00First Fall Meetings Scheduled By Parishes
Bellevue
Catholic Daughters of Amer-
ica--Court St. Gerard of Over-
lake, CDA is planning a "steak
and bean" dinner tomorrow
ight, Sept. 14, at the Edmund
home.
The 7 p.m. dinner will be for
court members, their husbands
and guests and Mrs. Walter
Schaefer is chairman. For in-
formation call the Attwood
home, GL 4-3476.
The regular meeting will be
held Wednesday, Sept. 18, at 8
p.m. Mrs. Bernard Kaifer will
e in charge of me program to
,llow the meeting.
Bellinqham
Assumption Parish--The Altar
Society held its first board
meeting and Rev. John C.
O'Connell, pastor, spoke on the
need for CCD teachers and
choir singers.
Society meetings are held on
:he first Monday of each month
1ith the Communion Mass the
Sunday of each month.
Officers are Mrs. Robert Lee,
president, assisted by Mes-
dames Vernon Young, • James
Roe and Lyle Desmul.
Carnation
St. Anthony Mission--A ham
dinner will be held Sunday,
Sept. 22, from 12 to 6 p.m.
in the church basement.
Tickets are $1.50 for adults;
75 cents for children six to
twelve and children under six
free. Family tickets may be
purchased for $5.
Enumclaw
Sacred Heart Parish--A tur-
key dinner will be served Sun-
day, Sept. 2, in the parish hall
from 11:30 a,m. to 6 p.m.
Adults are $1.50 and children
under 12 are 50 cents. Tickets
may be purchased at the door.
Olympia
Oblates of St. Benedict--Meet-
ing is scheduled Sunday, Sept.
15, at 4 p.m. at St. Martin's
Abbey.
Seattle
St. Anne Parish--The Mothers
Club will meet Wednesday. Sept.
18, at 1 p.m. in the school hall.
Nursery service for children 18
months and older will be pro-
vided.
A "friendly uniform ex-
change" will be held at the
same time. Anyone that has or
needs good used school, Camp-
fire, scout or athletic uniforms
is urged to attend.
Third Order of St. Francis,
St. George Fraternity --
Members will make a pilgrim-
age to St. Peter Mission Church
at Suquamish this Sunday, Sept.
15.
Members will attend Mass at
their own parishes and those
I
going by chartered bus must
be at the Colman Ferry Termin-
al, Pier 50, foot of Marion St.,
by 11:30 a.m..at the latest.
Those driving can come any-
time.
Luncheon will be served at
2 p.m. at the Suquamish Com-
munity Hall, and there will be
exhibits of Indian work and a
program. The pilgrimage will
close with a short talk and
Benediction in St. Peter's.
All proceeds will be used to
help build a small chapel at
La Libertad on the Island of
Negros in the Philippines where
two Franciscan priests Father
Cyprian, and Father Clifford
are working.
Order of Martha -- Meeting
will be Tuesday, Sept. 17, at
12:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Lucy Stulle, 1610 Second N.
St. Alphonsus Parish--The
Altar Society will meet Tues-
day, Sept. 17, at 12:30 p.m. in
the church meeting room. Host-
esses will be Mesdames John
Nelson, John H. Peden and
Rose K. Goiney.
Association for Catholic Child-
hood--The September quarterly
tea will be held Tuesday, Sept.
17, at 12:30 p.m. at the Broad-
moor home of Dr. and Mrs. A.
C. O h m a n, 100O Shenandoah
Drive E.
Honored guests will include
Mesdames J. L. Carroll, Robert
Moody, Joseph Zimmer, Bruce
Hawkins and Joseph Holleman.
Also being honored are the re-
vived Maude Rogers and Mary
O'Connor Circles as well as the
newly-formed circles of Rae
Blethen, C1 a r a Trate, Irene
Weber, L o u i s e McEvoy and
Veronica Olwell.
There will be cars at the gate-
house to take those members
arriving by bus to the Ohman
residence.
"Dominican Mothers Club---A
dessert card party will be held
Freshman Orientation Set At SU
Although classes do
not begin at Seattle Uni-
/ersity until Thursday,
st. 26, newcomers to campus
will begin arriving Friday,
Sept. 20, when the dormitories
open.
