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Transcript of 04.16.82
twenty-fifth•anniversary
edition
20c, $6 Per Year VOL. 26, NO.. 15 FALL RIVER, MASS., FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1982
, , , ,...... . .. . ', ., ... , .... ,. . .. ,. . .. . , , .
ANNIVERSAJRY GREETINGS ,
TO
I
Diocesan' Facilities Office . I
368 North Main Street I
Fall Rriver, Mass. '..
... '.'
Providing ~killed Nursing Care For the': Aged and Infirm
O~ the Diocese· . For .OveYt.Forty-troo Years
. , I i
Rev. Msgr. John J. Regan, V.E. Executive CoordinatorI .
Rev.1Lucio B. Phillipirio
Assistant Coordinator
. MARIAN MANORCATHOLIC MEMORIAL HOME 33 Summer. Street . 2446 Highland Avenue Taunton, Mass. Fall River, Mass.
MADONNA'MANOR OUR LADY'S HAVEN
8S,North Washing!on Street . 71 Center Street
North Attleboro~ Mass. Fairhaven, Mass.
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. . . . . . . . , t ,• ",', " '0. '?'.'.".,. I, . .• ,. I ••• ,., •••••• , ••• , ••• . , , .
FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NIEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSEnS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDSt ean
20c, $6 Per Year VOL. 26, NO. 15 FALL RIVER, MASS., FRiDAY, APRIL 16, 1982
.aDll........... 11I......,..AprU' •• 19S,
dJThel ANmOR
The first page of our first issue April 11, 1957
twenty.fifth anniversary edititon
fALL RIVER. MASS•• FRIDAY, APRIL 16. 1982 VOL. ~6. NO. '"
the ancholS)
The first page of this issue A ril 16, 1982
Bishop's Message
April 16, 1982
Dearly beloved in Christ, .
In this special edition, our Diocesan newspaper, The Anchor, happily celebrates its Silver Jubilee, marking tWl;!nty-five faithful years as an instrument for the instruction, formation and sanctification of the faithful of the Diocese of Fall River.
From the time when my predecessor as Ordinary, Bishop Connolly, was inspired to found a Diocesan newspaper a quarter of a century ago until this very edition, The Anchor has come into thousands upon thousands of households throughout our region, proclaiming the Gospel and serving as a cohesive bond of unity for readers from one end of the Diocese to the other.
Of late, our beloved Pope John Paul II has reaffirmed the extraordinary importance of the Cat40lic press in the mission of the Church. Addressing a group of bishops on January 4, 1982, the Sovereign Pontiff spoke of our conviction that everyone, redeemed and loved by the Lord, is called to truth. The Holy Father suggested that the role of Jhe Catholic press in reflecting the truth is -more -importaIlCtoday .than ever before, both for' the.· enlightenment of consciences and for the dispeiling of false interpretations and insinuations. The Pope identified the Catholic press as an instrumentality of the magisterium, serving "to bring about in the reader that development of judgment which bririgs him into liberating and saving truth." We take a measure of consolation in the knowledge that The Anchor has served so very well in fulfilling the Holy Father's ~raphic description of the task of the Catholic newspaper.
The title of our Diocesan weekly, The Anchor, is indicative of the intent and the expectations of all who are concerned with its publication. Symbol of the virtue of hope, an anchor stabilizes and secures a vessel, providing protection from the swirling currents and tides which could bring danger and harm. Here in southeastern Massachusetts, where our proximity to the sea .makes such a symbolic title all the more comprehensive and vivid, we thank Almighty Go~ for the security and stability which The Anchor has provided these many years as we move along on our voyage of faith and life. On this significant anniversary, we pray with confidence to the Heavenly Father that the apostolate of our Diocesan newspaper will continue, strong and faithful, for the many blessed years to come, helping all in our Diocese to an obedience of informed and vibrant faith.
Devotedly yours in Christ,
Bishop of Fall River
,'.2 '. ',' THE ANCHOR.,..,Anniversar.y. Editio·n....fri;, April 16; ·1-982 ' ': I,
The Anchor's early! years· Birthdays are a time for rem· sociate pastor at St. Josep.h's
iniscing. The Anchor is no ex- Church, then as pastor at St. ception to the rule. As we com· Louis and Holy Name parishes, plete our first quarter century, all 'in Fall River. we look back at one of the most Additionally, for many of his exciting eras in the lorig history' . Anchor years, Msgr. Shalloo of the Church.
Happenings in the universal Church will be touched on elsewhere in this special issue, but world events are, after all, seen
. through local eyes. Who does not remember where he or she was when news of the f!,ttempts on the lives of pope and president flashed on radio and television? In each mind such moments wed the familiar to the event of world significance.
This is an /
important function ofa newspaper: the examination of what this or that major event means to us as a community! to
_me as a person.
O.n every newspaper' one person makes the major decisions as to direction, as to how 'news
, will be handled for the particular audience to be reached. On The .Anchor, for 18 years, that person was Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, our general manager.
His figure looms large in any retrospective view of the newspaper. With wit, good humor and priestliness he held the operation together, combining editorial duties with demanding pastoral ~esponsibilites, orginally as as
taught at ·the former Sacred Hearts School of Education, and was chaplain of the Fall River Serra Club and Physicians' Guild. In 1968 he was named promoter of justice for the'diocesan marriage court, a position he still holds, and in 1963 he chaired the fundraisirig campaign for Bishop Connolly High School in Fall River.
Of tha.t bare-bones operation he' chuckled, "We studied the campaign a fundraising outfit put on for another school and did it all ourselves without hav,ing to go outside for, expensive help."
Without fanfare and frills, Msgr. Shalloo ran The Anchor in . much the same thrifty style,putting together a dedicated team of newspersons and business staffers.
They included Hugh J. Gold-en: managing editor until his death .in 1970; and John T. Crowley,with the paper from its second issue until his death in 1977.
Very Rev. John P. Driscoll,. pastor of St.' Lawrence parish, New Bedford, and head of the: New Bedford deanery of the dio-
I
ces~, was assistant general man. ager of The Anchor and its peer
less: editorial writer. and Miss Rosemary Dussault has been advertising and business manager since before day one, working wittl, the task force that prepared for the first issue of April II, 1951.
Others have come and gone through the years, but the above are the pioneers who built the foundation on which The Anchor stands.
.Thinking about those early days) Msgr. S1\alloo said recently that Bishop James' L. Connollyl now retired, began thinking a,bout a .diocesan newspaper in late 1956.
"S6 many things were going on in' those days and the secular papers could give us only limited
Icoverage," recalled Msgr. Shal
,100. l'Bishop Connolly realized. that a diocesan newspaper. could give ;readers a comprehensive view ,of church news."
He Isaid that Bishop Connolly tapped him for the general manager'sl job during a lakeside stroll at the annual' priests' retreat at Cathedral Camp, East Freetown.
I With Hughie Golden, a journ
alist turned lawyer, Msgr. Shal100 began planning the ,new paper.: A preview of its contents was gi.ven by Golden to a. meet
!Turn to Page Four I
MSGR. SHALLOO
"
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The clergy, religioU:.s and faitkful :la~ty
of the Cathedral Parish happily c~nvey
sincere felicitatioons to UYHE ANCHOR" on ... . :
this significant .Anniversary.
T he' Cathedral Parish family IS proud to
be among the nlunber of parishes I~naintaining
the ffTotal Parish Co~erage" plan,' so that
all our members enjoy anti benefit )rom reading .ffTHE ANCHOR" e,very week.
I I
The' Mother Parish of the 'entire Dl~ce:,c
extends congratulations and good ivishcs to ffour" newspaper!
./
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~athef)iat ~hut:clz'. " . \. ~
(~t. &Har:y ro th~&'288umption eJ,att dllil'er
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OUR LADY OF MOUNT CARMEL PARISH REV. MSGR. LUIZ ·G. MENDONCA, V.G.
EXTENDS
Sincere Congratulations
and·
Warm Best Wishes .
The Anchor's early years Continued from Page Two
ing of Bishop Connolly and diocesan priests.
Noting that national and world coverage would be supplied by the National Catholic News Service, Golden pointed out that no metropolitan newspaper had as many "reporters" of newsworthy items as potentially existed in
. the diocesan clergy. He asked the priests to alert parish leaders to this new avenue of publicity for their activities. . "We do hope. to bring the people of Provincetown closer to the people of Marisfield and the Attleboros by reporting com" pletely all newsworthy activities," Golden told the priests. . "This newspaper, an instrum
ent of Catholic ACtion, will bring the church's teachings on philosophy and theology to the lay people," he said.
"We ... appreciate the challenge, posed by the. tremendous task we are about to undertake," continued Golden. "With your cooperation,· we will provide
, each home in the diocese with something worthwhile - a paper which will be a credit to the diocese - and together we will conquer the challenge."
Saying that "everybody was great" and he received "unbelievable cooperation" from everyone associated· with the newspaper, Msgr. Shalloo nevertheless paid special tribute to his
longtime associate, Father Driscoll.
"Many priests used his editorials as takeoff points for their Sunday sermons," he said, adding that Father Driscoll's com~ ments were so tightly written "it· was impossible to cut them. If they were occasionally a line or two long, we'd simply reduce the size of the masthead for that' week."
How· many hours a week did Msgr. Shal100 put in at The Anchor? "Fourteen hundred" was his quick reply. In truth, the paper. was never far from his mind at all those 18 years.
And what does he see as the future, for his creation?
"As long as there's a need, there's a future," were. his reassuring words. "People still want to sit iri a chair and read."
One last question: Who had the inSl>iration to call the newspaper of a coastal diocese The Anchor?
Loquacious Msgr. Shalloo turned taciturn.· "Avoid giving names," he muttered, then turned around and did just that. "As soon as the' nam.e was mentioned to Bishop Connolly," he said, "he gave us the quote from St. Paul, carried on the front page for many years: An anchor of the SOUl, sure and firm,"
So who named The Anchor? One guess.
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:AN EARLY SIXTIES photograph at St. Mary's Cathedral recalls old-style vestplents.
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As the Polish Cathblic Community celebrates I
the' 600th ]ub,lee of the Holy leon I
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of' Our Lady! In Czestochowa
ST., STANISLAUS PARISH COMMUNITY OF FALL RIVER . I .
Extends Silver !Anniversary Wishes:' I "
To thea . I
Its Editor, Staff and Contributors
TO ~
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WARmEST
COnGRATULATiOnS
ST. FRANCIS XAvi~: , ~,~ ,-,t't '% '»'
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~CHURCH I OF
. SAINT
PATRICK . Falmouth
. Offers Sincere .
. I . CONGRATULATIONS
an.d
BEST WISHES
to
ancho ~. .
on Its.' .
.
25th ANNIVERSARY
COnGRATUlATlon5 ••· i ' I
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the 1
,Ianc 0 i :> I
I"on a,
Q,UARTER CENTl-J,RY I
of · ·WItnessIng
God's 'Wor{] I,
ill our diocese. 1
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SAINT ANNE PARISH and 'SHRINE,
l~' ALL nI v:E n EVERYBODY READS The Anchor, from Bishop Connolly, pictured
with a 1961 issue, to a mysterious gentlemen who found a 1968 issue so engrossing that he read it all t.he way from St. Peter's Square in Rome to
• -----.. ' the'Holy Land.
