The Record Newspaper 11 September 1986

Page 1

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• St Thoma ore Church t Margaret River ha r c ved an rt trea ure for t b I tower. See story, picture p ge 11.

PERTH, WA: September 11, 1986

Numbe 2496

POST ADDRESS: PO Box 50, Perth Aberdeen St, WA, 6<XX) LOC'ATION: 26 John St, Perth, (off Fitzgerald St)

TELEPHO E: (09) 328 1388

Registered by Australia Post

PubhcatJon

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Perth Aborigines are not seen in churches because many of them have been made to feel they are alie s. In Geraldton, Bishop Hickey says some Abor"gines have stopped going to Mass because of unfriendly messages and overtly hostile comments by many church people. The Perth Aboriginal Counci

says in a letter for A riginal Sunday: "Often we exp rience peo le loo ing down on us; al ing o us; long way away from us a to avoid touching us at the sign of peace.

ODD "The looks we get without anything being said make us fe I

uneasy. 'There is oo little support and too much opposition to jusfce for Aborigines amo gst catholic people.

'


any girl off to Italy

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St Jo ph's Co lege, Albany, student Ju e Hartley ha been cho en a an exch nge tud nt to vi it Italy. Jule wa cho n out of n ne cand date by an Independent panel of three Int rvlewer • Th

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II II D "There is much negativity, most of it unconscious, that prevents unity. Only last wee an Aboriginal family to d me no-one ever sat near them in Church nor greeted them after Mass. I have heard those painful words many times. Some hav e stop go· g to Mass because the unfrie dly message was only too clear o them.

A special Geraldto re ort

D "On he positive side here are many Church initiatives hat I welcome most ent usiasfcally, such as the extension of Cat olic Aoor"ginal Schooling in he Kimberley, he d velopment of Aboriqrgies, he efforts i adul io and ·c:1ging courses sponY he Ch rch, and he advocacy y he Church · n matters of justice. re · much more we can . As a Churc e are, let us e, a more benign spo sor t an a Gover ment instrumentality. We can offer much in the felds of he Ith, employ ent, social adva cement and self-sufficiency m v me ts," Bisho Hie ey.

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Record More married men to be ordained

Guest Editorial The Catholic Weekly Sydney

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I was a stranger and you made me welcome; naked and you clothed me; sick and you visited me, in prison and you came to see me.

Aborigines are the most criminal race in the world. o sane person would accept that statement. Nor would anyone agree that Northern Territory citizens are 10 times more criminal than those of Canberra. Yet statisics suggest at a poor Abo "gine from the Territory, if co victed of a cri e, wou d ave at least a 1000 per ce t more cha ce of being jailed than someo e in court e sewhere in the country. Professiona Richard Harding, the Director of the Australian Institute of Crimino ogy, said in March this year: Aboriginal Australians are the most imprisoned indigenous people in the free world ... the results of a census of jails in June, 1985 were 'staggering' . . . the national rate of imprisonment among 18 to 24-year-old Aborigines were more than five per cent, comp red with a rate ofjust over half of one per cent for the Australian population as a whole. What an abomination this is. We cannot believe that Aborigines, as well as being the most imprisoned ethnic group in the free world, are /so the most wiclced. n Western Australia today Abo · i co prise around a third of the dutt male prison t ey are more population. The fact is not criminal, ut y re poor a d I of c ·

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Seminarian shot dead

Midland acolyte and decorated police chief expec

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Commissioner for Police in WA Mr Brian Bull, has made a meteoric rise to the top of our Police Force, and also gained an honour in the Australia Day Honours given only to a few. Commissioner Bull, along with three others, was a recipient of the first Australian Police Medal ever to be presented. No stranger to outstandinq success, Mr Bull havi ng joined the police force in February 1953 after having served three years as a cadet, went rapidly from strength to strength. He spent 20 years with the CIB, is a member of the Institute o Legal Executives and in 1982 was awarded a grant from the Australian Japan Foundation to study in Japan. Having gained commissioned off cer ran in January 1984, Mr Bull was made Chief Superintend nt in Feb uary 984, Assistant Commissio er in o em r 1984 d Commissio er in arch 1985.

