Sudbury Catholic District School Board

The Greater Sudbury Public Library to Present Two Great Classic Movies

Join us at the Main Public Library, 74 Mackenzie Street for two great seasonal movies.

Thursday, December 6th watch The Bishop’s Wife, a romantic comedy starring Cary Grant and Loretta Young. This wonderful film, nominated for five Academy Awards in 1947 gives us Cary Grant as an angel come to earth to help a bishop save his marriage. The movie will be shown in English, without sub-titles.

And then on Thursday, December 13, drop in to see the wonderful Canadian film, Mon Oncle Antoine. This movie was filmed in 1971 and tells the story of a small mining town in Quebec. It is Christmas Eve, and this is the only day of the year when the factories close and the inhabitants can celebrate. The film will be shown in French, without sub-titles.

Everyone is welcome to both showings and admission is free!

For more information, please call Lise Larose at 673-1155, extension 225.

Advent: Let the Play Begin

Everyone likes a good play. A good play draws you in. It keeps you perched on the edge of your seat wondering how things will turn out. A good play has characters that you cheer or jeer. A good play fills you with a sense of excitement and wonder and resolves itself in a way that leaves you feeling satisfied. I am sure everyone reading this article can or has by now filled in the blank with their own good play and recalls all of the feelings it evoked.

Advent is the beginning of a good play. It is the beginning of the story of Jesus. Like a good beginning, Advent draws us into the mystery of the story through all of our senses. Music, candles, gestures and symbols create an atmosphere that tells us something different is happening. Stories about surprising events of births unexpected tell us that we are about to enter into a time that is very different. Voices from the past fill us with hope as we struggle with challenges of poverty, violence and exclusion. The beginning of the play seems to hold out a promise of better times to come.

Advent is only the beginning. The drama unfolds as we move from the birth of Jesus to his young adulthood, baptism and ministry of preaching and healing and ends with his passion, death and resurrection. The drama of Jesus is retold during the year and in different ways we are drawn into this drama and encouraged to see the drama as our own story. Participants are uplifted, saddened, inspired, challenged and comforted as we sing, pray, listen to stories and reach out to others in service.

There are high points in the drama such as Christmas, Epiphany, Ash Wednesday, Holy Week, the Triduum, Pentecost and Ascension Sunday but each Sunday is an opportunity to relive the whole drama and here once again the gestures, symbols, music and stories are a means of pointing to a deeper reality as a good play should.

What makes drama engaging is that in some way we recognize our own story in
The Story. The more we recognize our story in the Jesus Story, the more engaged we will become in the drama. Each of us has experienced times of insecurity, exclusion, doubt and fear. Jesus experienced all of these but his essential message which he called the good news of the kingdom confronted all these feelings and provided a radical alternative to a way of live which drags us down.

So, let the play begin. Become engaged in the drama making the Story your story. Take time to see how the events in the life of Jesus parallel your own life events. Take heart knowing that there is a resolution which will leave you satisfied much more than you could ever have expected.

Grade 9 Students at St. Charles College to Participate in Antioch Weekend

St. Charles College is hosting a Grade 9 Retreat Antioch Weekend from Friday, November 30th at 7:00 p.m to Sunday, December 2nd at 8:00 p.m. Students will have the opportunity to experience a dynamic weekend full of sharing, discussions, music, food, fun projects and more. The weekend is entirely given by experienced youth with the help of teachers and spiritual director Father Pat Woods.

The purpose of the weekend is to build a Christian community of young people within the school where they can experience Jesus Christ in a personal way alongside their peers. All Semester 1 Grade 9 Religion students will be participating.

Sudbury’s Elgin Street Mission Benefits from the Generosity of St. Ben’s Students

Frank Rocca, Department Head, Physical Education, St. Benedict CSS, Benny the Bear, (St. Benedict CSS Mascot) and Veronica Summerhill a Grade 12 student at St. Benedict CSS recently presented a $250 cheque to the City of Greater Sudbury’s Elgin Street Mission. The money was raised during the 50/50 draws at the “Bears” home football games. In addition to the cash donation, St. Benedict Catholic School students are also undertaking a “Mitten Drive” to help the Elgin Street Mission in providing winter clothing (mittens, hats, scarves, coats, etc.) for the less fortunate throughout the winter.

