Monday, December 1, 1997

December 1997

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1997-12-31


INBOX


Received a thank you letter from the Very Rev. John H. Endejan for my contribution to the Cathedral Preservation Foundation.


... Your personal support of the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist will certainly help to preserve our common treasure.


... One can only guess how many people have been touched by a visit to our beautiful Cathedral, by attending formal ceremonies or in a time of private prayer.


The restoration and continued preservation of the Cathedral will only be possible through the heartfelt loyalty and profound generosity of valued friends like you. ...


I invite you to visit your beautiful Cathedral whenever you have the opportunity to do so. ...



1997-12-31





December 12-14, 1997 New York City


Midwest Express Airlines. Milford Plaza Hotel.




1997-12-12





1997-12-10


SPEECH LOG


The Honorable James Buckley, a Senior Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, spoke on "Religion and Public Service," at a luncheon presented by the Federalist Society Milwaukee Lawyers Chapter.






1997-12-10




Saturday, November 1, 1997

November 1997

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1997-11-28 to 1997-12-04 Ireland


Aer Lingus Chicago to Dublin. The Book of Kells.


Driving to the west. Irish intercity buses have a setter for a logo instead of a greyhound. Shortcut one lane gravel road. Otherwise two lane asphalt roads look just like same in USA. Ancient coastal fort on mountaintop.


Dingle peninsula. Road signs in English with Gaelic graffiti. Monks stone beehive huts. Waiting at sheep crossings. Found an injured sheep which had apparently fallen from the little roadside bluff; left a note at the farm house. Monks' chapel built of stone, without mortar, in the shape of an overturned boat's hull. No crowds in the off season. O'Connor mortuary/petrol station. Hotel in horse country. Walls decorated with photos from race finishes. Huge room, furnishings like antiques. Popped into the bar, had it to ourselves, Guinness does taste better over here. Morning jog between the dairy farms. Smells just like rural Wisconsin. Mild climate indicated by carport-like shelters for cows. Cold snap; clear blue skies, frost on the mountaintops. Ireland's geography is like a bowl, with coastal mountains forming the rim. Small island, radio traffic report for the whole country.


Pub lunch and shopping in Limerick. Bought a gray wool hat. With sportcoat, sleeveless sweater, and scarf, salesman says I "look like an Irishman."


Hotel in Waterford former mansion of the local bishop, of the Church of Ireland I assume. Huge room, again furnishings look like antiques. Waterford Crystal has a factory outlet store. Waterford Castle now a tourist attraction. Once was a square around a large courtyard, now three-sided. Cromwell cannoned the fourth side down. Furnishings Victorian, seems crowded now, but only a part of what was crammed into rooms in actual Victorian times. Tour guide confirms Chicago-area visitor's surmise that owned the castle has holdings around Chicago.


Countryside is green, little farm fields irregular polygons, seperated by stone fences, just like in the storybooks. Here and there billboard-sized announcement that road project paid by European Economic Community funds.


Past Dublin to golf resort just this side of Northern Ireland.


Back to Chicago.




1997-11-28





1997-11


Rome endowments to honor Weakland:
Foundation here funding professorships in music, liturgy, Catholic teaching,

by Tom Heinen, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, November 1997




A $1.5 million chair of study in Catholic social teaching, and a $500,000 chair in liturgy and music, will be established in Archbishop Rembert Weakland’s name at universities in Rome by a foundation that is closely associated with him and the archdiocese.


Erica John, chairwoman and chief executive officer of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee Supporting Fund Inc., announced the endowments this week.


The largest endowment will be at the Gregorian University, a major institution for the training of church leaders, founded in 1551 by St. Ignatius Loyola. It educated 16 popes and more than one-third of the church’s current College of Cardinals, the body that elects popes and assists them on major church matters.


"He (Weakland) is an intellectual, not afraid to take a controversial stand if it ultimately results in the common good and welfare of others," John said in a statement.


"For these reasons, and through the prompting of the archbishop’s many admirers and colleagues, the AMS Fund is taking this occasion of (Weakland’s) 20th anniversary to formally acknowledge the high esteem in which Archbishop Weakland is held.


"It is our hope that the (Gregorian) chair will perpetuate Archbishop Weakland’s philosophies and his great love for humanity at an institution that prepares others who will hopefully follow in his footsteps."


The other endowment will be at the international Benedictine College, Sant’Anselmo, where Weakland studied.


