05.25.90

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VOL. 34, NO. 21

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Friday, May 25, 1990

FALL RIVER, MASS.

Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

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$11 Per Year

Beware of capitalism, pope tells East

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Hedonism, materialism rapped

RETIRIN G Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, moderator of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women as well as director of the Catholic Charities Appeal, is honored by Fall River District One of the council, which he served for 23 years as moderator before assuming the diocesan position. The book, with a needlepoint cover made by past DCCW president Claudette Armstrong, left, contains letters of tribute from past and present district presidents. Gertrude O'Brien, right, was an MC for the program, coordinated by district president Colette Waring. (Lavoie photo)

Appeal total at $1,998,099.75 The Catholic Charities Appeal total now stands at $1,998,099.75, with many parish returns, priests' donations and Special Gifts yet to be reported. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, diocesan Appeal director, said that such donations must reach Appeal headquarters in Fall River by today for inclusion in this year's total. "These reports should be made in person to insure credit," he said, noting that 1990 Appeal final totals will be published in the June 8 Anchor. "I hope that everyone of our

III parishes will be 'over the top' today," he said.

Honor Roll 74 parishes have thus far surpassed their 1989 finaltotals. The following parishes have been added to the honor roll since last week's Anchor report. St. Theresa, Attleboro; St. Mary, Mansfield; Sacred Heart, St. Mary, North Attleboro; Mt. Carmel, St. Mary, Seekonk. Our Lady of the Cape, Brewster; Holy Redeemer, Chatham; St. Elizabeth, Edgartown; St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis; Christ the King,

Mashpee; Our Lady of the Isle, Nantucket; St. Elizabeth Seton, North Falmouth; St. John, Pocasset; Corpus Christi, Sandwich; St. Pius X, South Yarmouth; St. Joseph, Woods Hole. St. Mary's Cathedral, Blessed Sacrament, Espirito Santo, Notre Dame, Holy Rosary, Immaculate Conception, St. Anne, St. Jean Baptiste, St. Michael, St. Patrick, Fall River. St. Bernard, Assonet; St. Dominic, St. Michael, Swansea; St. John the Baptist, Westport. Turn to Page Six

VATICAN CITY (CNS) - Since the fall of communist governments in Eastern Europe, Pope John Paul II has picked up a new theme: Europe must avoid the pitfails of capitalism. In trips to Mexico and Czechoslovakia and in a talk to Italian bishops, the pope has warned that communism's fai'lure does not mean countries shou'ld automatically adopt "liberal capitalism" as the way to economic development. Although the pope has not criticized capitalist countries by name, the Jesuit-run magazine La Civilta Cattolica - which reflects Vatican views - ran an II-page editorial May 19 saying that Europe must avoid "the political, economic and military imperialism of the United States." La Civilta Cattolica officials describe their magazine as a nonVatican publication at the service of the Vatican. Its editorials and major articles are reviewed by the Vatican Secretariat of State before publication. During an April 21-22 trip to Czechoslovakia, Pope John Paul warned East Europeans, that the dangers that renewed "contacts with the West can bring must not be underestimated." "Prepare in the churches entrusted to your care suitable immunizing defenses against ce'rtain 'viruses' such as secularism, indifference, hedonistic consumerism, practical materialism and also formal atheism, which today are widespread," he told Czechoslovakian bishops April 21. In Durango, Mexico, May 9, the pope told businessmen that only a "superficial" interpretation would consider communism's fall in Eastern Europe "as the triumph

of failure of one system over another especially the triumph of the liberal capitalist system. "Special interests would like to take the analysis to the extreme, to present the system that they believe the victor as the only road for our world, basing themselves on the reverses suffered by contemporary socialism," the pope said. The pope criticized an "exclusive eagerness for profit" that does not take into account the limited resources of many Third World countries. He said capitalism contains "the temptation to convert the national community into something at the service of the special interests of the company." ,Speaking to Mexican bishops, the pope called consumerism "a continuing and humiliating offense, especially for the poor, who at times are denied not what is superfluous, but what is most necessary for a dignified life." lri a May 18 speech to Italian bishops, the pope said Eastern Europe might have moved away from materialistic ideology, but like the West it remained vulnerable to Western-style materialism. In different ways, he said, Eastern and Western Europe face "the challenges of secularism and materialism - practical if no longer ideological. And both have an equal need of a new and great impulse of evangelization." But it was La Civilta Cattolica that went a step further and warned against U.S. dominance. The editorial analyzing the messages of the pope's Czechoslovakia trip stressed "the necessity for Europe to unify its own energies in order not to succumb in the face of the political, economic and milTurn to Page Six y

Drop women's pastoral, suggests Archbishop Weakland MILWAUKEE (CNS) - Citing credibility problems raised in part by the issue of women's ordination, Archbishop Rembert G. Weakland of Milwaukee has suggested the U.S. bishops' pastoral letter on women's concerns might best be dropped. "All things considered, I would prefer to let the whole question of a pastoral on women's concerns in church and society drop at this

moment," he wrote in his "Herald of Hope" column earlier this month in the Catholic Herald, archdiocesan newspaper. Its text follows. Two years ago (March 23,1988) the special ad hoc committee of bishops charged with drafting a pastoral letter on women's concerns put out their first attempt under the title "Partners in the Mystery of Redemption." After extensive consultation they have

now sent the bishops a second draft with the title "One in Christ Jesus: A Pastoral Response to the Concerns of Women for Church and Society." It will be debated and voted on this November at the meeting of the National Conference of Catholic, Bishops of the U.S.A. Having just read this second draft, I can say I found it "preachy"; a strident, negative, judgmental

tone seemed to dominate in the document. Apparently the authors felt that to persuade their readers vinegar was better than honey. I felt wrung out after reading it. Perhaps I needed being taken to the woodshed, but I did not sense that the authors were calling us all to a more collaborative working together toward a common goal. I was not inspired. Most of all, I did not sense any

new contribution to the themes treated; by now it was all old hat. It had all been said before and better. I am also tired of hearing in our documents that we should study this or that item more thoroughly; it is time to show how the themes can move forward. On almost every issue the document doe's not add anything to what has already been said by Turn to Page Eight


Leading Parishes ATTlEBORO AREA St John, AtUeboro St. Mary, Seekonk Ml Carmel, Seekonk Sl Mary, Mansfield Sl Mark. Attleboro Falls

41,255.00 34,461.50 31,696.00 29,013.00 25,413.00

CAPE COD AND THE ISlANDS AREA Sl Pius X, So. Yarmouth Sl Francis Xavier, Hyannis Holy Trinity, W. Harwich Corpus Christi, Sandwich O.L. of Victory, Centerville

79,137.50 58,328.00 39,043.50 34,450.00 33,281.00

FALL RIVER AREA Holy Name O.L. of Fatima, Swansea Our lady of Angels Sl Thomas More, Somerset St. John of God, Somerset

36,572.00 29,889.00 26,739.00 23,992.00 22,088.00

NEW BEDFORD AREA Mt. Carmel Immaculate Conception · St. Mary, So. Dartmouth St. Mary StJulie Billiart, No. Dartmouth

.38,755.00 36,546.00 29,263.10 24,873.00 23,688.00

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TAUNTON AREA , St. Ann, Raynham St. Mary St. Joseph St. Paul ImmaCUlate Conception

31,696.00 34,461.50

CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS AREA 26,712.00 Brewster-D. L. of the Cape 12,376.00 Buzzards Bay-Sl Margaret 33,281.00 Centerville-D. L. of Victory 28,612.25 Chatham-Holy Redeemer 27,566.00 East Falmouth-Sl Anthony 5,105.00 Edgartown-St. Elizabeth 32,919.00 Falmouth-St. Patrick 58,328.00 . Hyannis-St. Francis Xavier 24,695.00 Mashpee-Christ the King NantucketO.L. of the Isle 1~,542.00 . North Falmouth26,928.00 St. Elizabeth Seton 7,520.00 Oak Bluffs-S~cred Heart 27,170.00 Orleans-St. Joan of Arc 17,282.00 Osterville-Assumption Pocasset24,558.00 Sl John the Evangelist 9,950.00 Provincetown-St. Peter 34,450.00 Sandwich-Corpus Christi 79,137.50 South Yarmouth-St. Pius X Vineyard Haven7,315.00 Sl Augustine 6,044.00 Wellfleet-O.L. of lourdes West Harwich39,043.50 Holy Trinity 7,862.00 Woods Hole-St. Joseph

27.132.00 22,955.00 19,636.00r-. 17,326.00 15,941.00 Fall River

FAll RIVER AREA

St. Mary's Cathedral Blessed Sacrament Espirito Santo Holy Cross Holy Name Notre Dame Our lady of the Angels Our lady of Health Holy Rosary Immaculate Conception Sacred Heart St. Anne St. Anthony of Padua St. Elizabeth '. St. Jean Baptiste

Parish Totals ATTlEBORO · Attleboro ' Holy Ghost Sl John St. Joseph Sl Mark St. Stephen St. Theresa Mansfield-St. Mary · North Attleboro Sacred Heart St. Mary

11,750.00

Norton-St. Mary Seekonk Ml Carmel St Mary

12,435.66 41,255.00 11,062.00 25,413.00 11,571.83 20,789.50 29,013.00 7,337.00 16,738.00

12,378.10 4,268.50 15,270.00 3,256.00 36,572.00 15,250.00 ,26,739.00 9.125.00 18,855.00 6,825.00 13,631.00 13,287.00 15,118.00 5,303.00 6,694.00

9,297.00 7,930.00 15,016.00 14,542.00 10,050.00 15,084.00 11,070.00 18,201.00 10,262.00

St. Joseph St.louis St. Michael St. Patrick SS. Peter & Paul St. Stanislaus St. William Santo Christo Assonet-St. Bernard Somerset St. John of God St. Patrick St. Thomas More Swansea Our lady of Fatima St. Dominic St. louis de France St. Michael WestportO.L. of Grace St. George St. John the Baptist

22,088.00 13,300.00 23,992.00 29,889.00 15,546.97 16,351.00 11,273.00 12,063.00 7,687.00 14,428.00

NEW BEDFORD AREA New Bedford Holy Name Assumption Immaculate Conception Mt. Carmel Our lady of Fatima Our lady of Perpetual Help Sacred Heart St. Anne St. Anthony of Padua St. Casimir St. Francis of Assisi St. Hedwig St. James St. John the Baptist St. Joseph St. Kilian St.lawrence St. Mary St. Theresa AcushnetSt. Francis Xavier East FreetownSt. John Neumann FairhavenSt. Joseph St. Mary

$85.00 Bliss Brothers Dairy, Inc.

$75.00 Leedham Hardware, So. Attleboro Ro·Jack's Food Stores, Inc., So. Attleboro

$250.00

NATIONALS

Catholic Woman's Club

$1,000.00

$100.00

Holy Cross Fathers, N. Easton

Macedo Pharmacy -St. James Confirmation Class Richard H. Warburton, M.D. Josephine & Dominick Roda, Fairhaven Jane & Joseph Roda, Fairhaven

$50.00 Joseph V. Tally, Narragansett, 'RI

TAUNTON $1000.00

$60.00 Paul & Dixon Ins. Agcy.

Patriot Oil Corp., Raynham

$35.00

$600.00

Cornish & Co., Inc.

Durfee-Attleboro Bank

$25.00

$150.00

Walmsley & Hall, Inc.

Aleixo Insurance Agency, Inc.

$125.00 St. Anthony's Holy Rosary Society

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$100.00 Stacy's Beauty Salon

$50.oli Holy Rosary CCD Lima's Garage, E. Taunton Easton Council #238 K of C., S. Easton Riendeau Funeral Home

$35.00 Grenier Catering Peter R. Andrade, Esq.

$25.00 Lassen's Chevrolet, Dighton, Georgio's, Dighton, Taunton House of Pizza, E. Taunton, Berkley's Package Store,E. Taunton, Daniel F. McNearney Ins. Co., Spirit Within Us Prayer Group-Holy Cross Church, S. Easton, Misty Hill Landscape Design, Ltd., N. Eastham, Drummond Printing, Andy's Market, St. Jacques Women's Guild, Beauvais Bicycle Shop, St. Peter Women's Guild, Dighton

NEW BEDFORD $275.00 Norm's Catering

ATTLEBORO $600.00 Durfee-Attleboro Bank

$550.00 In Memory of Deceased Members and Benefactors of St. Theresa Conference, S. Attleboro

$500.00 Morin's, Inc.

$220.00 Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Women's Guild, Seekonk

$200.00 Dottie's Caterers, Pawtucket, R.I. Precision Tool & Machine Corp. St. Mary Catholic Woman's Club, Mansfield

.$150.00 St. Theresa Confraternity of Christian Mothers, S. Attleboro

$125.00 Country Haven Nursing Home, Norton

$100.00 So. Attleboro Golf Range Vachon Motors, Inc., So. Attleboro

$50.00 Bergh Bros: Co., Inc., Attleboro Falls lE. Case, Inc., No. Attleboro Mandeville Chevrolet, Inc., No. Attleboro Produce Barn, Norton Triad, Inc., Chartley K of CCouncil #5108, Seekonk

$35.00 St. John Women's Guild

$30.00 Attleboro Wood Works, Inc., So. Attleboro

$25.00 Achins Garage, N. Attleboro, Andy's Bay State Auto Body, Inc., S. Attleboro, Bristol Glass Corp., Crown Yarn & Dye, S. Attleboro, Kalmia Kennels, Norton, Doris A. Levasseur, No. Attleboro, Pariseau Realty Trust, No. Attleboro, Riley Bros. Lumber Co., Inc.,cNo. Attleboro, Sherwin Williams, Tri-Boro Gulf, No. Attleboro, Wagner's Flower Shop

CAPE COD $3500.00 Corpus Christi Conference, Sandwich

$2500.00 St. Pius X Bingo, So. Yarmouth St. Pius XConference, So. Yarmouth

$1500.00 Reliable Market, Inc., Oak Bluffs

$1000.00 St. Pius XGuild, So. Yarmouth

$900.00 Christ the King Conference, Mashpee

$500.00 Falmouth Lumber Co., Inc., E. Falmouth

$400.00 Our Lady of the Cape Guild, Brewster

$300.00 O.L, of Victory Conference, Centerville O.L of Victory Guild, Centerville

16,401.00 3,265.00 36,546.00 38,755.00 8,828.00 6,144.00 4,994.00 4,199.00 5,669.80 4,542.00 6,551.00 2,376.00 12,920.00 14,918.50 12,813.00 3,389.16 16,698.50 24,873.00 11,059.00

MarionSt. Rita MattapoisettSt. Anthony North DartmouthSl Julie Billiart South DartmouthSl Mary WarehamSl Patrick

6,682.00 14,688.20 23,688.00 29,263.10 16,109.00 .

TAUNTON AREA Taunton Holy Family Holy Rosary Immaculate Conception Our lady of lourdes Sacred Heart Sl Anthony St. Jacques Sl Joseph St. Mary St. Paul DightonSt. Peter No. DightonSt. Joseph No. EastonImmaculate Conception RaynhamSt. Ann So. EastonHoly Cross

14,044.00 5,681.00 15,941.00 13,994.00 13,677.00 8,228.00 6,942.00 19,636.00 22,955.00 17,326.00 4,478.00 8,121.00 14,415.00 27,132.00 11,700.00

11,813.00 19,686.00 13,297.00 6,412.00

$200.00 Falmouth Cooperative Bank Wood Lumber Co.; Falmouth

$125.00 St. Anthony Couples Club, E. Falmouth Provincetown Blessing of the Fleet

$110.00 A Friend

FALL RIVER $1200.00 Venus de Milo, Swansea

$1000.00 Staff of St. Vincent's Home

$800.00 Bova Publishers, Inc., Boston

$100.00 Knights of Columbus, E. Falmouth Arnold's, Inc., Provincetown McHoul Funeral Home, Provincetown Sea View Restaurant, Provincetown Knights of Columbus Aux., E. Falmouth Atty. Joseph Paruti, E. Falmouth St. John the Evangelist Women's Guild, Pocasset K of CCouncil #813, Falmouth

$75.00 -

Teaticket Hardware, E. Falmouth

$50.00 Dunes' Edge Campground, Provincetown Portuguese Princess Excursions, Provincetown George Botelho, Inc., E. Falmouth Doug's Country florist, E. Falmouth Falmouth Bark &Topsoil, E. Falmouth Eva's Sophisticated Junk, Falmouth A Friend Mitchell's Steak House, Hyannis Holy Ghost Soc., E. Falmouth Quahog Electric, Provincetown Catholic Daughters of America, Court #851, Provincetown Chatham Police Assoc., Inc., Chatham

$25.00 Grandma's Restaurant, Buzzards Bay, Cape Cod Excavating, Provincetown, The Dinghy Dock, Provincetown, Landmark Inn Restaurant, Provincetown, M.F. Peters Enterprises, Inc., Provincetown, James J. Roderick;lnc., Provincetown, Golden Sails Restaurant, E. Falmouth, Family Foods, E. Falmouth, Lands End Marine Supply, ,Provincetown, Falmouth Coal Co.

$500.00 Trina, Inc. Fall River Florists Supply Co.

$375.00 Thomas P. Egan, Inc., Somerset·

$350.00 Aberdeen Mfg. Co.

$200.00 Bristol Finishing Co., Inc.

$150.00 K of CCassidy Council #3669, Swansea

$125.00 St. Patrick Circle #335 0 of I, Somerset

$100.00 Wynn & Wynn, P.C., Attys. Durfee-Buffinton Ins. Co. F. Nasiff Jr. & Co., Inc. lE. Lynch, Inc:' Watuppa Oil Co., Inc. Helen V. Smith

$75.00 Jornal de Fall River

$50.00 Hathaway Funeral Service Americana Travel

$25.00 Brenner Realtors, Westport, Lawson Granite & Marble Works,lnc., Watullpa Package Store, Inc./Westport Fruit Market, Gemco Electrical Co., Inc., Catholic Committee on Scouting

---------Special Gift & parish listings will continue to appear weekly in order received by the printer until all have beelt listed.

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THE ANCHOR -

Diocese of Fall River -

Fri., May 25, 1990

BISHOP LOUIS E. Gelineau, left, and Bishop Daniel A. Cronin, center, participate in centennial celebration of St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception. parish, North Attleboro. Others on altar, from left, Rev. Ralph D. Tetrault, pastor; Msgr. JohnJ. Oliveira, diocesan chancellor; Rev. Cornelius J. Keliher, retired former pastor of St. Mary's. At right, the decorated cornerstone of the church, blessed by both bishops as they entered the building. Bishop Gelineau's presence recalled the fact that in 1890 what is now the Fall River diocese was part of the Providence see. (Breen photos)

T~eology

week _set for priests

Priests of the diocese ordained Prayer, Worship and Spiritual at least five years and in years end- Direction." ing in 4 or 9 (i.e., 1984, 1979, etc.), The June 19 topic will be "Priest are invited to attend a theological as Teacher: Word, Sacrament and study week to be held June 18 Healing," discussed by Sister Christhrough 21 at Cathedral Camp, topher O'Rourke, Ph.D., a family East Freetown. Other priests are therapist. also welcome to attend part or all "Priest: The Gift and Challenge of the program. of Collaboration" will be consiThe week's theme will be "Pri. dered on June 20 by Brian Swain esthood: Gifts of Spirit, Celebraand Rev. Paul Connors of Miramar tion, Collaboration and DiscernRetreat Center, Duxbury. ment." The subject on June 21 will be It will be addressed June 18 by Very Rev. Richard McNally, "Priest: Guide in Discerning/ ConSS.Cc., provincial of the Congre- science Formation." Discussion will gation of the Sacred Hearts. His be led by Rev. Paul Seaver, OP, of topic will be "Priest: Minister of Providence College.

Mending body, inind' is lecture.topic Joan Borysenko, Ph.D., will speak on "Minding the Body, Mending the Mind" at 7 p.m. June 6 in the Arts Center of Bristol 'Community College, 777 Elsbree St., Fall River. The free lecture by the cofounder and former director o(the MindBody Clinic of New England Deaconess Hospital/ Harvard Medical School is open to all. It is endorsed by Siste-r Suzanne Beaudoin of BCC Catholic Campus Ministry, who says "I highly recommend the lecture for spirit-

nill and psychological growth. It is wonderful to see science and medicine recognize spirituality as an essential element of health and ttealing." ." Dr. Borysenko agrees, saying :'We are at an emerging crossroads where science, medicine and spirituality are coming together as a new force for healing; where mending the soul is recognized as integral to mending the body and mending the mind."

Quake aid

Historic organ now in Taunton

WASHINGTON (CNS) - Some $1.2 million collected through National Catholic Disaster Relief operations has gone to victims of The historic, nearly century-old last October's California earthHook and Hastings pipe organ quake for housing, social services from the former St. Mathieu parand church and school repairs. ish, Fall River, will be heard again Father Thomas J. Harvey, execuin St. Jacques parish, Taunton, its tive director of Catholic Charities new home. USA of Washington, recently preAn inaugural concert with selec- sented checks to California diotions from a wide range of comceses at a state meeting of Catholic posers, including Bach, Brahms, Charities directors. Low-income Mozart, Vierne, Ives and Pinkfamilies, and elderly and disabled ham, will be offered at no charge. persons received $493,000 for at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, June 3, by housing renovation or replacement Barry Turley, assistant organist at from the disaster relief funqs. . King's Chapel, Bost.Qn. Father Thomas E. Morrissey, pastor at St. Jacques, was parochial vicar "at St. Mathieu's from GOO'S ANCHOR HOlDS 1961 to 1964 and again from 1967 to 1972, thus was familiar with its organ. -

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PENTECOST CELEBRATION Praise - Worship - Healing Sponsored by the Diocesan Service Committee for Charismatics

Fall River Deanery: St. Bernard Church, Assonet • Monday, June 4, at 7:00 p.m.

New Bedford Deanery: St. John Neumann Church, E. Freetown Wednesday, May 30, at 7:00 p.m.

Cape Cod & Islands Deanery: St. Francis Xavier Churcl:l Hall, Hyannis Saturday, June 2, at 12:30 p.m.

Taunton-Attleboro Deaneries: LaSalette Shrine, Attleboro • Monday, June 4, at 7:00 p.m.

Portuguese-speaking Community: St. John the Baptist Church, New Bedford 'Monday, June 4, at 7:00 p.m. ALL ARE WELCOME

COME AND PRAISE THE LORD!

ST. MARY'S NEW BEDFORD

Giant Indoor YARD SALE RAIN OR SHINE! MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND SUNDAY, MAY 27th - 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. MONDAY, MAY 28th ~ 9 A.M. TO 4 P,.M. St. Mary School Gymnasi~m Illinois St. • New Bedford

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4 .THE ANCHO~,.- Dio~se QfFall River -

Fri., May.25, .1990

.the moorin~ It's Still Tyranny Well, they have done it again. The proposed tax package conjured up to bail out the Commonwealth bears witness to indifference, self-indulgence and inefficiency. Rather than seriously reevaluating policies and needs, our legislators chose the easy road of n'ew taxes. Refusing to face the real issues of political patronage, wasteful cronyism and disastrous mismanagement, the entrenched members of the establishment socked it to their constituents. Increased gasoline, income and other consumer taxes are the directions that beckoned our elected officialdom, which even now refuses to admit crass failure in its management of Massachusetts. Few in the nation are unaware ofthe horrendous state of the Commonwealth. From the lusterless leadership of a lameduck governor reeling from national rejection to the ongoing give-away programs of limousine liberals, the people of the state have ,become scapegoats, not to mention sacrificial lambs. In some ways it might seem we deserve such a state of affairs. After all, we are the ones who continuously elected the same peop'le and party to power. This being said and noting the opposition's' state of shambles, no hardworking citizen of this state deserves the tax burden the General Court proposes to dump on his or her back. It is the middle class that will have to sacrifice to balance the budget. The rich will not because they have too many avenues of escape, the poor cannot for a rainbow of reasons. Thus the responsibility will be shouldered by the workers: the family that takes pride in its home, the couple struggling to buy a home, the commuter who must drive to work and millions of others whose lives are regulated by a market economy. We often forget that these people are the backbone of private charity, the ones who support churches and schools and underwrite many of our cultural programs and institutes. They ask for little, only to be allowed to enjoy the fruits of their labor. They want responsible, dependable government, sensitive to the needs of all citizens. As they try to balance their own budgets and pay their bills, they feel their government should do the same. Those who work hard do not want to see their money go for excessive taxes, nor frittered away by incompetent politicians. Yet this is exactly what is happening in Massachusetts. For over a year, the gang on the hill have made a bad situation worse. It boils down to the fact that either they do not want to change a patently disastrous system or they are incapable of objective evaluation of their actions. Every voter who seriously desires change should note the politicians who are obstructing reform. As we know, party machines are well entrenched in this state and have effectively brought us to our present state of fiscal chaos. In theprocess they seem determined to punish the responsible and reward the indifferent. Is it any wonder that this state has become the Commonwealth of Taxachusetts? If such a political mentality continues, it takes no crystal ball to predict that unemployment will increase, people will move out of state and recession will become endemic. As proposals for increased taxation multiply on Beacon Hill, the citizenry of Massachusetts may well remember that the same process caused the Boston Tea Party and led to eventual removal of the would-be taxers. Taxation without representation is still tyranny. 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 Telephone 508-675-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, D.O.• S.T.D.