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. ST. JOAN . OF
ARC CHURCH·
ORLEANS
CHURCH ·.OF THE
·VIS·ITATION
.. NORTH EASTHAM
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.. Rosemary Dussault~ The Anchor's anchor. . I , :
1
Meet Rosemary Dussault, The Anchor's anchor, the only crew ' member who's been aboard sinc~
before day one. Her involvement began, she
said, in February, 1957, two months before The Anchor~s first issue on April 11.
"We were all feeling our way," she said of those hectic days during which her first job was to bring order out of a chaotic initial list of subscribers to the new paper.
"The lists had been sent out to have addressograph plates made,'" she explained, "and the cards were returned just thrown into boxes. The only division was that they gave us one box for each city. We had to sort them by parish and street address."
Aided by a corps of 'eighth graders from SS. 'Peter and Paul School, Fall River, where Father John, Driscoll, The Anchor's assistant manager, was then curate, Rosemary finally got· the cards in order. Many are still in use, she says, each denoting a pioneer Anchor subscriber.
For its first few months The Anchor was housed in down-' town offices adjacent to those of Atty. Hugh Golden, its first editor. "When we were working on the subscription cards, we put long tables out'in the halls," recalled Rosemary. "Clients for
other offices in the building had to squeeze by our eighth graders."
S'oon, however, The Anchor's present offices at 410 Highland A:venue, Fall River, became available and the fledgling paper had room to grow. So~did Rosemary's job. With the departure of The
'Anchor's original bookkeeper, she took over that assignment, along with the general office routine.
A special project was the development of a "morgue" of photographs and clippings on a 'wide variety of subjects. that could be called on to' supply background information for Anchor stories.
-One facet of the task was getting a photograph of every diocesan priest, recalled Rosemary. "Finally we sent it photographer to the annual priests' retreat with orders to get a ITont and side view of everyone there. There was a lot of hasty shaving and dashing for clerical collars," she chuckled.
A standqut event during the Anchor's early years was the 1958 death of Pope Pius XII. "We had no files on the procedures that take place between the death of one pope and the accession of another; so we were really burning the midnight oil combing through reference books," she said.
Thos~ hastily assembled facts stood The Anchor in good stead three more times during the past quarter :century, as the pap,er recorded! the passings of John XXIII, Paul VI and John Paul I.
I .
While Roseinary became busierI I
IROSfMARY DUSSAULT
and busier with' other facets of The Anchor operation, a succession of aSSistants concentrated on' the all-idtportant circulation and mailing department. .
But dJring The Drive, the annual hectic period during which most A~chor subscriptions are up for renewal, she returns to her origihal post, leading her cohorts in toinplying with increa~-
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ingly complicated post office mailing regulations, separating the quick from the dead among subscribers and cajoling harried pastors into checking and return~
ing their parish subscription lists. .
Every year Rosemary sighs, "We'll never get through in time," but every year she meets her deadlines, usually juggling two or three other projects simUltaneously. This, year's extras include this special Anchor issue and another couple of specials just over the horizon. " Which brings us' to advertis
ing. Special issues mean special ads, which mean specially long hours for The Anchor's advert'ising manager.
You guessed it. That hat, too, belongs to Rosemary. Wearing it means calls on advertisers, enor~
mous amounts of telephone time and hours spent on copywriting and layout. .
Also slipping in shyly and claiming its share of attention is the diocesan office of communications, headquartered at The Anchor and in frequent need of
.having releases sent to area newspapers, television and'radio stations. . It sounds like at least five jobs
but Rosemary survives them all, , aided by her willingness to put
in 'extra hours as needed; and
also by' the fact that she finds the whole thing a challenge or five challenges. . Among her responsibilities she n~mes as most enjoyable her start-to-finish involvement in The Anchor's advertising. "Personal contact is the name of the game there," she says.
She also counts as a plus the many contacts she has made over the years with Catholic press advertising personnel. "We have an informal assistance network," she said, "and feel free to call each other up for advice or information as necessary." , For years, she said, she was
the only woman advertising executive at Catholic Press Association conventions. "When the advertising sessions started," she recalled, "the chairman would say 'Gentlemen :- and Rosemary - may I have your attention?'"
Nowadays, she says, many more women are in advertising and she finds them "sharp and quick."
Another plus of CPA membership has been the opportunity it gives her to travel. Last fall she combined attendance at an inter- ' national press meeting with a tour of Germany and later this spring she will continue from an Arizona convention to vacation in California.
Turn to Page Eleven
Sincere Cepngratulations i
and
Warm Best Wishes I I,
To I
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SAINT MARY'S PARISH• I •
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Seekork, Mass. I·
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iCO·NGRATULATIONS· -. i
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......... 'BEST WISHES. . . '~.'.......• ', . . " . . . '" ,
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25 YEARS ,l
:::
~The:\.
AUSPICa MARIA
V • • " I
•·CHOR! . of'" " An Anchor of the Soul. Sure and Firmc:.-ST,PAUL: .'. .CATHOLIC .
JOURNALISM . i I
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The Parish .... I ...
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C'ommunity .,. I
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.' ST. TH ERE SA Our Lady ,of VictoryI' • I
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of The Child Jesus! Parish i
SO·UTH A·TTLEBORO· ~ . .
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.-----_....--........."...-.........._--The
Priests and Parishio·ners
of
ST. THOMAS MORE
SOMERSET
------...__./'...._------
IN 1962 The Anchor celebrated its fifth birthday, complete with a cake; hI 1963 it chronicled the assassination of President Kennedy, picturing St. Mary's Cathedral overflowing with mourners at a requiem Mass.
....
To I
t eianCO
Notre Dame de Lourdes
NOTRE DAME de LOURDES'
Priests, Sisters, Brothers
and Parishioners
I Send. Their Prayers
and Good W-ishes
A NEW BEGINNING 1982
Fall River, Massachusetts II .
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Rev. Ernest Blais PrQsflor'
REV. NORMAN G. GRENIER
REV. ROBERT BLAIS, O.P.
ASSOCIATES . \., ~. .
, . . ' ,,~ -,'~ 0," ,OJ'.,. 0'.'\ ."_ w ""Jo.,,#~# 'II.'II'.'~,,·
Memories of an':.' .',": > ' :'~ c, ,. I
Anchorite 11
By Pat McGowan
The dictionary says an anchorite is one who lives in seclusion,usually for religious reasons.Half that definition applies toThe Anchor's quite sociable staff.What we do is for religious reasons but we are seldom accusedof being seclusive.
Sometimes we wish the wholedefinition applied to us, however. Like when people call tocomplain about the new Code ofCanon Law ("How come youput that out without the popeknowing about it?"); or to gripethat we print far toomuch or notnearly enough about
a) the charismatic renewalb) peace and justice issuesc) uiarriage and the familyd) abortion and birth control.
Most of the time, though, it'spretty nice being our brand ofAnchorite. I speak from the ex.,ert~ of 24 years, 18 parttime, six fulltime.
Not many people begin theirjournalism career from a hospital bed, but that's how it waswith me. I was at St. Anne'sHospital, relaxing after the birthof daughter number 2 <and thosewere the days, ladies - sheetsan<J pillowcases hand-embroide~ by the sisters and Sistersea'to assure every mother thathers was the most beautifulbaby St. Anne's had ever beenprivileged to usher into' theworld).
Anyway, in came MonsignorDaniel Shalloo, then Anchor gen·eral manager, for what I thoughtwas simply a pastoral visit. Butsomewhere along the line heslipped in an assignment to covera CYO meeting. Things continued from there.
For 18 years the job was parttime, woven around the arrivaland upbringing of seven childrenand made considerably easier because' of living across the streetfrom The Anchor's editorialoffices.
As the children got older,messenger service was' pretty
AnchorContinued from Page Eight
Rosemary is a Fall River native. living most of her life inImmaculate Conception parish,where she was among foundersof its credit union. A few yearsago she crossed the TauntonRiver to Somerset, lil\ere shebelongs to St. Thomas More pllrish, coincidentally pastored byMsgr. John J .. Regan, The Anchor's financial administrator.
In 1970 she received the Marian Award for distinguished service to the diocese.
Looking back over -1hat ser~
vice, now in its 26th year, shespeaks gJowingly of The An·chor's editors.
"I've enjoyed working withevery one of them," she said.
good too. Going to The Anchor(or Mommie was an.extremelypopular activity, the attractionbeing Rosemary Dussault's generosity with pencils and scratchpads.
Rosemary. then and now, theglue that holds The Anchor together, and her cohorts, firstCollette Burkett, now in Cali.fornia, then Carol Bennett, nowin Texas, were the only fulltimeAnchorites.
The rest of us were parttimeand sometimes didn't see eachother for weeks on end. Ourcommon point of reference was"the chair," a battered woodenobject at the editorial door,ready to receive our copy for theprinter. Anyone going in the direction of that printer. LearyPress, of Fall River for nearly allour 25 years, was dl1ty bound totake along the latest offerings
The parttimers included Msgr.Shalloo, editorialist Father JohnP. Driscoll and Father John Fol·ster. Very important too wereeditor Hughie Golden. and Latinscholar and walking reference onstyle and usage John T. Crowley,both now deceased.
Saturday mornings were usually a gathering time, when John,Hughie and Msgr. Shalloo heldstrategy sessions. OccasionallyBishop James L. Connolly. nowretired, would wander in to jointhe discussion and cast a fatherly eye around the office.
Tum to Page Twelve
MOY MOY at age 6. She's the major reward that hascome to reporter Pat McGowan and her family as a result
.of association with The Anchor.
ij
'~
-'-~'.~~~~~":.:",.'_~,..
OUR LADYof
; HEAl.TH CHURCHFall River
rk _-'---==0:-.---- -'--
...' -.,- -'- - -
CONGRATULATIONSand
BEST WISHES
ST. ANTHONY'S PARISHEAST FALMOUTH
OFFERS
SincenGood....
W,l,b.,
THE SACRED HEART PAmSHFALL RIVER
CONGRATULATIONS ,PARABENSj
i
o~. rour 25th Anniversary ;-Priests and-Parish~io~nJPe~rsl-----fJ---
~- --- - ~ - = - -
close friendships with people metas interview subjects. And aspecial gift has been the development of a largely rose-coloredview of the world contributed toby hundreds of diocesan Catholics.
What a lovely lot: priests, sisters, kids, parents, singles, marrieds, leaven in the dough,stumbling sometimes but basically hanging in there, buildingthe, Kingdom.
Of course there have beenmany interesting experiencesover the years but a standout remains a 1963 interview with thelate Msgr. Antonio Vieira, then98, a priest for 75 years and for56 years pastor of Our Lady ofMt. Carmel Church, New Bedford.
Accompanied by a photographer and expecting a baby in thevery near future, I rang the rectory doorbell and explained my
Turn to page 23
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCH
North Easton, Massachusetts
Anchorite
Keep Up The Good Work
HOLY TRINITY PARISHWest HarWich
Tile Catlaolle Pre••-,. e••entlal i ••teerld ..,lIere .....sneedla are a:......"
