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Bishop Daniel A. Cronin has announcedclosingofSt.Mathieu's ParishinFallRiver,effectiveJune 25,1989. BishopCroninexplainedthatit wasa painfuldecisionto make; however,hestatedthatboththe diocese an~ theparishmustface therealityofdecliningvocations and the dwindling number of parishioners. ThelateRev.AdrienE.Bernier, whomBishopCroninpraisedasa noblechurchman,hadcontinued toprovidepriestlyministrytothe parishionersuntillastfall, when histerminalillnesspreventedhim fromdoingso. TurntoPageSix
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VOL. 33, NO. 22,. Friday, June 2, 1989 FALL RIVER, MASS. Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly $11 Per Year President, pope meet HUNDREDS attended a recent prayer and healing serv- ice at St. Anne's Church, Fall River. (Gaudette photo) VATICAN CITY (NC) - At a meeting that was more substance than ceremony, Pope John Paul II and President Bush exchanged views on the fighting in Lebanon, political changes in Poland and the outlook for East-West detente. Meanwhile Barbara Bush took time from official meetings and state dinners to serve lunch to 40 homeless women at a Vatican shel- ter staffed by Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity. After a 55-minute private audience May 27, Bush and the pope delivered speeches that em- phasized the importance 'of new opportunities for peace and human rights in the world. It was Bush's first meeting as president with the pope. Vatican officials, noting that the encounter came early in the Bush term, said it allowed the Holy See to, provide input on several important issues - especially Lebanon and the changing scene in Eastern Europe. Bush said he came away from the meeting committed to "redou- bling our in every way pos- sible, for world peace, for streng- thening the family and for freedom of religion." The president said his 55-minute private conversation with the pope "was a talk that I'll long remember. I was again inspired by his moral and spiritual leadership." The pope, speaking to Bush and his entourage in the papal library, said recent world events had demonstrated that Turn to Page II U.8. bishops to discuss their teaching role St. Mathieu's p,arish to close WASHINGTON (NC) - The U.S. bishops are to vote on state- ments on their own doctrinal re- sponsibilities and on reconciliation between the United States and Vietnam when they hold their spring meeting June 16-19. The meeting, the first to be held at Seton Hall University in South Orange, N.J., will also feature ex- tended discussions on evangeliza- tion of black Catholics in the Uni- ted States, integrating Catholic social teaching in'the church and society, and implementing the bish- ops' 1987 national pastoral plan for Hispanic ministry. A three-year, $360,000 plan to observe the 1992 fifth centenary of Christianity in the Americas is also up for a vote at the meeting, It includes plans for celebrations to culminate in an October 1992 visit by Pope John Paul II to Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, to meet with a convocation of bishops from throughout the Americas. Also to be voted on at the meet- ing are two clergy exchange agree- ments, one with the bishops of Korea and one with the bishops of the Philippines. Although the meeting of about 250 bishops will last four days, only the first two are devoted to business sessions open to the press. The third day, Sunday, is a day of prayer and recollection, to be Bishop Daniel A. Cronin has announced closing ofSt. Mathieu's Parish in Fall River, effective June 25, 1989. Bishop Cronin explained that it was a painful decision to make; however, he stated that both the diocese the parish must face the reality of declining vocations and the dwindling number of parishioners. The late Rev. Adrien E. Bernier, whom Bishop Cronin praised as a noble churchman, had continued to provide priestly ministry to the parishioners until last fall, when his terminal illness prevented him from doing so. led by Cardinal Godfried Dan- neels of Malines-Brussels, Belgium. June 19 will be devoted to an executive session closed to the press, according to an agenda re- leased by the bishops' Office for Media Relations in Washington. -The office said a final press con- After Father Bernier's death, the diocese assessed the viability of ,the parish, consulting with pa- rishioners and priests alike. "Although we must face the painful reality of closing this par- ish, its spirit will continue, not only in its rich history, but also in the people who have been affil- iated with St. Mathieu's. Their faith was the essence of St. Matheiu's parish and that faith will continue in the many other parish communities that will re- ceive them," said Bishop Cronin. The bishop thanked the pa- rishioners for their gracious coop- ference would be held Saturday, June 17, after the last public ses- sion of the meeting. The document "Doctrinal Re- sponsibilities: Approaches to Pro- moting Cooperation and Resolv- ing Misunderstandings Between Bishops'and Theologians" has been eration and prayerful spmt. He also thanked the priests of St. Anne's parisn, especially the Rev. John R. Foister, pastor, for their generous ministry to St. Mathieu's. , During June, parishioners are invited to register with a new par- ish community of their choice. St. Mathieu's records will be kept at St. Anne's parish, and the diocese will begin to take the necessary steps regarding disposition of the parish property. The last Mass to be said at the parish, on Sunday, June 25, will be offered for the repose of the soul of Father Bernier. in various drafting stages since 1980. It was initially presented to the bishops for debate and a vote at the end of their meeting in No- vember 1987. Atthat time, Denver Archbishop J. Francis Stafford wanted to return the document to the bishops' Committee on Doc-' trine for substantial revision, argu-. ing that it treated' the teaching authority and doctrinal responsi- bility of bishops too lightly. The bishops voted down his motion to return the document to the com- mittee, but there were not enough bishops present to continue the meeting, so business was sus- pended. In November 1988 the slightly revised document was again on the agenda but a last-minute letter from the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, expressing concern that portions of the document seemed to put bishops and theologians on the same level, led to its withdrawal. The tardiness of the Vatican inter- Turn to Page Six First pope in A rctic Circle VATICAN CITY (NC) - Chalk up another first for the traveling pope: today John Paul II will become the first pontiff to cross the Arctic Circle when he visits the Norwegian town of Tromso. Crossing the Arctic Circle will put him within reach of slightly more than 600 of Norway's 20,000 Catholics, The fact points out the lengths to which the pope will have to go during his trip to five Nordic countries to find the sparse and scattered Catholic population in a region where Lutheranism is the dominant religion. The pope also will visit Iceland, Finland, Denmark and Sweden on his trip, which started yesterday and ends June 10. It will be the first papal visit to each of the five countries, where the total number of Catholics is less than 200,000. Except for Sweden, which has more than 120,000 Catholics, the pope's followers in the other coun- tries would easily fit into a section of the sports stadiums that often provide the venue for papal events. ,During the 10-day trip, the pope's itinerary calls for visits to 14 cities and towns in locations so far north that in June the sun hardly sets. The papal visit is expected to give a shot in the arm to the region's tiny Catholic minority, many of them either immigrants or refugees from central Europe and South America or descendants of immigrants and refugees. The trip will give the pope an opportunity to cement ecumenical relations with Lutherans,'send sig- nals to the Soviet Union; he will be within 60 miles of the Soviet border while visiting Finland, a neutral country in superpower struggles; and strengthen waning religious values in a highly developed, secular and materially well-off society with roots in Christianity. The region's Christian roots go back to the Middle Ages. Catholic- ism was firmly established in four of the countries by the beginning of the II th century and in Finland during the 12th century. Currently, Lutheranism is either the state religion or the favored one throughout the five Nordic countries. It swept away Catholi- Turn to Page Six - Not to SCaUl- I POPE JOHN PAUL II will visit 14 cities and towns in five countries during his trip to Scandinavia which started yester- day. (NC map)
Transcript
Page 1: 06.02.89

VOL. 33, NO. 22,. Friday, June 2, 1989 FALL RIVER, MASS. Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly • $11 Per Year

President, pope meet

HUNDREDS attended a recent prayer and healing serv­ice at St. Anne's Church, Fall River. (Gaudette photo)

VATICAN CITY (NC) - At ameeting that was more substancethan ceremony, Pope John Paul IIand President Bush exchangedviews on the fighting in Lebanon,political changes in Poland andthe outlook for East-West detente.

Meanwhile Barbara Bush tooktime from official meetings andstate dinners to serve lunch to 40homeless women at a Vatican shel­ter staffed by Mother Teresa'sMissionaries of Charity.

After a 55-minute privateaudience May 27, Bush and the

pope delivered speeches that em­phasized the importance 'of newopportunities for peace and humanrights in the world.

It was Bush's first meeting aspresident with the pope. Vaticanofficials, noting that the encountercame early in the Bush term, said itallowed the Holy See to, provideinput on several important issues- especially Lebanon and thechanging scene in Eastern Europe.

Bush said he came away fromthe meeting committed to "redou­bling our effo~ts, in every way pos-

sible, for world peace, for streng­thening the family and for freedomof religion."

The president said his 55-minuteprivate conversation with the pope"was a talk that I'll long remember.I was again inspired by his moraland spiritual leadership."

The pope, speaking to Bush andhis 33~member entourage in thepapal library, said recent worldevents had demonstrated that

Turn to Page II

U.8. bishops to discuss their teaching role

St. Mathieu's p,arish to close

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheU.S. bishops are to vote on state­ments on their own doctrinal re­sponsibilities and on reconciliationbetween the United States andVietnam when they hold theirspring meeting June 16-19.

The meeting, the first to be heldat Seton Hall University in SouthOrange, N.J., will also feature ex­tended discussions on evangeliza­tion of black Catholics in the Uni­ted States, integrating Catholicsocial teaching in'the church andsociety, and implementing the bish­ops' 1987 national pastoral planfor Hispanic ministry.

A three-year, $360,000 plan toobserve the 1992 fifth centenary ofChristianity in the Americas isalso up for a vote at the meeting, Itincludes plans for celebrations toculminate in an October 1992 visitby Pope John Paul II to SantoDomingo, Dominican Republic,to meet with a convocation ofbishops from throughout theAmericas.

Also to be voted on at the meet­ing are two clergy exchange agree­ments, one with the bishops of

Korea and one with the bishops ofthe Philippines.

Although the meeting of about250 bishops will last four days,only the first two are devoted tobusiness sessions open to the press.

The third day, Sunday, is a dayof prayer and recollection, to be

Bishop Daniel A. Cronin hasannounced closing ofSt. Mathieu'sParish in Fall River, effective June25, 1989.

Bishop Cronin explained that itwas a painful decision to make;however, he stated that both thediocese an~ the parish must facethe reality of declining vocationsand the dwindling number ofparishioners.

The late Rev. Adrien E. Bernier,whom Bishop Cronin praised as anoble churchman, had continuedto provide priestly ministry to theparishioners until last fall, whenhis terminal illness prevented himfrom doing so.

led by Cardinal Godfried Dan­neels of Malines-Brussels, Belgium.

June 19 will be devoted to anexecutive session closed to thepress, according to an agenda re­leased by the bishops' Office forMedia Relations in Washington.

-The office said a final press con-

After Father Bernier's death,the diocese assessed the viability of

,the parish, consulting with pa­rishioners and priests alike.

"Although we must face thepainful reality of closing this par­ish, its spirit will continue, notonly in its rich history, but also inthe people who have been affil­iated with St. Mathieu's. Theirfaith was the essence of St.Matheiu's parish and that faithwill continue in the many otherparish communities that will re­ceive them," said Bishop Cronin.

The bishop thanked the pa­rishioners for their gracious coop-

ference would be held Saturday,June 17, after the last public ses­sion of the meeting.

The document "Doctrinal Re­sponsibilities: Approaches to Pro­moting Cooperation and Resolv­ing Misunderstandings BetweenBishops'and Theologians" has been

eration and prayerful spmt. Healso thanked the priests of St.Anne's parisn, especially the Rev.John R. Foister, pastor, for theirgenerous ministry to St. Mathieu's., During June, parishioners are

invited to register with a new par­ish community of their choice. St.Mathieu's records will be kept atSt. Anne's parish, and the diocesewill begin to take the necessarysteps regarding disposition of theparish property.

The last Mass to be said at theparish, on Sunday, June 25, will beoffered for the repose of the soul ofFather Bernier.

in various drafting stages since1980.

It was initially presented to thebishops for debate and a vote atthe end of their meeting in No­vember 1987. Atthat time, DenverArchbishop J. Francis Staffordwanted to return the document tothe bishops' Committee on Doc-'trine for substantial revision, argu-.ing that it treated' the teachingauthority and doctrinal responsi­bility of bishops too lightly. Thebishops voted down his motion toreturn the document to the com­mittee, but there were not enoughbishops present to continue themeeting, so business was sus-pended. •

In November 1988 the slightlyrevised document was again on theagenda but a last-minute letterfrom the Vatican Congregationfor the Doctrine of the Faith,expressing concern that portionsof the document seemed to putbishops and theologians on thesame level, led to its withdrawal.The tardiness of the Vatican inter-

Turn to Page Six

First pope in A rctic CircleVATICAN CITY (NC) - Chalk

up another first for the travelingpope: today John Paul II willbecome the first pontiff to crossthe Arctic Circle when he visits theNorwegian town of Tromso.

Crossing the Arctic Circle willput him within reach of slightlymore than 600 of Norway's 20,000Catholics, The fact points out thelengths to which the pope will haveto go during his trip to five Nordiccountries to find the sparse andscattered Catholic population in aregion where Lutheranism is thedominant religion.

The pope also will visit Iceland,Finland, Denmark and Sweden onhis trip, which started yesterdayand ends June 10. It will be thefirst papal visit to each of the five

countries, where the total numberof Catholics is less than 200,000.

Except for Sweden, which hasmore than 120,000 Catholics, thepope's followers in the other coun­tries would easily fit into a sectionof the sports stadiums that oftenprovide the venue for papal events.

,During the 10-day trip, the pope'sitinerary calls for visits to 14 citiesand towns in locations so far norththat in June the sun hardly sets.

The papal visit is expected togive a shot in the arm to theregion's tiny Catholic minority,many of them either immigrantsor refugees from central Europeand South America or descendantsof immigrants and refugees.

The trip will give the pope anopportunity to cement ecumenical

relations with Lutherans, 'send sig­nals to the Soviet Union; he will bewithin 60 miles of the Soviet borderwhile visiting Finland, a neutralcountry in superpower struggles;and strengthen waning religiousvalues in a highly developed, secularand materially well-off society withroots in Christianity.

The region's Christian roots goback to the Middle Ages. Catholic­ism was firmly established in fourof the countries by the beginningof the II th century and in Finlandduring the 12th century.

Currently, Lutheranism is eitherthe state religion or the favoredone throughout the five Nordiccountries. It swept away Catholi-

Turn to Page Six

- Not to SCaUl­I

POPE JOHN PAUL II will visit 14 cities and towns in fivecountries during his trip to Scandinavia which started yester­day. (NC map)

Page 2: 06.02.89

June 81961, Very Rev. John s. Czer­

wonka, Assistant, St.Stanislaus,Fall River

June 91945, Rev. Timothy J. Calnen,

Pastor, St. Joseph, Woods Hole1966, Rev. Joseph S. Larue,

Pastor, Sacred Heart, North Attle­boro

BALTIMORE (NC) - Bellsrang out for 30 minutes May 23 asa procession of priests, deaconsand ecumenical leaders opened theinstallation Mass for ArchbishopWilliam H. Keeler as head of thearchdiocese of Baltimore, the na­tion's oldest see.

Representing the Fall River di­ocese at the installation were·Bish­op Daniel A. Cronin and Msgr.John J. Oliveira, chancellor andepiscopal secretary. .

Head of the diocese of Harris- .burg, Pa., since 1983, ArchbishopKeeler, 58, 'was named in April byPope John Paul II to succeed retir­ing Archbishop William D.Borders.

He concelebrated his installa­tion Mass with Archbishop Bord­ers; Archbishop Pio Laghi, papalpronunico to the United States;Archbishop John L. May of St.Louis, president of the NationalConference of Catholic Bishops;Baltimore's auxiliary bishops; andthe suffragan bishops of the Mary­land province.

Archbishop Laghi welcomedArchbishop Keeler and praisedthe tenure of Archbishop Borders.

"We are all grateful for the workyou have done for the church ofthe United States and here in Bal­timore," he said, to thunderousapplause and a standing ovation.

In his homily, Archbishop Keelerexhorted his new flock to feed thehungry, shelter the homeless andprotect human dignity.

Baltimore Was established as thefirst diocese in the United States inNovember, 1789. In April, 1808, itbecame the nation's first arch­diocese.

In addition to Archbishop JohnCarroll, the country's first bishop,Baltimore has been led by suchhistoric figures as ArchbishopsFrancis P. Kenrick and Martin J.Spalding and Cardin.als JamesGibbons and Lawrence Shehan.

New head foroldest see

Pilot staffer namedacting editor

BOSTON (NC) - Leila Har­rington Little, a staff writer at ThePilot, Boston's archdiocesan news­paper, has been named its actingeditor by Cardinal Bernard F. Law.

Ms. Little, who has been at ThePilot for two years, will edit thepaper until a permanent appoint­ment is made. Philip F. Lawler,executive editor since 1987, an­nounced his resignation in March.

Ms. Little has three decades ofexperience in the fields of publish­ing, public relations and businessmanagement, including eight years.as a researcher and reporter forTime magazine in New York.

She also has been an editorialassistant with the·Boston publish~

ing firm Little, Brown and Co., acorporate public affairs director,and manager of an art gallery.

A graduate of Katharine GibbsSchool in Boston, and of the Col­lege of Notre Dame of Marylandin Baltimore, she also studied atManhattanville College of SacredHeart in Purchase, N.Y. .

11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111I11I111111THE ANCHOR (USPS-545-Q20). SecondClass Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass.Published weekly except the week of July 4and the week after Christmas at 887 High­land Avenue, Fall River, Mass. 02720 bythe Catholic Press of the Diocese of FallRiver. SUbscription price by mail postpaid$11.00 per year. Postmasters send addresschanges to The Anchor, P.O. Box '7, FallRiver. MA 02722. .

June 4'1949, Rev. Jose P. D'Amaral,

Parochial Vicar, Santo ChristoFall River' ,

1920, Rev. Louis J. Terrien, OP,Dominican Priory, Fall River

1979, Rev. George Daigle, Pas­tor, Sacred Heart, North Attleboro

June 51954, Very Rev. ThomasJ. Mc­

Lean, Pastor, St. Francis Xavier,Hyannis

1970, Rev. Msgr. Louis Prevost,Pastor Emeritus, St. Joseph, NewBedford

Cardinal supports Lebanese Maronites. . BEIRUT, Lebanon(NC) -Car- . ing a trip to Lebanon in 1986, It~ In addition to giving comfort todmal John J. O'Connor of New show support for unity among Maronite Catholics, the AmericanYork expre~sed chu~ch supp~rt Lebanese..' I churchman, in his role as president~or Leb~no~ s M~r?mte Ca~hohcs Moslem political leader Sel~m of the Catholic Near East Welfarem a whlrlwmd VISit to their em- Hoss issued a statement May 28 Association, also visited hospitals,battle~ countrr May 27-30 that expressing "surprise" that the N~w schools and other social servicetook him sp~e~mg from on~ end of York churchman had decided facilities damaged by artillery fire.mostly ChnstIan east Beirut to against his planned visit to wJst Maronite Catholics make upanother. Beirut. Hos~ charge~ that "soi'e- the largest Christian community

He told the Lebane~e that the one has .an mterest m rreventI g in Lebanon, numbering 900,000pope and the U.S. bishops are thecardmal from heanng us . .. out of more than 1.5 million Leb­~eeply ~oncerned o~er their situa- on a .fals~ pre.ten~~ regarding the anese Christians, acording to Cath­tlOn. Without refernng by name to secunty SituatIOn. I olic Near East Welfare Associa­Syria, which. keeps more than Cardinal O'Connor said May ~O tion figures, which show 2.1 million3?,000 t~o~ps m Lebanon, the car- that in a telephone conversatipn Moslems in Lebanon.dmal said ~he world must know with the Moslem official the pre- Power sharing between Moslemsthat no outSIde pow~r can come in vious day, Hoss told him there ~as and Christia~s is ~ centra~ is~ue into govern Lebanon. no problem putting security forces Lebanon, which smce earher m the

But his plans to visit Moslem at his disposal, although there ~as . century has apportioned power byleaders in west Beirut were can- some concern about "sudden In- religion -:- a system that has givenceled by what the cardinal said planned attacks" by radicals. I Maronites the majority.turned .out to be "inaccurate" in- Ross heads a Moslem Cabinet Maronites 'say reforms can beform~tlOn o~ serious threats to his that rivals that of Gen Michel ~orked out t.o make powe~ s~ar­

.secunty..He mstead s~oke b~ tele- Aoun, the Maronite Catholic arrhy mg more eqUitable, but ChnstIa~sphone With Mos~em ft~ures m the officer appointed in 1988 by Olh- must be guaranteed .that they Willwester!! sector, mcludmg the son going President Amin Gemayel!to not ~e forced to hve under ano.fShelk Hassan Khaled, the assas- head an interim government until IslamiC government.smated leader of Lebanon's Sunni long-delayed presidential electidnsMosle~s. .. . a~e held. I

Dunng h~s tnp to .the ~Iddle Cardinal O'Connor met withEastern nation, Cardmal 0 Con- ·Aoun May 28 at the genedl'snor .repeated~y offered groups headquarters in the shell-batterbdholdmg ~mencan hostages, such presidential palace in the dry Jp­as ASSOCiated Press correspondent lands ofeast Beirut near the "GrebnTerry Anderson, to "go where~~r Line" _ the no man's land betw len!hey are, wherever they may be· If the Christian and Syrian-controtiedIt would help the hostages. Moslem sectors. The buffer zont is

While the U.S. government ob- so named because of the scrubje~ted to his journey, ~he cardinal vegetation and grass that has gro{vnsaid he had the blessmg of Pope on it during the l4-year LebaneseJohn Paul II, with whom he had conflict. . Imet. for 90 minutes just before The cardinal, saying that Aounleavmg Rome for Lebanon. had given him a "much better

During a May 28 Mass at a understanding" of Lebanon's sit~a-Marian shrine in thi: hills above tion, promised to prepare a "vJrythe port city of Juniyah, he told comprehensive" report on it. Ithe more than 2,000 .congregants Cardinal O'Connor was escortedthat the pope's "heart is filled with in his travels around east Beitutpain and sUf~ering for you." and Juniyah by a special forpes

He also said he brought a mes- unit of the Lebanese army whIch~a~e from the U.~. bishops, who Aoun commands. His mo~orc~de

, Will n~t turn their backs o?, you. careened through the streets withThey w~ll not ~bandon YO~'. sirens blaring and vans full of ~he

Cardmal 0 Co~nor said pnor soldiers dressed in camoufl~ge

to t~~ Lebanon. tnp that he hoped fatigues and black berets ardto VISit west BeIrut, as he had dur- wielding Swiss-made machine guns.

Valdez gets'another first

.---- --- - - - --~~~<b GOD'S ANCHOR HOLDS

....._----- - --- -- -- -

WASHINGTON (NC) - Val­dez, Alaska, already famous forthe' worst oil spill in history, nowhas a pleasanter claim to fame: it isthe first place in the United Stateswhere a Catholic nun performed amarriage.. The nun, Mercy Sister CarolAnn Aldrich, is the leader of theValdez Catholic communiiy in Val­dez, but technically she performedthe ceremony in a civil capllcity.

A combination of fog, rain, apriest shortage and a provision inchurch law led to Sister Aldrichpresiding at the May wedding ofStacey Smith and Rodney Mitch­ell at St. Francis Xavier Church inValdez.

The nun has been pastoral coor­dinator of the 90-family parishsince last fall when the previouspastor was reassigned by his order.

Archbishop Francis T. Hurleyof Anchorage - who was to haveassisted at the marriage but couldnot land his plane in Valdez becauseof bad weather - explained thedetails in a telephone interview.

He said he invoked a provisionin church law for mixed marriages- Mitchell is not Catholic ­under which a bishop can dispensethe Catholic party from beingmarried according to the canoni­cal form ordinarily required by thechurch.

Under the provision, the couplecould choose any civilly licensedofficial to officiate at their wed­ding. Sister Aldrich obtained civilcertification, and they chose her.

Archbishop Hurley said the Val­dez case followed a similar inci­dent three months earlier in whichbad weather nearly prevented adeacon from getting to a weddingat another priestless parish.

Since it is likely that his archdi­ocese will face more· such situa­tions, he plans to ask the U.S.bishops to request Vatican per­mission for trained lay persons topreside at marriages when an or­dained minister cannot be present.

The archdiocese -has five par­ishes coordinated by nuns, withpriests flying in one or more week­ends a month to administer sacra­ments.

