01.08.81

Page 1

t eanc 0 VOL. 25, No.2

FALL RIVER, MASS., THURSDAY, JANUARY 8/ 1981

SERVING ••• SOUTHEASTERN MASSACHUSmS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS

20c, $6" Per Year

Rights

violated • Latin lands In WASHINGTON (NC) - Two U.S. agricultural advisers killed Jan. 3 in El Salvador, Michael P. Hammer and Mark David Pearlman, worked for the land::ess peasants as did four American missionary women slain a month earlier. Hammer, 42, of Potomac, Md., was a Catholic and a: graduate of Georgetown University. His family said a Mass of Christian burial will be scheduled after his body is returned to the United States. Hammer and Pearlman, 36, of Seattle, worked for a Salvadoran government land reform program under contract which the American Institute for Free Labor Development has with the U.S. Agency for International Development. The institute is an educational arm of the AFL-CIO and sponsors projects in several Latin American countries. The murder of the advisers was blamed by President Napoleon Duarte of El Salvador on rightists opposing redistributi.on of land. Meanwhile El" Salvador a.nd Guatemala reported by the Council on Hemispheric" Affairs to top the list of human rights violators .jn Latin America. Bolivia .js a close third. COHA, a coalition of religious and civic groups, said in a review of Latin American events in 1980 that the two Central American countries had surpassed Argentina's 1979 record. In the two countries, with a combined population of 10 million, 15,000 people were killed as a result of political violence. "More people died in El Salvador than in all the other nations of Latin America," COlorA sa.jd. Close to 10,000 died in political violence there in 1980, "largely as the result of government-condoned rightwing death squad killings," it:.,said. In Guatemala "the number of political murders increased frC,m a daily average of 20 to 30 in 1979, to 30 and 40- in 1980; guerilla groups are active in the country, but most of the violence is carr-ied out by rightwing paramilitary g r 0 ups," COIi:A said.

Elsewhere in Central America and the Caribbean, COHA said, Honduras "made halting progress toward a return to civilian rule, although there were signs of violence against strikers." The first year of Sandinista rule in Nicaragua "produced a mixed record ... of tolerance Turn to Page Ten

Bishop's Ball tomorrow The weather will be cold but hearts will be warm tomorrow night as thousands dance at Lincoln Park Ballroom for the benefit of exceptional and underprivileged children of Southeastern Massachusetts. The music of the Meyer Davis and AI Rainone orchestras will be heard at the 26th annual Bishop's Charity Ball, to be highlighted by a ceremony at which 38 young women of the diocese will be presented to Bishop Daniel A. Cronin. Dancing will begin at 8 p;m. to the music of Al Rainone and at 9 p.m. the Meyer Davis orchestra, led by Emery Davis, will be introduced. Bishop Cronin will then be escorted to his box by ball honorary chairmen Miss Adrienne C. Lemieux, president of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, and Stanley A. McLean, president of the Cape Cod Particular Council of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. The organizations annually sponsor the ball. The presentees will be introduced "to the bishop by Robert McGuirk of North Dighton, representing Taunton area Vincentians. Dancing will follow the ceremony \lntil 10 p.m., when the traditional grand march will take place. " Kenneth Leger will sing the national anthem preceding introduction of Bishop Cronin to ball attendants by Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, diocesan ball director. The evening will continue with dancing until 1 a.m. to the music of' both orchestras.

YOUNG MEN preparing for the priesthood and retired priests looking back over lives of ministry met with Bishop Cronin on the same day, poignantly illustrating the words of the psalmist: "From the rising of the sun unto the going down of the same, the name of the Lord is worthy of praise." (Torchia' Photos)

bishop"s ball: '"forever springtime" I


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