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DIOCESE OF SAVANNAH EDITION
Serving
Georgia's 88
Southern Counties
Published By The
Catholic Laymen's
Ass'n of Georgia
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF SAVANNAH
Vol. 40, No. 26
MONROE, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1960
10c Per Copy — $3 a Year
Says Catholics Accept
American Principles
'Without Reservation'
ADDRESSES CPA CONVENTION
WASHINGTON — Catholics
accept the democratic principles
of America "without mental re
servation" and "without equi
vocation," the assistant general
secretary of the National Cath
olic Welfare Conference said
here.
‘‘The Church and the State—
here, our Catholic religion and
our American government —
are not in conflict. They exist
side by side and if we examine
the underlying ’ principles of
each, we see that actually they
support and compliment one an
other,” Father Francis T. Hurley
declared.
Father Hurley spoke (May 15)
to more than 2,000 graduating
seniors from Washington area
Catholic high schools at annual
“Senior Day” ceremonies held
in the National Shrine of the
Immaculate Conception.
Father Hurley reminded the
students that in their Catholic
schools they were “taught the
marks of the true American.”
“The true American, coming
from all races, creeds, colors
and social levels, is the one who
loves this country and agrees to
live by its traditions,” he con
tinued.
“We Catholics rejoice in the
basic principles- of America, its
laws, its spirit. We do so with
out, mental reservation, without
equivocation, and we have al
ways done so.”
Father Hurley also reminded
the siudents that iheir teachers
"instilled patriotism as a duty
and obligation binding in con
science and they warned you
that any violations of the'rights
of your country or your fellow
men is an offense against God."
Father Hurley urged each
senior "as a Catholic to stand
proudly before America as one
who loves God above all things
and who loves his fellow citi
zens and his country as a duty
of conscience."
Schools Refused
Nursing Aid
ST. JOSEPH, MO., (NC)—The
city council here has ruled that
public health nursing facilities
may not be provided for the
children in parochial schools.
In a letter to the health de
partment, City Counselor Jos
eph Wood stated: “It is the
opinion of this office that pub
lic moneys appropriated by the
Common Council to the Board
of Health could not legally be
used for the purpose of provid
ing public health nursing serv
ices in parochial schools.”
The letter added that “al
though it is not entirely clear,
it is believed that the expendi
ture could pass the Federal Con
stitution’s prohibitions . . . but
could not pass the prohibitions
in our own Missouri Constitu
tion as interpreted b^ the Mis
souri Supreme Court.
The ruling was made in re
sponse to a city health depart
ment request for a legal opinion
on the matter.
SURRENDER TO COMMUNISM
JUST AS BAD AS NUCLEAR
WAR, SENATOR STATES
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
JAMAICA, N. Y. — A U. S.
senator declared here that if the
Rev. John E.
O’Donohue, S.J.,
Dies At Mobile
AUGUSTA — The Rev. John
E. O’Donohoe, S.J., a former
pastor of Sacred Heart Church
here, died May 17 at the Mar
tin de Porres Hospital in Mo
bile, Ala.
Fr. O’Donohoe v/as a native
of Galway, Ireland, but came
REV. J. E. O'DONOHOE, S.J.
over to the United States to at
tend the Society of Jesus Col
lege, St. Stanislaus in Macon,
1907, 1911. After his later sem
inary training was completed,
he returned to Ireland for his<
ordination into the priesthood,
which took place in Dublin in
1922.
Fr. O’Donohoe first came to
Augusta as pastor of Sacred
Heart in 1934, returning to
Spring Hill College in 1947. He
returned for a brief pastorate
here in 1958, remaining only
one year before ill health caus
ed him to leave. He went to
Loyola University in New Or
leans upon leaving here. While
here he was also chaplain of
Patrick Walsh Council, Knights
of Columbus.
Some 25 members of, the hierarchy and 500 delegates attended ,the sessions , of the 50th an
niversary convention of the . Catholic Press Association of the United States and Canada, held
in Washingtqn. Keynote speaker, Cardinal Agagianian, is shown introduced by CPA president
John J. Daly, with Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate.
Cardinal Appeals To Press To
Develop 'Personal Involvement'
In Church's Worldwide Mission
free world surrenders piecemeal
to communism to avoid the risk
of nuclear war, it condemns it
self to a death “just as final as
nuclear destruction itself.”
Sen. Thomas J. Dodd of Con
necticut told 400 persons at St.
