Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            Netbooks: New  technology is a hit at Sts. Peter and Paul School  in Haubstadt
            
By Mary  Ann Hughes (Message staff writer)
              This year,  when fourth and fifth graders arrived at Sts. Peter and Paul School they were  given their very own netbooks, which are small laptop computers featuring 10  inch screens and keyboards.
              It didn’t take  long for the students to adapt to the new technology, and it didn’t take the  teachers much longer. Math teacher Katrina Martin said, “I’m in my  twenty-seventh year of teaching, and when I started teaching we did not even  have computers in the classroom.”
              The netbooks  have been incorporated into math, reading comprehension, writing and grammar  classes, and she has found the netbooks “very easy, the way they are set up.”  The Haubstadt school has wireless everywhere in the building, enabling the  students to use their netbooks anywhere. 
              On a recent  Monday morning, the fifth graders were solving multiplication problems on their  netbooks under their teacher’s supervision. As she stood in the back of the  classroom, she was able to see that all of the students were using a specific  math program, and she was able to detect how many correct and incorrect answers  they each had.
  “I can see  anyone who is struggling, and I can look at every screen and see if they are  with me.”
              She is able to  easily work with students who are learning at different levels, and there are  sites with tutorials if a student needs extra help.
              The students  can take their spelling tests on the netbooks, write papers and do research.  The school has an internet filter which locks out inappropriate websites.
          Bart Burke is  the technology coordinator at the school. He said “there is always a teacher present  when they are being used. The sources on the Internet are phenomenal, and they  [the students] never go on the Internet without a teacher going there first.”
            Photo caption: Sts. Peter and Paul teacher Katrina Martin watches as  fifth graders solve math problems using their Netbooks. (Message photo by Mary  Ann Hughes)
          (For this story and more news from the  Diocese of Evansville,  log on to the website of The Message at www.themessageonline.org)
 
            Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend
            St. Pius X honored as runner-up for stewardship  award
          
By Karen Clifford
              GRANGER  —The International Catholic Stewardship Council (ICSC) named St. Pius X of  Granger as a runner-up for the Archbishop Thomas J. Murphy Award on Oct. 13.  Julie Kenny, from Our Sunday Visitor and a member of the ICSC board of  directors, accepted the award on the parish’s behalf in Dallas, Texas. 
              According  to Michael Murphy, executive director of the ICSC, this award recognizes  parishes that give witness to stewardship in many areas of parish life. St.  Pius X was one of only five parishes in the country to receive this  distinction.
              St. Pius X  “demonstrated their commitment to exercising stewardship in pastoral areas such  as prayer and worship, formation and education, offering hospitality,  cultivating leadership, communications and promoting among their parishioners  the stewardship of time, talent and treasure,” Murphy emphasized. 
              Scott  Bader, vice president of the ICSC and director of parish stewardship for the  Archdiocese of Seattle, explained that St. Pius X helps to set the standard in  stewardship for parishes nationwide: “St. Pius X Parish is a superb example of  how a parish can build up the individual and collective practice of faith  through stewardship. The parish is one we definitely suggest others consider  emulating.” 
              In 2007,  Betsy Quinn, the director of stewardship and evangelization at St. Pius X,  oversaw the creation of a stewardship core team, which worked to develop a  comprehensive, multiyear strategic plan for stewardship and development. Areas  highlighted in the plan include volunteer appreciation, communication,  education/catechesis, outreach and welcoming and hospitality.
              Specific  programs that have resulted from the plan include development of an adult  education program, enhancement of the parish welcoming committee, formation of  a young adult ministry and expansion of youth activities. 
  “With a  large parish, of over 3,000 families, we are challenged to keep a tight-knit,  community feel. By having an ongoing and active stewardship program, we are  creating a true Christian atmosphere founded on the pillars of stewardship:  hospitality, prayer, formation and service,” said Quinn.
  Photo caption: Karen Clifford Bishop John M. D’Arcy, center,  congratulates St. Pius X Pastor Father Bill Schooler and Betsy Quinn, St. Pius  X director of evangelization and stewardship, on the parish’s selection as  runner-up for the Archbishop Thomas J. Murphy Award.
          (For this story and more news from the  Diocese of Fort Wayne-South  Bend, log on to  the website of Today’s Catholic at www.todayscatholicnews.org)
           
Diocese of Gary
No briefs  available this week
(For  news from the Diocese of Gary, log on to the  website of the Northwest Indiana Catholic at www.nwicatholic.com) 
 
Diocese of Lafayette
Two-day seminar at St. Maria  Goretti offers introduction to ‘theology of the body’
By  Caroline B. Mooney
  WESTFIELD — Two hundred and nine people from six  states heard Christopher West present “Into the Heart: Introduction to Theology  of the Body” in a two-day seminar Nov. 13-14 coordinated by the marriage  ministry team at St. Maria Goretti Church.
  “I think his breakdown of the teachings of  John Paul II and the ‘theology of the body’ has been very beneficial to the  whole Church — to married couples, single people, even priests and religious,”  said Father Kevin Haines, pastor of St. Maria Goretti. “What John Paul did was  brilliant, but Christopher West helps us understand as he explains it. It is an  honor to have him here.”
  “Theology of the body” is the name given to  129 talks presented by Pope John Paul II between September 1979 and November  1984. The Scripture-based talks looked at humans before and after original sin,  and in the age to come. The pope then applied the message to the vocation of  marriage and celibacy.
  West, a best-selling author, is a research  fellow and faculty member of the Theology of the Body Institute. He has  delivered more than 1,000 public lectures on four continents, in more  than a dozen countries. He and his wife, Wendy, have five children and  live in Lancaster County, Pa.
  “It is not unusual for people to ask whether  and how it is possible to make and keep a lifetime commitment in marriage,”  Bishop William L. Higi said in opening the seminar. “Our Church has a vision  for marriage that can sustain spouses in good times and bad, one that can lead  them to happiness and holiness in their relationship. This message is based on  both reason and faith; it is God’s plan for the good of the spouses, their  children and family, and society as a whole.
  “… It is my prayer that as you leave this  session, you will do so feeling that you better understand the call to holiness  God has extended to you through the vocation of marriage to which he is calling  you.”
  “We are made for one another,” West said.  “The reason for sexual difference — two are designed to become one flesh.  (Theology of the body) takes us on a journey. … What does it mean to be human?  Every human being is searching for the meaning of life. We are made for one  another. … Our sexual choices determine the face of history. 
  “What holds a family together?” he asked.  “Properly ordered sexual choices hold everyone together. Why we are in such  trouble as a culture? We are willing to indulge our lust. We remain starved for  love. The number one idol in human history has always been sex. When we lose  sight of God, sex is the next best thing. Behind the idolatry of sex, our  desire for God has gotten all twisted up.
(For  this story and more news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)