AN ANCHOR OF THE SOUL, SURE AND FIRM -HEB. 6:19
t eanc 0 VOL. 21, NO. 30
FALL RIVER, MASS., THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1977
'Soap' Is Likely To Wash Away
Surgeon Asks Theologians To Probe Psychosurgery
"Soap," an ABC television prime time series planned to premier in September, may wash out long before that time if the United States Catholic Conference has its way. Interfaith opposition to the series, described as a "radically new and outrageous adult comedy," is mounting and the latest salvo came from the USCC Department of Communication which last week released a memorandum to all U.S. bishops. Noting that Donald H. McGannon, head of the Westinghouse Broadcasting Company, has rejected at least the first two "Soap" episodes for its
Order Priests Are Assigned Bishop Daniel A. Cronin has confirmed presentations made by Very Rev. John Marie Cassesse, OFM, Minister Provincial of the Franciscan Friars and Very Rev. William B. Davis, SS. CC., Provincial Superior of the Sacred Hearts Fathers, relating to the assignment of three priests in parochial ministry in the diocese of Fall River. Appointed by Bishop Cronin as assistant at St. Kilian's parish, New Bedford, is Father Donald D'Ippolito, OFM. His assignment is effective Monday, Aug. 1.
Appointed as pastor of St. Boniface parish in New Bedford is Father Joachim Shults, SS. ce. Appointed as assistant pastor of St. Anthony parish, Mattapoisett, is Father Roy Yurco, Turn to Page Five
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lSc, $S Per Year
NEWLY ORDAINED Father Robert A. Oliveira and Bishop Daniel A. Cronin, following solemn ceremonies at 51. Mary's Cathedral. Father Oliveira's first assignment will be as associate pastor at Holy Name Church, New Bedford.
Feehan Facilities Expand As Enrollment Increases With a record-breaking increase to nearly 900 students projected for September, the physical plant at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro, is expanding, taking over a building adjacent to the campus formerly occupied by Nazareth School for students with special needs. The Nazareth facility was closed by the Fall River diocese in June because area special needs students were increasing-
ly being absorbed by regular public school systems. Sister Mary Faith Harding, Feehan principal, announced that the Nazareth building will become a religious studies center. Nearly all Feehan's 35 religion courses will be taught in the building, which houses five classrooms, a prayer room, an audiovisual center, a faculty room and an office. It will also Turn to Page Seven
By John Muthig ROME (NC) - A Jeading neurosurgeon who has transplanted ,brains in animals has asked Catholic moral theologians to devote less time to sexual morality and start scientific study of lifedeath problems faced by doctors. nr. Robert White, 51, said in an interview in Rome during a lecture tour that moral theolog-ians are unable to answer questions regarding neurosurgery and psychosurgery (operations on brains of criminals and psychotics) since they have "a great lack of knowledge about how the brain functions." He said that other medical probJems which could be a "gold mine" for moral theology, "could well become a disaster" if serious study is not begun soon. Among the problems: he listed the field of transplants, brain death ("We scientists are getting off too easily when we equate human death with brain death") and the use of expensive extraordinary means to conserve life of the chronically ill. Dr. White, who was the first scientist to isolate an animal brain and keep it alive mechanically, said that "moral theologians are so tied up in problems of sexuality and in trying to decide what homosexuality is that they are not giving sufficient study to major medical problems." He said that he knew of no moral theologian who understands neurochemistry or neuro-
physiology well enough to carry on an intelligent dialogue on the morality of certain operations on the brain. "How can moralists give guidelines to surgeons if they don't understand brain function or brain chemistry?" asked the Cleveland surgeon, who has successfully transplanted the brains of monkeys. "There as too much interest among the clergy in the fields of psychology and psychiatry, whereas they need a better education and background in the neurosciences." . Dr. White said that moralists Turn to Page Seven
Seekonk Clinic Ban Probable With approval by the threemember Seekonk Board of Selectmen of a zoning by-laws amendment prohibiting abortion clinics, pra-l;ife forces are a step closer to their goal of making it impossible for such institutions to operate in the town. At a meeting last Wednesday night, selectmen approved a zoning amendment prohihiting "clinics wherein abortions ar~ performed." The amendment now goes to the town planning board, which will hold a public hearing on the matter, and then to a representative town meeting scheduled for Sept. 12. At the meeting it will be voted on by Seekonk's 120 representatives.
VIEW OF FEEHAN CAMPUS, WITH NEW RELIGIOUS STUDIES CENTER AT LOWER LEFT
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 1977
ill People.Places.Events-NC News Briefs ID Red Congratulations
VAT.ICAN CITY - Czech president and Communist party leader Gustav Husak has written a letter of congratulations to newly created' Cardinal Frantisek Tomasek of Prague, the Vatican daily newspaper reported.
Discrimination Main Point SAN ANTONIO, Texas-Mexican-Americans, saying they are considered second rate citizens, complained about "the lack of ministry in the Church to reduce or eliminate discrimination." This is the main point in a long list of findings by the archdiocese of San Antonio in preparation for the second Encuentro Pastoral Hispano to be held in Washington August 18-21.
p'allottines Disburse 路BALTIMORE - Since Jan. 1, the Pallottine Fathers have given more than $2.6 million to charitable causes. The Baltimore-based community has been making the contributions in an effort to reduce its financial holdings. The Pallottines have been criticized for sending only a small portion of the large amounts of money raised through direct mail solicitation to the missions in the past.
Ian believes that the comatose young woman continues to live because she is serving a dramatic purpos,e: giving mute testimony to the evil of mercy-killing. Father Thomas J. Trapasso, the Quinlan family's parish priest, said that Joseph and Julia Quinlan, the stricken woman's parents, share his view.
They Should
A~nswer
PLAQUEMINE, La - Supreme Court Justices should have to answer to the public for their decisions" according to the leader of the Catholic Daughters of America (CDA). Winifred L. Trabeaux, regent of the 182,000-member CDA. said members of the court are by and large "good and honorable men," but "anyone holding such an :iinportant office should be held accountable to the American people for his decisions .- at least at intervals."
Renewal Must Follow
VATICAN OITY -: A spiritual renewal program must follow a eucharistic congress, or there's no J'1eason to have such a congress, according to the papal legate to the 41st International Eucharistic Congress held last August in Philadelphia. Cardinal James Knox, interviewed in Rome, called last year's con, gress a marvelous event" and said, "My Still Not Free head is still spinning from that wonderVIENNA, Austria - Despite recent ful week." But, he added, "if the spiritual signs of a thaw in Church-state relations effect of the congress does not extend in Hungary, the Communist government beyond the week, then such a gathering is still thwarting apparent guarantees of is a failure." religious freedom, according to a memorandum by 35 Hungarian priests that Never a Payc:heck has reached the West. SWEDESBORO, N.J. -- Angela Felciani has been an elementary school teaPostal Ceil'ing cher at St. Joseph's School in SwedesWASHINGTON - An attorney repre- boro for 25 years. But she has never senting four religious press associations accepted a paycheck for her work. Mrs. urged Congress to put a ceiling on how Falciani, mother of five, who is now asmuch the postal service can charge nonsistant principal at the school, was honprofit publications. Testifying before a ored recently for her contribution to the subcommittee of the House post office Church and children in the South Jersey and civil service committee, attorney farming community. Charles Emmet Lucey said the associations favored a ceiling on attr:ibutable Communion F'irst cost of 60 percent of total costs. PUEBLO, Colo. - Bishop Charles Buswell of Pueblo has agreed to requests from the diocesan offices that the dioCan't Come to US cese continue its policy of first CommuROME - Socially progressive Bishop nion before first confession. Francisco Claver, head of the prelature of Malaybalay, the Philippines, is being denied an exit visa to the United States Illegal En'try by the government of President FerdinPRETORIA, South Africa - Archbisand Marcos, according to reliable sourhop Joseph P. Fitzgerald of Johannesburg ces in Rome. has charged South African police with illegally entering the administrative ofMute Witness fices of the country's Catholic bishops' conference and with halrassing conferMOUNT ARLINGTON, N.J. - A priest close to the family of Karen Ann Quinence officials.
AMONG MAJOR SPEAKERS at the 29th New England Congress of Religious Education, to be held Aug. 19 through 21 at the Amherst campus of the University of Massachusetts, will be, from left, Father Ernest Larsen,
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Oppose Neutron Bomb CHICAGO - Production of the neutron bomb - which can kill through radiation without destroying buildings violates human rights. a group of nuns has charged. The National Coalition of American Nuns (NCAN), an organization concerned with social justice issues, called the bomb a "monster" in a letter to President Carter asking him to stop research and development on the bomb.
'Cash Out' Unwanted WASHINGTON - A top U.S. Catholic Conference (USCe) official has criticized a Carter Administration proposal to "cash out" some $4 billion in low-income housing subsidies. The Office of Management and Budget has suggested that the housing money be used instead to help finance a new welfare program. Msgr. Francis Lally, USCC secretary for social development and world peace, said that the USCC supported welfare reform, but he added, "the cutting of vital housing programs to secure revenue for welfare reform is not acceptable."
'Cold Technology' v ATICAN
.cITY - Reacting to the birth near London of a child conceived through artificial insemination, the Vatican daily newspaper said (July 12) that artificial insemination is immoral and represents a '''defeat for man and human liberty." In an article by Franciscan Father Gino Concetti, L'Osservatore Romano said that artificial insemination is "cold technology . . . a merely individualistic calculation Cof a rigid form of programming."
Important Signature NEW YORK - The Vatican's signature on the' Helsinki document carries great importance because of Helsinki's dependence on moral authority, says a prominent European Protestant minister. "Without moral author.ity Helsinki collapses, and if it collapses we are back in the Cold War, but with an even more dangerous situation," said the Rev. Glen Garfield Williams.
Accept Unions, He Says STEUBENVILLE, Ohio - An official of the National Catholic Educational Association ~NCEA) urged the Catholic Church to accept - not resist - the unionization of, its employes. "I think that unionization is here," said Dominican Brother Edward van Marrianhoer of Chicago, NCEA justice and peace consultant. "It's coming in some areas, and
we will have to learn to minister with it, not in spite of it."