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line news with follow-up stories for days, but now it is no news and unfortunately murder s more or ess accepted as inevitab . "The est contributor to violent crime today, O ug ,"

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got the messa e across. "A significant number now are not drinking and driving but unfortunately there are still those willing to ta e the risk and of course they are now paying the penalty," said Mr Bull. • What sort of moral standard do you expect from members of your Force? '1expecttotal moral commitment on the part of my police force," said r Bull emphatically. 'We have police regulations to ensure this moral commitment extends through to their private lives too, necessitating a high standard of moral behaviour. "It is necessary and enforced by the present police regulations," he said. 'This extends both to the departmental function and their pr" ate r • Is a policeman eve df

duty?

" o, r," id r Bull, " rrespective of whether he is on holidays ere, or an re in the r d. Police officers ta e an oath of offace to the

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of life is that a person like the pope has become a target for assassins and of course it · s our duty to ensure they don't succeed," he said. "A massive security organisation will be put into action, unparalelled in our state's history, simply because he attracts so many people. It is evident that people who have lost confdence in the tradiional system. ook to t e

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'This attracts so many peop e around him and unfortunately attracts those people who see him as a threat and want him eradicated," he said. "Because it is a 24 hour operation we can saturate with existing staff and because of the America's Cup, we have a lot more staff avai able plus the fact t e are no races on that part ar day." From the Catholic viewpoint, I a ed Mr Bull questi n regard to his re ig· : • Doyouf It lay peope could and will

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In an age of TV communications, the world grows smaller. The afflicted people in Ethiopia seem doser; a war in Asia does not seem far away. The TV viewer's understanding of the world and of his or her place in it is somewhat altered. This week we continue our exploration of issues in

media awareness, examining television and movies, and their impact on people today. Cindy Uebhart, NC's media reporter, notes that the TV cameras seem to be everywhere, allowing viewers to watch the unfolding dramas as they occur in real people's lives. This can have advantages

and disadvantages. But the immediacy of so many images is part of television's uniqueness. Katharine Bird, associate editor of the NC Religious Education Package, discusses current films and TV programs that introduce viewers to other cultures. The writer says she likes to hope that this

kind of programming not only will contnbute to making the world seem smaller, but that it will help shape a world of greater unity and interdependence. Dolores Leckey, executive director of the US bishops' Laity Secretariat, writes from an educator's point of view about the power of

tele;siotJ as an educational faro. No doubt about it, tele;siotJ does inform peOfe. But to change peote's behaviour in lastJg ways - a key conem of the educator the,ewer must be taken intoVJnsideration in 5P&al ways, she thinks. M1t.ecl<ey suggests that the iewer cannot be

considered incidental if truly educational television is to succeed. And Father John Caste/at writes of the communications world in biblical days. Contrary to what some people may think, he said, people in biblical times had considerable reading material

The whole • • universe 1s shrinking rapidly...

The mysterlou5 world of India, the andent, rich culture of Japan, the fa5dnatlng sapofRmsla- all are brought within reach of the average person for the price of a movie ticket or the twlsl of a lV switch. Two recent blockbuster media events, the movie "A Paasage to Jndla"andthe 14-wedt lV Sttin 1'heJewel In the Crown", offered

Ben Kingsley. in the title role of the award-winning film ""Glllldhr. portrayed one of the great men of peace of this century. The film hBVe sparlced interest in another film, ··passage to India··. and• telewsions series. "7he Jewel in the crown". which. like ""Gandhr. offer«J intriguing glimpses into life and culture in India little known to many Westerners. Television II/Id movies offer graphic evidence on a regular basis that the world is shrinking and that its people are growing increasingly interdependent.