EDITOR Rev. John F. Moore

GENERAL MANAGER Rosemary Dussault ~ Leery Press-Fall River

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LIGHTING 'THE TORCH 0

NATIONAL

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PILGR~sCIENCE

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DEMONSTRATORS LEAVE STARKE, FLA. AT THE BEGINNING OF A 400-MILE MARCH TO ATLANTA TO PROTEST CAPITAL PUNISHMENT

"Thou shalt not kill." Ex. 20:13

Business only growing vocation? MIAMI (CNS) - More than mere work, business is a vocation, said a prominent Miami businessman at a conference recently sponsored by the Miami archdiocesan office of lay ministry. In fact it appears to be the only vocation "that keeps growing," said Joe Sciortino, chief executive officer and chairman ofSysco Food Services, who helped organize the meeting on "Business as a Vocation." . "With every other aspect of vocation diminishing, you and I are the only hope for the church," he told conference participants, including law, business and finance professionals. Business, he said, is a Christian vocation in which people take dominion over creation and act in a productive manner as Scripture' demands, said Sciortino. Archbishop Edward A. McCarthy of Miami, speaking at the opening of the conference, said, "We need to regain the concept of business as a valued service to the human community" and "to make the connection between our faith and our business." Emilie Griffin, an award-winning publicist and speaker at the conference, asked participants to confront what she described as the error that "tells us that we will find the Lord on the hillside but not in the office corridors, in the factory or the plant. "The reality is that our holiness has to be found in the-place where we are putting our greatest effort and our greatest energy: in our jobs," she said. Ms. Griffin told her audience she would speflk to them "about someone you know well, someone I will call the Lord of the marketplace." "We are here today to- affirm. that he is our God not only on Saturdays and Sundays, not only

when we are in church or doing churchy things, praying, baptizing, lecturing and visiting the sick.... He is our God when we are in the midst of business, of earning and producing and marketing, promoting and striving," she said. She recommended that participants revive the belief that business exists for the sake of a good and productive society. Enterprise, she said, exists for the sake of developing what is best in others and in one's self. Another speaker, Jesuit Father John Haughey, author of several books of theological reflection on the meaning of work, said he believes 'it is the business world that tests the true religious character of individuals. He said many people lead split lives, unable to see the connection between their faith and their-daily activities. He advises these individuals to look at the way Jesus lived "being about his Father's

praye~BOX Perpetual Help

o Mother of Perpetual Help, grant that I may ever invoke thy most powerful name. May it be ever on my lips, for sweetness, confidence and emotion fill my soul when I utter your' sacred name. Let my love for you prompt me ever to hail you as the Mother of Perpetual Help. Amen.

business, sniffing out where his Father was working," then ask for the "grace to see God at work in work." "God wants productivity and the people of the earth to have what they need for their own human destiny," said the priest. "Productivity is as much at the heart of God's will as worship is," he said. Michael Feeley, a Catholic financier from a New York asset management corporation, Fee'Jey & Willcox, suggested conference participants develop personal goals in line with their faith. His own goals include: - Try to become' debt-free, which means slowing down the pace of consumption. - Create and maintain a liquidity pool of 20 percent of one's net worth. - Direct 80 percent of that net worth into equity investment of various types that meet one's personal criteria for directing money. "Let your mastery of money show. Empower other people with it. Take some risk and ... look about you and see what is t.he best way to use it," said Feeley. - Consider tithing the first 10 p«:rcent of gross revenues. - Consider creating a foundation that would embody your aims. "Pass it on to your kids," said Feeley. He said one's first commitment "is to yourself and to your Lord. But then comes your family, where the talk of money is generally considered taboo." "You' may be able to help members of the family get higher rates of interest in savings, or lower mortgages, offer seed capital for their initiatives," he said. One of the ways he integrated faith into his work world, Feeley said, was pledging to himself never to advance his own career "at the ex'pense of somebody else."


Seizing the moment

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"I was so tired when 1 came home from work," a mother told me," and 1 dreaded the h'ours ahead, getting dinner, doing laundry, helping kids with homework. "As I drove into our driveway, 1 saw my eleven-year-old son lying under the tree staring up at the sky. My first reaction was anger. Why wasn't he inside doing something? "But then I felt a longing to do the same thing. On impulse, 1 stashed my purse and briefcase on the front steps and went over and lay beside him. "He gave me a strange look so 1 explained that I wanted to relax with him for a littl~ while and asked him what he saw up there. He told me if 1 looked through some branches I could see clouds that looked like a train with a caboose. "While we were wasting a wonderful fifteen minutes together, our neig;lbor drove up. She looked at the two of us lying under the tree and called out, 'Did you lock yourselves out?' " 1 laughed heartily at her story because the neighbor's reaction was so typical oftoday's fast-track attitude. If wt;'re relaxing with those we love, something must have gone awry. I also applauded the mother's ability to grasp a spontaneous moment with her son

in an otherwise chaotic day. In a workshop on the TwoPaycheck Marriage that my husband and 1 conduct, we meet and listen to many couples who are managing the stress of work and family life effectively but we also meet many who aren't. Couples who manage well are more spontaneous. They recognize and seize the moment. We live in a culture that schedules its recreation and relaxation: "A week from Saturday, we will have fun." That isn't when we need it. We need a break from ongoing duties when the stress level gets high, when tensions start showing up in counterproductive ways in the family. That's when we need to give ourselves permission to say, 'Hey, something's going on here that isn't good for us. We need some time and some fun together." And the family that is spontaneous may give up the RENEW meeting at church in favor of a game of cards, a trip to the park, or a water fight. How do we know when we need this? I ask couples to finish the following sentence: "I know our family stress level is getting high when ...." Most commonly named symptoms are irritability, withdrawal, hyperactivity, lack of patience, lack of concentration, changes in eating and sleeping patterns, headaches and other

Hope for unborn Q. Your book and column have helped me greatly over tile past years. Maybe I can do something in return. Recently I read that Mother Teresa spoke to the women of China who were forced to have abortions because of national policy. In her message she told them to be assured that their children were with God and that they were praying for their parents. So many women in the United StateS-have had abortions. Many are going through terrible feelings of guilt and remorse. I know their sense of loss and' depression is almost too terrible to comprehend. Since these babies are part of the human race, are they not part· orthe Communion ofSaints? Could we ask their intercession on behalf of all unborn children who are in danger, and also for the peace and tranquility of their parents? I feel this might be a real source of comfort to parents who have repented what they have done and feel so hopeless to do anything to make amends. It,would also help all of us who work with right-to-life organizations when things seem to go against everything we try to gain. (Idaho) A. You and Mother Teresa make some powerful points. They may indeed be a source of comfort and healing for those, parents or others, who mourn the tragic, and wasteful deaths of these unborn children. Thank you for writing. 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

THE ANCHOR (USPS-545-Q20). ~econd Class Postage Paid at Fall River. Mass. Published weekly except the week of July 4 and the week after Christmas at 887 Highland Avenue. Fall River. Mass. 02720 by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. SUbscription price by mail. postpaid $11.00 per year. Postmasters send address changes io The Anchor. P.O. Box 7. Fall River. MA 02722. _

Q. I can see you are living in a world ofyour own. In your column about sterility, you say a woman who has had a hysterectomy can have a valid marria2e. I know of a man and wife who left the Catholic Church because they ,were told that they should not have sex because the wife had to have a hystrectomy. A lot of priests 'make up their ow~ canons. (Arkansas) A. What 1 said in that column was accurate. Apparently many are still confused. As I explained, there is a crucial difference between sterility and impotence. Impotence means that for some reason, physical or psychological, a particular man and woman are incapable of sexual intercourse. If that impotence is permanent . and cannot be remedied in any way, a valid marriage between those two people is not possible. Sterility means that because of a defect in the woman's or man's internal reproductive system they are incapable of having a child. The hysterectomy you mentioned is a good example. Such sterility does not make a marriage impossible between the two people, assuming of course that they can still have sexual relations. Obviously, sterility is not at all uncommon in a marriage. A dis-

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ailments, fatigue, and an increase in kids' fighting and whining. When a family can recognize and act upon its early symptoms, it takes control of the stress when it's still controllable. Other families try to tough it out, ignoring the signals to slow down and look at what's important, and their stress gallops out of control. When we recognize those early signals, we need to stop and examine priorities. Have we really talked with one another the past week? Does the kids' increased fighting reflect our tension? Are we the projectors and they the screen? Even if it means not meeting all our obligations or living with a less-than-perfect home, these nudges from God call us to seize the moment and reevaluate our use of ,time. 1 suspect the mom who wasted time with her son under the tree didn't cook as impressive a dinner as she would have otherwise, but she gave her son, herself, and her family something of far greater value...a relaxed wife and mother who had her priorities straight.

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Diocese of Fall River - Fri., May 25, 1990

Obituaries

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Appeal at $1,998,099.75

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Jacques, St. Mary, St. Paul, Taunton. A detailed report ofSpecial Gifts, parish totals, leading parishes and parish donations begins on page 2 of this issue of the Anchor and continues on pages 13 through 17. Listings will continue to appear until all donations have been recorded.

Continued from Page One Immaculate Conception, Our Lady of Fatima, Our Lady of Perpetual Help, St. Anne, St. Joseph, St. Mary, St. Theresa, New Bedford. St. Francis Xavier, Acushnet; St. Rita, Marion; St. Anthony, Mattapoisett; St. Julie Billiart, North Dartmouth. Holy Family, Holy Rosary, Immaculate Conception, Our Lady of Lourdes, Sacred Heart, St.

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Continued from Page One itary imper'ialism of the United States and of the economic competition' from iapan." The editorial added that a united Europe must also "be brought back to Christianity" and the moral and spiritual values must guide political and economic integration. . "The new Europe would get off on the wrong foot" if stronger nations took advantage of the current weakness of Eastern Europe, it said. "There is the risk that the new Europe will be made by the big mercantile and financial forces, with economic and political aims' predominating," it said. "Instead of a Europe founded on solidarity and freedom, we w6'uld move toward a Europe founded on money and power," it added. Western Europe, "after an initial

enthusiasm" over the fall of communism, has expressed "a certain coldness" toward the East, and "above all, a great difficulty in coordinating aid programs," it said. "Also strong is the 'imperialist' temptation, in other words the tendency of the Europe of'victorious capitalism,'" it said. "It seems to us that European unity cannot be built on the current capitalist model, which is always, in an open or hidden way, imperialistic," it added . The juxtaposition of the evils of communism and capitalism found throughout the sociaJ documents of the current pope - has been called "moral equivalency" by some U.S. Catholics. They are annoyed at what they consider a papal blind eye to the advantages of capitalism and befieve that the atheistic philosophy behind communism should trip the scales definitively in capitalism's favor.

Operation Rescue will

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NEW YORK (CNS) - Some 300 Operation Rescue supporters gathered in New York May 12 for a rally indicated that they were ready to take the struggle against abortion to new levels of intensity. Despite widespread criticism of their using civil disobedience tactics to blockade abortion clinics and the penalties of jailing and fines imposed on many of them, they expressed an untiring commitment to keep going to the "abortion mills" with the "demand that the killing be stopped." During the three-hour program, Auxliary Bishop Austin B. Vaughan of New York reiterated his warning that New York Gov. Mario M. Cuomo faced "serious risk of going straight to hell" for his position on

abortion and said controversy over his remarks had served the cause by drawing attention to his jailing. Christopher Slattery, a Catholic active in the rescue movement, announced plans for a national pro-life video conference to be broadcast from Chicago June 30 and national protests tomorrow against news media thought to be misreporting or neglecting the prolife movement. In the New York area, he said, protests are to be held in front of offices of the New York Times and Newsday.

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At 7 p.m. Friday, June I, at Our Lady of the Assumption Church, New Bedford, a memorial Mass will be celebrated for Father John Godelaer, SS.Cc., who died April 13 in Mechelen, Belgium, where he had been living in retirement. Father John, who in 1928 made perpetual profession as a member of the Congregation of the Sacred 'Hearts of Jesus and Mary and' was ordained a priest in 1931, served in the diocese of Fall River from 1938 until his retirement in 1971. He was parochial vicar at Sacred Hearts parish, Fairhaven, and Our Lady of Lourdes, Wellfleet, then pastor at Our Lady ofthe Assumption and St. Boniface parishes in New Bedford. All are invited to attend his memorial Mass.

Joseph Saulino The Mass of Christian Burial was offered last Saturday before a standing-room-only congregation at Holy Rosary Church, Fall River, for Joseph C. Saulino, 34, who died May 16 after a long struggle with cancer.. Untillast January, when illness forced his retirement, Saulino was fourth-grade teacher at Holy Name School, also in Fall River. Among his last projects was coordination of a drive netting over half a million dollars in supermarket register tapes, for which Holy Name School received three computers and allied equipment at no cost. Saulino, also an apprentice funeral director, was' active in his home parish of Holy Rosary, where he was religious education coordinator, taught a religion class and was a eucharistic minister. He was a past chairman of the parish Catholic Charities Appeal and of other parish programs. Saulino held a master's degree in education from Providence College and was a member of educational organizations on the regional and diocesan level. He is survived by his parents, Alphonse F. SaulinoJr., and Helen D. (Stewart) Saulino. by three brothers, Michael S. Saulino, Alphonse F. Saulino III, and Atty. John E. Saulino, and by two nephews and a niece.

Alarm expressed NEW YORK (CNS) - Archbishop Renato R. Martino, permanent observer of the Holy See to the United Nations, has warned the UNICEF executive board that the church "views with great alarm" proposals to make the agency an advocate for abortion. "The Holy See firmly opposes such proposals not only on moral grounds, but also because they would bring a totally unacceptable deviation from the stated purpose of UNICEF in favor of children," he said in a statement to the board holding its annual meeting at the United Nations.

-----How To Do It

"After having studied ourselves deeply, we must then forget all about it, go straight ahead and do our best, trusting only to that simple instinct of straightforward wisdom which is the natural side, the truth of the Christian life." Abbe de Tourville


make sure everything worked; arrange the display; and present themselves in a proper businesslike manner." The details came together and with the funds they earned the students will take a class trip next month to the Frank Davis Resort in Moodus, Conn. Learning business practices gives the students a headstart in the real world, said Mrs. Lavigne. "They really enjoy it and learn a great deal from it," she said. "So do I!" The students' projects have taught them that "they can't just start a business and have it work," Mrs. Lavigne continued. "And

U.8. goals set for Peter's Pence WASHINGTON (CNS) - The chairman of a committee of U.S. bishops formed to help finance Vatican activities has asked his fellow bishops to meet diocesan goals for contributions to the 1990 Peter's Pence collection, suggested to be taken up the weekend of June 23-24. Bishop John E. McCarthy of Austin, Texas, chairman of the U.S. bishops' Committee on the Economic Concerns of the Holy See, has also asked the bishops to set parish goals, said Thomas M. Flatley, consultant to Bishop McCarthy's committee. Flatley said it was the first time goals had been set for each diocese. He said the Vatican has been using Peter's Pence moneys to meet its deficit rather than for their intended purpose of funding charitable and missionary work. A Vatican deficit of some $86 million is anticipated this year. Flatley said amounts suggested for each diocese average about 13 percent higher than 1989, contributions which amounted to $12.4 million in the United States. Suggested increases vary by diocese, he said, based on collections over the last five' years, the size of the diocese, and the state of the economy within the diocese. Several dioceses received no suggested increases, including California's San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose, because of expenses incurred from last fall's earthquake, and the dioceses of Charlestown, S.C., and Charlotte, N.C., because of Hurricane Hugo. On average, each parish would have to increase its collection less than $100 to reach the overall goal, said Flatley. He said that averaged only "16 cents per family over the last collection." The goal was "so small," Flatley said, "the average pastor should have the increase in his wallet." Flatley, now retired, was director of development for the national office of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Explaining the need to increase the Peter's Pence COllection, he said the Vatican's budget "is less than most of our major archdioceses." "The church is really running a tight ship," he declared. Recent figures showed that the Vatican's expenditures were about $152 million a year while the archdiocese of Chicago, for example, spends over $430 million.

May 28 1982, Rev. Lionel A. Bourque, former chaplain Cardinal Cushing Hospital, Brockton May 30 1929, Rev. Jordan Harpin, O.P., Dominican Priory, Fall River 1937, Rev. Edmond J. Potvin, Pastor, St. Jean Baptiste, Fall River 1950, Rev. James M. Quinn, Pastor, St. John Evangelist, Attleboro May 31 1964, Rev. Vincent A. Wolski, OFM Conv., Pastor, Holy Cross, Fall River

The Anchor Friday, May 25, 1990

7

when they go shopping, they know how much their money is worth!" The youngsters also seem to "grow up a lot" in the course ofthe program, she said. "It's nice to see the changes in their maturity level from September to June." The Educator of the Year modestly downplays her own role in all of this. "My involvement is organizing, putting them on the right track," she said. "I envision myself as a spark. If you incite them they'll go search on their own. They really earned this [award]."

"This is where God wants me. " ATAWARDS banquet, Elizabeth Lavigne displays her Educator of the Year plaque. With her are Paul Gelzinis, chairman of the board of Junior Achievement of Fall River, and Patricia Wingate, principal of Holy Name elementary school, Fall River.

Holy Narne teacher cited as top JA educator By Marcie Hickey "If I'm tired, she must be really exhausted," teacher Elizabeth Lavigne of Holy Name School, Fall River, remembers commenting as the impressive credentials of the Educator of the Year were cited at the recent Futures Unlimited awards banquet for Junior Achievement of Fall River. Finally the busy winner's pame was revealed. Elizabeth Lavigne. "You should have seen the looks on their faces," the Fall River teacher said in reference to the five delightfUlly surprised members of her eighth grade class who accompanied her to the banquet. Word has it that Mrs. Lavigne wore a similar expression herself. "It was a nice surprise," she said. "It's a recognition and acknowledgment for the whole class for working so hard." That hard work has included bake sales, raffles and numerous other fund raisers devised and organized completely by the enterprising youngsters as they put into practice economic principles learned through J A. Those principles have helped the eighth graders fund thei'r class pictures, graduation expenses, a parent-appreciation dinner, a class trip and a class gift to be left to the school. "They're quite capable young people," their teacher summed up. The Educator ofthe Year award, presented at the annual banquet that honors J A's student entrepreneurs and their advisors, rec:' ognizes a teacher who demonstrates innovation in teaching economicsrelated topics and whose students demonstrate marked comprehension of the material. Mrs. Lavigne has been involved in Junior Achievement for three years, promoting its elementary level programs: Business Basics for grade 5 and Project Business for grade 8. Business Basics introduces students to the fundamentals of management, production and marketing through discussions, activities and presentations by business community volunteers. Project Business supplements the eighth-grade social studies, combining economic education with training and career exploration.

The eighth grade's business consultant is Lisa Murphy of Lafayette Federal Savings Bank, who addresses the class for 40 minutes on Friday afternoons. Mrs. Lavigne is proud of her students' enthusiasm for the program, saying that even on Fridays, when the weekend beckons, "they're all well-behaved and attentive." Although eighth graders aren't eligible for formal JA recognition, they'll receive awards at Holy Name's class night "and they deserve each and everyone," said their teacher. "They're a hardworking class." A recent eighth grade undertaking involved photographing younger pupils with the Easter Bunny. The project underway, the students were responsible for setting ticket prices and obtaining a camera, film, and a photo backdrop. One of the students designed the advertising logo, and "they did a little bargaining for the costume," Mrs. Lavigne said. When they spent a class period projecting how much they'd have to sell to meet their goal, "they were awed at the cost "of getting the business underway, she added. Finally, she said, there was the management aspect: "They had to

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"/ had never thought about being a nun until one day. while / was at co/lege ... and here / am. And / know / am where / belong."

DOMINICAN SISTERS OF HAWTHORNE A ~e!i~io~s c~mmunity of Catholic women with seven modern nursing faclhtles III SIX states. Our one apostolate is to nurse incurable cancer patients. This work is a practical fulfillment of our faith. The most important talent, highly prized by us, is the talent for sharing of yourself - your compassion, your cheerfulness, your faith -with those who have been made so vulnerable and dependent by this dread disease. Not all of our sisters are nurses, but as part of our apostolate, all directly help in the care of the patients. If you think you have a religious vocation and would like to know more about our work and community life, why not plan to visit with us. We would be happy to share with you a day from our lives.

Write: Sister Marie Edward I)()MINICAN SISTERS 0.' HAWTHORNE Rosary Hill Home 600 Linda Avenue Hawthorne, New York 10532 or call: (914) 769-4794

SATURDAY, MAY 2.6 Procession of Gifts 6:45 P.M. Band concert - Games - Food, Auction to Midnight

SUNDAY, MAY 27 Concelebrated Mass Sung in Portuguese 11 :30 A.M. PROCESSION - AT 3 P.M. (Including 8 Bands) After Procession There Will Be Band Concert - Games - Prizes - Food and Refreshments and Auction Until Midnight.

MONDAY, MAY 28 MEMORIAL DAY Band Concert, Bazaar - Games Food and Auction until 10 P.M. Continuous Music By "The Sailors" and other groups.

EVERYONE IS INVITED

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New hematologist at St. Anne's Jose Bruno Nunes Pestana, MD, has been appointed a hematologist/ oncologist at the Harold K. Hudner Oncology Center at St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River. He graduated from Escola Medicina e Cirurgia do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and completed a residency.

in hematology and internal medicine at the Hematology Institute, also in Rio. He was a medical resident and hematology fellow at Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, Fla., and an oncology fellow at University Hospital, Boston.

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CARDINAL EDMUND Szoka, left, of Detroit welcomes his successor, Archbishop Adam J. Maida, formerly bishop of Green Bay, Wise., following the announcement that· Archbishop Maida would be the new head of the nation's fifth largest diocese. Cardinal Szoka is going to Rome as head of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See, the Vatican's central accounting office. Archbishop Maida is a former president of the Canon Law Society of America and is board chairman of the Pope John XXIII Medical-Moral Research and Education Center in Braintree. (CNS / UPI ~~~

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MEMBERS OF Massachusetts Citizens for Life on Cape Cod turned out for a recent protest demonstration at Cape Cod Community College during spee9hes by Molly YaFd of the National Organization for Women and Lt. Governor Evelyn Murphy. (Boyle photo)

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pastoral, says 'archbishop

,Continued from Page One papal documents, In·fact, its brief treatment of crucial issues is neither satisfactory nor convincing: The document of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith from 1976 ("Inter Insigniores") and the Holy Father's apostolic letter (" M ulieris Dignitatem") are so much better. Those two, coupled with the two documents from previous synods of bishops, "Familiaris Consortio" and "Christifidelis Laici," say it all much better. It would be wiser to permit them to stand as is. The first draft was centered around the word "partners"; this second has as its key word "equality," A cursory glance at the index shows how the title to each chapter emphasizes this theme. Because of this emphasis on equality the section in the new draft on the ordination of women comes as an even more chilling cold shower. The argumentation seems less convincing because of this context of equality. After that section the paper goes on to reprimand society for the inequality of some of its structures and calls us to fight against such signs of sexism in our midst. At / this point the very credibility of the document comes into question. Credibility is important in a document of this sort and cannot be dismissed lightly. It is easy to see the bind the authors are in, but I am surprised that they do not say anything about the traditional relationship between ordained ministry andjurisdiction in the church. The whole issue of power and decision-making in the church and how they are, in our prese~t thinking and legisla-

tion, related to orders is not men~ tioned .• The question of whether this situation must be so is not even raised; there is not even a bland "this subject should be studied further." There will be no credible treatment of the role of women in the church till this question of the connection or lack thereof between orders and jurisdiction is laid out clearly. So, far example, the gifts of women cannot be fully recognized if leadership roles have to be tied into ordination. (Leadership is not mentioned either in the document, not even as needing more study.) All things considered, I would prefer to let the whole question of a pastoral on women's concerns in church and society drop at this moment. I feel too much as if the authors are telling me to get into the ring with Mike Tyson, and then have them tie my hands behind my . back.

