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FALL RIVER DIOCESANi NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS VOL. 38, NO. 38

• Friday, September 30,1994

FALL RIVER, MASS.

Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

• $11 Per Year

Quoting famed Jesuit

Buckley says Catholics may be last defense of U.8. political morals NEW YORK (CNS) - James L. Buckley, a federal appeals judge and prominent Catholic layman, said the nation's bishops have been lax toward Catholics who fail to support church positions on issues such as abortion. Citing work by the late Jesuit Father John Courtney Murray on the compatibility of Catholicism and American principles, he said Father Murray was aware that dissent from those principles might some day shatter the consensus on which the nation was built. and

that guardianship of the consensus "would have passed to the Catholic community." "Murray's fears about the shattering of the consensus appear, alas, to have been well grounded," Buckley said. "He may be proved right in another respect as well: that it may fall to Catholics, often the victims of American intolerance, to draw on our own faith to defend the American political tradition from those who would strip it of its moral content." Turn to Page Eight

Papal health:. always under a microscope VATICAN CITY (CNS) .Those who have followed Pope John Paul II for many years can close their eyes and see his trademark gesture: feet planted firmly. arms outstretched to the crowd and a wry smile on his face. But lately, that image has been supplanted by another, less majestic one: A pope who walks with a cane, occasionally winces in pain and has been known to rest his chin on his chest when he reads his speeches. Like everyone, the Polish-born pope is growing older. Like few before him, he is growing older under the magnifying lens of the global media and the watchful eyes of his aides. At 74, Pope John Paul hopes to

CSS photo drawing by Terrill Anne Hosford. age 12

Respect .Life Month 1994 Special Section pages 9-16 ....---- Also In This Issue An Interview with Principal of Bp. Connolly Page; 3

How People Feel about Sacrament of Reconciliation Pag~ 4

BallguetHonors Memory of Card~nal Medeiros !P,~ge 7

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preserve the chemistry that worked so well in earlier years: the fusion of papal charisma and the media ,potlight. But while the TV cameras are still rolling, today they reveal the inevitable ebb of physical energy in a man who has spent his entire career putting in long hours. His recent injuries - a shoulder separation last November, a broken thigh bone last April- have slowed the pope down noticeably. His slow-healing leg forced him to cancel an October visit to the United Nations and three U.S. cities; some Vatican officials were relieved that a hobbling pope would not be put on display. In early September, arriving for Turn to Page Eight

PACE urges support

of Senate Bill 2 The Parents' Alliance for Catholic Education (PACE), has announced support of State Senate Bill No.2. The bill proposes to amend the Massachusetts Constitution by striking out its language specifically prohibiting provision of public funds to private schools and substituting the words "The General Court shall make no laws respecting an establishment of religion." Executive director Stephen A. Pcrla said PACE support for the bill would be demonstrated at a Government Education DayThursday. Oct. 6, at the Boston State House. beginning with a speakers' program at 10 a.m. at the building's entrance. Perla urged participation at the

event by "all people who support preserving non-public schools in Massachusetts." Noting that support of the senate bill will insure continuance of the "minimum services," such as transportation, that non-pUblic school children now receive, he said "parents of nonpublic school children are taxpayers and their children deserve their fair share." He also stressed that closing of private schools due to inability of parents to pay increased fees would greatly increase public school enrollment, thus raising taxes for all citizens. "Our state Constitution's language is more prohibitive than [that of] our federal Constitution." Turn to Page Eight


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