Priest Commends Proposed School Aid Plan

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Priest Commends Proposed School Aid Plan PRIEST COMMENDS PROPOSED SCHOOL AID PLAN Tb* Rncister Hai tha International Neva SerTict (Wire and Mail), the N, C. W. C. Newi Service (Includinc Badioi and Cablet), Ite Own Special Service. Lumen Service of China, International Illnttrated Newt, and N. C. W. C. Picture Service. In Full Splendor PARISH HELP o f Detroit, is *hown in his most recent picture, presented exclusively Listening In in the Register. Bishop Woznicki, oqe o f 12 children, is a native o f Local Local Pennsylvania. He was ordained Dec. 22^)1917, and after a notable career as priest was consecrated at Detrojft Jan. 25 of this year by The AMociated Press, in Edition Edition MAY BE Archbishop Edward Mooney, head of the'.jtiewly erected Archdiocese Hescribing the repercussion at SNAG of Detroit. / he University of Kansas in THE iwrence, over the proposal or a legislative investigation IN C ONGRESS f Communist, activities at he school, said: “ The Amer- can Student union was most President’s Committee Makes Exhaustive active in fighting the resolu* tion. The organization sent REGISTER(Name Registered In the U. S. Patent Office) •Study of Federal Assistance to a telegram to Representative Education Donald Muir, who introduced VOL. XIV. No. 10 DENVER, COLO., SUNDAY, MARCH 6, 1938 TWO CENTS the resolution, inviting him Washington.— The report of the President’s Advisory to come here, at the union’s Over Score of Hierarchy dt 3-Day Louisville Event Committee on Education contains by far the most satis­ expense, and state his posi* factory approach to the problem of federal aid for schools lion.” ever formulated, says the Rev. Dr. George Johnson, direc­ This is made interesting by tor of the N.C.W.C. Department of Education and a mem­ the following editorial note Kentucky Governor Lauds ber of the committee. While the committtee’s plan con­ in the Michigan Catholic, De> tains the dangers of federal control of education, it does iroit: “A committee of the recommend preservation of local administration and makes High School Principals’ asso­ provision for assistance to paro Principles of Encyclical chial and private institutions. ciation in New York city has recommended that new chap­ Chances that congress will formu­ Louisville, Ky.— As the Church clical on Communism, said that it late legislation carrying out the Puerto Rico iters o f the American Student On Catholic Hour commitee’s recommendations are in Kentucky celebrated the erec­ is his aim to remove all barriers union be banned. The union slim, for the sums of money in­ tion of the Province of Louisville to free commerce, to preserve is an extremely radical organ­ freedom of reli^on, speech, and volved and* the favorable attitude ization.’ ’ and the Diocese of Owensboro and the press; to fight Communism, to parochial schools will meet with Trial Ground consecration of the first Owens­ and in other respects to carry out much opposition among congress­ the Pope’s principles of govern- men. A letter that has become an boro Bishop, the Most Rev. Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, Apostolic Del­ (Tum to Page t — Colum n 7) The President’s committee, Of Evil Laws important historic document egate to the United States, and a which conducted the most exhaus­ was written Oct. 16, 1937, at great crowd of distinguished per­ tive study of federal aid to edu­ Union City, N. J.— If the pagan Fushun,' Manchukuo, by the sons heard Governor A. B, cation ever made, recommends the Soviets Rob expenditure of less money than birth control, sterilization, and Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond A. “ Happy” Chandler pledge his ad­ ministration to the principles of such proposals as the Harrison- eugenics” legislation now being Lane, Prefect Apostolic of Fu- good government outlined by Pope Black-Fletcher bill. It would have experimented with in Puerto Rico shun, to ourselves. W e vis­ Pius XL Speaking at a great civic congress appropriate 170,000,000 succeeds there, it will probably be carried over to the continental ited Fushun just about a year reception for Archbishop Cicog­ Churches of for 1939-40 and gradually in­ crease the a n n u a'l sum to United States, warns Bishop Ed­ ago. The communication tells nani, Governor Chandler discussed win. V. Byrne of San Juan, P.R., Pius XT’s encyclical on Atheistic 5199,000,000 by 1944-45. Six how Father Gerard Donovan, funds would be created to aid: 1. in Sign magazine. Communism and said that he uses “ It may have been considered M.M., of Pittsburgh, Pa., was it as a guide in governing the state. 