Aid for Vietnamese WASHINGTON - Heads of eight voluntary agencies - including the U.S. who resettled Catholic Conference most of the Indochinese refugees in the United States following the Vietnam war say "we are ready to do our part" for 15,000 new refugees likely to enter the country soon, including some 6,000 "boat cases," refugees who left Vietnam in small boats and are sailing around the Pacific basin in Southeast Asia.'
Bishop Criticizes Nun BURLINGTON, Vt. - Sister Elizabeth Candon, Vermont state secretary for human services ,has been sharply criticized by Bishop John Marshall of Burlington for permitting state funding of welfare abortions.
Adoption Subsidies WASHINGTON - The Carter Administration has offered a plan to make adoptions easier and to reduce the unnecessary placement of children in foster care. The plan involves adoption subsidies for low and middle-income families and families adopting "hard-to-place" children - handicapped, minority or older children or t~o or more members of the same family.
Payments Banned PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Rhode Island Gov. J. Joseph Garrahy has instructed the -state, Department of Social and ,Rehabilitative Services to stop paying for elective abortions for welfare mothers.
Ask Intervention Forty-one priests at Worcester's Holy Cross College and a major Jewish organization have appealed to the U.S. government to intervene on behalf of 47 Jesuits in EI Salvador threatened by a terrorist group with execution. In separate telegrams to Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, the summer faculty at the Jesuit college and the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith (ADL) urged the United States to use its influence to protect the priests, who face death' at the hands of the White Warrior Union unless they leave the country.
Steril'ization on Rise WASHINGTON - A report by Princeton University's Office of Population Re路 search claims that' more American couples of child-bearing age have been sterilized than are using oral contraceptives.
Dr. David O'Brien, Msgr. Robert Fox, Father Louis Savary, SJ, Father Stephen Doyle, OFM., Dr. Michael Warren. The meeting will bring together religious educators from all parts of ~he six-state region.
JUBILARIANS MARKING diamond, golden and silver anniversaries as Sisters of St. Dominic of the Congregation of St. Catherine of Siena gather at the community's Fall River motherhouse. Top picture, froin left, seated, Sister Ambrose Stanger, retired at the motherhouse, Sister Martin Landry, still active at the motherhouse, both with 60 years of service. Standing, Sister Paulette DeGagne, a faculty member of Dominican Academy, Fall River, 25 years; Sister Veronica Landry, retired at the motherhouse, 60 years. Celebrant of the jubilee Mass was Father Richard Landry, MS, Sister Martin's nephew.
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Bottom picture, from left, golden jubilarians Sister Maria Marsan, former prioress general, now teaching in St. Philippe, Quebec; Sister Elizabeth Farand, former principal at St. Anne's School, Fall River, now retired at Plattsburgh, N.Y.
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Continued from Page One Baltimore affJIiate, Robert B. Beusse, USCC secretary of communication, said: "So. far, the network has refused to let the USCC see a preview of the first segments of 'Soap." Obviously, they are concerned about our reaction. "First, I suggest that you call your local ABC-TV affiliate station manager for information," said Beusse in his memo to the bishops. "Ask him (I) whether he plans to air 'Soap' in your community this fall; and (2) whether you personally or your personal representatives can see it as soon as possible so that you will be in a position to guide the people of your Diocese. "You may also wish to suggest that representatives of other religious denominations in your community be invited to screen the program with you. We are working in cooperation with various other Church agencies at the national level on this matter." With the memo, Beusse sent a New York Times clipping which quoted an Idaho television station president as saying of "Soap," "It's not a new frontier; it's a new sewer."
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APPOINTMENT Rev. Daniel F. Hoye, from Vice Officialis of the Diocesan Tribunal to Assistant General Secretary, United States Catholic Conference-National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Washington, D.C., effective July 25, 1977. ASSIGNMENTS Rev. Robert A. Oliveira, first priestly assignment, to Assistant, Holy Name Pari3h, New Bedford, effective August 10, 1977. Rev. Mr. Jon-Paul Gallant, temporary assignment as Deacon, Saint Joseph's Parish, New Bedford, effective July 20, 1977. Rev. Mr. Normand Grenier, temporary assignment as Deacon, Saint Theresa's Parish, South Attleboro, effective July 20, 1977.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 1977
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themoorin~ The Spirit of Kansas City This past week over 50,000 persons gathered in Kansas City for the 1977 Conference on Charismatic Renewal in Christian Churches. Representatives from various denominations have called the meeting one of the most important ecumenical giatherings ~n the religious ~istory of this country. If the religious life of this nation is to be revived in this manner, then encouragement and support should be offered to those who sincerely believe in the basic and fundamental efforts of the renewal. However, such efforts do not come about without difficulties and dangers. An Anglican priest from England offered the convention what might be considered one of the most meaningful reflections concerning a problem already appearing within the framework of the Charismatic renewal, namely, whether the renewal should stay in the "traditional" church. Father Michael Harper clearly point'ed out that there are dangers connected with the renewal, stating "this could be the third great schism of the church or it could be a great awakening in the Church." He explained that the charismatic renewal faced the dangers either of being so unstructured that charlatans could arise, or becoming so organized as to become another denomination. To guard against this, Father Harper proposed that those in the renewal keep in close touch with the organized church. This indeed is the position of the Catholic Church. In this diocese a special liaison has been formed to guide and direct the prayer groups in the area. A basic structure is being developed which not only brings stability to meet. ings but also leaves sufficient room for individual expression.
photom,edita,tion A group of religious educators ... at a workshop on liturgical dance raise joined hands and voices their common Father. · .. in praise of God Adding unfamiliar gestures . . . to the long familiar words of the Lord's Prayer . . . they sing the prayer's ancient .conclusion ... a hymn of praise ... "For thine is the kingdom . . . and the power . . . and the glory ... forever and ever ... Amen~" Despite signs of uneasiness at an uncommon manner of praying '. . . their bodily movements . . . create a sense of joyful praise ... imaging Mary's prayer ... "My whole being . . . proclaims . . . the greatness of the Lord" (Luke 1:46). Their whole-hearted . . . full-bodied prayer-song · .. may remind us that prayer ... is primarily praise · .. a heartfelt expression ... of wonder and appreciation ... before God ... so great and so good. "Praise the Lord . . . all you nations . . . glorify Him . '. . all you peoples. .. For steadfast is His kindness toward us ... and the fidelity of the Lord endures forever."
If the charismatic renewal is to be an authentic and effective witness, it must work within the church and not outside it.
The great danger of such a personal witness of faith is that it could become a vehicle of expression for the religious faddist or emotional extremist. Nevertheless t~s is one of the most important grassroots movements in today's church. Thousands of people meet weekly to pray, t<? listen and to witness; and many who have been searching for a form of religious expression that is a living testimony to the Gospel message have had their lives transformed. As the charismatic renewal continues to grow and develop,' it is most important that it continue to renew the entire church anc;l not become merely a praying playground for the spiritually immature.
The members of the renewal must also be aware that many of their fellow church members cannot understand what this movement is all about. Its message cannot be brought to such people by a mindless adherence to accidentals. It is thus imperative for the good of the entire church that the work of the renewal not be left in the hands of the jnept or the disturbed but rather that it be developed by those tried and true Christians who sincerely believe in the work of the Holy Spirit in today's church. The charismatic renewal will grow and achieve under5tanding and acceptance only if it achieves in its process of maturation a fidelity of devotion to the church universal. Its witness has meaning only within the concept of the entire church and never apart from it. It must always keep in mind that the gifts of the Spirit are for all men, not just for a select few. Letters Welcome Letters to the editor are welcomed. All letters should be brief and the editor reserves the right to condense any letters if deemed necessary. All letters must be signed and contain a home or-business address.
(Psalm 117:1-2)
'~elfare Reform Problems By Jim Castelli WASHINGTON (NC) - "Most of the principles on welfare reform expressed by President Ca~rter were good, but they all conflict with it's first principle of not spending any more money," according to Mathew Ahmann, associate director for government relati<ms with the National Conference of Catholic Charities. He and Father Edward Ryle of the National Catholic School of Social Services have analyzed the Administration's welfare proposals. They see a lot they like, but they also see some serious problems. The Administration emphasizes that many of
its proposals are still tentative; Adminstration officials are now talking to state officials and a final legislative proposal isn't expected until August. The basic proposal involves a "two-tier" income support with one level for those required to work and one for those who are not. Those not required to work would be the aged, blind or disabled (now covered by the supplemental Security Income, or S8I program) and mothers of young children. Former SSI recipients would receive $2,600 a year (in 1978 dollars), slightly more than they now receive from SSI and food stamps. A
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OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER
Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass. 02722 675-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, D.O.,' S.T.D.
EDITOR
FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATOR
Rev. John F. Moore, M.A.
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Leary PreSl-- fall Riv.r
single parent with a child would receive $3,300 a year and a family of four, $4,700 a year. On the second tier - those expected to work - a single person would receive $1,200 a year, a childless couple $2,400 a year and a two-parent family of four, $2,600 a year. Benefits would be reduced by fifty cents for each dollar earned. Benefits would be reduced less in private sector jobs than in public service jobs -for the minimum wage - provided by the government for those unable to find work otherwise. People on the second tier would move to the first tier if government could not find work for them. A person refusing work would lose eligibility, although children would not be cut off completely. Here are some of the problems Ahmann and Father Ryle see: -The benefit level is' inadequate. Catholic Charities has backed an income guarantee of about $7,900 a year for a family of four, half the median income. "We don't expect to see it right away," Ahmann says, '''but we can't understand benefits set at 75 percent of the poverty level, which is inadequate in the first place." . -People in many states, particularly the Northeast and Midwest, would get less than they get now. -Eligibility would be determined on the basis of income averaged over six months before application. This means, according to Father Ryle, that a family of four with an income of $900 a month f.or the first five months of'the year· and no income- after . that. would.• go.three...·mornhs without any benefits and three more months before it received the full $350 a month. Families like these would be helped by "general assistance" at the state level. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Joseph Califano has said the federal government will take over some of these costs. But Ahmann warns that relying on general assistance will make the system more complicated, not simpler. -The minimum-wage publicservice jobs will put people in dead-end jobs and depress wages for people already doing public service work. -The Administration proposal includeS a provision for "relative responsibility" which Father Ryle calls "really regressive." Now, SSI eligibility is based on the income of the aged, blind or disabled person alone. But under the Administration proposal, eligibility would be based on the income of blood relatives living in a household. this could mean, according to Father Ryle, that some aged, blind or disabled persons will be forced out of their families' homes in order' to receive benefits and that some families may be forced on welfare if they must support an aged, blind or disabled relative who is ineligible for benefits. Father Ryle says this approach "goes against U.S. policy since the Social Security Act of 1935 and against the principle of collective responsibility for the elderly."
