01.15.81

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SERVING ••• SOUTHEASTERN MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS

t eanc 0 VOL. 25, No.3

FALL RIVER, MASS., THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1981

20c, $6' Per Year

Diocesall SerVICeS. marl{. Unity Week The annual Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, observed throughout the world, will begin on Sunday. Its 1981 theme is "There is a variety' of gifts but always the same Spirit." Bishop Daniel A. Cronin has recommended that diocesan parishes mark the week with. services of prayer for unity, ei'~her on an individual parish level or a; part of a community program. In New Bedford, for the fifth consecutive year, the Greater New Bedford Clergy and Religious Association will sponsor local observance of the week with prayer services held at '7:30 nightly according to the following schedule: - Sunday, Jan. 18: St. Paul's United Methodist Church, Kempton and Rockdale Ave.; - Monday, Jan. 19: St. Martin's Episcopal Church, County and Rivet Streets; - Tuesday, Jan. 20: Trinity United Methodist Church, 473 County Street; . - Wednesday, Jan. 21: Douglas Memorial AME Zion Church, 169 Williams Street; - Thursday, Jan. 22: Sea~ man's Bethel, Johnny Cake Hill; - Friday, Jan. 23: South Baptist Church, 745 Brock Avenue; -Saturday, Jan. 24: Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, Rivet Street; - Sunday, Jan. 25: Pilgrim United 'Church of Christ, 635 Purchase Street (a preliminary hymn sing to which all arE! invited will begin at 6:30 p.m.). In Fall River the Right Rev. John B. Coburn, Episcopal bishop of Massachusetts, will pJ'leach

at the third annual Niagara Neighborhood ecumenical prayer service, to be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Holy Cross Church on Pulaski Street. All city residents are invited to attend the observance, which will be followed by a reception. In accepting the invitation to preach, which was extended by the vestry of St. Luke's Episcopal Church, Bishop Coburn said he "was deeply honored to participate in this grassroots expression of Christian cooperation." Niagara Neighborhood participating churches, in addition to Holy Cross and St. Luke's, are SS. Peter and Paul, Our Lady of Health, First Primitive Methodist and St. Paul's Lutheran. In Swansea an ecumenical service will take place at 7 p.m. Sunday at Christ Church. Taking a general view of the ecumenical picture, Father Charles LaFontaine of the Atonement Friars, of Garrison, N.Y., Father Paul Wattson, founded the Week of Prayer in 1908, suggests that "ecumenism may be on the way out precisely because it is on the way up." He writes that "the business of ecumenism is to put itself out ,of business through realization of Christian unity. Therefore, he said, despite a mixed year of ecumenical plusses and minuses in 1980, Christians during unity week will seek ways to wind their "business." Father Lafontaine also lists 1980 ecumenical high and low points. Among high points were Turn to page thirteen

MARIAN MEDALIST Frank S. Moriarty holds crucifix to be blessed by Bishop Daniel A. Cronin at dedication ceremonies for new St. Patrick's parish center in Somerset. Others, from left, Father Joseph D. Maguire (behind crucifix), associate pastor; Msgr. John J. Oliveira, episcopal secretary; Msgr. Robert L. Stanton, pastor. The 7,500 square foot center will accommodate 350 persons. and will be used for meetings, social occasions and the parish school of religion. Its features include portable walls, a movable stage and a completely equipped kitchen. William F. Moran headed the parish building committee that worked with Owen Hackett Associates and F. L. Collins Co., architects and contractors for the project. Music for a Mass preceding the dedication was by St. Patrick's senior choir with Mrs. Gertrude Matte as organist and director. The parish folk group, directea by Rene Lepage, was heard in the hall. (Torchia Photo)

March for Life .plans ready WASHINGTON (NC) ~ Hunureds from New England are expected to participate in the eighth annual March for Life, to be held next Thursday in Washington. This year the program 'vill be moved from its tradiional site, the west front of the ::apitol, to the Ellipse, a park hetween the White House and ;e Washington Monument. March for Life president Nellie. Gray said President-elect Ronald

Reagan, who will be inaugurated Tuesday, has been invited to the march. A Reagan spokeswoman said he will not participate but is considering meeting with an anti-abortion delegation at the White House. In the past Reagan has said that he is committed to the rightto-life movement and' that he supports a human life amendment. The theme of the eighth' march

AT BISHOP'S CHARITY BALL (Other pictures on pages 8, 9)

is "A Paramount Human Life Amendment" - the no-exceptions amendment sponsored by Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) and Rep. Robert Dornan (R-Calif.). Jan. 22 is the eighth anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court decision which overturned most state laws restricting abortion. Each year since 1974 tens of thousands of anti-abortionists have marched on Washington. Turn to Page Three


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01.15.81 by The Anchor - Issuu