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1629-15 Community Church I SUN MAR 04 1984 ED: NEIGHBORS SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 12 LENGTH: 922 MEDIUM ILLUST: color photo: Rosario Contreras and Mary Ellen Munday; photo: St. Patrick' s school (5 ) , SOURCE: IRENE LACHER Herald Staff Writer DATELINE: MEMO: COVER STORY / SCHOOLS LATIN EYES ARE SMILING AT ST. PATRICK'S SCHOOL The uniforms can't mask the varied backgrounds of the students at St. Patrick' s School, left, waiting to eat lunch at the school cafeteria. Sandy Fuentes, 11, and Eleonore Maillebiau, 10, far left, enjoy an after-lunch game of patty- cake outside the gym. Below, five-year-olds Ivan Restrepo, left, and Armando Ramos play on the monkey bars during recess . Sister Carmelina Guzman, below right, the only nun who teaches full- time at the school, leads a first-grade religion class in song. Socorro Cortes was a young Colombian bride, experiencing the dawn of her married years in the Miami Beach of 1973. Around her new home at Jefferson Avenue and Ninth Street the air was warmer, the gardens more compelling and the streets were cleaner than in her mountain home in Bogota. And she was in America. She wanted to belong. Before Cortes had children of her own, a friend invited her to attend a karate and cheerleading presentation at St. Patrick' s School in Miami Beach. She was charmed. "In Colombia we don't have cheerleaders, " Cortes recalled. "I always loved them. It seemed really American to me. " Cortes later contributed her progeny -- Katheline, now 10, and Jennifer, 8 -- to the mass of 340 students who recite their prayers and multiplication tables at the school at 3900 Garden Ave. Students at the eggshell-colored school no longer come from families named McGuire and O'Neill, as they did 30 years ago when the St. Patrick' s was 80 per cent Irish. More than 90 per cent of the Fighting Shamrocks now are of Latin American heritage -- roughly double the percentage at Miami Beach' s only public junior high school, Nautilus, which is 46 per cent Latin. Latin families flock to parochial schools because they consider a Catholic education the best they can give their young, said Father James Murphy of St. Patrick' s Church. "Especially with Hispanic people, they will make sacrifices to send their children to Catholic school, " he said. "There is a tremendous desire to pass on the culture and faith. . . . And many are either fleeing communism or the threat of communism. Naturally they will run to what is Catholic. " Parents such as Cortes have been a blessing to Catholic schools in the area. While declining enrollment and tough economic times have brought many parochial schools elsewhere to their knees, Dade ' s Catholic schools uniformly enjoy waiting lists. About 100 children are waiting for openings at St. Patrick' s, which teaches kindergarten through eighth grade. If they are admitted, students ' parents pay from $900 to $1, 100 a year for the privilege of sending their children to the only Catholic school south of 86th Street, where St. Joseph' s Parish School, Miami Beach' s only other Catholic school, makes its home. They will be buying a more demanding academic program than that provided by public schools, according to St. Patrick' s Principal Christine Lamadrid. On SRA achievement tests, a standardized test given the country' s eighth- graders, St. Patrick' s students score comfortably above the national average. St. Patrick' s began changing some 20 years ago, when Cubans began migrating to the Miami area. Now the student body is even more diverse, populated mostly by Hispanic children from countries to the south, but also finding its representatives from England, Greece and India. "It ' s as different as the world is different, " Lamadrid said. 1 The Fighting Shamrocks who wield the bats and balls of the school ' s athletic teams now answer to the names Silvio, Orlanda and Solalba. In the second grade alone, there are a dozen nations represented. There are only 21 children. But there is no harbor for bilingual education here. Outside of Spanish class, instruction is almost exclusively in English. "This is the USA and they need to speak English, " Lamadrid said. "They are American first, " Cortes said of her children as she noted her agreement with that philosophy. "In the beginning of the year some of them come in speaking only Spanish, " said Sister Carmelina Guzman, the school ' s religion coordinator. "In a few months I hear them chitchatting in English. One boy said to me, ' Did I say that in English or Spanish? I get it mixed up. ' " Despite the budding athletes ' Fighting Shamrocks sobriquet and the prominence of St. Patrick' s Day at the school -- students get to shed their tartan uniforms in favor of almost any suitable garb as long as it ' s green and white -- the school ' s appeal to many of its Latin families is all American. Take the school ' s brush with fame earlier this month. The talk of the school was an appearance by St. Patrick' s cheerleaders at a Miami Dolphins game, an honor accorded them for capturing the title of best cheerleaders in the Miami Archdiocese. In the beginning, 1926, St. Patrick' s shared a homeland with most of the student body. The families who sent their children there were as wealthy as the patrons of the polo stables the school replaced. The Depression seemed distant from St. Patrick' s parish. On Sunday mornings, the grounds of the church, which abut the school, was like "a chauffeur' s convention, " recalled John Ingraham, 69, who has maintained the church property for 48 years . The famous and the infamous joined hands there in search of the divine. Al Capone built the school gym in 1935 . Ingraham remembered Capone ' s son, Al Jr. , as a popular student