Archbishop Hurley said thatsince Valdez lost its resident pas­tor, visiting priests have providedMass and sacraments three weeksout of every four. He was the visit­ing priest the weekend of the Mit­chell wedding because confirma­tions were also scheduled for Satur­day evening, he said.

A longtime bush pilot, Archbi­shop Hurley said he thought 'hemight get through.although regu­lar flights were grounded. Butforced to land in a small villageabout 120 miles from Valdez, hecalled Sister Aldrich and grantedthe dispensation. He then borroweda car in the village and got to Val­dez for the 7 p.m. confirmations.

The archbishop said it was "avalue judgment" whether to let thewedding go ahead without him ormake the couple wait, ruining theirreception plans and the schedulesof out-of-town relatives.

He said he judged that a delaywould cause "g'tave inconvenience,"and was sufficient reason underchurch law for a dispensation.

Page 3: 06.02.89

capacity he has directed a boatingsafety course offered by MountHope Bay Flotilla 814 of which heis a staff officer.

He has also assisted with train­ing of sea cadets at Fall River'sBattleship Cove and during thesummer has accompanied CoastGuard personnel on safety patrols.He is also called upon for duties asa chaplain, sometimes offeringMass during lengthy cruises andofficiating at Blessing of the Fleetceremonies.

Father Oliveira

Father Oliveira will offer a Massof thanksgiving for his years ofpriesthood in the course of theHoly Ghost feast to be celebrated

The AnchorFriday, June 2, 1989 3June' 10 and II at Out Lady ofLourdes parish.

Born Sept. 11,1924, Father Oli­veira received his early educationin Angra, Terceira, Azores, alsobeginning preparation for the pri­esthood at the Angra seminaryand continuing at St. Mary'sSeminary, Baltimore, and atCatholic University.

He was parochial vicar at SantoChristo and St. Michael's parishes,Fall River, Our Lady of Mt. Car­mel, New Bedford, and St. An­thony's, Taunton. He returned toSt. Michael's as pastor in 1969 andbecame pastor at Our Lady ofLourdes in 1985.

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both of which Father Freitasserved.

Born in Terceira, Azores, March5, 1925, the son of the late Jose L.and Maria (Leonardo) Freitas, heattended elementary school atTerra Cha and prepared for thepriesthood at the Seminary ofAngra, Terceira, and at St. Mary'sSeminary, Baltimore.

Following ordination, he wasparochial vicar at Our Lady of Mt.Carmel parish, New Bedford, andat Santo Christo parish, Fall River,also taking two years for study atCatholic University, Washington,D.C.

He was named pastor of St. Eli­zabeth's in 1972 and of St. John ofGod in 1974.

He has served on the dioc'esanDivine Worship Commission andhas been associated with the Societyof St. Vincent de Paul, first asmoderator of the Fall River Par­ticular Council and since 1977 asdiocesan director of the organ­ization.

An expert seaman, he has forover 30 years been a member of theCoast Guard auxiliary. In that

--- - - --~~~~-..-

<f> GOD'S ANCHOR HOlDS

-------~..~

the funeral home to Sacred HeartChurch by policemen on foot.Scores of police from surroundingcommunities formed an honorguard at the church and after theconcelebrated funeral liturgy stoodat attention before the Fall Riverpolice station as the cortege passedthe building en route to St. Patrick'sCemetery.

At the final commendation fol­lowing the Mass of Christian Bur­ial, Father Byington personalizedthe prayer: "Whizzer," he said ten­derly, "may the angels of the Lordreceive you into paradise."

White is survived by his wife,Fern (Goodwin) White, a secre­tary for the diocesan CatholicCharities Appeal office, two sons,David H. White of Somerset andTimothy H. White of Houston,Texas; a daughter, Nancy E. Whiteof Fall River; a brother, ThomasG. White of Ft. Pierce, Fla.; foursisters, Audrey Shott of Swansea,Merna Renaud of Fall River, Car­lene Plocica of Tiverton, R.I., andArdith Petrin ofCasablanca, Mo­rocco; two grandchildren and sev­eral nieces and nephews.

tor of Our Lady of Health Church,Fall River, in June, 1970.

Father Andrade served in FallRiver until 1975, when he wasgranted a one-year leave to becomespiritual director of the Seminaryof Merida, Yucatan, Mexico.

Returning to the diocese in 1976,he was parochial vicar of St.Michael's parish, Fall River, until1985, when he assumed his presentassignment.

Father Andrade will celebratehis jubilee June 25, when noonMass at St. John the Baptist willbe followed by a parish receptionto which members of other churcheswhere he has served will also beinvited.

Father FreitasFather Freitas will celebrate his

jubilee June II with a concele-, brated Mass at 4:30 p.m" followed

by a banquet at Venus de Milorestaurant at 6 p.m., for whichFather Joseph M. Costa is chair­man and Gloria Costa is cochair­man and treasurer. Also involvedin arrangements are representativesfrom St. Elizabeth and SantoChristo parishes in Fall River, at

"Even a fellow Walter had ar­rested came up and told me what agreat man he was," said FatherEdward J. Byington, pastor ofSacred Heart parish, Fall River, inhis homily at the Tuesday funeralof Walter H. White, 66, who diedMay 26.

White, nicknamed Whizzer, aretired Fall River police lieuten­ant, was "able to do what he didbecause of his union with Christ,"said Father Byington, noting thatthe 50-year parishioner was a dailycommunicant at Sacred Heart.

A Fall River native, son of thelate Thomas F. and Mary (McLel­lan) White, he played professionalbaseball with the Chicago WhiteSox, Cleveland Indians and FallRiver Indians.

He was a World War II Navyveteran and joined the 'Fall River .police department in 1947. He wasnamed a lieutenant in 1953 andappointed to the department's in­spectors' division in 1966. Afterthree years as a prosecutor in FallRiver district court, he was nameddirector of the MassachusettsCriminal Justice Regional Train­ing Academy. He served there from1973 to 1984, then returned to theFall River police department astraining officer, remaining in thatpost until his retirement in 1987.

His hearse was escorted from

Three priests will mark their40th anniversary of ordination onSunday, June II. All were ordainedon that date by Bishop James L.Connolly at St. Mary's Cathedral.

They are Rev. Manuel Andrade,parochial yicar at St. John theBaptist parish, New Bedford; Rev.Daniel L. Freitas, pastor of St.John of God parish, Somerset;and Rev. Joseph Oliveira, pastorof Our Lady of Lourdes parish,Taunton.

Father Andrade 'Father An(lrade was born in

Taunton March 30, 1926, the sonof the late Manuel and Maria(Medeiros) Andrade. He attendedelementary school in the village ofRabo de Peixe, St. Michael,Azores, and prepared for the priest­hood at the Seminary of Angra,Terceira, Azores, and at St. Mary'sSeminary, Baltimore.. He served as parochial vicar atSt. Anthony of Padua, Our Ladyof Angels, and Espirito Santo par­ishes in Fall River and at OurLady of Mt. Carmel and Immacu­late Conception parishes in NewBedford before being named pas-

Page 4: 06.02.89

.;':.-:

4' THE ANCHOR ..:...- -Diocese of Fall River - Fri., Juhe 2, 1989

..

.. Easier"It is often easier to fight for

one's principles than to live up tothem." - Adler

Balance is especially valuable inthe political arena.

When out-of-balance people·hold important positions, we may'all suffer. Last March 24, whenCaptain Joseph Hazelwood alleg­edly had too much to drink andoverestimated the abilities of his.third mate, the Exxon Valdez wentaground, spilling millions of gal­lons of oil and contaminating some700 miles of Alaskan shoreline.

We may never make so dra­matic a mistake but all of us havebeen guilty of negligence at onetime or another. Too often wetravel on automatic pilot until weare forced to face a crisis and mayneed to turn to others to heJp cleanup the mess or disharmony wehave brought into our lives or intothose of others.

Perhaps if we regarded our livesas serious works ofart in the mak­ing and cherished them as we dothe work ofa Da Vinci or a Michel­angelo, it would make a difference.

At the sign of peace at Mass weimplicitly recognize the beauty ofour·fellow worshipers. The root of"shalom," the Hebrew word forJ1ea~e, means to be intact, com­'plete, put together inside.. To greet someone with "Sha­lom" means to wish him whole­ness, to hope that he is filled withthe happiness that comes frombeing in harmony with self, others,nature and God. Ii is' asking that'his life be·a work of art.

praye~BOX

O,Glorious Cr.OSS

J bless you, 0 gloriousCross, adorned with theheart and body ofourSav­iourJesus Christa"d stain­ed with his blood. J blessyou, 0 holy Cross, out of10veforJesus, our SaviourqflJ/il! . od. Amen.

'":""\;}:, ..

.iety, harmony and balance der-ictedin his or her work.

Similarly, a well-designed lifehas the quality .of unity found ingood art. Such personality evolu­tion takes time and is usually as­sisted by caring friends.

Balance is another quality of thewell-designed life. A variety ofinterests inoculates us against bore­dom, which can be a deadly enemy.

Many people who have sufferedthrough the agony of addictiontestify that boredom was one ofthe factors wreaking havoc in theirlives. Young people, especially,need a dramatic challenge to helpthem prove themselves and feelthat their lives have meaning. .

Without the right blend of unityand variety, one can become anout-of-balance person, even afanatic. Such people may help toraise consciousness but they rarelysucceed in making needed changes.

I ~~

DAVID ADAMS OF STl BERNADETTE'S SCHOOL, LAKEWOOD, COLO., FLASHESA 9-CENTIMETER ~MILE AT THE SCHOOL'S RECENT SCIENCE FUN DAY

"Rejoice and ~e joyful in the Lord your God." Joel 2:23

. I .. .

Making life awork ofBy Father Kevin J. Harrington I

During this commencement se~­son, graduates are exhorted by avariety of speakers to live by thbhighest of ethical principles. O~­timistic and encouraging word,Sare usually the order of the d.a~.

Woody Allen was an exceptionwhen he gave a two-sentence ad'­dress, telling graduates there wer~two roads ahead of them: one lead~ing to death and destruction; theother to.despair. I

At worst, commencement orartors exploit the naivete of youth;.At best they reinforce their sel~­

confidence as they face the uncerLtainty of the real werld. !

An old rabbi once said: "As lyoung man, I tried to save th~world. In middle life, I tried tosave the community. Then I trie~to save my family. Now that I amold, I ask for the strength to savemyself." . I

The worst part of trying to savyourselves is facing up to what wrtruly are. Realizing our inner disr

hevelment, seeing how lacking i~good design our lives are, can bemore disconcerting than facing aworld full of real or imaginaryenemies. . I

We often think of design in ar~

and architecture but frequentlyfail to consider its importance inour own lives. When visiting Ii.museum I often initially wonde~why a particular painting or sculp~ture was considered worthy ofpreservation and prominent disrplay. I hl,lve to learn why a particu­lar artist is admired by his or he~

Icolleagues; but eventually I canusually understand the unity, vart

I

themoorin~

the'OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE·DIOCESE OF FALL RIVERPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River.

. . 887 Highland Avenue P.O. BOX 7 . .Fall River Mass. 02722 508...£>75-7151

.. PUBLISHER ..Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, 0.0., STD.

FINANCIAL ADMINI$TRATORRev.

A Losers' ConflictSecretary of State James Baker's recent scolding of Israel at

least caused the raising of an eyebrow in most diplomaticcircles. It has been some time since a ranking AmericanWhiteHouse official has dared to question the state of Israel onalmost any subject.

Of course, the Baker chiding will not send even minor shockwaves across the killing fields of Paltestine. The world knowswell that the United States cannot nor willabandon its de factomilitary and economic support of Israel, which receives a '$3billion aid package from this country. About $1.8 billion goesto bolster military development and $1.2 to so-called economicassistance.

Despite all the talk, no one in Washington or in Congress isabout to change the way America does business with Israelbecause the political consequences would be disastrous.

What is unique about the Baker statement is that a presiden­tial cabinet member dared even to hint that Israel shouldchange the way she treats her captive people. Even the mediapundits were caught unaware by this chiding. Nevertheless, ithappened and there must have been a reason. Be that as it may,Baker surfaced the feelings of many Americans in regard to the

. Palestinian question. .In times when Russia is daring to show a new path to its own

people and when China is tqying with new ideas, it's rather sadto see Israel stubbornly determined to enforce the status quowith the Palestinians and -refusing even the merest notion ofcompromise.

Each day more and more Palestinians are aligning them­selves with Islamic fanatics with all that implies, especially inthe area of Pan-Arabian support. The Israeli response hasbeen and continues to be an eye for an eye and a tooth for atooth. However, David's slingshot has been replaced bytoday's sophisticated implements of war and the combatantsare too consumed by hate to even think of peace.

Unfortunately, the United States is once again caught in themiddle and will continue to pay aheavy price for its position asevidence~ by the bombing of Pan American Flight #103.

Although the governments of the world will brush asideBaker's reflection on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, we shouldnot. Realistic appraisals of the situation should be heard. Itshould be a source of hope that others might dare, even agains~

great odds, to offer solutions that might extricate the UnitedStates from a hopeless entanglement. .

There is no doubt that the' Mideast situation will worsen.The fanatics are beginning to rule the day. For proof, one hasonly to look at suffering Lebanon. What is happening therecan surface with explosive force anywhere else throughout thearea. History teaches that it is nearly impossible to controlreligious fanaticism in any denomination; but it 'can be con­tained and moderated by purposeful and merciful actionswhich heal and unite. .

However, such processes must come from within. Theycannot be enforced or demanded. In the case of the Israelis andPalestinians, it would be well for the United States to heed thislesson. It is' obvious we cannot contain the conflict, nor shouldwe inflame it.

We should not continue to give to one side what we deny tothe other. If we continue to follow this policy, in the long runthe American people will be the real losers. Baker's words~ight have been minimal; the danger is real and maximum." The Editor

Page 5: 06.02.89

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by our bishops last year, 70 dio­ceses in the United States haveparishes or missions under theadministration of a deacon, layperson or a religious sister or broth­er.

Thirty-one ofthese dioceses hadSunday worship without a priestduring 1987, Leaders of Sundayprayer in. almost all of these dio­ceses have been authorized topreach as well as read the Gospeland other Scriptures.

Statistics are yet higher in anumber of other countries in Eur­ope and Africa. More detailedinformation for Canada, includ­ing instructions and complete rit­uals, is available from the Cana­dian Catholic Conference (90 Par­ent Avenue, Ontario KIN7NBl).

As I indicated, similardocumentsfor the United States are not yetavailable.

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liturgy and liturgical music to ouryoung people?

Usually when a parish thinks ofrenewal it thinks in terms of newprograms. Perhaps, then, parishesmight consider a program on "Re­visiting Symbolism in Our Lives."

If some symbols have been lost,surely others are taking their place.What are they?

To explore Christian symbolismis to explore ties that bind. A livingcommunity is one with a sharedlanguage of symbols.

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parochial school system symbol­ized the strength of Catholicism inAmerica.

Today the use of many suchsymbols has diminished or disap­peared altogether, while we havepeople who relate to a symbolicworld much different from that oftheir grandparents.

For example, there has been adramatic increase in working wo­men familiar with the images andsymbolic language of the businessworld.

Youths wearing headsets listento music filled with symbolismthat would have mystified youths50 years ago.

I also think in this context of thenew wave of immigrants in theUnited States. Often the symbolismto which they relate is foreign tothose they sit next to in church onthe weekend, yet all are part of theU.S. church. Their worlds of sym­bolism must be understood andaddressed.

If tipping one's hat and meatlessFridays are gone, what syr.nboisare replacing them? If parisheshave Hispanic, black, Asian andMiddle Eastern members, whatefforts are they making to under­stand the symbolism that is theirs?

And how much effort is made toexplain the rich symbolism of

Wedding woes

Using symbolsLately I have been hearing

ministers of mainline denom­inations express great concernabout their congregations. Thenumber of churchgoers is decreas­ing; they feel they are not reachingyouth; and there is confusion overhow to bring renewal to congrega­tions.

Many Catholic pastors can echothese sentiments, leading me towonder how to foster renewal inCatholic parishes.

If I turn my attention at thispoint to symbolism, it might seema curious turn of direction. Butanthropologists, sociologists andtheologians alike stress a link be­tween the understanding of sym­bols and the renewal of com­munities.

Wolfhart Pannenberg, a Germanand a Protestant professor oftheology, writes that only throughsymbols and symbolic languagecan the larger community to whichwe belong be made present in ourexperiences and activities.

If symbols are not understoodor if people cannot relate to eachother through a common symboliclanguage, the life of a communitywill suffer.

An action can be symbolic, ascan a picture or image. Rememberthe old adages, "Actions speaklouder than words" and "One pic­ture is worth a thousand words."

When we examine symbols that 'Catholics used to use, we realizehow much they taught about faith.

For example, men used to tiptheir hat as they passed a church,as a sign of respect for the BlessedSacrament. Meatless Fridays sym­bolized observance of the dayChrist died. Nuns wore habits toshow their dedication to a worldbeyond this one. Catholic churcheswere distinguished by the crosseson their steeples. In a sense, the

Several years ago we visited We got into a discussion on howfriends at their simple lake command a performance is a wed­cabin and had a wonderful ding. We agreed that family wed-

ding attendance is important butday with them. They live in a disagreed on weddings of friends'part of the country where the children. I even remarked that inweather is pleasant only three this age of expense some friendsmonths or so a year and it was may feel called upon to invite usobvious they loved escaping to but might be happy if we send dings offriends' children where wetheir lake life for the weekend. . regrets. don't even know the bride and

"Do you come out here a lot in The other half of our friends' groom. Attendance at these isn'tthe summer?" I asked innocently problem was that she enjoyed wed- mandatory.and knew right away it was the dl'ngs but he dl'dn't _ a fal'rly M' h h' Q. My question concerns cele-. ore Important t an.t e Issuewrong questIOn. brating a Sunday liturgy without a

fcommon couple problem, I've of wedding etiquette, however, is

They stared at each other Oli a noted. priest. A friend of mine in Mainethe issue of leisure time. Wheneverfull minute and then he said, "This • says it happens in their area, but I. f' .. If there aren't many close friends a social event prevents us fromIS the Irst time thiS summer. Too am confused.there or if the ones who are there enjoying needed and longed-fordamn many weddings." . How are such services performedSh b d f ' d' d are fellow workers, it can be just relaxation, we need to give our-e ecame e enSlve an tne . without a priest? Is a lay person

f ' d I l'k another day for a lot of men. And selves permission to say no.to so ten hiS wor s." t seems I e allowed to read the Gospel, give aII f · d' d I' , k'd we all deserve a day off at the end . Stress I'S rampant I'n our culturea our nen s an re atlves I s homily and follow the exact for-

are getting married and that's taken of the week. and leisure time is our best anti- mat as an ordained priest, exclud-all our Saturdays. John doesn't Living farfrom our relatives, we dote. When our priorities are right, ing only the consecration? I amthink we have to go to all of them have the opposite problem. We we will take opportunities to play confused. (British Columbia)but I know they'd be hurt if we miss the wedding fun, the reunions even if there's a workshop or wed-didn't." )Vith relatives, and the joy that ding we could attend. A. Sunday liturgies without a

We were close enough friends to family weddings bring. We get to a Others might and will often try priest are occurring in ,increasingbe able to talk about it freely. few, but not many. to make us feel guilty but, as Elea- numbers in many countries. ThisObviously, it was a source of con- I don't believe that weddings are nor Roosevelt once said, "You must baffle Catholics who quitetention between them. He worked command performances, though, can't be made to feel guilty with- rightly have always considered cele-in a hot and dirty job all week and and that if they steal our summer out your permission." When we bration of the Eucharist an inte-longed to get away to the lake on relaxation from us, we need to hand our schedules over to others gral part of the Sunday worhsip.Saturday but they both came from send regrets now and then. because of the guilt they instill in As you know, the eucharisticlarge families and were of an age Invitations shouldn't imply man- us, we are handing our lives over liturgy has been essentialfor Chris-where the nieces and nephews had datory attendance. A Simple note to them. tians from the beginning, We can-reached the marrying age. to the effect that we have other I don't know how our friends not even imagine the development

I understood both sides and was plans should take care of hurting resolved their problem but they of a custom which would contra.-sorry for them. They had saved others' feelings, especially if they still have their getaway. Ijust hope dict that tradition.and worked hard for their lake are real friends. they are able to use it now and Apparently, until the church dis-getaway but they couldn't get away. Sometimes we're invited to wed- then. covers some way of dealing with~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.Ithedimin~h~gnumbcr~ck~y

ordained to preside at the Eucha-rist, the phenomenon you ask aboutwill continue to grow.

The bishops of your' country(Canada) established a ceremonyand policy for Sunday liturgiesconducted by lay people or otherswho are not priests as long ago as1981.

The Vatican Congregation forDivine Worship issued a "Direc­tory for Sunday Celebrations inthe Absence of a Priest" in June1988. The U.S. bishops' Commit­tee on the Liturgy now is prepar­ing such a ritual for our countr'y,based on that Vatican Directory.

Generally these rituals call for aLiturgy of the Word similar to theone at Sunday Mass, with someform ofthanksgiving prayer (which,as you indicate, is not to be in theform of the eucharistic prayers ofour present missal), a communionrite and concluding prayers.

According to a survey sponsored

.'

Page 6: 06.02.89

III

U.S.-bishopsContinued from Page One

vention provoked strong com­plaints from some bishops.

In March Archbishop Oscar H.Lipscomb of Mobile, Ala., doctri­nal committee chairman, and hisstaff met for four days -in Romewith staff members of the doctri­nal congregation and agreed on 38amendments to the 57-page text.

Afterwards Cardinal JosephRatzinger, head of the doctrinalcongregation, wrote a letter sayingthe consultation was "deeply ap­preciated" and his congregation"can only express its satisfactionwith the way in which the bishops'conference has chosen to deal withthis matter."

The statement on U.S.-Vietnamreconciliation calls for the United'States to restore formal diplomaticrelations with Vietnam. That state­ment also was on the preliminaryagenda of the November 1988meeting, but it was withdrawn forthe sake of further consultations, .including a fact-finding visit bythree U.S. bishops to Vietnam.

The clergy exchange agreementswith the bishops of the Philippinesand Korea, where dioceses of theNorth and South are in a singlebishops' conference, are two morein a series of such agreements thatthe U.S. bishops have engaged into assure orderly processes for themovement of priests from onecountry to another.

The proposed fifth centenary'observances of evangelization inthe Americas involve a wide rangeof projects over the next threeyears, designed to draw attentionto the religious significance ofColumbus' discovery. of America.

In addition to the meeting ofbishops and the pope in SantoDomingo, plans include produc­tion of history books and articles,catechetical and homiletic mate­rials, media progtams, a U.S. pas­toral letter and a joint statementby all bishops of the Americas.

Also to be discussed are prelim­·inary drafts of a National BlackCatholic Pastoral Plan and a doc­ument fitled "Here I Am, SendMe" - a proposed bishops' state­ment on evangelization of blackCatholics in response to a 1987national congress of black Catho­lics.

Although the drafts will not bevoted on this June, their discus­sion will aid in development offinal documents to be voted on at alater meeting.

A discussion on "integrating oursocial teaching into the life of thechurch and the broader society"will consist of two presentationsfollowed by six workshops on socialjustice and social ministry issues.

'1I1111111111111111illlllllllllllllllllllllillUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIStates, West European countries,Soviet-bloc nations and the Vati­can.

The accords have since becomecommon ground for a variety ofEast-West negotiations and fit inwell with the pope's often-expressedaim offosteringa reunited Europe.

But the pope will be "carefulabout not meddling in domesticSoviet issues," said Father Rooth.

Any statement he makes will bewithin the framework of the Hel­sinki accords on respect for humanrights and religious freedom, hesaid.

On the Finnish schedule is aJune 5 papal talk to the PaasikiviSociety, the country's main pri­vate group for influencing foreignpolicy.

Sunday church attendance islow, but church life is also expressedduring weekday activities in prayerhouses and by participation inLutheran organizations and activ-ities, he said. .

The Nordic countries - espe­cially Sweden, Finland and Nor­way - are among world leaders inthe percentage oftheir gross nation­al product devoted to foreign aid.. Sweden has taken in a large

. numl?er of political refugees fromEastern Europe and Chile, whoform the bulk of the nation's Cath­olics.