By

Katharine Bird Intriguing glimpses Into Indian Ille and culture along with lush views of a country Uttle known to many Westemen. Both the movie and the lV Sttin explored the natuff of the rela· tlooshlp between the Brlthh, the mlnorlty but nillng class, and the people of lndla, the majority but ruled race. The fictional accounts provided vlc,vcn further u.ns.et·

tllng cvldiencc that troubled racial relationships have a long history.

Somenme 1n the 1960s our reteviston broke and we decided not to have 1t fixed There were r� objecnoes from our young ch.Jldtc:n. v.,.-ho were 00\iousl) 1n.ftu· enc<d b) the,r parems' anU· 1V bias ( football fever cvcntll3Uy returned telcvi on co our homc:1) Gtven my iWUlllpllon at the time tlut tclC\o'ISlon contributed Little to lcarrung m the: home, It was somewhat surpn 1ng to find ffi)'X-lf �"Ork.Ing 10 a 1V tUdJO LO th<' arty '1'0s An cduca.tional sutioo hired me to dCSlgn an adult·educauon program tolled B>.cl. to Your Teln1s1on" The prognm onvol- an cxpcnment. Hov.. could td cvisioo Ix USocd, ,n a moreor·ICS& orgaru..,cd "'•Y, as a learning tool" Ob\1ously telni,;;ion often influences people. But education � 1 mean ll here bnntp l.ut,ng thangc 1n p,copl('s bc:h.n 1our Could teln,s.ion scrw 1n th.It lund of cdu<.·auon.tl proce - and .iid people 10 the ongoing txplora.tion of life's meaning" I fcltstrongly tlut for adults to truly learn tn this v,r,ry. they must be as fully engaged 1n the process as possible So my first Mcp ,.... to hoSl a conference bringing together rcp�tat1\.'CS of

.,.alk

/

By

Dolores Leckey ma.;or community orgaru�

tions co cell "'hat thC)· thought v.ould be mo\t helpful for adult viewing audiences The second key ,,ep wa..1 to build what 9,-c nUcd '"\icw-

mg groupo·· For c:umple. if the topic of a program v.,.115

nutrition. we

tried

to

arnngc for groupo of ordi

rury people to meet with nutrition c.xpcru Togethathey wouJd \1cw our progr.un and talk about It But the c:c.pc:rimcnt v.,.� on1) moderaccly \Uct.cliful "'11>" For one thing. the \1�1ng groups v.·erc tern porary Ontc the program 9,1·.15 O\.'Cr, ,o was the \.iC'\\-1\ng group There W11S no oppo<· turury to �inforce what�

The movie and n· s,,ri", perhaps bulld· Ing on the lnterc t fueled by the awanl.. 1 n n l ng movie "G:lndhl", also deplCI · characters on each

must acuvety participate in the educational process Vfbat happens if thi5 human factor •� ligtue<P As I moved from behind-

tbe-scenes prognmm,ng to

on·thc-:ur production, more decovenes awaited me. Td C\.'15100 - a-en educancear teievtsron - is an action medium, a.nd often its action takes the fonn of conflict 1lu meant find.Jog 1.ssucsof potential conflict that nught emphasise divergent \1t'W· points between progr.un guc>tS Best of the show's human interaction involved a bu of argumc.nt, so I was told' Of course, some programs have mherent confun One was a ncs of dulogucs in whrch paremv and teen· ager; talked about responshilit). counterculturaJ ltfc· "')1� the denunds of Im,:

Cameras everywhere An -1hquake dev-

uta181 Mexico City.

end NI.Cue workers toil night end day 1ID reach the� of people trapped under the rubble of ooJlepwl buildinga.