The
THE ANCHOR'Thurs., July 28, 1977
Parish Parade
Order Priests
Publicity chairmen of parish organizations are asked to submit news Items for this column to The Anchor, P. O. Box 7, Fall River, 02722. Name of city or town should be Included, as well as fUll dates of all Ictivities. Please send news of future rather than past events. Note: the same news Item can be used only once. Please do not request that we repeat an aMouncement several times.
SACRED HEART, FALL RIVER Members of the recent confirmation class will hold a combination planning meeting and pizza party Tuesday, Aug. 2 at 7:30 p.m. at the new parish center on Seabury Street. Adults interested in developing a parish youth program are also invited to attend. Beginning Aug. 1, all parish business will be conducted from the parish center adjoining the church. ST. LOUIS, FALL RIVER Franciscan Tertiaries will attend a theme Mass at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 3, followed by a meeting in the church hall. All interested persons are invited to attend. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER The parish council will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Aug. 22 at the parish hall. All members of parish organizations are asked to participate in a procession planned for 1 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 14, as part of the annual observance of the feast of Our Lady of Angels. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, FALL RIVER . :rhe ~aJ;!nHa! pa~i~h picni,c .will 路.t$~.pla~Sund~y,.. July 31 at Holy Ghost grounds, Sodom Road, Westport, with transportation provided from the church at half hour intervals from 11 :30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Events will include entertainment by the Amadores Acoreanos from 1 to 5 o'clock, an auction from 5 to 6 o'clock and a "cantoria" from 6 to 7 o'clock. Portuguese foods will be available and door prizes will be awarded. OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL NEW BEDFORD A parish bazaar will be held from tomorrow through Sunday on the church grounds, with live entertainment offered by the Celtas on Fdday night, Atlanticos on Saturday night, Conjunto VC on Sunday afternoon and Capitalistas on Sunday night. To be awarded are a trip to Hawaii or Portugal, cash prizes and a color television. Also featured will be American and Portuguese foods and a variety of games and booths. Tony Teixeira, chairman, w.ill be aided by Donald Aspden. SS. PETER & PAUL, FALL RIVER Marist Sisters staffing missions in Africa, Latin America and the Pacific islands will speak at all Masses next weekend. Reservations for a parish trip to Warwick Wednesday, Sept. 7 for a Liberace performance may be made with Margaret O'Neil, telephone 6768084. A testimonial will be held Sunday, Aug. 28 for Rev. Ronald A. Tosti, for six years as-
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OJO DE DIOS: Sister Marie Williams (left) and Sister Pauline admire "Ojo de Dios" or Eye of God folk art cross with Barbara Cabral, pioneer member of Domincan Sisters' 'lay missionary program. The crosses, popular in Latin areas, recall God's unceasing care. This one, hanging in Dighton provincial house of community, was made at their mission in Texas.
Dominican Sisters Lay Missioner Program Pleases Community, Pioneer Member "It was hard to believe I was in the United States. I didn't know people had such problems." Thus Barbara Cabral of Sharon, Mass., a graduate of South-
sociate pastor at SS. Peter & Paul and now administrator of St. Francis of Assisi parish, New Bedford. Arrangements for the event, to be held in Father Coady Center, are being made by the parish council, headed by Edward Quirk, president. ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER A Polish food sale will be conducted Friday night for workers at last week's summer festival. It will be open to the public following all weekend Masses. Men's Club members interested in attending a Red Sox game Sunday, Aug. 28 may contact Jack Zukowski this week, telephone 673-0333. ST. JOSEPH, NEW BEDFORD "How is your prayer life? Is something missing? Would you like to find out how to touch the heart of God?" With those questions the parish announces a service of prayer, praise and worship at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 3. Mass will be followed by a program in the school hall and refreshments.
Dames Patronnesses Dames Patronnesses of Sacred Heart Home, New Bedford, were hostesses at a summer outing last week for residents. A trip to Buttonwood Park and Zoo, New Bedford, included a box lunch, and residents unable to make the trip were served a special dessert. Miss Lillian B. Ross, Mrs. Daniel Dwyer, Mrs. Frank Chartier路 and Mrs. Normand Brassard were in charge of arrangements.
eastern Massachusetts University School of Nursing, summed up her eye-opening yer.r as the pioneer member of a Lay Missionary Program sponsored by the Dominican Sisters of the Presentation of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River. As a volunteer, she served from last August to this June in the small town of Cotulla, Texas, where she assisted Sister Pauline, O.P. of the St. Anne community in developing a rural health clinic and administering the WIC federal program aimed at nutritional and physical betterment of mothers and small children. In an area 85% Mexican- American, Barbara discovered how it felt to be a member of a minority group. "'Anglos' experience prejudice," she recounted, although in her case the fact that she was working with "the Sisters" dispelled suspicion. Barbara admitted that before her year in Texas she hadn't had much church involvement, but that the experienc~ "turned my thinking around and left me feeling better about the church." She credited Mrs. Del Maney of the SMU Nursing School faculty with interesting her in the lay missionary program. "She was so excited about it that I thought this was something I wanted to do." Initially nervous at the prospect of living in community with Sisters, Barbara said, "It turned out real well. I learned a lot." For the most part, she worked with Sister Pauline and another Sister from the St. Anne community, living in a rented house in the "barrio" or slum section of Cotulla. The Sisters were on a one-year assignment in the San Antonio archdiocese. Ordinarily they serve at a clinic in the Brownsville, Tex. diocese. Still undecided about the field of nursing she wishes to enter,
Continued from Page One SS.CC. Both appointments are effective today. Father D'Ippolito was ordained in 1950, then assigned to Greek Latin graduate studies at Catholic University, Washington, D.C. Thereafter he taught classical languages at St. Francis Seminary, Andover. He has also served as superior and pastor at St. Christopher Friary, Boston; Most Precious Blood Church, New York City; and Immaculate Conception Church, Toronto. His most recent assignment was at St. Anthony's Church, Troy, N.Y. Ordained in 1945, Father Shults was assigned as professor in the Sacred Hearts minor seminary in Wareham and in following years served as a member of his community's mission band and in St. Joseph's parish, Fairhaven; St. Mary's, North Fairhaven; Our Lady of Lourdes, Wellfleet; and St. Anthony's, Mattapoisett, as well as in Columbus, O. and Rochester, N.Y. Father Yruco taught in California and was bursar in the Jaffrey, N.H. Sacred Hearts Seminary following his ordination in 1962. He served in Our Lady of the Assumption parish, New Bedford, and St. Joseph's, Fairhaven, before his most recent assignment at St. James Church, Boston.
Barbara noted that in no other way could she have gained t?e public health experience she obtained in Texas, and that she regards her year of service as a Necrology professional as well as a spiritAugust 5 ual asset. Rev. Martin J. Fox, 1917, Sister Marie William, in Founder, St. Paul, Taunton charge of the lay missionary Rev. Thomas A. Kelly, 1934, program, stressed, however, that Pastor, SS. Peter & Paul, Fall it is by no means confined to River nurses. August 6 "Women can go wherever in Rev. Joseph P. Lyons, 1961, the world our community has Pastor, St. Joseph, Fall River houses," she said. That includes August 8 India, Latin America and France, Rev. William Bric, 1880, as well as the United States. Founder, St. Joseph, Fall River Although volunteers pay their own travel expenses to whereever they may be assigned, they she would be happy to address are provided with living quar- colleges or youth group<; to exters and a small stipend. And plain the rrogram furthEr. there are jobs for every taste, "We are n'lt looking 4'0'" Sissaid Sister Marie William, rang- ters," she fttressed, emphaf.izing ing from the many assignments the temporary nature of tLe lay in a hospital to catechetical missionary program, which can work, teaching, office positions be a m~.:lningful interlude ftlr a and the Spanish-Americ~n apos- YOl:n:~ WOil1an before er.tering tolate. her own o;hospn career. Women "searching for a faith As for the Dominican Sisters, experience through living in who discuc;sed their new procommunity and willing to com- gram in depth at their recent mit one year of their lives to plenary council meeting, aidert help others" are invited to con- by input from Barbara and from tact her at 15路 Melville St., Fall Mrs. Maney, they feel it is "a River 02724. She said women . good experience for us to have 20 and over are sought and that lay people shl!lre our life." ~~~~~~
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THE ANCHORThurs., July 28, 1977
6
By REV. ANDREW M. GRE:l:LEY
It is a safe bet that American Catholic church leaders are not thinking much about the next Supreme Court -vacancy. Every time there is an opening on the bench the Church seems to be caught by surprise. Blacks, Jews, women, and envioronmentalists quickly have a fix on where potential appoint-
Why Not A Catholic Seat on the Supreme Court? ees stand and take vigorous public positions on candidates. The Church manages to get itself organized a oouple of days after the appointment has been approved by the Senate. Thus Mr. Justice Brennan, the holder of the alleged "Catholic seat" -on the court, was approved a long time ago, and the Church seems quite content that there is a justice with an Irish name, despite the fact that Brennan has voted against the Catholic position on every major issue that has come down the pike-abortion, Catholic schools, pornography, anti-Catholic quotes. You will not catch Mr. Justice' Marshall ever voting against the black position. He knows 'why he's on the court; and if he for-
presidential candidates on abortion when the president has little effect directly on either Another justice was. well- constitutional amendments or known as an anti-Catholic in his court decisions but will then' home town. He refused to at-. pay no attention to court aptend the wedding or reception pointments when these appointwhen his daughter married a ments are of critical importance C2ltholic. This fact was known to the abortion issuse. by the bishop of his diocese and by the national leadership of the When the "Catholic seat" :beChurch, but no attempt was comes vacant, the campaign mnde to challenge his appoint- against a Catholic justice will ment. He has since written some be very strong. The pro-aborbitterly anti-Catholic opinions. tion and anti-Catholic school pressure groups will probably Can you imagine blacks sit- demand veto- power on a Cathoting still for a justice who would lic appointee. President Carter, not go to a wedding where the who does not seem to like Cathgroom was 6lack? olics very much, will quickly ar[ am amazed that the hier- gue that there is no such thing arehy will go to the mat with as a "Catholic seat" and that gets it, the blacks of the country let him know.
the vacancy should be filled by the "best qualified" p~rson. ,Can you imagine his arguing that when Mr. Justice Thurgood Marshall is being replaced? There is, you see, a "black seat" on the court now but not a "Catholic seat." And they will get away with it. The bishops don't know how to fight. And the laity are not much interested since the antiCatholicism of the Supreme Court has little impact on their daily lives. So the "Catholic seat" will be lost without a fight, and the bishops will go right ahead with useless campaigns on October Sundays. Everyone will be happy.