. "tlae .trOltfle.t~r.tfaat aneet tile destl."
._.. ---01 Itu•••itg."-
POPE JOHN PAUL IIJanuary I, 1982
Continued from page twelv1e
fingered Bill Ginalski; quietlycheerful Roy Moreira.
And the whole front-oflficegang: Marion Frizado, RonmieGalvao, Barbara Potts, MarthaMcGinn, Connie Black, PaulaPotts and Janice Reed.
And of course indestructiible~ohn and Josephine McGinn,;go109 strong as they near their 80s,Leary Press owners and residents, with John's aunt, PeggyNelson, of the famed Lizzie Biorden house~ which coexists withthe press..
Advantages of being an Anchorite are many, not least ofwhich is working with the C~ur
rent editor. _The situation doesnot exist for which he cannotfashion a one-liner and his effervescent personality adds fizz tothe weekly round, despite thefact that The Anchor's is onlyone of the many hats he wears.
Other benefits include seveJral
f~~:, \ ...
WAS IT ONLY YESTERDA'Y? File photos from the early Anchoryears reveal how sisters' clothillg;has changed. Included are Dominican, Holy;~Union, Mercy, Charif!l-fJf Nazareth .and DOrQtM3J\ si$.1,ers.
. ~ ,- _ ~ c'· j, *~"'~~~':\*':':~i,,~,..~~"'l-:·;~"'Jc~J.'-~"":>"""'~~~~~.""I.~,~ .."l'..·A·;';~~""~·:!' ~e~'~;:-'~ ~~ ,"
But for two days a week glamor is traded for the reality ofLeary -Press, where words turninto type and arrange themselvesneatly on the printed page.
Leary's is the home of theoblique wisecrack, the "it'llnever fly" attitude that somehowalways does make it fly. Although everyone there wouldrather die than admit it, there'sa lot of pride in turning out agood print job, week after week.
Right here I salute ArthurChadinha, lover of fine printingand lord of the linotype; CarlGagnon, makeup man extraordinaire whose patience and vocabulary are limitless; ever-obligingLeo Fagan, whose eye is moreaccurate than any pica gauge..
Also Ronnie Evans, who makesthe whole show go; Dee Motta,everyone's envy all summer asthe inhabitant of the air-conditioned camera room; lightning-
Turn to Page Thirteen
SOUTH DARTMOUTH
PRIESTS, DEACON ANDPA'RISH·ION\ERS OF
the
anc
ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA.PARISH
FALL RIVER
ST. MARY'S PARISH
Anchorite
EXTEN D
BEST WISHESTO
Continued from Page Eleven
Those were the leisurely years,before the National CatholicNews Service teleprinter chattered at us all day, the yearswhen trips to the post office formailed packages of national andinternational news stories werean important part of the routine.
At that time The Anchor offices, in what was once a millowner's elegant home in FallRiver's Highlands section, werebare and spare. The woodenfloors were splintery, my wooden chair uncompromisingly upright. Du~ng .my parttime yearsI didn't have a desk and shareda typewriter.
Of recent.years, however, TheAnchor has glamorized itself abit. We now have curtains, carpeting and more comfortablechairs. And Rosemary has twocoworkers, Lucille Fontaine andLinda Forcier, to deal with thenever--ending chores of circulation and mailing.
Brewster
OUR'LADYOF THE;
CAPE
TO
lIelicitations andbest wishes
SACRED HEART PARISHNorth Attleboro
OUR LADY OF. THE ANGELSP·ARISH
FALL RIVER
WARMESTCONGRATULATIONSFROM
~--SINCERM~,,-
CONGRATULATIONS
Anniversary
Best
Wishes
..
8ncholS> ... For A· .
Faifh'sEye-View
SAINT PIUS TENTH PARISH
·----SOUf-H .-¥ARMGUfH-
How The Anchor's It would be hard to improve
on Father John Foister's description of the weekly job of putting out The Anchor: Acting editor for 14 months during the 1970s, he wrote: "The publication of The Anchor is an ongoing, constant apostolate under the pressure of the human unexpected in news and the unsympathetic and unchanging deadline.
"In all the hectic happenings of each day, The Anchor staff attempts to bring meaning and value to the whirlwind of daily history, anxious tensions, crying needs. It attempts in all this busy loudness and echo to make clear the church's constant effort to explain, to unify and to give spirit."
That's why it's done. But how does news get from the reporter's notebook or the news wire to the newspaper you're holding?
Other papers may have differing procedures, but at The Anchor each week's issue begins with a newsprint dummy of the paper-to-be and a schedule sheet listing all regular features plus "extra" stories and features available for use if needed. _-
As each feature, such as "Know Your Faith" or "On Record," Is prepared for the printer, it is checked off the schedule sheet. Similarly, as news stories are readied, they are entered on
the dummy in the position where they will most likely be used.
Concurrently, stories originating in the Fall River diocese are written, photographers are dispatched to important events and the popular Steering Points column is prepared..
Tentative plans are made for the showcase front page, always with the realization that unexpected world or local events may dictate last-minute changes.
This background work continues for three days a week. On the other two days comes the job of putting it all together.
That takes place at the Leary Press in the shadow of St. Mary's Cathedral in downtown Fall River. There stories are set in type and they and the week's quota of advertising are fitted on each page.
Although the last part of The Anchor's print operation is an upto-the-minute offset process, stories are initially set on linotype machines well over half a century old. The wedding of ancient and new techniques might be considered a symbol of the church, combining old and new
......................;cD GOD'S ANCHOR HOlDS
• • • • • • • • • •• • ••••••••• 1
. THE ANCHO~~An'niversary Edition-Fri., April 16, 1982 17
published as she continues her 2,000 year
. old teaching mission. Besides, say aficionados, the
"hot type" of linotypes yields a print job far superior to the "cold type" of computerized operations.
At any rate, from the linotype the hot type goes to long me.tal trays or galleys. "Galley proofs" are made from these and given a first reading for errors.
The type is then arranged in metal b9xes, each the size of a completed Anchor page, page proofs are made, the material is proofread a second time and final. corrections are made.
The process now enters the 20th century as "reproduction proofs" are prepared on highgloss paper, photographed and transferred to large light-sensi. tive aluminum sheets, four An. chor pages to a sheet. .
The sheets are placed on Leary's huge offset press and, with last-minute adjustments of ink flow and paper tension, everything comes together and with a roar like ocean thunder .the presses roll. ,. In less than three hours, nearly 30,000 Anchors are printed, folded and ready to be addressed, bundled and bagged for the post office.
And it's time to start the process all over again.
MUCH OF OUR NEWS comes to us on this Extel teleprinter, which speeds communications from the National Catholic News Service in Washington, D.C. Here it's admired by Bishop Daniel A. Cronin and Father John F. Moore, editor, at right. (Torchia Photo)
MOST SINCERE CONGRATULAliONS
We share ·in
Joyful Celebration
as you· begin
your next quarter century
of publication
ST. MARI{'S CHURCH ATTLEBORO, MASS
.'
, {
18 THE ANCHOR-Anniversary E~ition-Fri., April 16, 1982
I . AFrER ITS JOURNEY from reporter's notebook or teleprinter through the· ~yPesetting and printing process, here's the finished product,.
the .hotoff ·the press Anchor, .being ch~cked by Father Moore, makeup man Carl Gagnon and Ronald Evans, :Leary Press president.
'. . . . ... " . i
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John· the Evangelist· Parish .. Pcbc2isset .i .,
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·St.
- -.,.,
25th· Anniversary of
...
ST. AUGUSTINE
VINEYARD HAVEN
MASS OF THANI(GSGIVING .. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17th
Most Reverend Bishop Daniel A. Cronin,
Principal Celebrant
Dear Father Moore mad Staff,
I wish to extend my hearty congratulations and felicitations to you and to The Anchor on the occasion of its, 25th
anniversary. This journal has rendered distinguished service to the Holy Mother Church in vigorously promoting and defending her doctrine. The Anchor's unyielding 'idelity to the Church's Magisterium and to our Holy Father, Pope John Paul II, is an example worthy of emulation by all of the Catholic people. May
divine Providence continue to bestow His blessings on you and everyone who' is associated .cith the apostolate of The
Anchor.
P ARISII RENEWAL .. NOVEMBER 6·12 Father Thomas Tobin; C.S.C.
- Entertainment
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'......
North Falmouth
...,
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.THE WORLD FOR THE SACRED HEARTS
:~SAINT ELIZABETH SETON i PARISH .. i
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CONGRATULATIONS
AND BEST WIS·HES
T.o·.
-THE ANC·HOR·
THE SACRED HEARTS FOR THE WORLD
Anchor Sampler . The, following are exeerpts
from early Issues of The Anchor. III III III
New St. Mary's Church, now nearing completion in North Seekonk, is a monument to years of prayer, sacrifice and toil.
The new church, located in Cherry Hill Acres plat just over the Attleboro line in Hebronville is less than a mile from the present edifice on Hebron Avenue. The church will be dedicated at 7:30 May 30.
- April 11, 1957 (I (I (I
Beginning September 1957 special bus service will be avallable from Providence, Pawtucket and Fall River for day students attending Salve Regina College. Reasonable weekly rates.
- April 11, 1957 III III III
The Anchor's first foreign subscriber is Rev. John Lawlor, MM, native son of New Bedford and Maryknoll missionary stationed at the parish of St. Rose de Lima in Lima, Peru.
In a letter to Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, general manager of The Anchor, Father Lawlor expresses his pleasure that the Fall River diocese now has its own paper and with congratulations sends along his best wishes for success.
- April 25, 1957 III III 011
Silence Is the byword In St. Anne's Hospital.
However, every day at 5:30 p.rn. the Hospital Is no longer In the quiet zone for at that moment the wards and rooms are filled with the responses to the rosary.
As part of Catholic Action done by the Legion of Mary, Our Lady of Good Health Praesldlum, the LegIonaries have arranged to have the rosary recited ~r the pubUc address system of the hospital.
- May 9, 1957 (I (I (I
Lois Marie Eveleth, a senior at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, has been awarded a certificate of ~uperlative Merit in Latin as $he l'esult of a nationwide tlXamination conducted by the~sspciation for the Probotion of ,~e Study of Latin.
- May 30, 1957
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YOUNGSTERS FROUe at St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, in this 1964 photograph. l
BEST WISHES FRANCISCAN FATHERS
and PARISHIONERS
Holy Cross Parish· Fall River
" (ttlng~lltullltiunj" from the Parish family of
ST. RITA lIII.... MARION'"""'''-------_....
ST. BONIFACE
CHURCH
New Bedford
Multos Annos·
Ad
OFFERS
ST. MARY'S CHURCH
FAIRHAVEN
,
CONGRATULATIONS and.
BEST WISHES
..............................................
..' ',,"
"~----------------... Ad MultosAnnos Our Lady of the Assumption
NEW BEDFORD
ePrartfju( . ConpUutdlionJ
THE ' 1------------..... PARISH ST. JOSEPH COMMUNITY TAUNTON
UJ31lli UJl~hf~ . ST. MARGARET'SCHlIJRCH
BUZZARDS BAY
,QU,R LADY of the ISLE N',A'NTUCKET
Extends' WARMEST
CONGRATULATIONS
Immaculate Conception Parish TAUNTON
Extends
war.. Special Greetings To
theanc S'T. JOSEPH CHURCH
N'ORTH DIGHTON
Happy 25th,
Anniversa..y
..-Blessed Sacrament Parish FALL RIVER
ST. ROCH'S PARISH Fall River
St. Peter the Apostle Parish PROVINCETOWN
Congratulations
.. .CongratuZations and Our
Best Wishes
.'
