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St. Gregory’s Academy Alumnus Response to closing of SGA

What do you guys think of this vision of the situation? This was a comment in response to the post about St. Gregory’s Academy on JP Sonnen’s blog

Headmaster's Address at SGA Graduation 2005

SGA is a special place and one which is sorely needed in the US and throughout the world. Speaking as a direct beneficiary of this truly unique place of formation, I believe it is the obligation of all of us who have received such a gift from the Lord to sacrifice so that this education may be passed on to future lads from around the world for their benefit, the benefit of the Church, the country and the world. As you noted, the reputation of the Academy has spread like wildfire across the world by the example of her graduates and thus students have come from homes as far away as Canada, Alaska, and France to seek out this particular unapologetic Catholic formation in manly virtue within the context of a classical liberal arts education and a unique Highlander brotherhood that inevitably forges real friendships that last far beyond the High School years.
It would answer a high calling and provide a noble service to the Church and to the future lads of St. Gregory’s Academy if those blessed with means to do so would help in a practical way to preserve this pearl of great price. At this point in its history, the Academy is looking to independently seek out its glorious mission by severing its formal ties with the FSSP. While no doubt both organizations have benefited from their relationship with each other, the particular founding mission and vision of St. Gregory’s Academy (which has thus far profoundly changed the lives of ordinary young Catholic boys for the better by orienting them toward a lifelong pursuit and love of the Good, the True, and the Beautiful) simply does not coincide with the chosen charism of the FSSP. It is a difference of two good visions of a Catholic school and thus the need for parting is mutual. This has been a point of tension and evaluation over the past several years and the decision has now been made to allow the opportunity for the Academy to continue true to its original mission separate from the FSSP. While this is certainly a great opportunity for the future flourishing of SGA, it comes with some serious material difficulties. An attempt to purchase the current property upon which the school has operated for the past 20 years (in Elmhurst, PA) failed on the business end of the negotiations and thus the Academy is in desperate need of a new home.
This is where some of your readers may be able to make a real difference in preserving this treasure hidden in the rolling hills of the Poconos. Information about SGA’s current situation and property may be found on the school’s website (the link is in the post). It is vital that the Academy be continued, if at all possible, right into the next academic year. There are many students currently at SGA who will not be able to finish the formation they have begun if they are not helped now. An organization deeply connected with SGA alumni and faculty (ranging back to the founding of the school) is currently undertaking the task of relocating the school. As you might guess, this is a monumental task and many prayers and sacrifices will be needed to ensure any kind of transition into the coming years. This organization is called the Clairvaux Institute and one can find out all about it by going to:

http://clairvauxinstitute.org/about.html

From there one can contact them for further information about providing donations and/or ways in which one can become a part of this noble cause.

Graduation Mass at St. Gregory's Academy 2005

Solid Catholic institutions in education are rare enough in our present day and age and Our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, continues to stress the huge role that education must play if there is going to be any revival in culture, especially Catholic culture, and in the Church. So, let’s not stand by and allow this essential work of the Lord, under the patronage of St. Gregory the Great, fall beneath the very real financial and logistical obstacles that are now presented with the separation from the FSSP and the exile from the Elmhurst property.

Support St. Gregory’s Academy by your prayers, sacrifices, and (when possible) whatever material means the Lord has blessed you with for the benefit of your fellow man.

“Though much is taken, much abides; and though
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”
-Alfred Lord Tennyson “Ulysses”

Yours in Christ,
SGA Grad

www.clairvauxinstitute.org

The Clairvaux Institute is an educational foundation dedicated to revitalizing society by returning to the sources of culture. The return of language to the elevation of poetry. The return of the individual to the completion of community. The return of nature to the care of human stewardship. The re…

University of Dallas Memes

We will play Wagon Wheel some other time…

Letter from Bishop Conley to parents, students, alumni, and friends of St. Gregory’s Academy

Greetings to parents, students and alumni of St. Gregory’s Academy,

I would like to introduce myself. My name is Bishop James D. Conley, Apostolic Administrator of the Archdiocese of Denver. I was appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Denver under Archbishop Charles Chaput, in May of 2008 by His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI.

