Sister Jean de Sales Tito, C.S.J.

Sister Jean de Sales Tito, C.S.J., a nurse who was a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph, Brentwood, for 68 years, has died.

Sister Eileen Patricia Haggerty, C.S.J.

Sister Eileen Patricia Haggerty, C.S.J., a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph, Brentwood, for 73 years, died June 27 in Maria Regina Residence, the sisters’ nursing home. Formerly known as Sister Maria Prague, she entered the congregation in 1945 from St. Thomas Aquinas parish, Flatlands. Her ministries included Holy Child Jesus, Richmond Hill, 1947-1951; […]

Sister Carole Therese Fitzpatrick, C.S.J.

Sister Carole Therese Fitzpatrick, C.S.J., a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph, Brentwood for 64 years died June 28 while residing in Maria Regina Residence, the sisters’ nursing home.

Sister Barbara Doyle, C.S.J.

Sister Barbara Doyle, C.S.J., a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph, Brentwood, for 63 years died July 4 while residing in Maria Regina Residence, the sisters’ nursing home.

Sister Jean Patrick Cody, C.S.J.

Sister Jean Patrick Cody, C.S.J., a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph, Brentwood, for 68 years, died May 22 at the Maria Regina Residence, the sisters’ nursing home.

Metropolitan Museum Celebrates Rock & Roll’s Signature Sound

On the fiftieth anniversary year of Woodstock and for the first time in an art museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Met) and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame will examine the most important objects used to create and perform rock music: the instruments.

The True Danger With Wealth

by Father Patrick Longalong“For what profit comes to man from all the toil and anxiety of heart with which he has labored under the sun?”

Lessons in Virtue From Apollo 11

Fifty years ago this week, the crew of Apollo 11, the world’s latest heroes, were doing decidedly unheroic things: napping, drinking beer, playing cards, reading magazines, and otherwise killing time in the Manned Spacecraft Center’s “Lunar Receiving Facility,” where they were quarantined to ensure that no lethal bugs had been brought back from the Moon’s surface by Neil Armstrong (who saved the mission by taking personal control of Eagle and landing it safely after overflying a vast field of lunar boulders), Buzz Aldrin (who memorably described the moonscape as one of “magnificent desolation”), and Michael Collins (who, orbiting the Moon in Columbia while Armstrong and Aldrin were on its surface, was more alone than any human being since Genesis 2:22). The Lab was perhaps the least glamorous (and, as things turned out, least necessary) of NASA’s Apollonian inventions. For as Charles Fishman vividly illustrates in “One Giant Leap: The Impossible Mission That Flew Us to the Moon,” just about everything involved in effecting that “one small step….[and] one giant leap” had to be imagined, and then fabricated, from scratch.

Anxiety and Grace

Fourth in a seriesIn his Apostolic Exhortation, “Christ Lives,” addressed to young people and to the entire people of God, Pope Francis comments on a topic — anxiety  —  that has interested me since the time I was a high school student. Encouraging readers to follow their dreams, Pope Francis writes the following: