark $450 William Parker; $200 Mrs. Ann Walton; $120 M-M Charles O'Neil; $100 Dr. & Mrs. John Killion, M-M James Curtis, M-M William Con­ nelly, M-M James Keiber, Raymond Coogan; $65 M-M Edward McDonagh; $50 Dr. & Mrs. Harold Thompson, M-M Joseph Fredette, M-M Frank Spinale, Mrs. Mar­ garet Troy, Mrs. Hazel Gaffney, M-M Raymond La Rocque, M-M Emilio Gauti~ri, M-M Ronald Mollins; $35 Dominic Lafratta, Florence Leary, M-M Francis Martin, M-M Wayne Harrison, M-M Michael McGrath; $30 M-M Robert Gilmore, M-M John Murray, Mrs. Janice Panoff, M-M George Boyd, Jr., M-M George ' ,Johnson, M-M Paul Hagarman. , $25' M-M Roy Godin, M-M Charles Roth, Mrs. Ruth Byrne, M-M David McInerney; Mrs. Kathleen Walsh, M-M Michael Kosinski, Mrs. Lynn Schweinshaut, M-M Charles Roland, William Moffitt, M-M Joseph Furtado, M-M, Raymond, Thad, Mrs. Shirley Semple, M-M Ray­ mond Mulry, 'M-M Edward Armon, M-M Robert Se­ quin, Mrs. Laurianne Fonseca, M-M Lawrence Murphy, M-M John Murray, M-M Christopher Servant, ,M-M Richard Forbes, M-M ViCtor Larkin, Mrs. Mariette Dube, M-M Horace Benson, M-M Donald Perkoski, Dr. & Mrs. James Dooley, M-M Gerard Dupont, M-M Ron­ ald Bishop, M-M Francis Petrillo, Jr., M-M Emmett Ashe, ,Jr.,. M-M John O'Brien,M-M Stephen Vining, M-M :J;>ennis' Damiano, M-M Robert Puhl. SOUTH ATTLEBORO "St. Theresa. of the Child Jesus $100 Mrs. Helen Green; $70 M-M Normand, Carrier; $50 Mrs. Nelson Roy, Mrs. Manlio Frova; $2~ M-M Claude Labossiere, M-M James M. Purcell,M-M Ro,bert Joubert, 'M-M Elmer Edwards.

MANSFIELD St. Mary's $200 Catholic Women's Club, Knights of Columbus, George C. Shields Council #420; $100 M-M Edward Jameson, Joseph E. Donovan, Jr., Dr. & Mrs. Philip Sibilia; $80 M-M Edward Kane; $60 Marianne Brons; $50 Compo Chemical Co. Inc:, M-M Neal R. Herrick, Nabisco Confections; $35 M-M Paul O'Neill, M.:.M George Knight, M-M Alfred Turinese; $30 M-M Philip Genatossio, M-M Thomas Warren, M-M James Musto, Mrs.. William A. Schmidt. '$25 M-M Robert Davis, M-M Benney Wong, M-M Arthur Lesse.rd, M-M Ronald Harrison, Mrs. Salvatore DeLutis, Wallpaper City, Inc., M-M Thomas V. Lavery, M.,M J. Riccio, M..M'John G. Maragnano"M-M Frank Nones, M-M George J. Barlow, M-M Richard Bella­ vance, Eugene Palanza, .M-M John O'Donnell, Hathe­ way & Patterson, Co. SEEKONK st. Mary's $200 Mary & Margaret Kinton, Paul J. Roche; $100 St., Mary's Womans Guild; $75 M-M Fran­ cis Murphy; $50 Dr. ,& Mrs. Domenic Basile, M-M Louis Landry; ,$25 Dr. & Mrs. Robert Bedard, M-M Ronald Brais, M-M Joseph Cabral, Robert C. Diamond, M-M T. F. McCarthy Sr., H. P. Nelson Tool, Mrs. Frances Vandal. SANDWICH <>

Corpus 'Christi $80 M-M John... A. Wegman; $25 ,Rosario Cadorette, Dr.-Mrs. Ludgero , Gomez. ,

TAUNTON Holy Rosary $100 M-M William Powers; $40 M-M Stanley Tokarz $30 M-M Anthony Sniger; $25 M-M Robert Bentley, M-M Herbert Cardoza, Kenneth Cloutier, M-M John C. Holland, M-M Elwin Nicker­ son, M-M Frank Tabak, Michael J. Tabak, M-M Wal­ ,ter Wenczak, M-M Paul Zaczkiewicz. ' . St. .Jose.ph $2'80 David Gay; $100 Edward F. Ken­ nedy, Dr. Thaddeus Figlock, Elton Buckley; $90 Joseph A. Medeiros; $75 Garvin Family $50 JohnCostova, M-M Alfred Goulet, Mrs. Edward Nixon,Donald Rounds, Anonymous; $40 Pauline Cleary, Joseph Santos; $30 M-M Louis Chaves, M-M Jerome .Evans Anna ,Champney, M-M Roger C. Kingsley Jr., M-M Charles Benjamin. $29 M-M Raymond Taylor; $25 Mrs. Bernard Cleary, ,Richard Travis, PeterBisio Family, John Stubre, Stan­ ley Pawlowski, Robert Smith, Mrs. Theodore Wojcik, Lawrence Masterson, Joseph Ricketts, Raymond Har­ nois, 'Mrs. James McCarthy, Jennie Driscoll, M-M Ed­ ward Aleixo, M-M A. Cravenho, Charlotte Carr M-M William McGann, M-M Edward Mocka, M-M joseph Oliveira, M-M Joseph Yorkoski, Paul Frazier M-M Robert Martin, St. Vincent DePaul - deceased'mem­ bers. '

NORTH ATTLEBORO Sacred Heart $50 M-M Gerrard Champagne, M-M Emile Seymour; $45 M-M Normand Cloutier; $32 M-M Wilbur Weldon; $30 M-M Rene Pinsonnault; $26 Paul Calderope; $25 M.,M Paul Achin, ,Mrs. Irene Boule, Mrs. AI,dea Brais, M-M Arthur € l outier, M-M Albert Desilets, Mrs. Alice Gaudette, M-M Louis Mayer, M-M Bertrand Preftmtaine, Denise Pinsonnault, M-M Paul Sauve, Edmond Couturier; Suzanne Deschenes, M-M Richard Deschenes, M-M George Magnan.

