05.19.95

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VOL. 39, NO. 20

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FALL RIVER, MASS.

Friday, May J9, J995

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FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS •

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Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

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$11 Per Year

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FATHER CAMBRA

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FATHER MARTINS

F ATHER OLIVEIRA

FATHER RAPOSO

FATHER REIS

Pastors named in three cities

FATHER TAVARES

Bishop Sean O'Malley has announced six appointments of pastors, all effective June 28. Rev. Raymond Cambra, parochial vicar at St. Pius X parish, South Yarmouth, will be pastor of St. Elizabeth parish, Fall River. Rev.J ohn C. Martins, pastor of Santo Christo parish, Fall River, will exchange pastorates with Rev. Gastao Oliveira, now pastor of St. Anthony of Padua parish, also Fall River. Rev. John A. Raposo, now parochial vicar at Immaculate Conception parish, New Bedford, will be pastor of St. Peter the Apostle

Father Cambra A native of New Bedford and the son of Raymond Cambra and Mary O. (Corvelo) Cambra, Father Cambra was ordained May 14, 1977. He has served as parochial vicar at Immaculate Conception,

Fall River; Immaculate Conception, Taunton; Santo Christo, Fall River; and since 1991 at St. Pius X. Father Martins Born in S. Sebastiao, Terceira, Azores, the son of Joao Cipriano and Rita Candida (Ferreira) Martins, Father Martins was ordained April 10, 1955. He was parochial vicar at St. Anthony of Padua, Fall River; St. Anthony, East Falmouth; St. Elizabeth's and Santo Christo, Fall River; and St. Anthony's, Taunton. He was pastor at St. Peter's, Provincetown, and Our Lady of Health, Fall River, before being

named pastor at Santo Christo in 1991. Father Oliveira A native of Ponta Delgada, Sao Miguel, Azores, Father Oliveira is the son of Maria (Louisa) Oliveira and the late Altino C. Oliveira. He was ordained in 1972 for the diocese of Carmona in Angola and served there as parochial vicar at the Cathedral of Carmona and then pastor of Our Lady of Fatima Church, Carmona City. He served on the diocesan tribunal, presbyteral council, and as diocesan diTurn to Page II

Charities Appeal at $1,356,110

Father Salvador chaplain for N.E. Region I Scouts Father Stephen B. Salvador, pastor of Holy Ghost parish, Attleboro, and diocesan chaplain of Catholic Scouting, has been named National Catholic Committee on Scouting(NCCS)chaplain for New England Region I of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, comprising the dioceses and/ or archdioceses of Boston, Bridgeport, Burlington, Fall River, Hartford, Manchester, Norwich, Portland, Providence, Springfield and Worcester. The appointment came at recent NCCS standing committee and executive board meetings in Orlando, FL. In addition to his new appointment, Father Salvador serves on the committee's Chaplain's Committee and its services subcommittee. The NCCS uses the program of the Boy Scouts of America as a form of ministry with Catholic youth, working with the National

parish, Provincetown; and Rev. Daniel O. Reis, now parochial vi~ar at Immaculate Conception, will become pastor there. Rev. Evaristo Tavares, now pastor at Immaculate Conception, New Bedford, will fill the same office at Our Lady of Angels parish, Fall Rivt:r.

The total collected thus far in the diocesan Catholic Charities . Appeal is $1,356,110.37, it has been announced by Rev. Daniel L. Freitas, diocesan director of the Appeal. He expressed gratitude to all contributors and to those who have worked for the success ofthe Appeal in both its Special Gifts and Parish phases.

O.L. of Victory, Centerville St. Elizabeth Seton, N. Falm. Holy Redeemer, Chatham

29,519.00 29,090.00 25,154.00

New Bedford Area O.L. of Mt. Carmel, N.B. $37,640.00 Turn to Page II

LEADING PARISHES

CAETANO pho'o'

FATHER SALVADOR

Attleboro Area O.L. of Mt. Carmel, Seekonk $36,219.00 22,903.00 St. Mary, Seekonk St. John the Evangelist, Altl. 19,272.00 18,906.00 St. Mark, Attleboro Falls 16,726.00 St. Mary, Mansfield Fall River Area St. Thomas More, Somerset $21,725.00 19,400.00 Sa nto Christo, Fall River 17,776.00 Holy Rosary, Fall River 17,634.00 St. Joh n of God, Somerset 17,410.00 Holy Name, Fall River Cape & Islands Area St. Pius X, So. Yarmouth $68,656.00 Holy Trinity, W. Harwich 30,685.00

F ALL RIVER area Catholic Charities Appeal workers pictured with Father Daniel L. Freitas, Appeal and area director; Deacon Thomas Souza, Appeal chairman; and Bishop O'Malley are Doris L. Poisson (second left) and Lorraine Julius, both parishioners of St. Anne Church, in Fall River. (Hickey photo)


$560

House of Orange, Nantucket; J. M. Ramos, Nantucket

Anonymous, Provincetown

Special Gifts CAP(COD &THE ISLANDS

ATTlEBORO

$1500

$300

St. Pius X Bingo, So. Yarmouth

J & RInvestments, Norton

$725

$200

St. Peter Conference, Provi ncetown

Swank, Inc. Reardon & Lynch Co.; Inc.

$700 St. Eliza beth Seton Conference, N. Falmouth

$50 Cook Funeral Home; Swift &Fisher, Inc., No. Attleboro

$600 Holy, Redeemer Conference, Chatham

$500 Deceased Members of The Gargano Family, Nantucket

$1500 Citizens·Union Savings Bank

$300 St. Elizabeth Seton Men's Club, N. Falmouth Deceased Benefactors of St. Mary Parish, Nantucket In Memory of Monsignor Lester L. Hull In Memory of Rev. Joseph Griffin

$250 ASpecial Friend, Nantucket

$200

FAll RIVER

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Holy Trinity Women's Guild, _ West Harwich

$800 Montie Plumbing & Heating Co., Inc.

$500 K of C, Council #86

$200 Lavoie & Tavares Company, Westport K of CCassidy Council #3669, :)wansea

$100 Dr. &Mrs. Warren M. Wood, II Journal De Fall River Almeida Electrical, Inc.

Natale; MlM Oscar Aubin Jr.; M/M John M/M Robert Steele; James Path Jr.; Leahy .' Robert McGrath; M/M Joseph Grigaitis; $104 M/M John J. Tobin; $100 M/M M/M James Maloney; Richard Croteau; C.B. Rosenbach; M/M James Donovan; Walter Nolan; Mrs. Joseph Finigan; Harold M/M William Garrity; M/M Ronald Fer· Roberts; M/M Robert Routhier enthel; Brendan Clifford; M/M George F. $50 M/M Robert Soukup; M/M James CAPE COD AND THE ISLANDS Mrs. Edward A. Giardino; William J. FlanCharette; M/M Henry H. Sprissler; M/M Hosey; Jane Powers; M/M Loui~; Florio; agan; M/M Richard Powers James Burns; Mrs. Thomas Wood; Heiny Mrs. Russell Weymouth; M/M Herbert ORLEANS $100 Mrs. William Conlon; Mrs. Elmer P. & Edna L. Caruso; Katherine M. TomMolway; Bernice Poutas; M/M Edward St. Joan of Arc $800 Rev. James W. T. Smith; M/M Robert Taylor; Dorothy pos; Mary J. Donovan; M/M K.e. Streight; Giardino; Mrs. William Carroll; Alphonse Clark; $650 M/M John E. Conway; $350 Clark; M/M John J. Deasy; $75 M/M P. Patrick & Anne Dineen; M/M Carl P. Burokas; Helen McCright; Helen Cronin; M/M Bernard Maguire; $250 Steven F. C M '11' Zimmerman;' M/M Leonard Marino Mrs. Joseph Walker; Albert Martin; Mrs. Minninger; $200 M/M John E. Mahoney; Crockett; M/MD. hase; M/ WI lam OSTERVILLE $100 MlM Robert E. McNamara; M/M James McGeary; M/M Romeo J. Noury; M/M Alfred Schubert; $150 M/M John McTague; $60 Dorothy Hoppough; M/M Our Lady of the Assumption $1800 Bernard McCabe; Henry C. Fitzgerald; Estelle Gorman; Francis O'Brien Cuccia; Thomas Garvey; M/M James Elmo A. Conway; $54 James W. Foley Rev. Thomas L. Rita; $500 Mary M. Tom- Sylvia Hatch; M/M Edward J. Eckland; $50 Dorothy Murphy; M/M Robert Hoban;. Virginia Kaufman; M/M Thomas $50 M/M Philip J. Finnegan; John linson; $240 M/M Ronald Day; M/M Judith Maguire; Melvin Dolan; M/MSullivan; M/M Frank Dayton; M/M 3eorge Lawson; Nancy·Lu Staib Weston; Frank R. McDonough; Patricia A. John D. Sullivan; $200 Mrs. Roland Ash- Arthur F. McLean; Patrick Cox; Martin E. Johnson; M/M Henri Lagasse; Calheirne $100· M/M Edwin Lannon; Beverly Lee; Mary Murray; M/M Melvin F. Russ; ley; M/M William Naas; $150 M/M Wi 1- Conroy; M/M Lawrence McGillivray; M/M Flynn; Dr/M William Tracey; MIt'll Hugh /M Adamkovic; Paul J. Alarie; M/M Ralph M/M JOhnRS. Shanahan; MM A. MaJc liam Butler, Jr.; Thomas J. Fallon; MlM David W. Cassidy; Arlene P. Rossi; MlM Fee; MlM Edward Doherty; M/M Edward Brakke; M/M David Brown; M/M Edward Isaac; Mrs. obertaRHart; Mp/ WiliiaMm · James Ryan; $100 Mrs. Victor Adams; John H. Annessi; James A. Lavita; M/M Hayes; M/M John McGrath; Thomas /M Bryant; Regina Collyer; M/M John Cough· RMilbler sr. ; Mary egina owell; Mrs. John Adomonis; MlM Philip Bou· George F. Rodenbush; M/M RogerS. Cash Connaughton; M/M Leo Hayes; M/M Ian ' Betty Fleml'ng' M/M John Haml'lton' 0 ert J. Dean dreau', Mrs. WI'II'lam H. Brl·ght·, M/M Th L M/M FW GI M' , Geo , '$50 M J B R B d $100 John &Mary Ray; Dr. Robert J. omas onergan; .. ynn; rs. M/M rge Hart·, M/M Adam HiPI)', Dr. rs. ames onner; ose ra y; James Brown, Jr.', M/M RI'chard Cal'n', F . D rt M/M W'II' I' fl ' M Ch I S k' Tilley', M/M Thos E. Cunningham; M/M rancls avenpo ; I lam le er; H I II C Charles Hopkl'ns' M/M Joseph Kelley' e en u Inan; rs. ar es zymans I; M/M Ro' bert P. Cron'ln', M/M Dav'ld E. M/M D . I C d M/M F k 0\' , , Mrs. Francls . D. Garvey; Mary Pare; Driscoll Rob.ert C.ostello·, Thom.a.s C. Misk.e.lI; M .. 1M . . anle ..o.ng on; ran Iva M/M Vernon Landers; Jane Lee . $100 Frederick, Joy & Amber Long; Edmond W. Dery Jr.; Deborah Lynn Wen· $100 Margaret Haggerty; M/M Law- Robert E. Fleischer; M/M J. Robert Kohr; .. CENTERVILLE zel '' M/M W,'III'am B,'II', Margaret May''rence Ann M/M John Our Lady ofVI'ctory $1750 Rev. Msgr. George W. Long; Th om as Maher; Th am as Kirk; Mrs. Armand Mathis; M/M . W. Roman; Theodore Kappler; M . L tt M G h P t M G Id T. Maiella; M/M William M. Smith; M/M Davl'd McCarthy', Grace O'Connor', Mrs. Anna R. Norton; William P. Gleeson; M. Henry T. Munroe, P.A:, $500 M/lvl Wil. artln; ore a c a ey; e er c 0 - E tt B H J B df d H d a e' Dorothy Butters; M/M Haynes Mahoney; ._1 rick; Dr/M Robert McLaughlin; M/M· vere . orn r.; ra or s ar w r, Thomas O'Donnell; M/M Melvin J. Pauze; M/M R.W. Neitz; William &Rita Harney; liam E. Curran; M/M Joseph I' ayne; Joseph Moran; Teresa Rew; M/M Roger Ralph & Frances Meyer; Robert Cotell; M/M John L. Quigley; M/M George Mrs. Paul Grady; M/M Paul F. Butler; $300 M/M Jon A. Glydon; RosE!marie Rioux; M/M Hector Robitaille; Virginia Alice D. Degnan Rucker; M/M Joseph Scanlan; $75 Eileen Mrs. William J. Lynch; M/M Everett J. Guertin; $250 M/M Alfred Fournier; Sanning; Joan F. Snow; M/M Robert POCASSET Mciver; $60 Mrs. Joseph Logue; $50 Shaw Jr.; M/M AlbertT.Anastasio; Loretta $200 M/M James Costello; M/M Thomas Troy; M/M John Veneri St. John the Evangelist $2000 Rev. Hope M. Burke; M/M.David J. Bradford; Ryan; M/M William G. Lionetta Hazlett; M/M James F. Holland; $150 $75 M/M Thomas Brady; M/M Alex Robert C. Donovan; $500 M/M Philip T. M/M Jon L. Bryan; Ruth Cunnion $100 M/M William Cahill; Helen C. M/M Earl L. Downs; M/M James Murphy Patterson; Helen Rabbitt; M/M Martin Riley; $200 Deacon/M James Marzelli, $50 M/M Elinus B. Hadley; M/M Wil· $100 Dr/M Richard J. Angelo, Jr.; Gauthier; M/M George F. Ryan; $65 Jr.; $100 M/M Brian Bergin; M/M Thomliam Carpenter; M/M Charles Cassidy; Cunningham; M/M Peter Randall; M/M M/M David Bisbee; M/M Garrett F. M/M Joseph Welch; $50 Charles Ador- as Dougherty; $50 M/M Robert Griffiths; Mrs. SA Dean; M/M Harry D. Evans, III; James P. Hoar; M/M Peter Gatti; Rosina Bowler; Joseph Cairns, Sr.; M/M John ney; Frances· Besson; M/M Paul Bossi; M/M Peter Kazmier M/M Daniel Hostetter; M/M David Hyyti, Dolan; M/M John McLoughlin, Jr.; Mrs. Casey; Carolyn Cenga; M/M Joseph C. Kathleen Bresnahan,' Ann Charlesworth,' EAST SANDWICH II M/M W'II' L t M TJ h Edmund Madden; Elizabeth Tormey; M/M Culll'nan,' Atty/M John F. Desmond,' M/M ; I lam aver y; rs. . osep John Marques; Mrs. Richard Boehler; Gertrude Clancy . Corpus Christi $350 M/M Kevin M. McCook; M/M Louis McKnight; Ann M/M Joseph Fallon; Dorothy Fitzgerald; William Devine; M/M Marshall Faillace; $50 Mrs. Roy Cruckshank; M/M Mario Flannigan; $200 M/M Francis J. Noonan; O'Connor; M/M James Shields;' Mrs. M/M Kenneth Bell; M/M Ralph Burgess; M/M John J. Gaffey; Kalliope G. Garc-ufes; Bartolini; M/M Elmer Costa; M/M E.C. M/M Philip J. Cardarople; M/M William Sherwood Tondorf John Kennedy M/M Edward J. Gibbons, Sr.; M/M Ray. Eldredge; M/M Laurence Gillane; Lucille F. MUlcahy; Francis J. Sylvia; M/M Wi 1BREWSTER $75 M/M Stephen Foley; M/M Wil. mond Glaser; M/M John F. Grady Hall; Maureen Hall; M/M Walter X. Kane; liam H. Mitchell; M/M John F. Crowley; 0 L d f th C 50 C II'am Grl'ffl'n,' Eml'ly M. PI'ekos', Ralph M/M Richard Griffith; Mary G. H3mil· M/M Aidan Kenney; M/M Richard LeClair; M/M J h W Shay' $150 M/M K' gsley ur a yo e ape $2 harles X. ton', M/M Edward Hannan', Helen ~ elle. o n . , In Sampson,' $200 Anna & Sarah Callahan,' M M/M Joseph Lewl's' Madeline M/M Joseph Loiselle; Linda L. Maintanis; M. Berg; M/M Peter A. Donahue; M/M ann;, her; M/M Bernard F. Kelley;.M/M Richard M/M Thomas Marcinek; M/M Peter John L. Stebbins; M/M William E. Murphy; $150 Lawrence G. Daly; '$100 John Col· Laird; Rita Church; Lillian Lawrence; Kennedy; Mrs. Loomis Kinney; MlM Markunas; M/M Ken Marshall; Ann Mars- M/M Roger A. Knollmeyer; Patrick E. Clintsh; Charless IDI.edon$;5Loouise Symcmonds; MM/cGMrafh~,r~~S.~~~~~i~~~;d M~I~a~.,h~~~ Patrick Lee; Mrs. Job H. Lippincott; MlM land; M/M Walter McPhee Murray; $125 M/M Bruce F. McDaniel; a enne u Ivan; Joseph heney; Paul J. Lynch; Katherine MacDonald; $50 James Millin; James & Phyllis $120 M/M James F. Radloff Robert O'Brien; Leonard Doherty; John J. John Giorgio; Edmond Janson-Lapalme; M/M Alexander D. Morgan, III; Elizabeth Moran; Emile Ollivier; Anne Peirce; Jane $100 M/M Robert D. Whearty', M/M Havlin' Mrs. Frank Woodworth; Marie Lynch; M h Lyd'a No n' M s Steph 60 M/M Victor Costanzo', M/M Richard urp y; I ona, r. en $ Perkins; M/M Richard Peterson; M/M Daniel T. Stack; Barbara J. Hadley; M/M . SOUTH YARMOUTH Brenner', M/M John Splaine,' $55 Edward O'Brien, Sr.; M/M Rene L. Poyant; MlM John Preu; Harriet Royal; John Sheridan; Robert F. Rogers, In Memory of Kris M. St. Pius Tenth $900 Rev. Msgr. John James R. Queeney; M/M Andre P. Sam. J. Smith; $600 M/M James F. McNabb; Lanzoni 'pou; Marea Sefton; M/M George Shee. . M/M John F. Sommerville; M/M Ken· Rogers; Mrs. Leo J. Kelly; M/M John J. neth Spengler; M. Jean Turner Neary; Mary F. Monahan; M/M David R. $500 M/M James Quirk, Jr.; M/M Joseph $50 M/M Edward Robinson; Mrs. han; Charles Walker HYANNIS Boucher; M/M Victor M. Devine; M/M E. McTiernan; $300 M/M Edward J.' Charles Boguski; M/M Thomas Newman; $80 Dr/M Karol B. Zielinski; $751V.lM St. Francis Xavier $3000 St. Vincent Charles E. Hughes; M/M Rudolph W. Murphy; M/M Robert Welch; Augustine Katherine MacDonald; Richard Cipullo; Joseph L. Cairns, Jr.; MlM Paul Hebert; De Paul; $1000 Rev. Edward J. Byington; Howes; Lillian C. Roth; Lawrence E. Bal· Gouveia; Dorothy A. Black; Anonymous; M/M Henri Marcotte; M/M Armand W. Samuel Keavy; Marjorie McCready; M/M $500 Mrs. Albina 'Golden; $250 M/M boni; June H. Miller; Agnes L. Bixby; .. $250 Mrs. William T. Smith; Ruth MulJalbert; M/M Thomas Madden; M/M John F. Pendergast, Jr.; M/M Wilfriell D. James Barry; $200 M/M Edward Zink; M/M Ernest A. Plante; Louise G. Robbins; ford; M/M Philip Gunther; M/M Paul Edward J. Hanlon; M/M Antonio Gabriele; Sampson; $70 M/M William D. Corbett; M/M Robert L. Kelley; Mrs. Gerard M/M Michael C. Peluso; Cheryl A. Cush· Long; $200 George Finn; M/M William E. Joseph Panek; Charles Tourjee; Forest $60 M/M Daniel J. Gallagher Richard; Theresa Mesq uita; M/M . ing; M/M Edward Guilfoyle; Robert F. Daniel; M/M John R. Mullen; M/M Robert Truland; Vivian Powers; M/M John $50 Mrs. Frank Andres; Dr/M Michael Charles W. Riley; Mrs. Jennie Karukas; Rooney; Dorothy E. Gallant; Dr/M Robert G. Sibley; Mrs. James Desmond; M/M Dougherty; Robert Robida P. Atkins; M/M Anthony Baudalna; Nicholas Karukas F. Mealy; Clarence J. Kilgallen Frank R. Locke; M/M James Peterson; . $50 M/M Charles Liberty; Sara Ahern; Dorothy Bailey; M/M Joseph P. Brosn 3n; $150 Mrs. John Flaherty Jr.; $125 $75 M/M Richard E. Nycz; M/M M/M John D. Schmidt; Margaret F. Kea· M/M Donald Tuers; M/M Henry St. Cyr; Dr/M Loren C. Burger; Eileen Claf'in; Mrs. Marshall Lovelette; M/M Thomas J. Robert D. Wentworth; M/M Francis J. ney; M/M Robert mcGowan; Lucy Kiley; M/M James Healy; Clarence F. King; Mrs. M/M Donald Colebourn; M/M Regin.lld Walsh; $100 Mrs. William E. Mcinerney; Fleming; Sally Latimer; M/M William K. M/M James H. Quirk Joseph Klaus; M/M Laurence Morse; Collette; Mrs. William J. Cotter; Mrs. M/M John Barrows; Mrs. C.E. McAdoo; Earle; M/M Henry J. Roux; $60 Mrs. $175 Mary Young; Mrs. Arthur G. M/M Thomas Boyle; Robert & Margaret Harry Davidson; Kathleen Denahy; M/M Lillian Sentero; Dr/M James Dunne; M/M Zulmira M. Mendes; $50 M/M Kenneth Lafrenier; $150 Mary O'Brien; M/M Walsh; M/M Frank Callbeck; Mrs. Roland Dennis Driscoll; M/M Roger Dupont Emmett F. Glynn; M/M Richard Powers; Corbin; M/M Gerald A. SUliivan; M/M Richard J. Stanton; M/M William McPart- Quayle; Margaret Murphy; M/M Michael $50 M/M John J. Flynn; M/M Thomas M/M John D. Sheehan M.D.; Mary Kelley; Peter R. Colgan; Mrs. James C. Bazzinotti; land; M/M Paul McGourty; M/M Thomas Hunter; M/M Paul McGlynn; Marie Con· Fosbre; M/M William Fulginiti; Lois Gam. M/M John W. Best M/M George W. Streeter; M/M Richard P. O'Connor; M/M Thomas Eaton; M/M nors; M/M Norman Gill; Mildred Lee ble; M/M Robert Guertin; M/M John F. $100 M/M Thomas McGarry; William J. Aittaniemi; M/M Fred W. Fay; M/M John Lally; M/M Thomas F. Donohue; $50 M/M Albert Kenney; M/M Joseph Haugh; M/M Wayne L. James; FrancisT. Carmody; M/M Edmund J. 'Daly Jr.; Mar· Thomas A. Donovan; M/M Steven J. Mur$125 Charles Young; M/M Richard Delo· Trzinski; M/M Antoinette Lioce; M/M Judge; M/M Owen Kiernan; M/M HO'N' garet McCarthy; M/M Roy Pollino; M/M ray; M/M Ernest J. Casali rey; Margaret R. Lucht; M/M James E. RJ. McCarthy; Maureen Cremen; M/M ard V. Kitchen; Mark Lepire; M/M John James E. Sullivan; C. Valerie Gesner; $50 M/M Albert Montani; Patricia Campion; M/M John Witheford; Mrs. Jos Thomas Molway; M/M Nicholas Imondi; M/M R. Bastille; M/M Americo Poliseno; Lemieux; Helen L. Freeley; M/M Joseph E. Colgan; $120 Edith Black; Ann M. James O'Neil; M/M David tallagher; Turn to Page 12