T,his Old Hc)use Kn:owsS,orr,ow As Well As Joy By MARY CARSON
The other day the 17-yearold son of my neighbor had a present for me-a photo of our house. He's been _studying photography and thought I'd like a copy of the picture he had made. My parents bought this house in 1925. We have pictures in deep snow, pictures with flower gardens in. blooms, pictures with children playing . . . from my oldest - brother down to my
By MSGR. GEORGE G. HIGGINS
This column will discuss .the International Labor Organization (ILO) program in the field of international economic development. The new technology proliferates. This side of the ocean one speaks of "participative" development strategies and "employ-
youngest daughter. There's even your vision. 'We have many "sunny" pica "formal portrait" of the house, , tures recalling the good times. made 50 years ago. Yet with all that recorded his- This new picture reminds me of tory, this new picture is some- other times. When I was born my father thing special. . This young man has an un- had just lost his business beusually creative mind. He took cause of the depression. He had this picture from inside a car, to borrow money to get my on a rainy day. He focused on mother and me out of the hosthe raindrops running down the pital. My mother's, mother died in car window. The house, far back in the this house. From here my three picture, soft because it's out of brothers left for military duty. It was from this house that I fOCIlS, looks misty, dreary, diswa.tche<1 for the mailman every tant. Some people look at the pic- day for 16 months, praying for ture and are surprised by my the day my fiance would return enthusiasm. The house looks for- from Korea . My parents have moved' out bidding, morose, gloomy, something out of an old English nov- .and we've lived here since our el, with mists rising from the third child was born. Weare moors obscuring and distorting ac(~umulating more memories.
Basic
Nee~~s,
ment oriented" strafegies. In Geneva, the 1976 ILO World Employment Conference endorsed the "basic needs" approach. In essence, however, the jargon on both sides concerns the same shift in approach from efforts to produce all-around development in the Third World through stimulating growth, to the belief that economic growth has to be coupled with far-reaching changes in priorities in the developing countries so that provision for the poorest becomes the prime objective. The idea underlying both A!ID and UN strategies is that growth must be linked to a better dis-
An emergency phone call for my husband. His father had had a heart attack. Kneeling in the living room with my very young children, saying a rosary with a request already too late. This house welcomed that last little baby who was so tiny we made a bassinet out of the laundry basket, that baby whose problems were finally explained by a diagnosis of Downs' Syndome. This house was our haven during days of fear, exhaustion struggle to bring life. back to our little girl who was almost killed in an accident. It was in this'yard that'iny husband and I frequentlywa1k~ ed - to talk, to be alone, to find courage together . . . when a doctor thought I had cancer,
and often, through the grueling years our business was on the verge of bankruptcy. This picture cOnveys all these things to me . . . the raindrops symbolizing the tears that have fallen, the gloominess a reminder of the heartaches endured. All those things are a part of our lives, part of the Creation of our family, part of the formation of each of us. This picture hangs in my living room - a cherished possession. Maudlin? If so, then I should remove the crucifix路 too, for路 that reof the .tears 'and minds heartaches of the Blessed Mother's life and gives me courage to grow in my own.
me
the United States and the ILO
tribution of wealth within develloping countries. From World War II until 1976, most international development conferences were concerned with regulating relations of states and terms of trade to stimulate economic and hopefully sodal progress. The 1969 World Employment Program of the ILO was a new departure, shifting thE! onus to a complex of domestic policies, assisted by the international community. The basic needs approach to development' unanimously endorsed by the 1976 World Employment Conference held under ILO auspices, corresponds to a
synthesis of growth, employment and poverty eradication goals. The basic needs approach obviously goes far beyond the traditional ILO field of responsibility. Hence the necessity to work in a closely integrated way with the other institutions in the UN system; for example, FAO for nutrition, WHO for health, UNESCO for education. Such collaboration as started effectively on preparation of a world survey of the state of basic needs fulfillment and an assessment of policies seeking to implement the basic needs-oriented strategy. Under the
World Employment Conference Program of Action, the results would be submitted to an ILO conference before the end of the decade. From the beginning, the ILO was conscious that man does not live by bread alone. This new program also is not taken to mean merely the provision of a material minimum for subsistence. The Program of Action states that the concept of basic needs should be placed in the context of a nation's overall social development, national independence, freedom and the dignity of the individual.
Stop, Look, Liisten, Enioy Are Messa:g,es 'of Summer By MARILYN RODERICK
While most of us admire God's handiwork I have never heard anyone put his admiration into such meaningful words as did the visiting priest at my parish last week. His homily was on attending to
the wonders of nature around us and realizing that by appreciating this beauty we are actually praying. Hi$ inspiration had come from a recent, message from the Pope who urged all Christians to make their summer vacations a prayer of gratitude for natural beauty. To all who have or walk in a garden or live or walk beside the sea, this is no new message but it does re-emphasize basic facts. Very often, when we are too busy, we tend to rush past all that life has to offer and both
Father and the Pope were urging all to stop, look and listen and reminding them that by doing so they were really pray-
blueberry.
inl~路
1 Y2 teaspoons cornstarch 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind 1 3-oz. package cream cheese % cup confectioners' sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup heavy cream 1. Place blueberries in medium size saucepan; mix sugar and cornstarch; sprinkle over berries. Cook over medium heat, stirring often and crushing a few berries until mixture thickens slightly and bubbles 1 minute.
Such a philosophy is refreshing and appropriate at this time of year when the bounty of the garden is both beautiful and plEmtiful, especially in the area of lovely fruits. So pause and enjoy the beauty of a season that gives abundant evidence of God's work. Here is a delightful recipe that uses ope of God's summer gifts to our area, the native
Blueberry Fool
1 pint blueberries % cup sugar
2. Remove from heat; cool completely. Pour into a 4 to 5 cup glass bowl; cover and refrigerate several hours. 3. To serve, beat cream cheese and lemon rind until soft in medium size bowl; blend in sugar and vanilla; add cream and beat with mixer or rotary beater until fluffy and soft peaks form. 4. Spoon cream mixture on blueberries; then gently top fold in, leaving streaks of blue ,and white. Sprinkle with additional lemon rind, if you wish. Refrigerate until serving time.
0'
THE ANCHOR-
Surgeon Continued from Page One cannot follow his presentations on neurosurgery since "they must bring what I say back into the realm of classical philosophy" Moralists must start answering hard questions about the morality of head transplants which, he believes, are already technically feasible. (He rejects the idea of brain transplants for humans, and speaks about head transplants which would "give the brain the possibility of communicating with its environment." In transplanting only the brain, said Dr. White, a surgeon would run the risk that the vital organs of sight, hearing and speech might be rejected when the new brain began to function.) While asserting that a head transplant probably could be done today, Dr. White admits that neither he nor other physicians are able yet to connect the spinal cord to the brain. Thus a transplant patient would be paralyzed from the neck down. Dr. White said that he has not yet made any personal decision on whether or not a head transplant could ever be considered a moral operation. The father of 10 children he is an active Catholic. Readers' Digest, which has published a long interview on his professional work, will soon publish a story on Dr. White's religious views, entitled "Why I Believe." Dr. White said that the suc-
Thurs., July 28, 1977
Seekonk Continued from Page One Opposition to the clinic has been led by Seekonk Catholics, with Ernest Trahan of St. Mary's parish chairman of an ad hoc committee that has gathered 960 signatures supporting the proposed zoning amendment.
FOSTER GRANDMAS at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River, receive certificates recognizing their contribution to providing homelike atmosphere for youngsters. From left, Front, Sister Lourdette, foster grandparent pro gram supervisor at home; Rev. Thomas L. Rita, director; Robert Perry, field program supervisor; rear, the grandmas, Nellie Casilli, Mary Miozza, Mary E. McCrosson, Jane Keezer, Martha Lambert, Mary Lo~d. cesses of transplants, dialysis machines and other extraordinary means of preserving life is causing mammoth problems for the medical profession. "We are able to keep people alive today for incredible periods when we probably should not," he said. "Dialysis machines can keep people with kidney trouble alive but the costs are exceedingly high. Everyone is supposed to have the best medical care possible. "But now decisions have to be made on the categories of patients who are to enjoy every advance of medicine. The public, the government and doctors need direction. But moralists are escapjng these.,.problems since they are not trained to deal with the scientific disciplines," said the neurosurgeon.' Asked about whether he felt the American hierarchy was suf-
ficiently aware of the need for serious moral guidance in the new medicine, Dr. White said that the Church "is still chasing its own tail." "There are so many problems w:ithin the clergy itself, within the parish and regarding the place of women in the Church that the problems of the medical profession are getting low priority," he said. Dr. White is professor and cochairman of neurosurgery at
Leg ion Retreat The Legion of Mary of the Fall River Diocese will hold a closed retreat at Sacred Hearts Academy, Faifhaven, on Friday and Saturday,· October 28-29. It will be given by Father Mar· tin Lucia, SSCC, and will be for both men and women. Anyone interested in making this retreat should call 995-2354 for reservations.
.UUUltnlUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll1llllllllll1lllll1lllllllllll1l1"llllllt1l1!"llllll'1ll11l11111'lllIllUWIUlllll1Hllllllll"mn'l;""'1'111I"""'III'.""""IIWuUtn:"'''''.'IUI:''''rlll''''''IU'Il1111ilUlIl
F·eehan Facilities Expand
WAS WAR PRISONER: Sister Mary Assumpta Duffy' 83, died last week at the Maryknoll Sistets' Motherhouse, Ossining, N.Y. A Fall River native, she entered the mission community in 1922 and served in the Philippines for 20 years. She was taken as a prisoner of war to an internment camp and was eventually rescued from behind Japanese lines by U.S. paratroopers and Filipino commandoes. After recovery from illness caused by camp conditions, she worked in Maryknoll houses in Pennsylvania, Missouri and Calif0rnia. She is survived by her sister, Sister Mary William, also a Maryknoller, and her brother, Andrew L. Duffy of Fall River.
7
Continued from Page One be used for class liturgies. During the past year members of the high school's religious studies department, led by Sister Elizabeth Doyle, have planned their use of the new facility, setting as their goal the providing of "an atmosphere wherein the students can experience and formulate for themselves a set of values which will lead them to live vihrant Christianity." The increase in the number of students at Feehan, significant especially during the past two years, even in the face of rising tuition costs, is indicative of the desire of students and parents for a qulility education combined with solid moral training, said Sister Mary Faith. "There are' many excellent school departments in our state and throughout ~r country," she noted, "but the varied philosophical backgrounds and religious orientation of the students present a unique challenge to American public education. In the Catholic school, conflicting moral values are non existent on the basic, fundamental level." Resource Center The educator also said that in cooperation with the state Department of Education a career resource center will be set up
Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, as well as director of the neurosurgery department and brain research laboratory at Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital.
Max Volterra, town counsel, recommended to the selectmen that the proposed amendment be made more specific than it is at present in order to avoid conflict with state zoning legislation. The· anti-clinic forces agreed to the change, saying that it would not "dilute the strength of the amendment." A leader among objectors to the proposed clinic has been Rev. Edward C. Duffy, pastor of St. Mary's parish in Seekonk, who has preached and written on the matter since it became a public issue in late June.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 1977
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Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:15, 9:30, 10:45, 12 noon Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:30 P.M. Daily-7:00 and 9:00 A.M. First Fridays-Ultreya-8:00 P.M. "First Friday Masses at 7:00 and 9:00 A.M.
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CHATHAM HOLY REDEEMER Schedule effective July 2 Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 AM. Saturday Evening-5:00 P.M. Daily-8:00 AM.
SOUTH CHATHAM OUR LADY OF GRACE Schedule effective July 2 Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 AM. Saturday Eve.-7:00 P.M. Daily-9:00 A.M.
NANTUCKET OUR LADY OF THE ISLE Masses: Sunday-7:30, 9:30, 11:30 A.M. and 7:00 P.M. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M. Daily-7:30 AM. and 12:00 Noon Rosary before Daily Masses Confessions: Saturday-4:00-4:45 P.M.
SIASCONSET UMON CHAPEL Masses: Sunday-8:45 AM. July and August
EAST FALMOUTH ST. ANTHONY
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Schedule effective weekend of June 25-26 Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, U:15 A.M. Saturday-4:30 P.M. Daily-8:00 AM.
ST. MARGARET'S Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00,10:00, 11:00, 12 Noon and 7:30 P.M. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 6:30 P.M. Daily-8:00 AM. Confessions: Sa'turday-4:00-5:00 and 7:00-8:00 P.M.
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NORTH FALMOUTH ST. ELIZABEnI SETON Masses: Sunday-7:45, 9:00, 10:15, 11:30 and 5:00 P.M. Saturday Eve.-4:00 and 5:30 P.M. Confession: 3:15-3:45 and 7:30-8:00 P.M.
EDGARTOWN ST. ELIZABEnI Masses: Sunday-9:00, 11 :00 AM. Saturday Eve.-4:00 and 7:00 P.M. Daily-8:00 AM. (Mon.-Fri.) Confessions-Saturday 11:00 AM.-Noon
OAK BLUFFS SACRED HEART Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:15, 10:30 A.M. Saturday Eve.-6:00 P.M. Daily-7:00 A.M.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 1977
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ORTINS PHOTO SUPPLY
of Churches and Masses Mass Schedule for Summer Season ORLEANS
ST. JOAN OF ARC Schedule effective June 18 - 19 - Labor Day Ma£es: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M. Daily-8:00 AM. Confessions-Saturday 4:00 - 4:50 P.M. Our Lady of Perpetual Help Novena-Wednesday Morning Mass at 8:00 AM. NORTH EASTHAM
CHURCH OF THE VISITATION Schedule effective June 18 - 19 - Labor Day Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M. Confessions-Saturday-6:3Q-6:50 P.M.
ST. AUGUSTINE Masses: Sunday-8:00, 11:00 AM. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M. Daily-8:00 AM. Confessions: Saturday-4:00-4:30 P.M. and 6:00-6:30 P.M.
SANTUIT
ST. JUDE'S CHAPEL Masses: Sunday-9:00 and 10:30 AM. Saturday-5:00 P.M. Confessions: Saturday-4:15 - 5:00 P.M. MASHPEE
Of. .t\~ SAINTS . Masses: Sunday-8:30, 10:00, 11:30 AM. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:30 P.M. Confessions: SaturdaY-4:15 - 5:00 P.M. ~ ,Q~N
PROVINCETOWN
ST. PETER THE APOSTLE Masses: Sunday-7:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M., 7:00 P.M. Saturday Eve.-7:00 P.M. Daily-7:00 A.M. and 5:30 P.M. (except Saturday) Confessions: Saturday-4:00 - 5:00 P.M. and 6:45 P.M. SANDWICH
CORPUS CHRISTI Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 AM. and 12 Noon Saturday Eve.-5:00 and.7:00 P.M. Daily-9:00 A.M.
SOUTH YARMOUTH
ST. PIUS TENTH Masses: Sunday-7:00, 9:00, 10:15, 11:30 AM. 5:00 P.M. Saturday Eve'-4:00 and 7:00 P.M. Oaily-7:00 and 9:00 A.M. (9:00 A.M. Mass Mon.-Fri. only) BASS RIVER
OUR LADY OF THE HIGHWAY Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:30, 11:00 A.M. Daily-8:00 AM. (Mon.-Fri.)
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Schedule July and August Masses: Sunday-9:00, 10:30 A.M. Saturday Eve.-7:00 P.M. Confessions: ~ hour before Mass WELLFLEET
OUR LADY OF LOURDES Schedule effective June 18 Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 AM. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M. Daily-9:00 A.M. Confessions: Sat: 4:30-5:00 P.M. and before all Masses. Tuesday Eve.: 7:30 P.M. Mass followed by Charis~atic Prayer Meeting TRURO
SACRED HEART Schedule effective June 18 Masses: Sunday-9:30 A.M. Saturday-7:00 P.M. Confessions: Before Masses NORTH TRURO
OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP Schedule effective June 18 Masses: Sunday-9:00, 10:00 & 11:00 AM. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:00 P.M. Confessions: Before Masses WEST HARWICH HOLY TRINITY
Schedule effective July 2 - Sept. 11 Masses: Sunday-7:30, 9:00, 10:30 & 12 Noon Saturday Eve.-5:00 & 7:00 P.M. Daily-9:00 AM. Confessions: Saturday 3:00 and 7:45 P.M. First Friday- Additional Mass at 11:00 AM. and Benediction at 2:00 P.M.
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ST. THERESA Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 AM. Saturday Eve.-6:00 P.M.
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ST. PATRICK Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:30, 10:00 11:30 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. Saturday Eve.-4:00 and 6:00 P.M. Daily-8:00 A.M. Confessions: Saturday-3:00-3:45 P.M. and 7:007:30 P.M.
POCASSET
ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30,10:30,11:30 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. Saturday Eve.-4:00, 5:00 and 7:00 P.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. Confessions: Saturday-3:00-3:45 P.M. and 6:156:45 P.M.
Doane' Heal'Ames
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OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION Schedule effective June 25 thru Sept. 4 Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:30, 10:00. 11:30 AM. Saturday Eve.-5:00 and 7:30 P.M. Daily-7:00 and 9:00 AM. Confessions: Saturday-4:15 - 5:00 P.M.
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UPPER COUNlY ROAD OUR LADY OF THE ANNUNCIATION Schedule effective July 2 - Sept. 11 Masses: Sunday-7:00,8:30, 10:00 & 11:30 AM. Saturday Eve.-4:30 P.M. Daily-8:00 AM. Confessions: Saturday 3:00 P.M. WOODS HOLE
ST. JOSEPH Masses: Sunday-8:00, 10:00 A.M. Saturday Eve.-7:00 P.M. Daily-8:00 A.M. (9:00 A.M. Sat. only) Confessions: ~ hour before Sunday Masses
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 1977
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Pope Suggests Soul路 'Vacation VATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope Paul VI recommends that Catholics take a "soul vacation" this summer. A "soul vacation," he said, is a period of "refinding oneself, one's thoughts, soul, freedom and very life. "A rest from the routine of work is not mere idleness nor simply external diversion," he maintained. He also encouraged vacationElrs to commune with nature. "Get yourselves into contact once again with nature in its genuine expression: with space, the atmosphere, and animals, with the sea, the mountains, the plains, with dawn, noontime, sunset and especially with the star-filled night, deep and always enchanting. "We wish you all happy vacationing," concluded the Pope. The Pontiff will take his own advice as he embarks on a two-month vacation at his summer villa in Castelgonolfo, 16 miles from Rome. The villa, described as "a garden of earthly delights," is about the same size as the whole of Vatican City State. The first important Roman to vacation on the sport was Em. peror Domitian (81-96 A.D.), who built the first of the great imperial villas on the site over-
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Pope Arrives at Castelgandolfo for Summer Vacation looking Laka Albano, a crater There is no swimming pool, lake. but there is an audience hall On rainy ,days Pope Paul can . with a capacity of 8,000 which is still use the long, fresco-covered rarely used, since the Pope enwalkway built by Domitian for joys flying by helicopter back taking his afternoon "passeg- to Rome on Wednesday for his giata" when weather is bad general audience. (which it almost never is). Papal secretary of state, CarAt one extreme of the papal dinal Jean Villot, spends about property is a model farm, coma month at the palace. There are plete with poultry, livestock, daily deliveries of material to be and fruit and olive trees. Its proreviewed by the Pontiff, who enduce is either given to convents joys working outdoors in a corand orphanages or sent to the ner of the vast gardens, but Vatican for sale in the commisthere is time for relaxation as sary. well. The Pope sees old friends The most beautiful feature of and has a closer - almost facethe papal compound is its Italian to-face-contact with the people and English gardens, with their who come to the villa on Sunreflecting ponds and manicured days for his noontime blessing. shrubbery. And in Castelgandolfo the The Vatican observatory manned by American Jesuit Pope gets some fresh air priests, also forms part of the something he almost never gets property. _ ., in Ro~~!.... "'.", ... ,~ .... '::." ~:# .:....;..~r...
