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OBITUARIES
Services For
Thomas O'Brien
SAVANNAH — Funeral serv
ices for Thomas J. O’Brien were
held at the Cathedral of St. John
the Baptist.
He was past president of the
Savannah and Georgia Societies
of Certified Public Accountants,
member of the Georgia and
American Bar Assns., Hibernian
Society, Elks, Navy veteran of
World War I.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Julia Pickney Keating O’Brien;
two sons, Thomas K. O’Brien
and J. Pinchney O’Brien; a
daughter, Mrs. John B. Tison,
all of Savannah, three brothers,
James P. O’Brien, of Savannah,
Walter A. O’Brien of Charleston
and Joseph O’Brien of Bruns
wick, a sister, Mrs. E. B. Mc-
Millen of Savannah, and nine
grandchildren.
Decatur Services .
William M. Hay
Mr. William M. Hay, Decatur
died April 14th at his home.
Born in Memphis, Tenn., Mr.
Hay had lived in Atlanta five
years. He was a member of St.
Thomas Moore Church, Decatur.
His body was sent to Tennessee
for burial, services were held
April 16th at St. John’s Church,
Lebanon, Tenn., Rev. Carl
Sassnacht officiating.
Surviving him is a sister, Miss
Lenora Hay, Decatur.
Services For
William Greer
SAVANNAH — Funeral serv
ices for. William Greer were held
April 21st at the Cathedral of
St. John the Baptist.
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Funeral Services
Miss Mary McDevitt
ATLANTA—Funeral services
for Miss Mary McDevitt were
held April 13th at St. Anthony’s
Church, Rev. W. M. Hanlon,
S.M., officiating.
Survivors are Mr. and Mrs.
A. J. McDevitt, Miss Lorraine
McDevitt, Mr. Joseph Mc
Devitt.
But Not Forget Past Accomplishments
N.C.E.A. HEAD URGES TEACHERS TO HEED
TODAY’S DISCUSSION OF EDUCATION
Mrs. j. j. W T ©lpert
Atlanta Services
ATLANTA—Funeral services
for Mrs. J. J. (Marie Dunlap)
Wolpert were held April 15th
at the Sacred Heart Church,
Rev. John Emmerth officiating.
Survivors are Sister Mary M.
Bernadette, Mr. and Mrs. J. T.
Langley, Mr. and Mrs. C. R.
Smith, grandchildren and great
grandchildren.
SERVICES FOR
MISS STEPHENS
ATLANTA—Funeral services
for Miss Isabel Stephens were
held April 20th at the Immacu
late Conception Church, Rev.
Leonard Kelly officiating.
Eugene Satzky
Atlanta Services
ATLANTA—Funeral services
for Mr. Eugene Satzky were
held April 19th at the Sacred
Heart Church, Rev. John Em
merth officiating.
Survivors are Miss Elizebeth
Satzky, Miss Helen Satzky, Mr.
John J. Satzky, Los Angeles,
Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. Carl A.
Satzky, Yucaipa, Calif, and
nieces and nephews.
Arthur Williamson
Services In Aiaany
ALBANY—Funeral services
for Arthur Williamson were
held April 20th at St. Teresa’s
Church.
Survivors, are his wife, the
former Miss Christine Banks; a
son, Arthur B. Williamson, Cor-
dele, Ga. and a number of nieces
and nephews.
Services For
Miss O'Keefe
SAVANNAH —■ Funeral serv
ices ior Miss Mae O'Keefe were
held April 9th at the Cathedral
of St. John the Baptist.
Survivors are two brothers,
Harry O’Keefe and Edward O -
Keeie, botn of Jacksonville, Fia.
Services For
Miss McAuliffe
SAVANNAH •— Funeral serv
ices for Miss Genevieve McAu-
iilfe were held April 3th at the
CaUiedral of St. Jonn tire Bap
tist.
Mrs. Johanna
jaugstetter
SAVANNAH — Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. Johanna Jaugstet-
ter were held April 11th at the
Cathedral of St. John the Bap
tist.
Survivors are three sons, F. E.
Jaugstetter and John F. Jaug
stetter, both of Savannah, and
Lt. Col. Joseph J. Jaugstetter of
Jersey City, N. J.; two daugh
ters, Mrs. T. E. Masters of Sav
annah and Mrs. E. A. Gavin of
Paris, France; eight grandchil
dren, five great-grandchildren,
and several nieces and nephews.
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MIKE & STEVE SERTICH
JA. 4-2053
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
CHICAGO, — Catholic • educa
tors were urged by the head of
their association to heed today’s
discussion of educational prob
lems, but not to let it make
them forget what has been ac
complished through the years.
Archbishop William E. Cous
ins of Milwaukee added (April
19) that Catholic teachers can
not remain “smugly content” in
the midst of today’s criticism
of education, but should be in
tne forefront of “essential pro
gress” because of their devotion
to full development of each stu
dent.
The Wisconsin prelate warn
ed, however, against being
“panicked into hasty, futile ac
tion” and following slavishly
every new educational experi
ment.
“Be not the first by whom
the new is tried, nor yet the last
to lay the old aside,” he said,
quoting Alexander Pope’s coup
let.
Archbishop Cousins, presi
dent-general of the National Ca
tholic Educational Association,
delivered the sermon at a Sol
emn Pontifical Mass which op
ened the NCEA’s 57th annual
convention in Chicago’s Inter
national Amphitheater.
Celebrant of the Mass was
His Eminence Albert Cardinal
Meyer, Archbishop of Chicago,
convention host and a past
president-general of the asso
ciation of Catholic teachers and
administrators.
