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No. 3499. PERTH, THURSDAY, MARCH 1 1, 1971
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POLICY -MAKING MUCATION BODY FORM T HE PROVINCIAL Conference of the Bishops of Western Australia and the Major Superiors of Teaching Orders conducting schools in this State h ave established a Catholic Education Commission which will act for the entire State of WA. Policy-making for Catholic education has hitherto been done in individual and Teaching Orders. ioceses d The new Commission, ernment schools, provis- ance of an executive which is appointed by, ion of guidance and office for the new ComREPRESENTATIVES of the various teaching Orders who have schools in this State are pictured with the and responsible to, a counselling services in mission. Bishop of Geraldton, Most Rev. F. X. Thomas, D.D., the Bishop of Broome, Most Rev. J. Jobst, D.D., His joint conference of the Catholic schools. The executive office of Grace, the Archbishop of Perth, Most Rev. L. J. Goody, D.D., the Bishop of Bunbury. Most Rev. M. The Commission will the Commission will inBishops and Heads of McKeon, D.D., and the Abbot of New Norcia, Most Rev. Dom Gregory Gomez, D.D., O.S.B. Teaching Orders, will have 12 or 13 members clude, in addition to the They had assembled to discuss and inaugurate the Catholic Education Commission last week at the Archstart work within a from: one Bishop, the Director of Catholic bishop's residence, Victoria Square. month. Its functions will Director of Catholic ed- Education, a Chief Edube to make broad pol- ucation in Perth, a mem- cational Officer, who icy decisions relating to ber of the Parents and will head a research and the scope and direction Friends Federation Coun- development unit, with of Catholic education in cil, six teaching Relig- t wo graduate assistants, WA, to assist the co-ordi- ious from the Teaching a secretary to the office A MASS at London's has been given for 20 nation of its various sub- Orders, a lay teacher and and to the Commission. famed Hyde Park — the Irish priests to conceleunits, to advise Govern- two or three additional The cost of the new speaker's delight — will brate the Mass there. ments and public author- people of acknowledged office will be met by a climax the St. Patrick's They will celebrate the ities on the needs of educational expertise in per capita average levy UTRECHT, The Netherlands (NC) — Cardinal Day parade through the Mass from an altar Catholic education. the Catholic community. on Catholic schools of Bernard Alfrink, of Utrecht, and Jesuit General city on Sunday, March placed on the back of a one dollar ($1) per child. Father Pedro Arrupe discussed the issues of 14. RESEARCH truck near "Speaker's Later, it will undertake Thousands of further specific functions It will concentrate It is hoped to move the priestly celibacy and a married clergy when they Irish Corner', a few yards Londoners will take part from the site of Tyburn such as the pre-service heavily on research. Al- Catholic Education Office met here last week. in the parade. and in-service education though the financial re- to a building of its own Gallows, where many Hyde Park is royal ter- martyrs died during the The two said they Haarlem recently withof teachers, research, de- sources available for ed- later. The sphere of invelopment of schools in ucation are limited, it fluence of the new Com- agreed these were not drew their support of a ritory. But permission Protestant Reformation. old and new areas, ad- has been decided to mission will be the en- Dutch issues but prob- student parish at Amfor vise on the religious ed- spend initially a sum of tire State, ranging from lems the whole sterdam University for ucation of Catholic child- approximately $35,000 an- Broome and Derby to Church. They hoped the allowing a married formren in Catholic and Gov- nually on the mainten- Esperance. issues would be discus- er Jesuit to celebrate sed at the Synod of Bish- Mass. ops in Rome, in SeptemDuring his visit to the ber-October, one of Netherlands, Father Arwhose topics is prob- rupe visited Jesuits at HIS GRACE, the Most Rev. Dr. L. J. Goody, Archbishop lems of the modern the Hague, Nijmegen, of Perth, and Archbishop Thomas Cahill, of CanberraGoulburn, will be Australia's delegates at the Synod of priesthood. Groningen, Amsterdam, Bishops in Rome during September-October. Father Arrupe and Rotterdam and Zeist. This was announced by the Australian Episcopal ConCardinal Alfrink also discussed other problems In talks to the Jesuits, ference, which also elected Archbishop James Knox, of LONDON ( NC )—Ger- it would be possible for world in which mankind of the universal Church Father Arrupe stressed Melbourne, as substitute in case one or the other of and of the Church in this that changes were neces- the delegates would be impeded from attending the man Jesuit theologian t he Pope to -voluntarily lived. Father Karl