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The Times Record from Troy, New York • Page 7

Publication:
The Times Recordi
Location:
Troy, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE TIMES RECORD, TROY, K. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 10, 1953 primitive wiIdcrn Brings Championship Tlwj'll All At Your When You Drink Whelan'i Grape 4 BY THE MAKERS OF WHELAN'S GINGER ALE Strricc Coll AS 4-5181 Jcrscyville, 111. (UP)--The local liijih school, preparing for its nual freshman-sophomore basketball tournament, sent its usual invitation to Bunker Hill, 25 miles away. The invitation went astray and ended up at Campbell Hill, 100 miles to the south. The Campbell Hill frosh-soph team journeyed to Jerseyvillc before Hie error was noticed, entered the tourney and won the championship.

i a a Lighl-as-o-feolher Nylon mesh to give you an air- cooled shoe thot really wears. As cool at a strow hot. Hextitly Mai Hmtitly PriitJ $13.50 Othtr Slylci $13.50 75 CONGRESS ST. WHEN OLD FRIENDS MEET--Two Watervliel servicemen who were good friends and schoolmates here but had not seen each other since they entered service, met recently at Pusan, Korea. Pvt.

William Alund, U. S. Army, left, and Machinist Repairman, third class, Anthony Kasparian. U. S.

Navy, are shown together at that Korean port. The sailor is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Georse Kasparian. 612 Twenty-third Street, and the soldier is the son of Mrs.

Thomas J. Alund, 2127 Fourth Avenue. Kasparian, who is stationed aboard the U.S.S. Kcrmit Hoosevelt, a repair ship, graduated from Watervliel High School in 1950 and entered service in September, 1951. Private Alund also attended Watervliet High School and entered the Army last year.

Verse Of Troy Nun Gains Prominence Here, Abroad BY KEITH MARVIN When a child writes verse or gives vent to a poetic impulse, the inspiration of such writing can generally be traced to a given assignment from his or her English teacher. When an adult, man or woman, writes poetry, doggerel, blank verse or sonnet, the occasion more often fostered by a sincere desire on the part of that person to express an emotion, and this dif fers sharply from the basic reason for the child's creative instinct The child writes, usually by assign mcnt--the adult to express any o. a number of emotions. Talldrj Clothen Tht Capital District no pajanuflook We. Believe Thif The Largest Selection in The Arm! this is, style Nylon and Tailored SLATE GRAY CHARCOAL HUE HUE GRAY COCOA BROWN SKIPPER BLUE LIGHT BLUE Ih.rl.

lien forllyi llouli You'll save upwards of $10 on one of these superb nylon and acetate rayon cord suits that itay trim tven on the soggiest Summer day. TAILORED to fit like the finest rtqular weight suit you can buy this suit gives you the greatest wearing comfort Sad. Choose from our tremendous election largest in the area believe in A wide variety of colors and styles. 621 RIVER ST. 2 BLOCKS NORTH TDft OF KOOS1CK ST.

I If I When a member of community turns poet, the underlying desire verse can generally be traced to inherent lnv of God and belie in those things associated wit! God, Christianity and the teaching of the Church through the centur ies. Religious poets are not rar as such, but throughout the centur ies they have been pretty well sea! tered throughout the four corner of the earth, rather than being con centrated in any one country continent? Such a person is Sister Mar; Ada, C.S.J., a member of the Sis ters of St. Joseph of Carondelet this city, a kindergarten cache at Sacred Heart School, whose firs published poem, "Star Folk," ap peared in "America," a naliona Catholic' magazine, Jan. 11, 1941 It would be unfair to say that the sister had at any one time "turner poet," for she has been writing since she was a child. The former Eileen Lomasney Schenectariy, Sister Mary Ada saic she has been writing verse since she was able to read.

Her gcand mother, the late Mrs. Carolyn Fair child Mackintosh, also wrote vcrs which was published in nationa magazines, and like Sister Mar, Ada, was quite a hand with arl The nun. paints as well as writes and in the latter medium prefer working with watercolors and oils Her work has been published in such religious periodicals as "Splr it," "America," "The Sign," Ih "Anthonian" and "The Magnificat 1 in this country and in "The Sower' in England. Jn addition, many ex amplcs of her verse have found Iheir way to newspapers in this country and her work has been in- eluded in anthologies of verse A'hich comprise works by other con writers including Thomas Merton, the monk and authoi if several novels concerning life among the Cistercians at Gcthscm- inc, Ky. A noteworthy example of Sistei Uary Ada's work was published in 1H49 and entitled, "There is Hearth." There is a Hearth where great good curls Make merry all together, And never mind a ticking clock Or ever mind the weather.

tVhpi-fi every guest a happens in claimed as each one's brother, To share the self-same company And love the self-same Mother. Our Father keeps the fire bright. glows on happy faces, While Mother hustles in and nut 'orevcr saving places. From North and South, from East and Wc.sl All roads a come arc narrow. )ur Father has such anxious eyes numbers every sparrow.

Ho watches all the livelong i She prays against the weather. They will not rest till all good hearts Arc sately Home together. Sister Mary Ada. whose parents, Mr. and Mrs.

John Lomasney reside in Schencctady, was born in that city and was graduated from St. John the Evangelist School prior to her entry into the order. Previously she taught first grade classes in a Utica parochial school but recently has been on the faculty at Sacred Heart School, Troy. She also has been attcnd'ng the College of St. Rose, Albany.

She has won the Summa Cum Laude award from the Catholic Poetry Society and examples of her verse have been previously published in two volumes of that organization, "Drink From the Rock" and "From the Four Winds." Sikkim tiny buffer state in the eastern Himalayas, ranges in altitude from 400 feet to 28,146 feet above sea level. ORDERS ARE ROLLING IN DO WE HAVE W.QWl ORDER? 1'RICES WILL SOON ADVANCE PETERSON PACKER COAL CO. FULTON and FOURTH STS. AS 4-6700 WOTKYNS DIVISION, AS 2-5091 A A FOR ASSURED COMFORT Ihnl Al- so YMTI KM'lrlrnrr DR. LOCKE SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN EXCLUSIVELY AT T.

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About The Times Record Archive

Pages Available:
303,950
Years Available:
1943-1977