Parishes

E. Jacinto; Mrs. Benjamin H. Colonero; Mrs. Francis E. Terry; Robert L. Buckley; M/M Eugene B. O'Keefe; George A. Orto· lani; Mary Ortolani; M/M Joseph F. Ken· nan; M/M Donal V. Cianciolo; M/M Arthur J. Dolan; M/M Norbert F. Eisch; M/M Frank A. Laurino; Joan M. Sullivan; M/M Tello Tontini; Elizabeth Baltusis; John A. Sullivan; Mrs. Dante J. Tassinari; M/M Edward F. McCann; M/M John A. Mcardle; M/M Richard T: Streeter

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"Ntiti~;~ri~rh'r~ '~Ir~

Maria Ate" parents of Jonathan, a social worker; Jennifer, a junior at the University of New Hampshire; and

ANTHONY S. NUNES

MARY ANN MISKEL

Two I»rincipals named New principals have been named for Bishop Connolly High School, Fall River. and Bishop Stang High School. North Dartmouth. At Bishop 'Connolly, Bishop Sean O'Malley has appointed Anthony S. Nunes as principal, effective July I, to succeed Father John P. Murray. SJ, who will have completed a five-year term in June. Theresa Dougall, president of Bishop Stang High School, announced the appointll!ent.of Mary Ann Miskel as academic principal as of Aug. I. She is the first to serve in the post after Stang's reorganization of administration. Anthony Nunes A 1968 graduate of Msgr. Coyle High School, Taunton, Nunes has been teaching and ministering at Coyle and Cassidy High School since 1982, teaching Spanish and Portuguese and heading the foreign languge department for eight years. He was appointed:deflil 'Of students in 1990. He started the school's Portuguese program and is an honorary member of the Spanish and Portuguese honor societies. He has been involved in numerous programs that promote study of peace and justice, and has directed student tours to Europe and Mexico as a counselor and head teacher with the' American Council of International Studies. In 1990 and 1992 he participated with students and other faculty

members in the Rostro de Cristo (F;lce of Christ) program. a IO-day experience of living with the urban poor in Duran, EC\lador. Nunes taught previously in the Taunton public schOOl system for 10 years and has also been a visiting lecturer at Providence College. He holds a bachelor's degree in modern languages from Providence College, master's degrees in bilingual and bicultural education fro.m Southeast~r,n Massacl:lU~etts, I)niversity (U Mass~Dartmouth) and LusoBrazilian studies from·Brown U niversity. and a master of educationadministration degree from· the Catholic School Management Program at Boston College. He has also studied at the University of Lisbon. the University of the Azores, and St. Anselm College in Manchester. NH. A member of Sacred Heart parish in' Taunton, Nunes'is a' leCl-orand di'rector, of tlTe·:paris:h'.~.Confirmac tion 1\ program. He is president of the board of directors of St. Francis Samaritan House, a homeless shelter. and received the Humanitarian Award from the Pine Street Inn, a Boston homeless shelter for which he serves as school liaison. Earlier this year the Prince Henry Society of Massachusetts named him Portuguese-American of the Year for his efforts to promote Portuguese language and culture in the region.

Diocese of Fall. River

OFFICIAL His Excellenc;y, the Most Reverend Sean O'Malley, O.EM. Cap., Bishop of Fall River, has announced the following appointments: Rev. Raymond Cambra, from Parochial Vicar, St. Pius X Parish, South Yarmouth, to Pastor, St. Elizabeth Parish, Fall River.

'tHfA-NCHOR

'~. Diocese'bf'Fal1 Rrver -Fri.,

May; 19, 19953 •

plementing a new academic schedule. and managing acquisition and installation of office technol-

Joshua. a Coyle-Cassidy sophomore. Mary Ann Miskel Originally from South Dartmouth and New Bedford and a graduate of Bishop Stang, Mrs. M iskel has been an assistant principal in the Baltimore public school system for the past nine years. Her responsibilities as academic principal will be: overseeing school operations pertaining to academics and faculty; faculty reviews: curriculum development: management of department chairpersons and the guidance office. library and media center; master scheduling and technological innovation. Mrs. M iskel holds a bachelor's degree from Emmanuel College, Boston, and a master of education degree in administration/ supervision from Loyola College of Baltimore. Altogether she has 25 years' experience in public schools in Massachusetts, :\lew York and Maryland. Among her accomplishments in Maryland were designing and im-

ogy. which involved networking and supervision and evaluation of faculty.

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Rev. John C. Martins, from Pastor, Santo Christo Parish, Fall River, to Pastor, St. Anthony of Padua Parish, Fall River. Rev. Gastao Oliveira, from Pastor, St. Anthony of Padua Parish, Fall River, to Pastor, Santo Christo Parish, Fall River. Rev. John A. Raposo, from Parochial Vicar, II1111Ulculate Conception Parish, New Bedford, to Pastor, St. Peter the Apostle Parish, Provincetown. Rev. Daniel O. Reis, frQm Parochial Vicar, Immaculate Conception Parish, New Bedford, to Pastor, Immaculate Co~ception Parish, New Bedford. Rev. Evaris1.o Tavares, from Pastor, Immaculate Conception Parish, New Bedford, to Pastor, Our Lady of the Angels Parish, Fall River.

Effective June 28, 1995

EGAN'S Religious Gifts

140 G.A.R. HIGHWAY (Rt. 6) • SOMERSET, MA

(508) 679-8400


4 T~E ANCHOR -

Diocese of Fall River -

Fri., May, 19, 1995

themoorin~

the living word

Civil Rights and the Catholic League . The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights recently published its first report on the state of anti-Catholicism in the United States. Its purpose is to educate the public and hopefully to have an impact on decision-makers in government, education and the media. The League, the largest Catholic civil rights organization in the nation, is dedicated to eliminating anti-Catholicism in our social order. It's not a tremendously large group, but it is determined and is much needed in today's secular society. Indeed, headlines and news stories give daily evidence of the sad state of our society and the church's is one of the few voices preaching the sanctity of marriage, respect for all life, ethical and moral responsibility and accountability for one's actions. In many areas of our society this is a most unpopular attitude ilOd we see an increasingly bigoted response to the message of the church, as evidenced by attacks on her sacraments and rites. In recent times a chief target has been the clergy, as evidenced by the cruel caricature of the priesthood in the film "Priest." When bishops and priests attempt a response to such 'vicious attacks, they are written off as second-class rejects. The Catholic League seeks to raise the level of consciousness on these matters among Catholic laity and to encourage them to come to the defense of the church. It emphasizes that an attack on the church is an attack on all Catholics. The League is, in fact, an extension of the church's mission in the marketplace and its work is indeed needed today when antiCatholicism is seen in all areas of society, from activists' organizations to the arts. Catholic-bashing in schools is on the rise, especially in colleges and universities, and is tolerated by too many educators under the guise offree speech. But what too many ignore is the difference between those who disagree and those who disdain. There is a difference between criticism and insult, between dialogue and diatribe. it-is abo~t,time that those who make it their business to engage in anti-Catholicism are called to task and indeed to court. Our brothers and sisters in the NAACP and the Jewish Anti-Defamation League never tolerate such bigotry as is suffered by the Catholic Church. It's about time Catholics took a leaf out of their books and started to hold bigots publicly accountable.. .I or their behavior and actions. It's the only way to diminish the snowballing effects of their behavior. It is imperative to curb or better, eradicate, all forms of social, religious or cultural discrimination. All are incompatible with God's design and certainly with the Constitution of the United States. ' . In an age when we are in many ways drawing more closely together, goodwill among people must be strengthened, not shattered. The church has always held it to be her duty to foster unity, charity and realization of what all peoples have in common. She rejects as contrary to the will of Christ any discrimination or harassment against people on the basis of race, religion or color. As she teaches, she expects to be treated. The Catholic League is a strong voice upholding the rights and defending the freedoms of American Catholicism. Let us join with it to say that all of us have had enough of Catholic bashing in America! The Editor

the

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 887 Highland Avenue P.O. BOX 7 Fall River. MA 02720 Fall River. MA 02722-0007 Teiephone 508-675-7151 FAX (508) 675-7048 Send address changes to P.O. Box 7 or call telephone number above

GENERAL MANAGER

EDITOR Rev. John F. Moore

Rosemary Dussault ~ Learv

Press - Fall River

eNs/Rcut:rs photo

A CIVILIAN CHECKS THE BODY OF A MAN KILLED DURING, HEAVY ATTACKS ON THE CROATIAN CAPITAL OF ZAGREB '~How lQilg,O.'Lord?'~Ps~ -.-

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Nine years later, Chernobyl still suffers NEW YORK (CNS) - To mark Father McMahon said that in the ninth anniversary of the Cher1986 the Catholic Medical Misnobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine, sion Board was the first agency to the Catholic Medical Mission send medical supplies for children Board flew in another shipment of suffering from radiation sickness medicines for use by doctors who and over the succc::eding nine years are treating the victims. has sent more than $9 million Jesuit Father Edward J. Mc- worth of supplies to treat both Mahon, director of the agency, left children and adults. The board New York to visit Ukraine April plans special activities next year to 26. That was the date in 1986 an commemorate the 'IOth anniverexplosion at a reactor blew off the . sary of the program, he said. top of the building where it was "But the situation is worse now housed and released tons of radio- than it was in the beginning," he active material into the atmos- said. "There are dou ble the number phere. of cases now." The priest went with leaders of He said adults continue to dethe Children of Chernobyl Relief velop cancers and other problems Fund, an agency based in Short attributable to the disaster, and Hills, N.J. Founded in 1989 to that more children are born with enlist Ukrainian-Americans in pro- defects passed on to them genetigrams of disaster aid, it works in cally. cooperation with the Catholic A statement issued in April by Medical Mission Board. the Children of Chernobyl Relief Father McMahon, interviewed Fund said: "Recent studies indiafter his return at his agency's offi- cate that Chernobyl released 300 ces in New York, said' a planeload 'times more radiation than the of medicines arrived in Kiev the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, and day after his group got there, and presently Ukraine and Belarus, the received widespread media cover- two countries most affected by the age. radioactive fallout, are the only "They are so impressed when two nations in Europe experiencyou come and let them know'they ing an increase in, infant mortality are not forgotten," he said. rates and decline in general popuFather McMahon said the ship- lation growth." ment included more than $300,000 Father McMahon said he visited worth of medicines from his agency 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 - partly received as donations THE ANCHOR (USPS-545-020). Second from pharmaceutical companies, Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass. partly purchased - and a larger Published weekly except the week of July 4 amount provided by the Children and the week after Christmas at 887 Highland Avenue, Fall River. Mass. 02720 by of Chernobyl Relief Fund. the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall The medicines sent by the fund, River. Subscription price by mail, postpaid it reported, were secured under a $11.00 per year. Postmasters send address grant from AID, the U.S. Agency changes to The Anchor. P.O. Box 7. Fall for International Development. River, MA 02722.

children in two hospitals in Kiev, gave them American candy and tried to communicate with them in spite of knowing only a couple of Ukrainian words. "They didn't know what I was saying, but it,was easy to get them laughing," he said. "In their innocence they handle this better than adults. The children don't know how ill they are." Father McMahon said the children would not necessarily remain in the hospitals" that some might live at home and return from time to time so doctors could treat them and study their development. He said the children's relieffund also worked with Ukrainian authorities to arrange a seminar for doctors dealing with radiation victims, and sent some American specialists to lead it. In Ukraine, doctors involv\:d in research and those in practice tend to remain separate, but the seminar brought them together for interchange with each other as well as with the American specialists, Father McMahon said. He said he had been told prior to the trip he could visit the Chernobyl reactor site, and was dil;appointed that no one was willing to drive him there. A former Navy chaplain, he ~:aid he twice served on nuclear submarines, and had become accustomed to living with nuclear reactors. He had no fear of visiting the Chernobyl site, but admitted there was potential danger because the plant still had three active reactors. "They do not think it would be economically feasible to shut. it down," he said.


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The indwelling of peace Acts 15:1-2,22-29 Revelation 21:10-.4,22-23 John 14:23-:29 As the Easter season moves toward completion, the Church's liturgy prepares for the descent of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost and its universal mission in the service of the gospel. This Sunday's readings assure the Church of God's continual presence within her midst as she struggles to be "true" to Jesus' challenge to love as he has. The Church is not called to an introverted life of self·,serving preservation; her mission is to show forth God's loving presence to all peoples. Despite her necessary struggles in striving to be faithful to the gospel, she is to be marked by peace. Only in this way can we sing today's psalm response: "0 God,let all the nations praise you" (Ps 67). The first reading from Acts recounts the important Council of Jerusalem which settled the crucial question of whether or not the salvation of Gentile converts to Christianity depended upon their being "circumcised according to Mosaic practice." This controversy bitterly divided the early Church, but through the guidance of the Holy Spirit it was able to reach a decision to expand beyond its Jewish origins and preach the gospel to peoples of all cult ures. In their preaching to the Gentiles, Paul and Barnabas had not required circumcision, bl.\t other .m.en from Judea insisted on its necessity (see Genesis 17). In their deliberations, the apostles and elders, on the basis of Peter's testimony about his baptism of the Roman centurion Cornelius (Acts 15:6-12), decide not to require that Gentiles be circumcised nor obey th(: whole Mosaic code. The letter sent "to the brothe~s of Gentile origin in Antioch" sImply asks that they observe the minimal requirements of non-Jews living among Jews: abstaining from meat sacrificed to idols, from blood, from meat of strangled animals and from illicit sexual union (see Leviticus 17-18). Obedience to these prohibitions would insure that the Gentile converts could participate in table fellowship with their Jewish Christian brethren.

Daily Readings May 22: Acts 16:11-15; Ps 149:1-6,9; In 15:26-16:4a May 23: Acts 16:22-34; Ps 138:1-3,7-8; In 16:5-11 May 24: Acts 17:15,2218:1; Ps 148:1-2,11-14; In 16:12-15 May 25: Acts 1:1-11; Ps 47:2-3,6-9; Eph 1:17-23 or Heb 9:24-28,;10:19-23; Lk 24:46-53 May 26: Acts 18:9-18; Ps 47:2-7; In 16:20-23a May 27: Acts 18:23-28; Ps 47:2-3,8-10; In 16:23b-28 May 28: Acts 7:55-60; Ps 97:1-2,6-7,9; Rv 22:12-14, 16-17,20; In 17:20-26

By DR. PATRICK V. REID The second reading from ReveI~t!on continues last Sunday's vIsion of God's new creation by focusing on the heavenly Jerusalem which is the bride of the Lamb. This is John of Patmos' vision of the final salvation which awaits God's faithful saints. He deliberately contrasts the new Jerusalem with its antitype - the selfish, bloodthirsty whore of Babylon ~see Revelation 17). Drawing upon Imagery found in the writings of the prophets (see Ezekiel 40-48 and Isaiah 60-62), John describes a city which radiates the presence of God. Its precious stones "gleam with the splendor of God." The massive walls have twelve gates inscribed with the names of the twelve tribes and protected by angels. On the foundation stones are written the names ofthe twelve apos~les of the Lamb. God's prese~cels sQ compl.et¢ t.hat, there is nQ, need. for 'a 'temple" nor' tne lig!li" prOVided by the sun or moon. God and the Lamb are the temple, and their glory provide light for the city. In the gospel, Jesus' words to his disciples from John's farewell discourse promise God's transforming presence to those who strive to be true to Jesus' command ofIove. Faced with the prospect of Jesus'

DANA, an Irish Christian singer who has composed several songs at the request of Pope John Paul II, including "We Are One Body," which she sang in 1993 with thousands of youth at World Youth Day in Denver, will appear in concert at 7 p.m. Friday, June 23, at St. Pius X Church, South Yarmouth. Information: 362-1572 and 398-8472.

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imminent departure, the disciples are understandably afraid, but Jesus assures them "Do not be distressed or fearful." His death and resurrection will be a return to the Father which will be followed by a new, even superior, presence with the disciples in which he and the Father and the Holy Spirit, the Paraclete, will dwell with them. The Paraclete's role will be to instruct and remind the disciples of all that Jesus told them, so that after the resurrection the significance of Jesus' actions and words will be clear (see John 2:22). Jesus promises that God's indwelling with the disciples after the resurrection will bring them the gift of peace, not the worldly peace of contending political powers, but the peace of those who keep God's command of love. "'Peace' is my farewell gift to you; my peace is my gift to you; I do not give it to you as the world gives peace."

Pope decries "barbarianism" VATICAN CITY (CNS) - Pope John Paul II has condemned renewed fighting in Bosnia-Herzegovina that has cl~imed the lives of a priest and nun who died in the bombing of a parish church. "Who can remain silent and inactive in the face of such barbarianism? Who can approve of such savagery, from whatever side it comes?" the pope said May 14. "Enough hatred! Enough blood! Enough war! Whoever is responsible for suc.h acts and whoever plans them WIll answer to God and ' t? a.1I pe~ple," he. said in a voice nngmg WIth emotIOn. The priest and nun were killed May 12 when St. Teresa parish was blown up. The bodies of Father ~i1ip L~kensa, 52, and Sister CeciIta Grglc, 43, were found in the

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THE ANCHOR -

Dioce~~ ~f Fall

smoldering ruins of the church. The parish is in Presnace, in the Serbian-held Banja Luka region of Bosnia, where tensions are high between the Croatian minority and the Serbian majority. Thousands ?f Serbian. refugees have poured mto the regIOn in recent weeks following a Croatian offensive in Siavonia, a contested border region in eastern Croatia. The pope described the parish bombing as among recent attacks that have also destroyed a convent and four other churches in the diocese. He said Bishop Franjo Komarica of Banja Luka, who is reportedly under hou~e arrest, described to him the suffering of the local church and urged international action. According to the Italian news

Fri., May, 19, 19955

R'iver -

agency ANSA, Bosnian Serb government authorities ha ve condemned attacks against churches.

