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t eanc 0 VOL. 42, NO. 33 _ Friday, August 28, 1998
FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS
. FALL RIVER, MASS.
Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly
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$14 Per Year
Vocation fair hopes to attract from 'across the diocese •
A day on the Cape offers a good look at what 20 communities of men and women religious have to offer, all under one roof. By JAMES N. DUNBAR
EAST SANDWICH - While Cape Cod doesn't need to push itself as a vacation spot, pt:rhaps its
center, 324 Quaker Meeting House Road. The day will begin with morning prayer "And then we will invite everyone to go and take a look," said Father Dahl. "We have invited 20 religious communities of sisters, brothers and priests representing a variety of orders. Many will present videos and make presentations and answer questions and all will have literature to offer. If anyone has any curiosity about a vocation, this will
ish library at the expansive parish center, Father Dahl was joined by Holy Union Sister Doreen Donegan and Patricia Stebbins, vocations committee chairman and parish librarian.
ANCHOR STAFF
lure will attract young people from throughout the Fall River Diocese to a massive vocation fair to be held in September. That's the thinking of Father Henry J. Dahl, parochia.l vicar at Corpus Christ Parish here, chairman of the fair, "Seeking Our Shepherds," to be held Saturday, Sept. 26, 10 a.m,-2 p.m., at the parish
be the time to talk about it and get questions answered. Everyone is invited. We're aiming particularly at high schoolers and above and even those in careers today." It has been planned as a casual, walk-in day, Father Dahl explained. "We'll end the day with prayer and Bishop Sean P. O'Malley will be present for the closing." In a recent interview in the par-
lege kids and anyone who has a glimmer of thinking about what religious life might be like." Stebbins said that the committee has contacted every high school, Tum to page three - Vocation Fair
Three diocesan employees recognized for community service By MutE GORDON
VOCATION MINDED - Father Henry J. Dahl, Holy Union Sister Doreen Donegan and Vocation Fair Chairman Patricia Stebbins are at the helm for the Sept. 26 event in East Sandwich that will offer an opportunity for those mulling a' vocation to get an inside ~ook.
"We will be focusing on all vocations, not just to the priesthood, but to the diaconate and the religious life of sisters.and brothers too," said Sister Donegan. "We are inviting all youth groups and col-
NEW BEDFORD - Helping others in one's community is something that many people talk about but never seem to take the time to do. That's· not the case with three outstanding citizens who were a m 0 n g some dozen persons recently recognized for their efforts within the ANA MEDINA . New Bedford Hispanic community. All members of Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe Parish in the Whaling City, Ana Medina, Edwin Aldarondo and Naim Ben'avente agree that helping people is what it's all about. Last month each of the trio received certificates from U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, Fall River Mayor Edward 1. Lambert, New Bedford Mayor Frederick Kalisz and Massachusetts Governor Paul A. Cellucci, among others. In addition to working on the community level,
each is active in the diocesan Hispanic Apostolate, which is coordinated by Father Paul E. Canuel, who also directs its New Bedford office and is pastor of Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe Parish. Ana Medina Born in New York, Ana Medina is a secretary and parish councilor at Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe, starting work at the parish in 1990. Among her responsibilities are translating papers and interpreting for Spanish speal.\ers at various agencies and doctors' offices. She described herself as "a type of social worker," saying "I saw a need in the community and like working wit h people. There's a big need and I have the skill to help." She said that the EDWIN recognition for her work with ALDARONDO the' Hispanic Apostolate was unexpected. "You do the work and don't expect
recognition like that because you just do it to . h e I p . . . . - - - - - -.... people," she declared. Edwin Aldarondo Ed wi n Aldarondo, also a New York native, has for some two and a half NIAM years been BENAVENTE a Hispanic Advocate for Catholic Social Services. He has lived in N~w Bedford for eight years and is active in community affairs, through Catholic Social Services helping Hispanics with basic needs and immigration related problems, also assisting those who wish to become U.S. citizens. "I really love my work. It makes my day to help people," he declared. "I'm never. too busy." He feels there is a need for more people to get involved in community service and commented that his faith helps a lot in his work. "It's my strength," he said. Tum to page five - Workers
Supreme Court Justice Ireland ·to speak at Red Mass dinner FALL RIVER - Massachusetts Supreme Court Justice Roderick L. Ireland of Milton will be the guest speaker at the second annual Red Mass celebration dinner to be held Sept. 20, 5 p.m., at White's of Westport. The Red Mass, to be celebrated earlier that day at 3 p.m., in St. Mary's Cathedral by Bishop Sean P. O'Malley, is the key JUSTICE event in the program the bishop established I~ELAND that yearly honors a judge, a lawyer, a court worker and an ecumenical honoree serving within the justice system. This year, Massachusetts Appeals Court Justice Robert A. Welsh, Jr., of Dennisport; Atty. Joseph P. Harrington of New Bedford;
Retired ClerklMagistrate James H. Sullivan of the Attleboro District Court; and Retired Superior Court Judge August C. Taveira of New Bedford, are the honorees. . Justice Ireland was appointed as an associate justice of the Supreme Judicial Court by Gov. William F. Weld in 1997, and is the first African-American to sit on that bench. Previously, he served as an associate justice of the Appeals Court for seven years and as an associate justice of the Boston Juvenile Court for almost 13 years, both appointments by Gov. . Michael S. Dijkakis. A native of Springfield, Justice Ireland received his bachelor's degree from Lincoln University, Pennsylvania, in 1966 and his doctor of la~ degree from Columbia University Law School in 1969. He began his legal career as an attorney with Neighborhood Legal Services in New York City. In 1970 he returned to Massachusetts and was a staff attorney at the Harvard Center for Law and Education. From 1971 to 1973 he served as chief attorney, then deputy and ex-
ecutive director at the Roxbury Defenders Committee. He also worked as a part-time legal counsel for the Roxbury District Court Clinic, 1974-1977, and as an associate at Burnham, Stem & Shapiro during 1975. In 1975 Justice Ireland received his master of law degree from Harvard Law School, where he was a teaching fellow. From 1975 to 1977 he served as assistant secretary and chief legal counsel for the Massachusetts Executive Office of Administration and Finance, and then as chairman of the state Board of Appeal on Motor Vehicle Liability Policies and Bonds in 1977. . Justice Ireland began teaching law courses in 1972 and since 1978 has been an adjunct faculty member at both the School of Law and College of Criminal Justice at Northeastern University. He is currently completing his doctorate at Northeastern in its Law, Policy and Society Program. He is the author of "Massachusetts Juvenile Law, Volume 44" of the "Massachusetts Practice Series," published by West Publishing Company in 1993. Since its inception in 1990, Justice Ireland
has been an advisor and teacher for the Supreme Judicial Court's Judicial Youth Corps, a court education program for high school students. He is also a regular participant in bar activities and continuing legal education programs. Active in his community, Justice Ireland is a frequent speaker in schools, churches and community forums. He has been a member of the Eliot Church of Roxbury for many years, participating in numerous church-sponsored programs and initiatives.. Among the many awards Justice Ireland has received throughout his career are the Boston College Law School's St. Thomas More Award; several honorary doctor of law degrees; the Judicial Excellence Award from the Massachusetts Judges Conference in 1996; the prestigious Haskell Cohn Distinguished Judicial Award presented by the Boston Bar Association in 1990; and the Boston Covenant Peace Prize in 1982 in recognition of his efforts to promote raci~l justice. Justice Ireland a'nd his wife, Alice Alexander, live in Milton.