Letters to the editor
Letters are welcomed, but should be no more than 200 words. The editor reserves the right to condense or edit, if deemed nl!cessary. All letters must be signed and ir clude a home or business address.
fOrgan Donations Dear Editor: Congratulations on the interesting and informative article on the donation of kidneys for transplant (June 30, 1977). I know it has stimulated路 people in this area to think about becoming a donor. The Church has delineated a very articulate position on the rIght to life. With prophetic voice today the Church carries on the principle of Jesus, "I have come that you may have life and have it to the full." (.rn. 10:10) We believe that life in this earthly, fleshly body is only temporary. ' I wish the Church would be more emphatic on this matter of donation viable organs for transplant, and indeed donating one's body after death for purposes of medical research. Such donations are a real participation in this mission of bringing full life to others. The process of deciding about the donation of organs or one's body or both is a delicate and important one. While the decision is ultimately made by an individual, 1 feel the process should be shared by family and they should be well aware of
Knight of ,Year JI Is Bourassa
and comfortable with the decision. Persons with an interest in such donations should be encouraged to pursue the process of inquiry now while they still have an opportunity. Rev. Kevin F. Tripp Coordinator of Catholic Ministry, St. Luke's Hospital, New Bedford
He Did It Too Dear Editor: We read with great interest the "Sidelights" report (Anchor, July 21) on the achievements of Father Powers in the building of two churches, a great accomplishment to his credit. However, with all due respect to Father Powers, we feel we must set straight a point of history, and state that an error was made, namely that we know of at least one more good and devoted priest who has also accomplished the building of two churches, that priest being Father Howard Waldron, who was responsible for the building of Our Lady of Victory church in Centerville and also the church of which he is at present the pastor, St..Thomas More in Somerset. Doreen J. Mello Eliza Rebello Swansea
New officers for Fall River Council 86, Knights of Columbus, are Armand T. Cousineau, grand knight; Henry Berube, deputy grand knight; Leo Cousineau, chancellor; Albert Pinsonnault, warden; Joseph Bourassa, treasurer. The first social activity for the new season will be a September spaghetti supper. Named 'by the council as Knight of the Year was Joseph Bourassa. At the program at which his selection was announced, scholarships were awarded to Paula Longstone and Cynthia Garand of Bishop Gerrard High School and James Charrette, Bishop Connolly High School, both of Fall River. On the national level, Knights of Columbus have announced plans to issue a complete history of the world's largest Catholic fraternal society. The project will be undertaken by Dr. Christopher H. Kauffman of St. Louis University. It as expected to take four years and to be completed prior to the society's centennial in 1982. Dr. Kauffman is the author of a recently completed history of the Alexian Brothers.
Non-Violent Struggle "I am convinced that the truest act of courage, the strongest act of manliness, is to sacrifice ourselv~s for others in a totally non-violent struggle for justice."-Cesar Chavez
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 1971
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995-5166 By Father John Dietzen
Certainly there are enough Catholic people who operate this way, especially perhaps in matters relating to recent changes in tl!e Church. But I confess the logical contradictions in that kind of position confuse me.
Q. Doesn't the Catholic Church want converts? My daughter-In-law had been married before. She decided on her own to take instructions to become a member of the Catholic faith. They had informed her there would be a charge for the paper work, but isn't a total of about $200 jut a little steep? I was a convert 27 years ago, and if they had charged like that, I would have said "forget it." (III.)
The Church has excellent historical, theological and liturgical reasons for allowing laymen and women to distribute Communion. If you cannot accept them, I pass on to you the advice a priest-friend of mine gives to anyone who will receive Communion only from a priest: "Go and kneel before our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament," he suggests, " and explain to Him why you will not receive Communion from one of your fellow Catholics."
A. There is no charge at all
for anyone entering the Catholic faith. Any minor expenses for books or other materials are usually absorbed by the priest himself or the parish. The figures you gave indicate to me that your daughter-in-law had asked for an annulment of her first marriage so she could marry your son. The normal offering requested for such a case is $70 or $80 for the work performed by the diocesan tribunal and $120 for the final stages of the case which are handled in Rome. Admittedly this may sound steep but even most Catholics have little idea of the average amount of hours and days including usually professional consultation with psychiatrists or medical doctors or others competent in the fields involved in a particular case that are required at all levels to complete an annulment procedure. In other words, whatever money is given is by no means a gift to one or another priest who works on the case. It simply pays basic expenses of the offices and personnel whose services are needed before the final decisions are made, sometimes a year or more after the original petition. Furthermore, no one is denied these services simply because he or she cannot pay for them. Provisions are made in every diocese and in Rome for the waiving of these charges when necessary. In some cases, as in our own diocese, the bishop authorizes that these be paid out of parish funds if the individuals involved in the case are too poor to give the stipend. Q. I can't see married men or any other man giving out Communion. The priest should be the only one. If I go to Communion and I see a man giving Communion, I will not go. I will go only if a priest gives it. (N.J.) A. I guess the only thing I
can respond to you is that you are simply not thinking like a Catholic. I've always found it difficult to understand how an individual can say: "I am so good a Catholic, I know better than the Church; no matter what the Church says, I'm going to be a real Catholic, and believe 'and do the opposite."
Q. What do people with a hearing problem do In a confessional? I wear a hearing aid but still feel up tight. I like a private confession rather than face-to-face. (Wise.) A. Most larger communities, as yours is, have at least one Church in which a confessional is equipped with a hearing aid. This may solve your problem. I suggest you call a priest in a nearby church and explain your problem. He will surely help you find a solution which will make provisio!l for your hearing difficulty.
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Questions for this column should be sent to Father John Dietzen, c/o The Anchor, P.O. Box 7, Fall River, Mass. 02722.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 28, 1977
KNOW YOUR FAITH NC NEWS
'Thi~
Israel and American Catholicism \ By Msgr. Joseph M. Champlin
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I spent Easter week as a pilgrim in Israel, visiting the Holy Land with a young student priest. The following are a few of my observations from that journey and their relationship to the Catholic Church in the United States. Military alertness and security precautions: As our Alitalia flight from Rome approached the Holy Land, the pilot announced we had entered Israel, air space and the use of all cameras, binoculars, etc., was strictly forbidden. That sober directive was but the beginning of many instances in路 which we saw visible testimony of past conflicts and current tensions. Wrecked fighter planes still remain strewn along the main runway of Ben Gurion International Airport. As we disembarked, security personnel quietly and unknown to me whisked my partner away for a routine spot check which nevertheless involved detailed questioning. When we departed from Israel, the security search was lengthy and thorough, including a respectful, but quite personal frisking of one's person. National industriousness and pride: "Give us 30 years of peace and we will transform Israel into a land flowing with milk and honey." Our guide's promise that this biblical description of -this . young nation will become a reality may sound fanciful or arrogant. However, when you view
the remarkable transformations which human industry and ingenious irrigation have already produced in the desert region around Jericho and throughout other areas, his remarks sound more like a prediction than a dream. Charity for the poor and incapacitated: Riding back on a local bus from En Karam, the site of Mary's visitation to Elizabeth, I was impressed by a youthful Israeli soldier and a woman in her early twenties, both of whom handed a coin to an elderly, begging lady. There were repeated similar incidents of charity during our visit. We found noteworthy, also, modern looking institutes for the blind, the sick and the aged. Observation of the sabbath: residents in Israel observe three different days for this weekly rest: Friday for Moslems; Saturday for Jews; Sunday for Christians. There is no public transportation and no Jewish stores remain open on Saturdays. During my visit I linked those impressions gathered throughout Israel with some apects of life and worship among American Catholics. First, our prayer for peace in the Middle East during Sunday liturgies assumes greater meaning when one has witnessed Israel's universal military preparedness and tight security precautions. Turn to Page Thirteen
By Father John J. Castelot Thoughtful people are becoming increasingly concerned about the way we have abused our natural resources. Strip mining has scarred lovely landscapes. Careless dumping of waste materials has fouled lakes and rivers and poisoned fish. We burn up energy as if it were limitless. We harness the atom and use it to annihilate innocent human beings and blight the lives of its survivors. On goes the ugly recital of our folly, of our sinful mismanagement of God's precious gifts. Sinful? Yes, if we believe in a God who has made us stewards of His creation. The creation accounts of the Bible are not scientific descriptions of how the world came to be, but they are serious theological reflections on the meaning of creation. One lesson that comes through insistently is that our universe is, by divine design, beautiful and good. We are the image and likeness of 'God in that we share His dominion over His creation. We are stewards of His universe, which He has given us as a sacred trust. Ecology, then, is not simply a natural concern; it has
By Father Alfred McBride
When God put Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden, He told them to take care of it. Later, when driven from the garden, that baleful couple was told to till the earth in the sweat of their brow. Now they were expected to develop the potential of the earth. The Bible teaches that God made the world, but expects people to take care of it and develop it. This inspired biblical principle has helped power the slow and painful progress of the human race from the age of agriculture to the present. God expects us to be creative and responsible guardians of the earth. But along with this construction principle, the Bible offers two shrewd pieces of advice: (1) Respect the need for human communication in the progress of the work. (2) Don't become a,J work slave. The first piece of advice is found in the story of the building of the tower of Babel. Thrilled with the discovered capacity to engineer and design a tall building, the people thought they might construct a tower that would reach right up into the heavens. As the路 story is told, God considered this an act of pride, for only He could truly bring man to heaven. To punish the people, He made them all speak different languages so they failed to communicate and were unable to finish the structure. The story has three meanings: people cannot reach God by human power alone; secondly, this is a legendary tale to account for the diversity of languages in serious theological implications. the world; thirdly, work should The author of Psalm 8 has left not be so frantic, mammoth and us a beautiful meditation on this overwhelming that the workers truth, more like a cry of won- lose the human touch - especider, really: "When I behold your ally the capacity to communiheavens, the work of your fing- cate. It is this last message that ers, the moon .and the stars is worth heeding today. which you set in place -/What Our age is characterized by is man that you should be the loss of communication at the mindful of him, or/the son of human level. We have the best man that you should care for communications system in hishim? . . . /you have given him tory, yet also have a tonguerule over the works of your tied culture. Psychologists, clerhands,/putting all things under gy, teachers and counselors his feet, . . . " (Ps. 8, 4-5, 7). spend half their time trying to Centuries later, in speaking of help people learn how to talk the exaltation of the risen Christ and listen to each other. to His position as head of the Allied to this is the error of universe, the author of Ephes- being a work slave, a work-aians recalls this psalm: "He has holic. By making work an adput all things under Christ's feet" diction we are creating a show(Eph. 1,22). case of industry and techThe risen Christ is the Son of nology and an insane asylum of Man who, in His glorified hu- stricken human beings. This is manity, rules and transforms and f Why the Bible advise regular gives new meaning to a universe rest periods where no work is which sinful humanity has mis- to be done at all. The Bible calls interpreted and misruled. We it sabbath. In the strictest forms are, one with the cosmic Christ, of Judaism, the sabbath rest the glorified Man who exercises meant not only absence of work, humanity's governance of the but almost all physical effort. universe in a transcendent, per- Don't cook. Don't even take more fect way. This adds a new dim- than a mile walk. Just rest. ension to our responsibility, The purpose of the sabbath which is now not merely human, was twofold. First, to set aside but specifically Christian. a day to honor and reverence
II Man: Steward of God's路 Creation
land Is My Land'
THE TOWER OF BABEL God. Having spent six days attending to the creation of God, pass the seventh day concentrating on the God of creation. The second reason was also important. People should take a break, a rest from their work. And
take a real rest. This rest aspect of the sabbath has been ignored and forgotten. The worship side has been retained, though even that is in decline. But the main point here is the Turn to Page Thirteen .