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6 THE-ANCHOR -

Diocese of Fall River -

Fri."May, 19, 1995

Death on the highway By Antoinette Bosco

Few people are aware of the fatalities on our highways because of truck accidents, which are increasing each year. It scares me to realize that the number of people killed in accidents involving trucks over the last 12 years - more than 50,000 - nearly equals the number of Americans killed in Vietnam during that 12year war. I recall my own recent experience when driving on a highway. All of a sudden a huge trailor truc\< was practically on top of my compa'ct car. Blasting on his horn, the driver then swerved into the passing lane. I was shook up, to say the least, and convinced that the driver had been behind the wheel all night and probably had dozed for a moment. If he hadn't become alert enough to see me, that monster truck would have rear-ended me' badly. Later I heard of a grassroots .i DENVER ARCHBISHOP J. Francis Stafford chats with organization formed about. five years ago to do something about Matthew Valenti', 5, on the. presider's chair at a Mass for this deadly situation. . special religious education students at the Cathedral of the Called Citizens for Reliable and Immaculate Conception. (CNS photo) Safe Highways - or CR,ASH members have worked tirelessly to ge't truc~ safety issues before the public, After my near-accident, I called CRASH (1-800-CRASH-12) By Father Eugt!ne Hemrick unless there IS an acceptance of for information. each family's sentiments. Julie Dawson, a spokesperson . "Every time. I look at the 'Style' Some couples have been cohab- forthe organization, said that since section in the newspape'r and see' CRASH was founded it has become iting for a considerable time thinkthe smiling faces of brides, I feel is the best way to ensure somewhat sad because I know half ing this 'bT d I . an effectiv'e force forgetting truck of them will end up in broken . c?mpastl Id.l.t y ahn a. astlhn g mar-safety legisla'tion passed in Connage. t u les s ow Just t e oppo. marriages," , 'sl't·e..r;;oup . les·'w.h' . ,. 0 cohabt't before ,-,- ~!~~~'. .. . .,. -- .,. .-....-;--_.... . . . --. Those sobering words c~'nie from marriage are 30 percent more prone a researcher who is part of a team than others to divorce. studying marriage-preparation proA man and women planning grams, The research is being conmarriage may come from diverse ducted by the new Center for MarBy Dr. James and Mary Kenny cultural backgrounds; others may riage and Family at Creighton be of the same culture, but in name Dear Dr. Kenny: I've been laid V.niversity and Omaha, Neb.. in only. off from work for over a month an effort to help couples preparing Some who come to marriage for marriage understand each other preparation sessions never have. now and I'm getting very frustrated. I end up taking things out better. discussed the role finances play in on our two elementary school-age The researchers will be the first making or breaking a marriage, or children. to tell you that even though they all that is involved in pursuing I start off by nagging' them. found that two-thirds of those individual careers, . Next thing is I'm yelling at them who participated in a marriage These issues are just some which and sending them to their room or preparation program were very researchers studying marriage preppunishing them for something satisfied with it, the program alone aration programs have surfaced. minor. cannot guarantee a successful marResearchers also point to another I don't want to be this way. I riage. Other factors are needed, finding that ,frequently is overknow that my layoff is at the botlike strong parent role models, looked. Often marriage preparatom of it, but I still can't control wise friends and relatives, a good tion participants have had little to myself. Help! - Chicago ed ucation and religious particino affiliation with a parish or a You don't ask about how to end pation. . priest. The marriage-preparation the layoff or find a new job so I The researchers at Creighton program becomes a vehicle for assume you are doing all you can. are finding that marriage preparatheir first close encounter with the with the primary problem. You tion programs are especially neceschurch. want to know how to keep your sary today because of the signifiMost priests and parents will frustration and anger from spilling cant issues participants raise -tell you that the church's marriage over. issues' which if not faced squarely preparation requirement often Yes, anger. Frustration is techcan come baek to haunt a marriage. meets resistance. Young people nically defined as "blocked goalResearch has found that there tend to be independent and want directed activity." are an increasing number of mixed to find their own way without outWhen we can't get or have what· marriages, as well as marriages side assistance. Some feel it is an we want, the blocked energy is involving "split-level Catholics," a infringement on their time. often labeled as anger. Like lightterm for couples who share the But research by Creighton Unining, the anger may then zap the same religious affiliation but are at different levels in understanding . versity and the archdiocese of most available point or persons. In Omaha confirms the church's wisyour case, your children are the it. dom in requiring marriage preparecipients. Studies repeatedly have shown ration, which brings to the surface You don't want to take out your that the more each party undermany important issues that counegative feelings on your children. stands how the other views reliples need to face before they comYou need to take charge of your gion, the better the chance the mit themselves to one another for life. Your moods are your most marriage will survive. This is espelife. formidable adversary. cially true when children come The research also shows that You cannot defeat a mood with along and family values stand or those who have participated in reasoning or by trying to interpose fall on the, religious values of the marriage preparation have found another mood. Ultimately, you parents. it worthwhile. need to .get busy. Some couples come to marriage preparation having been married Let actions dictate your feelings before. Often each has children and not vice versa. If you can get from a previous marriage. Disrupyour hands and feet busy, your tive family feuds could easily arise heart and mind will eventually fol-

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She pointed to a major victory in 1991 when CRASH got a bill passed to stop the proliferation of triple-trailer and other oversized

ANTOINETTE BOSCO

Statistics show that one person dies every two hours, and more than 100,000 people are injured each year in truckrelated accidents. Driver fatigue remains the greatest cause of traffic accidents; the key is to make the trucking industry more accountable in complying with existing safety laws trucks on'the nation's highways. In 1992'the'organization also led a successful campaign to stop a Department of Transportation proposal to increase the number of hours truck drivers legally could drive. We must remember what we're . really talking about are people and preventing .the escalating tragedy of the )oss:~f I<?,ved ones in tr\lck ac.~ideri.tsj.. 4~! ·n' ..,1 .. ·._

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low. Here is a simple 1-2-3-4 plan to accomplish that. I. Analyze your anger. Give yourself 30 seconds, no more, to

Dateline NBC carried a program on the subject, which was a Btunner. It brought out how many truck drivers feel they really have to break the law if they're going to keep their jobs. Truck drivers often can't deliver a load on time if they abidt: by the allowed driving hours. They keep a logbook, but it's fiction. ":It's a lie book," said a driver on the program. One problem getting at'~ention from CRAS H involves trucking industry proposals to increase truck lengths and weights. CRAS H told members of Congress of the added dangers from monster trucks, and is urging lawmakers to cap trailer length at 53 feet for national highway trayeL Driver fatigue remains by far the greatest cause of traffic: accidents, according to the National Transportation Safety Board. The key is to make the trucking industry more accountable in complying witp existing safety laws. . Tr\lck driyers s\lpport this move because they are the ones to benefit most if truck companies are restricted from making truckers work more hours. We should care about this na. tional tragedy. I see it as another a.spect of what Pople John Powl II recently called the "culture of death." We should be aware of the problem and do· what we cun to I demand 'truck safety. I ,jl.JoJlp ........ JJt." .... ;! .• j ! l . : l . I ••. , · ~ . ,

By Dr. JAMES &

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MARY KENNY

Frustration is technically defined as "blocked goaldirected activity." When we can't get or have what we want, the blocked energy is often labeled as anger. You cannot defeat a mood with reasoning or by trying to interpose another mood. Ultimately, you need to get busy. think how angry you are and why. Picture your anger as an ugly troll, a monster, a devil. . Picture your nagging as a cancerous disease. Otherwise known as negative verbal control, nagging is destructive of good relationships. 2. Picture a red octagonal stop sign. Say: Stop! Enough! Cast out the devil!

3. Escape. Leave the SCt:ne. Physically scram. Take a phy!:ical or mental timeout. Have a time:out place to go like your room or the bathroom or outside. Stay there for at least 60 seconds. If your cannot vacate the sct:ne, try some mental timeouts. Laugh. Take a deep breath. Say a prayer. 4. Do something! Act. Get bllsy, either in an opposite direction or as a distraction. Here are a few suggestions. - Interpose a positive action in place of your negative feeling. Fuke yourself out. Instead of nagging, give a compliment or a hug. - Picture yourself smiling in spite of it all. Then put a big smile on your face. - Walk once around the 01ltside of your house. Do 10 pushups. Pound a pillow. You are not the victim of your frustration and mood. You can ',e the person you want to be. . Reader questions on family living and child care to be answerl!d in print are invited by The Kennys; 219 W. Harrison; Rensselaer, Ind. 47978. .

STEWARDSHIP.... A WAY OF LIFE


Church teaching on linlbo Q. After the sudden death of a baby in our parish, some of us were discussing limbo. One woman, a life-long Catholic, said she was taught that babies who died before baptism were not saved. They went to a place called limbo where they would be happy, but not with God in heaven. I am a convert, but cannot believe this is Catholic dOdrine. Is she right? (Texas) A. In some ways she is. But you are right in your instinct that this is not what the Catholic Church teaches. The name of and ideas about limbo have a strange history. It starts generally around the time of St. Augustine (died, 430), when the salvation of infants who died without baptism began to be seriously questioned by leading Christian writers. Much later the Catechism of the Council of Tr~nt (the "Roman Catechism" of 1566) asserted that "without baptism this [sancitifying] grace and this [eternal] life are impossible" for children. However, the existence of a place or condition called limbo, where unbaptized infa nts would spend eternity in a state of "natural" ha·ppiness. but not in heaven, has never directly been addressed in a document of the universal church. Strangely. howc:ver. it became for many centuries a coinnionCatholic belief. Just 110 years ago, the Baltimore Catechism (No.3, published by authority of the American bishops in 1885) taught that infants who die without baptism "cannot enter heaven; but it is the common belief they will go to some place similar to limbo. where they will be free from suffering. though deprived of the happiness of heaven" (Question 632).

I guess I'm middle-aged G. Gaynor McTigue's collection of 350 middle-aged indicators ("You Know You're Middle-Aged When ...") has been a big seller for several months now, and it was the center of our post-liturgy carbo'n'-caffeine conversation last Sunday. Just how do you know when you've reached middle-aged Catholicness? For beginners. we agreed, you know it when you refuse to go to face-to-face confession because your priest looks so young you feel like you're talking to one of your children's college friends. You know you are a middleaged Catholic when charities begin sending you letters that want you to include them in your will. Or when: -You start reading those "gift annuity" advertisements in Catholic periodicals. - You come early to Mass so no one wm have a chance to sit in your place. - You don't feel guilty if you forgot your checkbook and can't make a donation at this particular

By

OBI~UARY

FATHER

Kathryn Blottman

JOHN J.

The Mass of Christian Burial was offered this morning at St. John the Evangelist Church, Attleboro, by Father William P. Blottman for his mother, Kathryn M. Blottman, 95, who died May 15 in Wrentham. Bishop Sean O'Malley presided at the Mass and many priests of tht: diocese were concelebrants. Mrs. Blottman was the widow of John B. Blottman, Sr., and the daughter of the late Peter and Louise (Mikenhause) Williams. Born in Dayton, Ohio, where she was a legal secretary before her marriage, she had lived in Attleboro for the past 50 years, where she was a member of the Catholic Order of Foresters and of Alcazaba Circle of the Daughters of Isabella. She is survived by two sons, Father Blottman, pastor of St. Peter the Apostle parish, Prov~nce­ town; and John B. Blottman, Jr., of North Andover; four daughters, Sister Rosemary Blottman, RC, of Dedham; Elizabeth A. McCormack of Ridgefield Park, NJ; Ruth K. Chippendale of Palo Alto, CA; and Joan Kenton of Attleboro; also by a sister, Sister Louise M. Williams, CPPS, of Oceanside, CA; 16 grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. She was the sister of the late Lawrence, Walter and Ambrose Williams.

DIETZEN This catechism. as most older Catholics will know, was the primary source for teaching our faith for most of the 20th century, which explains your friend's remark. Since then, however, our church has become far more hopeful and confident of God's desire and power to sa ve his people in ways beyond those he has revealed to us. For example, when discussing children who die without baptism, the new Catechism of the Catholic Church doesn't mention limbo at all. but expresses full trust in the love and mercy of God. The great mercy of God who desires that all people be saved, it says. and the tenderness of Jesus who said, "Let the children come to me," (Mark 10: 14) "allow us to hope that there is a way of salvation for children who have died without baptism" (No. 1261). Q. Would you explain the meaning of certain words that appear at the beginning ofsome ofthe psalms, words like "miktam" (16); "maskil" (32); "upon the gittith" (8)? We've asked several priests and ministers, but have not received an answer, (Florida) A. Most of th\1 psalms, as the ones to which you refer, contain an introduction Or title. These are generally of three types. One refers to the history of the psalm, according to Hebrew tradition. Psalm 18, for example, is David's thanksgiving for being "rescued from the grasp of all his enemies and from the hand of Saul." Psalm 51 is David's prayer of sorrow "after his sin with Bathsheba" (2 Sm. II). A second group, including your examples, are musical instructions, instruments to be used and so on.

By DAN MORRIS

week's Knights of Columbus breakfast. - You support the idea of more speed bumps in the parking lot and expanding,the crying room. - Youjust can't get excited about debates over inclusive language, celibacy, married clergy or women's ordination, but you have deep feelings about holding hands during the Our Father. - You are irritated when someone hands you a hymnal and actually expects you to sing. - Your lower back hurts like the devil doing double time when you kneel too long. - You think the church should be allocating more resources to ministry to the aged. -It dawns on you how much sense the so-called "delayed vocations" make. - When the priest says "and for· those for whom we now pray," you don't have enough time to remember everyone.

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THE ANCHOR -

Diocese of Fall River -

Fri., May, 19, 19957

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"You may think you are forgotten by the rest of the world. But never are you far from the mind and heart of God." • To the people of Bosnia-Herzegovina, he sent this message: "... may the ...weapons finally be silenced, may hearts be opened to the ardent task of peace!" • In the Pope's name, the Propagation

of the Faith encourages your prayerful and financial support of the Church in Sudan, in Bosnia and throughout the mission world. The Society for THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH Reverend Monsignor John J. Oliveira, V.E. 344 Highland Avenue • Fall River, MA 02720 "Attention: Column." No. 101 ANCH 5119/95

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8 THE ANCHOR -

Diocese of Fall River -

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Stonehill to award four honorary doctorates at May 21 graduation NORTH EASTON -Stonehill College will hold its 44th commencement exercises at II a.m. Sunday, May 21, on the College quadrangle. The College will confer more than 510 baccalaureate and honorary degrees. In the event of inclement weather, commencement exercises will be held at the Sally Blair Ames Sports Complex. Commencement speaker Sir John Marks Templeton, business- . -man, philanthropist and promoter of religion in the modern world, will be awarded an honorary doctor of philosophy degree. Also receiving honorary degrees will be Mary Cunningham Agee, founder and volunteer executiye director of The Nurturing Network, who will be awarded an honorary doctor of humanities degree; Leonard Florence, chairman, chief executive officer, and president of Syratech Corporation, honorary doctor oflaws; and Cathy E. Minehan, president of the Federal Reserve· Bank of Boston, honorary doctor of humane letters. Sir John Marks Templeton is the founder of some of the world's largest and most successful investment funds, including Templeton' Growth Fund and Templeton World Fund. Aware of the many billions of dollars spent on research in commerce and industry - and the comparatively small amount spent on research in religion - Templeton decided in 1972 to create a prize,to honor those who advanced the world's understanding of God. In 1973, the first Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion was awarded to M other Theresa. Stonehill alumnus Michael'N ovak, . '56, a religious philosopher whose writings on free society have influenced political and' social movements around the world, won the

1994 Templeton Prize, valued at about $1 million. Beyond funding the Prize, Templeton does not participate in choosing winners, 'leaving that to an international panel of jlJdges. Mary Cunningham Agee is the founder and volunteer executive' director of The Nurturing Network, a nationwide charitable organization that has provided for over a decade a positive alternative to abortion for thousands of mothers facing the 'crisis of an unplanned pregnancy. The Network has thousands of volunteer members who provide counseling, medical services, nurturing homes, employment, expedited college transfers and financial assistance for clients. Her business career has included top management positions in two of Fortune s 500 largest companies. As vice president of strategic planning for the Bendix Corporation and Joseph E. Seagram and Sons, Mrs. Agee significantly impacted the growth strategies of· both companies. She was promoted to the chairman's advisory council at Bendix and to executive vice president of planning at Seagram. She has also held management positions with the Chase Maghattan Bank and Salomon Brothers. Leonard Florence is chairman, chief executive officer and president of Syratech Corporation, a leading manufacturer of sterling silver flatware and resin casual furniture and accessories. Over the past 30 years Florence has bought or developed more than 30 ~omp;lQie~., .. , ,..'...... Florence serves'on the 'bo'ard'of' trustees of the Cardinal Cushing School and Training Center for ExceptiQnal Children of All Faiths as well as the Chelsea Soldiers Home. He holds honorary degrees

from King's College, Wilkes-Barre, PA; Merrimack College and Tufts University. In 1993, the Charlotte and Leonard Florence dental clinic and auditorium at Tufts Dental School and Charlotte and Leonard Florence courtyard in the nursery school at Temple Mishkan Tefila were dedicated. Cathy E. Minehan was named president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston in July 1994: She is a voting member of the F,~deral Open Market Committee, the monetary policymaking body of the U.S. central bank. She also directs the bank's supervision and regulation, payments system and research activities. Mrs. Minehan began her career with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in 1968. Her 23 years with the New York Fed included work in supervision, regulation and public infor!T!ation, as w,ell as a tour of duty as a senior aide to several governors at the Board of Governors in Washington, D,C. Her career at the New York Fed culminated in her being named senior vice president for high value payments, securities and accounting operations in 1987. In 1991, she was named first vice president and chief operating officer at the Boston Fed, becoming the first woman in the history of the Federal Reserve System to be named first vice president. She is also the first woman to be name.d president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. She is chair ,of a sp~.ciaJ 9vers.ight com~ mittee to ovei's'ee Federal Rese:rve' System's activities relative to interstate banking. She is also chair of the Conference of Presidents' Management System, Budget and PI.anning Committee.

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ROME (CNS) - Five mission- worth of m~dical supplies to a ary sisters were among more than . Catholic' )lOspital in Kik,wit and two dozen people killed in Zaire by a mysterious disease that authorities have attributed to the deadly Ebola virus. Ten other sisters were being kept in isolation in Zaire after coming in contact with the disease, but were reportedly not infected. Four of the deceased religious, Italian Sisters Floralba Rondi, Clara Angela Ghilardi, Dinarosa Belleri and Danielangela Sorti, were medical workers in Kikwit. Members of the Sisters of the Little Poor, a religious order based in Bergamo in northern Italy, they had worked in Zaire for up to 40 years. Kikwit, a city of about 600,000 people, was quarantined and surrounded by Zairian troops in early May. The virus also killed a young Zairian nun, Siste'r Eugenie Kabina, a nursing student in Kikwit. Ebola, a highly contagious disease spread through bodily fluids, causes death in about 90 percent of those it infects, causing hemorrhaging, fever and vomiting. There is no known cure and it is considered one of the deadliest viruses SISTER Clara Angela Ghiever identified. In 1976, an outbreak killed 276 people in a Zai- lardi, pictured with a Zairian rian village. child, is one of the five misIn Baltimore, Catholic Relief Services, the U.S. bishops' over- sionaries who' died after conseas relief and development agency, tracting the Ebola virus, said it oversaw delivery of $3,000 (CNS/ Reu!ers photo)

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that it and other aid agencies were helping deliver an additional $25,000 in emergency medical a.id, provided through the U.S. Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance.

Sudan crucifixions ROME (CNS) - Two leaders of a Sudanese clan that convertt:d to Catholicism in the 1970s were crucified for refusing to renount:e their faith and return to Islam, said the head of a Sudanese diocese. Msgr. Cesare Mazzolari, apostolic administrator of the diocese of Rumbek, said the mid-August crucifixions were reported in a letter from the vicar general of the archdiocese of Khartoum. "Death is implied [in the letter), but not stated," Msgr. Mazzolari told Catholic News Service. He said the men who were crucified, Abdalla Yusif, 65, and Mahanna Muhammad, 43, were arrested in mid-July and charged with apostasy for renounc-ing the Muslim faith.