Donations will be accepted at St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School, 2993 Algonquin Road, Sudbury from now until December 21 between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.

St. James Catholic School Hosts Aboriginal “Mishoomis and Nikoomis Day”

As part of its School Improvement Plan, the St. James Catholic School Parent Council initiated an Aboriginal Cultural Awareness Committee to promote Native cultural understanding and appreciation to both native and non-native students.

Mishoomis (grandfathers) and Nikoomis, (grandmothers) of the St. James Catholic School’s Native students were invited to visit the school to make a variety of presentations such as; eagle feather teaching, native craft making, aboriginal storytelling, how to clean a fish, how to do bead work, how to make moccasins, etc. One child in each class had been linked up with their own grandparent for the morning event.

View video of the event on the Sudbury Star’s website.

SCDSB Proud Participant in Sudbury Elementary Volleyball League

St. Raphael, Marymount and St. Francis are proud participants in the Sudbury Elementary Volleyball League. The league includes more than 350 athletes and is in it’s 7th season. Boasting 19 girls’ teams in two divisions and 13 boys’ teams in a single division, the league develops Sudbury athletes throughout the area from all four local school boards.

Teams have competed over 4 Saturdays from the beginning of the school year, and at the end of league play going into playoffs SCDSB teams are ranked as follows:

Boys:
St. Raphael – 3rd
St. Francis – 6th

Girls Division 1:
Marymount A – 1st
St. Francis – 6th
St. Raphael – 10th

Girls Division 2:
Marymount B – 7th

The Sudbury Elementary Volleyball League is organized by Diables Sports Club – a non-profit organization. They take care of all scheduling, stats, hosting and other organizational duties.

St. Benedict CSS to Host ‘Technology Days’

St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School will be hosting Technology Days on Monday, November 26, Thursday, November 29, Wednesday, December 5 and Thursday, December 6, 2007 from 9:30 a.m. until 2:00 p.m. at the school.

The days’ activities will involve four one-hour sessions:

– Automotive Technology session: Students will be given an overview of the program followed by a hands on team competition task

– Construction Technology session: Students will use power tools to produce a finished product

– Hospitality and Tourism session: Working in the Foods Lab students will make pasta which they will also enjoy eating.

– Communications Technology session: Using digital cameras students will plan and record scenes of “A Day at St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School.”

For additional information, please contact Maurizio Visentin, Guidance Counsellor at St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School at ph. 523-9235.

SCDSB Launches Year Two of “Dearness Conservation Program and Challenge”

The Sudbury Catholic District School Board recently launched the 2007-2008 Dearness Conservation Program and Challenge. The School Conservation Challenge was created by the Sudbury Catholic District School Board to increase the participation in the Dearness Conservation (DC) initiative that was introduced into all of the Board’s schools in 2001. Since the inception of the DC program, the Board has been able to achieve substantial utility savings by educating teachers, students and staff and providing them with the necessary resources through this program.

The Dearness Conservation Program is geared toward both secondary school and elementary schools. The program consists of an in-school presentation/workshop and seeks to incorporate all students in the school in its conservation efforts.

The DC in-school program launch consisted of two components:

Part 1: A viewing of the widely acclaimed environmental movie trailer, An Inconvenient Truth followed by a “Changes” and a “Choices” presentation which focused on the choices that students have to make with respect to the environment. Discussion also centred around the key aspects of the Board’s Conservation Challenge.

Part 2: A conservation trade show was held on energy efficient technologies. Students learned about energy and water saving technologies, how to perform technical audits, and how to run campaigns to involve all students and staff in energy, water and waste reduction.

Workshops are being presented in all secondary and elementary schools over the next two weeks, and all SCDSB Dearness Schools, Classes and Clubs are invited to participate in the “Conservation Challenge” which will run from October 30, 2007 to May 1, 2008.

The winner of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board’s 2007-2008 School Conservation Challenge will be awarded a Grand Prize of $500.00 (toward an approved greening/grounds improvement project) and the right to display the “SCDSB School Conservation Challenge Champions” banner for a year.

For more information on the Sudbury Catholic District School Board’s DC Program and Challenge please contact, Mark Gervais, Energy Coordinator at the Sudbury Catholic District School Board.

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