:-OFFERS-
FRANCISCANS FATHERS
ST. HEDWIG ••' New Bedford
; ••••••• : •• :u •• " ••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••• _••
·.WARMEST CONGRATULATIONS
ST. LOUIS PARISH
FALL RIVER
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ST. JOSEPH"eorJiat PARISH
~l51~Pte.~.,' WQods Hole .
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ST. ANTH'QNY. OF PAD.UA: .. ·. Parish '''Community:
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NEW B EDF 0 RD
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1967 BROUGHT the closing of Sacred Hearts Elementary School, Fall River, one of ·many Ithat fell under the weight of financial problems and lack of teaching vocations; . in 1968 Bishop Connolly visited one of his favorite charities, the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home. of Fall River, as the Dominican sisters received a contribution from the Massachusetts flks Association.
•
The Parish Community OF
OUR LADY OF FATIMA' NEW. BEDFORD'
Extends
.ltdIIrtiksI - . . .
BESTWISHE.S· ··On.······:your
...
.25th , 'Anniversary
THE I
.j. PARISH COMMUNI"Y.· of
.SACRED -HEART
.Oak Bluffs .. ':
.
Anchor Sampler The following are excerpts
from early issueS of The Anchor.
. Indications are that the current Catholic Charities. Appeal is prepared to surmount the challenge of 1956.
First parish returns and early Special Gifts reports being received at diocesan headquarters suggest that the Appeal with a
. Heart is equally as strong and hopefuHy stronger than the 1956 Appeal. Last year's final tota'l of $336,317.44 was the highest in the his'tory of 'Chafity in the diocese. '.
- May 23, 19.57
_ rhree changes of assignments of priests have. been announce by M~t Rev. Jmnes L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of 'Fall River.
Rev. Edward B. Booth, dean of ;Dukes and. Nantucket Counties ..!tOO p~stor .of Jhe Sacred Heart
Church. at Oak Bluff~ has been .name4 pastor.of., St. Mary's .Church, Nortb Attleboro.
.Rev. James E•.McMahon, admln(str.ator at St. John the Bap
. tlst Church, Central Village, has been appointed to succeed Father Booth at Oak Bluffs.
Rev. .William. R. Jordan, a curate'at St. 'Mliry'~ Church in Mansfield, has been ~eslgnated
_.admlnistrator of. St. .John the Baptist Church in Central Village.
-:.. May 30, 1957
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. . SISTERS OF ST. JEANNE d'ARC work at bishop's residence in first two pictures.
at St. Mary's Cathedral in third. All were taken in 1958.
Anchorite As We Celebrate 0111·
Continued from Page Thirteen
lOOth ANNIVERSARYmission to the housekeeper. She seated us in a parlor and scur We Offer Heartyried away. We waited and waited ~nd waited as the- hour of our Congratulation. Toappointment came and went.
Finally a young priest ap The An.cllo,,· peared and inquired what he could do for us. Once again I explained. He collapsed in laughter.
The housekeeper, with little English, had jumped to the conclusion that the photographer and I were in a hurry to regularize our relationship before the baby's arrival. But she couldn't ask Msgr. Vieira to see us· because he was waiting for the important lady from The Anchor.
On another occasion, I was visiting a home for a nighttime interview. At the precise instant I rang the doorbell, every light FALL RIVERin that part of the city went out. Hard not to feel responsible.
SSe Peter and Paul Parish
The major reward, however, that The Anchor has given me and my husband is our beautiful Chinese daughter.
In February, 1963, I localized HAPPYa story on the need of homes for Korean and Chinese orphans.
"For travel and processing costs averaging $315 to $400, far less than the cost of a new car, a family in the Fall River diocese can welcome one of these small members of the Mystical Body into its home and heart," I wrote. _ ANNIVERSARYThe thought haunted our own family and soon we 'found' ourselves embarked on the' adven- " ture of adoption. In nine months, just as for any baby~ we added Moy Moy to our brood. Since then she· has' been a constant OUR ,LADY OF 'GRACE delight.
Thank you; Anchor. P.ARISH
;. . '." '.Call 'to 'Intlriuaey " "The c;all to walk with the Lord
is fundamentally a call to inti· macy,' Anything less frustrates NORTH WESTPORT both p~ople' and the God of faith." - Dick Westley
ANNIVERSARY
GREETING'S
t THE PARISH
FAMILY
ST. JOHN THE BAP'TIST
Central Village
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OUR LADY OF
PERPE,T UAL HELP NEW BEDFORD
OFFERS
•• 1 Wlrtlbs : . -' .." .
~ur Warmest Boneratufations••
Sacred:' Hearts" .,Church " ,
, ,
FAIRHAVEN
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"A I glass that reflects the world - I . . .
and:. a .light ,to show· it the way~" I
(VAT. II)
theanc
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Congratulations i· -I
!From . I
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St. Mar,y'siParish' Family. ! .
NeW-BedfordI
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Sift & Card Shop FATHER HAROLD A. WHELAN, SS.<;C" left, and Father Edmund 46 :No..Main St. /Fall 'River
G. Francis, SS.CC., congratulate Weber Torres III, a 1961 pre-primary . 'Tel.: (617) 676-8632
"graduate" at S1. Mary's School, Fairhaven.
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THE STORY OF' 25 YEARS. " :
Twenty-five years.' A "The Mass, the· Sacraments, moment in the 2,000 year the public .prayers of the history of the Church. Less· Church," he· continued, "have
-long been looked upon as the than a third of the age of exclusive work of the priest, the Fall River diocese. Yet with the people acting as obedi
'in the providence of God ent but passive spectators." one of the most challenging "The active role of the people periods since that Resurrec- is stressed throughout th~ new tion moment without which ' Holy Week ceremonies," he said. . f .h' . That ,role has grown through the our alt IS va!n,' quarter century since 1957 and lis
What has happened in noted again and again in The , those 25 years? What did Anchor's pages.
The Anchor chronicle from Also in that first Anchor, the 1957 to now? Herewith a establishment of the mission of ,year-by-year rundown of St. Augu.stine, Vineyard Haven, great events and small of a!l a papsh v.:as announced, as
. h . .'. was the appomtment of Father moment~ t at WIll lIVe In John T. Higgins, now retired,' as world hIstory and of some its first administrator. already nearly forgotten.
Also noted was the appoint-' ment of Father, now Monsignor,
. William D. Thomson as administrator' of St. Mary's parish in1957 Norton. Msgr. Thomson is a:l~o
The lead story in The Anchor's now retired. At the same timefirst issue was headed "Diocese Father Joseph 'Powers, now pasPrepares for Holy Week" and in to,r of St. Eizabeth Seton parit Msgr. Patrick J. O'Neill, now ,ish, North Falmouth, was named pastor of SS. ,Peter and Paul par diocesan director of the Confra~ish, 'FaU River, itself celebrating
t~rnity of Christian Doctrine. 100 years of existence, explained the newly revised ceremonies of In national news, Archbishop Holy Week, part, he wrote, of WiHiam O. Brady of St. Paul, a "the modern movement to give Fall River native, was decrying the sacred Hturgy back to ,the those who opposed inclusion of people. , / a. cross on an emblem being de· .
l'iigned ;to commemorate the' centennial of Minnesota's statehood. ,
The :opponents were waging a campaign against "imaginary bogeymep in the dark," he· said.
And' coincidentally, in that first issue Bishop Robert. J. Dwyer: of Reno, Nev., in a column on the then new permission to celebrate Mass "at any time between dawn and. dusk," dis
.cussed Ithe church's slow adaptation ,to the' rhythm of urban
rather than rural life in scheduling Mass hours.
"It may be' fascinating," he pondered, "25 years from now, to -look back and recall the stages of our adjustment. It might be, of course, that we will all be
. farmers once more by then, and the process entireiy reversed,"
Bishop, it didn't happen! In 'the first of his many Anchor
editorials,Father John P. Driscoll expressed gratitude to other me
t
MSGR. JOHN J. REGAN, VERY REV. JOHN P. DRISCOLL, from 1957 to
sin~e ~,974 financhll admin 1975 assistant general manistrator of The Anchor. ager .of The Anchor. .. I
dia for their 'unfailing goodwill towards the church and outlined the duties of a Catholic newspaper. In a separate short paragraph he noted that the giving of palms to Christians on Palm Sunday symbolizes, in addition to its primary meaning, ",that we always bring something home from church with us, and precisely because we have given something to God,"
Nostalgically, a national news' item notes that average annual costs for public college students in 1957 were $1,500, for' private colleges about $2,000, while early supermarket ads list best quality roasts for .73 per pound:
The April 25 Anchor reported that the Order of Christ was to be conferred on Bishop James L. Connolly by the Portuguese government in appreciation of his deep interest in Portuguese im· ~igrants to the Fall River diocese. .
The Anchor front page for May 9, 1957, noted the start of con· struction on the chronic patient wing of Fall River's Catholic Memorial Home. Record-breaking worldwide food distribution activities of Catholic Relief Services were reported; and international affairs were brought close to home with an account of the
Continued on page 32
@[ill W@01][f 25111
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Our Lady of the Assumption Parish OS.IE RVI LlE
, II ••• Listen. I bring yolt news of great joy, a joy to be shared by the whole people."
Luke 2: 10
Congratulations on
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS of being a faithful messenger
THE ADMINISTRATION
FACULTY 'AND STUDENTS
OF
BISHOP STANG HIGH SCHOOL
North Dartmouth
II ••• Nut bearers ul/ly, bitt duers uf tbe word."
Congratulations on
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS of publishing the word
THE ADMINISTRATION
FACULTY AND STUDENTS
OF
BISHOP CONNOllY HIGH SCHOOL
Fall River
REST WISHES
To
theancholS)
II ••• I must proclaim the Good News 0/ the Kingdom' 0/ God to other tOWI/S too, because tbat is what I was sel/t to do."
