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Thursday, May 19, 1988 MOTHERS DINE FREE EVERY SUNDAY IN MAY, BECAUSE AT PLUMS... MAY IS MOTHERS MONTH Offer is for one Mother with party of four; when another entree of equal or greater value is purchased. Not valid with other offers Over 100 Entrees Served Continuously Sunday 3.D0 pm -10 pm Mon. - Thurs. 41:30 am -10 pm Fri. - Sat. 11:30 am - Midnight 2411 W. HENRIETTA Rd. - 272-7900 •A Mile South of W. Henrietta Rd., exit of Rt. 390 You magnify your problems when you don't understand the contract. To be sure you understand the fine print of a contract, have a lawyer look it over before you sign it. Attorneys interpret the legal language and explain how the contract will affect you or your business in the future. Callow office for legal help. (716) 546-3393 No charge for initial consultation. ENOS AND ATTORNEYS AT LAW Christopher J. Enes & Gregory E. Enos 505 Executive Office Building Call (716) 546-3393 for appointment MOVING? .Please Remember to Include f/ Your Mailing Label when ' notifying us of an address change. CQURIER-IOURNAL Bishop Matthew H. Clark President Bishop Dennis W. Hickey General Manager Karen M. Franz Editor Vol. 99. No. 32 May 19,1988 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 30C. One-year subscription in U.S. SIS. 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, USO 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 Ms and attend parish activities around the Diocese. For Advertising Information Call: 328-4340 CoMrief/Journol Covenant celebration scheduled St. Augustine's, Rochester — On Sunday, May 22, at 7:30 p.m., Bishops Matthew H. Clark and William G. Burrill will sign a cove- nant agreement between the Roman Catholic and Episcopal dioceses of Rochester. The ceremony will begin at St. Augustine's, then Conclude with a reception at St. Stephen's Epis- copal Church. The covenant agreement is meant to foster a sense of healing and forgiveness between the two traditions. Itjcommits the dioceses to work for greater unity, dialogue and mutual under- standing. The ceremony and reception are both open to the public. Noted labor expert to speak St. Mary's, Rochester — The Downtown Community Forum's \Life After Five\ series concludes with a talk by arbitrator and labor relations expert Jean T. McKelvey, Ph.D., Wed- nesday, May 25, from 5 to 7 p.m. in the church's lower level community center, .15 St. Mary's Place. McKelvey will address the topic; \Public Re- view Boards: Promoting.-Democracy and Safeguarding Unions\ A question and discus- sion session will follow her presentation. An internationally recognized labor law ex- pert, McKelvey is a Rochester-based member of the faculty of the School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University. She just edited a book, Cleared for Takeoff: Airline La- bor Relations Since Deregulation, to be pub- lished in June. . . McKelvey is a member of the Public Review Board of the United Auto Workers, AFL-CIO; the Federal Services Impasses Panel; the execu- tive board of the International Society for La- bor Law and Social Security; and a past president of the National Academy of Ar- bitrators. The program is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be provided. For information, call St. Mary's at (716) 232-7140. Parish Notes Priest to lead healing services St. Mary Our Mother, Horseheads — Fa- ther Matthew Swizdor, OFMConv, will con- duct a series of healing Masses and services Saturday, May 21 r through Thursday, May 26, in the church. The Saturday service will be part of the 5 p.m. Mass; the Masses and services on the other evenings will begin at 7:30. Father Swizdor, an Auburn-area native, has developed a national reputation for his heal- ing ministry. He is the author of three-books: God in Me; Lay Hands on the Sick; and The Power of the Kingdom. The healing Masses and services are open to all people needing physical, spiritual or emo- tional healing. For information, call (607)734-2977. Pilgrimage to basilica planned St. Joseph's, Wayland — The parish is spon- soring a pilgrimage to the Basilica of Our Lady of Victory in Lackawanna on Sunday, May 29. The basilica was dedicated by Mohsignor Nelson Baker, who has been proposed for canonization. He was noted for his many charitable activities in Lackawanna, and served briefly at St. Mary's Church, Corning. The pilgrimage bus will leave St. Joseph's at 1 p.m. At 3, the participants will have a tour of the basilica, followed by a 4:30 Mass. After dinner, the bus will return to Wayland, with arrival scheduled for 8:30. The cost of the trip is S15. The cost does not include dinner. Reservations are due by May 25. For infor- mation or to make reservations, call the rec- tory at (716)728-2228. .