3Vz Billions Operation and maintenance of ele­ good strategy by the birth con­ captured by btindits. His body, mentary and secondary schools. The Most Rev. Francis R. Cot­ 2. Improvement in preparation of trollers,” says Bishop Byrne, “ to ton, who was consecrated first torn by wolves and indicating Properties valued at more than teachers and other educational drive an opening wedge in Puerto that he had been strangled to Bishop of Ow'ensboro on the last workers. 3. Building construction. Rico. But we intend to continue day of the three-day celebration three and a half billion dollars death, was found four months 4. Improvement of state depart­ our fight against this unfair legis­ by Archbishop John A. Floersh, have been confiscated from Chris­ lation. Many of our people afterwards. He is Maryknoll’s ments of education. 5. Civic, gen­ will be installed on Tuesday, tian Churches in Russia since the eral, and vocational training for are confident that the immoral first martyr. Monsignor Lane Colored Sisterhood Founded in 1828 March 8. beginning of the Communist war adults. 6. Rural library service. neo-malthusian legislation passed by the blameworthy members of says: ^ On the first day of the program. on religion, the official Moscow There would also be a fund to Dear Monsignor Smith: Archbishop Cicognani was hon­ suppoH research work. the legislature of Puerto Rico was paper, Izvestia, has announced. favored by the actual administra­ I feel that I should write ored at a school children’s recep­ tion in the afternoon and a civic Expropriation of Church property Papal Count John McCormick, Danger of Federal Control ' tion in Washington,” and that Negro Nuns in U. S. you a few words of apprecia­ renowned and beloved Irith tenor, celebration in the evening. At the has extended to hundreds of chari­ Dr. Johnson, who is associate “ this suspicion has not been dis­ tion for the kind notices you will sing “ Pani* .4ngelicut” and professor of -education at the proved.” evening fete. Governor Chandler, table and educational institutions: (Turn to Page 4 — (Column 1) after mentioning the Papal ency- “ Ju»t for Today” in the eighth Catholic University of Aiqsrica, Charging that “ birth control Seventy-six monasteries and con­ birthday program of thfi;, nation­ says: “ The danger of federal con­ and sterilization are praised and vents operating 3^0 hospitals, 197 wide Catholic Hour Sunclil}^ March trol lurks in every plan for federal advocated at the University of Have Fine Growth Communists Are Feverishly Active schools, 168 poorhouses, 48 sana- 6. The Catholic Hour pi^gram i« aid to education. The federal Puerto Rico by certain profes­ toriums, and many others. Izvestia produced each Sunday by the Na­ taxpayer has a right to expect that sors,” Bishop Byrne adds that “ the is the first Bolshevik publication Bay St. Louis, Miss.— (Special) in 1831. Mary Lange, one of the tional Council of 'Catholic Men the federal government will in number of marriages is decreasing — The development of Colored two young Negro teachers who be­ to give detailed figures on the over the NBC Red network. (Turn to Page S — Coium n 1) rapidly while concubinage is in­ CATHOLIC YOUTH FRONT seizure of Church properties. Catholic sisterhoods in the United came the first Oblates, was made creasing.” States is recorded in the current mother superior of the nuns. She The Communist daily records issue of St. Augustine’s Messen­ died in 1882 at the age of 95. the nationalization of 1,700,000 Pius XI to Officiate Personally at Elevation Five-Year-Old Solves ger, published at St. Augustine’s acres of land, 1,112 asylums, The Oblate Sisters of Provi­ NEEDED TO FIGHT HEDS seminary for the Colored. The dence today have 212 members homes, and schools; 436 dairy Archbishop’s Worries communities discussed in the ar­ farms, 620 stock farms, 704 cortdiicting three academies, four COHSISTORIES MARCH 17 Los Angeles.— With the drive ticle are the Oblate Sisters of high schools, a normal school, and N e w York.— A nation-wide dio program sponsored by the Na­ hotels and inns, and 277 hospitals Providence, the Sisters of the Holy — all conducted , by monks and for the proposed archdiocesan two orphanages. They work in Catholic youth front, filled with tional Council of Catholic Women. Family, the Handmaids of the nuns. major seminary going forward, an Washington, D. C.; Baltimore and the zeal of the Crusaders, ia neces­ “ Here in America,” said Father exhibit of seminary replicas was Most Pure Heart of Mary, and the Ridge, Md.;. Alexandria, Va.: sary to combat the feverish activ­ Mooney, “ the young Communists TO PR QHUI M-SAlHTRi display here. Yfriou* parochial Negro MagdalenS at the Good Charleston, S. Car.; St. Louis ana Founder’s Virtue* DiscukiieJ ^ ity of the Reds among young peo­ are feverishly active. They play a schools had en'frYef Tn the exhibit. Shepherd convent in Baltimore. Normandy, Mo.; Leavenworth, ple, the Rev. Vincent Mooney, C. Vatican City.— The virtues of Oblate* Over 100 Year* Old very vital part in the American Vatican City.— (By Radio)— A new saints, a ceremony which is to At St.