St. Mary $1,000 in Memory of Monsignor James Dolan, In Memory of Michael J. Connolly; $500 In Memory of Rev. Walter J. Buckley; $125 Richard Bent­ ley; $100 Richard T. Donahue, M-M Clifford Lentz T. Russell, M-M Richard Smerdon~ $75.Joseph Wade; $6~ ~-M John P. Gonzals, Janice Russell; $55 Dr.-Mrs. WIlham J. Casey; $50 Ralph Buckley, John Keating, M. Leonard, Mary McNamara, Mrs. J. Rowley M-M Kenneth Baker, Joseph Bird, Edward DUffy, Ali~e Mc­ ,

Cusker, M-M Robert Doherty, F. Mulholland, J. M~l­ 'holland, John Mulholland, John B. Grant, Cecelia Sheerin, Anna O'Keefe; $45 M-M Edward Tokarz, R. Drake; $40 Clotilde Nason, Lelia Duffy; $35 Antone Pontes, James Burns;' $30 Elizabeth & Janet McKenna, David Leonard, M. Murphy, M-M Edward Tonry, Sr., William Clifford, M.-M John R. Moore. $25 M-M Raymond Raffettl, James Kelleher, M-M. Maurice Boucher, Frank B. Correia, Mrs. Norman Gor­ don, M-M W.J. Hansen; Sr., M-M David H. Martin, M-M Edward F. Morrissey, Mrs. James McMorrow, Mrs. James Vernazza, Mrs. F. Norton, J. Padula, M-M • George Powers, M-M Robert Quigley, John Quinlan, Mrs. Gene Romano, J. Sheerin, D.B. Sullivan, M-M Robert F. Thigpen, M. Turinese, J. Vacca, Ronald Wil­ kins, Richard Barrington, M-M Joseph Butler, Marion E. Campbell, John Connors, M-M Barry Desrosiers, Mrs. L. Gilbert, M-M Leo Gilchrist, M. Holmes, M-M John Laughlin, Mrs. L. Laughlin & Luanne Laughlin, Mary Maloney, Alice McKenna, Ruth McKenna, Sue McKenna, M-M James McGovern, Marguerite McMan­ us, Josephine McNamara, M-M Richard Menard, Mrs. E. O'Gara, L. Palazesi, M-M Louis Raposa, M-M Harry Sullivan. ,$25 George Aguiar, Mary Bird, Earle Blackwell, M-M Paul Brady, Helen Chaisty, Margaret Chaisty, Donald Cole, Ruth Dia!!, Catherine D'onahue, Dorothy Donahue, M-M Howard Donahue, Doris Drake, M-M Edmund Finnegan, M-M William Fisher, M-M Thomas Granfield, Marguerite Hoye, M-M John Lawson, Helen Lynds, Rita E. Magee, William Martin, Mary Mulhol­ land, C. Murphy, N. Alice McKenna, Catherine Mc­ Keon, Winifred McKeon, Denis McSweli!ney, Patricia McSweeney. DIGHTON

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NORTH DIGHTON St. Joseph $200 M-M Joseph Murray; $50 M-M Henry Conaty, Mrs: Paul Horton; $30 M-M Brendan Lynch, M-M William O'Connell; $25 Doris Booth, M-M Joseph Coelho, M-M Norman LaFrance, M-M Robert McConville. ' NORTH EASTON 'Immaculate Conception $125 M-M William Har­ rington; $100 M-M Joseph Arsenault; $50 M-M Alvaro Sousa, M-M Anthony Cerce, The Somervilles; $40 M-M Lyle Grindle $30 M-M William Kirby; $25 Patrick Coffee, M-M Alfred Gomes, M-M William Lupica. RAYNHAM st. Ann $60 M-M Oscar Vitali; $25 M-M Robert 'McCabe, M-M Joseph McCarthy, Arthur Souza, M-M Thomas Zaks. SOUTH EASTON Holy Cross $50 Rev. Robert C. McDonnell, CSC, Rev. John B. Larrere, CSC. $150 M-M Robert J. Huddy; $100 M-M Paul Brophy; $60 M-M Ignatius J. McCann & Louisa, M-M Whiteney Shannon; $50 Mrs. Bertha Cunningham, J. Vincent Hickey" Mrs. Frederick Dolloff, M-M Joseph Walton,' M-M Eldwood H. Spidden; $40 M-M Roy Owens, Rob­ ert Connors; $30 M-M George Mather, M-M Bernard Pietrowski; $25 M-M Richard Connolly, M-M Leonard D. Coe, Sr., M-M Robert Hegarty, David Gomes, M-M Joseph Macrina, Charles Re, Leo F. Sullivan, M-M Paul Sullivan, M-M William Richardson, M-M Steve Sabra.


11

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 11, 1982

uestfon corner By Father John 'Dle~eD Q. My Protestant employer re­ cently passed away. 'Today one of my Catholic co-workers and I were cUscussing the appl'9priate­ ness of sencUng a Mass card to the family, having a Mass ~ereel for him. . Is It all right to do this? Do the merits. of a Mass for the dead apply to those who are not Cath­ olic? (Massachusetts) A. The Mass can definitely be offered for the intention of those who are not Catholic. It may be announced publicly (in the par­ ish bulletin; for example,) if two conditions are fulfilled: . 1. The request for the celebra­ tion of Mass for the Protestant person should be made by the family, or at least explicitly ap­ proved by them. This is simply to assure that the non-Catholic's family will not be offended by something they do not believ.e in and perhaps might reject. 2. There should be no scandal resulting, either for Catholics or for those of other faiths because of the announced intention of the Mass. In this position, the church simply recognizes, in one of many ways, that it has no corner on God's love, on Christ's re­ deeming grace or on the direc­ tions in which the grace and love of the crucified and risen Christ - celebrated and represented in the Eucharist - will go. Jesus Christ died for all man­ kind, as St. Paul and the rest of the New Testament attest time and again. If the Mass, the cele­ bration of the Eucharist; is as we believe it to be, the reoffering of that once-and-for-all sacrifice to the heavenly. Father, then every Mass is for all humankind too. The Catholic Church does not, however, try to force itself or its beliefs on anyone, so it is very conscious of not imposing itself on another, even after death. (Hence the rule about not Viola­ ting another human being's cons­ cience or that of the family, even after he or she has died. Q. I have seen In non-Cath­ ollc churches that their crosses do not cUspiay the body of Christ. My friends who attend there give me the reason that they beUeve Jesus Is Uving. I know that we believe he Is living, too. When cUd the Catholic Church begin using the CI1Iclflx?

