t eanc 0 VOL. 37, NO. 15
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Friday, April 16, 1993
F ALL RIVER, MASS.
FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly
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$11 Per Year
13 from diocese in New Orleans for 90th NCEA convention With Catholic News Service reports
OUTGOING PRESIDENT Mary Mikita of the Dio'cesan Council of Catholic Women and Joanne Quirk and Betty Mazzucchelli, left to right, cochairmen of the council's April 24 convention, have chosen the theme "Protect God's Gift Our Earth."
Care of Earth is topic of DCCW convention Care of Earth will be the conson, research specialist with the cerns of members of the Diocesan biology department of the Woods Council of Catholic Women as Hole Oceanographic Institute and they gather Saturday, April 24, at also representing the Institute will St. Francis Xavier parish center, be Jack Gallagher, director of its Hyannis, for their annual conven- Center for Worldwide Marine Envition, themed "Protect God's ronmental Protection and Safety. Gift-Our Earth." Concluding the program will be Keynote speaker Whitney Tilt, panelist Gilbert Newton, a teacher project director for the Wash- at Sandwich High School and presington-based National Fish and ident of the Association for the Wildlife Foundation, will have as Preservation of Cape Cod. his topic "A Responsibility for The diocesan convention will Stewardship." He also spoke at a open at 8 a.m. with registration recent general assembly of the and a coffee hour, followed a"t 9 National Council of Catholic a.m. by prayer and a business Women. meeting, after which Tilt will speak. Tilt over~ees the not-for-profit Conference cochairman and foundation's grants program, which NCCW Boston Province director aided over600 projects in the years Mrs. James H. Quirk will deliver from 1986 to 1992. Prior to joining greetings from the national organthe foundation, he was a wildlife, ization at 10: I5 a.m. and outgoing specialist for the National Audubon DCCW president Mrs. Andrew Society; executive director of the W. Mikita will give the traditional Long Island Sound Task Force of president's message. the Oceanic Society; and a bald , DCCW moderator Very Rev. eagle specialist and refuge assistJames F. Lyons will speak and ant for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Bishop Sean P. O'Malley will be Service. He holds degrees from the introduced. The bishop will be Yale School of Forestry and Enviprincipal celebrant and homilist at ronmental Studies and Hampton the II: 15 a.m. convention Mass. College. Also on the schedule are instalAn afternoon panel moderated lation of new diocesan officers for by convention '.cochairman Mrs. a two-year term and presentation Joseph MazZllcchelli will continue of the annual Margaret M. Lahey/ concentration on the ecology. Our Lady of God Counsel Award Albert Lees Jr., president of Lees to a woman from each council disSupermarket, Westport, will dis- trict. The award recognizes service cuss recycling and William Rog- to the recipient's parish council ers, manager of Summertime and to her parish in general as well Laundry, South Yarmouth, will as her participation in district and discuss filtration. diocesan activities. Mrs. Michael J. McMahon, Soloist for the convention will representing the National Council be Mrs. Thomas Truelson and of Catholic Women, will speak on subcommittee chairman will be ecology initiatives undertaken by Mrs. Ethel Zink, raffle; Mrs. Arthur the national group. "Oil Spills" Maddison, liturgy; and Mrs. Toni will be the topic ofGeorge Hamp- Nagel, coffee hour.
Led by Rev. Richard W. Beaulieu, director of the Diocesan Department of Educatiori, and J,ames McNamee, an associate superintendent of schools, 13 diocesan educators attended the 90th annual I'/ational Catholic Educational Association convention, which concluded yesterday in New Orleans. The theme of the April 12-15 convention, "Catholic Educators: Telling the Good News Story," is "particularly significant at a time when so many tragic stories appear, on the front pages of our newspapers and leap out of our TV screens each day," said Sister Catherine McNamee, NCEA president. "Today's world needs the good news which Ca'tholic educators have to offer," the Sister of St. Joseph added. The four-day meeting for about 12,000 Catholic school principals and teachers, board members and religious education teachers featured general sessions, liturgies and workshops. In the kickoff session, Howard Jenkins, school superintendent for the archdiocese of New Orleans, welcomed the delegates to the city, noting that this is the archdiocese's bicentennial year. He said Ursuline nuns opened the city's first Catholic school in 1727.
Keynote speaker Father John Shea, author, lecturer and professor at Mundelein Seminary in Mundelein, IL, told the delegates they were continuing the Catholic school tradition - "a mission to manifest" the good news of the Gospel. ' "When we teach, we must see and love in our students what Jesus sees and loves in us," he said. He told the convention participants they had a "responsibility to teach the good news" and that it had to be taught right along with lessons about "frogs, biology and black holes." NCEA presented several awards during the general session. The Archbishop John Carroll
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Award, presented to bishops who have made outstanding contributions to Catholic education, was given posthumously to Archbishop James P. Lyke of Atlanta, who died last year of cancer. It was accepted by his longtime ,friend, Bishop Joseph L. Howze of Biloxi, Miss. "Archbishop Lyke was a man of. courage and conviction who spoke eloquently in support of Catholic education," said Sister McNamee. "He used the pulpit as a platform to convince Catholics and . non-Catholics alike that Catholic schools are a great gift to the nation," she added. Franciscan Sister Francesca Thompson received NCEA's C. Albert Koob award for providing leadership in Catholic education. Sister Thompson, associate professor of Afro-American studies at Fordham University in Bronx, N.Y., was described by Sister McNamee as a "dedicated educator" who promoted the importance of cultural awareness. Twelve teachers and 12 principals were also presented with distinguished teacher and principal awards during the convention. After hearing talks and receiving awards, the educators kicked up their heels in typical New Orleans fashion for an evening parade after the convention's opening day Sister McNamee, bedecked in a mask with feathers, tossed beads to a clapping and waving crowd from her parade float, which followed Catholic high school marching bands and cheerleaders. Workshop Speakers Speakers at convention workshops included Sister Kieran Sawyer, whose topic was moral issues that should be discussed with teens; and William Fisher, who maintained that a multicultural program is the "right thing to do" for Catholic schools. Sister Sawyer, a School Sister of Notre Dame who gives retreats and talks to groups of teenagers as the director of Tyme Out Youth Center in Pewaukee, Wis., not only urged the delegates to talk about what she termed "tough topics," but she told them to be consistent in their message. "What you say about abortion should agree with what you say about war," and "what you say to boys should be consistent with what you say to girls," she said. She also warned against teaching these topics 'out of context. "You can't talk about contraception out of the blue," she said, referring to one diocese where officials mandated teaching AIDS awareness without teaching sex education. "You come to kids through the wrong door that way," she added.
Sister Sawyer told the standingroom-only crowd of principals and teachers that she stresses abstinence to teens, but she also tells them about contraception. She said she deals with straight numbers, such as statistics that say four out of 10 sexually active teenagers who use contraception will get pregnant. She warns teens not only of the failure rate of contraceptives, but of the emotional toll of premarital sex. When she talks about abortion, Sister Sawyer said, she tells teens that no matter how legal it becomes, "it will always be a moral issue." She did not give the delegates any easy method for discussing the topic with teens, but stressed the need to distinguish between 98 percent of abortions "that are used as a secondary form of birth control" and the 2 percent of abortions that are "hard cases of rape or incest." Sister Sawyer also stressed the need to help teens who have had abortions. "We need to continue to honor them, even though they've made a terrible decision," she said. "They are carrying guilt and they need to know reconciliation'." Teachers also must be aware, she said, that in a class of 40, one or two teens may be homosexual. "You have to make the distinction between orientation and activity," she said. "But you should also try to speak to them in some way because they have a great cross to bear." Successful Multiculturalism A multicultural pr,ogram is the, "right thing to do" for Catholic schools to be true to their mission, said William Fisher, school board president for Catholic secondary schools in the diocese of Grand Rapids. Mich. . At his workshop, he explained how Catholic high schools in Grand Rapids successfully integrated 'a multicultural approach. In his words, it started when the schools received a "wake-up call" in 1989. Because of increased tuition, "students of color were not lining up for our schools," he said. "We were pricing them out of the market." . The student decrease isolated the dwindling number of minority students. "We were in a downward spiral picking up steam," said Fisher. As a result, school board committees decided first to build a multicultural approach in secondary schools and then to recruit ethnically diverse students. So far, it's worked. The number of m'inority students attending Grand Rapids Catholic secondary Turn to Page 13