NEW YORK (CNS)~· Eunice Kennedy Shriver, sister of President John F. Kennedy, said in a letter to the editor in The New York Times that an advertisement by the National Abortion Rights Action League "distorted" his words in using them to oppose the U.S. bishops' education campaign against abortion. Citing an advertisement published in the Times April 22, she said she read "with indignation" its use of Kennedy's assurance that in the type of society he favored "no religious body ... would impose its will directly or indirectly iJpon the general populace." "The use of the quote in the context oftheadvertisement," the late president's sister said in a letter published May 13, "is outrageous, unfair, inaccurate and a distortion both of my brother's remarks and of the Catholic bishops' full acceptance of the separation of church and state." the quote was from a speech Kennedy gave Sept. 12, I960, to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association on his views on churchstate issues in the face of criticism that a Catholic president would be influenced by the Vatican. To the question posed by the abortion rights group's advertisement of "who decides?" Mrs . Shriver countered, "The obvious answer is that we all do. ',' "This effort by the abortion rights league to raise money by attacking the bishops sets group against group, religion against religion, to the detriment of everyone;" she. said.' I .: ..:. " 'I', Kennedy took special pride, she said, in the bill 'establishing the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development to study problems of pregnanci and early childhood development. "H is interest in the fetus and in chiidren," she said, "was positive and comprehensive, reflecting his moral values." Mrs. Shriver noted that the proabortion league's advertisment opposed the decision ofthe bishops to contract with the Hill & Knowlton public relations firm for a prolife public education campaign. ·'It is difficult to understand why anyone would seek to deprive the bishops of the same right the National Abortion Rights Action League and every other American citizen possesses," she said. Mrs. Shriver said the right to life of a newly conceived fetus has "a moral value that· deserves debate," and the bishops had a right to advance their view. "President Kennedy believed and practiced the value that America should offer a free marketplace for all views, even those of Catholic bishops," concluded Mrs. Shriver. "He would have resented his words being distorted to confuse and obscure that value. His family resents it. too." She signed the letter as executive vice president of the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation in Washington, which supports research into causes and possible prevention of mental retardation as well as efforts to improve the way the mentally retarded are treated,

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as food for all those .present, the, THE ANCHOR - Diocese of Fall River - Fri:, May 25, 1~90 bread and the wine-and-water mixed over which the thanks had been offered, and also set some apart for those not present."; ..After the reader has finished his task, the one presiding gives an address, urgently admonishing h~ "ItOMlIlAW more than simply nostalgia for hearers to practice these beautiful COUIICI MIMIE." teaChings in their lives." "The pres"the good old days." We must first recall that the ident offers up prayers and thanksFOI "OMPT 14 Houl 5,,"1("1' Dear Editor: Cho,I~, V~lolo. p,~, 2·WAY RADIO "One, Holy, Catholic and Apos- givings, as much as in him lies. The I am writing as a Massachusetts people chime in with an Amen," tolic Church" is not restricted to attorney and a member of the ..... those who are well-to-do give American Bar Association to voice the 20th century expression of the whatever they will. What is gathRoman Rite as received from the my disapproval over the associaered is deposited with the one pretion's House of Delegates voting Council of Trent and modified siding, who therewith helps orphans under the various popes since that by more than a two-to-one margin time. There was a whole history of and widows.. ," to reaffirm a woman's "right" to This description of the Mass liturgical practice for the Roman have an abortion. M. . . . .y clearly expresses a diversity of Rite before Trent, and all the other I am concerned that many AmerOffICI ., OAK GlOYI AVI.• fAll IMI roles including one who presides, rites of the Catholic Church had icans might interpret this vote as one who reads, those who take up an affirmation that many attor- their particular histories of praca collection, deacons bringing Comneys in this county support this tice as well. While it is legitimate to inquire munion to the sick, the people who resolution wholeheartedly. make their responses. It is also What percentage of attorneys in "Where is the tabernacle?," it is "SHOREWAY ACRES IS. A SURE THING" noted that the one who presides perhaps more important to ask fact support a woman's right to It's 'What Life On Cape Cod Is All About" does not do the readings, but does and "When?" It helps to "Why?" abortion is unknown, and I would ... New EnKland GetAways Mallazine preach, does receive the gifts, does hope that the House of Delegates' start by recalling that the Mass is lead the prayers and say the thanksnot the worship ofthe Son, but the vote is not indicative ofthe percengivings (eucharistias). This distritage in the legal community at worship of the Father by the Son _ The Personal attention found onlv at through His Mystical Body, the bution of roles is the standard by large. a family-owned Resort Inn . which the development of liturgi_ 8 SUPERB meals per couple I am writing to tell you that Church. Thus the presence of the cal practice over the years is to be _ Full Service B.Y.O.B. Bar there there are attorneys and other Sacramental Body of Christ on the judged. altar from the beginning of Mass _ Live Music-DancinK-SinKalonKs legal professionals all across this _,Attractive AccommodationsFor our own Diocese, a letter of country who are strongly commit- (though veiled in the tabernacle)Indoor Pool-Saunas can be a cause of confusion in the the Bishop shortly after the Vatited to the pro-life issue. focus of our worship. ·[lcr rl.'r~un. I"c:r nil-!ht dh!. nccu('l. can Council instructed the priests fo, reservations. call Toll-tr.. in New Enllland I am writing, not only for the J I'J 90 t-. .lO 90 la:"ll.h'C'clC'nds in The original purpose of reserv- of the Diocese that various decrees 1-800-352-7100 or 508-540-3000 benefit of my pro-life colleagues .lUll\.' nih..", ... Iightl~ higher. Itnlida\"!\;) ing the Eucharist between Masses nighls. la.\ & lip", nUl in,,·ludcd. . ofthe Church regarding the Liturgy but also for all non-attorneys who On Hist()ric Shore Street. Box G Dept. A. Falmouth. Mass. 02541 hear of events like the delegates' was to provide communion out- were "to be considered prescripvote, and are discouraged. It is side of Mass, specifically for the tive", that is, they were to be condiscouraging when attorneys, who ill. Some sort of an arrangement sidered the law of the Diocese. should be safeguarding the inter- for such reservation had to be This was soon to be incorporated ests of the weakest members of made, and so various forms of into the statutes of the Diocese of society, choose to look the other repositories were devised over the Fall River: "Under the direction and guidance of the bishop, every way while the weak and innocent centuries. From the 16th century, the taber- priest has the obligation to impleare killed in abortion "clinics." PEOPLE ALL OVER THE WORLD ARE VISITING THIS If you are interested in defend- nacle type of repository fixed to an ment to the fullest aU the decrees YUGOSLAV VILLAGE TO BE PART OF THE REPORTED altar slowly became customary as of Vatican Council II and subse. ing the rights of the unborn, there APPARITIONS OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY.. are many organizations you can the repository of choice. This did quent instructions in regard to the join. If you are interested in lobby- . not become obligatory for all liturgy," (Pro-Synodal statutes, 1968, YOU CAN SHARE IN THIS ing to influence state legislation to churches of the Roman Rite until #52) decision ofthe Sacred CongregaDEEP SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCE! a do not want to go back to We prohibit abortions, contact Massachusetts Citizens for Life: Mary tion of. Rites in 1863. The other the exact form ofthe Mass as celeAnn Booth, 636-4903, or in Bos- rites of the church still maintain brated in Rome in the second centheir own particular customs. Thus tury which, besides having someton at (617)242-4199. 10 DAYS-All Inclusive (Including 1 Night in Dubrovnik) the universal practice of a taber- what different prayers and readings, If you are interested in actively nacle for reservation ofthe Blessed was celebrated in Greek. Nor protesting and "rescuing'" at abortion clinics across the state call Sacrament in the Roman Rite was should we be content to go back to Darrolene Furlit at (617)849-6026, just 100 years old at the beginning the exact form of the Mass given Pilg.rims w~o have travelled with us over the past 3 years know that our of the Second Vatican Council. to us by the Council of Trent, expenen~e glyes you the best environment to allow you to experience the Operation Rescue in Boston. But to get back to the original which was a response and reaction true MedJugorJe. If you are interested in pregquestion of "Where?", what altar to the Protestant reformation. SiCome join ~s ,?n this special trip and see why many of ourpilgrims have told nancy counseling, call your local was that tabernacle to be on? As a milarly, let us not be so fixed to the us th~t our pllgflmages h~ve been the best retreat of their Jives! Birthright Chapter. In Fall River/ rule, in cathedrals and monastic forms of our youth that we cannot Somerset, the number is 675-1561. churches, it was not placed on the understand and appreciate the manFO" UE: (AILS CALL NOW! • (508) 336-3090 I am also soliciting information high altar, but a side altar, or the ner of celebrating Mass given to us from health care and legal profesaltar of a special sacramentary by the Church for our own age sionals on the pro-life issue, parchapel, while in parish churches it through the work of the Second ticularly from a Catholic perspec1200 FAll RIVER AVE. • SEEKoI<.IK, MA was generally situated on the main Vatican Council. tive, with the intent of writing on altar. The directions for celebratRev. Martin Buote "Your MedJugorJe ConnectIon" the subject. Those interested in ing Mass in the Roman Missal New Bedford participating in a Catholic discusused prior to the Vatican Council sion of current health care or legal .assume that the tabernacle was not trends and their possible impact on the main altar. They read: "On on pro-life issues may contact me the way to Mass,' if the priest at 814 County St., Somerset 02726. should happen to pass the main Atty. Edward Hodkinson altar, he uncovers his head and Somerset bows toward it. If he passes the OF WESTPORT place of the sacrament, he genuflects," Thus, the practice presThe following letter is a response cribed by the Second Vatican to "Weekend Buffets?" which Council is really just a return to a fMlINUIt • . . . ~ eetelutiM ~"IJMe, . . . ~ 7Q-,," ~ t¥ 7Q~" appeared in the Mail Packet for practice that was standard for years, de ~.~"'" 1,..~. 7Q~ ~~ ... tMtuII_IIt4(, IHtlttut." ~, April 20, Editor acknowledged by the Council of u~ee " .eei4( etJeIIt ' " ~ ~,~~"tIP,~ 14. h u . IIIed It is a commonplace of human Trent, but obscured in recent cit ~ ,*,,,dt.. ~. psychology that what we grow up history. The earliest account of Mass with we use as a standard by which • White's Conference & Banquet Fadlities-Seven beautiful function rooms to measure and by which to act, that is extant is that of the martyr that can accommodate from 20 to 1,800 people and it is often very difficult to Justin in his first Apology, written • ~ Prisdlla. Restaununt-Nautically-inspired setting for family-style accept new standards. Most of us at Rome in Greek around the year dining ... daily luncheons and dinners, cbildren's menu, weekend entertainment 150. This account, found in chapwho reached maturity before Vat• The New Hampton Inn Hotel-134 rooms with plenty of extras ... free deluxe ican Council II had an outlook ters 65-67, makes use of the term continental breakfast, fitness center.with Jacuzzi and sauna, free cable TV and piety that was formed by 'president' in several instances and generations of attendance at the in several forms: ..... bread and a CaB us toda;y---4urfunction consultants White's of Westport Latin Mass of the Roman Rite. cup of water and wine mixed are are eager to help you make your next 508-615-7185 The modifications given to us by brought to the one presiding over celebration a memorable one/ 1-8()()-696-7185 (within MA) the brethren..,"; "After the presidthe Church following the Council amptoD Inn Hotel came too quickly for some of us to ing official has said thanks and the Junction of Route 24 and Interstate 195 508-675-8500 assimilate, and the longing for the people have joined in, the deacons, State Road· Westport, Massachusetts 02790 ways ofthe Church of our youth is as they are styled by us, distribute

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By Dr. James and Mary Kenny Dear Dr. Kenny: Recently I found otitthat my son is gay. He is 22 and living away from home. He told me of this on one of his visits. I am so shocked and upset I don't know what to do. . Is there any hope for a change in his lifestyle? Not only am I worried about AIDS, but also about his future. Can they change if they really want to? I'm not sure that he wants to. He seems to accept it. I cannot condone this kind of lifestyle. We have two other teenagers. Please answer soon. (Illinois) A. No one really knows how or why some persons are attracted physically to their own sex. Most of the experts do' agree, however, that homosexuality has a powerful physical basis (either genetic .or constitutional), and it is difficult, if not impossible, to change. One expert compared homosexuality to handedness. Some of us are right-handed. Some of us are left-handed. A few of us are ambidextrous. But since handedness is brain-based, it's almost impossible to switch. Homosexuality is certainly a sig-

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nificant factor in our society. The Kinsey Institute reported that by age 45,37 percent of males and 13 percent of females had at least one complete sexual experience with a member of their own sex. The research on homosexuality is fairly consistent. From 4 percent to II percent of females are reportedly more gay than straight. From 9 percent to 32 percent of males have been reported to be more homosexually inclined. The figures for being exclusiveiy homosexual are smaller: from 2 percent to 6 percent offemales and from 5 percent to 22 percent of males. I am giving you these figures so that you understand your son is far from alone. Please don't judge your son. He did not ask to be gay. Apparently, homosexuality is one of many naturally occurring human differences or variations. Unfortunately, too many people have a tendency to hierarchize differences or to put them in a rank order. Whites have put themselves over blacks; men over women; the healthy over the ill; age over youth; etc. This .tendency is called prejudice and has led to much grief and pain in the world.

In your letter, I think you are confusing the fact of homosexuality with a lifestyle. Some gay persons are confrontational, promiscuous and unpleasant. So are many straight persons. Not all homosexuals are active sexually,just as many heterosexuals don't sleep with everyone. This is where morality becomes an issue. We are responsible for our choices and behavior. We are not responsible for our inborn nature and preferences. It's not what we are, but what we do with what we are. Especially today, more than at any other time, it is important that 'parents and all persons of compassion and good will make the effort to understand homosexuality. The AIDS epidemic has led to considerable public abuse of homosexuals.. They need our support, not our condemnation. In loving your son, you are not supporting a homosexual lifestyle. He did not ask to be gay. Nevertheless, our culture may judge him severely for that. Be there for him.. Reader questions on family and child care to be answered in print are invited by the Kennys, Box 872, St. Joseph's College, Renasselaer, Ind. 47978•

In aw.e of sound: a gift of God By Antoinette Bosco One of the very nice things about being a writer is that now and then someone responds to you.in a way that lets you know you have touched them. Sometimes this communication becomes an unforgettable moment. Recently I got a letter from an 85-year-old woman in a nursing home. She was not responding to anything in particular I had written. She just wanted to join her voice with mine in the only way she could - with her written words. She is, you see, deaf. Her letter ended with the Jines, "My days in here are all about the same. Can't use hearing aids. Can't . listen to television or radio. So 1 scribble, scribble and read." Well, she may call what she does . scribbling, but fortunately for me she had included some of her written thoughts with the letter. One sheet was titled "What I Miss By Being Deaf." Listen to what she wrote: "The voices of our dear friends, cheerful, sweet, comforting when we need them most of all "The song of.. .the birds early in the spring and the church bells as they ring "The voice of a small child with all its innocence and guilelessness "The purr of our cat, the bark of our dog, the bleat of a lamb, the neigh of a horse, the low of the cattle at the end of the day "The raindrops on the roof "The song of a sweet voice, the music of an orchestra "In traffic, the toot of a horn to tell us a new day is born

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"But most of all the words that say - I love you." I had never taken the time to try to understand what it must feel like to be deaf. That may be because I have always been afraid tha! this would be my fate one day. I grew up with ear trouble and never .pass~d an ear test in my life. Rather ·than wondering what it might be like to live in a world without sound, I used my energy to develop my powers of concentration keenly enough to camouflage any hint of being a bit hard of hearing. But when this letter came to me, my defenses faded and I read the woman's words with my heart. I felt her loss. Imagine not being able to hear my grandson say "I

love you," or never again to hear the flashy red cardinal that comes to my window every morning to wake, me with his chirping, or being shut out of the glorious sound of my daughter singing"'Carmen." I was overwhelmend then in a surge of wonder at the goodness of the Creator who gave us the gift of sound and the ears to hear it. I could not believe that years had gone by since 1 had thanked the Lord specifically for my ears. True, I thank him daily for my blessings but I tend, I guess like most others, to take the most important things for granted. We simply expect we should have our eyes and ears and legs and 'hands, etc.

Farewell, Kate By Hilda Young I don't remember if it was Walt Whitman or my Great Aunt Susie who said, paraphrased, "The longer we live the more we realize that the greatest of life's treasures is not possessions, achievements or fame, but a good friend." Having thrown away my fair share of calendars, I know Walt and Aunt Susie are right. More to . the point, I am agonizing these days as my dear friend Kate goes through the packing process to move out of our neighborhood. 1 miss this human "treasure" already. 1 count the days until her family's scheduled moving day like Scrooge counted c·oins. How do you replace someone who reminds you of your own· children's birthdays? Who shares your caffeine addiction? Who sends you sympathy cards and your priest's unlisted phone number when your oldest gets her driver's license? "You know this means I have to . re-do all the kid's emergency contact forms at school and church. and at the Boys and Girls clubs," I groused at her the other day. "Really'! Just change the number and tell them I accept collect calls," she said evenly.

She always seems to say the right thing. Or maybe friends this close can rarely say the wrong thing because their presence and concern is what is "said." . We find ourselves playing tearful games of "Remember When?" "Remember when you called to ask me about column ideas," she laughs, "and I told you it was a bad time because we were in the middle of a solemn guppy funeral and the rest of the day was going to be spent trying to convince Larry's Appliance and Grill that its best garbage disposal should be able to handle popcorn kernels? "Y ou said thanks and hung up." "Remember our 'flaming tent' camping trip?" Remember Tim's first Communion party at our house?" "Remember when...?" I know 1'1I" miss our talks the most. You can sanitize and synthesize sins for the confessional, but a good friend helps you discern God's mind in an especially. healing way. . You can share intimate things with your spouse, yet some things are not understood quite as well as by a dear friend. A good friend is a grace. Now, if she'd just tell me how she conned old Father O'Kneal out of his unlisted number.


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Cape programs aid bereaved By Marcie Hickey Two bereavement programs on Cape Cod are helping people make the difficult adjustment of living without a loved one. Bridge to Other Widowed, facilitated by soCial worker Maureen Corrigan, is designed to help the widowed spouse "cope with grief and reinvest in life," she said. In Memory Still, conducted by Robert Fournier, aims to do the same for those who have lost a relative or friend through suicide. Both programs, funded by the annual Catholic Charities Appeal, are administered through Catholic Social Services in Hyannis, where Fournier is director. Ms. Corrigan-has directed Bridge to Other Widowed since its inception a decade ago. The group meets once a month for open discussion and an educational component based on a scheduled topic. It is the only ongoing widowed suport group on the Cape, allowing participants t9 attend as often or for as long as they wish. Most remain with the group about nine months, Ms. Corrigan said, and the members vary widely in age, with the average being mid-50s. Ms. Corrigan emphasizes that while having a professional facilitator is beneficial for the educational aspect of the program, the purpose of the group is self-help: "widowed supporting widowed." "Basically people find路 out they're not alone, that what they're feeling is a normal reaction to a major loss," she said. Although participants come from different backgrounds and different life circumstances, sharing the common experience of loss can be a powerful healer, Ms. Corrigan indicated. "People feel uncomfortable they think they'll feel worse" if they bring back the memory of the loss by talking about it, 'she said. But what they find, she continued, is that discussion "tends to divide rat~er than multiply grief." The support group provides an atmosphere of warmth, trust and openness for those experiencing fear, confusion or emptiness after losing a spouse, said Ms. Corrigan. "Everyone gets 'air time' to talk about what happened to them if they want to," she said. Ms. Corrigan explained that grief is a predictable process which can last two to three years. Most people who join the support group are entering a second stage of grief, during which they are feeling intense disappointment in life, she said. After the initial shock of losing a spouse, widowed persons may emerge from the "state of numbness" feeling as though "life is on hold," said Ms. Corrigan. Family and friends were there to support them through the wake and funeral, but once on their own, "they don't have any way to deal with the grief' and sometimes feel they should be over it, said Ms. Corrigan. "Most peopie don't realize that it will be as painful as it is, that it will affect so many areas of functioning in their lives," she continued. "People feel ripped off, cheated, isolated. Many times they are angry" and looking for a way to express it, whether it's" 'because he died before the rescue squad got here' or 'he died before the first grandchild was born.' " Many group participants have

said, she noted, that although they still have the support of family members and friends, no one understands what they are going through except others who have experienced it. In the support group setting, "people find their feelings are very similar - sometimes their sentences can be completed by a person on the other side of the room," said Ms. Corrigan. By telling their stories, she said, group members not only help themselves, they also give hope and ideas to others. Members can often borrow from one another's coping strategies, and, most importantly, realize that their feelings are a normal part ofthe grieving process. They are, also relieved to discover that the group does not encourage forgetting one's spouse. "The group isn't there to say goodbye to the loved one," said Ms. Corrigan. "It's okay to be memorializing, as long as you invest in living relationships too." However, she cautioned, it is wrong to assume that the group will "cure" the grief. "It can路 never be solved completely," she said. "The goal of the group is to resolve a piece of that grief and enable widowed persons to reinvest in life." The same applies to the bereavement group for survivors of suicide victims, said Robert Fournier, who proposed the In Memory Still program last year, when he became director of Catholic Social Services in Hyannis. The group meets for to hourand-a-half sessions on alternating weeks. The first 20-week program recently ended and another begins this month. A third program is scheduled to begin in the fall. Fournier feels there is a particular need to address the problems of persons who have lost a loved one through suicide (referred to as "suicide survivors") because, while grief is a problem with any kind of loss, such survivors must cope with additional difficulties due to the circumstances of the death. Loss through suicide is "very profound and very intense" and puts survivors in the position of questioning the fundamentals of life and death," said Fournier, who has worked in suicide counseling and research for 13 years. It is a "secret loss" because of the stigma attached, and circumstances may affect how open memorialization can be, he continued. In addition to feelings of anger, confusion and isolation, the suicide survivor often feels victimized or betrayed, and, in addition, "there is a tremendous feeling of guilt," said Fournier. "Condemning the act of suicide makes them feel they are condemning the person who did it." Survivors feel uncomfortable with their situation and fear that the victim will be judged by others; . therefore they often do not want to attend other bereavement groups, Fournier pointed out. In Memory Still "offers a safe, comfortable place for people to discuss their loss and its relationship to their own lives and living. "Imposingjudgment is a putdown. The situation needs to be viewed with respect and love and care," he said. While the program runs for aset time period, topics are flexible and discussion usually arises from issues

brought up by participants, Fournier explained. Group members plan their own closing session, which can be anything from a regular meeting to a lecture by a gue.~t speaker or a religious service. Prospective group members meet with Fournier prior to the program, giving them an opportunity to ask questions and decide if they want to participate. . "We send out a gentle invitation" to anyone who may have experienced a loss through suicide, said Fournier. In dealing with the bereaved, "I feel we're administering to an invisible population," said Ms. Corrigan. "People go underground with their grief." Both support groups offer the bereaved the opportunity to be open about their loss and how it is .affecting them and help them go on with their lives, said Fournier. Furthermore, the groups can help alleviate stress which can prolongate the grieving process, added Ms. Corrigan. "Holding on to grief, bitterness and anger can lead to increased depression and risk of health problems," she said. The social workers noted that loss does not have to be recent. One participant in the In Memory Still program was grieving a loss of 40 years ago, said Fournier. ..A loss may have happened years ago but was dealt with poorly at the time," said Ms. Corrigan. "It's not time itself that heals wounds but the quality of the time." She continued, "Adjustments have to be made at every age .and turn. . "One can't afford to let the grief accrue. It's like the back shelf in a closet - if you keep piling things on it, someday it will all come crashing down." . Ms. Corrigan holds the philosophy that "People do not need the support groups; the groups are something that grievers deserve. People should be made to feel better, and they can be by attending the group. "By providing these groups, Catholic Social Services is making a statement that grief is important," she added. In general, Catholic Social Services "offers a powerful service for the diocese and community," said Fournier. "Hopefully priests, religious and laypeople will refer people here - or call to learn how to help the grieving - or, of course, those with other problems." "People are ,uncomfortable with the grief of others and don't know the right things to say," Ms. Corrigan acknowledged. "Each parish should be aware that these services are here and make the appropriate referrals." Noting that the two programs

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Fri., May 25, 1990

~.

ROBERT FOURNIER and Maureen Corrigan are a welcoming presence at Catholic Social Services in Hyannis. (Hickey photo) Bridge to Other Widowed offer a sense of becoming settled with that loss, of achieving serenity and calmness and moving on with life." Information about either program can be obtained by contacting Robert Fournier or Maureen Corrigan at Catholic Social Sen'ices of Cape Cod, 261 South St., Hyannis; tel. 771-6771.

receive direct funding from the Catholic Charities Appeal, Fournier added, "It's important for the Catholic community to know that their monies go to these programs, as well as to many other social services and all are here when needed." With regard to bereavement, he concluded, "Loss is with one for a lifetime but In Memory Still and

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CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy - The pope's cows aren't really sacred, but they are kept at arm's length from the public. Journalists and tourists may traipse all over the Vatican, but the pontifical village farm near the pope's summer residence at Castel Gandolfo is off limits. The cows' milk, however, is available and since a Rome newspaper article mentjoned it in January, demand has been growing for the distinctive yellow and white cartons in which it's packaged. Although residents of Castel Gandolfo and nearby Albano have been employed at the 60-acre pontifical farm for more than 55 years, it has only been for about six years that they -and tourists in the know - have been able to buy the "papal milk."

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Owners of the three coffee bars that sell the milk plan to cash in during tourist season. "This year I will make a banner - yellow and white - that says, 'Milk of the pope,'" says Mirko. Deramo, a 20-year-old entrepreneur whose family owns Mirko's Bar in Castel Gandolfo. The one-liter cartons of milk cost $1.10, the same as other brands. Three-fourths of the milk produced by the herd of 30 Holstein cows is sold at the Vatican market, open only to Vatican employees. The rest, 120 liters a day, is divided evenly and delivered to Mirko's, another bar in Castel'Gandolfo and one in Albano. The milk usually arrIves between 8 and 9 a.m. and is gone in a couple of hours, Deramo said. Before the daily dairy delivery, two other brands of milk are evident in Mirko's refrigerator case. Deramo advertises that his cappucino is always made with papal milk. After making sure none of his regular customers are in the

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MIRKO DERAMO holds a carton of milk from the pope's "sacred cows." (eNS photo) still be practicing their faith clandestinely in the northern part of the Mediterranean country.

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published a document condemning the increase in pornography and violence in international media. The archbishop addressed a meeting of the International Catholic Union of the Press. He said Catholic journalists had led in seeking to open up Eastern Europe to a free flow of information and noted that at a 1987 UCIP meeting, the current prime minister of Poland, Tadeusz Mazowiecki, participated as a Catholic journalist.