Meditation At Mass By Alma Roberts Giordan This is the first Mass on a Sunday morning in July. In my small town parish church of St. John the Evangelist, I am the lone reader for the celebration. There is a sense of warm togetherness among the few sleepy-eyed regulars. A boy of about 10 has been conscripted from the congregation to serve as acolyte. He is unfamiliar with the ritual, but he is learning with obvious delight what it means to be on the altar so close, so truly a part of the action. Who knows? He may one day replace the celebrant. There might be a stirring within his Fonzi-shirted breast. And I, sitting back while the pastor expostulates on the Gospel, humanizing the classic story of five loaves and two fishes, wonder if that makeshift altar boy sees himself in the role of the lad who gave. up his picnic
lunch for that miraculous multiplication. My gaze wanders out the open side door opposite my sanctuary chair. What's to be seen out there? Nothing ... to those who "have eyes to see, yet see not." But with vision clear this fresh morning I observe a segment of God's precious handiwork. The grass is alive and green. Beyond, a maple branch makes a filagree pattern against blue sky. Then I note the man-made wonders framed in that doorway. There is the concrete sirlwalk, glinting diamonds of mica. The rear end of a green car parked against the back of a neighboring building. Out of sight in the maples a robin strikes up an anthem of praise. And suddenly, a terrible thought disturbs my tranquility - will man destroy this beautiful earth with his technology? Or will we remember in time that we are truly its stewards?
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A Verdade E A Vida Dirigida pelo Rev. Edmond Rego jesus, perfeito Deus e perfeito homem deu-nos exemplo de trabalho. Os que mais com Ele conviveram e melhor 0 imitaram Maria / " Jose, tambem. Que nos ensinam? Que 0 trabalho vale nem pelo brilho externo quepossa ter, mas pela perfei~~ e amor com que 0 fazemos. "Fez tudo bem feito" diziam de Jesus •. Na lpoca actual h( a tentas:aro, talvez mais que em outras passadas, de dar nas vistas. E todos gostariam de ser artistas de cinema. Se um acto pode tamblm pres tar um bom servi.o aos outros, a verdade {.que tantas vezes s10 as tarefas mais humildes as mais importantespara a humanidade e tambtm aos olhos de Deus: duma dona de casa, duma empregada domlstica, dum agricultor, que pro duz 0 p~o que nos alimenta. S. Paulo recomenda aos primeiros cristaos: "catla um permane~ na vocasao em que foi chamado." Temos de procurar 0 lugar em que Deus nos quer, a profisScro para que nos deu mais qualidades e depois amar esse trabalho talvez humilde, mon~tono, de todos os dias, vencendo a tenta~1(o de abandon!-lo. Um sacerdote do nosso tempo, Mons. Escriv{ de Balaguer, ensinou a muita gente, como dt"cil instrlfmento de Deus, a "santificar 0 trabalho, santificar-se no trabalho, e santificar com 0 trabalho.: Conta ele que, em Burgos, durante a guerra civil espanhola, ao receber as confid~cia daqueles rapazes que dirigia espiritualmente, "gostava de subir a uma torre (da catedral), para que contemplassem de perto os remates, uma autentica harmonia em pedra, fruto de urn trabalho paciente, custoso. Nessas palestras f~ia-lhes notar que aquela maravilha rta(o se via do ch~. E para materializar 0 que com repetida frequencia lhes havia explicado, comentava-Ihes: isto (0 trabalho de Deus, a obra de Deus: acabar a tarefa pessoal, com perfei~~o, com beleza, com 0 primor destas delicadas figuras de pedra. Compreendiam, perante essa realidade que • entrava pelos olhos, ~ue tudo aquilo era or~, urn formoso di~logo com 0 Senhor. Os que gastaram as suas energias nessa tarefa sabiam perfeitamente que dasruas da cidade ningu~m apreciaria 0 seu esfor~o. Era s~ para Deus. Entendes agora como a voca~o profissional pode aproximar de Deus? faz tu como aqueles canteiros e 0 teu trabalho ser' tamblm urn labor humano com entranhas e perfis divinos." Para trabalhar bem devemos fazt-Io com compe~cia, com intensidade, com cons tancia, e com ordem. Compet~cia: pondo toda a nossa intelig~cia, pois nao somos simples passarinhos que ajeitam muito bern 0 ninho e daf nito passam. 0 progresso humano, 0 desenvolvimento da ci~ncia e p~ a render os talentos recebidos de Deus e a inteligencia ~ dos maiores que Ele deu ao homem. Usa-Ia nas tarefas que realizamos e aprender a faz~-las melhor: estudando, pedindo conselhos, tomando iniciativas, reflectindo, numa palavra, melhorando cada dia a formai'ro profissiona],. . Depois, trabalhando com intensidade e const~ncia, n~o levando uma vi}a pregui,osa e mole. Assim fazia 0 Apostolo das . gentes. "Bern sabeis 0 que tendes a fazer para nos imitar. ~o temos vivido desre~ra damente, nem temos comido de grafa 0 p~o de ningu~m; como trabalho (fadiga lab~tamos noite e dial:' ~lidanao os que es~o' aonosso lado, se possJ.vel. "Levai as cargas uns dos outros'.' .
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"OUR PRAYER FOR PEACE in the Middle East during Sunday liturgies assumes greater meaning when one has witnessed Israel's universal military preparedness and tight security precautions."
Israel and American Catholicism Continued from Page Twelve Secondly, a sense of pride in being Catholic seemed to disappear for many some time dur..;< ing the past decade. The numerical success and great enthusiasm of last summer's Eucharis-.
This Land Continued from Page Twelve sabbath rest. This puts perspective in our lives, gives us time to evaluate the work of our hands, machines and computers and should prevent us from creating a Frankenstein. The Frankenstein story is more than an entertainment. It is a parable of what happens when our work ethic goes beserk. We create a monster and then it destroys us. We already have that potential in our hands. Our bombs can wipe us out. Our massive buildings are beehives of non-communication. Unless we rest and pray and think, we may become the heedless victims of the work of our hands. Yes, God wants us to labor and build up His earth. But He also wants us to love, pray, commune and relax. What could be more sensible?
tic Congress may very well have marked the reawakening of that spirit for countless persons. Thirdly, the need for a constant renewal of our efforts in charity, inspired by examples of others like those in Israel, hardly requires an explanation. Finally, we Catholics in the United States might examine our own observation of Sunday as a day for prayer and t:est. It appears that more and more stores will open on that day. However, how much of our purchasing is truly necssary? How many tasks could be anticipated or postponed? How serious are our intentions to make this a time for spiritual rejuvenation of individuals and families?