Recommended publications
  • Young in Years, but Rich in History, Resurrection of Our Lord Looks To
    Thursday, July 15, 2004 FEATURE Southern Cross,Page 3 Young in years, but rich in history, Resurrection of Our Lord looks to the future he name “Resurrection of Our Lord” is particularly apt for a Savan- Tnah parish which recently celebrated the fourth anniversary of its founding. Located in the building which was formerly Saint Anthony of Padua Catholic Church, the westside parish resulted from the merger of Saint Anthony’s and Most Pure Heart of Mary Church. Though only a “toddler” of four, the new church boasts bloodlines extending back to the early-twentieth-century beginnings of its parent parishes. It was close to a hundred years The birth of this church, like ma- ago that Father Ignatius Lissner, of ny beginnings, came in stages. The the Society of African Missions, Society of African Missions turned came to Savannah. French by birth administration of the churches over and missionary by nature, Lissner to the Diocese of Savannah in stepped into a challenging situation 1968. By the late 1990s a restruc- in 1907. As he later described it turing of the Savannah Deanery, himself, he “entered upon the task then comprising 13 parishes and of administering to the spiritual two missions and extending from wants of a mission which was co- Richmond Hill, through Savannah, existent with the whole state of to Springfield, seemed in order. A Georgia.” Along with another study commissioned by Bishop priest of his order, Father J. Kevin Boland took a long, Gustave Obrecht, Lissner hard look at the deanery’s Robert E. Chaney. courtesy of Father Photo Ray Wilson, Sr., Rickey Brady and Father Robert E.
    [Show full text]
  • Présentation Powerpoint
    Local Curiosities The area of Villedieu Intercom, counting 29 municipalities around Villedieu-les-Poêles, is crossed by the rivers Sienne, Vire, Sée and Soulles. This area, which is typical of Normandy, is characterized by several smaller mountains, such as the Mont Robin, near Percy, with a height of 276m. Beslon: • Cross-shaped church, which was enlarged in the middle of the 19th century, among others with stones of the Saint-Fraguaire church, which is right next to it. The steeple in the north was built in 1550 • Former manor house of Saint-Fraguaire from the 18th century • Path Cross with pilgrim stick on the way towards Saint-Aubin-des-Bois • Mills and settlements as well as isolated dwelling houses Boisyvon: • Sparse habitat • The cross-shaped church, a steeple from the 17th century built by de Laforestrie, the gable in the south-west direction of the church nave contains the dedication "1533 P L Laurence CD", the Choir carries another dedication “maid by Sir Delaforestrie, king's prosecutor in Avranches, 1713”. • Castle • Mill at the Sienne • National modern oratory in the church of Notre-Dame La Bloutière: • Cross-shaped church from the 15th-20th century. • Very beautiful holy Venisse, which is the subject of a popular cult • A centuries-old grave, one of the oldest in the area • Very nice view of the valley of the Sienne • Former priory of Saint Thomas Cantorbéry, founded in 1099 • Former home of the priory monks, reconstructed in 1760 • A church destroyed at the end of the 19th century Bourguenolles: • Bundled and isolated habitat • Cross-shaped church from the 18th century, very beautiful multi-colored wooden cross at the main altar from the 18th century • Path cross Champrépus: • Beautiful bell tower in the north of the transept built by Frémont, the priest of the village.
