The Record Newspaper 18 August 1988

Page 1

PERTH, WA: August 18, 1988

Registered by Australia Post Publication o. WAR 0202

Number 2597

POST ADDA ESS: PO Box 50, Northbridge, 6000 W.A. LOCATION: 26 John St, Northbridqe (east off Fitzgerald St).

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College to • come up in

•••

Mandurah

SPECIAL CATHOLIC CHARACTER ought from w 'thin the Chur h from religiou orders and congregati ns \ zithin ustralia and ov ers a .

A Cat lie Seco dary College will open in andu ah in 1991

on

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1992.

P. 6, 7 Professor Timothy 0' eara, provost of otre Dame is a me ber of t e planni g o d.

EJOBS

omething to buy? omething to sell?

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Guest Ed.torial The Universe

IN HONOUR OF MARY Last Sunday's celebration of Our Lady's Assumption brings to a close the celebration of the Marian Year. It has been a time of much prayer and pilgrimages. The Pope himself has urged us to develop a more intense but deeply rooted devotion to Mary. It is typical of him to remind us so vividly that Mother and Son can each be properly understood only in relation to each other. This Marian Year and the future celebration of the second millennium of Christ's birth in the year 2000 form a sing e whole. We have now entered an extended Ad ent. Mary, the second Eve, plays a unique part in the story of our redemption. Catholics a d Orthodox have always held that faith in Jesus Christ as true God and true man is safeguarded and upported by belief in Mary as Mother of God. If she is ignored or her role played down, the total truth of the Incarnation is eventually called into question. It is a sign of hope today hat many from the Anglican and Fr,ee Churches are redi covering the significance of Mary. It is an essential element in the renewal of Christian life. There was some surpri e when he econd Vatican Council decided no to devote a special decree to Mary. Instead it has proved a stroke of inspiration. By seeing her as Mother of God d Mother of the Church, the Council ensured that Mary ill in future always be seen in the context of the Church and as part of the pla of alvation. It is an as ociation which i mutually enriching. The Church learns mon ut i self nd Mary is plac d constantly at th heart of ft mission and ministry. In the p t devo ion to Mary ncouraged t e growth of chiv fry and rescu d wo en from oppres ion. 1i. day c n b tter sppt. ci t th e enti I unity nd di nity of all hum nkind in Chri t. Th r. i much to be don to put princi le in o pr, cti e. M ry, with her on, n u t b and in piretion.

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s r1 u obstacle to ity •

certain conditions. The pol gamy re lution ave us concern" he said hat \ ·as a negative tep far we were con med." The Cath li Church h rej t d caH to relax 'ts requirement of monofor i� gamo mm

ence gave a very strong endorsement'' to the RCIC I mal report, he said.

The judgment by the c nfe n e on the agreed tatemen on Eu harist ministry and authority ,• "v ry positive,' he sai .

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i u i rsity talk


II II II In order for the p osed Catholic university in WA to succeed it must be distinctive and offer a hig quality of educati n, Notre Dame presi t Fat Edward Malloy sai at last Friday's ress co ference.

v Ju we think are important for the omm n goo . The mu t p rmeate n t only in the cl room and tho e wh parti ipate but al o the a c untability exp ted of facultv taff and admini tn{tion.

come a en e of di tin tion, and pride. "Ex ellen e and a quality of education i a mu h ought after commodity today. 1 1ot only the Catholic community but the civic community will b nefit from u h a v nture,"

his team were not trying to force an merican model on the Australian context. They would p int out what had worked for them and what mistake they had made. He noted that the 150 -ear old otre Dame unive ity was one of 235 Catholic colle e and

universitie in the USA. which contain one third of the total Catholic higher education in titutions in the world.

The reason the e universitie had thrived, he said, was through the support of the Catholi and other population, andtheindirect upport of govemrnen .

"We have made a dynami contribution to our lo I cornmunitie a a whole. " 'otre Dame alread · had 10 foreign tudie p grams and tudents would be excited about corning to \ 1A for a erne ter. here might al o be faculty exchan e.