The 111111.uion cameras an, there, lilently NICOrding it •• - the

Churches orgarused parent teen \1<.-v.1ng g.rourr., for Ulls scnc- From pa..,tot"'i,. I heard

shock end grief of people who lost i-ents or children, �,_or friends; the glimmers of hope and then joy ...... infant. miraculously spenid. is pulled from the ruins. Anglicen Bishop Desmond Tutu plunges into the midst of • rioting mob out· side Johennesburg. South Africa, to shield • police officer the mob hN Nized end plen9 to kill. In• scene familiar to ·Jiewers al

n helped to-ecr numerocs

1n111.1.ti\e

to promote par cnttccn undcr-aandmg iow, 10 years later, I have had time enough to son through .my ambivalent feel le:imed. question the lnfor· 1ng� ahout this pov.crful mat1on, lend ongoing su� mcdtum Is televtston a Viii hie educauonal tool? I've pon to learners. llus tS education's human answered that question for factor. It means that one mr'iClf m the fellowing v.,.;iys who learns ls not merely a 8) itself, tetev.sron can pas.si""' party It suggests that inform and even msprre the learner - the viewer wuness public eetevistcn. wtuch makes the lessons of 11"======---;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;• history or the mysienes of narurc ava.ilable to a1J

• u ca ton Ed t

Hao, you see a 7V pro. gram in the last two u'f!eks tbat was so amusing, or so lnfonnattue, or tbat so angered you tbat you later fell compelled to talk about it with friends or co-workers' Can you recall a mo,-te tbat delivered a message wtth such force tbat you laterfoundyourself talking It over at borne or in tbe netgbhourbood, Chances are tbe ansuer to both questions Is yes

Television, after all,

is

part of life's da/Jy fare

for an awfully lot of people. And with the advent of the video cassette recorder, ii appears tbat mo,.;es are becoming more and more a part of tbe ordi· nary home's atmos pbere

Television and movies

are absorl,ing e:xperten. ces - m more u..ys tban

one.

8 The Record. September 11, 1986

�Ide who arc a�-at"C of

the INWling -· .,,

But. generally, the uuerscuon of people on a longer-

owrtumed cer bums in the bedcground •

the televilion canw focus on the angry fac»a al people denied

term basis is needed to change behaviour and stretch horizons lastingly

Sitting tn tho studio control

basic human rights too long, end the impusioned, cour-

room watching ideas get t.nnsformed into 1V pro-

egeo.• 1- al • men plucliug for en end to

grams. I admired the techru·

cians creating a ncw language through the camera. In the 1nten-erung years my adnurauoe grew So dtd my <.'OOV1ct.100 that a key ingredient for genumety educational televtvron 1, human interaction - the human factor What I the means to this uueracuoo> What are the places where It can occur)

the violence.

ODO And

the

telev1,1on

lamcra.., u-c there, too P«ri Boele _.res• teJ.v;sion-. for the C.rhok Tel«iomf1HIIICllt10ns N«worlr of Amor,c:a dunng liw cown,g. of• n-til,g of the N.-..J Conf-.c. of Cllthol,c 8tshcps TMs» days. tMIIISIOt1 CMIWM to IH ewryw,,_ Through tlN t«:hnology of sate/litas and cable telr,;sion systems. ,,_,..""" rum on th# tM111sion -s 24 hours• dr; and mstMrtly IH inform«J on � thousands of miles -.or

a., an IUonots parish keti"' nervous vigil for il, pa., tor and fellow pamhoo ers ahoa.rd i h11Jc..kl·ll N'A ,c:t on a runwa) ,n

Lt b lleirut; .,,,hen a 16·hour concert b}' the hottest names in pop music raises money for Afncan funine reuef These days, telei.i"on cameras seem to be

every�1here, capturing

hfe's mt'riad experiences On any given rught of the week. you can turn on the ne""� and he trans· ported half a world awai Or, perhaps more pre· cisel>, half the world " transported to you How does this glut of information and images from all over the wnrld effect mchviduals? Can it 1n some way foster their growth as human beings> Their involvement with the human family> Television posses.ses an ability to deliver ltve pictures of people caught up on an unfolding dr.una, bnnging the cvcnlS and people to life. It gives viewers the sense of being there. fa'cn those who work in tclrns.ion often wonder whether the cameras

ought to intrude m every

suuauon or whether viewers should be presen t as every drama unfolds - a f.uruly's per· <onal moments of gnd oc anxlety. for example But there i, a recognition tlut thos aspect of television nukes a powerful impact on people's understanding of them· ,cl,.-e, and thctr world

