02.10.95

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t eanc 0 VOL. 39, NO.6.

Friday, February 10, 1995

FALL RIVER, MASS.

FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

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$11 Per Year

Bishop Robert Mulvee Providence coadjutor

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AT LAST Sunday's Mass of Thanksgiving at St. Anne's Church, Fall River, commemorating the beatification of Blessed Marie Poussepin, foundress of the Dominican Sisters of the Presentation, Sister Joanna Fernandes, provincial superior, speaks from the lectern (top picture). Below, members ofthe community stand with Bishop Sean O'Malley, Mass celebrant. From left, Sisters Anna Maria Hernandez, Joanna Fernandes, Annette Demarais and Monica Bautista. (Gaude:tte photos)

WASHINGTON (CNS) - Pope John Paul II has transferred Bishop Robert E. Mulvee of Wilmington, Del., to the diocese of Providence, R.I., where he will be coadjutor to Bishop Louis E. Gelineau. A coadjutor has right of succession as head of the diocese. Robert Edward Mulvee was born in Boston Feb. 15, 1930, the son of the late John F. and Jennie T. Mlilvee. He prepared for the priesthood at St. Thomas Seminary in Bloomfield, Conn., St. Paul Seminary at the University of Ottawa, Canada, and the American College at the University of Louvain in Belgium. He was ordained to the priesthood for the diocese of Manchester in 1957 at Louvain. Following his return to the Manchester diocese, he served as chaplain at an orphanage and as associate pastor in several parishes. In 1961 he was assigned to graduate work at the North American College in Rome. He completed the requirements for a doctorate in canon law inJune 1964at the Pontifical Lateran University, and the same year completed the requirements for a master's degree in religious education 'from the University of Louvain. Upon his return to the Manchester diocese in July 1964, he was appointed assistant chancellor and later chancellor of the diocese. He also served in a number of diocesan posts, including judge and notary of the Diocesan Marriage Tribunal.

In 1966, then Father M ulvee was named a papal chamberlain by Pope Paul VI and in 1970 a prelate of honor. He was made auxiliary bishop of Manchester in 1977, the first auxiliary appointed for the diocese since its foundation in 1884. In 1985 he was named bishop of Wilmington, a diocese of about 155,000 Catholics that covers the state of Delaware and the nine Maryland counties of the Delmarva Peninsula east of the Chesapeake Bay. As coadjutor of Providence he moves to the nation's smallest but most Catholic state, with some 645,000 Catholics in a popUlation of just over I million. Bishop Gelineau, 66, has been bishop of Providence si nce 1972.

BISHOP MULVEE

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Catholic students seen, heard on Capitol Hill WASHINGTOl\' (CNS) - The old adage that children should be seen and not heard did not apply to more than 100 Catholic school students who descended on Capitol Hill Feb. I. The students, taking part in National Appreciation Day for Catholic Schools, wen: meant to be heard as they lobbic:d senators and representatives on behalf of their Catholic schools. Girls in plaid skirts and white blouses and boys with blazers, ties and khaki pants stood out from the usual lobbyists in the halls of Congress and frequently caused a head or two to turn. "So many people that we've bumped into have said, 'I went to Catholic school too,'" said Kate

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Keffer, a mother of two who accompanied a Pennsylvania school delegation to Washington. Such recognition, she said, shows that Catholic schools are doing a good job and turning out qualified graduates dedicated to public service. ' "If this doesn't speak to the worth of Catholic schools, I don't know what does," she told Catholic News Service. Mrs. Keffer was one of many parents, principals and other Catholic school officials who joined the students in the fifth year of lobbying efforts as part of Catholic Schools Week Jan. 29-Feb. 4. This year's event, sponsored annually by the National Catholic Educational Association, had the

most participants and involved more personal contacts than previous years. School delegations spoke with 17 Congress members and 25 legislative aides. They also hand-delivered packets with information on Catholic schools to 225 members of Congress. Most students joining in the lobbying efforts were from five schools in the metro Washington area. But they were joined by a group of 80 from Wilmington, Del., and sc:ven from Harrisburg, Pa. . Their day began with an unintended lesson in government operations when they tried to get a picture taken of everyone on the U.S. Capitol steps. Because of construction on the House side, they

decided to pose for their annual photo on the Senate side. First they had to wait because the area was sealed off while the Bosnian prime minister addressed the Senate. Then they were told they could not hold signs for the photo because that would make it a demonstration. Finally, when the photographer had all 148 pairs of eyes on him, a security guard said the picture could not be taken - a House member had sponsored the group, not senator. So the students and school officials ended up smiling in a neutral zone- a grassy area next to the Capitol. Luckily, they had the chance to warm up their smiling muscles; they would need them throughout

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the day. When the Harrisburg delegation posed in front of the desk of Rep. George Gekas, R-Pa., the NCEA photographer did not say "cheese" but "tax credits." Those words had been on most of the delegates' lips during their meetings. After singing the praises of Catholic schools, they hoped to encourage school choice initiatives. "There will always be Catholic schools, but why should we just have them for small numbers? Let's give the same opportunity to everyone," Anthony DeCaprio, assistant superintendent of secondary schools and special programs in the Harrisburg Diocese, told Gekas' legislative aide. Turn to Page Eight

I s s u e - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -......

Bishop Makes Eight Appointments

Rainbows Program Helps Children

Retired Doctor Has Second Career

Thmorrow Is World Day of Sick

Distinguished Graduates

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