Word: cincinnatis
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...Louis 3, Cincinnati...
...Archbishop of Cincinnati made headlines across the U.S. recently when he announced that because of high costs the parochial schools of his archdiocese would close their first grades next semester. This was news, but to TIME it was more of a suggestion than a story. As a result, correspondents surveyed the Roman Catholic education situation across the U.S., and this week RELIGION reports a changing pattern that points toward some kind of private-public recombination of religious and educational responsibilities...
...almost certainly be the party's strongest presidential candidate. It has been said repeatedly that Scranton must become better known among Republicans outside his own state. Yet reams have been written about him; he recently made a skillful Meet the Press appearance, achieved headlines with New York and Cincinnati speeches. So Republicans must surely be getting at least to know...
...Business? Cincinnati's Archbishop Alter says that three-fourths of all Catholic children in the arch diocese already attend kindergarten in public schools, and "adding one more year to their presence in the public schools will not interfere too seriously with their religious training." And a new book, by a Catholic mother of five boys who have variously gone to public and Catholic schools, suggests that the church should go out of the school business altogether. Mary Perkins Ryan, author of Are Parochial Schools the Answer?, argues that providing a general education for all young Catholics has proved...
...parochial-school system, which for the past 80 years has been the wellspring of the Roman Catholic Church in the U.S., is changing its patterns. In Cincinnati, Archbishop Karl J. Alter announced that because of high costs and overcrowded classrooms the parochial schools in his archdiocese would close their first grades next September: 10,000 children in an area that includes Cincinnati, Dayton and Springfield will enroll, instead, in public schools...