07.03.80

Page 15

THE ANCHORThurs., July 3, 1980

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New Creation "All things have become light, never again to set, and the setting has believed in the rising. This is the new creation." St. Clement

BIRTHRIGHT

Spartc:ms On All Star Yearn Lindsey Ketchel and Susan Feitelberg of Bishop Stang High School have been named to the New ,Bedford Standard-Times allstar track team along with the Spartanette 4x440 relay team of Kathey Malloy, Kathy Caswell, Ellen Vera and Chris Arthur. Miss Ketchel holds the school record of 112 feet 5J~ inches in the discus throw. A fourthplace finisher in Class C she was named most valuable field performer at the school's awards dinner. ' Undefeated in the two-mile and 3,000 meter events in dual meets,

Miss Feitelberg set a school and meet record in placing first in the Falmouth Invitational Meet. Her best showings are 12:05 'in the two-mile, 11 :15:4 in the 3,000 meters. In the 4x400 (1,600 meters) the Spartanette relay team set a school record of 4:15.2. Miss Vera, considered the best performer in track in the school's history, holds six individual school records, shares eight others in school relay marks, and has been the school's most valuable player in track for three straight years.

New [)irector at Apponequet Peter Looney has taken over the duties of athletic c:irector at Apponequet Regional High School in Lakeville, E.ucceeding Joseph Kobak. Paul Donegan received the Roy Caliri Award as the school's outstanding male athletl~ of the year, and Jean Win'berg was named senior girl athlete of the year. Scott Garvey was presented the Larry Pelletier Memorial Award and Mark Roberts and Chris Smith shared the Paul M. Kleiner Memorial Award. Most valuable player awards went to Jeff Nanfeld, football; John Sharland, most valuable lineman; Doug Broadbent, cross country; Dan Hopkins, boys' swimming; Scott Garvey, baseball; Mike Brown, boys' tennis; Paul Wesgate, track; Paul Aitken, golf. Most improved award went to John Audet, football; Mike Rousseau, cross country; David Toal,

swimming; Lance Livesey, baseball; Kevin Brown, tennis; Mark Roberts, track; Scott Holmes, golf. Most valuable players in girls sports are Jean Winberg, field hockey and basketball; Winberg and Lisa Hampston, softball. Winners of most improved awards are Sandra Grace, field hockey; Robin Alexander, basketball; Mary Jane Trainer, softball. Melissa Lawrence and Kathy Kalchthalter were MVPs in swimming and tennis, respectively, while Sheryl Vesey was most improved in swimming and Amy Zuber took similar honors in tennis. The entire basketball team received most valuable player awards and Scott Brady was the recipient of the Coaches' Award. In cheerleading, Linda Carroll was named most spirited and Vicki Sylvia most improved.

CYIO Golf and Baseball Golfers are reminded that the 21st CYO Diocesan Gulf Tourney will begin at 1 p.m. Monday, July 28, at the Pocasset Golf Course, Pocasset, and that they should contact CYO area directors now to ascertain dates for qualifying rounds in their respective areas. High point of the annual event is the presentation of the Marty Higgins Trophy to' the! outstanding golfer of the tourney. The Bristol County eyO Baseball League resumes play Sunday night with 6 p.m. twin bill North vs. Kennedy, South vs. Maplewood - at Chew Field in Fall River. Monday night's twin offering, also at Chew Field, has Central vs. Somerset, Kennedy vs. South. Wednesday night it will be Maplewood vs. Kenn,~dy, South vs. Central while on Thursday Somerset takes on South, North goes a~ainst Mapl,~wood. A single game at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Hanson Memorial Field at Somerset High School pits North vs. Somerset.

Six p.m. Saturday is the deadline for pre-entry in the first annual Mt. Carmel Festival Road Race to be held at 6:30 p.m., Saturday, July 12, from the Mt. Carmel Church rectory grounds in Seekonk. The event is sponsored by the Mt. Carmel Festival Committee and further information is available from Frank Mooney, race director, 60 Cynthia Road, Seekonk, Mass., 02771, to whom entries should be mailed. Chris McDonald, the 19-yearold Tiverton youth who boxes out of the Fall River CYO, has been impressive in recent appearances in national boxing tournaments. A finalist in the heavyweight division in the National AAU tournament in Louisiana a few weeks ago and also a finalist in the recent Olympic trials in Colorado, Chris has demonstrated his ability in the squared ring and has gained national recognition. He is a credit to himself and his trainer, Ron Comeau, boxing director at the Fall River CYO.

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tv, movie news Symbols following film reviews indicate both general and Catholic Film Office ratings, which do not always coincide. General ratings: G-suitable for gen· eral viewing; PG-parental guidance sug· gested; R-restricted, unsuitable for children or younger teens. Catholic ratings: Al-approved for children and adults; A2-approved for adults and adolescents; AJ--:.approved for adults only; B-objectionable in part for everyone; A4-separate classification (given to films not morally offensive Which, however, require some analysis and explanation); ~ondemned.

New Films

"The Big Red One" (United Artists): This routine war film attempts to convey the message that war is a brutal, futile business. It is a terious picture, however, which fails to evoke any empathy with the principals, four young soldiers and their grizzled sergeant (Lee Marvin). Vulgarities and much violence make it mature viewing fare. PG, A3 "Blues Brothers" (Universal): Two singers (John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd playing the characters they created on "Saturday Night Live") try to raise money for an orphanage by recruiting some topnotch black talent for a benefit. The plot seems little more than an excuse for some wholesale destruction and frenzied chases far more boring than funny. The rough language and the nature of some 'Of the jokes make it adult fare. PG, A3

"Don't Go in the House" (Film Ventures): A little boy whose mama burns him as punishment for being naughty grows up wanting to set on fire everybody who reminds him of mama. Grisly trash that exploits nudity an dviolence. Rating C "Rough Cut" (Paramount): Burt Reynolds plays a jewel thief and David Niven is a Scotland Yard inspector who per-

suades high society kleptomaniac Lesley Ann Down to set Reynolds up for an arrest. An attempt to combine a heist movie with a suave comedy, "Rough Cut," fails on both counts. Sexual references and general amorality rule this out for younger viewers. PG, A3 "Up the Academy" (Warners): A vulgar sophomoric romp sired by "Animal House:' this unappetizing movie has to do with military cadets getting revenge on a martinet commandant by sexual entrapment. R,B "Wholly Moses" (Columbia): Dudley Moore plays Moses' brother-in-law who mistakenly believes that he is 'the one entrusted with a mission from God in this tiresome attempt at satirical comedy. An occasional joke and incidental irreverence - the whole thing is too lightweight to take seriously make this adult fare. PG, A3

Against cut WASHINGTON (NC) - An official of the U.S. Catholic Conference has expressed "dismay" at the Carter administration's proposal to eliminate the recently established federal Office on Families. In a telegram to James T. McIntyre Jr., director of the Office of Management and Budget, Msgr. Francis J. Lally, USCC secretary for social development and world peace, urged that families office funding be retained. Administration efforts to reduce expenditures to combat inflation led to the proposal to drop the office. Msgr. Lally noted that the office would implement the recommendations of "the crucial 1980 White House Conference on Families" and that its budget is small.

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