The Record Newspaper 29 December 1988

Page 1

PERTH, WA: December 29, 1988

Registered by Australia Post Publication No. WAR 0202

( So Jesus went back with them to Nazareth, where he was obedient to them. His mother treasured al these things in her heart. And Jesus grew, both in body and wisdom, gaining, favour with God and men.

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A D LEFEBVRE·

VATICAN CITY: T e nilateral decision by the Anglican Churc to llow the o dination of men marred an othrwise fruitful year of ecumenica rogress, co ding to pe John

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AND AVOID INHUMAN PATH OF TERRORISM, SAYS POPE---minorit , groups or ountrie . The p a .e da ' me sage va dat d D mb r 8 and va: r lea d by the Vatican I ecemb r 9. The

Intention n to list s ecific cases

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Others mu t appl • the pop ' criteria in different ituation , and local churches have been active in defending minority right , he add d.

wrongs or se king justice. • ay tho who follow the inhuman path of terrorism hear my voice," he said. "To strike blindlv, kill inno ent people or carry out bloody repri I do not help a ju t evaluation of the claim advance by the minoriti for whom

Message directed to Chr·stian readers

In a me age directed to Christian readers, the pop said the ' should tolerate no di rirnination again t minorities in church or ociety, "Ju t a there can b no place for di rimination within the Church, o no Chri tian c:an knowingly fo ter or upport trueture and attitudes that unju tly divide individual or roup " h id. 'This sam teachins mu t b applied to th e \ rho have r ours to v · al n e or up port it," he add d.

L ft: L o rd m Ices his Pr fe sion.

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with the land. When thi i evered, he noted, they risk "disappearing a a people". The pope critici ed place where re tri .tion hav b en pla ed on a cultural minority' e. .pr ion, in luding th bannin of it language, nam s or c lebration .

Right to develop one's own culture

respon ihility" to pass along these valu s to th ir hildren, h added. The pop al o id minorities h ve duti of their own a well as rights, ot only mu t they contribute to th common od of ietv but th y mu. t 'promote th f1 dom and dignity' of th ir own memb rs he id.

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On the cale dar of eternity a dash of human revelry for the New Year is not even a flicker of time. For the human ants grappling with their future it may be a o entous time ·n their lives as the year 20 0 gets even closer. The nuclear time pieces and t e relentlessly spinning earth declare that it has all been seen before. For humanity, however. there is a chance to start all over again. The northern hemisphere cave-dwe er perishing in the cold loo ed up and saw there was ho after all as the sun climbed again. But he forgot to warn his descendants who would travel south to another hemi phere where the long hot azy summer would rule supreme at New Year. f God is thinking of visiting His ople, best e plan not to come durinq high summer. Leave it ill after he holidays. Priests squi t across the Sunday spaces and come to he co c u i t at Sunday orshippers oo are away on holiday . But wh re did hey vanis to? A attering of an increa e is noticed at a few resorts, but the numbers do not add up. Even The Record suffers: "Don't d extra cop· of he Christmas i su here" says a terse message. "the place is deserted at Christ as!". "Cancel everythi g for January" ay another couple of paris es. So muc for he plea to build he Chrisfan community - b t not duri g he summer vacation! With pol if cs and b siness closed down. the media are be ide emselves with boredo . Re-runs of everything. merely to string togeth r t e ucrative advertisi g for summ r sa s- the only 'gn tha note ryo e eep during he

From the Straits Times weekly overseas edition ·

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THE U IVERSE

THIS year the w k le ding up to Christma have b en scarred by suffering. The devastating earthquake in Armenia w followed by the crash of two relief planes, then the rail disaster at CJ. phem Juncti , followed by the Pan Am plane disa ter in Scotland. Our prayer. are offered for the souls of the dead while our hearts go out to families in their distress and loss. Once again people have responded magnificently to the ne ds of others. Rescuers, emergency services, medical and nur. ing teams have wotked timelessly not only here but also in Armenia. The pain and bewilderment however, remain. National di aster. and tragic accidents test our faith in a loving and omnipotent God. But the ba ic truth of the first Chri tmas helps us to see a littl. way into the darkness. The Christ Child of Bethlehem is the eternal witne to God's love for all hum nity. In Christ th life nd love of God b come's the d epe t me ning of our human exi tence. God i now nd for ever identified with all our joys nd arrow . He i at the heart of all our uffi ring. H never leaves u to be r the pain Ion . R o , r 29, 1988


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THE Catholic Churc 1988 was the year that a ong seething dispute over he Second Vatican Council brok ou an open schism. n bl

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WHO DEFIED THE POPE

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had nearlv everv vear ince he w� lectei From February to Jun h guid d unprecedented effort. to ac ommodat the liturgi I and piritu l en itivitie of th l fehvrit in an att mpt to turn a ide th 82-vear-old French ar .hi hop' threat to ord: in bl hop.

apart when the archbishop refu ed to ac ept Vatican H teachings on ecumeni m and religious

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7


In the eyes of many...