VATICAN CITY (CNS) Vatican officials are pleased that Albania has lifted a ban on religious propaganda, but said there is still a long way to go in restoring VATICAN CITY (CNS) - The religious liberty in the communist Vatican's top communications officnation. ial, U.S. Archbishop John P. Foley, The recent decision by Alba- warned that the newly gained freenia's parliament was among reform dom ofthe press in Eastern Europe measures designed to end the must not turn into a "license to nation's' isolation from the West pollute" the airwaves with pornand Western aid. ography. Until now, religious evangelizaArchbishop Foley's remarks were tion has been considered a crime in in the text of an address to an Albania, which in 1967 officially international meeting of Catholic 'declared itself an atheist state. journalists in Baar, Switzerland, VATICAN CITY (CNS) Government leaders did not imme- May 14. Vatican envoy Archbishop Frandiately provide details on how the Archbishop Foley said that the cesco Colasuonno met with Soviet amendment to the country's penal "free flow of information in East- President Mikhail Gorbachev May code would affect the functioning ern Europe has'truly been a breath 14 at the start of the archbishop's of chuJ:ches. of fresh aIr." . diplomatic mission in Moscow. A Vaticn official noted, for But he added that while the The Vatican said Archbishop instance, that the reform explicitly right to information must be pro- Colasuonno presented Gorbachev does not include restitution of tected in free societies, "there with a letter from Pope John Paul church buildings. . should also be a prophetic call for II. The Vatican would not com"Would they allow construction the responsible use of such free- ment on the contents of the letter. of new ones, then?" he asked. dom." According to a Tass news agency ..A tragic side effect of the hard- report monitored by Italian newsMsgr. Piero Pennacchini, vice won freedom of communication in papers, Gorbachev spoke during director ofthe Vatican press office, Eastern Europe, for example, is an the meeting of the need to develop issued a statement the same day saying the new legislation was "in increase in pornography," he said. contacts between the Soviet Union "It would indeed be unfortunate and the Holy See. He also pledged itself positive," but that "many serious aspects of religious liberty if the truth, which was once the to continue to resolve "problem!! victim of political propaganda of believers as well as non-bemust still be defined." Albania's minority Catholic pop- ruthlessly imposed, were to become 'lievers," Tass reported. Archbishop Colasuonno said the ulation was driven underground the victim of personal passion pope was following events in the during decades of harsh persecu- shamelessly exploited," he said. Archbishop Foley is president Soviet Union daily and that he was tion beginning in 1945. Under the ofthe Vatican's Council for Social praying that they had a favorable Stalinist regime of Enver Hoxha, Communications, which last year outcome, the Tass report said. churches were closed, worship Archbishop Colasuonno, who banned and dozens of priests and carries the personal title of aposbishops killed. tolic nuncio, was named to his Unlike other East European position in March. Vatican sourcountries in recent_ times, Albania ces said his Soviet counterpart has maintained severe restrictions would arrive soon at the Vatican. on religion and other fundamental The archbishop is expected to rights. Despite the religious remake severaHrips annually to the pression, church sources believe as Soviet Union. many as 300,000 Catholics might

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bar, he moves aside the extra-tall cans of Coke on the top shelf. Five liters of milk remain from the previous day. "I must have some for my bar. This is unique in the world. "It is much better because it is natural whole milk," he says. The townsfolk concur that the creamier taste is the major difference between the pontifical product and others. The farm does not make cheese or butter, so the milk contains every ounce of fat the cows uddered. Deramo says he does not like milk, but if he did, the pope's milk is what he would drink. "It's fresher. Yesterday morning this milk was in a cow," he says. As the clock approaches 9, more customers wander in, and most ask if the milk has arrived. A middle-aged man known as "Bon Bon" stops every morning on his way home to Genzano from the night shift at the bakery. He has orders for 14 liters for his mother, his sisters and friends, and a couple of liters for himself. An older man enters, looks in the refrigerated case, shakes his head and leans on the bar to wait. "He comes'in for the pope's milk and grappa," a brandy made from grape seeds and stems, Deramo says. The delivery truck with Vatican City license plates finally arrives, and Deramo scolds the driver his father, Eugenio -that he is late and people have been kept waiting.

Gorbachev meets Vatican envoy


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Craige, Frederick ence Courcy, M/M Achille rezza, Mildred Espirito Santo $100 AFriend, St. Vinton, Thoams & Barbara Siaden Tinory, Carl Cleveland, Patricia Bamford, Gilroy, M/M Robert Colleran, M/M Fred cent de Paul Conf., Jaime Pavao,Nor$400 Elsie M. Suprenard; $300 M/M Richard Zern, Paul Anderson, Mark Fla- Endler III, M/M .John Murray, M/M berta Pavao; $78 Confirmation Class; John S. Francis; $240 Janet Issler; $175 herty, Alan Svendsen, Edward Maher, Richard Altham, MlM Lawrence Shumila $60 Duarte Viveiros & Fam., $50 Heitor NORTON M/M Gerard Cinq-Mars; $110 M/M Paul Zoe Brown, Patrick Donnelly, Raymond . Sousa & Family, Jorge Miranda, Noe & Hodge; $125 Mrs. Antone Governo, Mrs. Gagnon, Annette Birch, Richard Turecki, St. Mary's $1500 Rev Thomas Rita; Maria Lindo, Barboza Family, Jose & Thomas P. Giblin; $120 Mrs. Roland Walter Chicoine, Larry Valade, Dawn H. $300 M/M Joseph 'Fernandes; $200 Maria Albernaz, Antonio M Oliveira & Smith; $100 Mrs. Lorraine C. Keniston,. LaCroix. M/M Earl Bastow; $130 Dr/M Alex Family, Antone Cabral, Irene Vasconcell.os, Mary Titus, M/M John J. McDermo~, ~r., $25 Timothy O'Hare, Suzanne Ney, Macisaac; $125 M/M George Yelle; $110 Maria C. Cabral; $40 Luis & Carmlna Doris Murray; $65 M/M Donald OliVier; Donna Beauchaine, Helen Roffinoli, John M/M HE Morriseau; $100 M/M Robert Carvalho $60 M/M Roger Lafrance, M/M B, A. Dzija. Shea, Jose Palomo, William WolI, John & Brault, Darlene Boroviak, M/M Robert . $30 Henrique 0 Cordeiro & Family, $50 Eileen F. Coyle, Albert & Ann Hal- Mary Wilson, Andrew Nyzio, John Soares, Burkhart, Mary Camara,. Dr/M James Jose Oliveira & Family, Antonio & Fatima

Furna Jose Salvador & Family, Eduardo & Ana' Costa, Agostinho Alves & Family, Thoams Soares &Family, Connie Viveiros; $25 E.S. Women Guild, Maria Barrei.ra, Jose MBatista &Family, Joao & Beatrice Angelo, Manuel & Mary Couto,. John Nunes Joao TMedeiros, Jose MMiranda &Family, EmilY,Carvalho, Octavio Canh~to & Family, Antonio Martins & Family, Miguel J Nunes & Family, Manuel lindo, Aires Cabral & Family, Arthur Abelha, Manuel Lopes & Family, Antonio Rebelo, Joseph & Maria Costa, Francisco Estacio & Family, Manuel & Maria Camara, ~-M­ Antonio CPedro, M-M Joao If Medeiros, Raymorid & Maria Desrosiers, Evelyn Hubert, Jeane Hubert, Laurie Hubert Madalina Gomes St. Stanislaus $165 St. Vincent de Paul Soc.; $150 Mrs Walter Kocon; $140 Dr1M Joseph McGuill, St Stanislaus Men's Club; $125 M-M Kenneth Tremblay, Mary &Josephine Niewola, M-M Joseph Gromada' $110 M-M Walter Deda, M-M Thomas Pasternak; $100 Holy Rosary Sodality, Mrs Mary Pypniowski, M-M Paul Klaege, Mrs Walter Conrad; $90 M-M Robert Charlebois; $80 M-M David Beard; $71 M-M Joseph Minior; $75 M-M Joseph Cichon, M-M Stephen Kulpa, M-M John Minior, Stanley Rys Jr; $65 Mrs Paulette Barlow' $60 M-M Michael O'Alu, M-M George' Wrobel, M-M Steven Rys, Lucille Carvalho, Paula Gagnon; $55 M-M Louis Angelini, M-M Edwin Reid, M-M Christopher Haponik, Mrs Jean Coutu, M-M Henry Paruch; $50 M-M Joseph Quinn, M-M Joseph Ciosek, M-M Henry Snizek, M-M Walter Wisniewski, In Memory of Jean Drtal, Stanley Lach, Mrs Helen Croteau, Torres Family, Paula King, M-M Walter Sokoll, Charles Ouellette; $45 Barbara Dubiel, M-MMichael Souza, Mrs Mary Louise Cleary , $40 Daniel Gagnon, Aniela Kruczek, M-M Joseph Forsack, M-M Stanley Wojnar, Daniel Babka, Mrs Barbara Mullen, M-M Herman Lopes, John Deveney, M-M Matthew Lalldoch, M-M John Lowney, M-M Edward Girza, M-M Eawin Kosinski; $35 M-M' John luddy, M-M Richard Miles, M-M Lawrence ROles, Antoinette Orzechowski, M-M Thaddeus Waszkiewicz. Mrs Chester Bednarz, John Mazurek Jr, M-M Warren O'Conneil, Rose Forczyk, Barbara O'Neil, Mary Makuch; $30 M-M Ernest Edwards, M-M Roland Dumas, M-M Robert Polak & Son, 'P-hyllis lizak, Nancy Sousa, M-M Josepll Desrosiers, Judith Dolan, M-M David St Laurent, Teresa Sardinha, Henry Mis,Walter Moson, Mrs Joseph Mello, Joyce Marie Freitas. M-M Albert Gouveia, M-M Eugene Czepiel, MMRichard Gauthier, M-M Thaddeus Chrupcala, Denis Butler, Phyllis Babiarz, Helen Weglowski, Alice Weglowski, M-M Stanley Pencak & Son $28 M-M Edward Niewola: $27 M-M Joseph Ozug;' $25 Shawomet Gardens, M-M Timothy Kelly, M-M Joseph Raposa, M-M Frederick Stachura, Clara Blackburn, M-M Thaddeus Karcz, Richard Bernardo, Thaddeus Kot, Genevieve Stasiowski, M-M William Gonsalves, M-M Manuel Pimental M·M Thomas Souza, M-M Ernest Ed~ards, M-M John Zukowski, M-M Daniel Pacheco, Mrs Anna Zdon, M-M John Gosciminski, linda Gauthier, M-M William Carreiro, M-M Raymond Bixzko, Deborah Lynn Clark, Mark Angelini, Donald Wilson, M-M Roland Dube, M-M Mrs Anthony Dubiel, Chester Weglowski $132 Mrs Alice Kret; $110 M-M Thomas Drewett; $100 M-M Raymond Romagnlo; $100 M-M John Deveney; $75 Eleanor Pavao; $60 M-M Arth~r Silva; $50 Karen DeMoura, M-M Martm Bernat, M-M John Rogers, M-M Leo Dube Pamela DeMoura, Beverly DeMoura, Valer'ie Polka; $40 M-M Jan Grygiel, M-M William Wolowiec, M-M Michael Jezak; $35 M-M Paul Pieroni, M-M Louis Mazurek; $34 Mary Kudlacik; $30 M-M Gary Ivanson, Karen Maria Cour~oyer, M-M John Hadfield, M-M Leo LaVOie St. Anne $100 M/M Edgar Ross; $50 M/M .Normand Boule, M/M Andre A


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Plante, M/M Joseph Toole; '$30 M/M Nelson Julius; $25 M/M Roger Richards, MlM Raymond St Laurent, M/M Bertrand Gagne, M/M Albert Beaudoin, M/M Maurice Desmarais, M/M Henrique Pavao, M/M Normand Valiquette, Mrs Lillian Oliveira, Mrs Alice Auclair, Mrs Lauretta Vaillancourt, Mrs Marie Louise Beaulieu Saint Anne $300 Mrs Yvonne Fourn' ier; $250 Rev. David Landry; $200 St. Vincent de Paul Soc.; $100 M-M Ray· mond Poisson, Mrs Jeanne Thibault, Mrs Jeannette Rivard; $75 M-M Honore Gauthier; $60 Loretta Fillion, M·M Benoit Canuel; $50 Jeannette Croteau, Alice Gauthier, M-M Loridas Jolivet, Alice & Anna Lalanne, Misses Quintin; $49 M·M Reginald Bellerive; $~O M-M Fred Heinig, M-M Olive Laprise; $25 M·M Michael Val: lee, Lauretta Gauthier, Germaine Gauthier, M·M Ludger Desilets, M-M Denis Ross, M-M Edward Medeiros, M·M Raymond Morin, Daniel J Methot, Mrs Lau· retta Michaud, M-M Jean Auger, M-M Paul Robillard, Louis P Ste Marie, Henriette St Denis, Mrs Catherine Bernier, Mrs Dolores Godd u, Robert Gauthier, Mrs Linda A Boutin Blessed Sacrament $120 M-M Scott Isaacson; $100 M·M William Therriault, Friends of Parish, AParishioner; $55 In Memory of My Parents; $50 Parishion· ers, M-M Leo Paul Beaudoin, A Prayer Group Friend, AParishioner, M-M Albert Beaudoin; $45 Ms Yvonne LaFontaine; $42 A Parishioner; $30 M-M Albert Suprenant, M·M John Gagliardi, A CCD Teacher; $25 Parishioners, M-M Henry Daigle, M-M Victor Santos, Ms Jeanne Gamache, M-M Antone Luz, Friends of the Parish, In Memory of Loved Ones, George Medeiros, Robert Levesque, Ms Madeleine. Boi.svert S1. Elizabeth $90 Charles & Helena Andrade; $50 Daniel & Margarida Barbosa, Ralph Borges; $30 Dennis & Adeline Calvo; $25 William & Angelina Letendre, Joseph & Maria Farias Notre Dame $1375 Rev. Ernest Blais; $600 Rev. Daniel Gamache; $200 M-M Romain Saulnier; $50 M·M Leo Berger, Albert Vallaincourt; $49 M-MRolan,d Desmarais; $45 M-M Paul Saulnier; $30 In Memory of Alice Dugal; $25 M-M Edgar StMartin, M-M Conrad Desmarais, M-MDaniel Vincellette, M·M Maurice Cote, M·M David Bessette, Marthe Boivin, M-M Donald Poulin, M·M Paul Levesque, M-M Louis Levesque, Concorde Lachance, M-M Normand Thiboutot, M·M George Geary, M·M Roland Masse, Rose Turcotte $250 Rev. Robert Canuel, loretta, Fuller; $135 M/M Roger Labonte; $100 Annette Frascatore, Maurice W. Mathieu, Medora Dupuis, In Memory of Alma & Alice Masse, Cecile Masse, Arthur Francoeur; $85 M/M Roger Berard; $60 M/M Bernard Gendreau; $50 Robert Chouinard, M/M Umberto Latessa, M/M Richard Cloutier, M/M Robert Boutin, M/M Gerard Duquette, M/M Theodore Bernier, M/M Raymond Thibault, Edmond Rheaume, M/M Normand Belanger. $45 M/M Oscar Maynard; $40 M/M Robert E. Levesque, M/M Armand Raiche; $35 M/M Ademord Allard, Dr/M Maurice Demers, Blanche Dugal, M/M Benito Rivera, M/M Gregory Arruda, M/M Ronald Salmons, M/MNormand Paul, Wilfrid Desmarais, M/M Raymond Morrissette, Claire Langevin. $25 Lena Chretien, M/M Robert Lajoie, M/M Lance Lavoie, M/M Adrien Pelletier, Irene Fontaine, Eva Michaud, M/M Roger Fournier, Yvette Antaya, Henry Tremblay, M/M Eugene Hubert, Louis Miranda, Alice Guillemette. $25 M/M Armand Dallaire, M/M Normand Daviau, M/M Paul Dumais, M/M Bruce O'Connell, M/M Robert Phenix, Richard Raiche, Edmour Poirier, Thomas Hartnett, M/M Rosaire Lariviere, M/M Romeo Parent, Therese Theberge, M/M Raymond Boulay, M/M Michael Napert, James S. Medeiros, M/M Tom Citrone. S1. Joseph $750 The Misses Valerie & Alma EFoley In Memory of Miss Bernadette MFoley; $150 M/M John RCorreiro, Joseph 0 Harrington; $100 Mrs Leroy Borden, Francis L Harrington, Julia Harrington, James 0 Salvo; $50 M/M John Carey, M/M Edward J Ponte; $40 M/M Jose Borges; $35 M/M Arthur Buckley, M/M Walter Nichipor, M/M William Nug-

ent, M/M Dale F' i ommer, Sr., $30 M/M Joseph F Accettullo; $25 M/M William Brough, M/M Arthur Dagwan, M/M Edmund Hussey, M/M John Lynch, Pauline Megna, M/M Agnelo Oliveira S1. Patrick $125 M/M Edward DeCiccio; $100 Mrs Evelyn Arsenault, St. Patrick's Women's Guild; $50 Sarah Gagnon; M/M Frank Mattos; $40 M/M John Mish; $35 Stella Mannion; $25 Miss Jane Coyle, Mrs James 0 Crosson, M/M Peter Czapiga, John J Darcy Jr, In Memory of Joseph Drobyski, M/M Edward Frazer, M/M Robert Goncalo, M/M David Halbar· dier, M/M Edward Haponik, Joseph Kuszay, M/M Michael Kuszay, M/M Ernest Mousseau, M/M Russell O'Brien, M/M Francis Powell Sr, M/M Louis Silvia, Mary Shea, M/M Maurice Sirois, M/M John Sullivan, M/M RobertT Whipp, M/M John CSimon Holy Name $1210 In Memory of the Mahoney & Leonard Familes; $600 M/M Thomas JCarroll; $500 In Memory of the Lynch Family; $300 Dr/~ John Delaney; $275 M/M Roger FSullivan; $250 M/M Herve Bernier; $120 M/M Thomas Morrell; $100 Atty/M Thomas McGuire, MlM Charles Franco, M/M William Heaney, Dr/M Andre Nasser, Catherine PHarrington, M/M Robert BReid, Mary Carvalho, In Memory of Anna & Joseph Dziduszko -Apalonija &Michael Gromek; Margaret P Kelliher, M/M Nicholas Christ, Elizabeth Neilan, M/M Fred Zebrasky, Mrs Elizabeth Zalenski, M/M John & Margaret MeDer· mott, Cecilia Sheahan; $80 M/M Frederick BMcDonald; $75 M/M LouisShea, Dr/M Alfred J Roy, Holy Name Women's Guild; $60 M/M Robert Kitchen, Theresa Ryan $55 M/M Thomas M Quinn, III; $52 Mrs Norman JRoy; $50 Ann RMonahan, MlM Hugh FReilly, Maria McCoy, Frances Mercier, M/M P Henry Desmond, Mary Ann Dillon, M/M Aime J Gamelin, M/M William Lyons, M/M Robert Rebello, Margaret Dwyer, Mary Dwyer, M/M Lawrence Sousa, MlM Joseph EAndrade, Vincent Schieri, M/M Edward Witkowicz, M/M Joseph F Doran, M/M John Donnelly Jr, M/M Paul Arnoe, M/M Dennis Griffin, M/M Thomas Clemmey, William Nuttall, M/M William Hacking, MargaretJ Turner, Pamela Smith, Michael Fitzgerald, Vincent MFitzgerald, M/M Edmond MMachado, M/M Norman Zalkind, M/M William F Keating, Jr, Janet Dupont, M/M Lionel Braz, M/M Brian J Prenda, Benevides Family, M/M John Grant $40 M/M James Wilcox, M/M Philip Silvia Jr, M/M Joseph Delaney; $35 Marion Foley, Daniell Foley, M/M Robert Margetta, Beatrice Nash, M/M Wilfred P Desruisseaux, M/M Leo J Flynn, M/M Joseph FMcGrady, Maureen Ryan; $35 M/M Thomas Dunn, M/M Theodore Gag· . liardi, M/M Daniel Lussier; $30 M/M Robert Croteau, M/M Jeffrey FO'Brien, M/M Antone Fernandes, M/M James Gibney, M/M Reginald Cousineau, M/M Elmer Stafford, Jr, M/M William &Janice Grady, M/M Henry Kowalski, M/M David Bishop, M/M Thomas Stapleton, Mrs T.H. McMahon, Mrs Eleanor Manchester, Paul RDunn, M/M Donald Vermette, Veronica MDunn, M/M Henry Kitchen Jr, Maureen McCloskey, M/M Thomas Garrity, M/M Thomas Dzialo, M/M John Cummings, M/M Henry Sullivan, Margaret MMcCaffrey $25 Mrs Francis Regan, Mrs Lucille Rockett, MlM William PReady, In Memory of William J Shea, M/M John Medeiros, M/M Francis Crowe, M/M Arthur Latessa, M/M William Driscoll, M/M Joseph Morais, M/M Manuel Aguira, Elizabeth Peloquin, M/M Leonard Pacheco, M/M Vincent Feijo, Joanne Dumont, Margaret Lahey, Margaret Parmelee, M/M William Kilroy, M/M Matthew Golen, M/M Henry Ferland, M/M John Costa, M/M Ellwood Rounds, M/M Edward C Berube, M/M John P Harrington, M/M Fred Plasski, Mrs Anna K McDowell, M/M Norman Levesque, M/M Gerard Mack, In Memory of John B Hart, M/M William E Stanton, Irene C Lapre $25 M/M Joseph Malvey, In Memory of William F&Gladys LO'Neil, Mrs Russel C Ouellette, M/M Roger Tache, M/M George Clark, Albert Dubois, M/M Paul R Lavigne, Raymond Cheney, MlM Richard Roderick, M/M Walter Neves, M/M James Harrington, M/M Hector Gauthier, Mrs Thomas AO'Donnell, M/M George Soares, M/M Mark Gustafson, M/M Marice Lau·

zier Jr, Mrs'Louis M Couto,'Mr's John F McMahon, Doris Comiskey, Mary Griffin, Roger Dufour, Mrs Henry Reis, M/M Manuel Mattoza, M/M Daniel Sheahan, John C Keating, M/M Arthur Donovan, MlM Raymond Chippendale, M/M Thomas P Walsh Jr, Mrs Nicholas Hurst, Mrs Peter Yeaman, M/M Timothy Duffy $25 M/M Thomas Dunn Jr, Anne & Mary Hampston, Raymond Beausoleil, M/M Michael Lopes, Thomas Dwyer, Mrs James Donnelly, Barbara Gerraughty, In Memory of DavidR Kay, MlM William Mello, M/M William JPaul, M/M Raymond Medeiros, Mrs Martin J McDonald, Anna Malone, MlM Michael Shaughnessy, MlM Stephen Waddicor, M/M James Daley, M/M Armand Nadeau, M/M Edward Quirk, Raymond Levesque, M/M Pierre Brouns, M/M Lucien Roy, MlM Raymond Thompson, MlM James WConnell, M/M Edmund Geary, M/M Alan Pontes, M/M Edward J Maher, M/M Timothy Sullivan Our Lady of the Angels $475 Charles Veloza; $40 joseph Lindo; $35 Jose DaCosta; $25 Amelia Almeida, Alice Paiva, . Mary Freitas Immaculate Conception $350 Rev. Terence Keenan; $100 In Memory of Thomas J King, In Memory of Thomas J Fleming & Ann Fleming, M/M Raymond' Lafleur; $75 Mrs Flora Mellen; $50 In Memory of Joseph Mlynek & Albert Jalbert; M/M James Gillet, M/M Edmond Jean, MlM John Flavin, Peter Sullivan,ln Memory of James SBentley; $35 William Benevides, Mrs Wright Turner, ~eonel Paiva; $30 Kenneth ,Boyer, M/M Pedro Miguel, Mrs Elizabeth Conroy, Mrs Jose DeMedeiros; $25 Helen J Flavin, M/M John Friedlander, MlM Carlos Oliveira, George Charbonneau, Mrs William Reney, M/M Edward Potvin, Mrs Margaret Wiles, Mrs Alice E Plante, Edward Harrington, M/M Robert Souiza, M/M James O'Hara, M/M Robert Greenwood, Mrs Roger Messier, M/M Henry Patenaude, Henry Tetreault, Benjamin McBride, Mrs John Curry, MrsMary Furtado $50 Leo J. Marcoux; $25 M/M Henry Gillet, In Memory of John & Mary MeMl\rrer, John Patrick Flavin, Anthony Pascoal. SOMERSET S1. Thomas More $1500 Rev. Msgr. Henry Munroe, V.G.; $500 Atty. Richard M. Peirce; $300 Barbara A. Dunn, M-M Eugene Pepin; $250 Atty.lM Charles Hague; $200 M·M Michael Stubbs; $175 M·M Francis Lussier; $150 Henry Gurl, M-M John Moynagh; $125 Rosemary Dussault, ~-M John Fennessey; $120 M-M Francis Silvia; $100 Charles Burke, M-M Vincent Coady, Catherine Connelly, Jen· nie Connolly, M·M Paul Daley, Frances LaSalle, M·M Charles Latham, M·M Gil· bert Leonard, M-M Henry McGown; $85 M-M Edward Sullivan Jr; $75 Margaret Dunn, M·M Louis Fayan, M·M Richard Kelley, M·M Charles Leary; $55 Helena Mahoney, M·M William Ryding $50 Raymond Aylward, M-M Norman Bessette, M·M Timothy Breidegan, M-M Richard Briere, M-M Richard Crowell, M·M Edward Gauthier, M-M Michael Gavigan, Ruth Johnson, Atty/M James Killoran, M-M John Kineavy, M-M Joseph Kolakowski, M-M Edward McCann, Mary McNulty, M-M Roland Marcoux, Margaret M Moynagh, M-M Gilbert Nadeau, M-M John T CO'Neil, Katherine Peirce, M·M Joseph Reidy, M-M Francis Reis, M-M Ernest Rogers, Ralph St Pierre, M-M AI Saulino, M-M Stanley Sieczkowski, M·M James Sullivan $45 Reginald Marchand; $40 M·M leo Rodrigues, M-M Joseph ladicola; $37 M·M Geo. Dickinson &Linda; $35 M·M Eugene Belanger, M·M Albert Capeto, Anna Danielson, M-M Gerald Driscoll, Benedict Eagan, Eileen Eldon, M-M Francis Macomber, M-M William Malloy; $30 M·M Alan Arruda, M-M- Roland Bernardo, Helen Burke, M-M Jay Cuttle, M-M Joseph Diogo, M-M John King, Mary Santoro, M-M Alfred Travers $25 Mildred Allenburgh, M-M leonard Ariagno, M-M Ronald Arruda Sr, M-M William Barrar, Mrs Chester Baker, M-M Roger Benevides, Christine Boardman, M-M David Britto, M-M Leonard Burgmyer, M-M Russell Burke, M-M Theodore Cabral, M-M Edwin Cadorette, M-M Frank Calis Jr, Mildred Carroll, M-M John Clorite, M-M Raymond Cormier, M-M Eugene