John’s University that the fun-,
damental question facing the
United States and its allies is
this: “Do we value our free civ
ilization,,; enough to run all the
risks and meet all the challeng
es which the communists will
force, upon us in the years
ahead?”
He spoke (May 14) at the fin
al session of the St. John's Free
dom Institute, a year-long pro
gram designed to alert and in
form the community of the
great evil of international com
munism. The university confer
red upon Sen. Dodd an honor
ary doctorate of laws.
Sen. Dodd condemned neu
tralist intellectuals who advo
cate unilateral free world dis
armament and submission to
communist control rather than
the continuance of the cold war
struggle.
“The revealed truths of re
ligion,” he said, “would be tho
roughly and systematically
stamped out ... Knowledge of
the true goal of our existence,
eternal life, would be erased in
sofar as it is possible to be eras
ed.”
He said'private property, free
choice and family life, as we
know it, would disappear. Pride
(Continued on Page 8)
By Burke Walsh
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
WASHINGTON — His Emi
nence Cregory Pete XV Cardi
nal Agagianian urged Catholics,
and the Catholic press in partic
ular, to share, in the Church’s
worldwide mission through-
“personal involvement in the
life of the Church everywhere.”
The Pro-Prefect of the Sacred
Congregation for the Propaga
tion of the Faith warned that'
narrow parochialism is “a para
lyzing mistake” for Catholics.
He added: “Though separated
by miles of geography, by lang
uage and history and custom,
though unknown to each other
and without visible means of
communication, every member
of the Church is brother to ev
ery other, and he must bear
realistically the responsibilities
of this brotherhood.”
Cardinal Agagianian spoke
(May 12) at a banquet climax
ing the golden jubilee conven
tion of the Catholic Press As
sociation.
In his address to the press
association, Cardinal Agagian-
ian emphasized that despite re-
- cent advances in science and
technology “the moral judg
ment which discerns the good
purpose from the evil one must
still be exercised by man him
self.”
It is in view of the moral di
mension of human life “that we
must measure the professional
work in which all of you, as
men and women of the press,
are engaged,” he commented.
“In order to record the true
history of the Church in the
days in which we live, we must
encourage our people to see be
hind the passing scene into that
deeper reality which is the
Kingdom of God on earth. The
divine quality of the Church
Militant is not merely a phrase,
Outstanding
Service Award
Frank A. Hall
For
WASHINGTON—F rank A.
Hall, director of the N.C.W.C.
News Service, was presented
the Catholic Press Association’s
second annual outstanding serv
ice award.
The chief of the agency which
reports national and internation
al news about the Church to
the Catholic press was pre
sented a statuette of St. Francis
de Sales, patron saint of jour
nalists.
Presentation of the honor was
made by John J. Daly, CPA
president and editor of the Cath
olic Virginian.
“Mr. Hall is the director of a
news agency serving the Church
which has shown consistently
steady progress, especially in
the last two years of 1958 and
1959, in top news coverage,” Mr.
Daly read from the nomination.
RECEIVE ASSIGNMENTS — Newly ordained priests of the
Diocese are shown as they received 'temporary assignments from
The Most Rev. Thomas J. McDonough, D.D., J.C.D., Bishop of
Savannah. Pictured left to right are: Bishop McDonough, Rev.
Lawrence Lucree and Rev. John Fitzpatrick. Father Lucree has
been assigned to the Cathedral of St. John-the-Baptist, while
Father Fitzpatrick has been assigned to Camp Villa Marie.—
(Bulletin Staff Photo)
Even When Under Severe Provocation
Cuban Prelate Who Saved
Castro's Life Denounces
Communism In His Regime
it is a living reality, it is Christ
passing through the years of
this generation and through ‘all
days even to the end of the
world.”
“This, it seems to me, is the
difficult challenge of the Cath
olic journalist, and particularly
of the Catholic editor — to
make the life of the Church
something more than merely
another portion of contempora
ry history, to make plain the
■ grace and mystery of this living
Church, to relate it intimately
with eternity without tearing it
from the present context of
time.”
“It is your vision that is com
municated through the pages of
the press, it is your word that
inspires the reader to new un
derstanding,” he told the CPA
members. “You are so literally
at the heart of the press, and
this is why so truly you are the
hope of the press.”
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
SANTIAGO, Cuba,—The Arch
bishop who saved Fidel Castro’s
life seven years ago has de
nounced communist infiltration
in Cuba’s government.