    [Show full text]
  • BULLETIN 2009.Indd
    Bulletin de l’académie du Var Année 2009 Nouvelle série Tome X Le Bulletin de l’académie du Var paraît depuis 1833 grâce à une importante participation financière du Conseil général du Var Toulon, académie du Var, 2010 Le Bulletin de l’académie du Var est publié par : ACADÉMIE DU VAR (association loi 1901) Passage de la Corderie 83000 Toulon — France Téléphone 04 94 92 62 67 Site Internet : http://www.academieduvar.org Mél. : [email protected] Permanence le lundi de 14 h 30 à 16 h 30 Jean-Paul MEYRUEIS, président. Jean-Yves BRY, vice-président et secrétaire général. Monique BROUSSAIS, secrétaire des séances. François GOUDARD, trésorier. Directeur de la publication : Jacques KERIGUY. Comité de rédaction : André BÉRUTTI, Philippe DEVERRE, Jean-Paul MEYRUEIS, Philippe GRANAROLO (commission de littérature), Henri-Pierre GERVAIS (commission des sciences), Bernard BRISOU (commission d’histoire et d’archéologie), Jean PERREAU (commission des beaux-arts). Imprimeur : Imprimerie SIRA, 960 route de Bandol, 83110 Sanary-sur-Mer. Parution : septembre 2010. Dépôt légal : septembre 2010. Les opinions émises dans cette revue n’engagent que la responsabilité de leurs auteurs. Droits de traduction et d’adaptation réservés pour tous pays. La loi n° 57-298 du 11 mars 1957 sur la propriété littéraire et artistique, article 41 alinéas 2 et 3, n’autorise que « les copies ou repro- ductions strictement réservées à l’usage privé du copiste et non destinées à une utilisation collective » ainsi que « les analyses et courtes citations ». L’article 40 alinéa 1er de la même loi prévoit que « toute représentation ou reproduction intégrale ou partielle faite sans le consentement de l’auteur ou de ses ayants droits ou ayants cause est illicite.
    [Show full text]
  • Archives De L'église De France
    Archivistes N°74CR_Archivistes N°70 CR 07/03/11 09:28 Page1 Archives de l’Église de France N°74 2e SEMESTRE 2010 uite à l’Assemblée générale du mois d’octobre dernier, l’Association a renouvelé une bonne partie de son Conseil Sr Elisabeth Sondag : d’administration. Pour les membres sortants qui ont travaillé Rapport moral S durant maintes années pour organiser les journées d’études et 2009-2010 .................…p. 2 gérer l’administration de cette association, nous leur disons un grand Sr Christiane-Marie Decombes : MERCI. Rapport Journée La relève étant assurée, il faudra faire au mieux pour continuer sur groupe II .............................…p. 6 notre lancée. Nous comptons beaucoup sur la participation Gilles Bouis : « active » des membres de l’Association pour faire des interventions, Rapport Journées écrire des articles, nous faire découvrir les « trésors » qui dorment des Diocésains ........................…p. 8 dans les congrégations et diocèses. Ce bulletin est le signe que notre Christian Sorrel : association est dynamique, que les archivistes, à plusieurs, peuvent La Grande Guerre et le retour fournir un travail exceptionnel en mettant leurs sources en com- des congrégations religieuses mun. Nous voyons très bien ce qu’a donné l’enquête réalisée en France ..................................…p. 10 auprès des congrégations au sujet de la Grande Guerre : des Sr Christiane-Marie Decombes : articles riches en documents, en images et en histoires. Synthèse de l’enquête sur le retour des Religieux en 14-18 ......…p. 18 Nous sommes aussi très intéressés par les publications, les expo- Mme de Bengy : sitions, ou bien la mise en valeur d’archives, et du travail qui se fait Les congrégations religieuses localement.
    [Show full text]
  • 127 Panel: Women and Power in the Church Sense of Inner Power of Life and Fruitfulness
    127 Panel: Women and Power in the Church sense of inner power of life and fruitfulness. In this situation, it had clear alter- natives and the power to choose between them. It had even previously thought through, as a Community, its possible general obligations regarding corporate dissent.4 Here, it seems to me, its decision was a decision not just to submit to its own lack of power, but a decision not to allow its own power to be diffused by the direct action of an external power. It was a decision to build on its pres- ent power in order ultimately to be more faithful to the truth and to its healing ministry. Concretely, that meant a decision which prevented such possible sanctions as the removal of Community officers, investigation of community hospitals, etc., and which allowed continuing community dialogue and col- laborative response. 4. The fourth judgment operative in this experience and decision was a judgment about the nature of power itself—or at least the use of power within the Church: Power is essentially for the sake of empowering others. This judg- ment was joined with basic presuppositions about the nature of the Church, the Church's ongoing search for truth, the capacity for community (and church) to sustain pluralism and authority, the possibilities for reform of church structures in the direction of just access to power, openness, collaboration, and concern for both individuality and communality. The judgment was also joined with an analysis of the concrete historical situation in which the events were unfolding. Though I cannot here explicate either the presuppositions or the historical analysis, it is crucial at least to note the importance for both of them of a view of power which is ultimately not for the domination of others but for their em- powerment.
