NAPLES, Fla. - If Domino's Pizza founder Thomas S.
Monaghan has his way, a new town being built in
Florida will be governed according to strict Roman
Catholic principles, with no place to get an abortion,
pornography or birth control. 

The pizza magnate is bankrolling the project with at
least $250 million and calls it "God's will."

Civil libertarians say the plan is unconstitutional
and are threatening to sue.

The town of Ave Maria is being constructed around Ave
Maria University, the first Catholic university to be
built in the United States in about 40 years. Both are
set to open next year about 25 miles east of Naples in
southwestern Florida.

The town and the university, developed in partnership
with the Barron Collier Co., an agricultural and real
estate business, will be set on 5,000 acres with a
European-inspired town center, a massive church and
what planners call the largest crucifix in the nation,
at nearly 65 feet tall. Monaghan envisions 11,000
homes and 20,000 residents.

During a speech last year at a Catholic men's
gathering in Boston, Monaghan said that in his
community, stores will not sell pornographic
magazines, pharmacies will not carry condoms or birth
control pills, and cable television will have no
X-rated channels.

Homebuyers in Ave Maria will own their property
outright. But Monaghan and Barron Collier will control
all commercial real estate in the town, meaning they
could insert provisions in leases to restrict the sale
of certain items.

"I believe all of history is just one big battle
between good and evil. I don't want to be on the
sidelines," Monaghan, who sold Domino's Pizza in 1998
to devote himself to doing good works, said in a
recent Newsweek interview.

Robert Falls, a spokesman for the project, said
Tuesday that attorneys are still reviewing the legal
issues and that Monaghan had no comment in the
meantime.

"If they attempt to do what he apparently wants to do,
the people of Naples and Collier County, Florida, are
in for a whole series of legal and constitutional
problems and a lot of litigation indefinitely into the
future," warned Howard Simon, executive director of
the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida.

Florida Attorney General Charlie Crist said it will be
up to the courts to decide the legalities of the plan.
"The community has the right to provide a wholesome
environment," he said. "If someone disagrees, they
have the right to go to court and present facts before
a judge."

Gov. Jeb Bush, at the site's groundbreaking earlier
this month, lauded the development as a new kind of
town where faith and freedom will merge to create a
community of like-minded citizens. Bush, a convert to
Catholicism, did not speak specifically to the
proposed restrictions.

"While the governor does not personally believe in
abortion or pornography, the town, and any
restrictions they may place on businesses choosing to
locate there, must comply with the laws and
constitution of the state and federal governments,"
Russell Schweiss, a spokesman for the governor, said
Tuesday.

Frances Kissling, president of the liberal
Washington-based Catholics for a Free Choice, likened
Monaghan's concept to Islamic fundamentalism.

"This is un-American," Kissling said. "I don't think
in a democratic society you can have a legally
organized township that will seek to have any kind of
public service whatsoever and try to restrict the
constitutional rights of citizens."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060301/ap_on_re_us/catholic_town



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