Catholic and Lutheran churchleaders als'o note that while inter­est in formal religion is low, thereis an ethical revival in the region aspeople look beyond material well­being to seek a deeper.meaning forexistence.

The five· countries have among~he.world'shighest a~nual per cap-­Ita Incomes, each topping $10,000:Norway leads with $13,790. AnnualU.S. per capita income is $11,670.

"There is an openingfor values,discussions of ethics, but not toomuch interest in the state church,"said Swedish Jesuit Father LarsRooth, director of the Scandina­vian department of Vatican Radioand an organizer of the papal trip.

The pope's trip is expected tobuttress this. His travel bags arealways filled with speeches on theneed to bring technological advan­ce~ under ethical guidelines and onthe overriding importance of re­spect for human life. ,

While the pope might have pro­blems convincing people of hisanti-abortion stand and sexualcode, he should find a ready au­dience for his moral overview ofworld issues, said Father Rooth.

..At many international meet­ings, Swedes found that their viewscoincided with the Vatican," headded.

The June 4-6 trip to Finlandalso provides the pope with a nat-

o ural platform to reiterate his desireto visit the Soviet Union.

Finland historically has been a'meeting place for East and West.Before declaring independence in1917, it was ruled by Sweden andthen by Russia.

Since independence, it has be­come a bridge in East-West rela­tions as witnessed by the 1975meeting in the capital of Helsinki,which led to the signing of the Hel­sinki accords on human rights andEuropean security and coopera­tion. Signers included the United

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90 percent ofthe population oft~efive countries professes Luthe;­anism, although only 5to 10 percer1tattend Sunday worship services·l

Remnants of anti-Catholic atti­tudes surfaced during the pre-tripplanning. The Danish Lutheranbishops decided that the popbwould not speak at the June (;prayer service in the Lutheran cathd­dral at Roskilde because the popti­lation was not ready for it. Instead,the pope will attend the service,then speak to Danish Lutherans ~t

. the nearby residence of the lodlLutheran bishop. I

But ecumenical relations are gen­erally good, and Vatican and Luth­eran officials are optimistic thdtthe pope will further encouragbCatholic-Lutheran dialogue. Thepope has to ecumenical events ohhis schedule, an average of one ~d~~, more than the norm for pap~1VISitS. . I

Catholic and Lutheran officialspredict that the pope's approachwill be pastoral. They do not expedthim to break new theologidl~round. - I

The visit should produce ~"strong papal affirmation of Cat~­olic-Lutheran dialogue," said Gun!­nar Staalsett, general secretary dfthe Geneva-based Lutheran WorldFederation, the Vatican's partnetin international dialogue. i

Staalsett, a Norwegian, said thevisit would "bring a greater award- .ness at the level of ordinary ped­pIe" that Catholics and Lutheransshould relate to each other as fel­low Christians.

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First pope in Arcti~ CircleContinued from Page One

cism in the aftermath of the 16th­century Protestant Reformation,when it was accepted by the region'srulers, who imposed it on theirsubjects.

For centuries natives in much ofthe area were forbidden to beCatholic. Catholic priests were pro­hibited from entering the countries,except to tend to the spiritualneeds of the handful of necessaryCatholic foreigners such as diplo­mats and migrant workers.

Protection of religious freedombegan evofving in the 19th century;in Sweden there were religious

. restrictions as late'as 1952.Today in several ofthe countries

children are automatical!y regis­tered as Lutherans at birth, unlesstheir parents formally request other­wise. The result is that more than

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Agca sentencecut by 2 years

ANCONA, Italy (NC) - Citinggood conduct, Italian authoritieshave granted a two-year reductionin the life sentence being served byMehmet Ali Agca, the Turk whoshot Pope John Paul II in 1981.

Authorities in Ancona cited "ir­reproachable conduct" by the 3Fyear-old papal assailant, who is ina maximum security prison in near­by Ascoli Piceno.

Based onprevious Italian cases,legal observers estimated that Agcawould be released after serving 24years, or in 2005. He could qualifyfor four additional years by meet­ing good conduct requirements.

Agca was arrested immediatelyafter the shooting in St. Peter'sSquare May 13, 1981. He con­fessed to the attack, which seriouslywounded the pope and two women.

Years later, Agca claimed hewas part of a plot involving otherTurks and Bulgarian agents. At atrial based on those accusations,however, Agca was uncooperativeand eventually refused to testify.The defendants were acquitted andreleased.

6

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!I

Page 7: 06.02.89

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Laicized p'riest returnsto active ministry

in Tiananmen Square" is whether"one welcomes, despite everything,the direction of renewal implicit inthe path of the new generation,"the Vatican paper said.

This generation is asking "aboveall, not to be used," the paper said.

The editorial said the first stepsof the mass youth movement have"ended an era of comfortablemyths" and point to a new direc­tion for the country..

Hundreds of thousands of stu­dents from Peking and elsewherehave occupied the enormous square~or weeks. The students are press­109 for the resignation of topgovernment officials and greaterdemocracy in the country.

MONDOVI, Wis. (NC) - Be- Before seeking readmission tofore all Masses during his first the priesthood, Father Blazewiczweekend at Sacred Heart Parish in earned a doctorate in education,Mondovi, Father William Blaze- taught college English and was awicz, 55, shared from the pulpit science specialist for the Philadel­the unusual circumstances of his phia public school system.priesthood. In 1976 he inquired about re-

The parishioners responded with admission but at that time the Vat-a standing ovation. ican was not accepting priests who

Father Blazewicz was ordained had been laicized. .for the Diocese of La Crosse, Wis., Now, however, a Vatican offi­in 1959, but left the active ministry ciaI told National Catholic Newseight years later and was laicized Service in Rome, readmission isin 1971. not considered unusual. As the

In mid-December the Vatican number of laicization requests hasCongregation for the Doctrine of gone down, the number of read­the Faith notified him that his mission cases has increased, theapplication for readmission to the • official said. The source declinedpriesthood had been approved. He to give figures on how many priestswas then assigned to Sacred Heart. have been readmitted.

His hope as a priest, he said, is After the Vatican began pro-to make the celebration of the cessing applications in the earlyMass the focal point of his parish 1980s, Father Blazewicz went toand to kindle a deep devotion to St. Charles Borromeo Seminary inChrist in the Eucharist among his Philadelphia to prepare for returnparishioners. to active ministry.

In retrospect, he said, ne left the He said his friendships with Pro-acti,ve priesthood after being caught' testant ministers have shown himup in what he called the "silliness" the positive aspects of celibacy.that marked the years following , "Many Protestant clergymen ex-the ~econd,Yatican Council. perience much tension in ,their

Father Blazewicz told the Times- marriages," he said. "It's especiallyReview, 9ioc~,sa'n newsplJ.per, that hard on their wives and children..a~, the time he ~as "feeling frus-. Also,~~sa-marriep person there aretrated an}:! nOl really effective as a r,' a lot of everyday"distractions thatpriest. ... I was yo'urig ;lnd made a stand 'in the way of deepening your.fO'oli.sh ~istake.;' . ' , '; spiritual life.':' j

Forabo,ut,f~u,ryears;heseldom;: "Here in Mondovi I've expe;:;~entto Mass. He c~edit.!! the rosary" rienced how often people call uponwith. reactiva,ting his prayer life their priest, and the importance of

.and aiding his, ~eturn to th,e church. beingconstantlya~ailable,"hesaid.

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Vatican applauds Chinese studentsVATICAN CITY (NC) - Chi­

nese young people demonstratingfor democracy in Peking's Tianan­men Square are challenging theircountry to renew itself, the Vati­can newspaper L'OsservatoreRomano said in a front-page editor­ial.

The editorial said China's younghave "written a ~age of history"with "their courage, their tenacity,their style, their thirst for dem- 'ocracy." .

The May 28 editorial describedthe vast throngs that blocked mil­itary convoys on ,the outskirts ofPeking as a "human wall" defend­ing the students from repression.

Beyond the labels of "new revo­lutionaries" and "counterrevolu­tionaries" that have been appliedto the students, there are real prob­lems facing the "complex and mul­tifaceted Chinese society," it said.

The.dilemma posed by the "ex­traordmary youthful mobilization

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MATTHEW E. Schiller, 38,has been named associate pub­lisher of The Tablet Publish­ing Co., which publishes theBrooklyn diocesan newspaper,The Tablet, and other publi­cations of the Brooklyn di­ocese.

Schiller supervises a com­puter service The Tablet offersother nonprofit publishers, in­cluding The Anchor.

He joined. The Tablet in1973 as an advertising sales­man arid has been the paper'sbusiness, manager since' 1984.In hisne~ po~sthe,'will co'or­dinate other,-undertakings ofthe company, which includepublication- ofa Spanish­'langu'age rilont~ly and di'rec­tories 'for' the Brooklyn andRockville Cenfre dioceses. '

Jeanne M. GagneFall River

Dear Editor:Waiting eagerly for my weekly

copy of The Anchor, I get moreand more fascinated with the titlebecause of its thought-inspiringdirection to the daily changes inthis storm-swept world flounder­ing in every form of life attemptingto tear down God's kingdom.

Weekly we meet The Anchorand for us, the faithful, anotherversion of an anchor, the seaman'skey, comes to mind. The anchorkeeps his ship from drifting orbeing swept away. Alone, the an­chor needs to be held by some­thing stronger than itself.

Here is where we take our stand.Let not the changes, as we seethem in the life of all of us, get uslost in the turmoil.

For us, we look to the only safeanchorage as we profess our Faith,the supernatural gift of God, andwitli this st~onghold we cannot bedeceived by what the world offers.

See, Father Moore, what TheAnchor is doing for me as well asthe mariy way's being offered,'onpage after page, in our diocesanweekly for 'its readers to ponder.

Di'd' not Jesus I telt us in' John),6:33 ."Have, confidence, I haveoverco'me the world"? What furtherproqf do we need as we follow "theWay, the Truth and the'Life"?

.God bless you, Father, for yourextensive' programs.Sister Theodosi~ Giide~, age 92Motherhouse, Sisters of Char\ty

of NazarethNazareth, Ky. 40048

The Anchor

The Unspoken WordI never got to call you "Ma." At

the beginning of time, when wewere all waiting to be, I waited myturn. Grandma had her turn. Youhad your turn. But when it came tome, you decided I would be toomuch trouble. I shouldn't be born.Your feminist rights were at stake.I waited for you to make the deci­sion that you thought was yoursalone to make. You didn't careabout God, who planned the uni­verse and each one of us.

You didn't care about Daddy.As you and I walked to that abor­tion clinic, I knew what it meant.

And where there had been lightand warmth before, darkness beganto descend and as I left you, per­haps you could feel my pain for theword that would never be spoken,"Ma."

the Hispanic community into ourCatholic family."

The booklet, which quotes theU.S. bishops' 1983 pastoral letteron Hispanic ministry, includes in­formation about Catholic valuesactivities and beliefs, describingthe Mass and sacraments, empha­sizing the importance ofdaily pray­er and quoting Hispanic and non­Hispanic Catholics on what theirreligion means to them.

Further information on thebooklet is available by calling (800)421-8510.

Booklet invites HispanicsLOS ANGELES (NC) ~ A

booklet inviting both new andfallen-away Hispanic Catholics toparticipate in the Catholic Churchhas been published by the Francis­can Communications and theCatholic Church Extension Society.

Titled "La Iglesia Catolica:Quienes Somos?," "The CatholicChurch: Who Are We?," the 16­page booklet is published in Span-'ish.

It was published to help remedy"the lack of catechet.ical resourceswhich fully address and integrate

Facejacts

Dear Editor:I was well pleased with the write­

up in The Anchor about my poemand the picture was very good.(~nchor, ~ay 12). I've had manynice compliments on it. I wouldjust like to thank you all. It wasgreat. Please also thank Doloresthe girl who took the picture. '

My daughters:in Arizona arevery pleased with their mother andher poems and writings. My neigh­bor across the street from me gotme 10 "opies to send away to mypeople. It is so nice to have goodneighbors along the way.

I do try to be happy.Margaret P. MelloFall River

Thank you

Letters are welcomed but should be no more than200 words. The editor resenes the right to condense oredit. if deemed necessary. All leiters must be signed andinclude a home or business address. They do not neces~sarily express the editorial "iews of The Anchor.

Dear Editor:After watching Tom Brokaw's

follow-up discussion of Roe vs.Wade on NBC, I realized some­thing about pro-choice.

Advocates of abortion as a solu­tion to unwanted pregnancy haverationalized and intellectualized thereality of abortion. To them, abor­tion is a sort of eraser that wipesout a mistake, and then the womancan go on as if nothing reallyhappened. .

Too bad we can't say the samefor the aborted baby. He or she

. cannot just pick up his or her lifeand go on. The unborn baby's real­ity ends in the death-dealing proce­dures of abortion.·1t is final. An"I'm sorry" won't change it.

But then, the intellectuals coun­ter with semantics - "a fetus is nota baby." They also say,how cruelwe are.to advise a woman that shewould do better, to have the babyand give it up for adoption tosomeone who really does want it.

Yet they are not cruel for advo­cating death to the unborn. Will

,things change when abortion' isroutinely done for, gender selec­tion? Will we have gone too farthen? Or will there be anotherrationalization to oil our conscien­ces?

Let us face facts. There is nosuch thing as being "only a little bitpregnant," and human beings con­ceive human beings. Abortion endsthe fetal life of a human being.

Janice VinciNew Bedford

1\

Page 8: 06.02.89

population control and familyIssues.

Anderson co-chaired the WhiteHouse Working Group on theFamily which held hearings andresearched the overall situation ofU.S. families and the impact onfamilies of various governmentpolicies, such as welfare or federaltax laws.

The group's work led to Presi­dent Reagan's September 1987executive order requiring federalagencies to review all current andproposed activities and policies onthe basis oftheir impact on families.

"That was something I was I~ckyto participate in," Anderson said."It recognizes that people live infamilies," and that their dreamsand aspirations are tied up with adesire to improve the quality oflifefor their families.

In 1985 Anderson moved to thepresident's public liaison office and·was appointed acting director in1987. His "swan song" there wascoordinating Reagan's September1987 meeting with Pope John PaulII in Miami.

"I can look back on my govern­ment service with a certain sense ofaccomplishment," said Anderson,who joined the Knights' staff in .December 1987.

"Government service is reallytaxing on one's family and familycommitment," he said, adding thatit's difficult to leave a White Housemeeting to attend a Cub Scoutdinner.

Working for the Knights, hesaid, meant continued pro-life in­volvement, as well as pro-familyactivities at work and at home.

THE ANDERSON family, from left, Anderson; sonCarl; Katherine, held by her father; Teresa; Matthew; and hiswife, Dorian (N..C.p.QotQ)...•.•...... VN.W•. " ,

Anderson, who has been a visit­ing professor at the institute inRome, wiII teach courses on fam­ily law and on laws related to bioe­thics, human rights issues and pop­ulation policies.

In the interview at his Washing­ton office, Anderson described him­self as "one of those pro-life acti­vists who came to Washington andstayed."

His pro-life activism began whilehe was an undergraduate at Jesuit­run Seattle University and workedagainst a 1970 Washington statereferendum legalizing abortion. •

After receiving a degree fromthe University of Denver Collegeof Law, he and his wife, Dorian,moved to the nation's capital, wherehe became legislative assistant onpro-life issues to Helms.

After five years in Helms' office,Anderson moved to a position as alegal counselor in the Departmentof Health and Human Services,where he helped develop policiesfor the medical treatment ofseverely handicapped infants.

In April 19l52 "Baby Doe," anIndIana newborn with Down's syn­drome, died of starvation after thebaby's parents refused to allowsurgery to correct a blockedesophagus.

Anderson worked with HHSofficials, physicians and others inpreparing what became the 1984federal regulations barring dis­crimination against handicappednewborns.

In 1983 he moved to the WhiteHouse Office of Policy Develop­ment helping formulate Reaganadministration policies on pro-life,

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WASHINGTON (NC) - Con­vincing U.S. Catholic couples tbfollow church teachings on ma~­riage and family life requires ap.expla,nation of those teachings ani:!not simply asserting that "the popesays so," said the vice president dfan institute focusing on the theol-ogy of marriage and family. I

Carl A. Anderson, vice presi­derit of the John Paul II Institutefor Studies on Marriage and Faml­ily, said the church's understand!­ing of the human person and ofGod's creation needs to be exL

plained to Catholics before manyof them will follow the teachings!

Anderson is also vice-presidentfor public policy of the Knights olfColumbus, which is funding th~

institute's Washington campusl,

where classes began last Septembe~.It is the first branch campus of theRome-based institute. I

The number of Catho"Jic couplesusing artificial means of birth conttrol, Anderson said, shows "howmuch work needs to be done" i~

, educating pebple about the ChriSttian vision of marriage and famil)'life. I

"It is a very complicated issuethat has to be looked at from phiLlosophy, theology, sociology, etc.fto begin to understand why thechurch teaches this," Andersortsaid during interview with NationalCatholic News Service. I

"The answer isn't really 'the pop¢says so.' The answer has to b~fiIIed out with an understanding ofChristian life, theology and spiritutality.". I

Before becoming an official ofthe institute and the Knights, Andertson, 37, held positions in the officeof Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., atthe U.S. Department of Healttland Human Services and at thtWhite House. He said strengthen-

11

ing family life, improving education and upholding pro-life valueJwere the focus of his governmentwork. ...... I

Now the fath~roffour promoteJthe same causes through his admin1istration and teaching at the JohnPaul II Institute and his work witH. .. " .•... , •••. . ,.. "1the Knights, including testimon~

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and federal agencies. IAnderson said he saw a need for

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"The bridge" from academia tOIgrass-roots family living is "thelpastoral support of families, and

that's why I was attracted to the'idea of the institute," he said. .J

The campus in Washington ithe institute itself is based at .th~

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Father Fox decidesto take sabbatical

The only solution he said, is forthe church to enter the publicdebate as one of many actors "andto try to persuade others of itsposition."

There is no doubt, he said, that'the relationship between faith andpolitics and social life· will be the"focal point for theology and pas­toral practices" for both the Latinand V.S. churches in comingdecades.

gians to be published in the V nitedStates.

Black and feminist theologians,said Archbishop Weakland, "in aspecial way found their life expe­riences in church and society mir­rored in those of the people ofLatin America."

The Latin American small eccles­ial communities have affected"more mainstream North Ameri­can life," said Archbishop Weak­land, citing V.S., church move­ments, including Renew, which usethe same basic small-group laystructure as Latin American"comunidades de base."

Renew is a two-and-a-half-yearrenewal program aimed at deepen- WASHINGTON (NC) - Domin­ing faith, developing lay leaders ican Father Matthew Fox, whoand bringing inactive Catholics said last November that he wasn'tback to the parish.·1t began in sure he would comply with a requestNewark, N.J., in 1978 and is now from his superiors that he take ain parishes in more than 100 V.S. one-year sabbatical, has decideddioceses. "to acquiesce," according to. his

He said leaders emerging from assistant, David G. Akin.Renew were more interested in thespiritual than - the financial and Father Damian A. Byrne, Domin­organizational aspects of parish ican master general, asked Father

"life arid were concerned about the - -., F6x;1l theologian aiIfhofilridconnection between the Gospel founder of the Institute in Cultureand social action." and Creation spirituality in Oak-

Archbishop Weakland said relation- land, Calif., to take a year toships between the churches of Latin reflect on his work beginning Dec.America and the Vnited States 15, 1988.have helped bring the V .S. church Last November, Father Fox saidinto the "post-modern period." he would be silent for one sernes-

"Uthe modern period was char- ter, but after that would "wrestle ,acterized by the ideology that with my conscience every day"science and technology could solve about m~intainingthe silence for aall the world's problems [and] the full year.ideal of the Enlightenment, namely, Akin said Father Fox decided inthat unaided human reason would April to follow his superior's re-be able to create a perfect world, quest "after a lot of prayer, reflec-then the postmodern world has tion and dialogue with trustedcome to see the folly of this pur- advisers" within the Dominicans'suit," he said. Midwest province.

The U.S. bishops' pastoral let-ters on war and peace, and the Father Fox has received a grantV.S. economy are "signs of that for travel during his sabbatical,breakthrough," he added, also Akin said and has been visitingnoting that Latin America's em- theologians and small Christianphasis on "theologizing out of lived communities in Europe, Southexperiences corresponds in a most America and Africa.profound way to the North Amer- Father Fox also is working onican psyche and to our ed ucational two new books, Akin said one ontradition." St. Thomas Aquinas and the other

He said the V .S. church walks a o'n creation spirituality and libera-tightrope between "rigid integral- tion theology. Father Byrne's re-ism," in which the morality of the quest that Father Fox take a sab- I

state's decisions is determined by batical followed a four-year investi-the church, and indifferentism, gation of Father Fox's writing bywhere any moral position or none the Vatican Congregation for theis ac.ci::ptable. , ,P.~c!r:in~ of the. Fl;li.th _

Puebla, Medellin impacted U.8. church

ATTLEBORO AREA Catholic Charities Appeal committee members, from left withBishop Daniel A. Cronin.and lay chairman David L. Hautanen are Father Thomas L. Rita;Bertrand. Sullivan; the bishop and Hautanen; Gerald Lanoue; Father Ralph D. Tetrault.(Studio 'D photo)

SOVTH BEND, Ind. (NC) ­Archbishop Rembert G. Weakland

-- of Milwaukee recently told a NotreDame Vniversity Conference thatthe historic Latin American churchmeetings of Medellin and Pueblahave had a great impact on theV.S. church.

He cited as examples of theinfluence of the Latin Americanchurch:

- Entry by the church in theV nited ~tates into a "post-modernperiod," in which it was no longermaintained that unaided humanreason would be able to create aperfect world. \_ - V.S. Catholics' involvementin movements including Renew, inwhich Catholics meet in smallgroups that have been comparedto Latin America's basic ecclesialcommunities.

- Growth o(black and feministtheologies of liberation in the V ni­ted States.

- Emphasis on a "preferentialoption for the poor" that, he said,was "brought into the common

'parla'riceOfthe chiIrcheS'" by -fheMedellin and Puebla conferences.

The Notre Dame conferencecommemorated the 1968 and 1969meetings of the Latin AmericanBishops' Council, known by itsSpanish acronym of CELAM, inMedellin, Colombia, and in Puebla,Mexico.

In his speech, the archbishopsaid that "one cannot underesti­mate" the impact of informationprovided in the past 30 years toAmerican Catholics by V.S. mis- .sionaries to Latin America.

"Even bishops in the VnitedStates who were more conserva­tive in theological matters beganto assess the situation of the churchin Latin America in a differentway because of the witness of,members of their, own dioceses,people whom they knew and trustedand who were working for andwith the churches and local leader­ship in Latin America," he said,

V .S. missionaries to Latin Amer­ica, Archbishop Weakland said,also brought to the V .S. church "amore sympathetic and experien­tial appreciation... of liberationtheology."

He said their"interest and enthus­iasm" made it possible for manymajor works of liberation theolo-

Page 10: 06.02.89

felt guilty I hadn't better preparedher for the shock.

Tears came to her eyes, her faceturned red and I feared she mightbuild up so much lung pressure shewould explode if she didn't removeher hand.

"Are you rapturing?" I asked,remembering hearing somethingabout that in religion class.

"Rupturing is the word, Hilda;''she eventually managed betweengasps and giggles.

It was good to see her so happy.I had underestimated the power ofdivine influence.

"What do you think?" I asked.·"00 you think you could resist

the temptation to stop' reflectingthe sun into the priest's eyes withyour compact mirror during Mass?"she asked.

I nodded, wondering how sheknew that had been me.

"What about telling fortuneswith playing cards during holyhour?" she went on.

I winced."What if I told you I,overheard

Richard Lund telling Benny Fitzhe hoped you would ask him to thedance again?"

I knew she was just testing myresolve. It failed.

"Let me get back to you onthis," I told her.

Besides, I thought, think"of thehigh drama of a former MissAmerica entering the convent.

Entering the conventBy Hilda Y~ung

As I mentioned before-, what Iwanted to be 'when I grew up wasMiss America.

However, there were three orfour brief periods when I wasthoroughly convinced I shouldfollow a religious vocation, "enterthe con,:ent" as we used to say.

One of those periods occurredduring my eighth-grade year andwas with such intensity I rememberit clearly. It was actually RichardLund who inspired me. On thedeep sigh scale, Richard was a 10.

