NEW FLAG APPROVED JPEG
NEW FLAG APPROVED JPEG

Cathy Locher

Sister Joan SorgeWithin a few days of each other two Springfield Dominicans received recognition, one at the national level, and another in a six-county region of Illinois, for their respective outstanding service and leadership skills to foster and enhance quality education.

VANDALIA — Teenage boys slightly outnumbered teenage girls at a co-ed Theology of the Body teen retreat held March 26-28 at Mother of Dolors Parish. The retreat for eighth-graders through high school seniors is based on the teachings of Pope John Paul II regarding God’s plan for love and life and how a person’s body reflects the language of the love of God.

ALTON — Marquette Catholic High School will venture down the yellow brick road to the Nazarene Community Center in Roxana to perform The Wizard of Oz, April 9-11. Shows will be at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, with a 2 p.m. matinee on Sunday, April 11. The cast of 30 features MCHS and other students from the community in all the whimsical Oz roles in a special arrangement with Tams-Whitmark Licensing.

The entrance to St. John’s Hospital will be moved from the north side facing Carpenter Street to Madison Street, facing east.St. John’s Hospital in Springfield will embark upon the largest construction project in the hospital’s 135-year history, pending approval of St. John’s two Certificates of Need (CON) by the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board. St. John’s plans to build a new centralized surgery department, renovate four floors of patient rooms in the patient tower, tear down some two- and four-story buildings on the hospital’s campus, move the hospital’s main entrance from Carpenter Street to Madison Street to face downtown Springfield, and create an outdoor healing garden with fountains across from the main entrance, on the east side of the Pavilion.

Eight-year-old Mikayla Hady’s generosity has inspired fellow parishioners at Resurrection Parish in Illiopolis to contribute to the children’s ward at St. John’s Hospital in Springfield.ILLIOPOLIS — Though she was only 7 years old at the time, Mikayla Hady inspired others at Resurrection Parish in Illiopolis to follow her lead and give generously to help others.

After Father James Palakudy, SAC gave his blessing at the end of the 10 a.m. Mass March, 21 at St. Thomas the Apostle Church in Decatur, parishioners joined Deacon Kevin Richardson to extend a blessing to their parochial vicar, who became a United States citizen last week. A reception immediately followed in St. Angela Hall, which was decorated in red, white and blue. Above, Gilda DeLeon presents Father Palakudy with a congratulatory poster, signed by numerous parishioners, as one of the many gifts presented to the Pallottine priest who is a native of India. “The entire office staff at St. Thomas had planned to go with Father James, for his swearing in ceremony, but we ended up having a big funeral here that day, and preparing for another funeral the next day,” said Phyllis Howley, parish nurse. Patty Gooding, parish secretary, was able to attend the ceremony.DECATUR — Greeting and shaking hands with the celebrant after Sunday Mass is a common practice in most Catholic churches. But on March 21 at St. Thomas the Apostle Church, parishioners had an additional message for their parochial vicar, Father James Palakudy, SAC. “Congratulations, Father Palakudy, on becoming a United States citizen.”

Illinois Gov. Patrick Quinn (far right) takes notes during a meeting with (clockwise from left) Cardinal Francis George of Chicago, Bishop Edward K. Braxton of Belleville (not shown), Bishop Daniel Jenky, CSC, of Peoria, (across from Bishop Braxton), and Msgr. Carl Kemme, administrator of the Springfield diocese. Robert Gilligan, (upper left) director of the Catholic Conference of Illinois, and Sean Vinck, the governor’s assistant, are also seated at the table.Over 1,000 Catholics from throughout Illinois packed the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Springfield to overflowing March 3 for Mass that opened “Catholics at the Capitol” day in Springfield.

Shown is an architect’s rendering of proposed changes to Sacred Heart-Griffin High School’s west campus. The project will include an upgraded weight room, remodeled office and kitchen space, new female locker rooms, heating and air conditioning systems and an energy efficient entryway. A St. John’s Hospital AthletiCare sports-medicine facility will be established on the west campus of Sacred Heart-Griffin High School in Springfield as a result of a long-term collaboration between the two Catholic institutions. The new 3,800- square-foot facility will provide patients and SHG student athletes with licensed physical therapy services, athletic trainer support services, and access on site to local orthopedic surgeons.

Sister Cristina Martinez, of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart ad Gentes, watches Msgr. Carl Kemme, diocesan administrator, ratify the names of catechumens from St. Alexius Parish in Beardstown. Sister Cristina instructs the Spanish-speaking RCIA sessions.Some 400 persons wishing to become Catholic or be fully initiated in the church participated in the Rite of Election of Catechumens and Call to Continuing Conversion of baptized candidates, held Feb. 20 and 21 at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Springfield.

St. Patrick Catholic School in Springfield will close at the end of the academic year due to financial difficulties, according to its board of directors.The nearly 100-year-old St. Patrick Catholic School on Springfield’s southeast side will close at the end of this school year.

Page 16 of 17