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Cote, M·M Michael Coulombe, M·M James $25 M-M Ronald Moniz, M-M Ronald Crivaro, Francis Dacey, M-M Maurice' Moreira, M-M Richard Mullen, M-M Ed· Demers, In Memory of Dorothea Devine, ward Murphy, Mrs Thomas Murphy, M·M M·M Carl DiManno, M-M Marcel Dionne, william Neilan, M-M John Nordeste, M-M M-M David GDriscoll daniel Pavao, M-M dennis Pereira, M·M $25 M·M Antonio Fournier, Joanne Oliver C Perry Jr, M·M anthony Pytel, Friar, M·M Gabriel Furtado, M·M Gabriel M-M William reed, M-M ronadl Richard, Gabbour, Elizabeth Gray, M·M Francis M-M John Rosa, Mrs Gertrude St Denis, Greeley, Marie R Greelish, M-M Leo M·M Roger & Carol Simons, Mrs Patricia Hayes, M-M RobertJackson, M-MMoran Smith, Marie Snyder, M-M Kenneth South· Jammen, Mary Johnston, Anna Jones, worth, M-M Lawrence Souza, Mrs Marion M·M Edward Kaylor, M-M Michael Kra· Souza, M·M R Souza, M·M arthur Sulliwetz, M-M Philip Kukielski, M-M Steven van Jr, M·M edward Tavares, M·M Joseph Lacava, M-M Robert Lima, Mrs Terrance Therrien, Mrs Joseph Tinsley, M-M John Lomax, John McAndrew, James McDo-' Toomey, M-M Donald Truver, Robert nald, Cecile McNamara, M-M William Turner, M-M Lawrence Vin,cent McNamara, Louis Medeiros, M-M Robert SWANSEA Medeiros, M-M Patrick Miller, M-M Donald S1. Dominic $1000 Rev. William CampMorrow, Rose Mullaney, M-M Francis bell; $500 Rev. Arthur Wingate; $150 Murphy, Atty/M Steph~n Nadeau, M-M M/M Louis Travers; $110 M/M Donald Anthony Mobrega, M-M Carl Norman, Souza, M/M Manuel Travers; $100 M/M Thomas O'Connell, M-M Paul Pacheco, Harvey Lenon, $65 M/M Henry Vanasse; M·M Peter Pannoni, M-M Paul Pellerin, $55 M/M Antone Abreu; M/M Edward M·M Thomas Perry, M-M Victor RobilTerceiro; $50 M/M John Carreiro, M/M lard, M-M Arthur Roy, M-M John Senra, Gardner Caswell, M/M John H Gerry, ' Atty/M John Silvia Jr, Mrs Arthur SulliM/M John Gibney; $40 M/M James Carr; van, Donald E Sullivan, M·M Sam SwiMrs Richard Haskell, M/M J Hinchcliffe, dey, M-M Paul Vaillancourt, Mrs Thomas M/M Roger A Pelissier, M/M Francis Washington, M-M Donald Waring, M-M Salamon, Mrs Marthe W Whalon; $30 David Wilding, John RWilliamson S1. Thomas More $500 Rev David M/M John McCann, Mrs Angela Nystro, Costa; $110 M/M William J Gibney; $70 M/M Bernard Ouellette, M/M Eugene M/M Albert Capeto; $60 M/M James Tavares; $27 M/M George Harrington, Mullins, M/M Allen Smith; $55 M/M M/M Raymond O'Connell, Mrs Robert Donald Hussey; $50 M/M D. ScottJame- Staples $25 Ludeen Raujo, M/M William E son; $45 The Shea Family; $35 M/M Alley, Cecile BBoulay, M/M Joseph Bou· George JBrough, Mary Philipp; $33 M/M William V Mahoney, Josephine T Dube; lay, M/M Albert H Brodeur, M/M Ken· $30 M/M Albert Remy; $25 Edward ,neth C Broskoskie, Mrs Rita L Cabral, O'Gara, Florence K McDermott, M/M John ClementJr, M/M Wilhelm Gill, M/M John Mullaly, M/M William H Kirkman, John Heywood, M/M Robert Kelliher, Mrs Andrew DiGiammo, M/M Raymond Mrs Frank Kingsley, M/M Roland MarKarnasiewicz, M/M Charles Adam, M/M telly, Mrs Blanche Masse, M/M Brian F Edward Cote, MlM Paul Donnelly, M/M McNally, M/M Joseph Medeiros, Mrs Eugene Orosz, Dana Richard, M/M AnMaurice England thony Sarmento, M/M Ernest Souza Jr, S1. John of God $100 Dr Kenneth M/M Robert Trudeau Arruda, M/M Raymond Lapointe, Deborah $200 M/M Richard M Mello; $150 Souza; $50 M/M Eric Bernier, M/M M/M Robert Lachance, $100 Mrs Joseph Raymond Perry, M/M Carlos Tavares, Marum; $50 M/M Robert FCouture, Mrs M/M John VelozoJr; $30 Frederick Kud· Charles Crispo, M/M George Farrell, lacik, M/M John Miranda, Leo Sullivan; $25 M/M Larry Bartram, M/M Roger M/M James J Gorman, M/M Everett Benevides, M/M Arthur Feno, M/M Arthur Mendes Jr, Edward Mitson Sr, Isabel Papa, St. Dominic's Women's Guild, M/M Malloy Jr, Arlene Megna, Henrique Pereira, Joao Luiz Recardo, Antonio San- Michael Tardiff, Jane E Unsworth; $38 M/M John R Schaefer; $25 George tos, Eugene Roussin Aguiar, M/M Lawrence Barnwell, Mrs S1. Patrick $350 Leonard Worsley; Henry Bird, Imelda Bombardier, M/M $250 Dr Roger Cadieux; $200 InMemory William Booker, M/M Joseph Castro, Mrs of Raymond RAdam, Dr/M Roland Chao Raymond Chadwick, M/M Jaime Chan, bot, M-M David Dunne, M-M- Armand Mrs Raymond Gagnon, M/M James Han· Forand, Mrs Ronald Mills; $170 M·M ley, M/M Michael Kelly, M/M Walter Joseph Matthews; $100 Dr/M Thomas Leberge, M/M Joseph Moitozo, Lori Pavao. Clark, M·M Edward Leonard, M·M Donald M/M Raymond Reed, M/M Herbert Reid, Mayer, M·M Richard Morgan, Frank Mor~ M/M Anthony CReius, Dorothy H Roy, iarty, In Memory of James C.Noonan, M/M Edmund silva, M/M Jose Sousa, Mary Quirk, St. Vincent de Paul Society, Mrs John AUnsworth M-M Francis Shea, Joan Whittington; $75 S1. Michael $110 M/M Charles Viens; M·M John McCarthy, Robert Meehan, M·M $100 M/M Cosmo Davi; $35 Janice Ford; Richard Mullaney; $60 M-M James Brad· $25 Alfred F ,Menezes, M/M Ernest bury; $50 M-M Raymond Bibeau, Arthur Rousseau, M/M Joseph Salvas, M/M Cassidy, M·M Joseph Foster, M·M CIif· Joseph Santos, Deobrah Shannon ford Clement, M·M Frank Jasparro, M·M Brian Leonard, M·M Michael Martin, Mrs ASSONET Harold Meehan, M·M Charles Raposa, M-M Daniel Ready, M-M Frerick Storch, 5t Bernard $100 M-M Richard Bar· M-M AGeorge Stukas, M-M Robert Vaudry nard, Marianno Rezendes Sr, M-M Law$40 Joseph Medeiros, M-M William renee St Onge, M·M Kenneth Santos; $50 Moran, Mrs Sol Streim, M-M Edward M-M Gerald Dichiara, M·M Michael Synan; $35 M-M Raymond Bachand, Mrs Patrick; $40 M·M Leonard Nicolan; $30 Walter Palmer, M-M Joseph Soroka; $30 M-M John J Brown; $25 M-M Ronald M-M William Bernat, Mrs Colette Crom- Amaral, M-M Frank Barboza, M-M John L bie, John DeCambra, M-M William Hart, Brown, John Krone, M-M Maurice LarriWilliam Hayden, M-M Paul Johnston, M-M vee, M·M Joseph Rodrigues, M·M Richard John Kinnane, M-M Raymond Mullen, Rousseau, M-M Mark Sevigney $125 M-M Francis Sullivan; $100 M-M M-M Manuel Nunes, M-M Roland Thibault, M-M Carment Zinna; $25 Mrs Leo Conroy, M-MFranklin Fairhurst, M·M Donna Almeida, M-M Robert Benevides, Paullamoureux; $60 M-M Andrew Bis· Mrs Valerie Booth, M·M'Tobias Borges, singer, Lillian Hadad; $50 M-M Robert M-M David Botelho, M-M Gilbert Bou- Blake, M-M Felician Brochu, Ms Ellen Brown, M·M Frank Clegg, John Doughchard, Mrs Agnes Brownell $25 M-M Joseph Capostagno, M·M erty, M·M Robert Gauthier, M·M Douglas James Carey, M-M Frank Carreiro, Mrs Michaud, M·M Raymond Rose; $30 M-M Shirley Cavanaugh, M·M Douglas Chap· James Dooley, M·M Roger Lussier, Manuel man, Thomas & Mary Cinquini, Mrs Mello Francis Collins, M-M James Darcy, M-M $25 Mrs Edward Adams, M-M James Stephen DePaola, M-M Edward Demp- Aguiar, Mary Andrews, M-M Maurice sey, M-M Roland Depin, M-M Roland Beaudo,in, M·M leonard Boyer, M-M U Feilhauer, M-M Arthur Gagnon, George Copeland, James Correia Sr, M-M FreGallipeau, M-M Manuel Gaspar, M-M deric Dreyer, ~-M Leslie Eckhart, M-M Denis Gaudreau, M-M Gerard Goyette, M-M Louis Gunning, M-M Donald Howarth, M-M Laurent Guay, Gordon Haggerty, M-M Stanley Janczura, M-M Kevin Meehan, Peter Hiotelis, M-M Edward Kerr, M-M M·M Luciano Nigra, M-M Gregory O'Brien, Francis Kilgrew, Rene LePage, M-M Nor- M-M Richard Paquette, M-M David Shafman levesque, M-M Robert lima, Mrs fer, M-M Antone Taveira, M-M Gerald Gladys Lopes, M-M Vincent Maddeleno, Velozo, M-M James Wood, Mrs Mary M-M louis Medeiros, M-M William Miller Worsley, John Zeb


WESTPORT St. George $300 Rev. Roger Leduc; $100 M·M Paul Methot; $60 Mrs Joyce Napert; $50 M-M Manuel Camara, Roland J Emond, M·M Edward St Onge, Palmina AVaillancourt; $31 Mrs Ronald Perrier; $30 Daniel Boucher, M-M George Berube, David & Barbara Carter, M-M Paul Dion, Paul Gagnon, Aurele Ledoux, Mrs Juliette Parent; $25 M-M Edwin Alvares Jr, M-M Antone Arruda Jr, M·M William Belanger, Mrs Connie Bernier, Mrs Alida Briere, Nancy Carignan, M·M Kenneth Costa, M-M Scott WCosta, M-M Normand Couture, M-M David Cunha $25 M-M Stephen Custadio, M-M Robert DeMoranville, M-M Joseph Fegueir· edo, M·M Robert Lavoie, M·M Carlos Moniz, M-M Russell Perry, M·M Ernesto M Pimental, M-M Octave Pimentel, M·M William Platt, Mrs Jeanette Rego, Vitaline Rezendes, Rosa Rioux, M-M Norman St Pierre, Mrs Frank Southworth, M·M Donald Sylvia, M-M Henry Tetrault, M·M Steven J Torres, Honore Vaillancourt, M· MJoseph Viveiros TAUNTON Holy Rosary Church $100 M-M James Ferreira & Family, M-M Marcellus 0 Lemaire; $75 John Kearns Jr; $55 Anne & Stacia Sienko; $50 Mrs Mary Dubena, Mrs Sophie Guresh, Mrs Anita Maciejowski; $40 M-M Gilbert Levesque & Family $35 M·M Robert Dziekiewicz & Family, Mrs Emily Pelczarski &Family; $30 M·M Edward Dulak, M-M Joseph Folcik, M-M Edward Goldrick, M-M John Kearns Sr, M·M Louis Tokarz &Family, M-M Theodore Wojcik $25 M-M Leon Bunk, M-M Joseph W Gorczyca, Francis Kozach, M-M James Kelliher Sr & Family, M·M peter Kmiec & Family, Lucille C Kula, M·M Francis Pelczarski & Family, M·M Frank Sharkus, M·M George Straub & Joey} M-M Walter Taraska $50 M/M Clinton N. Foss; $30 James Balanos, Jennie Gorczyca, Anne Kalacznik; $26 Anna Sienko; $25 M/M Joseph Arcikowski & Family, M/M Robert Bentley, M/M Henry A. Bzdula, Pauline Gula, Julia Kula, Adolph & John linek, M/M Frank Mack, M/M Gaetano Massapollo & Family, Esther Patasini, Katherine Sidor &Family, M/M Joseph Sienko &Family, M/M Michael Sylvia, Stella Thompson, M/M Walter Wenczak & Family. Saint Jacques $600 Rev Thomas Morrissey; $100 Rev Henry Bourgeois, Gloria Hudson, M-M John McRae, M-M 'Wesley Schondek; $75 M-M' Gerard Bonenfant; $60 M-M Maurice Guay $50 Mrs William Dubois, M-M William Grundy, Lynda Keene, Mrs Robert Powell, Paul Ouillette, M-M Francis Welch Jr, M-M Roger Yelle; $40 Clairina Hamel; $33 Yvonne Labonte $30 M·M Arthur Anctil, M-M Lawrence Courcy, Mrs Alma Pelletier, M-M George Pelletier; $27.50 Theresa Blain; $25 Mrs Lorraine Barefoot, M-M Charles Beaulieu, Mrs Leo Beaulieu, M·M Gerard J Bedard, M·M Theodore Benjamin, Mrs Agnes Benoit, M·M Bernard Berube, Mrs Edmund Cayer, Paul Davidzuk $25 M·M Camille Denis, M·M Mark Bissonette, Louis Donnelly, M·M George Frates, M·M Arthur Gauthier, M·M Donald Guay, M·M Raymond NGuay, M·M Kevin Harpin, M·M Roger Levesque, Mrs Peter Machnik, M·M Alfred Martin, M·M Norman Menard, Mrs Joseph Miga, Mrs Leo Murphy, M·M Walter Nunes, M·M Clive Olson, M·M Roger Parent, Mrs Charles Rocheleau, Elaine Sherman, M·M James Silvia, Mrs Walter Taylor, M·M Henri Vaillancourt St. Paul's $800 Rev Msgr Robert Stanton; $400 In Memory of M-M Daniel Stanton; $200 Frank Casella, M-M Joseph Reilly; $125 M-M James Duffy Jr; $105 M·M Robert JHill Jr; $100 M-M James H Fagan, Mrs Manuel Oliver, AlanThadeau, Dominic Casella, M-M Albert Nunes Jr $50 M-M John Reardon, M-M Edward Pryor, M·M Charles Tatro, M-M Robert Jose, M-M Franklin Brown, M·M Philip Lemieux, Mrs Joan Silva, Robert Alexander, M·M John Connors, M-M Walter Cahoon, M-M Neil McGrath; $49 M-M Joseph FMastromarino $40 Shirley & Alan Rose, M-M Philip Arsenault, M-M Robert Valle, M·M Ralph Cabral; $35 M-M Robert Stratton, M-M

Clement Wade, M-M Manuel Souza, Stuart Edward J. Galvin, Joseph O'Boy, M/M DIGHTON Place; $30 Mary, Lou Mozione, M·M William Martin, M/M James Reid. St. Peter $300 M/M James Murphy; Joseph Lazarz, M-M Raymond R~gers, $85 M/M John Gonzals; $75 M/M '$10 M/M Eric Dewhirst, M/M Norman Anna Sherry, M-M Paul Plumb, Pamela Harry Sullivan, M/M Carlton Caron; $60 Smith; $60 M/M Raymond Gagnon; $50 Robinson Dr/M William J. Casey; $50 Helen Bird, M/M David DeMello, M/M Lawrence $251n Memory of Ernest Botellio, Mrs Joseph Bird, Mary Bird, M/M James E. Dutra, M/M John Pelletier, M/M Wayne WBaxter-Green, M·M Edward Castle Jr, McGovern, M/M Gerald Peterson, M/M Thibeault; $40 M/M Joseph Corcoran; M·M Leo Conroy, Mrs Alyre Cormier, M-M ' George Curran, M/M Terrence Dorsey, $30 M/M Henry Bennett, M/M Emile Roland Desrosiers, M·M Raldo Giovanelli, L20nard Souza, Alice McKenna, Ruth Lamontagne; $25 Dr. Rose Borges, M/M M-M Roland Dusseault, M-M Hercule McKenna, Francis Mulholland James Scott Brindle, MlM Robert Clarke, M/M Meunier, M-M Albert" Ratcliff Jr, M·M Mulholland, John Mulholland Mary MulKenneth Cummings, M/M Robert Gray, Manuel Rebello, Phyllis Benoit, M-M holland, Margaret Murphy, M/M Henry M/M Joseph Love, M/M Geffrey Martel, Torrey, Aime St Pierre, M-M John Barlow Murray, James Vacca. M/M Michael Perry, M/M Norman Ross, $25 M-M Charles Metzger, M-M Robert $40 M/M David George, M/M Daniel M/M Russell Simmons, M/M John Smith. Berube, M-M Harold Olson, M·M William Sullivan; $35 Harold G. Crowley, M/M NORTH EASTON J Morin, Mrs Stanley Urban, M-M Brian John Keating; $30 Mrs. Bernard Hewey, Immaculate Conception $400 VinFriary, M-M George Walker, Mrs Joseph M/M Gerald Tripp, Ruth Dias, M/M cent l. Galvin; $250 M/M John Fresh; Demers, Gertrude Dermody, M·M Francis Andrew Scherben, M/M Daily Hill, Mar$200 Kathryn Healey; $100 M/M ChrisFerreira, M·M Antonio Jardim, M·M Rock garet Chaisty, Margaret Dorsey, MlM Desvergnes, M-M James Murphy, Eliza· James Eastman, M/M David Fernandes, topher Corey,'M/M William Griffith, M/M Edmund Richard, In Memory of John beth Carpenter John Fernandes, M/M Edmund FinneSilva, Jr. & John Silva, Sr.; $75 M/M $25 Elmer Meunier, M·M Richard gan, Grace Ganzer, Mrs. Peter George, Brennan, Mrs Cherie Sousa, Kathleen M/M Leo Gilchrist, M/M Alvin Gosson, Martin Lawson, M/M Robert Wooster, M/M Joseph Urciuoli; $60 MlM Edward Duarte, M-M Richard Conway, M-M Joseph Mrs. James Hutchins, Bertha Leonard. Morey, M·M George Milot, M·M Edmond $30 David Leonard, Winifrd Laughlin, Ryan, M/M Robert Stone, M/M John Thadeu, 'Mrs Wendell Robinson, Mrs Mrs. Vincent Lysaght, Helen McCarthy, Reardon, M/M Albert Dallaire. $50 M/M Thomas Stone, M/M William John T Holmes, Mrs Wesley Grandmont Dorothy McGlynn, Susanne McGlynn, M·M George Tyson, Mrs Raymond LaBrie, Blanche Paquette, M/M Richard Reilly, O'Connell, Mrs. John Connelly, M/M M·M William LaBrie, M·M John Desalliers, M/M Richard Scanlon; $25 M/M George John Leahy, Mrs. Charles McCarthy Sr., M·M Paul O'Boy . Aguia'r, M/M John Alphonse, Rita Baker, M/M Lewis Aries, M/M Robert Crocker, M/M Raymond Boffetti, M/M Paul Brady, M/M Russell Chapman, M/M Charles St. Joseph $1000 Rev. Msgr. Thomas M/M Wayne Doel, Gertrude Gilbert, Mar· McCarthy, Jr., M/M Edward Tokarz, Helen Harrington, Dr1M Thaddeus Figlock; $350 tha E. Hewey, MlM Steven S. Higgins, Doherty, Mrs. Ralph Dahlborg, MlM Joseph A Medeiros; $260 M/M Thomas Alfred McGlynn, Mrs. Edward O'Keefe, Henry Donahue, Easton Knights of ColumSantoro; $200A Friend; $150 John Cos· Maureen Parkinson, M/M George Reilly, bus, M/M Jacques Tremblay, Mary T. tova; $125 M/M Stephen Callahan, M/M M/M Charles Tripp, M/M Harvey Wilson. Campbell. William Scully, Sister Beth Mahoney; $45 M/M William.J. McEntee; $40 $100 M/M Robert Thomas, M/M Elton Holy Family $125 Stanley Markowski; M/M Virgil Andrews; $35 M/M Edward Buckley, Raymond Ducharme, Jr., Carolyn $105 M/M Alva Cowan; $100 Antonio Olsen, M/M James Friesen, MlM John Tamer, M/M Edward F. Kennedy, M/M Oliveira &Family, M/M Henrigue Sousa; Tuite; $30 M/M John P. Gerety, M/M Everett Perry, M/M Robert P. Hartung, A $75 Robert Larkin; $60 Mary Murphy, Jeffrey Hanson, M/M William Stoddard, Friend; $90 A Friend; $85 The Garvin David Orcutt, M/M Leo Goguen, M/M M/M Timothy J. Nolan; $25 Mrs. C.J. Family. Nemesio Bettencourt, M/M Joseph Moz- Harvey, Jr., M/M George White, Miss C. $80 A Friend; $75 M/M Stanley S.. zone, M/M Manuel Sousa, M/M Peter Harvey, Ken Hurley, M/M Joseph FreiPawlowski, Atty/M Peter B. Gay, Norma Murphy, Manuel Gomes, Mary M. Silvia; tas, M/M Robert Farrand, M/M Francis Tosti, Gertrude Taylor, M/M Donald Lewis, $55 M/M Gerard Ducharme. LeRoy, M/M Roy Howard, Jr., M/M A Friend; $60 M/M Jean T. Coulombe, $50 M/M Ernest Andrews, MlM Ern- "Edmund Malley, M/M Victor J. Madden, Louis Chaves, M/M Antonio Figueiredo, est Cormier, M/M Francis Perry, M/M Dominic Spadea, M/M William Poliseno. M/M Peter Reilly, Raymond Scully, A Raymond Prunier, M/M Scott Teevens, $25 William H. Maguire, Mrs. Harry Friend; $55 A Friend; $50 Dorothy M/M Lawrence Caverio, M/M Glen Greg· Eastman, Mrs. Charles F. McCarthy, Sr., Busiere, M/M James Goldrick, M/M ory, M/M Fernand Medeiros, M/M Elizabeth Knapp, M/M William Russell, Charles Smith, M/M Alfred Martin, M/M Richard Vincent, M/M Michael John- M/M A. DaSilva, Emily & Isabel Silva, Joseph Oliveira, Virginia McCormack, ston, Edward W. Booth, Paul &Gerry De M/M Harold Holmes, John Camara, Mark M/M Bradford Gomes, M/M Richard Silvia, The Turkalo Family, John P. Plentus. Pulcini, M/M F. Carda rella, M/M Richard Griffith, M/M Daniel Reilly, M/M Francis $40 M/M John Susko, M/M Joseph Tino, M/M· Carl Luciano, M/M John A. Guay, Dr/M Michael Broutsas, Isabel Castro, M/M Anthony Pacheco, M/M Costello, M/M John Crowe. Higgins, M/M William E. Dias, M/M Ronald Gordon, Robert Pacheco; $35 $25 John Maguire, Jr., Dr1M Eduardo Edward Aleixo, M/M Robert Reed, A ' M/M Francis Dutra, M/M Alfred Dutra, Talusan, Anne Griffin, M/M Donald Hines, Friend. " M/M John Shea, James Kenyon; $30 MlM D. Sullivan, M/M Louis Esposito, $45 Margaret White & Lena Govoni, Marguerite Morin, Vivian Gamache, Louise M/M Thomas Joy, M/M Carroll Luxton, Mrs. Jean Rose; $40 M/M Laurindo Homen, M/M William Araujo, Francis Michael Graca, M/M John Graca, Jr., DaGraca, M/M Richard A. Simmons, Rezendes, M/M Joseph Victorino, M/M Sheila Rhodes, M/M Bruce Baker, M/M Helen Fagan, Mrs. Robert J. Hill, M/M Joseph Mendes, M/M Edward Fowler, J. McAuliffe, M/M Albert Corte, M/M James Dorsey, AFriend; $35 M/M Glenn Sr., M/M Robert Rutherford. David Nolan, M/M Wilfred Roberge, M/M Walker, Eva Gomez, Charlotte Carr, M/M $25 M/M Gary Brooks,- M/M Joseph Frank Freeman, M/M Joseph Petrillo, Jr., John Uva, M/M Amerino Almeida, M/M De Moura, M/M John Hoey, M/M John Mrs. Thomas F. Driscoll, Mrs. Edward Nicholas Caras; $30 Uonna Lewis, M/M Garcia, M/M John Grenier, M/M John Keough, M/M Walter Chojnacki. Donald Raible, M/M Edward CrowninHorta, M/M John Silva, M/M ChrisRAYNHAM shield, Mrs. James McCarthy, MlM Alan topher Johnson, M/M Henry Kaminski, Bennett, M/M'Stephen White, Mrs. JoSt. Ann $425 Theodore Kapala; $200 Leslie Larocca, M/M David Peck, M/M seph Yorkoski, M/M Joseph Frias, M/M Manuel Rose, M/M Edmond St. Yves, M-M, Raymond Cooke; $150 Josephine Joseph Bartell, M/M Silvino Sousa, A M/M Fred Patrick, M/M Raymond Kapala, M-M Mark Karsner, M-M Edward Friend. Medeiros, June Isabel, Mary McArdle, Selleck; $125 M-M Patrick Cady; $120 $25 Mrs. Francis Lane, M/M John MlM Edward Eaton, M/M Donald McBain. M-M Frank Bedford; $100 M-M Leo -Nunes, Mary McGann, M/M William $25 M/M Christiano Victoria, M/M Champagne, M-M David Trucchi, M-M Moniz, M/M Mark Chase, Mrs. Manuel George Pacheco, Manuel Rose III, M/M Brian Andrade, M-M George Bumila, M-M Ventura, Jr., David and Joan Borges, Charles Kalaher, Sr., M/M Martin Sulli· Thomas Ross, M-M Joseph Bettencourt, M/M Patrick Masterson, M/M Arthur van, M/M Philip LaFrance, M/M Arnold M-M Robert McCabe, Anna Morehouse, Machado, Katherine Hern, M/M Richard Silvan, MlM George Dorsey, M/M Steven Mrs Dominic Cirino, M-M Arthur Botelho Rec, Mrs. James Medeiros, M/M Louis $75 M·M John McMullen, M-M William Gordon, M/M Stanley Baran, M/M Harold Lubold, Veronica Hooper, Mrs. Lawrence Rogers, M/M Frank Perry, M/M Ronald Piche; $60 M-M Robert Adams; $60 livermore, M/M John Pereira, M/M Jose Repoza, Edward Callahan, Jr., Mary Casey, Deacon/M John Welsch, M-M Edward Ferreira, M/M Armindo Lourenco, Bev· M/M James Ricardo, M/M Edwin De- Tokarz, M·M Richard Souza, Mrs Gertrude erly Brothers, M/M Edward Ferreira, Jill Brum, M/M Robert lima, Brendan Larkin, M·M Edward Almeida, Barbara T. Gurney, M/M Barbara Bradbury. O'Brien, M-M Edmund Goodhue, Mrs McNally. $25 M/M Glen Hebert, M/M Gilbert Elsie Jones, James JHauck Sr, M-M John St. Anthony $200 In Memory of Simmons, Mrs. Edward Lapre, M/M Bruce McDonough, M·M Michael J Scarlett, Manuel & Maria Hortensia M. Andrade, Correia, M/M Richard Handren, Mrs. ,M-M John Pimentel, M-M Robert Perkins, Theodore Wojcik, Michael Wojcik, M/M Rev. John Raposo; $50 Kent Luz, M/M M·M George Dion Jr Stephen Correia & Family, M/M Idilio John Sheehy, M/M Robert S1. Onge, $50 M-M Richard WDiVincenzo, M·M M/M Stephen St. Onge, M/M Edward Nunes; $30 M/M Jesse M. linhares, Robert Cushing, M-M John Cockerham, Anonymous; $25 M/M Jose Correia, Hickey, M/M Daniel Faria, James Myette, M·M Leroy WLatimer; $45 M·M Paul J M/M William McGann, M/M Henry M/M Manuel Dejesus, M/M Antone Fountain; $40 M·M Robert Reilly, M·M Guglielmo, Mrs. Joseph Corcoran, M/M Vieira, Jeffrey, Annalee & Andrew Ny· Leo Landgraf, M-M Joseph Saia, Mrs strom, M/M John Andrade. .Neil Figueredo, Elizabeth Bird, MlM Irene Tibi; $38 M-M Alfred Mailloux; $35 Charles Maguire, Osborne McClellan, M-M Gerald Smallhoover; M·M James NORTH DIGHTON Margaret Walsh, Louise Thomas. St. Joseph $300 Rev. Roland Boule; . DiVincenzo, M-M John Hollaway, M-M St. Mary $1000 In Memory of Rev. $200 M/M Joseph Murray; $50 M/M John McLaughlin, M-M Francis J Lucey, M-M Carlton Sylvia, M-M Emil Cobb Msgr. James Dolan; $250 Richard 1. , Thomas Borios, M/M Vincent Furtado, $30 M·M Terence Bradshaw, Bernice Donahue; $200 Dr1M John Fenton;"$125 M/M David Harwood, M/M Robert MurFountain; $25 M·M Edward Gaudette, Catherine l. McCarthy; $110 Janice Rus- ray, M/M Ernest Persechino; $45 M/M M·M John Allen, M-M Michael Whitty, sell; $100 Mrs. David Martin, Dr/M Arthur Tobin; $40 M/M David Schnopp; Joseph Nates, Martha Page, Thomas $25 M/M Frederick Williams, Helena M-M Marcel Marotte, M-M Thomas McAuley, Elizabeth Larkin, M·M Francis Russell, Cecilia Sheerin, M/M Robert J. Wheeler, M/M Richard Mahoney, M/M Sullivan, M/M Armand Yelle, Mrs. How- Walter Whitmore, M/M Brian Corr, Doro- X Dillon, M-M Edward Flanagan, M-M Kenneth Pimental, M-M William Clifford ard B. Carroll, M/M William Clifford, thea Silva, M/M Frank Bartos, M/M $25 M-M Phillip Belanger,M·M Richard Dorothy Donahue, Edward Duffy, M/M Christopher Angers,