In the eyes of many people of biblical times. Jesus was a failure - not at all the Messiah they expected. In this Advent instalment, the NC Reli· gious Education Package reflects on the theme of failure, a common enough reality in all of human life. Father Herbert Weber explores the sense of failure Iha! man) people experience at one time or another.Self-worth is nol determined bv whether or nol one has failed al something. he say-, And to fail al something need nol be nippling. Bui the writer ,,,ution, Iha! if self-worth rs loo tightlv linked to one\ accnrnp-

lishments. a failun- can be devastating. Jane Wolford Hughe, says that in the long run success means being the person God wants you to be. Successful living is possible even after a long pattern of losing decisions, she writes. Hut to achieve this. discipline is required along with openness lo signs calling for change. Dominiran Father David J.;. O'Rourke zeroes in on the question of

Briefly ••• The desire to succeed is so strong that people may feel devastated by a quite small failure. We thmk we're prepared lo handle success, Wen• nol sure whether we know ho" lo handle failure. And we can ·1 even be sure Iha! we'd know what failure is if we came face lo fare wilh ii. We easily confuse failure with other realities. There is. for example. a sense of inadequacy that emerges at various points in life. People WJII complain that they can't gel everything done. can'! do everything on their own. aren't able to meet all the needs of I hose who are part of their lives.

Thov have ,i sense of not

being all they would like lo be for ol hers. Whal people come face lo fare with are their own limitations. Bui lo have

lirnitationv

is

not

a

failure. ln fart. lo recognise them is a form of maturity. .\nd when limitation, are recognised. new possibilities for growth and greater maturity open up. Sometimes people develop a sense of failure by negatively comparing themselves with someone else. Another person's lifestyle or career can look pretty good from the outside. What is easily lost from view is the fact that another person's vocation is di!Terent from their own vocation.

Comma to term, with our own vocation can be

quite a chall.,ng1• when societv so often communicate-, the rnr-ssa • that Wl' ought to ht• more like other people - to measure our surcess against someone else's standard. ·onelhele.-,,,, to recog-

nise our nwn vocation the unique gifts each of

us has as Cod's image is another form of maturitv, And ii is m too context of this vocation that our reflections on success and failure must occur. Bui this IS easier said than donel It is, of course. possible to fail at something. Bui usually we fail "at something", and do not thereby become "a failure". Again, this is a difficult principle for people lo keep in mind. We forget how well God keeps ii in mind hy remaining faithful to us, by offering forgiveness, by pointing us back toward the future, Easily forgollen. too, is the capac.ity we have to forgive. to help restore hope to each other and in these ways to be Godlike. Events often unfold differently for us than we might have anticipated. This can be confusing or frustrating. Actual failures or a false sense of failure may accompany the unfolding of events in our lives, But in neither case is the future closed. The future is full of surprises. It is constantly reopening before us.

failure by telling a story about a man named Jack - a failure in his O\\'O eye, but a huge success in the eyes of others. Father John Castelo! pomts out that [esus appeared to be a big disappointment lo his family. disciples, towns-

CA :LOT

people and others. But this "failure" deeply influenced the C:OUrsP of the world.

Jesus failed everyone: his family, his townspeople, his disciples, his nation. Marl !ells us (3:20-21) Iha! when his relatives heard about some of Jesus· arti,·ities and the crowds gathering around him ... ,he,· SPI oul lo seize him for, ihP\ said. 'he is oul of his mind' ·· And mam· townspeople \\'Cre astonished \\·hen Jesus wen! home to l\'awrelh for a ,·isil and in the preac.hed

