04.08.11

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Diocese of Fall River

The Anchor

F riday , April 8, 2011

Speaker encourages diocesan teen-agers to remain chaste By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff

a run for their money — Security personnel flank Pope John Paul II’s motorcade during the pontiff’s visit to Boston in October 1979. (Photo courtesy of Roland Martineau)

For area man, JPII’s Boston visit was a ‘guard’ instance

This begins a series of features on encounters diocesan individuals had with Pope John Paul II who will be beatified in Rome on May 1. By Dave Jolivet, Editor

FALL RIVER — Roland Martineau spent 23 years in active duty in the U.S. Army and several more in the U.S. Army National Guard. Much of his time was spent in and around Berlin during the German Occupancy following its surrender in World War II. The Fall River resident and a parishioner of St. Anne’s Parish has many memories and stories of serving his country, but the one that

stands out most for him was an assignment in 1979 in his own backyard, Boston. While serving in the 685th Military Police Battery of the Mass. National Guard stationed in Buzzards Bay, Martineau and his good friend Brad Faxon Sr. were ordered to post guard behind the stage at the Boston Common during Pope John Paul II’s visit in October 1979. “There were many individuals assigned to security posts during the pope’s visit,” Martineau told The Anchor. “There were the Secret Service, the Mass. State Police, the Boston Police, and the Mass. National Guard. Brad and I were to Turn to page 19

Legislators, casino opponents call for cost-benefits analysis By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent

BOSTON — With 10 expanded gaming bills already filed this legislative session, 25 legislators have called for an independent cost-benefits analysis of the effects casinos and slots would have in Massachusetts. SB150, a bill filed by Sen.

NEW BEDFORD — Popular chastity speaker Jason Evert hoisted the brave volunteer from the packed confines of St. Mary’s Church up onto his shoulders and dangled him precariously upside down, acting out a scenario in which the two were on a date and looking over the edge of the Grand Canyon. The fact that Evert’s “date” was a teen-age boy donning a blonde wig added a bit of comic relief to the demonstration. “The point of that was basically this: none of us guys would ever take a girl we like to a dangerous place and see how far we can go without killing her,” Evert said. “But in high

school we’re always wondering how far we can go — can I do this with her? Can I do that with her?” Evert’s simple message of respect, purity and saving God’s gift of sexual intimacy for one’s future spouse resonated with the large gathering of Faith Formation students from New Bedford Deanery parishes. “In the Bible, there’s one passage a man needs to know to love a woman,” Evert said, quoting from Ephesians 5. “St. Paul says: ‘Husbands, love your wife like Christ loved the Church. Hand yourself over to her to make her holy.’” Evert then described how much Christ sufTurn to page 14

Stephen M. Brewer (D-Barre) on January 19, asks for a look at the positive and negative outcomes for the Commonwealth and individual communities in the short and long term. The organization hired would be a “qualified research institution” and would be asked to consider increased revenues as well as Turn to page 12

frank talk — Highly-regarded chastity speaker Jason Evert addresses a large gathering of Faith Formation students from New Bedford Deanery parishes at St. Mary’s Church in New Bedford. (Photo by Kenneth J. Souza)

More than a roof; it’s a home

By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff

NEW BEDFORD — When the former convent of St. Anne’s Parish in New Bedford fell into disrepair, the neighborhood association placed a phone call to the Community Action for Better Housing. “It had become a magnet for drugs and other kinds of activities, so the neighborhood association came to us and asked if we could do something about it; if we could acquire the property, and we did,” said Ed Allard, project director for CABH. “That was one of the first projects that I got involved in when I came on board.”

CABH came in and converted the property into 17 single-room occupancy units with onsite management and maintenance. “It went from being a total eyesore to being a total charmer for the neighborhood,” said Allard. “That’s something we do, we like to look at properties in distressed neighborhoods and see it hopefully as being a catalyst for the revitalization of those neighborhoods. A lot of what we do is motivated by that goal.” CABH was incorporated in 1995 as an affiliate agency of Catholic Social Services, and targets abandoned or foreclosed

properties to transform them into rental units or help first-time buyers transition into homeowners. Focused on properties in New Bedford and Fall River, the current housing market has created a glut of foreclosed properties to be considered by CABH as potential projects. As a member of the First Look Program, a Boston-based program developed by Citizens’ Housing and Planning Association that enters into a cooperative relationship with lenders, CABH takes it time weighing potential properties and the costs. “It’s not something you do off Turn to page 18


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