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Perth: August 15, 1996
A company of rascals prepares to tal(e the town
Aiming for the dramatic stars in La Compagnia dei Mattacchione (The Company of Rascals) are Claudia Cicanese, left, Vicky Barth, Italia Zaffino, Caterina and Vittorio Antenucci, and Rosa Canosa, all in full dramatic flight.
to be performed on 20 September at St Brigid's Midland, is Carlo Italian housewives abandoning Goldoni's farce - A Servant of aprons and dressing up for the Two Masters. stage? This particular play may well Well yes, it's really happening have inspired Shakespeare's with some Midland parishioners Twelfth Night and A Comedy who have now swapped their Erro11 rs, David believes, and sugdaily household chores for gests Shakespeare himself would greasepaint and the roar of the have attended these Comedia crowd! dell' Arte performances as they With appetites whetted from the toured ELIMpe and England. successful St Francis of Assisi Ultimately the Comeandia dell' Christmas nativity play, these Arte settled in Paris d King ladies (and one husband) have Louis XIV built the Opera decided the stage is the place for Comique to accommodate them, them. from where other plays, the BalSo under the guidance of The let, and La Mime were born Therry Catholic Drama Society's it's all in great tradition!" convenor and director David Among audiences sought by the Crann, La Compagnia dei Matapart from Perth's first company, tacchione (The Company of Rascals), was formed about four Italian Festival due in February months ago and, according to 199Z will be schools with students David. they hope to give an exam- S f Italian. First off the mark was ple of "derring-do and prestige" to the Bayswater Primary School taking a peek preview of the play Midland's Italian community. i This is the Midland Italians' n the Bayswater library last week. For further informatio please response to Fremantle's Italian I; ladies choir. The first production. contact David Crann on 32
The settlement, which will cost the Brothers close to $5 million, comes after three years of litigation which started in WA courts and ended in Sydney. In Sydney, Brother Julian McDonald, on behalf of the trustees of the Christian Brothers, welcomed the settlement as a more constructive alternative to the !li confrontation and polarisation involved in the legal process. "This settlement flows from a recognition that many of the issues raised by these cases cannot be adequately dealt with through the legal system," he said. The details of final settlement, under which litigants agree to withdraw their claims against the Brothers and take no further legal action, are similar to details of the agreements already published. A $3.5 million trust fund known as the WA Institutions Reconciliation Trust will be established to assist the men. It will be independently administered and operate for the next three years. One third of the trust fund will be made available for cash payments to a gmup of plaintiffs described in a Christian Brothers' statement issued after the settle-
According to the Brothers, the Brothers' current schools and remainder of the Trust, about $2.5 ministries. million, will then be administered Br Shanahan said that while the to provide services to the men Brothers had always denied legal ranging from therapy, rehabilita- responsibility as an organisation tion and retraining to family for the instances of abuse that had reunificatiIn, emergency relief occurred, they had always and low interest loans. accepted a moral responsibility to "We acknowledge with sincere the men. regrret that instances of abuse did "Some people have described occur in our childcare institutions the settlement as 'compensation' in WA," Br N4cDonald said, "and but it is not compensation and accept our moral responsibility to does not attempt to be," he said. do what we can ot• eh•lp these men "Compensation irnplies an who were our students in these attempt to quantify damages and WA institutions." injury. Nothing can `compensate' hi addition to funds made avail- these men for the loss of a normal able to the men, the Brothers family and childhood and for the I S; agreed to the litigants' $1.5 other hardships they have sufmillion legal bill incurred with fered. This settlement attempts to their lawyers, Slater and Gordon. offer practical help and opportuThe Brothers will also pay nities for healing." approwdmately $750,000 in cost Bruce Blythe, director of the orders made against the men by VOICES organisation whic.h has the NSW Supreme Court. spoken on behalf of the men, and Br Shanahan said in a message from the Brothers to Catholics in who has been critical of the ChrisSA and WA that the Christian tian Brothers' offers of settlement, Brothers' four provinces in Aus- could not be contacted for comtralia had contributed the money ment at the time of going to press. Full text of the Christian for the settlement. Brothers letter to the He said the $5 million would be Catholics South and paid from Provincial reserves and Western Australia - Page 4 would not impact on any of the
By Colleen McGuiness-Howard
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Brothers' lega cases s I ttled out of court By Peter Rosengren A multi-million dollar out of court settlement between the Christian Brothers and 260 men suing them in the Supreme Court of New South Wales over sexual abuses they suffered in Christian Brothersrun institutions was announced on Wednesday. However, Brother Tony Shanahan, head of the Cluistian Brothers' Holy Spirit Province covering South and Western Australia, told The Record that approximately a dozen men were still considering their position. He added that the settlement allowed for a period of grace whereby men who had refused to accept the settlement could still chIose to sign up and be covered by the agreement. But it was still possible those who had not signed could choose to continue with legal action. Nevertheless, the whole process had "come out of a legal dead end Br Shanahan said. "Now we're back on the road and going SOmewhere."
720 years of Irish Mercy honoured - Page 9
Br Tony Shanahan ment as having "particularly urgent needs." "Men who are alleging serious sexual assault and who have suffered continuing psychological j for payproblems will be ments of either $25,000 or $10,000, according to the severity of their situation," Br McDonald said. Each of the plaintiffs will also receive $2,000 for expenses they incurred in piusuing the litigation against the Brothers and will be able to claim for any additional expenses incurred.
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Aust mission director's Afrkan diary - Page 8
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Business ethics under scrutiny - Page 2