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the same reason. In fact, even when the body of Christ began to appear more on crosses, it was often the risen living Lord that was shown, rather than the dying or dead Christ that became common later. Around the 1200s, the passion of Christ became more central in Christian theology and spirit­ uality. Crucifixes graphically showing the suffering Christ be­ came popular and remained. so until our own time. With today's renewed empha­ sis on the resurrection and its central place in the - history of salvation, something like jewel­ ed crosses and crucifixes with the body of the risen Christ are seen more and' more, even in our Catholic churches.

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Anselm's College, Manches­ ter, N.H., a master's degree in social work from Boston College and is enrolled in a master's program in busi­ ness administration at Bry­ ant College.

Questions for this column should be sent to Father Dietzen, 8t. Mark's Church, 113 W. Brad­ ley, Peoria, m. 61606.

'Charismatics meet in August Charismatics throughout' the northeast, including many from the Fall River diocese, will gather at the 'Providence Civic Center August 13, 14, and 15 for Ute 1982 New England Genetal Conference for the Catholic Charismatic Renewal. National and European speakers will be featured. The conference theme is: "Do Whatever He Tells You." In addition to the New Eng­ land states, this year's confer­ ence will include New York, New Jersey, eastern Pennsyl­ vania, and lower Canada. An at­ tendance of over 13,000 people is expected. Among speakers will be Father Bruce Ritter, founder of a Times Square crisis center for young people; Mother Basilea Schlink, a Lutheran nun and founder of the Evangelical Sisterhood of Mary in Darmstadt, Germany; Professor Harry Blamires of Eng­ land, noted scholar, lecturer and author; and Father George Ma-

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II

THE ANCHORFriday, June 11, 1982

Parents

II

By Dolores Leckey

Families By David Gibson

When our oldest child gradu­ ated from COllege it was a peace· ful rite of passage, in sharp con· ,trast to her graduation from high school. I had expected her high school graduation weekend to be one of steady celebration. Instead it was filled with tension. • Then came the baccalaureate service. A Baptist minister, the father of a graduate, spoke. He described the emotional climate in his home. He could have been looking in our windows. Then he discussed what was happening. He said our children saw high school graduation as an impor­ tant adult threshold. They were scared. We parents were also worried, wondering if our children could survive without our close super­ vision. He said other personal·con­ cerns might surface at this time too. Some time later. through the work of Dr. Robert Hughes. I realized that the minister was pointing to the "anniversary crisis." Hughes is a husband. a father. an Episcopal priest and a sem­ inary professor. He has explored how being a mother or a father Turn to page thirteen

No two famiiies are exactly alike. One family faces severe finan· cial pressure. It influences the ways members relate to each other, how they spend leisure time, even how they plan for the future. Another family has lost a par· ent. All family members have been changed by that event. In one family, there is heavy emphasis on extracurricular ac· tivities. Much money is spent on such activities for both children and adults. Another 'family believes child· , ren grow best without heavy outside schedules. In one family, the evening meal is sacrosanct. Everyone 'All a sudden, parents fil1ld a stranger living in the house.' eats 'together almost every day. Another family feels lucky if two meals a week 'are eaten to­ gether. So it goes. A complete list of the ways families are different • would be almost endless. Some find "a stranger living in the able comments such as. "how By Ka!h~rine Bird families are large; some are house." It hurts, especially when well you socialize...· or "what a Marty came storming down the early adolescents seem to reject good race you ran!" small. Some families live far stairs. "Mom," he shouted, "Jan­ from their closest relatives;, or question everything their par­ Of 'course. parents have to set others do not. Some children have 'ie's been in my room again. ents value. ' limits for children - but they I' have 'some, privacy Can't young parents; others have older Sh~ strongly advises parents tQ should set objective bounds. such parents. Some families function around this place?" bear in mind that time will help. as curfews. Mrs. Kenny feels. Out of the blue, the gener­ '(urn to Page Thirteen The ages from 12 to 15 or 16 are , What if a 14:year-old protests ally outgoing.' responsive 13­ a "transition period," when chil~ year-old had become moody and vigorously .about spending the dren are taking the first steps to afternoon, at' Grandmother's? withdrawn, spending long ,stret· • "making sense' of the world" for "Well. I'd probably let her make " ::hes of time in his room and re­ themselves, Mrs. Kenny expiains. that decision," Mrs. Kenny says. ~ponding only in monosyllables. Young adolescents, also expe­ But "I'd take a dim vi~w" if the, o if at all. :to his parents and sib- riencing By Janaan Manternach dramatic' physical same child wanted to stay home By Father John J. Castelot ' lings. changes, are "starting to form from the family's sunimer vaca­ It was sunset., "Jesus sat in a Jesus ate with outcasts and Mary' Ann was just the op­ the!r own values and are only . tion. fishing boat teaching the crowds sinners., This was a matter of, posite. at age 14 full of criticism beginners at making judgments." Teens qf this age "take a that lined' the lake shore.. capital importance. ' and complaint. Nothing satisfied Weary from teaching all day, Mrs. Kenny thinks she has friend everywhere," she ob­ With that in mind, let's look at her. from the clothes she wore grown enormously by helping Jesus turned to his disciples. serves, and parents might con­ Chapter 2 of Mark's Gospel, to the movies she was allowed children through the challenging sider bringing a friend along to "Let us cross over to the farther specifically at the second of the to attend. years of early adolescence. make summer vacation happier shore." he said. five stories about conflict in this "Why can't we drive a flashier He waved goodbye to the peo­ At tqe sam~ time, she admits for everyone concerned. section of the Gospel. car. Dad, like the Aliens do?" it is hard to keep a positive atti­ ple on the shore as the boat How can parents bolster their moved away. Several boats fol­ Once again, two stories that she asked time and again. Or. tude and to see this age as a once were probably independent "Mom. why can't' this family time of growth for both parent own spirits while their children lowed his. manned by his dis­ seem to have been combined: the ever do anything really neat? and child, With a younger child, are going through adolescence? ciples. call of Levi and a banquet which Why can't we go skiing in Colo- it is simpler, she observes. "It is "!My husband and I have been Josiah was in the same boa~ , provoked the indignation of some rado this year?" easy to see the growth" when a helped by other parents. most with Jesus. Even though he was frequently at informal meetings," not one of Jesus' 12 closest com· 1'4ary Kenny. who with her toddler starts to walk. Pharisees. Both stories illustrate the same point. husband writes a family life col· panions. Josiah followed him With adolescents. according to Mrs. Kenny remarks. Accord­ ingly, she recommends 'that par­ closely. Mark's account of the call of umn carried by many diocesan Mrs. Kenny, parents should en­ "Jesus really looks tired this Levi recalls the call of the first newspapers, including The An­ deavor to maintain 'a "delicate ents "link up with other par­ four disciples, Jesus, walking by chor, says that such behavior is balance" between show)ng warm ents."- e'specially those with evening." Josiah thought. "The the lake, bids Levi to follow typical between the ages of 12 interest on 'the one hand. and not slightly older children. It is very crowds demand so much from him. Immediately. Levi leaves and 15. Early adolescents often pushing them to unreasonable helpful to see that other parents him." have lived through 'the crises of The master sat in the boat's his profession and becomes a dis- display a "sudden and dramatic lengths on the other. ciple. change" in attitudes and bestern. He fell asleep almost as Be quietly supportive, she ad- o the early adolescent. she adds. This is so telescoped a narra· hayior. she notes. For by the upper grades in soon as he sat down. 'vises. young teens are vitally Josiah looked out over the live. it probably does not take Naturally. the abrupt change, concerned about their looks, and high school, in Mrs. Kenny's ex­ lake. The waves seemed to be everythin'g into account. comes as a shock to parents. Mrs. often are' overly critical of them­ perience. most teens have be­ Levi. raking in money hand Kenny. mQther of 12 children. selves. :Parents then can bolster coine surer of themselves and getting a little choppy. Then the water became rough· over fist, looks up and sees a says: All of a sudden. parents their children by, making favor- are easier to live with. er and rougher. As darkness fell, complete stranger who asks that a fearful wind blew up. Water we follow him. Wi~hout hesita­ poured 'into the boat. Josiah was tion. Levi drops everything and terrified.