Archbishop Cousins spoke to
thousands of convention regis
trants in the amphitheater’s
arena. NCEA officials estimat
ed that more than 15,000 persons
attended tne convention before
its close on April 22.
The opening Mass was fol
lowed by a general session at
wnicn rattier Waiter J. Ong,
S.J., a St. Louis (Mo.) Univer
sity professor, delivered the
keynote address. The conven
tion’s theme was “Emphasis on
Excellence,”
-At tne conclusion of Father
Ong’s address, the convention
went into high gear, with at
least 12 simultaneous sessions
neid tnree times a day. Tney
were sponsored by the eight de
partments within the associa
tion itself and by numerous oth
er educational groups meeting
in conjunction with it.
Between sessions, delegates
visited displays of school equip
ment in 440 exhibits spread over
more than 61,000 square feet,
the largest exhibition in the
NCEA’s 57 years.
In his sermon, Archbishop
Cousins stressed that the incen
tive for educators to keep
abreast of trends and standards
is provided in the philosophy
on which Catholic schools are
founded.
“Primarily, our approach to
Christian education is founded
upon our acceptance of man as
a creature made to God’s image,
endowed with an immortal soul
which is possessed of faculties
of intellect' and will.
“Development of the faculties
is the divinely assigned task of
teachers responsible to the Cre
ator, as well as to the student,”
he said in his prepared re
marks.
The success of Catholic
schools, the Archbishop added,
must be measured in terms that
relate- to the individual and his
eternal future.
“There is no point to building,
maintaining and generally sup
porting Church-related schools
if the same results are attain
able in other educational sys
tems,” he declared.
Jesuit Father Ong, in his ad
dress prepared for the conven
tion’s first general session, dealt
with the implications for Ca
tholic schools of the rapid de
velopment in various fields,
saying change is now “an in
stitutionalized feature of hu
man culture.”
Educators are always train
ing for the future, Father Ong
said, but he argued that in to
day’s work such training has a
special urgency because plans
go so deeply into the future.
He put it this way:
“Today the person who is go
ing to be an intellectual leader
is by reason of tne very mo
mentum now present in human
knowledge likely to be in one
way or another deeply involved
in plans for the future of the
world.”
Products of Catholic training
will bring to this challenge a
confidence in God and a desire
to serve Him, but they will
need more, he said.
They will need “a particular
vision,” he claimed. “If we are
educating for excellence, we
must have as part of our habit
ual outlook a concern for the
future of this world, an inter
est in it, a curiosity about it
and a sense of knowledge itself
as developing beyond its pres
ent state.”
The motivation of American
Catholics to meet the challenge
held by the future, said Father
Ong, should be imaginative and
creative, and this can come
about “when we think less in
terms of what we are against
and more in terms of what we
are for.”
Opposed to this motivation,
sain rawer Ong, is one based
on a desire only to excel im
mediate rivals. This is “ineffec
tive apd self-defeating, as it is
negative,” he sail.
“If we believe that we must
do well simply in order to keep
up with or surpass others, we
are as much as admitting that
we have no interior resource
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of our own driving us on. We
move if and when the other
person moves, otherwise we sit
still,” he said.
As Americans, he added, we
can be criticized if we are spur
red to action only by communist
action. As Catholics, “we are
even worse off if we wish our
schools to be good simply be
cause we see the need to keep
up with other educational sys
tems, public or private,” he de
clared. |
"I should like to urge,” he
said, “that we cultivate, each in
his own way a little less paro
chial, more philosophical and
more profoundly religious ori
entation toward the future, one
which makes us at home in a
world which is more and more
concerned about the larger
movements of knowledge itself
and about the global evolution
of human society ...”
Hopes Religion
Won’t Be Issue
NEW YORK, (NC) — Adlai
E. Stevenson has expressed the
hope “that religion will play no
part” in the coming presidential
election.
“It seems to me that the issues
are too grave for voters to be
districted by questions about
where the candidates pray,” said
the former Illinois governor,
who was the Democratic party’s
nominee for President in 1952
and 1956. He spoke (April 11) at
a press conference following his
return from a two-month tour
of Latin America.
Asked to comment on the re
ligious issue now being raised
regarding Sen. John Kennedy of
Massachusetts, Mr. Stevenson
said: “I think it would debase
the campagin if so fine an
American as Jack Kennedy
would have to defend himself
against bigots.”
“I don’t think voters should
THE BULLETIN, April 30, 1960—PAGE 3
State Department Assures
Senator It Will Work For
Release Of Bishop Walsh
WASHINGTON, D. C. (NC) —
A U. S. Senator has received as
surance for the State Depart
ment that it will “continue to
seek by every feasible means the
release of Bishop James E.
Walsh, M.M.,” who was sentenc
ed to 20 years imprisonment by
the Red Chinese in mid-March.
Senator Hubert H. Humphrey
of Minnesota announced (April
17) that he told Secretary of
State Christian A. Herter in a
letter that “the Peking govern
ment has affronted all faiths in
its sentencing of this courageous
missionary leader, who for 42
years has served man’s spiritual
needs in China.”
He said: “The Government of
the United States can do nothing
less than to bring to bear the
fullest strength of its diplomatic
endeavors toward the release of
Bishop Walsh and all others . . .
so cruelly imprisoned.”
A reply from Assistant Secre
tary of State William B. Ma-
comber, Jr., assured the Sena-
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tor that the Department will
continue to seek the release of
Bishop Walsh “by every feasible
means” as well as the release of
four Americans still held in jail
by the Chinese communists.
Mr. Bacomber added that
“these five men are in effect
political hostages whom the Pe
king regime refuses to free in
flagrant violation of all humani
tarian considerations.”
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