Deacons' wives have mixed views on vocation BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (CNS) - As John and Sylvia Winkelman went through the deacon formation process in the St. PaulMinneapolis archdiocese, they looked forward to his ordination as a deacon. But Sylvia said she felt mixed emotions when John was introduced at St. Margaret Mary parish in Golden Valley, where he would serve, while she sat and watched. "It was like preparing for skijumping," she said. "Wf: got our skis on. He flew. And' fell off the chute. It was painfuL" Mrs. Winkelman was one offive women who talked about the rewards and frustrations of permanent deacons' wives at the recent annual convention ofthf; National Association of Permanent Diaconate Directors. The convention, held in Bloomington, drew about 200 diocesan diaconate directors, permanent deacons and their wives from across North America. The nearly 12,000 permanent deacons in the United States and Canada form nearly three-fifths of tine total in the church around the world. The session on deacons' wives was titled, "Women in the Diaconate Community: The Challenge of Inclusivity." The panelists used a 1993 archdiocesan survey of deacons' wives as a basis for discussion. It found that priests give little affirmation and support for women's roles and need to be educated about how deacon wives can serve parish communities, said Phyllis Wille'rscheidt, . director of the archdiocesan Commission of Women and panel moderator. "We need to do that education ourselves, and we need to be bold, maybe even a little bit assertive," said Margaret Barrett. She said it's important for dea:. con wives to inform people about the training they rf:ceive along with their husbands. Deacon formation programs require formation of wives on grounds that they must be involved in the husband's ministry. Char Murphy sai.d she is an integral part of her husband Jim's ministry but that thf: support she got from the pastor was at first lukewarm and hesitant as she coordinated grief support and social concerns groups and taught religious education c1aSSI~S. She said she felt more accepted after she and her husband began to have regular monthly meetings with the pastor. That led to a teamwork relationship and a clearer understanding of one another's roles, and now the pastor is a big supporter of her work, she said. 'n 1993 the archdiocese started a support group for wives of deacons who found th(:mselves struggling with problems of acceptance or trust in the parishes where their husbands were ministering. Mrs. Winkelman said she joined the group when she "fell off the chute" after her husband's ordination. "There is need for spiritual and intellectual support," she said. Another survey finding was that two-thirds of respondents felt women should be admitted into the permanent diaconate. '" don't think we can have real inclusivity until women are ordained," said Elizabeth Langlois. "I don't think we should calf our-

THE ANCHOR -

Diocese of Fall River -. Fri., May, 19, 19959

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KIM PEARSON, cottage manager at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River, i$ awarded a scholarship by David Lieder:' man, executive director of the Child Welfare League of America.

St. Vincent's staff member earns scholarship Kim Pearson, a cottage manager in the childhood unit at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River, recently received a $10,000 scholarship, comprised of a $5,000 award from the Child Welfare League of America and a $5,000 matching grant from St. Vincent's. Ms. Pearson is studying for a master's degree in social work at Boston University. A fulltime employee dfSt. Vincent's since 1988, she firstJoined the staff as an intern in 1986 while earning a .psychology degree from U MassDartmouth. She was a residential counselor from 1988 until 1990, when she was promoted to cottage manager. The Child Welfare League Scholarship, funded by Freddie Mac, is awarded annually to 10 people in the nation who are pursing advanced degree~ in social services. David Liederman, executive director of the Child Welfare League, presented th~ scholarships at the League's 75th annual convention in Washington, DC, in . March. Ms. Pearson and her husband, Fred, were among four attendees from St. Vincent's; Fred Pearson is residential services coordinator in the' preadolescent unit. The conference attracted 1,500 child welfare workers, agency executives and board members, child

advocates, political leaders and academicians. Keynoters included Hillary Rodham Clinton and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala. With 800 member agencies, CWLA is the nation's oldest and largest association of organizations devoted to improving life for atrisk youth.

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selves deacon couples," she added. '" am not a deacon. , am married to a deacon." She said it is not easy to deal with the male eXClusivity of the diaconate, and she often turns to prayer to affirm her role of assisting her husband. "Marriage preparation is the number one ministry between deacons and their wives," said Debbie ·Koop. "They can be role models to other people." She said 'working together with her husband, Steven, lessens the workload and the danger of burnout and can be a positive experience for a couple's marriage. By ministering as a couple, she said, deacons and their wives can help break down preconceived notions among Catholics of what women can and cannot do in service to their parishes.

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Diocesan women honor Mary at annual' conventioll By Marcie Hickey The Diocesan Council of Catholic women held a Mother's Day weekend tribute to the Blessed Mother at their 42nd annual con-' vention May 13 at St. John of God Church, "Somerset. The convention program, themed "Do Whatever He Tells You," included a keynote speech on Mary as a model for prayer: tableaux depicting Marian apparitions; presentation of Our Lady of Good Counsel Awards to outstanding DCCW members; and a Mass at which new officers were installed. Registrar Colette Waring reported 292 members and guests were in attendance, among them honored guest Bishop Sean O'Malley, the priest-moderators of the five DCCW districts, and keynoter Father.George G. Greenway, moderator of the DCCW of the Springfield diocese, who spoke on the theme, "Mary Did It, So Can You." A former Episcopal priest who was ordained to the Catholic priesthood in 1987, Father Greenway proposed Mary as a model for contemplative prayer and attributed to her intercession the con'versions of many Episcopal priests to Catholicism in the United States and in England. "Lovefor Mary is bringing about things that we never dreamed of," Father Greenway said, noting that in England 256 former Episcopal priests are in the proces-S of becoming Catholic and in the United States "there are 90 priests like myself and more coming every day," including Fort Worth, Texas, Episcopal Bishop Clarence Pope. Father Greenway has already anticipated the headline: "Pope becomes Catholic!" "It has been said that when Christians come back to Mary, England will once again be Catholic," Father Greenway said. "It's happening!" He emphasized that we should not just pray to Mary but with her and like her. In the Gospels, he explained, Mary is found, after the Resurrection and Ascension, with the disciples, "praying and waiting for the coming of the Holy Spirit. That was her role then and now;" Father Greenway outlined three aspects of contemplative prayer modeled on Mary: listening in silence, waiting in patience, trusting in darkness. Silence is necessary in order to become attuned to God as was Mary who, a woman of few words in the Gospel, was the embodiment of"the listening heart through whom God's word can enter the world; the perfect ear able to reproduce the music of God," said Father Greenway. Cultivation of "inner silence" is difficult for most people - "we would rather be saying or doing" - but it is possible with the attitude of Mary: " 'behold the handmaid of the Lord' - a humble, passive submission" and "self-abandonment" to the will of God, Father Greenway continued. Using pregnancy as a metaphor, he said contemplative prayer is a process of "letting a wonderful event develop within you." The widowed father of three and grandfather of ive, Father Greenway assured his audience that, like any expectant parent, he has had plenty of experience "waiting in patience." Our Lady's pregnancy was no different than any other woman's," he said. She no doubt "sometimes

AMONG PRINCIP ALfigures in Diocesan Council of Catholic Women activities, from left, Rev. Msgr. Daniel F. Hoye, VE, incoming DCCW moderator and also Attleboro District IV moderator; Mrs. Kitsy Lancisi, incoming DCCW president; Mrs. Be1la Nogueira, immediate past president; Very Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, immediate past diocesan moderator and continuing as Fa1l River District I moderator'. (Lavoie photo) found the waiting tiresome, wondered ifanything was actually happening, if everything would be all right. " Mary was also "in the dark" about the mystery that was unfolding and "understood even less the way of the cross" that was to come, said Father Greenway. "She had to have the faith of Abraham" who "set out, not knowing where he was to go" until darkness fell upon him (Gn. 15: 12) and in it he was shown'his descendants and the fulfillment of God's plan. We tocf'-haveperiods of da'rkness or dryness in prayer, in which nothing seems to be happening, said Father Greenway, but as St. John of the Cross taught, "this is a perfectly natural part of prayer life." "Nothing has gone wrong. God only asks us to be faithful," said

the keynoter. "The essential quality of prayer is waiting for God." Waiting, he continued, demands patience, "and patience is a form of suffering. But then there are those moments when something' stirs within us, signs of a new life growing and developing through God's grace." Like Mary, we "wait for Christ to be formed in us until his face can be shown to the world. Our waiting is expectant, because the Lord comes!" His Mother's Side In his homily at the convention Mass, Bishop O'Malley called Mary "the mother that brings the family [of the church) together" from the moment when Jesus, dying upon the cross, commends her to the care of the beloved disciple John

with the words, "Behold thy mother." At the same time, as Jesus tells his mother, "Behold thy son," "we see the first consecration of the church to her spiritual maternity and care," said the bishop. He recalled a scene from the TV series" All in the Family" in which Archie Bunker has just made an anti-Semitic remark. His son-inlaw Meathead points out that "Jesus was a Jew" to which Archie retorts, "but only on his mother's side!" "Today we are here to celebrate his mother's side," said Bishop O'Malley, noting that the convention fell on the 78th anniversary of the first Marian apparition at Fatima, May 13,1917. ' The bishop added that the con. vention theme, also his own episcopal motto, "Do whatever he tells you," is the last phrase of Mary recorded in the Gospels and is the overarching message of her various apparitions throughout history. The Gospel story of the Visitation is "a paradigm for Mary's apparitions," he said. "She comes bringing Christ and the message of Christ to point us always in the direction of her son." As we near the close of the bloodiest century in human history and the beginning of a new millennium, the world will have

!

NEW OFFICERS: Among those installed as new officers of the OCCW are, from left, Lillian Plouffe, second vice president; Kitsy Lancisi, president; Theresa Lewis, first vice president; Antonia Erwyn, recording secretary; and Helena Luxton, treasurer. ' Our Lady of Good Counsel award winners, from left, are Evelyn.Hendicks, Helen Ouellette, Madeline Livingston and Rita Fleming. (Hickey photos)

OUR LADY of Fatima, portrayed in OCCW convention tableau by Christine 001phe ofSt. John of God parish.

"true and lasting peace" only if "we take Mary's message to heart and live a life of conversion, fidelity and prayer," said Bishop O'Malley. "Behold our mother, still urging us to 'do whatever he te1ls you.' " The concluding program of the convention, "Mary: Woman of Many Faces," was held ::n the darkened church and featu,:ed a series of tableaux with narration and music, depicting seven ~.pparitions' of Mary from the 1531 a,ppearance of Our Lady of Gua.dalupe in Mexico to the present-day Medjugorje apparitions, which began in 1981. In scenes spotlighted in succession, the Blessed Mother and those who witnessed her appari tions were portrayed by St. John 0:: God parishioners and friends and relatives of DCCW members. Costumes were created by Colette Waring. The program had a cast of 27 and information was drawn from 19 sources. Other apparitions enacted were Our Lady of Pont main, France, 1871; Our Lady of Fatima, Aljustrel, Portugal, 1917; Our Lady of Banneaux, Belgium, 1933; and Our Lady of Akita, Yuzawadi, Japan, 1973. With each apparition. the narrator concluded, Mary has demonstrated her desire for "love and peace for each human soul. We must answer her call by Ii ving and spreading her message." This year's convention .included installation of a new slate of officers to two:year terms. In a farewell message, dl:parting president Bella Nogueira of the Fall River District said tha,tjust as "Mary' has many faces, "you as members of the council have shown me many faces ...always the faces of Christian love and loyalt.y. I will, always remember your many kindnesses." The new president, Kit!:y Lancisi of the Attleboro District, set as the theme of her presidency, "May we journey together toward wholeness and holiness." "As we encounter people," she said, "there is a need for healing, reconciling, listening and communicating" as, expressed in a' John Michael Talbot song, "we are Christ's hands, feet, eyes, ears, mouth." "I can only lead," saic: Mrs. Lancisi. "Together we canjourney." Her fellow officers and the:ir districts are: Antonia Erwyn, Attleboro, recording secretary; Helena Luxton, Taunton District, treasurer; and the vice presidents: first Theresa Lewis, New Bedford; second, Lillian Plouffe, Taunton; third Betty Mazzucchelli, Cape and Islands; fourth, Colette Waring, Fall River; fifth, Elise ~;pell足 man, Attleboro. Rev. Msgr. Daniel F. Hoye, Attleboro District moderator. succeeds Very Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, Fall River District, as diocesan moderator for the co unci I. Also given at the convention were five Our Lady of Good Coun, sel Awards, presented by Bis hop O'Malley. The annual awards recognize outstanding contribut ions by a member from each dist rict. The recipients were Evelyn Hendricks, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel parish, New Bedford; Helen Ouellette, Blessed Sacrament parish, Fall River; Madeline Livingston, Holy Ghost, Attleboro; Rita F1t:ming, Our Lady of Victory, Centerville; and Paula King, St. Anthony, Taunton.


11

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., May, 19, 1995

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PIANO MAN: Father Thomas J. Trepanier performs a classical piece at Holy Name Church in Providence, RI, during a fundraising concert for the parish school, where he teaches music and Latin. The priest gave his first concert at the church when he was 10 years old. (CNS photo)

Pastors named in three cities Continued from Page One rector of communicatr.ons and the Cursillo movement.

ford native, the son o( Emidio and Mariana (Andrade) Raposo. He was ordained October 22, 1977.

In the Fall River diocese, beginning in 1975, he served as parochial vicar at Our Lady of Health; Fall River; Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New Bedford, and Santo Christo, Fall River.

He has been parochial vicar at St. James, New Bedford; Our Lady of Health, Fall River; St. Anthony's, Taunton; and Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New Bedford. He became parochial vicar at Immaculate Conception in New Bedford. last June.

He was named pastor at St. Anthony of Padua last June and was also appointed director of communications for Portuguese ministry in January 1994. Father Raposo Father Raposo is a New Bed-

Father Reis Ordained in 1975, Father Reis served as parochial vicar at Santo Christo, Fall River, and Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New Bedford, be-

Father/Salvador named'chaplain

1

Continued from Page One Committee on Scouting began in 1925. . At the Orlando meeting a membership drive was initiated to increase both youth membership in church-sponsored. Scout troops, and the number of such troops. It was noted that sincl~ Scouting is a form of youth ministry, every interested Catholic boy and Explorer Scout-aged girl should have an opportunity to tak<: advantage of the program. Training Conference Father Salvador's interest in Scouting began as a small boy when he joined first a Cub Scout pack and then a Boy Scout troop at St. John the Baptist parish, New. Bedford. This summer he will be chaplain for a "Scouting in the Catholic Church" conference to be

held July 10 to 15 at Philmont Scout Ranch in Cimarron, New Mexico. The program, designed for laity, clergy and all youth ministry leaders on the parish, diocesan' or regional level, will explain both the mission, organization and training initiatives of national and diocesan Catholic Scouting committees and their cooperative relationship with the Boy Scouts of America. On the diocesan level, Father Salvador has been active in Scouting since 1977, when he was named chaplain and an executive board member of Moby 'Dick Boy Scout Council. As chaplain, he established the Catholic Committee on Scouting and an annual retreat program and gave impetus to religious programs leading to Parvuli Dei and Ad Altare Dei awards. He also interested Scouts in programs. assisting disabled persons. H IS work was recognized in 1986 when the Moby Dick Council presented him with the Silver Beaver Award for his "significant influence on the lives of our young people and his efforts in promoting brotherhood among all Scouts."

May 20 1952, Rev. Antonio L. daSilva, Pastor, Our Lady of Health, Fall River May 23 1944, Rev. William F. Donahue, Assistant, St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis Ma),24 Continued from Page One 1907, Rev. James F. Clark, Founder, St. James, New Bedford St. Mary, So. Dartmouth 23,653.00 1985, Rev. 'Pa~rick Heran, Immaculate Conception, N.B. 19,042.00 SS.CC., Former Rector, Sacred S1. Patrick, Wareham 16,743.00 Hearts Seminary, Fairhaven St. John the Baptist, N.B. 15,367.00 Taunton Area May 25 $16,996.00 1925, Rev. Michael P. Kirby, St. Joseph, Taunton 16,292.00 St. Ann, Raynham St. Mary, North Attleboro 1961, Rev. James V. Mendes, Immaculate Cone., N. Easton 12,160.00 11,607.00 , 10,603.00 Administrator, Our Lady of An- . St. Anthony, Taunton O.L. of Lourdes, Taunton gels, Fall River

fore becoming parochial vicar at Immaculate Conception, New Bedford, last June, Father Tavares Father Tavares, born in Candelaria, Sao Miguel, Azores, is the son of the late Jose and the late Mariana (Silva) Tavares. He was ordained June 5, 1960. He was parochial vicar at Our Lady of Lourdes and St. Anthony's, Taunton; St. Michael's, Fall River; Immaculate Conception, New Bedford; and at OUf Lady of the Angels before becoming pastor at St. Anthony of Padua, Fall River, in 1981. He was named pastor at Immaculate Conception, New Bedford, in 1991.'

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ST. MARY'S CEMETERIES, NEW BEDFORD

You are invited to remember your loved ones by attending a

MEMORIAL MASS May 29th at 12 Noon in the Chapel at Sacred Heart Cemetery MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND - FRIDAY THRU MONDAY Gates will be open from 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. (Gate at Old Sacred Heart Cemetery will be closed to vehicles.) -------<=::::~=>--------

MEMORIAL DAY, MAY 29th For the convenience of any wishing to make inquiries or other arrangements, . Office will be open from 8 A.M. to 3:30 :P.M. (Office open usually Monday thru Friday, 8 A.M. to 3:30 :P.M.) (Saturdays, 8 A.M. to 12 Noon)

Appeal

The Office for both S,Kred I-IC,Ht ,md St. ;\·I<1I"\'\ Cemetcrics is loc,ltl'd ,It SSLJ IVIt. Ple,lsant Strcl't • Ne\·\, Bedford, ;VI,\ 027-lS Telephone: (S08) LJLJ8-IILJS or LJl)~-S077 ALL FLOWERS WILL BE REMOVED ON OR AFTER MONDAY, JUNE 12th

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Lonergan; M/M Charles L. Maher; M/M Leo Maher; Col/M Walter Mayo, Jr.; $50 M/M John A. McLean; Mrs. Charles Miller; John Murphy; M/M Stephen O'Brien, Jr.; M/M PaUl Pacella; M/M Harold Russell; M/M Richard San· ick; Edward Souza; M/M Barry Sturgis; M/M Francis Walsh; Cynthia Weinert; M/M William J. Whelton; M/M Charles Whitehead

