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St. Jude School fifth grade class was recently given the task of designing a trap to catch Santaâs helper, Elf on the Shelf, in the act. Students were given a number of building materials and, with their partners, needed to build a device strong enough to outsmart the Elf on the Shelf. At press time no elves had been seen, but the fifth grade class hasnât given up hope just yet. Clockwise, from top left, Reese Tavella and Kaitlin Ziomek are hopeful their trap is quick enough to snag an elf; Sam Amandola and Luke Gordon think their trap has the stuff to catch that elf; Pull the string and you catch Santaâs helper according to Collin Brenner and Zoe Pray; and Miles McShea and JJ Pavlick show off their Elf on the Shelf masterpiece.
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Two St. Jude School students scored in the top award positions of the Diocese of Scranton local Forensics Competition in mid-November. Rhea Mascarenhas took second place at the junior varsity level and Michael Grandzol took second place at the varsity level. This enabled them to move forward to the diocesan level competition in which both students competed against the top performers from across the Diocese of Scranton. Grandzol performed his piece from âTales of A Fourth Grade Nothingâ and Rhea Mascarenhas performed her piece from âJudy Moody: Girl Detective,â virtually for the judges. Mascarenhas took second place in the junior varsity competition and Grandzol took top honors with his first place award at the varsity level. Eileen Barney and Ann Papciak are coaches. From left, Ann Papciak, Rhea Mascarenhas, Michael Grandzol and Eileen Barney celebrate a St. Jude Forensics victory.
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17:47
Members of Concerned Catholics of Cincinnati, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) and Cincinnati Voice of the Faithful wrote an op-ed in the Enquirer calling for an investigation into the Archdiocese of Cincinnati for its handling of Fr. Drew s case. They claim there were complaints about Drew spanning 30 years.
WVXU reached out to the Archdiocese of Cincinnati for comment. Here is the full response:
In response to your media inquiry, I offer the following that was sent to The Enquirer in response to their publication of Opinion: Archdiocese must be held accountable for priest abuse :
The Archdiocese of Cincinnati is disappointed with the publication of an op-ed with erroneous facts in the article, Opinion: Archdiocese must be held accountable for priest abuse in the Dec. 6 edition of The Cincinnati Enquirer. Based upon the Enquirer s own investigations over the years and reporting on this story for the last 16 months, it is clear that some of
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