It's not so much that he overtlyencouraged my pursuit of chasteholiness. However, I rememberfeeling "the call" not long afterRichard told me he would ratherattend the Sadie Hawkins dancewith Ed the talking horse in a tututhan go with me.

After long reflection, (a goodthree to five minutes after myconversation with Richard), I askedSister Angelina Marie, my scienceteacher, if she thought I wouldmake a good sister.

"Is your mother pregnant again?"she aSKed.

"Not that kind of sister;' I ex­plained, "a sister-sister, a nun likeyou."

She clearly was moved. Shegasped and threw her hand overher mouth in total amazement. I

Teens: selectively generousBy Dr. James and Mary Kenn~ are, in a sense, what you own, and directed generosity is easy for par-

D D K M t ti nowhere is this more evident thanents to miss. Most teens are gener-

ear r. enny: y wo een- t 2 b . d' .age daughters are so selfish. ~'d a age. . . ous, ut It oesn t show 10 thelike to be kind, but I don't kn~w . Ownersh~p and possesslO.ns pro- home. .'how else to put it. They are 15 a~d Vide a certam amount of pnde and Noone IS more loyal than a13 and they think of no one brt security through childhood. The teen-ager. Narking or telling on ath~mselves. ' grasping and desperate selfishness friend is unforgivable. I have seen

They hog the phone. They fail a of the 2-year-old will subside. otherwise selfish teens willing totake phone messages for anyo~e. . As the child grows, he or she suffer severe penalties rather thanThey con me for money. Th~y learns cooperation and sharing, nark on a peer. _forget birthdays. They borrow J.y , mostly in the form of trade or bar- Teens share clothing and per­jewelry and underwear witho~t ter. "You can ride my tricycle if I sonal items with each other in areturning it. I can play with your dolls." The way that puts adults to shame. Do

I could go on and on. Dad anIJ I parents may come to think they you share your clothing regularly?wonder where we went wrong as are raising a moderately decent Your favorite outfit? Your jewelry?parents. Did we fail to teach the~ person. Teens do.proper values? How can we get Then comes adolescence and Teen-age girls engineer a regu-them to be less self-centered? [I thoughtfulness toward adults goes lar clothing excnange. On one oc­Ohio outthewindow. Few teens (12-15) casion, my daughter's closet con-

You didn't go wrong. They sou 1 d are apt t~ exp~ess .~ratitude or tained dresses or .outfits from fourlike normal teen-age girls, goi?g ~how conslderatlOn.. l hey.are f~c- other. young ladles. Most" of herthrough one of life's two maj?r 109 what psychologist Enk Enk- favonte clothes were out on theselfish stages. I son calls~? "i~;ntity crisis." They ~ircuit." Jewelry, s~oes and other

Twos and teens don't shar;e. are very mto themselves, what Items were l!lso makmg the rounds.Two is the first self stage. Twb- they wear, how they look, what Teen-agers may not be the pleas­year-olds have just discovered thkt they want and who likes them. . antest people to have around thethey are separate from the rest bf Teens do show generosity and house. But ,before you criticizethe world, and they must work to share, but not within the· family. them for lack of g~nero~ity, lookcarve out their individualitf,' They share with each other. They closely. You may fmd more shar­"M.ine" and "no" are freque t will remember their best friend's ing than you realize. 'words in the vocabulary of a y birthday, but not their brother's. Reader questions on family Iiv­2-year-old. .. I They are pulling away from family ing apd child care to be answered

The psychologist William ~a!TI~s 'and at the _~ame time reaching ?1.!t' in print are invited by the Kennys,said that the foundation of self- toward their agemates. Box 872, St. Joseph's College,image'is.the "material me." ydu .. This newfound but differently Rensselaer, Ind. 47978.~' .. _ "" . - "I ~,

By,~"o,~~.,~~h ~ V~0~~~~1i~1I?~~~~~; t~~~p"~'fmm woddly affainB' b' '." b hI tb I'l t mto pubb, b'IO,,:'w>tb ooo,taol "" long,b••n nndmtood. I u.oo

. I 18, usmeslsdls p~o :i Yh ..e:J disruption, one's sensl: of privacy to cherish the old retreats, whichPdace w

f5w~>Ut t' ex,Rlic"o etadr 'I e gets lost by the wayside. Noise can were essentially weekends of si-

,1 ea 0 qUle Ime promo e .. . I'k 'b I . IF' .. . h f' d. By definition, "business" is' a seem I ea canm a eat109 away at ence.' or It IS mqulet t at ~e 10

state of constant bustle 'and activ- uS'.':.' . ._ . '., . our souls and hear ,the vOices of't t k· • f . t'h "Id A' 101 , By mtroducmg penods of qUiet truth.I y a en rom e 0 ng -. h k I - ". .Sa~on word "bisig" meaning ob- mto t e wor p a~e, we ~re saymg The fact IS, there s.hould never

, . d d!I' t '0 th th l we are human, With a nght to be have been a separatIOn betweencuple or ligen. n e 0 er . I' I kId h .. d' I f hhand "quiet" is a state of pea~e pnvate. t IS ~ ~ea ac nowe g- t e actiVlty- pven va ues 0 t eand ~alm derived from the Latin ment of our splr~tua~ selves. secu~ar ~orkplace and, the ~r;-tth­"quies" ~eaning "rest." On the Secu~ar orgamzatlOns can learn seekmg, lOner values of ~eh~lon.

rf' , th t t Id somethmg from the church, where Perhaps through use of"quiet time"su ace e wo concep s cou h' f' d' .not be ~ore different. I t e Importance 0 qUiet an pen- we can bnng them closer together.

Yet, Donald J. Schuenke, pres­ident and chief executive officer 6fNorthwestern Mutual Life Insut­ance Company, sees no conflittbetween peace and work. His Mi~­waukee-based ins~rance firrrt,which calls itself the "quiet con'1­pany," recently commissioned la$50,000 study on the use ofquiet inbusiness. I

The researchers examined psy­chological experiments on hOfWquiet or the presence of othe saffects performance. They also d­plored yoga, meditation and East-ern religions. I

According to the study, worketsdo easy tasks better when othJrpeople are nearby, but for con'1­plex mental tasks it is better to be~o~. I

Thilt may not be startling newsto anyone who has ever tried tlostudy, write or think through acomplicated problem. But whenthe leader of a big company starfsencouraging quiet time in tHeworkplace, it represents a real shiftin human understapding andot-ganizational values. I

At Northwestern Mutual, under­writers' phones are turned offeve~yWednesday so they can get theirwork done. Calls go to a receptio~­ist Who takes messages. "Quih

, days" have been practiced thetefor years, thanks to Schuenke. I

"Silence is golden," the old wif­dom tells us. Without it, we cann?t'think well. It is hard to pray or feFIclose to God when there is bustleall about.

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tified themselves as Sister Donatafrom Beaumont,Texas, and SisterClare from Manchester, Conn. Likethe other nuns, they declined togive their full names to "avoidpublicity."

The shelter residents were forthe most part middle-aged or el­derly. Some were still in the old·and frayed clothing they wore whenthey lived on the Roman streets.

A doctor at the center, LaviniaMicanti de Mayo, said most ofthewomen suffer from psychologicalproblems, the result of years ofhomelessness.

"They know it's a festive day,but I don't think they know it'sMrs. Bush," she said.

Before serving lunch, Mrs. Bush,an Episcopalian, stopped brieflyto pray in the adjacent chapel ofSan Salvatore in Ossibus, one ofthe oldest churches in the Vatican.On her way out, .she wayed topriests and nuns w~o peered out ofwindows at the Congregation forthe Doctrine of the Faith nextdoor.

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volunteers at a neonatal ward inEugene, Ore., a producer stagingplays for the homeless in NewYork City, counselors at a homefor runaways in Nashville, Tenn.,and a Peace Corps volunteer whowas a veterinarian in Africa.

Those featured are ordinary peo­ple. Their unselfishness costs themleisure time, but their rewards arefound in the meaning and depth of

. their lives. The.documentary con­fronts worldly wisdom with thetestimony ofthose who respect thedignity of the human spirit.

Its title is taken from Jesuit phi­losopher Teilhard de Chardin, whowrote:

"Some day, after mastering thewinds, the waves, the tides, andgravity, we will harness for Godthe energies of love. And then, forthe second time in the history of

. the world, humankind will havediscovered fire."

Viewers should check with localNBC channels in case the programairs at another time than thatgiven above.

"Road House" (United Artists):Formula Western with PatrickSwayze as a college-educated boun­cer who cleans up a Missouri night­club, incurring the wrath of thetown kingpin (Ben Gazzara) andhis henchmen. Women are resi­dent playthings, and men are resi­dent idiots. Interminable fisticuffs,graphic sexual encounters, endor­sement of vigilantism, nudity. 0,R

conceived story about promisingromance between strangers (An­thony Edwards and Mare Win­ningham) that deteriorates into adoomsday thriller about a pendingnuclear holocaust nightmare onthe Los Angeles streets. Grisly vio­lence, profanity, sexual vulgarities.O,R

TV ProgramsThe Energies of Love," 1-2 p.m.,June 4, NBC: Yuppie materialismand the selfishness of the "megeneration" are rejected in the reli­giousspecial, "The Energies ofLove," which considers why somepeople aid those whose needs areignored by the rest of soCiety.

Among them are a Jesuit physi­cian caring for AIDS patients inBoston, a police detective who

each one did. The atmosphere wascordial and friendly, with the popewarmly greeting the officials andsharing laughter with Bush.

At the end of the ceremony, thepresident and his wife, Barbara,presented the pope with a gift of asilver bowl and plate.

Bush had what he called "atouch of America" after the papalmeeting when he greeted some 250seminarians, priests, religious andCatholic laity in Ii Vatil!an hall. Hewas given an ovation by the crowd,which iflcluded top U.S. Vaticanofficials. .

Mrs. BushDuring her visit to the Vatican

shelter, Mrs. Bush spooned outrigatoni with tomato sauce as Arch­bishop Cassidy held plates for her.She then served salad, bread andstrawberries to the homeless womenbefore going upstairs in the build­ing to visit several bedridden resi­dents.

The 72-bed hostel, at the edge ofthe Vatican's border with Italy,was opened last year by Pope JohnPaul II as a gift to the Missionariesof Charity. Mrs. Bush heard aboutthe initiative and asked ifshe couldmake a low-key visit to the facility.

Mrs. Bush later said she wasimpressed by the church-run shel­ter.

"It was magnificent. There wasgreat warmth, affection and love,and it did not smell like an institu­tion. It was wonderful," she toldreporters.

When she arrived, Mrs. Bushwas greeted by the 65-year-olddoorkeeper, Adelina Lunati, whothrust a bouquet of flowers intothe first lady's hands and welcomedher "to the house given by theHoly Father to us poor."

Mrs. Lunati, white-haired andnearly toothless, said she had beenabandoned at the age of 10 monthsin an orphanage and had beenpoor ever since. She said beingdoorkeeper is "the greatest joy Ihave - I'm like St. Peter, 1open tothe sick and the poor."

Residents applauded as Mrs.Bush greeted the four nuns whorun the house and two Americannovices who were helping out overthe weekend. The Americans iden-

and her attraction to one of thealiens (Jeff Goldblum). This satireof California glitz, consumerismand grade-B beach party and alienfilms fails amid poorly done musi­cal numbers, sexual innuendos anda denigrating view of women. En­dorses sexual promiscuity. 0, P'G

/

"Indiana Jones and the LastCrusade" (Paramount): The finalinstallment in Steven Spielberg'strilogy on the deeds of rogue archae­ologist Indiana Jones. This timehe's with his father (Sean Con­nery), a medieval scholar out tosave the Holy Grail from the evilclutches of the Nazis, circa 1938.Eye-popping stunts and intensecomic-book violence are balancedby the interaction between fatherand son. Top-notch acting, toointense for youngsters but proba­bly OK for older adolescents. Min­or sexual innuendo, minimal roughlanguage. A3, PG 13.

"Miracle Mile" (Hemdale): Ill-

encounter, and from Bush's re­marks it was apparent tllat he did.

"We have heard your eloquentappeals for an end to the violencein Lebanon," Bush said. Then, inthe single departure from his pre­pared text, the president turned tothe pontiff and added: "My heart,too, aches for the people of thatonce: peaceful land."

"I can assure you that we willcontinue to do everything we canto bring peace -"and to help res­tore Lebanon's unity, sovereigntyand territorial integrity, with thedisbanding of militias and the with­drawal of all foreign forces," Bushsaid.

Only 12 days earlier, tlie popesent a personal message (0 Bushand 16 other world leaders, plead­ing with stronger nations to cometo Lebanon's defense. A Vaticanofficial who deals with Middle East­ern issues said May 26 there is afeeling that "Lebanon has beencompletely ignored" in the UnitedStates, perhaps as a deliberate pol­icy move.

Another Vatican official saidthe pope was clearly trying toincrease international pressure onSyria to withdraw its forces fromLebanon.

Much of the pope's speech wasin praise of the United States and"those values of the spirit" onwhich the country was founded.

The pope noted that in Bush'sinaugural address, he had describedpower as existing "to help people"and "to serve people."

"This is true at different levels,including power at the politicaland economic level," the popeadded. The president, seated nextto him in a high-baCked chair,nodded at the pope's words.

While Bush met privately with.the pope, Secretary of State JamesBaker held talks with his Vaticancounterpart, Cardinal AgostinoCasaroli. Joining them were nation­al security adviser Brent Scow­croft and the No.2 and No.3 offi­cials in the Vatican secretary ofstate's office, Archbishops EdwardCassidy and Angelo Sodano.

Later, the president introducedthe members of his entourage tothe pope, quietly describing what

President, pope meetContinued f~om Page One

"truly, the hour of internationalinterdependence has struck."

Bush began his remarks by stat­ing: "There is no doubt we are wit­ness to dynamic changes in muchof the world. Changes that move .toward greater freedom and basichuman rights.'.'

The president went out of hisway to use Poland as an exampleof this change and said much ofthe credit should go to the Polish­born pope.

Bush praised the recent church­supported roundtable agreementsthat have opened the way to politi­.all pluralism in Poland. The accord"is a tribute to the spirit of thePolish people - as well as to thedetermination of the Polish churchand the Holy See," he said.

Bush told the pope that thelegalization of the Catholic Churchin Poland in early May was "due inlarge part to your leadership."

"This triumph represents'the firstfull normalization of church-staterelations in any communist state- and it is a tribute to your endur- .ing commitment to freedom," hesaid.

Bush then noted that he hadrecently announced a package offinancial measures aimed at en­couraging economic and politicalreform in Poland and elsewhere inthe region.

"We hope these programs willhelp the Polish people achieve theeconomic recovery and politicalparticipation they so rightly de­serve," he said.. Bush's aid program for Poland,announced during a speech inMichigan in mid-May, has gener­ated excitement among Vatic;lnofficials, who see economic recov­ery as the best protector of socialand religiou~ liberalization in thecountry.

One Vatican official active inPolish affairs said the meetingdemonstrated that the pope andBush, perhaps for slightly differ­ent reasons, seem to recognizePoland as a significant testingground for reform in alI of EasternEurope.

Vatican officials had said thepope a1so'planned to strongly raisethe issue of Lebanon during the

tv, movie newsSymbols following film reviews

indicate both general and CatholicFilms Office ratings, which do notalways coincide. . .

General ratings: G-suitable forgeneral viewing; PG-I3-parentalguidance strongly suggested for chil­dren under 13; PG-parental guid­ance suggested; R-restricted, un­suitable for children or young teens.

Catholic ratings: AI-approved forchildren and adults; A2-approvedfor adults and adolescents; A3­approved for adults only; A4-sepa­rate classification (given films notmorally offensive which, however,require some analysis and explana­tion); O-morally offensive..

Catholic ratings for televisionmovies are those of the movie house'

. versions of the films.

"Earth Girls Are Easy" (Ves­tron): When three fuzzy alienscrash-land into a ditzy manicurist'spool, she (Geena Davis) is tornbetween love for her philanderingphysician fiance (Charles Rockett)

Page 12: 06.02.89

12 The Anchor. Friday, June 2, 1989 Small ecclesial c~mmu.nitYI

way to reach HIspanIcs I,

,

high schools

Bishop Feehan

Coyle and Cassidy

Latinist George Jabren receiveda gold medal and a summa cumlaude certificate in the annualNationall,-atin Examination; a sil­ver medal and maxima cum laudecitation went to Rebecca Hulbig;and magna cum laude recognitionwent to Ruta Kulvaitis, AndraVoght, Adam Dooley, ChristopherHaskins, Kristin Harris and Kris­tin Olsen. Classics students partic­ipated in a recent Classics Conven­tion in Cambridge, competing inancient history and Latin languageand track contests.

• • • •Juniors Michael Sibilia and

Brian Split at the Attleboro school.will attend the annual AmericanLegion Boys' State c~mvention,

this year to be held at Bentley Col­lege June 17 to 23. Chosen on thebasis of academic achievement, anessay and extracurricular activi­ties, they will take part in modelstate and local government pro­grams.

Hats at the Taunton high schoolare off to:

-Chad Larivee on his nomina­tion for the Greater Fall RiverOutstanding Lineman Award

-Dave Gauthier and Dan deA­breu for qualifying for the 1­mile in the State Meet

-Todd Ducharme for tying theschool record ih the 110 meterhigh hurdles

- Michelle St. George who setthe school record in the girl'sjavelin.

-Sister Vera Herbert, chosenTeacher for a Day at TauntonHigh by the Taunton Educa­tion Association, Inc.

-Jean Lincoln who broke theschool record for long jump.

-Debbie Arruda, Lauren Shur­tleff, Andrea Baskinger andJen Reardon who broke theschool record in the 200 meterrelay •

-Rebecca Murphy, Jean Lin­coln, Missy Battaglia andCheryl Benjamin who brokethe school record for sprintmedley

-Jean Lincoln, Rebecca Mur­phy, Debbie Arruda and MissyBattaglia w~o placed sixth inthe 100 meters at the StateMeet, the first time a CC girlsteam had placed in the State.

CHARLIE Rice serves spa­ghetti at Teen Ministry dinnerat S1. Joseph's parish, Taun­ton. Proceeds went to SisterDoreen Cloutier, CSC, aboutto depart for missionary workin Africa. During a Mass pre­ceding the dinner she spokeon the work she will be doing.

Bish~p Connolly

Top 10 graduates are Paulo Pe­reira, to attend MIT; Tara Medei­ros, Boston College; April Asata,university of Hawaii; Kevin Mc­Roy, Stonehill; Christina Connelly,Boston College, Monique Doherty,Stonehill; Sean Hayden, NotreDame; Barbara Cannistraro, WestPoint; Michael Spencer, HolyCross; Russell Ford, Marian Col­lege.

At the North Dartmouth HighSchool, Meghan Foley is the high­estranking junior. At an awardsnight program, she received anaward from the College Club ofNew Bedford and the HarvardBook Award. The Wellesley BookAward went to junior CathrineBaptiste and the Holy Cross BookAward to junior Thomas Pacheco.A Hugh O'Brian Leadership Pro­gram award went to sophomoreVince Jornales.

• • • •Principal's Scholarships of Ex­

cellence went to entering freshmenSuzanne Alderson of Christian DaySchool, Fall River; Kevin Grant,Mortin Middle School, Fall River;and George dos Santos, O.L. Mt.Carmel School, New Bedford. TheBishop Stang Parents' Club Scho­larship went to Rene Gagnon, St.Anne's School, Fall River. .

• • • •

Bishop Stang

. After boys' and girls' track teammembers participated in a recentstate class meet, three athletes con­tinued to state competition: CaraMcDermott, who set a school tri­ple jump and 400 record; BrianRamos, who won the 2-mile forthe second straight year, and MuffyMerrick, who won the girls' 2­mile. McDermott is theJirst Con­nolly athlete to qualify in twoevents.

Speech and debate learn mem­bers Matthew Carlos and PorshaIngles competed in the CatholicForensic League national speechtournament last weekend in Phi­ladelphia May 26-28. They werethe first Connolly students to enterthe competition.

The golf team finished regularseason competition in possessionof the Southeastern Mass. Con­ference Division II crown.

• • • •

/ JEFFREY E. SULLIVANFUNERAL HOME550 Locust StreetFall River. Mass.Rose E. Sullivan

William J. SullivanMargaret M. Sullivan

672-2391

Top to students for 1989 at theFall River school are Derek M.Leahy, who will attend CornellV niversity; Alexandra' da Silva,Boston College; Aimee Vezina,Notre Dame; Natalie Troya, Bow­doin; Helena Pacheco, Wellesley;Lori J. Hennebury, Bates; Jen­nifer A.F.J. Tung, McGill; Cathe­rine A. Wilcox, Rhode IslandSchool of Design; Jeffrey M. Perei­ra, Boston College; Monique A.O'Brien, Holy Cross.

By Laurie H.ansen

\XASHINGTON (NC) - A"think tank" of 40 Hispanic lead­ers recently met to develop guide­lines for small ecclesial or basecommunities called for in a 1987Hispanic pastoral plan approvedby the V.S. bishops.

The plan urged creation of basecommunities within parishes and

. recommended developing parishHispanic teams to go door to doorvisiting Hispanics as ways to slowloss of Hispanic Catholics to fun­damentalist sects.

Participants in the "think tank,"listed attributes they thought smallecclesial communities should pos-sess, among them: .

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Ito Protestant churches because th~y

feel the "giant majestic churches <?fthe Anglos" are impersonal. Basecommunities, she said, can "pet-sonalize" Catholic parishes. I

Father Lorenzo Ruiz said 112small communities he had worke~with, at Holy Family parish ipAlbuquerque, N.M., "transforme(lthe entire parish" and'community.

There were no sidewalks an'dinadequate drainage in the poqrHispanic neighborhood in whichthe church was located, he said.When it rained the streets woul~flood and children walking toschool would arrive with theirclothes covered with mud. :

As a result, he said, they werlefrequently sent home for cleanclothes. Parents' participating ih- Reflection pn realities faced ,

by community members and action church communities were con-taken to "transform" these realities. cerned their children were missing

_ Celebration of members' faith school and angered that the cityand lives through liturgy, popular was not preventing the flooding. Ireligiosity, spiritual events and "They organized and wept tpreflection. city hall and even to the statef

_ Evangelization oHallen-away Father Ruiz said. Their effortsand "conversion" of already par- paid off and - using an inexperi-

ticipating Catholics. spil~e~~~u~~~ ~~~~o~:~~;'~t~~fl-- Exercising an "option for the

poor" and themselves acting as community" - the water is nowexamples of justice. drained into existing ditches. I

_ Participation in varied church Miss Cuadra said that in theministries in which leadership is diocese of Raleigh small commud­shared. ities have helped to unite Puertb

Rican, Colombian and Peruvia~Hector R. Rodriguez, 44, a residents who are mainly well,­

member of the team offacilitators educated professionals, and poorfor the meeting from Washington, Mexican and Salvadoran season~l

said that "parishes used to be migrant· workers who work oil* * TOU R3 * * small, close-knit faith communi- area tobacco farms. '. ICANADIAN ROCKIES: 1st CLASS HOT- ties. Now we're saying they need to The relationship of the profes-ELS & MOST MEALS. Visit Seattle, be transformed to that again." sionals to the migrants is "not p~-'Kelowna, Banff, Jasper, Kamloops, Jacqueline Cuadra, diocesan co- ternalistic, but one of genuineVancouver, Victoria, and exult in their ordinator of Hispanic ministry in friendship; she said. Ibreath-taking beauty and charm. Raleigh, N.C.. said Hispanics go Father Ruiz said one stumbling

FOR ONLY block to creation of small com-

$1599 munities nationwide is fear on thb .