    [Show full text]
  • Departamento De Filología Francesa E Italiana Narrativa Sentimental Francesa Del Siglo Xvi: Estructuras Y Juegos Onomásticos A
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Repositori d'Objectes Digitals per a l'Ensenyament la Recerca i la Cultura DEPARTAMENTO DE FILOLOGÍA FRANCESA E ITALIANA NARRATIVA SENTIMENTAL FRANCESA DEL SIGLO XVI: ESTRUCTURAS Y JUEGOS ONOMÁSTICOS ALREDEDOR DE LES ANGOYSSES DOULOUREUSES QUI PROCEDENT D’ AMOURS DE HÉLISENNE DE CRENNE JANINE INCARDONA UNIVERSITAT DE VALENCIA Servei de Publicacions 2005 Aquesta Tesi Doctoral va ser presentada a Valencia el dia 26 de Maig de 2003 davant un tribunal format per: - Dª. Elena Real Ramos - Dª. Alicia Yllera Fernández - D. Pierre Brunel - D. Josep Lluís Canet Vallés - D. Evelio Miñano Martínez Va ser dirigida per: Dª. Dolores Jiménez Plaza ©Copyright: Servei de Publicacions Janine Incardona Depòsit legal: I.S.B.N.:84-370-6248-9 Edita: Universitat de València Servei de Publicacions C/ Artes Gráficas, 13 bajo 46010 València Spain Telèfon: 963864115 UNIVERSITAT DE VALÈNCIA FACULTAT DE FILOLOGIA DEPARTAMENT DE FILOLOGIA FRANCESA I ITALIANA NARRATIVA SENTIMENTAL FRANCESA DEL SIGLO XVI : ESTRUCTURAS Y JUEGOS ONOMÁSTICOS ALREDEDOR DE LES ANGOYSSES DOULOUREUSES QUI PROCEDENT D’AMOURS DE HÉLISENNE DE CRENNE TESIS DOCTORAL PRESENTADA POR : JANINE INCARDONA SCANNELLA DIRIGIDA POR : DRA DOLORES JIMÉNEZ PLAZA VALENCIA, 2003 LE GENRE NARRATIF SENTIMENTAL EN FRANCE AU XVIE SIÈCLE : STRUCTURES ET JEUX ONOMASTIQUES AUTOUR DES ANGOYSSES DOULOUREUSES QUI PROCEDENT D’AMOURS D’HÉLISENNE DE CRENNE JANINE INCARDONA UNIVERSITAT DE VALÈNCIA 2 REMERCIEMENTS 3 Comment exprimer ici ma gratitude envers toutes les personnes qui ont cheminé à mes côtés durant l’élaboration de cette thèse ? Les mots les plus recherchés ne sauraient refléter ma reconnaissance.
    [Show full text]
  • Justine: a Sadian Transformation of the French Literary Fairy Tale Ivy J
    Florida State University Libraries Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations The Graduate School 2007 Justine: A Sadian Transformation of the French Literary Fairy Tale Ivy J. Dyckman Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES JUSTINE: A SADIAN TRANSFORMATION OF THE FRENCH LITERARY FAIRY TALE By IVY J. DYCKMAN A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Degree Awarded: Spring Semester, 2007 Copyright © 2007 Ivy J. Dyckman All Rights Reserved The members of the Committee approve the dissertation of Ivy J. Dyckman defended on March 1, 2007. __________________________________ William Cloonan Professor Directing Dissertation __________________________________ Stanley E. Gontarski Outside Committee Member __________________________________ Aimée M.C. Boutin Committee Member __________________________________ Deborah J. Hasson Committee Member __________________________________ Lori J. Walters Committee Member Approved: _____________________________________________________________ William Cloonan, Chair, Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics _____________________________________________________________ Joseph Travis, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences The Office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee members. ii To Martin, The Greatest Dictionary of All iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I wish to thank Florida State University's Winthrop-King Institute for Contemporary French and Francophone Studies, which made possible a six-week summer session of research in Paris, the Congress of Graduate Students for a grant in support of that research, and the French Division of the Florida State University Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics for the opportunity to serve as a lectrice at the Sorbonne during the academic year 2002-2003.