It does not mean you've failed

I was leading a discussion among university students when the topic focused on family pressures. A wornan young reported that the first limp she had ever received a B rather than an A for a course was in her second vear After seeing her mark. her parents told her that she was "a complete disgrace to her family" Although the woman who told I he storv was trving lo laugh at what her parents had said. and although she did nol reallv believe Iha! a B

dis�rJ(·t·, one-ell or one's ance-torv, c,hp neverthe1..,_, was hurting. She not onlv felt that she had failed. she also felt like ., failure. There is a difference between lading and being a failure. Failing is hard for many people, but ii i, part of life and c.an be used lo a person's advantage. Seeing oneself a, a failure. however. can destroy the fabric of selfesteem t\ woman who had high ideals for herself and her farnilv constantlv told her c.hildren lhal-in her

Poser on Jesus Christ

By Fath John

vocabularv lht>n• wav no SU(h word d\ ··, ... m't" Her o:. onc., and dauchters grew up belu-ving Iha! there wav virtuallv no

challenge thev couldn't

lack le. The mothers vtaternent pushed them to I<">! their abilitres and use all their talents. ,\II the children were successful. Bui the challenge from the mother did nol account for lirmtanons of skills. When one or the other did not ac hn-ve some goal. the failure had llw potential to become a crushing defea I.

Graduall, the < hildren's interpntanon of their mother's statement wav tempered wtth more self-knowledge and realtstic gool!-.. If a person's self-worth is lied in wilh his or her ac:c:omplishments. then failing al any task Ls demoralising. The implication is. "I am loved if I sue ceed al this undertaking, I am not loved. or even lornble. if I don ·1." Bui when "hat people do is not loaded down with sur h ultimate consequences. then they can fail without feeling

synagoguP

1.ul.e sav, "!he, rose up, dmve him out of the tO\\TI and led him to the bm" of tho hill on which their !own had been huilt lo hurl him down headk,ng" (4:2' Again. aft,•r Pcll'r had uckno\\ledgcd h,m a,the Messmh. Jesu, \\en! right JO to ,1w.d of his wming pa�""" and death. But Pel<'r objected

,trenuou,h

l.ik.t• 1nan, of h1!-. con· tumporane--.. PPtPr ,,·ac.,

anticipating a m�al son of l)Jvid. a conquering

Although he prospered on �'•mily farm an� spent his life he!ping_ people, Jack never. achieved the goals he had set for himself when he was a young man. In his II eys, Jack wasn ta success. But his neighbours saw Jack differently.

By Father

Herbert WEBER worthli s. l...ic.,t ,t>.. tr I ,,a, evalu· ah,d on a pmw<I. Looking ha< I.. I n'BliSt• th,ll thP m,ln\ pn,1ti\\! comn1t•nb, ,,pn• O\'rrsha· dowfOd h) I he frw ne�t1v,...,. \1orrover, found nl\s,•lf a bil angrv Iha! cwn though I had done m,· bt.•,t, I ,1111 hadnl li,Cd up to r,·c�onc'<; expt'Clc1t1ons.

Aft.,r

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""'"'I tntar t and that �oal, were vtil]

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iund, I !Ph that I could >on \\ilh future cOorts alb '""' pre-sure lo . other-, or be nt'arerfecl in all ndertaking.,. failing, or even being erteived bv others as tiling. d0<•s nol du tale ne's value, E,·ervonp c . an learn om what ha-, �ne

'l'llng but failures don'! ave lo ht•< rippling. \ccepling failure in '""'If or in another also •n lead to grPaler

those initial ho,vti\'t'r. I also fell a certain 1mpass1on A young man. a sport,, fret•dom.

re\ponc.e\,

The Record, December 29, 1988

fill mg goal in \1f\l'nl. In the mids! of ChrLstmas preparations. there is a gre-at deal of emphasi.s on ha\"ing evcr.·thing "just right" for lhl' big holiday. There is much desire not to disappoint anvone or lei others down. Because of lhesp attitudes. personal failures or struggles can be o,eremphasised. or buried ,vhere no one ,viii see them. In the midst of the turmoil. ho,vever, Advent reminds Christians !hat Jesus rho"' to come into an imJl('rfect

,,·orld. to live arnon� humans ,,·ho ha\'P a propensil\ lo me,., up. and lo love and redeem tho."' who often failed to return that love. Jesus preached to cro,vds ,,.,ho sometime, abandoned him. had disciples who denied him and even a special follower who belraved him. · Jesus. who spent much time among the unsuccessful. also must have fell the sorrow of failing. But no amount of failing could diminish his mission of hope and compassion to this broken world.