follows Jesus. Even' the experienced fisher­ Now. the Gospels are not biog­

raphies. Just as in the call of men !legan to panic but through it all Jesus was fast asleep. Fin­ the disciples. Mark wants to ally Josiah and several others make a point, to illustrate the shook Jesus, anger mixed with promptness and unselfishness their fear. "Teacher." they com­ with which Christians should an· plained, "does it not matter to swer the call to discipleship. you that we are going to drown?'" Further, Mark copsiders it im­ portant that Levi is a tax' colJesus stood up quickly. He lector. ' raised a' hand against the wind That fact ties in the story of and waves. He shouted at the Levi's call with the other story sea: "Quiet! Be Still!" Then he sat down again. here - about a banquet at which Turn to page thirteen Turn to Page Thirteen

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Pharisees

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Pharisees

Continued from page twelve Jesus consorts with sinners. Es­ pecially to the Pharisees, tax collectors were considered sin. ners on more than one count. They were agents of a pagan foreign power, Rome'. They col­ lected taxes from their own peo­ ple to finance that power. More­ over, having bid and paid for the job, tax collectors had to re­ coup their investment by extort­ ing money above the legal tax rate. Many, in short, were crooks. Then, because their business kept them in frequent contact with gentiles, who cared nothing about ritual purity, tax collec­ tors were often considered un­ clean. Also Levi was probably in the employ of the Jewish King He­ rod A'ntipas. That did little for his image. The banquet story once may have involved a meal iIt Jesus' own house - according to a Greek text of the Gospel which reads, "While he was reclining to eat in his house." But now, joined to the call of Levi, the story tells of a banquet in Levi's house.

At any rate, the guests includ­ ed a crowd of "tax collectors and those known as sinners." Sinners, especially to many Pharisees, were those who did not carefully keep the prescrip­ tions of their traditions. Pharisees have often gotten a bad press. Bijt it should be re­ membered that in the main they were very sincere and religious. They carefully kept themselves separate (pharisee means sep· arated) from anythhig or anyone that might cause them to con­ tract legal uncleanliness. Thus Pharisees understand­ ably were sometimes scandalized by Jesus' conduct. Fatima with people like Levi was especially repulsive to them. Sharing a meal was a sign of unity and the chance of eating unclean food from impurified dishes was more , than good. But Jesus' answer was: "People who are healthy do not need a doctor, sick people do." For Mark's community, the all. embracing table-fellowship of Jesus taught an important lesson: The community has to welcome all to the eucharistic banquet.

Continued from page twelve amid continual music and noise; others don't. I know a couple in their 50s who have six children ranging in age from 32 to 14. The older children think - and don't fail to mention - that, they were raised much differently from the yonuger ones. The fact is, parents learn and change on the job. That is one thing families have in common. , There is no blueprint for family life or parenthood. In the process of developing their roles, many parents compare notes, talk over problems and generally try to figure out what other parents do that works. But in American society there is a heavy emphasis on privacy. There is much about family life that people seldom tell each other. Sometimes what is not told is just·what another parent most needs to hear and to under. stand. Perhaps the evening meal goes badly at least two or three nights a week in one home. Why are their children so fussy at dinnertime, the parents wonder. The parents may even think this is their personal failure. In another home, a 15-year­ old teen-ager spends much of his time in his room. He's enter· ed into a quiet stage and his par· ents feel frozen out. Again, they've started to wonder where they failed. Perhaps, they hllven't failed, but that doesn't make this phase of their son's life any easier for them. The parents of a 13-year-old girl in another home are dis­ turbed at some ways she is hand­ ling peer pressure at, school. Among other things, they think 'she is developing some racist at­ titudes ,that are expressed in her group - attitudes that do not reflect the parents' values. What can be done? In yet another home, the par­ ents are distressed because their child takes no interest in his faith. Faith is a focal point of their lives. They wonder how to get its importance across to their child. Situations like these are part of the reasoning behind parent­ to-parent and family-to-family ministry. There is a conviction that parents and families have much more to offer each other than they realize. No two families are' exactly

For children Continued from page twelve The wind stopped. The waves fell back. The lake became calm. The silver moon seemed to reach a shimmering calm finger out to the boat. Why are you so terrified?" Jesus asked his disciples. "Why are you lacking in faith?'" 'No one answered. They were awestruck by what had happen­ ed. They felt a little guilty not trusting Jesus. Most of all they were bewildered. "Who can this be?" they said over and over to one another, "Who can this be that the wind and sea obey him?" Josiah pondered that question all through the night.

: '"

alike, nor should they be. And families do require some privacy. 'But many people think that when more windows onto family life are opened, families will be amazed at, what they can provide each other in terms of support, compassion and genuine help in the task of learning to live as a family.