~part of some "burned-out" pries~s

AUGUST 11-21 "that this is one more programi'(from/to home airport) they must cpordinate. I

(A' f es b' t t h ) -- . - But, he said, "I can assure youIr ar su Jee 0 e ange this is a model of church in which

SPACE LIMITED - CAll NOW Train for careers In the priest doesn't have to do ever~-REV. J. JOSEPH KIERCE thing." In his experience, he sai~,

Saint Kevin Rectory small ecclesial or base communi-35 Virginia St., Dorchester, MA 02125 ties foster lay leadership and help

Tel. (617) 436-2771 to decrease the priest's duties. Ior In Latin America, such com-

JOHN RIORDAN - DISTANT HORIZONS munities have thrived among thf697 Tremont St., Boston, MA 02118 rural and urban poor and stress

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. ..on_ ............. FL tal "ructure,. I

~d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT dIIhT d1lhT dIIhT d1lhT dIIhT dIIhT d1lhT d111hT dIIhT d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT d1lhT dIIhT~

~ CATHOLIC SOCIAL SERVICES ~~ t···· ~~ . ~~ ~~ MAJO'R PROGRAMS ~.~ . COUNSELING: ADOPTIONS ~~ Individual _ Marriage _ Family HOUSING/St. Francis Residence ~EI for Women ~I

L PREGNANCY SERVICES . ~~ INFORMATION/REFERRAL ~;~ REFUGEE RESETTLEMENT INFANT FOSTER CARE ~

~ ~IL NEW BEDFORD FAll RIVER ATTLEBORO CAPE COD ~~ e.1'<a 59 ROCKLAND ST. . 783 SlADE ST. 10 MAPLE STREET 261 SOUTH ST. ~~ 997-7337 P.O. Box M - So. Sta. 22&-4710 HYANNIS ~EI 674-4881 771-6771 E;;"I

~ REV. PETER N. GRAZIANO, L1CSW, Diocesan Director . ~~.W.W~W.W.~IV.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.qw.W.W"'w.w·1

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13

chological pains ofgrowing up canmake drugs attractive.

"To the adolescent eye, everyo~eelse is happy, except me. All othersfeel good about life and aboutthemselves; I'm the only one withthe problem," he said.

He asked the graduates "to con­sider what you might do in theyears ahead - as parents, helpingprofessionals or just friends - toput yourselves ,between some ado­lescents and their problems."

He suggested that' underlyingthe demand for drugs in the Uni­ted States ,are cultural attitudesthat must be overcome. "Do notbe taken in by the big lie our cul­ture of consumerism perpetuates,"he said. "Do not believe that tohave is to be, that to have more isto be more fully human, and,worst lie of all, to live easily is tolive happily.

"Life will be painful at times.Bear it, and in the burden youbear, you will find happiness." ,

He urged the graduates to realizetheir own" infinite worth, regard­less of what you do or what youhave." .

"I hope you will communicatethis realization by word, actionand the commitment of your con­cern and time to others, especiallyto the young, ,as your personalcontribution to the reduction ofthe demand side of the drug prob­lem in America," he said.

"If demand reduces to zero," headded, "supply no ,longer remainsa threat."

Address -:-- _

Name ~~ ~_,....,_-

Please send me more information ab~ut your,\: - ..

Congregation. ' ',' . A 612/ 89•.

City __~_~--'-State _--- Zip _l.......;c--

.THE ANCHOR~DioceSeof Fall River-Fri., June 2, 1989-, .

It is a problem "that awaits acreative remedy froni you, the nextgeneration of leaders in this greatcountry of ours," he said.

Father Byron argued that resolv­ing the drug crisis requires lookingat the reasons behind the demandfor drugs.

He cited three main causes forthe demand:

- Everyone's desire for a "high,"which comes easily from drugs,but at the cost of dependency, andfar less easily from "athletic, aca­demic, artistic or other achieve­ments."

- The desire to avoid physicalor psychological pain in a culturethat "encourages escape at anyprice" from pain, disappointment,discouragement and monotony.

- Biologica·l predispositions toaddiction, which will not becomeaddictions only "if addictive sub­stances 'are never used."

Among adolescents especially,he said, the desire to avoid the psy-

Graduates challenged: end"drug train" nightmare

MIAMI (NC) - When students,0fSt. Thomas University in Miamigraduated in May, they received alecture on drug abuse.

Jesuit Father William J. Byron,president qf The Catholic Univer­sity of America in Washington,said he was speaking about drugsinstead of usual commencementtopics "without apology" becausethe "drug train" hurtling throughthe country is a national "night­mare."

, .

Write:Sr. Anne MarieDOMINICAN SISTERSOF HAWTHORNERosary Hill Home600 Linda AvenueHawthorne, New York 10532

or call: (914) 769-4794

SisterMarie Edward

,Age: 33Native of: Pennsylvania is

home, but raised in a militaryfamily and lived in ,i'numberof foreign countries andseveral states.

Education: B.A., ImmaculataCollege, Pennsylvania; ADin Nursing, Cochran Schoolof Nursing, New York

;1 Outside Interests: Reading,Art.

"My interest in'nursing d~veloped c~ncurrently with my desire to make alifetime commitment to God. My vocatio'!, a gift from God, is a means

c, ofgrowing closer to Christ." ,", 1,

' ...." ,!

DOMINICAN SISTERS' OF HAWTHORNE' ,A religious community of Catholic ~6men with seven moderh nu';singfacilities in six states. Our one apostolate is to nurse incurable cancerpatients. This work is a practical fulfillment of our faith.The most important talent, highly prized by us, is the talent for sharingof yourself - your compassion, your cheerfulness, your faith - with thosewho have been made so vulnerable and dependent by this dread disease.Not all of our sisters are nurses, butas part of our apostolate, all directlyhelp in the care of the patients.If you think you ha~e a religio~s vocation ahd ~ould iiketo know more'about our work and community life, why not plan to visit with lis. Wewould be happy to share with you a day from our lives.

RENE DICKHAUT ofCoy­Ie-Cassidy was named Division3 Player of the Year on theAll-Scholastic girls' basketballteam chosen annually since190 I by Boston Globe sportsreporters.

"This is where God wants me. "

Child aid 'askedWASHINGTON (NC) - The

U.S. Catholic Conference has askedthe Senate to support an amend­ment allowing low- and moderate­income parents to get governmentaid for, child care even at a relig­ious facility. Frank J. Monahan ofthe USCC's Office of GovernmentLiaison, said the amendment tothe Act for Better, Child Care"would allow parents ,the right toselect the day care provider oftheir choice." ,

The act, if passed, 'would pro­vide grants to nonprofit agenciesto expand child care and wouldgive child care :certificates to low­income working parents.

A very clear message is given. Inall we do - in our celebrations, inour lives - we should share withthe less fortunate.

Several parishes in my area rec­ognize graduating seniors at a Sun­day liturgy, followed by breakfastfor them and their parents. Thegraduates help plan the liturgy andare lectors, giftbearers and so forth.

Again, it is a way for the parishto celebrate with its young people.A special blessing is given as theseniors move on to college, voca­tional schools and fulltime jobs.Often the junior class is involvedin the breakfast, ushering and serv­ing at this event.

Finally, let's look at the longbreak of s'ummer. Is there someway to keep connected to parishactivities? Is there a summer schoolprogram in need of volunteers?Are senior high students needed tohelp with junior high fun activi­ties? Has your parish service pro­jects you can be involved in?',' The parish really needs teenag­ers willing to share their time,talent and treasure. Teens areimportant members ofthe commun­ity.

So, what about it? How will youcelebrate the prom, the ending ofthe school year arid the movementinto summer break? Will you share.in a significant way with others atthis time? I hope the answer is yes.Folks need your energy and enthu­siasm.

The church needs you.

:For the homeless, "

CLIFTON, N.J. (NC) -;- Thediocese of Paterson, N.J., will workto provide the h'omeless with emer­gency, transitional and permanenthousing. A task force plan com­mits the diocese to use land andbuildings "where appropriate andavailable" to provide hO,using.

By Father Joe FelkerIt is prom time. It is time for

end-of-the-year graduation eventsand a general winding down oftheschool year.

It is a time when we can becomevery centered on ourselves and ourschool's customs,'or we can expandand see beyond to new ideas andnew options for celebrating theseevents.

At a recent high school retreat Iwas talking with some juniors andseniors after supper. "Are you goingto the prom?" "How much are youspending?" "Where are you goingfor dinner'!" These were the maintopics of discussion.

I said, "I'm going to the promthis year." After a couple of startledlooks, someone said, "Who is tak­ing you?" I responded "I'm a chaper­one and will be there for the Massbefore." To which I heard, "Oh."

Yes, at least one Catholic schoolhas a prom Mass for the,couples,their parents and staff. Afterward,the couples go out to dinner andthen on to' the dance. It is a nice",ay of reminding everyone thatour religious beliefand val,ues touchall aspects of our lives.

A few of those going to theprom record ~hat they ~pend andgive 10 percent of the total to th~

church or a charity. The cost of adress or tuxedo, shoes; flowers"dinner, hairstyling and the pro initself can easily come to '$400 or$500. Giving $40 or $50 fo churchor a charity is a nice offer-ing tohelp a wor.thy cause.

Another school has an after­graduation party. It costs $25 forthe evening of fun, food, games,movies and prizes, ending with anice breakfast. Besides the admis­sion fee, the public school collectscanned goods and usable clothingfor local food pantries and churchshops for the poor.

.~ •• - .. ".",- .. < .. :- .... ,.. - ~.r-.,.,," : .. 4..~~~/~· • " ••• ....~~..." ... t .. r. •. ~~# • - ..... t .. '>,;.......;-,·· , ..,

MELISSA VALLILO and Kevin Rafferty stand withCoyle and Cassidy..headmasterMichael J. Donly after beingnamed Woman and Man of the Year at the Taunton highschool.

Page 14: 06.02.89

Special GiftsThe Standard Times

$50

~ CATHOLIC CHARITIES

$200

Holy Redeemer Guild, ChathamSheraton-Hyannis

$100

Tara-Dunphy Hotel, HyannisElm Arch Inn, FalmouthBank of New England South, FalmouthBova Publishers, Inc., BostonSI. Mary's Guild, Our Lady of the Isle Church, Nantucket

$80

Ray's Barber Shop, So. Yarmouth

$50

Hyannis PharmacyMchoul Funeral Home, ProvincetownBass River Sunoco, So, YarmouthHallett Funeral Home, So. YarmouthDukes County Savings Bank, Edgartown

US

John E. Medeiros, CPA, Provincetown

UOCavalier Motor Lodge, South Yarmouth

$25

Longlellow's Pub, So. Yarmouth, Cape Cod Excavating, Pro­vincetown, feeney Construction, E. Falmouth, I & L Enter­prises, East Falmouth, Town Cleaners, East Falmouth, River­way Lobster House, So. Yarmouth, Hearth & Kettle Restaurant,So. y'armouth, Teixeira, Florist, Hyannis, H.N. Hinckley &Sons, Inc.. Vineyard Haven, Yates Pharmacy, VineyardHaven, Bass River Exxon, South Yarmouth, Silver Cloud Tow-ing, So~th Ya~mouth ..

$700

Fall River Five Cents Savings Bank

$400

Borden-Remington Corp,

$50

Aberdeen Mfg. Company

$150

Anderson-Little Company, Inc.

$100

U50

Cape Codmoo

SI. Pius X'Conlerence, South Yarmouth

$1200

R~liable Market, Inc., Oak Bluffs

$1000

Peckha,!, Eleclrical, Inc., Hyannis

U72Waring-Ashton-Coughlin-D.D_ Sullivan-Driscoll FuneralDirectors

Fall River Emblem ClubWynn & Wynn, P.C., AttorneysFall River-New Bedlord Express, Assonetlayre Depl. Store

Hathaway Funeral ServicePotter Funeral Service, Inc_, Westport

$25

Catholic Committee on Scouting-Moby Dick Council, WatuppaPackage Store, Inc.,/Westport Fruit Marke\, Electro Systems

$35

$1000

$1600

Fall River

Bank 01 Boston, Southeastern Region

Somerset Mellical Association, In~.

New Bedford

uooAmerican 'Press, Inc.

John F. Folan, ESQ.

Anderson & Olsen, Inc.New Bedlord Credit Union

$400

Bank of Boston, Southeastern Region

$350

Cornish & Co., Inc.

mooNew Bedford,lnstitution lor Savings

$500

i- $25 '

Fairhaven Motors, Brodeur Machine Co., Inc., BellenOil'sjlOritz Corp. .

. . ,

i

II

National Bank of FairhavenSI. Anthony Women's Guild, Mattapoiselt

$100

Taunton$100

Dave's Crossroads Cale, lric., 'South Easton

$50

Dr. &'Mrs. William Donahue

$25

Daniel F_ McNearney Insur;.ce Co.. Edmund's Restauran\,So. Easton '

$60

Leedham Hardware, So. Attleboro

$50

Butler Tire Sales, No. AttleboroJ.E_ Case, Inc., No. AttleboroCharles R. Mason, Atty., No. AttleboroFrank Miller & Sons, Inc., No. Attleboro

$35

Andy's Bay State Auto Body, Inc.. So. Attleboro

$25

Produce Barn, Norton, Daughters 01 Isabella Benedict Circle#61, Doris A Levasseur, North Attleboro, Attleboro Wood­works, Inc., Crown Yarn & Dye, So. Attleboro, Jennings Res-tauran\, So. Attleboro, Tri-Boro Gull, No. Attleboro .

Attleboro

$75

Harry J. Boardman Ins. Agency, So. Attleboro

$65

Ro-Jack's Food Stores, Inc., So. Attleboro-

$750

Attleboro-Pawtuc~et Savings Bank, Seekonk

$600

Society 01 SI. Vincent de Paul, District Council of Attleboro

$500

SI. Theresa Conference_ So. Attleboro

$325

SI. Mary Conference, No. Attleboro

$300

Dottie's Caterers, Pawtucket

$150

SI. Mary's Couples Club, No. Attleboro

$100

SI. Theresa Conlraternity 01 Christian Mothers, So. AttleboroSouth Attleboro Gall Range .E.A. Dian, Inc.

OAK BLUFFS

Sacred Heart $50 M-M Brad Edwards, M-M David Cook; $25 Mrs. Irene H. Pacheco.

NORTH FALMOUTH

SI. Elizabeth Seton $250 M-M GeorgeJ. Pwer Jr.; $100 Mrs. John McNally, Mrs_ Martin Lawless, M-MRichard Welch; $50 M-M Jack Howard, M-M Clifford G.Long, M-M Bernard T.Lawlor, Hugh R. Rooney,M-M Nicholas Verven; $35 M-M Alfred P. Silva; $30 M-M Robert Inman, Roland G. Schnieders; $25 M-MPeter Alinskas, Barbara & Russell Bishop, M-M Robert Galaska, M-M Michael Hinds, Jenkins, Cole &Gleason, May Kenny, M-M Richard Kelly, M-M John MacDonald, Mrs. Alice Kraby, M-M Dana Miskell,M-M James J. Nixon, M-M Lawrence J. Palmer.

WDOOS HOLE

SI. Joseph $400 AFriend; $250 AFriend; $200 AFriend; $100 M-M Cornelius Hickey, M-M BrianMcDermott, M-M Leonard Beford, M-M George Rooney, M-M Kevin Nolan, AFriend; $50 DrlMrs WalterMcLean, M-M Charles Clarkin, Mrs. Daniel O'Grady, AFriend; $25 M-M Barry O'Neil, Louise Stubb, M-MC.R. Heulelder, M-M Fred Metell, Sophie Weslonski, M-M Roland Beliveau, M-M Thomas Orluskie, M-MDaniel Harrington, Catherine Geddes, Patricia A. Harrington, AFriend. -

$200 AFriend; $100 AFriend; $35 DrlM Edmund Finnerty; $25 AFriend

FALMOUTH

. SI. Patrick $500 Anonymous; $300 DrIMrs Paul R. Bouche; $250 M-M Terrence Dineen; $200 AidaVita Re; $100 Edmund C. Wessling, Elizabeth DeMello, M-M Kenneth Rebello, William H. Borden, Jr.,Anonymous; $50 In Memory 01 Frederick & Katharine Greene, Mrs. John Donovan, M-M Michael Early,Reed Hamilton Family; Rita Noll, McManamon Family, M-M James G. Green, M-M Joseph W. Sharp, M-MAnthony Ghelli, M-M Thomas O'Donnell, Anonymous. -

$35 M-M Edward Godlewski, Gertrude C. Arcaro; $30 M-M Charles V. Fay; $25 Jane I. Walker,McCleary Family, M-M John T. McEvoy, M-M Thomas F. Adams, M-M William McEachern, Louise Cook.M-M Joseph McLeISh, M-M Joseph Knych, M-M Albert Fetters, M-M Arthur Mullane, Mrs. GeorgeFonseca, Sherman C. Baker, M-M Peter Bergagna, M-M Frank Medeiros, M-M Eric Peterson, M-M LouisRabesa, Anonymous.

ORLEANS

SI. Joan of Arc $1000 M-M John A. MacL_ellan; $100 M-M John F. Prendergast; $50 M-M Henry D.Chambers, M-M Henry McCusker, M-M Robert Tischler; $25 Beverly Adamkovic, Mrs. Ronald Corrigan,Marie Jones.

PROVINCETOWN

SI. Poter The Apostle $250 Mary Hackett; $100 Mary Lou Santos; $50 M-M Edward Carreiro; $25M-M Joseph Ferreira, Debbie M. Silva & Michael Trovato, M-M John While, M-M Robert Cabral. WarrenCrawley.

Aurora Bird, M-M Richard Roser, M-M John Fernands, M-M Martin Toomey, M-M Thomas J. Glennon,M-M John Loucks, M-M William Boyd, M-M Joseph Raffetto, DrlMrs Alfred Rich, Jr., M-M John Regan,Ellen Tucci, M-M.Charles Kaplan, M-M Daniel Leary, M-M John J. McDonnell, M-M Nicholas Morris, M-MGerard Williams, Dorothy Pender, Sarah Fordham, M-M Alva Brown, lilly Gomes, Raymond Cronin.-M-MJohn Howard, M-M Colin MacDona.I~, M-M James Souza, M-M Charles Papagni.

BUIZARD'S BAY

., SI. Margaret's $100 M-M Paul Moncevicz;$5D M-M James Lvnch, M-M Nicholas Fernandes; $35 M-MJohn Burns; $25 Albert Bass. $50 Jal1)es H.Feeney; $25 Paul ACaldwell

WEST HARWICH

Holy Trinity $400 Elizabeth J. Dolan; $330 Marion J. Halbritter; $200 John Kaveny, M-M Bemis Boies,AttylMrs Joseph W. Downes, Catherine F. George, M-M Gerald F_ O'Neill; $180 DrlMrs Joseph E.Anderson; $150 Wallace &Jeffery Somers; $120 M-M Stanley Nowak; $100 A_Lawlor Burnbaum, M-MRalph Barnes, M-M Edward M. Blute, M-M James Botaish, Jane Britton, M-M Louis A. Chadik, M-M LouisP. Drinkwine, Jr., M-M CorneliusJ. Driscoll, Frances C: George, In Memory 01 Olivia Gorman, M-M JamesW. Howard, M-M Carl Johnson, M-M Eugene B. Kirk, Daniel & Irene Manning, M-M William H. Merigan,Nathan T. Mowry.

$100 M-M Richard Pickett, M-M Alexander S..violi, Joanne Sullivln, M-M John Sullivan, MargaretTrainer, M-M Michael Walsh, Adaline Wetherbee, Joseph Whalen, Joan Whitney, Martha Wilder; $75 M-MWilliam Brophy, Rosemary T. Frizzell; $60 Amos Leylon; $55 Gerald Flintoh.

$50 Mrs. Howard E. Clark, M-M George Ambrose, M-M John F. Coyle, lillian F_ Dowd, EdwardHathaway, Mary M. Moran, M-M Thomas Ogborne, Alice Saudade, Han_ Marilyn Sullivan, M-M Robert E_Welsh, M-M C.M_ Cronin, Oorothy Desrochers, Mary & Helen Doherty, DrlMrs Robert Dolan, M-MKenneth Durling, M-M John Farina, M-M Edward Fontaine, M-M Robert Gallagher, M-M John Gilmore,M-M Paul Hendrick, M-M Arthur Howard, Mrs. Eugene A. Hudson, M-M Richard Larkin, M-M Robert J.Lowrie, M-M Frank Matranga, Alice Miller, M-M Thomas Peterson, Jr_, M-M R_ Terrence Russell, RosemarySchreiner, M-M Leo Shea, Mrs_ William R. Sheerin, Marion Woodlock. Or. William falla, Fernand Fournier,M-M Thomas OgbOlne.

$40 M-M Roger Cahill, M-M Warren Holme{, M-M William Tomkinson; $35 M-M William F. Downey,M-M Joseph Stinson, Mrs. Sharon Stout, M-M Edward Immlr, M-M Herbert PatriQuin; $30 M-M RobertJohnson, M-M Edwin Roderick; $25 M-M Joseph Carvllho, M-M Joseph Fernandes, M-M Fred Gilnelli,M-M Bernard Hanlon, Sr_, M-M James J.. Higgins, M-M Joseph Keough, M-M William O'Donnell, M-MVincent Roscio, Evelyn Savini, George R_ Tucker.

$25 M-M Joseph Aldonis, M-M Raymond Alvey, M-M Walter Arsenault, M-M Julio Barrows, M-MEdward Blake, Elizabeth Bradley, Elizabelh Breed, M-M Edward Burns, E. Cannata, M-M WilliamCavallini, Joseph Codl, John l. Collins.

$25 John Conaghan, M-M Francis Concannon, M-M David Conlin, M-M Matthew Crehan, Mrs. Frank J.Cross, M-M Clifford A. Daluze, M-M Leo H. Dauphinais, M-M Joseph Demango, Mrs. Frances DiNetto, M-MEdward T. Donnelly, Ms. Gail W. Doyle, Catherine Drohan, M-M Bertram Dubois, W.V. Dunn, M-M JohnEastman, M-M John Ferguson, M-M William l. Flynn, M-M Stephen Ford, M-M A.G. Forti, M-M JosephGavin, M-M John Gibbons, M-M Joseph Gilmette, M-M ValereGodbou\, Mrs. Anthony Ganci, M-M Herbertl. Gumpright. M-M Lawrence Henningsen, M-M Harold Heslop, M-M Charles Hodgson, Mrs. OomenickHorvath, M-M Almon Hunter, M-M Patrick Kelleher, M-M Adrien L'Heureux, M-M Brian Lucas, MaryMcCarthy, M-M Donald McGowan, M-M John McGrath, M-M John McKeogh, M-M Joseph Maier_

$25 Mrs. Kathy Mello, Mrs. William Morey, M-M Edward Myers, M-M William P. Novack, Anthony F.O'Donnell, William O'Grady, Mrs. George O'Malley, Joan l. Pasda, M. Abbie Pierce, Annica Pina, Ms. EdithA. Ryan, G.W. Sears, Mrs. Clement F. Smith, M-M Henry Souza, M-M Raymond T. Speakman, M-M MichaelStacy, M-M James Supple, Theresa Sykes, Mrs. Charles Taglialeri, M-M John Tierney, M-M Joseph Tully,M-M Jan Vandenberge, Mary E. Walsh, Rita A. Walsh, Veronica Watkinson, Mrs. Frank Welch, M-MEdmund Williams, Christine Wood, M-M Paul Bedard, The Ebb TidelRichard McCormick. M-M JohnJannell, M-M Robert Paradise, M-M George Sherman, M-M Edward A. Sleeves.

OSTERVILLEI

Ou,l.Idy of the Assumplio~ $1000 Anonymous; $150 M-M John Curran; $100 M-M Armand Mathis;$50 Mrs. Paul Mark Ryan, John Queen, Florence&Norma Keane, Anonymous; $30 ",-M Phifip McCartin;$25 M-M Nichol.s Russo, Mrs. John Reilly, Mrs. Alexander Ellis, Kathryn O'Connor, M-M WilliamNaughton, David Buckley, M-M Odber Mdean, Anonymous. I

EOGARTOWN iSI. EIiZlboth $100 Philip C. Walsh; $50 Dukes County Savings Bank. I

MASHPEE

Christ the King $600 M-M Robert Cishek; $500 M-M William H. Sullivan; $250 M-M Gregory Beckel;$200 John J. Daly; $125 M-M James Lyons, M-M Michael Lane; $100 M-M John MCGrath, M-M ThomsMarchillo, M-M Walter Carlson, Jr., M-M Andrew Carmichael, Mrs. William A. Burns! M-M Donald Cook.M-M A. Edward OeloeJr., M-M John Crowley, Mrs. Howard Lane, Mrs. FrankShea, M-M John Davitt, M-MPaul Roma, M-M Louis Chong, M-M Frank Fantasia, M-M Jean Dian, M-M John Foley, Bov_a Publishers,M-M Dwight Giddings, M-M Ramond Leganowicz, M-M Joseph F. O'Connor, M-M John Davitt.

