- George Tribou
Monsignor George Tribou (April 14, 1924, ordained September 1, 1949 – February 2, 2001) was long-time principal of Catholic High School for Boys, located in Little Rock,
Arkansas , and was an influential figure in the local politics of the city ofLittle Rock and the state ofArkansas Fact|date=July 2007 as well as the Catholic Church in the United States.Early life
Born in
Jenkintown ,Pennsylvania , George Tribou worked as a film projectionist at a local theater. He would later tell students that part of his inspiration for becoming a priest was seeingNorman Taurog 's film "Boys Town" andSpencer Tracy 's romanticized portrayal of FatherEdward J. Flanagan .fact|date=April 2008 While working there, he was required by his boss to polish a large, stainless steel wall every week. A strong work ethic characterized Tribou's early life forged him into the Roman Catholic Priest that he became. While he was principal, when he did not feel like doing any work, the sign on his desk that said "DUTY" was all he needed to read to continue his work for the school. That sign remains there to this day. fact|date=April 2008George Tribou came to
St. John's Seminary in Little Rock for his theological studies. After his ordination in 1949, he served as assistant editor for the predecessor to the "Arkansas Catholic", the newspaper serving theDiocese of Little Rock , as well as chaplain at St. Vincent's Infirmary and St. Joseph's Orphanage. He took over aschaplain for theCarmelite Monastery of St. Theresa before becoming a teacher at Catholic High. He received many awards in Little Rock and from around Arkansas, including Citizen of the Year. fact|date=April 2008Career at Catholic High
Father Tribou served as a teacher at Catholic High for over fifty years, and as principal of the school for forty-one. During his tenure he became famous for his disciplinarian attitude and propensity for cigars. Under his guidance the school moved to a new building on then Lee Avenue, and its MCJROTC unit (dubbed "Sid's Kids", after Major General and Governor
Sid McMath ) was founded. In May 1996 he led a student-body march on War Memorial Stadium in a successful attempt to protest the loss of the stadium as the venue for home football games. fact|date=April 2008He was granted the honorific
Monsignor in recognition of his service to theDiocese of Little Rock and the greater Church in the US. However, since this came long after he had became well-known in the community as "Father Tribou", he was usually referred to by that name even after becoming a monsignor.As principal and teacher, he developed a reputation for himself locally as a creative disciplinarian with a knack for results. A few of his more famousFact|date=July 2007 approaches to discipline included:
*a boy was throwing rocks from the garden while another was clapping and encouraging him. The boy had to pick up sticks after school and the other boy had to clap and encourage him throughout the punishment
*making a boy smoke an entire cigar if he was caught smoking cigarettes
*letting a boy carry a door for a day since he had such a fond habit of slamming it
*allowing boys to settle their disputes with boxing gloves. The following day, they would serve in-school suspension together and would not be allowed to talk to anyone other than each other the entire day. If boys fought in the school without being sanctioned, they would have to sit in the main lobby during lunch, holding hands, feeding each other their own lunch with the one free hand.
*announcing to the class that he had discovered the identity of the boy who had been seen smoking on school grounds and that if he didn't show up at his office in a certain amount of time, his penalty would be severely worsened (upon which a long line of boys would manifest in front of his office)
*giving haircuts to boys whose hair was too long for the school's regulations
*making girls and boys hug the pillars of the school lobby all night if they were caught dancing too close during prom
*having boys wear a plastic bowl taped to their heads when coming to school with a "bowl" haircut
*making a student wear a sandwich board that said "careful, I spit" if caught using chewing tobacco.In 1999 he participated (along with President
Bill Clinton and First LadyHillary Rodham Clinton ) in the delegation greeting the late Pope John Paul II on his last visit to the United States.Citation
last =
first =
author-link =
last2 =
first2 =
author2-link =
publication-date =February 2, 2002
date = February 2
year =2002
title =
edition =
volume =
publication-place =
place =
publisher =Arkansas Democrat Gazette
id =
isbn =
doi =
oclc =
url =
accessdate =.Father Tribou died in 2001 after complications from
cancer . Faithful to his wishes, he was buried on a Friday afternoon, after class, since he always stressed hard work and studying during the school week. His memorial and burial was attended by thousands of former graduates from all over the United States. After his death, the section of Lee Avenue in front of Catholic High was renamed Father Tribou Street to commemorate the great man who led so many boys to future success as men at the school.Fact|date=July 2007 Currently,Steve Straessle is the active principal of the school with MonsignorLawrence Frederick and BrotherRichard Sanker in charge of pastoral, administrative, and guidance duties.Quotes
*"Father Tribou with two other guys." (Caption in CHS Yearbook below a picture of Father Tribou with
Pope John Paul II and U.S. PresidentBill Clinton .)
*"The measure of a man is his ability to control the animal within."
*"We don't offer AP classes; we offer M&P classes. Meat and Potatoes."
*"Christ is the reason for this school."
*"Boys and girls, prayer is simply talking to God in your own words."
*"A young boy was asking for Reconciliation at Boys Town which is a camp for troubled youth. He said that he lost a wrestling match and was so furious at God for allowing him to lose, that he went home and masturbated in a way of saying 'Take that, God!' He said that he feels awful for so blatantly sinning, and I smiled and said, 'Never have I seen such faith in all of Israel.'"
*"Be good, boys."
*"It doesn't matter how many doctors and lawyers we produce, but how many good fathers and husbands come from here that measures our success."
*"To have destroyed the defective infant,Helen Keller , would have been to destroy also the teacher-humanitarian who wasAnne Sullivan . In countless cases throughout the world a defective child has not been an expensive, heart-rending burden but a priceless gift that has brought out the hidden strengths of a father, a mother, and sisters and brothers." (unpublished speech, January 31, 1980)
*"We don't make rules at Catholic High unless they are needed. We have found the need to make a new rule--you may not flush sweaters down the toilet."
*"Many schools have talked of installing metal detectors. That would not work here. These boys have too much lead in their asses."
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.