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#1 |
Navy Seal
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Our school was Jesuit and very hard line; aside from the "Unobjectionable" books, there was very little leeway in reading choices, not to say that a lot of us didn't stray. Our school was pretty much run by the nuns and they were a very conservative lot; the priests, being Jesuits, were a bit less severe, but the conceded to the nuns on all matters of curriculum. It was odd, since in other matters such as social sciences, religious history, and such, they were pretty progressive, but, then, the Catholics have been a rather contradictory sort...
BTW, I spent 9 years in Catholic school, from the mid 50s to the mid 60s, an interesting time span and an interest sort of place to spend it... <O>
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#2 | |
Navy Seal
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![]() Quote:
![]() Last edited by Commander Wallace; 02-23-16 at 07:33 PM. |
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#3 |
Navy Seal
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Our nuns were more the yardstick or ruler type; there was one nun I remember who got angry at a student and took one of those hardwood blackboard pointers and broke it over the back of his hand with one very hard swing. What they were really masters of was the psychological sort of torment we all really feared. I really believe if Sister Mary DeLaRita had still been alive today, she could have made those Gitmo prisoners talk without the waterboarding...
<O>
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