Congratulations
Luke 4:43
on TWENTY-FIV,E ,YE~RS
of splAeading the Good News
THE ADMINISTRATION
FACULTY AND STUDENTS,
OF' ,
BISHOP FEEHAN HIGH SCHOOL
Attleboro
THE ADMINISTRATION
FACULTY AND STUDENTS
OF
COYLE-CASSIDY 'HIGH SCHOOL
Taunton
"
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THE ANCHOR-Anniversary Edition-Fri., April 16, 1982 ,,28, .
the moorin Some Personal Words
For this very special edition of The Anchor, the objective will be made subjective and the impersonal rather personal. , • '
, Few people, let alone few priests, have the chance in life of celebrating events that even though minor are historic. For some, this anniversary of a diocesan newspaper is but, to be graphic, a flea on a dog's back. Yet, for this editor, it is a moment for reflection accompanied by at least ~ small dose of personal satisfaction. :
This might seem somewhat smug, but it is only the statement of one who has been caught up for over 15 years by force of circUmstances'in the world of wor4s and print via The Mooring. I
In November, 19~7, this Mooring began almost by chance a ~ that, has lasted much longer than was anticipated. Twenty-two years ago, during my short but very interesting first assignment as a brash newlyordained priest, I was introduced to a parishioner, one Hugh Golderi. '
From the outset a unique relationship developed. At the time of our first meeting he looked upon me as one of those' if you can imagine in 1960, new breed' priests. Both of. us quick to verbalize, we excl1anged our ideas of the church readily and frankly. ,Our relationship continued over the years, even though I was no longer in Hugh's parish. "
On one occasion, when I was giving ~y opinion (which, as my friends know, is always available) on some matter, he turned to me and said, in essence, "Put' up or' shut up." .' , '
In effect; his challenge occasioned The Mooring column, which has ,become the trademark of this editor. I
For me, the 15 Mooring years have not been dull. To refre~h my memory, which has been known to draw a convenient blank, I took a quick glance' at The Moo,ring, both in the years when it appeared as a column and in those since it has graduated to being The Anchor's editorial voice. (Would you ~elieve that it has been filed and catalogued I by a devoted staff?) ". ' :
The parade of ideas, words, titles and comments that flashed before my eyes made even me wonder how one, could be so verbose, riot to mention opinionated. " ,
The Mooring during those years attempted to comment, refledt and express, an opinion that w~s nothing more than a personal reflection on the ,ti~es. Those columns were offered in honesty. After glancing: over theIr fIrst 10 years, I doubt that even if I had the opportunity, I would change their tone or content. '
Yet it must be stated that not once has there been any attempt to censure, change or subvert my copy. Encouragement to continue, inl spite of some objections, was always present in the person of the founding eqitor.
Msgr. .Daniel Shalloo was. not merely supportive and helpful but understand1Og, sympathetic and patient of this apprentice pen. He was an intelligent and quick-witted editor and above all a devoted churchman. ,!Ie gave me an insight into the printed word and its potential powe~ and Influence that only a caring editor could give a fledgling.' :
, Over the years, too, Msgr. Shalloo's ability to see the human aspect of lIfe's events has helped many, including thi~ editor, to "view life steadily and vie~ it whole." Wi,th ~his combination, words have validity. i
, D~r1Og The Anchor s fIrst generation, the p~per was favored in having an a~sIsta~t ,general manager who brought' to 'it the gift of his ,own 'mind and intellIgence. ' , Father John Driscoll brings me special memories from the days ~hen I was an altar boy and he was an assistant in' my home parish "of. St. Lawrence, New Bedford, where he is now pastor.
~is natural insight and vast knowledge were more, than supportive, espeCIally when he took the time, al~ng with, wonderful Jo~n, Crowley, to make sense out of a young man's Jumbledthoughis: ',", ','
, ~n the context of people who have dedicated, themselves in a: very speCIal way to the founding of The Anchor, one can't easily put aside the glue that k~pt everythi~g together in the beginning as i~ does t6pay. , ,The adheSIve element In the day-to-day operations of The Anchor' IS of course to be found in the energies, talents and concern of Rosemary
: Dussau~t. .For t~e entire li!e of this paper, she has been the thread of cont1OUIty WhICh has kmtted the involved administrative process of
. so~t?ern New.England's largest. weekly newspaper into a smooth, and , ,effICIent ?peratlOn. From subscriptions, advertising and mailings to parish
p.r., sh~ IS that loyal and devo~ed servant who-represents well our church. In ~e n~wspaper world <?ne doesn't work in a vacuum.' I acknowledge
the contrIbutions of these people to my beginnings in-the printed wodd not' o?ly because the~ have d?ne so. much to make our diocesan pape~ a VIbrant and effectIve fo!ce 10 the hfe of o,ur lo~al church but also because
they have bee~ 'so very helpful to me. Without Monsignor Shalloo, Father . "John Driscoll, Hugh Golden; John Crowley and Rosemary Dussault~
The Anchor would not have survived these 25 years. : The completion of 'its first decade brought The Mooring to a unique
juncture in journalism for a' columnist. A decision' had to be made to evolve the personai comments of a writer into the reflections of an editor.
',In ..January of 1977, The Mooring became the signed editorial of The Anchor ,with all that implies in newspaper jargon. For me it was not just a change but rather another challenge, another beginning in my life. .
I feel that I have not an obligation, but rather a responsibility to put into print the observation that these past five years have been perhaps
,the busiest of my life, possibly proving that life does begin at 40. I could not have kept my wits about me without the support, encouragement and freedom given to me by the publisher. ,
When all is said and done, both in the secular and church press, the publisher is the boss. Yet, while always recognizing Bishop Cronin as the publisher, I,know also that he is 'a person who can share loyalty and trust. Not once since the day when he and I entered the unique relationship of publisher and editor has he ever limited or curtailed the words, opinions or ideas of The Mooring. '
There are times, I am sure, when he might disagree with my style or content. Yet never has, he attempted to restrict editorial freedom. In fact, he has supported me in matters in which divergent viewpoints were more than merely uncomfortable. " ,
I make this refiectiQn knowing well that an editor is indeed reflective of the publisher. For my part, our working relationship has been more than successful. -He' knows my mind and as editor I respect his. What better relationship for newspaper people? '
These five years a~ editor have also brought me into many areas 0{1
church life which I would, o~herwise never have experienced. I have met hundreds of people througho~t the nation who have given themselves to the work of the church via the printed media. , As The Anchor completes 25 years of service and begins a new chapter in the life,of this local church, it does so with hope and optimism.
I, as editor, hope that I will be, wherever future days may find me, a loyal and honest churchman. I do not think a priest editor could pray for more. '
,?ver the m~n.tle in my office there hangs a portrait of one of my , favonte, pers~n~htIes, St. Thomas More (no relationship yet perceived).' Under the paIntlI~g I have placed a saying of his: "The things that I pray for, good Lord, gIVe me the grace to labor for," This is my own prayer in this apostolate. ,.. ~ . The Mooring is not merely a survivor from year to year. I want it to
lIve, to reflect and to teach as'should all workers in the, vineyard. As The Anchor continues as the biblical sign of hope, it would be
presumptuous to say that, all is perfect ,and ideal. Some, I am sure, have b~en hurt by my comments and reflections over the past 15 years. May I smcerely assure these people that my words have ,not been 'personal. In my own search for objectivity I must still deal with myself. If I have hl!rt, 'I pray that I can also heal.
Yet t?e word must be spoken, printed and proclaimed. The church ~ust contmue to serve and be served. A diocesan paper is an instrument 10 the work -of the church. Of its very nature it witnesses to the Good .News,. For the past 25 years The Anchor has done just this in the Fall RIve~ dIocese. May it continue this mission in future days, no matter what _theIr number.
, Like all.thi~g~ of man,.The ~ooring will some day fade and no longer be. Yet whIle It IS, may It be Just what it is, no more, no less. "
.
..... "." .c •
Father John F. Moore Editor
. "
thea OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER
Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue
,Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 , PUBLISHER
Most Rev. DanielA. Cronin, 0.0:, S.T.D. EDITOR FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATOR
Rev. John F. Moore Rev. Msgr. John J. Regan ~ LEARY PRESS - FALL RIVER'
. .
SACRED HEART CEMETERY . New Bedford,
REV. ERNEST A.BLAIS . AND STAFF
We Extend Our Congratulations
,And Warm Annil'ersary Greetings
To Our Diocesan Newspaper
. On Its Silver Jubilee
J
cPrarlrfu( conpOutdlions
SISTER MARY WlLUAM MANNION, RSM, of Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall River, receives golden juiJilee congratulations in March, 1963, from Lord Mayor James Gannon of Sligo, Ireland.
Diocese -of Fall River SOCIE1Y FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE- FAITH 368 NORTH MAIN STREET
FALL RIVER, MASSACHUSETTS O~720
THE CURSILLO MOVEMENT IN THE UNITED STATES
1957 ~ 1982
"/ appointed you to go and bear fruit, the kind of fruit that endures" (john 15:16), ,IN 1VIARCH, 1967, Bishop Connolly looks ~appy to bless the new CCD center at St.
Mary's pansh, Mansfield. I
SERRA CLUB
of
New Bedford '.
.Offers
SIXTY YEARS of religious life were marked in March, 1968, by Mother Gabriel Clare, 8?-year-old former principal of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River.
SINCERE CONGRATULATIONS
• ".1
Our heartiest support and Best Wishes.
May T~e Anchor continue to instruct and inform the people of God in our Diocese for years to come.
Sou·th CO'un:ty, ..
Worldwide
Marriage Encounter
Congratulations
and
Thank You /
,~ ....
THE OFFICE OF FAMILY MINISTRY
AND THE
DIOCESAN FAMILY LIITECENTER
REV. RONALD A. TOSTI, Director
500 SLOCUM ROAD
NO. DARTMOUTH, MA 02747
999·6420
32 THE ANCHOR-Anniversary edition:'-'F-ri.; April 16, 1982
The story of 25 years Continued from page 26
welcome extended by Cape Cod families to some 25 Hungarian high school students who had fled their homeland in the 1956 uprisings against Communism.
May 16 brought news of the establishment of the first NazaI'eth school for exceptional- children. It was located in ,FaIl River but Bishop Connolly in announcing it said he knew that it was "charity with a chain reaction already set up. I can well expect requests for services in other communities . .' . let me say simply that I should Hke nothing better than to provide for all."
Also reported was the second annual convention of the diocesan Ca'tholic teachers, who heard 'lectures by Dr. Annabelle Melville of 'Bridgewater State Col'lege and P.rofessor William J.. O'Ke,efe of Boston College Law School, among' others.
In June progress was outlined
mouth.. To properly enshrine the painting, 'Father Avila, now retired, renovated the entire church.
Also in June, Msgr.' John H. Hackett, now deceased, contributed an e~tensive article on the 1917 Code ,of Canon Law, then 40 years old: It was the first such collection of church law to have been made' in 700 years, noted Msgr; Hackett. Now, only
, 65 years from that ·time, onrushing events have made yet another updating necessary, and a new Code of Canon Law is due for promulgation this year.
July, 1957 brought establishment of the parish of Our Lady
, of Victory in Centerville and on the international scene the record-breaking total was noted of 121 speeches made by Pope Pius XII in .the 18th year ,of his reign.
"The large number of speeches . . . reflects the Jncrease in the number of international congress meetings in Rome and the growon construction of Our Lady of ' ing custom of ,delegates to such Fatima Church,' Swansea, and
the need for it was seen as "one meetings to be I'eceived in group audiences by the pope," the NCmore indication of the way CathNews reporter stated. ,olics are moving to subu·rban
, areas." In contrast, "hundreds of addresses" were delivered by Pope A touching story in' the issue
of June 20 relates how a famous John Paul II in 1980, in an era in ,which the importance of commuPortuguese artist, Henrique Me
dina, donated an outstandingly nications has been increasingly beautiful painting of Our Lady of recognized: Fatima to Father J. M. Betten A poignant moment .came i~
court e Avila, to be hung in St. August when Father Stanislaus Anthony's Church, East Fal- Bernard, SS.OC." who in 1905,
had cel~brated th,e first Mass in Our Lady of the AssumptionChurch, New Bedford, celebrated the last, -liturgy ,in the original . buil~ing, then preached in the new ch~rch.