$60 Catherine Kane; $50 M-M Michael J. Musto, M-M Waller Dudash, M-M John V. Harvey, M-MCharles Whitehead, William Quirk, Helen T. Foley, M-M John D. Wilcox, M-M Peter Ilaxter, M-M DonaldMcCarthy, M-M William Malone, M-M Palmira Bisio, M-M Richard Wanders; $35 M-M Harold Smith Jr.,M-M George Snyder Jr.; $30 M-M Richard Raitto, The Misses Corcoran, M-M John ~ichardson.

$25 M-M Frank Rahery, M-M Thomas Quinlan, Katherine Gomes, Shirley lebergs, ",-M Alcide Cormier,

Ii,

IWalter J Ford, Anthony Garner, M-M Albert Gomez, M-M George Hayes, M-M Curtis Hill, M-M JosephNader, Clara RPacheco, Stephanie Pogorzelski, M-M Richard Priebe, M-M Julio Santos, M-M FrancisSkelly, M-M Millon Soares, Gary Stone, Evelyn Tlilino; M-M James Vlldes I

$150 AFriend; $50 Joseph Costa, M-M WJFitigerald, M-M George PGaspa, Leo ~uckrah, M-M JamesMcNamara, Mrs John Maclennan, Allred Romiza; $40 Mary Daunt; $35 M-M Frank GSouza; $30 EdwardLocke, M-M Ronald Wood; $25 M-M Frank Almeida, M-M Joseph Bento Jr, M'M Ja~es Cabral, M-M RJDineo, William Gallaher, M-M PaUl MGonsalves, M-M Paul Gonsllves, M-M Jlmes FGrady, M-M Robert THowarth, Mary Mendoza, M-M Gile Monii, M-M Sean O'Connor, Lorraine Reardon, M-M Joseph Rose,Marie Rose, Sandra Almeida Serchuck' I

$I00'M-M Daniel Bailey, Paul GKinsella, Lt. Col/M Anthonl' RSolimine; $5DM-'" Robert GHackett,M·MGeorge EDegan, M-M Manuel Duarte, M-M Philip Fullin; $25 M-M John Donlanj Eva Montiero, Mary

..Pinho, M-M Joseph Botelho, M-M George Spooner. .$500 Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney; $275 M-M FrederickV. Murphy; $200 M-M Albe~tGramm, M-M Albin

Gusciora; $150 M-M John l.Lopes; $100 M-M Manuel S. White Jr.. M-M Patrick W.:Lewis, M-M John R.Martin, M-M Arthur Monteiro, M-M John A. Reine, M-M Anthony Spagone; $60 M-M francis P. Losi; $50

- MaryB. Bishop, M-M John G. Clinch; M-M Rodney DeMello, M-M Manuel Raposa, MjMWiliiam Bento Jr.,M-M William Harrington, M-M Benedict Lanni, Antonio Mello Sr.. M-M Charles Tupper: $30 M-M CharlesDavis .Jr., M-M Joseph Farland. . . I .

$25 M-M John A. Bordieri Jr., Gloria Carreia, M-M Gene G. Courtemanche, M-M Joseph Ferreira, M-MOJ. O'Brien, M-M Christopher Silva, M-M Morris M. Teixeira, M-M Charles Anastasia, M-M John Burke,M-M Ernest Cabral. Charles Cardoza, M-M Frank Casassa, M-M John Courtemanche, Mary Daigle, CarmenDegarteiz, M-M Robert Fulton, M-M James F. Grady, M-M ArthurG. Hale, Mrs. JOhn

1.Hommel, M-M T.K.

Mcintyre, M-M Joseph Larkin, M-M ArthurG.lima, M-M Antone Medeiros, Amelia P na, Carol Silva, M-MJoseph Wefers, M-M John Wilcox, M-M Paul Wimer.$250 Anonymous; $150 M-M Ernest PFoley; $100 M-M James Sughrue, M-M John PDoyle, M-M AlbertMartinage, DrlM Valentine Ferraris, William BBrennan, Anonymous; $50 M-M Philip FMackey Jr, M·MPhilip Stone, M-M Richard LStone, M·M Vincent Fierro, Anonymous; $25 M-M Ro~ert JDowling, M-MHugh McC~rtney, M-M Arthur D'Keele, M-M Alfred FVallone, Anonymous I'

SOUTH YARMOUTH .

SI. Pius Tenth $400 M-M James S. McGonagle; $300 M-M HaroldJarvis; $200 Jane Fogg; $100 M-MPaul F. Butler, Joseph M. Carbeau, M-M James E.Lynch, Gordon A. McGill, M-M William H. Reardon, M-MDomenic DiCori, Marie &Charles Doherty, M-M William Harney, Dan &Ann Sullivan, M-M John lic~ M-MJames F. Holland; $75 M-M John J. Cronin, M-M John D'Dowd; $60 M-M Victor Costanzo.

$50 Mrs. Ferdinand F. Killian, Helen McCright, Barbara M. McGrath, M-M Ridhard Bronski, Mrs.Robert Childs, Henry Chiminello, M-M John Curley, Mrs. John G. Manning, Mrs. Jo~n Manwaring; $40William & Mary Conley, M-M Richard Kermenski, M-M Joseph Perna, Curt Ristau; $35 Mrs. StasiaJohnson, Thomas McGrath; $30 Ivor H. & Barbara F. Faucher, Mrs. Raymond Jones! Margaret E. Fahey.

$25 Hefen C. Cunningham, Phyllis Dolan, Patrick &Anne Dineen, M-M Matthew Dopovan, J.R. Hofman,Eugene & Margaret Lanzilla, M-M Eugene Major, M-M Francis Martin, Mrs. John Murphy, John F. &Louise T. McLaughlin, John B. Savage, M-M John Wall, M-M Anthony J. lola, M-M Ri~hard BarStow, M-MWilliam Bullock, Warren Butler, George A. Carmel, Joseph Chaisson, M-M George Cifelli, Mary F. Cline,M-M Donald Johnson, Martin J. Joyce, Mrs. Rita T. McNerney, Cecile R. Packer, M-M Thomas Robinson,Anna M. Roche, Constance &James Ruhan, Mrs. Rico Sa blane, Helen Sprague, Donald &Judith Sullivan.

$50 Mrs Alice Donohue

HYANNIS . i -SI. Frlneis bvier $100 M-M Thomas Gianrdino, M-M Gilbert G. DesRochers, l'Iinilred Bopp, M-M

William O. Bill; $50 M-M James Godsill, Helen Blair Sullivan, Alice D. Degnan, M-M Robert Guertin,Roberta Hart, Mary Rowell, John S. Rotella, Stanley Nicole; $35 Red Rose Inn, M-~ John Gillen, M-MSpencer O'leary, Barbara Flinn; $30 M-M Paul J. Cahill, M-M Gil Raposa; $25 Anne 0_ Cullinane, lindaFontneau, M-M Horlce C. Roderick, Christina Mulcahy, M-M Julius P. Morin Jr., Margaret l. Pieroni, M-MQuentin M_ Harmon, M-M Arthur Conley, Mrs. Wesley Bennett M-M Bernard Foley, Patricia M. Flanagan,Charles D'Agostino. , I '.

SANDWICH

Corpus Christi $200 M-M Gary M_ Della Posta, Anonymous; $150 M-M Ch~rleJ A. Peterson; $100'Francis X. Bova, M-M Robert F_Leahy; $75 M-M Robert G. Quinn, M-M Henry J. Raux; $50 M-M Mario G.Baratta, M-M Edward A. Brennan, M-M Robert J. Crowley, Richard Hadley, M-M Flancis J. McCusker,M-M Kenneth W_ Mooney, M-M John l. Roberti; $40 M-M F. Dow Clark; $30 M-M Paul R. Regazio; $25M-MNeil W. Allison, M-M James M. Boles, M-M Gerald E. Caron, M-M Roland E. Ch~vrefils, Theresa P.Chisholm, M-M Michael Doolan, M-M Joseph P. Greene, M-M John J.lrvine, Jennie t!.Lesperance, M-MRoger C. Mazerolle, Jayne l. Messina, M-M Paul J. O'Connell, Victor Pasteris, M-M Jay Shapiro.

NANTUCKET i.SI. Ilry -O_l. oltholslo $100 Dennis Santangelo, Aele McKeever; $50 Mrs_ Ric~ard Congdon, M-M

James McKenna, Marsha Kotalac; $40 M-M Richard Caton; $25 M-M Stephen Lamb, ",-M Richard Hardy,Joseph Abdallah, M-M Richard Starr, Julie Reinemo, M-M Callie Pearce, M-M Robert McGrath Jr., M-MLarry Manchester, M-M Fred Coffin. I

$50 M-M Jean C. Berruet; $25 M-M Albert Glowacki, M-M Glenn DaSilvl, Mrs Leonora JGaspie,I

PARISHES

EAST f ALIOUTH

$1. Anthony $250 M-M John Michaels; $200 John Coppinger; $160 M.M Donald Kart; $150 AlvaroLOIles; $125 M-M Eugene Brady; $120 M-M Angelo Esposito; $100 M-M William Bonito, M-M GeorgeBotelho, John P Cabral, Alice S Dulra, L1cI/Mrs- William Joyce, M-M Richard Lemoine, Margaret RMcGalligan, Madeline McKenna, M-M Charles Mahoney, M-M Arthur Monteiro, Geraldine ARobbins,M-M Plulino Rodrigues, Mrs MPSimmons, M-M Manuel GSouza, M-M Frink MTeixeirl, M-M John PVidal; $75 Donnl Sofuolis; $70 Robert Calarella; $60 Ella MlY Hayes, M-M Lawrence Peters; $50 M-MMichael Augusta; M-M George Barboza, M-M Willilm ABurke, Mrs Hilda 0 Cabral, Gloria MCarnmey,Ar1IIlIndo Costa, M-M Edwlrd Duggan, Beatrice BEmerlld, M-M George Gonsalves, M-M John Goldpaugh,fredil Mae HlYes, M-M Stephen PHolmes, Edwlrd Kendrigan, M-M Allred AMarks, Arthur Marshall,M-M Manuel CMedeiros, M-M James O'Donnell, M-M Hugh Owens, Shirley MPecue, M-M Antonio Pilla,lamesS Pine, DrlM John Podlaski, M-M John Sattelmair, M-M John Shea, Emma RTavares, M-M MauriceHames. M-M Joseph Teixeira, CHTurell, M-M Mark WYoung; $40 M-M Daniel Ferreirl, M-M JoaQuim RLiAll, M-M Antone Mlrtin Jr, Mrs MLRezendes, M-M Joseph LTavores, M-M Antone Vieirl; $35 M-MGeorge Chlmplgne, M-M Rllph Hamilton, M-M Richard G'Hirtle, M-M Gerlien Kuipers, Agnes BLewis,M-M Vincent Luckrlft, M-M Louis Marshall, M-M John O'Calllghln, Bllnche Perry; $30 M-MJesse Costa,Geoevieve Farese, Mlrglret Martine, M-M Theophilus Olivoirl, M-M Jude C ROYlls, M-M Gilbert LTlnres; M-M Mlnuel Aguiar, M-M Gerlrd RAlves, Domingl Andrlde, M-M Thomls Arnold, Rita 81rtel,"M Adolph PBishop, M-M Willilm Bonito, M-M Henry Borchelt, M-M Glry Botelho, Mlrion Bergess,II-M George PClbrll, M-M Jlmes Cardeiro, M-M Joseph Cmoll, M-M Arthur Cilmbelli, M-M Plul Cotter,"'M Willilm J DeMello. Lorrline DePonte, M-M Ernest DeSouzI, M-M John OilS Jr, M-M JoaQuimDomingos, M-M Stanley CEldredge, M-M Johq JFllnlgln, M-M Frink figuerido, M-M Arthur Fonseca,M-M Carl fonseCl, M-M Louis Fucillo, M-M RlY Godin, M-M John Gumbleton, Nlncy Gustafson, IreneHlndy, M-M Robert Henderson, M-M George Howlrth, M-M Bernlrd MIgnos, M-M Oaniel Killettl, M-MKenneth Kozens. M-M Willilm Kersey, M-M Edward Knights, M-M Robert Levert, M-M Frink liml, M-MDanielL Lopes, M-M Louis McMenomy, M-M Frink RMacedo, M-M Chilies Macleod

$25 M-M George Mlndigo, M-M frank Moniz, M-M Benjamin FMoreland, M-M Joseph FMotta, M-MJoseph Peter, M-M John Rlpoza, Manuel F RlPOZl, Ronald J Rlpazl, M-M Joseph Reihl, MiryRichlrdson, M-M Wllter J Roach, M-M donald Robello, Miry L Robello, M-M Gilbert J Roberts, RuthRodriguez, M-M Virgilio Rodriques, M-M David Sinicki, M-M Edward Santiago, Mrs Dlniel Shea, M-MThomls Shevory, M-M Joseph Souza, M-M John Stm, M-M ManuelL Tavares, M-M John Vlrao, M-MGeorge EWeeks, Mary Whitley, M-M Robert f link

$100 M-M Thomas ABrown, M-M Joseph PLosi, M-M Guy Nickerson; $80 M-M Kevin Smaller; $75- M-M DanielL Pacheco; $50 M-M Joseph Andrlde, M-M Tony Andrews, Ritl Banville, M-M Harry Corbett,Barbarl Feener, Omer Gervlis, M-M Willilm S Guilmartin, M-M Stlnley Helmsdorff, M-M Ernest GHolcomb, M-M Michael Miller, M-M Frank Teixei,.; $35 M-M Kevin Cavlnlugh, M-M Richlrd Lewis; $25Timothy JAndrade, M-M Robert HBourlssa, Kathleen Carr, Grace Cltrambone, Mrs Wllter Cronin, M-M

POCASSET

ST_ JOHN EVANGELIST $500 M-M.Raymond ELambert; $200 M-M Robert O'Brien, $150 M-M GeorgeoDenmark, Mario Timothy Villanti; $100 M-M Lawrence Brennan, William MacLean, M-M VincentCorsano, Walter Shea, M-M Neal Hayes, M-M Robert Mosher, M-M Bartley FO'Connor Sr, M-M Richard JMcMorrow, M-M Hubert Thomas; $75 M-M John FNelson; $50 Dennis RMannix, M-M Robert Stark. M-MRalph Brown, Robert McCann, M-M Lester Johnson, M-M BBergin, Mrs Jane Tobin, LeRoy Perry, M-MWallace Mackinnon, M-M Michael MRaab,M-M George Barber, Mrs Catherine ADelaney, M-M Leo PJacobs, M-M Joseph PSullivan Jr, Joseph Sullivan, Henrielta Keenan, M-M John FHenderson, M~MDaniel FFoley, Caroline Damron, M-M Charles FCollins, M-M Stephen Bertrand, M-M Neil VCulhane, M-MWilliam Beninghol, Mrs Otto Becker, M-M Willard EOlmsted, Harold GCzarnellki, M-M Ernest APlante Jr,M-M Harold Czarnetzki; $40 M-M Paul JVella; $35 M-M Frank GShannis, M-M John MButler, M-M FredComings, M-M ADimodica, Mrs Michael Fitzgerald, Elizabeth Maginnis; $30 Mrs Raymond Lucier, M-MDomenic Colombo, M-M Joseph TMurtha, Donald JFord, M-M Cahrles Baron, Josephine Brandon, HelenMurray - . .

$25 M-M Allan RDean, M-M Charles Cahill, M-M Stephen FConnor, Mrs Alice Walsh, Irene Lewoczko,M-M John Murner, M-M Russell Stuchlak. Mrs Eleanor Tracy, M-M George Milne, M-M Joseph Ciampa,

. M-M Frank JLuizzi, M-M Philip Embrescia, M-M Rene Bergeron, M-M Norman Nichols, John McNamara,M-M Henry JGoff, Francis Mackedon, Mary McGowan, M-M Gordon Wixon, M-M Robert MBerube, M-MFrank Spata, M-M Ronald O'leary, M-M Louis MDiMarzo, M-M Ralph WLomma, M-M Joseph Agrillo, M-MJoseph Arcail, Mrs Mary M Perchard, M-M Leonard Dser, Mrs Charles Moore, M-M Patrick Malone,Eleanor GSheridan, Albert A Casey Jr, Mrs Benjamin FDimlich, Mrs William McGarr" M-M AndrewMcGonagle, Mrs Frank Todesca, M-M Robert RileY,Ann Dunne, M-M Howard Travis III, M-M Jeffrey Rose,M-M Michael McHugh, M-M Wiater SPower, M-M Martin Hiltz, Agnes Rogers, Dea Lawrence, FlorenceKircher,Joseph SPiccone, M-M William FCoughlin, M-M John Dunphy, M-M Peter Milner, M-M MichaelHalatyn, Mrs Nathan Keith, M-M Edgar Beauregard, Mrs Herbert Watson, Joseph-Linda deBenedictis,M-M Vincent Vancini, M-M Kevin McGonagle, M-M John Coughlin, M-M Joseph Scannell, M-M RobertPrimmerman, M-M Patrick McDonough, M-M Gerald REscolas, M-M George PCummings, Mrs BenjaminLiliewski, M-M Thomas O'Reilly, M-M J ED'Amore, Michale JLePore, M-M Robert Corey, Olive CGaffey,M-M William Desmarais, M-M Henry Hinden, Claudette M Moses •

$1500 Rev. James WClark; @4DD M-M Ricahrd Dian; $120 M-M James Lucas; $100 M-M Johneigliaccio; $75 Marie TJohnson; $50 Robert Collyer, M-M Robert Keane, M-M Michael Cicoria, M-MJames O'Reilly, M-M David Schubert; $35 M-M Edward Kenny; $30 M-M Thomas Dungan, M-M DonaldWard, M-M Matthew O'connell; $26 M-M Francis Steele, Aida Boucini, M-M Victor Houard, Mrs HerbertSchaefer, M-M Raymond Ward, M-M Michael Kelly, M-M Ronald Crossman, M-M Peter Mackin, M-M SamCarchidi, M-M Frederick Dunbury, M-M John Lennon, M-M Michael Harrington, M-M Carmen DiMuzio,M-M David Judge, Elizabeth O'Neil

$500 Richard Crespi, AFriend; $300 Nickerson-Bourne funeral Home, M-M Rober Jones; $200 Afriend; $100 M-M Patrick Deasy, M-M Lawrence Peraull, M-M William Cowen, M-M John Rando, JohnGrant, !>1-M Harold Shurtleff, Mrs. manuel Britto, M-M Keith Songer, Katherine MacArthur, M-M StanleyBergeron, M-M Daniel Dlinn, M-M Ronald Majewski,'A Friend; $50 AFriend; $40 M-M Albert Giordano;$35 Don B. Teed, Paul Nugent, Elizabeth Taylor; $30 M-M Robert Nash, M-M George McAndrew:

$25 M-M Edward Lajeunesse, M-M Bernard O'Donnell, M-M Thomas Dunlavey, M-M William W'asha­baugh, Betty Mortimer, M-M Gorden Griffin, M-M Edward Shay, M-M Gerald Conlin, M-M Arland Shields,M-M John Grant, Jr., M-M Edward Grant, M-M Donald Perkins, M-M Barry White, M-M James Vogel, M·MVictor lindblom.

Page 15: 06.02.89

rI

CENTERVILLE

D~r Lady olVictorY $750 Re~.·~~hn-A. Per;y; $500 'M-til William Prior; $200 M-M-Emil~G~eriin, tiM .James Murphy, M-M James Pendergast; $125.M-M Joseph Reardon; $100 M:MWiliiam Devine, EdwardW. Kirk, M-M George Sheehan, Mrs. Robert D. Thompson, M'M Richard Griffith, M-M Richard G..Parojinog. M-M John B. Sweeney, M-M Edward·D. Tocio, John Vetorino; $75 Mrs. Valmore Guertin.

$5D M·M Frank J: Carey, M-M John T. Carney, M·M Lawrence F. Chenier, Kathryn Connors, FlorenceEagan, Mrs. Robert Elliott, Gertrude A. Fisher, M-M Robert G.Levine, M-M Robert McDonald, Mrs. ArthurMorash, M-M Pasquale j, Russo, Julia Sullivan, Alice Toscano, M-M John Willett. M-M Robert Cannon,M-M Leo Coveney, M·M Michael Dean, M·M Michael Gilligan, M-M Daniel A. Harkins, M-M Everett B,Merrifield, Jr., M·M Joseph Murphy, M·M Michael j, Tenaglia. .. .'

$40 Mary F. Foley, M·M Daniel J. Gallagher; $33 M-M Paul Charest; $3D Peter Ausiejus; $25 M:M JakobAdam, Dr/Mrs Curtis Barry, M-M Ernest Bergeron, M-M Richard J. Bianco, Eileen Burton, Helen T.Callahan, M-M Richard Carroll, Joseph Cenga, M-M Edward Clark, M-M Francis X. Collins.

$25M·M Frank j, Deleo, M-M John Gentile, Maty T. Grace, M-M Thomas Hersey, M-M Edward B.Hutchinson, Jr., M-M Charles Kerr, M·M Roland j, Morin, M-M Peter Murray, M-M Robert A. O'Neil, M·MGerald M. Ott, M·M Edward Perry, M-M Edward Peterson, M·M Anthony Pino, Mrs. Walter E. Robbins,M-M R.j, Russo, M-M Paul j, Smith, Jr.. M-M William Stone, M·M Lawrence Verrier, M·M David j, Werner,Mrs. Robert Wheeler, M·M Chester Yacek.

$25 M-M Bento Correia, Dr/Mrs Louis DeRosa, M-M Harold Graham, M-M Leonard Higgins, Leo A.Horstman, M-M Walter Janson, M·M John Lees, M-M John Norton, Mrs. Gerald R. Phillip, M·M John R.Robichaud. Gloria Rocha, M-M Anthony Silvestri, Joseph A. Tweed, Antanas Vieskalnis, M-M StephenGouveia.

WEllflEEt, Our lady 01 Lourdes $100 Maria Ueberwaser; $25 j,l. Hastings.