How to judge succe s a nd failure

This is a story about a failure. At least he saw himself in that light. I pieced it together after he died, talking with his sister and his friends. In 1910. when Jack wru. born, who people counted were supposed lo have big plans. They talked about their dreams. And some people were prepared to tell themselves and others that they were on the road lo big thin!}�. Jack's family owned a

farm. ri< h land in an expc1nrling art'tl He lik,·d farming. hut he thought thal it rnuld be more c.c 1rntifir:, more more plannrd t1nd profitahll'. He decidrd he wasn't going to lcave school, as so man, of his friends did whe;, they were 15 or 16 to go oul inlo the fields. He wantPd to go to university. When he came back he was going to turn a good farm into

the best. a real modr-l, As his younger sister said. "He had plans. oh did he have plans." He was at the beginning of his second vear in University when the slack market er-ashed in 1929

His sister recalled his reaction: "Dad's loo old to be working 12 and 14 hours a day and now he can't afford to hire help. There's no one else to help but me," So Jacl. shelved his

plans lemporarili lo help on the family farm. )ark also helped '<'\eral neighbours who simply couldn't hire extra hands. They might joke about his trips to the town library to look at agricultural reports. but more than one said that the hours Jack added to his own long day kept them from foreclosure. After the war, he could have returned to university.

By Doris DONNELLY

d dad;' she said. "Jack id us lo lal.c the chance • had hec:au,c w,• nrver ew if we"d have other

lack prosp<•n•cl." hi., "l km•" h,• ,-.mted lo go har1.:· hissislersaid. "But l was young and wanted to get marril'd and my Terry. who was just out of the arm}. also had the chance to to go umvcrsily." "Ont' of us had to stay on the farm with mum

athway

ler continued. "All ers did in thosc ;-s. And he \\aS always lping people" He "Ved on the school •rd and for three terms !he town council.

But lo him that was •1 helping his neighurs, not something you

take pride in," she said. "'Pride ,.amP from achieving )·our goals and Jack didn't ac.hie,·" his." Hi!, !,t�ler continued. "lie uS!'d lo tell me about lhl' talks given by young hotshots from I he Department of Agriculture about new pestiddr, and better irrigation or ,vhatever You could !ell that he would trade in all his accomplishments if he had the knowledge and education they had. He ,vished

f the

KNOWYOiR AITH

8

enlhusia,1. found 11 m,pn-,.sihh• lo admil Iha! the death of a professional alhlPle bec.iu,c of drug Jbusc ,, as a I raged, He though! the player should haw known heller than lo pla, with dru!},. While agrecing Iha! the athlPte's hcha, iour was indefensible, I suggested thal !he a, knowledgemenl !hat prople do nol ah,ais li,c up lo high goals can mal.e us more c:ompa!-.c.,ionate Attaining a better understanding or failure and c:omp.:1.,c..ion 1s a

he was one of tlwm." Jack was 77 when he died las! war. H,, outlived man, of his contemporarit�. (,,() not many who filled !he rhurch for the funeral \lass remembered the voung man \>ilh h1g plans. Bui thev remembered their leading citizen. the man who had built their high school, who made sure it was staffed with the most qualified teachers to be found and had the best library

around. He was so kind. they said. read) to help anyone.

In his own eyes, Jack \\.'asn 't a SUCC"CSS. By his own standard, he didn't achieve much. But the accomplishments his neighbours saw are important enough lo make us wonder about the real meaning of succe$ and failure.

pirit

h,·ro. a pow!Orful leader who would lie J.. oul the Ruin.in fore t•, and raise lsrJPI lo !he slalus of a \\.'Oriel pcl\\'l'f. Jc,us failed Peter "ith

all !his tall. of suffering. rejection and death. Yes. Jesus failed everyone Bui ob\iously Jesus was not a failure. It "·ould tx� 1nore arruratc to say he failed people's expectations. Paradoxically. he succeeded prec:i..;,ll bt.-cause he did fail those e,pe< lations. If he had lived up lo them. he might possibly merit a short paragraph in a volume of world histon ,\s it i.s. books about him fill librarie,. \1ore important hP ha., innuenc eel !he li\"f'S of uncounted rnillinn� of Jl('Ople, thi, m,m who failed. P<."ple !1ml t difficult to .. he ,,ith p.1rJclox: it seem, '>O t lo,P to c.ontradu.l on. \\·e read. for e"1mple. that .. ,, hoover \\ 1�h , to sa,e his life \\111 lose it, bu! "hnewr lo,cs hL, life for mi sal.e and Iha! of !hi' (;o,pcl ,nil sa,e ii" 1\1,,r� 8:351. J"hi, <,O\ln<b lil.e gobhled\'gml..! Yet it� truth i, lx>rnp out 111 c.on�tant hum.in 1•,pt·-

rienc:P. The franllr pursuit of "·lf-int.,n·,t i.s a sure P""" riplion for <;(>)f. deslruclion. disillusionment. mi.o,f•n