I also happen to be a close, life-long friend of Mr. Howard Clark. We were roommates at the University of Kansas and fellow students of the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program in mid 1970s. I have great admiration and esteem for Mr. Clark’s accomplishments as teacher, mentor, and Head Master over these many years at St. Gregory’s Academy. The individual and collective achievements at SGA are truly remarkable. I have met many alumni over the years and have had a number of them as students when I served as chaplain of the University of Dallas Rome program and as theology instructor for Christendom College Rome campus. I have seen them juggle, heard them sing, and watched them pray. I have been inspired and edified by the unique and unmistakable character of the SGA education and formation.

Like all of us, I was deeply saddened and disappointed to hear the announcement last week of the closure of SGA. I know this unfortunate news has affected many loyal parents and families of the academy. My own experience, however, has taught me that with every disappointment in life, Our Lord offers an opportunity for growth in holiness.

A few years ago, Mr. Clark and I, along with a few dedicated graduates of SGA, established a non-profit corporation entitled the Clairvaux Institute. This new institute was established to be an educational foundation dedicated to promoting a classical liberal arts education and a return to the sources of authentic Catholic Culture.

I can tell you that there is a real possibility of a new school starting next fall modeled in the tradition of St. Gregory’s Academy under the auspices of the Clairvaux Institute.

Many things must be sorted out and many obstacles have to be overcome. Everyone is still dealing with the shock of the recent announcement. My sincere prayer is that this note of introduction will serve as an encouragement to the whole St. Gregory’s family.

Presently, the Clairvaux Institute is looking for suitable property for our inaugural year. We have some very promising prospects. Nothing is certain at this point, but as Catholics, we are called and invited to “cross the threshold of hope.” I am honored to be a part of this praiseworthy endeavor. We will keep you informed as events unfold.

In the meantime, be assured of my prayers and please redouble your prayers for all those who are involved in this worthy and noble initiative.

Saint Gregory the Great, pray for us.

Sincerely Yours In Christ,
James D. Conley, S.T.L

New Great Hearts Videos

Dear Friends,

As most of you know, I teach Studio Art out in the Phoenix desert.  The school I teach at is one of many charter schools in the network of schools called “Great Hearts Academies.”  This year is going really well at my school and there are some great things happening there and in our network of schools.  Next year there will be four more academies opening up (two regular 6-12 and two “Archway Classical Schools” which are K-5).

I have embedded three new videos that provide clear insight into the culture, curriculum, and purpose of the Great Hearts Academies.  The three videos are titled “An Educational Revolution,” “The Wisdom of the Ages,” and “The Great Hearted Student.”  Enjoy.

Peter Bloch

The University Shield

As some of you may know, last year an impassioned group of us began a publication at UD called The University Shield. We were largely successful with the two issues we printed and distributed last spring, and so, we have picked up the project once again and are publishing the first issue of this semester tomorrow.

I have not (as of yet) figured out how to post a .pdf file online. If I have a few spare minutes to play around on the computer and figure out that doo-daddy trick, then by all means, it will be up. BUT, for the time being, if you’d like a copy delivered straight to your personal email inbox, then please, shoot me an email at katieprejean741@gmail.com and I’ll be sure to send it your way.

The issue this month is dedicated to the many priests and religious that have helped shape our beloved UD, and so we have 2 quite dense and lengthy articles about the Cistercian’s influence on UD and the Sisters of St. Mary of Namur. The articles will certainly be enjoyable to you (I think) and move your hearts and minds to loving this place even more.

So recap: email me at katieprejean741@gmail.com and I’ll send you a copy of the Shield.

Cheers,

Katie

Isolated Love? – It doesn’t exist…

I am in the process of writing my thesis on the vocation to love according to Dietrich von Hildebrand & Karol Wojtyla (Pope John Paul II). These are the first of many paragraphs sure to compile the entire work, and so in celebration of finally writing something, I’ve decided to post just these few snippets. Enjoy.

The on-going experience of Love…

Love is never an isolated experience. It cannot be one singular moment whereby two people are caught up in a passionate experience and then are able to “move on.” This is contrary to the very nature of love, because love is, at the very root, an experience of discovery. One can clearly not discover one moment and not be discovering the next. Rather, one embarks on the journey of discovery and having set out, is now committed to continuing that journey for the rest of their life. Love, then, as a journey of discovery, means that one has set out to come to discover the beloved.