The AMS Fund was created in 1992, shortly before the death of John’s ex-husband, Harry. About $70 million from the now-defunct De Rance Foundation, once the world’s largest Catholic charity, was used to start the fund. Harry John, a grandson of Miller Brewing Co. founder Frederick Miller, founded De Rance in 1948.


Tom Cannon, the AMS Fund’s attorney, said the fund was a separate corporation, founded primarily to support the archdiocese’s charitable work. It has a charter list of other, largely Catholic organizations that are eligible for support, he said.


In 1996, the fund allocated nearly $6.5 million to the archdiocese and to a wide variety of schools, colleges, religious orders and other church-related organizations, according to its annual report.


Cannon said the fund had three directors: Erica John; her daughter, Paula John; and Weakland.


The Johns made the endowment decisions on their own, without Weakland’s participation, Cannon said. Their two votes constitute a majority and were all that were needed to make the decision.


In her statement, Erica John said Weakland had "a unique grasp of human problems and needs." She praised him for serving with "distinction, loyalty, and great love."


Weakland, who is in Rome for the Synod of Bishops for America, issued a statement through archdiocesan communications director Jerry Topczewski saying he was deeply honored by the gesture.


"It means a great deal to me that this recognition touches upon the two areas of deep interest in my life -- Catholic social teaching and music and liturgy -- while at the same time recognizing my roots as a Benedictine," Weakland said.


The formal inauguration of the Gregorian University chair will take place at a luncheon at the university Dec. 4. Weakland will attend the event.



1997-11





1997-11-19


SPEECH LOG


David E. Collins, spoke on "General Johnson Says...," at a breakfast presented by the Peter Favre Forum.




1997-11-19




Friday, October 31, 1997

Reading Rat - October 1997

Articles, Essays, Reviews

UW-Milwaukee grads arrested on spy charges, by Associated Press, Racine Journal Times

It Happened in Milwaukee: For the feminist academic Jane Gallop, policies that forbid consensual sex and romance between professors and students are a threat to pedagogy, by Janet Malcolm, The New York Review of Books

Wednesday, October 1, 1997

October 1997

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1997-10-16


HARK! THE HERALD


Candidates for the Priesthood

This column by Fr. Richard McBrien ran in the October 16, 2008 Milwaukee Catholic Herald.




1997-10-16




Monday, September 1, 1997

September 1997

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1997-09-17


SPEECH LOG


Archbishop Rembert G. Weakland, O.S.B., Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, spoke on "The Implementation of Vatican Council II: Where Are We?" at a breakfast presented by The Peter Favre Forum at The University Club.


He asked who wouldn't favor abrogating doctrines like the Immaculate Conception or Assumption in the interest of Christian unity. It was a rhetorical question not a request for a show of hands. He received a standing ovation; I was at a table at the back so could stay seated without notice.






1997-09-17





1997-09-14


Pastor rips "Jonestown" type plan:
Archdiocese wants Catholics to accept mergers without question, he says
,

by Joel Dresang and Don Behm, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Sunday, September 14, 1997


The Archdiocesan planning commission has recommended, among parish mergers and closings, the merger of St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Mary parishes in Kenosha. Fr. Thomas A. Lemieux of St. Thomas Aquinas gave a homily yesterday evening on the planning process.


"I call this the Pied Piper approach, the Jonestown technique to accomplish organizational change," Lemieux told his congregation, referring to the 1977 death of more than 900 people who were directed by the Rev. Jim Jones to drink cyanide laced punch.


"Rally people together who have been programmed into a set of beliefs and style of organization," Lemieux said. "Have them drink deeply of the secretly poisoned Kool Aid (as represented in these recommendations); give them a stiff warning about how change is difficult to endure and how Jesus' gospel is all about change; play some music and say 'Now people gently lie down and die.'"



1997-09-14




Sunday, August 31, 1997

Reading Rat - August 1997

Articles, Essays, Reviews

At a reading of Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy, Address of His Holiness Pope John Paul II (August 31, 1997), Libreria Editrice Vaticana

Tuesday, July 1, 1997

July 1997

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1997-07-16


SPEECH LOG


Very Rev. Andrew L. Nelson, Rector of Saint Francis Seminary, spoke on "Business Ethics: Roman Catholic Approaches," at a breakfast presented by the Peter Favre Forum.




1997-07-16





1997-07-01


RECONSIDERATIONS




It is one of the probably fundamental remaining differences between extremes of the Right and those of the Left. Hatred moves the former; fear the latter.


It was not always thus. One hundred and fifty or two hundred years ago, the old "Right," authoritarian kingdoms and dukedoms, the conservatives and the aristocracies and their police, were fearful of the ideas of the French revolution, of their attractions, and of their potential representatives.