'The enthu ia rn, of hop and confidenc alr adv oenerated giv us re -on to b part of the ot planning p only in the beauty of the land and the friendline of the people, but th pirit of dynamism to make it happ n made it a g d and re nabl pro p of havinz om thin distin live t off r"

Strong Catholic school system

7


By Katharine BIRD

Contemporary women can find in Mary a fitting model for their 20th-untury lives, said

illlJw. I(� ilJls Of

Many roles in her life Anxiety. Danger. Fear. Sorrow. Lack of understanding: Each of these played I role in the life of Mary, the mother of Jesus. As Pope John Paul II

said recently. "\.far, had a life like ours. She knew the daily difficulties and trials of human life. She lived in the darkness that faith involves." Often when people think of Marv todav, some phrase o; desc riplion regarding her wiU spring lo mind: Mother of Codcever virgincfull of grac Morning Star Even though each phrase holds deep meaning, we sometim find that l he very same words seem almost empty [ust

because they ace so familiar. HO\\.' can \\'C break through the shell which habits can produce? Perhaps one way would be lo return to Scripture lo discover in a fresh way what it meant for Mav to live as a woman· of faith in her O\\-TI ume. For Marv, as for everyone, the future was hidden. She, like the n--t of us, had lo struggle at times lo keep her faith in God and lo discover what her rm "ilOn in life was, even when she didn't understand comp! ·tt•h what was happening. Imagine the anxiety Mary must huvu e perienced throughout her

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Consider th points: A man cannot imitate her motherhood; a woman cannot irrutate her virginal motherhood.

·o one can imitate her

Immaculate Conception, which was a completely free and extraordinary gif] from God. What then? In his theological portrait of Mary, Luke highlights her role as the first Christian disciple. She heard the word of God and kept it. Thal can

be imitated. Mary was chosen to be the mother of God's son because she was the "highly favoured daughter" (Luke 1 ), the object of God's love. ll was nol because of special merit on her part. Like all Christians, all Mary could contribute was her free acceptance of God's favour. She did that, in spite of the fact that she was "deeply troubled" and did nol understand the implications of what was happening to her, or what

pregnancy. Think how she felt as her bod) began to change in response lo the growing infant within her. First she waited in silence for understanding from her fianre, Joseph. For months Mary waited, knowing all the while that her punishment for infidelity to her betrothed, according to Jewish law. could be stoning to death. Worrying about the damage to her reputation and fearful for her life, \1an must have struggled courageously to hold onto faith. Imagine her relief when loseph, after receiving a

God had in store for her.

Mary's

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Many Catholic uni· rusts today are IIU!ligto Mary in their for

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response

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Luke's first chapter was that of a model disciple: •·1 am the servant of the Lord. Let it be done to me as you say." This same theme is repeated in the Visitation scene, when Elizabeth hails Mary with these significant words: "Blest is she who trusted that the Lord's words to her would be fulfilled." Then still in St Luke's first chapter there is Mary's moving reaction to God's offer of grace:

message in a dream. decided not to abandon her, but to take her as his wife after all. But even the companionship of a husband couldn't protect \far,· from the difficult situations to come HPr faith was to be tested repeatedlv. As the biblical sto�iP, indicate. her faith grew in the midst of real strugglt•,, dread and danR<'r. Manv women todav, espec ;..11v while pregnant worrv about reaching the hospital in hme forthrbirth. I'hink of the dread that must have seized Marv when Jo-,,•ph had trouble finding a room in Bethlehem

when she was about to go into labour. Then. shortlv after her baby was born. Marv was forced to to take an arduous journey to Egypt with her husband, She learned firsthand what it was like to he a refugee. Imagine the pain Mary must have experienced when she heard that Herod "had all the male children killc,l "ho were 2 years old or um! r" ( vlatthew 2:161. Com· pare that to the wt \ one ftl<'ls at hearing toll.I\ of an innocent child's murder,

n.,..,

Marv's son was a duld of promise. But the fulfillment of this promise was revealed to onh a