Selness dedication lo the interests of others brings a happiness beyond price. !rue <;(>lffulfilmenl. Evervone fails. bu! is not 1hereb1 a failure. People fail -,o li\'e up to the artificial standard of living which is supposed lo be the hallmark of success. But it ma, well be that whal reall;· fails is the \'alue sy�iem and its unrealistic standard of li,ing. II ere.ates false expectations and mJkes people feel like failures. A<.luall). bi failing lo mPCI these e,pe<:lation_,, people ma, disco, er more satLc,h·ing \'alue-,, that don·11e1· them down. \1avhe the, bt.�in lo "think as God dOC'>, nol as human being, do" Amon� thl' man\' lessons lhP "failure"- fmm a,.areth laugh! wa., the important one that succes., shou Id not be measu n•d hi a \\arpccl yarclshrl.. Jt"iU<i did not cx>ml' to mal.e people rir:h or poor: he r.ame lo male p<'Ople happ, in spite of lhPir failin�, II i.s thi.s J ·sus whose mming into !he \\Orld we celebrate at !his lime.

Losing decisions

I was dozing on the sofa when I became conscious of my father speaking to my mother in a voice unlike his own. He sounded sad mad and tired all at t� same time.

"Al is in real trouble. He's laking bribes and is running

around

on

Agnes. He won't listen to me He's gelling awa) with it now. but I told him living a lieonl) leads to disastpr' l pn•lended to sleep as they talked softlv about their friends. just 11 vears old then, l was frighlPned for \I and his famih. Fwnlu.ilh ,\I losl hlS job a, a hu\t.'T for a big c:on1pan, and never found onP pqual lo ii. Iii, girlfriPnd moved on when !he , hampagnc slopp<•d nowing. Agnes n>mained faithful as did my pc_trf'nb,.

For lh1• ne,t five ,·ears the, showed me the mr�ning of compac;sion as the) continued lo help Al. l rer:all the many trip; made by my father to jails or nophouses to bring Al home after an alcoholk binge. The last call was that he

By Jane

WOLFORD HUGHE was dead on arrival al the hospital. In the eves of the world. Al was failure. Bui my parents saw him as 8 person in need and did nol abandon him even though the) could not help him Irv to reach !he potential he once had. Successful living is possible even after a pattern of losing decisions. But ii takes effort. discipline and an oJl('nness lo sig,,s that r.all for

a

changf•.

I hd\l' Jn acqut1intt1nn� ,, ho <,('f'lllPd to livr \\ithout a 1noral, ompas.c., and invariabh· took a \\Tong turn. Stella marrird Hank afler a "hirlwind romance which knocked her off balance. For a couple of years she rode an emotional lePlertoller until ,hr ,1ml llank divorced. The experienc:e left Stella warped by what she thought wa� her failure to make the marriage work. Her poor self-image was an impediment in her life. She found herself adding to her collection of failures. After much urging from her family she attended a meeting of the parish's for support group

divorced people. She did not return although she recognised that others in th_egroupwerelabounng ,>1th a sense of failure too. But she said she wasn·1 ready to deal with ii. The lo"esl point came the night she went to a singles bar. She found herself in a room crowded "ilh nois,· people. the stale air heavy \\ilh perfume, smoke and akohol. All al once. the only thing she wanted was lo get out of the bar "How have I let my<;(>lf come to this?'" she ,�ondered. For rea.sons she c:ould not sort oul. she wanted to get awa) from there and be quiet. ··1 went home and let the !ears come," she said. "oting that the te.ars were clcansing and the moment grace-filled. she said, "Ifs a lime I will ne\"er forge!. It was my turning JX)lnt." Stella is working now ,vith a counsellor and is back \\ilh the parish support group. With each successful, courageous act lo put her life together, her vision of the person God has r:alled her lo be grows more reverential. l don't suppose many of us become all that we dreamed of being. But in the long run, success is being the person God intended us to be. That's a lifelong challenge.

Comp ed by NC News Serv Le

The Record, December 29, 1988

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The majority of women make a direct c oice be een eith r marriage o the religious life.

