10.13.06

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ll~ FRIDAY,

0cr08IIt 13, 2006

Hundreds hail Our Lady. of Fatima as Queen ofPeace By DEACON JAMES N. DUNBAR ' FALL RIVER - Parishioners and 'clergy from' across the Fall River diocese prayed the rosary and sang hymns as they implored our Lady to spread her mantle of peace across the world, country, parishes, among family members,and in their own lives, during Monday night's annual, candlelight peace procession. , , After forming a pr~ssion at St Mary's Cathedral on Spring Street at dusk,the' marchers accompanied Bishop George W. Coleman and clergy and religious over city streets to St Anne's Church at Kennedy Park where the traditional Mass for Peace was celebrated at 7 p.m. Bishop Coleman, th,e principal celebrant of the Mass, told the packed church with many standing, "As we gather to pray for peace, we cannot help but be aware of the ongoing conflicts that surround us ... in Iraq and Mghanistan ... Lebanon, Sudan ... and even this morning in North Korea ... where there is a potential threat of world peace," the latter referring the detonation of a nuclear device there. "We pray that through the intercession of Our Lady of Fatima, that peace will reign in the hearts of men and women, that weapons be cast aside, that the indescribable suffering of millions of victims of war and conflict be brought to an end," he said. "If peace is to reign in our world, then it must reign first in our hearts," the bishop said. 'There is no one who can,beUer guide us than our Blessed Mother Mary. There is no one who can better serve as our model than Mary, the Queen of Peace." Quoting from the late Pope John Paul IT's letter declaring the rosary as the prayer for peace, Bishop Coleman said, "The rosary is by nature a prayer for peace, since it consists in the Turn to page seven-Peace

MANY YEARS OF DEDICATED SERVICE - Several area religiousilicelebrated jubilee years at a recent Day of Recollection for Religious at St. Julie Billiart Church in North DartmOl!Jth. Front, from left: Holy Union Sister Ruth Curry, 60years; Holy Union Sister Rita Laprade, 70 years; Mercy Sister Marie Andre Guay, 60 years; and Sister of St. Dorothy Marie Isabel Franco, 70 years. Back row: Holy Union Sister M.ilElizabeth Murphy, 60 years; Bishop George W. Coleman, principal celebrant of the jubilee Mass; La SaletteFather Giles Ginest; Mercy Sister Rose Angela McLellan, 50 years; La Salette Father John P. Sullivan, guest speaker; and Mercy Sister Lourdette Harold, 60 years. (AnchonJolivet photo) , I:

CMA conference to ai~ how moral principles apply in medical practice Theme is "The Natural Moral Law: God's Gift to Humanity." By DEACON JAMES N. DUNBAR

QUEEN OF PEACE - Altar-servers lead a statue of Our Lady of Fatima into St. Anne's Church, Fall River, as part of the annual diocesan march for peace on Monday. (Photo by Eric Rodrigues)

dration in the terminally ill, when to resuscitate, organ transBOSTON - When the Catholic Medical Association plants, and issues of daily living. But they w;ilI all agree on one point - that God has given holds it 75th annual Educational Conference here October 26 through 29, dozens of speakers from different locales, all humanity,'created in his image and likeness, - a natural medical climates - and faiths - will explore some of the moral law; and while they have may have different oaths, including those of Islamic physicians, those oaths have their basic concepts in the ethics of medicine. They will critically review :;;;tii• •11 common prigin in that law. The three-day conference complex dissimilar issues ! at the Park Plaza Hotel and such as domestic violence, Towers mixes the pragmatic stem-cell research and and the spiritual. therapy, business and mediIt will include perpetual cine, contraception and the adoration, Masses - includmarital contract, the crisis in ing the annual White Mass the Church and adolescent males, physician-assisted Turn to page 18suicide, nutrition and dehy1i'f::J k~:'~J cJ Il::.:i;:}rd Etijitc!.l?i"iDciples to 1~1edki!1 Proc!lC() Conference

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Tide goes out on old Anchor masthead; Fresh, new look greets reamers this week FALL RIVER - A new-look Anchor arrives in subscribers' mailboxes this week. In an ongoing effort to keep the publication fresh, current, informative and appealing, the Anchor staff continually monitors what works best for Catholic newspapers across the country, and when advantageous, institutes changes in the Fall River diocesan paper.

"This is ollf 50th year of publication and we thought it was a time fOf a new masthead that would incorporate our paper's histor)r at the same time as we freshened the look," said Executive Editor Father Roger J. Landry. I The new masthead is the fourth in the paper's five-decade .Turn to page 18 - Masthead


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