20 people gathered at Worcester City Hall today to repent, as Americans, for the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and to call for nuclear disarmament.
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Love in practice is a harsh and dreadful thing compared to love in dreams.
20 people gathered at Worcester City Hall today to repent, as Americans, for the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and to call for nuclear disarmament.
Related:
From the September 2012 issue of The Catholic Radical. [PDF]. Illustration by Sarah Jeglosky, 1987. 
“You are evil!†S. shouted only an hour after he called us “good people.â€
In truth, I can’t really blame him. He has a bad temper, especially when he’s drinking, but he’s otherwise a decent person. He came by looking for specific help, which Claire agreed to give to him. While the details were being worked out, he talked at me, effectively slowing down my work on a garden shed behind our house. When I started losing patience, I thought, “S. is Jesus,†but that was a pretty big stretch under the hot sun. Then he told me that he had been writing letters to Jesus. I couldn’t resist asking, “Have you gotten any letters back yet?†Ignoring me, he went on to disparage his family and to praise the Catholic Worker. “They live in a house, but this is a home,†he repeated several times. I feared this was a prelude to a request to move in with us for what must be his ninth or tenth time in twenty years. Continue reading “Mason Street Musings”
According to the Telegram & Gazette, today a full-time outreach worker will begin talking to Worcester’s panhandlers, as part of the city’s plan to reduce their numbers.
The only other part of this plan is “public education.” I haven’t noticed an ad campaign yet.
The manager said the outreach worker will document the needs of each person encountered and the types of intervention employed, and will have to give a report to the city’s transitional housing manager.
508 is a show about Worcester. This week, Jen Burt takes us on a tour of the partially-rebuilt Stone Soup
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Continue reading “508 #198: Stone Soup Groundbreaking”
7-9pm, five consecutive Wednesdays starting September 12, 2012. At SS. Francis & Therese Catholic Worker, 52 Mason St, Worcester, Massachusetts.
This fall, the Worcester Catholic Worker community is offering a series of weekly round-table discussions on the rich and evolving tradition of Catholic social teaching. Catholic Worker academics Michael Boover and Marc Tumeinski will give an introductory presentation.
Schedule of Presentations
For more than 120 years, Catholic popes, bishops, and Church Councils have issued documents on the social and political challenges of our time, including economic justice, nuclear disarmament, and the right relationships between individuals, communities, and their governments. But these critiques, seldom preached from the pulpit, are unknown to many Catholics and non-Catholics alike.
For example, did you know that in 1967 a papal encyclical warned about the problems of multi-nationals, free trade, and the growing divide between rich and poor? Or that way back in 1891 a pope advocated a living wage for workers?
We will look at the major themes and principles of Catholic social teaching and their expression in social movements and the lives of the saints. There will be ample time for discussion following each presentation, and of course refreshments. All are invited.
So if you are feeling discouraged by election rhetoric and the silence of many church leaders on social justice, then join us in the upstairs kitchen of 52 Mason Street as we consider life-giving concepts like the common good, solidarity, subsidiarity, and the dignity of the human person.
For updates, call 508-753-3588.
508 is a show about Worcester. This week’s panelist is Kevin Ksen.
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You can watch 508 Fridays at 7pm on WCCA TV13.
Continue reading “508 #197: Open Meeting Laws”
The City Manager’s response to the City Council’s request that something be done about panhandling is now online. The agenda item is: “Transmitting Informational Communication Relative to a Reponse to Reduce the Incidence of Panhandling in the City”. PDF link
There’s 57 pages of stuff here. Glancing through the 4-page letter from the City Manager that opens the document, we see these highlights:
In a nutshell: We’re hiring a social worker to deal with the problem.
Many more details, especially as regards the media campaign, are yet to come.

Photo: The showcase billboard from Worcester’s 2005 anti-panhandling campaign, defaced.
508 is a show about Worcester. This week we talk about ska and the WPS photo studio with Matt Caranci, Mike Hendrickson, and Manda Rose.
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Continue reading “508 #196: Ska and Photography”
508 is a show about Worcester. This week’s panel is Brendan Melican and Jen Burt. Jen opens a bee hive, Mike rants about panhandling/John Lurie/Occupy, and Brendan demonstrates patience.
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Continue reading “508 #195: Bees”
Carl Paulson, legendary stained glass artist and Catholic Worker, has died.

Carl Paulson and Worcester Bishop Robert J. McManus at the 2008 Catholic Worker National Gathering in Worcester. Carl was recognized at the event as “the oldest Catholic Worker.”
The obituary below was sent in by Ken Paulson.
Continue reading “Carl Paulson, RIP”