Mullen, Regis) Again Rule Parok Gridiron

Mullen, Regis) Again Rule Parok Gridiron

oj m 'vj o m "o Mullen O' 33 m 33 Great Day for Mullen High Oct. 17 O' m t 0 JO ‘ Tabloid Exactly one year from the day when the first mately 800 students. At present 475 students arc enrolled in phasis began to center about a more standard academic pro­ 01 r - shovelful of dirt was turned at a ground-breaking the high school, which is taught by 19 Christian Brothers and gram. VJl o c Next Week ceremony, the five-building expansion project at the lay faculty members. r c O t/) 33 J. K. Mullen high school, Fort Logan, will be ded­ At present the school is fully accredited and offers a full THE BOARDING DIVISION has been phased out. The A special tabloid on icated. college preparatory curriculum. 1965-66 school term is the last in which boarding students will lips the dedication' of Mullen On Sunday, Oct. 17, dedication of the beautiful new building.s Through the generosity of the J. K. Mullen Benevolent attend. Scholarship students will be placed in foster homes, s to will be held at the school, 3601 S. Lowell boulevard, at 5 p.m. high school’s expansion Foundation the building program was made possible. where it is felt they will receive more care than can be offered project will appear in the Archbishop Urban J. Vehr of Denver will preside and be as­ by an institution. by Thursday, Oct. 21 issue sisted by the Rev. Thomas M. Feely, C.M., chaplain, and the Brother Adrian, a native of Denver, cited the foundation and all persons who took part in the expansion program. The The Mullen foundation, however, will still provide scholar­ ing of this newspaper. Rt. Rev. Monsignor George Evans, Chancellor. ships to these boys who attend school at Mullen. Paying board­ not The welcome address will be given by Brother Adrian. school now rates as one of the most beautiful, as well as most completely equipped structures in the archdiocese. ing students have been advised that accommodations will end hat F.S.C., principal of Mullen high school. Brother Raphael, after .May, 1966. ace F.S.C., provincial superior of the Christian Brothers of the Shortly after the death of John Kernan Mullen in 1929 the Santa Fe - New Orleans province, will come from Lafayette, institution opened as a boarding school under the direction of ■ue, Notre Dame La., and give a commentary. the Christian Brothers of the Louisiana province for 10 or­ uld J. K. Malo, spokesman for the J. K. Mullen Benevolent phaned high school boys. ing Corporation, will speak, and Archbishop Vehr will give the Until the late 1930s it operated as a mechanical and agri­ In Parish to closing comments. Master of ceremonies will be John Hinter- cultural training high school with 45 boys enrolled. reiter, president of the Men for Mullen association. A banquet The change of approach began in the mid-1940s when era- DENVER CATHOLIC tiat will be held at 6:30 p.m. not Get Sisters Earlier in the ddy, an open house and tour will be .spon­ )ur sored by the Mullen Mothers’ club. It is scheduled from 1 to 4 P ublic fnvffed To Tour B uild ing s In the fall of 1966 a p.m. The public and the alumni are invited to the open house group of four Dominican The $650,000 expansion program includes an administra­ and dedication ceremonies at .Mullen high school Sunday, Oct. REGISTER Sisters from Akron, O., tion building, a classroom complex with 14 classrooms fully 17. Open house will be from 1 until 4 p.m. Students will con­ will open a grade school equipped for clo.sed-circuit television, a cafeteria, a faculty duct tours through the new buildings. Hcfreshinents will be THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1965 VOL. LX No. 10 be- at Notre Dame parish, residence, and a new librar>-. The faculty residence building served. Hostesses will be Mrs. Emma Ghcrardlnl, president of 2207 So. Zenobia street, di­ includes a new chapel. the Mothers’ club; Mrs. Jene Hall. .Mrs. Fat Lanoha, Mrs. Pope on Pepulatient in Denver, the Rev. Joseph Rule Halpin, and Mrs. Laurie Baker. Their committees will Koontz, pastor, has an­ THE EXPANSION PROGRAM brings the value of the com­ assist. as nounced. At the present plex to $1,500,000 and now offers accommodations for approxi­ -^pocrijphu ar- the school consists of nine ng classrooms. The nuns received permis- Food Needed, Bishop -AFaloney is alleged to lin .sion from Bishop Clarence Is- have overheard the following senmann of Cleveland. O.. to conversation at the Vatican undertake their new assign­ la.st week: ment here. Bishop Buswell: “ What do The Akron Dominican nuns Not Ways to you think the Holy Father would have replied if one of separated from the mother- the