Rahner has define and limit his own Father Rahner said c ount r y, particularly sary in the Jesuits, the Synod. s aid the concept of the sacra- with regard to. the Jes- Church and society. An Cardinal Sir Norman Gilroy, of Sydney, had indicated Churches jurisdiction. that apostolic spirit must be before the election of delegates that he would not be should unite without Doing so would make ments needed clarifica- uits. w aiting for doctrinal it possible for the Angli- tion and that the dis- The Jesuits and Bishop the basis of renewal a vailable. The Holy Father, Pope Paul VI has ratified the elections. differences to be re- can Church to be given agreement about the Theodore Zwartkruis of among the Jesuits. solved and should join the same autonomy with- number of sacraments in dialogues with athe- in one Church that the would in time seem ism and communism. Eastern Catholic church- much less important than it had. In an interview with es now have. the Times of London, Father Rahner said he He said there was no Father Rahner, who has sees no theological ob- real danger of a schism The AMSTERDAM. been visiting British jection to the concept of in the Catholic Church universities, said most pluralism of belief with- in the Netherlands, or Netherlands (NC) — The Christians already held in a united Church, but elsewhere in the world, Dutch Catholic traditionthe fundamentals of a added that there were because the conditions alist movement, Confron- TOKYO (NC)—A Japan institutional tation, has launched a anese branch of the ComCommon faith and were obstacles to its realisa- for sometimes more divid- tion — its acceptability schism no longer exist. national campaign for mittee for Society De ed by misunderstand- to the Pope and its ac- No one could found a the selection for the velopment and peace ings and misinterpreta- ceptability to Protestant new Church today, nor Roermond diocese of a ( SCDEPAX) was organtions than by real dis- Church leaders and mem- would there be a second bishop who defends the ised here. Reformation. doctrine and moral laws bers. agreements. of the Church in the Prof. Kinhide MushaBut he foresaw a lie asked why there NOT DOGMA spirit of Pope Paul VI. koji of the Jesuit-run great upheaval. In the should not be one Church mem- Sophia Confrontation University in The invalidity of Angli- future, many persons lid.th a plurality of becan orders—or the Cath- would leave the institu- bers are urging Dutch Tokyo said the real conbefs rather than a var- olic Church's position tionalised Church and Catholics to write to the cern of SODEPAX was iety of churches sharing that Anglican priests and some of them would Vatican asking for such to co-operate in explor one faith. ing issues in the developbishops were not validly cease to be Christians. a bishop. Such a single Church, ordained—was not a dogMoors. Petrus Bishop ment process, not to give Many Christians remainhe said, would remove ma of the Catholic ing in the of Roermond. 64. retired pat answers to problems Church would doctrinal in December for health differences Church but simply a rul- be very critical of it. reasons. el3neerning the papacy ing of Pope Leo XIII that Unity could never adaS an obstacle to union, could be changed. A considerable contra vance by considering Special Mass will because Christians could versy erupted late last Father Rattner hoped past doctrinal controyear when Pope Paul then regard the Pope C ounter & Standard be celebrated in honaccording to their Angli- progress concerning doc- versies. named Father Adrian J trinal differences among at Patrick. our of St. He criticised the limcan, Lutheran, Catholic Simonis, 39, considered a Or other interpretations. the Christian churches ited ecumenical achieve- spokesman for Dutch St. Mar 's Cathedral. A lso would come through dia- ments made so far, and FOOD & PIE WARMERS Pather Rahner, who logue with the non- said that dialogue tend- c onservative Catholics, to DEEP WELL FRYERS in on Sunday. March be bishop of the Rotterteaches at Muenster Uni- Christian world. T OASTER GRILLERS ed to get lost in theo- dam diocese. stock at 11 a.m. Bishop rsitY, Germany, said LOW OVEN RANGES He said the Churches logical discussions. Despite the controInternational Theo- should carry on a diaHOTCUPBOARDS The mutual recogni- veray, the Dutch bishonc Quinn will pla-e:rle and gical Commission set logue with communism tion by both of a comagreed to accept rather , 41Lby Pope Paul VI (of and atheism as ideolog- mon Christian faith was Simonis' appointment Zolch he is a member), ies, as well as with the an essential basis for and urged all Dutch Cath'as already decided that technological, empirical ecumenical advancement. olics to do the same.
Problems Not Solely Dutch
MASS AT HYDE PARK
ARCHBISHOPS GOODY AND CAHILL FOR SYNOD
Churches Urged To Unite Despite Differences
CAMPAIGN LAUNCHED
SODEPAX BRANCH FORMED
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