Dagenais; M/M Edward T. Deedy; M/M Medeiros; MlM John Merrill; M/M Hugh Doucette; $50 M/M Russell Dugas; M/M Robert Geary; Frances C. George; M/M Owens; Pamela Ray; M/M Julio Santos; Ernest Marquis; M/M Arthur Baril; M/M Richard Larkin; M/M Ralph Luedek'er; M/M John Sattelmair; M/M Edmund Steven Gousie Mrs. John Lyons; Mrs. Herbert S. Max· Sybertz; M/M Gilberrt L. Tavares; M/M St. Joseph $200 M/M Albert Dumont; well; M/M Raymond Miles; Mrs.' Albert Joseph L. Tavares; M/M Maurice J. M/M George Largess; St. Joseph's Con. Musto; M/M Charles McCabe; M/M Jo· Tavares; M/M Frederick E. Ward; M/M ference (St. Vincent DePaul); $150 M/M seph Reynolds; Marion R. Woodlock Edward White Rober Dubeau; $100 M/M Richard Au. $50 Elizabeth Ahern; M/M Edward W. FALMOUTH dette; David Fontneau; M/M Julien Forget; Barron; M/M Thomas Blute; Daniel J. St. Patrick $5000 Rev. Francis X. Wal- M/M Ralph lito; $75 M/M Michael NorBudkley, Jr.; Patricia Concannon; M/M lace; $1200 Marianne F. Keevins; $500 mand; $50 Doris Bellonzi; M/M Ronald Ralph F: Cox; M/M John F. Coyle; M/M Dr. Ambrose Finnell; M/M Nicholas Briand; M/M Richard Depot; M/M Robert WOODS HOLE St. Joseph $1000 Normand &Phyllis Thomas M. Cummings; M/M William lackoff; Rev. James A. McCarthy; $450 Desrosiers; M/M Arthur Dubuc; M/M MacNeil; $500 James &Johanna Bossi; Cushman; Cybulski/Yamamoto Family; M/M John Molongoski; $225 Katherine . Lawrence Governo; M/M Roland Pari· $300 Dr. William Daly; $249.99 Drs.. Helen McLaughlin; Margaret M. Delaney; Robbins; M/M Louis A. Tessier; $200 seau; M/M Mark Parsons; Anne Pouliot; Eugene &Mitsu LaForet; $225 Eugene & Mrs. William F. Downey; M/M Peter D. Elizabeth DeMello; Dr. Edward Fitch; Alfred Simonelli Dr./M William Schutten-, M/M Leslie St. John the Evangelist $450 M/M Marilyn Young; $200 Walter & Katerine Driscoll; Grace Dwan; M/M Joseph Farr $50 Frances Fislier; M/M Nicholas Murphy; $200 Evelyn Nolan; Kay Fewore; Garafalo; MlM Raymond L. Hebert; M/M Wilson' Thomas H. Cuddy, Jr.; $400 M/M James Hanley & Carol Knebel; $100 Paul Mc· AI H t J M/M 0 . ILk' $100 Richard T. Botsch; Marian Brown; Coogan; M/M Joseph Spinale; $300 M/M mon un er, r.; anle ar In; M/M James Brown; M/M David Carr; David P. Miller; Dr/M Fredrick WolI; Gonigle; $50 Frank &Mary Jane Burry; Claudia Pendergast; Thomas & Jan Jeanne Lockhart; Helen Marsden; M/M M/M Manuel Donta; Ferraris Family; $250 M/M Peter Guimond; Dr/M John J. Carl Meyer; Jerome Murphy; M/M M/M Robert J. Ferris; Gerald Flynn; Steo K'II' Orluski; John Valois; Mark Healy; Eliza- Richard J. Oram', M/M Herbert Patriquin', I Ion; M/M J0 hn Rear don; $220 R0 bert . Care II a; M/M John . Henry; M/M M'IC hae I Her I'h beth Gamache Evelyn M. Savini; Claire Schmidt; M/M phanle I y;- Bar ton; $200 Pt' a r1Cla CHATHAM William Sheehy; Margaret Walsh; Nora Joseph HI'II', M/M Adolph Jakobek', John Costello'"M/M Mervell Cron'ln'ln Memory Holy Redeemer $300 Association of M. Walsh; M/M Russell Wedge; Mrs. Wil. K. Kellon; M/M William G. Kelley; M/M of John & Theresa Mahon, Ian & Mar· the Sacred Hearts; $200 Mary MacLean; liam McDermott; Dr/M Lincoln Lynch; Raymond Laliberte; M/M Edwin Medei- garet Mahon Davis &John H. & Margie Marcella Lisiewski ros; Mrs. Joseph R. Miskell; M/M William Mahon; M/M R. Russell Morin; M/M Wil· $100 M/M Phillip Cahill; M/M James R. E. O'Connor; Mrs. Bernard O'Havre; M/M liam Walsh; $175 M/M Luca Fantacci· Deignan; M/M James Drew; M/M Fran· MASHPEE Paul Olenick; M/M Armand Ortins; Mrs. one; M/M Gilbert Rea; $160 M/M Richard cis Fleming; Amelia Gritis; M/M L.eRoy F. Christ the King $2400 Rev. Ronald A. Wallace Pierce; M/M Joseph W. Sharp Coffey; $150 M/M Frederick Bartek; Jarrett; Patricia Larkin; M/M Joseph $70 M/M Francis Furtado; $60 Mrs. M/M Daniel Flynn; M/M John Mcintyre; Nolan; M/M Richard O'Meara; M/M Wil· Tosti; $1000 Devlin Family; $500 Sulliliam Sheehan; Philip Stello; Dr/M Richard van Family; Marcia Hackett; Meredith John Flynn; Mrs. Robert Koob; $50 M/M M/M Ralph Sears; $125 M/M Richard Family; $280 Appel Family; $250 Holway William W. Burick; Mrs. John J. Burke; Marsh Weiler; M/M Thomas A. Welch $120 M/M Earl D. Kelly; M/M Michael $75 M/M Daniel Healy; $60 M/M Wil· Family; $200 Fiondlen Family; $150 M/M Paul F. Burke; M/M Richard DeMello; Russell Doucet; William J. Drew; Kress; $110 M/M Donald Lange; $100 liam Cotter; $50 M/M Robert Agnew; Roma Family $100 Kerins Family; Dooley Family; Jean Dugas; M/M Robert Dutra; M/M M/M Richard Arrighi; Arlene Doherty; M/M John Allison; Dominic A. Caronna; M/M George Cullen; Mrs. Robert Ericson; Flanagan Family; Raymond Family; Leahy Albert E. Fetters; M/M James Green; M/M Richard Doherty; M/M John Dolan; M/M Leonard Fougere; M/M Howard Family; Keirn Family; Costello Family; Alice R. Hallahan; M/M William m. Har· Mrs. William Goff; M/M Eugene Goulet; Goff; Dorothy Harrington; Mrs. Ernest Waterman Family; Daniels Family; Raf· vey; Mrs. John V.J. Joyce; M/M Howard Mary Hafey; Mrs. Julie Hammond; Fran· ces Anna Jenkins; Mrs. Mary Kenny; Jordan; William E. Kirkpatrick; M/M fetto Family; Stanley Family; Johnston Lawson; M/M Richard Lopes Family; Knights of Columbus/Falmouth; $50 M/M John Maloy; Gilbert Martin; M/M Gerard Kenton; MlM Francis Lucas; Albert Kolodzik; Dr. Joan Maloney; Eliza- Thomas Family; M/M John Thorn; $75 M/M T. Leonard Matthews, Jr.; M/M M/M Paul Morin; M/M James Murphy beth Nethercott; M/M Laurence Stevens Shaughnessy Family; $60 Fluke Family $50 Ruth E. Jonis; Dolan Family; Phil. Frank Medeiros; M/M Jesse Miller; Donald III; Suzanne Ney; M/M Daniel Nolin; Mrs. M/M Charles' Viens; Leona librat bin Family; Mueller Family; Bob &Evelyn Moitozo; James Nidositko; Rose 8.0'Don· J~ary F. Peter.s; Mrs. Dorothy Jte~ding; OAK BLUFFS Sacred Heart $500 Sacred Heart Con- Lynch; Wyatt Family; Munro Family; S. nell; Elie Rouke; M/M Milton Steele; Mrs. Leland Smith; MlM George S. Stilf· ference; $100 Sacred Heart GUild; Sacred Maloy Family; Bottos Family; Hurley Fam. Madeline T. Stewart; M/M Edward Stud· lfoerrd ; MlM Raymond Taylor; Mrs. Richard n .\ A F o l e y ; M/M Theodore Tavares; Lillian Tega'n; Heart Bingo I y; breau amily; eforge Family; Dolan M/M William Tynan $80 M/M Frank Bellomo; $75 Mrs. EDGARTOWN Family; Talanian Family; Witham Family; Adela Dudovicz; M/M Lawrence Dwyer; St. Elizabeth $500 St. Elizabeth St. Kozub Family; Donahue Family; M/M F. . NORTH FALMOUTH M/M David J. Foley; M/M Lawrence St. Elizabeth Seton $2500 Mrs. Joseph Vincent de Paul; $150 St. Elizabeth Donahue .McCarty', $1000 M/M William Black', Habershaw; M/M Joseph Mahon; M/M Guild; $100 Philip Walsh EAST FALMOUTH Edward Raposa; $68 Mrs. Rosemary St. Anthony $350 M/M Daniel Bailey; $750 Rev. Joseph L. Powers; $600 Rev. Lesage; $65 Mrs. Clifford Dieterle; $60 WELLflEET Our Lady of Lourdes $600 Bernard F. $300 M/M Anthony Briana; $250 LTCL/M John J. Murphy; $500 M/M Maurice Gil- Gerald A. Doyle; M/M Frederick WolI; Wills; $200 Frank Szedlak; $100 M/M William Joyce; Rev. Normand A. Ricard; lespie; $300 Mrs: William Costello; MlM $50 Frederick Aras; Mrs. Clare Board. John Monahan; $50 Mrs. Austin Rose Jr. $200 M/M Donald Karl; M/M Paulino Ralph Vaccaro; $250 Dr/M Arthur Robin- man; M/M Joseph Bono; M/M Joseph Rodrigues; M/M John Collins; $150 M/M son; $200 MlMAlbert Bonfatti; M/M Caponigro; M/M Thomas J. Carroll; M/M WEST HARWICH Charles Polachi; $125 M/M Gustav' Francis Brown; Ralph DeGregorio; M/M Thomas P. Clancy; M/M Henry Delisle; Holy Trinity $2000 M/M Raymond Bender; M/M Joseph P. Losi; M/M John Richard Nissi; M/M Herbert Sullivan; Margaret Doran; M/M Walter Doraz; Fontaine; $1000 Rev. William J. Shovel- R. Martin; Margaret R. McGaffigan; M/M $175 Richard' Fitzgerald; $160 M/M M/M Louis Downing; M/M Brian L. ton; $500 M/M Emerson J. Sheehy; Anthony Spagone Paul Boudreau Duffy; M/M John J. Foley; M/M Oscar $400 M/M Frank J. Stoddard; $300 $100 Frances Barry; Carmen Bellino; $150 Judge/M· Rober Champagne; Frechette; Mrs. Deborah Galofaro; M/M Catheirne F. George; M/M Maurice M/M William Bonito; M/M Thomas Brown; Mrs. Francis Corrigan; MlM John Dono- Eugene Goulet; M/M Rene Gruslin; M/M Houten; $200 M/M George BOUie; Atty/M Juhn P. Cabral; M/M Richard Casey; .hoe; M/M William Doyle; M/M Richard Frederick Marshall; Mrs. Eugene Martin Joseph W. Downes; M/M John J. Maho- M/M Ralph Chasse; John Coppinger; Giere; M/M Joseph' Montie; Richard $50 Fred McCracken; Desiree McNeil; ney; M/M Robert Murray; Honorable/M Richard L. Corey; M/M George P. Gaspa; Tracy; $130 M/M William Stone; $125 M/M Thomas J. Michienzi; M/M John Gerald F. O'Neill; Katherine Thomajan; M/M William Gilmartin; Edward Kendri- M/M Joseph Malone; Marcia Murphy; Mungo; Mrs. Julia Murphy; M/M Joseph $160 MlM Stanley Nowak gan; M/M Frank Teixeira; M/M John P. Mrs. Joseph Murray; $100 Isabelle Bene; Pacheco; M/M Raymond Paille; M/M $150 M/M Anthony Salvato; M/M Vidal; In Memory of M/M JustinoSimoes, Dr/M John Manning Steven Panicci; M/M Emil Paquin; M/M Philip Waystack; $125 M/M Robert E. Joe & Celia; Daniel H. Augusta; MlM $75 M/M Robert Antonucci; M/M James Pinocci; M/M Frank Rose; M/M Curtis, Sr.; John DeVincentis; M/M Paul Frank Devlin; M/M Edward Dudley; MlM' . Jerry Aubrey; M/M Kevin Bazarian; Mrs. William Skivington; M/M Gerard Vachon; F. Kelly; M/M Paul M. Murray; M/M John Albin Gusciora; M/M Charles Haley; M/M Charles Harvey; $60 M/M Daniel Dwyer; Mrs. Joan Woodward Sullivan; $100 M/M.A. Chotkowski; Cor- Kevin Nee; James S. Pine; Marie Shevory M/M Paul McGowan; $55 M/M Howard nelius J. Driscoll; M/M John Feeney; $75 M/M Robert Spellman; Beatrice Redgate; $50 M/M John Aziz; M/M NORTH ATTLEBORO St. Mary $700 M/M Nelson Chaffee; M/M Louis LaFlamme; M/M Albert Emerald; Shirley M. Pecue; Ruth- Rodri· Francis Bagarella; M/M Walter BZibziak; McEntee; Margaret Rasmusen; M/M guez; $60 Edward O'Brien; M/M Law· M/M Robert Caron; Mrs. John Connolly; $600 Rev. John M. Sullivan; $500 Nelson M/M Charles Fermano; M/M James Gulski; $400 Rev. William T. Babbitt; Richard T. Shea; Dr/M Thomas Szymko· rence Peters $50 M/M Joseph Andrade; Nancy Ganci; Mrs. John Gibbons; M/M Donald $200 Claire M. Faherty; M/M Joseph wicz; Ellen Wolcott; Evelyn Arnold; John R. Blackburn;'Dr/M Edward Brady Andrade; M/M Daniel Botelho; Hilda D. Hassett; M/M Jack Howard; Mrs. Francis Dolan; $180 M/M James Hall; $150 $100 Natalie Conway; M/M Carroll R. Cabral; Gloria Carney; M/M Pompei Ced- Keating; Mrs. Stephen Kelleher; M/M M/M Francis Leary; $125 M/M Hugh cusick; Mrs. Albert Davenport; MlM rone; M/M George DeMello; Eleanor Barry Kent; M/M James Kent Donnelly John J. Griffin; M/M John J. Hanratty; Driscoll; Mrs. Edward .Duggan; ~ouis J. $50 Mrs. Charles Kenyon; M/M John $100 Mary Kennedy; Mrs. Bernard M/M John Joyce; Marie M. Kelley; MlM Fuccillo; M/M John Goldpaugh; Fredia Laurendeau; MlM Frederick Lawton; Byrnes; $75 M/M Francis Murphy; $60 Paul T. Kirk; MlM Robert J. Lowrie; Mae Hayes; M/M Joseph Haynes; M/M M/M George Ludlow; M/M Francis Ma: Mrs. Ruth Clark; $55 Mrs. Domenic Robert M: &Susan Lynch; Mary F. Mac· Ernest Holcomb; M/M Stephen P. Holmes; honey; M/M Richard Mahoney; M/M Basile; $50 M/M George Normand; M/M Dougall; M/M James Marceline; J. Patri- MlM Leo Jolly, Jr.; Mary B. Bishop Edward McGuire; M/M Richard McKin· Francis Considine; Mrs. Katherine Kencia Marsh; Atty/M Richard Meaney; $50 M/M Franklin Botelho; M/M ney; Tom Mignone; Kathleen Noonan; nedy; Anthony Velletri; M/M Stephen C. Kathryn Prindiville; Alice PumphretGeorge Botelho; M/M Edmund J. Brown; M/M Robert Rubiano; David Schneider; Bengtson; M/M Leo Cloutier; M/M Nor· $100 Francis Recka; M/M Robert Carolyn Ann Cabral; M/M Kenneth Cof· M/M Robert Shaw; Mrs. William Thomp· man Fontaine; Mrs. Frank Fisler; M/M Spidle; In Memory of the Sylvia Family; fey; M/M Manuel Duarte; M/M Ralph son; M/M Daniel Triggs; Mrs. George Howard Gaudette; M/M Thomas Crouse; M/M James Terralavoro; Barbara Tes- Hamilton; M/M Richard ~emoine; M/M West . M/M Louis Landry; M/M Liam Murray sier; M/M Edward Uppgard; M/M John Frank Macedo; Edward Rapoza; Manuel . ATTLEBORO SOUTH ATTLEBORO M. Doyle; $75 M/M William Brophy; $60 'F. Rapoza & Sons; Lorraine Santos; M/M St. Stephen $510 St. Vincent de Paul St. Theresa of the Child Jesus $700 G. William 'Sears; M/M Joseph Perry; Frank G. Souza;. M/M Antone Vieira; Conference; $300 Gerald Laferriere; $200 M/M Normand Carrier; $200 M/M Louis Joanne Sullivan; M/M Howard Whitcomb M/M James R. Webber; In Memory of M/M Joseph M. Hodge; $100 M/M Jack Lacivita; $160 M/M Ernest Major; $125 . $50 M/M Paul Ballantine; M/M Roger Gilbert Moniz Maloney; M/M John Farley; $75 M/M Mrs. Esther Desmarais; $120 M/M Gae· Cahill; Mrs. Paul Coleman; M/M Nor'man $50 Arthur Marshall; M/M Manuel C. Felicien Brochu; $60 Magadalene &Glenn tan Brochu; MlM Douglas Strott

$100 M/M Eugene Hodge; M/M Leo Lachance; MlM Richard Magliozzi; Arthur Mondor; M/M Anthony Moskalski; Mrs. Adrien Piette; M/M Raymond Gravel; M/M Boleslaw Rec; Mrs. HelE!n Sharples; M/M Norman Standring; MlM David Wagle; $75 M/M Oscar Bourgette; M/M John Plath; $65 M/M Roberl Peloquin $50 MlM George Duquette; M/M Richard Enright; M/M Robert Goodreau; M/M Louis Hermans; Ms. Linda Hood; John Hunter; M/M Donald ~:irby; M/M John McDermott; M/M John McManus; Charles Manfredi; Thomas Reilly; M/M Joseph Robichaud; M/M Charles Rozak; M/M William Rushton; M/M· Leonard Stasiukiewicz; MlM Aime TUfJleOn; M/M John Mannix NORTON St. Mary $1000 Rev. Arnold R. Medei· ros', $300 Rev. John W. Peonam', $55 e M/M John Drane; $50 Richard Charette; Mrs. Cadorna Lori; Edna Nels(ln; Sandra &Christopher Ross; M/M Jonathan Rowe MANSFIELD St. Mary $2000 Anonymous; $550 Rev. George B. Scales; $550 In Memory of Msgr. Armando Annunziato; $400 John Gomes; $300 M/M Paul McAuliffe; $250 M/M James Vaughan, .Jr.; $200 M/M Francis Baldini; M/M Anthony Camelio; M/M Giles Dognazzi; M/M Fred· erick G. Gibbs; M/M R 0 Onofrio $165 L Costa & L Deane; $l55 Mrs: Domenic Macaione; $100 M/M Frank Anderson; Miss J. M Burns; M/M John Connor; M/M James Fontes; M/M Brian Healy; M/M Daniel E. Joyce; M/M Mark Niederberger; Lester McGoldril:k; M/M Stephen Scala; M/M Orlando Souza; M/M Lawrence E. Scanlon; M/M George W. Wallace $90 M/M William Lawrence; $75 M/M John King; $60 M/M Charles E. Egan; $50 M/M Lee Duclos; M/M Joseph Dug· gan; M/M Conley Eagan; M/M Albert Fasulo; M/M H 0 Fuller; M/M Bryan J. Hill; M/M Charles Hopkins; M/M Paul G. Hubrich', Mrs. J. Spencer Kelle'.I; M/M Michael Placido; MlM Alvin Stev/art SEEKONK Our Lady of Mount Carmel $2000 Mrs. D. Anthony Venditti; $1000 Francis A. Venditti; $400 Hendricks Pools, Inc.; $340 John Hendricks; $300Jane l3arker; $260 MlM Paul Kilcullen; $250 M/M Henry Foley; M/M Paul Sorenson; $200 M/M Francis Gibbons; Mt. CarmI!/ Holy Name Society; M/M George Solas $168 Mrs. Franka Gamboa; $150 M/M Jesse Hendricks; M/M Edward Olean; $125 MlM William Harrison; Ch,ulotte Mello; Mrs. Manuel Mello; $120 M/M Richard LeClaire; $100 M/M Daniel Arico; Dr/M Vincent Armenio; Mrs. Riluben Barker; A. Louise Bolton; M/M Thomas Castle; M/M Robert Desrochers; M/M Gerald Foley; M/M John Furtado; M/M William McAuliffe; James Mello; M/M Charles Mercier $100 M/M Raymond Naughton; M/M Daniel Pimental; Dr/M Anthony Potenza; M/M Winfield E. Pray; Mrs. Cornelius Sha~kett; M/M Raymond F. Silva; M/M Randall P. Silveira; $85 M/M Ray Corri· gan; $75 M/M Alfred R. Benoit; MlM David S. Edington; John J. McCormick; M/M Russell Partridge; M/M Ralph Tomei; Mrs. Florence Turner $65 Mrs. Maureen McCloskey; $60 M/M Anthon Andrews; MlM J. Ja mes Drapeau; M/M Edward Martin; Robert J. Propatier; M/M Eugene Rebello; $50 M/M Everett Almeida; Mrs. Ted Andru· ezewski; M/M Joseph Anthony $50 M/M William Bowen, Jr.; MlM David A. Brown; RobertA. Candido; WM Paul Cinq·Mars; Mrs. Louis C. Dupere; M/M Albert Farinha; M/M Mario Furtado; M/M Norman Galimberti; M/M Alfred George; M/M Charles A. Grealles, III; M/M Wallace Guay $50 M/M William Heaney; M/M Ernest G. Hicks, Jr.; M/M Thomas Kerwin; Turn to Page 13

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M/M Daniel Leite; M/M James N. Lovely; Mrs. Sergio Macedo; Mrs. Elizabeth Marsland; M/M Peter Matonis; Kenneth McCloskey; M/M John McGarry; M/M Michael McGee $50 Mrs. Margaret McNulty; M/M Frank Mooney; M/M Peter Olean; M/M John Pacheco; M/M Donald R. Paradis; William Quirk; M/M Neal Rapp; Antonio Ribeiro, Jr.; M/M Jorge Rijo; Mrs. Ana M. Rita; M/M Michael Spano; l.ucille Stark; M/M James Tiernan; M/M William Toole; John J. Tretton, Jr.; M/M Fritz Ulmschneider; M/M James Urquhal1; M/M Peter S. Ward; Mrs. George Wood NEW BEDFORD St. John the Baptist $500 Rev. John T. Oliveira; In Memory of Daniel T. Vieira; $250 M/M George Vasconcellos; St. John the Baptist 1995 Confirmation Class; Rev. Brian E. Albino; $200 St. John the Baptist Portuguese Prayer Group; St. Vincent De Paul Society; Joseph Baptista; $160 In Memory of Atty. Joseph Ferreira; $150 AFriend; In Thanksgiving; Anonymous; $125 M/M Alberto Pereira $100 Maria C. Pereira; Isabel Botelho; M/M Horace Wright; Anonymous; A Friend; In Memory of Manuel Freitas; M/M Manuel Silva; MlM Vivaldo D. Raposo; M/M Joseph Avila; Mary Ann Lomba; $80 M/M John M. Torres; A Friend; $75 M/M Edward Macedo; $60 Anonymous; M/M Gilberto Cordeiro; Benvinda Caldas $50 Isabella Lomba; AFriend; Maria C.. De Frias; Catherine Sanderson; Elsie Gracia; Carmen Silva; Anonymous; In Thanksgiving; M/M Victor Raposo; M/M Manuel Gaspar; M/M Armando Dias; M/M Carlos Aguiar; M/M Joseph Mello; In Memory of Manuel P. Arruda & Family St. Hedwig $100 M/M Matthew Dobyna; Palla Family; $50 In Memory of Helen Mastey; M/M Rudolphe A. Blanchard; M/M Stanley Los; M/M Donald Jusseaume Saint Anne $100 Jesse Mello; In Memory of Emelie LaFrance; $50 Arthur Michaud; Raymond Gonsalves; Jeanne Bowden; Joseph Maillet; Angelo Fraga; .~Qg!lr. gesrQl<~~s., ,'1.: ',I I .. ,;, ;/,'.,; St. Francis of 'As~;isi $100 Mrs.