...


With all consideration due to the inevitable limitations of the many telling, and often aphoristic, definitions of the "gentleman"--limitations of that ideal that inevitably connected it to the "gentle" birth or class--we may add that one of the characteristics of the ideal gentleman was the respectable, or indeed admirable, combination of a character embodying little or no hatred together with little or no fear.


--John Lukacs, "Fear and Hatred," The American Scholar, Summer 1997, pp. 438, 441



1997-07-01




Saturday, June 7, 1997

Liturgical Renewal: Two Latin Rites?

by Archbishop Rembert G. Weakland, O.S.B, at American Catholic Press, originally published in America, June 7, 1997

(via Joseph S. O'Leary)

Sunday, June 1, 1997

June 1997

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1997-06-18


SPEECH LOG


Gregory Pierce, Co-Publisher of ACTA Publications, and Paul Fullmer, President and C.E.O. of Selz, Seabold & Associates, spoke on "A Just Wage: Pipe Dream or Practical Program?" at a breakfast presented by the Peter Favre Forum.




1997-06-18




Thursday, May 1, 1997

May 1997

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May 23-25, 1997


Vacation in Washington, D.C.




1997-05-23





1997-05-21


SPEECH LOG


M. Shawn Copeland, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Theology at Marquette University, spoke on "The Challenge of Living as a Black Catholic in America," at a breakfast sponsored by the Peter Favre Forum.




1997-05-21




Tuesday, April 1, 1997

April 1997

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1997-04-01


RECONSIDERATIONS


This brings me to the heart of the matter--to the particular relationship between the library and the humanities. In theory, there is no reason why Milton's Paradise Lost or Rousseau's Social Contract cannot be called up on the screen, assuming they are "on line." (What is more likely is that something like a Cliff's Notes version of them is on line.)

But even if they are on line, there is every reason to hold them in book form--"hard copy," as we now say--rather than on the screen. With the physical volume in our hand, we are necessarily aware of the substantiality, the reality of the work, the text as it is, as Milton or Rousseau wrote it and meant us to read it.


--"Revolution in the Library," by Gertrude Himmelfarb, The American Scholar, Spring 1997, p. 203


So should we read Plato on scrolls?


1997-04-01




Saturday, March 1, 1997

March 1997

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1997-03-19


SPEECH LOG


Rev. Kenneth Omernick, spoke on "A Catholic Looks at Time Management: An Assessment of the Spiritual Assumptions in the Systems of Stephen Covey, Hyrum Smith, and Jeffrey Mayer, at a breakfast presented by the Peter Favre Forum.




1997-03-19




Thursday, February 13, 1997

Rapid Transit

by Bruce Murphy, Milwaukee Magazine, February 1997

It's actually about commuter rail.

Saturday, February 1, 1997

February 1997

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February 21-24, 1997


Vacation in Park City Utah. Skiing on powder.




1997-02-21





1997-02-19


SPEECH LOG


Sr. Joan Chittister, OSB, spoke on "Spirituality and Cultural Change," at a breakfast presented by the Peter Favre Forum.






1997-02-19




Friday, January 31, 1997

Reading Rat - January 197

Articles, Essays, Reviews

The Decline and Fall of Footnotes: Is the footnote still the handmaiden of academia, or has it become the Achilles' heel of university publications? by Bruce Anderson, Stanford Magazine

Wednesday, January 1, 1997

January 1997

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1997-01-01


RECONSIDERATIONS


[Leo] Strauss's critique of the end of history thesis--long before Francis Fukuyama brought the subject to public attention--was simultaneously a critique of the modern, cosmopolitan aspirations of the dominant progressivism that accepted a cosmopolitan outcome as the only rational object of political and moral striving. Strauss's objections were taken as prima facie evidence of his anti-progressive and therefore reactionary and anti-democratic tendencies. It was assumed by proponents of progressivist cosmopolitanism that the only alternative to their view was a narrow, parochial, ethnic nationalism, which was defined as, in principle, fascistic. But Strauss did not accept that a cosmopolitan/fascist dichotomy exhausted the available options. He was a proponent of neither. Strauss becomes a reactionary, anti-Enlightenment conservative only for those incapable of escaping the cosmopolitan/fascist dichotomy--a dichotomy that unfortunately remains all too prevalent.


--Gregory Bruce Smith, "Who Was Leo Strauss?" The American Scholar Winter 1997 p. 103



1997-01-01