few: Elizabeth, the Magi, 'imeon and Anna. \1o.,t of the lime Mary had to hope in the future. Marv must have feared for the life of her son when the 12-vear-old was lost for three clan and nights, Think of the shock felt now on read· ing in the newspaper that a child is missing. When [esus died on a c:ro, ,. Mary e perienced full} "hat Pope John Paul II calls "the sign of oontradittion." She '"" her son humiliated. tortured, killed - the son she thought destined "tn rule over the house of Jamb forever." Yet Mary remained faithful. while man} others ran away It is easv to forget that

the women and men who knew [esus during his lifo on earth didn't have the same pervpeclive on him that we do todav in light of the Resurrection and Pentecost Marv, along with Peter, John and the other disciples, lived her faith in the conte t of uncertainty and confusion. "Thev did not und rstand what he meant" Yet 11 was precisely her cap.id!\ to bclim m the midst of difficult 11 a uons that made 1ary and th others - so great. It LS also this that makes them relevant to us today

8

were to be awarded! With everything completed, a group of four swimmers and one father, the cardriver, pool's assembled to leave. They walked across the parking lot. Sudas they denly, approached the car, the fath r exc !aimed: "Where's Am}? We're missing Am}1••

for the ride, had somehow been left behind in the community centre where the swimalhon took place. The father's heart dropped to his stomach, and for a moment he panicked inwardly. ow everyone's attention was focused on Amy. Where was she?

Hi, younger child, who had com along

The father told the other children to ail

The Record, August 18. 1988

a "model for all faithful men and women," In his pastoral letter, Bishop Clark said that when Mary's "place in life and continued ministry of the Church is recognised and understood. the place of aU women in the Church is assured." Women he said, are "integral co-workers, as necessary to the

incarnation of Christ in our world as Mary was to the first incarnation." Both Bishop Clark and Sister Smith regarde Mary as a womean of action and strength. "There is nothing vapid or sentimental about her," said the bishop. "She is a woman with her feet planted firmly on the earth." Mary shows us "what it is to be Christian: to believe in God - to stand

DISCUSSION POINTS

firm - to serve others. She heard the word of God and acted on it," said Sister Smith. In response to student requests, Sister Smith developed a popular course on Mary.

Often the Mercy Sister finds that people's "understanding of Mary has a lot to do with their understanding of God." Those who view God as one who calls human beings to co-operate with him in his work in the world are likely to think of Mary in this light too. They look at the Annunciation, for instance, and see a woman co-operate with him in his work m the world are Iii.eh· to think of \1arv m · this light too. They iook at the Annunciation, for instance, and c.ee a \\'Oman co-operating with God in that work, ister Smith said. She added that \1ary keeps us 'rooted in historv." Ber.au<e \1ary i.s a \\·oman \\·ho bore a c;on, she keeps us •·from believing in a totally spiritualised Christ." The Scripture., pre.ent \1arv as •a woman ofhpr time, the wife of a poor man, the working mother of a \\·andering priest." Sister Smith said. \1an ahgns herself mo,,t · clear!,· Y.ith th,• poor and the oppn,-,,.st>d in her song. "The \1agnifica1;· Sister Smith said.

"My being proclaims the of the greatness Lord .. for he had looked upon his servant in her lowliness ... God who IS mighty has done great things for me, holy is his name. In the episode of the Presentation, an aged man named Simeon foretells the dramatic destiny of her son. And Simeon gives Mary this cryptic warning: "You yourself wiU be pierced with a sword." The nature of that sword one involving

choice and decision becomes clear in the following story about finding lesus in the temple, when he "as thought lost. When Mary chides Jesus for subjecting her and Joseph to such anguish, Jesus replies: "Why did you search for me? Did you know I had to be in my Father's house?" (Luke 2). Gentle as this rejoinder from Jesus may have been, it expressed clearly the fact that he had his own work to do. His work would mean sepa-

ration from her - a prospect to twist any' mothers heart. What made the sword even sharper was the fact that Marv did not understand, as Luke goes on to say immediately: "But they did not grasp what he said to them." evertheless, the account continues, Mary kept trying to understand: "His mother meanwhile kept all these things in memory." This is the model disciple, one who gratefully accepts God's offer - the person

who listens to Cod's word. trusts it, follows it. Once again in his Gospel, Luke remmds readers that here is where Mary's true personal greatness lies. We read of a woman in a crowd who cried out lo Jesus, saying "Blest is the womb that bore you and the breasts that nursed you!" Rather, Jesus responds, "blest are they who hear the word of God and keep it" (Luke 11). Mary is a model for disciples. She heard the word of God and kept it