And !a stUdy reported as schools I opened their doors in 1957 showed that diocesan schools,: Jthen .enrolling nearly 20,000 pupils, were saving' tax-
I ' payers nearly $5 million annually. Figures indicated that Fan River wasbeirtg saved nearly $2 mil
• I
Hon of the total' and New Bed.ford neatly $1 and a quarter mil-, Hon. T~unton foHowed with a figure of $787,939 and North Attleboro, .Fairhaven, Swansea, Attleboro, Acushnet, 'Dartmouth and Orleans reported lesser but substantial amounts, with the Orleans: figure standing at $36,000. :
. tAlso on the education scene, September saw the beginning of ,Bishop ConnoHy's regional high school plan which was eventually to see; the establishment of schools iin Taunton,' Attleboro, North Dartmouth and Fall River.
"We seek to fit o,ur youngsters for happiness in the home as well as in business, for eternity as well as in time. We set up stand
LEO W. FAGAN, longtime Leary Press employe, pulls Anchor page proof., (Torchia Photo) ,
ards of ~uccess similar' to those of Our Blessed Lord: 'What doth That month, too, the bishop it profit :to gain the whole world blessed Fall River's Nazareth at the cast of one's soul?' ", de Ha:ll School and New Bedford's clared a detter read in all church- Kennedy center,. named in honor
Ies on September 8. of the late Joseph ,P. Kennedy Jr., , I
who as a youth had summered with his family in Hyannisport.
The foreshadowing of increasing concern with medica·l ethics . '
Continued on page ,34
CONGRATULATIONS
Our Continued Support and,
Sincere Best Wishes To the a -
On its Twenty-Filth Birthday
.'
, REV.. ERNEST A. BL AIS and the STAFF
NOTRE· DAME CEMETERY . and
MAUSOLEUM .·Fall River
. \
--'34 THE ANCHOR-Anniversary Editi~n':':'F~'i':," April 16, 1982' j
.The .story i
of 25 years
,
as you celebrate YO'ur 25th AnniversaryI
I
i \
FALL RIVER ~IOCESAN ,COUNCIL OF CAT~OllC. NURSES
! .
I~ I'I
I
HCapi~g' With Christ" I
I For membership infor~ation you are welcom:~ NAME ············ .. i ,..
I
. to clip and mailcouf>on to: I I
I ADDRE~S
: .
I CITY or TOWN . BARBARA A. GAUTHIER, R.N. ~
I
Continued from page 32 came in December of The Anchor's first year, when Pope Pius XU stated in an address to the International Congress of Anesthetists that "one.is obliged to use only ordinary means to prolong his life."
A front-page article by famed moral theologian Father Francis J. Connell, CSSR noted that "this is the teaching of Catholic Church as now proclaimed by the Vicar of Christ. It is a middle course between the pagan theory of euthanasia that would allow a person 'suffering from a hopeless ailment to be put to death by some direct mean's and tne theory that every possible means must be used to keep a person alive, even when death would 'be a relief."
Also in that December The Anchor began its long tradition of announcing the ann'ual Bishop's 8all, even then a cherished diocesan annual event. Playing for the 1958 ball was Lester Lanin,"the number one band leader of high society." Among his recent engagements at that time had been a Monte Carlo ball honoring - Prince Rainier and Princess Grace and widely publicized Tiffany ball in Newport.
The Anchor's first Christmas issue. highlighted the famous "Yes, Virginia; there is a Santa Claus" story as well as Christmas photographs from diocesan
schools and' sports columnist Jack Kincavy's selections for "the first all-diocesan footbal1 team."
Named were starting ends" Steve Turkalo, Coyle; Martin Gomes, New 'Bedford Yoke; tackles Dave Yel1e, Coyle; Bob Asack, Taunton; guards Joe'
,Pavao, Durfee; Dick Blandori, Mansfield; center Gene Lopes, Wareham; halfbacks Ed Boyle,
, Coyle; Tom Eccleston, Wareham; quarterback Denny Redding, North Attleboro. '
Fullback, Pete Gazzola, Coyle; utility linemen, Jim Travis, Case; Dick Santos, New Bedford; Tino DiGiovanni, Mans~ield.
On the 1957'world scene death came for Msgr. RonaldA.Knox, '
. British convert, author' and Bible' translator and Father James M. Gillis, 'esp, author, orator and. journalist.
U.S. Catholics closed the year by observing a-day of prayer for tpe . persecuted of the world, while Pop~ Pius XI,I begged international leaders to renew efforts towards world peace.
1958 On the diocesan scene, Febru
ary of 1958 marked the elevation of six diocesan priests to the rank of monsignor. They, were Msgrs. Louis 'E. p'revost, J. Joseph
. Sullivan, Hugh A. 'Gallagher,
I . . John J. Shay and A. J. E. Bon "were of sun~hine and color minican Sisters of Charity of the neau, all' now deceased, and everywhere, the sunshine re- Presentation that staff St. Anne's Msgr. Humberto S. Medeiros, fleeted from gleaming floors, Hospital, Fall River. Previously
'now the ICardinal Archbishop of gaily patterned walls and crisp, candidates for the .community colorful bedspreads. had traveled to France for initial Boston. I
. April ibrought announcement "Modern but comfortable training. "The Fall River noviof the first diocesan-wide high chairs awaited.' guests in each tiate will eliminate these jourschoof science fair, which was room and cheerful peach-colored neys," stated the Anchor report. held in c,bnjunction with the an- curtains -separated the beds in Meanwhi'le, 17 young women nual teachers' convention. Taun the rooms for two and four pa- of the diocese entered the Sisters ton stu9~nts swept major awards tients. Individual thermostats of Mercy as part of a class of 46 at the' event, with 16-year-old control each room's heat and a. postulants receiving the com.Lea Cyr bf Raynham, a junior at two-channel radio system adjoins ,. munity's habit at traditional Sf. Mar~'s High School, wilmer every bed. In addition, it will be clothing and naming ceremonies of ~he top $100 prize for a genetic possible to pipe music through- at Mt. St. Rita Convent, Cumexperirtl~nt using fruit flies to out the building by means of a berland, R.I. Eight young women proveM9ndel's 'la~.of dominance. newly installed public address become postulants of the Reli
system. . . ' gious of the Holy Union of theSecond and third winners, both .Sacred Hearts. from M~gr. Coyle High School, "Occupational. therapy and
were 'Fim'othy W. Robbins, physical therapy"rooms are pro- September' brought the first of whose e~hibit' was titled "Chem- vided for the patients in addition what became a series of Labor ical' Analysis of Soil," and Fred to an up to the 'minute beauty Day Masses, with 'Bishop Conerick' J.IFitzsimmoh·s,. exhibiting parlor and barber shop. Care for nolly presiding at a Cathedral "Aspirini vs. Antacids and Buf details is evidenced. in such mat. . liturgy at which 20,000 union fered Aspirin." Their prizes were ters as bath~06ms,. with ,doors' .. workers were represented by $50 and I$25 respectively. wide enough to ad~it .~heel-. their delegates. The, observance
," chairs and the deadening'" of included a Protestant service and Also i;n April came formation sound as far as possible by the was followed by a breakfast. of a .Diocesan Catholic Youth use of acou!ltic tiled ceilings and Also in September Bishop CO,n-Council, i federating all Catholic
. heavy doors." nolly blessed a new 50-bed wing youth groups within the diocese under di'rectionofFather' Leo T. . The 1958 Catholic Charities· at Sacred Heart Home for the
'Sullivan; dioces~n CYO director. Appeal reached, a new high of' ,elderly, New Bedford. Mary T~ond :of'Holy Rosary par $366,207.98, topping the 1957 In October came news of the 'ish, Tau'nton, was named presi figure by $11,730.06, while Offi~ . death of ,Pope Pius XII, 83, whodent. . t. " .'. . . . cial '<;:atholic "Directory figures' had headed the universa\ church
May ~awthe opening of the showed that the diocesan Cath- for 19 years. In the Fall River . 74-bed inursing wing, of Fall' ollc population, had 'inCreased by" . diocese. each priest' celebrated River's €athOlic Memorial Home.' 3,334 to a tolalof 256,319. three Masses· for the repose of
"Our first impressions," wrote July news in 1:958 included ari- the pontiff's soul, while a rethe Anchor reporter who took a nouncement of the opening of an quiem high Mass was celebrated pre-operling ,tour of the facility, American' novitiat'e by the Do- Continued on page 36
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, YOUNG science students at Sacred Heart School, North
and white ecology flag at 1971 program on environment.
25 years Sister Ann Denise, SND, whiie the school facilities were pictured and described in the 20page paper.
The regular Anchor, dated Sept. 3, wasted no .time in announcing plans for the second regional high, Bishop Feehan, to be ·located in Attleboro.
In October. came word of four new monsignori. Named were Fathers. Francisco Bettencourt, Ray,nond Considine, John J. Kelly and M. P. Leonidas Lariviere, all now deceased except Msgr. Considine.
On the larger scene, 1959 is remembered as the year Pope John xxm announced preparations for the Second Vatican Council, the first since 1870. He also increased membership of ,the College of Cardinals to a precedentshatteril'lg 79 members.
Also in 1959 the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception,the largest U.S. Catholic church, 37 yelll's in the building, was dedicated; and the U.S. bishops lashed out at the proposed use of birth control methods to solve population problems. The bishops also identified Communism as the major obstacle to world peace.
1960 Early in 1960·future directions
of diocesan growth were foreshadow~ when Our Lady of the Highway Mission, West Yarmouth,! and St. Margaret's Church, Buzzards Bay announced plans tQ double their seating capacity, while land was purchased in Raypham for ,the future St. Ann's parish.
St. Peter the Apostle parish in Provincetown had the unique privilege of hosting three first Massell within a three-month period. 'farishioners ordained for the dio~ese were Fathers Manuel Ferrei1 and Louis Joseph, while Father ,~o Murphy was ordained as a Franciscan.
Construction of Cardinal O'Hara dormitory, the iargest new building to be added to the campus of StonehiU Col1ege, North Easton, was announced by college president Very Rev. Rich-
Continued on page 40
Attleboro, display green
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-EXTENDS-CONG RA T'U LA T I ON S
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25 Years of Sel'Y,ice to The Diocese of Fall Riyer
LEON J. LOMBARDI' Representative to The General Court
,1st Bristol District
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Greeti':lYs and HappyA.nnil'ersaj~y
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Best Wishes On Your 25th Anniversary. From The Bank That Cares
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BEST WISHES TO THE ANCHOR, ITS STAFF AND READERS, ON YOUR
25th ANNIVERSARY Our City is Richer For Your
Devotion To The Families of Fall River ~
, MAYOR & MRS. CARLTON M. VIVEIROS
~tJl(;h· 0/ tIw ~, O-AlaJJtr3
~II fhvej!'
congratulate5
·ancho~ •• ~ CON GRAT UL A T ION S •••
, The personnel of Mount St. Joseph School wishes to congratulate the ANCHOR on its Silver Jubilee of weekly editions .of c;ood News t~ the public. The serv.ices rendered by the Diocesan Journal are for the most part judicious, quite interesting and enlightening, and always appreciated for the benefit derived from its reading. International news as well as diocesan messages.and information come to the readers fresh and,' authentic; .