Anthony Arinanetti; Mrs. Louis Bono; St. Francis of Assisi Men's League; M/M William N. Whelan III; $50 M/M Arthur Carvalho; In Memory of Rev. Wm. R. Jordan; M/M Robert Maccini; M/M David B. Souza; M/M Charles Ti1rpey Saint Lawrence $800 Rev. John P. Driscoll; $125 Cecilia M. Felix; $100 M/M Ray Barbero; M/M Michael J. livingstone; Helen O'Brien; M/M Thomas Ryan; $60 M/M James M. Anderson; $50 Mrs. Florence Brower; James Buckley; M/M Manuel Guerreiro; Mrs. Francis Mahoney; Mrs. Roland Mathieu; M/M Thomas F. Parker, Jr.; M/M Manuel Sylvia Saint James $200 M/M Gerald Lewis; James Mullin Jr.; $100 M/M Arthur Arruda; M/M Patrick Baker; M/M Raymond Fontaine; M/M Robert S. Hayes; Kathryn Mahoney; In Loving Memory of Helen Massoud; Mary M. Worden; $75 Mrs. Daniel F. Dwyer; Neal Wall; $60 Ann Callanan; M/M Leonard N. Guilbeault; $55 M/M Raymond Bolger; M/M Robert Dupont $50 M/M Leonard Almeida; Mrs. Roland Bellavance; Mrs. James Bolton; Mrs. James Collins; Janet Connelly; M/M Edward Connulty; M/M Raymond Couto; Peter F. DeCosta; M/M James Delano; M/M Henry Frenette; Doreen Gonsalves; Mrs. Paul Hart, Alice Lowney; M/M Richard Manning; M/M Donald Medeiros; Joseph P. Meggison; M/M John J. O'Neill; Alice E. Oliver; M/M William P. Oliver; Francis O. Quinn; M/M George Rogers; Mrs. Francis' Roach; Manuel Travassos; M/M Herbert Wall St. Joseph $1,500.00 Rev. Roger J. Levesque; $200 St. Joseph, New Bedford - St. Vincent dePaul Society; $120 In Memory of M/M Raphael Beaulieu by Therese, Simone, & Alice Mrs. Rita Bedard; $100 Deacon & Mrs. Maurice Lavalle; M/M A. Laurier Marcotte; $75 M/M Rene L. Jacques; $~i4 Ms. Susan Weaver; $500 Mrs. Carol Bolton; Mrs. Rita Childs; M/M Francois Cormier; M/M Jorge Correia; Henry &Marcelle Hebert; Mrs. Rosa

Myers; M/M Raymond St. Gelais;MlM Alfred W. Sylvia, Jr.; M/M Hilaire Tremblay; M/M Philip Viall; M/M Thomas Weaver . St. Theresa $600 Rev. Roland Bousquet; $225 Eleanor Strong; $200 St. Vincent de Paul Society; $180 M/M Charles Jodoin; $150 M/M Raymond Bourassa; $100 M/M Robert Cyr; M/M David Fredette; M/M Alfred Lemieux; M/M Richard Lizotte; Rev. Raymond A. Robida; M/M Henri Valois; $125 M/M Ronald Gonneville; $80 M/M Bernard Poyant; $75 M/M Paul Carrier; $60 M/M Normand Brassard; $50 Mrs. Joseph Slight; M/M Roland Vigeant; M/M Soares; Evelyn Rapoza; St. Ann's Sodality; M/M Raoul LeBlanc; M/M Roland Benoit; In Memory of Mrs. Salome; Bissonn~tte & Conrad Bissonnette by Roger Bissonette; M/M Raymond Patnaude Our Lady of Fatima $100 Carolyn Pimental; $75 Irene Medeiros; St. Anne's Society; Randal De Sous~; $50 Jose De Medeiros; William J. Teixeira; Louis Plourde; David Correia; Helen Macomber; Daniel Murphy; Arnold R, Ponte Nuestra Senora De Guadalupe $240 Ms. Matilde Ortiz; $100 Laura Costa; Maria Marcial; $50 Mrs. Aurea Perez Sacred Heart $800 Rev. Clement E. Dufour; $150 M/M Roger Denault; $100 M/M Lionel Fernandes; $75 Mrs. Constance Menard; $60 M/M Michael Worster; $55 M/M Marcel Rogissart; $50 M/M Raymond Rainville; M/M Philip Bargioni Our Lady of Assumption $100 M/M Joseph Gomes; M/M Robert Garrison; $75 Palmira Silva; $50 M/M Antonio Costa; M/M Antonio Gonies; M/M Adolph Monteiro; Carlos Gomes Immaculate Conception $400 Rev. John A. Raposo; $250 MlM Jose S. Cordeiro; $225 M/M Victor F. Rebello Jr.; $200 St. Vincent de Paul Society; Bernadette Costa; M/M Hermano S. Medeiros; $100 Our Lady of the Rosary Sodality; M/M Euclides M. C:abral; M/M Jose M. Pacheco; M/M Albertino Pires; M/M Jo~~S~a~e.~;: M~.M A,Q,tonio.J'1 Va.scon~e­ 'Ios; $80 M/M Robert; 0: Amaral; $65 M/M Fernando F. Costa $75 M/M Alzira R. Cabral; M/M Michael J. DaSilva; $70 M/M Lazaro S. Rosa; $60 Eugenia H. Almeida; M/M Honorato Faria; M/M Francisco DeMedeiros; $52 M/M Joaquim Leite; $50 M/M Antonio N. Alves; Ermelinda Amaral; In Memory of Manuel J. Bettencourt; M/M Viriato Brandao; M/M Anibal Capella; M/M Jose C. DaPonte; M/M Alfred N. DaSilva; In Memory of Maria Caires Freitas; In.Memory of Mitchell S. Jasinski; M/M Antonio M. Lopes; M/M Manuel D. Machado; WM Luiz A. Matias; M/M Jose S. Moniz; M/M Edmund J. Nobrega; Jose P. Noia; M/M Jeao Nunes; Agostinho Pinto; M/M Antonio A. Pitta; M/M Gualter A. Raposo; Maria Rosario Raposo; M/M Armando Silveira; M/M Joao B. Teixeira; M/M Joseph A. Teotonio; Maria G. Torres Holy Name $700 In Memory of Fr. William F. O'Connell; $500 M/M James Flanagan; $170 M/M Eric Erickson; $100 In Memory of Martin Barry; M/M Charles Cabral Jr.; M/M Leo Cole; M/M Hugh Earley; M/M Joseph Finnerty; M/M Peter Gimmalvo; David F. Meehan; Sarah Murray; Carol Vercammen; $75 M/M Charles Xavier; $55 M/M John Czaban; $50 M/M Stanley Baron; Lilli~n Bendiksen; M/M Maurice Bourque; Donald Buckley; M/M John Considine; M/M Joseph Dias; MlM Joseph Landry; M/M Timothy Leary; M/M Robert Nogueira St. Casimir's $100 Anonymous; $75 Anonymous; $67 St. Casimir'S Senior Citizens; $60 M/M Fryderyk Gorczyca; $50 Mrs. Stanley Adamowski; Anonymous; Stanley Grabiec; Edward Jarosik; Frank Lawrence; Mrs. Michael Linkiewicz; Mrs. Charlotte Moffatt; Mrs. Genevieve Polar; M/M Henry Roszkiewicz; M/M Eugene Wajda; St. Casimir's Circle; St. Casimir's Holy Rosary Sodality EAST FREETOWN St. John Neumann $150 M/M Donald Thompson; $100 M/M Eugene Masse; $65 M/M Donal~ Messier; $60 M/M Joseph Herman; $50 M/M Richard

Ladeira; Donald Payette; M/M Walter Oliver; M/M Arthur Blais; M/M Raul Batista; St. John Neumann Women's Guild SOUTH DARTMOUTH St. Mary's $1,500 Rev. Walter A. Sullivan; $250 Dr/Mrs. Roger Pocze; $150 Miss Olivia M. Luiz; Miss Mary T. Luiz; $100 Mrs. Margaret Dias; Mrs. Anne Miskell; MlM Bruce Lemieux; M/M Peter T. Zatir; M/M Richard Reilly; $50 Dr/Mrs. Anthony Martin, M/M Gerald C. Pride; In Memory of Bob Avila; Mrs. Louis E. Cormier; Miss Shirley Perry NORTH DARTMOUTH St. Julie Billiarl $600 M/M Harding J. Carrier; $200 Stanley J. Babiec; M/M Charles Dolan; Atty/Mrs. Edward J. Harrington; Mary C. Halloran; $100 M/M Robert Bolduc; M/M David Bolton; In Memory of Joseph & Agnes Soares, Manuel E. Rodrigues & Elvira Ferra; M/M William Winsper; $75 Josephine Medeiros $60 M/M Richard H. Brown; Irene Gonsalves; Violette Powell; $54 M/M Roland A. Dumas; $50 Mildred Arruda; M/M Herman Couto; M/M James J. Donnelly; M/M Norman Dussault; Beatrice B. Freitas; Helen. F. Freitas; Marguerite Mahoney; Maria Pacheco; M/M John Saraiva; M/M Thomas D. Sbordone, Jr.; Isabel &Agnes Souza; M/M Daniel Tremblay; M/M Rober Zukowski MARION St. Rita's $350 Rev. James F. Greene; $500 M/M Francis Perry; $400 M/M Richard Arthur; $200 Mrs. Joseph Kairys; $100 M/M John Perry; William Burgess; $75 Dr.lMrs. Robert Tremblay; M/M John Lowney; $52 John Brugliera; $50 Theresa Dougall; M/M Kevin McClurg; M/M Dennis Giokas; M/M Gerard Good; M/M Frederick MacDougall . FAIRHAVEN St. Mary's $200 M/M Matthew Hart; $60 M/M Frank Marujo; $50 Arnold Cejka; Leonard Cejka; M/M Alan Hopkins; MlM Raymond Vary A.CUSHNET St. Francis Xavier $100 Jose & Alzira .Castelo;~ose Castelo Real Estate. Inc.; Mitchell & Pauline' Smola; $75 Laurier & Pauline Cormier; $50 Andre & Rose Trahan MATTAPOISETT S1. ANTHONY $600 Rev. Barry W. Wall; $250 M/M Gerald Langevin; $200 Mrs. Norman Gingrass; $150 In Memory of Joseph W. Hurley; $100 M/M Edwin Allard; M/M Robert Black; Mrs. Real Breton; M/M Edmund Buller; M/M Charles Caires; M/M William Carter; Dr.lMrs. Joseph Costa; Helen Gardner; M/M John Gibbons; M/M Wilson Harding; Catherine Hassey; M/M Charles Kelly; M/M David Mcintire; M/M Charles Rodrigues; Mr. Timothy Watterson & Ms. Cathleen Dupont $50 M/M Wilfred Belanger; M/M Philip Bernard; M/M Frank Cooper; Helen Dahill; Maribeth Dahill; M/M Marc Goddu; Mr. Daniel Mahoney; M/M Michael Michaud; M/M Edward Sylvester FAIRHAVEN St. Joseph's $125 M/M Raymond Starvish; $100 Mr. Joseph Begnoche; M/M Bernardino Fortunato; M/M Armand Marien; Mr. Matthew O'Malley; $75 Mrs. Roberta Braley; M/M James Lanagan; $50 M/M William Dearden; Mrs. Mary Caton Medeiros; Mrs. Mary Normandin; M/M Ernest J. Pare; Mrs. Joseph Saladino, Sr.; Mrs. David Sibor; M/M Stanley Wojcik; Mr. Robert Wood, Jr.; M/M Germano Xavier TAUNTON Our Lady of The Holy Rosary $1000 Conventual Franciscan Friars; $150 M/M Gilbert Levesque; $100 Mrs. Natalie Foss; Mrs. Victoria Ula k; $80 An ne & Stacia Sienko; $70 Mrs. Mary Dubena; $75 Miss Anne Kalacznik; $50 M/M Robert Bentley; James Kelliher; Julia Kula; Mrs. Emily Pelczarski; M/M Frank Sharkus; Mrs. Palmeda Ziomek St. Paul $235 M/M Robert J. Hill; $100 Carol Baxter-Green; M/MBrian Friary; M/M William Labrie; M/M Joseph F. Mastromarino; Peter Nolan; Mrs. Manuel Oliver; M/M Edmund Thadeu; Mrs. George Tyson; $75 M/M John Con-

"nors;' Olivia Giannini; Eleanor Nunes; M/M Walter Sowyrda $50 M/M John Barlow; M/M Joseph Flaherty; Joseph M. Giannini; M/M Roy Moss; M/M Harold J. Olson; M/M Paul Plumb; M/M Richard Prunier; In Memory of Veronica Pryor; M/M Manuel O. Souza; M/M Clement Wade St. Anthony $1,518 AFriend of Catholic Charities; $150 A Friend; $125 A Friend; $100 Jose Pinheiro; M/M Aniceto· O. De Costa; Cynthia Abreau; M/M Joseph Amaral; M/M Timothy Kieffer; Joao Pedro; M/M Jose Freitas; Antonio Chaves; M/M Manuel Costa; $75 Anonymous $60 M/M John Camara; $50 M/M Manuel Andrade; M/M Andre Faria; M/M Ernest Andrews; Francisco Correia; M/M David Mello; M/M Antonio Reis; Ronald Ferreira; M/M Charles Ferreira; William Drummond; Angelina Chaves; Maryanne Jacinto; Luisa Cabral; Jose C. Cabral; Emma Andrade; Louis Dansereau; M/M Francisco Aguiar Sacred Heart $1000 Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill; $500 M/M John Cullen; $250 Rose O'Donnell; $200 Helen Brady; $175 M/M Joseph Kuper; $125 Rita O'Donnell; $100 Francis Boudreau; Mary Martin; Bruce Blunt; M/M Robert Martin; M/M John Kelly; M/M Robert Dennen; $80 M/M Gilbert Perry; $75 Mrs. James Fahey; $70 M/M Edward Trucchi $50 Philip Cronan; M/M John Simmons; Alice Lynds; Mrs. James McKenna; M/M Michael Couture; M/M Clifton Pierce; M/M Claude Cornaglia; Eileen Cumiskey; M/M Benjamin Seekell Jr.; M/M Rayford Petersen; M/M Gerald Doiron; M/M James Dorsey Saint Joseph $1000 Rev. Msgr. Thomas J. Harrington; $600 Joseph A. Medeiros; $500 M/M Robert Martin; $150 The Garvin Family; $100 M/M Harold J. Rose, Jr.; M/M Richard S. Borden; Mrs. Edward Gotham; Miss Joan Frazier; M/M Fred Barker; M/M Alfred Borges; M/M RobertThomas; M/M James McGovern; M/M Gertrude Taylor; M/M William E. Dias; M/M Edward F. Kennedy; MlM Elton Buckley; Miss Kathleen Peterson; Miss Martha Peterson; William Scully; . Atty. & Mrs. Peter B. Gay;'M/M George Hickey; M/M John Lewis $75 Mayor Robert G. Nunes; M/M Stanley S. Pawlowski; Miss Linda Callahan; $60 M/M Richard Simmons; MlM Jean T. Coulombe; $50 Joseph A. Figlock; M/M Richard Morrison; Mrs. Karen Wat~ anabe; M/M John Sheehy; M/M Joseph Oliveira; M/M Peter Schondek; M/M Edward Aleixo; Mrs. Ann Gilmore; M/M Richard Puccini; Mrs. RobertJ. Hill; M/M Stanley Saladyga, Jr.; M/M Francis Guay; M/M Bruce Ballard; Mrs. Charlotte Carr; M/M John Uva; M/M Laurindo DaGraca; M/M Bruce Correia; Dr/M Michael Broutsas; Mrs. Anna Champney; M/M Charles A. Pirozzi; M/M Gilbert Briggs; Marjorie Kjeldsen; Dorothy Busiere; Ms. Patricia Laffan; M/M Daniel Chisholm EAST TAUNTON Holy Family $500 Deacon & Mrs. John Fitzpatrick; $125 M/M Alva Cowan; $120 MlM Raymond Prunier; $100 M/M Joseph Mozzone; M/M Steven Cravenho; $75 M/M Peter Murphy; M/M Edward Fowler, Sr.; $65 Mrs. Dora Null; $63 M/M Gerard Ducharme; $55 M/M William McCarthy; M/M David Cardoza; $50 M/M Joseph Kramer, Jr.; Mrs. Mary Shea; Stephanie Turkalo NORTH EASTON Immaculate Conception $500 Vincent Galvin; St. Vincent de Paul Society; $300 M/M John Fresh; $200 MlM Albert Arruda; M/M William Metz; Mrs. Timothy Maroney; $150 M/M Robert Wooster . $100 Elizabeth Symynkywicz; Jean Larkin; In Memory of June Kiley; M/M Anthony Spagone; M/M Francis Mahoney; M/M Edward Ryan; M/M Philip Tarallo; M/M James Thrasher; M/M Leo' Harlow; Mary Delgado; MlM Edward Tokarz; M/M John Falzone; M/M William Farrell, Jr.; M/M AI Dallaire; Dr/M Christopher Corey; M/M Robert O'Leary, Jr.; $75 M/M Robert Stone; M/M Edward Secher $60 M/M William McEntee; $50 M/M Thomas Starusky; M/M John McTernan; Mary Pratt; Helen Doherty; M/M Robert Wolpe; Lillian Landreville; M/M Richard