There is a goal set when one embarks on this journey of love, then – a goal satisfied each and every time the lover recognizes, yet again, the unique distinctness of the beloved. One loves not out of necessity or to fulfill a desire or because they are obligated to do so. No, one loves because they are drawn to this other person and hope to continue reveling in the delight of the other’s very existence. The goal, simply, is to discover all there is to know about the beloved; the lover wants to know, to see the glory that is this other person’s very existence, to be permitted to plumb the depths of another’s soul and see who they truly are and what gives them the life they so gloriously live.

Love cannot be isolated, then, for if it were, one would never plumb the depths as much as they would want to. They’d only be skimming the surface of an infinitely deep ocean, merely snorkeling rather than truly diving in to come to understand what lies beneath the simple top. If love were merely a “one time thing” experienced singularly without any “follow up” or “return,” then each and every person would be dissatisfied, unhappy, lonely, and above all frustrated at life itself.

When love is the expansive discovery that it is meant to be – when it is the journey of discovery of another that leads one to a true and complete understanding of the very self of the beloved – then we rejoice. We blush and giggle and spend hours swooning over the very thought of the other person, for they have awakened in us a delight that cannot be contained, but rather pours forth in everything we do and say. It brings us unbridled joy, this journey of discovery that is “loving another”, and it is a joy we each seek to know…a joy we each want to experience. And so we set out, our hearts open, our souls attuned to the souls of those we notice, and look for the moment when we can set out on this journey and seek to discover the beauty of another.

More to come when inspiration hits…

-Katie

Pretty BMX Footage

7D 1000 fps from Oton Bačar on Vimeo.

Chartres Pilgrimage 2011

It’s time to start thinking about the who what when and how of Chartres 2011.

The Pilgrimage, I believe takes place three days prior to Pentecost Sunday (June 12 this year).

We should start first and foremost by gauging interest.

If you are interested in joining in on the adventure, then comment below or contact me.

Nothing definite yet, just looking to see who is interested, that’s all.

Chartres Cathedral

Au revoir,

~Peter Bloch

p.s. – Can’t wait to see Fontgombault for the first time!

UD 1986 – A Time Capsule (Woah Boy!)

Viva Espana!

In honor of Spain’s recent victory, here’s a story from Saint Gregory’s senior class pilgrimage on the Camino di Santiago.

The senior class of St. Gregory’s Academy biked into Alba Franca, a town just before one of the steepest climbs through the mountains. Tired, wet, hungry, and penniless, Luke Culley led the lads to a hostel where he had previously found one of the five good faces of the earth. This was a privately-owned hostel, owned by a true Christian. This man had not only allowed the students to use the kitchen and sleep under a roof, for the customary fee of a juggling show; he had been so taken with the Saint Gregory’s spirit that also gave the boys food and good company for a night the year before. With the prospects of an old friend, warm food, and a dry place to sleep in front of them, the band arrived at the door of the hostel.

There, they met not the owner of the hostel, but two of his friends, workers at the hostel. One of them spoke English; the other didn’t. As Luke attempted to explain the situation (that they were poor pilgrims on the Camino, that he knew the owner, what they had been allowed in the past), it became apparent that the workers were uncomfortable at the prospect of allowing the ragged bunch into the hostel. ‘The owner can’t see you,’ they protested. ‘Just let me have a word with your boss,’ Luke said, ‘and that will clear everything up.’

But, the workers were obstinate. They even resorted to an old trick, hiding behind the language barrier. The English-speaking worker pretended that the Spanish speaker was really the one in charge, and thus neatly sidestepped any possibility of understanding the situation. ‘We cannot disturb the owner; he is too busy,’ he said, ‘you must go:’ and left the conversation. Meanwhile, the Spanish speaker side-stepped as well, insisting that he could understand nothing. He did, however, understand the words “Leave now!” and was surprised that the Americans had trouble with that order.

Disappointed, if only because of their high hopes, the students turned out into the wet. Luckily, they found a place to sleep just outside of Alba Franca. This wasn’t the nicest place. It was an abandoned nunnery, filled with old bones (at least one of which was human), old papers (there was a letter from the 19th century), and … yesterday’s newspaper? Fresh food in the kitchen? What was going on? Needless to say, the students bunched together in one room for the night, not wishing to spread themselves out, though the convent was very large. Luke asked, jesting, the next morning, whether anyone had been too afraid to leave the communal room to go to the bathroom late at night; a few students admitted ruefully their fear.