BREWSTER

Dur lady 01 the Cape $50 M-M Charles Malone; $25 M-M Richard TWilling

CHATHAII

Holy Redeemer $200 M·M Robert Byre. M·M Charles Magner; $100 Francis X Bova, M·M WilliamBrennan, M·M Norman Normandeau; $59 Helen McCarthy/Anne Raleigh, M·M Douglas Wells; $35Nancy Erskine; $25 Mrs Marjorie EConnors, Ida Galligan.M-M Gary Hackett, M·M Clifford Primeau, MaryRopulewis

TAUNTON

Our Lady 01 Lourdes $500 Our Lady 01 Lourdes Conference, St Vincent de Paul; $50 M·M David FMedas; $30 M-M Mario Pereira; $25 M·M Carlos Cabral, M·M Anthony Corriea, Mrs Ida Crowninshield,M-M Laszlo Kakuk Sr, M-M Richard King. M-M Baldomero Pena, Mrs Peggy Reams, M·M Paul Gregg.Gilberto Resendes, Mrs William 0 Shea, M-M Stephen KSherman, M·M Joseph Silveira, M-M Gilbert MTeixeira, Mrs Barbara Wordell, AFriend

51. Paul $75 Deacon/M John Schondek; $50 M-M Matthew Schondek, M-M Robert Roulusonis, M-MBrian Eddy; $30 M·M Raymond Rogers; $25 M-M Roy Moss, M-M Norman Menard. David Correia. M-MRichard Perra. M-M Lyman Taylor'

Sacred Heart $700 Rev Cornelius JO'Neill; $100 M·M Joseph Kuper, Mary GKennedy, Paul WSaben.M·M Oaniel MLeBrun, M-M David Dennis, M-M Horace Costa; $50 M·M Robert McClellan, M-M HectorQuintana, M·M Joseph Tavares. M-M Thaddeus Kuczewski; $40 Maxine Baldini; $35 M·M Frank Vaz &Family; $30 M-M Joseph Duarte; $25 M·M Steven Rubadbu, Grace Ganzer, M-M Galen Rheaume, M·MAllred Baptista Jr, M-M Eugene Braga,Mrs Louise Kelliher, M-M Manuel Goes. James Leonard, Vonda LeeLeonard, M·M William J McDonald, M·M James Hebert. Helen Reis, M-M Robert Vierra, M-M John LHeureux, M-M Frank Rose, Mrs Edward Feeney, Mrs Leo Brady, Melisas MSmith, M-M Edward Cayton,Thomas Halloran, M·M Brian Reed, M-M Raymond Thebault, M·M Raymond Francisco, M·M GeorgeRezendes, M·M William Lopes, Mary Ann Rogers, M-M James Wyall, Mary Bullock, FrancisO'Keele, M-MRWJohnson, Esther VMcDonald, Madeline Hathaway, James Martin, M-M Joseph Martin, M-M JosephIsidorio, M-M Albert Mendonce, Matthew Kuczek, M-M Jones Johnson, M-M Joseph Burke, HelenaMatteson

51. Joseph $650 Ally/M David Gay; $150 M-M David Bisio; $50 M·M Peter Reilly, M·M StanleyPawlowski; $25 Paul Blain, Robert M Barbosa Jr

51. Anthony $100 James Nunes, SI. Anthony Prayer Group, John Ferriera; $60 Hilda Wyatt; $50 JoseSCabral, Stephen Correia; $30 Idilio Nunes; $25 Francis Campos, John J Sikorski. Joseph Correia,Catherine Oliver, Mary &Walter Stadnisky, Alice Sousa, Antonio Amaral, Richard J cordeiro; $50 M-MJames Pereira; $25 Manuel GOUlart, Maria Silvia, Richard Pacheco, Maryanne Jacinto, Anthony Burgess

Stllary $1000 In Memory 01 Rev. Msgr. James Dolan; $100 M·M Joseph lannoni, Dorothy McManus,William WSmith, Robert & Diana Sullivan; $60 Peter Corr; $50. Pauline Orsi; $30 Marion Campbell, MrsRalph Reckard; $25 M·M William Balthazar, M·M James L Downing. Mrs Thaddeus Figlock, M-M AlvinGosson, James Kelliher, Charles Kelly, Louanne Laughlin, Francis McCarthy, M·M James Silvia, M-MCharles Tripp

$300 Spanish Apostolate at SI. Mary's; $100 Mrs Claire Auger, M·M Orlando deAbreu, Mrs Nina Knox,M·M Louis Raposa; $60 Dr/M William JCasey; $50 M-M Ronald Tauraias, M-M George Powers, Mrs JohnMocka. M·M Joseph Medeiros. Mary EMcNamara, David Leonard. Bertha Leonard, William FCarney; $40M·M James Keogh, M·M Edward Emsley; $25 M-M James Alvilhiera, M·M Raymond Bollelli, MargaretChaisty. M·M Charles Cronan, Margaret Dorsey, M·M John WDowney, M-M William Fisher, WilliamFitzgerald, Mrs Joseph Fournier, Mrs Norman Gordon, Mrs William Hansen, M·M Ralph Hodgson, M-MJames Lavigne, M-M Edward McGaughran Sr, Monica McGuire, Blanche Paquette, Mrs George Raymond,M-M Mark Reilly, M-M Mark Raposa, M-M Russell Seekell, John Sullivan, M-M Robert Thigpen, RonaldWilkins

51. Jacques $100 M·M Paul Racine; $50 M·M William grunday; $25 Mrs Willrid Milot

EAST TAUNTON

Holy Family $100 M·M Peter Deniz. Mrs Frances Scroggins; $60 M·M Thomas Giggin; $50 M·MJoseph Kramer, Jr, Mrs Mary Silvia, Pacheco Egg Co, Stetson's Agway Sales; $25 Mrs Frank Faria, M·MFrancis Legere Jr, M·M Charles Perry Jr, M-M Stephen Pielech, M-M Stephen SUllivan, M·M David StYves, M·M Richard Martin, Mrs Albert Banks, James Pacheco, Janet Malloch, M·M John Smith, AnneBettencourt

RAYNHAII

51. Ann $150 M·M Norman Poirier; $100 M-M John 0 Hislop III, M-M George Dion Jr, M-M LeoChampagne. Eleanor FO'Connor, M·M Charles Dyer, M-M Stephen PRogers; $50 M-M John Trucchi, InMemory 01 Eugene WDuarte, M-M Michael George. M·M Edward Bolton. M-M Joseph DelSignore, M·MJohn Kourtz, M-M Donald Toner, M·M John WScully, M·M George Gould, M·M Theodore ESargent Jr,M-M Arthur Howell, M·M Frank Ventura, Marlene Fisher; $60 M-M Oscar Vitali; $40 M·M Brian Gregg;$30 M·M Daniel Poyant; $25 M·M Robert Hill, M-M Mark O'Connell. M·M Frank Charest Jr, M-M RobertGray, M-M Russel Martorana, M·M Frederick Santos, M·M John Plante, M-M Robert McCormack, DonnaMack, M·M James Machado, M·M Thomas Porter, M-M Stephen PCosta. Mrs Lillian Rogan. M·M RichardVieira, M·M Phillip Balanger, M·M Gerard Carney, Mary O'Neil, M·M Allred Machado, M-M AndrewGalligan, M·M Joseph linhares, M·M Michael Hill, M·M John GManganaro, Mrs Paul Nelson, M-M DavidBurke, M·M Abel Ventura, M·M David Bonaparte, M-M Joseph Sylavain, M-M John AFurtado, M-M DanielEvans .

$100 M·M Henry Croimbie, M·M Mark Neville; $65 M·M Robert Adams: $60 M-M Edward MTokarz;$50 M-M John Pickard, M-M Richard Tonry, M-M Sheldon Estabrook, M-M John Sheehan, M-M JaymeMcDonough, M·M Albert Lousbury, M·M Robert FMurphy; $35 M-M John Cockerham; $30 M-M RobertReddy, M·M Antenor DaSilva; $25 M·M Lawrence Frost, M-M David Rocha, M-M Bruce DeWolle, M-MMichael Fitzsimmons, M·M Arthur Souza, M-M NeilJoseph, M-M John Roche, M·M Thomas Murray, M-MThomas Smith, M·M Robert Rodier, lola Flaherty, M·M Paul Bowen, M·M William Tripp, M·M DanielO'Brien, Thomas Murray, M-M Charles Lynch; M-M Robert Silva, M·M Paul Brezinski, M-M TimothySlattery, M·M GilbertSantos, M·M Joseph Gaivois, M-M Edward Smith, M·M Bernard Ruane, M-M Jose DeOlim, M-M Raymond Tourangeau, In Memory of Helen EMcNamee, Christopher Fraga, M-M Joseph WMcDonald

$300 Thomas J Whalen; $100 M-M George Bumila; $25 M-M Robert Silveira

SOUTH EASTON

Holy Cross$IOO Louise McMahon; $30 M-M Joseph MacDermott

NORTH EASTON.

Immaculate Conception$250 M'M Robert O'leary; $200 Theresa Prall; $50 M-M Virgil Andrews, M-MJ0 Mullen Sr;$40 M·M Joseph RCleary; $30 M·M Robert McDonald,Alma& Frank Ryan; $25 George&Gladys Knapp, Michael & Claudia Briody, James 0 Mullen Jr, Mrs George Pratt, M-M John Bellino, M-MEdward Casieri, Mrs Edward Grant

M-M Egino Savioli, M-M Frederick Bartek, M-M David Reed; $75 Or. Keith Choquelle, M·M RaymondMorrissey; $50 M-MJohn.Harrington,.M·M.Edward.Kelley.M-M Harold y!ashburn; $40 M·M Salvatore"

• Ciccio; $35 M-M Alan Blaha, M·M David Gibbs ".$25 Bernadine Veiga, M-M Armond Beauregard, M'aj/M J.T. Murphy, M·M John O'Connell, M-M Robert

Joy, M-M Garerd Lafrancois, M:M David Carreiro, M-M PauJ.Taylor,. M-M HenfY Simoneau, MildredBellavance, M-M Paul Bellavance, Cecile Schneider', Mrs. Thomas Clinton, Mary Rainville, M-M JosephLemieux

$100 M·M Edward Lopes, Jr. M-M Johp Braun, M-M Edward O'Donnell M·M Donald Desvergnes, Mrs.Francis Kelley; $50 M-M Gerard Champagne, M-M Raymond Farrell, M-M Neil Jacques; $35 M·MRaymond Diresto, Thomas Keane; $25 M·M Ted Smith, M·M Leonard fitzpatrick,.M·M David Adams, M·MArmand Teixeira, M·M Walter Coelho, Emerald Hanlon, DanielA. Pion M-M Joseph Destefano, M-M peterSbardelli. M·M Robert Lamarre, M-M Williams Bergevine, M-M Harold Kelleher, Jr, Irene Bolton. Mrs.William McKenna and John .

$80 Dr1M Lino Tiberi; $30 M·M Manuel Rebelo; $25 Mrs. Milton Dale, M-M Paul Lorincz, M-M Stephanj, Globa, Louis Desvergnes

ATTlEBDRD FALLS

Saintllark Parish $150 M-M Jamesj, Swanson; $100 M-M Norman Rogers, M·M FrankSpinale, Nina ..Olson; $75 M-M Edward Knapp; $50 DominickLaFratta, M-M Peter Cragan, M·M Gregory Cavalieri, Mrs.Judith Maclean, M-M Leonard Roberge. DrlM Rene Bousquet, M·M Alfred Hopkins; $40 Mrs, Goerge.Johnson, M-M Wayne Harrison, M-M John Folan; $35 M-M Thomas Gledhill, M·M Arthur Barry, EugeneTouzin, M-M Laban O'Brien; $30 M-M Richard LeCompte, Jerry Pepi

$25 Mrs. Leo Monast. M·M Phiiias Lallier, M·M James Harackiewicz, M·M Joseph Dery, M-M Eric.Hughes; M-M Bernard Proia, Mrs. Paul Lavoie, M-M David Lucia, David Casale, Michael Babul, Jane K.Kelley, Grace B. Fitton, M-M Armand Brunelle, III, M-M Delphis Soullier, M-M Donald LaFratta

MANSFiElD

51. Mary's $200 SI. Mary's Catholic Woman's Club; $100 M·M John Wilson; $50 M-M Francis LMcGowan; $25 M-M John Barry. 51. Mary $150 Mr. RobertG. Didas; $100 M-M Gary Willis; $80 M·M William j,Lawrence, Sr.; $75 M·MAdam Spilewski; $65 M-M Thomas E. Rogers; $60 M·M Charles E. Egan; $50 M-M E. Atwell, M·M WilliamCooney, M-M C.M. Fillmore, M-M Bruce Gallagher, M·M Paul KildUff, M-M Dominic Poillucci, M·M R.Vantassell, M·M Thomas Volta, M·M Anthony V. Ferrara, M·M Patrick McPherson; $40 Mrs. James Coyne,M-M Janies Musto; $35 M-M Alfred Turinese; M·M John Todesco, M·M Alvin Steward; $30 M-M BarryBreen, M-M Richard Breen. Mrs. George Pomlret

$25 M·M Williama Adie, M-M Louis Amoruso, M·M Tom Balboni, M·M John Brunelli, Mrs. RichardColley, M-M Edmund Donovan, M-M William Ferris, M·M John Girard, Mary Ellen Gremore, M·M PhillipHatch, M-M Michael Heroux, M·M RobertUnari, Kevin O'Sullivan. James Palladino, M·M Gary Palmieri,M-M Francis Shaw. M·M Thomas Sheehan, M·M Robert A. Shulfleton, M-M Paul Elhier, M-M EdgarDeviney, M-M Mark Anderson, M-M Robert Shaw, M-M Franklin Fleck, M·M James St. Don, M-M GeraldWright, M·M Glenn SanGiacomo, M-M Paul Murphy, M-M Richard Sherman, Viota R. DePrezio, M·MRonald j, Sullivan, Jr., Mrs. Robert Macivor, M-M Francis Ferney, M-M T. Scarpellini, M·M AlexanderThompson, M-M Michael Harn, M-M Doug Ernst. M·M Raymond Collins, M-M John Stanovitch, M-M .Ronald J. Sullivan. Mrs. James Talbot .

No. AlIleboro

51. lIary's $500 Mrs. John Smith; $200 M-M Paul J. Roche; $150 St. Mary's Women's Guild; $125 Mrs.Elmer Ralston; $100 In memory of John R. Carter In memory of Rev. Msgr. Paul F. Terracciano, Inmemory of Mary j, Tetrault, M·M Howard Gaudette; $50 In memory of M·M Thomas Langford, In memory01 M-M Adelord Tetrault, In memory of Edmond E.Levesque, St. Mary's Altar.Servers, M·M NormandBrissette; $30 M-M Frederick Whittier; $26 Dr/Mrs. Robert Bedard; $25 M-M Raymond Desautel, M·MLouis E. Ganon. Regina Herrick, M-M Owen Johnson, M-M Michael Roche, Lillian Wojciechowski

Sacred Heart$IOD Courtois M·M Raymond. Johnson M·M Charles, $50 Dion M-M Paul, Doucelle M·MDonald; $40 Alexander M-M Bruce; $30 Richards Mildred; $25 Bennett M·M Andrew, Centazzo M-MPeter, Cloutier M-M Arthur, Coyle M·M Brian, Fredette M·M Robert, Herou. Robert, Lacasse M-MRaymond, Macksoud M-M Edmund, Marcil Mrs. Henry, Martineau Marielle, Mercier M·M Kevin, NalleyMary, Saeeaw M-M Narin Pinsonnault Denise, Prefontaine M-M Bertrand, Tattrie Mrs. Madeleine, CarrollM-M Robert, Jelle Mrs. Cecile, Landry M·M George, Perry M-M Charles, Pinsonnault Mrs. Ester,Prelontaine M-M Gerald

NORTON

Saint lIary's $240 M·M Forrest Wallace; $200 M-M Edgar Bosworth; $100 Vangie Fonseca, M·MWilliam Lynch; $60 M·M John Drane $50 M-M Kevin Eagan, M-M Donald Halloran, M·M Lawrence TaylorM·M John j, Camara, M-M John Mannix, M-M Michael Murphy, M-M Ernest S. Tasho; $40 M-M JosephMateria, M-M Thomas Sisto $30 Mary Gouveia, M-M Paul Grenier

$25 Patricia Anderson M·M Edward Beatty, M·M Eugene F. Boyle, M-M Paul Chastenay, Jr, M-MMichael Feldmann, M·M Albert Harvey, M-M Herbert Hunter, Eleanor Higgins, Martha B. Howell, M·MWillrid LaPointe, Mrs. Donald Nevius, M·M Andrew M. Principe, Mrs. Arthur C. Puscheck, Mrs. RobertRussell, Robert Smith, M-M John F. Sullivan. M-M Stephen Austin, M-M Armand J. Brown, Jr., MaryCronin, M-M Paul Cunniff, M·M Richard Demers, M-M James A. Devine, M-M Earl H. Dion, Mrs. DonaldDion & Family, M·M Paul Gangemi, Robert Hays, M·M Slephen Jacques, M·M Lawrence Larocque,M-M Norman j, Marshall, M-M Walter Messenger, M-M David j, Moitoza, M-M John Murphy, M-M JamesRulling, M-M Thomas Williams, M-M Frederick Celeste

SEEKONK

Our lady 01 Ill. Carmel $125 Rita O'Neill; $120 M-M Joseph McCabe; $100 M-M James Araujo, M-MWilliam j, Quirk; $65 Lucille Stark; $50 Mrs. Muriel Hunt, M-M Harvey Mace, M·M James Murray, M-MJohn P. Searles, M-M James Tiernan. M·M j, Roger Vaillancourt, Mrs. George Wood; $35 M-M Raymond F.Silva; $30 M-M David Avila, Mrs. John Botelho, Mrs. Manuel DeMallos, M·M Joseph Hendricks, Mrs.Helen Lewis, M-M George Roderick

$25 Mrs. Catherine Balazs, Robert A. Candido, M-M John Chmura, M-M Paul Cosgrove, M·M GeorgeDaily III, M-M Michale Filuminia, M·M Fred, Gordon, Nelspn E. Goulet, M-M Charles Grossman, M-MRonald Hebert, Mrs. Manuel HendricksJr.. M-M Walter Kelly, M-M Richard Leclaire, M-M Alexander lisy,M-M Thomas McGovern, M-M 'Frank Mooney, M-M Joao Oliveira, M-M Robert J. Partington, M-MRaymond Pickett, M-M Anthony Piquette, M·M John Pontilice, M-M Thomas Rose, Rose Mary Schultz,M·M William Toole. M·M RobertG. Vandal, Mrs. MadelineVartanian, M-M RobertWhitaker, M-M N. PaulDoyle

$200 Our Lady 01 Mount Carmel Women's Guild; $150 Joseph R. Swift; $100 M·M Ralph Castino, M-MAlfred Musson; $75 M-M James Roberts; $50 M-M Paul Jannetti, M-M Carl R. Mitchell, Jr., Raymond l.Murray, Seekonk Knights of Columbus, M·M Henry j, Hayes III; $35 M·M Paul A. Armstrong; $30 M-MPeter Hopper, M-M Ralph Tomei. Mrs. Antonio Nunes

$25 M·M Louis DelSesto, M-M Ernest G. Hicks, Jr., M·M Mark Loiselle, M-M Robert J. Miller, M-M LeoMorin, M·M Daniel Pimental, M-M William Serpa, M·M Robert M. Sloane, M·M Anthony S. Spagnolo, M-MDennis A. Taylor, M-M Dennis Violette, M·M Frank Santoro, M·M Eugene F. Silva, M-M Norman B.Denham, Mrs. Morelo Rodrigues, Mrs. Louisa Fallon

Sl.llary's $1,000 In Memoriam; $500 Anonymous; $125 Anne Sullivan; $100 Anonymous, Afriend,James &Deborah Bolton, M-M Ernesllrahan. M-M Alfred Karol, Mrs. Thomas Toppin; $60 Afriend; $50 AIriend M·M John Przybyla, M-M Joseph Palana, M-M Roger Farren, Arthur & Ross Rollins, M-M JosephBannon, M-M Robert Besselle, Louise Legare, Emma Legare, M-M Eric Spenser; $48 M-M Robert Biron;$40 M-M David Turinese, M-M Harold Doran; $35 M-M Robert Jacobs, ST. Mary's Prayer Group; $30 M·MFrancis Walker, M·M Henry Cutler, Anonymous

$25 James & Helena Armstrong, M-M George Casey, M-M William Cone, Mary GreenWOOd, M-M AlexKagan, M·M Sylva Langlois, M·M Peter Louvaris, M·M Peter Cardosi, M-M Robert Forsher, George &JuneFrenier, M-M George Geisser, Irene Goudreau, Mary Lou Heffernan, M-M Joseph Lamontagne, Mary C.Marcinkwicz, Denise Mongeau, M-M Timothy Mcginn, Thomas and Sherry Ustas

ASSONET

51. Bernard $400 M-M Gary Marcondes; $100 Jean M. Fairhurst; $50 M-M William Boulay, M·MFelician Brochu; $25 Mrs. Carol Araujo, M-M John j, Brown, M-M Brian Lawton, M·M Marc Rousseau,M-M Glen White.

SDIIERSET

SI. Thomas 1I0re $25 M·M Edward Camara, Francis R. Dacey, Alice G. Gagnon, M·M Herman Neher,M-M Michael Saucier.

St.John 01 God $961 Confirmation Class Walk-a-thon; $500 Rev. Daniell. Freltas;$IOO In Memory 01Arthur &Anna Leite; $75 Altar Boys St. John 01 God; $50 John Velozo, Jr., Edward Machado, Gary Velozo;$25 Maria Chaves, Roger Lemelin, Allred Medeiros, Frederick Kudlacik, Joao Jesus.

51. Patrick $100 M-M Carlton Boardman, F. Moriaty; $75 M-M Richard Mullaney; $50 M·M JamesDarcy, M-M Valentino Pallolla, Mary Quirk, Joan Whittington; $40 M. Manuels; $35 Mary Belanger, M-MRaul'Silva; Mrs. John Hogan, John Walsh; $25 Leo Bond, M-M Tobias Borges, M-M Peter Calise, Jr.,Joseph Capostagno, M·M Frank Carreiro, Rene LePage, M-M Norman Levesque, M-M Joseph Macek, M-MFernando matos, Mrs. Thomas Murphy, M-M Albert Ouellette, M·M Allen Pacheco, M-M Armand Saurette,M-M Arthur Sullivan, Jr., M-M John Toomey.

WESTPORT

51. John the Baptist $50 Mrs. Mary Taylor; $40 M-M Thomas Peters.

Our Lady 01 Grace $100 M·M Manuel M. Vale, Mrs. Irene Gavriluk, M·M John McGough; $50 M-MDaniel Alexander, Wayne Dore d/b/a Dore &Son Plumbing; $35 M-M John T. Senay; $27.77 M-M FrankMellen; $25 M-M Joseph Botelho, M-M Robert LaFrance, M·M Edward Nowak; M-M Jeffrey Veloza, M-M'Francisco Souza, Jr., M-M Donald Danis, M-M Donald Clements, M-M Henry Lavoie, Sr.

51. Georee $100 M-M Paul Methot; $30 Mrs. Ronald Perrier; $25 J.O. Forand Tax Service, M-M DavidLoranger, M-M John Oliveira, M-M Michael Sullivan, John Szyszko.

SWANSEA

Our Lady 01 Fatima $1500 Anonymous; $500 M·M J David Connell; $200'Anonymous; $125 M-MThomas Doyle; $120 Claudia Mullane; $100 Louis Almeida, M·M Michale Ziobro, Anonymous; $79'Anonymous; $60 Anonymous; $50 M-M John 0 Arsenault, M-M John Gunn, M·M Thomas CMaiato.Thomas MMcGovern, M-M Maurice LPichette, M-M Robert Tschirch. Anonymous; $40 M·M Joseph Vera,Anonymous; $35 M·M James THodkinson, Anonymous; $30 M-M Jeffrey Kirkman, M-M Charles Leary,

. M-M Thomas CLowney &Sons, M·M Robert Oliveira, Anonymous; $25 M-M Francis LKelly, M·M Kevin MKelly, M-M Keith Kenyon, Mrs Irene Koven, Mrs John Bernard, M-M William RBouchard, M·M Joseph.Chaves, M·M Donald HFerron, Mrs Joseph FFoley; M·M Gary Giaconetti, M-M Edward SMcNerney, M-MAllred Medeiros, M·M Edmund Pontes. M-M William J Souza, M-M Roger Talbot. Anonymous

51. Dominic $100 M-M John Carreiro, M-M Joseph Vital; $50 M·M Raymond Bryden. Edward MitsonSr, Dorothy HRoy, St Dominic's Women's Guild, M·M John Silva; $40 M·M Gerardo Chiavettone; $30 M·MRobert Trudeau; $25 M-M Lamont Beaudette, Mrs Arthur Cote, M-M William DaPonte, M·M FrankKopeski, M·M John Maguire. Fred Marszalek, M·M Thomas Murphy, M-M Raymond O'Connell, DanaRichard, M·M Dwight Doane. Joan Kelley, M·M Jose Sousa

$100 M·M William Unsworth; $50 M·M Jack Gomes; $30 M-M Bernard Ouellette; $25 M·M StanleySzczepanek Jr, M-M Richard Berard, John Clement Jr, M-M Lawrence Barnwell

51. Louis de France$IODO Rev. Andre PJussaume; $100 M-M Richard Dufour, M-M Normand Fortin;$50 M-MRichard Boulanger, M-M RomeoChaiest, Mrs William Fleti:'her:M'M'GeiaiifFontaine, M-MAllred Iwanski, M-M Walter Pierce, M-M John Walsh; $35 M'M Eric Araujo, M-M Alphonse Mendoza, M·M.wiliiamO'Neil; $25 Mrs linda Ahearn, M-M John D.Bisbano,M·M Alfred Bouchard, M-M Raymond

. Boulanger, M·M Richard Boyer, M·M Leo Chabot, M-M Richard MChouinard,M-M David Correira, Linda& Leon Dunnam, M-M William RGilbert, M·M Michael Hebda, M·M Edward Larrivee, In Memory 01 RevBernard ALavoie, Paul Mathieu, M-M Raoul Messier, DrlM Philip Robitalaille, M-M Allred GSouza

$40 M-M Fernand CEAuclair; $30 M-M Kenneth Carr, M-M Robert Gauthier, M-M John McCarraher;$25 M-M John Barrett, M-M Daniel DeMello, M-M Ronald Desrosiers, Mrs Joseph Duquette, M-MJeffreyGouveia,M-M Roger Laflamme, M·M Rene Lavoie, M-M Ronald Paul, M'M Raymond Saucier, MrsJeanneShileikis, M·~ David Stallman .

