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Thursday, January 7, 1988 Courier-Journal Delivers Meats, Groceries and Baked^ Goods DELIVERS Prompf, Courteous Service - 7 Days a Week MATTRESSES • FUTONS BOX SPRINGS Around the Diocese ANY y SIZE ANY SHAPE ANTIQUE BED SPECIALISTS SPLIT BOX SPRINGS FOR QUEEN SIZE FRE6 PROFESSIONAL MEASURING Call Today For Our Representative (716) 271-3660 Produced in full accordance wiih the laws of ihe Church governing valid and licit matter for Altar Wines. / » 'x fNEHDA •- mm CALL ORDERS COLLECT (716) 346-5760 O-NEH-DA VINEYARD CONESUS, N.Y. 7107 Vineyard Rd Conesus. New York 14435 716 - 346-5760 Divorce Mediation An alternative path . to a divorce settlement For further information calk Tbm Hanson 546-7220 Catholic Family Center 50 Chestnut Plaza Rochester, New York 14604 The [COURIER-JOURNALj will present its . . . Wedding Supplement. Thurs., Feb. 18th, 1988 Serving the Rochester Catholic Diocese More weddings are performed in the CathoDc Church than in any other. ^~~ Our most popular issue every year is our Wedding Supplement. This section, in addition to appearing as a supplement in the issue of February 18, is also distributed to couples attending Pre-Cana instructions throughout 1988. Included in this Package are 12 one inch ad insertions '^ A \| in a Wedding Guide appearing monthly in the Courier- Journal where your company name will be seen throughout the year. ws V* page Vi page Vi page Full page 5x8 inches 5 x 15 Vz inches lOVi x 8 inches 10V4 x 15V2 inches 350.00 595.00 595.00 1095.06 Phone: 328-4340 for Information MOVING? .Please Remember to Include ) ;Your Mailing Label when ' ; notifying us of an address change. GDURIERMOURNAL Bishop Matthew H. ([lark President Bishop Dennis W. Hickey General Manager Karen M. Franz Editor Vol. 99. No. 13 January 7, 1988 Courier-Journal (USPS 135-580) Published weekly except week after July 4 and Christmas, by the Rochester Catholic Press As- sociation. Subscription rates: Single copy 50c. One-year subscription in U.S. $15. Canada and Foreign S20. Offices: 1150 Buffalo! Rd., Roch- ester, N.Y. 14624, (716) 328-4340. Second Class Postage paid at Rochester, - N.Y. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to Courier- Journal. 1150 Buffalo Rd., Rochester, N.Y. 14624. INCREASE ATTENDANCE At Your PARISH FUNCTIONS Make Your Fund Raisers a Success... Advertise them in The Courier-Journal! Every Thursday and Friday, our subscribers read our Ads and! attend parish activities around the Diocese. For Advertising Information Call: 328-4340 Parish hosts pre-cana program Our Lady of Lourdes, Elmira — Engaged couples are invited to a pre-Cana conference hosted by the parish on Friday and Saturday, Jan. 15 and 16, in the parish center. Friday's session is scheduled from 7:30-10:30 p.m. On Saturday, couples will gather from 9 a.mr3 p.m. Lourdes parishioners are also invited to an ad- ditional session entitled \Planning Your Wed- ding Ceremony\ on Saturday evening from 7-8:15 p.m. - To register, contact Marc or Lisa Rustici at (607)732-5816. Parishioners are also invited to a post- holiday appreciation party on Friday evening, Jan. 22, from 6:30-8:30 p>m. in the parish cen- ter. The party is intended to bring parishion- ers together, welcome newcomers, and thank volunteers..^ Pastor proposes new outreach Corpus Christi, Rochester — Father James Callan has proposed a new parish outreach '\program to offer women an alternative to abor- tion through counseling, shelter and support. At Corpus Christi, we offer hospitality to the homeless, the hungry, the ex-prisoner, the sick, the dying and the little children!' he wrote in a Christmas bulletin message. \How about offering hospitality to those who are pregnant and have nowhere to turn?\ On Saturday, Jan. 9, the parish will offer a nuclear resistance retreat from 9 a.mr2 p.m. parishioners are also planning to welcome Father Emory Tang, a priest from California, who^will conduct a parish renewal January 23-28.' For ihformajieli on any of the above items, contaeTTnVfectory at (716)325-2424. Parish Notes Holy Cross to offer concert poly Cross; Rochester — Holy Cross School Band will present an instrumental concert featuring a medley of holiday tunes on Wed- nesday, Jan. 13, at 7 p.m. in the school hall. All are invited, to share the/Christmas spirit. * The parish's School AgeChild Care Center has also opened in the newly refurbished par- ish house at 4488 Lake Avenue. The center operates from 6:45-8:45 a.m. and 3:05-6 p.m. For information, contact Katie Irwin, (716)865-3821, or the Maplewopd YMCA, 647-3600. UR parish to sponsarlservice Newman Community, University ofiRoch- ester ^- Parishioners will sponsor an afternoon worship service at Monroe Developmental Center on Sunday, Jan. 24, at 1 p.m.