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THE ANCHORThurs., July 28, 1977
Life
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Trash Gets More Food Than Kids REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (NC) - The list of items in the North Pole News read like a menu of a sandwich shop, but the story was about waste, not consumption. It concerned the students at Our Lady of Mount Carmel grade school who deposited the unused portion of their lunches in the garbage cans. What made the practice unusual, the student newspaper discovered, was that much of the . food was never eaten. Editor-in-chief Martha Mendez covered the story and this is the way she told it: "THERE SEEMS to be a mythology about the young. "On April 27, 1977, Miss Sanders and I went to look for fruit They represent a fresh, clean page in human history. There's the possibility of a new chapter being written, superior to and other kinds of food'.' in the school's garbage cans. "This is all preceding chapters." what we found: 76 slices of bread, nine slices of bologna, eight slices of cheese, 24 slices of ham, 28 slices of salami, about a quarter of a head of lettuce, about half a jar of peanut butter, about half a jar of jelly, by Cecilia Belanger youth have more cause for turkey, three eggs, tuna, lunch weariness of spirit. They are still One of the greatest preachers meat, 15 apples. 11 and a half in the process of trying to masof all time wrote to his congreoranges, five and a half bananas, one carrot, one celery, three gation, "I write you out of much ter the art of living. They are marshmallows and four small affliction and anguish of heart bumping into things and falling down and getting hurt. All don't and with many tears . . . " bags of chips. have someone there to pick I receive many letters written "On April 29, we went to them up. Lucky Store ( a supermarket)' to in this vein from young people. Distorted Values There are enormous moral burfind out how much everything Youth say they face a society cost, and it added up to $17.90." dens to be carried in our human Ms. Mendez did a little arith- society and youth as expected to strangely distorted in its values. Which reminds me of a remark matic 'and figured that if stu- carry its share. Sometimes a burden unreason- made by a tardy professor to dents throw out the same amount every day, in a year's able in its demands and beyond l:.is class: '11 have enough detime more than $3,200 worth of the possibility of fulmillmenf is grees to tattoo the length of my expected of many who just can't arm, yet this morning I didn't food is wasted. In the best tradition of Water- cut it. We expect youth to re- know the first thing about how gate, the 12-year-old editor pub- deem every failure of the old, to get my stalled car going. I lished the names of the food not to repeat the same mistakes. called the fellow who knew and wasters. The result: there is There seems to be a mythology who, at that moment, was far the local hardly any food in the Our about the young. They repre- superior to me Lady of Mount Carmel garbage sent a fresh, clean page in hu- garage mechanic!" cans. Reading, writing and memorman history. There's the possibBon appetit. ility of a new chapter being i:dng isn't all there is. There are written, superior to all preced- times when education can be sterile. Yet we have created a ing chapters. New Journal society ambitious to secure a It is great to hope in our COLLEGEVILLE, Minn. (NC) college degree merely for the It is to be applauded as young. - The Human Life Center at sake of it, regardless of one's in'the God a sign of our hope St. John's University has begun talents and capabilities. Many publishing a quarterly journal of hope. However - placing an potential first-rate crafts people unreasonable burden on the mode8!ling with natural family are being misled into becoming planning and allied subjects. ral conscience of our youth teachers and preachers. (This without our standing beside William D. Molitor, associate center director, said the Inter- them - may immobilize them also applies to our girls). In my opinion the church national Review of Natural Fam- -into inaction, driving many into disappointment and cynicism. must address its searching word ily Planning, will he "a schoYouth tell me they sometimes to this question and speak out larly publication serving the practical needs of doctors, tea- get tired of fighting battles they about it. Youth tell me the society is chers, nurses, clergymen, prac- cannot win. They, too, fall exhausted. In fact, I think that already too flawed, in their opintitioners and others."
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LOOKS LIKE WE MADE IT There you are Looking just the same as you did Last time I touched you And here I am Close to getting tangled up Inside the thought of you Do you love him As much as I love her Will that love be strong When old feelings start to stir Looks like we made it Left each other on the way To another love Looks like we made it Or I thought so until today Until you were there everywhere And all I could taste was love The way we made it Love's so strange Playing hide-and-seek With hearts and always hurting And we're the fools Standing close enough to touch those burning memories And if I hold you For the sake of aU those times Love made us lose our minds Could I ever let you go by Richard Kerr/Will Jennings ( (p) 1976 Arista Records, Inc. BMI) ",Love's so strange," Barry Manilow is absolutely right. Love is one of life's greater mysteries. No one knows why it happens, what makes it change over the years, or how it can be so crushing when it is not present. Barry Manilow's song is about this mystery. Actually the title misleads 'you into thinking the theme is going -to -be simple. You expect Barry to sing that the two lovers are solid in their relationship with each other. Not so. He sings that it is a strange feeling to meet after both of them have become involved with new people. They have "left each other on the way to another love." Since the story is not clear, it is difficult to say anything about what they should do. But the song does give us an opportunity to comment on the mystery of love. It so often seems that love reveals something deep and personal which we have never known about ourselves. We stand before the fact that we do not know the whole story. We are con~tantly discovering new combinations of feelings which come in each new love. We begin to suspect that the years bring profound changes in our lives and in those of the people we know. I am reminded of the wisdom of the sage who once said that too much talk of love in too short a time is the way of the fool. It is the fool wh6 is not patient, who cannot 'wait for love to unfold its mysteries in its own time. U is the fool who thinks that love is simple.
ion, to do much about it. I can't believe that, but that it is greatly flawed I do believe and know. There is a spiritual death being promoted in the land, through magazines, newspapers, movies and TV. A l2-year-old polled in a survey poignantly said, "Who can have heroes? They're just like us." There is a fundamental loss in the hearts of the young. They look around them and see the consuming of alcohol, the taking of drugs, the gratification of every sense, and they are sickened and helpless. To whom can they turn? Adults themselves seem to be part of the entire act. To Christ The years of youth are stormy, like endless miles of western plains, with cyclones testing endurance. And when young peo-
pIe are too tired to run, to whom can they turn? To the "healers" who themselves need healing? To those who themselves are too overwhelm!:d by the complexity of society? By the thousands, youth are turning to Christ. The exhausted, though tJ:1ey fall, will "mount up with wings as eagles" through Him. All have the capacity to wing their way into a finer atmosphere because of Him.
Only Through Christ "The Assembly believes that an international order conformea to the will of God and establish·ed in His peace can be achieved only through the reconciliation which Christ makes possible." - The Evanston Report
Interscholastic Sports
IN THE DIOCESE
By BILL MORRISSETTE
Coaching Changes At Connolly High Coaching changes at Bishop Connolly High School have been announced by Brother Daniel Caron, F.I.C., the school's athletic director. Frank Stranick, a commissioned officer in the United States Navy, has been appointed hockey coach and Al Greenhalgh will be volunteer assistant coach. Stranick replaces Rev. Arthur Pare, S.J., who remains the school's soccer coach. A native of Pottstown, Pa., the new Cougar hockey mentor graduated from Villanova University in 1963. Stranick had previously served in the Navy and returned to. that branch of the service after his graduation from Villanova, pursuing his studies at the Aviation Officers' Candidate School in Pensacola, Florida. After his commissioning in
1963 he attended the Naval War College in Newport, graduating last year. He is presently on the staff of the Naval War College! in the Center for War Gaming. Stranick became involved in youth hockey while living in Greenwood, Nova Scotia. He was also associated with the sport in San Diego and Newport as a Bantam Division coach. In Newport, he has been active in fund raising and team sponsorships and is the travel team coordinator. He broadened his experience by attending the Cooper Coaches Clinic in San Diego and in East Greenwich, R.I. He also attended the Canl Am Coaches training school in Guelph, Ontario, and the International Hockey Coaches Symposium in Bellville, Ontario.
Greenhalgh Also Has Broad Experience Greenhalgh, Stranick's volunteer assistant, is a graduate of Durfee High School, Fall River, and of the Southeastern Mass. Technical Institute, which later became Southeastern Mass University, in partmouth. He is a ijunior executive with"the Morse' Shoe Company. He has been an instructor in hockey fundamentals in the Squirt, Peewee, Bantam and Midget Divisions of the Fall River Youth Hockey Association and is past president of the Fall
River Hockey Association Coaches Association. A former program director of the Southeastern Hockey Group, Greenhalgh is also a program coordinator of the Westport Youth Hockey League. Father Pare came to Connolly in August, 1975, and 'brought to the position of hockey coach for the Cougars impressive credentials including a three-year stint as coach at Cranwell Prep School, Lenox, Mass. At Cranwell, he piloted its
hockey teams to a pair of 12-3 seasons and two second-place finishes in the Berkshire League. Bob Kelly, of Immaculate Conception, was named Most Valuable Player, in the CYO allstar game at Lafayette Park, Fall River, last Sunday night: Kelly was named first-baseman on the diocesan all-star team along with Mike Medeiros, S1. Joseph, second base; Mark Ferreira EspiFito Santo, shortstop; Mike Gelinas, Holy Name, New Bedford, third-base; Dan Ciullo, Sacred Heart, right field; ,Peter Pappas, Somerset, cf; Bob Brodeur, Central Catholic, If; Dave Morgado, Kennedy, catch; and Steve Pereira, Somerset,
pitch, completing the area team. Kelly, Ferreira, Gelinas, Ciullo were on the Eastern Division team, Pappas, Brodeur, Morgado, Pereira and Medeiros on the Western squad. Except for Holy Name and Somerset, the other teams mentioned are from Fall River. East defeated West, 6-3, in 10 innings. A bases-loaded single by Holy Name's Paul Sladewski drove in two runs to give East a 5-3 edge. Kelly followed this up with a run-producing single that made the final score 6-3. Mike Starosiak, of St. Stanislaus, who pitched the last four innings for East was credited with the victory.
THE ANCHORThurs., July 28, 1977
Miracle Bookshelf Christian Bookstore WE ARE OPEN Mon. - Sat. 10-5, Fri. 'Til 9 675-0812 - 636·3742 . 909 STATE ROAD RTE. 6 - WESTPORT
CYO Golf Rained Out Weather 'conditions last Monday forced postponement of the annual CYO diocesan golf tour-
1S
JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN
nament scheduled for the Pocasset Golf Club. Monday, Aug. 15, is the new date.
Funeral Home 550 Locust Str.eet FaD River, Mass. 672-2391
'White Ma rtyrs' Today's Heroes
Rose E. Sullivan William J. Sullivan Margaret M. Sullivan
VATICAN OITY (NC) - An expert on causes for sainthood said in a Vatican Radio iriterv.iew that bloodless "white martyrdom" is the "20th century's new form of martyrdom:' Franciscan Father Ernesto Piacentini, author of a study on juridical aspects of what martyrdom is, said that the "new techniques of persecution today' THRIFT STORES are not intent on creating mar679-5262 308 COLLETTE STREET tyrs through physically eliminNEW BEDFORD, MASS. ating Christians. "They rely rather on reducing 1150 JEFFERSON BLVD. LEARY PRESS WARWICK, R.I. Christians to the purely vegeta(Rt. 85 South· Airport Ellt) tive state," he said. "Today theologians state that cases of psychological death are r"'-""""""""""""""""""""'-~ true Christian martyrdom," the priest added. "It is the 20th century's new form of martyrdom. "If all the other elements which make up martydom are present the theologian answers that we have a case of true ~ The Post Office has increased from 13 to 25 ~ martyrdom."
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UNDEFEATED CITY CHAMPIONS are members of the Junior Girls CYO basketball team of Holy Name parish, New Bedford. They were honored at an awards banquet where they received trophies and jackets. From left, rear, Judy Belli, coach; Mary Jane Cabral, Joyce Bancroft, Melodie Livramento, Stacy Coucci, Jennifer Wheelden; front, Gayle Bruce, Robin Bancroft, Christy Semiao, captain; Mary Beth Bruce, Lynn Hogan.
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