PERTH, WA: January 26, 1989
Registered by Australia Post Publication No. WAR 0202
Number 2620
POST ADDRESS: PO Box 50, Northbridge, 6000 W.A. LOCATION: 26 John St, Northbridge (east off Fitzgerald St).
TELEPHONE: (09) 328 1388
FAX (09) 328 7307
Wonder stories on Faith • Pages 8 and 9
Europeans in an Asian world • Pages 6 and 7
Importance of having a second tongue • Page 4
PRICE 600
Golden joy for trio ...
At their A quinas College celebration on Monday night, convalescent heart patient Brother Vincent Duffy (right) got some good advice on how to cut the jubilee cake from diamond jubilarian Brother Baptist Healy (left) and the other two local golden jubilarians Brothers Bruno Doyle and Patrick O'Doherty.
Long periods of service to Clontarf, Castledare, Bindoon and Tardun establishments were praised at Monday night's jubilee celebrations for local Christian Brothers. BROTHER BRUNO DOYLE, with a younger brother already a Christian Brother and another brother to become a priest, had spent three years at Melbourne's St Vincent's Orphanage before starting his 10 year stint at Clontarf. six of them as superior. It was at the height of the Christian Brothers migrant youth program and he was to follow many of them to his next six-year posting as superior of Keaney College Bindoon. Three years later he would pick up the threads again when he became superior for six years at Tardun agricultural college, returning to Bindoon yet again for another three year term as superior. In his retirement in 1989 he will be back at his familiar Clontarf surroundings again. BROTHER PATRICK O'DOHERTY who has spent only four later
years in his native state of Queensland got his early start at Clontarf in 1948, moving six years later to become head of Castledare, returning to Clontarf in the wake of Brother Doyle in 1960
Pray for serial killer
and following him again as superior in Bindoon in 1966. For seven years he was director of vocations before returning to Mount Isa for three years as superior.
In 1989 he returns again to Clontarf as superior with teaching duties at Trinity where he has taught for the past four years. BROTHER VINCENT DUFFY has been att-
ached to St Pat's Gerald- The other years were ton for 17 years with an spent at a number of States earlier 12 years at Aqui- Eastern nas College and two appointments. years at Fremantle as BROTHER BAPTIST part of his Christian HEALY, who has taught Brother service to his in several Western Ausnative Western Australia. tralian schools is on a
diamond jubilee visit from his posting at the order's Rome generalate house. Next month he celebrates in his native Adelaide his 60 years as a Christian Brother.
CATHOLICS ATTACK EXECUTION OF MOST HATED MAN ORLANDO, (Florida). (NC): Although many cheered Florida's execution of notorious sex murderer Theodore R. Bundy, a Florida Catholic Conference official said no crime deserves the death penalty.
The strong statewide support for Bundy's execution underscored the fact that the 42-yearold former law student was "probably the most hated guy on death row", said Thomas A. Horkan Jr, executive director of the Florida Catholic A Cathedral priest Conference. But, said Horkan, even spokes man said it was no reason for elation but "the terrible nature of his time to kneel down and crime doesn't make the death penalty right". The pray. When serial killer Catholic bishops of FlorBundy was executed at ida have repeatedly Florida State Prison in stated their opposition to Starke shortly after 7am, the death penalty. Officially, the reason a crowd waiting at the prison gate cheered and Bundy was put to death was for the 1978 sex applauded. of 12-year-old murder Drivers of passing cars Leach in Lake Kimberly honked their support for the execution, and a City, less than 90km smaller-than-usual con- from the prison in tingent of capital punish- Starke. But he was also under ment opponents gathered for a protest death senxtence for the savage beating-murder of vigil.
two Florida State Univer- rage over the nature of sity coeds that same year, Bundy's crimes led to a and he was accused or carnival-like atmosphere suspected of similar sex in the days before his murders or disappearan- death. ces of 35 young women Father Robert Baker of in the West and St Augustine Cathedral Northwest. in St Augustine said the Over the weekend "sideshow" surrounding before his execution, he the execution "alarms confessed to more than me personally. I don't 20 murders and said his find this. . . execution a spree of violence in the reason for elation". 1970s had its origins in a Rather, he said, "it teenage fascination with pornography. should be a time to get Bundy's death by elec- down on our knees and trocution was the 20th pray". execution in Florida "A man's death is a since 1979, when use of sacred experience," said the death penalty the priest, who had been resumed in the state with Jeffrey Joseph following changes in Daugherty, a Catholic, capital punishment laws shortly before Daugherty mandated by the US was executed at Starke Supreme Court. last November. In a state where as Horkan said it did not much as three-fourths of the population supports s urprise him when capital punishment, out- Bundy, in an interview
before his execution, said that a teenage addiction to pornography had led him to explore more violent pornography and then murder. He said that however horrible Bundy's crimes were, the state could serve justice and protect society by instituting life imprisonment without parole as a substitute for the death penalty. Such an approach would foster greater respect for human life, he said. "It was wrong when Ted Bundy killed his victims. It is wrong when society kills Bundy," Horkan said. "We kill criminals to teach other people not to kill," he said. "So we kill them, and they kill us, and we kill them, and they kill us. And everybody seems to like that."