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Thursday, October 27, 1988 SO YEARS OF RECYCLING 3RD AND ATH GENERATION KRIEGER PAYS CASH!!! For Scrap Metals • Aluminum • Copper & Brass Steel • Batteries • Radiators • Glass Bottles and Jars Vinyl Siding • Scrap Plastic Any new Industrial Buttons, Machine Shop or Factory that lists Krieger, we wiN gh* an additional percentage to your local etareh or Catholic Charity of your choice. — WB make plant pick-ups — CALL US TODAY FOR DETAILS (716)232-4767 KRIEGER WASTE We Pay HIGH PRICES for scrap metal Courier-Journal 60 YEARS OF RECYCLING 3RD AND 4TH GENERATION CALL 232-1363 ASK ABOUT OUR SUNDAY SAVINGS! Co-Produced b\ Rochester Telephone Corp. 17\) %<><>dbur\ Bl\d. Rochester. NY I4<>07 ir»<%if*. RochMtw'iAiriiM MOVING? LPIease Remember to Include f/ Your Mailing Label when ' notifying us of an address change. COUMER-IOUKNAL Bishop Matthew H. Clark President Bishop Dennis W. Hickey General Manager Karen M. Franz Editor Vol. 100. No. 4 October 27,1988 Courier-Journal (USPS 135-580) Published weekly except week after July 4 and Chrisiipas, by the Rochester Catholic Press As- sociation. Subscription rates: Single copy SOC. One-year subscription in U.S. $15. Canada and Foreign $20. 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- Journkl, 1150 Buffalo Rd., Rochester, N.Y. 14624. LiArs Rjce Tuuk Ifs All FRS for Seniors Wed., Nov. 2! Enjoy the excitement of thoroughbred racing — on the final Seniors Day of the season — courtesy of Finger Lakes! On Wednesday, November 2, at Finger Lakes Race Track, every- one age 60 and over will receive: • FREE Clubhouse Admission • FREE Program • FREE Small Beverage Post time 12:45 pm 4/ve racing continues through November 29. No racing Mondays and Thursdays. No racing on Wednesdays after November 9. ^ Simulcast wagering from Aqueduct starts in December! Ihrutay hit U, (jrundaigta, NY. for dining reservations, group pjrtie and more in/omufion. call nl/924-3%1 1 r r Food drive underway I SL Joseph's, PenfieM — Students at the par- ish school are collecting canned gopds for the Sisters of Mercy Tioga County Rural Minis- try program and the Inner City Fopd Shelter. The collection is the first in a series of social justice activities planned for the year and will end Friday, Nov. 11. The Sisters of Mercy program will use the canned goods in Thanksgiving packages, while the Inner City Food Shelter will! distribute them as needed throughout the community. For more information, call Ann Meyer at (716)381-9505. Party to benefit scholarship St. James, Rochester — The annual Father Feeney Scholarship Card Party will be held on Monday, Nov. 7, at 8 p.m. in the church hall, 109 Brockley Road. The Rosary Society and Men's Club are sponsoring the event. Proceeds will go towards offsetting student tuition costs. Tickets are $2 and can be bought at the recto- ry. For information, call the rectory at (716)482-9796. El Salvador delegation returns Corpus Christi, Rochester — The four- person delegation to the parish's sister parish of Santa Marta, El Salvador, returned on Fri- day, Oct. 14. The group had traveled to the country a week earlier to celebrate the rebuild- ing of the town of Santa Marta in a spot a few kilometers from its former location near the border with Honduras. The original town had been destroyed when the army drove its inhabi- tants out in 1980 in an attempt to destroy sanc- tuaries for anti-government guerrillas. Despite being given permission beforehand from the government to visit the parish, the delegation was stopped twice, on October 8 and 9, at a military checkpoint and refused passage to the parish, according to parish spokeswoman, Carole Farley-Taombs. Corpus Christi parishioners sent messages to the area's commanding general' complaining of the group's delay. On their third tijy, on October 10, the group was allowed to travel to Santa Marta. The delegation participated in celebrations commemorating the first anniversary of the in- habitants' return in October of last year. Mem- bers of the group also spoke to numerous victims of torture and harassment by the Sal- Parish Notes vadoran military. Paul Kuppinger, one of the delegation mem- bers, said that the military denied the group entry into the nearby village of San Jose de las Flores, which had also been established in the resettlement. Another American delegation had already been allowed to go through to San Jose de las Flores before the Corpus Christi group tried. The army then came through and shot up that settlement, Kuppinger said. The delegation found no support for the Sal- vadoran government during their travels, Kup- pinger