Parents Continued from page twelve can lead to a truer knowledge of God. What he calls the anniversary crisis usually occurs when a child reaches a point in life that was especially difficult years ago for one or both parents. At such times. parents often uncon­ sciously project their own fears onto the child. When parents see what really is going on, not only will the child prosper, but the parents will be helped to work through' their unresolved trauma and be stronger for it. Clearly, tension recurred for my husband and me each time one of our children graduated. It was not until last year my husband recalled that his high school graduation had been in jeopardy because he had failed a final exam in Greek. He passed a makeup test and went on to college and graduate school. Greek was forgotten - or so he thought. Obviously, however, the feel· ings of uncertainty associated with his near failure remained. When he read about the anni­ versary crisis, he realized that they surfaced whenever one of the children reached the point of graduation. Th.is was a liberating realization for him. But what does it say about parenthood and God? First, I think it says that most of us come to parenthood still working through the stages of our own maturity. As a friend says, "Few children get grown­ ups for parents." I think rearing children helps adults become firm, fair, living bearers of authority and tradi­ tion. Children are in many ways our mirrors. We come to know our strengths, weaknesses and many hidden dimensions of our per­ sonalities through our children. Sometimes what we see is not pleasant. Sometimes it hurts. Hughes calls this undistorted . self-recognition a form of the spiritual dark night, one through which all parents must pass. He urges parents to see their child· ren and all the natural problems that occur in family life as sig­ nals, accompanied by grace, that challenge us, to new levels of conversion. Christian parents can help each other to have faith during these dark nights, just as the Baptist minister helped me to see what was happening. during my daughter's graduation. The help parents share, how­ ever, will not come from com· paring one family to another, or through searching for a correct family model. It will come wMn we tell each other our stories truthfully and humbly.

THE ANCHOR -

Friday, June 11, 1982

13

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'14

Camp Fire leaders

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri."June .11.,.1982-

~~FILM

Among .award recipients at the recent Adult Leader Recognition Night held at St. Michael's Church, Swansea (photos at left) were three Camp Fire vol­ unteers. ' Mrs. George Martin, Westport, received the St. Anne Medal for service to youth for 10 years or more. She is a Camp Fire Leader .and a board of directors mem­ ber. Recipients of the St. Elizabeth Seton Medal, for five or more years of service were Mrs. Mi­ chael Miozza, Fall River, and Mrs. Gerald Poisson, Westport. Both are Camp Fire leaders' and' have prepared members of -their groups for religious achievement awards, as has Mrs. Martin. Mrs. Miozza is a fonner youth member of the Algonquin Camp Fire Council and Mrs. Poisson is chainnan of the organization's Leader-Sponsor Association, rep­ resenting it on the Camp Fire board of directors. Camp Fire members and adults took part in' the Recognition Night Mass as flag bearers, read­ ers and bearers of gifts. . Camp Fire, founded in 1910, was the first national organiza­ tion for girls.

RATINGS-~

A-1 Approved for Children and,Adults The looney Bugs Bunny MovIe Jesus

Annie Chariots of Fire (Rec.> Fox and Hound (Rec.>

Night Crossing Victory (Rec.) ,

A-2 Approved. for Adults and Adolescents Absence of Malice The Boat is Full (Rec.> ·The Chosen (Rec.> Evil under the Sun

Heartland (Rec.) Missing (Rec.> Only When I laugh Taps

Three Brothers Ticket to Heaven Windwalker

Zorro, the Gay Blade

'

A-3 Approved for Ad~lts Only The Amateur Arthur Atlantic City The Border Cutter and Bone Das Boot Dead Men Don't. Wear Plaid Deathtrap Diner Eyewitness Four Friends The Four Seasons The French lieutenant's Woman Callipoli

If You Could See' What I Hear I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can I Ought To Be in Picture9 looker Man of Iron Modern Problems ' Mommie Dearest. One from the Heart On Golden Pond Pennies from Heaven Prince of the City (Rec.) Raggedy Man Raging Bull Raiders of the lost Ark Reds (Rec.>

Resurrection Rocky III Rollover Secret Policemen's Ball Seems Like Old Times Sharkey's Machine Shoot the Moon Silent Rage Southern Comfort' A Stranger Is Watching They All laughed . Time Bandits Under the Rainbow ' Venom Wolfen The Woman Next Door

Wrong Is Right

I

A-4 Separate Classification, (A Separate Classification is given to certain films which while not morally offensive, require some analysis and explanation as a pro­ .tection against wrong interpretations and false conclusions.) The long Good Friday Mephisto Pixote Ragtime

Richard Pryor live on Sunset Strip The Story of Christiane F.

Gets scholarship

True Confessions Victor·Victoria Whose life Is It Anyway?

Maureen V. Guilinette, a sen--' ior at BMC Durfee High School, Fall River, is the 1982 recipient of the Rose E. Sullivan Scholar­ ship awarded by Sacred Heart Women's Guild, also of Fall River. The .daughter of Mr.';and Mrs.. Robert W. Guilmette, she ex­ pects to attend Bristol Commun­ ity College. and study business administration. At Durfee she was Business Club president, yearbook activities editor and a member of the senior prom com­ mittee.

The SuIlivan scholarship, es­ tablished in 1975, honors ,the first president of Sacred Heart Guild.

o -Morally Offensive All the Marbles lady Chatterley's lover Altered States A little Sex Amin - The Rise and Fall I love You • An American Werewolf love and Money in london Making love Blowout Mel Brooks' History of Butterfly the World Part I Caligula Neighbors Cat People . Paradise Circle of Deceit Parasite Conan the Barbarian Partners Death Valley Penitentiary II Death Wish II Personal Best

Fighting Back Polyester Ghost Story Porky's

Private lessons Quest for Fire The Seduction S.O.B. So Fine Some Kind of Hero Soup for One ' Squeeze Play Strange Behavior Stripes Tattoo Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man· . Vice Squad Visiting Hours

(Rec.) after a title indicates that the film Is recommended by the u.s. Catholic Conference reviewer for the category of viewers under which it is listed. These listings are presented monthly; please clip

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'IT WAS A big day for youth leaders at' St. Michael's Church, Swansea; as the' 23rd annual 'presentation .of awards to Gir~ Scout, Boy Scput' and Camp Fire leaders took place; Top and center, Fathe~ NQrmand Boulet of St. Michael's and Richard Cloutier of Notre Dame parish, Fall River, receive St., George Awards from Bishop Daniel A. Cronin. Bottom, St. Michael's Knights of the Altai meet yiith th~ bishop pror to t~~ ceremony.. . .' . : .