More than JU>! malung viewers aware of the world. televisson involves viewers at a very basic level In the way II shows people, faces, television can serve to establish a

bond, a heightened sense that we arc all members of the same f.uruly "The shock of recognition" is the W2) the late Marshall McLuhan des cribed this power 10 "The Medium os the Mes· sage." •10 an electric rnforma non environment. minor· oty groups can no longer be contained - ignored Too many people know too much about each other Our new environ· ment compels cornrmtmcnt and parncspauon We have become UTCYOC·

ably involved with. and responsible for. each other," McLuhan said TclCV1S1on, by us very nature, stimulates the intellect, engages the senses, arouses the emo11 ons, perhaps even

sparks th <.:OC\SCICOCC It can ,ur fcchngs of anger

or compassion. pleasure or fear It can also gJ\-C viewers the sense of parncrpanon in the events taking place We somehow share in the experiences of the people caught up m tnwnph or tragedy -

The biblical media One could eaily get the idea that the only books the Jews end early Christians had to fill their lives weN1 thoee of the Bible. The invention al printing was • long way off, writing matllriels were expensive end. anyway, relatively few people could l'IIIKf or

write.

1bc Grttks and Rooum had their poets and pl.rv wngl11.s. buo fc,,. Jews or Omst111'\5 rad lhcm

By

Father John Castelot JCW\Sh cin:Ic.s. some from Ouisc:wu.. some - m thC' furm 11 came 009.n to us from Jewish authors later ahted by Omst,,ns.

to

A n-c.ent cdtbon ol thcx bool.s conums U compo9

8 C to th< second century AD Som< of It came &om

include "'"""' purported 10 be l"'e¥<atJons ma<k to great figurn ol antiquity 1lq � of the "now it can � told" type

HQ't>.�r rcctnt diSC<Ner focus ancnt1on on an am=ngly rich and clJvcne hterarutt ..1udl ftounsha1 from the second century

lJOO.s. The,

1lq pretended to rcvaI secrets of thC' heavenly world and of the rnd of the

present world

Wrtucn ac a 1u1� of pa!e· cut1on, 1nsccunty and anx 1ety, they off'cm:I a.s.suranccs of God's ultima1e \'ictory �r cv,I 11lcy �:ere the produc.:ts of h\.'t:t) umguut oons Mos< of all. the wori<:> Qtosfied thi: popuLlr tlursi tor 1nformat1on about the unc;et.'n world and the future Prop!<

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1n�a11abl) curious about <uch tlu ngs, they still an: \l-'11ness the astonishing populuity of Hal ll�'s ' "'The La1e. Great Planet Eanh"' In tlus book. he b}' OUI the 91,ilolc future C'OW"3C of human tu.story ,n nunutc detail

or )Ust c,,.·eryday life Telcv,son can help lc:,d people to acuon on behalf of ,ustoce or Oms· tian chanry A re...-rnt. dramatoc example of thos ,s the outpounng of con tr1but1ons for famine· stnc..ken Eth1op1a after

people \1CWCd gnphll sc.:cnc� of ,Un,ng ...-h1k1 ren that rughtl) nood<d the airwaves l»t yc:or. •·Telev1s1on demands �ILIJ)atlOn M1d 1nvol n,ment in depth of the

whole heong;· McLuhan

wrote. "It wiU not v..-ork a, a hac..kgrounc.J

A f.n"OUnte thcffl<' d the !Jcera.ru.rc was the ong,.n ol sm. Some authon worked out of the Adam and Eve story but embellished 11 so as to emphasise Eff's guilt llus led to a gmcnl dcptt· c1a11on of v.iomcn as the cause: of all human oils.

On the contrary, the author of ..• Ezra"', a populu nonbobhcal wor1< o( the tune:. slufted the blame: to Adam.

