08.11.89

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VOL. 33, NO. 31

FALlIIVEI OIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FORSOUTHEASTMASSACHUSEnS ,C .& THEISl;AHDS ,

Friday, August 11, 1989

FALL RIVER, MASS.

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Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

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Hang in there, prelate tells-black Catholics ATLANTA(CNS) - Black Cath- than a, week after black Catholic olics have fought too hard in the clergy meeting in Milwaukee past to give up on the Catholic announced they would study creaChurch now, Archbishop Eugene tion of an African-American rite A. Marino of Atlanta told black within the church. lay Catholics attending a national "Creating a Spirit of Africanconference last week in Atlanta. American Leadership" was the "We're not going to abandon theme of the Atlanta conference, Jesus. We're not going to leave this which had some 400 participants. church. Our fathers have struggled Discussion of a separate rite too hard, endured too many sacri- . emerged after Father George A. fices, to give up," he said. Stallings, former evangelist for the "We're not going to be turned archdiocese of Washington, foundout, turned away. We're going to ed the Imani Temple for black stay with the Roman Catholic Catholics in Washington July 2. Church.... We've paid too much CardinalJames A. Hickey of Washfor our membership," said Arch- ington subsequently suspended bishop Marino, the nation's only Father Stallings for celebrating black archbishop. unauthorized liturgies. He commented during a fourAl~hough some observers have day meeting of the National Office for Black Catholics at Emory Uni- suggested Father Stallings is askversity in Atlanta. He is episcopal ing black Catholics to leave the church, he has insisted Imani adviser to the office. The conference came little more Temple is a Catholic church formed

Assumption mosaic in the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception

TUESDAY, AUGUST IS, is the feast of the Assumption, a holy day of obligation. Catholics should attend a vigil Mass on Monday or a Mass on Tuesday. The Eternal Word Television Network will present live coverage of the Solemn Mass of the AsslJJDption of the Blessed Virgin from the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception beginning at noon on the holy day. Archbishop Pio Lagbi, proDuncio to the United States, will be the principal celebrant. ' The annual "Million Candles for Peace'~ ceremony will follow the Mass. This observance, sponsQred by the Catholic Golden Age Association, invites peoPle throughout the nation to pray for world peace and: to light a candle in honor of Mary, Queen of Peace!c

Knights vow all-out pro-life support BALTIMORE (CNS) - In Baltimore this month for their 107th Supreme Council, Knights of Columbus from the United States and other nations heard a plea for strong family policy from Vice President Dan Quayle and established two $2 million funds for Catholic education. Arch bishop John L. May of St. Louis, president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, called strong lay leadership the key to the church of the future. Supreme Knight Virgil Dechant pledged U.S. Knights to a long struggle to end legalized abortion. At a news conference after the

meeting, he described a resolution by the Knights, committing the'm to an extensive pro-life campaign and support for a human life amendment to the U.S. Constitution, as the most important action of. the convention. Some 2,000 Knights and their wives, representing nearly 1.5 million members in the United States, Canada, Mexico, the Philippines and other nations, convened at the Baltimore Convention Center for the three-day meeting. Preaching at a concelebrated opening Mass, Archbishop Wil· Turn to Page Six

without the approval of the archdiocese of Washington. Discussion of the propoged rite and Father Stallings' actions were not on the meeting agenda, but each mention of Father Stallings drew applause from meeting participants. Walter Hubbard, executive director of the National Office for Black Catholics, said that contrary to news reports saying the organization's board voted to back the proposed rite, there had been no vote taken at the meeting. "We are asking for reconciliation. Cardinal Hickey has been a good shepherd to us in the archdiocese of Washington. Father Stallings is a good priest. We want reconciliation. That's all we've said. Period," Hubbard said. Sister Thea Bowman, a Franc

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Pocasset parishioner serves blind from Falmouth home By Marcie Hickey If you want something done, do it yourself. For Josephine Fletcher of St. John the Evangelist parish, Pocasset, bringing broadcasts into her home of the Talking Information Center, a radio service for the blind, meant exactly that. Since March, one room in her Falmouth home has served as a local studio for the Marshfield-based radio service. It is one of a statewide network. Other facilities are in North Dartmouth, Marshfield, Boston, Worcester, Springfield, Pittsfield and Amherst. The service offered by TIC includes the daily reading of newspapers from the Wall Street Journal to the National Enquirer, bestselling books, supermarket and department store ads and magazines. Also broadcast are calendars of community events, senior information, cultural program, original radio drama, educational programs and job opportunities for the handicapped. Programming runs daily from 7 a.m. to midnight. TIC is a non-commercial, nonprofit service for the print handicapped of Massachusetts. This includes the 25,000 blind and legally blind of the state as well as 25,000 others prevented from reading by age or physical handicaps. Programming is broadcast on special audio signals of FM radio stations and stereo public TV chan-

nels. Such "side band" signals are broadcast in addition to the two channels that carry regular programming and can be heard only with a special receiver. Many stations have donated use of their third signal to TiC. In addition, TIC has obtained use of some alpha numeric channels on cable TV. These channels broadcast video information on the screen while using a radio station for audio background. Over 80 cable outlets now carry TIC programming as their audio channel. It is also available on stereo

TV station WGBX channel 44 of Boston. On some cable systems, TIC is offered as one of many radio stations that can be connected to home stereo. There is no charge for TI C service, which is supported by federal grants, corporate and private donations, fundraising events and on the state level by the Massachusetts Commission for the Blind and the Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities. The receivers required for the Turn to Page Six

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JOSEPHINE FLETCHER in her office at the Massachusetts Military Reservation with her omnipresent companion, Misha, who was trained at the Seeing Eye School in Morrison, N.J. (Hickey photo) .


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