Mount Saint Joseph' School, well, and alive. after. 92 years of dedication and service to children,' is still situated "at 56 St. Joseph Street in Fall River. There are 405 students presently enrolled in this Catholic, DiOcesan School, from Day Care Nursery to ,the 8th grade inclusively. .
The school is administered and has been existing under the direction of the Sisters of Charity of Quebec since 1890. The staff of religious and lay educators are serving with joy in accordante with the educational and psychological methods, applied in today'-s society.'
Our sincere congratulations and thanks 'to' the' ANCHOR and to all who support Catholic Press and Catholic Education. '
MOUNT ST. JOSEPH SCHOOL 56 ST. JOSEPH STREEt
FAU RIVER, MASSACHUSEnS 02723
eorJiaf
DOMINICAN ,SISTERS
of the
PRESENTAT,ION
3012 ELM STREET
DIGHTON, MASSACHUSETTS
DURING 1972 trip to Azores, Bishop Cronin visits village church of Sao Sebastiao.
25 years Continued from page 39SINCERE
ard Sullivan, CSC; while Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, planned to build a "gymnatoCONGRATULATIONS ri-um" as a highlight of the forthcoming diamond jubilee of the arrival of the Holy Union Sisters
,
ST. STEPHEN PARISH - AnLEBORO in the United States; St. WilHam's parish, also in Fall River, readied plans for a new church; and in September students at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, began using a -new addition. /"'M "BEST ':".ISHES
Also in 1960, Our Lady of the- U U..J ~~ SISTERS OF Lake Day Camp for girls, ad{-L4.. {) n tJ' .. joining the 10ng-established CaEverywhere ~,,,,j-=i'K G~:~\='; THE RESURRECTION thedral Camp for boys, was you 'will bear me witneu \I 01\ \ - " opened, while a second Nazareth
, Ih\ ./ EOFORD School for exceptional childrenIN LOVE AND TRUTH ''\ :.' NEW B was opened, this ,in Hyannis, to join the school already operating
that I AM . , ' ~
THE RESURRECTION in Fall River. , and THE LIFE
In August news came of plans for a girls' high school in Taun~
ton, then named Bishop Cassidy "The blind 'with silent dignity' make a special High School, but in later years to
merge with Coyle High for boys J ' contribution of example to the world."
to become Coyle-Cassidy. POPE PAiUL VI . Continuing the building boom, . July 23, 1967 ' Our Lady of Annunciation Mis
-sion, Denriisport, expanded seat~ CONGRATULATIONS TO THE ANCHOR ing capacity, wJ'tile Masses began
ON ITS SilVER JUBILEE at St. Anne's parish, Raynham; and in North Dartmouth the
The Diocesan Guild For The Blind Dominican Sisters of St. CathIRIEV. BRUCE M. NEYLON .:..: Diocesan Director erine of Siena acquired a novi
tiate site. In September Msgr. Humberto
Medeiros, then diocesan chancellor, was named pastor of St.Our Gratitude Michael's Church, FaH River, while on Oct. 4 the first diocesan and pilgrimage to the holy places of
I
Europe got under way, led by1- Prayerful Good Wishes Bishop Connolly. Also in October, Fathers Henri
'IMMACULATE CONCEPTION Hamel and Bernard Fenton, both PAR ISH F AM I LY then chaplains in the armed
forces and both now retired,NEW BEDFORD were named monsignors at the
request of Cardinal Francis SpelIman, military vicar for U.S..~ ."
armed forces. ,In November, 1960, came the
election of John F. Kennedy, a summer resident of the Fall River diocese, as the nation's first Catholic president. Edito
:~ AD MULTOS ANNOS -~
Fall ,River rially, The Anchor commented that ,the choice was "a tribute to ;'Ca'thol'ic Woman's
I • the political maturity of th~
American voters. . . . They have Club turned deaf ears to attempts to dictate their choice on the basis
• I••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t ••••• e .••••••• of bigotry." November also brought news
of ,the planned construction of a HOLY ROSARY PARISH retreat house at LaSalette Shrine, Attleboro. Known as the Taunton Center for Christian Living, it has over the years noused hundreds of diocesan retreats as well as 'many CursiHo aitd Marriage Encounter pro~rams.elicitations and Nationally and intpnationally, 1960 saw creation pf ,the first black, Japanese and Filipino car
,
War,m Wishes , Cont~nued on page 44
CONG RATULATIONS
WIe Are 'Proud
of our
24 years'.
of service
to
theancho on its
TWENTY FIFTH ANNIVERSARY
" .' .
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Margaret M. Heckle~
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LEARY ,PRESS 234 Second Street
Fall River, Mass.'
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,.1
DIOCESAN SIS T E R S don't miss a thing during papal Mass on Boston Common in October, 1979.
(necroloQY) , April '18
Rev. Hugh B" Harrold; 1953, , Pastor, St. Mary, Mansfield
Rt. Rev. John F. McKeon, P.~.,
1956, Pastor,"St. Lawrence, New Bedford
April 19 Rev. Msgr. Leo J. Duart, 1975,
Pastor, ,St. Peter the Apostle, Provincetown.
April 20 Rev. Edward F. Coyle, S.S.,
1954, St. Mary Seminary; Paca Street, Maryland , Rev. James 'E. O'Reilly, 1970, Pastor Emeritus, Mt. Carmel, Seekonk
April 22 Rev. James L. Smith, 1910,
Pastor, Sacred Heart, Taunton Rev. Thomas F. Fitzgerald,
1954, Pastor, St, Mary, Nantucket
Anniversary Of
Publication
To, The Anchor:
On Your 25th
THE SISTERS OF
ST. JOAN OF ARC
The Bishop's Residence
St. Ma,ry's CatJ'tedral Rectory
Notre Dame De Lourdes
, Rectory
Congratulations
and Best Wishes
Staffing.
CA THO II C
MEMORIAL HOME Fall River
t OUR LADY'S HAVEN
Fairhaven
James Parish NEW BEDFORD
,Our Prayers For
Continued, ,' Suc(;ess:
·Fr.om The . ..
,CA,RMELITE ~ISTERS
, ,For~ The Aged ,,'
- And Infirm
Our sincere congratulations and, heartiest support.
EDGARTOWN
The priests and parishioners- jo~n
.in' lvishing l 1he Anchor ,nany nlore years.,
8T. 'ELIZABETH;S
pARISH FAMILY
CARMELITE SISTERS
"t'on'grat;ulflti,ons on"
)'our 251!A nni,versary"
I',
..-.- -,-. -... + • + +
I '
"
!
I~ "I~
,~... Diocesan Departm ent of Pastoral
Care of The Sick
EXTENDS
Sincere Congratulations and·
Warm Best Wishes'
The Parish Family of
ST. MICHAEL, Swansea, with REV. CLEMENT E. DUFOUR, Pastor
REV. NORMAND BOULET, Associate
SR. THERESA SPARROW, R.S.M., Coordinator
_._~ . ~~
\
offer our,
Co.ngratulations on Your
25th ANNIVERSARY
. ' Mav You Continue To Be ..
Of Our Christiall Readillg .
CONGRATULATIONS and
BEST WISHES from
THE'PARISHIONE;RS
HOLY NAME CHURCH, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
;,;. ... ;t_.
S~INT ANTHONY'S CHURCH We.' Wareham, M.II.
SAINT PATRICK'S CHURCH W.,oham, Ma...
f)ur ?8'armesi .Bonarafulafions••
~;.
L:I ri!i
Our best wishes on .
the occasion .of your
Twenty-fifth ,At\nniversary
May Y0lt continue to instruct .
the people of God for
many m,ore' years.
HOLY REDEEM-ER' PARISH' CHA'TH~~M
. . -- . ~. .,.
25 yearsThe Parish Community
Continued from page 4001 dinals, the sentencing of Bishop James E. Walsh of Maryknoll to SANTO CHRISTO a 20-year prison term by Communi,st China and ihe establishFall River ment of a Latin, American Bureau by the National Catholic Welfare
J
Ii' EXTENDS C~mference to aid the church in
priest-short Central and South! 25th ilnnf"ersarg G.,-eetings iAmerica.' " ", ,
I 196i~1970~ CONGRATULATIONS ~ The early Anchor years are reQn co'rded in some detail as holding
mimy firsts, both 'for the diocese and, this newspaper, while suc-
Years 01 Catholic Journalism ce~ding years, fresher in mem
ory, will be more 'condensed. ST. JOHN OF GOD PARISH 1961: Regina, Pacis Center125····· opens; Bishop Connolly marks 10th anniversary' as diocesan head; Archbishop Brady of'St. Paul, ·Fall Riv.er native, dies;
+ ' . SOMERSET
~'j'lJi!~i!!ffi!Ii!~IiilliiID~~ '2J Marian Manor opens in Taunton;! • ~ Mater et Magistra encyclical issued by Pope John XXIU.~NNIYERSARY I~ 1962: St. Saviour Day Nursery opens in New Bedford; January : GREETINGS!
Ispecial issue salutes Attleboro's
I - Bishop Feeha,n High School; Maryknoll Father Joseph Regan SAINT THE'RESA'S PARISH named a bishop in the Philippines;, Father Patrick O'Neill
,; NEW BEDFORD named diocesan school superjntendent; Fall River diocese rated first in New England in housing~@o~~I~~:~~:~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~ and bed care for aged; Lili Ann Motta, 15, of Stang High" wins
I ST. JULIE BILLIART national ,&cience award for work in skin -grafts; new Espirito,PA,RISH
" Santo Church built in Fall River; St. Augustine's. Vineyard Haven. dedicated; first Mass celebrated 'at Our Lady of the Cape, Brew
'North Dartmouth ,'. " '. ·0 F FE'R 5 ster; Vatican Council II opens.
1963: Bishop 'Cassidy High . School op.ens in Taunton; Stone
hill College builds new classroom eorJia,l G~Ul~Pte~ . I wing; Pope John XXUI dies;
Pope 'Paul VI e1ected; St. Anne's Hospital adds wing; Channel 6 I television Mass begins; President
!'WE EXTEND OUR APPRECIATION FOR Kennedy assassinated. '1964: Pope Paul first pope
I '.
: A QUARTER OF A CENTURY OF since St. Peter to visit Holy
I PUBLISHING. THE WORD OF GOD:. Land; vernacular liturgy approved, welcomed in diocese;
I I communion fast reduced to one
hour.I Sacred Heart POlrishi 1965: Mass is said ,facing the ,
, congregation; concelebration, reI, Taunton , ception of communion under , both species and simplified Holy
Week ceremonies are introduced; . cloistered Carmelite nuns establish South Dartmouth monastery; New England CCD Congress held
.................+ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •••
at Bishop Stang tHigh School; Diocesan Commission for Christian Unity formed; La Salette provincial house transferred to
WARM Attleboro; ·Pope Paul VI visits U.S., and UN; new St. Francis
WISHY ! ST. JEAN BAPTISTE PARISH Xavier School dedicated in
Acushnet. j FALL RIVER 1966: Jubilee marks end of!