Curia had asked, ‘Tene house at Caldwell, N.J., in iuvavit Novum Eboracum, he 1929, at the request of Bishop Sancte Pater’?” m. Schrembs. At present the or­ Bishop Newell: “That’s der has 250 profe.ssed Sisters Prevent Birth Lly easy: ‘I.x3cus bellus ad visen- and 13 novices. By Rev. John J. Kelliher and Chris Hernon dum esl, non habitandum’.” ib- They staff two high schools * « » and 11 elementary schools, as “ You must strive to multiply the bread so that New Preathing Technicfue ir- well as a home for the aged in it suffices for the tables of mankind and not rather it, the Cleveland diocese, and in favor an artificial control of birth, which would be We read in the Christian in the Diocese of Youngstown irrational, in order to diminish the number of guests Century for Oct. 6 that at the he they have five elementary at the banquet table.” --------------------- Gospel Lighthou.se in Dallas le schools, and teach at one cen­ With these words. Pope that the surface has only been you can hear a “ Thrilling Il­ tral high school. Mother Mary Paul VI told the listening scratched. lustrated Sermon. Bitten by Eileen is superior of the Akron world that the problem of The statistics of what these Serpents. .Hear the Screams congregation. population as it affects to­ hybrids have done are im­ of Those Bitten. .See the e- The assistant pastor at at day’s generations and tomor­ pressive. The hybrid corn Costumes of .M o s e s ’ Notre Dame, the Rev. Donald row’s families should be re­ yields in our country during Day. Hear the Crys [sic] Dunn, said that the clergy and solved by a po.sitive program World War II were up 2H per from the Cross.” laity of the parish were happy of food production rather than cent of what other types of to learn that Archbishop Ur­ the negative use of artificial corn would give the farmer. .An advertisement in the ban .1. Vehr of Denver had birth control. In 1947, conservative esti­ Long Island Press for July 24 given his permission for the Was the Pope speaking as mates indicate that close to read: “ Big Week. Adam’s is new school to be staffed by Mother’s Birthday. Who is an Idealist, out of (ouch with 800 million bushels of corn ig the nuns. were added to our farm prod­ she? How old is she now? “ The parish has been in ex­ the harsh realities of life? Or ucts because hybrid corn Short spicy lectures for busy istence eight years, and we En tran ce to Mullen High School is (here some scientific basis was planted. people. No sermon over 40 have been eagerly awaiting for thi.s plea of more food for minutes. Singing from the big the Sisters,” he said. This is a scene of the entrance off Lowell boulevard into To the right of the sign is the new faculty residence, one of screen. Bible given away the family of man rather than THE MAJOR problem fac­ Mullen high school, Denver, which will hold a ceremony of the new buildings. The rustic architectural design complements ing the world as regards food nightly.” Other sermon topics the use of an immoral means dedication for five new buildings on Sunday, Oct. 17, at 5 p.m., the existing buildings as well as the grounds, which are covered is that of technology and pro­ that week: “ Sex and the Sin­ at which Archbishop Urban J. Vehr of Denver will preside. with an abundance of trees. — (Photo by De Croce) to a good end? duction. If, in those countries gle Girl,” “ Nagging Wives — In the last century, two men where food production is lag­ Hen-pecked Husbands — In- Remember contributed much to the pres­ ging behind, Mendel’s theo­ Laws and Out-Laws.” ent discussion. One was an ries were put to use. the stan­ Augustinian priest. Father dard of living could be raised Surely the Calvary Baptist Missions in For Millions: ‘The Pope in New York’ Gregor Johann Mendel, and to the level of “ frugal com­ church in Philadelphia didn’t the other was an English fort” which the Popes have mean it this way when the country parson, Thomas recommended. church advertisement read: Special Section in This Issue Robert Malthus. The e.xpanding world popu­ “ 7:00 p.m. ‘ Your First Day in Pagan Lands A D a y of H o p e lation does create a problem Hell.’ All .Are Welcome.” “The Pope in New York,” a special 12- IT WAS Malthus’ guess that of food, but the means are The vast missionary By Barrett McGum page tabloid highlighting the appearance of since the population of the available to overcome the de­ The Chri.stian Century con­ work being accomplished New York — Pope Paul’s visit to New York world was increasing in a ficiencies in agricultural pro­ cluded its comments on these by thousands of priests, Pope Paul VI in the U.S.

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