CHICAGO (NC) - A group of U.S. pro-lifers have toured Ire­ land at the request of the Pro­ Life Amendment Campaign, that country's first nati~nal organiza­ tion. The purpose of the visit by the pro·lifers was to prevent "the laity' from being lulled into a sense of security" about the possibility of less restrictive ab­ ortion coming to Ireland, said Dr. Herbert Ratner, one' of the travelers and editor of Child and Family Quarterly·. Although Ireland's laws prohibit abortion, in 1968 several abortion refer­ ral agencies were opened in Dub­ lin, pr:ompting many Irish wo­ men to .seek out abortion clinics in England. The Irish Pro-Life Amendment Campaign is ~ coali­ tion o(·several Irish organizations which was fonned in anticipation' of possible court· actiQn and to counteract the. media and edu­ cational campaign of abortion advocates.

WarnI.nJ Those who stand' for nothing , ~iIl fall for anything.


By Bill Morrissette

portswQtch A Cougar Is State Recordholder Jeff Palmer, Bishop Connolly High School's ace pitcher, has set a new state record for car­ eer wins in scholastic baseball with 36 victories, eclipsing the former record set in 1981 by Charley Marchese of Norton High School. Over his four-year span on the mound for Connolly, Palmer completed 37 of the 52 games he started.. He was never re­ placed because of ineffective­ ness, only to give him a rest. In 3Ot·-y, innings he was nick­ ed for 164 hits, gave up 111 runs, 75 of them earned, and compiled an impressive earned run average of only 1-73. He struck out 271 batters, gave up only 150 walks. He was charged with only nine losses and credit­ ed with two saves. ' Pitching 21 innings in his

freshman year, he won one and lost two and that was to be his only losing season. As a sopho­ more he posted .13 wins against two losses, a performance he re­ peated as a junior. This year, 9-2 as a senior, he became the new holder of the state record for career victories. He was the winner in each of his three starts in post-season play, winning two in 1980, one in 1981.

Another Connolly senior, Dave Gauvin, has been making nation­ ai, headlines 'in amateur boxing. He is now at the United States Olympic Training Center in Colo­ rado competing for a berth on the United States national team that will participate in the North American Championships Mon-, day through Saturday of next week in Las Vegas.

Hockomock Champions In spring Hockomock League sports Franklin High School with a 12-4 record won the baseball championship by only one game over runnerup Canton. Oliver Ames, 14-2, is the softball titlist while Sharon and Foxboro, 10-6, tied for second place. Undefeated in 14 starts, Shar­ on was the winner of the boys' tennis crown with Stoughton, Jll·3, the runnerup. Also unde­ I~eated, 16-0, Stoughton won the girls' tennis championship. Franklin and King Philip, each 14-4 tied for second place. Each 8-0 Mansfield and No. Attleboro were the' winners of

the boys and girls, respectively, Spring track champions. No. At­ tleboro also was victorious in the girls all-league meet with 96, points, followed by Sharon 90, Oliver Ames 60, Mansfield 52, ' Canton 51, Foxboro 39, Stough­ ton 28, 'King Philip 14, Franklin 8. With 138Y2 points in the boys all-league meet No. Attleboro completed a sweep of the all­ league meets. In the boys com-· petition Mansfield was second with 112 points followed by Sharon 64, Oliver Ames 63, Fox­ boro 51, King Philip 48, Canton 22, Franklin 18, Stoughton 7Y2

tv, mOVIe news

NOTE Please cheek' 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 Ancholl'. Symbols following film reviews indicate both general and Catholic Film Office ratings, which do not always coincide. Genera! ratings: G-suitable for gen· eral viewing; PG-parental guidance slig, gested; R-restricted, unsuitable for children or younger teens. Catholic ratings: Al-approved for children and adults; A2-approved for adults and adolescents; A3-approved for adults only; A4--separate classification (given to films not morally offensive which, however, require some analysis and explanation!; O-morally offensive.

New films "Fighting Back" (paramount): The story of an inner-city Ital­ ian-American (Tom Skerrit) who organizes his neighbors to fight crime. Despite muddled homage to .the complexity of big city ills, everything come~ down to the usual spasm ,of simplistic vio­ lence that solves all problems. Because it resorts to an end­ justifies-the-means m 0 r a: 1i t Y , "Fighting Back" is rated 0, R. "Rocky Ill" (Columbia): What­ ever its shortcomings as cinem­ atic art, "Rocky III'" is just about flawless as popular entertain­ ment. The ring carnage, though brief, is still very intense making the movie mature fare and earn­ it A3, PG ratings.

"The Secret Policeman's Ball" (Miramax): (Not the exact title of the Monte Python troupe's latest, but it's close enough.) This is a filmed record of two London re­ vues Monte Python did for Am­ nesty International. Some skits are very funny, but the rock in­ terludes are boring. Only. for the Miscellany Senior Gary Monteiro of Ware­ Softball League championship. It most avid Python fans. Because ham High School won the 110 was also the team's ninth of sexual jokes and occasional meter high hurdles in the Massa­ straight unbeaten league season.. obscene language, it is rated A3. chusetts Invitation Track Cham­ Next school year wtll see a "Visiting Hours" (Fox): An­ pionships at Boston College Al­ new athletic director and a new other Canadian attempt in the umni Stadium last Saturday. His basketball coach at Connolly tradition of "Porky's." Lee Grant time was 14.7 seconds. High School. Marc Letendre, the stars as a woman terrorized by Jose Rocha of 'New Bedford hoop mentor, has accepte4 a beefy maniac Michael Ironside. High set a new school record of position in Florida. His wife, Mi­ A revolting, stupid film without 9 minutes 23 seconds in the two chelle, is the school's athletic a single redeeming quality. 0, R. mile run. The former record, director. They leave next month "Annie" (Columbia): Although held by Steve Caton, was 9:23.6. with their daughter for Florida. lacking the charm of the stage In girls' competition, Case No decision has been an­ version, thi~ is, with a few res­ High's Pat Jette, the state's nounced regarding appointment ervations, good family entertain­ Class C champion was first of a new football coach at Dur­ ment. In an ill-advised attempt in javelin with a throw of fee High. Rumor says that Don­ 'to appeal to both adults and 127 feet four inches, four inches ald F. Montle, who formerly held moppets, director John Huston better than her performance in the position, has the inside track. has included items better fore­ The seventh annual Tom Nor­ winning the Class C title earlier gone. There's an awful lot of ton Celebrity Open Golf Tourna­ this year. leg work in the production num­ The second annual five-mile ment for. the benefit of the bers but more serious than that road race sponsored by the Fall Greater Fall River Association are some profanity and adult River Educators Association will for Retarded Citizens will be held humor. Carol Burnett, as Miss be held at 6 p.m. Sunday from Sunday at the Fall River Country Ha'nnigan, flicks ashes down the Knights of Columbus Hall, Club. Initiated by state' repre­ Bernadette .Peters' decolletage, Columbus Avenue,' Fall River. sentative Thomas C. Norton, the ' for example, and, in one se­ Dubbed "Sprint for Scholars" tour'nament this year is dedica­ quence, attempts to seduce Al­ the race is for the benefit of the ted to the late Ed Nasser, one of bert Finney's Daddy Warbucks. association's, scholarship. fund. its founders. The ,event usually. These instances, though r(!gret­ A two-mile fun run, starting' at attracts outstanding personalities' 'table, are innocuous, and since 5:30 p.m. has been added to the from a variety of sports. Joe Laz the movie as a whole is good program. zaro, former three-time national family entertainment, .it rates The Apponequet Regional blind golfing champion, is ex­ A'~ and PG listings. High School girls team, under pected to participate this year as . "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" coach Pete Loney, has' won' lts he 'has each previous year. (United Artists): Steve Martin, ninth conseCUtive Mayflower