Dubois; Mrs. John Connelly; M/M Gary Twiraga; M/M Wilfred Roberge; M/M William Russell; M/M Richard Gartland; Eugene Princi; Dr/M Eduardo Talusan; Elizabeth Knapp; Mary Lordan; Alice Howard; M/M Kenneth Kane; M/M James Friesen SOUTH EASTON Holy Cross $300 Leo Ziniti, Jr.; $150 Edward Marcheselli; $100 M/M James Azevedo; Mrs. Thomas Murphy; M/M Daniel O'Reilly; M/M James Sullivan; $60 Patricia A. Gentile; $50 M/M John J. Trudnak RAYNHAM St. Ann's Church $600 Rev. Philip A. Davigon; $300 Mr. Thomas J. Whalen; $200 M/M Raymond Cooke; $100 M/M Edmund Goodhue, Jr.; Mrs. Marion San· ford; $70 M/M Robert E. Reilly; $50 M/M John Cockerham; M/M Richard DiVincenzio; M/M Joseph Fernandes; M/M Fred Markot; M/M John McGrath; M/M Mark O'Connell; M/M Earle Parker; M/M John Peters; M/M Albert Ribeiro; M/M Theodore Sargent; M/M R. Michael Whitty NORTH DIGHTON St. Joseph $120 MlM Frank Phillipe; $100 M/M Joseph C. Murray; M/M Daniel Hoyng; M/M Harold Chartier; M/M Charles Cronan; M/M Jeffrey Rogers; Paul Achtelik; $75 M/M Richard Lee; $51 Mr. Edward J. Donnelly; $50 M/M James L. Corey; M/M Arthur Ennes; M/M Wm. Langtry; M/M David Borden; M/M Ralph Charlwood; M/M A. Annunziato; M/M Donald Scott; M/M Richard Slavik FALL RIVER Notre Dame $1000 Rev. Richard W. Beaulieu; $600 Rev. Daniel A. Gamache; $300 Rev. Roland B. Boule; $200 Anonymous; $150 M/M Alfred Dupras; $100 M/M Gerard Duquette; Dr. & Mrs. Ray· mond B. Fournier; Ms. Cecile Masse; M/M Theodore Bernier; Miss Medora Dupuis; M/M Robert E. Levesque; M/M Robert Phenix; M/M Romain Saulnier; $54 M/M Roland Desmarais; $50 Mr. Armand LaBerge; M/M Leo Berger; M/M Roland Couture; Mr. Paul Dumais; M/M Albert Furtado; M/M Normand Belanger; Miss Alice Brodeur; M/M Normand Daviau; Miss Lilliane Marceau; Miss Adrienne Michaud; Mr. Albert Vaillancourt Immaculate Conception $125 Miss Mary Lennon; $100 Immaculate Concep· tion Women's Guild; M/M Albert W. Jalbert; $75 Mrs. Flora Mellen; $50 Mr. Peter Sullivan; Miss Deborah Longchamps Saints Peter and Paul $250 SS. Peter & Paul St. Vincent de Paul; $200 Winifred M. Hasprey; In Memory of Thomas P. Slater Sr. & Mary Tyrrell; $100 M/M Norbert Flores; Irene LeClair; M/M Henry Hawkins; SS. Peter & Paul Women's Club; $75 Mrs. Edward Kelly; Mrs. Theresa Nientimp; Mr. John Tyrrell; $60 M/M John Force; M/M William Hyland; $55 Louise Tyrrell; $50 Mr. Alfred Farias; M/M Robert Hoole; M/M Joseph Le· vesque; M/M John Oliveira; M/M William O'Neil; Mrs. Raymond Polak; M/M Joseph Stankiewicz; Mr. Frank Sullivan; Mrs. James Sunderland; M/M John Wilding Sacred Heart $200 Sacred Heart Chess Club; Constance R. Lynch; $150 MlM Robert Nedderman; M/M Raymond Rosa; $125 M/M John J. Patota; Margaret F. Tolan; $120 M/M Robert Christopher; $100 Mrs. Walter H. White; Mrs. Joseph Welch; Mrs. Joseph Akers; William F. White, Jr.; Mrs. Edmund Mitchell; M/M Charles E. Curtis; Mrs. Arthur Beland; Mr. James F. Darcy; In Memory of Michael & Margaret Grace; MlM John J. Harrington; $75 MlM Manuel J. Soares; M/M Hugh Reilly; Mr. John O'Neill; $60 M/M Eugene Vail; Elizabeth Owens; $50 Mary Grandfield; Thomas J. Dolan; Leonard E. Burgmyer; Joseph R. Dufault; M/M Charles F. Duffy; Raymond Audet; Robert Carey; Robert Carr; Raymond McGuire; In Memory ofThomas E. McVey; Maria L. Mesquita; David & Katherine Molloy; George O'Brien; Willard and Helen Piper; Mrs. Sadie Trainor; Leonard J. Hughes; Miss Patricia Smith; Miss M. Doris Sullivan

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~.;..r-~:,..:-::...:":..~.:... ~.::, _,. .. q~'-#:l': ': :-~..':-' ': ~~~_ .• ~:~ THE ANCHOR-':'Oiocese of Fall River---.oFri., May; 19; 1995

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14

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By Christopher Carstens It sat there, just below the rack of candy and chewing gum. I read the cover of the supermarket tabloid while the clerk checked out the items in my cart. There was nothing subtle about the headline. "Teen Slaves of Satan - Brainwashed to Serve Devil." , I couldn't help wondering how many copies this on'e' would sell. Way too many, I thought. I don't think there ar,e many Cat~olic teens these days who spend much time worrying aboutan ,image of Satan with a pointed tail and horns who goes around kidnapping teenage girls: • But have you watched the news recently? Try telling the men and women who dug through the rubble of the Federal Building in ... Oklahoma C'ity that there isn't real " .'. in the world. They've looked PAPAL AUDIENCE: Coyle-Cassidy junior Alexander evil at real evil, right in its ugly, leering Hazen of Car:ver meets Pope John Paul II during a' February face. vacation trip. . Somebody Duilt 'th,at bomb, and

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St. Anthony of Padua $700 Rev. Gas· Torres; M/M PaulKlaege; Mrs. Walter tao Qliveira; $500 SilVa·Faria, Funeral Conrad; St. Vincent de Paul Society; DeaHomes; $400 St. Anthony of Padua Holy' con & Mrs. Frank Mfs; M/M Thomas. Name Society; $300 St. Anthony of Drewett;. '. " . Padua Confirmation Class 1995; $250St. $140 Lucille Carvalho; Josephine & Anthony of Padua St. Vincent de Paul Mary Niewola; A Friend; $125 M/M Society; $100 Cisaltina Gomes; Emery' Joseph Quinn; M/M'David Beard; M/M Gomes & Sons; Maria Elena Sardinha; St Joseph Minioy; AFriend; $121 M/M Wal·' Anthony of Padua Holy Rosary Sodality; ter Deda; $120 Marian D'Alu; M/M George Cabral; Liberal Silva; Tiberio Sar- Michael Swauger; $105 M/M Andre dinha; St. Anthony of Padua Youth Group; Lacroix; A Friend; $100 M/M Joseph $75 Jose C. Sardinha; $50 Vasco Cor· Gromada; M/M Scott Mitchell; M/M Vic· deiro; Ernest Ladeira; Armindo Geraldes; , tor Medeiros; M/M Raymond' Romag-' Paul F. Silva; Francisco Cordeiro; Edward nolo; Denita Tremblay; Weglowski Fam· Ahaesy; William Costa; St. Anthony of ily;Alice Weglowski; M/M Henry Paruch; Padua Credit Union; Emanuel M. Resen· M/M George Pereira; M/M Joseph Min· des; Maria Viveiros; Antero Cabral; In ior; Mrs. Walter Kocon; Butler Family; Memory of Frank B. Souza; Jose Pereira Holy Rosary Sodality; M/M Kevin JoeS1. Michael $300 Anonymous; rres; Joann Bozzuto; M/M Dominic M/M Robert Eagles; M/M C $100 Parishioner, Sandra Carvalho','A Uemeglio; 'te; M/M , Friend', $80 A Friend', $75 M/M Antone Iwans k·I; M/M .Ph'll' I.m Lapoin " k'I; Joan Le CI' WIsnlews air; M/M Souza', Mrs. Mary Gonsalves & FaITII'ly', WaIt'der F' $50 Mrs. & Mrs. Joao Aguiar; M/M DaVI eeney; Ann & Jeff rey Var Iey; Manuel S. Medeiros', Miss Cecelia Oli- Carol Sousa; Judy. Ann Rebello; Patricia Perel'ra' M/M M T Mull ane; .M/M R'IC k veira; AParishioner; Mr. Ernesto Furtado',' ·zek'· A Frl'end' Snl In Memory of a Loved One; A Friend', ' ' " Anonymous $80 M/M Joseph Cichon; Anna Reid; Our Lady of Health $100 Antonio Pie· dade; $50 Rev. Mr. Robert Faria; Paulo G. Costa; Madeline DeAlmeida; Charles Motta;, Our Lady of Health Ladies Guild .

M/M Warren O'Connell; $75 Geneieve Stasiowski; Rita Lindo; A Friend; $'10 Raymond Frazier; ~Iearior Roberts; M/M George Wrobel; AFriend; $60 M/M Ray· mond Biszko; M/M Stephen Kulpa; M/M John Mayo; $55 Jo-Ann & Robert Polak; M/M Stanley Pruchnik; $52 Ronald Jolin; $50 Rose Forczyk;Thaddeus Kot; John Mazurek, Jr.; Charles Ouellette;

St. William's $1500 A Friend; $700 S1. Vincent de Paul; $200 Miss Mary Doucet; $150 Mrs. Charles Maclnt\'re; M/M Louis Viveiros; St. William's Women's Guild; $130 In Memory of Mary and Paula Martin; $100 M/M Alfred Vieira; $50 Mrs. Louis Przewonik; M/M John M/M Leonard Bernier,' M/M Victor St. ,Rogers; M/M Walter Sokoll, Jr.; Mrs. Denis; M/M Dan Araujo; $65 Mrs. Bert Stanley Wojnar; M/M Edwin Kosinski; Galford; $50 M/M William J. Sewell; Mrs Jan Szember; Steven Rys; M/M Abel M/M James M. Noone; M/M Valentine Roies; Clara BalckbiJrn; M/M Herman Palmer', Miss Carolyn Boll', Miss Tracy Lopes; M/M John Luddy; N1/M Henry Bomback; M/M Louis Perreira; Mrs. J. Nadeau; M/M Joseph Forsack; M/M McCarthy; M/M Herbert Boll; Mrs. Fred John Gosciminski; Stanley Rys, Jr.; Mary Chlebek; M/M Romeo Lajoie; M/M Harold Mello; Barbara Dubiel; Phyllis Babiarz; Robinson; Mr. Christopher Lake Jr.; M/M Edward Couto; M/M Leo Dube; M/M Harry Kershaw; M/M Major Wheelock; John Zukowski; Margaret Teixeira; M/M Mr. Michael Pankow; M/M Clement William Wolowiec; M/M Milton Rebello; Paquette Lynn Amaral; Carl Bugara; MlM Louis Blessed Sacrament $100 Mauric:e Mazurek; A Friend ' Stebenne; A Parishioner; $60 Mrs. Jean ASSONET Demers; $50 M/M Roland Lavoie; M/M St. Bernard $400 M/M Fred Bopp; Michael Dumont; Mrs. Norman LaBrie; '$lOa M/M Paul Lamoureux; $75 M/M M/M Albert Beaudoin; AParishioner Frank Clegg; $60 Mrs. Nola Barnard; $54 St. Stanislaus $825 A Friend; $500 M/M John Donahue; $50 M/M Walter M/M Walter Phillips; $400 A Friend; Cabucio; M/M Donald Howarth; M/M $350 M/M Dennis Cunningham; $300 A Kenrad Sylvia Friend; $280 M/M Walter Pypniowski; ,WESTPORT $240 M/M Michael Souza; $200 M/M St. Georg~ $400 Rev, Roger D, LeDuc; Thomas Skibinski; Anne Joerres; julie $150 M/M Paul R, Methot; $120 M/M Picard; M/M Frederick Leader; AFriend; 'Paul Dion;' $100 St., George Women's $180 AF.riend; $16,0 M/MRobert Emond; Guild; M/M Manuel A. Camara; M/M Car·

caref~jiy pl~ced' it' ~e~'t "to th~'-' '''a~(pie~~'of pie"even ',~heri 'yo'u' , building, knowing the destruction know it's your mom's - ':hat inner it would cause, the lives it would voice quietly reminds you what destroy. The project took weeks: it you should do. wasn't a momentary impulse of Every time you ignore that voice,' passion. it becomes weaker. The habit of During that preparation, the picking what you want over what bombers' lives were organized you know is right gets :;tronger. around a single unspeakably evil Little by little you. become the deed. That would seem to make slave of your own· impulses. .I never met a terrorist bomber, them "slaves of Satan, brainwashed to serve the devil." but I've met plenty of k"ids who As teens, it's easy to mentally have lost contact. with tlleir best selves. divide the world into ttiree·groups. There are a few great sinners, like They are'good studentsrwho get the Oklahoma C.ity ,o()mbers, abe~ind for one re'ason or another few grea t sain ts, Ii ke 'M other . and stop trying. They are I;ids who Teresa, and then the rest~f us~' .... go along w'ith the crow<l, doing Here's how the reasoning, goes. thing's they know are wrong, be'Tm riot'a real bad guy, and I'm, cause "everybody's doing it." They probably not gonna be'i:\ saint. rrriare.kids who go out and u:;e drugs in the middle. What' I do' d.oesn't· 'in spite of everything thei,r'families ., , 'do to help them stop. matter'." , Each bne of ,us has..the capacity' When you know what's right to do very bad'things. Each one of and still do what's wrollg, you make your best self weaker., Do it us can' become the slave' of our own w~on'g choices, pic.~in·g, what again and again', and you eventuwe' want, over what we' know is ally feel you aren't making your right'. own choices anymore. Probably But' each of us also has the you aren't making bomhs, but potentil!-Iof real goodness.' Each of your best self sits in the corner and us has a "best self,",the'person we shrivels. can become if\ve make the effort That's what being a sla\'e is all Our best self'is aware of what's about. going on, and its voice is the voice Your comments are welcomed of conscience. When you are faced by Dr. Christopher Carstens, c/o with a ·moral choice ~ even a Catholic News Service, 3211 :Fourth small'one, like should you eat the St.,N.E., Washington,D.C.200t7.

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M/M 'Robert Lima; M/M Jo~n F,Daley," St.Louis de France $400 St,l.ouis de M/M Ronald P, Perrier; $50. M/M John Caron; Roland Emond; M/M Steven J. Jr.; M/M Joseph ladicola; John P. Kin'g; , France Conference; $300 M/M ,~rmand John W, King; M/M Paul Ouelette; Debora A. Gauthier; M/M Normand J. LllComte; Torres; Ernest Vohnoutka '. $150 Gaston A. Bernier; $100 M/M St. John the Baptist $200 Mrs. Wi I· Setters; M/M Walter Prayzner; M/M liam J. Porter; $175 St. John the Baptist Richard Briere; M/M Jack MecherJ; M/M' Alfred Almeida; M/M George W. Blaser; M/M Milton Brouillard; M/M Milton Women's Guild; $150 M/M John Fazzina; Frederick Kozak; M/M Gilbert Nadeau; Mrs, Thomas Washington; M/M Leonard Brouillard Jr.; Leroy Chouinard; Ilichard $125 M/M Leo St. Aubin; $100 M/M John Fennellyl M/M Carlin Lynch; Miss Burgmyer; John H. McAndrew; Josephine' Cichon; M/M Mark Decof; MlM Roger Paquette; M/M Walter Pierce; Patricia M, Agnes McCloskey; Atty/M Brian SUllivan; Dube; M/M John Moynagh; M/M Gabriel Furtado; M/M Francis Murphy; Mary Roakes; M/M Edward L. Sullivan; M/M Mr. Francis Toohey; Mrs. Eileen Zalewski; James E. Walsh; Mrs. Michael Weiman $75 Ms. Denise TooheY;.$50 Mrs. Helen Santoro; M/M Edward Kaylor;.M/M Miton Anqruskiewicz; M/M ,~ic,h~e! Avila; ..Mr. " D'avidson; Helen Ozug;tt1/M ,And,re C.~r·$,?5.M/M,.Q~rren.P9~ne;,M(M G,erald rler; M/M Michael SI. Laurent; M/M Fontaine, Sr.; M/M Arthur Grim'ls, Jr,; Jell Bosworth; Dr./M Joseph Doerr; M/M M/M Lawrence Mannes; $65 M/M Leo A. Roger Duprat; M/M John Fitzgerald, Jr.; George Dickinson; M/M J,ohn Carvalho, Chabot; $60 Mrs. Raymond A. Dumont, M/M Patrick Hart; M/M Clinton F. Law· Jr.; Mrs. Jack McCormick; M/M John Kineavy; Mary Philipp; Shea Family; Sr.; $50 Mrs. Eugene Ahearn; Mrs.lloland ton;, M/M Roger Leclerc; MlM Brian M/M Stanley Godek; Luciene & Ronald J. Aubut; M/M Fernand C, E. Auclair; McDonald; M/M Thomas Peters; M/M M/M Manuel S. Azevedo; M/M Josllph H. Donald Schmitt; M/M Richard Souza; Uemers ~/M Domlck Massa; M/M David Driscoll Belanger; M/M Daniel H. Berthi~ume; M/M Raymond Tetrault, ' St. Patrick $675 Rev. George C. BelM/M Edwin Booth; M/M Richar~ Bou· Our Lady of Grace $600 Rev,. Richard lenoit; $500 Patricia Tod; $425 M/M langer; Fernand J. Boulay; MI,M TUTIothy L. Chretien;" $300 Our Lady of Grace St. J. Cotter; M/M Daniel DeSouto; M/M Vincent de Paul Society; $200 M/M John Leon(jrd Worsley; $250 Dr 1M Roger Cadieux; $225 M/M Joseph Matthews; Roland Goddu; M/M Ralph A. ~aganelli; MacDonald III; $~OO M/M Donald May- $200 In Memory of Paula Adam Cronin; M/M Raymond Lagasse;.M/M Richard D. nard; Joseph Moniz', Our Lady of Grace In Memory of Raymond Aaam; M/M L~vesque; Leo ~~thleu; ~r~. Una Council of Catholic Women-, M/.M Joseph David Dunne;' $120 M/M Ernest CumMichaud; M/M William R. 0 Nell; Mrs. Botelho;' Beverly Guinen; M/M Philip mings; $100 Mrs. Raymond Bachand; Ronald .R. ParadiS; M/M Lawren,:e P. Mercurio; M/M John Sparks; M/M Manuel Schlernltzauer; M/M Alfred G. Souza; Vale; $65 M/M George Carpenter; $60 M/M Carlton Boardman; M/M James M/M Robert Sykes; M/M William J. Beatrice Hurley; $52 M/M Henry Isa. Bradbury; Arthur Cassidy, Sr.; Dr. Roland Webb, Jr. belle; $50 Germaine Da'vis; M/M Bruce Chabot; M/M Lionel Desrosiers; M/M Fernandes; M/M David Pragana; M/M Arthur Gagnon; MI.M, Edward Hussey: Our Lady of Fatima $500 bur La,:!y of M/M Edward Kerr, Edwar~' Le?nard, Fatima SI. Vincent de Paul; $400 Rev, Donald Nadeau; M/M Russell Olson; Richard Le,onard; M/M Austin 0 Toole; Terence F. Keenan; $300 Richar:l A. M/M Bradford Perkins Ma$r~l'J/u~k R' h d M II . M/M Th Crosson; Our Lady of Fatima Guild; $200 SOMERSET . IC ar ,e 0, o· Mona C. Kennedy; Mrs. Donald L. Mac. St. Thomas More $600 Atty. Richard mas Rels; Helen Sullivan; $70 M/M Donald; M/M Mark Shea; MlM Robert P. Peirce; $500 St. Thomas More Youth Edward Rausch; $60 Mrs. Edward Kelly; LaFlamme; Dorvalino S. Correiro; $125 Ministry; Rev. John J. Steakem; $350 $60 M/M Do~ald Mayer; $50 M/M Ray: M/M Joseph Bushell; $100 M/M John Barbara A. Dunn; $300 M/M Eugene Hunt; M/M Francis L. Ray; M/M Wo'las. Pepin; $240 M/M Allen Smith; $200 mond Bibeau, MIM. Joseph Capostagno, ton Morin; M/M Leonard Connors; rvJIM Raymond Aylward; M/M Gilbert Leo. Dr/M Thomas Daley, M/M Edward Demp· Nicholas DiMatteo, Mrs. Harold T, Cur. nard; $150 M/M Norman Bessette; sey; M/M Joseph Ferreira; Mrs. John Gormalley; William Hayden; M/M Nor· tain; M/M Russell B. Cochrane; Mrs. Rosemary Dussault; M/M Francis Silvia Leonard J. O'Neil; M/M David Costa; $125 M/M Louis Fayan; $120 M/M mand Heroux; M,rs. John Hogan; M/~ M/M Craig Sherwin; $75 M/M Paul J.V. Edward McCann; $115 M/M Joseph , Umberto Latessa, M/M Brian Leonard, Parente; M/M Arthur F. Turcotte; ~;65 Kolakowski; $100 Atty, Stephen Nadeau; Dr 1M Owen McGowan; Mrs. Harold Mee· M/M Joseph Kirkman Jean O'Brien; M/M Michael Stubbs; Dr/M han; M/M Robert Meehan; John Nor· $50 Miss Catherine O'Connell; rllrs, William Langfield, Jr.; Charles Burke, Jr.; deste; M/M Arman~ Saurette; LUCille Ambrose Powers; James Grillin; ~Irs. Rose Fennessey; M/M Richard Kelley; Raposa; MlM Frederick S~orch; Mrs. Sol James T. Waldron; Mrs. Jean Mullensky; M/M William Phaneuf; Margaret Hague; Str~II!1; M/M Arthur Sullivan, Jr.; Joan Dr/M Stanley Ross; Helen Roberts; M/M Margaret Dunn; M/M Gerald Driscoll; Whittington Alfred Mello; Mrs. Roger B. Gray; M/M M/M Paul Daley; William Gibney; Dr/M SWANSEA Edwardo Leonardo; M/M Vincent Coady St. Michael $500 In Memory of Idola John V. Medeiros; M/M John Lyons; $75 M/M John Gaspar;M/M James Hargraves; $100 M/M Manuel Silveira' M/M Robert Smith; M/M Herbert E. Mullins; M/M Stanley Sieczkowski, Jr.; M/M Fernand Lizotte; M/M Roland Pre: Chace; Arthur McAndrew; M/M John F. M/M Scott Jameson; M/M Harry Hynes; vost; M/M George Bedard; St. Vincent De Gunn; M/M Gabriel Costa; Miss Anne V. M/M John Smith; M/M Francis Macom· Paul; M/M Manuel Silveira; $60 M/M Fayan; M/M Peter G. McMurray ber; M/M Richard Crowell; M/M Joseph Joseph Dumont; M/M $50 M/M Michael Gondela; M/M Philip Kukielski; M/M Pacheco; Dominic Troy; MlM Raymond Alphonse Saulino; M/M Ronald Mande- Walsh; M/M Roger Lamonde; M/M Ed. Special Gift & parish listings will ville; $60 M/M Edward Blain, Jr.; Mrs. ward Thompson; M/M Ralph Lepore, Jr.; continue to appear weekly in order David Farnham; Helena Mahoney; $54 M/M Paul Kelly; M/M Joseph Medeiros; received by the printer until all have Mary McNulty; Reginald Marchand M/M Charles Anthony'llI; M/M Walter been ·Iisted. '

;M~/;M~J;Oh~n~D;e~ve~n~e~y;~$~15~0~J;a~n;&~H;O~no;r;a.•·~I;os~,~'co~s~ta~;~.M~r~s~T~h;er~es;a~PI~un~k~e~tt;-';$6;0~_;$5~0~L~u~ce~M;Ur~p~hY~;~M~/;M~E~d;w~in~P;a~"a~s,ii' ..;M~a;lo~n;e;~M~/~M~B;i;"y~D~O~li;n.~

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Our Catholic Schools + Our Catholic Youth Bishop Connolly High School

"I WILL NOT eat green eggs and ham!" St. Anthony's kindergartener Amanda Dean seems to be saying as she and classmate Alex Cabral are served the dish from the famed Dr. Seuss story.