So, after a hearty breakfast of water, a vitamin pill, and doughnuts that were found in the convent kitchen (they weren’t from the 19th century), the students, colder, hungrier, and more down in spirits than the night before, climbed their steeds/bikes and began the arduous path up the steepest climb of their trip.

About ten kilometers out of town, a truck came up behind the stretched-out convoy of bikers. It is common (though rather impolite) for drivers to harass the convoy with their horns as they try to pass the large group of bikers on the narrow mountain roads. The man in this truck, however, outdid the others. Honking, waving his arms, shouting at them–really annoying. Everyone arrived at an overlook where they could pull over, take a break, and find out what the problem was with their follower.

The driver, as you might have guessed, was the owner of the hostel. After hearing from his workers how a group of jugglers had harassed the hostel the night before, the owner, distraught at his workers’ inhospitality, left the next morning, driving around town for an hour trying to find the students and apologize to them. I mentioned before that the hostel was privately owned, not involved with the tourism bureau. The owner took pride in the fact that he, being the owner, could extend hospitality to those who needed it, and was literally in tears from anger at his workers for having failed to practice the beatitudes. He personally spoke with and apologized to everyone in the group; Luke and co. assured him that they were not angry or put out at all; the students sang a few songs and juggled for a bit; the owner left; and the Camino continued.

The owner was not done with them, however. He had driven ahead to the nearest rest stop and bought the pilgrims plates of food–and not just the fare that characterizes the pilgrimage, the old standards bread and cheese: but plates of deli meats and hot quiches.

Considering that the owner’s name was Jesus, haven’t we heard this story before?

And they brought to him young children, that he might touch them. And the disciples rebuked them that brought them.
Whom when Jesus saw, he was much displeased and said to them: Suffer the little children to come unto me and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God.
Amen I say to you, whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child shall not enter into it.
And embracing them and laying his hands upon them, he blessed them. (Mk 10:13-16)

And, the Scripture passage that guided the pilgrims’ reflections:
Be not solicitous therefore, saying: What shall we eat: or what shall we drink, or wherewith shall we be clothed?
For after all these things do the heathens seek. For your Father knows that you have need of all these things.
Seek therefore first the kingdom of God, and his justice, and all these things shall be added unto you. (Mt 6:31-33)

These things added included good food, camaraderie, wine, cigarettes, candy, and café a leches on the Camino. It happened just like that, time and again. “Beauty will save the world,” says Elder Zossima; we are lucky to have so many beautiful people like Jesus (or, like Peter Kane) and beautiful places like Spain and SGA (or, like Old Mill).

Summer Plans! What are yours?

To whom it may concern:

Thus it begins, a Summer Road-Trip of limited sorts.
I am going to be driving from Phoenix to D.C. starting this
Tuesday morning (6.08).
I will be in Dallas on Tuesday night and will leave Thursday (6.10).
I will be arriving in D.C. on Friday or Saturday at the latest (6.11/12).
I will be in D.C. taking an art class and visiting old haunts (Prospect Hill is top o’ the list; and I want Sponge-Bob back.  You know who you are).
I will be attending the wedding of one MP[3] Jones and Sam.  I will be in Dallas for a week for that, and then back to D.C.

I will be in D.C. until around July 15th or so.  This would be a good time to get everyone together as I will be free and not taking classes.  Maybe some of your norther NY & PA folk can come down for something?

On my way back to Phoenix I was thinking of hitting up Raleigh, Atlanta, New Orleans, Dallas, Austin, Houston, and anything else in the way if you invite me.
Let me know if you are going to be around in these places and would like to grab lunch or hang out for a more extended time.  I have a pretty loose schedule as much as things go.  
Leave a comment on here with your summer plans so that we can figure something out!  