Story of a child left behind The swimathon finally ended. The childl'ffl d�ssed, then gathered around their coaches, �porti '- many lengths of the pool they had swum, how much money that had earned tor charity thn,ug� pledges from parents, teacllers and friends. All attention focused for a few minutes on how well the children had done - and. of course, on the T-shirts and special pms they

a "strong, r.aring model, a woman faithful to herself and to the Church," noted Sister of Mercy Patricia Smith, a teacher of theology. But Mary can't be restricted to women alone, Sister Smith said in an interview, Mary is

Christine ALLEN

avoure

Imitate Mary. Is that � listic advice?

O(Jli F'.A

Bishop Matthew lark of Rochester, N.Y.,111n April 1982 pa iral letter on women.

beside the car, then he raced beck to the building. As he ran, a million thoughts swirled through his head. All concerned Amy. As he entered the building. he immediately saw the tearyeyed child, who, like her father, couldn 't figure out ho, she rould have been left behind. In «>me way, this

story resembles the story of Jesus who got lefi behind in the temple when he was 12. Surely \1ary and Joseph could not quite imagine how it had happened. The biblical SIOT) often is told to help people imagine how Mary must have felt - ho" any parent would f I - in such a situauon But th resemblance

doesn't stop there. It is found also in the fact that everyone's attention now becomes focused on the child. Where is Jesus? Where is Amy? Why? In the Bible, Mary, the Lord's master, tends to fulfil this kind of role: She focuses evervone 's attention on Jesu_, Who is he 1 Where is he? Whv' Thi dimension of far s per onalitv

has been taken quite seriously in church history. To be the mother of Jesus says something about the mother, to be sure. But it says something about the son as well, To say that 1ary ts the Lord's mother ts to r affirm that his human nature I, real, that in the inr.arna-

non

(;od'c.

Son

hccame a hmther to U.S.

"Marv could hear the of the poor and proclaim it so eloquently becau.se she was one of them:· Sister Smith wrote. The Magnificat, she suAAested, is Mary's public acknowledgement of the call to work for justice.

CT).

What do Christians today hold in common with Mary, the mother of the Lord? Often it seems that Mary is very much unlike us. Sister of Mercy Sister Christine Allen presents Mary as one who knows from her own experience what it means to encounter anxiety, fear or lack of understanding. Katharine Bird interviews Sister of Mercy Sister Patricia Smith, asking how Mary is a model for women today. Ms Bird also turns a pastoral letter by Bishop Matthew Clark of Rochester, N.Y., for some of his comments on Mary and the roles of women today. And Father John Castelot highlights Mary's role as the first disciple.

For Mary, doing justice meant "treating all with dignity and respect, because all were made in the image of God." she added.

Mary "communicated and revealed the love of God to us. It is in this context that you can �late to her, for you are also called to make God visible, to communicate through your own lives the good news of his io.e.• (Poet Catherine de Vind< quoted by Carmelite Father Eamon Carroll in the May 1984 issue of St Anthony Messenger magazine). God's presence in her life was the source of her strength in the face of frightening change and danger. Her fidelity to the Spirit MM'i<ing in her makes her the pertect disciple and the best eumple of human �sponse to God's action among us." (Bishop Matthew Clan of Rochester, N.Y., in a 1982 pastoral letter on the roles of women.) "It is precisely in this way that Mary is the first model for the contemporarJ -.ian ... as an altogether human -.ian who was painflllly misunderstood by the man she loved; who was confused by her child's behaviour, who was not afraid to speak her mind cw voice her questions." (Bishop Matthew Clan of Rochester, N.Y., in a 1982 pastoral letter on the

roles of women.)

