But their relationship turned shrill on Monday when the diocese sued the high school in State Supreme Court in Queens, accusing it of flouting an agreement the two sides struck in 1976, when the financially strained diocese shed the day-to-day operations of its six high schools in Brooklyn and Queens.
And much like the debate over the sharing of public school buildings, the fight comes down to space, money and the growth of charter schools.
At the heart of the dispute, according to diocesan
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