For points of information:
My 2014 parish calendar (a diocesan parish, so yes,
Novus Ordo) lists St. Blaise on February 3 and St. Catherine of Alexandria on November 25.
I looked up Saint Philomena and discovered that her feast was never on the General Roman Calendar, but rather her liturgical commemoration was approved for some places. My 1950 edition of the Saint Joseph Daily Missal does not list her. She was included in the 1961 decree removing a few saints from the universal and local calendars.
Here is one of the more comprehensive databases of saints (on the calendar or not)
http://www.catholic.org/saints/There are an estimated 10,000 and more saints recognized by the Catholic Church. Only a very small portion are on the liturgical calendar at any given time (whether the universal calendar or local calendars), and Popes have been revising the calendars for centuries.
Saint Pius V removed Saints Joachim and Anne (parents of Our Lady), Anthony of Padua, Nicholas of Tolentino, Francis of Paola, Bernardino of Siena and Elizabeth of Hungary. He removed the feast of the Precious Blood and removed the word "Immaculate" from the title of the 8 December feast of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, abolished the previously existing special Mass for that day and directed that the Mass of the Nativity of Mary should be used.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tridentine_Calendar