04.18.68

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ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING .OF PROPOSED NEW CENTER FOR ST. MARGARET'S CHURCH IN BUZZARDS BAY

The ANCHOR fall Riv@U'o Mass., Thursday April 18, 1968 PRIce IOc Vol. 12 N@. 16 © 1968 The Ancho'r $4.00 per Year 0

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sc'ope of proposed usage. During the academic' school year the classroom section will be used daily !for CCD classes of approx­ imately 30 students each and during the evening by church and community groups of varying sizes from 30 to 400. CYO athletic functions will use the multi-purpose room

lyn, of which he is an alumnus. From 1917 to 1923, the jubilarian served as an assistant to his brother Rev. William K. Dwyer, then pastor at Our Lady of Sorrows Church, Corona. An­ other brother, Rev. Robert Dwyer, was stationed in the New York Archdiocese. Father Daniel also served at St. Agnes, Blessed Sacrament and St. Francis of Assisi, Brooklyn. In 1923, Msgr. Dwyer was ap­ pointed pastor of OUI' Lady of the MagnUicat Church in Ocean

Beach, L. r. Later that year he organized 35 families into the parish of St. Martin, Bethpage,

@~ DioceS~51 Sch~~I~

. The first phase of the an­ nual· Catholic Charities Ap­ peal, now' in its 26th year of ·service to the community,

A Fall River native stads @n Thursday, April 25. Rt. :Dlev, Msgr. Daniel A. Dwyer, iQ3stor emeritus of St. Barthol­ omcw's Church, Elmhurst, L. r. first came to the Long Island vorish as a curate in 1914. Monsignor Dwyer was 01'­ caaincd on April 25, 1908 in St, John's Seminary, Brooklyn. Hc holds an honorary LL.D. degl'ce from St. Francis College, Brook-

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Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Superintendent of Schools for the Diocese of Fall River, has been engaged to teach

)l.ey. paklok J. O'Neill.

throughout the year, while dur­ ing the busy summer tourist per­ iod the multi-purpose space will serve as a church seating 400 to 500 for Sunday Masses. The ex terior' character is of clean, regional, contemporary design conceived to blend with the existing buildings and yet express the building's educational identity. '

St. Margaret's new Parish Center, has been designed with optimum flexibility to accommodate th e b r 0 a d

interiors of long life, low maln­ tenance, rich textured and 1._at­ ural materials such as patterned white pumice block bearin~ walls which support laminated! wood beams carrying red cedar roof decking which will be iill a 'natural finish and exposed thl'oughout the structure. Nonbearing partitions will be demountable type gypsum board covered with vinyl wall fabric arid capable of being taken d(>wllll

The· selected materhll pallet includes brick exterior to blend with the original church with

Turn to Page Eleven

Dwyer 60 Years A Priest

:~is seventh decade of service 1~1 the vineward of the Lord

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Cape Church Plans

New Parish Center

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at the University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind., for the Summer session of 19G8. He will 'teach two courses in educational administration for

gra'duate students working

towards Masters and Doctorate degrees in education. Father O'Neill has previously taught courses in education at the College of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River and Catholic Teachers College in Providence. He conducted an Institute for Principals in Portland Maine in 1966. He has addresed a Con­ ference of Religious Superiors and a Workshop for New En­ gland Supervisors on .the tr~in-, , Tur~ .to 'Page "Ilighteem ,'.

L. r.

oJ; Immaculate Heart of Mary,

Brooklyn. In 1943, Msgr. Dwyer

was appointed pastor of St. Bartholomew's. He was named pastor emeritus in 1966. Msgr. Dwyer was elevated in 1950 to the rank of domestic prelate and five years later was named to the Board of Consul­ tors of the Brooklyn Diocese: Msgr. Dwyer also served as a member of the board of t.rustees of St. John's' Hospital, Elm­ hurst. In 1961, he was the recipient of the first Franciscan loyalty award presented by St.

Francis College.

A concelebrated Mass of

thanksgiving will be offered in Turn to Page Ten

'.

·From 1928 until 1933, Msgr. Dwyer was pastor of St. Brigid's Church, Westbury, L. I., and for 10 years after that pastor

Dioce~e Prepares

Sta lrt of 26th , Hett'1lrrt Appeal

begins Monday when 625 vol­ unteer special gift solicitors will make over. 2150 calls to profes­ sional, traternal, business people' and ind ustrialists. ·The .Special Gift Appeal phase will end May 4. Turn to Page Ten 4" • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

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MSGR. DANIEL A. DWYER

Re~oinmend Centrali%@t1'~on

Of Nilne Parish

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AUBURN (NC)-:-"':'Unification of this city's eight par­ ish schools and one high school into a single, centralized school system has been urged in ·a report prepared by an outside firm of educational consultants. Unification "is needed for the developlllent schools serving 3,300 students in of a superior progralll and this New York community. for proper and efficient use The report was hailed by of facilities," the report said. Msgr. James D. Cuffney, presi­ It also urged the schools to im­

prove both their curriculum and their staffs., ·The study, completed at the cost of $18,600 by the firm of Englehardt, Ehglehardt and Leggett of New' York, covered in'detail the ..present facilities, '.' financing" 'sta'ffing, program,s . -and· handicaps.: of . the nine

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dent of the Cayuga County Catholic School Board, and by Father Daniel Brent, associate superintendent of schools in the Rochester diocese. The Cayuga school 'board voted last Spring to hire, the survey firm. "This study is one of the most complete analyses ever made iD TUrn ·to Page Six


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04.18.68 by The Anchor - Issuu