Fourth of July


The Fourth of July is a day filled with all sorts of family traditions, memories, activities and of course fireworks! As a young girl growing up in North Central Oregon, we attended the family reunion every 4th of July and it was a great opportunity to see everyone outside of a wedding or funeral and have some fun together.  One of my favorite memories is the time The Dalles Fire Dept. set up a volleyball hung by a net bag to  a wire that strung about 100 feet in length with a tether at each end.  Two teams of five would each have a fire hose and try to move the volleyball from the center of the wire to the other end of the wire defeating the other team who was attempting to move the volleyball to the opposite end of the wire. It was a hot day, the water was refreshing and we got a sense of how powerful the water is going through the fire hose.

My Mom and my Aunts were all excellent cooks who cooked from scratch.  Aunt Marie and her daughter, Rita, achieved state fair honors, several years as “Queen of the Kitchen” and had a reputation for excellent cooking skills.  You could always count on great food at the picnics.

Even though the Fourth of July marked our Independence, it was also a Patriotic Holiday which led to talk about relatives who had given their lives in the various wars.  One of the most memorable in our family was my Dad’s first cousin who died in WWII.  When word reached his Mother in Central Oregon, she died of a heart attack.  They had a joint funeral Mass for them.

The 4th has always been one of my favorite holidays probably because it is a “good weather” holiday and we can enjoy outdoor activities.  This year I will be enjoying a barbecue with family and friends and we will have a trap shooting contest.

I hope you have a wonderful 4th of July!

St. Mary’s Academy Scores Huge Hit with Title IX (Forty Year Commemoration) Dinner


I am so glad I attended the St. Mary’s Academy Title IX Dinner at the Tiger Woods (Nike Campus).  My friends know I often refer to myself as a “Title IX Girl!”  Local soccer star and Olympic Gold and Silver medalist, Tiffeny Milbrett was the guest speaker and Diane Hooley warmed up the crowd with a little Title IX history which was interesting.  Milbrett stole the show showing her real self, a warm hearted wholesome sport loving young woman raised in Hillsboro, OR. She played for the University of Portland and made the 1996 Team USA Soccer team (first time soccer was an olympic sport for women) where she played for 15 years winning a gold and silver medal and several World Cup honors.

Title IX is very important to women and today’s youth has no idea about the impact.  The law has been challenged over 20 times and is vital to gender equity for women.   I started high school in 1972, the year that title IX passed.  I spent my four years helping put high school teams together for girls.  We made our own basketball uniforms while the boys had brand new ones every year.

I hope you encourage your daughters AND sons to read and become familiar with Title IX.  It is about a LOT MORE than sports!

10 Key Areas of Title IX:

http://www.titleix.info/History/History-Overview.aspx

Seton Catholic School Play, SSMO trip by Chartered bus to Sacramento…exciting week ahead!


This week will be an exciting week for me.  Life at CYO and Camp Howard is exciting in itself.

What am I looking forward to?  Outside of CYO I am looking forward to the Seton High School Play “You Can’t Take it With You” starring, Madeline Hunter and co-starring, Cheyenne Cunning!  The play opens Friday night at St. James in Vancouver and will play on Saturday and Sunday as well.  The school could use your support so consider checking it out.  Seton High School is a new Catholic High School as of 2009.

We have our Spring AD meeting on Wednesday night.  This meeting will be filled with a lot of interesting information for CYO Athletic Directors for the coming 2012-13 year.

On Friday I will leave town for Sacramento, CA. joining some 40 Sisters of St. Mary of Oregon to travel in a chartered bus to see the Smithsonian Museum’s  “Women in Spirit” – the history of Religious LIfe in America.  I am looking forward to this trip because it caps our 125th anniversary as a religious community.  It is the first time in my 30 years as a Sister that we have done anything like this as a community of Sisters.

I will be blogging about the trip from the bus and from Sacrament so stay tuned.

I hope this is a blessed week for YOU too!