> ^Vr-iV^VsV-i'^VXsV^-Vi^^^ Dr. Harry Murray, assistant professor of so- ciology at Nazareth College, has been named the second recipient of the Student Affairs' Service to Nazareth College of Rochester award. He was cited for developing special pro- grams for Nazareth students concerned about worldwide issues. During the last year he presented several nuclear awareness lectures at the college, organized a student trip to the U.S. government's nuclear testing facilities in the Nevada desert, and arranged for students to work in area soup kitchens while participat- ing in a homelessness awareness program. • • • . St. Charles Borromeo School has an- nounced the winners of its annual science fair. First place winners were Wendy Brundage and Heather Gray; second place winners were Michael Fitzgerald and Derek Wasnock; and taking third place honors were Meredith Grass and Lisa Di Nicola. Earning the award for Outstanding Achieve- ment by an Individual was Stacey Tears. • • • On Sunday, May 1, friends, family, co- workers and CYO coaches:past and present' joined in a surprise banquet honoring Joe Judge, coordinator of CYO's basketball and softbali programs for 30 years. During those 30 years, Judge has coordinated sports pro- grams that have included nearly 75,000 young people, according to CYO estimates. Judge is scheduled to retire in 1989 at the end of his 31st year at the CYO. St. Joseph's Hospital, Elmira, has an- nounced the appointment of Joseph P. DiBcneditto, M.D., M.P.H., as the new medi- cal director of Occupational Health Service, effective July 1. DiBeneditto comes to St. Joseph's after serving on special assignment to the medical director of CPC Pontiac Opera- tions in Pontiac; Mich. As the director of Oc- cupational Health Services, he will be responsible for administering the O.H.S. pro- grams for both outside industries and the hospital, as well as serving as an advisor to hospital employees and administration. • • • Eileen GoMe, an English teacher at Aqui- nas Institute, has been awarded a fellowship ' by the National Endowment for the Humani- ties. Goble will participate in a five-week sum- mer seminar program entitled \Local Roots and Cultural Identity\ at the Univiereiry of South Carolina at Columbia. ors The Monroe County Catholic War Veterans honored Roland Aube of Our Lady of Per- petual Help Parish as 1987 Catholic Layman of the Year at their annual communion break- fast, April 17. Aube earned the award for his service to the Church. • • • Two Cardinal Mooney High School students have been awarded scholarships to attend the 1988 International Summer Institute, an en- richment program conducted by the National Center for Excellence in Education. \Shiley Lechner and David Rinaldi are among 104 stu- dents from across the country chosen to par- ticipate in the three-week program on the basis of scores on a qualifying exam. They'may. choose to register for sessions at one of three sites: Long Island University, the University of California at Los Angeles, or Nice, France. • • • Holy Cross School had five winners in the Catholic Daughters of the Americas Education Contest, conducted in April. In the Art Divi- sion, Matthew Ownes won first prize. Brent O'Deir, Angela Caruso and Thomas Gibaud took first, second and third prizes respective- ly in the Essay II Division. Nicole Fink earned third prize in the Poster Division. The Daughters of the American Revolution presented Aquinas Institute Senior Paula Bcn- tivegna with the DAR Good Citizenship Cer? tiificate for her demonstrated qualities of dependability, leadership service and patri- otism. Brian Burke and Amy Zampi received the Merit Award from the Monroe County Council Veterans of foreign Ware for being responsible citizens and service to the school community. . -••••.•\•' .,-.••• Father MfchaeIR Cerretto, CSB, has been appointed principal of Andrean High School, Merrillville, Ind., effective at the end of the current school year. Father Cerretto, a Roch- ester native who graduated from Aquinas In- stitute and St. John Fisher College; has been a member of the Andrean faculty for six years, and is currently the rchgious superior fpr the Basiuan community living and teaching at the] school.. i_ i • • ,