noted. \It's generally felt that if (U.S) aid to El Salvador would cease, that the government would fall in a pretty short time;' he said. Kuppinger remarked that he had tak- en hundreds of photographs in El Salvador and that he planned to use them to create a slide show to educate the public about the situation there. Christian group to perform St. Joseph's, Penfidd, and St. John the Evangelist, Greece — A six-member group called Spiritsong from the Franciscan Univer- sity of Steubenville, Ohio, will present a con- cert of modern Christian music on Tuesday, Nov. 8, at 7 p.m. at St. Joseph's Church, and on Wednesday, Nov. 9, at St. John the Evan- gelist. Spiritsong devleoped from the Franciscan University's campus music ministry progam, which started in 1979. Each year, new students from the university join the group and travel throughout the United States and Canada. This year's tour will stop in 150 locations. Dinner to raise school funds St Philip Neri, Rochester — The parish will host a spaghetti dinner on Sunday, Nov. 6, from 12-5 p.m. in the school hall:Tickets,— $4 per adult and $1.25 per child, under 12 — are available at the rectory in advance or at the door. Each dinner consists of spaghetti, meat- balls, bread and butter, coffee and dessert Pro- ceeds will go to benefit the parish school. For information, call (716)482-2400. high schools Christopher O'Connor, a sen- ior at Iona Col- lege, New Roch- elle, N.Y., was in- ducted into Iona's chapter of Delta Epsilon Sigma on October 15. Delta Epsilon Sigma is a society of stu- dents achieving high academic ex- cellence within colleges of a Catholic tradition. Earlier this year, O'Connor, a graduate of Bish- op Kearney High School and St. Louis Gram- mar School, was also inducted into Sigma Tau Delta, an international English honor society. • • • Bishop Kearney High School has been noti- fied by National Merit Scholarship Corpora- tion that seniors Joseph Adams, Michael Hinchcliffe, Steven Tickell and Cheryl Batisti have been designated commended students in the 1989 National Merit Scholarship Program. The commended student designation indicates that the students finished among the top five percent of the more than one million students who took the PSAT/NMSQT examination in October, 1987. Thomas J. Demott, a member of St. John of Rochester Parish and a graduate of St. John Fisher College, has become a partner in Suss, DeMott & Smith, a new Rochester-based ac- counting and financial services firm. He.is also a member of the advisory committee for St. John Fisher College • • • St. Joseph's Villa has named Mary Jane Brennan principal of the Villa's campus school. She holds a Master's degree in Education from Nazareth College, and is a certified special edu- . cation teacher. Prior to her appointment, she was a senior high level teacher in the Villa's Residential Treatment Facility program. She is also an adjunct instructor in Nazareth Col- lege's special education department. Neighbors Sister Florian Reichert, SSJ, has published her second volume of poetry, Eye of the Cro- cus. Sister Reichert, a former music teacher at Nazareth College, was honored at a reception and reading at the college on Sunday, Sept. 25. Her first collection, Morning Blue: A Book of Poetry, was published in 1984. • • • In honor of the late James V. Chine, Jr., the board of directors of St. Joseph's Hospital Foundation have renamed the annual Centuri- on of the Year Award the James V. Chine, Jr. Memorial Centurion Award. The award recog- nizes an individual who lives in Chemung County and who has been involved in a volun- teer capacity in the improvement of the health- care system and has made notable contribu- tions to the community. The recipients are selected by the nominating committee of the foundation. This year's winner is Angelo Fusco. Fusco, a motel owner, has served as a board member of Neighborhood Justice, the Boy Scouts of America and the Chamber of Commerce. He is also the former commodore of the Watkins Glen Yacht Club, and is a member of the Moose and Elks clubs. • • • Dr. Esther Denaro-Maltese, director of the Secondary Education Program at Nazareth College, was awarded the \Sacro Cuore Med- al\ by the University Cattolica del Sacro Cuore during an international conference on Educa- tion Management: Cooperation in Dissemina- tion held in Brescia, Italy, June 1-5. Denaro-Maltese was nominated by the Italian Parliament to the Academy of Social and Eco- nomic Improvement to receive the award for her expertise in preservice teacher education. She had been invited by the Italian Ministry of Education to attend the conference as the U.S. representative.