
Steven Herbert named principal at Bishop Fenwick High School
Bishop Fenwick High School has named a new principal, who brings more than 30 years of experience in Catholic higher education to the role.

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Blessed Sacrament closes for good, holds final day of school Thursday
A local Catholic school that's been open since 1939 closed its doors for summer break for the very last time. Students at Blessed Sacrament had their last day of school on Thursday, and mixed emotions could be seen from students, parents and staff. Parents voice concerns to school board over closure of Blessed Sacrament The Erie Catholic School System announced that they were shutting down this past February, citing what they called a 'continuous decline in enrollment.' One parent said they are extremely frustrated, but they are hopeful about their case, which is currently being seen before the Vatican. Protest held following closure announcement of Blessed Sacrament School 'They've really paid a lot of attention to the decision. Within three weeks of sending us the information, they have looked at it well enough to know that they wanted to go further with it, extremely encouraging,' said Dorothy Sexauer, a Blessed Sacrament parent. 'We just had schools closed down in the Bronx in February, the same month we did, we had a school in Chicago the 31st of May, so this is an event of national importance.' Sexauer said they are taking a group of students to Waldameer to kick off the summer and keep their minds off the situation. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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14 hours ago
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Commentary: Why nostalgia for the 1950s of ‘Leave it to Beaver' persists in America's religious right
Anyone looking to drench themselves in the 1950s nostalgia currently favored by the religious right in America should consider watching 'Leave It to Beaver' stoned. Which is what I did with an old friend in the 1980s while attending graduate school at the University of California-Berkeley. Nostalgia for the '50s — that land beyond time where Catholic traditionalists such as Notre Dame political theorist and post-liberal prophet Patrick Deneen dwell — idealizes imaginary communities of yore such as Mayfield, the setting for 'Leave it to Beaver,' where the values of faith, family, friends and flag all flourished. According to this narrative, late-stage liberalism and the globalization of markets, with their characteristic rootlessness, dissolve this communal existence. When I was at Berkeley in the 1980s, a large number of my childhood friends from Princeton, New Jersey, somehow found their way to the Bay Area. One afternoon, one of my Princeton buddies was house-sitting for an uncle in a Bay Area suburb. The uncle, whom I'll call Uncle Jim, had been my Cub Scout pack leader in Princeton when I was in elementary school. One sun-drenched afternoon, my friend and I settled into a couch, he rolled some joints and we flipped the TV to 'Leave It to Beaver' reruns. The series, on the air from 1957 and 1963, is a resonant symbol of '50s nostalgia, one to which conservative Catholics have returned as a template for modeling natural law. To Catholics who moved to the suburbs in the '50s and '60s, 'Leave It to Beaver' was a 'medieval morality play,' as Jerry Mathers, the Catholic actor who played young protagonist Theodore 'Beaver' Cleaver, put it. The show was a guide for young souls more tethered to television than to the suburban church. Michael De Sapio, writing in the online journal The Imaginative Conservative in 2017, states that, according to Mather, Beaver Cleaver 'repeatedly succumbed to temptation, suffered the consequences, and was guided back on the path of virtue.' In other words, these archetypal storylines and characters represent a moral imagination that 'elevates us to first principles as it guides us upwards towards virtue and wisdom and redemption,' in the words of American philosopher Russell Kirk. De Sapio continues: 'The emphasis on decorum and good manners in the Cleaver family conveyed a vision of the good, true and beautiful.' Mathers shared that the casting directors for the show selected him to play Beaver when they asked where he would prefer to be after they noticed he was uneasy at the audition. His guileless reply: his Cub Scouts den meeting. Notably, the mission of the Scouts is to 'prepare young people to make ethical and moral choices over their lifetimes by instilling in them the values of the Scout Oath and Law.' Which returns us to Uncle Jim, my former Cub Scouts leader. He was an electrical engineer who ended his first marriage and moved to California in the 1970s, where he married a woman several decades younger and shed the trappings of his formerly decorous identity. 'Leave It to Beaver' mirrored and shaped the aspirations of millions of Catholics moving to the suburbs after World War II, and it has lingered as an idealized — and exclusive — depiction of the American Dream. The only nonwhite characters to appear in the show's 234 episodes were a Black man exiting a dairy truck in the episode 'Eddie, the Businessman' (1962) and a Black actress who plays a maid in the 1963 episode 'The Parking Attendants.' Within months of its final episode in June 1963 — following the March on Washington, D.C., in August led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and the November assassination of President John F. Kennedy — 'Leave It to Beaver' had become a charming artifact of mid-century optimism, more a product of nostalgia and romantic imagination than a realistic model for America's future. _____ Peter H. Schwartz writes at the broad intersection of philosophy, politics, history and religion. He publishes the Wikid World newsletter on Substack. _____
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20 hours ago
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Genni Asteri, Austintown, Ohio
AUSTINTOWN, Ohio (MyValleyTributes) – Genni Asteri, left this world peacefully to join her beloved husband in heaven at the age of 100 on Monday, June 9, 2025, surrounded by the love of her family. Born on February 2, 1925, in Caulonia, via Campoli, Reggio Calabria, Italy, daughter of the late Larry (Gilda) Carr and Maria Stella Tassone. Find obituaries from your high school She married Joe, the love of her life, on September 26, 1946, and came to the United States in 1947 with her brother Dominic, followed by her husband in 1949. Genni lived a life filled with love and, devotion to her family and to her Catholic faith, joy in simple pleasures, and warmth and love that extended to all who knew her. She celebrated her 100th birthday on her second birthdate, April 19, 2025, at a party held for her, surrounded by family and friends. Genni worked at Penn Ohio Towel Supply for many years as a seamstress. But her greatest joy was being a homemaker. She was known for her culinary talents, especially her delicious pizzelles she shared with everyone. She delighted in crocheting beautiful afghan blankets, sewing, baking, especially at holidays, canning vegetables from their own garden, and ensuring that no one ever left her home with an empty stomach. In her younger years, she enjoyed shopping and having lunch with her many friends. Her infectious spirit brought laughter and love into her family gatherings, and she loved to tell stories about her life growing up in Italy, and with her husband. Genni was a devoted wife to her late husband, and together they built a foundation of love and support for their family. Her children, her son-in-law, her grandson and his wife, and her great granddaughter meant the world to her, and she treasured the time she spent with them. She is survived by her daughter, Mary Theresa (Paul) Martin of Niles; her son, Joseph A. (Kathleen) Asteri Jr. of Austintown; her grandson, Scott (Christy) Martin; great granddaughter, Meredith Martin; sister, Theresa Trell of Arizona; a brother, Louie (Janice) Carr of Austintown, and many nieces and nephews in the United States and Italy. Genni was preceded in death by her husband, Joseph Anthony Asteri, Sr., who passed away November 12, 2017; her parents and stepmother; a sister, Rose Chiera; and three brothers, Dominic Chiera, Guiseppe Chiera, and Vince Carr. Calling hours will take place on Friday June 13, 2025, from 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. at Higgins-Reardon Funeral Homes, Austintown Chapel. A Mass of Christian Burial will take place on Saturday, June 14, 2025, at 10:00 a.m. at St. Joseph Church, where we will gather to honor her legacy. Prayers will be held prior to i Mass at 9:15 a.m. at the funeral home. To order memorial trees or send flowers to the family in memory of Genni Asteri, please visit our flower store. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.