when he attended school there in the 1930s. "Wealth gets along with wealth, " he said. Those were the days when New York City Mayor Jimmy Walker' s wife, Jeanette, sold religious items in the gift shop abutting the school, when Miami Beach developer Carl Fisher would come to meet with his close friend, Monsignor William A. Barry, who founded the school. Families who made their fortunes in the auto industry, including the Firestones, would present themselves for Barry' s instruction. In the 1940s, Fulton Sheen, then a monsignor, would preach at St. Patrick' s during his Miami Beach vacations and retire to a back room to write. On the auditorium walls, a former student painted a striking mural illustrating the history of Catholicism in the New World, but that was so long ago, even Ingraham can't recall the artist. Ingraham, dubbed "The Bishop" by the children, remembers it all. Mostly he remembers the monsignor, whose family devoted itself to Catholic education in Miami and founded Barry University, a small college in Miami Shores. No matter where he was in the sprawling Spanish-style complex, Ingraham knew the day had begun when he heard a crashing sound coming from the direction of the bell tower across the street from the church. It was always Barry slamming the door to the tower building, which contained his quarters, on his way to mass. It happened every morning at 8 . Behind their hands, the children called him "Wild Bill. " Barry is remembered as strict but not rigid, an educator who brought out both obediance and affection from his charges until injuries from a car accident forced him to retire to St. Francis Hospital in 1965 . He died two years later. A photograph of Barry hangs on a wall in Lamadrid' s office. He is seated among 40 children in their communion best, who radiate out from his center in a perfect white triangle. Lamadrid -- an O' Sullivan before marriage -- is in the picture too. When she assumed the helm of St. Patrick' s this year, she was coming home. She attended the school from 1955 to 1968, when it had a high school as well. Lamdrid, 33, taught at St. Patrick' s in 1973 and 1974 and left to have a child. When she was ready to return to work, however, St. Patrick' s wasn't ready for her. With no openings there, she joined the St. Agnes School staff on Key Biscayne until Murphy invited her to take the principal ' s job this year. Partly, she missed her "babies, " as she likes to call the younger children -- she had been working with junior high schoolers at St. Agnes. Partly, she wanted to return to the place responsible for "everything good that I am today . . . academically, spiritually, morally. " "When I was in the second grade, Monsignor Barry would say to a friend and to me, ' I know you girls are going to be nuns. ' Now I look at his picture and think, 'No, I 'm not a nun. But I 'm doing your work. ' " She opted instead for motherhood. "I have the best of both worlds, " Lamadrid said with satisfaction. She is a strong presence. Motherly, humorous and firm, she rules by moral suasion. "I want kids to be orderly, but I also want a relaxed atmosphere, " she said. "I don' t think kids can learn unless they are happy at school. " Marilyn Meireles, a 12-year-old seventh grader, said that Lamadrid' s strictness has earned her a reputation for being mean among some students. "But I think she ' s nice, " she said. "She doesn 't treat you like a prisoner. She treats you like a friend, " said sixth-grader George Laures, 11 . Not long ago, Lamadrid was sailing down a breezy corridor lining one of the school ' s interior courtyards . She came across a small girl with a long brown ponytail. "Ruby, Ruby, what ' s the matter?" she cooed. The child sank into Lamadrid' s arms and the principal planted a kiss on her head. "Nothing, " Ruby said. Down the hall, Sister Carmelina Guzman was introducing one of the school ' s first-grade classes to Catholic theology. She leads the children in song, tells them bible stories, gives them "a minute to tell Jesus your own little secrets, " and dares them to solve religious anagrams in an alphabet of umbrellas, musical notes, octopi and ice cream cones. "It ' s brainwashing for Jesus, " Sister Carmelina said mischievously. "It' s fun time. " Sister Carmelina, a nun of the Teresian order, is the school ' s only full- time teaching nun. Across the country lay teachers are taking over most Catholic school instruction as fewer and fewer people enter religious orders. Teachers ' pay here is less than wages made by public school teachers, Lamadrid said, although she declined to provide salary figures. Their Dade public school counterparts start at $15 , 083 . One teacher noted that because salaries are lower, the teaching staff is comprised entirely of women with one exception -- Coach Arturo Fernandez, who runs the athletics program. There is also some personal sacrifice here. Maria Diaz, who has two children at St. Patrick' s, said she surrendered a job in genetics research for the Dade County Health Department to teach science at the school . "I really compromised a lot of my own goals because I believe in Catholic education, " she said. These days Joan Munday also believes in Catholic education. When she sent her first child to St. Patrick' s, she was primarily looking for teachers who would brook no nonsense and provide the structure her son, John, now 14 and in eighth grade, needed to learn. The Mundays eventually made a St. Patrick' s education a family affair. Scarlett, 12 , and Mary, 6, later joined their brother there. Munday explained her attraction to the school: "Everything they teach, they teach in the bounds of morality. . . . It' s not the religion, per se. " You see, the Mundays are Protestant. ADDED TERMS: profile school END OF DOCUMENT. y