BLOOM... where you are planted! A call to single women to live a consecrated life in the world. For information about the Secular Institute of the Kingship of Christ contact: Father Oliv r Goode, OFM clo Th Friary, 53 Great Northern Highway, Midland 6056. Tel· 274 1159.

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7

from the e Po t Offices:

In the etro are at the f ollowmg Post Office : Perth, Stirling Street, Cloi ters Square, GPO (Forre t Plar.e), Ea t P rth (Hay Street), St Georqes's Tee. At the f ollow111g suburban Po t Office · Applecross, Armada le, Cannington, Claremont, Cloverdale, remantle, Go nell , Greenwood, Hamilton Hill, Kalamunda, rdland. orley, Mt Hawthorn, Nedland , Scarborough, South Perth, Subi co, Vic Park Ea t, We t Perth, Willeton

Iron, the e Country Post Offices

Alb ny, Br ome. Bunhury, Bu elton. Geraldtm . K · le oorhe. Karrath . K n111rn1p k th rr rr din. or , rro 111, H )ell· nd. Hnckuu t • m, uth H di ncl, om Pnc ,, York 12

mouth,

ndur h,

m, Port


0

Position at Tardun

A young person, aged 20 to 30 years, preferably male, is required as a

Dormitory Ass·stan at Tardun Agricul ural College

a

The position requ · res the supervisi g of the boys in the dormitory, a d also for after school sport. The school has four x 10 week terms. Salary would be between S15,000-S20,000 per year. Those interested can ap y to: Brother Frank Donohue, Christian Brothers Agr'cuttural College, Tardun, 6628. Pho e (099) 61 5212.

I(, ,J (��

, . 1,f (. ',,_ /,"

'"\!

Youth Affairs Bureau YOU H PA T C PATIO

GRA TS

Grants are available o ass st young e aged 1225 years to design and runt err o n community based projects, Grants of up to $1000

mb rs of the ed m orist

g

c

II be ma

uth ]'; m xpr ssing t emselves in Liturgical Dance. CO TACT Caron Irwin Youth Aff airs Bur u PO Bo 586 EST PERT 'A 6005 Tel phone (09) 481 0895

s

c

Father Greg Donov n e helping er ct th Pe pie, Ne Life b nn r.

Fehr ary 19 21 e r ary 21-23 First year students at UWA can meet fellow Catholics, make triends & learn about Uni life from students

For details, wri e to:

Far ri ht:

gl

or

Ct lie

Rally.

Ri t: L iron th · s to build a

Catholic Youth Council vision weekend is scheduled for

18, 19.

re

m

al nttn tl m •

arch 17,

It i the annual gathering of some 30 young people and their chaplains from the various youth organisations and movements m Western Australia. It is firstly an opportunity o meet the ne people or 1989. It's a chance to reflect back on the pre ious 2 months and make concrete plans for the months ahead. ovements, organisations and dioce es ould appoint their respective delegates as soon as possible. 13


Compiled by Colleen McGUINESS-HOWA D HWE ET

p

SHORTBREAD

5 cup

Pl c all th ingr i nt in a u xcept th pan I monad

E

o r

I litre

114 cup c tor ug r 250g butt r

ri e flour

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iff d u h.

ift f1ou

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r full lif

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or 20°F) 5-20 mi ut

n (1

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ru] in ti ·

t.

pi c

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ut r i

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14

The R cord, Decemb r 29, 1988

rt


new year visson« •

by

Colleen McGuiness-Howard

rtists' view of religion

Th ·re i

uniq •

Gifts fo c

e

e So i ary Life ® he child of

was a

n h

tid of p

im. Hi fr. nd

orro

d

,

d n

nifi tion of II

T

R

ord,

m

r 29, 1988


(To t

h tth victoti Squ i C ntr ) At a Ii

-in w k nd at the Redemptori t R tr at ou e Friday ?pm-Sun 3pm ebru ry 25-26

L1 e a le ot ine-yea • o ds, Sri Lankan sc o • girl ahisha Gunatilaka r s drawing, tho gh the thought that o of r creations might get o the front page of a tio a magazin ably ne r entered er ad. But that's hat appe d.

P o e 325 6644 fo

TLE ORE

-

..

-

DOGS' CHANCE ., ·. ·� -

-

.

:.

Hou

HELPERS WA

ED

,

Archdiocesan Calendar -

6

T

R

r 29, 1988

-

-


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