51. lIichael $125 M·M Charles Viens; $25 M-M Daniel Azevedo, M-M Robert Flanne;" M-M StephenHiggins, In Memory 01 James & Martha Scholes, M-M Thomas Leach, M·M Roger Keyes, M-M JosephGoyette, M·M Gerald Sevigny

NEW BEDFORD

51. lI~ry $700 Rev. John F. Moore; $100 In·Memory of Richard J Brown; $50 In Memory ofRosieMedeiros, M·M William Constant; $25 M-M Joseph Gendron, Diane Charbonneau, M-M Gilbert Butts, M·MWilliam Cotter, M-M Manuel CCorreia,M-M Jose Carvalho, Mary F& Anna THarrington, M-M JosephCampbell, M-M Albert Pepin, M-M Joseph Simas Jr, M,"" Raymond Fontaine, M-M Alan DRebello, MonaProvencher, In Memory of Arnold Weaver, Clifford Pina; M-M David A.Pelletier, Waldy Kut,Francis MDevlin, Pauline Mathieu, Mrs Ben Wegrazniak, M-M Robert Lavoie, M·M MarkJussaume, M-M IlaymondVeary, Rose Harris, M-M Mark Richard. M·M George Green, M-M David Poulin, M·M Joao Medeiros; M-MDaniel Fortier, Mrs Vincent Peternel, M-M Ronald Hubert. M-M David Alves, M-M Nelson Ostiguy, M·MDennis Malloy. M·M Michael Hartley, In Memory 01 Luigi &Florida Fiano, PaulineLaquerre,M·M RobertHebert, M-M James REdwards, Cecilia Oliveira, M·M Conrad Levesque,Florence Lavoie, M-M Louis Roy,M·M Fred Scoll, M-M Carlton Spooner, M·M Edward Haggerty, M·M Carlos Pacheco, M·M Thaddeus IrzykJr. M·M Michael Rapoza, Michele O'leary, Thomas O'leary, M·M George A Desrosiers, M-M KevinSweeney, M-M William AHall, M-M Allen Ponichtera, Laurette Payette, Belmire Blackburn, M-M GeorgeSouza, M-M MarianoGentiii, M·M Adrien Messier, M·M Richard Collard, M-M William Ochab, M-M DavidCaron. M·M David Joaquim, Cheryl Pacheco, M-M James ESullivan Jr, M-M Richard Landreville, MrsGerard Demanche, M·M William Avila, M-M Kazimierz Pelczarski, M·M David Loveridge, M-M GabrielHolmes Jr, Hilda LSouza

$200 Rev. Robert TCanuel, St. Mary's Women's Guild; $100 Steven Perry, M·M Dennis Poyant; $60M·M Normand Boutin; $50 M-M John Maguire, Alfred Dias, M·M Gaston DeBrosse, James &Rita Mendes,Rene Carrol; $40 M·M Michael Forgue, M·M Robert Allain; $35 M·M Richard Lally; $30 HopeS Mulberry;$25 M-M Manuel Travers, M·M Antone Oliveira, Mrs William Donlan, M·M Joseph Towers, M·M MartinMcCoy, Margaret Cabral, Doris Bachand, In Memory 01 Donald HBarlow, M·M Victor Silva Jr. Mrs GunterErlenkamp, M·M Louis Dumont; M-M Robert Andrade, M-M John Hernon, Mrs Joseph Chaplin, M·MJoseph Alves, M·M Arthur Greene, M-M Edward Correia, M-M William J Blake, M-M William Whelan Jr,M·M Kenneth EStrong Jr, M·M Paul Deneault, M-M Francis Lynch, Gloria Berube, Nancy Curry, M·M

.Richard Waite, Evelyn Loranger, M·M Roger Bourgeois, M·M Raymond Rocheleau, M-M David AProvencher, M-M Edward Angelo, M-M John Teixeira, M-M Felix Kocor, M·M Daniel Costa, JosephPelletier, M-M Evangelos Safioleas, M·M Paul JCosta, M-M Francis Macey, Mrs Richard Greenhalgh, M·MGeorge Martins, Jr, M-M William RSilveira, M·M Romeo Dion. $35 Mrs Allred Delreitas, M-M Leonard Coller; $30 M-M Joseph Winsper, M-M Arthur Correai, Joseph&Grace Marco, M-M Alexander Phillips, Mabel Reiendes, M-M Rosario Pineau, M·M Manuel Mota, M·MRobert FLagasse, M-M Frank Condez, M-M Ernest Barboza, Norma Sylvia; $25 M·M Norman Letendre,M·M Emile Brugger, Mrs Lawrence Hughes. M·M Anthony Denault, M-M Joseph Santos, Rosemary Wach,M·M Rod Lussier, M·M David AMedeiros, M-M Robert Coache, Thomas Griffiths, M·M Raymond CStGelais, M-M Paul Doherty, M-M \'(illiam Walsh, M-M John Pimentel Jr, M-M Dennis Desnoyers, M·MClarence Marshall, M·M Roland Tavano, M·M Normand Arsenault, M·M Gary Gomes, M·M Ernest lizotte,M·M Arnold BCamara, M·M Frank Moniz, M·M John Green, M-M Francisco Belmiro, Bruce Cathcart, M-MMichael WBriand, M-M Walter Jaworski, M-M L Gibbs, M-M Ronald Silveira, Helen Baillargeon, M·MDavid Sylvia, M-M Bruce lima, M-M Kenneth J Sylvia, M-M Charles Vardo, Mrs Jesse Mathews, M-MEdmund Correira, M-M Joseph Corkum, M·M Normand Langlois, M-M Glen Machado, M-M lawrenceLynch, M-M Saul Santos, Izaura Teixeira, M-M Richard Botelho, M-M Steven Nunes

$40051. Vincent DePaul Society of St. Mary's; $180 M·M John HLeBoeul; $150 DrlM Roger Lacost,M·M Gilbert Costa; $100 M-M Pierce Penton, In Memory of Jesse Mathews; $70 M-M John Freitas; $60M·M George Wheeler, M-M George Taber; $50 M-M Joseph FALeBlanc, M-M Arthur Caron, Alice &HazelDavis, Mrs John Dexter, M-M John HighamJr, Edward MacLean, M·M Paul Marashio, Maria Almeida, M·MPeter Becker, Dr/M Manuel GCamacho, M·M Phillip Chasse, Henry &Jane Martin·Fortin, M·M PatrickGannon, M·M George ELandry, Mrs Manuel Rezendes, M·M Paul Szwaja, M-M David Resendes, M-MFrancis 0 Sullivan, M·M Ronald Walsh, Mrs Edward Szyndlar, Antoinette Bertalotto, M-M Leo Laquerre,M·M Antonio Pinheiro. M-M Dennis Wilkinson

51. James $100 M-M Gerald Stabell, SI. James Catholic Youth Organization, SI. James Ladies' Guild,M-M Paul Lestage, AFriend; $50 M-M Anthony Silva, M·M lhomas Oliver, M-M Chris Donnelly, M-MLeonard Guilbeault, Mrs Daniel Dwyer, M·M William Jakusik, M·M William Whalen', M·M John Sylvia; $40M·M Paul Hart, Mrs Joseph Hathaway; $35 M·M Paul Rezendes; $25 Margaret ABernier, M-M CalvinMedeiros, Winnilred EFolger, M·M Leonard Souza, Ann Gulbeault, M·M Richard Rostron, M-M EdmundQuadros. M-M Charles Gomes, M-M John Connor, M-M Raymond Couto, M·M Francis Lamb, M·M VltorinoNoia, M·M John Green, M·M John Britto, M-M Joseph Ferreira, M-M William Dlejarz, Sara Harrison, MrsFrancis Roach, Beeverly Gracia, Bridget Finch, Helen Jarusik, Irene Schall

51. Lawrence $150 M-M William Kearney; $125 M-M David RNelson; $100 M·M Joseph Harrington,St. Lawrence Guard 01 Honor; $75 Hope Mcfadden; $60 M-M Allred Beauregard; $55 Robert Tessier,$50 M·M James Anderson, M-M Paul FCardoza, Mrs Malcolm JDelaney. Mrs Anne EHooper, M-M HenryHorn, M-M Edward Lopes, Veronica O'bRien, Helen & Elizabeth O'Connor, M·M Joseph Pierce, Albert PPorter; $40 M·M George Swansey; $35 James FMcGlynn, Mrs Arthur FWalsh, Mrs Mary Winterson; $30Mrs Ernest King. M·M Paul LaForesl

$200 Mrs Edwin livingstone Jr; $100 In Memory of Rev William RJordan, M-M David AMcLaughlin;$60 Mrs Mary BWheaton; $50 M-M James Dee. M-M Richard TSaunders Jr, Joseph VSmith, M-M LeoSlewart, M-M Robert JSylvia, M·M Leo Tracey; $45 Patricia ENorton; $40 M-M Steven Beauregard; $30M·M Peter Clavin, Helen E McGrath; $25 M-M Edward T Butler, M-M Odee LLandry, Mrs Joseph EMacFarlane, Mary Manning, M·M William Montigny, Mrs Pierre Roy, Robert Sullivan, M-M Arthur BWalsh. M·M Steven RWarn

$100 M-M Raymond Barbero; $60 M-M Thomas Ryan; $50 Evalynne A Turner; $25 M-M RobertBedard, Michelle Conceicao, M-M James FCosta, M·M Albert LFisher, M-M Robert JMarinelli. James SSheerin, M·M Manuel Sylvia. MrsClara EVieira, Mrs Edward Varsel. Allen Wall, M-M Raymond Beaulieu,M·M John Burt, M·M Bruce JBotelho, M·M James Corbell, Mrs Odena DeCosta, M-M Roland Dumas, M·MNed Emmons, M-M William Fortier, M·M Daniel Germano, M-M Paul Humason, Mrs Donald MacMullen,Ann Mahoney, M·M Paul EMarshall, M-M Hugh McKenna, Mrs Patrick JMoore, Mrs James EMurphy,John M Newby Jr, Mrs Veronica M Peccini, Gerry Rivet, M-M Joseph ARivet. Antone Rutkowski, MrsRichard Rymszewicz. M·M Richard Sparrow, Margaret ESullivan, Or Paul FWalsh, M-M John Warren,M·M Raymond EWeber, M-M John RWhalen

Our Lady 01 Assumption $50 M-M Noel Almeida, Mrs Elizabeth Duarte; $25 OLDA Senior Citizens,M·M Earle Bargasse, M-M Edward Rogers, Constance Tavares, St. Martin de Porres Guild, Our Lady 01Assumption Club, M-M Antonio Costa, M·M Albert Houtman

St. Anne $$500 St. Vincent de Paul Society; $25 Normand Lapointe

51. Anthony 01 Padua $500 St. Anthony Bingo; $200 In Memory of Msgr. Albert Berube; $100 BarrieLee; $50 Robert Levesque; $52 SI. Anthony Youth Group; $35 Harry Hathaway; $25 Dorothy Desrosiers,Roger Bourgeois

$200 Anonymous; $100 In Memory of Rev. J.F. McCarthy; $100 Adrien Beauregard; $50 AGroup ofFriends, Anonymous; $40 Leo Picard, Jose Medeiros, Patricia Powell; $30 Ja.ime Resendes; $25 OscarLeBlanc, Joseph Remillard, Antonio E Conterno, Ada Paradis, Paul Goudreau, Jean Duval, AnnetteFlorent, Maurice Cote, Janet Mailhotte, M-M Gaston Laverdiere, Anonymous .

51. Francis 01 Assisi $500 In Loving Memory of Frank Garcia; $100 M·M Francisco Morgado, M·MVictor Reis, M-M Peter Regis; $35 M-M Henry Healy, M·M John Maiato; $30 M-M Antone Alfonso, M-MArmand S Coelho; $25 M-M William A Besse, Mrs Joseph Castellina, Salome Cordeiro, Mrs RichardHolden, M-M Leonel Neron, M-M Carlos Viegas, Dorothy V!kre, Norma PRegis, M-M Marcus Schlosser

51. Hedwle$500 Franciscan Fathers, OFM Conv; $120 M-M Joseph Rapoza; $35 Smietana Family; $30Lee Cook; $25 M-M Antonio L Medeiros, Chester Nietupski, M·M Joseph Szaro, Barbara Traban, M-MWilliam Wunschel, John Barylski

51. Joseph $500 SI. Joseph Parish Bingo

Holy Name $130 M-M Leonard FSouza; $100 M·M Richard Babineau, Paul Mulvey, M-M RobertSylvia, M·M Edward FMurray; $50 M-M Arnold Avellar, M·M Joseph Cazemiro, Mrs Helen Mello, M-MAntonio Mendes, M-M Norris Walecka, M-M Charles Xavier; $30 M·M William Demsky, M-M Stanley Gaj,Mrs Lawrence Harney; $25 M-M Frank Burns, M·M Lester Chase, M-M Henry Carreau, M-M MichaelCollet, Mrs Mary AConlon, M·M Robert Connor, M-M Joseph Estacio, M-M Stanley Koska, M·M Leo Law,Mrs Jackson Lovelf, M·M Stephen Luce, M-M Sylvester Luce, Mrs Anthony Mulroy, Ms Rose Neves, M-MAugusto Vieira, Mrs Micahel PWilson, Mrs Mary LWilson .

$125 M-M SalvatorGiammalvo; $100 AFriend, M·M Charles Quinn, M-MSalvatore Fernandes, FrancisSmith; $75 Helen Mcintyre; $50 M-M Sergi lacoponi; $35 Edith Mcintyre; $30 M-M Donald Girourd; $25M-M Augusto Fernandes, M-M Thomas Thomas, M-M Harold Briggs, M-M Kenneth· Camara, FeliciaBociek, M-M Joseph Brunette, M·M Arthur Martin, M-M'Laurien Rock, M-M Igance Alawalski

51. Theresa $500 In Memory of Rev Joseph NHamel and Rev William Collard; $350 AFriend; $150M-M Joseph Mandeville, St Theresa St Vincent de Paulln'Memory 01 Rev William Collard, M·M HenriValois; $100 MauriceGamache, MrsAdrien Lemire, AFriend; $75 AFriend; $50 M·M Roland Benoil, M·MRobert Cyr, Mrs Paul Fontaine. M-M Leonard Poyant,A Friend;'$35 AFriend; $30 M·M Robert Reney, AFriend; $25 M-M Richard Bousquet, M-M Nicholas Catrambone; M'M William Dugas, M·M GerardLeranger, M-M Larry Moreau, M-M Vite Merra, Mrs Marie Parent, St Anne Sodality, M·M Mark Sullivan

Immaculate Conception $600 Portuguese Prayer. Group,. Rev. Jose A'.F. dos Santos; $365 1~89Confirmation Class, Anonymous; $200 In Thanksgiving; $100 M-M Joao BTeixeira, AFrien'd;'$60 M-MDavid Plira; $50 Immaculate Conception Youth Group, M·M Manuel CRamos, M·M.Manuel Medeiros;$30 Maria RCordeiro, Maria E5 Franco, M-M Jose Pereira & Isaura Pereira; $25 M·M Ernest Pacheco,M.M Urbano sarros, John Cordeiro, Joaquim Rebelo' ,.

Our Lady 01 Fatima $100 M-M Robert Berche; $50 MrS Jacqueline King; $25 M-M Fred Anderson,M·M Eugene Berche, David Correia, M-M Roland Fortin ,

51. John the Baptist $100 M-M Octavio 0 Fragata; $50 M-M Joseph Motta, Anonymous; $30 AFriend;$26 M-M Joseph RGarcia; $25 In Memory o(Msgr John ASilvia, Eva Sylvia, M-M Gilbert Vieira

Special Gift and parish listings will continue to appearweekly in the order received by the printer until all. havebeen listed.

/'

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Page 16: 06.02.89

16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., June 2,1989'

Ileering pOintl

Chicago covenantCHICAGO (NC)' - Cardinal

Joseph L. Bernardin and. Luthe- .ran Bishop Sherman Hicks recentlyled Chicago Catholics and Luthe­rans in signing a covenant pledg­ing cooperation, while admittingthat serious differences, specificallyon abortion, remain between thetwo denominations.

- Do they recognize that vio­lence is too often the problem­solving method of first resort?

- Do young girls buy into tele­vision's false message that a mid­dle-aged man can be a sex symbol,but that for a woman to be a sexsymbol, she must be under 30?

Singer concl uded that more re­search is 'needed on the impact ofTV viewing, but warned parentsagainst letting television's purvey­ors of violence and commercialismbecome dominant influences ontheir children. He asked if parentswere prepared to monitor, controland discuss the medium so thattheir own family values mightprevail.

Singer's right on, but it alsoseems that parents, especially infamilies with two wage-earners,need help and that the schoolscould shoulder some responsibil­ity here. Certainly religious edu'ca­tion teachers should pay attentionto anything shaping values.

To be literate today is not onlyto understand how the printedword communicates meaning, bUtalso to know how society's domi­nant medium, television, transmitsits messages and vision of reality.

Making sure young people candistinguish between authentic andnon-authentic visions of life is notonly a media literacy issue but a,lsoa religious issue, important to bothclassroom teachers and parish re­ligious educators.

NCEA media literacy.programs deserve use

By Richard H. HirschDirector, U.S. Catholic Conference

Office for Film & Broadcasting

NEW YORK (NC) -In a recentarticle, "Why Johnny's WatchingNeeds Watching," Jerome L. Sing­er, professor of psychology andchild study at Yale University,asked if parents can assume thatchildren know television is just aworld of make-believe.

Singer said research has foundthat some parents regularly dis­cuss television broadcasts withtheir children, while others rarelyhelp them understand the false­ness of the TV world.

"The children of the 'mediating', parents turn 'out to be relativelymore immune to the negative ef­fects of television, and they under­stand much better what commer­cials are," Singer reported.

It seems, however, that no onein school or at home is makingsure that young people are media­literate, able to recognize how tele­vision gives them messages andvalues.

Several years ago the U.S. Cath­olic Conference Department ofCommunication produced a medialiteracy program for use at ele­mentary, junior high and seniorhigh school levels.

The texts were published by theNational Catholic Educational As­sociationfor Catholic schoolteachers. But the project made justa small ripple and never becamepart of the Catholic educationagenda. But it should be part ofthat agenda and deal with suchquestions as:

- Do children, espl;cially thosebelow age 12, think about whotheir TV heroes are and, moreimportantly, why they are theirheroes?

- Do they grasp what TV com­mercials often are really selling ­lifestyles, values and attitudestoward others?

CATHEDRAL, FRParishioners will honor CYO

basketball teams at a spaghetti sup­per 7 p.m. Sunday.BL. SACRAMENT, FR

Women's Guild meeting 7 p.m.Wednesday followed by potluck sup­per and singing by junior choir.ST. STANISLAUS, FR

Adoration of Blessed Sacramenttoday. Kindergarten promotion 7tonight, school hall.HOLY NAME, FR

-Summer classes for altar serversforming. Information at rectory.ST. PATRICK, FALMOUTH

Communal anointing ofsick, II: 15a.m. Mass Sunday. Transportation:548-6326, 540-2486.ST. MARY, N. ATTLEBORO

Healing service and Mass 2 p.m.Sunday.LaSALETTE CENTER,ATTLEBORO

Teach the Children Well II and,I1Icatechetical programs will be offered

,July 24-28 and July 31-Aug. 4 re­spectively. A vacation Bible schoolfor children will take place concur­rently. Information: 222-8530.

EMMAUS RETREATEmmaus #79, begins tonight at

Cathedral Camp, East Freetown;Galilee reunion 7 p.m. June II.ST.ANNE,FR

Kindergarten graduation 10 thismorning. New Home and Schoolboard officers: Susan Chapdelaine,president; Rose Almeida, vice-presi­dent; Joanne Bergeron; treasurer;Elaine Gagnon, Bertha Medeiros,secretaries.SS. PETER & PAUL, FR

Kindergarten graduation 7 p.m.Thursday, Father Coady Center.Vincentian meeting also 7 p.m.Thursday, rectory.

First Class Second ClassFirst Class Presort Carrier Route Coding

Third Class Bulk Rate Zip Code SortingThird Class Non Profit List Maintenance

All TO USPS SPECIFICATIONS

Cheshire labeling on Kirk-Rudy 4-uplabeler. And Pressure Sensitive Labeling

Inserting. col/ating, folding.metering, sealing, sorting, addressing.

sacking, completing USPS forms,direct delivery to Post Office, . , Printing, , , We Do It AI/!

Call for Details (508) 679-5262

I!

O.L. CAPE, BREWSTER IHarvest Sunday June 4: donatiorts

of canned or paper goods acceptt¥tby Vincentians. I

HOLY GHOST, ATTLEBORO IYouth Group Boston trip tomor­

row. Dedication of new organ 3:3'0p.m. June 25. IVINCENTIANS, FR I

District Council meeting 7 p.m.June 7, O.L. Grace Church, Wes,-port. IRALLY FOR LIFE I

Pro-life rally 2 p.m. tomorro\\j,Boston Government Center plaza.Information and carpooling: 636-[4903.

SACRED HEART, IN.ATTLEBORO

Green thumb gardeners needed tohelp keep parish grounds beautiful:.Information at rectory. Vincentianjlmeet after 8:30 a.m. Mass Sunday.VINCENTIANS, TAUNTON !

District Council meeting 7 p.mlMonday, Mass at St. Anthony'~Church; rpeeting 8 p.m. .st. Joseph'~church hall.BREAD OF LIFE IPRAYER GROUP, FR

Meeting at 7:30 tonight at BlessedSacrament Church;, members willhear a teaching by Father RichardAndrade,parochial vicar at stlMary's Cathedral. The first sessiorlof a 7-week program, "Foundationsof Christian Maturit(' will fOllOW'1

New administrato~

at Fairhaven hom~Bishop 'Daniel A. Cronin has

announced appointment of Mis~Jean M. Golitz as administrator of

. Our Lady's Haven nursing hom~in Fairhaven. Miss Golitz assumed!her duties on May 22. I

. Rev. Edmund J. Fitzgerald, direcJtor of diocesan' nursing homes,1said she holds a bachelor of sCienceldegree in health care managementfrom St. Francis College" Brook'!Iyn, N.Y., and has had extensivel

. experience\n the field of long­terrp care, most recently as admin-Iistrator for the past six years ofI'

Parkwell Health Care Center inHyde Park. ' i

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PAX CHRISTI, FRMembers will participate in ecu­

menical service 7 p.m. June 4 at SS.Peter and Paul Cathedral, Provi­dence. Among speakers will be Rev.Allan Boesak, a South African leaderin resistance fo apartheid.

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are asked to submll news items for thiscolumn to The Anchor, P.O. Box 7, FallRiver, 02722. Name 01 city or town shouldbe Included, as well as full dates of all actlv­Illes. Please send news of future ratherthan past events. Note: We do not normallycarry news of fundraising activities. We arehappy to carry notices 01 splrllual pro­grams, club meetings, youth projects andsimilar nonprofit activities. Fundralslng

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On Steering Points lIems FR IndicatesFall River, NB Indicates New Bedford.

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Complete diocesan information. • Addresses of retired clergy and thoseTelephone directory of priests, direc- serving outside the djocese.tors of diocesan institutions,parish reli- • Listing of priests by years of ordination.

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This Message Sponsored by the FollowingBusiness Concerns in the Diocese of Fall River

FEITElBERG INSURANCE AGENCY DURO FINISHING CORP. GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO.GILBERT C. OLIVEIRA INS. AGENCY GEORGE O'HARA CHEVROLET-CADILLAC

SCENE AT May 21 dedicaton of a monument in Arling­ton National Cemetery honoring Catholic chaplains who diedin World War II, Korea and Vietnam. Among those memorial­ized is Father Arthur C Lenaghan, who grew 'up in SacredHeart parish,Fall River. His name is seventh from the bottomin'the second column of World War II chaplains, the firstgroup listed on the monument. Father Lenaghan is interred inhis family's plot in St. Patrick's Cemetery, Fall River. (NCphoto)