.'. e' ••••••••••••••••••• t t t ••• At • Vatican Council II, designated diocesan jubilee churches are St. Mary's Cathedral; St. FrancisST. M,ARY'S PARISH FAMILY Xavier, Hyannis; St. John, Attleboro; St. Mary, Taunton; St. Lawrence, New Bedford; Madonna Manor opens in Attleboro; Lenten fast reduced to Ash
N1orth' Attlebo"o
OFF.E'RS Wednesday, Good Friday; thousands attend vocatiop panorama Cassidy High, Taqnton; new Holy Cross parish in SouthiBEST WISHES Easton; Msgr. Medeiros named
Continued on page 45 .,.t: ," '. , . "",
!HE ANCHOR-Anniversary Edition-Fri., April 16, 1982 45
Continued from page 44 bishop of Brownsville, Texas; diocesan school. board estabHshed; Bishop Connolly High School opens in Fall River; priests' senate, diocesan pastoral council organized; formation of parish council encouraged.
1967: Sacred Heart Home, New Bedford, builds new wing; new St. Anthony of Padua Church built in ·Fall River; Priests' Senate publishes constitution;lFather Joseph Delaney loaned to Brownsville, Texas, diocese; Queen of MI Saints Chapel built in Mashpee; new St. Anthony Church built in Mattapoisett; St. Mark's parish, Attleboro Falls, established; first Bishops' Synod meets in Rome; Bishop Connolly High School, Fall River, is dedicated by Archbishop ,Luigi Raimondi, apostolic delegate; English recitation of Mass Canon begins; Marian Aw'ard for :laity established.
1968: Sisters of Providence establish regional headquarters in Fall River; Pope Paul VI issues Humanae Vitae encyclical on
..birth control; 163 Pro-Synodal Statutes promulgated for Fall River diocese; Anchor begins offset printing at Leary Press with issue of Dec. 5; Days of Prayer supplant traditional 40 hours Devotion.
1969: New canons and prefaces introduced to Eucharistic
The story of 25 years Jiturgy; Diocesan Directory on work; American-oriented Thanks trator for 22 years, dies; Cardinal Ecumenism issued; Saturday vigil giving Day Mass introduced. Richard Cushing dies; Bishop Mass authorized; St. Elizabeth's, . 1970: Bishop Connolly marks Daniel A. Cronin succeeds BishEdgartown, and St. John's, Po silver jubilee of epicopate; An op James L. Connolly as bishop casset, f~rmer missions, attain chor editor Hugh Golden dies; of Fall River, is installed by parish status; Second World Syn Bishop Medeiros named arch~ Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, od of Bishops held; Father Ken bishop of Boston; Mother Pierre Apostolic Delegate; Pope Paul neth Delano participates in first Marie, OP, president of the cor VI visits A'ustralia; Bishop Cromoon landing as member of Lun poration of, St. Anne's Hospital, nin's first pastoral letter conar Internationaf Observer's Net ,Fall River, and hospital adminis demns abortion.
IN 25 YEARS, ALMOST ANYTIUNG CAN HAPPEN. Last month we looked out The Anchor office window to see a house going by on Highland Avenue. (Torchia Photo)
1971-1982 1971: Coyle lllnd Cassidy high
schools merge in Taunton; Mt. St. Mary, Dominican Academy and Jesus-Mary Academy merge in Fall River to form Bishop Gerrard High School; middle school established In Taunton; St. Julie Billiart Church, North Dartmouth blessed.
1972: Bishop Cronin visits Portugal for immigrant pastoral care talks; Bishop Stang Day Nursery closes in Fall River; episcopal vicars named; new St. Vincent's Home dedicated in Fall River; Father John Foister receives presidential citation for role in averting 'Braga Bridge suicide. 1973: Diocese donates intensive care unit to St. Anne's Hospital; Archbishop Medeiros elevated to College of Cardinals; lay persons permitted to distri bute holy communion; Bishops Connolly and Gerrard celebrate golden jubilees in priesthood, honored by establis~ment of high school scholarship fund; diocese aids earthquake-stricken Azores.
1974: Pope Paul VI declares 1975 Holy Year; in preparation, diocesan pilgrims travel to designated . local churches; Mrs. Michael J. McMahon named NCCW director; new penance rite announced; SS. 'Peter and Paul par-
Continued on page 46
STONEHILL COLLEGE~
Congratulates
THE ANCHOR on 'its·
25th Anni.versary'
, Founded by the Holy Cross Fathers in 1948, '5tonehill College has. served
the Diocese by sending out 7,000 men and women to higher ,studies,
into the priesthood, and into business and the professions.
.~ ..
.~.
'46 THE AN~HOR-Anniversary Edition-Fri., April 16, 1982
With 27,000 Subsc;ibers, It Pays To
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The story Continued from page 45
ish, FaIl'River, remodels school as DlUltipurpose facility in wake of fire destroying church build.' ing; Fall River Sisters of St. Joseph merge with Springfield Sisters of St. Joseph; Bishop Cronin makes ad !imina visit to Rome; Vatican Holy Door opened Christmas Eve to inaugurate Holy Year,
1975: Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, closes; Cathedral Camp switches from resident to total day 'camp status; diocesan Holy Year' pilgrim-age travels to Rome; St. Anne's Hospital dedicates pediatric 'center; Fall 'River diocese ranked 7th in U.S. in priest/people ratio; Elizabeth Ann Seton becomes' first native American canonized; (irst ~nnual Columbus Day peace procession ,draws 30;000.to Kennedy Park, Fall River; Cursillo ,cofounder attends 10th anniversary of diocesan CursiIlo organization; , -1976: State Knights of Columbus present Lantern Award, recognizing service' to God and country, to Bishop Cronin; Bishop Gerrard resigns as auxiliary bishop; Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen homilist at Bicentennial Mass at Bishop Stang High School; Charities Appeal breaks $1 million mark for first time; many diocesans at 41st Euchar-' istic Congress in Philadelphia; seven diocesans accompany Bishop Cronin to Call for Action Conference in Detroit; Depart
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of 25 years, ment of Social Services inaugurates Catholic Counseling Services; diamond jubilee of cathedral consecration celebrated; Hispanic apostolate. extended to AttIeboros.
1977: Father George Coleman named- education directori St. Elizabeth Seton parish, North Falmouth" dedicated 'by Archbishop Jean Jadot, Apostolic Delegate; Anchor begins Portuguese-ianguage column; permanent diaconateprogram begins accepting applicants; ,Priests' Council succeeds 'Priests' Senate;
"Father Daniel,' Hoye nal1'!ed NCCB a,ssistant, general secretary; communion in hand approved for U.S.; John Neumann is first' American man canonized; Anchor hosts regional Catholic Press Association meeting in Hyannis.
1978: St. Anne's Hospital medical library dedicated to Dr. Frederick Sullivan;' vocations prayer campaign. successful; Pope Paul VI dies, succeeded for
, 34 days by Pope John Paul I, then by Pope John Paul 11.
1979: Diocese holds year-long celebration of 75th anniversary; events include jubilee' Masses and banquets at St. Mary's Cathedral and in each area of the diocese; a jubilee trip to Italy; parish Days of Devotion; and a Vo~ations Awareness Day; Pope John Paul visits Dominican Republic, Mexico, Bahamas; Rice Bowl Lenten program initiated nationally, in diocese; Cardinal John Wright dies; pilot We Care/We Share program held in Somerset, Swansea, kicked off by diocesan Evangelization Congress; Pope John ,Paul visits U.S., beginning tour with Boston Mass; Mother Teresa gets Nobel Peace Prize; Pope visits Turkey; Archbishop Sheen dies.
1980: Diocese aids Azorean earthquake victims; Archbishop Romero slain at San Salvador Mass; Bishop Cronin celebrates Santo Christo feast in Ponta Delgada, St. Michael, Azores; first permanent deacons ordained for diocese; pope, visits Brazil; Angelus Sunday observed; We Care/We Share program covers diocese; Bishop ,Cronin marks 10th anniversary as Ordinary.
1981: Diocese rejoices at release of Iranian captives; pope visits 'Philippines; Japan, Guam, Alaska; Diocesan Social Services aids Indochinese refugees; assassina.tion attempt made on pope; Cardinal 'Stefan Wyszynski of Poland dies; Northeast Vincentians, New 'Engiand Catholic Council on Social Ministry meet at Stonehill College; Mass held for diocesan handicapped; Father Joseph P. Delaney.. named Bishop of Fort Worth, Texas; Father Ed'mond Rego, 'Anchor Portuguese
_columnist, dies; Family Life 'Center op,ens in' North Dartmouth; diocesans support tuition tax credit drive.
1982: Postal rate hikes hit Catholic press; Father Hoye elec
-ted youngest ever general secre· tary of National Conference of Catholic Bishops/U;S. Catholic Conference; pope'visits Africa; in April, Anchor celebrates' 25th birthday.
•••••••••••••
•••••••••••••
• •
SYMBOUZING the past and future of the Fall River diocese are its two retfred bishops and the present Ordinary. From left, Bishop James L. Connolly, Bishop Daniel A. Cronin, Bishop James J. Gerrard. (Rosa Photo)
Anchor Sampler The following are excerpts
from early Issues of The Anchor. l!J l!J (I
Mrs. Frederick B. Tuttle will serve as president of the Fall River District. Diocesan CouncH of Catholic Women, for the next year.
The Fall River. woman was chosen at a meeting of District Council at St. Louis Church, Fall River, Monday night.
- May 16, 1957
'" On next Tuesday examinations wUl be held at the· Convent of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, Prospect Street, Fall River, at 9 In the morning for . those college students who .desire to study for the priesthood of the diocese of Fall River. The examination Will be on the subJects covered In the first two years of a classical college course.
The young men taking the examination will be seeking sponsorship by the Bishop In a major seminary. There are at present 50 young men studying for the Diocese In major seminaries and 15 In minor seminaries.
- June 13, 1957
'" '" '" A horse show culminated the summer program at Cathedral Camp, East Freetown. Blue ribbon winner in the Fine Ridirag Iclass was Larry Hatch, Onset.
Stan Koczera, New Bedford, and Bob Hackett, Fall .River, were victorious in the Chieftain flag relay race; and Ted Sanft, Fall River, won the saddle race.
-Aug. 22, 1957
THE ADVERTISERS
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THE ANCHOR-Anniversary Edition-Fri., April 16, 1982 47
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"Cast all your cares Oil God; 'that anchor holds."
TENNYSON
THE DIOCESAN COUNCIL
of the
NATIONAL COUNCIL
OF CATHOLIC WOMEN
extends
BEST 'VISHES
and
CON·GR~4.TUIJATIONS
to
. THE ANCHOR
in celebrating
'Twenty-five Years of Publication
....
OUR BEST WISH·ES
CENTRAL COUNCIL OF FALL RIVER
SOCIETY OF ST. VINCENT De PAUL
: .
'.
,. I
I I I
THE ANCHOR ..... Navigating. I ,
~he Seas of Faith i I
I
II .
I
I
g(UJ~ [8)~s)1 W~~~[ES), i , . .
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