Thcff wu m the Bible's Gcncsu. Olap<cr 6. ano<hcr <"i>l>naaon of the ongu, of Rn tn hwrwt1ry It W2S ttw rdcrcn« to the •sons of God' who marned •·the daughters o( men " The bibUcal author adapted III andcnt story here, not to teach all 115 details Utol'2ily. but to help pc:oplc Wlder·

stand the g,ov,ing atnnae mcnt ofhumaruty from God.

just how demeaning the British Indian relatlonshlp'i are to both panit'i. Con ,inced that this Is an i!'t�uc of Justice. and de plte the danger ln,·ol,ed. the� lOur ageousl) take stc� to lessen the distance bc-n..·ccn the ra�. In 1'he Je-..-el In the Crown·. for lostaocc:. an Indian, Harl Kumar, strik" up an uoll.kely and touching friendship with a Brit· lsh woman. Daphne Manners. In one poignant scene, he laments to her that to the British In Ind"' he d�n't ex.lq. bc-uuse h Is skin Is black. \'lcwers Intrigued b) Japan had their appe· tit" ..1tencd b� the n· miniseries "'Shogun" Richard starring Chamberlain. High· Ughtlng the m lonary activities of Jesuit cxplottn, the Krin provided a glance Into Jai-nesce history. To Western vkwcn whooe knowledge of Japan may M IJJnlted to "'made-In-Japan·• cars and other pro-

ducts. "Shogun" opened a window to a rich and �ne cuJ. turc that stretches back many cenrurles. Such media events can be considered simply an evening's entertainment, to be enjoyed for the moment and then for· t1oaen. At the S,ame time. I llke to think that th� can serve another pur �· They can opc,n doon into other coun· tri" and cul�. The

media can whet our appetite to learn mott about the others who Inhabit our "'orld.

The Record. September 11. 1986

9


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I T e name Denis (Dinny) Heaney has ....__. been well known to Western Australians for many years in a variety of sporting contexts - boxing, racing, tro 1ing and rowing to name a few. He has also had is share of activities ln mining and in the commercia ield as owner of a truckinq business, a case factory, and a pharmacy.

8

Dinny Heaney recalls that barring-down was an important underground operation in mining at Wiluna before World War II. It involved the thorough removal from the roof and walls of the drive of any loose materi a I that could have come crashing down onto the heads of those below with serious or even fatal results. It was an exercise meticulously supervised by the shift boss before he would allow the machine to operate at the face. He wou d suspend for a week or two anybody found to be derelict in this duty - a severe financial penaltv for members, like Dinny, of a contract party .

Today's People·

the door, but the site knowledge he acquired enabled him to tender successfully for a contract to build up the spectator ba t Gloucest Park. It was a b g project. requiring 1 Om of fill n some areas Shortly afterward he was eward appointed a full-tirn which invo him in being chairman of stewards for I country meetings a d assistant hand pper to th chairman for metropolitan was the constructio of t meeting . east-west r d now novvn Th' happy situation conas t Eyre Hi way a period tmu for about n rs of rough living in hard cond until his controversial dismistions on the Nullarbor. sal in th 19 over what He got a contract before the became known as the B'nend of the war which involved eight trucks plyi between the etropohta Markets in West Perth. re they collected s fro all over the e, the WA Egg Board. nDinny's first post-wa ture was to start a ca factory in James St wa - a thriving bu i until the P h Crty Council

A regular feature By BOB BOYLE activities gong on all the

urn ."