Six days of examinations,
seminars and social functions
will follow including the fol-
lowing events:
1) Sophomore committees
will meet arriving freshmen
the airports, bus and train
depots throughout September
20 and that evening there will
be a Hootenanny in Bellar-
mine Hall for all dormitory
fresh;
2) Friday and Saturday eve-
nings, Teatro lnigo will pre-
sent "Ring Round the Moon"
aht 8:15 p.m. at their little
eater;
3) Saturday the Washington
Pre-College Guidance Test will
be given all entering freshmen;
4) The Freshmen Beanie Ball
will be held Saturday beginning
at 9 p.ha. Live music will be
featured;
5) The Very Ray. A. A.
L e m i e u x, S.J., university
resident, will be host at the
resident'a reception in Bel-
larmine Hall from 2 to 4 Sun-
day afternoon;
6) Monday morning Father
Lemieux will welcome the
freshmen at a convocation in
Pigott Auditorium after which
the fresh will take vocational
motivation tests and, in the af-
ternoon, boys will attend an
ROTC Assembly followed by a
meeting with the deans of the
schools;
7) Monday will also bring
meetings wi t h department
heads and an open house at
The Spectator, the student
newspaper. At 6 p.m. the
freshman b a n q u e t will • be
served in the Chieftain with a
mixer and variety show fol-
lowing.
8) Tuesday the annual Orien-
tation Mass for freshmen will
be offered in St. James Cathed-
ral. Returning students will reg-
ister Tuesday and freshmen
registration starts Wednesday;
9) Tuesday evening the man-
datory reading program discus-
sions will begin at 6:30 p.m.
Upperclassmen will lead the
discussions;
10) Classes begin Thursday
morning.
Dr. karson Head Of
SU Socioloqy Dept.
DR. FATHER
LARSON GOODWIN
Dr. Robert J. Larson, asso-
ciate professor of sociology at
Seattle University, has been
named head of the Sociology
department succeeding Rev.
James P. Goodwin, S.J., Rev.
Frank B. Costello, academic
vice president, announced.
Father Goodwin has been
assigned to the Jesuit semin-
ary at Mount Saint Michael
near Spokane where he will
serve as spiritual director for
tile seminarians. He has been
a member of the faculty at
Seattle University since 1950
when he received his master's
degree in sociology from Har-
vard.
Dr. Larson is a 1949 Seattle
University graduate. He re-
ceived a master's degree from
Fordham and a Ph.D. from the
University of Washington. He
has been in the department
since 1952.
New SU Education
Instructors Named
Dr. Winfield S. Fountain, act-
ing dean Of the SU School of
Education, has announced the
appointment of two new faculty
members.
They are: Dr. Mary Hamil-
ton, associate professor of ed-
ucational psychology, and Dr.
Ronatd J. Rousseve, associate
professor of educational guid-
ance.
Dr. Hamilton is director of
Guidance Services in the Wash-
ington State Office of Public In-
struction.
Dr. Rousseve received his
doctorate from Notre Dame and
has been director of the College
Counselling Center at Prairie
View A. and M. College, Prairie
View, Tax.
at Blessed Sacrament Parish
gym Tuesday, Sept. 17, at 12:30
p.m.
Tickets for $I are available at
the door and all are requested
to bring their own cards. Chair-
man is Mrs. R. A. Willison.
Seattle University Guild--Mrs.
Winston D. Brown has been
named president of the board
With the following officers also
named:
Mrs. Roy Roberts, first vice
president; Mrs. John W. Schille,
second vice persident;'Miss
Jane Sellen, secretary, and Mrs.
B. J. Skahill, treasurer.
The two new board members
Mrs. Michael Dederer and Mrs.
Talbott Carroll.
Tacoma
Third Order of St. Francis--
St. George Fraternit€, Tacoma
branch, will be meeting this
Sunday, Sept. 15, at St. Pat-
rick Church with the novice
class beginning in the school at
2:30 p.m.
Chapter meeting will also be
at 2:30 in the church hall and
choir meeting wilt be in the
church at 3:30 with Rev. Angelo
Cardoza, O.F.M. officiating.
Siena Club-Meeting will be
Thiarsday, Sept. 18, at 8 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Neal C.
Gregory, 1001 N. 11th. There
will be a discussion of current
topics and a review of "Clement
XIV and the Suppression of the
Jesuits" (E.E.Y. Hales) by
Mrs. James H. Egan.
St. Rita Parish--St. Francis
Sodality will meet Thursday,
Sept. 19, at 8 p.m., in the parish
hall. Hostesses will be Mes-
dames James Aquino, Gens
Teodoro and Carl Benson.