Latest Creative Endeavor


(Sorry boys by the way…)
So I recently made this jewelry pendant. I am pretty excited and feel I have a new obsession coming on… the clear glassy like finish is called “diamond glaze dimensional adhesive” which is code for awesome.
The flowered paper is from this stationary that Anne & Laura got for me from the National Art Museum in DC (is that what the art museum in DC is called?)
Anyway, I hope that everyone has a great Memorial Day and if you have an exceptionally exciting adventure, be sure to share. Actually. Let’s be real, even if it’s only moderately exciting, share.

Until the Pequod Stellas,
Cheltz-dog

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The Essential Belloc: A Prophet for Our Times

Ladies and Gentlemen!  

Here it is at last the book that my father wrote along with Fr. John McCloskey and Brian Robertson, and which I helped to edit and research for.  Pre-order your copy today!
Cheers,
Peter Hilaire Bloch


Essential Belloc Cover.jpg
Dear Friends of Belloc:
On behalf of my fellow editors, Fr. C. John McCloskey, Brian Robertson, and the Faith and Reason Institute under the leadership of Robert Royal – we would like to invite you to pre-order your copy of the collection of Hilaire Belloc’s best writings. 
We thank you for considering purchasing it on preorder.  Perhaps it would also be suitable for gifts for others, and to circulate this notice to friends and relatives and others who may be interested.  The timing is good for a reordering of our minds to culture and Christian civilization.  Belloc is the paladin of that effort, and a kindly guide through life’s measureless wonder and warfare.  
Here is the link to Saint Benedict/Tan Press for pre-order of The Essential Belloc: a Prophet for Our Times.
Below is the book jacket copy.   I will be doing a book signing at the Catholic Information Center on April 21, 2010 at 6:30 p.m. followed by wine and cheese reception.  Fr. James Schall who wrote the Preface to this book, will be in attendance and will introduce a short talk.
Your scrivenous scribe, 
Scott  Bloch, Secretary of Belloc Society of Washington, DC
“More than any other man, Hilaire Belloc made the English-speaking Catholic world in which we all live”
-Frank Sheed

He was a poet, a polemicist, and a prose stylist without peer, but Hilaire Belloc (1870-1954) was first and above all a mighty champion of the Catholic faith. With his brave (and sometimes brash) defenses of Catholic civilization, he taught an entire generation of Catholics never to stand for being treated as second-class citizens in the predominantly Protestant Anglosphere.

Today, with the Faith once again suffering scorn and contempt from all sides, it is time to re-discover this Catholic champion.

The Essential Belloc draws upon the prolific writer’s works (he authored more than 140 books, plus countless articles, pamphlets, and letters) to provide a comprehensive overview of his ideas, style, and personality. More than just a collection of quotes, these pages offer rich samplings from Belloc’s writings, affording you a solid introduction to his thoughts on:

• The foundational link between European culture and the Catholic faith
• The anti-Catholic historical myths that the English-speaking world has come to accept as fact
• The limits—and dangers—of science that has abandoned faith in God
• The latent power and future menace of militant Islam
• The characteristic faults of political and economic systems that deviate from Catholic principles
• The particular charms of places throughout the world: their towns and roads, their churches and inns
• The love of good food, wine, and ale, and the songs of camaraderie that go with them

And more—plus delightful examples of Belloc’s poetry and wit.

Belloc himself once remarked that “genius is the ability to think in a very large number of categories.” In The Essential Belloc you will marvel at how well he fits that very definition, and be edified by the breadth of his brilliance—and its continuing relevance for the modern world.

SOME BLURBS:
“Hilaire Belloc’s superb portrait of England’s ill-starred cardinal, Wolsey, would crown any normal writer’s career.  But with Belloc, this is just the tip of an iceberg; his range and brilliance as a writer have been matched by very few moderns.  Father McCloskey has done a marvelous service by collecting many of Belloc’s most insightful passages into one volume.  The Essential Belloc is an invaluable resource and hugely enjoyable reading.”
 
+Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap.
Archbishop of Denver
 
At a time when Catholicism is again vilified, Fr.C John McCloskey, Scott Bloch, and Brian Robertson have done a timely service to us all by bringing forth this affectoinate and appreciative study of Hilaire Belloc, that spendlid writer, modern prophet, and morally courageous defender of the Faith.
                                                                                                    — Pat Buchanan
 “From graceful depths to bumptious joy, Belloc’s prose deserves an audience literate, allergic to cant, and wise. Nevertheless, it will have to make do with us.”
                –David Whalen, Associate Provost, Hillsdale College
 
Hilaire Belloc should be essential reading for any serious Catholic wishing to get to grips with the modern world and the evils it promotes and fosters. And if Belloc is essential reading what better than a book that brings together the “essential Belloc” into one power-punching volume?
                    – Joseph Pearce, author of Old Thunder: a Life of Hilaire Belloc
 
Belloc believed that party and the state are not all powerful, that the Church and Family have primacy of place.  He married an American and was fond of saying that our Declaration of Independence was a master work of freedom in the world’s history.   As such, we need him more than ever to reestablish our religious liberties, the rights of the family, of marriage, and the sacred right of property.  
                –Senator Rick Santorum, author of It Takes a Family
 
Economics and competition never happen in a moral-free zone.  Hilaire Belloc offers us a roadmap for a healthy economy and a healthy culture.  Read this book and you will see how Belloc was among the few in the last hundred years who advocated for better business principles that are not predatory but just, not given over to big government but ordered to free people in a free economy.
     – Dr. Andrew Abela,  Chair of Department of Business and Economics, Catholic University of America
“They called Hilaire Belloc “Old Thunder.” After Bellocian Thunder will come first the rain and then the fruit of truth for those able readers of The Essential Belloc who dare to wrestle with the master’s muscular prose.”
 
     — Robert K. Carlson, Academic Dean, Wyoming Catholic College
“In the pantheon of English literature the bust of Hilaire Belloc has been relegated to a dusty corner, frequented only by the convivial cognoscenti who gather to drink claret beneath its shade.  The great man deserves to be better known, the conviviality should be spread, and I hope The Essential Belloc finds the wide readership it deserves.”

– H. W.Crocker III, author of Triumph: The Power and the Glory of the Catholic Church, A 2,000-Year History

There is no one like Hilaire Belloc, no one who could describe a battlefield or a heresy with such penetrating insight, no one who saw the future as clearly (eg, Islam’s rise; Calvinism’s vitality among the Protestants); no one who could conjure so invitingly and vividly the pleasures of hearth and home and friendship and walking and roaring.  I thank Father Schall for pressing me to read him, and I thank Scott Bloch, Brian Robertson and Father McCloskey for taking the (no doubt bracing and wonderful) time to draw his insights and his splendid writing together for us and future generations to read, to savor, and to exhult in, and I hope it leads us all to give thanks to the good God who gave us Hilaire Belloc.
         –William Saunders, Senior Vice President and Senior Counsel, Americans United for Life

Gratitude

I don’t have anything brilliant or insightful to share with you early this Tuesday morning. Rather, I just wanted to say hello and give thanks to you all. As I sit here, watching my 5th period honors students look up vocabulary words, I have been glancing through everyone’s recent posts and I just feel grateful. Grateful to have such wise, caring, cynical friends, who are willing to share their 2 cents about life, bringing a bit of joy into what is sure to be a heck of a week. I consistently come to Peter’s blog, looking for a bit of refreshment and rejuvenation, which I almost always find. So, thank you, for being you, for sharing your view of the world (or just who you think is the hottest literary figure), and for letting us silent viewers *until now* keep a slightly stalkerish tab on your life and the adventures it brings.

Club Schmitz Review Website

I felt that we have been mysteriously silent on the subject of an oldie but a goodie, Club Schmitz.

If you are or were a student at University of Dallas and you haven’t been to the “(pre-)historic” Club Schmitz, then you are missing out on a big UD tradition and committing a double bad naughty.  This place has been around since before the school and the only thing that is different is that they put in a TV and kickass Golf Arcade Game.  Here’s a good website that puts it all in perspective for you.

Make sure that you go with friends, lots of friends; or maybe you just want a beer by yourself; either way, Club Schmitz is a great place to:

have a birthday party
film a movie about love, intrigue, drinking, and a vampire pimp and Socrates (John Sercer)
eat delicious fried bar food and drink pitchers of beer
meet babes
go to for a unintended but badly needed study break
take a girl on a first date
go to with Fr. McGuire

All of these are things that I have either done myself or Misko has done.

Get thee to Schmitz!

Sweetly,

Peter

p.s. – Click on the photo to enlarge it