There were six football cl and playing for Mines Rove with Dinny, who had played for Perth, were bro hers Tom and state cricketer Barny O'Shaughnessy bo h also CBC Terrace old boys. They were among h's teamma es, too, in the vo unt r fire brigades' t t nt to Fremantle to co •

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Italian academic, business magnate combine to bring art treasure to Margaret River Visitors to Margaret River since mid-June this year will have noticed the relief sculptures at the Catholic Church of St Thomas More, on the front wall of the bell tower. The sculptured bas relief, which was made in Umbria last year by the distinguished Italian sculptor Lucia Rossi Monti and donated by her to the Catholic parish of Margaret River, was erected in early June and officially blessed and opened by the Bishop of Sunbury, Bishop Quinn, on June 13 1986. The relief sculp ure is mad of fired refractory clay, in a soft pin ochre colour that matches the rammed earth of th church. The composition is reminiscent of medi al carving, ideally suited to the neo-

e

fresco or autumn to spring) and in Um ria, (where she lives and works from spring to autumn). e bas relief at argaret Ri r is consid ed to be o of er best tar -sca e (" measures about 3m x 3.5m) and · is h r o ly out-

in 1984 because of technical problems, revived later in 1984 when Professor

Mr

Denis

Horgan.

own r of the eeuwin

Esta e Winery and so etime par's lo r of the St. Thomas church.

s

ODD

mt Annunciation; above this the Baptism of Christ; in t cen re, the m ting be n Christ and the Samaritan woman at the well; in the upper righ the three crosses of Golgotha; in the I r riqht, Resurrection, the shown in the traditiona I image of the three Marys at the tom . This particular com inafon of eoi , with Christ and the Samaritan woman at the centre of the com ition, is bel' to uniqu . The h · h quality of the craftsmanship, coupled with the intense feeling and harmony majestic transmitted by this wo make it o of the finest sculp ures of its kind in Australia.

tance of th Friary is in the training of locals to be young Franciscans." said Father

DOD

Alban.

F

7

you that

"And Sing e appears to be the logical centre for deve op nt of Catholicism and Franciscanism in South East Asia, owing to th reliious tol ranee of th Singapore Government," said Father A n. "In Malaysia and Thailand t e are increa mg restncf ns wh'ch pre nt fore· n

The artist, Miss Lucia Rossi Monti, was born in 1919 of an old Italian nob e family. After university st dies in Siena and Florence she taught literature in the liceo classico "Br ra", in Milan, th nturnedto full-time sculpture wh n sh was in h r late thirties. Her work attracted · attention in Italy in the 1960s, but since h 1970s h bited I

H . To IJ,·c�oi,w·,1},011.•U•- •11 IJol,I

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"to �

Record relltle,-s ' ', 1

.. _1P':!1..�T. �nt. f A 1

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o

Australia was m

Italian at the Umve ity of Western Australia. K wi that he wor1< would suit the argaret Ri r church, he wrote to Miss Rossi Monti in 1 83, nding a e ch of the proposed composition,. with p otographs of the church and architect's rficatio s Th .

nile.

o ct Grove 0

For

r

OD

AUCTION THROUGH Wool Broker The woolgro ers own selling organisation. EST 1959

For further details contact:

John LOUGHLI

General

anager

H 337 3121


==OB TUARY== Monsignor John Hogan who died suddenly in his native Fennoy, County Cori<, Ireland on September 5, had served in Perth archdiocese for� years before retiri g to Ireland ·n 1979. He wa a month off 70 years at the time of his

DEATH I TI quality wor at the right price. John Frea ley. Phone 361 4349.

ohn Hogan Co cern ove dying

death.

a · I

Arriving •

SITUATIONS

WANTED

From Margaret TALBOT, Balga Sir, In a society ere everythin com e� and instant and good moral

A

Weddings ,

THANKS ,

ens cted

..• ...... • •• • •• • ••

RECORD • CLASSIFI OS •• ••• P rthPOA Boxrd 50 •

•• Pictured at a recent marr:iage pr p ration cour. e re: Above: Gomez Udo of Karawara and Ch ryl Ed t of Girrawh en who were married at Girrawh en on Sep ember 7.

end cheque and adverti ement to: RECORD CLAS IFIEDS. P.O. BOX 50 PERTH ABERD EN ST. 6000.

C

Below: Tony Emm tt d Clare Ranfani who are to be married at St Francis Church, Maida vet. on September 20.