Archbishop Enrique Perez
Serantes of Santiago declared in
a pastoral letter:
“We cannot say that the ene
my is already at the doors, be
cause it is already within, speak
ing loudly as though settled in
its own domain.”
This is the first time a mem
ber of the Cuban Hierarchy has
pointed to communism within
Premier Castro’s regime, al
though other bishops have
warned in recent months against
the threat of communism.
Archbishop Perez Serantes
acknowledged the government’s
solicitude in attempting to solve
the problems of the impoverish
ed. But he warned that social
injustice cannot be righted or
happiness gained by denying
God.
In decrying communism with
in the Castro revolutionary re
gime the Archbishop displayed
the same courage that enabled
him to save the life of the re
gime’s leader in 1953. At that
time Fidel Castro was the hunt
ed leader of a revolutionary
coup that had fizzled. Troops
of the Cuban dictator Fulgencia
Batista were in pursuit, and Mr.
Castro himself said he feared
he would be shot on capture,
without trial.
Archbishop Perez Serantes,
then 69 years of age, went un
armed into the mountains to
persuade Mr. Castro to surren
der. The Archbishop had obtain
ed a promise from the army
commandant that Mr. Castro
would have a civilian trial.
Castro was jailed and eventual
ly released in an amnesty.
The Archbishop declared his
support for the social program
of the revolutionary government
when it came to power. But by
June of last year he saw “very
clear similarities with commu
nist thinking” in the govern
ment’s agrarian reform law.
In his latest pastoral letter
the Archbishop said:
“It is not without grounds
that some of the better informed
are alarmed, or are even will
ing to fight against those who
are trying to impose the heavy
GRAUUATI0N EXERCISES
Benedictine Military
School, Savannah
Graduation exercises will be
held June 2nd at 8 p. m. in the
Savannah Municipal Auditori
um. Speaker will be Mr. Frank
Rossister, Associate Editor of
the Savannah Morning News.
Presiding will be the Most Rev.
Thomas J. McDonough, D.D.,
J.C.D., Bishop of Savannah.
The Baccalaureate Mass for
the 57 graduates will be held
at noon, May 31, at the Sacred
Heart Church.
St. Vincent's
Academy, Savannah
Commencement exercises will
be held May 31 at 5 p. m. at the
Cathedral of St. John the Bap
tist. The Most Rev. Thomas J.
McDonough, D.D., J.C.D., Bish
op of Savannah, will preside
and deliver the graduation ad
dress.
Baccalaureate Mass for the 45
graduates will be held at 8 a. m.
at the Cathedral. The Mass will
be followed with a breakfast for
the graduates and their parents
at St. Vincent’s convent.
St. Pius X
Savannah
Graduation exercises will be
held June 1 at 7:30 p. m. at St.
Benedict’s Church. Presiding
will be the Most Rev. Thomas
J. McDonough, Bishop of Sav
annah. Speaker will be the Very
Rev. Bede Lightner, O.S.B.,
Principle of Benedictine Mili
tary School.
The 19 graduates will attend
a Baccalaureate Mass at 8 a. m.
at St. Benedict’s. The Mass will
be followed by a communion
breakfast.
Aquinas High School
Augusta
A Mass for graduating stu
dents will be offered at St. Pat
rick’s Church May 29 at 8 p. m.
with the Rev. Arthur Weltzer,
pastor of St. Patrick’s deliver
ing the sermon.
Graduation exercises will be
held May 29 at 7:30 p. m. in St.
Patrick’s Church with the Most
Rev. Thomas J. McDonough,
D.D., J.C.D., Bishop of Savan
nah conferring diplomas. Speak
er will be the Rev. Andrew
Doris, O.S.B., instructor of lang
uages at Benedictine Military
School in Savannah.
Immaculate Conception
Augusta
Graduation exercises for Im
maculate Conception High
School will be held at the Im
maculate Conception Auditori
um, at 8 p. m. on Monday, May
30th. The Most Rev. Thomas J.
McDonough, D.D., J.C.D., Bish
op of Savannah will present
diplomas.
Mt. DeSales
Macon
A special graduation Mass for
students of Mt. de Sales, at
which diplomas will be pre
sented, will be held at the 9:30
a. m. May 29 at St. Joseph’s
Church with the Rt. Rev. Msgr.
Thomas I. Sheehan presiding.
Speaker at the graduation cere
monies will be the Rev. John
Cuddy, diocesan superintendent
of schools.
yoke of the new slavery.