Bagge, M·M John Dolan, M·M Paul MetlD. M·M Joseph Fe'rnandes, M-M William Heath, M-M Roland Chalifoux, M-M Kenneth Mackay, M-M Ron'ald Pike, Mr:s Ruth ESelleck, M-M Roger Howlett, M·M John Moulaison, M-M Lawrence Pille, M·M Joseph Ferreira, Barbara Peck $25 M·M John AFurtado, Mrs Clifford Bettencourt, M-M William Badiali, M·M Richard Scovel, M-M Donald McKinnol'\, M-M William Kraihanzel, M·M Daniel Costa, M·M Henry Berube, M-M William Previti, Michael Scanlon, DDS, Mrs Josepb Secanlon, M-M Michael Hickey, Mrs Ralph Miller, M-M Everett Menice, James MPowers, lola MFlaherty, M·M RobertW Damaris, M-M Alexander Almeida $25 Christopher AFraga, M·M Stuart O'Brien, M-M Fred Petti, M·M Herbet.l Camacho, Mrs Dennis Carvalho, M-M Walter Cahoon, Joyce Wallace, M·M Peter M DeSousa Sr, M·M Edwin Mahoney, M-M Stephen Tracy, M-M Ernest Anaco~. M-M Frederick McCarthy, M-M JOM Smith, M-M Joseph Masterson $25 M-M Joseph Sa, M·M RoJml! Brown, M-M Richard Viera, Eleanor If O'Connor, M·M Louis Mantell, M-M Jalll5 Trucchi, Patricia Riley, M·M Vincem Innocenzi, Mrs Doris Connors, AdolpblF Rozenas, M·M John Lanagan, Marguere Kruczek, M·M Raymond Nevitt, M. Donald Shearstone, Deacon/M Michall Murray $200 M/M Mark Neville; $100 MI. Henry Crombie; $60 Gilbert Fahey; $51 M/M Thomas Porter, linda McGuinn~ M/M Paul Alves, M/M Antenor DaSilva:; $35 M/M Brian Marvel, M/M RobeY! Steidinger; $30 M/M Daniel O'BrieT\, Mrs. Michael Corrao, Coreena Var~ M/M Paul Perruzzi, M/M Frank Ventura" M/M James Machado. $25 MlM Gilbert Lavoie, M/M Ste-phen P. Costa, MlM James Carr, MI. Abel Ventura, M/M Paul O'Connor, MI. Stephen P. McLaughlin, M/M Francis Gendreau, M/M David Bonaparte, MIJI Molyneaux Mathews, M/M James F. TBiera, Sr., M/M Robert Gallagher, MI. Brian Roy, Alice M. Carey, M/M Char1es Lynch, M/M Timothy Slattery, M/M Wiliam Keohane, M/M William Roland" M/M Wayne Barlow. SQUTH EASTON Holy Cross $366 George Buckley; $300 M-M Lawrence Kennedy; $135 M-M James Sullivan; $125 M-M Leon J Lombardi; $100 M-M James Azevedo" Dr/M Thomas JBerry, M-M John KFord, M·M Thomas Gallagher, M-M Robert Hughes, M-M Richard T Lawler, M·M Louise McMahon $75 M-M David Boch, M-M John F Costigan, Robert Martin; $60 Patricia Anne Gentile, M-M Daniel O'Reilly; $5D M-M Clarence J Boucher, M-M Calvin F Bourne, M-M William MBrown, RobertW Bruce, M-M Leon Burke, Robert Connors. M-M Robert F Cunha, M·M Robert Goodwin, M-M Henry Hobaica, M·M Alan Huffe~us, M-M Daniel .KinnaUy, M·" Timothy Kain, M-M Thomas Kincaid, M·Y David Krupa, Mrs Mary Lombardi. M-M Oscar Martin, Donna Mase $50 M-M Craig L Mello, Jane f Piecewicz, M·M William T Powers, M-M Leo Schleicher, M-M Michael Soeldner. M-M Robert Richardi, M·M Robert Smith. M-M Robert Tarallo, Stephen RWhite . $40 Ernest Bonanno, M·M Michael Long, M-M Frank Madden; $37 M·M Irving Vose; $35 M-M Herold Bergeron. M-M Gerald Deneault, Lawrence Hurley Jr, Raymond Mcinnis, Mrs Mary McNamara, M-M Maurice Soares, M-M A Theodore Welte . $30 M-M Richard Arkuszewski, M-M Craig Binney, M-M Stephen Dellelo, Mrs Charles Frizado, M-M Edward FJones Jr. Emil Osiecki, Louis Silva, M-M James Tuominen, M-M Francis J Veale Jr $25 Arnold E Amirault, M-M John R Anderson, Patricia Barrett, David Bliss, M-M Vincent Brazauskas, Mrs Francis Brophy, Katherine Brophy, Edward Casey. M-M Richard Clifford, M-M Walton E Colson-, M-M Paul Connelly, Richard Connelly, Richard Connelly, M-M Daniel Corbett, M-M Daniel Crane, M-M John f Creedon, Ellen Conrad, Charles Davis M-M Paul DeCristofaro, M-M Daniel Dempsey, M-M Joseph Derian, M-M Frederick Doherty, M·M Dennis ADugay, Phllip{)umoulin, M-M Robert MDowney.


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Pothier, M/M Jean Sevigny, M/M KenIntention, Dr/M John Wolkowicz, Ano- ,Gomes M/M George Durette M·M James Fowler, M·M Donald Fullerton neth Sherman, M/M Armand Tanguay, $25 M/M Donald V LeBlanc, M/M nymous; $45 In Memory of Frank & $25 M/M Raymond Lachapelle, MlM $25 M·M Richard P Gallagher, M-M Mrs Nelson VanBrunt, M/M Armand Rosalie Jeglinski; $35 M/M Joseph Gonet, David ~ Poulin, M/M Joseph Gonsalves, Russell J Hotte, M/M James E Ziobro, Thomas Gentile, M·M William Hadge, Viera, Mrs Frederick Wood' Cynthia Brodeur, M/M Dennis laPer· Dr/M Robert Haglund, M·M Robert G M/M Mit,chell Koczera, M/M Walter Pauline Laquerre, M/M William Avila, Polchlopek Jr, M/M Raymond Spirlet, M/M Paul bedard, M/M Normand F riere, Jeannette Tisdelle, M/M Leonard Heckman, Jacqueline Hunt, M·M Eugene St. Kilian $50 Bill & Maria Santos, Rosary Society of OLPH, Special Inten- Ouellet, M/M Kazimierz Pelczarski,M/M Boehler, M/M Dennis Brightman Jones, Robert Kane, M·M David Karpiniski, Mary Tavano; $35 Janet Hardman, Hilda Daniel Gonsalves, M/M Maximino SBul· tion, Anonymous M·M Eugene Kelly, M·M Paul Kelly, Frank $25 M/M J Armand Dupont, M/M' Babiarz; $30 Mary Augeri; $25 luiz $30 Mrs Pauline Amaral & Family, hoes, MlM Carlton Spooner, M/M David Knippenberg, Denise l Kravitz, leo Alves, MlM Herbert Brown, M/M Peter Clarence Alves Jr, Karen & Leo Blier, M/M Henry Cembalisty, Mrs Stefanie J Stevens Sr, Virginia Sheehan, M/M M/M Albert Comeau, M/M Paul Tetreault, laRock, M·M Bernard Lanoue Gazdik, Rita Martin, M/M Manuel Mello, $25 M-M Thomas Patrick lavin, M·M ' Pabis, M/M Chester Ponichtera, M/M John Pimental Jr, MlM Louis Roy, M/M M/M William Duclos, M/M Daniel Cor· Manuel Pimental, Mary E Ribeiro, M/M Stephen F lema, Charles leonard, M·M ' Joseph Skypeck & Family, In Memory of William Bryant, M/M Gabriel Holmes Jr, deiro, M/M Arthur Phaneuf, M/M Peter Melvi/] Russell Lopes, Germaine Surprenant, M/M Vincent J lombardi, M·M John lynch, ' Walter & Jenny Piorkowski Jr, M/M Mrs George Seddon, Hazel Davis, Rose ,Saint James $380 Rev James Greene; Raymond Lucas, M/M Raymond J BourWayne Crouch & Family; $27.50 M/M Harris, M/M Richard Lally, M/M William Richard Macrina, M-M Charles Magno, $150 M/M David Bryant; $130 M/M Eugene Chaberek &Family, Henry Galus cotter, M/M Lawrence Gibbs, Clifford M-M Charles Malcosky, M·M Paul beau, M/M John Racine, M/M leonard Paul lestage; $125 Gerald lewis; $100 Pina ' $25 M/M Edward Bobrowiecki, The ' Barrieau, M/M Peter Mitchell, M/M Mandeville, M-M Anthony J Masse, M·M $25 M/M David A Pelletier, Mrs Leo M/M Richard Fontaine, M/M Vincent Richard ACasemiro Boc Family, M/M Peter Borowiec, M/M Kevin McCabe, M·M Joseph Medeiros, M-M David Mekler, M·M William EMorgan, Charles Daignault, M/M Mitchell Fal, Mrs Robida, Roger Fredette, David & Pamela Worden; $60 M/M John Callanan; $55 $50 M/M George CSousa; $27 M/M Greene, M/M ,Anthony Giunta, M/M Ruth PGomes, M/M Robert Clark, M/M Mrs Raymen Morrell, M-M Francis Murphy Florence Goyette, M/M Charles Holland Robert Muir; $25 Theresa Barboza, Ger,John Sylvia, M/M Robert Dupont, M/M Louis Teixeira, Belmira Blackburn, Nor· $25 Grace & Helena Murphy, M·M Jr, M/M Leo Kisla, Casimir Koczwara, trude Wood man Letendre, M/M Reginald Chandler, Anthony Silva, M/M Dona!d Medeiros, Mrs Veronica Hebert, Albert Longpre, John F Murphy, M·M Pat Myers, M·M SOUTH DARTMOUTH M/M George Souza, M/M Francis Giambo, M/M Richard Manning Mrs Stephanie Smith, Stanley StankieBenoit Nadeau, M·M Thomas O'Connor, $50 MlM William Whalen, Mrs Daniel St. Mary's $200 Kathleen T Shea, In M/M Eugene Gregoire, Marilyn Collins, wicz, M/M Louis Swol, M/M Emily Vieira lawrence Pasalaqua, M·M William Memory of J Normand Murphy; 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$200 M/M Roger Denault; $150 Mello, Michael Correia, Rose Correia ray; $75 M/M Charles Cabral; $60 M/M tyre, M/M Hugh McKenna, MargaretSul- Jaworski, M/M Edmund E Shannon, M/M GeraldLaFrance; $120 M/M Roger FAIRHAVEN Hugh Earley livan, Mrs Helen\liveiros, M/M George M/M Michael McDermott, M/M RayMenard; $100 M/M Joseph Bettencourt; $50 M/M M/M Stanley Baron, Mrs mond R Yates, M/M Joseph Corkum, St. Joseph's $200 M/M James Hono$75 M/M Norman Landreville; $60 Rose Walker Bjarne Bendiksen, M/M Arnold Briden, han, Matthew O'Malley; $100 Manuel $27,50 M/M George B Lavoie, John M/M Joseph Winsper, Mrs Gerard Oliveira M/M Joseph Cazemiro, M/M Leo Cole, Garcia, M/M Armand Marien, Mrs MarNewby, M/M John Warren; $25 M/M JG Demanche, M/M Leo Rousseau, M/M $30 M/M Raymond Rainville, M/M William Reilly, M/M Mark Jussaume, Roma Dussault, M/M William Kasper, Eugene Sasseville, M/M Joseph Sylvia, M/M Alfred Deneault, M/M Stanley Gaj, garet F Soares; $75 M/M Jospeh SalaM/M Richard ALangis, Mark ALavallee, M/M Francis Lynch M/M Jules Lamonthe, Barbara Castro, M/M Robert Nogueira, Helen Quinlan, dino M/M William Carey; $50 M/M $30 M/M James Mendes, M/M Frank M/M Marcel Rogissart, M/M Paul Soucy; M/M Stephen Rapoza, M/M Edward George Dupuis, M/M John Dwyer, M/M M/M Edward Mcintyre, M'rs Edith Albert Gonsalves, M/M August J gonThatcher, M/M Thomas P Dolan, Mrs Condez, M/M Rosario Pineau, M/M $27 M/M Evarista LaFrance; $26 M/M Smith Jr, M/M George Swansey $45 M/M John Czeban; $40 Rose salves, M/M Earl Hebert, M/M Dennis Andrw Doyle, Mrs Lewis Dutra, M/M Ned Antonio Moura, M/M Ernest Barboza, Arthur Oliveira Emmons, M/M 0 Herve Fortin, Gene- M/M Charles Vardo, M/M Ernest lizotte, $25 Preston LaBoeuf, M/M Charles Mailloux, M/M Damase Moreau, Mrs Hogan, M/M Grover C Johnson, Mrs M/M William R Silveira, M/M Horace Catherine Machado, M/M John Negri, vieve E Foley Lafleur, Jeanne Fournier, M/M Dorius Thomas Poulos; $38.50 M/M John Flood; $25 M/M Robert lopes, M/M Edward Carvalho, Mrs Joseph Chaplin, Violette Masse, M/M Edward Metivier, Doris $35 M/M Maurice Bourgue, M/M John , Thomas Rielly, M/M Mark M Roberts, Considine, Marguerite Ronan; 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$27.50 M/M M/M John Dias Jr; $30 M/M Robert Anthony Armanetti; $100 Mrs Louis Bono, Joseph Estacio, M/M Roland Young Coache, Mrs William Donlan, M/M Robert John Santos, M/M Joseph Jacintho Bach, Mrs Ernest Bouley, M/M Edward M/M Robert K Bradley, William N Whe$25 M/M Raymond Atwood, Mrs Frank Jennings Jr, Mrs Michael Moran, M/M F Lagasse, M/M Alan D Rebello, M/M lan III; $52 Rita Marcotte; $50 M/M Bell, Mrs Henry Collard, M/M Paul Coucci, Immaculate Conception $300 ImLarry Burnes Raymond & Joan Fontaine Robert Riding, M/M Charles Tetreault Gabriel Folco, M/M Raymond Gardner, M/M Gilbert Butts, M/M Dennis Malloy' maculate Conception Confirmation, Class Mrs Mary David, Mrs Alban Duchesneau, M/M Joseph Neves Jr, M/M Peter Regis, $25 M/M Roger Bergeron, Dorothy of 1990; $250 Rev Maurice Gauvin; $80 Beverly Ann Gracia, M/M Orner Granger, $25 M/M Bruce Cathcart, M/M ,M/M David BSouza, M/M Patrick WilkinBisaillon, M/M Jospeh Blecharczyk, M/M Michael Hartley, Mrs Lonnie Houghton, Raul Vultao; 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Thomas Joseph, Mrs Genevieve Correia, Lorraine Damm, M/M Robert Tobiassen; $'30 M/M Anthony Cardullo, Kamionek Joao MDeFrias; $25 M/M Manuel J BarGermaine C Ferreira, M/M John B Kut, M/M Richard Bielski, M/M Leo D'Anjou, M/M William Dearden, M/M $25 Mrs Suzanne Brousseau, M/M ros, M/M Ernest Pacheco Figueiredo, Kathleen Treadup; $25 Judith' 'Abramczyk, Pauline Mathieu, David ProAntone DeTerra Jr, M/M Kevin Ducharme, vencher, M/M William Walsh Ann Belli, Alfred Camaioni, James Our Lady of Fatima $125 M/M Louis Donald Calnan, Edward Camara, Mrs M/M Paul Foster Dora Figuerido, Kathleen Finnerty, M/M Camaioni, Mrs Joseph Castellina, M/M $25 M/M Bruce lima, MlM George LeBlanc, M/M Paul Pelletier; $110 The Carlos Fortinha, M/M Ralph Gioiosa, $25 M/M Philip Haridng, Mrs Moses Joseph Colletti, M/M Gilbert Ferreira, Washburn, M/M Aurelio Rodrigues, M/M Key Man; $100 M/M Anibal Medeiros; M/M Charles Gunning, Joseph MullarKenham, M/M Joltn Kubiski, M/M Paul E M/M Joseph Gagliardi, Bertha, Dorothy Allen Ponichtera, La'urette Payette, Virgi- $60 M/M Domingos Parau; $50 MlM key, M/M Joseph Sears, M/M John . L'Etoile, Alice Mayer, M/M James Murphy, & Alice Gallant, Mrs Richard Holden nia Moninheiro, Mrs Gunter Erlenkamp, Emile Camire, M/M Randall DeSouza, Sweeney M/M John Olival, Mrs Manuel Olivera $25 Mrs George Joblon, M/M RobertThomas PWalsh, Mrs Helen Baillargeon, Aime Goyette, M/M Carlos Machado $25 Joyce Leite, Mrs Kathleen Maho· M/M Anson Paine, Mrs Arthur Paquette, son Kane, M/M Edward F Leary, M/M $40 M/M Antonio Barboza, Lorraine Mabel Rezendes, M/M Kevin Sweeney, ney, Mrs William McCann, M/M Damase M/M Manuel Rapoza, M/M Thomas leonel Neron, M/M Michael Obolensky, M/M Raymond CSt Gelais, M/M Joseph Cote, M/M Leonard Spooner; $35 Pau· Moreau, M/M Arthur Motta Jr, Mrs RusSmith, Mrs Joseph E Ste Marie, M/M M/M Joseph Oliveira, Mrs Isabel Perry, Gendron, M/M Normand Arsenault, M/M line & Lena Forand; $30 Angela Cloutier, Donald Tucker, William Tucker, M/M M/M Alan Plant, Mrs Victor Reale,Norma ' Peter Cesolini, M/M Leonard Ventura, M/M Jospeh Montour, M/M Arnold Ponte, sell Nelson, Mrs Walter Oliver, M/M Fred Scott, Clifford Snell, M/M William Storer, Rene Vezina, M/M Harry Booth, M/M PRegis, M/M Charles Tarpey, Mrs Frank M/M Joseph Vezina Cheryl Pacheco Paul Desrosiers, M/M John Roderiques, Teixeira, M/M William Thompson, Dorothy $25 Emile Beauregard, M/M Eugene M/M Edward Sylvia, Jacob Teser, M/M $25 M/M Frank Moniz, M/M Michael Augusto Vieira M/M Joseph Rose III, M/M Harry Young Vikre Rapoza, M/M Dennis Hogan, Donald & Berche, M/M David Buckley, M/M GilSt. Mary $125 M/M Matthew Hart; , EAST FREETOWN Donna LaBrode, M/M Richard Blouin, bert Cavaco, Lillian Corrado, M/M Mark Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish $60 M/M Frank Marujo; $50 Mrs, Mary M/M Jeffrey Hart, Mrs Jesse Mathews, Dobyna, M/M Marc Durocher, M/M $1000 Andrew Banas; $200 Special St. John Neumann Church $50 M/M Anthony, M/M Robert Dorgan Sr; $40 M/M Romeo Dion, M/M John Hogan, Thomas Ouval, MlM Elio Ferreira, M/M Intention,Anonymous; $100 M/M Felix Timothy FWhitney, M/M Albert LafounM/M Weber R Torres Jr, M/M Silvino M/M Paul J Costa, Florence Lavoie, Donat Fortin, M/M Joseph Fournier, Witkowicz; $60 Special Intention, Anotain; $30 M/M David Severs; $25 JacRezendes; $35 Mrs Louise Frigault; $30 M/M Donald Gaudette, Gertrude Giard, Afonso Lucio, M/M Robert Hebert, M/M nymous, M/M Mitchell Gacek; $55 M/M queline M Mathieu, M/M Joseph GaviMaurice Hevey, MlM K Charles KluboMichael Richard, Cecilia Oliveira, M/M M/M Ronald Houde, M/M Jean Landre· Bill Arabasz, OLPH Ladies Society gan III, Loretta G Rozansky, Jo Ann wicz, M/M Raymond Vary, M/M Donald $50 M/M lionel Dubois, M/M Thad James R Edwards, M/M Domingo P ville, M/M Joseph Mitzan, MlM Arthur Nelson, M/M Thomas E Ashley, M/M