O

For Sale For Hire Situations Vacant Situ tion Wanted Part-time/Casu I Employment Trade & Service Hou & lats Boarding Accommodation Holiday Accommod tion hool Uniforms hool Teach rs Scho I Equipment. PRI T CLE RLY O E

ORD PER BO '-•-

.

5 ca 28

d

or

I -

DDITIO Al

A

E:

ADDRESS.

12

O c nt for

ach

ords or I

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mportant role for young An important j b has b n giv n to young

people at the Papal on ovemb r 0. t

tal of 9

OPJO

at Mass PREPARING FOR POPE ing th mini ter f r c rnmuni n at th papal altar and e orting th m to a pr - rran ed di tribu-

B sy programs ahead for many yo th groups and workers

-

e s

Si fer A

.

lot. w

out tor

YCS st1Moon1ts. YCS HOLIDAY ACTIVITIES: YCS

Dyt

ned fOf the holiday . A Social Ju tic Wor p with a choice of

' in

Ri

11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 111§

13


ey Kid I• A Cont s

his c

nb yours -

Dove Collins who have published this ook Pope John Paul I, are offering S X b oks fo the best colourinq-in entries. All you have to do is colour in th is picture, putting you name, address and age. Submit your entries to T e Record, Post Office Box 50, Aberdeen Street, Pert and winners wil be announced after the Contest coses on Friday, September 26. So no matter how sma I you are, w y don't you give it a go? Anyone from zero to hirteen years old can enter. After he announcemen of win ers, they w·11 receive one in the a . GOTO TKIDS.

1

Jokes

·,

Euroa, Eur h ? Buroa da boat. l 'U catcba da f. b.

Fro

c

0


.... efender

Poa d

Tbe English 'ouet from

Dickens to Lawrence by Raymond Wt/Jta . Pub-

lished by Hogarth Press. 'Dtstrlbuted through Tbe Australasian Publishing Co. $10.95.

---ar

I


PEACE EUCHARIST

TENNI

AJI these have had very close encounters during the home a d awtfV matches so the fi should be very ewnJy contested affa'rs.

1J PETER MESSER Entry fonns for the ann tenni association champion re now available

from club secretaries or tJ.,. contacting Jack Eastcott on 328 6860.

For those

Trinity College tenni courts in n ing · be the venue for the toumament on Saturday October 11 nd conti Sunday October 12, Saturday October 18 end Sunday October 19. Cathol · Entry . open to ics nd members of clubs ffi. tedwiththeWACLTA. The toumament been designed so that pla rd

1

-

ASSERTIVENESS WORKSHOP

SINGLE PARENTS

Septem 14

RCIA CATECHUME ATE The Maranatha Institute offe

n intro-

sponsors

m members · vofved ·

d

the catech menate to be held on Thu ·

days from 9.30a -3.()()pm at Ma Hou

, cnr Ca

bridg

tha

& Station S , d

September 1986 to Sr mpta, M

m nda Road,

t St. Emi . ' , 75 Ka •

unda.

.A. 6076.

OBLATE CELE BRATES

-

--

17

ductory course for adult cathechists,

Wembley �mencing October 9 -

Greyhounds - with The Record Tipster ---

The commu ity of the Holy T · ity d Catholics for Peace invite I Cathof to a Eucha. celebrating the lntemationa Y r of Peace and the of St Fra • at 7.30pm on Saturday, October 4 at Holy R ry Ch rch, Angelico Street. Woodnd , on the theme: ( · n 3:15) "ThepeaceofChirst ... Towhichyou re ca · one body." A special liturgy of the Word . be held fo chi dren. After M there wi be pper d a peace m entitled "Be ot Afraid."

21 22

28 30

74th An . Church Bou Archbishop Tokyo to · n Episco Confirmation Manning, Mgr

Keating.

Confirmation a· pH Jy.

Beaconsfield, Victoria Par ,

Me:rcei1ca of


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