“For a genuine Christian
could not live without freedom.”
Archbishop Perez Serantes
explained that he had written
his pastoral to remind Catholics
“of the line of conduct they
must follow in these times of
confusion and worry.” He said
he is acting “for love of religion
• and country.”
He asserted:
“Materialism and communism
cast God from everything; but
we Catholics, at least, cannot
live without God or His holy
law, without which everything
else lacks solid foundation.”
The Archbishop spelled out
the advantages of Christian so
cial justice over materialistic
and totalitarian communism.
He warned that if men reject
God to find bread “it may come
to pass that they are left with
out bread as well as without
God.”
Archbishop Perez Serantes
said the threats of materialism
make propaganda of the Cath
olic Faith even more necessary.
He urged all parents to teach
catechism to their children with
the help of priests and Religious.
Six Nuns
See Mother
Profess Vows
WASHINGTON, (NC) — S i x
nuns saw their mother pro
nounce her initial vows here in
the cloistered community of the
Franciscan Nuns of the Most
Blessed Sacrament.
Sister Mary Gertrude of the
Sacred Heart, the mother of
ten children—nine of whom en
tered the religious life, pro
fessed her vows (May 14) before
Auxiliary Bishop Philip M.
Hannan of Washington.
The 64-year-old mother of six
girls and four boys was invested
into the community in 1958. She
is the former Mrs. James A.
Burns of Columbus, Ohio.
Of her six nun-daughters,
three are Franciscan Sisters
from Joliet, 111., and two are
Notre Dame Sisters. The other,
Sister Mary Agnes, is a mem
ber of her mother’s organization.
One son is married, another
died while a Jesuit seminarian
and a third will be ordained a
Jesuit priest in June. Her fourth
son, Father John Burns, O.M.I.,
is stationed in Brazil.
Stone-Throwing Rhodesians
Warned Of Excommunication
NDOLA, Nor+hern Rhodesia.
(Radio, NC) — The Bishop of
Ndola warned the Catholics of
his diocese that they will be ex
communicated if they throw
stones at people or otherwise
try to intimidate them.
Catholic Press Urged To Speak Truth In Charity
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
WASHINGTON — Workers in
the field of the Catholic press
were strongly urged here “to
speak the truth in charity.”
These words of His Holiness
Pope John XXIII were given as
a theme to the publishers and
editors of Catholic .newspapers
and magazines gathered here
from all parts of the United
States and Canada for the gold
en jubilee convention of the'
Catholic Press Association.
“If by our quiet dignity, our
charity, our compassion, our
mercy, we give the lie to false
charges against us, such attacks
will boomerang upon those mak
ing them,” Archbishop Patrick
A. O’Boyle of Washington said
in his sermon at a Pontifical
Low Mass which the delegates
attended in the National Shrine
of the Immaculate Conception.
“Our manner of acting will be
more eloquent than a thousand
sermons in our search for unity
of all Christians in truth. We can
show that our only concern is
for souls, and not political pow
er or earthly riches.”
“It is not important to the
Church that the symbols of
secular power accrue to its sons.
But it is vital that we so com
port ourselves that the truth and
vitality of our Faith become
evident to all. From this point
of view, the humiliation of per
secution, based on half-truths
and all but forgotten lies, can be
a blessing, if only we accept
it in the spirit of Christ. Here is
a real challenge to the Catholic
press and to all our faithful.”
His Eminence Peter Gregory
XV Cardinal Agagianian, Pro-
Prefect of the Sacred Congrega
tion for the Propagation of the
Faith in Rome, presided at the
Mass. The Cardinal had come to
Washington to address the civic
banquet of the CPA convention.
Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi,
Apostolic Delegate in the Uni
ted States, was celebrant of the
Mass.
Bishop Francis C. Mazzicri,
O.F.M. Conv., in issuing the
warning (May 13), instructed
his priests to post printed copies
of it on church doors and to
explain it to iheir congrega
tions.
In an explanatory letter to
the press, the Bishop said that
the Church cannot remain sil
ent in the face of ihe criminal
acts and violence that have
been taking place in this part of
East Africa.
"I sincerely hope that no
Catholic is involved in crimes of
this naturg," the Italian-born
missionary bishop said. "How
ever, to deter our people from
such horrible actions I warn all
Catholics of this diocese that
whoever cooperates either di
rectly or indirectly in any of
the crimes mentioned above
shall be excluded from the sac
raments."