01.24.92

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FALL RIVER DIOCE$AN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS VOL. 36, NO.4.

Friday, January 24, 1992

FALL RIVER, MASS.

Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

$11 Per Year

Catholic Schools Week events set WASHINGTON (CNS) "Now is the time" for promoting Catholic schools as the "entire nation is struggling with the need for educational reform," the head of the National Catholic Educational Association said. Sister Catherine T. McNamee, a member of the Sisters ofSt. Joseph of Carondelet, made her corr ments in anticipation of the annual Catholic Schools Week, this year slated for Jan. 26-Feb. I. The week will be marked hy various activities in the schools of the Fall River diocese, with Jan. 29 to be observed as National Appreciation Day for Catholic Schools. "Discover Catholic Schools" is the theme of Catholic S,;hools Week as well as a yearlong rr arketing campaign launched in SeptemberbytheNCEAand U.S. bishops. It is illustrated by a tall-masted ship on rough waters, reminiscent of Columbus' voyage to the New World 500 years ago. The NCEA and the bishc,ps began the campaign "to showcase the values-added education and academic excellence of Catholic schools and help parents select schools for their children," NCEA materials said.

Mercy Sister Lourdes Sheehan, U.S. Catholic Conference secretary for education, said the bishops backed the campaign because they believe Catholic schools are vital to the future ofthe Catholic Church "and to our country."

Below is a schedule of Catholic Schools Week events at diocesan elementary and high schools. St. Joseph's School Fairhaven Jan. 25: annual family dance with DJ Bruce Duarte 6:30 to 9:30 p.m .. school auditorium. Jan. 26: Family Mass 9:30 a.m. at St. Joseph's Church, followed by gathering at Papa Gino's noon to 5 p.m. Jan. 27: No Uniform Day. Students may wear funny hats, favorite sweatshirts, buttons. etc. Jan. 28: School Spirit Day. Students will wear the school colors of navy blue and white. Kindergarten will participate in "Olympic Preview 2004" at 9 a.m. and a grades 6 through 8 spelling bee will begin at I p.m. Jan. 29: Thankful Hearts Prayer Service 9 a.m: Surprise celebration later in the day and a special nursery school treat.

Jan. 30: Open house with annual science fair 6:30 to 8 p.m. Jan. 31: Prayer service 9 a.m. with eighth grade ribbon and class pin ceremony and presentation of science and Golden Apple All Star awards. Dismissal at 11:30 a.m. followed by staff appreciation luncheon at noon.

St. Mary New Bedford Jan. 26: 10:00 a.m. Mass fol,lowed by continental breakfast, cafeteria. Jan. 27: Old World Day. Students dress in 15th century costumes with each grade assigned a specific country. Lunch will consist of ethnic foods brought by students. Jan. 28: New World Day. Invited guests will speak on the history of native Americans. A talent show will be held in the evening. Jan. 29: National Appreciation Day for Catholic Schools. Nursery through second grade students will visit Zeiterion Theater while grades 3 through 8 participate in Sports Day. Jan. 30: Spaghetti supper and family dance. Turn to Page II

Feisty l\fother Teresa recovering U .8. bishops lau~ch campaign for children WASHINGTON (CNS) - In dioceses around the country, the U.S. bishops are launching their national campaign to put children at the forefront of legislative policy. To drive home their point, bishops conducted press conferences at children's homes, innercity schools, courthouses, mobile health vans and h'omes for single mothers. The U.S. bishops' statement "Putting Children and Families First: A Challenge for Our Church, Nation and World," was released earlier this month. It examines the state of children in the United States and worldwide and calls for legislative remedies to problems associated with poverty, education and neglect. Archbishop Daniel E. Pilarczyk of Cincinnati, president of the U.S. bishops' conference, visited a mobile unit of Healthy Moms and Babes, a Catholic health ministry offering prenatal care and education in parenting. . "Children have soft voices, voices that other sounds in our society can easily drown out," Archbishop Pilarcyzk said. "Our bishops' statement offers the Catholic community as a persistent, informed and committed voice for children and families." "Our children and families are

hurting," Cardinal James A. Hickey of Washington said at St. Ann's Infant and Maternity Home in Hyattsville, Md., a Washington suburb. "They are undermined by poverty, hunger and homeless," he said. "They are neglected by misplaced priorities." The cardinal noted "signs of neglect" in the nation's capital. ··'We live in a city where a child is gunned down every three days, where almost as many children are destroyed by abortion as are born, where an infant dies every 33 hours, and where every 56 minutes a child is reported as neglected or abused." The numbers, Cardinal Hickey said, "are more than statistks. They are human tragedies and moral challenges." Bishop Daniel P. Reilly of Norwich, Conn., launched his diocese's campaign at a transitional facility in Norwich providing housing, job training, child care and parenting skills for single mothers. The diocese's Operation Rice Bowl provides partial funding for the -facility. In Salt Lake City, diocesan vicar general Father Robert J. Bussen, said at a press conference, "I n the African tradition they have a say- Turn to Page II

LA JOLLA, Calif. (CNS) Mother Teresa has been disc:larged from a California hospital after a three-week stay in which she fought off heart illness and pneumonia with the help of intensive medical care. "There is no doubt that her feisty nature helped enormously in her recovery. She had an 'I-mustget-well' attitude all the time," said Dr. Patricia Aubanel, one of two cardiologists treating her at the Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation in La Jolla, an afflut'Ot section of San Diego. Dr. Aubanel and her colleague, Dr. Paul Teirstein, continually

Installation. Installation ceremonie!. for Archbishop-designate Daniel A. Cronin, to take place froOl 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 28, in St. Joseph's Cathedral, Hartford, Conn., will be carried Ihe on the following Hartford Mevision and radio outlets: WVIT-TV Channel 3 J WFSB·TV Channel :I WTIC·TV Channel 61 WTIC AM 1080 WJMJ FM Bloomfield 118.9 WJMJ FM New Haven] 07.1 WJMJ FM Harnden 9L5 WPRI-TV, Channel 12, ]t»rovidence, will offer a delayecl telecast at 11:30 p.m. Jan. 28.

praised Mother Teresa during daily press briefings while she was hospitalized, but admitted that she was not the ideal patient. They said she constantly demanded to be released, insisting

that she was not ill and had important work to get back to. Only briefly; said Dr. Aubanel, did Mother Teresa admit the severity of her illness. Turn to Page II

'.

MOTHER TERESA waves as she leaves Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, Calif. Behind her is Dr. Patricia AUbanel, among cardiologists who treated her. (CNS/Reuters photo)


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01.24.92 by The Anchor - Issuu