-The cen- ter, located on Westphal Road, houses 430 peo- ple with mental retardation and other handicapping conditions. During the service, Newman Community members hope to include residents in singing and prayer, and afterward to offer them an op- portunity to socialize over refreshments. Volunteers are needed to serve as escorts for residents and to provide music, refreshments and hospitality. For information, contact the chapel office at (716)275-4322. J* Two Rochester-based organizations, Cephas Attica, Inc., and the STAR Program were ^mong 15 winners of the Fourth Annual Eleanor Roosevelt Community Service Awards. The awards, presented by Governor Mario M. Cuomo's wife, Matilda, and Brooklyn\ Aux- iliary Bishop Joseph Sullivan in a ceremony last month at the state capitol, recognize civic or voluntary organizations that make out- standing contributions to the community through the use of volunteers. More than 300 organizations from across New York state were nominated for the Roosevelt Award this year. Cephas Attica, Inc., is a program that since 1972 has provided job training and counsel- ing for ex-offenders both prior to and after their release from prison. The STAR Program, administered through the Catholic Family Cen- s ter, recruits volunteers to provide elderly men . \and women with friendly visits, transportation and light housekeeping. • • • A hiring committee last month chose Pau- line and James Dobbertin to serve as co- directors of Corpus Christi's home for the homeless, Dimitri House. Parishioners' prayers were also answered with the recent arrival of Chuck Sawyer, who is serving as a full-time staff resident at Rogers House, an outreach program for ex-offenders. • • • Teen suicide prevention was the topic of a faculty inservice program for teachers at Nazareth Academy last month. The featured speaker, Dr. Christopher Hodgeman, director of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at Strong Memorial Hospital, outlined the early signs and symptoms of depression, as well as methods for coping with those symptoms. \It is important for the faculty to be able to recognize the early signs of depression which may lead to thoughts of suicide!' remarked Sis- ter Marlene Pape, Nazareth Academy nurse. \(Teachers) must be prepared to deal with those students appropriately by referring them to the agencies which will be able to help them!' • • • Four students from Aquinas Institute dis- cussed high-school-level peer pressure and drug abuse with elementary-aged students as part of the Rochester Police Department's Drug Abuse Residence Education (DARE) program last month. During the 12th of 17 weekly DARE ses- sions, Kacey Compisi, Ellen Frederick, Aaron Micheau, and Joe Triassi visited Nazareth Hall, Holy Rosary, Holy Family, and St. Philip Neri schools to answer questions such as \what hap- pens if you refuse drugs at a party?\ \Students wanted more than facts\ Micheau explained. \(They) wanted to hear from anoth- er student what it was like and how to handle situations!' Neighbors The Catholic Theological Society of Ameri- ca has awarded a Rochester native, Father Walter H. Principe,CSB, the 1987 JohnCourt- ney Murray Award in hqnor of his distin- ' guished work in the field'of theology. Father Principe, the son pf the late Arthur and Louise Principe, former members of St. John the Evangelist Parish, Humboldt Street joined the Congregation of St. Basil after ^graduating from the-Aquinas Institute. He was ordained in 1949, after which he continued theological studies at the Sorbonne in Paris and tljePontifical Institute of Medie- val Studies, whehs he was awarded the doctor of medieval studfessdegree summa cum laude in 1954. He has subsequently served as a Sen- ior Fellow of the institute, as well as a profes- sor in the University of Toronto's Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies. The author of five books and numerous ar- ticles on theological and religious topics, Fa- ther Principe earned a Guggenheim Fellowship, for research in 1967. Among the other academ- ic honors he has since received are a Canada Council Research Qrant, a scholarship and re- search grant from tjhe Association of Theologr. ical Schools, and; a. Humanities Research Council of Canada Leave Fellowship. ' • • • Energy was the -focus of experiments and models entered by students in the first Science Fair sponsored last month by the Renaissance Program at St. Mary's School, Waterloo. Judges Matt Brennesholtz, an engineer with Phillips ECG, David Mulvey, a science teacher at St. Mary's and Terry Youmans, science teacher at Waterloo High School, chose the following students' projects as winning entries: 1 first place, Rachel Brennesholtz; second, Christopher Wilcox; third, Kevin Kuney; fourth, Christopher Petrosino; fifth, Megan Grela; sixth, Matt Stowell and Timothy Wadhams. Local companies, including New York State Electric and Gas, Evans Chemetics, Goulds Pumps, and the Waterloo Lions and Rotary Clubs donated prizes for the winners. Sister Mary Judith Heberle, RSM, principal of Our Lady of Mercy High School, has been reelected to the executive board of the Mercy Secondary Education Association. This month, the association will begin an eighth year of collaboration between educators serv- ing 45 Mercy secondary schools located in 21 states as well as Argentina, Belize, Honduras and Jamaica.