    [Show full text]
  • Franciscan Handmaids of the Most Pure Heart of Mary Continue to “Build Bridges”
    Thursday, January 10, 2008 FEATURE Southern Cross, Page 3 Franciscan Handmaids of the Most Pure Heart of Mary continue to “build bridges” he numbers of the Franciscan Handmaids of the Most Pure Heart of Mary instituted a Christ Child TMary may have fluctuated over the years, but their mission —to bridge Club, a girls’ sodality, several societal needs and ethnic gaps—has never wavered. The order’s founder, small schools, and a soup kitchen. the serious and devout Elizabeth Barbara Williams, knew from childhood Part of Saint Mary’s Convent that she wanted to serve God. The question was: how? Born February became a working girl’s home. 11,1868, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Williams received her education from Mother Theodore embraced this the Ladies of the Sacred Heart and from the Sisters of the Holy Family, varied ministry eagerly. second oldest society of African-American religious in the United States. “Throughout last winter,” reported At 19, Williams entered the Lissner drew up a constitution and a story in the August 15, 1931 Sisters of Saint Francis Convent received permission from Bishop issue of The Bulletin of the in Louisiana. When that order dis- Benjamin J. Keiley of Savannah Catholic Laymen’s Association of banded in 1912, she entered the to establish a religious order of Georgia, “Mother Theodore novitiate of the Oblate Sisters of black sisters. It was then that he declined to leave to any of the other sisters the work of ladling Providence in Baltimore where recruited Williams, who had pre- Mother Theodore, FHM she was received as a novice and viously experienced life in two soup in the kitchen conducted for Loretta Theresa Richards, FHM, given the name, Sister Mary religious congregations.
    [Show full text]
  • © 2013 Shannen Dee Williams ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
    © 2013 Shannen Dee Williams ALL RIGHTS RESERVED BLACK NUNS AND THE STRUGGLE TO DESEGREGATE CATHOLIC AMERICA AFTER WORLD WAR I By SHANNEN DEE WILLIAMS A Dissertation submitted to the Graduate School-New Brunswick Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Program in History written under the direction of Deborah Gray White and approved by New Brunswick, New Jersey May 2013 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Black Nuns and the Struggle to Desegregate Catholic America after World War I by SHANNEN DEE WILLIAMS Dissertation Director: Deborah Gray White Since 1824, hundreds of black women and girls have embraced the religious state in the U.S. Catholic Church. By consecrating their lives to God in a society that deemed all black people immoral, black Catholic sisters provided a powerful refutation to the racist stereotypes used by white supremacists and paternalists to exclude African Americans from the ranks of religious life and full citizenship rights. By dedicating their labors to the educational and social uplift of the largely neglected black community, black sisters challenged the Church and the nation to live up to the full promises of democracy and Catholicism. Yet, their lives and labors remain largely invisible in the annals of American and religious history. This is especially true of their efforts in the twentieth century, when black sisters pried opened the doors of Catholic higher education, desegregated several historically white congregations, and helped to launch the greatest black Catholic revolt in American history. This dissertation unearths the hidden history of black Catholic sisters in the fight for racial and educational justice in the twentieth century.
    [Show full text]
  • The Catholic Foundation 2018 ANNUAL REPORT the Catholic Foundation
    The Catholic Foundation 2018 ANNUAL REPORT the Catholic Foundation 2018 ANNUAL REPORT THEME: Two Sides to Every Story Produced by The Catholic Foundation Published by Hopkins Printing 2018 A LETTER FROM OUR CEO Dear Friends, The theme of this year’s Annual Report is “Two Sides To Every Story”. You will read stories of the Holy Spirit at work inspiring and motivating those who give and those who receive. These stories represent the very best and sometimes the humblest of people. We share these stories so that the Holy Spirit may inspire, educate, and hopefully motivate others to realize they can also give. Many people are under the impression that only the wealthy can give in an impactful way to the causes and organizations they care about. These stories will show how someone’s desire to give, and served by The Catholic Foundation’s ability to facilitate that desire, has not only made dreams come true but has furthered the core values of our Catholic faith. Blessed Mother Teresa said, “If you can’t feed a hundred people, feed just one.” One person or one gift can affect many lives. I ask that you read each story and connect with the people who gave and the people who have received. See how you can relate to their stories, their willingness to give, and their determination to make our Catholic faith and communities stronger. At The Catholic Foundation, we are here to ensure that your intentions and aspirations are met. We can create a custom, charitable plan that is carried out in a way that fits your goals and needs.