THE ANCHOR ­ Friday, June 11, 1982

BIRTHRIGHT

as 1940s private eye Rigby Rear­ don, cavorts with old-time stars thanks to some clever editing in this affectionate and moderately entertaining spoof. Martin is good throughout, Rachel Ward shows talent as his mysterious client, and Carl Reiner is amus­ ing as an Otto Preminger-style Nazi menace. Some sexually oriented jokes make this strictly mature material;' classified A3, PG. "The Escape Artist" (Warners): A teen-ager, trying to measure up to his 4ead father's reputa­ tion as a magician, puts his lock­ picking and wallet-lifting skills to good use in exposing a ring of corrupt politicians. The best thing about this off-beat adv~n­ ture story is Griffin O'Neal's pre­ cocious performance as the plucky youngster who beats an adult world at its own shady game'. Because of the threaten­ ing intensity of several scenes, it is rated A2, PG. "Lady Chatterley's Lover" (Can­ 1I10n): This adaptation of the D. H. Lawrence novel is an ex­ ercise in commericalized eroti-­ cism. Because of graphic sex, it is rated 0, R.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese 'of Fall River-Fri.~ Jufie' 11, 1982' 'NAZARETH BALL, FR Nazareth ,Hall will celebrate its 25th· anniversary Sunday, Sept. 19, with a 10 a.m. Mass to be offered at St. Mary's Cathe­ dral by Bishop Daniel A. Cro­ nin. A dinner will follow at Venus de Milo restaurant, Swan­ . sea. The event will ·be sponsored by ,the Friends of Nazareth Hall and the Nazareth staff. Past and 'present students will be special guests. ST. THERESA, NB BISHOP STANG

.All are welcome at ,the ob­ mGH SCHOOL,

Corpus Christi, Sunday, June servance; Further information is NORTH DARTMOUTH

13, will be observed as a parish available from Sister Maureen day of prayer and adoration. Mitchell, 676-1572, or Ms. Phyl­ A farewell reception honoring George Milot, principal, will be Exposition of the Blessed Sacra­ lis BroWn, 678-0912. . held from 6 to 8 p.m:, Friday; ment will follow a solemn Mass at 11 a.m., concluding at 7 p.m. RIGHT TO LIFE June 111, in the school auditor­ The 10th annual national ium. Alumni, parents and with an outdoor procession to friends welcome. Informa)tion: four altars, evening prayer and Right to Life convention will be 996-2781; 674-3140. Benediction. Refreshments will 'held July 15 through 17. at then ,be ,served in' the parish Cherry Hill, N.J., with the SACRED HEART,

theme CIA New Birth of Free­ hall. All welcome. ' PAWT,UCKET

dom." Information: Convention, 30 Hasting Road, Old Bridge, The parish, at 38 Park Street,' SEPARATED/DIVORCED, FR The Greater Fall River sup­ N.J. 08857. . will hold a Roots Night at 7:30 p.m" Friday, June 18. In its 110 port group will meet at 7 p.m. WIDOWED SUPPORT GROUP, Wednesday, June 23, at Our NB year history the parish served . South Attleboro and Seekonk, Lady of Fatima parish hall, 560 Travel and vacation plans will Gardners Neck Rd., Swansea. now in the Fall River diocese, as be discussed at a meeting of the well as many persons now living All welcome to share experi­ in other areas of the diocese. All ences with others in exchange New Bedford Support Group for the Widowed at 7:30 p.m. Mon­ are invited to particpate in the for support and understanding. day, June 14, at St. Kilian's rec­ program. Information:' Mary tory. All welcome. ST. JULIE,N. DARTMOUTH Foley, 401-722-6459. CYO cheerleading tryouts for girls in 6th to 8th grade will be ST. ,MARY, SEEKONK D OF I, NEW BEDFORD The parish prayer group meets Hyacinth Circle will meet at held at 2 ·p.m. Sunday in the at 7:30 p.m. each Monday in the 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 15, at church hall. Information: 996­ CCD center. All welcome. K of C Hall on Pleasant Street. 4127. A seminar on adolescent sex­ Guests are welcome for a pro­ uality for parents, educators and SACRED HEART, FIR. gram to be offered by hand­ Senior citizens will take a bus other concerned persons is in' writing analyst Margaret Ham­ trip to Connecticut Tuesday, progress. Sessions will be 'held burgess. Refresh;ments. June 15. Information: 676-8332. Tuesday, June 15 and 22. Infor­ SS. PETER & PAUL, Flit A parish picnic will take mation: 399-7534. A cookout for young persons

Steve Cobery and Ken Souza place from nooh to 6 p.m. Sun­ were cowinners .of the Msgr. day, June 27, at Cathedral Camp, confirmed last month will be

'held at 2 p.m. Sunday, June 27,

George Maxwell Award at the East Freetown. Swimming, ten­ 'at the. rectory. Reservations:

'annual parish CYO banquet. nis, softball and basketball fa­ 226-2279.