St. Anthony's School NEW BEDFORD -- Students When not preparing for the sacat St. Anthony's School have bid rament, the youngsters brought winter good-bye and welcomed the Land of the Dinosaur into spring with a variety of activities, their classroom. They read about, starting with the younger, ener- wrote about and even did math getic set. The kindergarten classes about dinosaurs. of Susan Pratt and MaryLou Lynn Lawrence and her third Marks learned about' different grade class studied the workings of modes of transportation and trav- a library at New Bedford's Wilks eled right into Dr. '::euss Land branch. They also have been ex, where they read stories, wrote their panding on their geography lesown stories and became gourmet sons by map reading and making; cooks of "green eggs and ham." leaving no corner of the world ".!though the childn:n eagerly pre- unexplored. Students also had an pared the dish, most refused to unusual birthday party when they taste it. celebrated Hostess Twinkies' 65th Next stop was Hawaii. While anniversary. wearing their tropical best, stuPhyliss Goodwin has been teachdents danced the hula, surfed and ing her fourth graders the art of partook of festive Hawaiian cus- letter writing. Each student wrote toms. The students are now study- a letter, prepared an envelope and ing dinosaurs. traveled to the downtown branch During Lent, the school's theme of the New Bedford post office to was "Walk in Jesus' Footsteps." purchase stamps. While there they Various fundraising events were had a guided tour and learned held to help two young girls in the about the postal system. community who have leukemia. Kimberly Thibeult and grade Special events were "Dress Down five will soon be exploring the hurDay" and "spend a day in kinder- ricane barrier. 'Yhile explaining garten," which wa.s voted the best the history of the barrier, a tour guide will lead the students from event by the upper classmen. The first grade class of Martha New Bedford through the tunnels Macomber ventured to the Zeiter- into Fairhaven. Grades 6,7 an<l8 participated in ion for a performance of the Pied Piper. They have been busy learn- the Exchange Club's Quarters for ing about the life: cycle of a plant Kids Blue Ribbon Campaign. Proand have been cultivating seedlings ceeds from the campaign went to and writing down their observa- child abuse prevention. Upper class men, with history teacher tions. Michelle daSiUva's first-graders Patrick Wilkins(m, also went on a have also been h:arning about en- field trip to the Higgins Armory vironmental issues. The class was Museum in Worcester. The mutransformed into a rain forest, seum houses a world-renowned where students studied the depths collection of European medieval of the jungle and its natural in- and Renaissance arms and armor, as well as artifacts from ancient habitants. They then learned about recy- Greece and Rome, Japan and Africa. While there the students cling. The highlight of the year for learned about the days of chivalry second-graders was first commun- and tried on costumes. Eighth-graders in Richard Ferion on May 7. Under the guidance of their teacher, Tina Berube, and reira's class have received high principal Elizabeth Lavigne, the school acceptance letters and are students shared a special day they making plans for graduation day. Everyone is now preparing for and their families will always the annual school walkathon. remember.

FALL RIVER-- The Connolly Alcohol and Drug Awareness Team sponsored a recent Health Awareness Day which offered education on health topics and information on health-related careers. Speakers, displays, pamphlets, videos, demonstrations and participatory activities explored such topics as cigarette smoking, alcohol and drugs, nutrition, exercise and fitness, stress, date rape and sexual violence, and AIDS and HIVeducation. Jennifer Rezendes of Westport was named a United States National Honor Roll Award winner by the United States Achievement Academy. Miss Rezendes will appear in the Acadl:my's official yearbook, published nationally. At Connolly, she has served four terms as class president and is a member of the National and French National honor societies, the mentor program, and the chorus. She is a letter winner in cross country, soccer cheerleading, basketball and softball. She has received the Hugh O'Brian Leadership Award, the Harvard Book Award and the University of Massachusetts-Amherst Chancellor's Award for academic excellence. She was named a Tandy Technology Scholar and was also the 1994 Westport Junior Miss. Senior Rebecca Hancock of Fall River was named the Golden Ruler Award Student of the Month for March by First' Federal Bank and WSAR/ WHTB radio. Winne'rs are chosen from among high school students of six area cities Miss Hancock'received a savings bond, dinner for four with limousine service to the restaurant, a plaqueanda radio interview. At Connolly, Miss Hancock is editor of the yearbook, production coordinator for the literary magazine, and a member of the National and Portuguese National honor societies. She has received the Regis College Presidential Scholarship, Regis College Alumnae Sponsor Award, and St. Anne's Credit Union Scholarship. She is also a volunteer at the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home, a parish lector and a curator's assistant at Fall River's Marine Museum. Andrea Santos of Westport and John Nasrah of Assonet were named Teenagers of the Month for April by Fall River Elks Lodge 118. Miss Santos is a member of the National and French National

honor societies, French Mentor Program, and cross country, winter track and tennis teams, earning a letter in each sport and serving as team captain for the latter. Nasrah is a member of the National Honor Society and the literary magazine and newspaper staffs. He earned a letter in baseball. The Rhode Island Higher Education Assistance Authority has, a warded certificates of honor, recognizing academic achievement, to seniors Richard Sisson and Rebec'ca Frazzano of Portsmouth, Timothy Saccardo of Middletown,

and Charles Walsh of Tiverton. They are all designated Rhode Island Scholars. Sophomore .Jenny Lynn of Fall River will participate in the 1995 Massachusetts Hugh O'Brian Youth Foundation Leadership Seminar June 8-11 at Emmanuel College. Students participating in the program, which is designed to motivate and train future leaders, meet with individuals who have distinguished themselves in business, education, government, the sciences, the arts and the professions.

Coyle-Cassidy High School TAUNTON - Seniors Craig Sangas and Thomas Souza ofTaunton, David Morrison of West Bridgewater and Justin Russell of Middleboro represented Coyle-Cassidy at the 10th annual Providence Col~ lege Programming Contest. Teams from 45 Massachusetts and Rhode Island schools participated in the event, in which they worked to develop solutions for various computer programming problems using BASIC or PASCAL. Winners were chosen based on the greatest number of problems solved in the fastest time. The Coyle-Cassidy quartet solved three problems in a total of 449 minutes during the two-day event. Language Exam Honors Thirty-three Coyle-Cassidy students scored at or above the national average and 25 earned awards for their performance on the 1995 National Latin Exam. Summa cum laude gold medals for the Latin I Exam went to David Schmeer of West Bridgewater, who missed just one of 40 questions, and Ann Goj of Taunton, who answered all but two correctly. Maxima cum laude silver medals went to Brian Blackwell, Angela Pollard and Lauren Malo ofTaunton and Michael Balletto of Carver. Magna'cum laude honors went to Kelley Crownover, Kristin Clark, Megan Dineen and Kristen Folcik of Taunton, Lauren DelTufo of Bridgewater, Laura Joyce of East

Taunton and Brent McCarty of Raynham. Certificates went to Elizabeth Coyne of East Taunton, Brian Driscoll, Catherine McCarty, Shannon Mealy and Karen Read of Taunton, Lillah O'Mara and Karen Cannata of Norton, and Mark McAuley of Raynham. For Latin II, Kimberly Damon of Middleboro earned magna cum laude honors and William McLaughlin of Berkley was a cum laude finisher. Vanessa DeMarco of Berkley was a magna cum laude winner on the Prose III test. Laurel Goj of Taunton earned magna cum laude honors for Poetry IV. On the 1995 National Spanish Exam, 31 Coyle-Cassidy students scored above the state average. Stephanie Miranda scored in the top three percent of the state, finishing sixth of206 students taking the Spanish I Exam, with.no prior experience. Erin Morley of Raynham was the school's top scorer, finishing in the top 10 percent for Massachusetts, on the Spanish I Exam, with previous experience. Angela Saltamacchia of Taunton finished 31 st, in the top five percent of 612 students taking the Spanish II Exam. Eric Hager of Middleboro won the school's Spanish III Exam award and Thomas McGarry of West Bridgewater took Spanish IV honors.

Parents' Night Counselor Sister Liz Engel, OP, MS, will offer a parenting program for parents of students in grades 6, 7 and 8 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. May 23 in the library of Coyle-Cassidy High School, Taunton. Sister Engel, who runs a nonprofit counseling service in Centredale, RI, holds a bachelor's degree in education from Dominican College, Blauvelt, NY, and a master's degree in guidance and counseling from Hunter College in New York City.

NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY officers recently installed at Coyle-Cassidy High School are, from l~ft, pres~dent Carrie Ann Campbell, secretary Sarah Bowen, Vice preSident Thomas McGarry, treasurer J. Elizabeth McGarr.


. . , 19 1995 '. SEPARATED/DIVORCED 16 THE ANCHO~~-DI?ce~~.?fF~Il. R!.-ver-:-.-:F,n., .¥ay, , .'., CATHOLICS,.-NB _. .

PUBLICITY CHAIRMEN are asked to submit news Items lor this column 10 The Anchor, P.O. Box 7, Fall River, 02722. Name 01 city or lown should be Included, as well as full dates 01 all activIties. Please send news of lulure ralher than past events. Due to IImlled space and also because notices 01 strictly parish aliaIrs normally appear In a parish's own bulletin, we are lorced to limit Items to events 01 general Interest. Also, we do not normally carry nollces ollundralslng activities, which may be advertised at our regular ratos, oblalnable Irom The Anchor business olllce, telephone (508) 675-7151. On Steering Points Items, FR Indicates Fall River; NB Indicates New Bedford.

ST. MARY, SEEKONK Youth dance (grades 6-9) will be held 7:30 to 10 tonight, church basement. Sunday night softball returns 6 p.m. May 21, North School field. A remembrance Mass for parishioners whose funerals were celebrated during the past year will be held 10 a.m. May 29. ST. JAMES, NB The parish pastoral council and . finance council have plan!:1i:d a celebration for 7 p.m. May 25 at which the parish mission statement will be unveiled. OUR SISTER'S P·LACE CAPE IRISH CHILDREN'S The battered women's shelter in PROGRAM Fall River will hold a volunteer Host families are sought for childrecruitment and education program ren, ages 10 and II, from Belfast 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. June 6 and 7 at the who will arrive at the end of June for Unitarian Society, 309 North Main a six-week stay on Cape Cod. InforSt. Information: Mary Lynne Alexmation: Gerry Schulze. 477-3035. ion or Emily Lothrop, 677-0224, Registration deadline is May 25. ST. ANNE'S HOSPIT AL, FR Contributions are requested for a CATHEDRAL CENTER of yard sale for Hope House to be held RENEWAL, E. FREETOWN 9 a.m. to 3 p,m. Sunday in the parkDiocesan seminarian convocation ing lot on the corner of Osborn and May 22-26. Stewardship program South Main streets. Information: 4:30 to 9 p.m. May 23 .. Bishop Stang 674-5600 ext. 2023. High School day of recollection May 26. DIOCESAN SCOUTING :::::::::::::::::::\::::::::::::::;i• •t~i:!lli COMMITTEE . Day of Reflection for all leaders ;:;:;:;:::;:;:::: '.'.:.:.:: :::::::::::: of Boy and Girl Scouts and Campfire will be held 3 to 5 p.m. May 21, Sacred Hearts Fathers Retreat House, Great Neck Rd .. Wareham. Program includes ·Exposition of Blessed Sacrament and a talk on ministry to youth through storytelling, sharing and silent prayer.

OUR LADY'S RELIGIOUS STORE Man. - Sat. 10:00 - 5:30 p.M.

GIFTS

CARDS BOOKS

673-4262 936 So. Main St., Fall River

, Support group.meeting 7 to 9 p.m. May 22, Fa~ily Life Center, N. Dartmouth; video will be shown on topic ~'Sin, Guilt and Reconciliation." ST. MARY,.N. ATTLEBORO Brownie Troop 1168 of St. Mary-. Sacred Heart School will assist in this weekend's "Feeding Our Future" collection of nonperishable foods.

JOANNA FISH, a Christian singer, composer and guitarist, will perform at the LaSalette Shrine Coffee House 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the cafeteria of the Attleboro shrine. The Rhode Islander founded the "Mystical Rose Ministry" to spread devotion to the rosary and has produced two musical releases. A A:30 p.m. Mass' will precede the concert. Information: 2225410. O.L. CAPE, BREWSTER Jack Shea will present a Sports Night program at Men's Club meeting 7:30 ·p.m. May 23, parish center.

Norris H. Tripp SHEET METAL J. TESER, Prop. RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL 253 Cedar St., New Bedford 993-3222

FIFTY·FOUR YEARS OF SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY YOUR GENEROUS GIFT HELPS MEET THE NEEDS OF MANY PEOPLE

ST. JOSEPH, TAUNTON SECULAR FRANCISCANS Calix meeting for Catholics rec.' Our Lady of the Angels Fraternity overing from addictive diseases 6:30 will host a gaihering of fraternities p.m. Sunday. church hall. followed May 21 at Our Lady's Chapel, N B. by monthly Mass. beginning'with registration at 8:30 a.m. and morning prayer at 9: 15. LaSALETTE SHRINE, Program .includes guest speaker ATTLEBORO Dianne Hayes. Mass, lunch and felFather Andre Patenaude. MS, will lowship. workshop and group activlead a healing service 2 p,m. May 21. ities led by Karen Martin. RSVP: Marian devotions 3 p.m. Sundays Ms, Martin, 295-7362, or Joan Foley. . during May. 763-2320. ST. MARY, FAIRHAVEN WIDOWED SUPPORT, Planting for the community garden CAPE COD . will begin 2 to 5 p.m. June 4, bring Support group meeting I:30 to garden tools and a picnic lunch. 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Christ the King Information: Don Fedette, 992-8969. parish education center library, ST. JOAN of ARC, ORLEANS Mashpee; topic: "Making the Best Mass and breakfast fOJ graduatOut of the Worst." Information: ing seniors of the parish will be held Dorothyann Callal1an, 428-7078. <.. 9 a.m. Sunday. Church of:he VisitaAPOSTOLATE FOR PERSONS tion. Eastham;informat:on: Judy WITH DISABILITIES Burt, 255-8717 . Monthly Mass and social 2 p.m. MARIAN MANOR, TAUNTON Sunday. Our Lady.of Fatima Church A memorial Mass for deceased hall, N B. A brief meeting of the residents will be held 5:30 p.m. May International Catholic Deaf Associ24. chapel. ation (I CDA) Chapter91 will follow the social.lCDA plans its 46th annual CHRIST THE KING, MASHPEE convention July 9-15 at the RadisIreland's "Golden Voice" Frank son Hotel in Utica, NY; informaPatterson and his wife Eily O'Grady tion: voice, (315) 738-1592; TTY, will perform in concert 3 p.m. June (315) 735-8184; fax, (315) 735-3503. 4; information: 477-7710. "A LovingJustice: The Moral and ST. JOSEPH, WOODS HOLE Legal Responsibilities of the U.S. Natural Family Planning classes Catholic Church Under the Ameriwill be offered beginning May 23; to cans With Disabilities Act," a guide register call 540-4670. for parishes and church agencies for providing access for disabled Ca- CATHOLIC WOMAN'S CLUB,NB tholics, is available from the National Executive board meeting 7 p.m. Catholic Office for Persons With May 24. St. Lawrence rectory. NB. Disabilities, Box 29113. Washington, DC 20019. "Your Child's Rights in the New World: A Parents' Guidebook on the Civil Rights of Individuals With Disabilities" is available from the Cape Organization for Rights of t~e Disabled. 114 Enterprise Rd .. Hyannis 02601; 775-8300, 1-800-5410282 (voice/TTY).

Notre Dame parish plans WW II remembrance Mass Notre Dame de Lourdes parish, Fall River, will host a Mass of Remembrance, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the ending of World War II and honoring all veterans of the U,S. armed forces, at 10 a.m. May 28. At the end of the war in 1945, the Fall River diocese published a booklet memorializing the diocesans who had died in service to their country. Notre Dame Church suffered the greatest number of casualties, losing 38 parishioners. including the first diocesan native to die in the war: Donat G. Duquette, Jr., who was 19 years 'old when he was killed on the morning of Dec. 7, 1941, at Pearl Harbor.

Father Richard W. Beauli(:u will be celebrant and Father Roland Boule concelebrant for tht: Remembrance Mass. Taking p.ut in the liturgy will be t.he fOllowing World War II veterans: Army: George Caron, flag bearer; Henri Tremblay, music minister; Andre Jusseaume .and Paul Dumais, lectors; Raymond Houlay, Roger Fournier, Mallrice Raiche, offertory; and Normand Castonguay, eucharistic mini!:ter. Navy: Roland Allard, Aime Durette, offertory. Merchant Mari~e: Raymond Anctil, offertory. Marines': Raymond Morissette, eucharistic minister.

Appeal funds aid women with unplanned pregnancies, youth, handicappedpersons, engaged couples, those with marriage problems, the sick, poor and elderly, and HIVIAIDS victims. They also provide family life enrichment programs, continuing formation for clergy and laity ; and serve a variety ofother needs.

"SHARING IS THE MEASURE OF LOVE" Most Rev. Sean P. O'Malley, OFM,Cap.· Honorary'Chairman ·Rev. :Daniel:L 'Freitas • Diocesan Director ·PermanenfDeacon ThomasJ. Souza • Diocesan Chairman This Message ~ponsored by the:Following B.uslness Concerns In the Diocese of Fall River 'FEI:rELBERG:INSURANCE.AGENCY DURO FINISHING'.CORPORATION ·GILBERf·C.QUVEIRA·INS. AGENCY GLOBE-MANUFACTURING CO.

CAPTURED 'MOMENT: In this World War II photo, Andre Jusseaume (foreground,third left) and members of his Army division pose with a captured German tank in Austria. The camera which took the photo was also captured from a German soldier. J ussea ume wiII be a ·Iector for a Mass to mark the 50th·anniversary oUhe war's end·1O a:m. M~y 28at Notre: Dame Church, Fall·:River.


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