M/M


lipsett, M/M Manuel J Medeiros, .M/M James Joaquin, Mrs Rita Crista, M/M James levasseur, Mrs Irene Martin Normand Daigle, M/M James Martin' George laronda, M/M Carlos Correia' Mrs Evelyn Martin ' $25 M/M Manuel Cardoza, M/M Wil· liam K MacCord, M/M Daniel Bolton Arnold Cejka, M/M Jose Reis, M/M Gil: bert Powell, M/M John Botelho, M/M Kenneth Wood, M/M Paul Kruger Mrs Philomena Charamba, M/M R~bert Medeiros MARION St. R~ta's $500 M/M Francis J Perry; $125 Wilham ABurgess; $100 Richard & Helen Arthur, Mrs James Dougall, Atty/M Edward White, Everett & Anne Tichon' $75 Frank & Peg Cafarella; $50 M/M Edward Dailey, Carl & Maureen lamoureaux, Ronald &Dolores Murphy, Richard &Irene Roszkiewicz, M/M James Verni M/M Richard lens ' $~5 M/M Henry Briggs; $30 Harry & Patrlc!a Leber; $25 M/M Kevin McClurg, FrancIs M Mead, Frank & Katherine Kozicki, Roland & Shirley Letendre Frederick & Lorraine Donovan, John & Claudette Perry MATTAPOISETT St. Anthony $200 M/M Charles Rodrigues; $100 M/M John Connor; $60 M/M George Charette, M/M Frank Cooper; $50 M/M Charles Ruel, Dr/M Joseph' Costa, M/M Howard Chadwick Jr; $40 Dr/M Thomas Paul Jackivicz; $30 M/M James Sumner $25 M/M Albert Alvernaz, M/M Roy Andrews, M/M Frank Bardsley, Mrs Eleanor Contant, M/M Edward Day,s M/M Robert Gaspar, M/M Donald Lake' Mrs Arthur Leary, M/M Kenneth Lovell' Richard Regan ' NORTH DARTMOUTH St. Jul,ie's $135 Clara Weeks; $100 M/M Edwin Church, M/M Peter MNicholson; $50 M/M Robert lukowski, M/M Michael J Avila, M/M David Bolton' $40 Giselle Tavares; $30 M/M John S~usa M/M Oldemireo Canto, Elizabeth Oliver: M/M Manuel F Moinheiro $25 M/M Prudent Predo, M/M Steven H Vaughan, Atty/M Richard I Moses, Gladys LRaymond, Carol AGifford M/M Mario J Sousa, M/M Normand J D~fault Eugene F Sullivan, M/M John Wade: M/M Thomas FPatenaude, M/M David G Goulart, M/M Adelino Santos M/M Domingos Paiva, M/M Lawrenc~ Cote M/M Charles Almeida, M/M Jim Larson' Alice Henzel, Agnes Soares, M/M Ray: mond Lake, M/M John Morris, M/M Waiter Kenyon, M/M Harry ETeachman HYANNIS St. Francis Xavier $165 M/M Edmond WDery Jr; $120 John Medeiros, Sam & Mary Siciliano; 4100 MlM William Flan· agan, Mary M Lovett, Evelyn Rose, M/M George M Shannon, Ken Shaughnessy, Marilyn Snow & Frances Hayes M/M Edward A link; $75 M/M Asa Stanley; $60 M/M Thomas Loughlin $50 M/M William J Carmody, Agnes T Dunn, Dr/M James Dunne, M/M Joseph McManus, M/M Richard Mitchell M/M Americo Poliseno, M/M Gil Rapaso' M/M Joseph Richard, M/M Robert Sau~ders M/M William Scannell, Mrs Frederick Thome, Eward & Marjorie Chipmen Kathleen Flinn ' $45 Virginia Long, $40 Gladys Pillion; $35 Alfred F Garons, M/M Donald R Tefft, In Memory of Cunnion; $30 M/M John Vol Best, James FFraser, Mrs William M Smith $25 M/M John Barter, M/M Edward Bogle, M/M Edmund I Burke, M/M G Howard Christine, Robert Cotell Mrs Martin Dolan, M/M Paul Donahue: M/M Edward G Eaton, M/M John L Geary, Thomas N :George, Maureen Jackson, Yvonne Karolczak, M/M Edward lariviere, M/M Valerio Mantilio, John R McGowan, Mrs Alfred McKenna , $25 Eileen McCauley McVeign, Christina Mulcahy, Ruth Muldowney, Normand Nault, Norma Barter, M/M Fred Murphy, Arthur' & Mildred Scannesin Mary GShea, Spirit of Jesus Regional PC: Mrs Robert S!ewart, M/M Joseph Urso, M/M Frank Vierra, Ruth CWilson SOUTH YARMOUTH St. Pius Tenth Church $500 M/M John F Martin; $400 Dorothy P Ewing;

$250 M/M Philip Gunther; $220 M/M -James Cassidy; $200 M/M James Keany, Mrs Joseph Mitchell; $150 Yvette locke; $100 M/M Thomas Williamson Jr, M/M RW Neitz, M/M George O'Brien, M/M Joseph Glebauskas, Russell & Janet Murphy $75 Mary COrmiton; $50 M/M John Cunningham, M/M Robert Cunningham, Paul & Donna Gilson, M/M James landrigan, Mrs Richard McNealy, M/M William lynch, M/M James Dacey, M/M Pat Demone, Mrs Edward J McGrath, Joan G Kiggen, Melvin E Dolan $35 James E O'Neil, M/M Warren J Cole; $30 Joanne Pennington, M/M Edmund Tessier; $25 Francis Finnegan, Mrs Paul Kennally, M/M Henri Marcotte, M/M Daniel Toomey, Donald V Walsh, Judith Yakola, Norman Babineau, M/M Thomas Molway, M/M Richard Finn, M/M Michael O'Connor Jr, Mary Kinchla, M/M Anthony Avitabile, M/M Thomas Conroy, M/M Louis Vergnani, M/M Donald Burke, Marinus J Kraska, James PBlute, M/M Candido Pinto, Rose Mar1e Faust , $25 M/M Francis Gallagher, Mrs William Decost, M/M Paul Beatty, M/M William Sorbie, M/M Frederick Barker Donna Hume, Raymond & Gertrude Nauit, Rawley CMcCorkle, Mrs Stephen Hunter, Mrs Joseph Hayes, Eleanor l Jones, Florence Knitel OAK BLUFFS Sacred Heart $100 Mrs Irene H Pacheco; $50M/M David Cook, M/M James H Cleary, Mary Marden, M/M Edward Ben David; $25 Patricia Costa, Robert I Reagan, M/M Brad Edwards John Riley, M/M Manuel PRose ' CENTERVillE Our Lady of Victory $500 Henry Mcinerney, Deacon & Mrs Joseph PStanley; $200 M-M Alfred Fournier, M·M Jon A Glydon, Mrs James F McRae, Agnes L Mcinerney, M-M James Pendergast, M-M Rene LPoyant, $150 M·M Howard Daviau M-M Roy F Pollino, Robert F Rooney , $125 M·M Paul J Lynch; $110 M-M Garrett F Bowler; $100 William Dacey, Anthony DeCrosta, M·M Thomas DePaoia, Dr/M GC Barry, Nina Bremer, M-M .Joseph C,Cullinan, M-M Carl Hakel, M-M James TMcCarthy, M·M Stanley McLean Katherine MacDonald, John F Norton: M-M Arnold E Pond, Mrs James Power, M-M Joseph Reardon, M-M George C Schmidt, Marea Sefton $~O Mrs Job H lippincott; $75 Mary Bohhng, M-M Joseph L Cairns Jr, Mrs Kathleen Denahy, Kalliope G Garoufes, Mrs Frances Guertin, M-M John lonergan, M-M Luciano Raspante; $60 M-M Peter Boissonneault, Helen l Kelleher, Rev James Tobin, CSC $55 M-M Richard Kennedy; $50 Mrs Jennie, Andres, M·M John F Aylmer Jr, Mrs Eileen Claflin, M·M Donald Colebourn, Mrs Kathryn Connors Mrs William J Cotter, M-M Leo J Cov~ney, M·M Thomas Creighton, M-M Kevin Davis, M-M Marshall Faillace, Bernadette Fin· , ley, Dr/M Bernard Hand $50 M·M Daniel AHarkins, Mrs Mildred B Joslyn, M-M Owen Kiernan, Mrs Wray Lockwood, M-M Robert W McElhinney, M-M Charles LMaher, M-M Burton Merrifield, M-M Joseph O'Brien Sr, M-M Richard l"Powers, Edward Souza, M·M Edmund J Walsh Jr, Mrs Cynthia Weinhert $45 M·M Joseph Brescia; $40 Mrs Mary F Foley; $35 M-M James Barrett M-M John J Connolly, M-M Jose deMelo: M-M Dennis Driscoll, M-M Andrew' J Kelly, M-M Donald Morris, Mrs Howard MLinroe, M-M Stephen O'Brien Jr, M-M Frances Walsh; $33 Edward J Ledwith' $30 M-M Ralph L Duplin, M-M Charles H Hazelton, M-M RJ Russo, M-M Joseph Stefens ' $25 M-M lloyd EAllen III, M-M John Baldner, M-M leo Barksdale, Lawrence B~nnett, M-M Ernest Bergeron, M-M HL Biron, M-M Ernest Bliudnikas, M·M John J Br~snan, Dr/M Loren C Burger, Wil· helmlna Burke, Mrs Theron B Burlin· game, Helen T Callahan, Mrs Frank Carlucci, M·M John T Carney, M-M James J Casey, M-M Edward Clark, Michael Conlon $25 M-M Francis J Connors M-M Robert 'cross Jr, Mrs John Crowley, M·M Arthur L Desrocher, Mrs Julie Doll M-M James W Driscoll, M-M John J Driscoll, Roy Dupuy, M-M Antone Fajao Jr, Mrs George garoufes, Mrs Anthony Gonsalves,

Costa, Virginia Costa, Marian Cronin M-M'Stephen Goveia, M·M George GraMASHPEE M/M Robert Dinco, M/M William Gilles: ham,-Dr/M Harvey J Grinsell, Mrs Roger. Christ the King $1000 Robert J Mack; . pie, M/M George Hayes, M/M Frances Hansen, M·M John FHaugh, M-M James $500 Edward F Daly, M/M John Urban; Hayes $300 Arthur Brennan; $250 M/M Wm lewis, M/M Melvin lewis, M/M louis $25 Mrs William Hetterman, M-M lammer Jr, M/M Williams Ricci J Nor- Marshall, Margaret Martine, M/M Edward Mello, lorraine Reardon, Evelyn Roach Roland Hicks Sr, Mrs Anelia Higgins, man Fitzgerald; $240 M/M HD Allick; $25 Nathalie Almeida, M/M Michael Helen PHogan, M-M Charles Huber, M·M $225 Rev John Carroll; $200 MB & AR Augusta, Rita Bartel, M/M John Bearse, Edward B Hutchinson, Mrs Brone Juce· Hanley; $150 M/M Paul Lebel, M/M M/M John Bento, M/M Edmond Botelho, nas, M-M Thomas J Keady, Mrs Francis J John Thorn; $125 M/M James Lyons; M/M Edmund Brown, M/M James Car· Kelley, Mrs Charlotte M Kelly, M-M How$120 M/M Robert Crotty, M/M James deiro, M/M Grace Catrambone, M/M ard V Kitchen, M-M James Keville, M·M Walker Arthur Ciambelli, ~Iizabeth Crowley, Armand J lapierre, John F leary, M·M $100 M/M Arthur Kelley, M/M SteMt.M Charles Deem, Ida DePrizio, M/M John lees, M-M James lundy, M-M phen Kenney, Mrs Alfred lewando, M/M DWight Evans, M/M Robert Fulton, M/M David McCarthy, Mrs Roseanna McCourt Robert Jutstrom, M/M Paul Costello Philip Furtado, Nancy Gustafson, M/M $25 Mary Ann McHugh, M-M Francis M/M John Scanlon, Claire Lane MlM McVarish, M-M Roland J Marcoux, John Willis Michaelson, M/M William' John- James Hanson Marion Hommel, M/M George HowP Merlesena, M·M Thomas Monaghan, ston, M/M Stephen O'Connor, M/M John arth, M/M Bernard Ignos, M/M Ernest M-M Nicholas CMontecalvio, M-M Roland Lyn,ch, M/M Austin Findlen, Mrs Roy Keating, M/M William lattan, M/M Miguel J Morin, M-M Andrew Murphy, M-M WilSmith, PJohn Hannon, M/M Edwin Karp, Lopes, M/M Daniel McCarthy, M/M liam RMurzic, Mrs Joanne Nelson, M-M M/M Andrew Carmichael John Norton, Mrs Ubaldo Nugnes, M-M $75 Ruth Ough; $50 M/M James P George Mandigo, M/M Cecelia Marshall, Thomas Nutile, M·M Arthur O'Keefe, M-M Connolly, Ruth E Jonis, M/M David J Theresa Moloney, M/M Donald Messmore, M/M Joseph Nader, Franklin Perry, Wayne Paddock, Mrs Bradly Parker, M-M Kopp, M/M Agostino leone, M/M Tho· M/M H~nry Peters, M/M Joseph Peters, R Parojinog mas Boyd, Mrs Ronald Butler, Kathleen Mary Richardson, M/M Davis Sanicki, $25 M-M Edward Perry, Mrs Gerald R Duggan, M/M George Wyatt, M/M George Irene T Souza, Meribah Stanton, M/M Phillip, Laurette Reilly, M-M John R Dooley, M/M William Schirmer, M/M Robichaud, Mrs Frank A Seaver, M-M John Crowley, Adele Labute, Edith Hur- John Starr, M/M Don Swire, Manuel Paul J Smith, Mrs Robert Starck, M-M ley, ~/M William EGerson, M/M James Tavares, Mary Tavares, M/M John Varao Elsie Wefers, M/M Robert Weiss, M/M Ronald Stevens, M-M William Stone, M-M CurtiS, M/M James Kaminske, Anne Fitzlee Wood Kenneth Stuart Sr, Mrs Mary Sullivan gerald, M/M John Wilcox, Martha Rubado Mrs Marie Sullivan, Mrs Marie Supple, $35 M/M Palmiro Bisio, M/M Hubert FALMOUTH Mrs Walter l Teehan, Mrs Arthur Tomlin· Ray~ond, M/M Robert Mullen; $25 St. Patrick $1000 Anonymous; $250 son, M-M Jeffrey Travers, M-M Charles J Natalie Coddington, M/M James Souza, M/M Terrence Dineen; $200 Rev John Valcour Jr, Mrs Walter C Verney, M:M M/M John Carey, M/M Joseph Conway, Daly, CSC; $175 M/M Melvin Prada' James PWalsh, M-M Patrick Walsh Sally Bold, M/M Robert Stranieri, M/M $150 John J O'Connor, M/M Anthony NANTUCKET Wayne Enos, M/M Donald Cook, M/M Montrond; $140 M/M louis Tessier St. Mary·Our Lady of the Isle $400 Roger Raymond $125 Mrs Margaret E Weill, Marie E Rev Philip Davignon; $300 M/M Robert $25 M/M Alva Brown, M/M Robert Murphy, Anonymous; $110 Mrs Herman McGrath; $200 Kenneth Holdgate Jr, Glover, Salva Swan, Hilda & Mrs John E Prada; $100 Mrs James Hearn M/M M/M Charles Darby; $175 M/M Francis Almeida, M/M T Ribaga, M/M Daniel David Bruno, Mrs Marie Hobbs: M/M Santos; $150 Donald Terry, CaptiM WaiL~ary, M/M Richard Golden, M/M Wilbur Murray, M/M Robert T ~eynolds ter Folger; $100 Annette Stackpole, M/M Richard Raitto, Virginia Belanger, M/M $100 M/M David Carr, M/M Arthur T Myles Reis Sr, M/M John 0 Neill, Adele Patrick, Ball, Mrs Peter Kinney, M/M Doyle, M/M John Doyle, Valentine RFerMcKeever, M/M Howard laundry, Mary John Cincotta raris, M/M Michael Grady Samuel & Holmes, M/M William Hays III M/M John $25 M/M Frederick Regan, Mrs John J~dith Clorusso, James McDonough, HC Hallett, Sharon Cranston, M/M James Grady, M/M Peter Dinizio, Mr John Richardson, Mrs Theresa R Stone Crecca, Mimi Congdon, M/M Allan Bell Logan, M/M George Clish, Mrs Harold Anonymous ' , $75 M/M Bradley Woodruff, Eunice Boynton, Mary & Louise Daiinis M/M $75 M/M Chester Frazier, M/M Sjolund, M/M Edmund J McNally, M/M Richard Shaughnessy, Mrs Mary'Mone, Anthony Ghelfi, M/M Frank O'Connor Donald Holdgate Sr; $70 Mary Grimes, M/M Vincent Keblin, M/M George Baker, M/M Joseph WSharp; $60 M/M HUIO! $60 Lucille Pew M/M James Conant, Helen Scudder Haden; $55 M/M Charles Crocker; $50 $50 Richard White, M/M Alvin Topham, EAST FALMOUTH M/M Robert Granfield, Barbara CHickey, Joseph Souza, M/M Wesley Simmons St. Anthony $200 M/M Albin Gusci· M/M Howard lannon, Mrs Carl Paige, M/M James McKenna, Thomas McAuley' ora, M/M Paulino Rodrigues; $120 M/M Mrs John Tegan, Anonymous Mrs FredRenee Levine, Terrence Laundry, M~M Angelo Exposito; $100 M/M Richard ,erick Kite, M/M John McCabe, John Richard Hardy, M/M Norman Gauvin Corey, William Joyce, M/M Bela Kiss, Gren,da, Marjorie Scheh, M/M Sylvester M/M Wilson Fanton, M/M Thomas Devine' M/M Raymond lepore, M/M John Lopes, McGI~n, M/M John Filkins, M/M Albert M/M Fred Coffin, M/M George Butter: Margaret McGaffigan, M/M John Reine, Carreiro worth, M/M Richard Mack, M/M Arthur M/M FrankTeixeira, M/M RichardWalsh $40 M/M Robert Dutra, ~obert l Butler, M/M Albert Brock, Mark Arnold, M/M William Bonito, M/M Thomas Brown' Koob, M/M Harry Hinckley; $35 AnoJosephine Deacon, William Broughton, M/M Daniel Hannon, M/M Arthur lima' nymou~, M/M John McEvoy, MlM Miguel M/M Donald Allen, M/M Victor Bernier M/M G,uy Nickerson, M/M Joseph losi: Camp~lna, M/M Charles Cassidy, laura , $40 Esther Swain, Beverly Hilts, M/M MarjOrie MacLennan, M/M Charles Vecchl; $30 M/M Lee Bourgoin, M/M Richard Herman; $35 Antone F Sylvia, Mahoney, Rev Raymond Robida Thomas Devine, M/M John Cardoza M/M Edward Strojny, M/M Edmund T M/M Fred Ferioli, Mrs Bernard Tobin' $75 Ducillia Newton; $70 M/M lawPollard, Marie Lamb, M/M Ralph Hardy' rence Peters; $65. Ella May Hayes; $60 Anonymous; , $33 M/M Francis Lynch; $30 M/M Pete; M/M Eugene Brady; $50 M/M William $25 MlM Robert S Allen, Gertrude C Sylvia, M/M Robert Sjolund, M/M Jeffery Burke, M/M Edward Duggan, Beatrice Arcaro, Mrs Benjamin Bevelander, M/M Marks, M/M Jamie Marks, M/M John Emerald, Fredia Mae Hayes, M/M Steleonard Costa, M/M William Cullen, Mrs Fee Sr, M/M Richard Caton Dorothy Cusack, M/M Richard DeMello phen Holmes, M/M Frank Leone, M/M $25 Michael Fee, M/M James Worth John Klink, Vincent Luckraft, M/M John M/M Robert Dowling, M/M Michael Sr, CaptiM Nelson Woodward, Shirley . McCarthy, M/M Baldassaro Porzio, M/M Goulet, Pauline Gradeski Mrs Reed Watts, M/M John Wall, M/M Barry Thur- John Stegeman, M/M Charles Turell H~milton, M/M Charles H~ynes, M/M ston, M/M John Sullivan, Gertrude Stru- M/M Richard Wasil, M/M Edward Whit~ William 0 Kelley, M/M Kevin lane Jean cinski, John Schnurbusch, M/M Robert $50 John Cabral, Hilda Cabral, M/M Larkin, M/M Mrs John Lee, M/M Edward Ruley, Charron Ranney, M/M Frank Psa- Guy Salerno, M/M Maurice T Tavares, Loyko radelis Jr, Susan Parks, M/M David Mur- M/M Charles Tupper, M/M David Correl· , $25 MlM Jesse Enos, M/M James ray Sr, M/M Stephen Mailloux Ius, M/M Walter Fitzgerald, M/M Joseph Fltz~erald, Mrs Bertram Haddon, Louise $25 M/M John J McDonald Jr, M/M Griffith, Arthur Marshall, M/M Joseph Justice, M/M Edward R McMahon Eli· VoI0ody Lindley, Helen Levin's, M/M Wil· Teixeira, M/M Antone Vieira In Memory zabeth Scalli, M/M Robert DCrane M/M ham Levan, M/M Brian Legg, Bridget T of Joseph & Sally Simoer John Irving, M/M Thomas E PI~uskY Ledwell, M/M Richard Larrabee, M/M M/M Brian PRobinson, Anonymous ' $40 M/M George Botelho, M/M Gerben Stephen Lamb, M/M James Joynt, Mary Kuipers, M/M Ralph Hamilton, M/M $25 Isabelle Andrews, MlM Henry Huffman, Mary Hettinger, M/M James Blanche Perry, Mary Rezendes, M/M Gonsalves, M/M Glenn Prada, M/M Harry Hardy, M/M David Glowacki George Champagne, M/M George De· Oakes, M/M Harold Tomkinson, Ethel $25 M/M Albert Glowacki, Annette Mello, M/M Daniel Ferreira, M/M Richard Gallos, M/M John ASarson M/M John F Gardner, M/M Robert Grant, M/M Robert Lewis, M/M Joseph Tavares, M/M Joseph Keating, M/M John Cardo~a, M/M SalGarrabrant, Eleanor Ferreira M/M Wil· Larkin, vador Matos, M/M John Teixeira, M/M Iiam Ellis, M/M James Egan' Sr, Arthur $35 M/M Gary Botelho, M/M Frank Manuel Andrews, M/M Clement Spillane Egan, Ethel Dunham, M/M David Dun· lima, M/M William Valadao, M/M Gilbert M(M John G Tully Jr, M/M Joh~ ham, Antone Dias, Doris Day, Delores Tavares, M/M Joseph Farland, M/M Brightman Day, M/M Ronald DaSilva, Mary Louise George Gaspa, Manuel Rapoza, Ronald $25 M/M Frank McFarland M/M Conway, Ann Coffin, M/M Frederick Clark Rapoza; $30 M/M Gerard Alves, M/M Jam~~ J McG~ire, MlM William M'aloney, $25 M/M Robert Cicerrella, Nancy Theophilus Oliveira, Mary Brobello, Ella Patricia Martin, M/M Glenn MMedeiros Chase, M/M Dennis Caron, M/M Melvin Tavares, M/M George Cabral, M/M Mi- M/M Jesse Miller, M/M Frank EO'Con: Cardos, M/M Butler Brownell, Jr, Neil chaelMoniz, M/M Joseph Farland, M/M nell, Mrs Stanley Overlan, MlM Joseph Brosnan, Mrs Robert Bretschneider, M/M George Rapoza, Ronald Rapoza Staruch, Maj/RetiM Lawrence UchmaAlbert Bond, M/M Harold Boehm, M/M nowicz, Mrs Dominic Vadala, Anonymous $25 M/M William Bonito, MlM Arthur Paul Bixby, M/M Richard Bellevue, CO,sta, M/M John Dias, M/MJoseph FerTheresa Bedell, Emily Annis, M/M Michael reira, M/M Frank Figuerido, M/M Joseph Angelastro, M/M Stephen Albright, Joseph Feguerldo, M/M Louis Fucillo M/M Special Gift & parish listings will Abdallah:Demby Andrew Guishecker, M/M Jonath'an LorWElLflEET continue to appear weekly in order sord?, M/M Louis Marks, M/M Antone Our Lady of Lourdes $25 Mrs Ernest Martin, M/M Antonio Pilla, Amelia Pena, received by the printer until all have Silva, Mrs Lorraine Kmiec, M/M Antone Pauline Shea, M/M John Wilcox been listed. Lopes $25 M/M James Cabral, M/M John


in our schools

TOP STUDENTS at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro, this year are valedictorian Steven Goodreau, left, and salutatorian George Jabren. Goodreau received early acceptance from Harvard University, where he plans to study biogenetics, and Jabren has enrolled in the honors program at Boston College.