Both former altar boys, they cilities will be available. Babysitting is available for are now parish CCD teachers childr~n folirand' younger dur- . and are active in many other ST. MARY, ONSET A Corpus Christi procession ing 10 a.m. Mass each Sunday. A parish . projects. Also a top award winner was Dave Ayers, will be held at 10:30 a.m. Mass Bible school, for which registra­ alltime CYO' bowling record Sunday, June 13, followed by a tions are now being accepted, is conducted for four and five­ holder:, with a game total of 198 fa~ily day picnic at the church year-olds. in spring competition. center.

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ST: JOSEPH,' FAIRHAVEN' Congratulations are extended to the Sacred Hearls priests of the parish' marking· their. ordina­ tion anniversaries: Father Cole­ man Conley, 25 years; Father Bill McClenahan, 31 years; and Father Felix Lesnek, 29 years. A charismatic prayer meeting is 'held from 8:45 to 11:30 a.m. each Wednesday at Sacred Hearis convent, 44 Rotch St. A blood bank will be held from 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sun­ day in the church hall. ST. ANNE HOS·PIToAL, FR The Physicians' Education Committee will sponsor a con­ ference at 6 p.m. Thursday, June 24, at the Quequechan Club, Fall River. Dr. Richard A. Gleckman will discuss cost-effective use of anltibiotids. Information: Ellen Pelletier, 674-5741, ext. 258. ST. THOMAS MORE, SOMERSET The youth group will meet at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the parish center. Guests..-are welcome. New ·parishioners are 'asked to fill out a census card, to be found in the church foyers. The rectory should be· notified jf children will be attending CCD classes for the first time. ST. SJ'ANISLAUS, FR Czestochowa Confraternity members will meet for spiritual direction Wednesday, June 23. The annual Corpus Christi Mass and procession will take place at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. FAMILY LIFE CENTER, N.DARTMOUTH The c.enter calendar includes a retreat (or permanent diaconate couples starting tonight; a meet­ ing of St. Helena's Ultreya at 7 p.m. Sunday; a meeting from Tuesday through Friday of the ad hoc Newly Married Com­ mittee of the Catholic Family Life Program;. and a Polaroid Corporation seminar Friday, June 18.. HOLY NAME, FR The Blessed Sacrament will be exposed following 11:15 a.m. Mass Sunday, the feast of Cor­ ,pus Christi. Exposition will con­ tinue until 7 .p.m. when there will be a Benediction service. HOLY FAMILY, E. TAUNTON The parish family ministry is organizing a community picnic open to all residents of East Taunton. It will take place on the Holy Ghost Hall grounds in Middleboro from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday, June 27. Participants should bring lunch and drinks. Grills will be provided. The pro­ gram will include games, prizes and entertainment. Reservations by June 20: 823-6610, 823-4452. LA SALETTE, ATTLEBORO The Sacred Hearls of Jesus and Mary wil be honored Friday and Saturday, June 18 and 19, with an opening charismatic lit­ urgy celebrated by Father An­ dre Patenaude, MS, at 7:30 p.m. Friday, followed by processions and vigil 'hours until midnight. An 8 a.m. Mass Saturday will be celebrated by Father Paul Dalbec, MS. Meditations and scripture sharings will follow until noon. A closing liturgy at 12:10 p.m. wIll be celebrated by Rev. Donald Paradis, MS. Weather permitting, processions and prayer services will take place outdoors. Also on Saturday, June 19, an outdoor coffee house will follow 7:30 p.m. Mass. Featured will be John PoIce and the ·Upper Room Ministry, a group ,that has been heard in the area for the past seven years: The program will include several compositions ,by' PoIce.

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CATHEDRAL CAMPS Due to weather conditions, an open' house at Cathedral and Our Lady ot the Lake camps, East Freetown, planned for last Sunday has been rescheduled for Sunday, June 13. To be held from 1 to 4 p.m., the program will include a 2_ p.m. gymnastics exhibition, camp tours and the opportunity to talk to staff members. Information: 763-8874. ST. ANmONY OF PADUA, FR ?arishioners 'are celebrating their patronal feast, which be­ gan last Monday with a triduum conducted by Father Henry Ar­ ruda of Immaculate Conception parish, New Bedford. Recrea­ tional programs will be con­ ducted tonight and tomorow night and ,the feastday Mass wil,l be offered at 11 a.m. Sunday, with music by the choir of Es­ pirito Santo Church, Fall River. A procession and ·band concert will follow at 2 p.m. All welcome. ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI, NB Senior citizens will hold an installation luncheon at Thad's restaurant Tuesday. DOMINICAN LAITY, FR Members will attend Mass at 1:30 p.m. Monday, June 14, at St. Anne's priests' chapel, Fall River. A meeting and election o! officers will follow in the rec­ tory meeting room. ST. ANNE, FR The annual memorial Mass for fire fighters will be offered at 10 a.m. Sunday. SACRED HEARTS SEMINARY, WAREHAM A triduum of prayer for vo­ cations . will be held Monday through Wednesday, June 28 through 30, beginning with 10 a.m. Mass daily, continuing with exposition of the Blessed Sacra­ ment and closing at 7 p.m_with a 'holy hour and Benediction. Groups or individuals are wel­ come. A priest will be available to discuss vocation questions. In­ formation: Brother Damien, SS.CC., 295-0100. ST. JOHN OF GOD, SOMERSET Observance of the Holy Ghost feast will begin tonight with a concert. on the church .grounds. A procession will begin at 11 a.m. .Sunday at the Wellsley Drive home of mordomo Joseph Raposo, with crowning at noon and the serving of soupas in the parish center to follow. Father Stephen B. Salvador, assistant .pastor, will speak on Meditation Hours at ·a fellow­ ship meeting to follow 7 p.m. Mass Thursday, June.17. An appreciation night for CCD ,teachers will begin with Mass at 7 p.m. Friday, June 18. A social 'hour will follow. ST. LOUIS, F'R Women's Guild officers for the coming season will be Mrs. Mar_ ion Cote, ·reelected president; Miss Marion Fahey, vice-presi­ -dent; Mrs. Helen Morin, secre­ tary; Mrs. Marie Aguiar, treas­ urer. ST. M10HAEL, SWANSEA

The Youth Group will meet

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BL.SACRAMENT, FR Parish council elections will take place the weekend of June 19 and 20. The youth ministry will meet Sunday night, June 27. New Women's Guild officers are Helen Ouellette, president; Gladys Barre, vice-president· Anita Joseph, secretary; Louise Guay, treasurer. O.L.GRACE,WESTPORT Couples' Club installation ceremonies will follow 6:30 p.m. Mass tomorrow. Members wiU then attend a banquet in the parish center.

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