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LATEST I AND SHORT
NOW
CAR COATS
with
WITH FUR
HARD BURNT CLAY P,COFING
COLLARS
from £6161 -
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TILES
SERVICE ACCOUNT AT Open a CREDIT
A' to 602 HAY STREET
No. 3032.
Perth, Thursday, May 24, 1962
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DOMINICAN HIGH SCHOOL FILLS GMAT SEED "More than all else, the present age needs women in whose heart is a deep faith and on ardent devotion to duty.
Women are the moral standard of the land. Whence will such women come if not from schools like this where girls ore taught to be gentlewomen; where
virtue is a daily lesson not of precept but of living example." His GRACE THE ARCHBISHOP
USED THESE WORDS ON SUNDAY LAST AT THE OPENING OF THE NEW DOMINICAN HIGH SCHOOL FOR GIRLS AT DOUBLEVIEW.
The school,. costing in the vicinity of £38,000 when Burnished, will cote: for girl students from North and South Doubieview, Scarborough and Wembley Downs. It is proposed that it will accommodate up to 300 pupils and will teach up
FOOD FOR
to Leasing Certificate stan-
dard. Future additions a r e planned to extend the school and also in the future to build a convent on the property. His Grace was welcomed by a guarcd of honour of Dominican pupils in Williamstown Road and was met at the main entrance by the Mother Provincial of the Dominican Sisters, Mother Marie Thereie, and Mother Laurence. After blessing the school, His Grace went to the students' entrance, where the
STARVING CHINESE
Taipei, Formosa: Catholic Relief ServicesNational Catholic Welfare Conference is prepared to double its family feeding prcgramme in Formosa if Church world Services disc,ntinues its feeding operations here. This was stated here by Father Francis O'Neill, M.M., CRS-NCWC Formosa director. He was commenting on an announcement in New York that Church World Service is going to discontinue direct family feeding in Formosa.
IS A PROBLEM He said an Agency for Development survey had reported that less than one per cent of relief goods reaching black markets. He also noted that it was CRS-NCWC which had introduced the present ration card system for relief recipients and that the Chineec gee:ernment did rot issue cards. ''Human errors, are unavoidable however long you work on the relief list," he said.
International
Minister for Education, the Hon. E. H. Lewis, unveiled the memorial plaque, at which point the girls' choir sang the Dominican Hymn. The offcial party went to a prepared dais at the south side of the school where about a thousand parents and friends of the Sisters and pupils were assembled. Here His Grace complimented the Dominican Sisters on the high tone and standard maintained fin all their schools. His Grace said that the Sisters came- to Perth in 1941 from Dunedin, New Zealand, bringing with them the splendid traditions that characterised their schools everywhere, in the old world and the new. To the parents, His Grace said that he hoped that they would take advantage of the facilities offered to them in a regional high school and that they would allow their cirughters to remain if possible till the Leaving Certificate. "This," said His Grace, "would allow them to take their place in the world and to play a leading role in the Above all it community. would help them in obtain-; ing a more thorough knowledge of their Faith."
In eonunenting on the service which schools like this one do to the Church and the State, His Grace said that educationally second to none. these schools keep high the ideals of womanhood and place maidenly virtue on a high pedestal. Official guests of the Sisters, including His Grace, were Father E. McBride, who made the appeal on behalf of the Sisters, Father Brown, O.P., Father P. O'Meara and Father P. Quinn, the Minister for Education, the Hon. E. Lewis, M.L.A., Dr. Guy Henn, M.L.A., Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, President of Perth Shire Council, Councillor J. Rice, and Mrs. Rice, Senator and Mrs. Vincent, Mr. R.
Summer hayes (architect) and Mrs. Summerhayes, Mr. P. Sullivan (Brenton Buildings), Mr' and Mrs. D. Jackson, Mr. J. Hopkins (President of the School Parents and Friends) and Mrs. Hopkins (Secretary of the Dominican Ex-Pupils Association) and Mrs. Bateman (President of the Dominican Ex -Pupils).
Extensions Blessed ON FRIDAY LAST, His
Grace the Archbishop privately blessed extensions to the pariah prim try same! at Sr.b!ac-i. Tire e hoot is conducted by the Brieldine Sieters. who recently opened a new school in Floreat. The extensions, consisting of two classrooms and an ablution blo -k. were completed at a cost of £7,000.
Price 9d.
The Town Hall is opposite
ST. THOMAS MORE RECTOR
MADE AUSTRALIAN PROVINCIAL
News was released today that the Very Reverend Father J. R. Boylen, S.J., Rector of St. Thomas More College at the University of Western Australia, has been made Provincial of the Australian Province of the Society of Jesus. Father Boylen left Perth on Wednesday morning to take up the appointment at the Provincial Residence of the Society in Hawthorn, Victoria. The present Provincial, the Very Reverend J. Hogan, S.J., will be coming to Perth to be Rector of St. Thomas More College.
Father Boylen was born in Kalgoorlie and studied with the Christian Brothers there. He entered the Society of Jesus in 1922. After the novitiate in Sydney he studied in Ireland, where he received the degree of Bachelor of Arts at the University of Dublin. Father Boylen studied philosophy in the German Rhineland, where he was awarded a Doctorate of Philosophy. Later, in Belgium, at the Louvain University, he secured a Licentiate of Sacred Theology. Prior to his appointment as Rector of St. Thomas More College, Father Boylen was Rector of St. Francis Xavier's College in Kew. Melbourne. The new Jesuit Provincial is a brother of Mr. A. Z Boylen, Assistant Superintendent of Secondary Education in W.A., and the late Mr. L. Boylen, who was editor of the "Farmer's Weekly," and the late Mr. R. Boylen, of Kalgoorlie.
FINAL SESSION FOR COL NCIL The seventh and final session of the Central Preparatory Commission for the coming ecumenical Council hos been scheduled for June 12 to 20. By the end of its June During the five days prior
session the commission is expected to have completed its review of all proposals for the council agenda. During its sixth session, which ended on May 12, the central commission examined 18 proposals called -`schemes"-some of which had several parts. They are contained in 32 booklets with a total of 424 pages. The proposals to be dealt
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TWO LEAVING CERTIFICATE CANDIDATES, ROSLYN JERMYN DOOR OF THEIR NEW SCHOOL.
(
left) AND JENNIFER
MACRAE LOOK THROUGH THE GLASS
with at the final session will be those drawn up by the Preparatory Commission for the Lay Apostolate and the Preparatory Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity. The session will also review the parts of proposals which were not completed at earlier meetings or which were returned to other preparatory commissions for revision.
to the
next session, from June 7 to 11, the central commission's sub - commission for amendments will review proposals presented by the Preparatory Theological Commission, the Preparatory Liturgical Commission and the Preparatory Secretariat for Communications Media. It will prepare final drafts of these proposals for presentation at the council. To date the central commission has studied a total of 59 proposals at its six sessions. These are contained in 102 booklets with a total of 1,400 pages. They represent a sifting of the replies from bishops and various experts which were
gathered during the ante preparatory phase of the council.