02.08.13

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The Anchor Diocese of Fall River

F riday , February 8, 2013

Area college campus ministries strive to ‘refuel’ students this Lent By Dave Jolivet, Editor

NORTH DARTMOUTH — Their lives are fast-paced and busy. The young women and men who attend area colleges and universities quickly learn to juggle course schedules, jobs, work studies, and socializing, but sometimes forget to make time for their spiritual lives. To help the many Catholics who attend UMass-Dartmouth in North Dartmouth step back and spiritually refuel, Father David C. Frederici, chaplain, and Dominican Sister Madeleine Tacy have developed a full slate of activities and reflections for the upcoming Lenten season. Father Frederici is also chaplain at Cape Cod Com-

munity College in West Barnstable. At Stonehill College in Easton, the only Catholic college or university in the Diocese of Fall River, an already vibrant campus ministry will offer students there several components to enhance the Lenten season. “Forty-seven percent of the student population at UMass Dartmouth is Catholic,” Father Frederici told The Anchor. “Our campus ministry is here to support those students who want it and need it. We’re not here for the number of students, although increasing the numbers would be great. We’re here to help support and Turn to page 18

RED RIBBON PANEL — Bishop George W. Coleman, center, cuts the ribbon on the new academic resource center at Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth. Joining him are, from left, Maureen Sylvia Armstrong, ’82 graduate and co-chairman of the school’s capital campaign; Peter V. Shaughnessy, president/ principal; Dr. Michael Griffin, superintendent of schools for the Fall River Diocese; and Michael J. Harrington, ’79 graduate and co-chairman of the capital campaign committee. (Photo by Kenneth J. Souza)

Bishop Stang blessed with new academic resource center By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff

stepping into the quiet — Father David C. Frederici, chaplain at UMassDartmouth and Cape Cod Community College, gives a homily at a Mass on the North Dartmouth campus in this file photo. Father Frederici and Sister Madeleine Tacy, O.P., have developed a full slate of activities and reflections for students for the upcoming Lenten season.

NORTH DARTMOUTH — Walking through the brightly-lit hallways of the new academic resource center at Bishop Stang High School, Sister Sheila Finnigan, SND, was trying to recall where her bedroom used to be. “I’m trying to place myself … to figure out where I was,” she said. As a Sister of Notre Dame de Namur, the order that once staffed the diocesan high school, Sister Finnigan was one of

the nuns who occupied the former convent building that was recently converted into a state-of-the-art academic resource building. “I was here for seven years,” Sister Finnigan said. “But I think it’s terrific what they’ve done. Coming back, I feel like I haven’t left at all. I’ll always be a part of the Stang family.” Sister Finnigan joined her extended Stang family last week for the blessing and dedication of the academic resource Turn to page 14

The art of engaging teen-agers in class B y B ecky Aubut A nchor Staff

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — In elementary school, Lisa Bucci already knew what she wanted to be when she grew up. “In my fifth-grade yearbook I wrote that I wanted to be a teacher, but I don’t know why I wanted to be a teacher at that age,” recalled Bucci. “When I was in high school, I still wanted to be a teacher but I didn’t know what the draw was — I just really wanted to do it.” That all changed during her senior year in high school, when a requirement of her physics class required groups of students going into classrooms to teach younger students. “Everyone got a topic, like water density or pressure, and when my team went in, everyone sort of froze up on what they were supposed to say,” said Bucci. “I took charge, which was rare because I was very, very shy growing

up — my teachers probably heard my voice maybe two times a year — so for me to step up and take over the lesson, it was then that I really liked it. That’s when I knew it was the right thing for me to do.” Bucci graduated magna cum laude from Rhode Island College with a B.A. in physics and a B.A. in chemistry, along with a degree in secondary education. Currently in her ninth year as a physics teacher for 11th- and 12thgrade students at Hope High School in Providence, R.I., Bucci has also been teaching Faith Formation classes at St. Paul the Apostle Parish in Foster since she graduated from high school 13 years ago. Teen-agers are reluctant to open up in almost every setting, but in a classroom it’s particularly tough to get them to engage, said Bucci. For the past two years Bucci has been a presenter at Turn to page 13

40 Days stays the course By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent

ATTLEBORO — After 40 years of legalized abortion nationwide, Pro-Lifers in the United States understand that they must be committed to the cause for the long haul. Those who pray outside abortion clinics as part of the biannual 40 Days for Life campaigns also know their work is far from over. Ron Larose, coordinator of the 40 Days in Attleboro, told The Anchor that the local campaign is committed to “staying the course.” The spring campaign will be held February 13 to March 24. “We keep it on a low boil, a strong simmer. It allows us to maintain the effort over

what we know to be an extended period of time,” he said. “We’ve had a lot of folks who have been with us from the beginning, so we are very grateful for their steadfastness and their effort.” Pro-Lifers, he said, know not to get discouraged. The Attleboro vigil began in fall 2008, and the upcoming campaign will be the 10th. The vigilers gather from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day at Angel Park, located between divided state highway Route 118 and across the street from the Four Women Health Services in Attleboro, the only abortion clinic in the Diocese of Fall River. Turn to page 14


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