Oblates of St. Benedict--Meet-
ing is scheduled Sunday, Sept.
15, at 3:30 p.m. at Visitation
Church.
Variety Is Keynote
Of Puyallup Fair
PUYALLUP -- Variety is the
keynote of exciting entertain-
ment for all ages that will put
the "fun-for-all" in the Western
Washington Fair here again
this year.
This Fair's 60th season starts
Saturday, September 14, and
the traditional nine-day show
runs through Sunday night,
-September 22.
The array of top-flight fea-
ture attractions is deemed "the
best we've put together since
World War II," according to
J. H. McMurray, secretary-
manager.
He called attention to the
firewo/'ks spectacular every
night, the only such event of
major scope and showman-
ship scheduled in the region
under terms of new state
laws.
Entries from all over the
state are in competition for
ribbons or cash in hundreds of
categories--farm produce, live-
stock, poultry, pets, cookery,
sewing; handicrafts and hob-
bies, the arts--that are the
time-honored foundation of all
fairs.
Commercial displays by busi-
ness and industry, showing a
substantial increase this year,
and eating foods and confec-
tions of every description con-
stitute the enjoyable activities
ranking next in popularity with
"children up to a hundred
years old," McMurray said.
Special attractions, staged by
an imposing roster of top-flight
professional talent, guarantees
• everybody a memorable good
time that has come to be ex-
pected by local fair-goers since
the classic was founded in 1900.
Headlining a one-act va-
riety bill of both European
a n d American performing
• artists are the Great Wal-
lendas, high-wire stars and
circus royalty of international
fame who have lost six of
their members in tragic mid-
show accidents within the
last two years.
Fast-paced and thrilling, the
grandstand shows will be
staged every afternoon and
evening, and Happy Kellerns,
well-known clown, will be back
again to entertain young and
old alike.
Dinner Set
At St. John's
New Parish Hall
A prime rib dinner served
by candlelight will be the first
social function planned for the
new St. John Parish hall to be
dedicated Sunday, Sept. 22.
The dinner will be held from
5:30 to 9 p.m. that evening and
Jay CuRer, head chef for the
Ballard Elks and Ed Workman,
chef at Crawford's Seafoods
Restaurant, will be in charge.
The price will be $3 per per-
son and the public is invited to
attend the dinner and tour the
new gymnasium-hall at St.
John's. Walter ,1.. Talbot is gen-
eral chairman.
+ 4.
Fr;day, Sp÷. 13, Iq63 THE PROGRESS--7
St. Brendan Show Set
PLANNING a style show of fashion patterns as well as
ready-to.wear clothes are (from the left) Mesdames Robert
Bader, Bernard Botz and Judith Watt of St. Margaret
Guild of St. Brenden Parish in Bothell. The show will be
held Thursday, Sept. 19, at 8 p.m. in the parish hall. Ad.
mission is 50 cents and includes refreshments. Mrs. Botz and
Mrs. Rod Studhy are co-chalrmen.
Fourth Degree Formal
A PATRIOTIC centerpiece with miniature flags was shown
by Mrs. John Cantrill of Bellevue to Harry F. Naehr (cen-
ter) and Mr. Cantrill for use in the James Shields General
Assembly of the Knights of Columbus' Fourth Degree an-
nual fall formal installation dinner-dance Saturday, Sept.
14, in Sand Point Country Club. Festivities will begin at
6:30 p.m. Music will be by the Tony Brucker Trio. Timothy
H. Ham, Jr., is the new faithful navigator. Naehr is dinner-
dance chairman.
GYMNASIUM and AUDITORIUM
SUNDAY, SEPT 22 at 5 P.M.
NORTH 79th & 1st AVE. N.W.
followed by the
DEDICATION DINNER
(PRIME RIB OF BEEFAND "THE WORKS")
This will be a gala occasion you can't afford to miss!
Everybody Is Invited
THE DINNER--will be prepared and served by
the well-known Chef Mr. "Jay" Culter and his staff
-.and Candle Light with Organ Music by Gene Smith
It's All Quite Informal--Come as you are!
DONATION: s3 PER PERSON .
NURSERY SERVICE
Will Be Provided in the
SCHOOL HALL
-- mlm
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION--
Phone: SU 4,0409
SU 3.0646
SU 4.4395
:!
WATCH FOR THE SPECIAL ST. JOHN'S SECTION IN NEXT FRIDAY'S PROGRESS
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