    [Show full text]
  • Autographes & Manuscrits
    _25_06_15 AUTOGRAPHES & MANUSCRITS & AUTOGRAPHES Pierre Bergé & associés Société de Ventes Volontaires_agrément n°2002-128 du 04.04.02 Paris 92 avenue d’Iéna 75116 Paris T. +33 (0)1 49 49 90 00 F. +33 (0)1 49 49 90 01 Bruxelles Avenue du Général de Gaulle 47 - 1050 Bruxelles Autographes & Manuscrits T. +32 (0)2 504 80 30 F. +32 (0)2 513 21 65 PARIS - JEUDI 25 juIN 2015 www.pba-auctions.com VENTE AUX ENCHÈRES PUBLIQUES PARIS Pierre Bergé & associés AUTOGRAPHES & MANUSCRITS DATE DE LA VENTE / DATE OF THE AUCTION Jeudi 25 juin 2015 - 13 heures 30 June Thursday 25th 2015 at 1:30 pm LIEU DE VENTE / LOCATION Drouot-Richelieu - Salle 8 9, rue Drouot 75009 Paris EXPOSITION PRIVÉE / PRIVATE VieWinG Sur rendez-vous à la Librairie Les Autographes 45 rue de l’Abbé Grégoire 75006 Paris T. + 33 (0)1 45 48 25 31 EXPOSITIONS PUBLIQUES / PUBlic VieWinG Mercredi 24 juin de 11 heures à 18 heures Jeudi 25 juin de 11 heures à 12 heures June Wednesday 24th from 11:00 am to 6:00 pm June Thursday 25th from 11:00 am to 12:00 pm TÉLÉPHONE PENDANT L’EXPOSITION PUBLIQUE ET LA VENTE T. +33 (0)1 48 00 20 08 CONTACTS POUR LA VENTE Eric Masquelier T. + 33 (0)1 49 49 90 31 - [email protected] Sophie Duvillier T. + 33 (0)1 49 49 90 10 - [email protected] EXPERT POUR LA VENTE Thierry Bodin Syndicat Français des Experts Professionnels en Œuvres d'Art 45 rue de l'Abbé Grégoire, 75006 Paris T.
    [Show full text]
  • “Practical and Theoretical Aspects of the Duchemin Chansonniers of Ca
    “Practical and Theoretical Aspects of The Duchemin Chansonniers of ca. 1550” The growing demand for music prints, such as Du Chemin’s Chansons nouvelles, is unimaginable without a readership armed with the basic musical skills required to perform the works these prints contain. How did aspiring musicians acquire these skills? For modern musicians, what special problems are presented by the printed poetic and musical texts at hand in these books? Finally, what can we learn from Renaissance music theory about the organization of individual compositions and the albums into which they were collected by editors like Nicolas Regnes, Claude Goudimel, and Loys Bisson? Pierre Attaingnant, for his part, did not issue any truly practical manuals for the performance of polyphonic vocal music (although he did issue a treatise on some more abstract aspects of musical thought by the royal mathematician, Oronce Finé).1 Yet by the 1550’s, the legacy of Attaingnant’s chansonniers had provoked public demand sufficiently to justify the commercial publication by Du Chemin of music primers such as Claude Martin’s Elementorum musices practicae, (issued Latin in 1550 and in French translation in 1556), Maximillian Guilliaud’s Rudiments de musique practique (1554; in fact little more than a French summary of Martin’s Elementorum), and Michel de Menehou’s Nouvelle instruction familiere of 1558.2 As we will discover, these modest treatises offer practical and theoretical observations about music that shed some light on the habits and competencies of the readers who used books like Du Chemin’s. Through them, novice musicians could gain a basic understanding of the notation of rhythm, the tone systems of — 1 Renaissance polyphony, the rudiments of solfege, and even elementary composition.
    [Show full text]