"It has ever been the task of the Church to let the questions of the day chaUenge and deepen her understanding," Bishop Clarlc pointed out in his pastoral letter. In today's world, a proper understanding of Mary's role and that of women might mean taking a fresh look at the way women participate in the Church, he suggested. He called for an ongoing dialogue in his diocese and in the Church to find creative ways for \\Omen to participate more fully m the life of the Church. "It is this kind of dialogue between believers and their culture •.. which under the guidance of the Holy Spirit keeps us growing toward the full stature of Christ." hcconduded

The Record, August 18, 1988

9


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Reporter Colleen McGuiness-Howard in a special ,�,

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antibody are run. For tho registering positive, it mean they have had three different test done.

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interview with a Royal Perth Hospital dector

IN AUSTRALIA LIKELY TO BE VERY VALUABLE virus will go onto full blown DS." To date the clinic h had bout 38 or 39 cas of IDS, of which approximately h f have died.

and (ii). "The e are the classical infections associated with imuno deficiency and th are the one which were originally us d (along , rith certain tumours), to define AID and veral othe which do occur more frequent!' but can anywher

o t people

she said, ho 'ever th y can also die from ertain malignancie , from wasting, and encephalitis. Infection remains however the bia e t ciller, e p cially pneumonia. SPREAD OF THEVIR S: The viru

T

·ho die of

AIDS, die of infection,

change while the threat is imminent,' she said. 'For example up to the advent of the pill, the pregnancy threat prevented teenagers, to a degree, from having sex; it partially controlled their behaviour. human b hav iour chan e once there v ras om way o p venting pregnancy. Once the behaviour pattern deve oped even thouzh peopl ould u contraceptiv . babie

''The reason hy I b lieve that, is because once under the influence of a drug, although they may have the best intentions in the world, their behaviour may be affected by the drug and their ability to modify b haviour diminished.' Dr myth said that 'th her e .per ience, the horn exual population in \ h re pcm d , rell. 'Th peopl have modified th ir

Peop e have to take their r · sks born to

effective vaccine remain extremely difficult. 'And although there have been many attempts, none of them so far has been prov en to be able to pre -ent infection.'

1 n th v ry fund mentals of earlv the infectio� remain poorly understood · creatin an e ective vaccine remain extreme} diffi ult,' h said.


Most cred H art of Jesus may your name be praised and glorified throughout the whole world now and forever Amen. My sped I thanks to the Sacred Heart and Our Lady of Revelations for a very special favour granted to me. Judy.

BUILDING TRADES

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pr cti al Ca holies prepared to har atever e p rti e they hav ith the Abongmal childr n and adults of th orth- st of u traha They erve the Church. placing them elves at the dispo al of the Bi hop, "a icar and le at e of Chn t". (Vat II, P382), and a I t him in a pirit of ded cation They ive them elves totally for 2 year . hving in roup , co-oper tmg in fraternal lo in the pirit of the Go pel . ervmg on I olated mi ion nd to ship They fully ccept their Christian duty to evangeli e according to their o individual a ilrtie . Under the patronage and gu da ce of the Bishop, they hav their o formally constituted sscciation and elected Council. Lay I ionaries do not accept a alary. only their eep and poc et money. Their fares are paid a d a small um on completion of their ervice

TH Kl

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Orientation Course commences December 30, 1987 --

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YOUTH FORUM

ristian j s ce

STUDENTS TO RECORD IMPRESSIO S

Uni Rounds SS

YOUTH APPEAL

Collectors eeded

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Sunday, August 21

Ring 328 9878 Give us a couple of hours of your time.

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da UMas with a difference"

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Afte ards all invited to an Antioch meeting and a tomach satisfying gourmet delight. Enquiri

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Leaves Barrac St. Jetty 7.45pm Doc s rnidni ht