Bishop Feehan Bishop Feehan senior Julie Toscano is one of 350 winners of 1990 national Scholastic Writing Awards. Her essay, "Modern Day Heroes," was chosen from more than 18,000 entries. Miss Toscano and her English teacher at the Attleboro school met other student winners, representatives of the contest sponsor and Scholastic staff members at a recent luncheon at the WaldorfAstoria Hotel in New York City, Miss Toscano plans to attend PrincetonU niversity in the fall.

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interscholastic programs; contributions to the community; and demonstration of "curiosity, confidence, courage and constancy." .

• • • •

Senior Brian Kelly was cited in the May 1990 edition of Track and Field News Magazine for his performance in the National Pentathlon, in which he topped the alltime best score with a 'new record of 401.1. In January he topped the international high school record with a 3536 score.

Junior Gino Delsisto is the,Mas~­ achusetts winner in t}te Walt Disney World National Dreamers and Doers Program. He was selected on the basis of participation in

.Cornwell Memorial ;::', .Chapel, Inc. ~, ;', CENTER STREET d~t;:WAREHAM, MASS. "lftaNIFIED FUNERAL SERVICE DIRECTDIIS GEOIIGE E. COIINWELL EVERETT E. KAHIIMAN

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Open year round 15081540.7232

SHAWOMET GARDENS 102 "Shawomet Avenue Somerset, Mass.

Tel. 674-4881 3% rOOm Apartment 4V2 room Apartment Includes heat, hot water, stove reo frirerator and maintenance service.

.Make .Your Move Mortgage money now available.

CITIZENS-UNION s·\\ 1'Jl is I~\:".l\

- (,

Bishop Stang Among honorees at Bishop Stang's annual Awards Night, May 16, were the top IO students in each class at the North Dartmouth school. Ranked first in the senior class is Meghan Foley, who will attend Tufts University in the fall, and second, Cathrine Baptiste, who will attend Boston College. Top ranked underclassmen are juniors Erin Hayden and 'Gregory Vrona; sophomores Scott Jusseaume and Michelle Beaupre; and freshmen Alison Fleming and George Dos Santos. Receiving special awards were: Spanish: Sandra Alves, Carlos Arruda, Tenaya Dean, Gabriela Vasconcelos French: Erin Hayden, Michelle Beaupre, Eduardo Pires, Nicole Poisson Francophone Society Certificate of Achievement: Eduardo Pires Hugh O'Brian Leadership Award: Margaret Bowen Holy Cross College Book Award: Gregory Vrona Wellesley College Book Award: Lynn Asato Harvard Book Award: Erin Hayden Charles Cayer Memorial Scholarship: Judy Arruda, Heidi Duhancik Principal's Scholarship: Selena Bates, Westport Middle School; Andrew Kissell, Wareham Intermediate School Parents' Club Scholarship: Andrea Sorell, St. Joseph's School, Fairhaven

Year-end activities for seniors at Bishop Connolly High School, Fall River, began with the class awards banquet at White;s of Westport, followed by the junior-senior prom at Taunton Regency Inn. After the prom, students returned to Connolly for the traditional allnight post-prom paf\y.with music and entertainment inCluding per. formances by The Intent and hypnotist Frank Santos. The post-prom, one of the area's first chemical-free gra'duation events, has grown yearly. .. ' Connolly N~tes Freshman English classes have published "Tales from the Pencil Sharpener," 33 I poems and line drawirigs created by class members. Seniors Mike Gendreau and! Noreen Daly are Connolly nominees for the Greater Fall River Elks Teenagers of the Year program, and classmate Craig Bernat has been awarded a leadership scholarship to Elon College, NC. Receiving highest honors on the third quarter honor roll were 31 seniors, 28juniors, 12 sophomores and seven freshmen. High honors went to 16 seniors, 22 juniors, 11 sophomores and 14 freshmen. Former Connolly faculty member Rev. Jack Crabb, SJ, was elected chairman of the National Conference of Admissions Directors of Jesuit Schools at a recent Jesuit Secondary Education Association conference in Chicago at which Rev. Paul Sullivan, SJ, represented Bishop Connolly. Alumni are asked to make reservations by May 31 for a Con. nolly Contacts gathering, to be held 7 p.m. June 7 at Newport JaiAlai. The reservations may be made with the Connolly development office, 676-1476, or alumni chair-

COYLE-CASSIDY juniors, clockwise from left, Rachel Doherty, Sarah Funke, Daniel Crowley, Patrick Sweeney, Marie Foley and Jennifer Moniz.

Coyle-Cassidy The six students pictured above, all juniqrs at. Coyle-Cassidy High School, Taunton, are semifinalists in the annual National Merit Scholarship Program. Their SAT scores will be sent to two colleges of their choice and they will continue in scholarship competition. Paul Gomes is Coyle-Cassidy's 1990 recipient of the Bausch & Lomb Science Award. The bronze medal, presented annually at approximately 7,500 schools in the United States and other nations, goes to the junior ranking highest in science. .As a Bausch & Lomb scholar, Gomes is eligible to apply for scholarship funds at the University of Rochester, Rochester, NY.

Courses to be offered are algebra I, computer programs, "Discovering Self," foreign languages, music, script writing, study skills and summer reading. The morning sessions will run for 90 minutes July 9 through 27 and July 29 through August 17. To register contact Coyle-Cassidy, 823-6164.

• • • •

Coyle-Cassidy will offer a twosession summer. enrichment program open to students entering grades 7 through 9 in September.

PAUL GOMES

. and the 400-yard dash'. Miss McDermott and teammates Muffy Merrick, Christina Fasy and Meredith Lowe placed fourth in the relay. Jeanne McLaughlin won the high Jump and placed second in the 100-meter hurdles. Alumnus Matt Carroll, '86, has been named Athlete of the Year at Roger Williams College. He has been captain of the college golf team and cocaptain of the soccer squad. The third annual alumni baseball game will take place at 10:30 a.m. June 2 at ponaldson Field on the Connolly campus. All former players are invited. to take on the 1,990 Connolly team.

AT A RECENT SS Peter and Paul CYO breakfast, Father Gerald P. Barnwell, parochial vicar at the Fall River parish, presented the Msgr. George Maxwell Award to CYO president Daniel Britl~lOd. The award goes annually to a CYO member who excels in religion, character and service.


.•. Th'e

tv, movie news

Jim Henson called "very special light"

Friday, May 25, 1990

Symbols followinl film reviews and sexually suggestive scenes with indicate both leneral and C'atholic female nudity, positive portrayal Films Office rltinls, which do not of drug use, several scenes of uriIlways coincide. nation, gross gestures, near elecGeneral rltin.s: G-suitlble for trocutions and unnecessary violenerll viewinl; PG·13-plrentll.ui- lence.O,R dlnce stronlly suaested for children "Honeymoon Academy" (Triunder 13; PG-plrentalluidlnce su.· umph): Failed attempt at slapstick 'Iested; R-restricted., unsuitlblo for comedy has a honeymooning exchildren or youn. teens. Cltholic rltinls: AI-approved for · State Department courier (Kim children and adults; A2-lpproved for Cattrall) and her naive husband Idults Ind Idolescents; A3-lpproved (Robert Hays) pursued around for Idults only; 4-separlte classifi· Madrid by three brainless foreign cltion (liven films not morilly offen- spies, her U.S. contact, a sinister sive which. however. require some hit man and a devious counterspy, Inllysis and explanation); O-morilly all searching for counterfeit cur-offensive. Cltholic rltinls for television rency plates that could ruin the movies Ire those of the movie Iiouse U.S. economy. While the bridal couple is appealing, Gene Quintaversions of the films.

ance? Embrace it as an emotional form of energy you can and must learn to use creatively. 2. Recognize the cause of your anger. Often the recipients of our anger are not the cause of it. We might have too much to do, or feel unloved because a friend ignored us. We need to allow ourselves to face the true cause. Perhaps the NOTE energy of our anger should be used Please check dates and to deal with that situation. times of television and radio 3. Rate its importance. Is it programs against local list· worth the energy building up in IlIIs, which may differ from you? Too often this kind of rating the New York network schedis done afterward when we say to ules supplied to The Anchor. ourselves, "Why did I act so dumb?" This rating should be done before expressing anger. New Films 4. Choose a realistic course. In "The Big Bang" (Triton): An some instances, the best course is to do nothing. When we cool down, astronomer, gangster, painter, we see how right we were to let it model and nun-philosopher are go. In other instances, we should among a diverse mix of individuexpress our anger, but not when it als who tell what they think about love, life, death, the origins of the is running us. When expressing anger toward universe and what lies beyond the someone we love, I suggest we find grave. Director James Toback's the right moment, a quiet moment, documentary interweaves the interwhen we can giye each other the views into a relatively painless talk attention we need. We go for a show, offering an uneven grab bag walk together; we sit down over of,ideas, ranging from the provocative to the pretentious and -at coffee or ice ere-am. I also suggest that'we ground times, preposterous. Some ro~gh our complaint in the person's spe- language and an explicit descripcific actions or behaviors that cause tion of a sexual encounter. A3,R "Last Exit to Brooklyn" (Cineus anger. Avoid phrases like, "You always ..... or "You're nothing but com): Repugnant view of urban working-class life during a 1952 a ...•• shipping strike in which neighborPeople understand better when we say, "When you do (or did) hood thugs amuse themselves tersuch and such, I get angry." Here rorizing passersby. Also featured are a local union strike leader you do not even interpret the rea(Stephen Lang) who enjoys brutalS011S for the behavior, which you izing his wife and is having a don't know. You stick with fhe ~omosexual affair, and an aspirbehavior itself. 109 hooker (Jennifer Jason Leigh) , If any of these suggestions for who winds up the victim of a gang dealing with anger are new to you, rape. Director Uli Edel's dark picyou may find yourself uncomfor- ture of human degradation makes , table with them at the beginning. seve.ral feeble gestures affirming Any new style takes a little getting family and union solidarity, but used to. they ring hollow and fail to add significanc;e to the dehumanized proceedings. Excessive violence WAS~INGTON (CNS) - Jim he stopped at the university's Fos- and sexual exploitation. O,R Henson, mventor of the Muppets, ter McGaw Hospital. "~Iass of 1999" (Taurus): Ex"He brought Kermit the Frog penmental android teachers go who died ~ay 16 at .age 53 and Amenca for three and went over t 0 our pe d"latracs berserk in this ultraviolent film in dwho entertamed d eca es, was remembered as ward and entertained theh'ld- which a student discovers the "humble" ~nd "a very special light" ren," Father Baumhart sai~ IHe teachers are systematically killing by h' Catholic 'b' leaders who praised added that after mee t'109 th' e pup- troublesome kids. Producer-direcIS contra, utlons to e~ter~ainment. peteer, he could see why "his char- tor Mark L. Lester's darkly at~ospheric tale quickly descends Fathe~ John Catolr? director of acters were so wholesome" The Chnstophers, which honored ..' anto a non-stop bloodbath overthe CBS-TV program "The MuppThe award-wmmng CBS special pow~ring the suspense with gory ets _ A Celebration of 30 Years" ~n 30 years of~he M ~ppets marked special effects and a grisly pileup with a 1987 Christopher Award, a.personal traumph. for Henson, of corpses. Extremely graphic viosaid that with Henson's passing said Henry ~erx, director of the lence, drug use and rough lan"the world loses a very special U.S..Cathohc Conference Office guagethroughout. O,R light." for Film and Broadcasting. "F~r Out Man"(CineTel Films): "We thank God for the gift he . Henson's program "had been Termanally revolting film about a brought to us in this good man" turned down by the networks when mindless hippie (Tommy Chong) said Father Catoir. ' h e , originally offered them 'The who takes to the road and accidenJesuit Father Raymond Baum- Muppet Show,''' said Herx, noting tally finds his former wife and his hart, president of Loyola Univer- that the series went on to become son, now_ 12 years old. Chong "sity in Chicago, who presented :'one of ~he most successful shows wrote, directed and stars in this Henson with the university's Sword an Amencan syndication." sick tribute to the drug culture and . of Loyola in 1982, said Henson Henson also was honor~d by all things base and crude. His was "a great man" who was "good, Unda-USA, an association of m~vie is out oftouch in its presenhuman a.nd humble" despite all his Catholic broadcasters and com- tation of drug use and sexual proaccomplishments. municators, which awarded him a miscuity as perfectly. acceptable. . ~e recalled that when Henson Gabriel Award for personal achieve- Numerous profanities and obscenvIsited Loyola to accept the honor, ment in 1981. ities, demeaning sexual references By Michael Wanen A young person asked me recently, "How do I learn to express my angerT' Repressing an emotion means ~enying that it exists in a particular Instance. When we repress emotions they go underground and surface in some other form - for instance anxiety and depression. ' Suppressing anger 'involves keeping it in check, not allowing it to go off in ways we will later regret. But what about expressing anger? I don't think you can understand how to express anger without grasping the importance of suppressing it. People who have studied the matter believe that venting anger in the heat -of it makes you angrier. Many of us know this well. We know how in the heat of anger we said terrible things to someone we loved, things meant to hurt and things we could not easily take back. Also we can get into a habit of getting angry and letting it all hang out anytime we are annoyed. (I've noticed this behavior in babies). Such people don't run their anger' their anger runs them. For thes~ people, life must be like wanting to go for a pleasant ride on horseback, but the horse always runs wild. I told my young friend I wasn't making a case for never expressing anger. But most of us have to learn our own ways _of avoiding the extremes of expressing every little thing that irritates us and never expre~si!,g ~nger .at all, accepting every anJustice. Silent sulking is a deadly way of keeping anger alive and unresolved. Based on these understandings, I suggested the following method for expressing anger. I. Recognize your anger. Is what you are feeling anger orjust annoy-

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"Anchor .. ,,

no's script a"d direction eschews all subtlety in favor of cartoonish characters, strained chase scenes and routine shoot-outs. Several abrupt deaths and one instance of rough language. A2, PG 13 "Cadillac MilO" (Orion): Unpleasant comedy in which a fasttalking car salesman (Robin Williams) tries to pacify a crazed gunman (Tim Robbins) who takes ~veryone hostage after bursting anto a car agency in search of his wife's lover. Directed by Roger Donaldson, the lame comedy gets few laughs out of the salesman's · two mistresses, ex-wife and runaway daughter. A tacked-on happy ending does not compensate for the movie's emphasis on sexual promiscuity, its depiction ofterrorized hostages and rough language. O,R "The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover" (Miramax): Boring-when-not-repellent British pro· duction about a savage mobster (Michael Gambon) and his wife (Helen Mirren) who spend their evenings in a resJaurant owned by the husband - he gorging himself

. 19

on delicacies prepared by a French chef (Richard Bohringer) while she makes love to a bookseller between courses in an affair that has dire, gruesome results. Written and directed by Peter Greenaway, it's a pointless exercise in moral decadence treated in tedious pretentious fashion. Excessive via-: lence, unremitting brutality ex. ploitative sex scenes and r~ugh , language. 0 "Jesus of Montreal" (Orion Classics): Challenging FrenchCanadian drama about a young actor (Lothaire Bluteau) who modernizes a traditional Passion play staged annually at a local shrine. Though his new version is a dramatic success, its unorthodoxy causes the shrine's religious authorities to withdraw permission for future performances. Written and directed by Denys Arcand the movie suggests parallels bet~een events in the life of Christ and what happens to the young actor. While some viewers may be dismayed by the work's critical attitude toward the institutional church and its intermingling of the historical Jesus with unseemly aspects of mod~rn !ife? others may gain refreshmg anslghts and perspectives on Chr~stianity's continuing relevance an contemporary society. A4,R .

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20

'THE'ANC'ii6R~Di~c~~~ ~fFail Ri~~~~F~C M~y

25,"1990 "SACREO'HEART,'NB

Iteering pOintl a~e

PUBLICITY CHAIRMEN

asked to submit news Items for this column to The Anchor, P.O. Box 7, Fall River, 02722. Name 01 cl'y or 'own should be Included, I I well as full da'es of a,lactlvIlles. Please send news of future rather ' than past events. Note: We do not normally carry news of fund raising acllvltles. We are happy to carry notices of spiritual programs, club meetings, youth projec's and similar nonprofit activities. Fundralslng projects may be advertised a' our regular rates, obtainable from The Anchor business office, telephone 675-7151. On Steering Points Items FR Indicates Fall River, NB Indicates New Bedford.

ST.STEPHEN,ATTLEBORO CCD registration for new students 1O-11:30a.m. Tuesday-Thursday and 6-7 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, religious education office. Memorial Day Mass for all buried at St. Stephen's Cemetery 10 a.m. Monday. _ _ _ 234 Second Street

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ST. ANN, RAYNHAM Father Francis Santilli of St. Vincent House of Formation, Providence, will conduct a workshop, "Healing the Family Tree," 9 a.m.-4 p.m. June 9. Registration deadline May 31. Information: Ann Levasseur, 822-6866; Mary Leite, 822-2219. LaSALLE ACADEMY, PROVIDENCE LaSalle Academy, Providence alumni weekend for classes graduating in a' year ending in 5 or 0 June 8 and 9 with dinner dance at Omni Biltmore, Providence, and barbecue at LaSalle Academy campus. Reservation deadline May 31. Information: (401) 351-9710. DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA Alacazaba Circle 65, Attleboro, mystery ride leaving K. of C. Hall, Hodges St., 5 p.m. June 7. An open meeting will also be held. HOLY GHOST, ATTLEBORO Thursday daily Mass will be at 7 p.m. beginning in June. BIRTHRIGHT, FALMOUTH Birthright has appointed Everett Lonzo as its new director. LaSALETTE SHRINE, ATTLEBORO Teach the Children Well I catechist enrichment program July 9-13. Provides renewed understanding of basic elements of Catholic faith; qualifies participants for' basic certification in most New England dioceses. Directors: Rev. Gilles Genest, Felicia McKnight, Sister Patricia Cocozza. Information: 222-8530. Healing service 2 p.m. Sunday led by Rev. Andre Patenaude. ST. DOMINIC, SWANSEA Lectors needed for 8:30 and 11:30 a.m. Sunday Masses; contact Father William Campbell. Women's'Guild communion breakfast following 8:30 a.m. Mass Sunday, Brass Rail, Seekonk.

' ,, Ladies of St. Anne annual dinner 6 p.m. June 5; reservation deadline May 29. Information: Muriel Denault,993-o316. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, TAUNTON Widowed support group dinner outing 7 p.m. June 2; registration deadline May 28. Information: rectory, 824-8794.

ST. JULIE BILLIART, N. DARTMOUTH Vincentians meet 7:30 p.m. Thursday, rectory. Monthly rosary and benediction 4 p.m. Sunday. ST. MARY, SEEKONK Youth softball 6-8 p.m. Sunday. Dance for grades 6-9 7:30-10 p.m. June I, parish center. ST. MARY, N. ATTLEBORO Certificates of merit for CCD students will be awarded at 5: 15 p.m. Mass Saturday. Burial of time capsule on 100th anniversary of laying of parish cornerstone 7 p.m. Wednesday. Applications for Women's Guild scholarship to Bishop Feehan H.S. may be sent to St. Mary's Parish Guild, PO Box 1027, N. Attleboro 02761 by June 18. Entrants should write a paragraph on why they want a Catholic education. ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI, NB Men's Le~gue meeting II a.m. Sunday. Women's League year-end meeting with an ethnic s~pper 6 p.m. Thursday, church hall. O.L. VICTORY, CENTERVILLE , Dinner for graduating high school seniors 6 p.m. June 5, Paddock Restaurant; reservation deadline June I. Information: Bobbi Paradise, 7711614, or parish office, 775-5744

,

ST'.ANNE~H'OSP"TAL, FR

SACRED HEART NURSING HOME,NB Open House 2-4 p.m. Wednesday and 6-8:30 p.m. Thursday; staff and Sisters of Charity of Quebec will conduct tours and answer questions. Information: 996-6751. ST. PATRICK, WAREHAM CYO meeting 7-8:15 p.m. Tuesday, parish hall; senior Mass and picnic will be planned. Grades 7-12 trip June 9. ST. ANNE, FR First communion for middle grade students 10 a.m. Sunday.

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ADORERS OF BL. SACRAMENT Walk Your Weight Down, a pro'Holy hour 7 p.m. Monday, St. gram designed to promote healthy Theresa's Church, NB; celebrant: eating habits and exercise for long- Rev. Richard Roy, parochial vicar term weight management, will begin at O.L. Grace Church, Westport. June 19; classes run 8-10 a.m. Tues- The public is invited. Information: days for 10 weeks. Information: 674- Angelo DeBortoli, 996-0332. Expo5741 ext. 2635. Recruiting junior' sition of Blessed Sacrament followvolunteers for summer hospital aide ing 9 a.m. Mass until 7 p.m. Benedicprogram; must be age 14 or older by tion services Fridays at St. Theresa's. July. Information: 674-5741. ST. STANISLAUS, FR Orientation meeting for students and parents involved in World Youth R'ally following 10:30 a.m. Mass Sunday. New altar boys meet 11:30 ~t'i/ parish, a.m.-12:45 p.m. tomorrow. ebrate its annuST. PATRICK, FR e~sttomorr6W Holy hour 2 p.m. Sunday. eniorial Day hoI:;' ST. ANTHONY OFTHE DESERT, ,'- processi()ll~ FR r entertain:;' Exposition of Blessed Sacrament noo~-6 p.m. June 3, holy hour 5 p.m. .

ORDER OF ALHAMBRA Region One Council of Caravans monthly meeting 8 p.m. June I, . Loyola Hall, College of the Holy Cross, Worcester. Regional director Ben Pasquariello will preside; Salib Caravan 243 of Portland, Maine, will host: ST. JOSEPH, TAUNTON Young Mothers' Group meeting 7 p.m. June I, church hall; a color analyst will speak. Memorial Day Mass 10 a.m. Monday, St. Joseph's Cemetery.

ST. JOHN EVANGELIST, POCASSET Final Vincentian meeting of season following 8 a.m. Mass and rosary tomorrow. ST. ANTHONY, MATTAPOISETT Memorial Day Mass 9 a.m. ST. LOUIS de FRANCE, SWANSEA Confirmation tonight. Memorial Mass for deceased parishioners 2 p.m. Sunday. HOLY NAME, FR Spring Fair has been rescheduled to 10 a.m.-3 p.m. June 2. Youth group golf outing leaving school at 6 p.m. Sunday. O.L. CAPE, BREWSTER Ladies' Guild members are needed as respite care volunteers; information: Mary Woodhouse, 760-1528. ST. ELIZABETH SETON, N. FALMOUTH 5:30 p.m. Saturday and 7:45 a.m. Sunday Masses resume this weekend. CHRIST THE KING, MASHPEE Young Adults group Mass and pizza outing 7 p.m. Thursday; information: 771-2084, 778-5141. VINCENTIANS, FR Mass and FR District meeting 7 p.m. June 5, St. Louis de France parish, Swansea. Mass celebrant: Rev. Andre Jussaume. ST. THOMAS MORE, SOMERSET Kendra E. Cote is the recipient of the Women's Guild Rev. Howard A. Waldron Memorial Scholarship. Graduating seniors are invited to a Graduate's Day Mass 9 a.m. June 3. HOLY NAME, NB Women's Guild annual banquet 6:30 p.m. Monday, Muldoon's Restaurant, Taunton; for rides contact Eleanor Cabral. Couples' Club communion brunch II a.m. Sunday, parish center; all parishioners invited . CATHOLIC SOCIAL SERVICES, FR Cambodian refugee community is in need of pots and pans, beds, mattresses, chairs, tables, etc. Information: 674-4681. ST. MARY, FAIRHAVEN Grade 2 students will participate in 9:30 a.m Mass at Our Lady's Haven Sunday.

pASTORAL ASSOCIATE MAINE SEACOAST PARISH Dynamic parish community is searching for a Pastoral Associate. Master's Theology or related area preferred plus successful comparable experie:1ce. Music/Choir ministry direction experience desirable.

Starting Salary Negotiable Send resume to:

1

Lti·F~ASHION FAMILY FUN!

St. Mary's ~hurch Attn: Search Committee P.O. Box 368 • Wells, ME 04090


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