02.22.79

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diocese of fall river

t eanc 0 VOL. 23, NO. 8

FALL RIVER, MASS., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1979

Cable TV Called Boon for Church CaBs for increased use of cable television in church communications have come from the Catholic Television Network of Chicago and a leading religious broadcaster in AlQany, N.Y. "Cable stations need and will accept professional, religious programming," said Charles E. Hinds, executive director of the Catholic Television Network of Chicago. "The cable stations' economics dictate the use of quality, but low-cost, programs which can be made available to them by members of the communities and dioceses they serve." Hinds was commenting on the results of a, recent survey of Catholic dioceses, which indicated that 37 per cent of the 132 responding dioceses had video cassette equipment but that most were missing an important opportunity by not utilizing cable television resources. "'Perhaps part of the hesitation to begin to use this excelTum to Page Three

20c, $6 Per Year

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Rice Bowl To Be Included In Lenten Observances The Lenten regulations for the Fall River diocese have been announced by the Chancery Office and are listed on page 3 of this issue of The Anchor. The penitential season begins Wednesday, Feb.' 28 and Easter Sunday will be April 15. H is noted that the season for fulfillment of the obligation to receive the Eucharist' during the Easter season extends from the first Sunday of iLent, March 4, through Trinity Sunday, June 10. A special collection for the Negro and Indian home missions will be taken up, as is traditional, on the first Sunday of Lent; and throughout Lent Catholics are encouraged to participate in "Operation Rice Bowl," a six-week program of family prayer and sacrifice. "Rice Bowl wrappers," informative labels to be taped to a beverage can or similar-sized container, will be distributed in all parishes. 'Each week of Lent, participating families are asked to

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eat a low-cost meal and pray for other. less fortunate families around the world. The difference between the price of the sacrificial meal and their regular meal is placed in the "rice bowl" can, which is, kept on the dining table. Each Sunday during -Operation Rice Bowl offerings are brought to the parish rice bowl. Twenty-five percent of the proceeds of Rice Bowl will be used within the Fall River to alleviate povdiocese erty and suffering on the local level. Nationally, Catholic Relief Services will use its share for self-help and community deTurn to Page Sixteen

Pope Will Preside At Her Wedding Vittoria Ianni and Mario Maltese will be ~arried on Sunday by the Pope in the Vatican's Pauline chapel. Vittoria, 22, is the daughter of Giuseppe lanni, a Roman street cleaner and trashman who met the pope last month when the pontiff visited a mechanized crib scene built by street cleaners under lanni's direction. The trashman explained to Pope John Paul how the scene's lights, animals, streams and waterfalls had been constructed. He also told the pontiff his daughter was soon to be married. The pope then promised to officiate at the wedding.

Convocation Topic Will Be Vocations Twelve representatives from the Fall River diocese will accompany Bishop Daniel A. Cronin to the seventh annuai New ,England Convocation, to be held the weekend of March 2 through 4 at Mont Marie Conference Center" Holyoke. They are Father Horace J. Travassos, Msgr. John J. Oliveira, Sister Martin de Porres, OP, Sister Margaret Hjggins, SUSC, Keith Caldwell, Brother Louis St. 'Pierre, FIC. David Landry, Mrs. John Houst, Mr. and Mrs. John Cwiekowski, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Coughlin. The group includes guidance

Alateen -Helps Youngsters Face Life With Alcoholic Parents Most kids worry about what to wear to school, how to fix their hair, whether they can borrow the car for Saturday night. These kids, children of alcoholics, worry about what they'll find when they get Mme from school. Parents or guardians may beat them, throw them out of the house into subzero weath-

erJ as happened this week in Detroit, shake them down for small change to buy liquor or keep them at home to do housework or babysit. Most of all, almost universally, such parents load their children with guilt. - "Anyone would drink, with kids like you:" _is a typical rationalization.

. To months and _years of such treatment, youngsters usually react by developing their own problems, often including drink.ing and drugs. For such kids, there's Alateen, founded in 1957 by the 17-yearold son of an alcoholic and now numbering hundreds of small Turn to Page, Seven

FATHER DAVID BELUVEAU, SJ conducts Alateen meeting in Fall River. Meetings are open to any teen with a problem of alcoholism in his or her family. (Torchia Photo)

counselors, vocation directors, seminarians, members of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and the Serra Club and a candidate for the permanent diaconate. 路This year the convocation will focus on vocations to the priesthood and religious life. More than 130 delegates from the 11 New -England dioceses will join with their bishops in group presentations and discussions centering on the roles of priests, religious and lay persons, especially parents, in nurturing vocations. The keynote speaker will be Boston auxiliary and vicar general for spiritual development, Bishop John M. D'Arcy. "One of our most pressing concerns is to establish the foundations of strong leadership for the Church in the future," said Bishop D'Arcy, who has also served as a faculty member at St. John's Seminary, Brighton. Among other major presentors Tum to Page Seven

Puebla Bishops Stress La ity PUEBLA, Mexico (NC)-The Latin American bishops' committed themselves to fight for social change and to give preferential treatment to -the poor at the close of their third general assembly. But they said thilt the . laity have the primary role in fostering this change through political means. The bishops' 200-page final document "insists especially in the action of the laity to carry out essentially a political action and to offer a witness within temporal structures," said a summary. The bishops said they will foster greater participation by the people in the affairs of their nations as a means to overcome "the growing gap and the inequality in our societies" between rich and poor. "Thus the church seeks to overcome delays in the change of structures and shorten the waiting for change already postponed through generations," said the summary. In Vatican City, the pope said Turn to Page Seven


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