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Record Kids Club

hildren's Story Hour

AUSTRAL AN QUIZ by A. Gorfa·

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PEOPLE 1. Who, on the Endeavour, first sighted Australia? 2. When Flinders and Bass started to explore the SW coast, what was the name of their boat? 3. Who was Australia's first Prime Minister? 4. Who was the first Australian to win the V.C.? 5. ho suggested the name Australia"? 6. Which NSW fighter died in Memphis, Tennessee? 7. Which e plorer is featured on the $100 note? 8. Which Australian racing driver on the World Grand Prix three times? 9. Which Australian retired undefeated from orld boxing? 10. Who carried out pioneering experi ents on 1 ight 10 years before he Wrig t Brothers, at Stanwel Par , near Sydney? ACES 1. here as Gundagai erec ed a monu en to the dog hat sat on t e tuc er ox? 2. What is he talles bui ding in he Southern Hemisphere? 3. Fo Denison had two earlier names. W at re t ey? 4. W ich SW country own is a par drome? 5. What annual festival is held at Grafton. SW? 6. In hich Sydney suburb ere Granny Smith apples first cultivated? 7. W at and here is The Green Ca hedral? 8. Which is he world's only continen occupied by one nation? 9. hich notable building in Paris as designed by Australian architect Harry S idl r? 10. Where ar he world's largest ea h arms found?

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. What is a pademelon? 2. The first official orld surfing championship was h Id at anly in 96. ho on? 3. Which island is close to the S and Victorian border? 4. Australia has the only t o egg-laying mammals in the orld. Can you name o e? 5. hat as the name of the first plane to f y the Pacific?

6. Wha is another name for the native companion? 7. Which American flag has the Union Jack m its design? 8. What was Don Bradman's highest score, a world record, in test cricket? 9. Which was the first town in SW to have electric lights? 10. What is the world's largest living structure?

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ALIA FL S he first feature film in the world was made in Austra ia. What was it called? 2. W o was the star of "My Bri Ian Career"? 3. Under w at name was ad ax released in the USA? 4. W o produced "Picnic at Hanging ock"? 5. Which English star played at t e role of Breaker Morant? 6. Who wrote "The Chant of Jimmy Blacksmi h"? 7. Who plays the feminine lead in · 'Crocodile Dundee· ? 8. For w ich film did Wendy Hug es win the best ac ress award in 1983? 9. Who was the girl in "The Coca Cola Kid'? 10. W o rote t e script for "Gallipoli ?

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ERT Al E A D T E AR S 1. Wha is the home town of Peter Alie? 2. Which gro p s pp ied t e musical backing for the fi m ''Saturday ig Fever'? 3. W n Sir William Debell submitted his controversial painting for he Archibald Prize o was the sublect? 4. T e Seeker as a famous singing group in e '60s. Who was the girl in the group? 5. W ich Austra ian choreograp er as done creative wor ith orvill and Dean? 6. Who painted the famous Austra ian picture "Bailed Up"? 7. Which Australian classical guitarist once studied with Segovia? 8. Of which group is e er Garrett th lead singer? 9. In C.J. Dennis' poem, "The Play," a couple go to see hich famous play? 10. Which singer took her professional name from the to n that helped her early in er career?

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MARIAN CALENDAR BATE A : A retreat seminar on "Mary, Women and Social J stice" will be held on Friday, August 26, from 9.45am to 2.30pm at Noalimba Centre Venus St. Free chi d care provided. For further information phone Sandra Brown on

se ri g

325 1212.

MEDITATO

PUBLIC EC URES

Medita ion sessions are co ducted every onday at 7.30p at e Servite Priory, 2 organs St. Tuart Hill. Fa er C ris Ross will conduct e session o August 29. and hen on the 'first and third o days of each month fro Sep ember.

Dr Brendan Brads aw SM from Carnbridqe University. will gi e t e followi g free public ectures: 1. "T e root of the ris problem," in the Austi Lecture T eatre, Arts Facu B ildi g, UWA, at 5.15pm, Wed esday, Au ust 24. 2. " enaissance umanism and the Reformation," in t e Maths Co mon oom, 1st oor, athe atics Buil i g, UWA, t 8pm, Monday, Sep mber 5, (parid g off Fairway, Entr nc o. 3).

DAILV: 7pm Ro ary, Homily and Benediction FRIDAY: September 2. Blessmg of the Sick O DAY: September 5. Annointing of the Sic THURSDAY: September 8, ativit of the irgin ary, 7pm Hof a s, folio ed by Procession to the Grotto, 8.45pm Dance to celebrate Our her's Birthday at the P nsh Hall

E TRA CE: 5.00

ENQUI IE 271

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Archdiocesan Calendar.

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