06.11.81

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Moment in

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Education head favors tax credits WASHINGTON ~C) - SllCretary of Education T. H. Bell testified in favor of tuition tax credits at a Senate finance subcommittee hearing last week in what Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) called a "mome:nt in history." "You are the first chief officer of education to have spoken," on tax credits, Moynihan, (:0sponsor of the Tuition Tax Relief Act of 1981 and long time supporter of aid for non-public school students, told Bell. Previous Health, Education and

Welfare and Office of Education officials had avoided such hearings, Moynihan said. Auxiliary Bishop James P. Lyke of Cleveland, representing the U.S. Catholic Conference, and Rev. Jerry Falwell, president of the -Moral Majority, Inc., also urged Congress to pass legislation allowing parents of nonpublic school children to claim tuition tax credits. Bell told the subcommittee on taxation and debt management that he wanted to appear personally before it because "I didn't

Pope calls for unity VATICAN CITY (NC) - Four days after returning to the Vatican from three weeks in the hospital following the May 13 attempt on his life, Pope John Pnul II made his first formal public ~IP­ pearance and issued a major call for

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unity.

On Pentecost Sunday the (llyear-ulJ pontiff, still pale and th~in after his ordeal, personally delivered a five-minute talk and gave the final blessing at a Mass in St. Peter's Basilica. To representatives of other churches and hundreds of Catholic bishops gathered from round the world to mark the Christian faith in the Holy Spirit, the pope declared that the Holy Spirit "has gathered us together into the one love of Christ." Although his doctors refus.ed

to let the pope lead any of the June 6-7 events celebrating the 16th century of the Council of Constantinople and the 1,550th anniversary of the Council of Ephesus, on June 6 he pre-recorded three separate speeches, totaling more than an hour, to be broadcast at events the next day.

want to appear to waffle" on the issue. Assistant Treasury Secretary John E. Chapoton had told the panel June 3 that tax cuts would have to come before tax credits and some have accused the administration of backing down from its support of tuition tax credits. However, Bell said that President Reagan "attaches a high priority" to tuition tax credits and that the administration believes that the growth of private school alternatives "is healthy and increases the freedom of

families to choose the type of education that will best meet the needs of their children." Asked by Moynihan if, as principal U. S. school official, Bell saw the bill as a threat to public education, Bell replied, "I don't . . . I feel friendly competition is healthy for all of education." In his testimony Bishop Lyke sought to clear up what he called misconceptions about nonpublic schools and tax credits. "For too long the non-public schools in this country have been considered racist, elitist and of

inferior quality," Bishop Lyke told the subcommittee. "Past attempts to establish a public polio cy which would truly give parents educational freedom of choice have been defeated using these misconceptions as reasons. "Hard evidence is now avail· able, and it reveals these misconceptions for what they are," he said. The evidence he referred to came from a study by James S. Coleman on secondary school Turn to Page Three

the

anc 0 Vol. 25, No. 24

Fall River, Mass. Thurs.; June 11, 1981

The recorded papal speeches were a half-hour homily at the concelebrated morning Mass of Pentecost in St. Peter's Basilica, a 10-minute talk before his noontime Regina Coeli appearance over St. Peter's Square, and another half-hour allocution Sunday evening during ceremonies at St. Mary Major Basilica in Rome in honor of Mary. The drama of Pope John Paul's Turn to Page Six

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Mass plans ready Preparations are complete for the diocesan Mass for the handicapped and disabled, to be celebrated at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 20, in the gymnasium of Bishop Connolly High School, Fall Rivl~r. A large attendance from ,all parts of the diocese is expectlld. The Mass, scheduled in celnnection with observance of 1981 as the International Year for Disabled Persons, will coincide with a similar Mass to be celebrated at St. Peter's Basilica in Rome on the feast of Corpus Christi and to be attended by disabled persons from throughclut the world. Bishop Daniel A. Cronin will be principal celebrant and homilist for the Fall River Mass, with priests of the diocese as concelebrants. Oscar Drinkwater and Frank Mis will be deacons and minor ministers will be students of Nazareth Hall, Fall River. The first reader will be Dennis Polselli, representing the Catholic Guild for the Blind and the second reader will be Victoria Kitchen of the Catholic Gu:ild for the peaf. Cheryl Finnerty will offer the Prayer of the Faithful and the

meditation after communion will be by Dennis Cancilla. The offertory procession will be formed by representatives of diocesan nursing homes, religious communities and handicapped youth. Music will be by the parish choir of Sacred Heart Church, New Bedford, directed by Joseph Scammons. Members of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Nurses will be on duty in case of emergency, as will emergency medical technicians under the direction of Father John FoIster, Fall River fire department chaplain. Father Martin Buote, diocesan director of Catholic Scouting, will supervise Scout ushers for the Mass. Arrangements for the liturgy and following reception have been handled by the Bishop Connolly High School community. Bishop Cronin will meet all those attending the Mass and each participant will receive a ring rosary as a memento. Refreshments in the school cafeteria will follow the service with members of the Fall River District Council of Catholic Turn to Page Seven

"WE USTENED," said President Reagan, when asked what was discussed at luncheon for Mother Teresa of Calcutta, shown with the First Couple during her Washington stay. (NC/UPI Photo)

'Give that child to me' WASHINGTON {NC) - On a month-long tour of the United States to open several homes for ·the poor, -Mother Teresa of Calcutta came to Washington to deliver her message that abortion is a destroyer of family life. At the same time :it was announced that she wHi open two of her new homes in the capital city. "Today the unborn child has become the target of destruction," she said at a day-long symposium sponsored by the Amer·

iean Family Institu,te. "In destroying that child, we are destroying love . . . we are destroying God." The symposium, held in a Senate hearing room, attracted more than 100 people, including a smattering of congressmen and Reagan administration officials along with several leaders of the New Right. Under bright TV lights and surrounded by photographers, Mother Teresa called the child

God's greatest gift and said that in Calcutta her coworkers were fighting abortion with adoption. At a talk to New York police officers she returned to the theme. "If you know anyone who does not want !the child, who is afraid of the child, then tell them to give that child to me," she said. In Washington, sp~aking from nearly the same llpot where earlier this spring wjtnesses arTurn to Page Seven


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